Updated: Fri 4 Apr 00:27:20 BST 2025

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Releases Safari Technology Preview 216 With Bug Fixes and Performance Improvements
Apple today released a new update for Safari Technology Preview, the experimental browser that was first introduced in March 2016. Apple designed ‌Safari Technology Preview‌ to allow users to test features that are planned for future release versions of the Safari browser.





‌Safari Technology Preview‌ 216 includes fixes and updates for Accessibility, CSS, Forms, Media, Rendering, Service Workers, SVG, Text, URLs, Web Animations, Web API, and Web Inspector.



The current ‌Safari Technology Preview‌ release is compatible with machines running macOS Sonoma and macOS Sequoia, the newest version of macOS.



The ‌Safari Technology Preview‌ update is available through the Software Update mechanism in System Preferences or System Settings to anyone who has downloaded the browser from Apple’s website. Complete release notes for the update are available on the Safari Technology Preview website.



Apple’s aim with ‌Safari Technology Preview‌ is to gather feedback from developers and users on its browser development process. ‌Safari Technology Preview‌ can run side-by-side with the existing Safari browser and while it is designed for developers, it does not require a developer account to download and use.Tag: Safari Technology PreviewThis article, 'Apple Releases Safari Technology Preview 216 With Bug Fixes and Performance Improvements' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Supplier TSMC May Operate Intel’s Chipmaking Facilities
Apple supplier TSMC has reached a preliminary agreement with Intel that will see TSMC operating Intel’s chipmaking facilities, reports The Information. TSMC will own a 20 percent stake in the new combined company, while Intel and other semiconductor companies will own the majority of the shares.





As part of the deal, TSMC may share some of its chip manufacturing methods with Intel, and train Intel employees to use them. Discussions are still underway, and the final details have not been established. The talks between Intel and TSMC were reportedly initiated by the Trump administration in an effort to stymy Intel’s decline and bring advanced chipmaking to the U.S.



Intel is one of TSMC’s major competitors, and the two have long been rivals. Apple previously used Intel chips in its Macs, but transitioned to its own Apple silicon chips manufactured by TSMC starting in 2020. No Apple devices use Intel processors, with Apple now relying entirely on its own technology.



TSMC focuses on chip manufacturing, not design, which is handled by TSMC customers like Apple and Nvidia. The focus solely on manufacturing has allowed TSMC to outpace Intel, and Intel’s foundary operations are less attractive to companies because Intel’s chips cost more than TSMC’s and its yields are lower.



Some Intel executives are said to be worried that the deal would result in layoffs, because Intel would need to eliminate engineers and may need to change or sell the equipment that it uses. Intel and TSMC have different manufacturing machines and materials, so if Intel is expected to adopt TSMC manufacturing processes, it could have to sell most of its existing equipment.



In 2024, Intel had an $18.8 billion loss because of its investments in chip manufacturing and a weakening PC market.Tags: Intel, TSMCThis article, 'Apple Supplier TSMC May Operate Intel’s Chipmaking Facilities' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Wordle today — answer and my hints for game #1385, Friday, April 4

TechRadar News
Open 
CinemaCon 2025 live – Predator: Badlands, juicy Fantastic 4 info, and expect Avatar 3 and The Mandalorian & Grogu to come

Digital Trends
Open 
The Nintendo Switch 2 seems expensive, this deal makes the original a great value
Why wait for the $450 Nintendo Switch 2 when you can get a Nintendo Switch OLED for $275?

Digital Trends
Open 
This Asus 27-inch monitor is 33% off — under $100!
The Asus VA27EQSB monitor features a 27-inch Full HD screen, an ultra-low blue light filter, and flicker-free technology for less than $100.

Digital Trends
Open 
3 underrated Amazon Prime Video movies you should watch this weekend (April 4-6)
These Amazon Prime Video titles will give you a sense of just how many great movies are available on Amazon Prime Video.

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Pavel Luzanov: PostgreSQL 18: part 3 or CommitFest 2024-11
We continue the series of articles about new patches coming to PostgreSQL 18, this one covering the news of the November CommitFest.
If you missed the previous reviews, you can check them out here: 2024-07, 2024-09.

initdb: checksum calculation enabled by default
Planner: array lookup instead of multiple similar conditions under OR
Planner: switching around expressions in DISTINCT clauses
GROUPING SETS: HAVING -> WHERE
Data type cache entry invalidation and temporary tables
Planner: incremental sorting during Merge Join
New function array_reverse
Functions min and max for the type bytea
Parallel worker usage statistics
New function pg_ls_summariesdir
new contrib module: pg_logicalsnapinspect
Improved extension installation error messages
NOT NULL constraints in the system catalog
A TOAST table for pg_index
COPY... FROM and file_fdw: rejected row limit
LIKE support with nondetermenistic collations
TLS v1.3: cipher suites

...

The Verge
Open 
PSA pauses card grading submissions from outside the US
The card grading service PSA will no longer take direct submissions from outside the US in response to the Trump administration’s new far-reaching tariffs. In an update on Wednesday, PSA says it’s “reluctantly taking these measures to protect our international customers from significant tariff expenses.” As noted by PSA, the tariffs are “against the value […]

The Verge
Open 
Google’s regular Pixel 10 will reportedly get worse (but more) cameras
Google’s upcoming base Pixel 10 might come with primary and ultrawide cameras that match the hardware recently introduced in the budget Pixel 9A, which aren’t as good as the cameras on the Pixel 9, Android Authority reports. However, the new phone may get a telephoto camera, which the Pixel 9 and other base Pixels haven’t […]

The Verge
Open 
Trump’s tariffs mean you’ll pay more for all gadgets
If you were wondering how President Trump’s tariffs may impact gadgets like smartphones, laptops, and smartwatches, there’s some bad, and perhaps slightly less-bad news. Unless something changes, Trump’s sweeping tariffs will lead to increased prices for consumers. But it will likely take some time before that actually happens. Modern gadgets generally aren’t made or assembled […]

Gizmodo
Open 
Report: Disney Is Putting the Live-Action Tangled on Hold
In the wake of Snow White's middling performance, Disney seems to be rethinking the pace and potential of its live-action remakes.

Gizmodo
Open 
The First Glimpse of Predator: Badlands Is Full of Skulls and Snarls
CinemaCon audiences got an early look at Predator: Badlands, including its setting: an alien 'planet of hurt.'

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump fires six national security staffers after meeting with far-right activist Laura Loomer
Trump ally presented him with opposition research against a number of officials that she said showed their disloyaltyFollow US politics liveDonald Trump fired six national security council staffers after a fraught meeting in the Oval Office where the far-right activist Laura Loomer presented opposition research against a number of staffers that she said showed they were disloyal to the US president, according to two people familiar with the matter.The firings encompassed four staffers who were fired overnight, after the meeting, and two who were removed over the weekend. It created the extraordinary situation where Loomer appeared to have more influence than national security adviser Mike Waltz over the NSC and undercut Waltz in having aides axed under him. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Severe storms and tornadoes hit US south and midwest, killing at least seven
White House approves Tennessee’s state of emergency request as further fatalities expected to be confirmedViolent storms and tornadoes have torn across the US south and midwest, killing at least seven people and downing power lines and trees, smashing homes and upturning cars across multiple states.The outbreak of storms and tornadoes has resulted in at least seven deaths in Tennessee and Missouri, with further fatalities expected to be confirmed. One of the victims has been named: a 68-year-old man named Garry Moore who was a fire chief in Cape Girardeau county, Missouri. At least a dozen injuries have also been reported from the storms. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Cross-Channel train services to be cheaper to run as operator cuts charges
LSPH chief executive announces ‘groundbreaking proposal’ intended to grow international rail travel from the UK Cross-Channel train services serving new destinations will be cheaper to run under a scheme to grow international rail travel from the UK.London St Pancras Highspeed (LSPH), which owns and operates the railway and stations from the capital to the Channel tunnel, said it would slash charges for operators planning new routes. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Pentagon launches investigation into Pete Hegseth’s use of Signal app after sensitive information leak
Defense chief and others discussed US military operations on messaging app that included journalistThe inspector general of the Department of Defense (DOD) is launching an investigation into Pentagon secretary Pete Hegseth’s use of the encrypted messaging app Signal to discuss sensitive information about military operations in Yemen.The probe, announced on Thursday, follows a bipartisan request from the Senate armed services committee after allegations emerged that highly precise – and most likely classified – intelligence about impending US airstrikes in Yemen, including strike timing and aircraft models, had been shared in a Signal group chat that included a journalist. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
Homeless woman with cancer living on makeshift bed
Fatima says the accommodation offered by the Northern Ireland Housing Executive is unsuitable for her needs.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Fan jeers and a cupped ear - is Postecoglou feeling the friction?
Ange Postecoglou had a torrid night as Tottenham lost at Chelsea, facing the fury of his own fans. He cupped his ear towards them when he thought they had equalised - so has that made things worse?

Ars Technica
Open 
Nvidia confirms the Switch 2 supports DLSS, G-Sync, and ray tracing

Ars Technica
Open 
DeepMind has detailed all the ways AGI could wreck the world

Ars Technica
Open 
Wealthy Americans have death rates on par with poor Europeans

Boing Boing
Open 
Hilarious doggo breaks rules, chases ducks — then fakes injury to garner sympathy (video)
A black lab named Pepsi couldn't help herself, zooming across a lake to chase ducks even when her dog-sitters repeatedly told her to come back. But when the pup eventually got bored and swam back to shore, she knew she had to come up with a good one to get herself out of trouble. — Read the rest
The post Hilarious doggo breaks rules, chases ducks — then fakes injury to garner sympathy (video) appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Register
Open 
Flux off: CISA, annexable allies warn of hot DNS threat
Shape shifting technique described as menace to national security The US govt's Cybersecurity Infrastructure Agency, aka CISA, on Thursday urged organizations, internet service providers, and security firms to strengthen defenses against so-called fast flux attacks.…

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Fernández lifts Chelsea into top four as Tottenham fans turn on Postecoglou
It was a typically incident-filled meeting between these sworn enemies but, really, there was only one place to start. Ange Postecoglou, the remorselessly under-fire Tottenham manager, had been barracked by his own supporters when he replaced Lucas Bergvall with Pape Sarr in the 64th minute. Like every other Spurs player, Bergvall had struggled to impose himself but the fans do like him.“You don’t know what you’re doing,” they informed Postecoglou. So just imagine how the fiercely proud Australian must have felt shortly afterwards when Sarr won the ball off Moisés Caicedo and unloaded a low shot from distance, which the Chelsea goalkeeper, Robert Sánchez, inexplicably allowed to beat him. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Who has made Troy's Premier League team of the week?
After every round of Premier League matches this season, Troy Deeney gives us his team of the week. Do you agree with his choices?

No Agenda Show
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1752 - "Pell-Mell"
No Agenda Episode 1752 - "Pell-Mell"



"Pell-Mell"
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Gigawatt Coffee Roasters LLC
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The Hill
Open 
Federal judge temporarily pauses RFK Jr. effort to rescind billions of public health funds
A federal judge granted a temporary restraining order Thursday that stops the Trump administration from pulling back more than $11 billion in public health funding from state and local health departments. Judge Mary McElroy of the federal district court in Rhode Island granted a 14-day restraining order to a group of 23 states and the...

The Hill
Open 
Democratic group focused on downballot races hauls in $600K in first quarter
A Democratic group focused on downballot races said Thursday that it hauled more than $600,000 in the first quarter of 2025. In a Thursday press release, the Democratic Association of Secretaries of State (DASS) said the first quarter gains, beyond double the group’s first quarter funds raised in 2023, shows “substantial growth in grassroots support...

The Hill
Open 
Trump says he 'sometimes' takes Laura Loomer's advice, downplays her role in NSC firings
President Trump on Thursday said he “sometimes” listens to the recommendations of far-right activist Laura Loomer, even as he denied she was responsible for the ouster of multiple national security aides. Trump spoke to reporters aboard Air Force One, where he was asked about Loomer one day after meeting with her in the Oval Office. At that...

The Hill
Open 
Former Trump economic adviser calls tariffs a ‘sledgehammer’
President Trump’s former economic adviser Stephen Moore likened the administration’s newly announced tariffs to a “sledgehammer.” Moore joined CNN on Thursday, just a day after Trump announced a 10 percent general tariff on all imports to the U.S. and targeted tariffs on dozens of other countries around the world. “I’m not a big fan of...

The Hill
Open 
Dr. Oz takes the helm of CMS
Click in for more news from The Hill {beacon} Health Care Health Care   The Big Story Oz talks helm of Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Television personality Dr. Mehmet Oz was confirmed by the Senate to lead the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in a party-line 53-45 vote Thursday. © Greg Nash,...

The Hill
Open 
CDC cuts environmental health employees
{beacon} Energy & Environment Energy & Environment   The Big Story Staff who worked on lead, asthma let go from CDC Staff members who fought childhood lead exposure and those who worked on cancer clusters were among those fired from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), a now-former employee told The Hill. ©...

The Hill
Open 
Trump's tariffs spur stock meltdown
Welcome to The Hill's Business & Economy newsletter {beacon} Business & Economy Business & Economy   The Big Story  Wall Street suffers worst day of losses since 2020 The stock market cratered Thursday as fears of global economic slowdown driven by President Trump’s new tariffs spurred Wall Street’s worst day of losses since the outbreak...

The Hill
Open 
What tariffs could mean for US workers, consumers and the economy
President Trump’s Wednesday tariff announcement was larger in scope than many businesses and policy analysts were predicting, with the imposition of a 10 percent general tariff on imports to the U.S. and additional targeted tariffs on dozens of other countries. The taxes on U.S. importers of foreign products are a major unilateral escalation of Trump’s...

The Hill
Open 
Tariffs roil Big Tech
{beacon} View Online Technology Technology   The Big Story Why Trump's tariffs are roiling Big Tech President Trump’s sweeping new tariffs are poised to strike a blow at the tech industry, as massive import taxes on China and Taiwan disrupt trade flows central to tech firms’ business. © AP Photo/Seth Wenig Trump announced new tariffs...

The Hill
Open 
Cruz: High tariffs 'in perpetuity' would not be good economic policy
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) on Thursday warned that if President Trump’s tariffs on trading partners last for months it will hurt the economy and American consumers. “I think it is a mistake to assume that we will have high tariffs in perpetuity. I don’t think that would be good economic policy. I am not a...

The Hill
Open 
Mehdi Hasan on talks of Booker's rise in Democratic Party: 'Let's calm down'
Former MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan said it’s premature for Democrats to talk about Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) potentially running for president in 2028, saying news cycles pass quickly in President Trump’s Washington. In an interview on NewsNation’s “On Balance,” host Leland Vittert asked Hasan, a left-leaning commentator, whether he thinks “everybody [is] getting a little...

The Hill
Open 
NSC staff ousted
Welcome to The Hill's Defense & NatSec newsletter {beacon} Defense &National Security Defense &National Security   The Big Story National Security Council staff ousted at White House Multiple staff members on the White House National Security Council were fired Thursday following a meeting President Trump had this week with far-right activist Laura Loomer. © AP...

Mail Online
Open 
My children were on the school bus that Virginia Giuffre claims slammed into her at 110kmh - but they said it was a 'small crash'
Mother Emmie-Rose Wright said her three children - aged five, eight and nine - relayed the crash only caused slight damage to the rear break light of the Toyota Highlander.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
England's Woad shares lead heading to Augusta finale
England's world number one Lottie Woad shares the lead heading into the final round of the Augusta National Women's Amateur as she looks to become the first to defend the title.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bunting ends Premier League darts drought in Berlin but Littler crashes out
Bunting beats Price 6-5 in final to break his duckLittler beaten by Dobey in opening matchStephen Bunting turned his Premier League form around in stunning fashion to claim victory in Berlin after Luke Littler crashed out early.Bunting had failed to win a match in the first eight rounds of the series but he saw off Nathan Aspinall to break his duck then eased to victory over Luke Humphries before defeating Gerwyn Price 6-5 in the final. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
County Championship bursts back into life with calm before the storm
The 125th edition – the calm before the 2026 storm – begins on Friday with notable names headlining the cast list The cut of the grass, the shine of a boot, the sigh of a drop, the joy of a catch, the crunch of a four, the hope of the spring. Time stealthily gouging out lines, on faces, over scars, around knees. A first season. A last.Here, suddenly, is April, unexpectedly sunny and dry. And with it, 135 years after the first County Championship (minus one year for Covid, four for world war one and six for world war two), the 125th. Continue reading...

Techdirt
Open 
Ctrl-Alt-Speech: World Wide Wedge Issue
Ctrl-Alt-Speech is a weekly podcast about the latest news in online speech, from Mike Masnick and Everything in Moderation‘s Ben Whitelaw. Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Pocket Casts, YouTube, or your podcast app of choice — or go straight to the RSS feed. In this week’s round-up of the latest news in online […]

Slashdot
Open 
Microsoft's Miniature Windows 365 Link PC Goes On Sale
An anonymous reader shares a report: Microsoft's business-oriented "Link" mini-desktop PC, which connects directly to the company's Windows 365 cloud service, is now available to buy for $349.99 in the US and in several other countries. Windows 365 Link, which was announced last November, is a device that is more easily manageable by IT departments than a typical computer while also reducing the needs of hands on support.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Intel, TSMC Tentatively Agree To Form Chipmaking Joint Venture
Intel and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. have reached a preliminary agreement to form a joint venture operating Intel's chipmaking facilities, with TSMC taking a 20% stake, The Information reports [non-paywalled source]. Intel and other U.S. semiconductor companies would hold the majority of shares in the proposed venture. Instead of capital investment, TSMC has discussed sharing chipmaking methods and training Intel personnel.

The talks face internal opposition from some Intel executives concerned about widespread layoffs and the abandonment of Intel's own technology, according to the report. The deal could help TSMC neutralize a struggling competitor while potentially giving Taiwan more leverage with the U.S. administration, which recently imposed tariffs on Taiwanese goods excluding chips.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Sky News Home
Open 
Israeli airstrike kills at least 27 at Gaza school, says Hamas-run health ministry
More than 100 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli airstrikes targeting Gaza, including 27 sheltering at a school, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Severe storms and tornadoes hit US south and midwest, killing at least seven
White House approves Tennessee’s state of emergency request as further fatalities expected to be confirmedViolent storms and tornadoes have torn across the US south and midwest, killing at least seven people and downing power lines and trees, smashing homes, and upturning cars across multiple states.The outbreak of storms and tornadoes has resulted in at least seven deaths in Tennessee and Missouri, with further fatalities expected to be confirmed. One of the victims has been named: a 68-year-old man called Garry Moore who was a fire chief in Cape Girardeau county, Missouri. At least a dozen injuries have also been reported from the storms. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Trump tariffs trigger steepest US stocks drop since 2020 as China, EU vow to hit back
Nike and Apple were among brands worst hit, but Trump maintained the US economy would ultimately "boom".

F1 Technical
Open 
Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff to miss Japanese Grand Prix
Having also missed last year's Japanese Grand Prix, Mercedes have confirmed that the Brackley-based outfit's team boss Toto Wolff will not be present at this weekend's Suzuka race.

BBC UK News
Open 
Pylon plans could spark mass social unrest - Plaid
A green energy company is threatening landowners with legal action as they deny access requests.

Mail Online
Open 
Kim Kardashian poses with NO underwear for saucy snaps
The SKIMS founder had on a fur top around her chest but forgot to add her bottoms in a pinup post that received hundreds of thousands of likes. The 44-year-old had her black hair slicked back.

The Verge
Open 
Trump’s tariffs put the iPhone in a tough spot
The US smartphone market is weird. Most of us buy our phones through some combination of installment plans, trade-in offers, and carrier deals, so answering the question “How much does this phone cost?” can sometimes require a little galaxy-brain math. President Trump’s 34 percent tariff increase on Chinese goods is set to take effect on […]

Mail Online
Open 
Kim Kardashian poses with NO underwear for saucy snaps amid Kanye West 'split' from Bianca
The 44-year-old - who posed with no underwear for a Thursday SKIMS post - did not reach out to Bianca after splitting from Kanye, DailyMail.com has learned.

Sky News Home
Open 
Stock markets drop sharply after Trump tariffs - with two indexes recording worst day since COVID
Stock markets around the world fell on Thursday after Donald Trump announced sweeping tariffs - with some economists now fearing a recession.

Gizmodo
Open 
Now You Can See Krypto Be a Very Good Boy in New Superman Footage
James Gunn's superhero tale starring David Corenswet, Rachel Brosnahan, a bunch of other humans, and one really cute dog lands in theaters July 11.

Adam Curry
Open 
No Agenda Episode 1752 - "Pell-Mell"
No Agenda Episode 1752 - "Pell-Mell"

Sky News Home
Open 
Tom Cruise leads moment of silence in tribute to 'dear friend' Val Kilmer
Tom Cruise has paid tribute to Val Kilmer, wishing his Top Gun co-star "well on the next journey".

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Spain could include Camp Nou final in bid to host 2035 Rugby World Cup
Real Madrid’s Bernabéu also offers appeal to federationItaly expected to be Spain’s closest rival for tournamentThe 2035 Rugby World Cup final could be staged at the revamped Camp Nou in Barcelona with the Spanish rugby federation in discussions with La Liga over using celebrated football stadiums as part of its bid to host the tournament.Delegates from the Spanish federation met World Rugby executives last weekend to demonstrate their intentions to host the tournament in 2035 and discussions are said to have piqued interest. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Delivered to a Predator: Al Fayed’s Fixer review – this startling tale urgently needed telling
Dispatches, presented by Cathy Newman, talks to 16 survivors or witnesses of the ex-Harrods boss’s abuse, as well as tracking down his alleged enabler. The result is a raw, horrifying and invaluable watchIt is disturbingly easy to respond with little more than fatigue to reports of powerful men sexually exploiting women, because there have been so many. The part of us that should emit shock, disgust and righteous outrage becomes dulled through overuse. And so, when Mohamed Al Fayed, the billionaire former owner of Harrods, died in 2023 and was then credibly accused of being one of Britain’s worst sex offenders, the collective reaction felt like a shrug.The new Dispatches investigation, Delivered to a Predator: Al Fayed’s Fixer, however, ought to sharpen our revulsion and our resolve to fight for change. Building on the 2017 Dispatches documentary Behind Closed Doors and the 2024 BBC programme Predator at Harrods, it outlines the scale of the tycoon’s wrongdoing: last year, the Metropolitan police said it believed Al Fayed may have raped or abused at least 111 women and girls, but here a lawyer working for survivors estimates the number to be more like 300. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Trump tariffs trigger steepest US stocks drop since 2020 as China, EU vow to hit back
The US stock market suffers its worst day in five years, a day after Trump announced sweeping tariffs.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Trump tariffs trigger steepest drop for US stocks since 2020 as China, EU vow to hit back
The US stock market suffers its worst day in five years, a day after Trump announced sweeping tariffs.

Ars Technica
Open 
Google unveils end-to-end messages for Gmail. Only thing is: It’s not true E2EE.

Ars Technica
Open 
Google DeepMind releases its plan to keep AGI from running wild

Mail Online
Open 
Kim Kardashian 'did not reach out to Kanye's anxiety-ridden ex Bianca to comfort her'... after shock split
The 44-year-old - who posed with no underwear for a Thursday SKIMS post - did not reach out to Bianca after splitting from Kanye, DailyMail.com has learned.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump fires six national security staffers after meeting with far-right activist Laura Loomer
Trump ally presented him with opposition research against a number of officials that she said showed their disloyaltyFollow US politics liveDonald Trump fired six national security council staffers after an unusual meeting in the Oval Office where the far-right activist Laura Loomer presented opposition research against a number of staffers that she said showed they were disloyal to the US president, according to two people familiar with the matter.The firings included three staffers who had been brought on by national security adviser Mike Waltz – an extraordinary situation where Loomer appeared to have more sway over NSC personnel than the official in charge of running the agency. It also undercut Waltz’s position to have his allies axed from under him. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Fernández lifts Chelsea into top four as Tottenham fans turn on Postecoglou
It was a typically incident-filled meeting between these sworn enemies but, really, there was only one place to start. Ange Postecoglou, the remorselessly under-fire Tottenham manager, had been barracked by his own club’s supporters when he replaced Lucas Bergvall with Pape Sarr in the 64th minute.Bergvall had enjoyed a few bright moments. “You don’t know what you’re doing,” the travelling hordes informed Postecoglou. And so just imagine how the fiercely proud Australian must have felt shortly afterwards when Sarr won the ball off Moisés Caicedo and unloaded a low shot that the Chelsea goalkeeper, Robert Sánchez, inexplicably allowed to beat him. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Steepest drop for US stocks since 2020 as China and EU vow to hit back on Trump tariffs
The US stock market suffers its worst day in five years, a day after Trump announced sweeping tariffs.

The Register
Open 
For healthcare orgs, DR means making sure docs can save lives during ransomware infections
Organizational, technological resilience combined defeat the disease that is cybercrime When IT disasters strike, it can become a matter of life and death for healthcare organizations – and criminals know it.…

The Register
Open 
Windows intros 365 Link, a black box that does nothing but connect to Microsoft's cloud
And it can be yours for a rather steep $349 Microsoft's Windows 365 Link has reached general availability, although some may question its value.…

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Matt Taibbi Files $10 Million Libel Suit Against Dem Rep. For Accusing Him Of 'Serial Sexual Harassment'
Matt Taibbi Files $10 Million Libel Suit Against Dem Rep. For Accusing Him Of 'Serial Sexual Harassment'

Journalist Matt Taibbi is suing Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove for libel, after the California Democrat claimed during her opening remarks in a House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee hearing on Tuesday that he's a "serial sexual harasser."



"To distract from the dumpster fire this administration is pursuing," she said, the Republicans were "elevating a serial sexual harrasser as their star witness."

While Taibbi wouldn't have been able to sue due to lawmaker protections under the Speech and Debate clause of the constitution, Kamlager-Dove was stupid enough to then post those claims on social media; both on X and Blue Sky.


Damn. Ranking Member Kamlager-Dove calls GOP witness Matt Taibbi a "serial sexual harasser" and enters articles into the congressional record about his history as a sex pest pic.twitter.com/D0li1K6Qij
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) April 1, 2025

As Taibbi directly notes to Kamlager-Dove via Racket News, "Rep. Kamlager-Dove, no woman has ever accused me of engaging in sexual harrassment once, let alone serially. See you in court. Please do not evade service." 



*  *  *

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Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 16:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Intel, TSMC Tentatively Agree On Chipmaking JV In 'America First' Era 
Intel, TSMC Tentatively Agree On Chipmaking JV In 'America First' Era 

Intel shares are up 5% late in the cash session following a report from The Information that sheds light on ongoing talks between Intel and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) to form a joint venture to operate Intel's chipmaking facilities. Under the proposed deal, TSMC would take a 20% stake in the new company and offer manufacturing expertise and personnel training. 


*INTEL, TSMC TENTATIVELY AGREE TO FORM CHIPMAKING JV: INFORMATION
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) April 3, 2025
Two people familiar with the talks between Intel and TSMC provided additional color about the preliminary agreement to form the new joint venture:


Intel and other U.S. semiconductor companies will hold the majority of the shares in the proposed JV, which would include at least some of Intel's existing chip foundries, said the two people. In exchange for the 20% stake, TSMC has discussed sharing some of its chipmaking methods with Intel and training Intel personnel to use them, insteading of funding its stake with capital, one of the people said.

It isn't clear how the rest of the new entity would be funded. The deliberations are ongoing and no final agreement has been reached, the two people said. There's still resistance from some Intel executives concerned that the deal would cause widespread layoffs at the company while subsuming its own chipmaking technology, according to two Intel employees.


The JV was encouraged by members of the Trump administration and is part of the broader 'America First' effort to revive the U.S. chipmaking sector after decades of decay. It also plays into hemispheric defense, where the U.S. will rely less on foreign adversaries for chips.

President Trump has previously accused Taiwan of "stealing" America's chip industry: "You know, Taiwan, they stole our chip business ... and they want protection." However, TSMC has reversed the tide with additional investments in the U.S. - more than $100 billion.

Multiple reports over the last several weeks, including this one from Reuters, have discussed TSMC pitching a JV with Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices, and Broadcom to operate Intel's factories.


TSMC Reportedly Pitches JV With Nvidia, AMD, Broadcom To Operate Intel Foundry https://t.co/3NKo9IY6zx
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) March 12, 2025
Sources via The Information continued:


White House and Commerce officials have been pressing TSMC and Intel to strike a deal to resolve the long-running crisis at Intel, one of the most iconic U.S. technology firms. Commerce officials who have facilitated the negotiations support the tentative deal, said the two people who have been involved in some of the talks.

. . . 

The proposed joint venture could also help TSMC effectively put down a major, if struggling, competitor and give the Taiwanese government more bargaining power with the Trump administration, which just levied tariffs on goods other than chips from the island.


In February, Robert W. Baird analysts wrote in a note to clients that the Trump administration was working to broker a JV between Intel and TSMC, one which would focus on something we said last August has excess value at the Intel enterprise, namely its fabs... 


Intel has 15 fabs; the fabs alone are worth $10bn/each in liquidation value.
The value created by management is negative $50 billion. https://t.co/HkqUQJ4A6J
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) August 2, 2024
In markets, Intel shares are up 5% in late cash trading. On the year, shares are up about 16% on speculation of a deal - shares have been floored around $20 handle. 



Will Intel shares fly in Trump's America First era? 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 16:40

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Pentagon Watchdog Launches Investigation Into SecDef Hegseth Over Use Of Signal
Pentagon Watchdog Launches Investigation Into SecDef Hegseth Over Use Of Signal

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times,

The inspector general for the Department of Defense is investigating Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth over his use of the messaging app Signal.



Acting Pentagon Inspector General Steven A. Stebbins said in an April 3 memorandum to Hegseth that the probe would cover whether Hegseth and other military personnel complied with Department of Defense policies and procedures for using a commercial messaging application for official business.

“Additionally, we will review compliance with classification and records retention requirements,” he said.

A Department of Defense spokesperson told The Epoch Times in an email, “Per our longstanding policy, we don’t comment on ongoing investigations.”

Hegseth has not reacted as of yet to the development.

Hegseth and other top U.S. officials in mid-March messaged on Signal about strikes in Yemen against Houthi terrorists.

The Atlantic released the messages after Jeffrey Goldberg, its editor-in-chief, was added to the chat group.

Hegseth and the White House have said no classified information was shared.

Developing...

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 17:00

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Health And Human Services Layoffs Begin Leaving Federal Workers Stunned
Health And Human Services Layoffs Begin Leaving Federal Workers Stunned

The first stage of cuts to Health and Human Services (HHS) have begun with 10,000 employees slated to be fired in the coming weeks.  Pink slips have been replaced with deactivated key cards as workers line up at HHS offices across the country to find out if they still have a job.  The establishment media is out in force to paint a tragic narrative of "public servants" who only want to do good for less fortunate souls no unable to fulfill their calling.  It's all quite dramatic.



It's hard to say when government bureaucrats suddenly became an army of charitable saints sacrificing themselves for the good of humanity.  The HHS currently employs around 82,000 people within 10 regional offices and the average income for a worker is around $100,000 with benefits.  The majority of them are pencil pushers and social workers, not doctors or scientists making grand discoveries in medical technology.  When they do get involved in medical study, disasters seem to follow. 

Keep in mind that the HHS was partly involved in the funding of gain of function research by EcoHealth Alliance, which, in conjunction with projects run by Dr. Peter Daszak and Dr. Anthony Fauci at the NIH, reportedly led to the creation of human transmissible coronaviruses at the Wuhan Level 4 Virology Lab in China (ground zero for Covid).  

The annual budget of the HHS is $1.8 trillion - It accounts for around 20% of all federal dollars spent every year and tracking where this immense pool of cash goes is far more complex than the shady operations of USAID.  The agency is, by any measure, a monstrosity.  Cuts are intended to hit the FDA, CDC, and the NIH, all under the umbrella of the HHS. 



A large portion of programs instituted by HHS tap into pandemic funds set aside during covid (yes, the covid cash is still floating around after 5 years).  This money goes to support numerous programs that the majority of Americans voted against, including DEI programs, illegal immigrant programs and gender affirming care programs (gender based care for minors was indeed pursued by the HHS).  

The point is, it's not worth feeling sorry for these people.  When they had unmitigated power they abused it in grand fashion and everything that happens from here onward is pure Karma. 

Democrats in at least 23 states are taking action to sue the Trump Administration over the budget cuts and layoffs.  In the lawsuit, filed Tuesday, the states are seeking a temporary restraining order and injunctive relief to immediately halt the administration’s funding cuts that they say will lead to key public health services being discontinued and thousands of health-care workers losing their jobs.



The civil suits are unlikely to make much difference in the end, just as they failed to stop the cuts to USAID.  The HHS, now under the management of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is expected to undergo unprecedented changes in the coming months and a level of accountability the institution has probably never dealt with before.  

“The COVID-19 pandemic is over, and HHS will no longer waste billions of taxpayer dollars responding to a non-existent pandemic that Americans moved on from years ago. HHS is prioritizing funding projects that will deliver on President Trump’s mandate to address our chronic disease epidemic and Make America Healthy Again,” the agency said in a statement last week.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 17:20

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Tucker Carlson Horrified As Dr. Mary Talley Bowden Drops Chilling COVID Statistic
Tucker Carlson Horrified As Dr. Mary Talley Bowden Drops Chilling COVID Statistic

Via VigiliantFox.com,

Dr. Mary Talley Bowden left Tucker Carlson visibly shaken after dropping a chilling COVID vaccine statistic that’s impacting millions of children right now.



Before her appearance on Carlson’s show, Dr. Bowden, a Texas-based ENT specialist, rose to prominence in the medical freedom movement by speaking out against vaccine mandates and advocating for early treatment options like ivermectin.

She gained national attention after she was suspended by Houston Methodist Hospital for challenging the prevailing COVID narrative.



Despite the backlash, Bowden has remained committed to the Hippocratic Oath, successfully treating an impressive total of over 6,000 COVID patients without a single death.



Before Tucker became visibly disturbed, Dr. Bowden pointed to data from the CDC’s VAERS system, explaining that over 38,000 deaths have been reported following the rollout of the so-called COVID-19 vaccines.

She said that under normal circumstances, such numbers would’ve prompted the FDA to pull the shots.



Instead, they pushed forward, adding the COVID vaccine to the routine childhood schedule, with the expectation that babies receive three doses by just nine months of age.

She added that the shots are still under Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) for children under 12—not fully FDA approved—and yet they remain on the official vaccine schedule.



Tucker was horrified when Dr. Bowden mentioned a disturbing fact: “According to the CDC, 9 million American children have gotten the latest version of these COVID shots,” she said.

Clearly caught off guard, Carlson asked, “Actually?”

“Yes,” Bowden confirmed.

“Still?” he pressed.

“Yes. Yes. 9 million [kids]—12% [of US children have been injected].”

Tucker, in disbelief, asked, “Wait, this is going on right now?”

“Yes,” Bowden replied.

“I think we voted against this,” Tucker said.

“Yeah,” Bowden confirmed.

“Correct?” Tucker stressed.

“I don’t know,” Dr. Bowden answered.

“You’re very diplomatic, but I’m just stunned to learn that that’s happening right now,” Tucker exclaimed.

“Could this be shut down?” he asked.

“It should have been shut down a long time ago,” Dr. Bowden answered. “And you know, what’s the—”

Tucker interrupted: “9 million babies have had COVID shots?”

“Yeah. Well, children. Minors,” Dr. Bowden clarified.

Tucker’s reaction at the end says it all:


Carlson was horrified when Dr. Bowden mentioned a disturbing fact: “According to the CDC, 9 million American children have gotten the latest version of these COVID shots,” she said.
Clearly caught off guard, Carlson asked, “Actually?”
“Yes,” Bowden confirmed.
“Still?” he… pic.twitter.com/ihkbx4zKeJ
— The Vigilant Fox 🦊 (@VigilantFox) April 3, 2025
The conversation took another dark turn when Carlson asked about the potential long-term consequences of these shots, to which Dr. Bowden pointed to a disturbing trend.

“I don’t see a ton of cancer in my practice,” she said, “but I do have friends at MD Anderson, and they said they’ve never seen anything like it. The young people coming in with very advanced tumors, I think that’s what we have to be worried about now.”

She explained that getting updated cancer data is difficult, but the anecdotal reports are piling up. “It’s hard to get up-to-date cancer numbers, but I’m hearing all sorts of things. There are probably people who have access to that data, but publicly, it’s hard [to get access].”


The conversation took another darker turn when Carlson asked about the potential long-term consequences of these shots. Dr. Bowden pointed to a disturbing trend.
“I don’t see a ton of cancer in my practice,” she said, “but I do have friends at MD Anderson, and they said they’ve… pic.twitter.com/muaMqzmwkS
— The Vigilant Fox 🦊 (@VigilantFox) April 3, 2025
This raises a profound question we must now consider as a society: What have we done?

In our rush to vaccinate every man, woman, and child, have we compromised the long-term health of a population that never needed these shots in the first place?

What data was ignored? If so, who made decisions to ignore that data, and will they ever answer for the consequences? It’s time for a serious conversation about accountability.



You can watch the full, eye-opening conversation below:



*  *  *

If you like my work and want to support me and my family and help keep this page going strong, the most powerful thing you can do is sign up for the email list and become a paid subscriber.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 17:40

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US prosecutors pursue death penalty for Luigi Mangione, suspect in 2024 killing of healthcare CEO
Crime and law
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Wednesday, April 2, 2025 
File illustration of a court gavel. Credit:Quince media
On Tuesday, US Attorney General Pam Bondi made a statement announcing that she had advised prosecutors to pursue the death penalty against Luigi Mangione, the suspect in the shooting and killing of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson in December 2024. She was quoted saying: "Luigi Mangione's murder of Brian Thompson — an innocent man and father of two young children — was a premeditated, cold-blooded assassination that shocked America."
Mangione, 26, was arrested in Altoona, Pennsylvania in on December 9 after he was implicated in Thompson's death outside a hotel in Manhattan. On December 4, the CEO arrived there to attend a shareholder meeting, and he was shot by a masked gunman. After the incident, some health insurance employers opted for remote work and virtual shareholder meetings due to safety concerns.
Police arrested Mangione five days later in Altoona, Pennsylvania, about 230 miles from New York. They report that he had a ghost gun and anti-health-insurance writings with him at the time.
Mangione awaits trial at the Metropolitan Detention Center, a New York facility located in Brooklyn. He continues to deny the state charges, for which the maximum penalty under state law is life in prison without the possibility of parole. The state of New York has charged him with first-degree murder, murder as terrorism, and nine other offenses.
Mangione has not yet entered a plea for the charges on the federal level. These charges include murder through use of a firearm and interstate stalking, which make Mangione legally elegible for the death penalty.
Mangione's lawyer, Karen Friedman Agnifilo, responded to Bondi's statement announcing intent to seek the death penalty, saying: "the Justice Department has moved from the dysfunctional to the barbaric."

Sources[edit]
Brandon Drenon. "US prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione" — BBC News, April 1, 2025
Michael R. Sisak and Alanna Durkin Richer. "Federal prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione in UnitedHealthcare CEO’s killing" — AP News, April 1, 2025





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The Guardian (UK)
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The Guardian (UK)
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The US president’s tariffs are almost certain to have dire consequences and he is not impervious to market decline or public opinionSo much for the idea that “liberation day” would free financial markets from their fear of the unknown. Publication of precise tariff rates, went a cheerful line of advance thinking, would at least allow investors to assess the probable trade effects on the basis of hard information. True optimists clung to the idea that Donald Trump would not wish to risk a truly severe market reaction.That narrative was blown apart when the president reached for his pub-style display of wares. This really was a case of going back to the tariffs rates of the 1920s or 1930s. Not even the penguins of Heard Island and the McDonald Islands were spared. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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ZeroHedge News
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Microsoft Scales Back AI Data Center Projects In US, Australia, UK
Microsoft Scales Back AI Data Center Projects In US, Australia, UK

TD Cowen analyst Michael Elias has explained to clients through multiple notes over the last month that Microsoft has scaled back on data center projects in the U.S. and Europe. This development is unsurprising, as readers have been aware of the emerging risks posed by the cheaper and more efficient Chinese DeepSeek (as noted on Jan. 27), prompting us to question whether AI data capacity will be achieved sooner than initially anticipated.

Another worrying sign for the AI bubble—or rather, a continuation of Elias' reporting on Microsoft scaling back data center projects—comes from Bloomberg, which provides additional color on MSFT supposedly halting data center construction sites in Indonesia, the UK, Australia, Illinois, North Dakota, and Wisconsin. 

Here's more from the report, citing people familiar with talks (list courtesy of Bloomberg):


Microsoft recently withdrew from negotiations to lease space between London and Cambridge in the UK at a site being marketed for its ability to host advanced Nvidia chips, according to people familiar with the talks, who requested anonymity to discuss a private matter.


The company has also halted negotiations for data center space at a site near Chicago, according to a person familiar with the talks.


In some cases, Microsoft is delaying construction. For example, it has paused work on parts of a data center campus it owns about an hour outside of Jakarta, according to people familiar with the situation.


Microsoft also has put on hold some planned expansion at a site in Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin, part of a complex visited by then-President Joe Biden, according to another person.


In London, Microsoft was negotiating to lease space at Ada Infrastructure's 210-megawatt Docklands data center but has held off on committing to the project, according to people familiar with the matter.

Elias first raised concerns about Microsoft scaling back on AI computing capacity in a note on Feb. 24, in which he stated that Microsoft was terminating AI data center leases. This was followed by a separate note last week, in which the analyst reported that Microsoft had walked away from data center projects in the U.S. and Europe, amounting to a capacity of approximately 2 gigawatts of electricity.

"We continue to believe the lease cancellations and deferrals of capacity points to data center oversupply relative to its current demand forecast," Elias said last week. 

News of the cheaper Chinese DeepSeek—a response to OpenAI's ChatGPT—in late January, which is allegedly 40–50 times more efficient than other large language models, had Goldman's Rich Privorotsky at the time proposing a new theme that spelled bad news for the AI bubble: "If you can do more with less, it naturally raises the question of whether so much capacity is necessary."

The whole "do more with less" theme produced by DeepSeek sparked a debate that AI peak demand capacity could be reached much sooner than Goldman's forecast of late 2026. 



Capex revisions next?



Year to date, Goldman's AI and power baskets have gotten the memo...



Goldman's China AI basket leads US AI baskets.



. . .

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 15:25

The Hill
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Girl, 13, dies in house fire near Liverpool but seven others escape
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The Guardian (UK)
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Global markets in turmoil as Trump tariffs wipe $2.5tn off Wall Street
Economists say levies of between 10% and 50% have dramatically added to the risk of a worldwide downturnGlobal financial markets have been plunged into turmoil as Donald Trump’s escalating trade war knocked trillions of dollars off the value of the world’s biggest companies and heightened fears of a US recession.As world leaders reacted to the US president’s “liberation day” tariff policies demolishing the international trading order, about $2.5tn (£1.9tn) was wiped off Wall Street and share prices in other financial centres across the globe. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
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Trump tariffs breach NATO rules – Norway

Mail Online
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RICHARD LITTLEJOHN: What irony that Starmer's in the box seat for a U.S. trade deal thanks to Brexit - which he bitterly opposed and spent years trying to stop
Donald Trump dealt Keir Starmer a gold-plated Get Out Of Jail Free card when he dropped his global tariff bomb.

Mail Online
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Trump gives stunning response to Wall Street bloodbath as his tariffs cause biggest stock drop since Covid crash
Wall Street was shell shocked Thursday after the biggest stock market rout since Covid/ Trump's tariffs sparked fears of a US and global recession.

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Switch 2 Games Are More Expensive, and Tariffs Might Not Be the Reason Why
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Mortgage Rate Predictions for April: How Tariffs Will Impact Spring Homebuying
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This Smart Plug Manages Energy (and Energy Spending) Better Than Any I've Tested
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The Hottest Switch 2 Accessory Could Be… a Lap Desk
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Chase Is Now Blocking Some Zelle Charges. This Is What You Need to Know
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Best Smart Locks of 2025: Tested and Reviewed
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The Guardian (UK)
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Trump denies market turmoil is a problem, claiming ‘stock is going to boom’ – US politics live
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The Guardian (UK)
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All three major US index funds close down as Apple and Nvidia, two of US’s largest companies, lose combined $470bnTrump tariffs – live updatesUS stock markets tumbled on Thursday as investors parsed the sweeping change in global trading following Donald Trump’s announcement of a barrage of tariffs on the country’s trading partners.All three major US stock markets closed down in their worst day since June 2020, during the Covid pandemic. The tech-heavy Nasdaq fell 6%, while the S&P 500 and the Dow dropped 4.8% and 3.9%, respectively. Apple and Nvidia, two of the US’s largest companies by market value, had lost a combined $470bn in value by midday. Continue reading...

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Mail Online
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The Guardian (UK)
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Mail Online
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Sky News Home
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The 39 Best Movies on Hulu This Week (April 2025)
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Boing Boing
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The post All aboard for the puke party on luxury cruise liner Queen Mary 2 appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Let's be clear about what this is: It's literally just a lumpy stuffed dinosaur with a speaker, microphone, and chatbot crammed inside. — Read the rest
The post Dystopia for kids: this $249 stuffed dinosaur reports everything your child says back to you appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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TL;DR: Let this handy hidden camera detector uncover cameras, GPS trackers, bugs, and other invasions of your privacy when you're traveling and at home for just $39.99 (reg. $59). 
If you're on travel TikTok you may have seen videos of hidden cameras spying on travelers in hotel rooms and rentals. — Read the rest
The post Protect your privacy and score 33% off this hidden camera detector appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Get a coding education and the software you'll need to build things with this $56 bundle
TL;DR: Learn to code and get the software to do it with this Microsoft Visual Studio Professional 2022 and The Premium Learn to Code Certification Bundle now just $55.97 (reg. $1,999). 
Deep down, we all know we should learn how to code. — Read the rest
The post Get a coding education and the software you'll need to build things with this $56 bundle appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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The post Restoration Hardware CEO swears during interview when he sees collapsing stock price appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Register
Open 
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The Register
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ZeroHedge News
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'Disloyal' NSC Staffers Fired After Laura Loomer Brings Receipts To The White House
'Disloyal' NSC Staffers Fired After Laura Loomer Brings Receipts To The White House

Three staffers on the National Security Council have been fired after journalist Laura Loomer met with President Trump in the Oval Office on Wednesday, where she presented him with a list of 'disloyal' employees, the NY Times reports, thanks to ongoing (and copious) leaks from the administration.




Mr. Trump may act on some of Ms. Loomer’s recommendations, two of the people said. Ms. Loomer walked into the White House with a sheaf of papers, which amounted to a mass of opposition research attacking the character and loyalty of numerous N.S.C. officials, two of the people said. She proceeded to excoriate them in front of their boss, the national security adviser Michael Waltz, who was also in the meeting. -NYT


The rest of the Times report amounts to a character assassination on Loomer, which was to be expected - writing that "Loomer’s rhetoric and actions have been so extreme that she has alienated others even on the far right."

The White House meeting came after weeks of Loomer posting about various 'disloyal' Democrats within the Trump administration - including deputy national security adviser Alex Wong, who she says added a journalist from The Atlantic to a DoD Signal chat on behalf of his boss, national security adviser Michael Waltz (Waltz was in Wednesday's meeting, according to the report). In posts to X, Loomer noted that Wong's wife worked as a DOJ lawyer for the Biden and Obama administrations, and her father is a large shareholder in a Chinese satellite manufacturer.

The roughly 30-minute meeting with Loomer was held shortly before Trump's major tariff announcement in the White House Rose Garden. Also in the meeting aside from Waltz were VP JD Vance, Sergio Gor - the head of presidential personnel, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, and White House communications director Steven Cheung, according to the NYT's leakers.

Loomer Responds

"I woke up this morning to learn that there are still people in and around the West Wing who are LEAKING to the hostile, left-wing media about President Trump’s *confidential* and *private* meetings in the Oval Office," Loomer wrote on X in response to the news, adding that she would not divulge any details about her meeting.


I woke up this morning to learn that there are still people in and around the West Wing who are LEAKING to the hostile, left-wing media about President Trump’s *confidential* and *private* meetings in the Oval Office. I want to reiterate how important it is that people who gain…
— Laura Loomer (@LauraLoomer) April 3, 2025

According to Loomer, there's "More to come!"


“Exactly one hour before he received the termination email, Laura Loomer posted on social media about Mr. Schleifer, calling him a "Biden holdover.”
More to come! pic.twitter.com/ndc0qAXdf3
— Laura Loomer (@LauraLoomer) April 3, 2025

* * *

We've sold a TON of these lighter / flashlight combos...
Buy two for free shipping! (over $50) Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back
Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 14:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Massive International Pedophile Streaming Network Discovered; 2 Million Users Shared Child-Porn Across 35 Countries
Massive International Pedophile Streaming Network Discovered; 2 Million Users Shared Child-Porn Across 35 Countries

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

A massive darknet international pedophile child porn network calling itself “Kidflix” has been discovered and shut down by Europol.



Investigators stated that site shockingly had more than 91,000 child porn videos on it, with around three new videos being uploaded to its servers every hour.

Users were paying a fee for access to stream and upload their own videos of child sex abuse. They were able to make payments via cryptocurrencies to avoid a paper trail, and were given the incentive of earning tokens to spend on the site by uploading content.


Kidflix, one of the largest paedophile platforms in the world, has been shut down in an international operation against child sexual exploitation.
⏹️ Europol has supported authorities from 38 countries worldwide in shutting down the platform.
More: https://t.co/eoETaBNyBi pic.twitter.com/FPI9xkuTkE
— Europol (@Europol) April 2, 2025
Dozens of arrests were made, the agency announced Wednesday, noting that the network had around two million users and spanned across 35 countries.

The network was terminated at the direction of the Bavarian State Criminal Police Office in Germany.


One of the world’s largest pedophile networks, Kidflix, has been dismantled in a massive international operation against child exploitation.
Authorities from 38 countries, including the U.S., Canada, and Australia, collaborated in a global effort to shut down the platform.… pic.twitter.com/jQCpJxde8a
— Shadow of Ezra (@ShadowofEzra) April 3, 2025
German broadcaster NTV reports that 79 people have been arrested thus far, with around 1,400 further suspects identified.

The investigation spanned almost three years and has now concluded with thousands of electronic devices being seized and the servers of the monstrosity, located in both Germany and the Netherlands, being shut down.

The report notes that Europol officials believe those arrested not only watched and uploaded child pornography, but are also suspected of carrying out the sexual abuse of the children.

This isn’t even an isolated incident, these massive pedo operations are in play everywhere.


🇵🇱 OVER 1 MILLION CHILD P*RN FILES SEIZED IN POLAND
The files were uncovered during an extensive nationwide operation conducted by the Polish police.
They raided 112 locations, charging 75 suspects aged 16 to 78, with 31 in pre-trial detention.
Among the material were images… pic.twitter.com/ixfnO88ouv
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) November 12, 2024

𝗨.𝗦. 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗨.𝗞. 𝗔𝘂𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗿𝗶𝘁𝗶𝗲𝘀 𝗔𝗻𝗻𝗼𝘂𝗻𝗰𝗲 𝗖𝗿𝗮𝗰𝗸𝗱𝗼𝘄𝗻 𝗼𝗻 𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗔𝗻𝗻𝗲𝘅, '𝗢𝗻𝗲 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗟𝗮𝗿𝗴𝗲𝘀𝘁 𝗖𝗵𝗶𝗹𝗱 𝗣𝗼𝗿𝗻𝗼𝗴𝗿𝗮𝗽𝗵𝘆 𝗪𝗲𝗯𝘀𝗶𝘁𝗲𝘀 𝗚𝗹𝗼𝗯𝗮𝗹𝗹𝘆,' 𝗙𝗼𝗹𝗹𝗼𝘄𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗕𝗿𝗶𝘁𝗶𝘀𝗵 𝗖𝗼𝘂𝗿𝘁 𝗦𝗲𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗻𝗰𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗼𝗳… pic.twitter.com/9jHuscKLOT
— Shadow of Ezra (@ShadowofEzra) March 11, 2024

Still think child sex trafficking isn't a problem Canada? You'll want to give this a read...👇
Have you heard of the Canadian film company Azov Films?
Azov films was a Toronto based film company founded by Brian Way. The company was selling and streaming footage of naked… pic.twitter.com/g1MXUiXl8X
— 🇨🇦Unacceptable Canadian Girl🇨🇦 (@AreOhEssEyeEe) June 23, 2024

2 predators arrested & 9 children rescued in an ongoing investigation in SE Asia. 9 terabytes of data including child sexual abuse material were recovered at the scene.
1 terabyte alone can hold up to 1 million smartphone quality pictures, or thousands of hours of video. pic.twitter.com/Kvo1PVtaKv
— Our Rescue (@OURrescue) August 21, 2020

South Korean National and Hundreds of Others Charged Worldwide in the Takedown of the Largest Darknet Child Pornography Website, Which was Funded by Bitcoin@drawandstrike @catesduane @rising_serpent @almostjingo @tracybeanz @CarrollQuigley1 @dbonginohttps://t.co/yZOOXyL7t6
— Headsnipe011 (@Headsnipe011) October 16, 2019

WATCH 🚨 45 People Arrested For Being Child Predators, Prostitutes, Human Traffickers, Child Traffickers & Wanting To Eat Children, Yes Cannibalism “Sheriff told us about a man who he said wanted to eat a child. Yes. Eat her as in cannibalism, And that was just one of the… pic.twitter.com/Na04RsreXG
— IlluminatiCoin (@naticoineth) February 22, 2024
Earlier this year, French police announced arrested 37 people and seized over a million picture and video files of child pornography from computers, tablets, smartphones, and even cameras.

According to The French newspaper La Dépêche reported that the operation, which began in November, involved 270 gendarmes, including 36 cybercrime specialist investigators.


🚨 ALERTE INFO - 37 PEDOPHILES ARRÊTÉS DANS L’EST DE LA FRANCE
Plus de 1 MILLIONS DE FICHIERS PEDOPORNOGRAPHIQUE
Sur la saisis ont retrouvent 60 ordinateurs, 290 supports de stockage externes, 27 téléphones portables, huit tablettes, quatre caméras
Plus de 270 ENQUÊTEURS… pic.twitter.com/fP0CWWslMr
— AlertesPedo (@AlertesPed0) January 27, 2025
A separate international operation last December also led to the arrest of 95 people in France in connection to a cross-border child pornography ring.

In that case, police seized hundreds of devices with an estimated 375,000 photos and 156,000 videos of child pornography, making up 217 terabytes of data.


#BellesAffaires 🖥️ Démantèlement d’un important réseau pédopornographique international via l'application #Signal, par la SR de Versailles et les gendarmes du @CyberGEND :
➡️ 570 gendarmes mobilisés
➡️ 500k photos/vidéos découverts
➡️ 95 personnes ont été identifiées en France pic.twitter.com/xTC1UsJm6Y
— Gendarmerie nationale (@Gendarmerie) December 21, 2024
While investigators have managed to rescue some of the children who were victims of these horrendous activities in each case, the numbers are always disappointingly low, and it’s clear many thousands more, if not millions are still suffering.

The level of evil is unimaginable.

Leftists will tell you it’s all just a big conspiracy theory though.







And in some cases they will investigate anyone who tries to expose it.





*  *  *

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 15:05

Atlas Obscura
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Dough Nguyener’s Bakery in Gretna, Louisiana

Russia Today News
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The Guardian (UK)
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Sky News Home
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'Vile' police inspector caught in child sex sting
A 'vile' former police officer who was caught in a sting operation after travelling to meet what he thought was a 14-year-old boy has been jailed.

The Guardian (UK)
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Noel Clarke’s Bafta award raised fears he would be ‘untouchable’, court hears
Sources for sexual misconduct claims say honorary award, if given to actor, could have made his behaviour worseThe Guardian’s sources for sexual misconduct allegations against Noel Clarke feared an honorary award from Bafta would make him “untouchable” and increase the severity of his behaviour, the high court has heard.Sirin Kale, a co-author of the series of articles about the Doctor Who actor, said she did not believe that the sources collectively decided “they wanted to damage Clarke’s reputation”, as he claims. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump denies market turmoil is a problem, claiming ‘stock is going to boom’, as McConnell says tariffs ‘bad policy’ - US politics live
US president insists country is going to flourish as former Republican leader joins widespread criticism of Trump tariffsUS stock markets tumble as investors shaken by Trump tariffsIn the aftermath of the disastrous debate against Donald Trump that ultimately ended his political career, Joe Biden skipped a White House meeting with the congressional Progressive caucus in favor of a Camp David photoshoot with the fashion photographer Annie Leibovitz, a new book says.“You need to cancel that,” Ron Klain, Biden’s former chief of staff and debate prep leader, told the president, as he advocated securing the endorsement of the group of powerful progressive politicians perhaps key to his remaining the Democratic nominee. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
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Tariff troubles overshadow US olive branch at NATO
US Secretary of State Rubio was more conciliatory in tone with NATO allies, but the growing transatlantic chasm is hard to gloss over. Ukraine's future and European security are existential questions for the alliance.

Mail Online
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Girl, 13, killed in Prescot house fire: Five other children, a woman and man make lucky escape unharmed
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Mail Online
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Trump gives stunning response to Wall Street bloodbath caused by his tariffs
Wall Street was shell shocked Thursday after the biggest stock market rout since Covid/ Trump's tariffs sparked fears of a US and global recession.

Sky News Home
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Stock markets drop sharply after Trump tariffs - with one index set for worst day since COVID
Stock markets around the world opened to sharp lows after Donald Trump announced sweeping tariffs - with some economists now fearing a recession.

BBC World News
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Indonesia volcano eruption creates huge column of ash
Mount Marapi erupted on Thursday, sending a column of ash towering into the sky.

BBC World News
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Israeli strike on Gaza City school kills 27, health ministry says
Palestinian authorities say children were among the dead, while Israel says it hit a Hamas command-and-control centre.

Slashdot
Open 
Climate Crisis On Track To Destroy Capitalism, Warns Top Insurer
The climate crisis is on track to destroy capitalism, a top insurer has warned, with the vast cost of extreme weather impacts leaving the financial sector unable to operate. From a report: The world is fast approaching temperature levels where insurers will no longer be able to offer cover for many climate risks, said Günther Thallinger, on the board of Allianz SE, one of the world's biggest insurance companies. He said that without insurance, which is already being pulled in some places, many other financial services become unviable, from mortgages to investments.

Global carbon emissions are still rising and current policies will result in a rise in global temperature between 2.2C and 3.4C above pre-industrial levels. The damage at 3C will be so great that governments will be unable to provide financial bailouts and it will be impossible to adapt to many climate impacts, said Thallinger, who is also the chair of the German company's investment board and was previously CEO of Allianz Investment Management. The core business of the insurance industry is risk management and it has long taken the dangers of global heating very seriously. In recent reports, Aviva said extreme weather damages for the decade to 2023 hit $2tn, while GallagherRE said the figure was $400bn in 2024. Zurich said it was "essential" to hit net zero by 2050.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Oracle Tells Clients of Second Recent Hack, Log-In Data Stolen
An anonymous reader shares a report: Oracle has told customers that a hacker broke into a computer system and stole old client log-in credentials, according to two people familiar with the matter. It's the second cybersecurity breach that the software company has acknowledged to clients in the last month.

Oracle staff informed some clients this week that the attacker gained access to usernames, passkeys and encrypted passwords, according to the people, who spoke on condition that they not be identified because they're not authorized to discuss the matter. Oracle also told them that the FBI and cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike are investigating the incident, according to the people, who added that the attacker sought an extortion payment from the company. Oracle told customers that the intrusion is separate from another hack that the company flagged to some health-care customers last month, the people said.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Techdirt
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Doctor Who Will Celebrate Its Revival’s Big Anniversary With a New Documentary
Speaking to io9, showrunner Russell T Davies confirmed that a new documentary will look back on the making of Doctor Who's return–and why it's happening a little later than you might expect.

Gizmodo
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The Running Man Looks Proper Bonkers and Pure Edgar Wright
Glen Powell starts along with Coleman Domingo, Josh Brolin, Michael Cera, and more. It's out in November.

Mail Online
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Trump gives stunning response to Wall Street bloodbath caused by his tariffs
Stock markets plunged Thursday after President Donald Trump's historic tariff announcement, sparking fears of a US  and global recession. 

Sky News Home
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Two men in court as four arrested amid major police probe into gang feud
Two men have appeared in court amid a major police investigation into a feud between crime gangs in Edinburgh.

Sky News Home
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Sentebale chair's decision to spend almost £430,000 on consultants 'will form part of Charity Commission probe'
The decision by the chair of Prince Harry's Sentebale charity to spend almost half a million pounds on consultancy fees, and who she decided to pay, will form part of a Charity Commission investigation, according to an expert in charity governance.

The Guardian (UK)
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Chelsea v Tottenham: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offLive match centre | Read Football Daily | And mail NiallCraig Pawson gets us under way. Could be lively, this one.St. Totteringham’s Day thoughts: Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Cory Booker didn’t go to the bathroom for 25 hours. Is that ... OK?
The Democrat delivered the longest Senate speech in history. We asked urologists one pressing question about itOn Monday evening, Cory Booker, a Democratic senator for New Jersey, took the floor to denounce the harm he believes Donald Trump and his administration have inflicted on the United States. “Our country is in crisis,” he said, decrying the economic chaos, mass layoffs and tyrannical acts of the administration’s first 71 days. He stopped speaking 25 hours and five minutes later, making it the longest Senate speech in history.Many praised Booker for the rousing political act. Some were also impressed by a particular physical feat: namely, he seemingly didn’t pee once the whole time. (A rep for Booker confirmed to TMZ that he did not wear a diaper during his speech.) Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Man catches Hertfordshire hawk that attacked villagers for weeks
Steve Harris, 40, throws cage over belligerent bird in his garden after it stalked him while he was out joggingA hawk that has been terrorising male residents of a Hertfordshire village for weeks has been captured by a local man after it stalked him through the village while he was jogging.Dozens of villagers in Flamstead, near Luton, have reported being attacked from behind by the bird, identified as a Harris’s hawk. Some have been left bleeding and in at least one case requiring hospital treatment. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Pentagon watchdog to investigate Pete Hegseth over Signal war-planning chat leak
Defense chief and others discussed US military operations on messaging app that included journalistThe inspector general of the Department of Defense (DOD) is launching an investigation into Pentagon secretary Pete Hegseth’s use of the encrypted messaging app Signal to discuss sensitive information about military operations in Yemen.The probe, announced on Thursday, follows a bipartisan request from the Senate armed services committee after allegations emerged that highly precise – and most likely classified – intelligence about impending US airstrikes in Yemen, including strike timing and aircraft models, had been shared in a Signal group chat that included a journalist. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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McConnell condemns ‘bad’ tariff policy after Trump secretary says president won’t stand down from latest levies – live
Former Republican leader criticized Trump tariffs; Howard Lutnick says US president stands by decision to impose sweeping tariffs US stock markets tumble as investors shaken by Trump tariffsIn the aftermath of the disastrous debate against Donald Trump that ultimately ended his political career, Joe Biden skipped a White House meeting with the congressional Progressive caucus in favor of a Camp David photoshoot with the fashion photographer Annie Leibovitz, a new book says.“You need to cancel that,” Ron Klain, Biden’s former chief of staff and debate prep leader, told the president, as he advocated securing the endorsement of the group of powerful progressive politicians perhaps key to his remaining the Democratic nominee. Continue reading...

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Boy saved from burning car after deadly crash caused by suicidal ex-pilot, inquest hears
A workman saved a seven-year-old boy from a burning car in the aftermath of a deadly crash caused by a suicidal ex-pilot, an inquest has heard.

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Sentebale chair's decision to spend almost half a million pounds on consultancy 'will form part of Charity Commission probe'
The decision by the chair of Prince Harry's Sentebale charity to spend almost half a million pounds on consultancy fees, and who she decided to pay, will form part of a Charity Commission investigation, according to an expert in charity governance.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Girl, 13, killed in blaze as seven others escape
Police and firefighters say two adults and five children survived the fire.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Harris hawk captured after tormenting villagers
A resident says he was able to humanely catch the hawk, which has attacked an estimated 50 people.

Ars Technica
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Employee pricing for all, tariffs on the sticker: OEMs react to tariffs

Ars Technica
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Feeling curious? NotebookLM can now discover data sources for you.

Ars Technica
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SpaceX just took a big step toward reusing Starship’s Super Heavy booster

Ars Technica
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Critics suspect Trump’s weird tariff math came from chatbots

UK Government News
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Organised Immigration Crime Summit organised by the United Kingdom on the 31 March 2025: UK statement to the OSCE
Ambassador Holland updates on UK and partners' efforts to fight against Organised Immigration Crime and the protection of our collective border security.

Boing Boing
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Buying sunglasses in Brazil requires a degree in psychological bargaining tactics
In Brazil buying a pair of children's sunglasses requires an elaborate bargaining ritual complete with coffee service and multiple sales staff, as London School of Economics professor Christopher Sandmann discovered during a family vacation.
Writing on The Holdup Problem, Sandmann describes entering a high-end optical shop with his two-year-old son, where they were greeted by no fewer than six employees. — Read the rest
The post Buying sunglasses in Brazil requires a degree in psychological bargaining tactics appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Stocks plunge further as tariff news sinks in
Turmoil has engulfed the republic. Yesterday, President Trump announced worldwide tariffs on imports, described as reciprocal but in fact based on the balance of trade with each territory. The peculiar formula and other oddities, such as tariffs on trade from uninhabited islands, compounded the inevitable: a bad day at the stock market. — Read the rest
The post Stocks plunge further as tariff news sinks in appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Unlicensed doctor tries to flee U.S. when surgery turns to nightmare — but he doesn't get very far
A 38-year-old gentleman posing as a doctor in New York tried to flee the country after one of his procedures left a woman in critical condition. But he didn't get very far when police arrested him at John F. Kennedy International airport with an unused ticket to Colombia in hand. — Read the rest
The post Unlicensed doctor tries to flee U.S. when surgery turns to nightmare — but he doesn't get very far appeared first on Boing Boing.

TechRadar Reviews
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Emsisoft Anti-Malware Home review

TechRadar Reviews
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I loved how easy it was to create a VistaPrint photo book, and the end results are great – with a few exceptions

ZeroHedge News
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Auto Tariffs Pump Brakes On Jeep Owner; Stellantis Pauses Canada, Mexico Plants 
Auto Tariffs Pump Brakes On Jeep Owner; Stellantis Pauses Canada, Mexico Plants 

President Trump's 25% tariffs on imported vehicles took effect overnight, with the first signs of impact materializing Thursday morning—i.e., shares of U.S. carmakers tumbled in the early cash session, and Stellantis NV announced plans to temporarily suspend production lines in both Canada and Mexico.

Bloomberg reported that the global automaker overseeing 14 car brands will pause production at its Windsor, Ontario plant for two weeks starting next Monday. Details about how long production lines in Mexico would remain offline were not disclosed.

"With the new automotive sector tariffs now in effect, it will take our collective resilience and discipline to push through this challenging time," Antonio Filosa, head of the company's North American operations, told employees in a memo earlier. He said the move will affect employees at "several" of the company's U.S. powertrain and stamping facilities supporting Canada and Mexico operations. 

Bernstein analyst Daniel Roeska warned clients that a "25% automotive imports lasting beyond four to six weeks would likely have a chilling effect on the entire sector as [automakers] need to grapple with significant impact to the bottom line." 

TD Cowen's Itay Michaeli described the tariffs as "close to the worst case outcome vs. recent expectations," while Barclays' Dan Levy warned: "there are no 'winners' in the absolute – only relative winners."

Upcoming production changes at some of Stellantis' factories in Canada and Mexico are some of the first effects of Trump's 25% tariffs on auto imports. The administration's move is to revive America's industrial base, and the only way to do that is to use tariffs to force companies to re-shore operations. 

Wedbush analyst Dan Ives told clients that "the concept of a U.S. carmaker with parts all from the U.S. is a fictional tale that does not exist and would take years to make this concept a reality." 

CNBC noted, "Parts that are currently compliant with the USMCA trade deal will be tariff-free, but only until the secretary of commerce and Customs and Border Protection establish processes to impose levies on non-U.S. content." 

In markets, automakers were pressured lower with broader main equity indexes. General Motors dropped 2.4%, Ford -2.2%, Rivian -3%, Lucid -4%, and Tesla -3.5%



An analysis we shared with readers on Tuesday, "Trade War Hits The Gas: Trump's Auto Tariffs To Reshape Global Manufacturing," provides more color into how the repercussions of the auto tariffs could be far more impactful than initially appear—impacting everything from dealership showrooms to global supply chains.

The move to restore America's hallowed industrial core begins.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 13:25

ZeroHedge News
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This Trump Shock Is A Reverse Nixon
This Trump Shock Is A Reverse Nixon

By Michael Every of Rabobank

Hoot Small-ly and Reverse Nixon Again

In line with the Churchillian tone I had struck, yesterday’s US tariffs were historic and suggest a world-wide battle. It remains to be seen in what form, with what outcome, but global bifurcation is again on the cards. The US raised its weighted-average tariff to 29%, the highest in over 100 years, and above the Smoot-Hawley tariffs of the 1930s. That’s staggering, not just for the US, or inflation or GDP, but for the global system built on the US as consumer of last resort for everyone else’s overproduction and the US dollar as the lubricant for that trade and the US financial assets everyone accumulates as a result.

The US assumed a non-tariff barrier with each trade partner leading to reciprocal tariffs as the simple function of the US bilateral trade deficit as a ratio of exports to it, e.g., Indonesia runs a $17.9bn trade surplus with the US and exports $28bn to it, so $17.9/$28 = the 64% assumed Indonesian trade barrier, which the US offered a ‘discount’ on down to 32%. On one hand, this is nonsense. On the other, it’s exactly what Ricardian theory says should happen under free trade: all bilateral flows should balance, with the composition of the basket shifting with comparative advantage. That it never does for the US shows the theory isn’t true; so, the US is using both hands to pull down the system ostensibly based on it. It’s critical to understand that before talking about the numbers below and hooting small-ly about Smoot-Hawley.

We got massive increases in tariffs on Asian exporters like Bangladesh (37%), Cambodia (49%), China (34%), India (26%), Indonesia (32%), Japan (24%), South Korea (25%), Thailand (36%), and Vietnam (46%). Moreover, these are stackable on top of pre-exiting tariffs, so China faces 54% at least, with the threat of another 25% for buying Venezuelan oil and another 25-50% for buying Russian oil. That is a dramatic escalation between the world’s two largest economies.



The EU fared slightly better (20%), but which is four times higher than what we had presumed in our own model assumptions.

Most others, including the UK, Australia, and New Zealand got 10%, a divide-and-rule tactic we’d expected, as did Latin America, the Monroe Doctrine also expected, especially if the US now offers dollar liquidity to help shift supply chains in that direction. But what then for Brazilian agri trade to China?

Nobody --except Russia(but that's because it is under sanctions)-- was overlooked: even a small island off Australia got a 10% tariff for its population of penguins, and the closest of US defence allies like Israel and the Philippines face 17%, while Iran only sees 10%. The only exemptions apart from Canada and Mexico were on steel and aluminium, autos, copper, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, bullion, energy and other minerals not available in the US; but the first three already have 25% tariffs in place, with the rest waiting for one.

The US postal de minimis loophole is also over for everyone with a tariff once systems are ready, except for bonafide gifts and items brought into the US while traveling. That upends a lot of e-commerce.

We now start the next phase of negotiation and/or retaliation. It’s hard to imagine the UK, Australia, or New Zealand will rock the boat, and the same is true for anyone getting just a 10% tariff. Indeed, Latin America may be rubbing its hands at the geostrategic windfall ahead.

But what about Asia? For example, will China allow CNY to move lower? Does that drag other FX down with it? Does the US then raise tariffs even higher? Or will China switch to domestic consumption, which would be inflationary? What are the options for Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, and India? They can’t “trade more with China” unless it plays the US importer/consumer role, but it won’t want to import more. So, does all of Asia inflate domestically with the US, or sink into deflation? Or does everyone but China pivot to the US side vs. China?

We have already published a report on what we expect Europe to do and underlined the risks of escalation that risks rapidly moving from trade into other areas. Indeed, the US is already pressuring Europe to buy American weapons rather than local as it rearms: if Europe accepts, maybe the trade war and security issues are resolved in tandem; and if it refuses, Europe may face more US intractability on NATO, and trade, and energy, and perhaps even on dollar swaplines.

Another key point to stress is renewed talk of ‘dedollarisation’. Notably, US 10-year yields are going down, now at just 4.06%, even though inflation will almost certainly be seen and for some time. The DXY broad dollar index is dropping, and even Asian exporters hit by massive tariffs are only seeing slight selloffs in their FX. Indeed, JPY is rallying despite Japan being reliant on the US for its defense as well as exports, as is EUR, with Europe reliant on the US for energy and tech on top of security and exports. Crypto tumbled, but gold hit a new record high before dipping.

However, the initial FX reaction reflects repatriation of US assets; and it overlooks the CNY threat and that there can’t be a global system within which JPY and EUR can thrive without the dollar’s current role. That’s hard to accept, but it’s true.

An ECB speaker just said Europe has a unique opportunity to push the global use of the Euro. Yet besides requiring the issuance of Eurobonds, a huge hurdle, that would see Europe run capital account surpluses, as funds flood in, and matching current account deficits, as foreign goods flood in too. In short, Europe would follow the US in deindustrialising, financialising, and polarising just as it needs unifying and militarising. Yet Europe would also need a large military to have a true global reserve currency role, because those with such muscle won’t just roll over!

While US actions show it wants to stop the dollar being a lubricant for most exporters to it and conduit for financial assets back to them, it doesn’t want to lose its role in commodity pricing, and global trade, settlements, and debt. History shows a country can retain a global FX reserve even without a trade deficit, but it takes mercantilism to do it – which we are now seeing.

As I say, the implications are so large that markets don’t fully grasp them, or don’t want to. It’s one thing for them to have been forced to recognize that guns now matter as well as butter, but it’s another to realize life is now about gunship diplomacy (“We have 11 aircraft carriers: we get to say which currency commodities are priced in. Understand?”). Equally, macro models trying to capture what this means presume everything returns to mean and vast net trade deficits are absorbed by the system. If they don’t, the model breaks; here, the system does.

One may disagree with Yanis Varoufakis on many things, but he knows his economic history – which markets don’t. He begins a recent must-read (‘Will Liberation Day transform the world? The Nixon Shock set a radical precedent’) thus:


“My philosophy, Mr President, is that all foreigners are out to screw us and it’s our job to screw them first.” With these words, the US Treasury Secretary convinced the President to deliver a colossal shock to the global economy. In the words of one of the President’s men, the objective was to trigger “a controlled disintegration of the world economy”.

No, those words were not spoken by members of President Trump’s team in advance of their “Liberation Day” tariff splurge. While the “foreigners are out to screw us” certainly has a Trumpian ring, it was uttered in the summer of 1971 by then Treasury Secretary John Connally, who succeeded in convincing his President to unleash the infamous Nixon Shock a couple of days later.

Commentators should know better than to pretend that the shock Trump is now delivering is both “unprecedented” and bound to fail like all “reckless” assaults on the prevailing order. The Nixon Shock was more devastating than the one delivered today, especially for Europeans. And precisely because of the economic devastation caused, its architects achieved their main long-term objective: to ensure American hegemony grew alongside America’s twin (trade and government budget) deficits.

The success of the Nixon Shock in no way guarantees the success of Trump’s version, but it does remind us that what is good for America’s rulers is not necessarily good for most Americans or, indeed, for the world.

One of the smartest Nixon advisers, who helped to convince Connally of the need for a shock, articulated this point with brilliant clarity: “It is tempting to look at the market as an impartial arbiter. But balancing the requirements of a stable international system against the desirability of retaining freedom of action for national policy, a number of countries, including the US, opted for the latter.”

Then with one additional phrase he undermined all of the assumptions on which Western Europe and Japan had erected their post-war economic miracles: “A controlled disintegration in the world economy is a legitimate objective for the Eighties.”

And 10 months after giving this lecture, the man in question, Paul Volcker, rose to the Presidency of the Federal Reserve. Soon, US interest rates were doubled, then trebled. The controlled disintegration of the world economy, which had started when President Nixon was convinced by Connally and Volcker to dismantle the hitherto stable exchange rates regime, was now being completed with interest rate hikes that were far more devastating than Trump’s tariffs can ever be today.

Trump is therefore not the first President to seek the controlled disintegration of the world economy by means of a devastating blow. Nor is he the first to purposely damage America’s allies to renew and prolong US hegemony. Nor the first who was prepared to hurt Wall Street in the short run in the process of strengthening US capital accumulation in the long term. Nixon had done all that half a century earlier. And the irony is that the world the Western liberal establishment is grieving over today came into being as a result of the Nixon Shock.”


He concludes: “Every generation likes to think it is on a cusp of some historic transformation. But ours is cursed enough to actually be on such a cusp. So rather than focusing too much on the character of the man in the White House, we would do well to recall that the Nixon Shock was much more important than Nixon. If Nixon reshaped the world once, leaving it nastier and more unbalanced, Trump can certainly do it again.”

This Trump Shock is, again, a reverse Nixon: to take the US from trade deficits and financialisation back to raw US mercantilist power, using parts of the old system to do so. (As I have put it, using economic statecraft; or, using financial Fartcraft to shift back to Warcraft.)

That’s as: the US put sanctions on some Russian entities; Israel blew up the runway of the Syrian airbase Turkey is taking over; the US pours military equipment into the Middle East; the US senate pencils in $5 trillion in tax cuts over the next decade; and Elon Musk is rumored to be leaving the White House circle soon --stocks rallied (“No more DOGE corruption-cutting!”)-- which he denied.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 13:45

ZeroHedge News
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'Disloyal' NSC Staffers Fired After Laura Loomer Brings Receipts To The White House
'Disloyal' NSC Staffers Fired After Laura Loomer Brings Receipts To The White House

Three staffers on the National Security Council have been fired after journalist Laura Loomer met with President Trump in the Oval Office on Wednesday, where she presented him with a list of 'disloyal' employees, the NY Times reports, thanks to ongoing (and copious) leaks from the administration.




Mr. Trump may act on some of Ms. Loomer’s recommendations, two of the people said. Ms. Loomer walked into the White House with a sheaf of papers, which amounted to a mass of opposition research attacking the character and loyalty of numerous N.S.C. officials, two of the people said. She proceeded to excoriate them in front of their boss, the national security adviser Michael Waltz, who was also in the meeting. -NYT


The rest of the Times report amounts to a character assassination on Loomer, which was to be expected - writing that "Loomer’s rhetoric and actions have been so extreme that she has alienated others even on the far right."

The White House meeting came after weeks of Loomer posting about various 'disloyal' Democrats within the Trump administration - including deputy national security adviser Alex Wong, who she says added a journalist from The Atlantic to a DoD Signal chat on behalf of his boss, national security adviser Michael Waltz (Waltz was in Wednesday's meeting, according to the report). In posts to X, Loomer noted that Wong's wife worked as a DOJ lawyer for the Biden and Obama administrations, and her father is a large shareholder in a Chinese satellite manufacturer.

The roughly 30-minute meeting with Loomer was held shortly before Trump's major tariff announcement in the White House Rose Garden. Also in the meeting aside from Waltz were VP JD Vance, Sergio Gor - the head of presidential personnel, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, and White House communications director Steven Cheung, according to the NYT's leakers.

Loomer Responds

"I woke up this morning to learn that there are still people in and around the West Wing who are LEAKING to the hostile, left-wing media about President Trump’s *confidential* and *private* meetings in the Oval Office," Loomer wrote on X in response to the news, adding that she would not divulge any details about her meeting.


I woke up this morning to learn that there are still people in and around the West Wing who are LEAKING to the hostile, left-wing media about President Trump’s *confidential* and *private* meetings in the Oval Office. I want to reiterate how important it is that people who gain…
— Laura Loomer (@LauraLoomer) April 3, 2025

According to Loomer, there's "More to come!"


“Exactly one hour before he received the termination email, Laura Loomer posted on social media about Mr. Schleifer, calling him a "Biden holdover.”
More to come! pic.twitter.com/ndc0qAXdf3
— Laura Loomer (@LauraLoomer) April 3, 2025

*  *  *

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Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 14:05

Atlas Obscura
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The Tomato Place in Vicksburg, Mississippi

Mail Online
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I went to hospital and had to wait 16 hours for surgery - when I woke up I realised they had amputated my leg
Molly Harbron, 26, said she was in 'a lot of pain' as she made her way to Dewsbury and District Hospital in West Yorkshire.

Mail Online
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Celebrity Big Brother 'embroiled in bullying row' as housemate 'who left Christine McGuinness in floods of tears' is set to enter
Although Christine did not clarify who she was talking about, she lifted the lid on the incident in her autobiography A Beautiful Nightmare.

The Guardian (UK)
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Danish PM tells US ‘you cannot annex another country’ on visit to Greenland
Mette Frederiksen, who met island’s new and outgoing PMs, says she wants to cooperate with Trump on Arctic securityThe Danish prime minister has put on a show of unity with Greenlandic leaders in her first visit to the Arctic island since Donald Trump’s renewed threats to acquire the territory, telling the US: “You cannot annex another country.”Speaking onboard an inspection ship in front of a military helicopter, alongside Greenland’s new prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, and its outgoing prime minister, Múte B Egede, Mette Frederiksen switched from Danish to English to address the diplomatic standoff with the Trump administration. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Severe storms and tornadoes rip across US south and midwest, killing at least seven
White House approves Tennessee’s state of emergency request as further fatalities expected to be confirmedViolent storms and tornadoes have torn across the US south and midwest, killing at least seven people and downing power lines and trees, smashing homes, and upturning cars across multiple states.The outbreak of storms and tornadoes has resulted in at least seven deaths in Tennessee and Missouri, with further fatalities expected to be confirmed. One of the victims has been named: a 68-year-old man called Garry Moore who was a fire chief in Cape Girardeau county, Missouri. At least a dozen injuries have also been reported from the storms. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Olmo and Pau Víctor cleared to play on but La Liga says Barcelona have failed FFP
Spanish sports council upholds Barça’s complaintLeague queries disappearance of €100m from accountsDani Olmo and Pau Víctor can continue to play until the end of the season after the Spanish sports council (CSD) upheld Barcelona’s appeal against the league’s decision to unregister them because the club did not meet a 31 December deadline on financial controls.The judgment comes a day after La Liga said Barcelona still did not comply with the salary limit set and that it would report the club’s former auditors after €100m effectively disappeared from their accounts. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Worcester wind back to life with second-tier return and vow to clear debts
Warriors to return next season in new-look Tier 2 leagueTeam to play at Sixways after ‘challenging process’Worcester Warriors insist they will be both sustainable and competitive when they return to English rugby’s second tier next season almost three years after going bust. The club’s new owners have had to provide stringent financial guarantees and commit to repaying rugby creditors left high and dry when Worcester went into administration with debts of more than £2 5m in September 2022.In the past clubs such as Richmond and London Welsh have been forced to start again at the foot of the English pyramid but a condition of Worcester’s return to the new-look Tier 2 league is that outstanding debts to, among others, HMRC and the Department for Culture, Media and Sport will be settled by the end of the year. In addition, the new owners have already made substantial payments to the administrators. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Chelsea v Tottenham: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offLive match centre | Read Football Daily | And mail NiallHere’s Ange! “The squad is getting there in terms of personnel, numbers and match fitness – the international break was good for us. We’re in a better place. It’s going to be in a tough game tonight, against a top-quality team.”On Romero and Van de Ven starting together, he says: “We’ve missed that, the understanding that those two seemed to have from day one. Having those two back, it gives us real good opportunities to build from the back.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Is it OK not to pee for 25 hours?
Cory Booker delivered the longest Senate speech in history. We asked urologists one pressing question about it On Monday evening, Cory Booker, a Democratic senator for New Jersey, took the floor to denounce the harm he believes Donald Trump and his administration have inflicted on the United States. “Our country is in crisis,” he said, decrying the economic chaos, mass layoffs and tyrannical acts of the administration’s first 71 days. He stopped speaking 25 hours and five minutes later, making it the longest Senate speech in history.Many praised Booker for the rousing political act. Some were also impressed by a particular physical feat: namely, he seemingly didn’t pee once the whole time. (A rep for Booker confirmed to TMZ that he did not wear a diaper during his speech.) Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Global markets in turmoil as Trump tariffs wipe $2tn off Wall Street
Economists say levies of 10-50% have dramatically added to the risk of a worldwide downturnGlobal financial markets have been plunged into turmoil as Donald Trump’s escalating trade war knocked trillions of dollars off the value of the world’s biggest companies and heightened fears of a US recession.As world leaders reacted to the US president’s “liberation day” tariff policies demolishing the international trading order, about $2tn (£1.5tn) was wiped off Wall Street and share prices in other financial centres across the globe. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
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See all the Trump tariffs by country
A table showing all the new US tariffs announced by President Trump on Wednesday

The Hill
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White House postpones Saturday garden tours due to anti-Trump demonstrations
The White House is rescheduling one of its annual spring garden tour dates due to a "massive" anti-Trump demonstration expected to take place near 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. The spring garden tours that were scheduled for Saturday have been pushed a day later, to Sunday, the White House announced Thursday. "This decision has been made out...

The Hill
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How President Trump could get a third term
Donald Trump may attempt to run for a third term in 2028 by endorsing a loyalist GOP ticket for president and vice president, winning back the House, and becoming Speaker, or by refusing to accept electoral defeat and imposing martial law or a military coup.

The Hill
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Chimp relatives use humanlike grammar, study finds
Humans are not the only species to combine concepts to build more complex meaning, a new study found. Bonobo chimpanzees combine calls in a manner similar to how humans structure words to make phrases and sentences, according to findings published on Thursday in the journal Science. The pygmy chimpanzees “seem to combine calls to convey meaning that...

The Hill
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Pence on Trump tariffs: 'Largest peacetime tax hike in U.S. history'
Former Vice President Mike Pence warned about the economic and political risks of the Trump administration’s sweeping reciprocal tariffs on other nations, calling them the “largest peacetime tax hike in U.S. history.” Pence, who served alongside President Trump during his first term, posted on the social platform X following Wednesday’s announcement that the tariffs “are...

The Hill
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Staff working on childhood lead exposure and cancer clusters fired from CDC
Staff members who fought childhood lead exposure and those who worked on cancer clusters were among those fired from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), a now former employee told The Hill. The entire permanent staff of the Division of Environmental Health Science and Practice was cut, according to one person who was...

The Hill
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Impeaching judges should never be off the table
The anti-federalists, who were critics of the proposed Constitution of 1787, saw danger in total judicial independence. 

The Hill
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ICE to release Venezuelan man seeking to give his brother kidney transplant
Jose Gregorio Gonzalez had been detained by ICE after he accompanied his brother, Jose Alfredo Gonzalez, to a kidney dialysis appointment.

The Hill
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Canada announces 25 percent tariff on non-USMCA compliant US auto imports
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney announced on Thursday his country will impose 25-percent tariffs on U.S. auto imports that do not comply with the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) on free trade. Carney said the tariffs are a direct response to President Trump’s 25-percent auto tariffs, which took effect Thursday. “As I told President Trump during our...

The Hill
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Ford offering employee pricing to all shoppers in wake of Trump tariffs
Automotive giant Ford announced that it will be offering employee pricing to all of their shoppers in the wake of President Trump’s new sweeping tariff package.  Ford is kicking off its “From America, For America” campaign on Thursday. The effort, which Ford calls the “handshake deal with every American,” will be advertised on social media,...

Mail Online
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Tom Cruise breaks silence on Top Gun co-star Val Kilmer's shock death at 65
Tom Cruise has paid an emotional tribute to his Top Gun co-star Val Kilmer after his shock death aged 65 this week.

ZDNet News
Open 
These wireless headphones are an audiophile's dream - and my new all-time favorite
If you're looking for headphones with sonic clarity and brilliant EQ, the Dali IO-8 will transport you to audio nirvana.

ZDNet News
Open 
How Bill Gates, the Altair 8800 and BASIC propelled me into the PC revolution
In 1975, Bill and I were using the same computing tech - the Altair 8800 and DEC's PDP-10 - as BASIC became a gateway for generations of developers. Where were you all those decades ago?

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
NTSB Warns of Boeing Evacuation Slide Issues
The agency issued recommendations to the FAA and Boeing on Thursday.

BBC UK News
Open 
Sword attack victim: 'I cannot get back to normal'
A safeguarding review has been launched after a 15-year-old boy was sentenced for attempted murder.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump fires national security officials after far-right activist Laura Loomer urged him to in meeting – report
Loomer reportedly presented Trump with opposition research on national security council officials at Oval OfficeFollow US politics liveLaura Loomer, a far-right conspiracy theorist and Islamophobic former Republican congressional candidate banned from Uber, Paypal and some social media platforms, has apparently been successful in pushing the White House to fire national security staffers for disloyalty.The White House reportedly fired at least three national security council senior aides involved in the Signal leak debacle. Senior director of intelligence Brian Walsh, senior director for legislative affairs Thomas Boodry and a senior director overseeing tech and national security, David Feith, have all been let go post-meeting, CNN reports. But that number could be up to six staffers now, according to the New York Times. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reading owner granted sale extension by EFL amid suspension threat
Dai Yongge given until 22 April to divest interests in clubEFL believes Dai more motivated than previously to sellReading have been granted an extension until 22 April by the English Football League for their owner, Dai Yongge, to sell the club. Reading had been at risk of suspension if they failed to show adequate signs of progress.Dai was disqualified under the league’s owners’ and directors’ test in February due to debts and court rulings in his native China but the troubled League One club were permitted an extension on the initial 28-day period in which Dai needed to divest his shares, until this Saturday. The EFL, whose board met at their monthly meeting on Thursday, has now given Dai more time to sell. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea v Tottenham: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offLive match centre | Read Football Daily | And mail Niall“With Chelsea vying for a European spot and Spurs battling for an Australian’s place in the dugout, this Cockney clash has the feel of an international night,” writes Peter Oh. I should warn you – I’ve already had words from a disgruntled, West-Ham-following colleague about calling either of these teams Cockneys.Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Sánchez; Gusto, Chalobah, Colwill, Cucurella; Caicedo, Fernández (c); Neto, Palmer, Sancho; Jackson. Subs: Jörgensen, Adarabioyo, Badiashile, Acheampong, James, Dewsbury-Hall, Madueke, George, Nkunku. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Henman Hill to get shelter under fresh Wimbledon expansion plans
Multimillion-pound project will also boost capacity by 20% and improve wheelchair accessibilityDifferent generations of tennis fans may disagree on its name – to traditionalists it will always be Henman Hill, millennials probably plump for Murray Mound and gen Z may know it as Raducanu Rise or even, regrettably, Jack’s Stack – but all ages can agree that bringing a little shelter to Wimbledon’s most famous viewing area can only be a good thing.Wimbledon’s Hill – which since 1997 has allowed tennis fans with a grounds pass to watch the action on No 1 Court live atop its grassy knoll – is getting a makeover, the All England Lawn and Tennis Club (AELTC) has announced. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Man catches Hertfordshire hawk that has been attacking villagers for weeks
Steve Harris, 40, throws cage over belligerent bird in his garden after it stalked him while he was out joggingA hawk that has been terrorising male residents of a Hertfordshire village for weeks has been captured by a local man after it stalked him through the village while he was jogging.Dozens of villagers in Flamstead, near Luton, have reported being attacked from behind by the bird, identified as a Harris’s hawk. Some have been left bleeding and in at least one case requiring hospital treatment. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
FTSE 100 suffers biggest one-day fall since August as Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs wipes trillions off global markets – business live
Shares slump on both sides of the Atlantic, and across Asia-Pacific, as US dollar falls to six month low after US President Trump’s ‘liberation day’ tariffs fuel recession fearsFull report: Trump announces sweeping new tariffsAnalysis: Trump’s tariffs likely to raise prices and cause chaosWhat are tariffs and why do they matter?The new US tariffs “will only create losers” with US consumers particularly hard hit, the German Automotive Industry Association (VDA), has said in a statement, calling on the EU “to act together and with the necessary force, while continuing to signal its willingness to negotiate.”The body, which represents the powerful German auto industry, said the tariffs markedthe United States’ departure from the rules-based global trade order – and thus a departure from the foundation for global value creation and corresponding growth and prosperity in many regions of the world.This is not America first; this is America alone. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Global markets in turmoil as Trump tariffs wipe £1.5tn off Wall Street
Economists say levies of 10-50% have dramatically added to the risk of a worldwide downturnGlobal financial markets have been plunged into turmoil as Donald Trump’s escalating trade war knocked trillions of dollars off the value of the world’s biggest companies and heightened fears of a US recession.As world leaders reacted to the US president’s “liberation day” tariff policies demolishing the international trading order, about $2tn (£1.5tn) was wiped off Wall Street and share prices in other financial centres across the globe. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
US embassy staff in China banned from dating locals – AP

BBC UK News
Open 
Tormenting Harris's hawk is captured by Mr Harris
A resident says he was able to humanely catch the hawk, which has attacked an estimated 50 people.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukraine: Soldiers on the front line have little hope of peace
The Russian advance on Ukraine continues despite ongoing US-led ceasefire negotiations. DW spoke with Ukrainian soldiers on the front about their expectations.

Techdirt
Open 
Daily Deal: uTalk Language Learning
uTalk can help you start speaking like a native within minutes. Using the uTalk learning App you can listen to real native speakers to help you navigate through your next vacation or business trip. With more than 2,500 words and phrases to learn in each of our 140+ languages, the app gives you a running start […]

Techdirt
Open 
Iowa Book Ban Law Again Mostly Dead Following Return Trip To Federal Court
Will the third time be the charm? Let’s hope so. This charmless act of hatred masquerading as “for the children” legislating has been struck down again by the same federal court that tried to kill it off the first time. In late December 2023, an Iowa federal court told the state there was little chance […]

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Danish PM tells US ‘you cannot annex another country’ on visit to Greenland
Mette Frederiksen, who met island’s new and outgoing PMs, says she wants to cooperate with Trump on Arctic securityThe Danish prime minister has put on a show of unity with Greenlandic leaders in her first visit to the Arctic island since Donald Trump’s renewed threats to acquire the territory, telling the US: “You cannot annex another country.”Speaking onboard an inspection ship in front of a military helicopter, alongside Greenland’s new prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, and Greenland’s outgoing prime minister, Múte B Egede, Mette Frederiksen switched from Danish to English to address the diplomatic standoff with the Trump administration. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
LA wildfires death toll climbs to 30 after officials find more human remains
Discovery in Altadena months after fires brings deaths in Eaton fire up to 18, while 12 people killed in Palisades fireMonths after wildfires tore through Los Angeles communities, officials announced this week they had discovered another set of human remains, bringing the death toll in the disaster up to 30.Investigators were dispatched to Altadena on Wednesday to investigate possible human remains in the community, which was hit hard by the Eaton fire in January. The special operations response team confirmed that the remains were human, the Los Angeles county medical examiner’s office said in a statement. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Meta faces £1.8bn lawsuit over claims it inflamed violence in Ethiopia
Son of murdered academic calls on Facebook owner to ‘radically change how it moderates dangerous content’Meta faces a $2.4bn (£1.8bn) lawsuit accusing the Facebook owner of inflaming violence in Ethiopia after the Kenyan high court said a legal case against the US tech group could go ahead.The case brought by two Ethiopian nationals calls on Facebook to alter its algorithm to stop promoting hateful material and incitement to violence, as well as hiring more content moderators in Africa. It is also seeking a $2.4bn “restitution fund” for victims of hate and violence incited on Facebook. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Williamson hopes Russo can carry Arsenal swagger into Lionesses games
Forward is in fine form going into Belgium double-header‘To be a No 9 you have to have that confidence about you’Leah Williamson has praised the form of Alessia Russo before England’s No 9 spearheads the Lionesses’ attack in their Women’s Nations League double-header against Belgium, starting in Bristol on Friday.Arsenal’s Russo has scored 14 goals in her past 21 games for club and country, including two in last week’s Champions League second-leg comeback win over Real Madrid. Her clubmate, the England captain Williamson, praised Russo’s character, saying at St George’s Park on Thursday: “Everyone will always say how nice a person Alessia is and everyone wants to see her do well for that reason. But to be a No 9 you do have to have that sort of – not arrogance – but confidence about you. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump’s ‘idiotic’ and flawed tariff calculations stun economists
‘Willing sycophants’ came up with simplistic formula that has thrown global economy into disarrayUS politics live – latest updatesWaving a big chart as a prop in the White House Rose Garden, Donald Trump suggested his new tariff plan was simple: “Reciprocal – that means they do it to us, and we do it to them. Very simple. Can’t get simpler than that.”Perhaps a bit too simple. The method used to calculate the most important numbers in international trade, politics and economics has left some of the world’s leading experts shocked.Goods trade deficit: $291.9bnTotal goods imports: $438.9bnThose figures divided = 0.67, or 67%And halved = 34%Reciprocal tariffs are calculated as the tariff rate necessary to balance bilateral trade deficits between the US and each of our trading partners. This calculation assumes that persistent trade deficits are due to a combination of tariff and non-tariff factors that prevent trade from balancing. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Global markets in turmoil as Trump tariffs wipe £1.5tn off Wall Street
Economists say levies of 10-50% have dramatically added to the risk of a worldwide downturnGlobal financial markets have been plunged into turmoil as Donald Trump’s escalating trade war knocked trillions of dollars off the value of the world’s biggest companies and heightened fears of a US recession.As world leaders reacted to the president’s “liberation day” tariff policies demolishing the international trading order, about $2tn (£1.5tn) was wiped off Wall Street and share prices in other financial centres across the globe. Continue reading...

F1 Technical
Open 
TYRE PREVIEW: Pirelli expects a significant increase in load for Suzuka
Expecting a significant increase in load for this weekend's Suzuka race, Formula One's sole tyre supplier Pirelli have elected to mandate very high starting minimum pressures.

Nature
Open 
Take Nature’s poll: How will Trump’s policies affect US science?

TechRadar News
Open 
JetKVM is an exciting, tiny open source KVM over IP module that sold almost 100,000 units and it even has a rare RJ11 port

TechRadar News
Open 
Nintendo Switch 2: everything you need to know, from pre-orders and price to exclusive games and launch titles

TechRadar News
Open 
CinemaCon 2025 live – The Last Airbender sequel, The Running Man, Scream 7 and Sonic 4 updates, and Marvel/Disney is up next

Digital Trends
Open 
The 55-inch Roku Pro Series 4K QLED has a $300 discount today
The Roku 55-inch Pro Series 4K QLED is on sale today for $600 when you shop at Amazon, Best Buy, and Walmart.

The Aviationist
Open 
Colombia Choses Saab JAS39 Gripen as its Newest Frontline Fighter Jet
Colombia signed a letter of intent for the acquisition of the Gripen E, launching the negotiations which would make the country the type’s second South American operator. After nearly two years of speculations and unconfirmed reports, Colombia has finally selected Sweden’s Saab JAS39 Gripen as its newest fighter aircraft. Colombian President Gustavo Petro announced the […]
The post Colombia Choses Saab JAS39 Gripen as its Newest Frontline Fighter Jet appeared first on The Aviationist.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Hungary announces plans to leave ICC as Netanyahu visits
The Hungarian government has said it will withdraw from the International Criminal Court as Budapest defies an international arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. DW has the latest.

The Verge
Open 
Trump’s tariff plan includes a potential death blow to cheap Chinese e-commerce
With President Donald Trump’s new tariff plan, your online shopping packages coming directly from China are about to get much more expensive. In February, the Trump administration moved to get rid of a little-known rule that allows US consumers to avoid tariffs on low-value packages. The de minimis exemption meant that packages valued under $800 […]

The Verge
Open 
Nintendo’s Switch 2 era comes at a price
Just about everything with the Nintendo Switch 2 is more expensive than the original Switch.  It’s perhaps not unexpected that the console itself costs more money than the first Switch. That device launched more than eight years ago, after all. But following yesterday’s big Switch 2 Direct, there has been a lot of sticker shock […]

Gizmodo
Open 
5 Things We Liked, and 2 We Didn’t, About Devil May Cry
Netflix's anime adaptation of Capcom's hack-and-slash series hits the jackpot.

Gizmodo
Open 
This Lichen Species Might Survive on Mars, Study Suggests
Researchers exposed two lichen species to Mars-like atmospheric conditions for five hours—and one performed impressively.

Gizmodo
Open 
Sen. Grassley Introduces Bipartisan Bill to Claw Back Tariff Power From Trump
The Trump ally says he wants to "ensure Congress has a voice in trade policy."

Gizmodo
Open 
Ancient Bacteria Were Breathing Long Before Oxygen Became Abundant
Scientists assumed most forms of life before the Great Oxidation Event didn't metabolize oxygen—but recent research suggests otherwise.

Guardian F1
Open 
Max Verstappen indicates he was unhappy Red Bull sacked Liam Lawson
Yuki Tsunoda replaces Lawson for Sunday’s Japan GPLewis Hamilton describes demotion as ‘pretty harsh’Max Verstappen has reiterated that he was unhappy with the way his Red Bull team suddenly sacked their driver Liam Lawson after just two races and replaced him with Yuki Tsunoda from sister team Racing Bulls.Red Bull dropped Lawson with a shocking speed after he underperformed in his first two races for the team, a bluntly emphatic act even by F1 standards. In the immediate aftermath the former driver Giedo van der Garde described Red Bull’s treatment of the 23-year-old as “closer to bullying or a panic move” and that they “gave Liam two races only to crush his spirit” in a post on Instagram, which was liked by Verstappen. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
First trailer for Liam Neeson’s Naked Gun reboot released
Neeson steps into the role of the bumbling detective made famous by Leslie Nielsen in the TV show and film series created by the Zucker Abrahams Zucker teamThe first footage has been released of Paramount’s upcoming reboot of the much-loved Naked Gun series of spoof police movies. The new film stars Liam Neeson has Frank Drebin Jr – revealed to be the son of Leslie Nielsen’s bumbling detective from the original films.The trailer introduces him a considerably slicker operator to his late father, disabling a baddie in a schoolgirl disguise with a sharpened lollipop. He is then seen tearfully addressing a photograph of Drebin Snr, as offspring of Captain Ed Hocken (George Kennedy) and, more controversially, Officer Nordberg (OJ Simpson) are seen following suit. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea v Tottenham: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offLive match centre | Read Football Daily | And mail NiallChelsea (4-2-3-1): Sánchez; Gusto, Chalobah, Colwill, Cucurella; Caicedo, Fernández (c); Neto, Palmer, Sancho; Jackson. Subs: Jörgensen, Adarabioyo, Badiashile, Acheampong, James, Dewsbury-Hall, Madueke, George, Nkunku.Tottenham (4-3-3): Vicario; Spence, Romero, Van de Ven, Udogie; Bergvall, Bentancur, Maddison; Odobert, Solanke, Son (c).Subs: Kinsky, Porro, Davies, Gray, Bissouma, Sarr, Moore, Johnson, Tel. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on Trump’s tariffs: a monstrous and momentous act of folly | Editorial
The US president has expelled his own country from the rules-based global trade system that America itself createdFor the world’s already embattled trading system, it is as though an asteroid has crashed into the planet, devastating everyone and everything that previously existed there. But there is this important difference. If an asteroid struck the Earth, the impact would at least have been caused by ungovernable cosmic forces. The assault on world trade, by contrast, is a completely deliberate act of choice, taken by one man and one nation.Donald Trump’s decision to impose tariffs on every country in the world is a monstrous and momentous act of folly. Unilateral and unjustified, it was expressed on Wednesday in indefensible language in which Mr Trump described US allies as “cheaters” and “scavengers” who “looted”, “raped” and “pillaged” the US. Many of the calculations on which Mr Trump doled out his punishments are perverse, not least the exclusion of Russia from the condemned list. The tariffs mean prices are certain to rise in sector after sector, in the US and elsewhere, fuelling inflation and perhaps recession. Mr Trump will presumably respond as he did when asked about foreign cars becoming more expensive: “I couldn’t care less.”Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Bonobos may combine words in ways previously thought unique to humans
Phrases used to smooth over tense social situations have meanings beyond the sum of their parts, study suggestsBonobos use a combination of calls to encourage peace with their partner during mating rituals, research suggests.The discovery is part of a study that suggests our close evolutionary cousins can string together vocalisations to produce phrases with meanings that go beyond the sum of their parts – something often considered unique to human language. Continue reading...

Adam Curry
Open 
We're live now with No Agenda episode 1752 #@pocketnoagenda
We're live now with No Agenda episode 1752 #@pocketnoagenda

Mail Online
Open 
Exposure to common chemical while pregnant could damage baby's brain, study suggests
Common chemicals called phthalates are used in everything from food packaging to kids toys and shampoos. But these can leach out of products and pass into food and water.

Mail Online
Open 
Divorcee prison governor denies relationship with drug boss despite both their DNA being found on size 10 Hugo Boss flip flops and toothbrush in her flat
Divorcee Kerri Pegg, 42, is accused of being in
a relationship with Anthony Saunderson, who she had approved for temporary early release from HMP Kirkham where she was a governor, a jury heard.

Mail Online
Open 
Man, 33, mauled to death by two XL Bully dogs and two other hounds while feeding his brother's pets - before his body was found 'hidden' outside after he tried to leap out a window to safety
A man was found dead in a garden after being mauled by up to four dogs, including two XL bullies, as he visited a relative's home to feed their pets while they were in hospital, an inquest has heard.

Mail Online
Open 
The controversial truth about the wild dating rule that men should date half their age plus seven
As long as the concept of 'dating' has existed, so have 'rules' for how people should conduct themselves.

Mail Online
Open 
Cowboy builder who left massive hole in woman's house despite charging her £17,000 when his firm was about to go bust avoids jail
Gary Roberts, 60, signed a contract promising to complete an extension to the rear of the female's property, Chester Magistrates' Court heard.

Mail Online
Open 
New bombshell lawsuit claims Beyoncé, Jay Z and LeBron James attended 'Freak-Off' party where Diddy 'drugged and sexually maimed victim'
Joseph Manzaro has filed a claim against Sean 'Diddy' Combs that he was 'drugged, transported against his will, and sexually maimed as a victim of a coercive criminal enterprise'.

Mail Online
Open 
Stephanie Davis rushes baby son Samuel, 2 months, to hospital after he 'stopped breathing' as she details the 'scariest time of  my life'
The Coronation Street star, 32, described the ordeal as 'the scariest time of my life' as she told her social media followers what happened.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
O'Sullivan to make late decision on competing at World Championship
Seven-time winner Ronnie O'Sullivan will give himself "as much time as possible" to decide whether to compete at the World Snooker Championship.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Double jeopardy killer refused move to open prison
The justice secretary blocks a recommendation to move William Dunlop to an open prison.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Woman punched on Tube 'failed by emergency system'
Sally Wynter says she hit an emergency button several times after being attacked but received no answer.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Shirts, sponsors and bad blood: how Trump's tariffs might affect sport
After US president Donald Trump unveiled his new trade tariffs, BBC sports editor Dan Roan looks at what impact the move could have on the world of sport.

UK Government News
Open 
Appointment of Oli de Botton as the PM’s Expert Adviser on Education and Skills
Oli de Botton has been appointed as the Prime Minister’s Expert Adviser on Education and Skills. 

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The Trump Tariffs Are How Everything Works Now
The US is barreling toward a recession for no good reason, and dragging the world—and a few thousand penguins on remote Antarctic islands—down with it.

Boing Boing
Open 
Howard Lutnick: Don't expect economic relief for a good long time (video)
If you're uncomfortable with grocery prices and the state of the U.S. economy in general, get used to it. Donald Trump's Commerce Secretary just predicted when things will turn around: not next week, not next month, not this summer…
"That's a whole lot of growth, and you're going to get that starting in the fourth quarter," said business tycoon Howard Lutnick, defending Trump's tariff "Liberation Day" while brushing off its catastrophic aftermath. — Read the rest
The post Howard Lutnick: Don't expect economic relief for a good long time (video) appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Register
Open 
Amazon's Project Kuiper satellites now boarding the rocket to relevance
Jeff Bezos' other space business finally shows signs of life with launch scheduled for next week The first batch of Amazon's Project Kuiper satellites is due to be lofted into orbit next week.…

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
Is Plesk a good alternative to cPanel? I tried it to see what it's good at.

Sky News Home
Open 
Woman who lost son in terror attack and did masters degree to understand it welcomes new law in his name
There is a certain steel about a mother who has lost a child.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Meryl Streep in talks to play Aslan in Greta Gerwig’s Narnia movie
Oscar-winner set to take on role as godlike lion usually perceived to be male in upcoming adaption of The Magician’s NephewMeryl Streep is in talks to play Aslan in Greta Gerwig’s upcoming Narnia film, according to reports. According to Nexus Point News, and confirmed by Deadline Streep, 79, is being lined up to star in Netflix’s film, which will be adapted from The Magician’s Nephew – the sixth of CS Lewis Narnia series of novels, but the first in chronological terms.In the Narnia books, Aslan is a dignified and quasi-omniscient lion, generally seen to be male and usually interpreted as an allegory for Jesus. The Magician’s Nephew centres on two children, Digory Kirke and Polly Plummer, who discover the magical world through Digory’s uncle Andrew. Daniel Craig is also in talks for the film, with speculation rising that he will play the uncle. Charli XCX is also in line for a role, rumoured to be Jadis, the White Witch. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
ECB insists sale of Hundred teams will go through despite TV rights wrangle
Delays caused by negotiations around overseas rightsECB also launch review into crowded domestic scheduleThe England and Wales Cricket Board insists that the sale of the eight Hundred franchises will be completed by the end of April, despite the delays to negotiations.The governing body’s chief executive, Richard Gould, said that the high valuations were not one of the issues behind the delays, but admitted that future broadcasting rights were. “All the discussions are on a very, very sound footing,” Gould said, “we’re just trying to work out how to maximise value from sponsorships, tickets sales and broadcast revenues. They’re investing a lot of money into our game and we want to make sure that pays dividends.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Worcester wind back to life with second-tier return and vow to clear debts
Warriors to return next season in new-look Tier 2 leagueTeam to play at Sixways after ‘challenging process’Worcester Warriors insist they will be both sustainable and competitive when they return to English rugby’s second tier next season almost three years after going bust. The club’s new owners have had to provide stringent financial guarantees and commit to repaying rugby creditors left high and dry when Worcester went into administration with debts of more than £2 5m in September 2022.In the past clubs such as ­Richmond and London Welsh have been forced to start again at the foot of the ­English pyramid but a condition of ­Worcester’s return to the new-look Tier 2 league is that ­outstanding debts to, among others, HMRC and the Department for Culture, Media and Sport will be settled by the end of the year. In ­addition, the new ­owners have already made ­substantial ­payments to the administrators. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Chelsea v Tottenham: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offLive match centre | Read Football Daily | And mail NiallPre-game readingFrom the Cockney Cup Final to the Battle of the Bridge, Chelsea v Tottenham Hotspur is a rivalry that rarely disappoints. The Blues’ last two trips to Spurs have seen them win 4-1 and 4-3, punishing two of the Angiest performances of their rivals’ Postecoglou era. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on Israel’s killing of paramedics: a new atrocity in an unending conflict | Editorial
Impunity over Palestinian deaths in Gaza will lead to further cases like this massacre of rescue and healthcare workersAfter 18 months of slaughter, it is still possible to be shocked by events in Gaza. More than 50,000 people have been killed, according to Palestinian health authorities. More are starving because Israel has cut off aid. The offensive is intensifying again – with 100 children killed or maimed each day since Israel resumed heavy strikes last month, the UN reports.Even so, Israel’s killing of 15 Palestinian paramedics and rescue workers is particularly chilling. Though they died on 23 March, it took days for Israel to grant access to the site, the UN said. Another man was last seen in Israeli custody. Two grounds for seeing this not only as tragic but as a war crime stand out. The first is that the UN says the men were shot “one by one”, and a forensic expert said that preliminary evidence “suggests they were executed, not from a distant range”, given the “specific and intentional” locations of bullet wounds. Two witnesses said some of the bodies had their hands or legs tied. Prisoners are protected by the Geneva conventions. The second is that medics also enjoy specific protections.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on Trump’s tariffs: a monstrous and momentous act of folly | Editorial
The US president has expelled his own country from the rules-based global trade system that America itself createdFor the world’s already embattled trading system, it is as though an asteroid has crashed into the planet, devastating everyone and everything that previously existed there. But there is this important difference. If an asteroid struck the Earth, the impact would at least have been caused by ungovernable cosmic forces. The assault on world trade, by contrast, is a completely deliberate act of choice, taken by one man and one nation.Donald Trump’s decision to impose tariffs on every country in the world is a monstrous and momentous act of folly. Unilateral and unjustified, it was expressed on Wednesday in indefensible language in which Mr Trump described US allies as “cheaters” and “scavengers” who “looted”, “raped” and “pillaged” the US. Many of the calculations on which Mr Trump doled out his punishments are perverse, not least the exclusion of Russia from the condemned list. The tariffs mean prices are certain to rise in sector after sector, in the US and elsewhere, fuelling inflation and perhaps recession. Mr Trump will presumably respond as he did when asked about foreign cars becoming more expensive: “I couldn’t care less.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Flamstead man catches hawk that had been attacking villagers for weeks
Steve Harris, 40, throws cage over Harris hawk in his garden after it stalked him while he was out joggingA hawk which has been terrorising male residents of a Hertfordshire village for weeks has been captured by a local man after it stalked him through the village while he was jogging.Dozens of villagers in Flamstead, near Luton, have reported being attacked from behind by the bird, identified as a Harris hawk, with some left bleeding and in at least one case requiring hospital treatment. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Giving Noel Clarke a Bafta would have made him ‘untouchable’, court hears
Sources for sexual misconduct claims say honorary award, if given to actor, could have made his behaviour worseThe Guardian’s sources for sexual misconduct allegations against Noel Clarke feared an honorary award from Bafta would make him “untouchable” and increase the severity of his behaviour, the high court has heard.Sirin Kale, a co-author of the series of articles about the Doctor Who actor, said she did not believe that the sources collectively decided “they wanted to damage Clarke’s reputation”, as he claims. Continue reading...

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Assad Or Jolani: The Syria Debate
Assad Or Jolani: The Syria Debate

Now that the neocons/libs and Israel had their way with Syria, former dictator Bashar Al Assad has been replaced with… Al Qaeda.

So what now?



Visit the ZeroHedge homepage tonight at 7pm ET for our live Syria Debate with Pulitzer winner and Daily Beast reporter Roy Gutman who will face off against Antiwar.com editorial director Scott Horton. The debate will be moderated by David “Viva Frei” Freiheit.

Has the latest iteration of Middle Eastern regime change paid off or been a total disaster? A quick primer on Gutman’s interventionism and Horton’s isolationism:

Gutman: “Assad Must Go”



Horton: "America is back on the side of al-Qaeda... quite frankly, it's treason."


"America is back on the side of al-Qaeda... quite frankly, it's treason."
Watch Scott Horton and General Wesley Clark's full discussion on Syria, Assad, Putin and more 👇
📺 https://t.co/tkQyaIE64N@piersmorgan | @scotthortonshow | @GeneralClark pic.twitter.com/vjCYp3fehP
— Piers Morgan Uncensored (@PiersUncensored) December 10, 2024
We’ll see you at 7pm ET.

If you would like to listen to Scott take on another interventionist, check out his debate with historian Niall Ferguson on the war in Ukraine from December:

 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 11:27

ZeroHedge News
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The Rio Reset: Inside The BRICS Scheme To Hotwire The Global Economy
The Rio Reset: Inside The BRICS Scheme To Hotwire The Global Economy

Authored by Peter Reagan via Birch Gold Group,

BRICS+ leaders are meeting in Rio de Janiero this summer. Their dedollarization drive has made huge progress over the last two years. Here’s what they’ve accomplished so far – and why the Rio Reset will stun the world…



The warning signs were there (but most people missed them)

In August 2023, all eyes were on Durban, South Africa when the leaders of the BRICS alliance met behind closed doors. A few weeks before, Russia’s top diplomat Sergey Lavrov made global headlines claiming the BRICS alliance was close to launching a “gold-backed currency.”

Their intentions were clear: First to challenge, then to replace, the U.S. dollar. 

It was a bold claim – and for everyone who understood the role the dollar plays in the global financial system, it was a truly frightening moment. It would be an exaggeration to say the world held its breath – but I don’t mind telling you, I certainly held mine!

The meeting came and went. BRICS held press conferences and announced new committees… 

But the gold-backed international BRICS currency never materialized.

Ever since, we’ve been wondering what happened. Did Lavrov overplay his hand? Was the foreign minister (or perhaps Putin himself) simply trolling the Biden administration? 

The election of President Trump seemed to put the final nail in the coffin. He swore instant, punitive sanctions on any countries that replaced the dollar in their global transactions. 



Trump understands that dollar dominance is a matter of national security. And he understands the consequences of losing – “If we lost the dollar as the world currency, I think that would be the equivalent of losing a war,” he told The Economic Club of New York in September 2024.

The shared BRICS currency experiment was dead even before arrival. 

Or was it?

I’ve always had my doubts and my suspicions. As a result, over the last few weeks, I’ve called in every favor. Cashed in every chip I have with the movers and shakers in Washington D.C. Consulted analysts and insiders on three continents (trust me, it wasn’t cheap!) – and I think I finally understand what happened.

In hindsight, the real story wasn’t what Lavrov or any of the other BRICS officials announced – it was what they didn’t say.

At the Rio Reset in July, BRICS will reveal their real plan

Back in 2023, BRICS never revealed their real plan. The threat of an international, gold-backed BRICSbuck was a brilliant distraction. The mainstream media laughed it off. The alternative media engaged in doom-mongering. 

And BRICS members quietly pressed ahead with something far more ambitious:

A complete, parallel global financial system – a new, 21st century Bretton-Woods – designed to bypass the dollar completely.

What Lavrov called a “currency” was just a decoy. A distraction meant to keep us focused in the wrong direction.

This summer, July 6-7, 2025, BRICS leaders are meeting again in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. I want you to join me in watching this meeting closely. Because I expect truly astonishing news. An event truly worthy of the name Rio Reset.

But not for a new currency announcement! Let me explain why I think this is just a distraction...

When I say “money” or “currency,” what do you think of? 

Most people think of something like this: 



Author’s personal collection of currencies from The Bahamas, Brazil, China, Nigeria, the UK, the U.S., Vietnam and Zaire.

Or this: 



A mock-up of a shared BRICS currency, revealed by Russian President Vladimir Putin at the 2024 BRICS meeting in Kazan, Russian Federation.

These are all examples of currencies. We're all familiar with currency, because we use it every day. Currency is the most visible part of the global financial system.

Compared to the scale of the global financial system, though?

Any single currency (even all currencies!) are just the tip of the iceberg… 

The true scope of the Rio Reset is staggering

This is what our global financial system looks like: 



Image via PlatON

That chart is not deliberately confusing, by the way. This really is what the global financial system looks like. Key institutions, clearing and settlement systems, domestic and international institutions, compliance and regulatory agencies – and that’s just the organizations. Each of them has its own set of compliance requirements, regulations, procedures and regulatory body at both the national and international levels.

Now, it would be silly to pretend that this entire post-World War II, Bretton-Woods global financial system was all carefully planned and painstakingly executed. Parts of it were – and the rest developed over time.

THAT is what BRICS have been working on!

What the Rio Reset really means

The term Rio Reset may be new – but the underlying idea is not.

This is the culmination of everything BRICS nations have worked toward since the Great Financial Crisis of 2008.

Their goal? To insulate themselves from dollar devaluation, dollar weaponization and the financial instabilities inherent in the dollar-based global financial system.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 12:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Elon Musk's Neuralink Seeks Patients Globally To Try Its Brain Chips
Elon Musk's Neuralink Seeks Patients Globally To Try Its Brain Chips

Authored by Jesse Coghlan via CoinTelegraph.com,

Elon Musk’s brain-chip company, Neuralink, is recruiting participants worldwide to trial its device, which enables users to control a computer using only their thoughts.



Neuralink is looking for people with quadriplegia — those who are not able to use their arms or legs — to sign up for a clinical trial, it said in an April 2 post on X, the social media platform also owned by Musk.

As of January, Neuralink has said that three patients have been implanted with a device. All are quadriplegic and are testing a small brain implant that tracks neural activity to control a computer or smartphone as part of a clinical trial called the Precise Robotically Implanted Brain-Computer Interface, or PRIME study.

Neuralink is one of several companies and academic institutions developing and testing so-called brain-computer interfaces, which vary from small wire-like implants as part of clinical trials to non-invasive devices akin to a hat.



Source: Neuralink

Neuralink’s website says its clinical PRIME study, which will take around six years, is looking for quadriplegics with spinal cord injury or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis to use their thoughts to control a computer.

Musk also heads vehicle maker Tesla and is the Trump administration's government cost-cutting czar. He has said he wants Neuralink to move beyond just allowing humans to operate computers by thinking and wants to help “give people superpowers.”

First Neuralink patient reports no side effects after a year

Noland Arbaugh, Neuralink's first patient, said in a March 28 X post that he’s “had no negative side effects, neither physically nor psychologically” in the year after receiving his brain implant. 

Arbaugh, a quadriplegic, demoed his brain chip about a year ago by controlling a computer cursor to play chess and surf the web.


https://t.co/OMIeGGjYtG
— Neuralink (@neuralink) March 20, 2024
Arbaugh said he’s now using his brain chip “for all sorts of things” and guessed he’s using it for over 10 hours a day.

He said the company’s researchers were “figuring out how to control a wheelchair with the implant,” which he added he won’t use “unless it’s next to perfect. I think it benefits everyone if I don’t lose control and drive into traffic.”

Arbaugh said he had found work as a traveling keynote speaker thanks to Neuralink’s implant, which helps him write, research, and communicate online.

“I can’t tell you how much hope and purpose this technology has provided me,” he wrote. “It’s only a matter of time before the implant is in dozens, then hundreds, then thousands of people.”

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 13:05

Atlas Obscura
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Sanada no Osada in Kirishima, Japan

The Hill
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Trump levies tariffs on uninhabited islands
President Trump, as part of his expansive package of new tariffs, levied taxes on a number of uninhabited or sparsely populated islands that have little-to-no exports. The announcement of new tariffs on Wednesday will hit nearly all foreign countries with a baseline tax at 10 percent. The administration also announced higher tariffs on others, ballooning...

The Hill
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The Hill
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The Hill
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The Hill
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BBC Top Stories (US)
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EFF
Open 
Judge Rejects Government’s Attempt to Dismiss EFF Lawsuit Against OPM, DOGE, and Musk
Court Confirms That, If Proven, DOGE’s Ongoing Access to Personnel Records Is Illegal NEW YORK—A lawsuit seeking to stop the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) from disclosing tens of millions of Americans’ private, sensitive information to Elon Musk’s “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) can continue, a federal judge ruled Thursday. 
Judge Denise L. Cote of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York partially rejected the defendants’ motion to dismiss the lawsuit, which was filed Feb. 11 on behalf of two labor unions and individual current and former government workers across the country. This decision is a victory: The court agreed that the claims that OPM illegally disclosed highly personal records of millions of people to DOGE agents can move forward with the goal of stopping that ongoing disclosure and requiring that any shared information be returned. 
Cote ruled current and former federal employees "may pursue their request for injunctive relief under the APA [Administrative Procedure Act]. ...  The defendants’ Kafkaesque argument to the contrary would deprive the plaintiffs of any recourse under the law." 
"The complaint plausibly alleges that actions by OPM were not representative of its ordinary day-to-day operations but were, in sharp contrast to its normal procedures, illegal, rushed, and dangerous,” the judge wrote.  
The Court added: “The complaint adequately pleads that the DOGE Defendants 'plainly and openly crossed a congressionally drawn line in the sand.'" 
OPM maintains databases of highly sensitive personal information about tens of millions of federal employees, retirees, and job applicants. The lawsuit by EFF, Lex Lumina LLP, State Democracy Defenders Fund, and The Chandra Law Firm argues that OPM and OPM Acting Director Charles Ezell illegally disclosed personnel records to DOGE agents in violation of the federal Privacy Act of 1974, a watershed anti-surveillance statute that prevents the federal government from abusing our personal information. 
The lawsuit’s union plaintiffs are the American Federation of Government Employees AFL-CIO and the Association of Administrative Law Judges, International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers Judicial Council 1 AFL-CIO. 
“Today’s legal victory sends a crystal-clear message: Americans’ private data stored with the government isn't the personal playground of unelected billionaires,” said AFGE National President Everett Kelley. “Elon Musk and his DOGE cronies have no business rifling through sensitive data stored at OPM, period. AFGE and our allies fought back – and won – because we will not compromise when it comes to protecting the privacy and security of our members and the American people they proudly serve.” 
As the federal government is the nation’s largest employer, the records held by OPM represent one of the largest collections of sensitive personal data in the country. In addition to personally identifiable information such as names, social security numbers, and demographic data, these records include work information like salaries and union activities; personal health records and information regarding life insurance and health benefits; financial information like death benefit designations and savings programs;  nondisclosure agreements; and information concerning family members and other third parties referenced in background checks and health records.  
OPM holds these records for tens of millions of Americans, including current and former federal workers and those who have applied for federal jobs. OPM has a history of privacy violations—an OPM breach in 2015 exposed the personal information of 22.1 million people—and its recent actions make its systems less secure.  
With few exceptions, the Privacy Act limits the disclosure of federally maintained sensitive records on individuals without the consent of the individuals whose data is being shared. It protects all Americans from harms caused by government stockpiling of our personal data. This law was enacted in 1974, the last time Congress acted to limit the data collection and surveillance powers of an out-of-control President. The judge ruled that the request for an injunction under the Privacy Act claims can go forward under the Administrative Procedures Act, but not directly under the Privacy Act.  
For the order denying the motion to dismiss: https://www.eff.org/document/afge-v-opm-opinion-and-order-motion-dismiss 
For the complaint: https://www.eff.org/document/afge-v-opm-complaint 
For more about the case: https://www.eff.org/cases/american-federation-government-employees-v-us-office-personnel-management 
Contacts 
Electronic Frontier Foundation: [email protected] 
Lex Lumina LLP: Managing Partner Rhett Millsaps, [email protected] 

BBC UK News
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US tariffs 'painful' for some but 'opportunities' for others
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Mail Online
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An evening with Paolo Di Canio: Being attacked by his own team-mates, shoving referees, Nazi salutes, grandchildren ...and managing West Ham
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Mail Online
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Mail Online
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New discovery at Biblical site where David battled Goliath reveals secrets of ancient civilization
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Sky News Home
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Bruce Springsteen to release seven 'lost' albums
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Sky News Home
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US seems content to cosy up to Russia instead of imposing tariffs
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The Guardian (UK)
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Trans teacher in Texas resigns after online attacks: ‘I’m heartbroken’
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The Guardian (UK)
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Britain can retaliate or negotiate with Trump – but there is no way we can win at this game | Gaby Hinsliff
Starmer will try to calm the situation and focus on May’s local elections, but one thing is clear: our ties with Europe are more crucial than everNobody wins a trade war. You can lose it by greater or lesser degrees: you may be one of the luckier casualties. But that’s about as good as it gets. So, while there will have been initial relief in Downing Street on Wednesday night, a feeling even that Keir Starmer’s placating of Donald Trump looks vindicated, what followed was no victory lap.How could it be, after that grotesquely swaggering show trial the president staged in the White House garden, all the better to jazz up an economic assault on what were once his country’s allies? Come on down, Britain, escaping with just the minimum 10% tariff on its exports to the US and no drive-by insults! Better than Taiwan (32% plus a lecture about how the US used to build all the semiconductors once), Vietnam (“They like me, I like them” but still a brutal 46%), the EU (“very very tough traders” and lucky to get away with 20%) or poor Lesotho, still reeling from the overnight collapse of US aid and now whacked by a 50% tariff. But even lucky Britain still emerged with a 25% duty on cars that the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) estimates could cost 25,000 jobs, plus the grim realisation that this may be just the beginning of a long unravelling. Globalisation is dead, protectionism is back, and all to satisfy one man’s delusions that life was better in the 1800s before income tax was invented.Gaby Hinsliff is a Guardian columnistDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Thousands of churches face financial blow after VAT changes on repair works
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The Guardian (UK)
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The Guardian (UK)
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Man shot dead by police at Milton Keynes station is named
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The Guardian (UK)
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The Guardian (UK)
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BBC Top Stories (US)
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Slashdot
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The bankruptcy was filed after co-founder Joseph Sanberg was charged by federal prosecutors with conspiring to defraud two investor funds of at least $145 million, according to a US Department of Justice announcement earlier this month. The charges involve his personal conduct and don't implicate CTN or its affiliates "in any criminal activity," said Staglik, a managing director at CR3 Partners that's been hired as CTN's restructuring adviser.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
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Man shot dead at train station by police after running at officers with a knife is named - as watchdog launches witness appeal
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Sky News Home
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Techdirt
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Mail Online
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The Guardian (UK)
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Severe storms and tornadoes rip across US south and midwest, killing at least six people
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The Guardian (UK)
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Spain could include Camp Nou final in bid to host 2035 Rugby World Cup
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The Guardian (UK)
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Labour tries to seem in control while The Donald unleashes chaos on the world | John Crace
Underneath the measured words you could almost smell the panic as the government scrambled to come up with a plan to respond to Trump’s tariffsWith characteristic humility and good grace … Hardly.Shortly after 9pm UK time on Wednesday, the Sun-Bed King made his way to the White House Rose Garden, looking every bit the dishonest bookie as he held up a board with every country’s separate tariff. He might as well have been signposting the odds on a global recession. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Don’t weaken online safety laws for UK-US trade deal, campaigners urge
Child protection charities say watering down Online Safety Act would be an ‘appalling sellout’ by governmentUK politics live – latest updatesChild safety campaigners have warned the government against watering down landmark online laws as part of a UK-US trade deal, describing the prospect of a compromise as an “appalling sellout” that would be rejected by voters.A draft transatlantic trade agreement contains commitments to review enforcement of the Online Safety Act, according to a report on Thursday, amid White House concerns the legislation poses a threat to free speech. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US tourist arrested for landing on forbidden Indian tribal island
Police say man landed on island in attempt to meet the Sentinelese people – a tribe untouched by the industrial worldIndian police said on Thursday they had arrested a US tourist who sneaked on to a highly restricted island carrying a coconut and a can of Diet Coke to a tribe untouched by the industrial world.Mykhailo Viktorovych Polyakov, 24, set foot on the restricted territory of North Sentinel – part of India’s Andaman Islands – in an attempt to meet the Sentinelese people, who are believed to number only about 150. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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US stock markets tumble as investors shaken by Trump tariffs
Dollar hits six-month low after president announces sweeping tariffs on US’s largest trade partnersTrump tariffs – live updatesUS stock markets tumbled on Thursday as investors parsed the sweeping change in global trading following Donald Trump’s announcement of a barrage of tariffs on the country’s trading partners.All three major US index funds were down as trading started on Thursday morning. The tech-heavy Nasdaq fund was down 4.5%, while the S&P 500 and the Dow dropped 3.4% and 2.7% at opening, respectively. Apple and Nvidia, two of the US’s largest companies by market value, had lost a combined $470bn in value by midday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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UK takes first step towards possible retaliation against US tariffs
Jonathan Reynolds tells MPs he is keeping ‘all options on the table’ after Trump’s announcement of import taxes on British goodsBusiness live – latest updatesUK politics live – latest updatesThe UK has launched a formal process to retaliate against Donald Trump’s tariffs if it does not secure a trade deal with the US, the business secretary has said.Jonathan Reynolds told the Commons he was taking the first step towards retaliatory action against the US so as “to keep all options on the table”. Continue reading...

F1 Technical
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RACE GUIDE for this weekend's Japanese Grand Prix
Following the opening race in Melbourne and Shanghai this weekend sees Formula One drivers and teams head east once again to Japan with the Land of the Rising Sun set to host Round 3 of the 2025 FIA Formula One World Championship, the Japanese Grand Prix. F1Technical's senior writer Balázs Szabó delivers some key stats and trivia for the 39th Japanese Grand Prix.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Updates iWork Apps With New iOS 18.4 and macOS 15.4 Features
Apple today updated its iWork apps Keynote, Numbers, and Pages with new features that require iOS 18.4, iPadOS 18.4, or macOS 15.4.





For example, in the latest version of each app, you can now make text edits using Writing Tools directly in a presentation, spreadsheet, or document. This feature requires Apple Intelligence, which is available on iPhone 15 Pro models, all iPhone 16 models, any Mac or iPad model with an M1 chip or newer, or the iPad mini with the A17 Pro chip.



In addition, Apple says you can now export a presentation, spreadsheet, or document in another format using the Shortcuts app, and all three apps gained improved copy and paste integration with the Freeform app. Each app also received a few other enhancements that are not tied to the latest software updates.



The release notes for version 14.4 of each app on iOS follow.



Keynote:• Make text edits using Writing Tools directly in your presentation (requires Apple Intelligence and iOS or iPadOS 18.4)

• Export presentations into other formats using Shortcuts (requires iOS or iPadOS 18.4)

• Improved copy and paste with Freeform (requires iOS or iPadOS 18.4)Numbers:• Use over 30 new advanced functions including LET, LAMBDA, FILTER, SORT, and UNIQUE

• See results from a single formula across multiple cells using spilling arrays

• Make text edits using Writing Tools directly in your spreadsheet (requires Apple Intelligence and iOS or iPadOS 18.4)

• Export spreadsheets into other formats using Shortcuts (requires iOS or iPadOS 18.4)

• Improved copy and paste with Freeform (requires iOS or iPadOS 18.4)

• Improved compatibility when importing or exporting Microsoft Excel spreadsheetsPages:• Make text edits using Writing Tools directly in your document (requires Apple Intelligence and macOS 15.4)

• Add additional pages into a word-processing document more easily

• Export documents into other formats using Shortcuts (requires macOS 15.4)

• Improved copy and paste with Freeform (requires macOS 15.4)iOS 18.4, iPadOS 18.4, and macOS 15.4 were all released to the general public this week, following more than a month of beta testing.



The updated iWork apps are available in the App Store across the iPhone, iPad, and Mac.Tags: iWork, Keynote, Numbers, PagesThis article, 'Apple Updates iWork Apps With New iOS 18.4 and macOS 15.4 Features' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
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Video: Choosing the Best Mac For You
If you're new to Macs, or haven't upgraded for some time, it can be difficult to decide just what to get. Is the MacBook Air the best option? Do you need the power of the MacBook Pro? What about desktop options?



Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more videos.

In our latest video, we walk through the current Mac lineup and provide some tips on things to consider when you're trying to decide on a new machine. Trying to figure out if you need more RAM or a storage upgrade? Our video just might help.This article, 'Video: Choosing the Best Mac For You' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
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Villagers rejoice as plans for 'US-style' megafarm rearing 714,000 chickens and 14,000 pigs are refused by council
JUBILANT villagers cheered and hugged as an application for a US-style megafarm with up to 870,000 chickens and 14,000 pigs was turned down today.

TechRadar News
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The Nintendo Switch 2 will feature DLSS and ray tracing, but we don't know which games support it

TechRadar News
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CinemaCon 2025 live – expect Marvel, Sonic 4, Scream 7 and more movie news to arrive soon

Digital Trends
Open 
Attention, gamers: 49-inch Samsung Odyssey G9 gaming monitors are on sale
The 49-inch Samsung Odyssey G9 gaming monitor is $450 off while the 49-inch Samsung Odyssey OLED G9 gaming monitor is $700 off. Hurry!

Digital Trends
Open 
The Nintendo Switch 2 seems expensive, this deal makes the original very cheap
Why wait for the $450 Nintendo Switch 2 when you can get a Nintendo Switch OLED for $275?

The Verge
Open 
Everything we know so far about the Nintendo Switch 2
After an agonizing three-month wait, Nintendo finally revealed more details on the Switch 2 during a Direct presentation on the morning of April 2nd. While Nintendo told us very little in the official reveal of the console in January, now we know when the Switch 2 is coming and how much it will cost at […]

The Verge
Open 
M3gan 2.0 gives the doll some upgrades in new trailer
Though Blumhouse’s first M3gan feature was a near-perfect blend of techno-horror and ridiculous comedy, the sequel looks like it’s going to blow its predecessor out of the water. Set a couple of years after the first film, M3gan 2.0 once again centers roboticist Gemma (Allison Williams) and her niece Cady (Violet McGraw) — two of […]

The Verge
Open 
Nvidia confirms the Nintendo Switch 2 has DLSS and real-time ray tracing
Nintendo’s Switch 2 tech specs yesterday vaguely said that the console is powered by a “custom processor made by Nvidia,” but in a new blog post, Nvidia has shared a little more detail about how it’s powering the device. Nvidia says that its chip enables DLSS support on the Nintendo Switch 2, allowing the console […]

The Verge
Open 
Rural fiber internet expansion is at risk as Trump administration holds funds
Fiber internet providers are worried they won’t see the funds promised under a Biden-era initiative that would bring reliable internet service to rural areas. Louisiana fiber internet provider Cajun Broadband was granted $33 million as part of the plan, but the “money isn’t flowing” and concerns are growing over whether the new administration will prioritize […]

The Verge
Open 
Trump’s tariff plan includes a potential death blow to cheap Chinese e-commerce
With President Donald Trump’s new tariff plan, your online shopping packages coming directly from China are about to get much more expensive. In February, the Trump administration moved to get rid of a little-known rule that allows US consumers to avoid tariffs on low-value packages. The de minimis exemption meant that packages valued under $800 […]

The Verge
Open 
OpenAI and Anthropic are fighting over college students with free AI
Two leading AI labs, OpenAI and Anthropic, just announced major initiatives in higher education. It’s the constant one-upping we’ve all become familiar with: this week, Anthropic dropped their announcement at 8 AM Wednesday, while OpenAI followed with nearly identical news at 8 AM Thursday. For Anthropic, this week’s announcement was its first major academic push. […]

The Verge
Open 
Hyundai’s Ioniq 6 redesign is a little sportier and a bit weirder
Hyundai’s Ioniq 6 electric sedan already had a polarizing “streamliner” design that only owners seem to love. Now the automaker has massaged the front a bit more for a new look for 2026. The latest Ioniq 6 has squintier daytime running lights and headlights that are lower down into the bumper, something that we’re seeing […]

Gizmodo
Open 
Google Just Took $200 Off the Pixel 9 Smartphone, No Trade-In Needed
It's time you let that old, decrepit tech go and upgrade to the new hotness.

Gizmodo
Open 
Do You Need a Measles Booster Shot? The Answer May Surprise You
Most vaccinated people should still be highly protected against measles, but there are important exceptions.

Gizmodo
Open 
We Just Saw the First Footage From Masters of the Universe
Nicholas Galitzine and Jared Leto star in the Hasbro adaptation, coming to theaters June 5, 2026.

Mail Online
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Trapped astronauts share horrifying new secret from their near-deadly trip to space aboard Boeing Starliner
The astronauts who were left stranded on board the International Space Station revealed their near-death experience.

Mail Online
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Yoga teacher's heartbreak after ex-Green Beret she fell in love with in class was 'beheaded by his wife'
The yoga teacher girlfriend of murdered Green Beret Clint Bonnell tells DailyMail.com about their doomed relationship - and the ominous warning signs in the days leading up to his horror death.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump fires national security officials after far-right activist Laura Loomer urged him to in meeting – report
Loomer reportedly presented Trump with opposition research on national security council officials at Oval OfficeFollow US politics liveLaura Loomer, a far-right conspiracy theorist and Islamophobic former Republican congressional candidate banned from Uber, Paypal and some social media platforms, has apparently been successful in pushing the White House to fire national security staffers for disloyalty.The New York Times first reported that Loomer, notorious for promoting racism and 9/11 conspiracy theories, was spotted in a meeting on Wednesday where she reportedly presented Trump with opposition research on national security council officials during a 30-minute Oval Office meeting. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Heteropessimism’ didn’t spring from nowhere | Letters
Josephine Grahl advises looking at the labour burden placed on women and how social structures enforce this. Brid Connolly recalls Marge Piercy’s novel Body of GlassRachel Connolly has it the wrong way round when she suggests that one problem with heterosexuality is that women unrealistically expect men to fulfil a complete spectrum of emotional needs and desires (Social media is awash with ‘heteropessimism’. Do young women really think so poorly of men?, 31 March). As many surveys have shown – most recently in a study by Humboldt University – straight men are more likely to be dependent on their female partners and cope worse after separation or divorce.Connolly suggests that online statements of “heteropessimism” are not being acted on, but Office for National Statistics figures from 2023 show a continuing increase in single households of all ages – a phenomenon that has persisted over the last few decades despite increasing social precarity, spiralling housing costs and what the US sociologist Bella DePaulo describes as the “singles tax” – the financial disadvantage incurred by those who live alone or are unmarried. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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There’s no doubt about it – Trump’s tariffs will fail | Letters
Readers react to Donald Trump’s imposition of tariffs on goods imported into the US from Martin Kettle considers it uncertain whether Donald Trump’s tariffs will work, while noting that even Keynes supported their occasional use (Perilous and chaotic, Trump’s ‘liberation day’ endangers the world’s broken economy – and him, 2 April). Such an open-minded view risks overoptimism. Keynes’s support for the idea of tariffs was limited to specific short-term need, as in protection of fledgling industry. But Keynes knew well the harm of tariffs as long-term economic policy.Far from being uncertain, it is inevitable that Trump’s tariffs will fail. The deep interconnectedness of international supply chains means Americans will see a swift rise in inflation (that key growth-killer Trump campaigned to reduce) as indispensable worldwide component imports push up the price of domestic US goods and the reverse is repeated around the world. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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What will Trump do when his tariffs backfire?
The US president’s tariffs are almost certain to have dire consequences and he is not impervious to market decline or public opinionBusiness live – latest updatesSo much for the idea that “liberation day” would free financial markets from their fear of the unknown. Publication of precise tariff rates, went a cheerful line of advance thinking, would at least allow investors to assess the probable trade effects on the basis of hard information. True optimists clung to the idea that Donald Trump would not wish to risk a truly severe market reaction.That narrative was blown apart when the president reached for his pub-style display of wares. This really was a case of going back to the tariffs rates of the 1920s or 1930s. Not even the penguins of Heard Island and the McDonald Islands were spared. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Donald Trump ordered to pay £626,000 legal costs after Steele dossier lawsuit
US president had sued over denied allegations he took part in ‘perverted’ sex acts but UK case was thrown out last yearDonald Trump has been ordered by a judge in England to pay more than £620,000 in legal costs after unsuccessfully suing a company over denied allegations he took part in “perverted” sex acts.The US president brought a data protection claim against Orbis Business Intelligence, a consultancy founded by a former MI6 officer, Christopher Steele, in 2022. Continue reading...

Air Accidents Investigation Branch
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AAIB investigation to Cirrus SR22T, G-RGSK. Air Accidents Investigation Branch.
AAIB investigation to Cirrus SR22T, G-RGSK. Air Accidents Investigation Branch.

Russia Today News
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ICC ‘means absolutely nothing’ – expert

Mail Online
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Pervert contacted me on SpareRoom and offered to be my sugar daddy in 'sex for rent' deal - these are the disgusting things he wanted me to do
Jasmine Emery, 20, from Lowestoft, Suffolk, is calling for more stringent laws to be put in place to protect people from being taken advantage of by rogue landlords

Mail Online
Open 
The Hollywood comparison Elon Musk's trans daughter is sick of hearing
The 20-year-old rose to notoriety in the last year for publicly bashing her estranged father, who has claimed he was 'tricked' into letting her transition at 16.

Mail Online
Open 
Stunning discovery at Biblical site where David battled Goliath reveals secrets of ancient civilization
Archaeologists have announced a discovery at the site believed to be where David battled Goliath more than 3,000 years ago.

Mail Online
Open 
Labour ignored education department plea to delay VAT on private school fees until new year so Government could net almost £1bn extra from families
Lawyers for the Government have told the High Court bringing forward the date by eight months would raise 'an additional revenue of over £900 million'.

Mail Online
Open 
Millions of women hang on to his every word.. so how did Jay Shetty go from troubled schoolboy to monk, to motivational speaker and friend to the stars?
Despite being one of the most recognisable faces in the world of self-help, Londoner Jay Shetty's story from troubled schoolboy to friend-to-the stars is not known by everyone.

Mail Online
Open 
I bully men for a living as a dominatrix... I don't think it is 'dirty' or 'wrong' despite what people say
Mooni Minx, 19, from Ohio, bullies men for a living as a dominatrix. She has been in the findom industry for two years after realizing that a regular 9-5 job was never for her.

Mail Online
Open 
TV station forced to fire glamorous 'fact checker' after her shocking past was exposed
Rachel Gilmore, 30, had only aired a single segment when she was suddenly ousted by the network earlier this week - a development first reported by the PressProgress.

BBC World News
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Europe hopes for Trump tariffs deal but prepares for the worst
The EU's message is that it is ready to negotiate with the US but at the same time poised to hit back too.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Sri Lanka: Former 'Tamil Tigers' struggle to reintegrate
Nearly 16 years after Sri Lanka's civil war, former female fighters from the country's northern provinces still have limited opportunities.

BBC UK News
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Benn should 'do the right thing' after murdered GAA official court ruling
The government's refusal to hold a public inquiry into Sean Brown's killing in 1997 is unlawful, the Court of Appeal rules.

Mail Online
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RICHARD LITTLEJOHN: Tariffs. I'm with Trump, the most Anglophile President in our lifetime. He's thrown Starmer a lifeline he doesn't deserve
Donald Trump dealt Keir Starmer a gold-plated Get Out Of Jail Free card when he dropped his global tariff bomb.

Ars Technica
Open 
Most Americans think AI won’t improve their lives, survey says

Ars Technica
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How automakers like Ford, VW, Stellantis are reacting to Trump’s 25% tariff

Ars Technica
Open 
Google gives NotebookLM a “Discover” button to search the web

UK Government News
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2/2025: Non-Domestic Rating (Multipliers and Private Schools) Act 2025
Business rates information letters are issued by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government at regular intervals throughout the year.

UK Government News
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Environment Agency grants permit for Whitestone landfill site
The environmental permit sets out strict conditions on operation of the proposed inert landfill site at Lower Hare Farm

Bicycle Touring Pro YouTube
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🚴‍♂️ Riding the Great Divide! -- Bikepacker Shares His Adventure Plans

Boing Boing
Open 
Explaining how a touchscreen works with a sausage (video)
During South Korea's brutal winter of 2010, frustrated glove-wearing smartphone users learned that they could use sausages instead of their finger. This hack became so popular that one sausage manufacturer reported a 40% spike in sales, as BBC's "The Secret Genius of Modern Life" reports. — Read the rest
The post Explaining how a touchscreen works with a sausage (video) appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
'Thank you and now goodbye' Europe's break-up letter to America
Here's the opening paragraph from Europe's break-up letter with its insufferably redpilled friend, USA:
"Thank you for Andy Warhol. Thank you for the Big Mac and the iPhone. Thank you, too, for Francis Ford Coppola, for Stanley Kubrick and Quentin Tarantino. — Read the rest
The post 'Thank you and now goodbye' Europe's break-up letter to America appeared first on Boing Boing.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Europe prepares 'countermeasures' to Trump tariffs
The EU said it was preparing countermeasures to protect European interests and businesses if US negotiations fail. France called for a suspension in all new US investment.

BBC UK News
Open 
US tariffs 'painful' for some but opportunities for others
Some Welsh companies fear US tariffs may cause them pain but others see potential opportunities.

BBC UK News
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Benn urged to 'do the right thing' after murdered GAA official court ruling
The government's refusal to hold a public inquiry into Sean Brown's killing in 1997 is unlawful, the Court of Appeal rules.

Mail Online
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British Catholic missionary, 83, and his assistant are 'brutally abducted' by 'unknown armed men' in Cameroon
British missionary Huub Welters and his assistant Henry Kang were captured on Tuesday in Bambui - a town located in Cameroons separatist conflict-hit anglophone northwest.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Danish PM puts on show of unity in Greenland after Trump acquisition threats
Mette Frederiksen joins Greenland’s new and outgoing prime ministers, emphasising ‘cooperation, equality and security’The Danish prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, has put on a show of unity with Greenlandic leaders in her first visit to the Arctic island since Donald Trump’s renewed threats to acquire the territory, saying that when Greenland is in a “difficult situation” so too are Denmark and Europe.The Danish PM boarded an inspection ship on Thursday with Greenland’s new prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, after which they were due to hold a joint press conference expected to focus on unity and Arctic security. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump fires national security officials after far-right activist Laura Loomer urged him to in meeting – report
Loomer reportedly presented Trump with opposition research on national security council officials at Oval OfficeFollow US politics liveLaura Loomer, a far-right conspiracy theorist and Islamophobic former Republican congressional candidate banned from Uber, Paypal and some social media platforms has apparently been successful in pushing the White House to fire national security staffers for disloyalty.The New York Times first reported that Loomer, famous for promoting racism and 9/11 conspiracy theories, was spotted in a meeting on Wednesday where she reportedly presented Trump with opposition research on national security council officials during a 30-minute Oval Office meeting. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Severe storms and tornadoes rip across US south and midwest, killing at least six people
Outbreak of tornadoes result in five deaths in Tennessee and one in Missouri as 213,000 households without powerViolent storms and tornadoes have torn across the US south and midwest, killing at least six people and downing power lines and trees, smashing homes and upturning cars across multiple states.The outbreak of storms of tornadoes have resulted in five deaths in Tennessee and one in Missouri, with further fatalities expected to be confirmed. The storms are now tracking east, after leaving more than 213,000 households without power from Texas to Ohio. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Labour tries to seem in control while The Donald unleashes chaos on the world | John Crace
Underneath the measured words you could almost smell the panic as the government scrambled to come up with a plan to respond to Trump’s tariffsWith characteristic humility and good grace … Hardly.Shortly after 9pm UK time on Wednesday, The Sun-Bed King made his way to the White House Rose Garden, looking every bit the dishonest bookie as he held up a board with every country’s separate tariff. He might as well have been signposting the odds on a global recession. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump’s ‘idiotic’ and flawed tariff calculations stun economists
‘Willing sycophants’ came up with simplistic formula that has thrown global economy into disarrayUS politics live – latest updatesUK politics live –latest updatesWaving a big chart as a prop in the White House Rose Garden, Donald Trump suggested his new tariff plan was simple: “Reciprocal – that means they do it to us, and we do it to them. Very simple. Can’t get simpler than that.”Perhaps a bit too simple. The method used to calculate the most important numbers in international trade, politics and economics has left some of the world’s leading experts shocked.Goods trade deficit: $291.9bnTotal goods imports: $438.9bnThose figures divided = 0.67, or 67%And halved = 34%Reciprocal tariffs are calculated as the tariff rate necessary to balance bilateral trade deficits between the US and each of our trading partners. This calculation assumes that persistent trade deficits are due to a combination of tariff and non-tariff factors that prevent trade from balancing. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Why Trump's tariffs aren't really reciprocal
BBC Verify's Ben Chu takes a look at the wide range of different tariffs being imposed on countries.

TechRadar Reviews
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I was drawn to South of Midnight by its masterful audio and visual presentation but fell in love with its incredible exploration and combat

TechRadar Reviews
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How much has changed in cPanel? I used it to find out.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Watch: Sen. John Kennedy Destroys Nationwide Injunctions
Watch: Sen. John Kennedy Destroys Nationwide Injunctions

Authored by Matt Margolis via PJMedia.com,

By now, you know that I’m a big fan of Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) and his unmatched ability to dismantle weak arguments with his signature Southern wit. On Monday, during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, he was at the top of his game, systematically exposing the complete lack of legal authority for district judges to issue universal injunctions — a favorite tactic of the left to block President Trump’s agenda.



Questioning Assistant Attorney General nominee Brett Shumate, Kennedy systematically dismantled any justification for these sweeping judicial orders.

"Mr. Shumate, what's a universal injunction?" Kennedy asked.

Shumate explained, "Senator, a universal injunction is an order from a court enjoining the government in a way that goes beyond the parties to the case but applies nationwide or in some cases universally."

Kennedy pressed further, asking, "What's the statutory basis for a federal judge issuing an order that affects people other than the parties before the court?"

"I'm not aware of a statutory basis, Senator," Shumate admitted.

"There is no statutory basis, is there?" Kennedy reiterated.

"No, Senator," Shumate confirmed.

Kennedy then challenged Shumate to name a Supreme Court ruling that interprets the Constitution to allow such injunctions. 

"Can you name me that case?" he asked.

"I'm not aware of one, Senator," Shumate responded.

"There isn't one, is there?" Kennedy pressed.

"I'm not aware of one, Senator," Shumate repeated.

Kennedy then laid out the fundamental issue: 


"You have a plaintiff and a defendant, and the plaintiff files a lawsuit in federal court. The judge has jurisdiction over those parties. How can a federal judge issue an order that affects everyone else outside of that courtroom?"


"Uh, it shouldn't be possible, Senator, but district courts do it all the time," Shumate admitted. 

"I think on the theory that courts need to enjoin a federal policy from going into effect, and they often will enjoin it nationwide so that all non-parties are protected."

"I thought that if you wanted to affect parties who aren't in court, you had to file a class action," Kennedy countered.

"That's correct, Senator," Shumate agreed.

Kennedy pointed out that instead of filing class-action suits, plaintiffs often seek universal injunctions, which have no legal foundation. 

"Does this encourage forum shopping?" he asked.

"Yes, Senator. Not only does it encourage forum shopping, but also district shopping and filing multiple strategic lawsuits to find one judge who will enjoin a single policy nationwide," Shumate said. "If you have five lawsuits, only one of those cases needs to be successful."

Kennedy then turned to historical precedent. 

"Universal injunction is basically an equitable remedy. Did this exist in common law courts in England?" he asked.

"I don't believe so, Senator," Shumate responded, citing Supreme Court precedent that equitable relief was traditionally limited to the parties in a case.

Kennedy then pointed out that judges issued only about 27 universal injunctions in the entire 20th century.

"But 86 of them were issued against President Trump in his first term. Is that correct?" Kennedy asked.

"I don't know the specific number, but it was a high number," Shumate conceded.

"And so far in President Trump's second term, 30 universal injunctions have been issued against him. Have they not?" Kennedy continued.

"Senator, I don't have the specific number, but that sounds about right," Shumate said.

"The universal injunction has become a weapon against the Trump administration, has it not?" Kennedy asked.

"Yes," Shumate affirmed.

In his closing remarks, Kennedy highlighted the constitutional issue at hand: "Tell me the basis for universal injunction in Article III. Where does it mention universal injunction?"

"It does not, Senator," Shumate said. "It says courts are to decide the case or controversy before them, which is based on the parties to the case."

Kennedy concluded, "So Congress could act and say, 'Look, federal judges, you render a decision to a plaintiff or a defendant, but you can't impact people outside of your courtroom other than through a class action.' That's why God created class actions, isn't it?"

"Yes, Senator," Shumate agreed.



Kennedy’s questioning explained that universal injunctions lack any basis in statutory law, Supreme Court precedent, or historical common law and exposed their use as a judicial overreach that disproportionately targets President Trump’s policies.

The left's weaponization of universal injunctions against Trump continues unchecked, but Senator Kennedy just exposed their game. 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 11:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Antiwar.com Vs Daily Beast: The Syria Debate
Antiwar.com Vs Daily Beast: The Syria Debate

Now that the neocons/libs and Israel had their way with Syria, former dictator Bashar Al Assad has been replaced with… Al Qaeda.

So what now?



Visit the ZeroHedge homepage tonight at 7pm ET for our live Syria Debate with Pulitzer winner and Daily Beast reporter Roy Gutman who will face off against Antiwar.com editorial director Scott Horton. The debate will be moderated by David “Viva Frei” Freiheit.

Has the latest iteration of Middle Eastern regime change paid off or been a total disaster? A quick primer on Gutman’s interventionism and Horton’s isolationism:

Gutman: “Assad Must Go”



Horton: "America is back on the side of al-Qaeda... quite frankly, it's treason."


"America is back on the side of al-Qaeda... quite frankly, it's treason."
Watch Scott Horton and General Wesley Clark's full discussion on Syria, Assad, Putin and more 👇
📺 https://t.co/tkQyaIE64N@piersmorgan | @scotthortonshow | @GeneralClark pic.twitter.com/vjCYp3fehP
— Piers Morgan Uncensored (@PiersUncensored) December 10, 2024
We’ll see you at 7pm ET.

If you would like to listen to Scott take on another interventionist, check out his debate with historian Niall Ferguson on the war in Ukraine from December:

 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 11:27

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Senate Votes To Block Trump Tariffs On Canada After Four Republicans Cross The Aisle
Senate Votes To Block Trump Tariffs On Canada After Four Republicans Cross The Aisle

The Senate has passed a largely performative rebuke of President Donald Trump's ability to impose tariffs on Canada, after four Republicans crossed the aisle for a 51-48 vote.
Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) (C) speaks alongside Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) (R) and Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) at a press conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on April 2, 2025. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

The resolution - which has practically no chance of making it through the House (and Trump would veto anyway), passed hours after Trump announced his so-called "Liberation Day" of worldwide tariffs, would end Trump's emergency declaration on fentanyl trafficking used to justify tariffs on Canada, though both Canada and Mexico are exempt from Trump's 10% baseline rate, while products subject to CUSMA/USCMA are exempt.

"Tariffs on imports from Canada are still set to rise on Thursday. Auto tariffs announced last week will still push the average U.S. tariff rate on imports from Canada to about 3.5% from 2.5% by our count," said RBC's Nathan Janzen and Claire Fan.

"That increase will still matter, but looks small now compared to dramatically higher tariffs set to be imposed on other countries."

The four Republicans who joined all Senate Democrats were; Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Rand Paul of Kentucky.

Following the vote, former Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said, "As I have always warned, tariffs are bad policy, and trade wars with our partners hurt working people most."

Trump has argued that Canada isn't doing enough to stop the flow of illegal drugs from entering the USA. In 2024, CBP seized 43 lbs. of fentanyl in its northern border sector vs. 21,000 at the southern US border. Since January, authorities have seized less than 1.5 lbs in the north, according to federal data cited by AP.

"This is not about fentanyl. It’s about tariffs. It’s about a national sales tax on American families," said Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA), who initiated the resolution.


Democrats argued that Trump is using the tariffs to pay for proposed tax cuts that would benefit the wealthy, but will also make it more expensive to build homes, buy cars and pay for imported grocery products. Kaine pointed to aluminum imported from Canada that is used by businesses ranging from pie makers to shipbuilders. -AP


"Today, Donald Trump takes a sledgehammer to the American economy and even to the American dream," said Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer, who of course also had something to say, adding "Once the American people say, ‘I don’t want to embrace somebody, I don’t want to vote for somebody, I don’t want to support somebody who embraces Trump’s policies,’ things are going to change."

During Wednesday's presser, Trump singled out Canada as a chief beneficiary of "unfair" trading practices with the US despite not adding any new tariffs as part of the Lutnick plan.



"Why are we doing this? I mean, at what point do we say, ‘You’ve got to work for yourselves and you’ve got to’? This is why we have the big deficits," said Trump.

Standing up for Trump were several Senate Republicans - who insisted that Canada's punishment was more about fentanyl than the impacts of tariffs.

"There are unique threats to the United States at our northern border," said Majority Whip Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) said during a floor speech, adding that former President Joe Biden had "also thrown open the northern border. The criminal cartels noticed and they took advantage."

"President Trump is taking the bold, decisive, swift action that is necessary to secure that border as well," he continued.

* * *

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Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 11:35

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Far-Left Maryland Lawmakers Pass Reparations Bill While Financial Crisis Looms
Far-Left Maryland Lawmakers Pass Reparations Bill While Financial Crisis Looms

Far-left Maryland lawmakers, sitting high in their Annapolis castle, are completely detached from reality. They masquerade as public servants but are merely progressive activists who cannot govern properly. Instead of addressing the state's incoming financial crisis and worsening power crisis, these woke lawmakers have focused on condoms for kids and other disastrous left-wing policies. It's as if these politicians are sabotaging the state... 

Democrats in the state have been spending taxpayer monies like drunken sailors, driving the state to the brink of a financial crisis marked by a $3.2 billion deficit, heightened credit downgrade risk, and a worsening power crisis. Compounding the situation, DOGE-related cuts to the bloated federal bureaucracy threaten to trigger a devastating recession in the state, whose economy is mainly dependent on the federal government and produces little value in the private economy. 

On Wednesday, instead of addressing the mounting problems, Democratic lawmakers passed a bill in a 101–36 vote to establish a commission tasked with studying and recommending potential reparations for slavery and the lasting effects of racial discrimination in the state.



The bill now heads to far-left Gov. Wes Moore's desk, who has previously said he will consider signing the statewide reparations commission. Remember, Moore is being primed by the Democratic Party for a presidential bid in the upcoming elections. However, he has already been accused of stolen valor. 


The Maryland House gave preliminary approval Tuesday to a bill creating a statewide reparations commission to study and recommend benefits for Marylanders whose ancestors were enslaved or impacted by inequitable government policies. The legislation, a top priority for the… pic.twitter.com/v2nD5ekFcU
— The Baltimore Sun (@baltimoresun) April 2, 2025
"I have said and long stated that the history of racism in this state is real," Moore previously stated, adding that the impacts "are still very much being felt and they've been structurally felt within the state of Maryland."

The governor and Democratic leadership in Annapolis are in over their heads when it comes to effectively managing the state. The reason is simple: they're activists, not managers. 

Instead, these activist leaders are steering Maryland like a drunk driver on a busy highway—crashing into everything in sight while barreling toward a cliff. That cliff is a looming financial crisis, driven by reckless spending and further compounded by DOGE-related cuts.

The Democrats in Annapolis have no solutions to save the state. Actually, they do - it's taxes, taxes, and more taxes, such as a proposed service tax, and, more recently, a "sleeping tax," as we joked. "Is a Thinking Tax Next? "


Maryland Democrats Pass "Sleep Tax" - Is a Thinking Tax Next? https://t.co/ujScbAAnrT
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) March 29, 2025
Instead of addressing real crises—while tens of thousands, if not over 100,000, residents struggle with skyrocketing power bills caused by backfiring green policies—these lawmakers recently thought it was a good use of time to debate about installing vending machines filled with condoms for children. 


Maryland Democrats are pushing a bill to put VENDING MACHINE CONDOMS in KINDERGARTEN
Literally beyond parody pic.twitter.com/Ynd5X15vzP
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) February 26, 2025
Maryland's current direction is disastrous and will likely spark an exodus of residents and businesses.

A large asset manager based in the state has already told us they're advising clients against investing in Maryland municipal bonds—and are encouraging clients living in the imploding state to relocate.

If the solution to an imploding state is reparations, condoms for kids, and a tax on sleep, then Maryland voters are in dire need of a wake-up call. Honestly, it might already be too late.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 12:00

Ian Visits
Open 
The London Buzz – 3rd April 2025
Today's London news round-up:Read more ›

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Keelung Tower in Keelung City, Taiwan

The Hill
Open 
TikTok deal will be reached before deadline: Vance
Vice President Vance said a TikTok deal would be reached before Saturday's ban enforcement deadline after President Trump’s closed-door meeting with top aides to discuss potential investors. “It’ll come out before the deadline,” Vance said in a Thursday morning interview with Fox News. “We’ve got to wait a couple days to continue working on it,...

The Hill
Open 
Trump’s high-risk, high-reward Liberation Day tariffs   
Are President Trump's Liberation Day a masterstroke of economic nationalism or a reckless gamble that could upend international trade laws and the broader economy?

The smart money is on Door No.2.

The Hill
Open 
Trump levies tariffs on uninhabited islands
President Trump, as part of his expansive package of new tariffs, levied taxes on a number of uninhabited or sparsely populated islands that have little-to-no exports.  The roll out of reciprocal tariffs on Wednesday hit nearly all foreign countries with a baseline tax at 10 percent. The administration imposed higher tariffs on others, ballooning up...

The Hill
Open 
National Security Council staffers fired in wake of Trump meeting with Laura Loomer
Multiple staff members on the White House National Security Council reportedly were fired Thursday following a meeting President Trump had with far-right activist Laura Loomer where she raised questions about their loyalty. Trump met with Loomer in the Oval Office on Wednesday, where she made the case that several staffers in the building were not...

The Hill
Open 
Stellantis halts production at assembly plants in Canada, Mexico after Trump auto tariffs
Stellantis, a multinational auto manufacturer, told employees Thursday it would temporarily pause production at assembly plants in Canada and Mexico amid the onset of President Trump’s tariffs, according to an internal email obtained by The Hill. “We are continuing to assess the medium- and long-term effects of these tariffs on our operations, but also have...

The Hill
Open 
Senators introduce bipartisan bill to give Congress more power over tariffs
Senators have introduced bipartisan legislation to grant Congress more power over instituting tariffs on other countries following President Trump’s announcement of wide-ranging taxes on nearly all U.S. foreign trading partners. The bill, co-sponsored by Sens. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) and Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) — both members of the Senate Finance Committee — would “reaffirm” the role...

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Trump tariff fallout takes hold as; National Security council staffers fired
Global economic fallout sparked by President Trump’s sweeping tariffs has taken hold after the stock market tumbled Thursday. The aggressive move affects nearly every nation exporting products to the U.S, which Trump has argued will restore the country's manufacturing economy while making trade relationships fairer and boosting government revenue. The tariffs, fulfilling a Trump campaign...

The Hill
Open 
What’s next after Trump’s sweeping tariffs?
It’s Thursday. Sooooo, who thinks there will be a TikTok deal by this weekend? In today's edition: THE FIRST 100 DAYS *Awkwardly waves at the rest of the world*: ^To quote the TikTok meme, "heyyy, how y’all doing?’” In one day, President Trump fundamentally redefined the U.S.’s trade policies, blowing up nearly a century of...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany: Far-right AfD rises in the polls
A new opinion poll shows the likely future Chancellor Friedrich Merz from the conservative CDU party losing support even before his government is formed. The populist AfD is cashing in on the dissatisfaction.

Mail Online
Open 
Energy firm goes bust leaving 90,000 customers without a supplier - what happens next?
It mirrors the collapse of smaller energy firms at the peak of the energy crisis when wholesale prices hit new highs but the firms could not pass on the price to consumers.

Mail Online
Open 
Is this the REAL reason for Prince Harry's fallout with the boss of his beloved charity Sentebale? Insiders claim she was spending eyewatering sums on business consultants to break into America - as charity watchdog launches investigation
They claim the acrimonious boardroom battle that caused the Duke of Sussex and the charity's trustees to mass resign was due to financial worries.

Mail Online
Open 
Scientists warn major US volcano is 'moving closer to an eruption' after earthquake activity increases
A massive US volcano looks like it will erupt in 'weeks to months,' scientists warn. It sits just 80 miles from a major city home to nearly 300,000 people.

Mail Online
Open 
Trapped astronauts share horrifying new secret from their near-deadly trip to space aboard Boeing Starliner
The astronauts who were left stranded on board the International Space Station revealed they were almost lost in space on the day their Boeing Starliner ship malfunctioned.

Mail Online
Open 
British Catholic missionary, 83, and his assistant are 'brutally abducted' by 'unknown armed men' in Cameroon
An armed group in Cameroon's separatist conflict-hit anglophone northwest abducted an 83-year-old British missionary and his assistant, his church group said Thursday.

Sky News Home
Open 
Deaths of British couple in France 'treated as murder-suicide'
Officials investigating the deaths of a British couple in rural southwest France are treating it as a murder-suicide.

Sky News Home
Open 
There were no winners from Trump's tariff gameshow
Donald Trump flourished his list of tariffs like a gameshow host in the White House Rose Garden on Wednesday – but there were no winners from the president's made-for-TV show of economic strength.

ZDNet News
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Is ChatGPT Plus worth your $20? Here's how it compares to Free and Pro plans
ChatGPT Pro is 10 times the price of ChatGPT Plus. Is either worth the money or should you stick to the free version? Here's how to decide.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best VPN for gaming in 2025: Expert tested and reviewed
When you launch a gaming session, internet stability and speed are top priorities. We tested the best gaming VPNs, which keep lag at bay and allow you to securely stream without impacting your gaming experience.

ZDNet News
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The best flip phones of 2025: Samsung, Motorola, and more
The best flip phones feature a big cover screen, strong hinge, versatile camera setup and unique software features that take advantage of their deisgn.

ZDNet News
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Want to protect your phone's battery? Stop doing this one simple thing
Basically, excessively discharging batteries harms them. Here's why and what it means for you.

ZDNet News
Open 
Anthropic launches Claude for Education, an AI to help students think critically
No, it won't just do their homework for them. Plus, it helps teachers create rubrics and provide feedback.

EFF
Open 
EFF Joins Amicus Brief Supporting Perkins Coie Law Firm Against Unconstitutional Executive Order
EFF has joined the American Civil Liberties Union and other legal advocacy organizations across the ideological spectrum in filing an amicus brief asking a federal judge to strike down President Donald Trump’s executive order targeting law firm Perkins Coie for its past work on voting rights lawsuits and its representation of the President’s prior political opponents. 
As a legal organization that has fought in court to defend the rights of technology users for almost 35 years, including numerous legal challenges to federal government overreach, EFF unequivocally supports Perkins Coie’s challenge to this shocking, vindictive, and unconstitutional executive order. In punishing the law firm for its zealous advocacy on behalf of its clients, the March 6 order offends the First Amendment, the rule of law, and the legal profession broadly in numerous ways. We commend Perkins Coie and other targeted law firms that have chosen to do so (and their legal representatives) for fighting back.  
“If allowed to stand, these pressure tactics will have broad and lasting impacts on Americans' ability to retain legal counsel in important matters, to arrange their business and personal affairs as they like, and to speak their minds,” our brief says. 
Lawsuits against the federal government are a vital component of the system of checks and balances that undergirds American democracy. They reflect a confidence in both the judiciary to decide such matters fairly and justly, and the executive to abide by the court’s determination. They are a backstop against autocracy and a sustaining feature of American jurisprudence since Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137 (1803).   
The executive order, if enforced, would upend that system and set an appalling precedent: Law firms that represent clients adverse to a given administration can and will be punished for doing their jobs.   
This is a fundamental abuse of executive power.   
The constitutional problems are legion, but here are a few:   

The First Amendment bars the government from “distorting the legal system by altering the traditional role of attorneys” by controlling what legal arguments lawyers can make. See Legal Services Corp. v. Velasquez, 531 U.S. 533, 544 (2001). “An informed independent judiciary presumes an informed, independent bar.” Id. at 545.  


The executive order is also unconstitutional retaliation for Perkins Coie’s engaging in constitutionally protected speech during the course of representing its clients. See Lozman v. City of Riviera Beach, 585 U.S. 87, 90 (2018). 


The executive order violates fundamental precepts of separation of powers and the Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights of litigants to select the counsel of their choice. See United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez, 548 U.S. 140, 147–48 (2006).  

An independent legal profession is a fundamental component of democracy and the rule of law. As a nonprofit legal organization that frequently sues the federal government, we well understand the value of this bedrock principle and how it – and First Amendment rights more broadly – are threatened by President Trump’s executive orders targeting Perkins Coie and other law firms. It is especially important that the whole legal profession speak out against the executive orders in light of the capitulation by a few large law firms. 
The order must be swiftly nullified by the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, and must be uniformly vilified by the entire legal profession. 
The ACLU’s press release with quotes from fellow amici can be found here.

Mail Online
Open 
Why Prince William has hired Diana's divorce lawyers. RICHARD EDEN reveals shock move that's talk of the palace
When Princess Diana was beset with worries in 1995 that she would be killed in a staged car accident, she voiced her fears to the man she trusted most, her lawyer Lord Mishcon.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ben Jennings on Donald Trump’s international trade tariffs – cartoon
Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US tourist arrested for landing on forbidden Indian tribal island
Police say man landed on island in attempt to meet the Sentinelese people – a tribe untouched by modern worldIndian police said on Thursday they had arrested a US tourist who sneaked on to a highly restricted island carrying a coconut and a can of Diet Coke to a tribe untouched by the modern world.Mykhailo Viktorovych Polyakov, 24, set foot on the restricted territory of North Sentinel – part of India’s Andaman Islands – in an attempt to meet the Sentinelese people, who are believed to number only about 150. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Fire crews battle blazes across UK amid ‘very high to extreme’ risk for weekend
People urged not to light fires as crews attend outbreaks in Stirling and Dunbartonshire and on Dorset heathlandWildfires are continuing to burn across the UK, with the emergency services warning of an “extreme” risk caused by the warmer weather.Crews in Scotland have been dealing with a large grass fire at Gartur Moss in Port of Menteith, Stirling after the alarm was raised on Wednesday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
FTSE 100 suffers biggest one-day fall since August as Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs wipes trillions off global markets – business live
Shares slump on both sides of the Atlantic, and across Asia-Pacific, as US dollar falls to six month low after US President Trump’s ‘liberation day’Full report: Trump announces sweeping new tariffsAnalysis: Trump’s tariffs likely to raise prices and cause chaosWhat are tariffs and why do they matter?The new US tariffs “will only create losers” with US consumers particularly hard hit, the German Automotive Industry Association (VDA), has said in a statement, calling on the EU “to act together and with the necessary force, while continuing to signal its willingness to negotiate.”The body, which represents the powerful German auto industry, said the tariffs markedthe United States’ departure from the rules-based global trade order – and thus a departure from the foundation for global value creation and corresponding growth and prosperity in many regions of the world.This is not America first; this is America alone. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Amazon plans 'fresh' James Bond but will respect 007 legacy
Producers Amy Pascal and David Heyman were recently hired to oversee the hugely popular spy franchise.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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How campaigning mum won six-year battle to get Martyn's Law introduced
The mother of Manchester attack victim Martyn Hett has reached her goal of introducing a new law.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Man shot dead by police at railway station named
The man was killed by a single bullet from an officer, police say.

BBC Technology News
Open 
Vance confident TikTok will be sold in US as deadline looms
Despite the increasing number of potential buyers, neither the app nor its Chinese owner have confirmed they will do a deal.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
'I feel lied to after losing thousands reserving unfinished flat'
The developer says people lost their "reservation deposits" because buyers failed to exchange.

Mail Online
Open 
'Knifeman' shot dead by police outside Milton Keynes train station after 'moving at speed towards officers' is named - as watchdog launches witness appeal
He was seen on police bodycam and CCTV with a blade in his hand sprinting towards cops outside the city station's entrance on Tuesday, April 1, at 1.04pm.

Sky News Home
Open 
Trump trade war escalation sparks '$2.2trn' global market sell-off
Donald Trump's trade war escalation has sparked a global sell-off, with US stock markets seeing the biggest declines in a hit to values estimated above $2trn.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Trump trade tariffs put Asian economies in a bind
Asia's export powerhouses, including China, Japan and Vietnam, will be hit harder than most by the extensive new tariffs unveiled by US president Donald Trump.

Mail Online
Open 
Jon Stewart makes dystopian World War 3 prediction while railing against Trump
Jon Stewart made a shocking suggestion as Donald Trump and his administration continually criticizes 'free-loading' NATO nations.

BBC World News
Open 
Zambians protest over heinous child rape reports
Protesters in Zambia call for a change in the law after heinous child rape reports.

Slashdot
Open 
Intel Refreshes Iconic Brand
Intel has unveiled a refresh of its iconic brand identity, introducing the slogan "That's the power of Intel Inside" to reconnect with consumers and highlight the chipmaker's role in modern computing. The new campaign resurrects the familiar "Intel Inside" theme that helped transform the company into a household name in the 1990s, when Intel's marketing strategy directly targeted consumers rather than system designers.

Brett Hannath, Intel's chief marketing officer, said the message reflects the company's belief that its products can unlock potential for employees, customers, consumers and partners. The original "Intel Inside" campaign, launched in 1991, revolutionized tech marketing by making processors a key selling point for PCs with its recognizable sticker and five-note jingle. The strategy helped Intel differentiate itself from competitors like AMD and Cyrix during the PC market explosion.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Techdirt
Open 
Trump’s Buddies At Andreessen Horowitz Want To Help Buy TikTok, Turn It Into A Right Wing Safe Space
We’ve noted more times than I can’t count that the push to ban TikTok was never really about protecting American privacy. If that were true, we would pass a real privacy law and craft serious penalties for companies and executives that play fast and loose with sensitive American data. It was never really about propaganda. […]

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Pakistan: Militants make March deadliest month in a decade
Militant attacks and reactions by security forces led to the deaths of 335 people in Pakistan. That is the highest number of fatalities in one month since August 2015.

Russia Today News
Open 
US won’t leave NATO – Rubio

Mail Online
Open 
Diddy's children mourn major death in the family amid his incarceration for sex trafficking
Porter and Diddy's son Quincy Combs revealed that his great grandmother Lila Mae Star had passed away in an Instagram post on Wednesday night.

Mail Online
Open 
'Activist judges' should face action, say Tories, in wake of 'inadequate' court ruling over Pakistani man who's lived in Britain illegally for 16 YEARS
The first-tier immigration tribunal has been blasted for ruling Pakistani national Muhammad Arshad should be allowed to remain in Britain on human rights grounds.

Mail Online
Open 
Jon Stewart makes dystopian World War 3 prediction while railing against Trump
Jon Stewart made a shocking suggestion about Germany as Donald Trump and his administration continually criticizes 'free-loading' NATO nations.

Mail Online
Open 
'Knifeman' shot dead by police outside Milton Keynes train station after 'moving at speed towards officers' is named - as watchdog launches witness appeal
The Independent Office for Police Conduct said bodyworn footage and CCTV showed Mr Joyce run towards police officers with a knife in his hand just outside the station entrance at 1.04pm.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Hope in my heart’: big Texas welcome for displaced Afghans on hold as Trump freezes refugee programs
Texas volunteers had prepared welcome for family fleeing Taliban now stranded in Pakistan in fear of being deportedThe 24-year-old Afghan woman wants to become a surgeon – and she had set her sights on training in the US.She wants to care for other women and girls, so they don’t have to be afraid to visit the doctor – so at least in one crucial aspect of their lives they won’t have to endure the unwanted advances, dismissive comments and blatant disrespect that she’s experienced from many of the men who have always surrounded her, first in her native Afghanistan and now in legal limbo in Pakistan. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Asian countries riven by war and disaster face some of steepest Trump tariffs
Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos hit with rates over 40% as experts say the real target is ChinaBusiness live – latest updatesAnalysis: Trump’s ‘idiotic’ and flawed tariff calculations stun economistsDeveloping nations in south-east Asia, including wartorn and earthquake-hit Myanmar, and several African nations are among the trading partners facing the highest tariffs set by Donald Trump.Upending decades of US trade policy and threatening to unleash a global trade war, the US president announced a raft of tariffs on Wednesday that he said were designed to stop the US economy from being “cheated”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump fires three national security staffers after meeting with far-right activist Laura Loomer – report
Loomer reportedly presented Trump with opposition research on national security council officials at Oval OfficeFollow US politics liveLaura Loomer, a far-right conspiracy theorist and Islamophobic former Republican congressional candidate banned from Uber, Paypal and some social media platforms has apparently been successful in pushing the White House to fire national security staffers for disloyalty.The New York Times first reported that Loomer, famous for promoting racism and 9/11 conspiracy theories, was spotted in a meeting on Wednesday where she reportedly presented Trump with opposition research on national security council officials during a 30-minute Oval Office meeting. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tata redundancy scheme targeted older, non-Indian nationals in UK, tribunal hears
Three claimants allege Mumbai-based consultancy firm discriminated against them during restructuringA UK division of the Indian conglomerate Tata “deliberately orchestrated” a redundancy programme in a way that unfairly targeted older, non-Indian nationals, an employment tribunal has heard.Three claimants allege the Mumbai-based Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), which is valued at almost £110bn on the BSE stock exchange in Mumbai, discriminated against them on grounds of age and nationality during a restructuring that began in mid-2023. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reading owner granted sale extension by EFL amid suspension threat
Dai Yongge given until 22 April to divest interests in clubEFL believes Dai more motivated than previously to sellReading have been granted an extension by the English Football League until 22 April for their owner, Dai Yongge, to sell the club. Reading had been at risk of suspension if they failed to show adequate signs of progress.Dai was disqualified under the league’s owners’ and directors’ test in February owing to debts and court rulings in his native China but the troubled League One club were permitted an extension on the initial 28-day period in which Dai needed to divest his shares, until this Saturday. The EFL, whose board met at their monthly meeting on Thursday, has now given Dai more time to sell. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Musk to remain ‘friend and adviser’ to Trump after leaving Doge, says Vance
Vice-president makes remark after reports that president told cabinet members billionaire will be stepping backJD Vance said on Thursday that Elon Musk would remain a “friend and an adviser” to the vice-president and Donald Trump after he leaves his current role with the so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge).In recent days, several news outlets, including Politico, reported that Trump had told members of his cabinet that the tech billionaire, who holds the position of “special government employee”, would soon be stepping back from his role in the administration, and would take on a supporting role and return to the private sector. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump’s tariffs: the full list
US president Donald Trump yesterday produced a chart of all the new tariffs he was announcing, affecting trade with countries across the world. Here is the list as he displayed itAnalysis: Trump’s ‘idiotic’ and flawed tariff calculations stun economistsThe president displayed the top of his list from a podium in the White House Rose Garden, and later published a longer version. Note that the “tariffs charged to the USA” in Trump’s formulation include “trade barriers” so don’t necessarily align with the tariffs published by countries concerned. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump ‘is not going to back off’ from tariff policies, US commerce secretary says – live
Howard Lutnick tells CNN that US president stands by decision to impose sweeping tariffs on nations around the worldUS stock markets tumble as investors shaken by Trump tariffsAnalysis: Trump promised lower prices – his tariffs risk the oppositeIn the aftermath of the disastrous debate against Donald Trump that ultimately ended his political career, Joe Biden skipped a White House meeting with the congressional Progressive caucus in favor of a Camp David photoshoot with the fashion photographer Annie Leibovitz, a new book says.“You need to cancel that,” Ron Klain, Biden’s former chief of staff and debate prep leader, told the president, as he advocated securing the endorsement of the group of powerful progressive politicians perhaps key to his remaining the Democratic nominee. Continue reading...

Nature
Open 
Journal targeted by paper mill still grappling with the aftermath years later

Nature
Open 
Solar cells made of Moon dust could power up a lunar base

Nature
Open 
Hidden states and dynamics of fractional fillings in twisted MoTe2 bilayers

Nature
Open 
Strategic atom replacement enables regiocontrol in pyrazole alkylation

Mac Rumours
Open 
You Can Now Get Visual Intelligence on iPhone 15 Pro – Here's How
On iPhone 16 models, Visual Intelligence lets you use the camera to learn more about places and objects around you. It can also summarize text, read text out loud, translate text, search Google for items, ask ChatGPT, and more. And thanks to the latest iOS 18.4 update from Apple, iPhone 15 Pro models can now get in on the action, too.





Until recently, ‌Visual Intelligence‌ was a feature limited to iPhone 16 models with a Camera Control button, which was necessary to activate the feature. However, Apple in February debuted the iPhone 16e, which lacks Camera Control and yet supports Visual Intelligence. This is because the device ships with a version of iOS that includes Visual Intelligence as an assignable option to the device's Action button.



Apple later confirmed that the same Visual Intelligence customization setting would be coming to iPhone 15 Pro models via a software update. That update is iOS 18.4, and it's available now. If you haven't updated yet, you can do so by opening Settings ➝ General ➝ Software Update.



After your device is up-to-date, you can assign Visual Intelligence to the device's Action button in the following way.

Open Settings on your iPhone 15 Pro.

Tap Action Button.

Swipe to Visual Intelligence.



Pressing and holding the Action button will now activate Visual Intelligence. Note that you can also activate Visual Intelligence using the new button option in Control Center. Here's how.

Swipe down from the top-right corner of your iPhone's display, then long press on the Control Center.

Tap Add a Control at the bottom.

Use the search bar at the top to search for Visual Intelligence, or swipe up to the "Apple Intelligence" section and choose the button.

Tap the screen to exit the Control Center's edit mode.



Using Visual Intelligence

The Visual Intelligence interface features a view from the camera, a button to capture a photo, and dedicated "Ask" and "Search" buttons. Ask queries ChatGPT, and Search sends an image to Google Search.





When using Visual Intelligence you can either snap a photo using the shutter button and then select an option, or you can select an option in live camera view. You cannot use photos that you took previously.



To learn about everything that you can do with Visual Intelligence, be sure to check out our dedicated guide.This article, 'You Can Now Get Visual Intelligence on iPhone 15 Pro – Here's How' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Updates iWork Apps With New iOS 18.4 and macOS 15.4 Features
Apple today updated its iWork apps Keynote, Numbers, and Pages with new features that require iOS 18.4, iPadOS 18.4, or macOS 15.4.





For example, in the latest version of each app, you can now make text edits using Writing Tools directly in a presentation, spreadsheet, or document. This feature requires Apple Intelligence, which is available on iPhone 15 Pro models, all iPhone 16 models, any Mac or iPad model with an M1 chip or newer, or the iPad mini with the A17 Pro chip.



In addition, Apple says you can now export a presentation, spreadsheet, or document in another format using the Shortcuts app, and all three apps gained improved copy and paste integration with the Freeform app. Each app also received a few other enhancements that are not tied to the latest software updates.



The release notes for version 14.4 of each app on iOS follow.



Keyote:• Make text edits using Writing Tools directly in your presentation (requires Apple Intelligence and iOS or iPadOS 18.4)

• Export presentations into other formats using Shortcuts (requires iOS or iPadOS 18.4)

• Improved copy and paste with Freeform (requires iOS or iPadOS 18.4)Numbers:• Use over 30 new advanced functions including LET, LAMBDA, FILTER, SORT, and UNIQUE

• See results from a single formula across multiple cells using spilling arrays

• Make text edits using Writing Tools directly in your spreadsheet (requires Apple Intelligence and iOS or iPadOS 18.4)

• Export spreadsheets into other formats using Shortcuts (requires iOS or iPadOS 18.4)

• Improved copy and paste with Freeform (requires iOS or iPadOS 18.4)

• Improved compatibility when importing or exporting Microsoft Excel spreadsheetsPages:• Make text edits using Writing Tools directly in your document (requires Apple Intelligence and macOS 15.4)

• Add additional pages into a word-processing document more easily

• Export documents into other formats using Shortcuts (requires macOS 15.4)

• Improved copy and paste with Freeform (requires macOS 15.4)iOS 18.4, iPadOS 18.4, and macOS 15.4 were all released to the general public this week, following more than a month of beta testing.



The updated iWork apps are available in the App Store across the iPhone, iPad, and Mac.Tags: iWork, Keynote, Numbers, PagesThis article, 'Apple Updates iWork Apps With New iOS 18.4 and macOS 15.4 Features' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

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Reign Of Tariffs Begins: Futures Crash, Dollar Craters
Reign Of Tariffs Begins: Futures Crash, Dollar Craters

Well, Trump's "liberation day" is here... and it has liberated countless traders of their net worth and risk assets: the market's reaction to Trump's newly-instituted "much worse than expected" reign of tariffs is nothing short of a bloodbath, with a global selloff hitting stock markets everywhere but especially in the US where conventional wisdom, at least early on, is that the recession will be worst. As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures are down 3.5%, while Nasdaq futures tumble 4%, but should really be down more: Pre-market, AAPL (-7.5%), AMZN (-5.6%) and TSLA (-4.6%) are among the worst performing stocks within Mag 7, which is red across the board. As Trump unveiled yesterday (after the close), all US imports will have a minimum 10% tariff, with additional duties for big trading partners. China faces a tariff of well above 50% on many goods; the EU is subjected to a 20% levy. Bond yields crash in anticipation of a looming recession, down 4-10bp lower across the board, the Bloomberg US Dollar index is down -1.6%, set for its biggest drop . Commodities are all also sharply lower: WTI -3.9%, silver -3.4%, even gold is back under $3000. On today's calendar we get initial and con continuing jobless claims as well as the latest ISM Services data.



Roughly $1.7 trillion is set to be erased from the S&P 500 Index when trading opens Thursday amid worries that the sweeping tariffs could plunge the economy into a recession. The damage was heaviest in companies whose supply chains are most dependent on overseas manufacturing. Apple, which makes the majority of its US-sold devices in China, is on track to open down 7.7%. Lululemon Athletica and Nike among companies with manufacturing ties to Vietnam, are down at least 9%. Walmart Inc. and Dollar Tree Inc., retailers whose stores are filled with products sourced outside of the US, are trading at least 4% lower.

In premarket trading, Apple is the biggest laggard among the Mag7 as the iPhone maker is one of the firms most exposed to tariff risk given China is a key manufacturing hub (Apple -7.2%, Amazon -6.3%, Nvidia -5.5%, Tesla -5.9%, Meta -4.7%, Alphabet -3.0%, Microsoft -2.7%). In general, stocks linked to global trade and the health of the economy are sliding after President Donald Trump announced a minimum 10% tariff on all exporters to the US and additional duties on about 60 nations with large trade imbalances with the US.

Tech: Broadcom (AVGO) -6.2%, Micron (MU) -6.6%, Dell (DELL) -8.4%, HP Inc. (HPQ) -7.0%
Automakers: General Motors (GM) -2.4%, Ford (F) -2.3%, Rivian (RIVN) -5.3%, Lucid (LCID) -5.4%
Financials: JPMorgan (JPM) -3.8%, Bank of America (BAC) -3.9%, Wells Fargo (WFC) -4.5%, Morgan Stanley (MS) -4.8%, Goldman Sachs (GS) -4.6%, Citigroup (C) -4.5%; crypto stocks also slide
Consumer: Walmart (WMT) -4.7%, Target (TGT) 5.5% , Nike (NKE) -9.9%, Skechers (SKX) -12%, Deckers Outdoor (DECK) -12%, On Holding (ONON) -15%, JetBlue (JBLU) -4.8%, Carnival (CCL) -6.3%, DraftKings (DKNG) -5.9%
US-listed Chinese stocks: Alibaba (BABA) -3.1%, Baidu (BIDU) -2.9%, PDD (PDD) -5.3%, JD.com (JD) -4.6%
Here are some other notable premarket movers:

Lyft Inc. (LYFT) falls 11% after Bank of America downgraded the ride-sharing company by two notches to underperform, citing reasons that include Waymo’s rapid expansion in San Francisco and Los Angeles.
RH (RH) tumbles 28% after the luxury home furnishing company’s annual revenue growth forecast trailed Wall Street expectations. Analysts note that new round of tariffs add “significantly more uncertainty.”
Here are the key sectors in focus this morning:

Tech and Chips

Apple, which counts China as a key manufacturing hub, led the Mag 7 group lower. Among other Mag 7 movers: Amazon -5.1%, Meta -3.2%
Chipmakers were broadly lower; Nvidia is down 3.2% while Broadcom and Micron also slip.
Automakers, Industrials, Transport

Tariffs threaten to add thousands to car prices, and steep tariffs on the sector are already set to go into effect Thursday morning. EV-makers moving lower: Tesla -3.7%, Rivian -3%
Industrial behemoths slip in postmarket trading as tariff risks may hurt companies with global supply chains. Watch: Caterpillar, Dover, General Electric, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, RTX and Eaton.
Financials

Big banks trade lower and the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF falls 4.4%
Consumer

Watch apparel stocks as tariffs on countries like Vietnam and Indonesia are poised to rattle the global shoe and clothing supply chain.
Travel and leisure stocks are down on fears tariffs will raise prices for consumers and curb discretionary spending.
Retailers — many of which source goods from China — are also falling, including Walmart -5.8% and Target -5.2%
Homebuilding

From lumber to steel to building supplies, home construction is highly exposed to tariffs; Watch the ETF (XHB US) that tracks homebuilder and home improvement stocks and its members: Williams-Sonoma, Dream Finders Homes, Builders FirstSource.
Chinese Companies

US-listed shares of Chinese companies decline, including Alibaba -2.7%
Fears about growth and inflation are front of mind, while investors are also dealing with a new level of risk related to volatility and positioning. UBS economists said that real GDP could be hit by 1.5-2 percentage points in 2025, while inflation could rise to close to 5% if tariffs are not reversed soon. RBC strategist Lori Calvasina, meanwhile, cautioned that a “growth scare drawdown” is likely if the S&P falls meaningfully below its mid-March low. In other US assets, Treasury yields slumped while the dollar also fell. Apple and Nike — which rely on global supply chains — are both down more than 6% premarket.

While the jury is still out on the final outcome of Trump's "reign of tariffs", which came in far more sever than expected,  one thing is emerging: for now, Trump's shake-up of the global trading system is hurting US assets more than those in many of the big economies he has just slapped with additional tariffs. As noted above, US index futures tumbled as much as 4% after and the dollar cratered, while the impact elsewhere was less extreme. The Stoxx Europe 600 was down 1.9% and a broad gauge of Asian stocks fell as much as 1.7%; while the euro was up 2.2% against the dollar, hitting its highest level since October in what was its biggest one-day jump in a decade. The yen likewise soared.



The tariff announcement has put more pressure on a US stock market that had already floundered this year, as investors braced for Trump’s policies to stir up inflation and raise the odds of a recession in the world’s largest economy. The S&P 500 was down 3.6% this year before the tariff announcement, while the Nasdaq 100 had shed about 7%. The Magnificent Seven tech stocks have also tumbled. By contrast, Germany’s DAX is up 10% in 2025.

“We aren’t buying the dip in the US,” said Aneeka Gupta, head of macroeconomic research at Wisdom Tree UK Ltd. “Investors are turning toward income as a source of refuge in these times of uncertainty as they wait and watch how countries essentially come back with their countermeasures.”

The widespread selloff in global markets makes clear that investors don’t expect any winners from the latest - and by the far the largest - salvo in a growing trade war. But they also suggest the US itself might be one of the biggest victims of Trump’s protectionist policies.

“Global asset allocators will be looking at the US in a very different way,” Neil Birrell, chief investment officer at Premier Miton Investors, said by phone. “Would international investors sell the US as a result of this and start moving money? Yes, they probably will.”

Meanwhile, the dollar headed for its worst day in over two years...



... as traders prepared for the economic impact. The Japanese yen gained 1.9% against the greenback, and Treasury 10-year yields hit their lowest level since October, further weighing on the greenback. The Euro meanwhile enjoyed its best 1 day against the dollar in the last decade: only the 3.1% surge in Dec 2015 was bigger.




“The aggravation of US growth concerns on the tariff news and related further falls in US stocks has meant that the dollar isn’t enjoying its traditional safe-haven, reserve currency status support,” said Ray Attrill, head of foreign-exchange strategy at National Australia Bank Ltd.

The Stoxx 600 falls 1.6% to the lowest since the end of January after Trump announced the steepest American tariffs in a century, including a 20% rate for the European Union, which said it will retaliate. Most sectors are sliding, with real estate and utilities among the rare gainers. Consumer products, banks and technology are the worst hit sectors. Here are the biggest movers Thursday:



Most European sectors are under pressure following Trump’s tariff announcement. Banks, tech, industrials and commodity-linked sectors are the worst performers, while those that offer defensive charecteristics, such as utilities and real estate, are outperforming
European medical technology and healthcare services stocks drop after Trump said he will apply at least a 10% tariff on all exporters to the US, with even higher duties on some 60 nations
European luxury stocks slide after Trump unveiled a 20% tariff on EU imports and a 31% rate on Switzerland. Companies that make goods in the US and EU, like LVMH, could see less of an earnings hit, according to analysts
Logitech shares sink as much as 12%, the most in over a year, hit by escalating trade tensions from the US. The computer peripherals firm is seen more sensitive to higher tariffs as it generates bulk of sales from the US and owns production facilities in China
Diageo shares rise as much as 3.1%, leading gains for European distillers, as analysts say the US tariffs announcement avoided the worst-case scenario for the sector
South Africa’s key stock index drops as much as 2.6%, the most since August, as new US tarrifs weigh on global markets. A deepening dispute in the nation’s ruling coalition over proposed tax increases also hit the sentiment

Roche shares drop as much as 2.9%, lagging behind European pharma peers, after the company said a high-dose version of its best-selling multiple sclerosis drug Ocrevus failed to outperform the original in a large study
LPP drops as much as 7.7% after Poland’s biggest fashion retailer reported 4Q earnings missing estimates and confirmed an ambitious store opening plan that is seen by analysts as a profitability risk.
Earlier in the session, Asian stocks also tumbled: 

Japan's Nikkei 225 suffered heavy losses with the index firmly beneath the 35,000 level after the US announced 24% tariffs for Japan, while notable losses were seen in the financial sector and automakers were also hit by the 25% auto tariffs.
Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were pressured after US President Trump imposed a 34% tariff on China, on top of the existing 20% tariffs, for a total 54% tariff rate which saw the Hong Kong benchmark conform to the broad selling in the Asia-Pac region although the mainland initially showed some resilience with downside somewhat cushioned after stronger-than-expected Chinese Caixin Services PMI data.
Australia's ASX 200 declined with the index dragged lower by underperformance in tech and energy, while there were comments from Australian PM Albanese who said they will not impose reciprocal tariffs and will continue to make the case for these unjustified tariffs to be removed from exporters.
In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index drops 1.7%, on course for its largest intraday fall since November 2022. The Swedish krona is leading gains against the greenback, rising 2.4%. The Japanese yen and Swiss franc are not far behind.

In rates, treasuries rally, pushing US 10-year yields down 7 bps to 4.06%. European bonds also gain, led by the short-end as traders boost bets on interest rate cuts by both the European Central Bank and Bank of England.



In commodities, WTI drops 3.9% to below $69 a barrel. Spot gold declines 50 to around $3,091/oz. Bitcoin falls 3% to below $83,000

Looking to the day ahead now, focus within a busy economic release schedule will likely center on March ISM Services at 10am ET, seen easing to 52.9, from 53.5. Other releases include Challenger job cuts report for March at 7.30am ET, Trade balance for Feb. at 8.30am ET and US weekly jobless claims at 8.30am ET.  Central bank speakers include Fed’s Jefferson and Cook's speech and the ECB’s account of the March meeting. NATO’s foreign ministers are also set to meet today until April 4.

Market Snapshot

S&P 500 mini -3.2%
Nasdaq 100 mini -3.8%
Russell 2000 mini -4.4%
Stoxx Europe 600 -1.5%
DAX -1.7%
CAC 40 -2.1%
10-year Treasury yield -5 basis points at 4.08%
VIX +3.9 points at 25.45
Bloomberg Dollar Index -1.3% at 1254.51
euro +1.5% at $1.1018
WTI crude -3.3% at $69.35/barrel
Top Overnight News

Apple shares slumped premarket on the tariffs announcement despite efforts to insulate its supply chains. Other major tech stocks including Nvidia, Meta, Tesla and Alphabet also declined.  Nike, Adidas and Puma plunged given their reliance on Vietnamese manufacturing. BBG
Here’s what the White House and its crack team of trade investigators seems to have done: Take the US’s goods trade deficit with any particular country, and divide it by the total amount of goods imported from that country. Cut that percentage in half, and there’s the US’s “reciprocal” tariff rate. FT
US President Trump reiterated that tax cuts will be passed in one big beautiful bill in Congress, while he added they need to get permanent tax cuts.
US President Trump posted on Truth Social that "Speaker of the House Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune have been working tirelessly on taking the next step to pass the plan for our ONE, BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL, as it is known, as well as getting us closer to the Debt Extension necessary to continue our great work. The Senate Budget plan gives us the tools that we need to get our shared priorities done, including certain PERMANENT Tax Cuts, Spending Cuts, Energy, Historic Investments in Defense, Border, and much more. We are going to cut Spending, and right-size the Budget back to where it should be. The Senate Plan has my Complete and Total Support. Likewise, the House is working along the same lines. Every Republican, House and Senate, must UNIFY. We need to pass it IMMEDIATELY!"
In the immediate aftermath of Trump’s tariff announcement, confusion reigned even among some White House officials about what rate the approximately $440 billion in Chinese imports would face. Policy experts were perplexed, too. Barron’s
Fed Governor Kugler said the latest data indicates progress towards the 2% inflation target may have stalled and she supports keeping the current policy rate in place as long as upside risks to inflation continue, given stable activity and employment. Furthermore, she stated that inflation expectations have risen and upcoming policy changes hold upside risk, as well as noted that there may be reasons why tariffs have more prolonged effects.
Goldman's bottom line on Tariff Announcements: The “reciprocal” tariff policy President Trump announced would impose a weighted average tariff rate of 18.3%, around 3pp higher than we expected. However, roughly 1/3 of total imports would be exempt, which reduces the impact to a 12.6pp increase in the effective tariff rate. We estimate this and other tariffs announced year-to-date would raise the US effective tariff rate by 18.8pp. While we assume that negotiations with trading partners will lead to somewhat lower “reciprocal” rates than announced today, the prospect for escalation following retaliatory tariffs and a high probability of further sectoral tariffs suggests a risk that the US effective tariff rate rises more than the 15pp increase we assume in our economic forecast. GIR
China’s Ministry of Commerce held a briefing at 3pm today, just hours after US President Donald Trump declared a trade war with the world. The action includes a further 34 per cent tariffs on imports from China, raising American tariffs on China to 54 per cent. In a statement on Thursday morning, the ministry accused the US of “typical unilateral bullying” and vowed to take resolute countermeasures. It also said Beijing would urge Washington to remove the tariffs and solve disputes through dialogue. SMCI
China’s Caixin services PMI came in ahead of expectations at 51.9, up from 51.4 in Feb and above the consensus forecast of 51.5. WSJ
The BOJ’s policy normalization course has been thrown into doubt because of the risk of a domestic recession spurred by US tariffs, economists said. “This was beyond our worst case scenario.” BBG
The EU has given itself a 4 week window to convince Trump to drop his 20% on the block, with retaliation ruled out before late April. FT
Senate votes 51-48 to reject Trump’s Canadian tariffs as four Republicans (Collins, McConnell, Murkowski, and Paul) joined with the Dems (this vote is symbolic and won’t have any actual impact on policy, but it does send a small message of displeasure to the White House). Politico
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks mostly tumbled in the aftermath of the 'Liberation Day' tariff announcements in which US President Trump unveiled reciprocal tariffs which were mostly set at around half of the rate that individual countries were charging the US with the actual baseline at 10%, while he also announced 25% auto tariffs. ASX 200 declined with the index dragged lower by underperformance in tech and energy, while there were comments from Australian PM Albanese who said they will not impose reciprocal tariffs and will continue to make the case for these unjustified tariffs to be removed from exporters. Nikkei 225 suffered heavy losses with the index firmly beneath the 35,000 level after the US announced 24% tariffs for Japan, while notable losses were seen in the financial sector and automakers were also hit by the 25% auto tariffs. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were pressured after US President Trump imposed a 34% tariff on China, on top of the existing 20% tariffs, for a total 54% tariff rate which saw the Hong Kong benchmark conform to the broad selling in the Asia-Pac region although the mainland initially showed some resilience with downside somewhat cushioned after stronger-than-expected Chinese Caixin Services PMI data.

Top Asian News

Japanese RENGO trade union third-round data: average wage increase 5.42% for fiscal 2025 vs. 5.40% in the second-round.
European bourses (STOXX 600 -1.2%) are entirely and markedly in the red in the fallout of US President Trump’s “Liberation Day”, where the reciprocal tariff announcement was viewed as worse than feared. Wedbush writes that the levies are a “worst case scenario” for Wall Street. European sectors are mostly lower and holds a clear negative bias, in-fitting with the risk tone. Healthcare is modestly in the green owing to the defensive risk tone and as the pharmaceutical industry avoided reciprocal tariffs (for now). Consumer Products is underperforming today, given the losses in the Luxury sector as trader’s brace themselves for the hefty tariffs set on China.

Top European News

BoE Decision Maker Panel survey: firms 1-year ahead own price inflation expected at 3.9% (prev. 4.0%) in the three-month period to March.
Fixed Income

USTs are bid given the US tariff announcement where the initial relief on reporting around a 10% baseline gave way to marked risk-off as the reciprocal levels were announced. In brief the average US effective tariff rate is (once the measures are implemented) around 23% from around 10%. Further insight into Trump’s tariffs and how the administration feels about the initial comments/responses to the measures from various nations may be provided VP Vance and Commerce Secretary Lutnick who are due to speak from around 13:00BST. US Challenger Layoffs, Jobless Claims and ISM Services are scheduled.
Hit a 112-24+ peak in the hour after Trump’s speech, at best the benchmark posted gains of around 40 ticks and the 10yr yield hit a 4.04% low, a base which takes us back to November 2024 when the yield was below the 4.0% handle.
Bunds peaked at 129.94 after Trump’s tariff announcement. A high that takes Bunds around half of the way back to the pre-fiscal change levels. With, as a function of the move lower on fiscal reform, the next chronological resistance point someway off at 132.04. While Bunds peaked at 129.94 and are in the green, they have been pulling back gradually throughout the morning. A pullback which is likely a function of European bourses picking up off worst levels in the morning, though still well into the red, and potentially as the knee-jerk move on growth concerns/general risk is tempered by inflationary concerns.
Gilts are firmer albeit to a lesser degree vs peers. UK benefits as a function of leaving the EU, with the nation subject to just the 10% baseline tariff, for now at least. Nonetheless, the benchmark gapped higher by 58 ticks and then extended by another 41 to a 93.14 peak. Stopping just shy of a cluster between 93.33-79 from early-March.
Spain sells EUR 6.24bln vs exp. EUR 5.5-6.5bln 2.40% 2028, 3.10% 2031 & 3.90% 2039 Bono and EUR 0.6bln vs exp. EUR 0.25-0.75bln 1.00% 2030 I/L.
France sells EUR 12bln vs exp. EUR 10-12bln 3.50% 2033, 3.20% 2035, 3.75% 2056 OAT.
UK sells GBP 3.25bln 4.375% 2040 Gilt: b/c 2.58x (prev. 2.89x), tail 0.9bps (prev. 0.6bps), average yield 4.917% (prev. 4.836%).
Commodities

Crude is significantly lower, with Brent Jun'25 down by around USD 2.50/bbl, as the complex is swept away by the negative risk-tone following US President Trump's tariff announcement. Pressure since the European morning has continued and the benchmarks currently reside near lows.
Spot gold climbed to a fresh record high of USD 3,167.74/oz in reaction to the tariff turmoil owning to its haven status. The European morning thus far has seen a slight unwind of that upside, and is now off by around USD 10.50/oz in a USD 3,116.55-3,167.74/oz range. As a reminder, US President Trump's tariff order exempts gold, according to Reuters citing a White House fact sheet.
Base metals are entirely in the red, in-fitting with the risk tone. On the trade front, Trump excluded steel, aluminium, and gold from reciprocal tariffs, providing some relief to domestic buyers who are already paying 25% duties on these key metals used in industries like automobiles and appliances.
Kazakhstan supplied 150k/T of oil to Germany via the Druzhba pipeline in March (100k/T in February), via Ifx.
Geopolitics

US Treasury Secretary Bessent said the Ukraine deal is coming up and a team from Ukraine may be coming over as soon as this week, while he added that they could see more Iran sanctions
US Event Calendar


7:30 am: Mar Challenger Job Cuts YoY 204.8%, prior 103.2%
8:30 am: Feb Trade Balance, est. -123.5b, prior -131.38b
8:30 am: Mar 29 Initial Jobless Claims, est. 225k, prior 224k
Mar 22 Continuing Claims, est. 1870k, prior 1856k

9:45 am: Mar F S&P Global U.S. Services PMI, est. 54.2, prior 54.3
Mar F S&P Global U.S. Composite PMI, est. 53.45, prior 53.5

10:00 am: Mar ISM Services Index, est. 52.9, prior 53.5
DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

I'm off on holiday for a couple of weeks from this afternoon. I think trying to work through the deluge of very confusing and bespoke tariffs headlines overnight is enough alone to justify the break. You'll be in the very safe hands of Henry Allen and Peter Sidorov while I'm away and last night Peter has been a great help interpreting all these once in a lifetime headlines coming out of the US. It has been a truely remarkable last 8 hours or so.

So one last attempt to navigate all the headlines before I have a lie down. In short the tariffs put in place last night were extraordinary both in terms of scale and in how they were calculated, with President Trump announcing reciprocal tariffs under the Internation Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) as he declared a national emergency over the trade deficit.

Our US economists will need to work through the full implications but their initial read is that if implemented this could easily knock around 1 to 1.5% off US growth this year while adding a similar amount to core PCE. See their brief comments here. So although the impact will be large in many places, the US will see a significant impact too.
In terms of the details, countries will face a minimum tariff of 10%, with much higher rates for many major trading partners. Some of the tariff rates appeared broadly in line with expectations, such as the 20% on the EU and 10% on the UK, but with higher than anticipated rates on most Asian economies, ranging from 24% on Japan to 46% on Vietnam. And in China’s case, a reciprocal tariff of 34% comes on top of a 20% increase in tariffs announced earlier this year. Our US economists estimate that the average tariff rate on US imports could now rise into the 25-30% range, a level clearly on the worst end of expectations. As shown in our CoTD yesterday (link here), that would be in line with levels at the very start of the 20th century.

As this morning has evolved, it has became clear that the scaling of the reciprocal tariffs used a simple formula based on the size of a country’s relative goods trade surplus with the US, with the 10% minimum for countries that run a trade deficit with the US. Quite an extraordinary calculation after months of work behind the scenes. The 10% baseline tariff is due to take effect from Saturday, with higher individual rates effective next Wednesday (April 9). Overall, the size of the tariffs added to the sense of a push for a radical policy reordering by the new US administration, which was strongly hinted at in the recent Lutnick/Bessent podcasts which we summarised here, but didn’t add much confidence on there being an in-depth strategic implementation plan.

The reciprocal tariff plans do contain several exemptions. Trade with Canada and Mexico has been excluded for the time being, though a part of this already faces a 25% tariff over the fentanyl and migration emergency announced under IEEPA. Critical minerals and gold/bullion, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, lumber and copper are also outside of the scope of the reciprocal tariffs, but these are under separate sectoral trade investigations, while steel & aluminium and auto imports will still face 25% tariffs as recently announced. Trump’s comments did leave the door open for potential negotiations to lower tariffs but his executive order also left room for further escalation, saying that the President may further “increase or expand in scope the duties imposed” should any trading partners retaliate. So watch out for these headlines.

In other related news last night, the Senate voted 51-48 to pass a resolution against Trump’s IEEPA tariffs against Canada, with four Republican senators joining all Democrats on the vote. With the Republican leadership having set up a procedural obstacle to a similar vote being forced in the House, this Senate vote has little practical meaning, but it’s an interesting test of the support for Trump’s economic policies, not least with fiscal negotiations expected in the coming weeks.

Markets have seen a strong risk-off reaction to the tariff announcement, with S&P futures down -2.65%, which would bring the index back into correction territory if it materializes in the regular session today. NASDAQ futures are -3.18%. In Europe, STOXX 50 futures are down -1.64%. For bonds, 10yr Treasury yields are -7.75bps lower to a new four-month low of 4.05%, following a -3.7bps decline yesterday. This rally comes even as at the US 1yr inflation swap is trading at new two-and-a-half-year high of 3.45% (+5.3bps overnight after +14.6bps yesterday). Brent crude is -2.13% lower overnight, while gold is +0.48% higher after a +0.67% rise to a record close of $3134/oz yesterday. And in the currency space, the dollar is -0.72% weaker after a -0.43% slide yesterday. Our FX strategists see questions over the policy credibility of the US administration as supporting their bullish EURUSD view.

Asian equity markets are slumping with the Vietnamese stock market down -6.25% given they've faced the brunt of the tariffs. Elsewhere the Nikkei (-3.18%) is hitting its lowest level in almost eight months but was more than four percent lower earlier. China risk is holding in better with the Hang Seng (-1.58%) and the Shanghai Composite (-0.51%) down but not slumping. Meanwhile, the KOSPI (-0.80%) and the S&P/ASX 200 (-0.93%) are lower. Sovereign bonds are climbing across the board with yields on the 10yr JGBs (-12.6bps) and Aussie bonds (-15.1bps) seeing extraordinary moves.
In FX, the Japanese yen has strengthened +1.13% to trade at a three-week high of 147.59 against the dollar. The Chinese onshore yuan has fallen to its weakest since February 13, trading at 7.2982 per dollar while tracking its offshore counterpart, which bottomed at a two-month low earlier in the session. Meanwhile, the PBOC set the yuan’s reference exchange rate stronger than expected at 7.1889 per dollar, 735 pips stronger than the average estimate in a Bloomberg survey thus indicating the central bank desire to maintain currency stability despite the trade tensions. Our Asian FX colleagues have just put out a note looking at the implications. Please see it here.

In the parallel universe of life before last night's blitz, US markets actually put in a solid performance yesterday, with the S&P 500 (+0.67%) posting a third consecutive advance. The S&P had been -1.09% down early on so all of these past three days have followed the same slump then recovery pattern. Both the NASDAQ (+0.87%) and the small cap Russell 2000 (+1.65%) outperformed as cyclical stocks advanced. And the Mag-7 were up +0.99%, led by a +5.33% rise for Tesla. Tesla had initially fallen by as much as -6.40% after its Q1 results showed 336,681 deliveries (vs. 390,343 estimates), its lowest car sales since Q2 2022. However, the share price moved higher after Politico reported that Trump was reportedly saying Musk will soon “leave” the White House, even if the extent of what that actually means is still unclear, with denials of this story seen later.

Yesterday’s turnaround in equities came as investors hoped that the worst case tariff scenarios would be avoided, not least given Treasury Secretary Bessent’s reported comments to lawmakers that the tariffs were a “cap” that could be negotiated downwards. Bessent repeated this sentiment publicly last night, saying “This is the high end of the number barring retaliation”. So the market was too optimistic on this yesterday.

Yesterday's optimism also got a boost from solid economic releases with ADP’s report of private payrolls coming in at +155k in March (vs. +120k expected). So that was an upside surprise ahead of tomorrow’s jobs report. In addition, factory orders were up +0.6% (vs. +0.5% expected).

In Europe, the STOXX 600 fell -0.50%, though it pared back its initial losses following a Bloomberg report that the EU was preparing a package of emergency measures to support sectors that will be hit hardest by the US tariffs. So that was considered to be positive if the retaliation ended up being via fiscal policy rather than tariffs. Nevertheless, defence and healthcare stocks were among the worst performers, including Rheinmetall (-4.21%) as the worst performer in the DAX (-0.66%).

In other geopolitical news yesterday, the Washington Post reported that White House is studying how much it would take to buy Greenland. Iran’s Foreign Minister has also said that the country is ready to begin indirect negotiations with the US over Iran’s nuclear program. This comes as US Treasury Bessent is pushing for some of the world’s biggest banks to help the Trump administration ratchet up economic pressure on Iran.

To the day ahead now, we’ll get data releases including US March ISM services, February trade balance, initial jobless claims, China March Caixin services PMI, Italy March services PMI, Eurozone February PPI, and Switzerland March CPI. Central bank speakers include Fed’s Jefferson and Cook's speech and the ECB’s account of the March meeting. NATO’s foreign ministers are also set to meet today until April 4.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 08:21

ZeroHedge News
Open 
'DOGE Impact': Federal Govt Layoffs Dominate Biggest March Job Losses In 36 Years
'DOGE Impact': Federal Govt Layoffs Dominate Biggest March Job Losses In 36 Years

Over the last two months, DOGE actions have been attributed to 280,253 layoff plans of federal workers and contractors impacting 27 agencies, according to Challenger tracking. 

Another 4,429 job cuts have come from the downstream effect of cutting federal aid or ending contracts, impacting mostly Non-Profits and Health organizations.

The Government led all sectors in job cuts in March with 216,215, all of which occurred in the federal government. 

So far this year, the Government has cut 279,445, an increase of 672% from the 36,195 cuts announced in the first quarter of 2024.

March’s total is the third-highest monthly total ever recorded.

The highest monthly total occurred in April 2020 when 671,129 cuts were recorded, followed by May 2020 with 397,016. It is the highest total for the month of March on record, since Challenger began reporting on job cut plans in 1989.



“DOGE Impact” leads job cut reasons this year.


“Job cut announcements were dominated last month by Department of Government Efficiency [DOGE] plans to eliminate positions in the federal government. It would have otherwise been a fairly quiet month for layoffs,” Andrew Challenger, Senior Vice President and workplace expert for Challenger, Gray & Christmas.


Companies’ hiring plans fell in March from 34,580 in February to 13,198. So far this year, companies plan to hire 53,867 workers, a 16% decrease from the 64,163 new hires announced in the first quarter of 2024. It is the lowest Q1 hiring total since 2012 when 52,540 new hiring plans were announced.

Meanwhile, according to the government's official data, the labor market is awesome with only 219k Americans filing for jobless claims for the first time last week - a level that has been basically consistent for the last three years



Kentucky, Illinois, and Iowa saw the biggest rise in initial jobless claims last week while Texas and Massachusetts saw the biggest decline...



And despite the surge in layoffs across the Deep 'Tri-State', initial jobless claims have been falling...



But continuing jobless claims broke out of its recent range and above its Maginot Line of 1.9 million Americans...



That is the highest since November 2021.

Continuing Claims across The Deep 'TriState' continue to rise...



So who are you going to believe - WARN notices, Challenger Grey, or the BLS?



Will tomorrow's payrolls print be the tie-breaker?



Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 09:36

ZeroHedge News
Open 
VW Among Several European Automakers To Halt Vehicle Shipments, Raise Prices, In Response To Tariffs
VW Among Several European Automakers To Halt Vehicle Shipments, Raise Prices, In Response To Tariffs

Here come the price hikes...

European automakers are hiking prices and shifting production to the U.S. in response to Trump’s auto tariffs. Volkswagen will add import fees to vehicle prices, while Volvo and Mercedes-Benz are considering expanding U.S. manufacturing to avoid the 25% duties, according to Bloomberg.

German brands like BMW, Porsche, and Mercedes are especially exposed, but strong U.S. demand—particularly for SUVs—keeps the market attractive despite the rising costs.



Trump’s tariffs, which took effect Thursday, mark a “fundamental turning point in trade policy,” said Hildegard Müller, head of Germany’s auto lobby VDA. She warned the move would create “only losers,” including U.S. consumers facing “rising inflation and a reduced choice of products.”

The Bloomberg article says that Volkswagen notified U.S. dealers it will add import fees and temporarily pause shipments from Mexico and Europe, according to Automotive News. A spokesperson confirmed the memo but declined to elaborate.

The tariffs have already shaken the industry—buyers are rushing to make purchases, and shares of German automakers dropped sharply Thursday. Mercedes and Volkswagen fell over 3%, while BMW slipped as much as 4.3%.



Mercedes may move production of a model to Alabama to offset tariffs and is weighing pulling its cheaper cars from the U.S. after a 58% sales jump in its top-selling import, the GLC SUV. Germany’s economy minister backed EU talks with the U.S. but warned of a “clear and decisive response” if no deal is reached, calling the tariffs a risk to global stability.

Volkswagen, which builds cars in Tennessee, still imports key models from Europe and Mexico. The U.S. now makes up 20% of its revenue, helped by a 7% sales boost in 2024.

BMW imports 60% of its U.S. sales and depends on European parts for its South Carolina plant. Mercedes’ Alabama factory faces similar supply chain exposure.

Volvo plans to expand U.S. production, while Ferrari will hike U.S. prices up to 10%. British automakers warned Americans will likely pay more for iconic brands like Bentley and Mini.

“These tariff costs cannot be absorbed by manufacturers,” said Mike Hawes of the UK’s auto trade lobby, “thus hitting U.S. consumers who may face additional costs and a reduced choice of iconic British brands.”

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 09:50

ZeroHedge News
Open 
ISM Services Slumps To 9-Month Lows; Employment Plunges
ISM Services Slumps To 9-Month Lows; Employment Plunges

Following the significant decline in US Manufacturing 'soft' survey data (while hard data keeps rising with manufacturing jobs jumping most in years according to ADP), expectations for this morning's Services Sector PMIs are mixed.


S&P Global's US Services PMI jumped from 15 month lows at 51.0 to 54.4 in March


ISM Services PMI tumbled from 53.5 to 50.8 - its lowest since June 2024



Source: Bloomberg

Under the hood of ISM was not pretty as Employment plunged into contraction (46.2) and New Orders dropped significantly (while Prices Paid saw some respite)...



Source: Bloomberg

Baffle 'em with bullshit is back...



Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence, offered a silver lining after the Manufacturing survey's slump:


"March saw a welcome rebound in service sector business activity after a weak start to the year, with employment also returning to growth after a decline seen in February. 

However, the rate of expansion remains below that seen throughout the second half of last year. [ZH: but still stronger than the rest of the world.]



Combined with a weak manufacturing reading for March, the survey data point to GDP having risen at an annualized rate of just 1.5% in the first quarter, down sharply from the 2.4% rate seen at the end of last year. 




But, it's not all unicorns and rainbows:


"The focus turns to whether growth will also trend lower in the second quarter. 

In this respect, we note that some of the improvement in March reflected better weather, after adverse conditions dampened services activity in the first two months of the year at many companies. There’s a suggestion, therefore, that the expansion in March may exaggerate the true underlying growth momentum in the economy.

"This gloomier picture is supported by the PMI’s future activity index, which showed optimism edging lower again in March. 

Business sentiment is now the lowest since the end of 2022 barring only the heightened uncertainty seen ahead of last year’s Presidential election. 

"Companies report heightened concerns and uncertainty around the impact of political change, ranging from DOGE-related budget cutting to tariffs and the degree to which foreign demand may be affected by recent policy initiatives. 

Concerns have also risen in relation to costs, which rose in March at the fastest rate in nearly two years as firms across both services and manufacturing reported intensifying supplier-driven price hikes, fueled by tariffs."


While less dramatic than the signal from Manufacturing suirveys, there is still the stench of stagflation as prices are soaring and growth is flagging.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 10:06

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Here Are The Three Goals That Trump Wants To Achieve Through His Global Trade War
Here Are The Three Goals That Trump Wants To Achieve Through His Global Trade War

Authored by Andrew Korybko via substack,

He hopes to strengthen the US’ supply chain sovereignty, renegotiate its ties with all countries with a view towards getting them to distance themselves from China, and shape the emerging world order.



Trump’s decision to tariff the entire world to varying extents as revenge for their tariffs against the US has shaken the global economy to its core. Instead of restoring free and fair trade like he claims to want, which would give American companies an advantage, he might inadvertently accelerate regionalization trends and the subsequent division of the world into a collection of trade blocs. Even in that scenario, however, he could still advance the three unstated goals that are responsible for this policy.


The first is to strengthen the US’ supply chain sovereignty so as to eliminate the leverage that other countries have over it. This might not be pursued solely for the sake of it, but perhaps also as contingency planning, thus hinting at concerns about a major war. The two most likely adversaries are China and Iran, and a hot conflict with either would throw the global economy into turmoil. Trump might therefore want to prioritize reshoring in order for the US to preemptively minimize the consequences.


The second goal builds upon the first and relates to the US prompting every country to renegotiate their bilateral ties, during which time the US could offer to reduce tariffs in exchange for certain concessions. These could take the form of distancing themselves from China to a degree and gradually replacing it with the US with their top trade partner. Other incentives could also be dangled such as technology-sharing and military deals. The purpose would be to weaken China by chipping away its foreign trade.


And finally, the last goal is to shape the emerging world order, to which end the US had to speed up the end of the present one by shaking the global economy to its core like Trump just did. Obtaining supply chain sovereignty and replacing China as the top trade partner for as many countries as possible would give the US’ leverage over a sizeable portion of the world. While it’s premature to speculate the ways in which the US could exploit this, it’ll almost certainly be in the context of its systemic rivalry with China.

Even if Trump’s global trade war unintentionally turbocharges regionalization trends and the subsequent division of the world into a collection of trade blocs instead of serving as the unprecedented power play that he expects, the US could still take advantage of this to implement its “Fortress America” policy. This refers to the US restoring its unipolar hegemony over the Western Hemisphere, which would make it strategically autarkic if it receives preferential access to these countries’ resources and markets.

In that event, the US would survive and could even thrive even if it’s pushed out of the Eastern Hemisphere upon losing the major war that it might be planning or if the consequences thereof make that part of the world too dysfunctional for the US to manage, which could lead to the US returning to its 1920s-like isolationism. To be clear, the US is unlikely to voluntarily abandon the Eastern Hemisphere, but it would still make sense to plan for that possibility just in case circumstances compel it to do so.

All in all, Trump’s global trade war is an epochal event that’ll leave a lasting impact on International Relations regardless of its outcome, but it’s too early to say for sure exactly what’ll come from it. The only thing that can be said with any certainty is that Trump has a grand plan in mind even if he doesn’t ultimately achieve any of his goals, the three most likely of which were touched upon in this analysis. In any case, the old era of globalization is now over, but it remains to be seen what’ll replace it and when.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 10:15

ZeroHedge News
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'Luigi Mangione' Copycat Kills Pharmacy Worker In California
'Luigi Mangione' Copycat Kills Pharmacy Worker In California

Authored by Luis Cornelio via Headline USA,

A copycat of alleged insurance executive assassin Luigi Mangione apparently harbored so much hatred toward large pharmacies that he targeted a Walgreens in California and fatally shot a vulnerable employee, police said. 

The accused perpetrator, Narciso Gallardo Fernandez, shot and killed Erick Valasquez inside a Walgreens in Madera, California during Velasquez’s shift in what investigators describe as a random attack, Madera Police Chief Gino Chiaramonte said. 

A chilling video widely shared on social media captured Gallardo Fernandez entering the Walgreens, waving his hands before firing at the camera.

He then targeted Valasquez, a husband and father of two young children. 

“He has generalized anger towards pharmacies through previous issues,” Chiaramonte said, according to local news outlet KSEE. 


In an apparent "Luigi style" shooting at a Walgreens in Madera, CA, 30-year-old Narciso Gallardo Fernandez murdered a father of two in cold blood due to a grudge against large pharmacies.
This is a deranged coward who deserves society's deepest contempt and punishment. pic.twitter.com/VCvKvS90Ni
— Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) April 2, 2025
The unhinged man, who reportedly drove 80 miles to reach the Walgreens, also shot other store workers and customers as they fled. He was reloading his weapon when law enforcement approached him in the parking lot. 

“He not only point blank murdered the store employee Erick Velasquez, but the store manager and a female victim after the shooting fled out the front door and he turned and started shooting towards them,” Chiaramonte said. 

The police chief said the alleged gunman told officers that he knew it was over by the large presence of police, lights and sirens coming. 

Local resident Alexis Miller-Jones expressed shock at the harrowing incident, noting that she often visits the store with her 11-year-old child. 

“I’ve not seen anything to this magnitude in our town,” Miller-Jones told KSEE. “One time somebody busted in the doors and stole a bunch of cigarettes, but that was the biggest, this is a lot more scary.” 

Walgreens reacted to the killing in a press statement, stating:

“We are deeply saddened by last night’s tragic event, which resulted in the death of one of our team members. Our thoughts and prayers are with their loved ones during this difficult time.” 

The killing comes less than four months after UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was fatally shot by activist Luigi Nicholas Mangione in a New York City street. 

CCTV footage captured Mangione approaching Thompson and firing a 3D-printed pistol fitted with a 3D-printed suppressor in an assassination-style attack. 

Mangione now faces several state and federal charges for the murder, with the Trump-led DOJ seeking the death penalty. 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 10:45

Atlas Obscura
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‘El Mural Que Debió Ser’ (‘The Mural That Should’ve Been’) in Oaxaca, Mexico

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BBC Top Stories (UK)
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The best VPNs for businesses and teams of 2025: Expert tested
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Amazon's Starlink challenger set for launch - here's when you'll be able to use it
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I caught my boyfriend cheating on me on our Ring doorbell camera… you'll never believe what happened next
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The 'death' of Poundland: How iconic discount chain has been hit by cost-of-living crisis, shoplifting epidemic and Labour's tax raids as its owners put 825-store retailer up for sale
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The Guardian (UK)
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Tata redundancy scheme targeted older, non-Indian nationals in UK, tribunal hears
Three claimants allege Mumbai-based consultancy firm discriminated against them during restructuringA UK division of the Indian conglomerate Tata “deliberately orchestrated” a redundancy programme in a way that unfairly targeted older, non-Indian nationals, an employment tribunal has heard.Three claimants allege the Mumbai-based Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), which is valued at almost £110bn on the Bombay stock exchange, discriminated against them on grounds of their age and nationality during a restructuring that began in mid-2023. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Constitution Hill falls again at Grand National festival as Lossiemouth triumphs
Aintree Hurdle favourite comes down two outWillie Mullins’ runner completes four-timerLossiemouth swept home to win the William Hill Aintree Hurdle, as Constitution Hill left onlookers stunned again with another fall.Nicky Henderson’s superstar was the even-money favourite to put his shock Champion Hurdle spill from Cheltenham firmly behind him, and after a smooth passage through the early stages he looked on track to do so. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Football Daily | Southampton and the holy grail: will they avoid football history books?
Sign up now! Sign up now! Sign up now? Sign up now!While they may be more adrift from safety than a drunken 18th-century sailor abandoned at sea in a leaky rowing-boat without any oars, Southampton still have one small and very significant sliver of dignity left to fight for. As we approach the run-in of a Premier League campaign where anything resembling jeopardy is at a premium, Ivan Juric’s side are clawing their way towards the holy grail that is Not Being As Terrible As 2007-08 Era Derby County. Managed at first by Billy Davies and then Paul Jewell, the Rams of that particular campaign were consigned to the Championship and the history books as the worst team in Premier League history, infamously acquiring just 11 points over the course of a season. And while it is probably unfair to single out the likes of Robbie Savage, Danny Mills and Kenny Miller for their roles in securing this unwanted record, a special shout-out should almost certainly go to pub-quiz staples, Newcastle United, the only team to get beaten by the worst top-flight rabble ever assembled.I can confirm that we have received one bid for 2031 and one valid bid for 2035. The 2031 bid is from the [USA USA USA] and potentially some other Concacaf nations. The 2035 bid is from Europe, from the home nations” – yes, as well as an in-no-way-problematic Women’s World Cup in tariff-land, the tournament is set to head for British shores four years later.To expand on John Kozempel’s fine missive (yesterday’s Football Daily letters), the term ‘tailgating’ comes from dropping the back of a pickup truck or station wagon – the tailgate – in a stadium parking lot to create a flat, elevated surface for beverages, BBQ grills, etc. On a mildly political level, perhaps the ongoing tariff spat between the USA USA USA and Europe may lead to an increase in importing Euro-styled vehicles. I’ve never seen a BMW/Mercedes/Renault pickup truck before, but I’m certain they’ll develop creative party features – champagne chiller, paté slicer, bratwurst steamer – and take tailgating to the next level. Europe should send these over as soon as they’re available. By the way, you can keep Christian Pulisic in exchange” – Mike Wilner.This is an extract from our daily football email … Football Daily. To get the full version, just visit this page and follow the instructions. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Big matchups and bigger bucks: Michael Johnson pledges Grand Slam Track will bring ‘fantasy to life’
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‘Did you stand up?’: read part of Cory Booker’s blockbuster 25-hour speech | Cory Booker
I rise tonight because silence at this moment of national crisis would be a betrayal of some of the greatest heroes of our nationEditor’s note: the following is an excerpt from Cory Booker’s 25-hour marathon speech on the US Senate floorTonight, I rise with the intention of getting in some good trouble. I rise with the intention of disrupting the normal business of the United States Senate for as long as I am physically able.Cory Booker is a US senator from New Jersey Continue reading...

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‘Dead white men are what I’m legitimately interested in’: podcaster Karina Longworth on the forgotten work of Hollywood titans
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The Guardian (UK)
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Deaths of British couple in France being treated as murder-suicide
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Mail Online
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Moment drink-driver is caught crashing car by his OWN dashcam - which then also records him telling friend: 'I've had too much to drink and I'll lose my job'
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Mail Online
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French police confirm Hollyoaks star's mother and step-father died in murder-suicide
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Revealed: Incredible value of four-bedroom home where beloved 70s sitcom The Good Life was filmed
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Slashdot
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Schrodinger's Economics
databasecowgirl writes: Commenting in The Times on the absurdity of Meta's copyright infringement claims, Caitlin Moran defines Schrodinger's economics: where a company is both [one of] the most valuable on the planet yet also too poor to pay for the materials it profits from.

Ultimately "move fast and break things" means breaking other people's things. Or, possibly worse, going full 'The Talented Mr Ripley': slowly feeling so entitled to the things you are enamored of that you end up clubbing out the brains of your beloved in a boat.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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AV1 is Supposed To Make Streaming Better, So Why Isn't Everyone Using It?
Despite promises of more efficient streaming, the AV1 video codec hasn't achieved widespread adoption seven years after its 2018 debut, even with backing from tech giants Netflix, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Meta. The Alliance for Open Media (AOMedia) claims AV1 is 30% more efficient than standards like HEVC, delivering higher-quality video at lower bandwidth while remaining royalty-free.

Major services including YouTube, Netflix, and Amazon Prime Video have embraced the technology, with Netflix encoding approximately 95% of its content using AV1. However, adoption faces significant hurdles. Many streaming platforms including Max, Peacock, and Paramount Plus haven't implemented AV1, partly due to hardware limitations. Devices require specific decoders to properly support AV1, though recent products from Apple, Nvidia, AMD, and Intel have begun including them. "In order to get its best features, you have to accept a much higher encoding complexity," Larry Pearlstein, associate professor at the College of New Jersey, told The Verge. "But there is also higher decoding complexity, and that is on the consumer end."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Wall Street in full-blown panic as stock meltdown spirals… TRILLIONS wiped from the economy and 401(K)s
Stock markets plunged Thursday after President Donald Trump's historic tariff announcement, sparking fears of a US  and global recession. 

Sky News Home
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Luton Airport expansion approved
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The Guardian (UK)
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The Guardian (UK)
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Constitution Hill falls again at Grand National festival as Lossiemouth triumphs
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Worcester wind back to life with second-tier return and vow to clear debts
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The Guardian (UK)
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Israel has chosen military occupation over a ceasefire in Gaza. Where does this end? | Sanam Vakil
The latest escalation and attempts to dismantle the Palestinian leadership are utterly at odds with peace negotiationsSanam Vakil is a senior research fellow in the Middle East and North Africa programme at Chatham HouseAgainst the pleas and protests of hostage families desperate to secure the release of their loved ones, the Israeli government is moving ahead with the military occupation of the Gaza Strip. On 2 April, the defence minister, Israel Katz, announced plans to seize large areas of Gaza with the aim of eliminating Hamas’s remaining infrastructure and establishing new security zones that will split Gaza in two. This escalation, which began in mid-March with intensified airstrikes, is intended to encourage a mass exodus of the local population, and has led to substantial civilian casualties. ​Despite the international outcry over more than 50,000 deaths, 110,000 civilian injuries and significant displacement of Palestinians, the Israeli government rationalises and justifies these moves as necessary for security against an undefeated Hamas. Ultimately, though, Israel’s actions imperil the fragile ceasefire negotiations, its broader credibility and wider hopes for a political process to end the conflict. In reality, this would be the only viable path to stability and security. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The best walking pads and under-desk treadmills, tried and tested to turn your workday into a workout
Sedentary lifestyles are bad for us, but which under-desk treadmills and walking pads are worth the cost? Our expert stepped up to find out• The best treadmills for your homeVarious guidelines suggest we all try to walk at least 10,000 steps a day to improve our overall health and wellbeing. Public Health England encourages a slightly more manageable target of just 10 minutes of brisk walking daily to introduce more moderate-intensity physical activity and reduce your risk of early death by up to 15%.But even squeezing in “brisk walks” can be a chore, with busy schedules and increasingly desk-bound jobs forcing more of us to remain sedentary for long periods. That is where walking pads come in, being lighter, smaller and often easier to store than bulky and tricky-to-manoeuvre running treadmills.Best overall walking pad:JTX MoveLight£499 at JTX FitnessBest budget walking pad:
Rattantree shock-absorbing treadmill£142.49 at DebenhamsBest foldable walking pad:
BodyMax WP60£549 at AmazonBest walking pad for incline:
Mobvoi Home Treadmill Plus£224.99 at Mobvoi Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Lossiemouth wins Aintree Hurdle after Constitution Hill falls
Constitution Hill falls for the second time in succession as star mare Lossiemouth lands the Aintree Hurdle

Mac Rumours
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RollerCoaster Tycoon and More Games Now Available on Apple Arcade
Apple Arcade gained six more games today as promised, including RollerCoaster Tycoon Classic, Katamari Damacy Rolling LIVE, The Game of Life 2, Sesame Street Mecha Builders, Space Invaders Infinity Gene Evolve, and puffies.





Notably, the Apple Arcade version of RollerCoaster Tycoon Classic is available on the Mac:Combining features from two of the series' most successful and beloved games, RollerCoaster Tycoon and RollerCoaster Tycoon 2, this new game invites players to create and run amazing parks with the most outrageous rides imaginable. Enhanced for iPhone and iPad, RollerCoaster Tycoon Classic+ delivers the same depth of gameplay and unique graphical style of Chris Sawyer's original best-selling PC games. It also includes three expansion packs — Wacky Worlds, Time Twister, and Toolkit — and is playable across iPhone, iPad, and Mac.The first original Katamari game in nearly eight years also arrived on Apple Arcade today, across the iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple TV.





Here is how Apple describes that game:In this quirky action game — an Apple Arcade exclusive — players expand their Katamari by rolling up objects scattered across the earth. Featuring unique and whimsical gameplay, and a captivating soundtrack that blends different genres, the game invites players to energize the king's "live stream" by rolling their Katamari to create stars. As users advance, comments from in-game fans appear, and the longer they play, the larger their audience grows. By completing the king's challenges and boosting their subscriber count, players can unlock dynamic new stages.More details about all six games can be found in Apple's announcement from last month.



Accessible through the App Store, Apple Arcade is a subscription-based service that provides access to hundreds of games across the iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV, and Apple Vision Pro, all free of ads and in-app purchases. In the U.S., Apple Arcade costs $6.99 per month and is bundled with other Apple services in all Apple One plans.Tag: Apple ArcadeThis article, 'RollerCoaster Tycoon and More Games Now Available on Apple Arcade' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Samsung Introduces Discounts on Popular Monitors, TVs, Smartphones, and More in Spring Sale
Samsung this week kicked off a new springtime sale, which includes savings on monitors, TVs, Galaxy products, and more.



Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Samsung. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.



One of the best overall deals during this sale is on The Frame TVs, which are available for up to $1,800 off, depending on the size of the model you purchase. Every size is being discounted during this event, with the popular 65-inch The Frame TV available for $1,299.99, down from $1,999.99.



SITEWIDE DISCOUNTSSamsung Spring Sale



The best monitor deals include the popular 27-inch ViewFinity S9 5K Smart Monitor for $999.99, down from $1,599.99. At $600 off this is a solid second-best price on the display, which has a matte display, modular 4K SlimFit camera, and support for Thunderbolt 4.



$200 OFF32-inch Smart Monitor M80D for $499.99

$600 OFF27-inch ViewFinity S9 5K Smart Monitor for $999.99



Of course, there's a lot more on sale than just monitors. This sale also covers the newest Galaxy S25 smartphones, The Frame TV, and Samsung's line of home appliances, including refrigerators and washer/dryers. We've accumulated some of these deals in the lists below, but be sure to check out Samsung's website for the full sale.





TVs

The Frame - Save up to $1,800

85-inch Crystal UHD TV - $799.99, down from $1,099.99

65-inch QLED 4K TV - $1,099.99, down from $1,599.99

65-inch OLED S90C TV - $1,399.99, down from $2,599.99

65-inch Neo QLED 4K TV - $1,399.99, down from $2,699.99

85-inch QLED 4K TV - $1,179.99, down from $2,799.99

85-inch Neo QLED 4K TV - $1,749.99, down from $3,999.99

Monitors and Storage

990 EVO 5.0 NVMe SSD 2TB - $129.99, down from $239.99

2TB Portable SSD - $149.99, down from $284.99

27-inch Odyssey G6 Gaming Monitor - $549.99, down from $799.99

43-inch Odyssey Neo G7 Smart Gaming Monitor - $569.99, down from $999.99

49-inch Odyssey G9 (G95C) Curved Gaming Monitor - $849.99, down from $1,299.99

49-inch Odyssey OLED G9 (G95SC) Curved Gaming Monitor - $1,099.99, down from $1,699.99

49-inch Odyssey OLED G9 (G93SD) Curved Gaming Monitor - $1,299.99, down from $1,699.99

55-inch Odyssey Ark 2nd Gen Curved Gaming Monitor - $1,799.99, down from $2,699.99

Refrigerators

Large Capacity Side-by-Side Fridge - $1,099.00, down from $1,666.00

4-Door French Door Fridge - $1,799.00, down from $2,899.00

Mega Capacity 3-Door French Door Fridge - $2,399.00, down from $3,499.00

Bespoke 4-Door Flex Fridge - $2,499.00, down from $4,099.00

Bespoke 4-Door Flex Fridge - $3,099.00, down from $4,999.00

Galaxy Products

Galaxy S25 Smartphone - Save up to $850

Galaxy S25+ Smartphone - Save up to $850

Galaxy S25 Ultra - Save up to $1,000

Galaxy Z Fold6 - Save up to $1,300

Galaxy Ring - Get up to $100 trade-in credit

Galaxy Watch Ultra - Save up to $325

Galaxy Watch 7 - Save up to $175

Galaxy Buds3 Pro - Save up to $125



Be sure to visit our full Deals Roundup to shop for even more Apple-related products and accessories.





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Interested in hearing more about the best deals you can find in 2025? Sign up for our Deals Newsletter and we'll keep you updated so you don't miss the biggest deals of the season!









Related Roundup: Apple DealsThis article, 'Samsung Introduces Discounts on Popular Monitors, TVs, Smartphones, and More in Spring Sale' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
iOS 18.4: Stop Your Recent Searches Showing in New Safari Tabs
Apple in iOS 18.4 has introduced a potentially privacy-compromising change to Safari that puts your search history on full display when opening new tabs.





Previously in iOS, opening a new tab and tapping the search field brought up the keyboard while continuing to display the personalized Safari home page. However, Apple's latest iOS 18.4 software update modifies how Safari handles new tabs by automatically showing your recent search history whenever someone taps into the search field.



Privacy-conscious users are likely to raise eyebrows at the change, as it could expose previous searches in situations where users hand their devices to friends, family members, or colleagues – or just search for something when someone else is looking at their screen. A quick tap on the search field would immediately reveal what the device owner has been searching for online.



Fortunately, Apple has added a toggle that reverts the new Safari tab behavior so that your recent searches are no longer on full view.

Open the Settings app on your iPhone.

Scroll down to the bottom and tap Apps.

Find Safari in the alphabetical list and tap on it, then toggle off the switch called Show Recent Searches.



Of course, there's an upside to the change that you may appreciate. It makes frequently used search terms more conveniently accessible, potentially saving time if you often search for similar topics. But the convenience still comes with the tradeoff of reduced privacy, and that might be a step too far for some users.Tag: SafariThis article, 'iOS 18.4: Stop Your Recent Searches Showing in New Safari Tabs' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Chatham House
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Trump’s ‘liberation day’ tariffs are likely just the beginning of a longer-term vision
Trump’s ‘liberation day’ tariffs are likely just the beginning of a longer-term vision
Expert comment
LToremark
3 April 2025

Amid strident rhetoric and shifting targets, many observers have written off Trump’s tariff agenda either as a thoughtless time bomb that may wreck the global economy or as a negotiating tactic. But they are missing the bigger picture.















President Trump’s ‘liberation day’ tariffs were both bigger and broader than many observers expected. It is now time to understand that the moves – the largest single imposition of tariffs in at least 70 years – are not a one-off or a negotiating tactic.Beyond the chaos, Trump’s key advisers have a set of theories that they believe will transform politics and economics at home, as well as the foundations of US power abroad. In their telling, a mix of tariffs and negotiations can help the US dramatically increase manufacturing employment, cover a significant fraction of government spending, and reserve security alliances for countries that balance trade and exchange rates with Washington. Although this worldview has thus far failed to convince everyone in Trump’s administration – and many mainstream economists – its seductive promise that the US can have both power and freedom of action, at home and abroad, likely means that it is here to stay.The intellectual underpinnings of MAGA economicsTrumpian economics is grounded in two critiques of the existing global trade system that sound sensible to non-experts while driving trade wonks to madness. Trump used both to great effect in his remarks launching the new policies.






Beyond the chaos, Trump’s key advisers have a set of theories that they believe will transform politics and economics at home, as well as the foundations of US power abroad.






The first critique is that trading partners’ practices are unfair. Trump argues that US businesses, workers and security all suffer because foreign countries are breaking international rules or taking advantage of lax rules negotiated by his predecessors. The result, according to Trump, is that businesses and workers cannot compete and industries essential to US security are threatened. Notably, here Trump is pushing on a strong view among Republicans, and an increasingly close divide among Democrats, that increased trade has cost Americans more than it has gained them. His unfairness case has two sub-arguments. First, that the policies of the Chinese government, from extensive subsidies for exporting industries to intellectual property theft, pose a unique and existential threat to the US economy, security, workers and way of life. This view of Beijing as fundamentally undercutting the rules of the game is now broadly held across Washington. The second is that US allies owe the US balanced trade in exchange for security guarantees such as NATO membership. ‘In many cases, the friend is worse than the foe’, Trump said as he announced the new tariffs. This added pressure on allies completely overturns a standard tool in the US security toolbox – offering access to the US market in exchange for countries making closer security arrangements.


























Related content
The international trading system needs urgent support to survive








It is also utterly antithetical to the letter and spirit of existing trade rules, which foresaw the global economy as a place where different systems could meet on equal footing – and assumed that liberal democracies would win out economically. Members of Trump’s team are now saying those assumptions were wrong or just irrelevant, and countries that eliminate their trade surpluses should be closer allies than those that do not.The second critique is that trade deficits are bad in themselves. This argument has not figured in US policy circles in decades. Mainstream economists argue that persistent US trade deficits are closely linked to the US dollar’s position as the global reserve currency – or even beneficial as they are mirrored by massive global purchases of dollars and investments in the US. Leading figures around Trump, however, believe differently. Robert Lighthizer, who served as US trade representative in Trump’s first term, argues that the deficits have transferred ‘some $20 trillion of our wealth (in the form of equity in our companies, debt and real estate) to the governments and citizens of the exploiting countries’ over the past 20 years. He further argues that the decline of manufacturing jobs – specifically for men – must be reversed to improve the national character. In an electorate sharply divided by gender, arguments about male dignity are falling on receptive ears, economic theories notwithstanding.The longer-term visionThe sheer number of tariff possibilities thrown around by Trump, and his penchant for modifying, delaying or removing them, has led many observers to argue that there is no larger plan behind them – or that the negotiating leverage is the point, rather than any particular outcome. However, this misses the extent to which key members of his team spent recent years gaming out longer-term scenarios in which US tariffs reshape the domestic economy, the federal budget and global economic architecture.






If domestic manufacturing replaces imports that means tariffs are no longer being paid on imports and thus that revenue will not materialize.






Trump has promised his voters that he will bring manufacturing jobs and industries back to the US. He sees tariffs helping him achieve this in two ways: supporting US manufacturers by making imports more expensive and encouraging foreign manufacturers to set up shop in the US. But this objective is somewhat in tension with his pledge that tariffs will cover the costs of corporate tax cuts, reduce the federal budget deficit and eventually replace the income tax. If domestic manufacturing replaces imports that means tariffs are no longer being paid on imports and thus that revenue will not materialize. Likewise, if the dollar falls against other currencies (another goal of the administration that is shared by important bipartisan constituencies), imports become more expensive and tariffs raise less revenue.

Mail Online
Open 
Demand for bizarre 'pubic lift' surgery surges 500% - women are shocked to learn what's involved
It is said to tackle laxity in the skin that comes with age and the impact of childbirth, giving the pubic region a 'youthful and aesthetically pleasing shape'.

Mail Online
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Jean Claude Van Damme caught up in sex trafficking investigation after 'five women were presented to him as a "gift" in Cannes'
Van Damme, known for his roles in the film Double Impact and most recently in The Gardener, was brought up in the case after one of the alleged victims came forward, according to reports.

Mail Online
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Grand National golden girl Rachael Blackmore taken to hospital as her horse dies in fall at Aintree
Grand National winner Rachael Blackmore has been taken to hospital after suffering a fall in the Grade 1 Juvenile Hurdle at Aintree on Thursday.

Mail Online
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This Morning fans blast 'inconsiderate and self-obsessed' Kate Lawler for screaming at ambulance siren live on air - raging 'they're probably going to save someone's life!'
The TV personality, 44, took to central London on Thursday to tell viewers about an ITV competition. But almost as soon as she began speaking, she was drowned out by police and ambulance sirens.

Mail Online
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Trump fires staff of 'idiot' adviser embroiled in Signal scandal after urging by controversial MAGA influencer
President Donald Trump has fired several members of his National Security Council team, Axios reported Thursday.

Mail Online
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White Lotus cast salaries revealed ahead of season three's finale premiere
The White Lotus cast salaries for the actors starring in the current third season have been revealed.

Sky News Home
Open 
Luton Airport expansion plans approved
The expansion of Luton Airport has been approved by the transport secretary.

TechRadar News
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Old Stripe APIs are being hijacked for credit card skimmer attacks

TechRadar News
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Amazon adds new benefit to Prime subscription that gives members a better chance of buying an Nvidia RTX 5000 or AMD RX 9070 GPU

TechRadar News
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Furious fans hijack Nintendo Treehouse: Live stream with demands to 'drop the price'

TechRadar News
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Upcoming Nintendo Switch 2 exclusives - release schedule for confirmed games including The Duskbloods and Mario Kart World

TechRadar News
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Microsoft adds hotpatching support for Windows 11 enterprise users as it looks to end unnecessary downtime for work devices

TechRadar News
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Call of Duty Warzone Verdansk release time for your timezone

TechRadar News
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CinemaCon 2025 live – everything announced on day 4, including full coverage of Paramount and Disney's presentations

TechRadar News
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GenAI bots could well be scraping your web apps, researchers warn

TechRadar News
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Nintendo Switch 2 Treehouse: Live: our Switch 2 hands-on is here, new Mario Kart World gameplay, plus the latest news with the stream underway

Digital Trends
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All Switch 2 launch games
A new console is only as good as its launch games, so what can you look forward to playing when you get your Nintendo Switch 2? These are all the launch titles.

Digital Trends
Open 
Pixel 10 camera leaks show promising upgrade met with potential disappointments
We’ve heard some intriguing news regarding the camera system expected on Google’s upcoming Pixel 10 handset. It presents a mix of good and bad updates. On the positive side, as we mentioned weeks ago, the standard Pixel 10 is likely to feature a triple-camera setup that includes a periscope-style zoom lens, a feature previously exclusive […]

The Aviationist
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Last F-16 Set for VENOM Autonomous Aircraft Modification Arrives at Eglin
The VENOM program will modify six F-16Cs into autonomous aircraft to accelerate testing of autonomy software on crewed and uncrewed aircraft. The U.S. Air Force is progressing with the Viper Experimentation and Next-gen Operations Model – Autonomy Flying Testbed program, or VENOM, which will modify six F-16Cs into autonomous aircraft. On Apr. 1, 2025, the […]
The post Last F-16 Set for VENOM Autonomous Aircraft Modification Arrives at Eglin appeared first on The Aviationist.

UK Legislation
Open 
Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act 2025
An Act to require persons with control of certain premises or events to take steps to reduce the vulnerability of the premises or event to, and the risk of physical harm to individuals arising from, acts of terrorism; to confer related functions on the Security Industry Authority; to limit the disclosure of information about licensed premises that is likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism; and for connected purposes.

UK Legislation
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Church of Scotland (Lord High Commissioner) Act 2025
An Act to make provision for persons of the Roman Catholic faith to be eligible to hold the office of His Majesty’s High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland.

UK Legislation
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Chancel Repair (Church Commissioners’ Liability) Measure 2025
A Measure of the General Synod of the Church of England to provide for any liability of the Church Commissioners to repair the chancel of a church to have effect as a statutory duty.

UK Legislation
Open 
Church Funds Investment Measure 2025
A Measure of the General Synod of the Church of England to make provision enabling the transfer of the assets of certain funds connected with the Church of England.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Companies Act 2006 (Recognition of Third Country Qualifications and Practical Training) (Amendment) Regulations 2025
These Regulations revoke and replace provisions in section 1221 of and paragraph 9(4) and (5) of Schedule 11 to the Companies Act 2006 (c. 46) which relate to the approval of a third country audit qualification and the requirement for a minimum level of practical training for recognition of a professional qualification.

Mail Online
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Delta Airlines passenger horrified over flight attendant's shocking comment after sending a text on board
A passenger has shared her shocking experience with a 'confrontational' flight attendant. In a since-deleted TikTok video, Paige described an incident that took place during a recent trip.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Doge gained access to sensitive data of migrant children, including reports of abuse
Former officials question the reason for a Doge engineer’s access to the Unaccompanied Alien Children portalA member of Elon Musk’s unofficial “department of government efficiency” gained access to a government system that contains the personal data of unaccompanied immigrant children, according to a recent court filing.The database, called the Unaccompanied Alien Children portal (UAC), contains extremely detailed information about thousands of minors who enter the United States alone, including individual children’s mental health and therapy records, as well as immigration records, photos and addresses of their family members. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Not a good idea’: Uefa president Ceferin hits out at 64-team World Cup proposal
Fifa considering one-off expanded tournament in 2030Ceferin: ‘We didn’t know anything before the Fifa council’The Uefa president, Aleksander Ceferin, has hit out at a proposal to expand the 2030 men’s World Cup to 64 teams, calling the concept a “bad idea” and appearing to criticise Fifa for not advising his organisation of the suggestion in advance.Fifa confirmed last month that it would consider adopting the sprawling new format as a one-off in 2030 to celebrate the tournament’s centenary, after the idea was raised at a meeting of its council by the Uruguayan football association president, Ignacio Alonso. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Keir Starmer accuses Reform UK of ‘fawning over Putin’
PM uses launch of Labour local election campaign to attack Nigel Farage over past comments about Russian leaderKeir Starmer has accused Reform UK of “fawning over Putin” as the prime minister used the launch of Labour’s local election campaign to attack Nigel Farage repeatedly over his past comments about the Russian leader.With Labour viewing Reform as potentially its greatest rival in next month’s elections, Starmer devoted more time to attacking the rightwing populist party than criticising the Conservatives. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Tate Modern given Joan Mitchell work in biggest donation since 1969
Miami billionaire couple part with triptych by late abstract expressionist that previously hung in their bedroomTate Modern has announced its most significant single donation in more than 50 years, a monumental triptych by the American abstract expressionist Joan Mitchell that she named after her German shepherd dog, Iva.The huge 6-metre work, painted by Mitchell in 1973, was given to Britain’s national art collection by the billionaire Miami real estate magnate Jorge M Pérez and his wife, Darlene. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Percy Pig’s US adventure may be short-lived as M&S responds to Trump tariffs
Retailer’s ‘gift to America’ could be hit by new taxes as it also adjusts to rules on advertising high fat, sugar and salt foodsBusiness live – latest updatesGlobal stock markets plunge and US dollar tumblesPercy Pig’s US invasion could be called to a halt amid fears that Donald Trump’s tariffs could affect sales of Marks & Spencer’s popular confectionery brand which has just launched in Target stores across the Atlantic.Archie Norman, the chair of M&S, has described Percy as the retailer’s “gift to America” but he told the Retail Technology Show in London that “we might have to change our minds” as Trump imposes additional taxes on imported goods. While M&S is not considering withdrawing the sweets, tariffs could push up prices and make them less popular. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Starmer warns Trump’s US tariffs not just ‘short-term tactical exercise’ – UK politics live
PM says measures mark ‘the beginning of a new era’ for trade and the global economyInternet safety campaigners have expressed alarm about reports that the Online Safety Act could be reviewed as part of the economic deal the UK is negotiating with the US.According to a Politico report, quoting unnamed sources who have been briefed on what is in the potential deal, it will include a commitment to a review of the Digital Markets and Competition Act and the Online Safety Act.We are dismayed and appalled by reports that the Online Safety Act could be watered down to facilitate a US trade deal.We have written to Jonathan Reynolds [business secretary] urging him not to continue with an appalling sell out of children’s safety and to meet with lived experience campaigners to understand the dire consequences.The Online Safety Act offers a foundation that we believe will vastly improve children’s experiences online.For too long, too many children and young people have been exposed to harmful content, groomed, harassed and bullied online. The Government must not roll back on their commitment to making the online world safer for them, now and in the future. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Lossiemouth triumphs after Constitution Hill fall
Constitution Hill falls for the second time in succession as star mare Lossiemouth lands the Aintree Hurdle

The Verge
Open 
Nikon’s full-frame Z5 II upgrades autofocus and shooting speeds
Five years after Nikon released its entry-level and more affordable alternative to its original Z7 and Z6 full-frame cameras, the company is finally updating its Z5 with improved autofocus and image stabilization, and a much brighter electronic viewfinder. Nikon says the new Z5 II is also its first camera that can capture video in its […]

The Verge
Open 
Apple has its biggest stock drop in five years because of Trump’s tariffs
Shares of Apple, Amazon, and other tech stocks are getting walloped on Thursday as the markets digest the impact of President Donald Trump’s new round of tariffs announced on Wednesday evening. Shares of Apple were down about 9 percent on Thursday morning, which would mark the biggest drop in about five years if it holds […]

The Verge
Open 
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds sets phasers to kitsch in new season 3 trailer
Though the last season of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds ended on a perilous note, when the Paramount Plus series returns, it’s going to lean into the whimsical energy that made the original ‘60s show feel fun. Ahead of Strange New Worlds’ season three premiere, Paramount Plus has dropped a new trailer teasing how the […]

The Verge
Open 
Indie studio Heart Machine is experimenting with Patreon because ‘money is tough to come by’
Heart Machine, the studio behind games like Hyper Light Drifter, Solar Ash, and the upcoming platformer Possessor(s), launched a Patreon last December. Like many other developers, it has dealt with its share of struggles, including layoffs late last year. With the many challenges in the gaming industry right now, the studio is experimenting with using […]

The Verge
Open 
Trump’s new tariff math looks a lot like ChatGPT’s
When President Donald Trump began yesterday’s announcement of the White House’s latest trade policy brandishing a novelty-sized cardboard sign labeled “Reciprocal Tariffs,” the immediate and nearly unanimous response was bafflement. Trump slapped a 10 percent baseline tariff on all imports into the US, including from uninhabited islands, plus absurdly high rates on specific countries, supposedly […]

Gizmodo
Open 
Project Hail Mary Looks Like the Sci-Fi Movie Event of 2026
Ryan Gosling stars in the latest film from Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, from author Andy Weir.

Gizmodo
Open 
Amazon Offers the Seagate 5TB Portable Hard Drive at a Black Friday Price Now
Save nearly 20% on the Seagate One Touch portable HDD for a limited time at Amazon.

Air Accidents Investigation Branch
Open 
AAIB investigation to ATR 72-212 A, G-CMJM. Air Accidents Investigation Branch.
AAIB investigation to ATR 72-212 A, G-CMJM. Air Accidents Investigation Branch.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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What Trump has done - and why it matters
We dig into what the US president has said, what it could mean, and why it is happening now.

Mail Online
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'They're not short of a few bob are they?': Residents say travellers leave mess in local park after invading it with their flashy caravans every year
Dozens of vehicles and trailers parked-up on playing fields at Swanshurst Park, in Birmingham on Sunday 30 March.

Mail Online
Open 
Drunk ex-RAF pilot who killed family of four while 'deliberately' driving the wrong way down the M6 would have been charged with manslaughter had he lived, inquest told
Richard John Woods, 40, was almost four times the legal drink-drive limit when his blue Skoda Fabia ploughed into a Toyota Yaris on the M6 IN Cumbria.

Mail Online
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Reclusive Athina Onassis, heiress to $2.7 billion fortune, is unrecognisable as she makes first public appearance in 3 years at charity event in Paris
Athina Onassis, 40, was snapped at an art event hosted by the Amis du Centre Pompidou in Paris last month.

Mail Online
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Brit tourist lashes out at 'rip off' fee for a sachet of HP sauce in Benidorm… and is ridiculed online
The tourist had been visiting the holiday hotspot with her family before stopping for a peaceful breakfast at the The 4 Kings bar on Avenida Mediterraneo.

Mail Online
Open 
Huge 90s pop star reveals heartbreaking battle with cancer left him infertile, bald and isolated
The 911 lead singer, 51, which was formed in 1995 before splitting five years later, appeared on This Morning on Thursday to raise awareness of lymphoma, cancer of the lymph nodes.

Mail Online
Open 
Aides reveal how Biden was 'out of it' and needed fluorescent tape on the floor to guide him
Aides to Joe Biden are revealing their concerns about how he was 'out' of it and the lengths they had to go to in order to keep him looking presidential during his final years in the White House.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Luton airport expansion approved by government
Annual passenger numbers are due to almost double to 32 million, despite environmental concerns.

BBC World News
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iPhones, prices and Brexit: Your questions about tariffs answered
Donald Trump slaps much of the world with a 10% baseline tariff while others face even higher rates. Our correspondents answer your questions.

BBC World News
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UK set to host 2035 Women's World Cup
The home nations England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland will likely be hosting the 2035 Women's World Cup as the only 'valid' bid.

Russia Today News
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ICC responds to Netanyahu’s Hungary visit

Mail Online
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The simple secret behind Donald Trump's dodgy tariffs 'formula' is revealed... as baffled economists pour scorn on US President's 'irrational' calculation of global trade levies
A giant chart brandished by the US President revealed how the EU was being hit by 20 per cent 'reciprocal tariffs' on all goods.

Mail Online
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Celebrity Big Brother star Angellica Bell's surprising job before TV fame, early hardship and private life with famous husband
Away from the glitz and glam of television, the presenter, 49, leads a normal life with her fellow TV star husband Michael Underwood and their two children.

Sky News Home
Open 
Trump trade war escalation sparks global market sell-off
Donald Trump's trade war escalation has sparked a global sell-off, with US markets seeing the biggest declines.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Assisted Dying: The Final Choice
How assisted dying works in California and Canada.

Ars Technica
Open 
RFK Jr.’s bloodbath at HHS: Blowback grows as losses become clearer

Ars Technica
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Explaining MicroSD Express cards and why you should care about them

Ars Technica
Open 
A bonus from the shingles vaccine: Dementia protection?

Wired Top Stories
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It Might Be Time to Ditch Your Emotional Support Hoodie
The hoodie is a work-from-home security blanket. But in the office, it’s a trap.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The Blunt Force Trauma of the Trump Tariffs
The US is barreling toward a recession for no good reason, and dragging the world—and a few thousand penguins on remote Antarctic islands—down with it.

Computer Weekly
Open 
Taking a ‘good enough’ approach with cloud security isn't enough
In the wake of the January 2025 'Codefinger' attacks against AWS S3 users, Thales Rob Elliss argues that many organisations are dropping the ball when it comes to their understanding of cloud security best practice

Boing Boing
Open 
Supporting ongoing Los Angeles wildfire recovery efforts
Entire lives are still uprooted, and a simple donation can go a long way toward helping with the relief efforts for the Los Angeles wildfires.
Yesterday, while doing some paperwork at the DMV, my father, who lives in LA, talked with a gentleman who had lost his home in the wildfire of the Pacific Palisades. — Read the rest
The post Supporting ongoing Los Angeles wildfire recovery efforts appeared first on Boing Boing.

Deutsche Welle
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Adolescence and mental health: Are smartphone bans enough?
British Netflix series "Adolescence" has sparked discussion about the internet, smartphones and teens' mental health. Does the online world really harm teenagers’ health? Researchers have clear advice.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Sri Lanka: Former 'Tamil Tigers' struggle to reintegrate
Nearly 16 years after Sri Lanka's civil war, former female fighters from Sri Lanka's northern provinces still have limited opportunities.

Mail Online
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Elizabeth Hurley, 59, goes braless and flashes her knickers under a sheer pink dress as she drinks milk in quirky shoot
The English actress went braless beneath the risky silk number in a shoot posted to Instagram on Wednesday, adding a pair of platform shoes to the outfit.

Mail Online
Open 
This Morning fans blast 'inconsiderate and self-obsessed' Kate Lawler for screaming at an ambulance live on air - raging 'they're probably going to save someone's life!'
The TV personality, 44, took to central London on Thursday to tell viewers about an ITV competition. But almost as soon as she began speaking, she was drowned out by police and ambulance sirens.

Mail Online
Open 
Today Programme listeners call out tension between Emma Barnett and Nick Robinson on their first show together since 'clashing egos' row
Emma Barnett, 61, and Nick Robinson, 61, tried to pretend it was business as usual, but Radio 4 listeners were less than convinced, noting an icy air between the pair on Thursday morning.

The Guardian (UK)
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Elijah Wood says fees for Lord of the Rings actors were ‘not massive’
Star says cast took a ‘gamble’ appearing in Peter Jackson’s hit trilogy and did not earn enough to ‘rest easy’ for lifeElijah Wood has said that his salary for The Lord of the Rings movies was “not massive” and that appearing in the films was “a real gamble”.According to a report in Business Insider, which carried quotes from the star at the Texas film awards in March, Wood said the fact that the actors had to sign up for all three films at the start meant that their fees were not related to the film’s financial success. “Because we weren’t making one movie and then renegotiating a contract for the next, it wasn’t the sort of lucrative scenario that you could sort of rest easy for the rest of your life.” Continue reading...

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Chaka Khan on Prince, poetry and wild, wonderful nights: ‘No one’s done anything but craziness at 4am’
The singer answers your questions about her drum skills, friendship with Joni Mitchell and more – and reveals unheard music with both Prince and SiaCan you remember the precise moment you realised you had a gift as a vocalist? SalfordRed64I was doing a talent show at the Burning Spear in Chicago. My group, the Crystallettes, graced many a nightclub stage in competitions, and every time either us or [fellow Chicago girl group] the Emotions would win. But I remember singing some Aretha Franklin songs and people in the audience were throwing money on the stage, and they started calling me “little Aretha”. That’s when I connected the dots: “Oh, I see what this is all about.” I realised I didn’t have to become a teacher or a whatever I wanted to be when I grew up back then – I could be a singer!You have so much confidence and you just knew you and [the band] Rufus were going to make it big. Where does that confidence come from? stifwhiffWhen I was with Rufus, I knew I loved what we were doing, and I could only hope and pray everyone else loved it like I did. That’s all you can ask for. And that’s still how I am about the music I make. I have confidence in everything I do – all the time. And that is a necessary thing to have if you want success – if you’ve created something and you want everyone to love it, you have to love it first. And that’s applicable to everything in life, not just music. Continue reading...

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Tate Modern given Joan Mitchell work in biggest donation since 1969
Miami billionaire couple part with triptych by late abstract expressionist that previously hung in their bedroomTate Modern has announced its most significant single donation in more than 50 years, a monumental triptych by the American abstract expressionist Joan Mitchell that she named after her German shepherd dog, Iva.The huge six-metre work, painted by Mitchell in 1973, was given to Britain’s national art collection by the billionaire Miami real estate magnate Jorge M Pérez and his wife, Darlene. Continue reading...

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Luton airport allowed to double capacity after UK government overrules planners
Transport secretary Heidi Alexander grants consent to London’s fourth-biggest airport to allow potential 32m passengers a yearLuton airport will be allowed to almost double in capacity after the government overruled planning inspectors who recommended blocking the scheme on environmental grounds.The transport secretary, Heidi Alexander, granted a development consent order for the airport’s plans to expand its perimeter and add a new terminal, allowing for a potential 32 million passengers a year. Continue reading...

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‘I heard them take their last breath’: survivor recounts Gaza paramedic killings
Munther Abed, 27, was in the first ambulance on the scene of an airstrike near Rafah when Israeli soldiers opened fire• Gaza paramedic killings: a visual timelineA survivor from a massacre of Palestinian paramedics and rescue workers in Gaza has said he saw Israeli troops open fire on a succession of Red Crescent ambulances and rescue vehicles and then use a bulldozer to bury the wreckage in a pit.Munther Abed, a 27-year-old Red Crescent volunteer, was in the back of the first ambulance to arrive on the scene of an airstrike in the Hashashin district of Rafah before dawn on 23 March, when it came under intense Israeli fire. His two Red Crescent colleagues sitting in the front were killed but he survived by throwing himself to the floor of the vehicle. Continue reading...

The Register
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Mediatek wants to make Chromebooks more like Copilot+ PCs
Arm-based silicon to help Google hardware muscle in on territory of Microsoft's own Arm-based PCs MediaTek is bringing out a new chip for Chromebooks that blurs the boundary with Copilot+ PCs, sporting an 8-core CPU cluster and a neural processing unit (NPU) rated at 50 TOPS.…

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RSS.com Review

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I tried US Fleet Tracking - read what I thought of this GPS fleet management provider

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Here's what I think of ScalaHosting's SPanel

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Wimbledon’s Henman Hill set for makeover ahead of the championship’s 150th anniversary
Wimbledon's famous Henman Hill / Murray Mount could get larger and easier to sit on for its many fans, as the All England Lawn Tennis Club has announced plans to improve the hill.Read more ›

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Red’s in Clarksdale, Mississippi

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Chilling declassified CIA file reveals aliens committed 'revenge massacre' after UFO was shot down
A bone-chilling CIAS document has exposed an alleged massacre by aliens from a crashed UFO.

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Why has Trump slapped tariffs on the rest of the world - and how will it affect me? Everything you need to know about Donald's trade war and how it could play out
On Wednesday night, Donald Trump announced a sweeping range of tariff measures on foreign imports in what he called America's 'declaration of economic independence'.

The Hill
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Markets plunge in reaction to Trump 'Liberation Day' tariffs
Stocks plunged Thursday morning as U.S. trading opened for the first time after President Trump’s announcement of heavy tariffs on nearly every nation exporting products to the United States. The Dow Jones Industrial Average opened with a loss of more than 1,200 points, falling 2.8 percent on the day. The S&P 500 index opened with...

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NASA astronaut reunites with dogs after 9-month stay in space
NASA astronaut Suni Williams returned to Earth after a planned eight-day mission turned into a nine-month stay on the ISS.

The Hill
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Trump versus Obama: 'Fundamental transformation' is in the eye of the beholder
If your guy does it, it’s fine. If the other guy does it, it’s tyranny. If your team wins, it’s democracy in action. If the other team wins, it’s the end of the republic.

The Hill
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White House defends not including Russia, North Korea on tariffs
The White House on Thursday defended its decision to not include Russia, North Korea, Cuba or Belarus in the latest round of tariffs, which targeted dozens of global trading partners that were labeled the “worst offenders” when it came to trade barriers. A White House official told The Hill in a statement that the four...

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CNN host on Trump tariffs: 'The president said today a whole load of economic nonsense'
CNN host Richard Quest tore into President Trump over new tariffs on foreign nations his administration announced Wednesday. "Let there be no doubt about this: The president said today a whole load of economic nonsense, things that we know simply will not happen. He talks about it being great for the economy and 'it’s going...

The Hill
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Maryland lawmakers approve reparations study, bill heads to Moore
A Maryland bill to create a commission to study and recommend future reparations for slavery and racial discrimination is heading to Gov. Wes Moore’s (D) desk for consideration.  The bill, a top priority of the Legislative Black Caucus of Maryland, passed in a 101-36 vote in the state’s House on Wednesday. The legislation outlines a...

The Hill
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Live updates: Trump's new tariffs send markets diving as countries weigh response
The stock market plunged Thursday after President Trump signed sweeping tariffs into effect on dozens of countries, completely upending U.S. trade policy. The aggressive move affects nearly every nation exporting products to the U.S, which Trump has argued will restore the country's manufacturing economy while making trade relationships fairer and boosting government revenue. The tariffs,...

The Hill
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More Americans worried about financial issues: Gallup
More Americans now are worried about financial issues, including affordability, inflation and the federal budget deficit, along with health care and Social Security, according to a survey that was released on Thursday. The new Gallup poll found that the majority of Americans have a “great deal” of worry about bread-and-butter issues such as the economy...

The Hill
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Haberman: Trump advisers 'tired of Musk's presence'
New York Times political correspondent Maggie Haberman said Wednesday that President Trump’s advisers are “tired of” tech billionaire Elon Musk hanging around. “He does see advantages in having Musk around,” Haberman told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins on “The Source” of Trump in a clip highlighted by Mediaite. “I don’t think that he is eager to shove...

The Hill
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Save NPR and PBS — but without the government money
The best strategy for public broadcasting would be to take their own decisive steps to ditch federal funding and move on.

The Hill
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Eric Trump: Countries that rush to negotiate trade deal with US ‘will win’
Eric Trump, the son of President Trump, advised the many countries who will face reciprocal tariffs on goods imported to the U.S. to act quickly to negotiate with his father. "I wouldn’t want to be the last country that tries to negotiate a trade deal with @realDonaldTrump,” the younger Trump, who serves as vice president of...

Deutsche Welle
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Gaza: Palestinians bear the brunt of Israel's clampdown
New military corridors, airstrikes, evacuation and a blockade of humanitarian aid exacerbate the humanitarian situation in Gaza. Is Israel's objective to pave the way for Trump's "Gaza Riviera" plans?

Deutsche Welle
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Turkey detains 11 people for pro-government business boycott calls
A daylong shopping boycott was part of protests against the imprisonment of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's main rival, Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu.

Mail Online
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White Lotus cast salaries revealed ahead of season three's finale premiere
This week, one of the producers disclosed how much each actor - including Leslie Bibb, Walton Goggins and Patrick Schwarzenegger among many others - is paid.

Mail Online
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Gen Z aren't lazy, they're masters of 'justified effort management', says Oxford professor
Katrien Devolder, a professor of applied ethics, said that many older people are workaholics and Gen Z instead chooses to make 'strategic choices about their energy'.

Mail Online
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I'm a travel expert and these are the world's best destinations for female solo travellers
Travel expert, Will Sarson at Riviera Travel, is here to share some of the company's choices of the best destinations for female solo travellers...

Mail Online
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Liam Payne's girlfriend Kate Cassidy returns to restaurant where they met for the first time since his death - but some fans accuse her of using him for 'clout'
The influencer has been sharing her healing journey online and while some fans have thanked her for being so open others have accused her of using the singer for 'clout.'

Mail Online
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Celebrity Big Brother star Angellica Bell's surprising job before TV fame, early hardship and private life with famous husband 
Away from the glitz and glam of television, the presenter, 49, leads a normal life with her fellow TV star husband Michael Underwood and their two children.

The Guardian (UK)
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Post your questions for Ani DiFranco
Ahead of her performance at Glastonbury, the activist singer-songwriter will take on questions about wearing Prince out and rejecting the major label systemAni DiFranco may be the only musician ever to have tired Prince into submission. When they jammed in 1999, he and his band called it quits after four hours while the Buffalo songwriter kept dancing. “After being with her, it dawned on me why she’s like that,” Prince said. “She’s never had a ceiling over her.”DiFranco has been tirelessly doing things to her own beat since 1989. She formed her own label, Righteous Babe, and became a defining activist voice of the 90s, calling out rape culture, racism and threats to reproductive rights in her inimitable conversational poetry. Among the artists she signed to her independent label is Anaïs Mitchell, who would go on to cast DiFranco as Persephone on her 2010 album Hadestown – now a major stage musical in which DiFranco recently starred on Broadway. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Murders of two female students prompt calls for a ‘cultural rebellion’ in Italy
Sara Campanella and Ilaria Sula were found within 48 hours of each other, bringing the number of femicides in 2025 to 11There have been calls in Italy for a “cultural rebellion” amid outrage and protests over the murders of two female students found within 48 hours of each other, bringing the number of femicides in the country since the start of the year to 11.Sara Campanella, a 22-year-old biomedical student, was stabbed at a bus stop in the Sicilian city of Messina on Monday afternoon and died while being taken to hospital. Continue reading...

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Prince Harry attacks ‘blatant lies’ in charity row as watchdog opens inquiry
Duke of Sussex says he hopes Charity Commission will ‘unveil the truth’ about governance of SentebalePrince Harry has launched a thinly veiled attack on the chair of the Sentebale charity he founded two decades ago for telling “blatant lies”, as an inquiry was launched into claims about the organisation’s governance.In a statement issued in response to the Charity Commission’s decision to open a “compliance case”, the prince said he hoped a “robust inquiry” would “unveil the truth”. Continue reading...

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Percy Pig’s US adventure may be short-lived as M&S responds to Trump tariffs
Retailer’s ‘gift to America’ could be hit by new taxes as it also adjusts to new rules on advertising high fat, sugar and salt foodsBusiness live – latest updatesGlobal stock markets plunge and US dollar tumblesPercy Pig’s US invasion could be called to a halt amid fears that Donald Trump’s tariffs could affect sales of Marks & Spencer’s popular confectionery brand which has just launched in Target stores across the Atlantic.Archie Norman, the chair of M&S, has described Percy as the retailer’s “gift to America” but he told the Retail Technology Show in London that “we might have to change our minds” as Trump imposes additional taxes on imported goods. While M&S is not considering withdrawing the sweets, tariffs could push up prices and make them less popular. Continue reading...

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UK draws up list of US products it could hit with tariffs
The business secretary says he wants to reach an economic deal but would take "necessary steps' if talks failed.

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We saw Sony's 2025 Bravia TV lineup, including a flagship OLED model that blew us away
The successor to the 'crown jewel' A95L is here and is seriously impressive. Sony is also expanding its range of Bravia TVs by carrying over several models from last year.

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Gemini Pro 2.5 is one of only two AIs to crush all my coding tests - and it's free
I found Gemini Pro 2.5 to be a surprisingly good coding assistant - and a big threat to ChatGPT.

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My search for the ultimate multitool for under $30 is finally over
The NexTool E1 packs a punch in a compact design and offers multiple functions. Here's my verdict after extensive usage.

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Google's NotebookLM can gather your research sources for you now - and it's free
Tired of spending hours hunting for sources for your reports or other projects? Google's AI-powered notebook can do that for you now. Here's how it works.

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Garmin wants you to pay for AI features and enhanced software updates - is it worth it?
If you want AI-powered 'Active Intelligence,' training guidance, and more, you'll have to pay for the new Connect Plus service.

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If you're planning to upgrade your electronics, you might want to buy them now - here's why
President Trump's new economic plan, set to take effect on April 5, could shake up global tech manufacturing - potentially hitting consumers the hardest.

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India: Lower house passes contentious Muslim land bill
Critics of the bill amending laws that govern Muslim land endowments, called wafqs, say it is an attempt by Modi's BJP Hindu nationalist ruling party to weaken minority rights.

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Adolescence and mental health: Are smartphone bans enough?
British Netflix series Adolescence has sparked discussion about the internet, smartphones and teen's mental health. Does the online world really harm teenagers’ health? Researchers have clear advice for parents.

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K-pop show mired in child exploitation controversy
The show "Under15" attracted criticism in South Korea for encouraging children aiming to be the next K-Pop prodigy to dress, sing and perform the provocative routines of established stars.

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Interpol refuses request to arrest Bosnian Serb leader

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Man blows up his car and turns himself into a human fireball in Amsterdam days after knifeman's frenzied attack was ended by hero Brit at same tourist spot
Shocking footage shows a red car driving slowly into a crowd and exploding before the vehicle burst into a flames at around 1.30pm.

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Celebrity Big Brother star Mickey Rourke's eye-watering salary for ITV stint revealed amid fears actor could quit series
The 80s action star, 72, was the final star to sign up for the hotly-anticipated reality TV show, which is coming to screens on April 7 for just over two weeks until April 25.

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Top-20 players ask Grand Slams for more prize money
The top 20 men's and women's players send a letter to the four Grand Slams asking for more prize money.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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iPhones, pensions and Brexit: Your questions about tariffs answered
Donald Trump slaps much of the world with a 10% baseline tariff while others face even higher rates. Our correspondents answer your questions.

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The countries hit hardest by new US tariffs
A 10% rate of import tax will apply globally - with higher rates for a list of Trump's "worst offenders".

BBC Top Stories (US)
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What does it mean for me? Your questions answered
Donald Trump slaps much of the world with a 10% baseline tariff while others face even higher rates. Our correspondents answer your questions.

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White House explains Russia’s absence from tariff list

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Flat Earthers 'in shambles' after astronauts release new footage of our planet
Civilian astronauts captured astounding footage of Earth from space that clearly shows the planet's curvature, sparking outrage among flat Earthers.

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Boy, five, dies after drinking mother's apple juice that was 'laced with meth'
Heather Opsincs, 37, was arrested and charged with aggravated manslaughter after her five-year-old son ingested apple juice containing methamphetamine and died.

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Scientists finally reveal if Tunnock's Teacakes are fit to fly 60 years after they were banned by RAF for exploding in cockpit
The RAF Centre of Aerospace Medicine in Henlow, Bedfordshire, lifted the treats to 8,000ft inside an altitude chamber normally used in the training of new jet pilots.

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Microsoft Pulls Back on Data Centers From Chicago To Jakarta
Microsoft has pulled back on data center projects around the world, suggesting the company is taking a harder look at its plans to build the server farms powering artificial intelligence and the cloud. From a report: The software company has recently halted talks for, or delayed development of, sites in Indonesia, the UK, Australia, Illinois, North Dakota and Wisconsin, according to people familiar with the situation. Microsoft is widely seen as a leader in commercializing AI services, largely thanks to its close partnership with OpenAI. Investors closely track Microsoft's spending plans to get a sense of long-term customer demand for cloud and AI services.

It's hard to know how much of the company's data center pullback reflects expectations of diminished demand versus temporary construction challenges, such as shortages of power and building materials. Some investors have interpreted signs of retrenchment as an indication that projected purchases of AI services don't justify Microsoft's massive outlays on server farms. Those concerns have weighed on global tech stocks in recent weeks, particularly chipmakers like Nvidia which suck up a significant share of data center budgets.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Battling childhood cancer left me infertile, bald and isolated - but there has been one life-changing upside, says 911's Lee Brennan in emotional This Morning interview
The 911 lead singer, 51, which was formed in 1995 before splitting five years later, appeared on This Morning on Thursday to raise awareness of lymphoma, cancer of the lymph nodes.

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'Heartbroken' Harry as charity faces probe: Prince accuses Sentebale chair of telling 'blatant lies' as charity commission opens investigation after accusations of 'bullying'
The Charity Commission said it has opened a case into 'concerns raised' about the Sentebale charity, which the Duke of Sussex quit as patron of last week.

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Celebrity Big Brother star Angellica Bell's life with her very famous husband, her shock Martin Lewis show exit and why she 'doesn't feel wealthy'
Away from the glitz and glam of television, the presenter, 49, leads a normal life with her fellow TV star husband Michael Underwood and their two children.

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‘Generational shift’: UK gyms busier than ever as gen Zers ditch pub for pilates
More health-conscious young people take total to 11.5m memberships, report finds, as experts cite social aspect alongside fitnessRecord numbers of Britons are going to the gym, as the desire of many gen Zers to socialise while getting fit instead of drinking in the pub drives an unprecedented surge in membership, a report shows.In all, 11.5 million people aged 16 and over– a new high – now belong to a gym in the UK, a rise of 1.6 million from 2022. It means one in six people have taken out a membership. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Murders of two female students prompt calls for a ‘cultural rebellion’ in Italy
Sara Campanella and Ilaria Sula were killed within 48 hours of each other, bringing the number of femicides in 2025 to 11There have been calls in Italy for a “cultural rebellion” amid outrage and protests over the murders of two female students within 48 hours of each other, bringing the number of femicides in the country since the start of the year to 11.Sara Campanella, a 22-year-old biomedical student, was stabbed in broad daylight at a bus stop in the Sicilian city of Messina on Monday afternoon and died while being taken to hospital. Continue reading...

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Percy Pig’s US adventure may be short-lived as M&S responds to Trump tariffs
Retailer’s ‘gift to America’ could be hit as it also adjusts to new rules on advertising high fat, sugar and salt foodsBusiness live – latest updatesGlobal stock markets plunge and US dollar tumblesPercy Pig’s US invasion could be called to a halt amid fears that Donald Trump’s tariffs could affect sales of Marks & Spencer’s popular confectionery brand which has just launched in Target stores across the Atlantic.Archie Norman, the chair of M&S, has described Percy as the retailer’s “gift to America” but he told the Retail Technology Show in London that “we might have to change our minds” as Trump imposes additional taxes on imported goods. While M&S is not considering withdrawing the sweets, tariffs could push up prices and make them less popular. Continue reading...

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I Get 5G on My Phone at Home. So Why Can't I Get 5G Home Internet?
Even if your fancy new phone gets 5G service, you're not guaranteed to be able to get a 5G home internet service. What gives? CNET explains.

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I Played the Nintendo Switch 2: Is It Worth It?
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Can't Pay Your Tax Bill This Year? Here Are 5 Things You Can Do Right Now
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Spring Cleaning: How and Where to Recycle Your Old Computers and Printers for Free
If you've got ancient PC towers, laptops and printers sitting around, you can recycle them for free -- and in some cases get store credit.

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Be sure to catch Lazarus, Devil May Cry, The Beginning After the End and more this spring.

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We Asked Experts if Powering Your Home With an EV Is the Future
With bidirectional charging, your electric vehicle can be more than just eco-friendly transportation. Here's what experts have to say.

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Chase Sapphire Preferred's New 100K Welcome Bonus Is Too Good to Miss. Here's How I'd Spend It
This limited-time offer on my go-to travel card has me already considering the possibilities.

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Ferrari add 13-year-old talent to its driver academy programme
Noah Baglin will join the five existing students of Ferrari's driver academy programme, thus becoming the 25th youngster to be enrolled in the Maranello programme established in 2009.

Mail Online
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Celebrity Big Brother star Angellica Bell's life with her very famous husband, her shock Martin Lewis show exit and and why she 'doesn't feel wealthy'
Away from the glitz and glam of television, the presenter, 49, leads a normal life with her fellow TV star husband Michael Underwood and their two children.

Mac Rumours
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Kuo: Apple Can Reduce Impact of Trump's Massive Tariffs in Five Ways
U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday announced that massive tariffs will be applied to imports from many countries, starting April 9. The tariffs will significantly impact Apple's supply chain, with iPhones and other products imported to the U.S. from China, India, and Vietnam set to face 54%, 26%, and 46% tariffs, respectively.





Apple supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo today said that if Apple does not raise prices, its overall gross profit margin could face a significant drop of 8.5% to 9%, due to the tariffs significantly raising costs. However, he outlined five ways in which Apple can reduce the impact of the tariffs on its gross margins going forward:



Apple can boost iPhone production in India. Kuo said if India can secure tariff exemptions through new trading agreements with the U.S., and Apple boosts its iPhone production capacity there to over 30% of its global supply, the negative impact on gross margins could shrink to just 1% to 3%.

Apple could raise prices on iPhone Pro models. In the U.S. market, Kuo said high-end iPhones account for 65-70% of new model sales, and he believes that "high-end consumers are relatively more accepting of price increases." So, the Pro and Pro Max models could see price increases, if absolutely necessary.

Apple could increase carrier subsidies for iPhones.

Apple could reduce trade-in values to partially offset the costs of tariffs.

Apple could put even greater pressure on its suppliers to cut costs.Apple's overall gross margin was 46% in the 2024 fiscal year. Gross margin is a profitability metric that indicates the percentage of money that Apple earns on a product like an iPhone after subtracting the costs of making the product. Even if Apple's gross margin drops below 40%, Kuo believes this dip "should be short-lived."



Apple's stock price dropped more than 9% since Trump's announcement.Tag: Ming-Chi KuoThis article, 'Kuo: Apple Can Reduce Impact of Trump's Massive Tariffs in Five Ways' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
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CNBC+ Now Available on Apple TV
The business news network CNBC on Wednesday announced that its CNBC+ streaming service has expanded to the Apple TV and Roku devices.





CNBC+ is now available through the CNBC app on all Apple TV HD and Apple TV 4K models, providing subscribers with a live stream of the CNBC channel, along with full episodes of popular CNBC shows on demand. In the App Store, a subscription to CNBC+ in the U.S. costs $14.99 per month, or $149.99 per year.



The streaming service first launched in late 2024 on iOS, Android, and CNBC.com, according to a CNBC spokesperson.Related Roundup: Apple TVTag: CNBCBuyer's Guide: Apple TV (Don't Buy)Related Forum: Apple TV and Home TheaterThis article, 'CNBC+ Now Available on Apple TV' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

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Is South Africa's coalition government about to fall apart?
The pro-business DA rejects the budget leaving the ANC to rely on other parties to get it passed in parliament.

Chatham House
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US–Russia rapprochement: What is the end game?
US–Russia rapprochement: What is the end game?
10
April 2025 — 6:00PM TO 7:00PM
Anonymous (not verified)
27 March 2025

Chatham House and Online
Experts examine the American strategy towards Russia, implications for the war on Ukraine and China’s perspective on warming relations between the two countries.
Experts examine the implications of US-Russia relations for European Security and the war on Ukraine.














The second Trump administration has made ending the war in Ukraine and normalization of relations with Russia a top priority. US dialogue with Russian officials has, at a minimum, opened a path to a potential ceasefire and peace deal.However, Ukraine and its supporters have expressed concerns over the terms for peace imposed on Kyiv. A deal has so far proved hard find. Has the idea of a ‘just peace’ been abandoned?Warming relations also challenges the dynamic of superpower relations between the US and China, particularly strategic competition between Washington and Beijing and the Russia-China alliance.This discussion will cover:What safeguards are needed to ensure that war does not return? Can a ‘Trump and Putin’ peace have durability…and even validity?How much, if anything at all, can Russia concede? And Ukraine?To what extent is Europe likely to re-engage economically and diplomatically with Russia after any conclusion to the war?How has the Trump administration’s approach to Russia challenged its long-term relationships with Moscow?What does China stand to lose or gain with greater relations between the Russia and the US?By registering for this event, attendees agree to our code of conduct, ensuring a respectful, inclusive, and welcoming space for diverse perspectives and debate.

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New Brisbane stadium to replace Gabba as venue for Olympics, cricket, AFL
Australia
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In decision announced by Queensland Premier David Crisafulli on Tuesday, Brisbane's The Gabba stadium is now scheduled to be replaced by a new stadium located on the north side of the Brisbane River. The yet to be named stadium is due to be the main stadium for the 2032 Olympics as well as international cricket and top level Australian rules football, both currently hosted at the Gabba.
Queensland Cricket, Chief Executive Officer, Terry Svenson welcomed the decision of the state government. "Queensland Cricket congratulates the Queensland Government on its decision to invest in the State's future, with a world-class stadium that will be a centrepiece of Brisbane for 2032 and beyond," Svenson said. "The Gabba has been wonderful venue for cricket for many years and has provided fans and players with countless memories – however the challenges the stadium faces are well documented, and we need to look to the future. There is now the opportunity for Queensland to attract the world's best cricket events, such as ICC events, men's and women's Ashes Series, the Border-Gavaskar Trophy series between Australia and India, as well has hosting the BBL and WBBL in a new purpose-built stadium."
The Brisbane Lions are the Australian Football League premiers. Their CEO Greg Swann was equally as welcoming. "The Gabba has been a great home for the past 30 years, but the city has outgrown it, the Lions have outgrown it, and the venue is reaching its end of life," Swann said.
"The Olympics and Paralympics presents an opportunity to deliver a venue that will serve the City and State's growing population, not just for the Games, but for the next 50 years. Between now and the Olympics nearly 4 million Queensland sports fans will visit the Gabba for either a Lions or cricket match, with each event creating job and economic opportunities and ensuring our local events industry is equipped and skilled to deliver the Games. We need all stakeholders to unite behind 2032 so we can get on with delivering the venues needed to host a great Games and critical infrastructure for decades to come."
Former Queensland Premier Campbell Newman was amongst a group that opposed the potential loss of green space at the Victoria Park site. “It is not only the stadium, but now we’re getting the swimmers talking about putting a swimming venue in the park as well. And this is what happens. These people really have to look at their own words,” Newman told Fox Sports News. “One minute they’re saying it’s only going to take up x-percent of the Park. The next minute, within a few breaths, they’re talking about putting the swimming in there as well. And that’s how it goes (and soon) you have no park.”
Those opposed to the new stadium site seem likely to challenge the decision in court according to Fox Sports News.





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Sources[edit]
"Years of speculation ends with location for 2032 Olympics stadium finally revealed" — 7News Australia, March 25, 2025
Jack McKay and Claudia Williams. "New Brisbane stadium to be built at Victoria Park for 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games" — ABC News, March 25, 2025
Courtney Walsh. "2032 stadium call made as QLD Premier ‘sorry’ for Gabba backflip in Olympic venues reveal" — Fox Sports News, March 25, 2025





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New York county clerk says Texas cannot fine abortion doctor
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On Thursday, acting Ulster County, New York clerk, Taylor Bruck, refused to enforce a Texas court ruling against a doctor who has been accused of mailing abortion pills across state lines. Brock cited New York's shield law, which, according to New York Attorney General Letitia James, was passed specifically to protect abortion providers. According to the New York Times, this marks the first instance of a shield law being applied to defend a physician from the abortion restrictions of another state.
According to the lawsuit, Dr. Margaret Carpenter, who lives and works in New York, allegedly prescribed and sent abortion pills through the mail to a patient in Texas, where almost all abortions are illegal. A Texas judge fined her US$113,000 and ordered her to stop sending the pills to patients in Texas.
Bruck refused to file the lawsuit in New York and cited the New York State Shield Law but declined to comment further in anticipation of further litigation.
New York Attorney General Letitia James said more: "New York's shield law was created to protect patients and providers from out-of-state anti-choice attacks, and we will not allow anyone to undermine health care providers' ability to deliver necessary care to their patients."
Shortly after filing the initial lawsuit, Texas Attourney General Ken Paxton told the press, "In Texas, we treasure the health and lives of mothers and babies, and this is why out-of-state doctors may not illegally and dangerously prescribe abortion-inducing drugs to Texas residents."
Louisiana, which also has strict anti-abortion-rights laws, asked New York to extradite Carpenter so she could be prosecuted for allegedly mailing abortion pills to a woman in Louisiana who gave them to her daughter, but New York governor Kathy Hochul refused.
In 2022, the United States Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade, a 1973 Supreme Court ruling that had rendered abortion legal throughout the United States. Overturning it meant each state could make its own laws regarding abortion, and they have come to differ widely. Some states, such as Texas and Louisiana, banned nearly all abortions and created new laws allowing anyone who helps a woman seek an abortion to be sued or prosecuted.
Lawyer, Alejandra Caraballo, who wrote about state-to-state extradition in Law Review told Jezebel, "We haven't seen this kind of disparity in state laws around human rights since the Civil War. What constitutes a human right in one state is a capital crime in another."




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Sources[edit]
Kylie Cheung. "New York Blocks Texas From Enforcing Abortion Law Against Doctor, Wields Shield Law for 1st Time" — Jezebel, March 27, 2025
Carter Sherman. "New York clerk refuses to enforce Texas effort to punish abortion provider" — Guardian, March 27, 2025
Sean Murphy, Michael Hill, and Geoff Mulvihill. "Texas' abortion pill lawsuit against New York doctor marks new challenge to interstate telemedicine" — AP, December 13, 2024





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Zero Dimensional Chess
Zero Dimensional Chess

Authored by Peter Tchir via Academy Securities,

This administration had delivered on the border as the voters wanted. I wanted to start with something positive.

Today, I’m sure we will hear some hot takes about how the administration is playing 5D chess which everyone who doesn’t think tariff approach will work, is simply to simple to see.

I think they have just exposed themselves as playing zero dimensional chess.

Reciprocal tariffs, to almost anyone I talk to meant:

You tariff me at X% on ABC good, I now tariff you at X% on ABC good.
I would argue that at least 90% of market participants and countries thought that was the definition of reciprocal tariffs.

Apparently, the calculation was:

Trade Deficit with Country / Imports from that Country
Then the U.S. took 50% of that (rounded up) and called that reciprocal.

I guess they wanted a “big” or “huge” “simple” number for each country? That is all my little mind can come up with.



I DO NOT SEE HOW YOU “NEGOTIATE” WITH THAT

That is such a weird calculation that it is incredibly difficult to figure out a starting point for negotiations.

The government pulled back tariffs on potash (they should have read our T-Report from two weeks ago and saved themselves the trouble).

I bet the administration will cancel the tariffs on chips from Taiwan.


Markets will briefly rally as this was self-inflicted wound.


Markets will then sell off, because a mistake so obvious as this demonstrates, that there are probably so many mistakes in here, that countries will wait and watch the policies implode before coming to the table (Americans, as we have learned, HATE inflation and that is coming, since there were big tariffs, virtually everywhere).


I though Chinese solar had 100% tariffs (initially under Trump and bumped up under Biden) do those come down now? (sounds stupid, but who the heck knows given the policy!)

I do not see countries coming to the table in a rush.

I see inflation spiking as it takes time to bring manufacturing back and there is no one to turn to who didn’t get whacked (making it far more likely tariffs get passed on).

Bottom Line

Rates will come down a bit – economic problems – but not as much as expected because inflation will rise and foreign buying will dwindle.

The lows are NOT yet in for stocks. I cut some shorts here, but remain bearish on the Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 – though will be watching for bounces.

I will be adding specific chip makers with a U.S. foundry presence (and plans to build that are underway).

While I recommended reducing all global holdings a week or more ago, I will be adding back China holdings here – despite the new tariffs, I see them benefitting.

Good luck, hopefully I’m wrong, but this was worse than I expected, and I was on the pessimistic side to begin with.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 08:05

ZeroHedge News
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Reign Of Tariffs Begins: Futures Crash, Dollar Craters
Reign Of Tariffs Begins: Futures Crash, Dollar Craters

Well, Trump's "liberation day" is here... and it has liberated countless traders of their net worth and risk assets: the market's reaction to Trump's newly-instituted "much worse than expected" reign of tariffs is nothing short of a bloodbath, with a global selloff hitting stock markets everywhere but especially in the US where conventional wisdom, at least early on, is that the recession will be worst. As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures are down 3.5%, while Nasdaq futures tumble 4%, but should really be down more: Pre-market, AAPL (-7.5%), AMZN (-5.6%) and TSLA (-4.6%) are among the worst performing stocks within Mag 7, which is red across the board. As Trump unveiled yesterday (after the close), all US imports will have a minimum 10% tariff, with additional duties for big trading partners. China faces a tariff of well above 50% on many goods; the EU is subjected to a 20% levy. Bond yields crash in anticipation of a looming recession, down 4-10bp lower across the board, the Bloomberg US Dollar index is down -1.6%, set for its biggest drop . Commodities are all also sharply lower: WTI -3.9%, silver -3.4%, even gold is back under $3000. On today's calendar we get initial and con continuing jobless claims as well as the latest ISM Services data.



Roughly $1.7 trillion is set to be erased from the S&P 500 Index when trading opens Thursday amid worries that the sweeping tariffs could plunge the economy into a recession. The damage was heaviest in companies whose supply chains are most dependent on overseas manufacturing. Apple, which makes the majority of its US-sold devices in China, is on track to open down 7.7%. Lululemon Athletica and Nike among companies with manufacturing ties to Vietnam, are down at least 9%. Walmart Inc. and Dollar Tree Inc., retailers whose stores are filled with products sourced outside of the US, are trading at least 4% lower.

In premarket trading, Apple is the biggest laggard among the Mag7 as the iPhone maker is one of the firms most exposed to tariff risk given China is a key manufacturing hub (Apple -7.2%, Amazon -6.3%, Nvidia -5.5%, Tesla -5.9%, Meta -4.7%, Alphabet -3.0%, Microsoft -2.7%). In general, stocks linked to global trade and the health of the economy are sliding after President Donald Trump announced a minimum 10% tariff on all exporters to the US and additional duties on about 60 nations with large trade imbalances with the US.

Tech: Broadcom (AVGO) -6.2%, Micron (MU) -6.6%, Dell (DELL) -8.4%, HP Inc. (HPQ) -7.0%
Automakers: General Motors (GM) -2.4%, Ford (F) -2.3%, Rivian (RIVN) -5.3%, Lucid (LCID) -5.4%
Financials: JPMorgan (JPM) -3.8%, Bank of America (BAC) -3.9%, Wells Fargo (WFC) -4.5%, Morgan Stanley (MS) -4.8%, Goldman Sachs (GS) -4.6%, Citigroup (C) -4.5%; crypto stocks also slide
Consumer: Walmart (WMT) -4.7%, Target (TGT) 5.5% , Nike (NKE) -9.9%, Skechers (SKX) -12%, Deckers Outdoor (DECK) -12%, On Holding (ONON) -15%, JetBlue (JBLU) -4.8%, Carnival (CCL) -6.3%, DraftKings (DKNG) -5.9%
US-listed Chinese stocks: Alibaba (BABA) -3.1%, Baidu (BIDU) -2.9%, PDD (PDD) -5.3%, JD.com (JD) -4.6%
Here are some other notable premarket movers:

Lyft Inc. (LYFT) falls 11% after Bank of America downgraded the ride-sharing company by two notches to underperform, citing reasons that include Waymo’s rapid expansion in San Francisco and Los Angeles.
RH (RH) tumbles 28% after the luxury home furnishing company’s annual revenue growth forecast trailed Wall Street expectations. Analysts note that new round of tariffs add “significantly more uncertainty.”
Here are the key sectors in focus this morning:

Tech and Chips

Apple, which counts China as a key manufacturing hub, led the Mag 7 group lower. Among other Mag 7 movers: Amazon -5.1%, Meta -3.2%
Chipmakers were broadly lower; Nvidia is down 3.2% while Broadcom and Micron also slip.
Automakers, Industrials, Transport

Tariffs threaten to add thousands to car prices, and steep tariffs on the sector are already set to go into effect Thursday morning. EV-makers moving lower: Tesla -3.7%, Rivian -3%
Industrial behemoths slip in postmarket trading as tariff risks may hurt companies with global supply chains. Watch: Caterpillar, Dover, General Electric, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, RTX and Eaton.
Financials

Big banks trade lower and the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF falls 4.4%
Consumer

Watch apparel stocks as tariffs on countries like Vietnam and Indonesia are poised to rattle the global shoe and clothing supply chain.
Travel and leisure stocks are down on fears tariffs will raise prices for consumers and curb discretionary spending.
Retailers — many of which source goods from China — are also falling, including Walmart -5.8% and Target -5.2%
Homebuilding

From lumber to steel to building supplies, home construction is highly exposed to tariffs; Watch the ETF (XHB US) that tracks homebuilder and home improvement stocks and its members: Williams-Sonoma, Dream Finders Homes, Builders FirstSource.
Chinese Companies

US-listed shares of Chinese companies decline, including Alibaba -2.7%
Fears about growth and inflation are front of mind, while investors are also dealing with a new level of risk related to volatility and positioning. UBS economists said that real GDP could be hit by 1.5-2 percentage points in 2025, while inflation could rise to close to 5% if tariffs are not reversed soon. RBC strategist Lori Calvasina, meanwhile, cautioned that a “growth scare drawdown” is likely if the S&P falls meaningfully below its mid-March low. In other US assets, Treasury yields slumped while the dollar also fell. Apple and Nike — which rely on global supply chains — are both down more than 6% premarket.

While the jury is still out on the final outcome of Trump's "reign of tariffs", which came in far more sever than expected,  one thing is emerging: for now, Trump's shake-up of the global trading system is hurting US assets more than those in many of the big economies he has just slapped with additional tariffs. As noted above, US index futures tumbled as much as 4% after and the dollar cratered, while the impact elsewhere was less extreme. The Stoxx Europe 600 was down 1.9% and a broad gauge of Asian stocks fell as much as 1.7%; while the euro was up 2.2% against the dollar, hitting its highest level since October in what was its biggest one-day jump in a decade. The yen likewise soared.



The tariff announcement has put more pressure on a US stock market that had already floundered this year, as investors braced for Trump’s policies to stir up inflation and raise the odds of a recession in the world’s largest economy. The S&P 500 was down 3.6% this year before the tariff announcement, while the Nasdaq 100 had shed about 7%. The Magnificent Seven tech stocks have also tumbled. By contrast, Germany’s DAX is up 10% in 2025.

“We aren’t buying the dip in the US,” said Aneeka Gupta, head of macroeconomic research at Wisdom Tree UK Ltd. “Investors are turning toward income as a source of refuge in these times of uncertainty as they wait and watch how countries essentially come back with their countermeasures.”

The widespread selloff in global markets makes clear that investors don’t expect any winners from the latest - and by the far the largest - salvo in a growing trade war. But they also suggest the US itself might be one of the biggest victims of Trump’s protectionist policies.

“Global asset allocators will be looking at the US in a very different way,” Neil Birrell, chief investment officer at Premier Miton Investors, said by phone. “Would international investors sell the US as a result of this and start moving money? Yes, they probably will.”

Meanwhile, the dollar headed for its worst day in over two years...



... as traders prepared for the economic impact. The Japanese yen gained 1.9% against the greenback, and Treasury 10-year yields hit their lowest level since October, further weighing on the greenback. The Euro meanwhile enjoyed its best 1 day against the dollar in the last decade: only the 3.1% surge in Dec 2015 was bigger.




“The aggravation of US growth concerns on the tariff news and related further falls in US stocks has meant that the dollar isn’t enjoying its traditional safe-haven, reserve currency status support,” said Ray Attrill, head of foreign-exchange strategy at National Australia Bank Ltd.

The Stoxx 600 falls 1.6% to the lowest since the end of January after Trump announced the steepest American tariffs in a century, including a 20% rate for the European Union, which said it will retaliate. Most sectors are sliding, with real estate and utilities among the rare gainers. Consumer products, banks and technology are the worst hit sectors. Here are the biggest movers Thursday:



Most European sectors are under pressure following Trump’s tariff announcement. Banks, tech, industrials and commodity-linked sectors are the worst performers, while those that offer defensive charecteristics, such as utilities and real estate, are outperforming
European medical technology and healthcare services stocks drop after Trump said he will apply at least a 10% tariff on all exporters to the US, with even higher duties on some 60 nations
European luxury stocks slide after Trump unveiled a 20% tariff on EU imports and a 31% rate on Switzerland. Companies that make goods in the US and EU, like LVMH, could see less of an earnings hit, according to analysts
Logitech shares sink as much as 12%, the most in over a year, hit by escalating trade tensions from the US. The computer peripherals firm is seen more sensitive to higher tariffs as it generates bulk of sales from the US and owns production facilities in China
Diageo shares rise as much as 3.1%, leading gains for European distillers, as analysts say the US tariffs announcement avoided the worst-case scenario for the sector
South Africa’s key stock index drops as much as 2.6%, the most since August, as new US tarrifs weigh on global markets. A deepening dispute in the nation’s ruling coalition over proposed tax increases also hit the sentiment

Roche shares drop as much as 2.9%, lagging behind European pharma peers, after the company said a high-dose version of its best-selling multiple sclerosis drug Ocrevus failed to outperform the original in a large study
LPP drops as much as 7.7% after Poland’s biggest fashion retailer reported 4Q earnings missing estimates and confirmed an ambitious store opening plan that is seen by analysts as a profitability risk.
Earlier in the session, Asian stocks also tumbled: 

Japan's Nikkei 225 suffered heavy losses with the index firmly beneath the 35,000 level after the US announced 24% tariffs for Japan, while notable losses were seen in the financial sector and automakers were also hit by the 25% auto tariffs.
Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were pressured after US President Trump imposed a 34% tariff on China, on top of the existing 20% tariffs, for a total 54% tariff rate which saw the Hong Kong benchmark conform to the broad selling in the Asia-Pac region although the mainland initially showed some resilience with downside somewhat cushioned after stronger-than-expected Chinese Caixin Services PMI data.
Australia's ASX 200 declined with the index dragged lower by underperformance in tech and energy, while there were comments from Australian PM Albanese who said they will not impose reciprocal tariffs and will continue to make the case for these unjustified tariffs to be removed from exporters.
In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index drops 1.7%, on course for its largest intraday fall since November 2022. The Swedish krona is leading gains against the greenback, rising 2.4%. The Japanese yen and Swiss franc are not far behind.

In rates, treasuries rally, pushing US 10-year yields down 7 bps to 4.06%. European bonds also gain, led by the short-end as traders boost bets on interest rate cuts by both the European Central Bank and Bank of England.

In commodities, WTI drops 3.9% to below $69 a barrel. Spot gold declines 50 to around $3,091/oz. Bitcoin falls 3% to below $83,000

Looking to the day ahead now, focus within a busy economic release schedule will likely center on March ISM Services at 10am ET, seen easing to 52.9, from 53.5. Other releases include Challenger job cuts report for March at 7.30am ET, Trade balance for Feb. at 8.30am ET and US weekly jobless claims at 8.30am ET.  Central bank speakers include Fed’s Jefferson and Cook's speech and the ECB’s account of the March meeting. NATO’s foreign ministers are also set to meet today until April 4.

Market Snapshot

S&P 500 mini -3.2%
Nasdaq 100 mini -3.8%
Russell 2000 mini -4.4%
Stoxx Europe 600 -1.5%
DAX -1.7%
CAC 40 -2.1%
10-year Treasury yield -5 basis points at 4.08%
VIX +3.9 points at 25.45
Bloomberg Dollar Index -1.3% at 1254.51
euro +1.5% at $1.1018
WTI crude -3.3% at $69.35/barrel
Top Overnight News

Apple shares slumped premarket on the tariffs announcement despite efforts to insulate its supply chains. Other major tech stocks including Nvidia, Meta, Tesla and Alphabet also declined.  Nike, Adidas and Puma plunged given their reliance on Vietnamese manufacturing. BBG
Here’s what the White House and its crack team of trade investigators seems to have done: Take the US’s goods trade deficit with any particular country, and divide it by the total amount of goods imported from that country. Cut that percentage in half, and there’s the US’s “reciprocal” tariff rate. FT
US President Trump reiterated that tax cuts will be passed in one big beautiful bill in Congress, while he added they need to get permanent tax cuts.
US President Trump posted on Truth Social that "Speaker of the House Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune have been working tirelessly on taking the next step to pass the plan for our ONE, BIG, BEAUTIFUL BILL, as it is known, as well as getting us closer to the Debt Extension necessary to continue our great work. The Senate Budget plan gives us the tools that we need to get our shared priorities done, including certain PERMANENT Tax Cuts, Spending Cuts, Energy, Historic Investments in Defense, Border, and much more. We are going to cut Spending, and right-size the Budget back to where it should be. The Senate Plan has my Complete and Total Support. Likewise, the House is working along the same lines. Every Republican, House and Senate, must UNIFY. We need to pass it IMMEDIATELY!"
In the immediate aftermath of Trump’s tariff announcement, confusion reigned even among some White House officials about what rate the approximately $440 billion in Chinese imports would face. Policy experts were perplexed, too. Barron’s
Fed Governor Kugler said the latest data indicates progress towards the 2% inflation target may have stalled and she supports keeping the current policy rate in place as long as upside risks to inflation continue, given stable activity and employment. Furthermore, she stated that inflation expectations have risen and upcoming policy changes hold upside risk, as well as noted that there may be reasons why tariffs have more prolonged effects.
Goldman's bottom line on Tariff Announcements: The “reciprocal” tariff policy President Trump announced would impose a weighted average tariff rate of 18.3%, around 3pp higher than we expected. However, roughly 1/3 of total imports would be exempt, which reduces the impact to a 12.6pp increase in the effective tariff rate. We estimate this and other tariffs announced year-to-date would raise the US effective tariff rate by 18.8pp. While we assume that negotiations with trading partners will lead to somewhat lower “reciprocal” rates than announced today, the prospect for escalation following retaliatory tariffs and a high probability of further sectoral tariffs suggests a risk that the US effective tariff rate rises more than the 15pp increase we assume in our economic forecast. GIR
China’s Ministry of Commerce held a briefing at 3pm today, just hours after US President Donald Trump declared a trade war with the world. The action includes a further 34 per cent tariffs on imports from China, raising American tariffs on China to 54 per cent. In a statement on Thursday morning, the ministry accused the US of “typical unilateral bullying” and vowed to take resolute countermeasures. It also said Beijing would urge Washington to remove the tariffs and solve disputes through dialogue. SMCI
China’s Caixin services PMI came in ahead of expectations at 51.9, up from 51.4 in Feb and above the consensus forecast of 51.5. WSJ
The BOJ’s policy normalization course has been thrown into doubt because of the risk of a domestic recession spurred by US tariffs, economists said. “This was beyond our worst case scenario.” BBG
The EU has given itself a 4 week window to convince Trump to drop his 20% on the block, with retaliation ruled out before late April. FT
Senate votes 51-48 to reject Trump’s Canadian tariffs as four Republicans (Collins, McConnell, Murkowski, and Paul) joined with the Dems (this vote is symbolic and won’t have any actual impact on policy, but it does send a small message of displeasure to the White House). Politico
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks mostly tumbled in the aftermath of the 'Liberation Day' tariff announcements in which US President Trump unveiled reciprocal tariffs which were mostly set at around half of the rate that individual countries were charging the US with the actual baseline at 10%, while he also announced 25% auto tariffs. ASX 200 declined with the index dragged lower by underperformance in tech and energy, while there were comments from Australian PM Albanese who said they will not impose reciprocal tariffs and will continue to make the case for these unjustified tariffs to be removed from exporters. Nikkei 225 suffered heavy losses with the index firmly beneath the 35,000 level after the US announced 24% tariffs for Japan, while notable losses were seen in the financial sector and automakers were also hit by the 25% auto tariffs. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were pressured after US President Trump imposed a 34% tariff on China, on top of the existing 20% tariffs, for a total 54% tariff rate which saw the Hong Kong benchmark conform to the broad selling in the Asia-Pac region although the mainland initially showed some resilience with downside somewhat cushioned after stronger-than-expected Chinese Caixin Services PMI data.

Top Asian News

Japanese RENGO trade union third-round data: average wage increase 5.42% for fiscal 2025 vs. 5.40% in the second-round.
European bourses (STOXX 600 -1.2%) are entirely and markedly in the red in the fallout of US President Trump’s “Liberation Day”, where the reciprocal tariff announcement was viewed as worse than feared. Wedbush writes that the levies are a “worst case scenario” for Wall Street. European sectors are mostly lower and holds a clear negative bias, in-fitting with the risk tone. Healthcare is modestly in the green owing to the defensive risk tone and as the pharmaceutical industry avoided reciprocal tariffs (for now). Consumer Products is underperforming today, given the losses in the Luxury sector as trader’s brace themselves for the hefty tariffs set on China.

Top European News

BoE Decision Maker Panel survey: firms 1-year ahead own price inflation expected at 3.9% (prev. 4.0%) in the three-month period to March.
Fixed Income

USTs are bid given the US tariff announcement where the initial relief on reporting around a 10% baseline gave way to marked risk-off as the reciprocal levels were announced. In brief the average US effective tariff rate is (once the measures are implemented) around 23% from around 10%. Further insight into Trump’s tariffs and how the administration feels about the initial comments/responses to the measures from various nations may be provided VP Vance and Commerce Secretary Lutnick who are due to speak from around 13:00BST. US Challenger Layoffs, Jobless Claims and ISM Services are scheduled.
Hit a 112-24+ peak in the hour after Trump’s speech, at best the benchmark posted gains of around 40 ticks and the 10yr yield hit a 4.04% low, a base which takes us back to November 2024 when the yield was below the 4.0% handle.
Bunds peaked at 129.94 after Trump’s tariff announcement. A high that takes Bunds around half of the way back to the pre-fiscal change levels. With, as a function of the move lower on fiscal reform, the next chronological resistance point someway off at 132.04. While Bunds peaked at 129.94 and are in the green, they have been pulling back gradually throughout the morning. A pullback which is likely a function of European bourses picking up off worst levels in the morning, though still well into the red, and potentially as the knee-jerk move on growth concerns/general risk is tempered by inflationary concerns.
Gilts are firmer albeit to a lesser degree vs peers. UK benefits as a function of leaving the EU, with the nation subject to just the 10% baseline tariff, for now at least. Nonetheless, the benchmark gapped higher by 58 ticks and then extended by another 41 to a 93.14 peak. Stopping just shy of a cluster between 93.33-79 from early-March.
Spain sells EUR 6.24bln vs exp. EUR 5.5-6.5bln 2.40% 2028, 3.10% 2031 & 3.90% 2039 Bono and EUR 0.6bln vs exp. EUR 0.25-0.75bln 1.00% 2030 I/L.
France sells EUR 12bln vs exp. EUR 10-12bln 3.50% 2033, 3.20% 2035, 3.75% 2056 OAT.
UK sells GBP 3.25bln 4.375% 2040 Gilt: b/c 2.58x (prev. 2.89x), tail 0.9bps (prev. 0.6bps), average yield 4.917% (prev. 4.836%).
Commodities

Crude is significantly lower, with Brent Jun'25 down by around USD 2.50/bbl, as the complex is swept away by the negative risk-tone following US President Trump's tariff announcement. Pressure since the European morning has continued and the benchmarks currently reside near lows.
Spot gold climbed to a fresh record high of USD 3,167.74/oz in reaction to the tariff turmoil owning to its haven status. The European morning thus far has seen a slight unwind of that upside, and is now off by around USD 10.50/oz in a USD 3,116.55-3,167.74/oz range. As a reminder, US President Trump's tariff order exempts gold, according to Reuters citing a White House fact sheet.
Base metals are entirely in the red, in-fitting with the risk tone. On the trade front, Trump excluded steel, aluminium, and gold from reciprocal tariffs, providing some relief to domestic buyers who are already paying 25% duties on these key metals used in industries like automobiles and appliances.
Kazakhstan supplied 150k/T of oil to Germany via the Druzhba pipeline in March (100k/T in February), via Ifx.
Geopolitics

US Treasury Secretary Bessent said the Ukraine deal is coming up and a team from Ukraine may be coming over as soon as this week, while he added that they could see more Iran sanctions
US Event Calendar


7:30 am: Mar Challenger Job Cuts YoY 204.8%, prior 103.2%
8:30 am: Feb Trade Balance, est. -123.5b, prior -131.38b
8:30 am: Mar 29 Initial Jobless Claims, est. 225k, prior 224k
Mar 22 Continuing Claims, est. 1870k, prior 1856k

9:45 am: Mar F S&P Global U.S. Services PMI, est. 54.2, prior 54.3
Mar F S&P Global U.S. Composite PMI, est. 53.45, prior 53.5

10:00 am: Mar ISM Services Index, est. 52.9, prior 53.5
DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap


I'm off on holiday for a couple of weeks from this afternoon. I think trying to work through the deluge of very confusing and bespoke tariffs headlines overnight is enough alone to justify the break. You'll be in the very safe hands of Henry Allen and Peter Sidorov while I'm away and last night Peter has been a great help interpreting all these once in a lifetime headlines coming out of the US. It has been a truely remarkable last 8 hours or so.

So one last attempt to navigate all the headlines before I have a lie down. In short the tariffs put in place last night were extraordinary both in terms of scale and in how they were calculated, with President Trump announcing reciprocal tariffs under the Internation Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) as he declared a national emergency over the trade deficit.

Our US economists will need to work through the full implications but their initial read is that if implemented this could easily knock around 1 to 1.5% off US growth this year while adding a similar amount to core PCE. See their brief comments here. So although the impact will be large in many places, the US will see a significant impact too.
In terms of the details, countries will face a minimum tariff of 10%, with much higher rates for many major trading partners. Some of the tariff rates appeared broadly in line with expectations, such as the 20% on the EU and 10% on the UK, but with higher than anticipated rates on most Asian economies, ranging from 24% on Japan to 46% on Vietnam. And in China’s case, a reciprocal tariff of 34% comes on top of a 20% increase in tariffs announced earlier this year. Our US economists estimate that the average tariff rate on US imports could now rise into the 25-30% range, a level clearly on the worst end of expectations. As shown in our CoTD yesterday (link here), that would be in line with levels at the very start of the 20th century.

As this morning has evolved, it has became clear that the scaling of the reciprocal tariffs used a simple formula based on the size of a country’s relative goods trade surplus with the US, with the 10% minimum for countries that run a trade deficit with the US. Quite an extraordinary calculation after months of work behind the scenes. The 10% baseline tariff is due to take effect from Saturday, with higher individual rates effective next Wednesday (April 9). Overall, the size of the tariffs added to the sense of a push for a radical policy reordering by the new US administration, which was strongly hinted at in the recent Lutnick/Bessent podcasts which we summarised here, but didn’t add much confidence on there being an in-depth strategic implementation plan.

The reciprocal tariff plans do contain several exemptions. Trade with Canada and Mexico has been excluded for the time being, though a part of this already faces a 25% tariff over the fentanyl and migration emergency announced under IEEPA. Critical minerals and gold/bullion, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, lumber and copper are also outside of the scope of the reciprocal tariffs, but these are under separate sectoral trade investigations, while steel & aluminium and auto imports will still face 25% tariffs as recently announced. Trump’s comments did leave the door open for potential negotiations to lower tariffs but his executive order also left room for further escalation, saying that the President may further “increase or expand in scope the duties imposed” should any trading partners retaliate. So watch out for these headlines.

In other related news last night, the Senate voted 51-48 to pass a resolution against Trump’s IEEPA tariffs against Canada, with four Republican senators joining all Democrats on the vote. With the Republican leadership having set up a procedural obstacle to a similar vote being forced in the House, this Senate vote has little practical meaning, but it’s an interesting test of the support for Trump’s economic policies, not least with fiscal negotiations expected in the coming weeks.

Markets have seen a strong risk-off reaction to the tariff announcement, with S&P futures down -2.65%, which would bring the index back into correction territory if it materializes in the regular session today. NASDAQ futures are -3.18%. In Europe, STOXX 50 futures are down -1.64%. For bonds, 10yr Treasury yields are -7.75bps lower to a new four-month low of 4.05%, following a -3.7bps decline yesterday. This rally comes even as at the US 1yr inflation swap is trading at new two-and-a-half-year high of 3.45% (+5.3bps overnight after +14.6bps yesterday). Brent crude is -2.13% lower overnight, while gold is +0.48% higher after a +0.67% rise to a record close of $3134/oz yesterday. And in the currency space, the dollar is -0.72% weaker after a -0.43% slide yesterday. Our FX strategists see questions over the policy credibility of the US administration as supporting their bullish EURUSD view.

Asian equity markets are slumping with the Vietnamese stock market down -6.25% given they've faced the brunt of the tariffs. Elsewhere the Nikkei (-3.18%) is hitting its lowest level in almost eight months but was more than four percent lower earlier. China risk is holding in better with the Hang Seng (-1.58%) and the Shanghai Composite (-0.51%) down but not slumping. Meanwhile, the KOSPI (-0.80%) and the S&P/ASX 200 (-0.93%) are lower. Sovereign bonds are climbing across the board with yields on the 10yr JGBs (-12.6bps) and Aussie bonds (-15.1bps) seeing extraordinary moves.
In FX, the Japanese yen has strengthened +1.13% to trade at a three-week high of 147.59 against the dollar. The Chinese onshore yuan has fallen to its weakest since February 13, trading at 7.2982 per dollar while tracking its offshore counterpart, which bottomed at a two-month low earlier in the session. Meanwhile, the PBOC set the yuan’s reference exchange rate stronger than expected at 7.1889 per dollar, 735 pips stronger than the average estimate in a Bloomberg survey thus indicating the central bank desire to maintain currency stability despite the trade tensions. Our Asian FX colleagues have just put out a note looking at the implications. Please see it here.

In the parallel universe of life before last night's blitz, US markets actually put in a solid performance yesterday, with the S&P 500 (+0.67%) posting a third consecutive advance. The S&P had been -1.09% down early on so all of these past three days have followed the same slump then recovery pattern. Both the NASDAQ (+0.87%) and the small cap Russell 2000 (+1.65%) outperformed as cyclical stocks advanced. And the Mag-7 were up +0.99%, led by a +5.33% rise for Tesla. Tesla had initially fallen by as much as -6.40% after its Q1 results showed 336,681 deliveries (vs. 390,343 estimates), its lowest car sales since Q2 2022. However, the share price moved higher after Politico reported that Trump was reportedly saying Musk will soon “leave” the White House, even if the extent of what that actually means is still unclear, with denials of this story seen later.

Yesterday’s turnaround in equities came as investors hoped that the worst case tariff scenarios would be avoided, not least given Treasury Secretary Bessent’s reported comments to lawmakers that the tariffs were a “cap” that could be negotiated downwards. Bessent repeated this sentiment publicly last night, saying “This is the high end of the number barring retaliation”. So the market was too optimistic on this yesterday.

Yesterday's optimism also got a boost from solid economic releases with ADP’s report of private payrolls coming in at +155k in March (vs. +120k expected). So that was an upside surprise ahead of tomorrow’s jobs report. In addition, factory orders were up +0.6% (vs. +0.5% expected).

In Europe, the STOXX 600 fell -0.50%, though it pared back its initial losses following a Bloomberg report that the EU was preparing a package of emergency measures to support sectors that will be hit hardest by the US tariffs. So that was considered to be positive if the retaliation ended up being via fiscal policy rather than tariffs. Nevertheless, defence and healthcare stocks were among the worst performers, including Rheinmetall (-4.21%) as the worst performer in the DAX (-0.66%).

In other geopolitical news yesterday, the Washington Post reported that White House is studying how much it would take to buy Greenland. Iran’s Foreign Minister has also said that the country is ready to begin indirect negotiations with the US over Iran’s nuclear program. This comes as US Treasury Bessent is pushing for some of the world’s biggest banks to help the Trump administration ratchet up economic pressure on Iran.

To the day ahead now, we’ll get data releases including US March ISM services, February trade balance, initial jobless claims, China March Caixin services PMI, Italy March services PMI, Eurozone February PPI, and Switzerland March CPI. Central bank speakers include Fed’s Jefferson and Cook's speech and the ECB’s account of the March meeting. NATO’s foreign ministers are also set to meet today until April 4.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 08:21

ZeroHedge News
Open 
'DOGE Impact': Federal Govt Layoffs Dominate Biggest March Job Losses In 36 Years
'DOGE Impact': Federal Govt Layoffs Dominate Biggest March Job Losses In 36 Years

Over the last two months, DOGE actions have been attributed to 280,253 layoff plans of federal workers and contractors impacting 27 agencies, according to Challenger tracking. 

Another 4,429 job cuts have come from the downstream effect of cutting federal aid or ending contracts, impacting mostly Non-Profits and Health organizations.

The Government led all sectors in job cuts in March with 216,215, all of which occurred in the federal government. 

So far this year, the Government has cut 279,445, an increase of 672% from the 36,195 cuts announced in the first quarter of 2024.

March’s total is the third-highest monthly total ever recorded.

The highest monthly total occurred in April 2020 when 671,129 cuts were recorded, followed by May 2020 with 397,016. It is the highest total for the month of March on record, since Challenger began reporting on job cut plans in 1989.



“DOGE Impact” leads job cut reasons this year.


“Job cut announcements were dominated last month by Department of Government Efficiency [DOGE] plans to eliminate positions in the federal government. It would have otherwise been a fairly quiet month for layoffs,” Andrew Challenger, Senior Vice President and workplace expert for Challenger, Gray & Christmas.


Companies’ hiring plans fell in March from 34,580 in February to 13,198. So far this year, companies plan to hire 53,867 workers, a 16% decrease from the 64,163 new hires announced in the first quarter of 2024. It is the lowest Q1 hiring total since 2012 when 52,540 new hiring plans were announced.

Meanwhile, according to the government's official data, the labor market is awesome with only 219k Americans filing for jobless claims for the first time last week - a level that has been basically consistent for the last three years



Kentucky, Illinois, and Iowa saw the biggest rise in initial jobless claims last week while Texas and Massachusetts saw the biggest decline...



And despite the surge in layoffs across the Deep 'Tri-State', initial jobless claims have been falling...



But continuing jobless claims broke out of its recent range and above its Maginot Line of 1.9 million Americans...



That is the highest since November 2021.

Continuing Claims across The Deep 'TriState' continue to rise...



So who are you going to believe - WARN notices, Challenger Grey, or the BLS?



Will tomorrow's payrolls print be the tie-breaker?

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 08:36

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Maine Gets Final Warning on Males in Female Sports
Maine Gets Final Warning on Males in Female Sports

Authored by Naveen Athrappully via The Epoch Times,

The U.S. Department of Education issued a final warning to the state of Maine, telling it to agree to protect female sports or suffer cuts in federal funding.
The seal of the U.S. Department of Education in Washington on July 16, 2019. Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times

On March 19, the federal department’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) sent a letter notifying the Maine Department of Education (MDOE) that its policies and practices violate Title IX rules by allowing males to partake in female sporting events.

Title IX prohibits discrimination based on sex in any education program or activity that receives federal funding.

The OCR proposed a resolution agreement on March 19 detailing corrective actions, including banning males from female sports. However, “MDOE has taken no action to protect women and girls from discrimination in sports or intimate spaces,” the federal agency said in a March 31 statement.

On Monday, the OCR notified Maine that “unless it signs a Resolution Agreement by April 11, OCR will refer the matter to DOJ (Department of Justice) for proceedings, which could result in termination of MDOE’s federal education funding.”

The investigation was launched by the Office for Civil Rights on Feb. 21.

The probe came following President Donald Trump’s presidential action on Feb. 5 opposing “male competitive participation in women’s sports.” It called for rescinding “all funds from educational programs that deprive women and girls of fair athletic opportunities.”

Allowing males to compete against females in sporting events is “demeaning, unfair, and dangerous to women and girls, and denies women and girls the equal opportunity to participate and excel in competitive sports,” it said.

Commenting on the final warning letter to MDOE, Department of Education Acting Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Craig Trainor said the Maine education department’s “indifference to its past, current, and future female athletes is astonishing.”

“By refusing to comply with Title IX, MDOE allows—indeed, encourages—male competitors to threaten the safety of female athletes, wrongfully obtain girls’ hard-earned accolades, and deny females equal opportunity in educational activities to which they are guaranteed under Title IX,” he said.

On Feb. 21, Maine Gov. Janet Mills said that her state “will not be intimidated by the President’s threats.”

If federal funding is cut, her administration “will take all appropriate and necessary legal action to restore that funding,” she said at the time.

The Epoch Times has reached out to MDOE for comment.

Crackdown on MDOE

The March 19 letter to MDOE from the Office for Civil Rights outlined several steps the state had to take.

MDOE must direct all public school districts to comply with Title IX, “reminding them that noncompliance places their federal funding in jeopardy,” it said.

The directive must mention that compliance with Title IX requires schools to forbid “males to participate in any athletic program, or access any locker room or bathroom, designated for females,” it added.

The terms “man” and “woman” must be understood in the context that there are only two sexes, the letter also said.

Meanwhile, the federal Education Department’s Student Privacy Office recently launched another probe, looking at whether MDOE has violated the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA).

The investigation follows reports that dozens of school districts in the state were breaching parental rights.

The school districts’ policies allow schools to create “gender plans” that support a student’s transgender identity. The districts contend that these plans are not education records under FERPA and thus are inaccessible to parents.

“Parents and guardians have the right to access their child’s education records to guide and safeguard their child’s mental, emotional, and physical well-being. Any policy to the contrary is both illegal and immoral,” said U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon.

“It is deeply concerning to hear that teachers and school counselors in Maine are reportedly encouraging and helping students to undergo so-called ‘gender transitions’ while keeping parents in the dark. The Trump Administration will enforce all federal laws to safeguard students and families.”

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 09:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Immense Consequences" - EU Warns Of Countermeasures As World Leaders Respond To US Tariffs
"Immense Consequences" - EU Warns Of Countermeasures As World Leaders Respond To US Tariffs

The European Union will unveil countermeasures to U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest tariffs if negotiations with the White House stall, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on April 2, as leaders around the world responded to the new levies.

Trump on Wednesday unveiled a 10 percent minimum reciprocal tariff on most goods imported to the United States, while imposing a higher 20 percent levy on the European Union.

He said the tariffs were designed to help rebuild the U.S. economy and prevent cheating.

In a statement read out in Uzbek city Samarkand, von der Leyen said the newly unveiled tariffs were “a major blow to the world economy” that will have “immense consequences.”


“The global economy will massively suffer,” the EU chief said.

“Uncertainty will spiral and trigger the rise of further protectionism. The consequences will be dire for millions of people around the globe.”




Inflation will also soar, and the most vulnerable citizens will likely be impacted, von der Leyen stated.


“I agree with President Trump, that others are taking unfair advantage of the current rules,” she said. 

“And I am ready to support any efforts to make the global trading system fit for the realities of the global economy. But I also want to be clear: Reaching for tariffs as your first and last tool will not fix it.”

“That is why, from the outset, we have always been ready to negotiate with the US, to remove any remaining barriers to Transatlantic trade,” von der Leyen said. 

“At the same time, we are prepared to respond.”


As The Epoch Times Katabella Roberts reports, Von der Leyen said the EU is finalizing a package of countermeasures in response to tariffs on steel, referencing the 26 billion euro (roughly $28 billion) package of tariffs the EU plans to impose on some American goods this month after Trump’s U.S. steel and aluminum tariffs took effect on March 12.

“We are now preparing for further countermeasures, to protect our interests and our businesses if negotiations fail,” the EU chief said.

Her comments come as Trump announced tariffs on nearly all U.S. trading partners, part of what he said are efforts to balance trade deficits.

The rates include a flat 10 percent baseline levy, along with additional individualized rates that Trump said are designed to match each nation’s trade barriers on the United States. The tariffs are set to take effect at 12:01 a.m. on April 5.

Speaking from the Rose Garden at the White House, Trump declared it was “Liberation Day in America” and said the tariffs would “make America greater than ever before,” simultaneously boosting domestic manufacturing and lowering prices for consumers.

The president described the EU as pathetic and said it was “ripping off” the United States.


“Now we’re going to charge the European Union. They’re very tough. Very, very tough traders,” Trump said.


World Leaders Respond

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney vowed to fight the tariffs with countermeasures and “build the strongest economy in the G7.”

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson expressed “deep regret” over the path the United States has embarked upon.


“We don’t want growing trade barriers. We don’t want a trade war. That would make our populations poorer and the world more dangerous in the long run,” Kristersson said.

“But – Sweden and the Swedish Government are well prepared for what’s happening now. We stand on solid economic ground, with world-class public finances.”


Kristersson added that he will “take every opportunity” to reverse the tariffs in the EU and hopes to be able to contain the new U.S. tariffs.


“We want to find our way back to a path of trade and cooperation together with the US, so that people in our countries can enjoy a better life. Sweden will continue to stand up for free trade and international cooperation,” he said.


Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister) Micheál Martin said the tariffs “benefit no one.”


“My priority, and that of the government, is to protect Irish jobs and the Irish economy,” he said in a social media statement.


British Prime Minister Kier Starmer said a trade war was not in the UK’s national interest.


“Negotiations on an economic prosperity deal, one that strengthens our existing trading relationship - they continue,” he said.


Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said her administration will do “everything we can” to work towards an agreement with the United States. 

She said Italy hopes to avoid a trade war that “would inevitably weaken the West in favor of other global players.”

French President Emmanuel Macron will meet with representatives from business sectors hit by the new taxes at the Élysée Palace on April 3, the French presidency said.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 09:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"This Could Blow Up Apple" iPhone Maker Plummets; Most Impacted By Tariffs Among Mag7s
"This Could Blow Up Apple" iPhone Maker Plummets; Most Impacted By Tariffs Among Mag7s

Apple shares are plunging almost 10% in premarket trading, as the iPhone maker is viewed as especially exposed to the Trump administration’s tariff announcements.



As Bloomberg economists write in an overnight report (available to pro subs), "the US reciprocal 34% tariff on China and other nations where Apple has manufacturing will likely amplify operating-margin deterioration, given we don’t expect the company to hike prices to offset the effects." They add that revenue growth "could remain under pressure if Apple does raise product prices, in addition to uneasy consumer sentiment, which might delay upgrades."

Below we excerpt from several other Wall Street research reports, all of which reach the same conclusion:

Rosenblatt Securities (buy, PT $263)

“Our quick math on Trump’s tariff Liberation Day suggests that this could blow up Apple,” and “that suggests something is likely to give,” like Apple getting an exemption or Trump reaching a deal with China and/or Vietnam
“It’s hard for us to imagine Trump blowing up an American icon,” but “this looks pretty tough”
Citi (buy, PT $275)

“If Apple cannot get exempted this time and assuming Apple gets hit by the accumulative 54% China tariffs and does not pass it through, we estimate about 9% negative impact to the company’s total gross margin”
Jefferies (underperform, PT $202.33)

“The simple thought is likely that Apple’s products will be subject to this tariff, and thus demand will get hit and thus the supply chain will suffer,” although “our base case remains AAPL will be exempted from China tariffs”
Wedbush

The firm sees the tariffs as “the start of negotiations,” and the selloff could represent “a major buying opportunity to own the best tech winners on sale for a policy that will be temporary and not permanent,” especially China-exposed names like Apple
However, “numbers are now going to have come down across the tech world as just the sheer uncertainty from this tariff announcement heard around the world will cause some IT budgets to freeze”
While Apple is crashing by almsot double digits, the rest of the tech giants are also broadly lower, including: Microsoft -2.6%, Nvidia -5.6%, Amazon -6.1%, Alphabet -3%, Meta Platforms -4.6%, and Tesla -5.9%, Skyworks -3.8%, Broadcom -6.2%.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 09:35

Ian Visits
Open 
New skyscraper may open up a hidden section of London’s Roman Wall
A section of London's Roman Wall hidden under a 1980s office block could be opened up to the public if plans for a redevelopment of the site are approved.Read more ›

Atlas Obscura
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Solly’s Hot Tamales in Vicksburg, Mississippi

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Luton airport expansion approved by government
Luton Rising wants to increase airport capacity to 32 million passengers by 2043.

The Hill
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Treasury secretary: 'My advice to every country right now is do not retaliate'
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent encouraged countries around the world to refrain from retaliating against the U.S. in light of President Trump’s reset of tariff policy, arguing the administration is preparing the U.S. for “long-term” economic growth. “My advice to every country right now is, do not retaliate, sit back, take it in, let's see how...

The Hill
Open 
Adams running for reelection as an independent
New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) announced that he is running for reelection as an independent in the mayoral race, as he has faced long odds of being able to win as a Democrat. Observers had been watching for what Adams would do ahead of Thursday’s filing deadline for the race as he had...

The Hill
Open 
Threats, calls for negotiations in wake of Trump tariffs
Countries around globe have responded to President Trump's latest tariffs with either threats of retaliation or calls for negotiation. Trump on Wednesday imposed a 10-percent base tax on all goods coming into the U.S., with the exception of items from Mexico and Canada — trading partners the administration has already targeted with 25 percent tariffs....

The Hill
Open 
Ontario premier ‘cautiously optimistic’ amid Trump tariffs
“Make no mistake about it, Canadians love Americans. They love the U.S., and I do, too,” Doug Ford said.

The Hill
Open 
The price of privacy: How your personal data could dictate what you pay 
Your location, your health and your driving are all under constant watch to power the advertising machine. But now, they’re influencing the prices you pay for everything, from loans to insurance premiums to groceries. And that should worry all of us.

The Hill
Open 
Speaker Johnson backs Donalds for Florida governor
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-Fla.) backed Rep. Byron Donalds's (R-Fla.) bid for governor on Thursday, becoming the latest Republican to throw their support behind the congressman.  “Byron Donalds is a principled conservative leader who Floridians can trust as their next governor,” Johnson told Politico. “In Congress, Byron has been tenacious in standing up for Florida and...

The Hill
Open 
Seinfeld, Springsteen added to Forbes' 2025 Billionaires list: Who else made the cut?
The 2025 list features a total of 3,028 billionaires, according to Forbes' current estimates. That's the most since the media outlet created the list.

The Hill
Open 
Senate Democrat: Tariffs 'will come back to haunt Donald Trump'
Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) weighed in the latest tariff announcement from President Trump, telling reporters that the new taxes will "come back to haunt" Trump and cause prices to increase. “The President's tariffs threaten recession, but very immediately they are attacks, they'll raise prices on everything from electricity to gas to groceries,” Blumenthal said Wednesday...

The Hill
Open 
DOGE-driven layoffs in March third-highest recorded
Layoffs driven by Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) cuts to the federal workforce totaled 275,240 in March, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, the third-highest monthly amount ever recorded by the outplacement firm. The firm said that the government sector accounted for 216,215 layoffs last month. The Trump administration has cut 279,445 federal jobs since...

The Hill
Open 
Scrapping these green energy subsidies could save the Inflation Reduction Act 
They should use a two-pronged approach: scrapping the credits that don’t work and simplifying the ones that do by getting rid of the “everything bagel” provisions weighing them down. 

The Hill
Open 
Market plunge in reaction to Trump 'Liberation Day' tariffs
Stocks plunged Thursday morning as U.S. trading opened for the first time after President Trump’s announcement of heavy tariffs on nearly every nation exporting products to the United States. The Dow Jones Industrial Average opened with a loss of more than 1,200 points, falling 2.8 percent on the day. The S&P 500 index opened with...

The Hill
Open 
Tech group CEO: Trump tariffs will 'drive inflation,' 'kill jobs'
The head of the Consumer Technology Association (CTA) warned that President Trump’s sweeping tariffs will “drive inflation” and “kill jobs,” risking a recession in the U.S.  Trump announced his most wide-ranging slate of tariffs yet on Wednesday afternoon, imposing a 10 percent baseline tax on imports from nearly all foreign countries, along with tariffs of...

Harvard Business Review
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A Guide to Building a Unified Culture After a Merger or Acquisition
Don’t forget: the employees are a huge part of what made the company attractive in the first place.

Mail Online
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Neither oil tanker nor container ship had dedicated lookouts when they crashed in 'patchy visibility' in North Sea to spark massive fires, investigators say
Neither the oil tanker nor the container ship which collided in the North Sea last month sparking massive fires had dedicated lookouts, investigators claim.

Mail Online
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The future of luxury travel: Near-supersonic jet that can fly from London to New York at speeds 'not seen since Concorde' features a full-size kitchen, cinema, and an anti-jetlag lighting system
Canadian company Bombardier Aviation has revealed its Global 8000, a swanky private plane that flies at Mach 0.94 (720mph).

Mail Online
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Russian state media falls for April Fool's joke claiming Britain will build aircraft carrier called HMS Prince Andrew which can carry 'infinity' jets
Russian channel RT ran the article headlined 'Britain to expand navy due to Russian "threat", following a satirical report by an online military news site.

Mail Online
Open 
US tourist arrested for leaving a can of Coke for untouched tribe on a remote island is a wannabe travel influencer who spent time with the Taliban
Mykhailo Viktorovych Polyakov, 24, creates YouTube videos under the username Neo-Orientalist. He seemingly teased his visit to North Sentinel Island online five months before making the journey.

The Guardian (UK)
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Mo Gilligan review – riotous red-carpet relatability from a big-hearted comic
Brighton DomeUnderpinned by standup craftsmanship as effortless as it is meticulous, Gilligan continues to prove his gift for bringing everyday scenarios to lifeThere are shaggy dog stories, then there’s the centrepiece anecdote of Mo Gilligan’s touring show, which narrates more or less in real time a recent glitzy night out on the Hollywood tiles. It’s quite the gambit for a standup known for his boy-next-door approachability to dedicate half an hour to this tale of red-carpet excess. Happy to say, Gilligan pulls it off with humility intact; his modesty, indeed, is the joke. Less happy to say, the story, which finds Mo and his London “mandem” given the VIP treatment in an LA nightclub, isn’t remarkable or variegated enough to justify its excessive length.I began to think that routine might constitute the whole show. But it doesn’t. There’s a fun opening number about black Britons on holiday. Later, the 37-year-old ranges across singledom and coupledom, drawing him into territory he has always effortlessly commanded – where boys do this and girls do that, on the dancefloor, in front of the telly, in the bedroom. “Men, we’re not good at apologising.” Women always know where the remote control is. Is any of it true? Gilligan is so skilled at bringing these everyday scenarios to life, so gifted at animating the telling detail, we’re happy to indulge a generalisation or three. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Co-op to open at least 120 more grocery shops after profits rise five-fold
Mutual reports increase from £28m to £161m, but says ministers ‘layering costs’ on retailers could hit high streetsThe Co-operative Group plans to open at least a further 120 grocery shops this year after profits rose more than fivefold, but told the government that “layering costs” on retailers could hit high streets and communities.The mutual, which owns more than 800 funeral parlours and an insurance and legal advisory business as well as operating more than 2,000 convenience shops, said changes to employers’ national insurance contributions (NICs) and packaging regulations were expected to add £80m to its costs this year. It also lost £80m to shoplifters last year despite spending millions on new security measures. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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From android to assassin: Daryl Hannah’s 10 best films – ranked!
With the release this month of Coastal, her documentary about husband Neil Young’s 2023 solo tour, we look at Hannah’s greatest rolesLooking as though she has strayed from another genre, Hannah plays Mickey Rourke’s girlfriend, a leggy aerobics instructor who keeps getting undressed. At least she’s more fun than Rourke and an insanely posturing Eric Roberts as deadbeat cousins ripping off the mob: roles originally written for Robert De Niro and Al Pacino. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Danish PM puts on show of unity in Greenland after Trump acquisition threats
Mette Frederiksen joins Greenland’s new and outgoing prime ministers, emphasising ‘cooperation, equality and security’Europe live – latest updatesThe Danish prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, has put on a show of unity with Greenlandic leaders in her first visit to the Arctic island since Donald Trump’s renewed threats to acquire the territory, saying that when Greenland is in a “difficult situation” so too are Denmark and Europe.The Danish PM boarded an inspection ship on Thursday with Greenland’s new prime minister, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, after which they were due to hold a joint press conference expected to focus on unity and Arctic security. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Stocks tumble on Wall Street as Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs rattle global markets – business live
Ursula von der Leyen says tariffs a ‘major blow’ to world economy, as US dollar falls to six month low after US President Trump’s ‘liberation day’Full report: Trump announces sweeping new tariffsAnalysis: Trump’s tariffs likely to raise prices and cause chaosWhat are tariffs and why do they matter?The new US tariffs “will only create losers” with US consumers particularly hard hit, the German Automotive Industry Association (VDA), has said in a statement, calling on the EU “to act together and with the necessary force, while continuing to signal its willingness to negotiate.”The body, which represents the powerful German auto industry, said the tariffs markedthe United States’ departure from the rules-based global trade order – and thus a departure from the foundation for global value creation and corresponding growth and prosperity in many regions of the world.This is not America first; this is America alone. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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'Heartbreaking': Prince Harry responds to charity row - as watchdog announces review into 'concerns raised'
Prince Harry has described a row over his Sentebale charity as "heartbreaking", as a watchdog said it has opened a case looking into "concerns raised".

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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UK explores retaliatory action against US tariffs
The business secretary says he wants to reach an economic deal but would take "necessary steps' if talks failed.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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How were Trump's tariffs calculated?
Analysts have questioned claims that new tariffs are reciprocal and based on those charged against the US.

BBC World News
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Russia not on Trump's tariff list
US media quotes the White House press secretary as saying this is because of sanctions on Moscow.

ZDNet News
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T-Mobile's data breach payouts begin this month - how to check your eligibility
After a 2021 data breach affected 76 million customers, settlement checks are finally on the way. Here's what you can expect.

ZDNet News
Open 
These XR glasses gave me a 120-inch screen to work with - and they're surprisingly affordable
I can't travel without my XR glasses now. If you're ready to give them a go on your next trip or commute, the RayNeo Air 3S gives you an unbeatable experience for the price.

ZDNet News
Open 
Want free AI training from Microsoft? You can sign up for its AI Skills Fest now
Microsoft's 50-day AI Skills Fest is open to all - from beginners to pros. Register now for free access to AI lessons and help Microsoft win a Guinness World Record (seriously).

ZDNet News
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I changed 12 Android phone settings to dramatically increase battery life (and why they work)
No more battery anxiety - these 12 proven tips will help you maximize your Android's battery life.

EFF
Open 
Calyx Institute: A Case Study in Grassroots Innovation
Technologists play a huge role in building alternative tools and resources when our right to privacy and security are undermined by governments and major corporations. This direct resistance ensures that even in the face of powerful adversaries, communities can find some safety and autonomy through community-built tools.
One of the most renowned names in this work is the Calyx Institute, a New York based 501(c)3 nonprofit founded by Nicholas Merrill, after a successful and influential constitutional challenge to the National Security Letter (NSL) statute in the USA Patriot Act. Today Calyx’s mission is to defend digital privacy, advance connectivity, and strive for a future where everyone has access to the resources and tools they need to remain securely connected. Their work is made possible thanks to the generous donations of their over 12,000 grassroots members.
More recently, Calyx joined EFF’s network of grassroots organizations across the US, the Electronic Frontier Alliance (EFA). Members of the alliance are not-for-profit local organizations dedicated to EFA’s five guiding principles: privacy, free expression, access to knowledge, creativity, and security. Calyx has since been an exceptional ally, lifting up and collaborating with fellow members.
If you’re inspired by Calyx to start making a difference in your community, you can get started with our organizer toolkits. Once you’re ready, we hope you consider applying to join the alliance.
JOIN EFA
Defend Digital Rights Locally
We corresponded with Calyx over email to discuss the group's ambitious work, and what the future holds for Calyx. Here are excerpts from our conversation:
Thanks for chatting with us, to get started could you tell us a bit about Calyx’s current work?
Calyx focuses on three areas: (1) developing a privacy-respecting software ecosystem, (2) bridging the digital divide with affordable internet access, and (3) sustaining our community through grants, and research, and educational initiatives.
We build and maintain a digital ecosystem of free and open-source software (FOSS) centering on CalyxOS, an Android operating system that encrypts communications, combats invasive metadata collection, and protects users from geolocation tracking. The Calyx Internet Membership Program offers mobile hotspots so people have a way to stay connected despite limited resources or a lack of viable alternatives. Finally, Calyx actively engages with diverse stakeholder groups to build a shared understanding of privacy and expand digital-security literacy and provide grants to directly support aligned organizations. By partnering with our peers, funders, and service providers, we hope to drive collective action toward a privacy-and-rights-respecting future of technology.
Calyx projects work with a wide range of technologies. What are some barriers Calyx runs into in this work?
Our biggest challenge is one shared by many tech communities, particularly FOSS advocates: it is difficult to balance privacy and security with usability in tool development. On the one hand, the current data-mining business model of the tech sector makes it extremely hard to provide FOSS solutions to proprietary tech while keeping the tool intuitive and easy to use. On the other, there is a general lack of momentum for funding and growing an alternative digital ecosystem.
As a result, many digital rights enthusiasts are left with scarce resources and a narrow space within which to work on technical solutions. We need more people to work together and collectively advocate for a privacy-respecting tech ecosystem that cares about all communities and does not marginalize anyone.
Take CalyxOS, for example. Before it became a tangible project, our founder Nick spent years thinking about an alternative mobile operating system that put privacy first. Back in 2012, Nick spoke to Moxie Marlinspike, the creator of the Signal messaging app, about his idea. Moxie shared several valid concerns that almost led Nick to stop working on it. Fortunately, these warnings, which came from Moxie’s experience and success with Signal, made Nick even more determined, and he recruited an expert global team to help realize his idea.
What do you see as the role of technologists in defending civil liberties with local communities?
Technologists are enablers—they build tools and technical infrastructures, fundamental parts of the digital ecosystem within which people exercise their rights and enjoy their lives. A healthy digital ecosystem consists of technologies that liberate people. It is an arena where people willingly and actively connect and share their expertise, confident in the shared protocols that protect everyone’s rights and dignity. That is why Calyx builds and advocates for people-centered, privacy-focused FOSS tools.
How has Calyx supported folks in NYC? What have you learned from it?
It’s a real privilege to be part of the NYC tech community, which has such a wealth of technologists, policy experts, human rights watchdogs, and grassroots activists. In recent years, we joined efforts led by multiple networks and organizations to mobilize against unjustifiable mass surveillance and other digital threats faced by millions of people of color, immigrants, and other underrepresented groups.
We’re particularly proud of the support we provided to another EFA member, Surveillance Technology Oversight Project, on the Ban the Scan campaign to ban facial recognition in NYC, and CryptoHarlem to sustain their work bringing digital privacy and cybersecurity education to communities in Harlem and beyond. Most recently, we funded Sunset Spark—a small nonprofit offering free education in science and technology in the heart of Brooklyn—to develop a multipurpose curriculum focused on privacy, internet infrastructure, and the roles of the public and private sectors in our digital world.
These experiences deeply inspired us to shape a funding philosophy that centers the needs of organizations and groups with limited resources, helps local communities break barriers and build capacity, and grows reciprocal relationships between each member of the community.
You mentioned a grantmaking program, which is a really unique project for an EFA member. Could you tell us a bit about your theory of change for the program?
Since 2020, the Calyx Institute has been funding the development of digital privacy and security tools, research on mass surveillance systems, and training efforts to equip people with the knowledge and tools they need to protect their right to privacy and connectivity. In 2022, Calyx launched the Fusion Center Research Fund to aid investigations into law enforcement harvesting of personal data through intelligence-sharing centers. This effort, with nearly $200,000 disbursed to grantees, helped reveal the deleterious impact of surveillance technology on privacy and freedom of expression.
These efforts have led to the Sepal Fund, Calyx’s pilot program to offer small groups unrestricted and holistic grants. This program will provide five organizations, collectives, or projects a yearly grant of up to $50,000 for a total of three years. In addition, we will provide our grantees opportunities for professional development, as well as other resources. Through this program, we hope to sustain and elevate research, tool development, and education that will support digital privacy and defend internet freedom.
Could you tell us a bit about how people can get involved?
All our projects are, at their core, community projects, and we welcome insights and involvement from anyone to whom our work is relevant. CalyxOS offers a variety of ways to connect, including a CalyxOS Matrix room and GitLab repository where users and programmers interact in real time to troubleshoot and discuss improvements. Part of making CalyxOS accessible is ensuring that it’s as widely available as possible, so anyone who would like to be part of that translation and localization effort should visit our weblate site.
What does the future look like for Calyx?
We are hoping that the future holds big things for us, like CalyxOS builds on more affordable and globally available mobile devices so that people in different locations with varied resources can equally enjoy the right to privacy. We are also looking forward to updating our visual communication—we have been “substance over style” for so long that it will be exciting to see how a refreshed look will help us reach new audiences.
Finally, what’s your “moonshot”? What’s the ideal future Calyx wants to build?
The Calyx dream is accessible digital privacy, security, and connectivity for all, regardless of budget or tech background, centering communities that are most in need.
We want a future where everyone has access to the resources and tools they need to remain securely connected. To get there, we’ll need to work on building a lot of capacity, both technological and informational. Great tools can only fulfill their purpose if people know why and how to use them. Creating those tools and spreading the word about them requires collaboration, and we are proud to be working toward that goal alongside all the organizations that make up the EFA.
Our thanks to the Calyx Institute for their continued efforts to build private and secure tools for targeted groups, in New York City and across the globe. You can find and support other Electronic Frontier Alliance affiliated groups near you by visiting eff.org/fight.

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Microsoft, Amazon Execs Call Out Washington's Low-Performing 9-Year-Olds In Tax Pushback
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From the letter: "We have long partnered with you in many areas, including education funding. Despite more than doubling K-12 spending and increasing teacher salaries to some of the highest rates in the nation, 4th and 8th grade assessment scores in reading and math are among the worst in the country. Similarly, we have collaborated with you to address housing and homelessness. Despite historic investments in affordable housing and homelessness prevention since 2013, Washington's homeless population has grown by 71 percent, making it the third largest in the nation after California and New York, according to HUD. These outcomes beg the question of whether more investment is needed or whether we need different policies instead."

Back in 2010, Smith teamed with then-Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and then-Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos to fund an effort to defeat an initiative for a WA state income that was pushed for by Bill Gates Sr. In 2023, Bezos moved out of WA state before being subjected to a 7% tax on gains of more than $250,000 from the sale of stocks and bonds, a move that reportedly saved him $1.2 billion in WA taxes on his 2024 Amazon stock sales.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Techdirt
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The Guardian (UK)
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Just Between Ourselves review – Ayckbourn’s marital malaise comedy has a proto dark side
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The Guardian (UK)
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Plan for Norfolk megafarm rejected by councillors over environmental concerns
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Vessels had no ‘dedicated lookouts’ at time of North Sea collision, report finds
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The Guardian (UK)
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Russia bans Elton John Aids Foundation over its support for LGBTQ+ rights
Designation as ‘undesirable organisation’ exposes nonprofit’s staff and partners to possible criminal prosecutionRussian authorities on Thursday banned the Elton John Aids Foundation (EJAF), which focuses on HIV/Aids prevention, citing its support for LGBTQ+ rights as a reason for the move.Founded by the British singer and songwriter in 1992, the organisation funds HIV treatment programmes in countries including Russia. It also advocates for LGBTQ+ people, who have faced years of brutal persecution in Russia. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Luton airport allowed to double capacity after UK government overrules planners
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The Guardian (UK)
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Deaths of British couple in France being treated as murder-suicide
Andrew Searle and Dawn Kerr were found dead in their home in Les Pesquiès in Aveyron on 6 FebruaryThe deaths of a British couple who were found in their renovated rural home in Aveyron, south-west France, are being treated as a murder followed by a suicide.The bodies of Andrew Searle, 62, a retired fraud investigator, Dawn Kerr, 56, a project manager, were discovered on 6 February at their home in the village of Les Pesquiès, south of Villefranche-de-Rouergue. Continue reading...

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'Concerns raised' at charity set up by Prince Harry to be reviewed by UK watchdog
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Chatham House
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Trump’s ‘liberation day’ tariffs are likely just the beginning of a longer-term vision
Trump’s ‘liberation day’ tariffs are likely just the beginning of a longer-term vision
Expert comment
LToremark
3 April 2025

Amid strident rhetoric and shifting targets, many observers have written off Trump’s tariff agenda either as a thoughtless time bomb that may wreck the global economy or as a negotiating tactic. But they are missing the bigger picture.















President Trump’s ‘liberation day’ tariffs were both bigger and broader than many observers expected. It is now time to understand that the moves – the largest single imposition of tariffs in at least 70 years – are not a one-off or a negotiating tactic.Beyond the chaos, Trump’s key advisers have a set of theories that they believe will transform politics and economics at home, as well as the foundations of US power abroad. In their telling, a mix of tariffs and negotiations can help the US dramatically increase manufacturing employment, cover a significant fraction of government spending, and reserve security alliances for countries that balance trade and exchange rates with Washington. Although this worldview has thus far failed to convince everyone in Trump’s administration – and many mainstream economists – its seductive promise that the US can have both power and freedom of action, at home and abroad, likely means that it is here to stay.The intellectual underpinnings of MAGA economicsTrumpian economics is grounded in two critiques of the existing global trade system that sound sensible to non-experts while driving trade wonks to madness. Trump used both to great effect in his remarks launching the new policies.






Beyond the chaos, Trump’s key advisers have a set of theories that they believe will transform politics and economics at home, as well as the foundations of US power abroad.






The first critique is that trading partners’ practices are unfair. Trump argues that US businesses, workers and security all suffer because foreign countries are breaking international rules or taking advantage of lax rules negotiated by his predecessors. The result, according to Trump, is that businesses and workers cannot compete and industries essential to US security are threatened. Notably, here Trump is pushing on a strong view among Republicans, and an increasingly close divide among Democrats, that increased trade has cost Americans more than it has gained them. His unfairness case has two sub-arguments. First, that the policies of the Chinese government, from extensive subsidies for exporting industries to intellectual property theft, pose a unique and existential threat to the US economy, security, workers and way of life. This view of Beijing as fundamentally undercutting the rules of the game is now broadly held across Washington. The second is that US allies owe the US balanced trade in exchange for security guarantees such as NATO membership. ’In many cases, the friend is worse than the foe’, Trump said as he announced the new tariffs. This added pressure on allies completely overturns a standard tool in the US security toolbox – offering access to the US market in exchange for countries making closer security arrangements.


























Related content
The international trading system needs urgent support to survive








It is also utterly antithetical to the letter and spirit of existing trade rules, which foresaw the global economy as a place where different systems could meet on equal footing – and assumed that liberal democracies would win out economically. Members of Trump’s team are now saying those assumptions were wrong or just irrelevant, and countries that eliminate their trade surpluses should be closer allies than those that do not.The second critique is that trade deficits are bad in themselves. This argument has not figured in US policy circles in decades. Mainstream economists argue that persistent US trade deficits are closely linked to the US dollar’s position as the global reserve currency – or even beneficial as they are mirrored by massive global purchases of dollars and investments in the US. Leading figures around Trump, however, believe differently. Robert Lighthizer, who served as US trade representative in Trump’s first term, argues that the deficits have transferred ‘some $20 trillion of our wealth (in the form of equity in our companies, debt and real estate) to the governments and citizens of the exploiting countries’ over the past 20 years. He further argues that the decline of manufacturing jobs – specifically for men – must be reversed to improve the national character. In an electorate sharply divided by gender, arguments about male dignity are falling on receptive ears, economic theories notwithstanding.The longer-term visionThe sheer number of tariff possibilities thrown around by Trump, and his penchant for modifying, delaying or removing them, has led many observers to argue that there is no larger plan behind them – or that the negotiating leverage is the point, rather than any particular outcome. However, this misses the extent to which key members of his team spent recent years gaming out longer-term scenarios in which US tariffs reshape the domestic economy, the federal budget and global economic architecture.






If domestic manufacturing replaces imports that means tariffs are no longer being paid on imports and thus that revenue will not materialize.






Trump has promised his voters that he will bring manufacturing jobs and industries back to the US. He sees tariffs helping him achieve this in two ways: supporting US manufacturers by making imports more expensive and encouraging foreign manufacturers to set up shop in the US. But this objective is somewhat in tension with his pledge that tariffs will cover the costs of corporate tax cuts, reduce the federal budget deficit and eventually replace the income tax. If domestic manufacturing replaces imports that means tariffs are no longer being paid on imports and thus that revenue will not materialize. Likewise, if the dollar falls against other currencies (another goal of the administration that is shared by important bipartisan constituencies), imports become more expensive and tariffs raise less revenue.

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I bought it to be part of a greener future, but that was before Musk proved so awful. I’d sell it now, but prices have droppedAfter our children left home, my wife and I decided to treat ourselves and buy a new car for a driving holiday in Europe. We’d been driving a family estate car for years, loading it up with kids and making trips to and from universities, but we wanted something for ourselves.As a surprise, she booked a test drive for the Tesla Model S for my birthday. It was unlike any car I’d been in before. I thought “Wow, this is amazing.” It felt like the future: a computer on wheels that was constantly updating with new features. I can’t say I feel that way now – and many people seem to share that view. Tesla sales figures declined by 13% in the first few months of this year. Others feel even more uneasy: more than 200 demonstrations happened last weekend outside company facilities around the world to protest against Elon Musk and the wrecking ball he has taken to the federal government. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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There are new ways to catch goombas, a Mario Kart battle royale and innovative gameplay ideas abound, but Nintendo will need to work hard to sell its next-gen machine After Nintendo’s intriguing hour-long live stream on Wednesday, we now know a lot more about its follow-up to the phenomenally successful Switch. But how does the Switch 2 play? After the online presentation, I got to spend about four hours road-testing the new console at a press event in the Grand Palais, Paris, the box-white exhibition hall adorned in Nintendo red and lined with rows of high-end TV screens and Switch 2 consoles. There was also a 90-minute roundtable with three of the masterminds behind the console: Tetsuya Sasaki (hardware design lead), Kouichi Kawamoto (producer) and Takuhiro Dohta (director). Here’s what I learned. Continue reading...

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Reece Galbraith, 33, pleaded guilty to manslaughter in blast from gas canisters used to make cannabis sweetsA huge house explosion that killed two people including a seven-year-old boy was the result of a dangerous and criminal drug lab making cannabis gummy sweets using 100 gas canisters, a court has heard.Details of the causes of the blast in the Benwell area of Newcastle can now be reported after Reece Galbraith, 33, pleaded guilty on Thursday to the manslaughter of two people. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Plan for Norfolk megafarm rejected by councillors over environmental concerns
Application, submitted by Cranswick, would have created one of the largest industrial poultry and pig units in EuropeA megafarm which would have produced almost one million chickens and pigs at any one time has been blocked by councillors in Norfolk over climate change and environmental concerns.Councillors on King’s Lynn and West Norfolk borough council unanimously rejected an application to build what would have been one of the largest industrial poultry and pig units in Europe. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Deaths of British couple in France being treated as murder-suicide, reports say
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Sky News Home
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Luton Airport expansion plans approved by transport secretary
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Prince Harry charity row to be investigated by watchdog
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The Air Navigation (Restriction of Flying) (Duxford) Regulations 2025

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The Victims and Prisoners Act 2024 (Commencement No. 5) Regulations 2025
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The Public Service Pension Schemes (Rectification of Unlawful Discrimination) (Tax) Regulations 2025
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The Social Security (Contributions) (Amendment No. 5) Regulations 2025
These Regulations amend the Social Security (Contributions) Regulations 2001 to provide that Horizon Shortfall Scheme Appeals payments will be disregarded in the calculation of earnings for the purpose of establishing liability to Class 1 National Insurance contributions.

UK Legislation
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The Town and Country Planning (Crown Development Applications) (Procedure and Written Representations) Order 2025
The Town and Country Planning (Crown Development Applications) (Procedure and Written Representations) Order 2025 (“the Order”) sets out the procedure to be followed where a Crown development application for planning permission or approval of reserved matters or a connected listed building application is made in accordance with sections 293D and 293E of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8) (“the 1990 Act”).

UK Legislation
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The Electronic Communications (Networks and Services) (Designated Vendor Directions) (Penalties) Order 2025

UK Legislation
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The Student Accommodation (Codes of Management Practice and Specified Educational Establishments) (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2025
These Regulations amend the Student Accommodation (Codes of Management Practice and Specified Educational Establishments) (England) Regulations 2024 (S.I. 2024/947) (“the 2024 Regulations”).

UK Legislation
Open 
The Horizon Shortfall Scheme Appeals (Tax Exemptions and Relief) Regulations 2025
These Regulations provide for exemptions from capital gains tax, corporation tax, income tax and a relief from inheritance tax for payments received under Horizon Shortfall Scheme Appeals, an independent appeals process created by the Department for Business and Trade.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Town and Country Planning (Crown Development) (Urgent Applications) (Procedure) (England) Order 2025
Sections 293B and 293C of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8) (as inserted by section 109 of the Levelling-up and Regeneration Act 2023 (c. 55)) provide a route for applications for planning permission for Crown development in England where the development is considered to be of national importance, and where it is also necessary that the development be carried out as a matter of urgency.

UK Legislation
Open 
The Town and Country Planning (Consequential and Miscellaneous Amendments) Regulations 2025

UK Legislation
Open 
The Companies (Directors' Remuneration and Audit) (Amendment) Regulations 2025
Part 2 of these Regulations amends the Companies Act 2006 (c. 46) and the Large and Medium-sized Companies and Groups (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2008 (S.I. 2008/410) to revoke, or revoke and replace, changes made by regulations 1 to 23 and 25 to 33 of the Companies (Directors’ Remuneration Policy and Directors’ Remuneration Report) Regulations 2019 (S.I. 2019/970) which relate to company directors’ remuneration. The provisions being amended by Part 2 of these Regulations are secondary retained EU law within the meaning of section 11(2) of the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023 (c. 28).

The Verge
Open 
Verizon now offers a three-year price lock — but there’s a catch
Verizon is announcing a new price lock policy today, and the timing is probably no coincidence. The company is extending a three-year price guarantee on certain plans, both for new and existing customers. The announcement comes a day after President Trump unveiled sweeping tariffs, and Verizon says it’s hoping to give customers more “predictability” in […]

Air Accidents Investigation Branch
Open 
AAIB Report: Cirrus SR22T, G-RGSK. Air Accidents Investigation Branch.
AAIB Report: Cirrus SR22T, G-RGSK. Air Accidents Investigation Branch.

Gizmodo
Open 
T-Mobile Bug Reveals Names, Images, and Locations of Random Children
The company claims the issue has been fully resolved.

Gizmodo
Open 
No, This Garmin GPS Running Watch for $149 Is Not a Belated April Fool’s Joke
Amazon's 25% off deal makes that ridiculously low price for a workout watch from one of the world's top manufacturers a reality.

Gizmodo
Open 
A Blast of Wind From the Sun Squished Jupiter’s Magnetic Shielding
The rare event revealed never-before-seen behaviors of a planetary atmosphere.

Gizmodo
Open 
The Nintendo Switch 2 Is Nice, and Its Mouse Gaming Mode Is Even Nicer
Mouse gaming is back on consoles, baby.

BBC Technology News
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I played the £75 Mario Kart World on Switch 2 - was it worth it?
The BBC gets hands-on with the hotly anticipated Nintendo Switch 2, launching in June.

Russia Today News
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EU state announces withdrawal from ICC

Mail Online
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Laurence Olivier and Joan Plowright's home could be yours for £2m as seven-bedroom Elizabethan farmhouse goes up for sale two months after Dame's death at 95
A seven-bedroom Elizabethan farmhouse that once belonged to the revered British actors Sir Laurence Olivier and Dame Joan Plowright has gone on sale in West Sussex.

Sky News Home
Open 
Luton Airport expansion approved by transport secretary
The expansion of Luton Airport has been approved by Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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What the president announced - and why it matters
We dig into what the US president has said, what it could mean, and why it is happening now.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Global stocks slide as US tariffs hit markets
European shares open lower after falls in Asia, while the gold price hits another record high.

Mail Online
Open 
Man blows up his car and turns himself into a human fireball in Amsterdam days after knifeman's frenzied attack was ended by hero Brit at same tourist spot
Amsterdam police said a car caught fire on the central Dam Square on Thursday afternoon following an explosion in the vehicle.

Mail Online
Open 
'Heartbroken' Prince Harry vows watchdog probe into Sentebale will 'unveil the truth' as he condemns 'blatant lies' after chairwoman accused him of 'harassment and bullying'
The Charity Commission said it has opened a case into 'concerns raised' about the Sentebale charity, which the Duke of Sussex quit as patron of last week.

Sky News Home
Open 
Watchdog opens case into 'concerns raised' at charity set up by Prince Harry
The UK's charity watchdog has said it has opened a case into "concerns raised" about Sentebale - which the Duke of Sussex quit as patron of amid a boardroom battle.

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BBC UK News
Open 
No drinks with sweeteners for younger children, say UK advisers
Drinks such as sugar-free squash are off the menu for young children, say health advisers.

BBC UK News
Open 
British Steel could decide to shut Scunthorpe plant in days
British Steel's owner has cancelled coal and iron ore shipments to the Scunthorpe plant.

Mail Online
Open 
'Heartbroken' Prince Harry hopes watchdog probe into Sentebale will 'unveil the truth' as he condemns 'blatant lies' after he was accused of 'harassment and bullying' by chairwoman
The Charity Commission said it has opened a case into 'concerns raised' about the Sentebale charity, which the Duke of Sussex quit as patron of last week.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Big matchups and bigger bucks: Michael Johnson pledges Grand Slam Track will bring ‘fantasy to life’
Athletics legend says his new four-part event, which launches on Friday, is exactly what the sport needsMichael Johnson is one of the few true legends of track and field. Now, though, he is chasing the holy grail. Every four years, athletics is the biggest sport at the Olympics. In between, for most casual fans, it tumbles off a cliff. But Johnson, a four-time gold medallist across the Barcelona, Atlanta and Sydney Games, believes he can change all that with a new big-money professional track league, Grand Slam Track, which launches on Friday in Kingston, Jamaica.“Grand Slam Track is the equivalent of UFC and Formula One,” he tells the Guardian. “The research tells us that people watched track during the Olympics because of the stakes, the stars, and the stories. So that is the recipe. And at the absolute heart of it is the head-to-head competition between the best athletes. Because that’s what people want to see.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
James Tarkowski should have been sent off against Liverpool, admits PGMOL
Slot welcomes move and says officiating has been ‘OK’Everton defender booked for challenge on Mac AllisterThe Premier League referees’ body, Professional Game Match Officials Ltd (PGMOL), has acknowledged that Everton’s James Tarkowski should have been sent off early on in their defeat at Liverpool. Arne Slot welcomed the move on Thursday after Tarkowski was only cautioned for a reckless challenge on Alexis Mac Allister.The referee, Sam Barrott, gave Tarkowski a yellow card and David Moyes conceded the defender was fortunate to stay on the pitch. PGMOL believes the video assistant referee, Paul Tierney, should have recommended a review. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Grand National 2025: horse-by-horse guide to all the runners
Last year’s winner I Am Maximus heads to Aintree on Saturday bidding to make history. Here is a look through the chances of all 34 contendersThere was a lot going on in the spring of 1974. Abba won Eurovision, Manchester United were relegated and Red Rum became the most recent horse to win the Grand National under what was then the top weight of 12 stone. Just over half a century later, last year’s winner will attempt to emulate the greatest Aintree hero of them all and defy top weight, and though he is higher in the ratings, he won so readily 12 months ago that he would surely have done so with another 8lb on his back. Lacklustre in two runs this campaign but Willie Mullins will have been working backwards from here and he seems highly likely to leave that form behind now he is back at the scene of his greatest triumph.Verdict: classy acceleration to seal victory last year, big chance to repeat from 8lb higher markVerdict: top-class at Haydock and when the mud is flying. Will not have either hereVerdict: loves spring ground and in the mix, but worse off with a couple of rivals on recent formVerdict: decent form already and best days still ahead of him but not cut much slack by the handicapperVerdict: the 2023 King George winner will love the ground and the trip but might lack a gear-change when it mattersVerdict: big run last year and can’t get classier than a Gold Cup winner but may have missed best chanceVerdict: outstanding novice over hurdles, yet to show same form over fences or at an extended trip Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hungary to pull out of ‘political’ ICC as Netanyahu visits Budapest
Israeli PM, who is wanted by the court, hails Viktor Orbán’s ‘bold and principled’ decision to leave the ‘corrupt’ bodyHungary will leave the international criminal court because it has become “political”, the country’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, said as he welcomed his Israeli counterpart, Benjamin Netanhayu – the subject of an ICC arrest warrant – to Budapest for an official visit.Standing beside Netanyahu at the start of the four-day visit, Orbàn said on Thursday that Hungary was convinced the “otherwise very important court” had “diminished into a political forum”. Netanyahu hailed “a bold and principled” decision. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Percy Pig’s US adventure may be short-lived as M&S respond to Trump tariffs
Retailer reconsiders ‘gift to America’ as it also adjusts to new rules on advertising high fat, sugar and salt foodsBusiness live – latest updatesGlobal stock markets plunge and US dollar tumblesPercy Pig’s US invasion could be called to a halt amid fears that Donald Trump’s tariffs could affect sales of Marks & Spencer’s popular confectionery brand which has just launched in Target stores across the Atlantic.Archie Norman, the chair of M&S, has described Percy as the retailer’s “gift to America” but he told the Retail Technology Show in London that “we might have to change our minds” as Trump imposes additional taxes on imported goods. Continue reading...

UK Government News
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22 days after Ukraine agreed to an immediate ceasefire, Russia continues to distract and delay: UK statement to the OSCE
Ambassador Holland questions Russia's seriousness about peace when it continues to attack Ukraine with hundreds of drones and refuses to commit to a full, immediate ceasefire.

UK Government News
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Serious Fraud Office sets out next steps in ambitious plan
The SFO has published its plan for the year ahead focusing on using new tools, enhancing its intelligence capacity and with domestic and international partners.

UK Government News
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Sentebale: Commission opens compliance case to assess concerns raised about the charity
The regulator for charities in England and Wales has opened a regulatory compliance case to examine concerns raised about the charity Sentebale.

UK Government News
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UK seeks business views on response to US tariffs
Government begins process seeking business views on response to US tariffs

Wired Top Stories
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Audio-Technica ATH-CKS50TW2 Earbuds Review: Max Power
These mid-tier earbuds have 15 hours of battery life with noise canceling, and a magnetic design that keeps them charged—no case required.

Boing Boing
Open 
Switch 2 release date finally revealed
After what feels like endless speculation, it's here and it's real. The Switch 2 was debuted and explained in excruciating detail today, with Nintendo covering everything from the new controllers (each of which can be used like a computer mouse) to the new 1080p screen. — Read the rest
The post Switch 2 release date finally revealed appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Bloodborne successor finally in development as Switch 2 exclusive
What kind of monkey's paw is responsible for this? After more than a decade of asking, Bloodborne developer FromSoftware has returned to that dark gothic setting – or at least one heavily inspired by it. The only caveat? It's a multiplayer-only game developed exclusively for Switch 2 of all consoles. — Read the rest
The post Bloodborne successor finally in development as Switch 2 exclusive appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
New research: Shingles vaccine reduces risk of developing dementia by 20%
New research reveals that the shingles vaccine might play a role in reducing the risk of developing dementia. The study was led by a team of scientists at Stanford Medicine and involved analyzing a vaccination program in Wales. Researchers found that the shingles vaccine lowered new dementia diagnoses by 20%, which is more than any other currently known prevention or intervention. — Read the rest
The post New research: Shingles vaccine reduces risk of developing dementia by 20% appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Bichon Frise Lufy has likely found his furever home
An adorable Bichon Frise doggo named Lufy, who became a viral obsession after he was recently featured on the social media account of the Sahara Kennel Rescue—an animal rescue shelter in Dubai, United Arab Emirates—has now entered a trial adoption process and may have found his furever home! — Read the rest
The post Bichon Frise Lufy has likely found his furever home appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
'Conservative girl makeup' tutorials mock the 'brutal aesthetics of MAGA'
Being ugly on the inside correlates with what Mother Jones calls the "brutal aesthetics of MAGA," which include "Mar-a-Lago face" (described succinctly in The Guardian as consisting largely of "fillers and aggressive fake tan") along with other makeup choices seemingly preferred by the MAGA crowd. — Read the rest
The post 'Conservative girl makeup' tutorials mock the 'brutal aesthetics of MAGA' appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Super Mario Odyssey followup stars Donkey Kong
Super Mario Odyssey is one of the best 3D platformers of all time – I'm not sure I'd find anyone who disagrees with that opinion if I tried. Naturally, with the advent of the Switch 2 fast approaching, fans were eager to see what Nintendo had cooking with the next 3D Mario game, though I'm not sure anyone expected this answer. — Read the rest
The post Super Mario Odyssey followup stars Donkey Kong appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Register
Open 
Zorin OS 17.3 takes the Brave step of changing its default browser from Firefox
To be fair, it sounds like the team has ironed out the more controversial features Comment  The latest version of Zorin OS, a popular Windows-macOS-like Ubuntu Linux remix, looks good, but there's one change that causes this vulture some concern.…

The Register
Open 
Why is someone mass-scanning Juniper and Palo Alto Networks products?
Espionage? Botnets? Trying to exploit a zero-day? Someone or something is probing devices made by Juniper Networks and Palo Alto Networks, and researchers think it could be evidence of espionage attempts, attempts to build a botnet, or an effort to exploit zero-day vulnerabilities.…

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Don't give younger kids drinks with artificial sweeteners, health advisers say
Drinks such as sugar-free squash are off the menu for young children, say health advisers.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Unearthed FBI Chat Logs Reveal 'Gag Order' On Biden Laptop Exposé
Unearthed FBI Chat Logs Reveal 'Gag Order' On Biden Laptop Exposé

Authored by Luis Cornelio via Headline USA,

Internal FBI chat logs revealed that the bureau imposed a “gag order” on agents regarding the New York Post bombshell story on the Hunter Biden laptop. Along with showing Hunter’s depravity, the laptop revealed Joe Biden’s involvement in his son’s foreign business dealings. 



The chat logs, published Tuesday by the House Judiciary Committee on X, show that the gag order extended to an FBI analyst who attempted to alert social media companies that the laptop was authentic—before these companies moved to censor the story’s spread. 


The FBI had Hunter Biden’s laptop, but on the day the NY Post story came out, the FBI refused to tell Big Tech the truth.
— House Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@JudiciaryGOP) April 1, 2025
On Oct. 14, 2020, the New York Post released its first story on the laptop’s content. That same day, FBI officials instructed agents, “please do not discuss Biden matter.” 

Earlier chats show a group of agents—including Laura Dehmlow, Bradley Benavides and James Dennehy—debating the Post’s story.

“You guys are tracking the coverage of the laptop right?” Dehmlow wrote. Both Benavides and Dennehy replied affirmatively. 

Later, agents whose names remain sealed sent messages stating, “right answer – nobody on call is is [sic] authorized to comment upon NY Post story” and “nobody [is] authorized to comment.” 

One agent asked if another had “admonished” the colleague who nearly revealed the laptop’s authenticity to Big Tech companies. “yes but he wont [sic] shut up,” one response read. 

Hours later, agents reiterated that they were forbidden from commenting on the laptop story, with messages like “official response no commen [sic] and “we cannot comment.” 

A previous transcribed interview with Dehmlow revealed that during a Zoom meeting with Big Tech, an FBI agent was interrupted before he could confirm the laptop was real and already in the bureau’s possession. 

The FBI had verified the laptop in 2019 by cross-referencing its serial number with Hunter’s iCloud storage, FBI special agent Erika Jensen stated during Hunter’s criminal trial in 2024. 

Despite this verification, the bureau remained silent while social media companies debated whether the Post’s story was tied to a Russian disinformation campaign.

Notably, the FBI had warned them weeks earlier of an imminent “hack-and-leak” story about the 2020 election, leading many to mistakenly equate that warning with the laptop exposé. 

The laptop revealed that while Hunter failed to pay millions in taxes, he also consumed drugs, paid for prostitutes and launched what Republicans call an “influence-peddling scheme” aimed at selling access—or at least the appearance of access—to Joe Biden in exchange for payments. 

According to the laptop, 10% of these payments were earmarked for the “Big Guy,” a term confirmed by former Biden ally Devon Archer to refer to Joe Biden. 

Biden went on to win the 2020 election, and before leaving office in 2025, he issued sweeping pardons to his siblings and Hunter, covering offenses committed between 2014 and 2025.

Read the full House Judiciary Committee’s X thread on the chatlogs:


The Committee had testimony from key FBI personnel, but until now, the FBI refused to produce the internal communications from that day in unclassified form for the American public to see. pic.twitter.com/I5uGnJICVM
— House Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@JudiciaryGOP) April 1, 2025

The internal FBI chat log also shows how far senior FBI officials went to silence this analyst.
After the meeting, a senior FBI lawyer put a “gag order” on the analyst. pic.twitter.com/9AzXIl565B
— House Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@JudiciaryGOP) April 1, 2025

 
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Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 05:44

ZeroHedge News
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Maxine Waters Alleges Trump Wants To Replace US Dollar With His Stablecoin
Maxine Waters Alleges Trump Wants To Replace US Dollar With His Stablecoin

Authored by Turner Wright via CoinTelegraph.com,

California Representative Maxine Waters, ranking member of the US House Financial Services Committee, used her opening statement at a markup hearing to criticize President Donald Trump’s business and ethical entanglements with the crypto industry, including the launch of a stablecoin by a family-backed company.



Addressing lawmakers at an April 2 hearing, Waters said Trump had used his position as president to leverage “multiple crypto schemes” for profit, including a US dollar-pegged stablecoin launched by World Liberty Financial (WLFI) — the firm backed by his family.

The California lawmaker pointed to Trump’s memecoin launched in January, his plans to establish a national cryptocurrency stockpile, and “his own stablecoin,” referring to WLFI’s USD1 token launched in March.



Rep. Maxine Waters addressing the House Financial Services Committee on April 2. Source: GOP Financial Services


“With this stablecoin bill, this committee is setting an unacceptable and dangerous precedent, validating the president and his insiders’ efforts to write rules of the road that will enrich themselves at the expense of everyone else,” said Waters, adding:

“Trump likely wants the entire government to use stablecoins from payments made by the Department of Housing and Urban Development, to Social Security payments, to paying taxes. And which coin do you think Trump would replace the dollar with? His own, of course.”


Waters does not stand alone in her criticism of Trump’s crypto ventures, with many lawmakers and experts across the political spectrum suggesting potential conflicts of interest.

Committee Chair French Hill, who spoke on stablecoins before Waters, also reportedly said that the Trump family’s involvement in the industry makes legislation “more complicated.”


“If there is no effort to block the President of the United States of America from owning his stablecoin business [...] I will never be able to agree on supporting this bill, and I would ask other members not to be enablers,” said Waters. 


Representative Bryan Steil, who introduced the Stablecoin Transparency and Accountability for a Better Ledger Economy, or STABLE Act, did not immediately address Waters’ concerns about Trump’s stablecoin but referred to establishing safeguards for consumers.

Hill did not mention Trump in his opening statement but said there needed to be a “clear federal framework” for payment stablecoins.

Crypto legislation moving through Congress

The committee will consider amendments to the STABLE Act, as well as bills to combat illicit finance using emerging financial technologies and blocking the US government from issuing a central bank digital currency, or CBDC.

The markup hearing was a necessary step before the committee could vote on whether to advance the bills to the House of Representatives.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 06:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
In Warning To Turkey, Israel Strikes Several Bases Across Syria
In Warning To Turkey, Israel Strikes Several Bases Across Syria

Israel on Tuesday carried out several major airstrikes on Syria, including targeting the capital of Damascus, according to state agency SANA.

"An Israeli occupation airstrike targeted the vicinity of the building of the scientific research center in the Barzeh residential district of Damascus," the outlet said. This area has been hit several times in recent years, as it conducted chemical weapons research under Assad.
Smoke over the Syrian capital in the evening hours.

Separate airstrikes rocked a military airport in Hamas, and reportedly the T4 airbase in Homs province, in central Syria (Syrian desert).

No causalities were initially reported, but some sources say they were particularly intense, with five airstrikes launched on the Hama air base in less than half an hour on Wednesday evening.

Regional war correspondent Elijah Magnier observers of the strikes:


After bombing Damascus, Israel also bombed Syria, Hama and the T4 airport, challenging Turkey, which was/is planning to establish a military air base at the same bombed airport.


Since Bashar al-Assad's ouster on December 8, Israel has conducted literally hundreds of strikes on army bases, weapons storehouses, and alleged chemical weapons sites.

The timing of these fresh strikes is interesting especially given Turkey's growing closeness to the new Jolani regime.


Israel airstrike on Hama military airport pic.twitter.com/ffRiv7zMoY
— ScharoMaroof (@ScharoMaroof) April 2, 2025
We earlier featured reporting which says Turkey is mulling the takeover of Syria's T4 airbase, and could provide aircover to the new government, given it has no air protection to speak of. It appears Israel wants to ensure this doesn't happen:


A source familiar with the matter told MEE that Turkey has begun moving to take control of the T4 air base, located near Palmyra in central Syria. "A Hisar-type air defense system will be deployed to T4 to provide air cover for the base," the source said.


"Once the system is in place, the base will be reconstructed and expanded with necessary facilities. Ankara also plans to deploy surveillance and armed drones, including those with extended strike capabilities," the same report said.


Israel sends a warning to Turkey by heavily striking bases across Syria, saying that Ankara shouldn’t try to prevent Israelis from flying over the airspace https://t.co/VlF5ewcsis
— Ragıp Soylu (@ragipsoylu) April 2, 2025
While Iran has long been Israel's enemy number one in Syria, Turkey is increasingly being viewed from Tel Aviv as a dangerous regional rival, especially as it cozies up to Hayat Tahrir al-Sham/AQ militants in Syria. Israel now wants to ensure it has complete dominance over Syria's skies for the foreseeable future.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 06:55

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Beijing Slams Trump's "Unilateral Bullying" Tariffs, Signals Retaliatory Action
Beijing Slams Trump's "Unilateral Bullying" Tariffs, Signals Retaliatory Action

President Trump's late afternoon announcement on Wednesday—"Liberation Day"—unveiled a far more aggressive tariff policy than top Wall Street analysts had anticipated, prompting panic dumping in global equities and futures markets overnight.



Of particular concern is Trump's stance toward China. The total effective tariff rate on Chinese imports surged to 54%, a dramatic increase of 34% from the previously imposed 20% in additional levies tied to fentanyl and earlier duties.



Trump's Liberation Day has drawn swift condemnation from Beijing, which has described the escalating tariff war as "unilateral bullying." 

Nikkei Asia quoted China's Ministry of Commerce, warning that it "firmly opposes" Trump's tariffs and "will resolutely take countermeasures to safeguard its own rights and interests."

The Commerce Ministry noted that the US "ignored" the benefits of a global trading system, adding, "The so-called 'reciprocal tariffs,' which are based on subjective and unilateral assessments by the United States, are not in line with the rules of international trade, seriously jeopardize the legitimate rights and interests of the parties concerned, and are typical of unilateral bullying." 

The ministry did not discuss specifics on the countermeasures. A ministry spokesperson told reporters that Beijing hopes to "resolve various issues through equal consultation." 

In other words, it's just a matter of time before Beijing mounts a countermeasure against the US, whether that's targeted tariffs, export controls, or other measures (such as targeting US Big Tech). Or as we've recently seen: Beijing Derailing Panama Port Deal.

Guo Jiakun, a spokesperson for China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, sang the same tune: China "firmly opposes" Trump's trade war escalation, which "seriously undermines" the rules-based global trading system. He urged Washington to resolve trade differences through talks. 

However, President Trump tried that with the Chinese Communist Party in his first term with the so-called "Phase One" agreement. Beijing committed to purchasing $200 billion of additional US exports. Yet, the phase one deal with the CCP was derailed by Covid disruptions. 

The Trump administration's goal with reciprocal tariffs against literally the entire world, including some cases of near triple-digit reciprocal tariffs that will lead to a historic emerging markets shock, is to reverse a half-century or more of de-industrialization policies in the US that have hollowed out the nation's core and produced a national security threat as the world fractures into a bipolar state.


pic.twitter.com/fSHTQWcauf
— Crypto_Maximaliste (@Crypto__Maxi) April 2, 2025
In financial markets, the People's Bank of China set the daily reference rate for the yuan at 7.1889 per dollar, weakening the currency. This allows the yuan to depreciate and support export competitiveness. A move like this will only draw accusations of currency manipulation from Trump.

"We maintain our view that the PBOC will not allow a sharp [yuan] depreciation given capital outflow risks and the government's objective to restore confidence in the Chinese economy," HK Mizuho Securities analyst Ken Cheung wrote in a note earlier.

Goldman analysts Andrew Tilton and others told clients:


On April 2, President Trump announced "reciprocal" tariffs on trading partners with exclusion of products that are subject to sectoral tariffs, resulting in what we estimate to be an increase of 26pp in the average effective US tariff rate on China, which would bring the total effective tariff rate on Chinese goods to 58%.

This is much higher than we and the market had expected. Similar to the experience when the previous two 10% tariff increases were imposed on China earlier this year, we think the Chinese government is likely to retaliate with some targeted tariffs on US products as well as non-tariff measures like export controls.

We expect policymakers to continue to resist significant CNY depreciation. We believe the government will step up easing measures to offset the additional growth drag from higher tariffs. We are not changing our 2025 full-year GDP growth forecast of 4.5% at this time due to better-than-expected Q1 data and increased policy easing expectations, as well as remaining uncertainties regarding whether some of the tariffs could be negotiated down in the coming months. That said, we acknowledge downside risk from slowing global growth after the large, across-the board US tariff increases.


S&P Global Ratings credit analyst Ming Tan warned that Trump's tariffs could exacerbate China's weak economy:


"The drag on China's economy from higher tariffs will transmit to banks. We expect problem loans will rise over the next few years and could leap as high as 6.4% of total loans in a downside scenario."


Fred Neumann, chief Asia economist at HSBC, had a big-picture view for clients: "The era of Asia's export manufacturing-led development has come to an end, and the region will need to develop markets closer to home." 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 07:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Nashville Police Claim Transgender Christian School Shooter Never Had 'Manifesto'
Nashville Police Claim Transgender Christian School Shooter Never Had 'Manifesto'

Authored by Ken Silva via Headline USA,

The transgender shooter behind the 2023 Nashville elementary school attack that killed six people, including three children, had been planning it for years while struggling with mental health issues, according to a police report released Wednesday.



The nearly 50-page investigative case summary by Metro Nashville Police closes the agency’s probe into the shooting at the Christian, private Covenant School in March 2023.

Contrary to widespread media reports, the investigation said that no manifesto existed.


“In this case, a manifesto didn’t exist. Hale never left behind a single document explaining why she committed the attack, why she specifically targeted The Covenant, and what she hoped to gain, if anything, with the attack,” the Nashville police report states.


Instead, the shooter, Audrey Hale, left behind “a series of notebooks, art composition books, and media files created by Hale documenting her planning and preparation for the attack, the events in her life that motivated her to commit the attack, and her hopes regarding the outcome of the attack,” police determined. 

Hale, who once attended Covenant, was killed by police.

Hale identified as a man at the time of the attack, but the police report uses female pronouns. The report doesn’t refer to Hale as transgender.


“She began to use the name ‘Aiden Williams’ in the years prior to her death and used male pronouns on her social media and networking accounts. Nothing has been found to suggest she initiated or was undergoing a transition at the time of her death, including medical documentation,” the report states.

“During her autopsy following her death, it was determined she was biologically female.”



Factual, but not truthful. https://t.co/MLD8pGV61F pic.twitter.com/OvxojCPYNc
— Ken Silva (@JD_Cashless) April 2, 2025
Hale began receiving treatment at Vanderbilt University Medical Center on April 23, 2001, when the shooter was just six years old. She first fantasized about committing a mass shooting in November 2017, after watching documentaries about school shootings and “remembering her social struggles in middle school,” according to the Nashville police report.

By December 2018, Hale also began planning an attack at a different middle school where she had once been a student, the report says. Months later, her therapist became “concerned,” and recommended Hale take part in a psychological assessment at VUMC, according to the police report. That assessment occurred in June 2019.


“Based on records from the assessment, VUMC confirmed the mental health disorders Hale was already known to have and identified her depression and anxiety as the largest aggravating factors. They made no mention of psychosis and noted Hale denied having any plans to harm herself or others, nor the means to do so,” the Nashville police report states.


After her assessment, Hale participated in an eight-week “intensive outpatient program.”


“For a short period of time, the treatment seemed to work, as Hale’s writings tended to be more positive, and fewer mentions of depression and anxiety were present. She seemed more hopeful about life and the possibility of finding independence and success,” the police report states.

“But these feelings quickly faded, as the social and personal factors that drove her depression in the first place never left. Hale quickly sunk back into deep rage and despair.”


Hale continued to fantasize about school shootings for the next several years until she carried one out the morning of March 27, 2023. Hale’s shooting spree lasted about 20 minutes before police killed her.


Transgender Christian school shooter Audrey Hale began receiving treatment at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in 2001, when she was 6.
According to the Nashville police report released today, Hale first fantasized about committing a mass shooting in November 2017.
In 2019,… pic.twitter.com/rlDSRZCmXh
— Ken Silva (@JD_Cashless) April 2, 2025
“Due to the audible fire alarm, the earplugs she was wearing throughout the attack, and the sound of her own gunfire, Hale never heard the police officers as they entered the lobby behind her. One officer then fired a 5.56mm caliber rifle at Hale, striking her and knocking her to the ground,” the Nashville police report states.

“As the officers approached Hale to take her into custody, they saw she still had possession of her firearms and her arms were moving. A second officer fired a 9mm caliber pistol at her. She was fatally wounded by the officers’ gunfire.”

The people killed in the shooting at Covenant were: Evelyn Dieckhaus, Hallie Scruggs, and William Kinney, all 9 years old; Cynthia Peak, 61; Katherine Koonce, 60; and Mike Hill, 61.

The Tennessee Star still has an ongoing lawsuit to compel MNPD and the FBI to release Hale’s full writings. 

The Star reported Wednesday that it’s extended a settlement offer to FBI Director Kash Patel, who had called for Hale’s “manifesto” to be made public before he became director.

“FBI Director Kash Patel indicated that he would release Hale’s writings if made the agency’s director, and SNDM has extended a settlement offer that would see the lawsuit dropped in exchange for Patel dropping the agency’s opposition to their release around the time of his confirmation. The FBI has yet to respond to the offer,” the Star reported.

The evidence held by law enforcement on Hale includes more than 100 gigabytes of data, which includes over 900 pages of her writings.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 07:45

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According to Majin Bu, the iPhone 17 Pro will feature a new Telephoto lens with a 48MP sensor, up from the current 12MP sensor found in the iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max. This rumor isn't new – in fact it's been repeatedly claimed by several other sources. However, Bu goes further by claiming that the new lens will offer 3.5x optical zoom (85mm equivalent) instead of the 5x zoom (120mm equivalent) currently available.



This focal length is generally better suited for portraits and everyday photography, since it allows users to frame shots without having to move as far away from the subject. However, the big shift allegedly comes from the new 48MP sensor, in that the extra resolution allows for digital cropping to simulate longer focal lengths, offering less quality loss than normal digital zoom.



This is similar to what Apple already does with the main Fusion camera on the iPhone 16, where the 48MP sensor enables a 2x digital crop – marketed as "Telephoto" – that still produces a 12MP image with minimal quality loss.



Bu points out that one of the practical benefits of a 3.5x telephoto lens would be greater versatility, especially for portrait photography. A 3.5x lens would make it easier to compose portraits at more comfortable distances, particularly in indoors or other tight environments.



The alleged change would see Apple relying more on high-resolution sensors and computational processing to replace some of the limitations of traditional optics. If the report is accurate, the iPhone 17 Pro could deliver more flexible zoom options while making portrait photography more user-friendly, without sacrificing image quality.



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New Brisbane stadium to replace Gabba as venue for Olympics, cricket, AFL
Monday, March 31, 2025 

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In decision announced by Queensland Premier David Crisafulli on Tuesday, Brisbane's The Gabba stadium is now scheduled to be replaced by a new stadium located on the north side of the Brisbane River. The yet to be named stadium is due to be the main stadium for the 2032 Olympics as well as international cricket and top level Australian rules football, both currently hosted at the Gabba.
Queensland Cricket, Chief Executive Officer, Terry Svenson welcomed the decision of the state government. "Queensland Cricket congratulates the Queensland Government on its decision to invest in the State's future, with a world-class stadium that will be a centrepiece of Brisbane for 2032 and beyond," Svenson said. "The Gabba has been wonderful venue for cricket for many years and has provided fans and players with countless memories – however the challenges the stadium faces are well documented, and we need to look to the future. There is now the opportunity for Queensland to attract the world's best cricket events, such as ICC events, men's and women's Ashes Series, the Border-Gavaskar Trophy series between Australia and India, as well has hosting the BBL and WBBL in a new purpose-built stadium."
The Brisbane Lions are the Australian Football League premiers. Their CEO Greg Swann was equally as welcoming. "The Gabba has been a great home for the past 30 years, but the city has outgrown it, the Lions have outgrown it, and the venue is reaching its end of life," Swann said.
"The Olympics and Paralympics presents an opportunity to deliver a venue that will serve the City and State's growing population, not just for the Games, but for the next 50 years. Between now and the Olympics nearly 4 million Queensland sports fans will visit the Gabba for either a Lions or cricket match, with each event creating job and economic opportunities and ensuring our local events industry is equipped and skilled to deliver the Games. We need all stakeholders to unite behind 2032 so we can get on with delivering the venues needed to host a great Games and critical infrastructure for decades to come."
Former Queensland Premier Campbell Newman was amongst a group that opposed the potential loss of green space at the Victoria Park site. “It is not only the stadium, but now we’re getting the swimmers talking about putting a swimming venue in the park as well. And this is what happens. These people really have to look at their own words,” Newman told Fox Sports News. “One minute they’re saying it’s only going to take up x-percent of the Park. The next minute, within a few breaths, they’re talking about putting the swimming in there as well. And that’s how it goes (and soon) you have no park.”
Those opposed to the new stadium site seem likely to challenge the decision in court according to Fox Sports News.





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"Years of speculation ends with location for 2032 Olympics stadium finally revealed" — 7News Australia, March 25, 2025
Jack McKay and Claudia Williams. "New Brisbane stadium to be built at Victoria Park for 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games" — ABC News, March 25, 2025
Courtney Walsh. "2032 stadium call made as QLD Premier ‘sorry’ for Gabba backflip in Olympic venues reveal" — Fox Sports News, March 25, 2025





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New York county clerk says Texas cannot fine abortion doctor
Wednesday, April 2, 2025 

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On Thursday, acting Ulster County, New York clerk, Taylor Bruck, refused to enforce a Texas court ruling against a doctor who has been accused of mailing abortion pills across state lines. Brock cited New York's shield law, which, according to New York Attorney General Letitia James, was passed specifically to protect abortion providers. According to the New York Times, this marks the first instance of a shield law being applied to defend a physician from the abortion restrictions of another state.
According to the lawsuit, Dr. Margaret Carpenter, who lives and works in New York, allegedly prescribed and sent abortion pills through the mail to a patient in Texas, where almost all abortions are illegal. A Texas judge fined her US$113,000 and ordered her to stop sending the pills to patients in Texas.
Bruck refused to file the lawsuit in New York and cited the New York State Shield Law but declined to comment further in anticipation of further litigation.
New York Attorney General Letitia James said more: "New York's shield law was created to protect patients and providers from out-of-state anti-choice attacks, and we will not allow anyone to undermine health care providers' ability to deliver necessary care to their patients."
Shortly after filing the initial lawsuit, Texas Attourney General Ken Paxton told the press "In Texas, we treasure the health and lives of mothers and babies, and this is why out-of-state doctors may not illegally and dangerously prescribe abortion-inducing drugs to Texas residents."
Louisiana, which also has strict anti-abortion-rights laws, asked New York to extradite Carpenter so she could be prosecuted for allegedly mailing abortion pills to a woman in Louisiana who gave them to her daughter, but New York governor Kathy Hochul refused.
In 2022, the United States Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade, a 1973 Supreme Court ruling that had rendered abortion legal throughout the United States. Overturning it meant each state could make its own laws regarding abortion, and they have come to differ widely. Some states, such as Texas and Louisiana, banned nearly all abortions and created new laws allowing anyone who helps a woman seek an abortion to be sued or prosecuted.
Lawyer, Alejandra Caraballo, who wrote about state-to-state extradition in Law Review told Jezebel, "We haven't seen this kind of disparity in state laws around human rights since the Civil War. What constitutes a human right in one state is a capital crime in another."




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Kylie Cheung. "New York Blocks Texas From Enforcing Abortion Law Against Doctor, Wields Shield Law for 1st Time" — Jezebel, March 27, 2025
Carter Sherman. "New York clerk refuses to enforce Texas effort to punish abortion provider" — Guardian, March 27, 2025
Sean Murphy, Michael Hill, and Geoff Mulvihill. "Texas' abortion pill lawsuit against New York doctor marks new challenge to interstate telemedicine" — AP, December 13, 2024





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US prosecutors pursue death penalty for Luigi Mangione, suspect in 2024 killing of healthcare CEO
Wednesday, April 2, 2025 

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File illustration of a court gavel. Credit:Quince media
On Tuesday, US Attorney General Pam Bondi made a statement announcing that she had advised prosecutors to pursue the death penalty against Luigi Mangione, the suspect in the shooting and killing of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson in December 2024. She was quoted saying: "Luigi Mangione's murder of Brian Thompson — an innocent man and father of two young children — was a premeditated, cold-blooded assassination that shocked America."
Mangione, 26, was arrested in Altoona, Pennsylvania in on December 9 after he was implicated in Thompson's death outside a hotel in Manhattan. On December 4, the CEO arrived there to attend a shareholder meeting, and he was shot by a masked gunman. After the incident, some health insurance employers opted for remote work and virtual shareholder meetings due to safety concerns.
Police arrested Mangione five days later in Altoona, Pennsylvania, about 230 miles from New York. They report that he had a ghost gun and anti-health-insurance writings with him at the time.
Mangione awaits trial at the Metropolitan Detention Center, a New York facility located in Brooklyn, and he continues to deny the state charges, for which the maximum penalty under state law is life in prison without the possibility of parole. The state of New York has charged him with first-degree murder, murder as terrorism, and nine other offenses.
Mangione has not yet entered a plea for the charges on the federal level. These charges include murder through use of a firearm and interstate stalking, which make Mangione legally elegible for the death penalty.
Mangione's lawyer, Karen Friedman Agnifilo, responded to Bondi's statement announcing intent to seek the death penalty, saying: "the Justice Department has moved from the dysfunctional to the barbaric."

Sources


edit





Brandon Drenon. "US prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione" — BBC News, April 1, 2025
Michael R. Sisak and Alanna Durkin Richer. "Federal prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione in UnitedHealthcare CEO’s killing" — AP News, April 1, 2025





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The Sonos Era 100 and Ray’s new lower price are a welcome move from a company that wants to win your love back

TechRadar News
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Is ChatGPT's Studio Ghibli craze a copyright timebomb? Here's the verdict from expert lawyers

TechRadar News
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Nintendo Switch 2 Treehouse: Live build-up: plus pre-orders start to go live, and all the details from yesterday's Direct

TechRadar News
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Adobe Premiere Pro updates bring some serious AI power

Digital Trends
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Apple could still move away from physical buttons on iPhone, but not anytime soon
The rumour mill for upcoming smartphones is constantly churning, and that’s especially true when it comes to the next Apple and Samsung devices. For years now, there has been speculation that Apple is considering solid state buttons for its iPhones, which would see it move away from physical buttons like the volume rocker and power […]

Digital Trends
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Anthropic debuts a new version of its Claude AI chatbot for schools
The increasing prevalence of chatbots like ChatGPT has lead to difficulties in schools and colleges as professors try to figure out how to balance students’ use of AI with their need for learning. Now, Anthropic is rolling out a new tool it hopes will be a positive step in the use of AI for both […]

Digital Trends
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A new cheap phone touting major camera performance is on the horizon
April might have one just begun but it’s looking like it could shape up to be a very busy month for phones. We’ve heard plenty of chatter around the upcoming Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge that is expected to launch in the middle of the month and OnePlus is also expected to debut its OnePlus 13T […]

Digital Trends
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The Simpsons, Family Guy, and more get multiple-season renewals from Fox
Fox strikes a deal with Disney's 20th Century TV to keep The Simpsons, Family Guy, Bob's Burgers, and American Dad around for years to come.

Mirror F1
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Lando Norris points out Lewis Hamilton's problem as McLaren have advantage over F1 rivals
Lando Norris currently leads the F1 World Championship after winning the opening race of the season in Australia, with Oscar Piastri taking victory in China

Mail Online
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Kyle Walker opens up on 'sad' Man City exit that left him 'wanting to cry' - as he reveals why he 'couldn't say no' to AC Milan amid drama with wife Annie Kilner and ex-mistress Lauryn Goodman
The six-time Premier League winner has now opened up on exactly how hard the call was to move on from City for a fresh challenge abroad.

Mail Online
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Do you live in an asbestos hotspot? Interactive map reveals levels of deadly material in your area with one town's deaths SEVEN times higher than road traffic accidents
Today, the Mail is publishing an interactive map produced from the Asbestos Information CIC researc as part of The Mail's Asbestos: Britain's Hidden Killer campaign

The Guardian (UK)
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All the president’s pens and a baby mammoth: photos of the day – Thursday
The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Millions of Afghans lose access to healthcare services as USAID cuts shut clinics
Fears of surge in malnutrition, measles, malaria and polio as 206 World Health Organization facilities forced to close ‘I begged them, my daughter was dying’: how Taliban male escort rules are killing mothers and babiesMore than 200 health facilities run by the World Health Organization in Afghanistan, providing medical care for 1.84 million people, have closed or ceased operating after the US aid cuts announced by the Trump administration shut off life-saving medical care, including vaccinations, maternal and child health services.On his first day in office in January, President Donald Trump announced an immediate freeze on all US foreign assistance, including more than $40bn (£32bn) for international projects coming from USAID, the United States Agency for International Development. It was later confirmed that more than 80% of USAID programmes had been cancelled. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Revealed: Trump’s fossil-fuel donors to profit from data-center boom and green rollbacks
Energy Transfer, a top backer of US president, has received requests to power even more energy-guzzling data centersOil and gas barons who donated millions of dollars to the Trump campaign are on the cusp of cashing in on the administration’s support for energy-guzzling data centers – and a slew of unprecedented environmental rollbacks.Energy Transfer, the oil and gas transport company behind the Dakota Access Pipeline, has received requests to power 70 new data centers – a 75% rise since Trump took office, according to a new investigation by the advocacy nonprofit Oil Change International (OCI) and the Guardian. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Our lives depend on seeds. Trump’s cuts put our vast reserves at risk | Thor Hanson
Maintaining seed diversity and abundance is essential – and requires constant work. It’s time for Congress to return to the seed businessFrom 1862 until 1923, US senators and members of Congress provided vast numbers of seeds to constituents. At its peak, the congressional seed distribution program delivered over 60m seed packets directly to farmers and market gardeners every year, helping introduce new varieties of everything from wheat and corn to oats, soybeans, flowers and vegetables. A century later, far fewer Americans till the soil for a living, but seeds remain central to our lives.To understand the importance of seeds, try to imagine a morning without them. It would begin naked on a bare mattress, with no cozy sheets or pajamas, and there would be no fluffy towel to wrap up in after your shower. All of those things come from the seeds of the cotton plant. Stumbling wet into the kitchen, you would find no coffee, and no toast or bagel to go with it. There would be no eggs, no bacon, no cereal, no milk. All of those staples come from seeds or from livestock raised on seed crops. And if you thought you might console yourself with a chocolate bar, you can forget it. Cocoa powder, and the cocoa butter that makes it melt in your mouth, are both derived from seeds. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘How did this ever get made?’ Gen Z is falling in love (and hate) with Glee
A decade after the finale, new fans are flocking to Glee, causing its songs to shoot up the charts. The internet’s ablaze with TikTok dance homages, Reddit threads – and tons of hate watchersThe year is 2009, and Glee has hit like a cultural earthquake. Every week, millions of people around the world tune in to watch a group of American high school misfits belt out musical theatre and pop hits, turning show choir into mainstream entertainment. The cast’s cover of Journey’s Don’t Stop Believin’ becomes an anthem, spending 37 weeks in the UK charts, catapulting its young stars to overnight fame. Glee clubs start in schools across the US and beyond, and Ryan Murphy’s show develops a devoted fanbase – myself included – who proudly call ourselves Gleeks. Online, we dissect every episode on Tumblr, trade theories and wear our fandom, plus the merch we bought to prove it, as a badge of honour.But by the time Glee came to a close in 2015, all its magic had faded. The Guardian reported that “few will mourn its passing” as the show’s last season premiered. A string of increasingly absurd storylines and poor song choices left a dwindling viewership and even the most diehard fans drifting away. Or so we thought – because 10 years after its finale, the show is back with a vengeance.In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email [email protected] or [email protected]. In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.orgThis article was amended on 3 April 2025 to state that Cory Monteith died of a drug and alcohol overdose rather than by suicide as previously stated. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Deaths of British couple in France being treated as murder-suicide, reports say
Andrew Searle and Dawn Kerr were found dead in their home in Les Pesquiès in Aveyron on 6 FebruaryThe deaths of a married British couple at their home in the south of France are being treated as a murder – and suicide, according to reports.Andrew Searle and Dawn Kerr, both in their 60s, were found dead in the hamlet of Les Pesquiès in Villefranche-de-Rouergue, Aveyron, on 6 February. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Prince Harry charity row to be examined by watchdog
The Charity Commission has launched an inquiry into the dispute at the Sentebale charity.

The Verge
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Universities are giving up the fight for free speech — students aren’t
As the US government launches investigations and threatens to pull federal funding, some elite universities have decided to take the path of least resistance. Colleges across the country have responded to the Trump administration’s attacks on diversity programs and student protesters by complying with these “anti-woke” witch hunts. In recent weeks, university administrators at Columbia […]

Mail Online
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Lily Allen shares her reaction after making a DISGUSTING discovery on the train which forced her to miss her Botox appointment
The Smile Hitmaker, 39, was due to attend a Botox appointment but ended up missing it after she realised there was a pile of human excrement on the floor of her train carriage.

Mail Online
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Scientists reveal the surprising reason why some farts smell worse than others
Experts have lifted the lid on why some farts smell worse than others - and how the stench could provide clues about what's going on in your gut.

Mail Online
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Speedboat driver who hit and killed British millionairess with his propeller as she swam off Greek island avoids prison
Claire Glatman, 60, from North Yorkshire, was fatally struck by the propellors of the motorboat 20 metres off the shoreline of Corfu in August 2020.

Sky News Home
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Bill named after Manchester Arena bombing victim becomes law
New legislation to make venues protect the public in the event of a terror attack, named in memory of a victim of the 2017 Manchester Arena bombing, has become law in the UK today.

BBC Technology News
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Buyers circle and rumours swirl as TikTok sale deadline looms
Despite the increasing number of potential buyers, neither the app nor its Chinese owner have confirmed they will do a deal.

Mail Online
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Aintree revellers welcome sunny spring weather in plunging necklines and figure-hugging dresses as day one of the festival gets underway
Racegoers embraced the warmer April weather in sleeveless dresses with plunging necklines and figure-hugging skirts as day one of the Merseyside racing meet got underway on Thursday.

Deutsche Welle
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NATO members seek assurances at summit amid US tariffs
Ministers are meeting in Brussels amid continued antagonism from the US, including 20% tariffs against the EU. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has called for 5% defense spending.

BBC UK News
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Lockerbie bombing whistleblower arrested in Libya
Samir Shegwara was arrested after the BBC reported the existence of evidence linking Libya with the bombing.

Mail Online
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Education Secretary urges schools to recruit more male teachers to head off 'toxic online influences' after Adolescence drama highlighted 'defining issue of our time'
Bridget Phillipson said schoolboys needed 'strong, positive male role models to look up to' as she highlighted a lack of men forging careers in the classroom.

Mail Online
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People left in tears after husband reveals he has bought his wife the same gift every Friday for 68 years
Peter, from Liverpool, is 89 years old and has bought his wife Vera the same gift every Friday for 68 years. He recently went viral on TikTok, where people were left in tears at the romantic gesture.

Mail Online
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Bali bans 'menstruating tourists' from entering their temples because blood is 'dirty' and will 'contaminate' holy sites
The holiday island has recently launched a crackdown on 'naughty' tourists, with those in breach of the new rules facing fines and even imprisonment.

Mail Online
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UK's creepiest house is back up for sale after buyers were scared off by terrifying warning etched onto its walls
The eerie three-bedroom house, which is located in Blofield, near Norwich, Norfolk, is nothing short of terrifying to look at, with blood red graffiti scrawled on the boarded windows.

Mail Online
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Keir Starmer launches Labour's local election campaign with attack on Reform amid rising alarm at Nigel Farage threat - with polls sliding after disastrous Spring Statement
Keir Starmer joined his deputy Angela Rayner in the East Midlands as they formally kicked off the push towards the votes on May 1.

The Guardian (UK)
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Mary Earps on life at PSG: ‘There was a lot of noise so it’s been nice to escape’
England goalkeeper on how she has fine-tuned her game since moving to France and ‘loving the architecture’ in ParisMany of us might perceive it as a bustling metropolis full of tourist hotspots. To Mary Earps, however, Paris is noise-free. Peaceful. Beautiful. It is very rare for anybody to spot the England goalkeeper in public – unless she is at the airport or waiting to catch the Eurostar from Gare du Nord – and, for a player who shot to fame so quickly that she was the 2023 Sports Personality of the Year, such relative invisibility in the so-called City of Light is a blissful feeling.“It’s been more refreshing than I thought it would be,” Earps says of her move to Paris Saint-Germain, who she joined last summer. “The last few years have been unbelievable, a massive acceleration I could never have predicted, and what’s come with that is some incredible opportunities but also a lot of noise, and so I really wanted to get into a little focus zone and just totally concentrate on my development as a footballer. Careers are short and I really wanted to maximise mine. I’m trying to squeeze out every last bit of potential that I have in myself and put the blinkers on a little bit – it’s been nice to escape and just be totally all-in with trying to push myself to another level.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Dining across the divide: ‘He couldn’t see that we were actually disagreeing’
Can a Lib Dem voting engineer who is ‘dead against’ people arriving in small boats and a Zambian-born author agree to disagree on immigration?Clive, 56, ManchesterOccupation Consultant engineer Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Deaths of British couple in France being treated as murder-suicide, reports say
Andrew Searle and Dawn Kerr, in their 60s, were found dead in their home in Les Pesquiès in Aveyron on 6 FebruaryThe sudden deaths of a married British couple at their home in the south of France are being treated as a murder-suicide, according to reports.Andrew Searle and Dawn Kerr, both in their 60s, were found dead in the hamlet of Les Pesquiès in Villefranche-de-Rouergue, Aveyron, in the early afternoon of 6 February. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Government launching consultation over possible retaliatory tariffs against US, says business secretary – UK politics live
Jonathan Reynolds says retaliatory tariffs are one option but the government believes economic deal between both countries could be possibleInternet safety campaigners have expressed alarm about reports that the Online Safety Act could be reviewed as part of the economic deal the UK is negotiating with the US.According to a Politico report, quoting unnamed sources who have been briefed on what is in the potential deal, it will include a commitment to a review of the Digital Markets and Competition Act and the Online Safety Act.We are dismayed and appalled by reports that the Online Safety Act could be watered down to facilitate a US trade deal.We have written to Jonathan Reynolds [business secretary] urging him not to continue with an appalling sell out of children’s safety and to meet with lived experience campaigners to understand the dire consequences.The Online Safety Act offers a foundation that we believe will vastly improve children’s experiences online.For too long, too many children and young people have been exposed to harmful content, groomed, harassed and bullied online. The Government must not roll back on their commitment to making the online world safer for them, now and in the future. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Lockdown star Louis the osprey returns to nest after illness
An osprey who rose to fame during the first COVID lockdown has returned to his nest after fears he wouldn't make it back this year following an illness.

BBC World News
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How were Donald Trump's tariffs calculated?
Analysts have questioned claims that new tariffs are reciprocal and based on those charged against the US.

UK Government News
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Overspeeding incident at Grantham South Junction
Preliminary examination into an overspeeding incident at Grantham South Junction, 25 February 2025.

UK Government News
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Government Legal Department Celebrates Ten Years of Excellence
GLD celebrates ten years of providing outstanding legal service to help the government govern well, within the rule of law.

UK Government News
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West Country creates sources of water in unlikeliest places 
Devon and Cornwall is leading the way in innovative water sources as the West Country’s industrial legacy is turned into gigantic water holes.

UK Government News
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Statement by the Trade Secretary on US Tariffs
The Business and Trade Secretary's statement to Parliament on the imposition of US tariffs.

Wired Top Stories
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12 Best Umbrellas (2025), Tested and Reviewed
These are the best umbrellas we’ve tested. They’ll protect you from showers and heavy rain and will hold up for the long haul.

Flightradar24
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Has Concorde really made a comeback?
Spoiler alert – no. Concorde did not return to the skies on April 1st, 2025. Instead, we paid tribute to the legendary supersonic jet by recreating two Concorde flights on Flightradar24. Here’s a look at what happened. Concorde was a revolutionary supersonic passenger airliner developed jointly by British and French aerospace companies—British Aircraft Corporation and […]
The post Has Concorde really made a comeback? appeared first on Flightradar24 Blog.

Computer Weekly
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Danish supercomputer to drive innovation
Supercomputer project will add a competitive edge to drive innovation and growth among Denmark’s enterprises and research organisations

The Register
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EU: These are scary times – let's backdoor encryption!
ProtectEU plan wants to have its cake and eat it too The EU has issued its plans to keep the continent's denizens secure and among the pages of bureaucratese are a few worrying sections that indicate the political union wants to backdoor encryption by 2026, or even sooner.…

TechRadar Reviews
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I tested the Tribit Stormbox Lava Bluetooth speaker and although it lacks a red-hot design, it’s a solid, budget-friendly option

TechRadar Reviews
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I tested Insightly’s CRM and it’s one of the easiest I’ve ever used

Mail Online
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Val Kilmer's heartbreaking final words  before he lost his voice revealed - after throat cancer left him using voice box
The Hollywood star, who passed away from pneumonia aged 65 on Tuesday, was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014 and underwent a tracheotomy.

Mail Online
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I make nearly £500,000 a year as a 'benefits influencer'. I show followers how to cheat the welfare system and get as much cash as possible from taxpayers - I'll NEVER get a proper job
Whitney Ainscough says she doesn't care about the hate she gets online for showing off how she exploited the benefits system for maximum gain.

Mail Online
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Kanye West and Bianca Censori bombshell: 'Leaked track claims to tell rapper's story of how he was dumped and she had panic attacks over his tweets'
The controversial rapper, 47, who recently denied 'absurd' rumours he was 'battering his wife', has now dedicated a song to Bianca, 30, which will be on his new album WW3.

Sky News Home
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New photos show moment of North Sea crash - as interim report published
Newly released photographs show the moment two ships collided in last month's North Sea crash.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Don't give younger kids drinks with artificial sweeteners, health advisers say
Drinks such as sugar-free squash are off the menu for young children, say health advisors.

Ian Visits
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From Roman relics to horned helmets: Mudlarking treasures unveiled
Twice a day, the depths of the River Thames are pulled back by the power of the moon, opening up its foreshore to the mudlarkers, those hardy folk who scrabble amongst the shingle for hidden treasures.Read more ›

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Hungary withdraws from International Criminal Court during Netanyahu visit
The move is announced hours after Israel's PM, who is sought under an ICC arrest warrant, arrives in Budapest for a state visit.

The Hill
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Morning Report — Trump’s tariffs deepen US economic uncertainty    
In today’s issue: President Trump’s rollout of steep tariffs aimed at allied trading partners on Wednesday sparked international head-shaking and renewed warnings at home about lasting U.S. economic damage. The president, who says the U.S. is the victim of “economic warfare,” imposed what he called reciprocal tariffs on dozens of countries, to be anchored with...

The Hill
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Team Trump is losing World War III
In fact, Team Trump is losing two world wars.

Mail Online
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UK sets May 1 deadline for deal to stop US tariffs: Ministers hint at retaliation if agreement cannot be reached as Trump 'pushes Britain to accept chlorinated chicken'
Jonathan Reynolds told MPs that a consultation will be held over the next four months on what American products could be targeted in a retaliation package.

Mail Online
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Body is found on M5 as motorway is closed in both directions to spark huge delays for drivers
A body has been found on the M5, prompting the motorway to be closed in both directions and causing huge delays for drivers.

Mail Online
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That's one way to turn back the clock David! Beckham takes a visit to Kim Kardashian's shapewear store Skims in LA ahead of his 50th - but is it him or Victoria he's shopping for?
David Beckham was seen at the Skims store in LA on Thursday - ahead of his 50th birthday next month. 

The Guardian (UK)
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Germany is now deporting pro-Palestine EU citizens. This is a chilling new step | Hanno Hauenstein
The country’s so-called political centre has licensed a new era of authoritarianism – to the AfD’s delightA crackdown on political dissent is well under way in Germany. Over the past two years, institutions and authorities have cancelled events, exhibitions and awards over statements about Palestine or Israel. There are many examples: the Frankfurt book fair indefinitely postponing an award ceremony for Adania Shibli; the Heinrich Böll Foundation withdrawing the Hannah Arendt prize from Masha Gessen; the University of Cologne rescinding a professorship for Nancy Fraser; the No Other Land directors Basel Adra and Yuval Abraham being defamed by German ministers. And, most recently, the philosopher Omri Boehm being disinvited from speaking at this month’s anniversary of the liberation of Buchenwald.In nearly all of these cases, accusations of antisemitism loom large – even though Jews are often among those being targeted. More often than not, it is liberals driving or tacitly accepting these cancellations, while conservatives and the far right lean back and cheer them on. While vigilance against rising antisemitism is no doubt warranted – especially in Germany – that concern is increasingly weaponised as a political tool to silence the left.Hanno Hauenstein is a Berlin-based journalist and author. He worked as a senior editor in Berliner Zeitung’s culture department, specialising in contemporary art and politicsDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The Gaza paramedic killings: a visual timeline
On 23 March contact was lost with a team of Palestinian rescue workers and medics in southern Gaza. A week later their bodies were recovered from a mass graveAt 4.20am, a Red Crescent ambulance on its way to collect people injured by an airstrike in Rafah comes under Israeli fire in Hashashin. Two paramedics are killed. Continue reading...

ZDNet News
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I saw Samsung's deluge of 2025 QLED TVs, and I've never been more ready to splurge
A recent Samsung workshop gave me an up-close look at the company's 2025 Neo QLED TV lineup, and I walked away impressed.

ZDNet News
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T-Mobile's $25,000 data breach payouts begin this month - how to check your eligibility
After a 2021 data breach affected 76 million customers, settlement checks are finally on the way. Here's what you can expect.

ZDNet News
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New US tariffs are shaking up tech - here's how it could hit your wallet
President Trump's new economic plan, set to take effect on April 5, could shake up global tech manufacturing - potentially hitting consumers the hardest.

ZDNet News
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This thumb-sized SSD finally let me break up with iCloud storage for good
The Planck SSD is a handy USB-C accessory that gives any device up to 2TB of additional storage, a game-changer if your cloud storage is full.

ZDNet News
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Are wind power generators actually viable at home? I tested one, and here are my results
Solar generators are popular, but what about cloudy days? With spring savings in full swing, Shineturbine is offering discounts on its home wind power generators.

Mail Online
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Forget the Mediterranean diet - scientists discover another regional eating plan that could slash cancer risk
Dutch researchers, who recruited more than 30 people to follow the diet, found it was effective in reducing inflammation in the body and getting metabolism under control.

Mail Online
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Make rich pay more to fly so poor families can still go on summer holiday, says net zero tsar
Emma Pinchbeck, chief executive of the Climate Change Committee, has said flying should be considered a luxury, but that it would be unfair to price lower income families out of air travel.

Mail Online
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Moment brazen thief saws through cables at electric vehicle charging station before walking away amid wave of wire thefts
The man, who has not been identified, cut the thick cables at the EV charging hub at Decathlon Gallagher Retail Park, Wednesbury, just after 8.30pm on March 12.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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When Liverpool nearly missed out on Salah
When Liverpool nearly missed out on signing Mohamed Salah, and how adopting the 'Moneyball' strategy revitalised the club.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Don't give younger kids drinks with artificial sweeteners, UK parents advised
Drinks such as sugar-free squash are off the menu for young children, say health advisors.

Mail Online
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How The Lady became Tinder for toffs: As historic magazine faces closure, its saucy personal ads are still thriving
There's no holding back in the personal ads on troubled high society mag The Lady's classified section, the content of which could inspire a season of Netflix's Rivals.

Mail Online
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Rich should be forced to fly less by paying new taxes so poor families can still take summer holidays, Britain's net zero tsar says
Emma Pinchbeck, chief executive of the Climate Change Committee, has said flying should be considered a luxury, but that it would be unfair to price lower income families out of air travel.

Mail Online
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I went bald at 20 - it left me depressed. Now I look like this - and I HAVEN'T had a transplant. Here's the revolutionary secret that's changing the lives of hundreds of men like me
When Johnny Thain began going bald at 20 he tried everything to fix it. From thickening powders to extensions and a toupee, nothing worked. Then he discovered a revolutionary solution.

BBC UK News
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'Unlawful' for government to refuse public inquiry into murdered GAA official
Sean Brown's family call on Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn "to do the right thing".

Mail Online
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Moment Trump ally compares BBC host Victoria Derbyshire to a 'kindergartner' before threatening to walk off camera in fiery tariffs interview
Sebastian Gorka, who is the president's deputy assistant, clashed with the veteran journalist during an extraordinary exchange on BBC Newsnight.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Germany is now deporting pro-Palestine EU citizens. This is a chilling new step | Hanno Hauenstein
The country’s so-called political centre has licensed a new era of authoritarianism – to the AfD’s delightA crackdown on political dissent is well under way in Germany. Over the past two years, institutions and authorities have cancelled events, exhibitions and awards over statements about Palestine or Israel. There are many examples: the Frankfurt book fair indefinitely postponing an award ceremony for Adania Shibli; the Heinrich Böll Foundation withdrawing the Hannah Arendt prize from Masha Gessen; the University of Cologne rescinding a professorship for Nancy Fraser; the No Other Land directors Basel Adra and Yuval Abraham being defamed by German ministers. And, most recently, the philosopher Omri Boehm being disinvited from speaking at this month’s anniversary of the liberation of Buchenwald.In nearly all of these cases, accusations of antisemitism loom large – even though Jews are often among those being targeted. More often than not, it is liberals driving or tacitly accepting these cancellations, while conservatives and the far right lean back and cheer them on. While vigilance against rising antisemitism is no doubt warranted – especially in Germany – that concern is increasingly weaponised as a political tool to silence the left.Hanno Hauenstein is a Berlin-based journalist and author. He worked as a senior editor in Berliner Zeitung’s culture department, specialising in contemporary art and politics Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Ban children from social media if new online safety laws watered down, children's commissioner says
Young people should be removed from social media altogether if the Online Safety Act is watered down as part of US trade negotiations, the children's commissioner for England has said.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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California man invites BBC to witness his death as MPs debate assisted dying
Wayne Hawkins believes terminally ill people should be able to die when they choose, but others in the state disagree.

CNET News
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Xanthan Gum: Harmless Food Additive or Digestion Nightmare?
Is xanthan gum safe for you to consume? We asked experts about its potential benefits and side effects.

CNET News
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Play Katamari Damacy and 5 More Games on Apple Arcade Now
Subscribers can also play Space Invaders and RollerCoaster Tycoon.

CNET News
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Best Internet Providers in Your Area
Looking for home internet? Start here.

CNET News
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23 Fun TV Shows You Should Watch on Disney Plus Immediately
All the Marvel and Star Wars series you could want are right here.

Mail Online
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I went bald at 20 - it left me depressed. Now I look like this - and I HAVEN'T had a transplant. Here's the revolutionary secret that's changing the lives of hundreds of men like me
When Johnny Thain began going bald at 20 he tried everything to fix it. From thickening powders to extensions and a toupee, nothing worked. Then he discovered a revolutionary new hair system.

Mail Online
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The easy washing machine mistakes you must avoid - and the truth about 'fast' washes, according to an engineer
Our slightly slapdash approach to laundry could be costing us when it comes to the cleanliness of our clothes and the longevity of expensive machines.

Mail Online
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My front teeth are so gappy I can fit a 2p through them. They made me feel poor and ugly. I looked into radical solutions - then had a big realisation
My teeth are what you may call an acquired taste, wrtes Hilary Freeman. Between each of my incisors, there's a gap large enough to fit a two-pence piece. But here's why I won't change them.

Mail Online
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Susanna Reid REPLACED on Good Morning Britain as she announces extended break from show with goodbye message to fans
The 54-year-old, who usually presents the programme Monday to Wednesday, and alternative Thursdays, will be taking her leave.

Mail Online
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Do you have one of these gathering dust in your attic? Experts reveal the retro gadgets that are now worth a FORTUNE - with a vintage cassette player topping the list
Experts from Protect Your Bubble have revealed the retro gadgets that are now worth a fortune, including old phones, cassette players, and gaming consoles.

Mail Online
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That's one way to turn back the clock David! Beckham takes a visit to Kim Kardashian's shapewear store Skims in LA ahead of his 50th - but is it Victoria he's shopping for?
David Beckham was seen at the Skims store in LA on Thursday - ahead of his 50th birthday next month. 

Mail Online
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Julie Goodyear's heartbroken husband Scott Brand deletes picture of his wife amid her dementia battle after backlash for sharing the photo
Julie Goodyear's husband has now deleted a recent photograph of the actress which he shared in honour of her 83rd birthday on Wednesday.

Mail Online
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The Chase fans left open-mouthed by teacher's 'shocking' blunder and swipe 'call OFSTED quick' - but can you solve the question that stumped him?
Four contestants, Janet, James, Izzy and Kahlum, featured on Wednesday's instalment of the ITV quiz show hosted by Bradley Walsh, 64.

Mail Online
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Moment brazen thief saws through cables at electric vehicle charging station before walking away amid wave of wire thefts
The man, who has not been identified, cut the thick £15 cables at the EV charging hub at Decathlon Gallagher Retail Park, Wednesbury, just after 8.30pm on March 12.

Sky News Home
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New photos show moment of North Sea crash - as report says neither ship had 'dedicated lookout'
Newly released photographs show the moment two ships collided in last month's North Sea crash.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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No drinks with sweeteners for younger children, say UK advisors
Drinks such as sugar-free squash are off the menu for young children, say health advisors.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Tate receives 'transformational' gift from US donors
A painting by the US modern artist Joan Mitchell is "one of the most important" Tate has received.

Mac Rumours
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OLED iPad Mini Display in Testing Reportedly Made by Samsung
Apple is currently evaluating a new small-sized OLED display for its next iPad mini model, according to a Chinese leaker with sources in Apple's supply chain.





Weibo-based account Digital Chat Station today made the claim in a brief preview of upcoming tablets from different brands. The leaker went on to say that the OLED display in question is made by Samsung, but that they remain unsure if it features a higher refresh rate than the 60Hz LCD display used in the existing iPad mini 7.



Reports last year claimed that Apple had requested OLED display panels designed for future iPad mini models from its suppliers.



In May 2024, it was reported that Samsung Display had started developing sample 8-inch OLED panels for a future ‌iPad mini‌, with plans to initiate mass production at its facility in Cheonan in the second half of 2025. The same report claimed that Apple will bring an OLED panel to the iPad Air alongside the ‌iPad mini‌ in 2026.



That outlook differs slightly from a December report by analyst firm Display Supply Chain Consultants (DSCC) that said an 8.5-inch OLED iPad mini is planned for a 2026 launch, while 11-inch and 13-inch OLED iPad Air models are expected to follow in 2027.



OLED panels can individually control each pixel, resulting in more precise color reproduction and deeper blacks compared to other common display technologies. They also provide superior contrast, faster response times, better viewing angles, and greater design flexibility. All of Apple's flagship iPhones use OLED panels, and in May 2024 the company brought the display technology to the iPad Pro for the first time.



Unlike Apple's ‌iPad Pro‌ models, which feature two-stack low-temperature polycrystalline oxide (LTPO) OLED panels‌, the ‌iPad mini‌ and ‌iPad Air‌ may have single-stack low-temperature polycrystalline silicon (LTPS) panels, meaning that they may be dimmer and continue to lack ProMotion.Related Roundup: iPad miniTag: Digital Chat StationBuyer's Guide: iPad Mini (Buy Now)Related Forum: iPadThis article, 'OLED iPad Mini Display in Testing Reportedly Made by Samsung' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
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Jury were 'misled' with 'false' evidence to convict serial killer Lucy Letby, her legal team claim as they try to cast 'serious doubts' on her guilt
Lucy Letby, 35, from Hereford, is serving 15 whole-life orders after she was convicted of murdering seven of those children and attempting to murder seven more.

Sky News Home
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Protection from terrorism bill named after Manchester Arena bombing victim becomes law
New legislation to make venues protect the public in the event of a terror attack, named in memory of a victim of the 2017 Manchester Arena bombing, has become law in the UK today.

TechRadar News
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WordPress owner Automattic announces major layoffs

TechRadar News
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It's not just you – a weird iOS 18.4 bug is downloading random apps to some people’s iPhones

TechRadar News
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Google’s new Battery Health assistance will intentionally shorten your Pixel 9a’s battery life – and you can’t turn the feature off

TechRadar News
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Netflix movies and shows are now available in over 30 languages – here's what you need to know

TechRadar News
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New Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 leak again confirms return of the Classic model

TechRadar News
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Yes, the Nintendo Switch 2 has more internal storage and supports expandable cards, but you'll need a specific type

TechRadar News
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Proton VPN unveils a major revamp to its Windows, iOS, and Android apps

TechRadar News
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Oracle admits second major security breach, user login data stolen

TechRadar News
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Nintendo Switch 2 Treehouse: Live: Recap of the Direct and build-up to today's event as pre-orders start to go live

Digital Trends
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Polestar 2 gets an audio upgrade from Bowers & Wilkins
There will soon be a new model of the popular Polestar 2 EV on its way, as the Swedish company has announced a 2026 update that will first be available in Europe before rolling out to other locations throughout this year. The 2026 Polestar 2 sees a new audio system and an upgraded infotainment system, […]

Digital Trends
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OnePlus’ pocket rocket incoming after 13T appears in another leak
OnePlus announced its flagship OnePlus 13 series at the beginning of the year with the OnePlus 13 and the OnePlus 13R both arriving around the same time. There’s another model that is set to join the series that keeps popping up in rumours however, and that’s the OnePlus 13T. The Chinese company previously confirmed this […]

Digital Trends
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I love Apple’s minimalist Mac design, and the iPhone 17 Air needs to follow it
The Mac Studio is Apple’s design at its best, but the iPhone 17 Air could head in a new direction. Here’s why Apple should stick to its core design principles.

Mirror F1
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Lewis Hamilton rubbishes Ferrari theory as questions raised over F1 struggles
Ferrari have just 17 points to show for the first two rounds of the new Formula 1 season with Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc ninth and 10th in the championship

The Verge
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Google’s NotebookLM can now find its own sources
Google has added a new feature to NotebookLM that lets the AI note-taking tool find its own web sources to summarize and narrate. Instead of manually uploading sources like documents or YouTube links, users can now tap the “Discover” button and simply describe the topic they want to get a better understanding of, with the […]

The Verge
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AV1 is supposed to make streaming better, so why isn’t everyone using it?
When you jump into a video on YouTube or Netflix, a lot happens very quickly behind the scenes. Video data is rapidly downloaded to your device, which then has to unpack and normalize that information into a smooth, hiccup-free stream. The process of encoding and decoding video data has changed greatly over the years, with […]

Air Accidents Investigation Branch
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AAIB Report: ATR 72-212 A, G-CMJM. Air Accidents Investigation Branch.
AAIB Report: ATR 72-212 A, G-CMJM. Air Accidents Investigation Branch.

BBC UK News
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Trump's tariffs 'very painful' for Welsh firm
Halen Mon says new tariffs on exports to the US might mean it can no longer sell its products there.

Mail Online
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Residents swarm bin lorry in strike-hit Birmingham as rats the 'size of baby MONKEYS' infest rubbish-strewn streets
A mobile bin lorry n allowing residents whose bins aren't being collected to drop their rubbish off - was overrun by householders in inner-city Birmingham amid strikes

Mail Online
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Revealed: Meghan Markle's As Ever online shop is run by 'truly awful' US web firm accused of flogging items that never existed - as duchess faces claims of using 'marketing ploy' to boost sales and harvest data
The Duchess of Sussex 's As Ever range went on sale in the US yesterday and she was celebrating when they sold out within half an hour of going live.

The Guardian (UK)
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Shenmue voted the most influential video game of all time in Bafta poll
The idiosyncratic adventure from 1999 beat the likes of Doom and Super Mario Bros in a public vote, proving that, in a world of blockbusters, there’s still room for strange, exotic gamesIt is a game about love and identity, but it also has forklift truck races. It is a game about bloody revenge, but while you’re waiting to retaliate, you can buy lottery tickets and visit the arcade. When Bafta recently asked gamers to vote on the most influential game of all time, I’m not sure even the most ardent Sega fans would have gambled on the success of an idiosyncratic Dreamcast adventure from 1999. Yet the results, released on Thursday morning, show Shenmue at No 1, with perhaps more predictable contenders Doom and Super Mario Bros coming in second and third respectively.How has this happened, especially considering the game was considered a financial failure at the time of its release, falling short of recouping its then staggering development costs (a reported $70m, which would now get you about a third of Horizon Forbidden West or Star Wars Outlaws)? Well, nostalgia is a funny thing – and so is the concept of cultural influence. When it was released more than two decades ago, Shenmue was an oddity: an open-world role-playing adventure that followed martial arts student Ryo Hazuki as he sought revenge for the murder of his father. But while there were fights and puzzles galore, there was also a lot of … other stuff. The game used an internal clock to switch between day and night, and to cycle through seasons. Often, the people Ryo needed to speak to (or beat up) were only available at certain times, so he had to kill time by wandering the streets of mid-1980s Yokosuka. You could go to shops, play old Sega arcade games, you could visit the hotdog stand. The world was filled with eccentric characters and strange mini-games – including the aforementioned forklift races. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Black Country, New Road: Forever Howlong review | Alexis Petridis's album of the week
(Ninja Tune)After losing their frontman, the band’s third studio album shows how resilient and adaptable they are, with luscious melodies, fantastical lyrics and lots of recordersThe last time Black Country, New Road released a studio album, in 2022, it was accompanied by a strange feeling. Their debut the previous year had reached No 4 in the UK charts, and Ants from Up There was an even greater breakthrough, the sound of the UK septet pulling confidently away from the serried ranks of sprechgesang-heavy alt-rock bands who proliferated in the late 2010s. But there was an elegiac feeling around its release: Black Country, New Road’s frontman, Isaac Wood, had announced his departure four days prior. The others had resolved to continue without him, but given how distinctive Wood’s declarative, ruminating vocals were, many thought the band’s future was uncertain at best.That proved to be an underestimation. Instead of touring Ants from Up There, the remaining members stopped playing any of the Wood-fronted songs that had made them famous and wrote entirely new ones. “Look at what we did together,” ran the chorus of one of them, on a live album recorded at London’s Bush Hall in December 2022 – looking back with pride at the Wood era, and perhaps in disbelief at where they were going next. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Zonal electricity pricing plan could add £3bn a year to GB bills, report finds
Research finds proposal may also drive up cost of building new windfarms as developers need higher subsidies to offset costPlans to overhaul England, Wales and Scotland’s electricity market risk piling an extra £3bn on to household energy bills every year until the 2040s, according to the government’s own clean power adviser.New research has found that moving ahead with a plan to divide the national electricity market into different pricing zones could drive up the cost of building new windfarms as the government aims for a renewable energy boom before the end of the decade. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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I put the Married at First Sight ‘experiment’ to the test. The results are stark | Gideon Meyerowitz-Katz
I’ve become addicted to the show. But as a scientist I wonder: how many couples actually stay together?It has finally happened. After a decade of avoiding the show, my wife and I decided that we would try out the new season of Married at First Sight. We consume quite a bit of reality TV, so it’s not that we avoided it precisely, but something about the idea of watching people struggle to build a healthy relationship amid a storm of cameras and manufactured drama just never drew us in. At least until we watched Married at First Sight and realised it was actually kind of fun.Relationship drama makes for addictive viewing. But after watching most of a season of weird “marriages”, screaming matches and couch quizzes accompanied by deep and meaningful music, one part of the show has struck me as really weird. Everyone keeps referring to the saga as an “experiment”. From the narrator to the experts who counsel the hapless couples on their relationship dramas, the entire show seems to be calling the experience a social experiment for which we don’t know the outcome.How many couples stay together until the end of filming?How many couples stay together after filming is completed?How many couples are still together and is it fewer than we’d expect? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump has abandoned the idea of diplomacy in the Middle East | Jo-Ann Mort
The administration has proposed no realistic settlement, leaving a void for Netanyahu. This is foolishness gone wildWhen I wrote an opinion piece for the Guardian a few months ago, anticipating Donald Trump’s foreign policy regarding the Middle East, I made a big mistake.I thought that there would be diplomacy involved, even if it was ill-conceived. Instead, the complete lack of diplomatic rendering in this administration’s foreign policy is already pointing in dangerous directions, especially regarding Israel, the Palestinians, Jordan and Egypt. Saudi Arabia, the sleeping giant that’s in a key position to provide a roadmap to a fair resolution for both Israelis and Palestinians, seems to be sitting on the sidelines now. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Yes, I have just done a naked forward roll. But there was a good reason | Adrian Chiles
There I was, lying in bed and worrying I’d lost a basic life skill. Can you blame me for putting it to the test?When I was in the first year at middle school, in Miss Hale’s class, my parents returned from a parents’ evening looking disappointed. My nine-year-old self picked up on this. It wasn’t my schoolwork: that was OK. It was that the teacher had revealed that in PE I was the only one in the class who couldn’t do a forward roll.This was true. It wasn’t that I was physically incapable – I was in the school football team and, without wishing to boast, probably the ninth-quickest runner. I just had this mental block. I couldn’t bring myself to do it. The idea of the world momentarily going upside down was too much for me. The prospect of such disorientation was unbearable. If only Miss Hale had taken me to one side and said: “Look, you’re overthinking this – and, believe you me, if you let it, overthinking will blight your life.” But she didn’t, because teachers didn’t talk like that then (and probably don’t do so now, either).Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Block-busted: why homemade Minecraft movies are the real hits
The bestselling video game ever has a devoted, vocal, following. Can a faceless corporation make a successful film based on such beloved IP without involving its fanbase?By any estimation, Minecraft is impossibly successful. The bestselling video game ever, as of last December it had 204 million monthly active players. Since it was first released in 2011, it has generated over $3bn (£2.3bn) in revenue. What’s more, its players have always been eager to demonstrate their fandom outside the boundaries of the game itself. In 2021, YouTube calculated that videos related to the game – tutorials, walk-throughs, homages, parodies – had collectively been viewed 1tn times. In short, it is a phenomenon.Such is the strength of feeling, almost all of it positive, about Minecraft that it was only a matter of time before someone tried to turn it into a film. After all, you have a historically popular product and a highly engaged fanbase: what could possibly go wrong? Turns out, quite a lot. Last September, the first trailer for the film – titled A Minecraft Movie – was released, and the reaction was instant and violent. “Minecraft fans devastated by ‘awful’ live-action trailer” read one headline the following day. Some called it “a crime against humanity”; others “a soulless neon abomination”. In less than 24 hours, the website GamingBible had called it “a curse on my eyes” and “pure nightmare fuel”. Within three days of its release, the trailer had been downvoted more than 1m times. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Top genome scientists to map DNA sequence of invertebrate winner 2025
Sanger Institute’s Tree of Life team say genomes offer invaluable insight into how species will fare under climate crisisVoting is now open! Vote for your favourite here“We are following the ‘invertebrate of the year’ series with bated breath,” began the email that arrived in the Guardian’s inbox last week.Mark Blaxter leads the Sanger Institute’s Tree of Life programme, a project that sequences species’ DNA to understand the diversity and origins of life on Earth. But far more importantly, Blaxter and his team are superfans of our invertebrate of the year competition and have offered to map the genome sequence of whoever wins this year. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump imposes tariffs on uninhabited Heard and McDonald Islands near Antarctica
Australian prime minister surprised after external territories – including tiny Norfolk Island and remote islands home to penguins – targeted by US presidentA group of barren, uninhabited volcanic islands near Antarctica, covered in glaciers and home to penguins, have been swept up in Donald Trump’s trade war, as the US president hit them with a 10% tariff on goods.Heard Island and McDonald Islands, which form an external territory of Australia, are among the remotest places on Earth, accessible only via a two-week boat voyage from Perth on Australia’s west coast. They are completely uninhabited, with the last visit from people believed to be nearly 10 years ago. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Spain proposes €14.1bn package to support economy as trade commissioner says EU won’t ‘stand idly by’ on US tariffs – Europe live
Spanish PM Pedro Sánchez calls tariffs ‘return to 19th-century protectionism’ as EU’s Maroš Šefčovič says he will speak to US counterpartsWhat are tariffs and why do they matter?French prime minister François Bayrou told reporters that Donald Trump’s tariffs marked “a catastrophe” for the global economy, and posed “an immense difficulty” for Europe.Speaking on the margins of a meeting in the French Senate, he also said the move will be “a catastrophe for the US and for US citizens.” Continue reading...

BBC Formula One
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The true story of Britain's biggest bullion heist
In November 1983, armed robbers stole £26 million worth of gold from the Brink’s-Mat security depot

BBC UK News
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'Unlawful' for government to refuse public inquiry into murdered GAA official
The UK government had said it would not hold an inquiry into the death of Sean Brown in 1997.

Mail Online
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Good Morning Britain fans blast 'sneering and snooty' Ed Balls for 'turning his nose up' at money-saving segment - raging 'this man is a clown!'
Good Morning Britain fans have blasted Ed Balls as 'sneering and snooting' for 'turning his nose up' at a money-saving segment.

Mail Online
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Key relationship problem that could be a sign of 'hidden' autism - do you or your partner feel this way?
Thousands of Britons are believed to be living with undiagnosed autism, a condition that causes communication issues, repetitive behaviours and finding certain situations overwhelming.

Mail Online
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Who really bought Meghan's sold-out jam? Fans raise questions as it's revealed her famous pals snapped up stock - while Kris Jenner got a freebie
Baffled members of the public have raised questions over Meghan Markle's sold out jam after it was revealed her famous pals snapped up a lot of the stock.

Mail Online
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Jamaican rapist avoids deportation on human rights grounds as criminal record in UK means he is not eligible for witness protection in Caribbean
A convicted sex attacker cannot be deported to Jamaica because his crimes in the UK mean he might not be eligible for the witness protection scheme in his homeland, an immigration judge ruled.

Mail Online
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Female fencer takes a knee and walks out against transgender rival, as she tells ref: 'I will not fence against a man'
USA fencer Stephanie Turner was scheduled to face Redmond Sullivan at the Cherry Blossom tournament held at the University of Maryland .

The Guardian (UK)
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Wake review – Irish dance takes a raucous, pole-dancing rollercoaster ride
Peacock theatre, London Gleefully exploding traditional funeral rites, Thisispopbaby deploy styles from stepdance to pole dance to upend expectations of Irish cultureYou haven’t lived, it turns out, until you’ve seen a blazing-hot pole dance accompanied by a mournful Irish fiddle. Or perhaps a B-boy headspinning to the song of a button accordion. In fact there are a lot of things you didn’t know you needed in this show, Wake, by the Dublin-based theatre company Thisispopbaby, which joyfully explodes expectations of the traditional Irish wake, but captures some of the culture’s soul alongside the high camp and shiny Lycra.
The ingredients are mind-bogglingly myriad: cabaret, character comedy and Irish stepdance, trad folk music and 80s, 90s, 00s bangers, aerial circus skills and audience participation. It’s also an invitation to imagine life’s seismic moments as a catalyst for reinvention, spurred by the coming together of bodies and hearts in the same room.Directors Jennifer Jennings and Phillip McMahon have gathered a talented cast who are clearly having a blast, among them Michael Roberson, a competitive Irish dancer from the US with barnstorming energy and slick technique. They’ve been calling him “the Paul Mescal of Irish dance”, possibly because of his Gladiator physique, except Lucius Verus didn’t have gold briefs and a glitter ball. Many are international artists based in Ireland: world champion pole dancer Lisette Krol (originally from Venezuela) is the most powerful person on stage and proves herself a hardcore athlete in a G-string; charismatic B-boy Cristian Emmanuel Dirocie (Dominican Republic) has a catalogue of power moves and gyrates his pipe-cleaner-bendy limbs in superfast time; while Irish-Nigerian spoken word artist Felispeaks is the sage of the show. The onstage band are tight, with accordionist Darren Roche of the band Moxie, and fiddle player Lucia Mac Partlin on great form.
The ability to ride a tonal rollercoaster that swerves way off the rails, from tongue-in-cheek burlesque to moving a cappella folk, is mightily impressive. Wake is rude, raucous, silly and then suddenly poignant, celebrating all that you can stuff into life, with earnestness thrown out the window. It has late-night festival hit written all over it (if they’re not going up to Edinburgh this summer, they should be), and would be even better in the round, which is how it was staged in Dublin, because what it’s all about is togetherness, gathering; death as a prompt for really living.
• At Peacock theatre, London, until 5 April. Then at Aviva Studios, Manchester, 17-21 April. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Steven Soderbergh developing ‘terrifying’ idea for post-Covid Contagion sequel
Director says he fears that a followup to the 2011 film, which gained renewed popularity during the pandemic, could be ‘irresponsible’The director Steven Soderbergh has “terrifying” ideas for a sequel to Contagion, his 2011 film about a global pandemic which enjoyed a resurgence under Covid-19, but feels it would be “irresponsible” to base a movie around them.“We talk about it and have come up with some terrifying ideas,” Soderbergh said, while describing conversations with pandemic experts. “There would have to be, I think, a plot that doesn’t feel predictable. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘How did this ever get made?’ Gen Z is falling in love (and hate) with Glee
A decade after the finale, new fans are flocking to Glee, causing its songs to shoot up the charts. The internet’s ablaze with TikTok dance homages, Reddit threads – and tonnes of hate watchersThe year is 2009, and Glee has hit like a cultural earthquake. Every week, millions of people around the world tune in to watch a group of American high school misfits belt out musical theatre and pop hits, turning show choir into mainstream entertainment. The cast’s cover of Journey’s Don’t Stop Believin’ becomes an anthem, spending 37 weeks in the UK charts, catapulting its young stars to overnight fame. Glee clubs start in schools across the US and beyond, and Ryan Murphy’s show develops a devoted fanbase – myself included – who proudly call ourselves Gleeks. Online, we dissect every episode on Tumblr, trade theories and wear our fandom, plus the merch we bought to prove it, as a badge of honour.But by the time Glee came to a close in 2015, all its magic had faded. The Guardian reported that “few will mourn its passing” as the show’s last season premiered. A string of increasingly absurd storylines and poor song choices left a dwindling viewership and even the most diehard fans drifting away. Or so we thought – because 10 years after its finale, the show is back with a vengeance.In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email [email protected] or [email protected]. In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.orgThis article was amended on 3 April 2025 to state that Cory Monteith died of a drug and alcohol overdose rather than by suicide as previously stated. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Hungary to pull out of ICC as Netanyahu visits Budapest
Israeli PM meets Viktor Orbán despite international arrest warrant over allegations of war crimes in GazaHungary has said it will begin the process of withdrawing from the international criminal court, hours after the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu – the subject of an ICC arrest warrant – arrived in the country for an official visit.“Hungary will exit the ICC,” Gergely Gulyás, prime minister Viktor Orbán’s chief of staff, said. “The government will initiate the withdrawal procedure on Thursday in accordance with the constitutional and international legal framework.” Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Two men arrested in London over alleged Hezbollah links
Two men have been arrested in west London over alleged links to Hezbollah.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Meat-eating dinosaurs shared watering holes with their prey
Scientists' analysis of prehistoric tracks suggests predators and prey drank at the same lagoons.

UK Government News
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Education Secretary keynote speech at Festival of Childhood
The Education Secretary's keynote speech at the Children’s Commissioner’s Festival of Childhood event.

UK Government News
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Half a million appointments and operations saved by ending resident doctor strikes
Ending doctor strikes saved 500,000 appointments and operations, and cut waiting lists by 193,000

UK Government News
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Floating signs to protect Looe seals from watercraft
The Looe Island Marine Wildlife Code Project sees deployment of new signage in this key habitat for Atlantic grey seals.

The Register
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System builders say server prices set to spike as Trump plays customs cowboy
Tariff moves threaten supply chain stability The cost of buying servers for business will inevitably rise as a result of US President Donald Trump's trade policies, at least in the short term, as uncertainty grips the supply chain.…

BBC UK News
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Ships had no lookouts before crash, says report
The Stena Immaculate was hit by the Solong cargo ship off the coast of East Yorkshire on 10 March.

Mail Online
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Shock poll shows Nigel Farage IS on track to be PM as Labour and Tories struggle… but will YOU have a Reform MP?
Analysis of a survey of 5,180 people predicts Reform would secure 25 per cent of the vote if a general election was called now, with Labour and the Conservatives tied on 23 per cent each.

Mail Online
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Inside Val Kilmer's romance with 'dream' woman Joanne Whalley - before romance soured when he found out she was divorcing him in 'brutal' way
Legend has it that Val followed Joanne, best known for Edge of Darkness, Scarlett, and Scandal, from the West End to an after-party after he became enamoured by her beauty and talent.

Mail Online
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Economists rip apart Trump's 'insane' list of 'fake' international tariff charges levied against US and reveal 'the formula White House used' to create reciprocal fees that have caused global chaos
The Trump administration seems to have used a primary school-level equation to calculate its 'Liberation Day' reciprocal tariffs that have sent global markets tumbling

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Parts of UK set to be hotter than Algarve on Friday
Warm, bright conditions are expected but come with a warning about wildfires.

TechRadar Reviews
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I tested the Elecrow Pi Terminal - read what I thought of it

Propublica
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Utah Ex-Therapist Scott Owen Sentenced to Prison for Sexually Abusing Patients
by Jessica Schreifels, The Salt Lake Tribune



This article was produced for ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network in partnership with The Salt Lake Tribune. Sign up for Dispatches to get stories like this one as soon as they are published.










The last time Sam met with his therapist, Scott Owen, the session was nothing more than an hour of Owen sexually abusing him, he told a Provo, Utah, courtroom this week. Sam remembers sitting in his car afterward, screaming as loud as he could.

“I could feel him all over my skin,” he said. “I could not believe this was happening.”

It was October 2017, and Sam had been seeing Owen for therapy for more than a year. A faithful member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he was struggling with what he called “unwanted same-sex attraction.” Owen was a high-ranking leader in the LDS Church at that time, and Sam said Owen assured him that he had helped more than 200 men who felt similarly.

Instead, he said, Owen “meticulously leveraged” his two roles as a therapist and a church leader to assure him that the sexual touching during their sessions was key to helping him heal, learn how to accept intimacy and grow closer to God.

“He exploited my trust, he weaponized my faith and dismantled my confidence,” Sam told the courtroom. “What he did was not just unethical. It was calculated, predatory and destructive.”

Police began investigating Owen in 2023 only after The Salt Lake Tribune and ProPublica reported on a range of sex abuse allegations against Owen, who had built a reputation over his 20-year therapy career as a specialist who could help gay men who were members of the LDS Church. Some of the men who spoke to The Tribune said their bishop in the faith referred them to Owen and used church funds to pay for sessions where Owen allegedly also touched them inappropriately.











Austin Millet at his home in Oregon. Millet is one of several men who told The Salt Lake Tribune and ProPublica that Owen abused them during sessions paid for with funds from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

(Amanda Lucier for ProPublica)









In February, Owen pleaded guilty to three charges, admitting he sexually abused Sam and a second patient who also said he sought Owen’s help because he was struggling with his sexuality and Latter-day Saints faith. Owen also pleaded no contest in another case, saying prosecutors likely had enough evidence to convict him at a trial on an allegation that he had groped a young girl during a therapy session.

But the number of people who say that Owen harmed them is much larger — and they filled a Provo courtroom on Monday as Owen was sentenced to spend at least 15 years in prison.



One by one, they stood at a podium in court and told Owen how he had hurt them. Most were his patients, like Sam, a pseudonym to protect his identity from his community.

One man told the court Owen had abused him when Owen was a leader of a young men’s group organized by the LDS Church.

“He had sleepovers at his house,” Mike Bahr said. “I was there once, and I have lived in a nightmare since.”

Also speaking were family members of a man who had died by suicide, including his brother who said his sibling disclosed to him that Owen had abused him just days before he took his life.

And there was one of Owen’s own family members, his cousin, who alleges that Owen molested him on a family trip when he was a kid. After becoming more public with his own abuse allegations several years ago, James Cooper has worked to gather others who say his cousin victimized them.











James Cooper speaks during Owen’s sentencing hearing. Cooper is Owen’s cousin and alleges the man abused him when he was a child.

(Francisco Kjolseth/The Salt Lake Tribune)









He spoke about the dynamics that allowed Owen to hurt others for so long without repercussions.

“Certainly, we know how charismatic he is, and what it’s like to be a victim of sexual assault. The shame you carry. The guilt you carry,” he said. “The fear of Scott. The fear of not being accepted by your family, your society, your church. All those things are enormous factors.”

One woman spoke about Owen touching her inappropriately during therapy when she was 13 years old, in 2007. During the hearing, the only woman to have publicly accused him said Owen had made her feel like something was wrong with her. Now, she added, “He no longer holds power over me.”

When Owen, 66, was given a chance to speak, he said there was no excuse or rationale for what he had done.

“I am so sorry,” he said. “All I have to offer is what’s left of my life. And I hope that in offering those years, justice will have been met in some small fashion, and those who I have hurt can disconnect from me and move forward with their healing.”

Defense attorney Earl Xaiz said Owen did not want leniency from the judge but mentioned in court that his client had been sexually abused himself as a child and had struggled with his sexuality.

Fourth District Judge Kraig Powell sentenced Owen on Monday to 15 years to life in prison. Given Owen’s age and the nature of his crimes, both prosecutors and the defense agreed it is likely he will spend the rest of his life in prison.

Powell became emotional as he handed down the sentence, telling Owen that he harmed not only those who spoke publicly on Monday, but all of those therapists and church leaders who are ethical and working to help people.

“Thousands and thousands of these people, I fear, will be affected by this terrible, abhorrent case,” the judge said.











Owen was sentenced to prison after he admitted he sexually abused patients during sessions.

(Francisco Kjolseth/The Salt Lake Tribune)









While Owen gave up his therapy license in 2018 after several patients complained to state licensors that he had touched them inappropriately, the allegations were never investigated by the police and were not widely known.

Under a negotiated settlement with Utah’s licensing division, Owen was able to surrender his license without admitting to any inappropriate conduct, and the sexual nature of his patients’ allegations is not referenced in the documents he signed when he gave up his license. He continued to have an active role in his therapy business, Canyon Counseling, until The Tribune and ProPublica published their investigation.

Police interviewed more than a dozen former patients of Owen’s, all of whom reported that he touched them in ways they felt were inappropriate during therapy sessions. But Owen faced charges in connection with only three patients, because the type of touching that the other men alleged fell under parts of the criminal code that had a shorter window of time for prosecutors to file a case, called the statute of limitations. The crimes that Owen was charged with are all felonies that have no statute of limitations.

Both state licensors and local leaders in the LDS Church knew of inappropriate touching allegations against Owen as early as 2016, reporting by The Tribune and ProPublica showed, but neither would say whether they ever reported Owen to the police.

The church said in response to that reporting that it takes all matters of sexual misconduct seriously, and that in 2019 it confidentially annotated internal records to alert bishops that Owen’s conduct had threatened the well-being of other people or the church.

The church also said it has no process in place to vet the therapists its church leaders recommend and pay for using member donations. It is up to individual members, a church spokesperson has said, to “make their own decisions” about whether to see a specific therapist that their bishop recommends.











Michael, a former patient of Owen’s who agreed to be photographed but asked to be identified by only his first name, looks at his wife while speaking in court about the inappropriate touching he said happened in therapy sessions.

(Francisco Kjolseth/The Salt Lake Tribune)









For some who accused Owen of abuse, Monday’s sentencing was the only chance they had to address Owen because charges could not be brought in their cases. That includes Michael, who asked to be identified by only his first name. He said he saw Owen for therapy on and off for about a decade, starting when he was 14. He read a letter to his younger self in court on Monday.

“I just learned on Thursday that we are beyond our legal opportunity to fix this problem,” he said. “And it broke my heart to learn that I can’t pursue a court case for you. … You’ll have to be strong. It’s going to be so hard, but you’re going to make it through.”





Editor’s note: Sam is identified only by a pseudonym because he requested anonymity. We have granted this request because of the risk to his standing in his community. The Salt Lake Tribune and ProPublica typically use sources’ full names in stories. But sometimes that isn’t possible, and we consider other approaches. That often takes the form of initials or middle names. In this case, we felt that we couldn’t fully protect our source by those means. We know his full name and have corroborated his accounts in documents and through interviews with others.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
European Officials Now Worry About Reliance Of Dollar Funding By The Fed
European Officials Now Worry About Reliance Of Dollar Funding By The Fed

Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

Can the EU rely on dollar funding by the Fed with Trump in play?



Dollar Funding Under Trump

Reuters reports Some European officials weigh if they can rely on Fed for dollars under Trump


Some European central banking and supervisory officials are questioning whether they can still rely on the U.S. Federal Reserve to provide dollar funding in times of market stress, six people familiar with the matter said, casting some doubt over what has been a bedrock of financial stability.

But the European officials have held informal discussions about this possibility – which Reuters is reporting for the first time – because their trust in the United States government has been shaken by some of the Trump administration’s policies.

President Donald Trump has made a sharp break from long-standing U.S. policy in several areas, such as appearing to endorse Russia’s position on Ukraine, raising questions about U.S. commitment to European security and imposing tariffs on its allies.

In some European forums where participants assess potential risks to the financial system, these officials have discussed scenarios under which the U.S. government might pressure the Fed to suspend the dollar backstops, two of the sources said.

Some officials have been gaming out whether they can find alternatives to the U.S. central bank, the two sources said. In times of market stress, the Fed has provided the European Central Bank and other major counterparts with access to dollar funding.

The takeaway from these discussions: there is no good substitute to the Fed, said the six sources, who include senior ECB and European Union banking supervisory staff with first-hand knowledge of the conversations.

The sources all requested anonymity to speak candidly about the private deliberations.

The ECB and the Fed declined to comment for this article. The White House did not respond to a request for comment.


Remarkable Discussion

My answer is the same as what sources told Reuters.

“The sources consider it highly unlikely the Fed would not honour its funding backstops — and the U.S. central bank itself has given no signals to suggest that.”

However, that Europe sees any need for this discussion is remarkable in and of itself.

The Fed is still independent, at least for now. But it’s fair game to assume the US Treasury might pressure the Fed to do whatever the Hell Trump wants.

Weaponization of Swift

Please consider the March 2022 Richmond Fed article What Is SWIFT, and Could Sanctions Impact the U.S. Dollar’s Dominance? 


The recent removal of Russian banks from the SWIFT messaging system has highlighted the importance of payments in supporting economies. But the weaponization of SWIFT has also left some commentators worrying about the loss of the U.S. dollar’s dominance, as it might drive banks and firms to other substitutes. This Economic Brief discusses the economics of SWIFT and explains why emigrating from the U.S. dollar may be more difficult than we thought.


The Richmond’s Fed’s assessment is self-serving. Yet, it appears accurate. Importantly the Fed even admits weaponization, the emphasis was mine.

Dollar Weaponization Expands

On May 13, 2023 I commented Dollar Weaponization Expands – FDIC Message to Foreign Depositors Is Don’t Trust the US


Systemic Risk Assessment

The FDIC made a “systemic risk exception” for Silicon Valley Bank to protect depositor funds beyond its limit of $250,000 per bank account.

FDIC’s stated “insurance” is for US depositors only. But the exception to make all US depositors whole means foreign depositors bear 100% of responsibility for the collapse of SVB.

Since bond holders rate higher than unsecured depositors, and the FDIC had significant losses rated to SVB, foreign depositors may get zero cents on the dollar.

If you are a foreign depositor at any small or midsized bank, the FDIC is affirming that you better get your money out now. 


What Does China Do With a Dollar That’s No Longer Risk Free?

On March 18, 2022, I asked What Does China Do With a Dollar That’s No Longer Risk Free? Buy Gold?


Q&A With Michael Pettis

Mish: Will China now hold more commodities and fewer dollars despite the pro-cyclical nature of it? More Euros or Yen over dollars? More gold?

Michael Pettis:

“Given that so much of China’s “reserves” are now indirect and held by state-owned banks (all the increase since 2017) it’s hard to say what the currency composition of China’s reserves are.
“Officially the US dollar is still by far the biggest component, but it is slowly declining.
“I expect that this will continue as far as the official reserves go but, as you know, the hard part of reducing the US dollar component of your reserves is figuring out what the alternative should be, and with such high and growing reserves (once you include the indirect reserves at the state-owned banks) that is a very difficult question to resolve.”


Is China Dumping US Treasuries?

I post https://twitter.com/LukeGromen/status/1648364877302452225

“Strategists Joana Freire and Stephen Jen calculated that the greenback accounted for about two-thirds of total global reserves in 2003, then 55% by 2021, and 47% last year.”



This question comes up every year, and every year my answer is the same.

No, Luke Gromen, China masks its US treasury holding.

Here’s the correct take.



Here’s another take.

Setser “The dollar’s share of reserves didn’t actually change at all in 2022.“


But if the IMF's data on reserve holdings is adjusted for changes in US bond market valuation, I don't get any real US dollar sales --
No currency got large reserve inflows in 22 in fact.
5/ pic.twitter.com/XWFN9zdzGX
— Brad Setser (@Brad_Setser) April 19, 2023
What About China?


And looking at reserves without also looking at the foreign assets of state banks and SWFs is so ... 2012.
The cutting edge of flow tracking (imo) captures SWFs, forwards, state banks and the like ...
7/ pic.twitter.com/K5RRVN2n51
— Brad Setser (@Brad_Setser) April 19, 2023
Setser “Looking at reserves without also looking at the foreign assets of state banks and SWFs is so … 2012.“

China masks its reserves in SOEs, something I have commented on many times.

Still More Fairy Tales of US Dollar Demise That Didn’t Happen

For discussion, please see my April 26, 2023 post Still More Fairy Tales of US Dollar Demise That Didn’t Happen

Sorry for the digression, but it’s an important one.

It is currently very difficult to avoid the dollar.

More Gold Backed BRIC Currency Silliness on Dethroning the Dollar

On July 7, 2023, I noted More Gold Backed BRIC Currency Silliness on Dethroning the Dollar


If Russia or China had a gold-backed BRIC, what would that even mean? Would you trust it? Buy it?


The BRIC is literally of zero threat to anyone.

Truth Social Post

“The idea that the BRICS Countries are trying to move away from the Dollar while we stand by and watch is OVER. We require a commitment from these Countries that they will neither create a new BRICS Currency, nor back any other Currency to replace the mighty U.S. Dollar or, they will face 100% Tariffs, and should expect to say goodbye to selling into the wonderful U.S. Economy.”

“They can go find another “sucker!” There is no chance that the BRICS will replace the U.S. Dollar in International Trade, and any Country that tries should wave goodbye to America.”

On November 30, 2024, I commented Trump’s Obvious Bluff Over BRICS Currency Proves He Is Clueless on Trade


Let’s start with the obvious. First, Trump is bluffing. Second, he is clueless as to what the real problem is.

Global Consumers of Last Resort

The US is stuck with the reserve currency because we have the largest, most open capital markets in the world, the world’s largest bond market, and a far better business climate than the EU, China, or Japan.


BRICS Irony

Trump demands a weak dollar.

True competition to the dollar in the form of alternate reserve currencies would actually help.

Trump Wants a Weak Dollar But Needs a Strong One

On March 16, 2025, I commented Trump Wants a Weak Dollar But Needs a Strong One


One way to get a weaker dollar is for the US to run huge budget deficits and for the Fed to not follow through with interest rate hikes.

But that conflicts with Trump’s promise to balance the budget. And balancing the budget would strengthen the dollar.


Strengthening the dollar would help with inflation but Trump wants a weak dollar.

Trump wants “made in America” but the US is the highest cost producer or nearly everything non-agricultural. So good luck with exports.

Trump demands no competition to the dollar, but that is one thing propping up the dollar!

It’s all so damn convoluted that Europe is now concerned over dollar funding.

US dollar avoidance is not easy, as discussed, but Trump is greatly increasing the incentive for nations to try.

I suggest the EU needs to focus on building an alternative to SWIFT, as soon as possible. The EU half-heartily tried, but gave up.

Try again, better this time.

Swift avoidance would not end dollar reliance, but it would help the EU find ways to avoid US sanctions. And a sanction showdown with the EU is coming.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 05:00

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Mac Studio Buyer's Guide: All Models Compared
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The new ‌Mac Studio‌'s main upgrade is its chip, moving from the M2 Max and ‌M2‌ Ultra to the M4 Max and M3 Ultra. Compared to its predecessor, the new ‌Mac Studio‌ is up to 75% faster with 2x faster graphics. It also now features up to 512GB of memory, 16TB of storage, as well as Thunderbolt 5 connectivity.



See the breakdown below for each new feature, change, and improvement that was added with the latest ‌Mac Studio‌ compared to its predecessors:







‌Mac Studio‌ (2022)

‌Mac Studio‌ (2023)

‌Mac Studio‌ (2025)





Apple M1 Max or M1 Ultra chip

Apple ‌M2‌ Max or ‌M2‌ Ultra chip

Apple M4 Max or M3 Ultra chip





M1 Max: 10-core CPU (8 performance cores, 2 efficiency cores)

M1 Ultra: 20-core CPU (16 performance cores, 4 efficiency cores)



M2 Max: 12-core CPU (8 performance cores, 4 efficiency cores)

M2 Ultra: 24-core CPU (16 performance cores, 8 efficiency cores)



M4 Max: Up to 16-core CPU (12 performance cores, 4 efficiency cores)

M3 Ultra: Up to 32-core CPU (24 performance cores, 8 efficiency cores)







M1 Max: Up to 32-core GPU

M1 Ultra: Up to 64-core GPU

M2 Max: Up to 38-core GPU

M2 Ultra: Up to 76-core GPU

M4 Max: Up to 40-core GPU

M3 Ultra: Up to 80-core GPU









Hardware-accelerated ray tracing









AV1 decode





M1 Max: 16-core Neural Engine (11 TOPS)

M1 Ultra: 32-core Neural Engine (22 TOPS)



M2 Max: 16-core Neural Engine (15.8 TOPS)

M2 Ultra: 32-core Neural Engine (31.6 TOPS)



M4 Max: 16-core Neural Engine (38 TOPS)

M3 Ultra: 32-core Neural Engine (76 TOPS)







M1 Max: Video decode engine

M1 Ultra: Two video decode engines

M2 Max: Video decode engine

M2 Ultra: Two video decode engines

M4 Max: Video decode engine

M3 Ultra: Two video decode engines





M1 Max: Two video encode engines

M1 Ultra: Four video encode engines

M2 Max: Two video encode engines

M2 Ultra: Four video encode engines

M4 Max: Two video encode engines

M3 Ultra: Four video encode engines





M1 Max: Two ProRes encode and decode engines

M1 Ultra: Four ProRes encode and decode engines

M2 Max: Two ProRes encode and decode engines

M2 Ultra: Four ProRes encode and decode engines

M4 Max: Two ProRes encode and decode engines

M3 Ultra: Four ProRes encode and decode engines





M1 Max: 32GB or 64GB memory

M1 Ultra: 64GB or 128GB memory

M2 Max: 32GB, 64GB, or 96GB memory

M2 Ultra: 64GB, 128GB, or 192GB memory

M4 Max: 36GB, 48GB, 64GB, 128GB memory

M3 Ultra: 96GB, 256GB, or 512GB memory





M1 Max: 400GB/s memory bandwidth

M1 Ultra: 800GB/s memory bandwidth

M2 Max: 400GB/s memory bandwidth

M2 Ultra: 800GB/s memory bandwidth

M4 Max: Up to 546GB/s memory bandwidth

M3 Ultra: 819GB/s memory bandwidth





512GB, 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, or 8TB SSD storage

M2 Max: 512GB, 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, or 8TB SSD storage

M2 Ultra: 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, or 8TB SSD storage

M4 Max: 512GB, 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, or 8TB SSD storage

M3 Ultra: 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, 8TB, or 16TB SSD storage





M1 Max: Four Thunderbolt 4 ports and two USB-C ports

M1 Ultra: Six Thunderbolt 4 ports

M2 Max: Four Thunderbolt 4 ports and two USB-C ports

M2 Ultra: Six Thunderbolt 4 ports

M4 Max: Four Thunderbolt 5 ports and two USB-C ports

M3 Ultra: Six Thunderbolt 5 ports





HDMI 2.0 port

HDMI 2.1 port

HDMI 2.1 port





Support for up to four Pro Display XDRs and one 4K display

Support for up to eight 4K displays, six 6K displays, or three 8K displays

Support for up to eight 4K displays, eight 6K displays or four 8K displays





3.5mm headphone jack

3.5mm headphone jack with advanced support for high-impedance headphones

3.5mm headphone jack with advanced support for high-impedance headphones





802.11ax Wi‑Fi 6

802.11ax Wi‑Fi 6E

802.11ax Wi‑Fi 6E





Bluetooth 5.0

Bluetooth 5.3

Bluetooth 5.3







Released March 2022

Released June 2023

Released March 2025









Only those 2022 ‌Mac Studio‌ users who consistently push their machines to the limit with tasks like 3D rendering, video editing in high resolutions, machine learning workflows, or large-scale software development should consider upgrading to the 2025 model. The 2025 ‌Mac Studio‌ introduces a considerable leap in performance, particularly with the M4 Max and M3 Ultra chips, offering substantially better GPU performance, more powerful GPUs with hardware-accelerated ray tracing, a significantly faster Neural Engine, and support for up to 512GB of memory and Thunderbolt 5. These improvements dramatically improve workflows that demand extreme parallel processing, faster memory access, or broader external display setups. If your current 2022 ‌Mac Studio‌ ever feels like a bottleneck, or if you are preparing to work with increasingly complex projects over the next few years, the upgrade is likely to be worth it. However, for users whose workloads remain well within the capabilities of the ‌M1 Max‌ or ‌M1 Ultra‌, especially those focused on less GPU-intensive tasks, the gains may not justify the cost at this time.



Upgrading from the 2023 ‌Mac Studio‌ to the 2025 model is likely to be worth it for far fewer users, simply because the performance gains, while significant on paper, will make less of a real-world difference for most professionals already using the ‌M2‌ Max or ‌M2‌ Ultra chip because the 2023 model is still exceptionally capable. However, there are a few edge cases where the upgrade may be justified—particularly for users working with local large language models or intensive AI workloads, where the vastly improved Neural Engine in the M4 Max or M3 Ultra can offer major benefits. Similarly, users who rely on extremely high memory capacity or bandwidth, or those building systems around Thunderbolt 5 and AV1 decode support, might see tangible improvements that justify the cost. Still, for the vast majority of users, especially those in video production, app development, or general pro workflows, the 2023 ‌Mac Studio‌ remains more than sufficient for the foreseeable future, making the 2025 upgrade more of a luxury than a necessity.



The 2022 and 2023 ‌Mac Studio‌ models are still very much worth buying, especially if found refurbished or second-hand at a good price. Both models offer excellent performance that remains highly competitive even in 2025, with the ‌M1 Ultra‌ and ‌M2‌ Ultra still delivering substantial CPU and GPU power, high memory bandwidth, and dedicated media engines that easily handle demanding tasks like video editing, music production, 3D rendering, and software development. While they lack newer features like Thunderbolt 5, hardware-accelerated ray tracing, or the enhanced Neural Engine performance found in the 2025 models, those are largely beneficial only to users with very specific, future-facing workloads. For most professionals and power users, especially those upgrading from Intel Macs or base M1 systems, the 2022 and 2023 models remain an outstanding value—and often represent the best balance between performance and cost when purchased refurbished or pre-owned.Related Roundup: Mac StudioBuyer's Guide: Mac Studio (Buy Now)Related Forum: Mac StudioThis article, 'Mac Studio Buyer's Guide: All Models Compared' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

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New Brisbane stadium to replace Gabba as venue for Olympics, cricket, AFL
Australia
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Monday, March 31, 2025 
In decision announced by Queensland Premier David Crisafulli on Tuesday, Brisbane's The Gabba stadium is now scheduled to be replaced by a new stadium located on the north side of the Brisbane River. The yet to be named stadium is due to be the main stadium for the 2032 Olympics as well as international cricket and top level Australian rules football, both currently hosted at the Gabba.
Queensland Cricket, Chief Executive Officer, Terry Svenson welcomed the decision of the state government. "Queensland Cricket congratulates the Queensland Government on its decision to invest in the State's future, with a world-class stadium that will be a centrepiece of Brisbane for 2032 and beyond," Svenson said. "The Gabba has been wonderful venue for cricket for many years and has provided fans and players with countless memories – however the challenges the stadium faces are well documented, and we need to look to the future. There is now the opportunity for Queensland to attract the world's best cricket events, such as ICC events, men's and women's Ashes Series, the Border-Gavaskar Trophy series between Australia and India, as well has hosting the BBL and WBBL in a new purpose-built stadium."
The Brisbane Lions are the Australian Football League premiers. Their CEO Greg Swann was equally as welcoming. "The Gabba has been a great home for the past 30 years, but the city has outgrown it, the Lions have outgrown it, and the venue is reaching its end of life," Swann said.
"The Olympics and Paralympics presents an opportunity to deliver a venue that will serve the City and State's growing population, not just for the Games, but for the next 50 years. Between now and the Olympics nearly 4 million Queensland sports fans will visit the Gabba for either a Lions or cricket match, with each event creating job and economic opportunities and ensuring our local events industry is equipped and skilled to deliver the Games. We need all stakeholders to unite behind 2032 so we can get on with delivering the venues needed to host a great Games and critical infrastructure for decades to come."
Former Queensland Premier Campbell Newman was amongst a group that opposed the potential loss of green space at the Victoria Park site. “It is not only the stadium, but now we’re getting the swimmers talking about putting a swimming venue in the park as well. And this is what happens. These people really have to look at their own words,” Newman told Fox Sports News. “One minute they’re saying it’s only going to take up x-percent of the Park. The next minute, within a few breaths, they’re talking about putting the swimming in there as well. And that’s how it goes (and soon) you have no park.”
Those opposed to the new stadium site seem likely to challenge the decision in court according to Fox Sports News.





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Sources[edit]
"Years of speculation ends with location for 2032 Olympics stadium finally revealed" — 7News Australia, March 25, 2025
Jack McKay and Claudia Williams. "New Brisbane stadium to be built at Victoria Park for 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games" — ABC News, March 25, 2025
Courtney Walsh. "2032 stadium call made as QLD Premier ‘sorry’ for Gabba backflip in Olympic venues reveal" — Fox Sports News, March 25, 2025





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US prosecutors pursue death penalty for Luigi Mangione, suspect in 2024 killing of healthcare CEO
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Wednesday, April 2, 2025 
File illustration of a court gavel. Credit:Quince media
On Tuesday, US Attorney General Pam Bondi made a statement announcing that she had advised prosecutors to pursue the death penalty against Luigi Mangione, the suspect in the shooting and killing of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson in December 2024. She was quoted saying: "Luigi Mangione's murder of Brian Thompson — an innocent man and father of two young children — was a premeditated, cold-blooded assassination that shocked America."
Mangione, 26, was arrested in Altoona, Pennsylvania in on December 9 after he was implicated in Thompson's death outside a hotel in Manhattan. On December 4, the CEO arrived there to attend a shareholder meeting, and he was shot by a masked gunman. After the incident, some health insurance employers opted for remote work and virtual shareholder meetings due to safety concerns.
Police arrested Mangione five days later in Altoona, Pennsylvania, about 230 miles from New York. They report that he had a ghost gun and anti-health-insurance writings with him at the time.
Mangione awaits trial at the Metropolitan Detention Center, a New York facility located in Brooklyn, and he continues to deny the state charges, for which the maximum penalty under state law is life in prison without the possibility of parole. The state of New York has charged him with first-degree murder, murder as terrorism, and nine other offenses.
Mangione has not yet entered a plea for the charges on the federal level. These charges include murder through use of a firearm and interstate stalking, which make Mangione legally elegible for the death penalty.
Mangione's lawyer, Karen Friedman Agnifilo, responded to Bondi's statement announcing intent to seek the death penalty, saying: "the Justice Department has moved from the dysfunctional to the barbaric."

Sources[edit]
Brandon Drenon. "US prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione" — BBC News, April 1, 2025
Michael R. Sisak and Alanna Durkin Richer. "Federal prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione in UnitedHealthcare CEO’s killing" — AP News, April 1, 2025





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A Lawyer Who Helped the Kushners Crack Down on Poor Tenants Now Helps Renters Fight Big Landlords
by Alec MacGillis




ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.











The first time I saw Andrew Rabinowitz, it was in April 2017 at Baltimore District Court, where he was representing a property management company owned by the family of Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law. That day, the company had three cases against tenants at Dutch Village, one of the many large apartment complexes the Kushner Companies owned in the Baltimore area.

One tenant was a Morgan State University student facing struggles typical of residents in the Kushner complexes. She had given notice that she was moving at the end of March, having tired of the perpetually clogged toilet and the ceiling leak in her closet. But when she paid March rent via the automated system tenants had to use, the money somehow ended up with an adjacent Kushner complex, and the company started eviction proceedings — even though she had already signaled her intent to leave a few weeks later.

A sheriff’s deputy changed the locks on her door when she was out of town, preventing her from moving her things out. She got her keys back, but by then she no longer had access to a moving truck. The company was also after her for April’s rent, despite the fact that it had physically barred her from being able to move before April.

In court, Rabinowitz, a 33-year-old in a jacket and tie, spoke to the judge in a polished, even-keeled tone, in contrast to the student, who grew more agitated as the hearing went on. The judge sided with Rabinowitz, ordering the student to pay $471.23 for part of April’s rent.

When I approached Rabinowitz as he was leaving the courthouse, to ask about the company’s aggressive approach, he looked startled. “What’s the article regarding?” he said. “I’m not inclined to give a statement.”

The next day, he was back in court to defend the company against the student’s criminal complaint over the unfounded eviction. This time, he offered a deal: He agreed to let her stay, rent-free, until the end of May to give her time to move out, as long as she paid for April. Afterward, she asked Rabinowitz if he could make sure that the hot water would be turned back on. “I’m just the attorney,” he demurred. (The hot water stayed off.)

The next time I saw Rabinowitz in court was in February, almost eight years later. Kushner’s father-in-law was back in the White House. But Rabinowitz’s situation had changed. He was no longer demanding payment from beleaguered tenants. Instead, he was defending them.



I had learned of his dramatic career shift when I ran into him once in downtown Baltimore. But I needed to see it to believe it. So I tracked him down one midday at the Landlord and Tenant Branch of the District of Columbia Courts, where he now spends his days. As I spotted him, he was in a hallway speaking to a fretful older man who was seeking assistance. “Give me four minutes. Let me just go check and see if I can serve you,” Rabinowitz said, before ducking into the office of his new employer, Rising for Justice, a nonprofit that provides free legal representation to low-income tenants facing eviction.

A moment later, after attending to the man, Rabinowitz came over to say hello. He still wore a tie, but now had long hair to go along with it. He was looking far less anxious than he had when I approached him back at the Baltimore courthouse. In fact, he was positively glowing.

So much has changed in this country and the world since 2017 — much of it, arguably, not for the better. I wanted to know: What had happened with Rabinowitz?


American culture is rife with glamorous depictions of high-stakes, high-paying Big Law firms, from “L.A. Law” to “Michael Clayton” to “Suits.” But there is a humbler realm more typically glimpsed via highway billboards and subway ads. This is the level at which millions of people encounter the justice system, for better or worse.

And this is the corner through which Rabinowitz entered the profession. He grew up in Ellicott City, Maryland, outside Baltimore. His mother was dean of admissions at the University of Maryland School of Nursing; his father was chief of social work at the Armed Forces Retirement Home in Washington. He attended Frostburg State University, in western Maryland. Interested in the law, he spent a couple years as a paralegal before heading to law school at Barry University in Orlando, Florida.

His aspiration was to become a criminal defense attorney, but the job he found after getting his degree was with Barry Glazer, a colorful Baltimore personal injury lawyer known for attention-getting ads. One script went like this: “I am sick and tired of these insurance companies telling you what good neighbors they are and how you’re in such good hands. If your car is totaled and you owe more than it’s worth, they give you the lesser amount and you continue to pay a finance company the difference. Don’t pee on my leg and tell me it’s raining.” Under pressure from the Bar Association, Glazer changed “pee” to “urinate.”

It was an eye-opening experience, the first time Rabinowitz had come into regular contact with people on the lower rungs of the social ladder — people with big problems but unable to afford big firms. He left after a couple years for a small defense practice because he wanted to pursue his original aspiration. This proved disappointing. Criminal law, he found, turned out to be less a stirring quest for justice and more an exercise in squeezing fees out of poor clients in desperate circumstances.

Rabinowitz started looking around again, in 2015, and joined Jeffrey Tapper, whose small firm in the Baltimore suburb of Owings Mills specialized in representing landlords large and small as they pursued tenants.

At first, Rabinowitz liked the work. Despite his natural introversion, he had come to enjoy being in court, in front of a judge. And in this new job, he was in court a lot — as many as 10 hearings per day.

He prided himself on being able to negotiate settlements, getting landlords to accept less than what they believed they were owed and working out payment plans with tenants. This was what he recalled of the case where I had first met him — that he had been able to work out a deal with the college student to give her an extra month to move out of the Kushner unit.

He even gave some tenants his phone number, urging them to call if they ended up falling behind again, so they could work something out before it landed them back in court. He wasn’t really sure what to think when, one day, he heard a judge say to a tenant, “Step into the hallway with Mr. Rabinowitz. He’s the fairest debt collector in town.”


To many people, “fairest debt collector” sounds about as noble as “kindest executioner.” But the label was apt. A couple of times, he appeared opposite Joe Mack, a tenant’s rights attorney whom he had gone to camp with as a kid. Mack recalled Rabinowitz persuading a judge that Mack’s client had failed to provide enough notice before breaking a lease and thus owed the landlord a sizable sum. Making the loss easier to take, Mack said, was that Rabinowitz had been respectful in the courtroom. “I can imagine,” Mack added, “that some other things he was doing might have been rougher.”

My eventual 2017 article laid bare the harsher reality of many of the cases involving the Kushner complexes. The company pursued one woman for several years for about $3,000, eventually having her wages garnished, even though she had received written permission to break her lease. A second woman ended up in court after moving out from a unit with maggots coming out of the living-room carpet and raw sewage flowing out of the kitchen sink. Yet another was pursued for about $4,000 even though she had written permission to move out of a unit with black mold.

After the article appeared, the Maryland attorney general filed suit against the Kushner company, which in 2022 settled with the state for $3.25 million, though the company did not acknowledge wrongdoing. In March, a group of former tenants won class-action status in their own lawsuit against the company. The company, which denied wrongdoing in the class-action case, did not respond to a request for an interview for this article. Over the years, the company has sold most of the properties ProPublica originally reported on.

Back in 2017, a company executive had responded to questions by saying that it had a “fiduciary obligation” to its investment partners to collect as much revenue as possible from tenants, and that its practices in doing so were “consistent with industry standards.”

Rabinowitz offers a similar defense. The Kushner approach was not noticeably different from other big landlords, he said: “They were all the same.” He had no particular feelings for the company itself, and he had never actually met Kushner or any other executives. “They’re so disconnected from the property,” Rabinowitz told me. “It’s just money for them.” But he was protective of his boss, Tapper, who he felt had treated him fairly. (Tapper died last year.)

Rabinowitz himself had not set foot inside the Kushner complexes. The sorts of poor upkeep described in the article did not figure much in the cases, he said. “I know most people wouldn’t want to live in housing like that,” he said, “but I remember driving past those communities and I don’t remember being like, ‘Those were horrible places.’”

He insists he did not regret his years working for the Kushners and other landlords. There was a system in place, and he had played a part in that system. “I honestly felt that if every attorney could have had the same philosophy and treated people fair and put people in the position to take control of their life,” he said, “then debt collectors wouldn’t be such bad people. They’d be assistants to people paying off their debts.”

Still, the article instilled an unease that only grew with time. He was almost always facing off against people who lacked their own attorney, in a state with laws that were unusually favorable to landlords. “It was like a heavyweight sparring featherweights over and over again,” he said. “That’s just not satisfying.”

His longtime partner started to notice that he was agitated on nights before trials; sometimes he’d even mutter things like “objection!” in his sleep. “She could tell my mind was in court, constantly,” he said. To try and escape the burden, he went whitewater kayaking on weekends.

Around this time, his parents were nearing retirement. Accolades poured in from people they had served over the years, at the nursing schools and the retirement home. One man was wheeled in on his hospital bed to thank Rabinowitz’s father. “When I saw all the people who came out, I realized they had so much impact on so many people’s lives,” Rabinowitz said. He paused. “And I’m just putting money into rich people’s pockets.”

Then came the coronavirus pandemic. Maryland suspended evictions in March 2020, and, when the moratorium ended in 2021, it passed a law establishing (and funding) the right to an attorney for any tenant facing eviction.

Rabinowitz saw his chance. He applied for an entry-level opening in the Baltimore County office of Maryland Legal Aid. The organization recognized his experience and urged him to apply to be the supervisor of a staff of 20 in its newly expanded Baltimore City housing office. The job came with a “fairly significant” drop in pay, but he took it.

It wasn’t easy telling Tapper, who had recently offered to make him a partner in the firm before he retired. But Tapper understood. “I went to the enemy, on the one hand,” Rabinowitz said. “On the other hand, he was proud.”


The transition was awkward at first. Rabinowitz and his new colleagues at Legal Aid were occasionally facing off against a former colleague. And he could tell that some of his new colleagues were initially wary. After all, while many lawyers move from public-service roles to private practice, precious few head in the other direction. “People wanted to know if I was for real,” he said.

A few years later, Rabinowitz made his way to Rising for Justice, as director of the organization’s Tenant Justice Program. He now oversees four staff attorneys and a paralegal while supervising about nine law students from Georgetown University and the University of the District of Columbia.

It means a near-daily rail commute from Baltimore. But he likes working in the Washington court, which has such a nonconfrontational vibe that it makes do without bailiffs. The organization’s clients are grateful for the assistance, and he likes that it includes a social-service branch to help people find nonlegal help.

The law students assigned to him were surprised when they learned that their supervisor had once been on the other side. But they said it came in handy, too. “We get very emotional. It’s easy to get frustrated for your clients and wrapped up and involved,” said Savannah Myers, a Georgetown student, “and Drew has the unique perspective to say, ‘OK, well, this is what’s happening on your end, here’s probably what’s happening on the other end and here’s how you can proceed in the best way to help your client within the legal system.’”

One recent day, I watched in court as an older Ethiopian woman faced off against a landlord who was demanding back rent that she owed after having lost her job. The woman, who was using a walker, had an interpreter to assist her but no attorney. She tried to argue that the debt should be lowered because of a broken air conditioner and a problem with vermin in the rental.

After the judge, Sherry Trafford, ordered her to make monthly payments of $2,989 to the landlord, she also gently suggested that she seek out help from Rising for Justice in advance of the next hearing on her case.

“Where are they?” said the woman.

“It’s at the end of this hallway,” said Trafford.

The woman made her way slowly down, and it so happened that the person manning the intake desk at that moment was Andrew Rabinowitz. He welcomed her. “Do you have some court paperwork?” he asked through the interpreter, and then came back with a law student to assist her.

Later, Rabinowitz told me that it was poor housing conditions like the ones the woman was dealing with that were his ultimate goad these days. “That’s what motivates me,” he said. “I want people to have clean housing like mine.” Why had those conditions not registered so much with him back when he was on the other side? “I guess that stuff didn’t really get to me,” he said.

I was struck again by Rabinowitz’s reluctance to judge his earlier self. But there was no obscuring one effect of his new role. “I sleep well,” he said.

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Starmer says UK has ‘range of levers’ as he promises to respond to Trump tariffs with ‘cool and calm heads’ – UK politics live
Prime minister says the UK government is ‘prepared’ and would not agree economic deal with US if he does not think it is good for UKJonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, has argued that people interpreting the Trump tariff announcements as some sort of Brexit bonus are missing the point.The Conservative party, and some Tory papers, have claimed that the announcement vindicates Brexit, because the tariffs imposed on the UK are lower than the tariffs imposed on the EU. (See 9.33am.)I think anyone trying to use this to fight the kind of perennial historical political debates in the UK has missed the point.This is … a really significant change to how the global trading system operates and the US’s role within it.No, I want those tariffs removed. I want them removed in terms of the 10% that’s been announced. I want them removed on steel and aluminium. I don’t think there is an argument, a strong argument, for those being in place …I want not only to remove what has been announced so far, but to strengthen that relationship. I want more UK businesses with stronger market access to all parts of the US. That’s the prize on offer.What I am committed to – and what I genuinely believe we can deliver – is a position where not only are we not in a position where we’ve got to think about job losses or about the loss of exports, but we can strengthen that relationship. That is what we’re committed to doing. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for April 3, #1384
Today's Wordle No. 1,384 for April 3 has a barnyard connections. Here's the answer.

CNET News
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Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for April 3, #662
The purple category does it again for Connections for April 3, No. 662. Here are the answers.

CNET News
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Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for April 3, #192
Here are the hints and answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, No. 192, for Thursday, April 3.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Will Trump's latest tariffs launch a global trade war?
Businesses and governments around the world are trying to make sense of their new reality as Donald Trump reveals another round of US tariffs. Contingency plans and retaliation are being openly discussed.

Russia Today News
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Zelensky playing ‘dangerous game’ with Trump – Moscow

BBC UK News
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Trump tariffs 'deeply regrettable' minister says
Economy Minister Caoimhe Archibald says a trade war will "only fuel inflation and risk recession".

Mail Online
Open 
Former Olympic athlete on FBI most-wanted list after being accused of attempted murder and convicted for drug trafficking
A former Olympic athlete is on the FBI 's most-wanted list after having previously been convicted for an attempt to deal cocaine. finished in 24th place out of 32 competitors at the 2002 Winter Olympics.

BBC World News
Open 
UK set to host 2035 Women's World Cup as only 'valid' bid
The UK is set to host the 2035 Women's World Cup as the sole "valid" bidder for the tournament, Fifa president Gianni Infantino says.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Tarkowski should have seen red, says referee body
BBC Sport is told by the Premier League's refereeing body that James Tarkowski should have been sent off for his tackle on Alexis Mac Allister during Everton's defeat at Liverpool.

Mail Online
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Say goodbye to the plastic bags! Major UK airport completely scraps 100ml liquid rule in favour of major change
Passengers will find new security rules at one of the UK's biggest airports in time for the Easter holidays.

Mail Online
Open 
Grand Designs viewers slam couple for 'tone deaf' comments about their bespoke kitchen in their £900,000 home
In last night's episode of the Channel 4 show, HR director Sarah and technology director Pip were faced with the mammoth task of transforming an old barn in Bedfordshire.

Mail Online
Open 
Conor McGregor hits out at Donald Trump's tariffs just weeks after visiting the US President at the White House
McGregor visited Trump as the White House last month and began donning a 'Make Ireland Great Again' cap - similar to Trump's famous red cap with the same slogan but for America.

Mail Online
Open 
BAFTA-winning TV star dies aged 97 as Michael Palin leads the tributes
The Bergerac actor had a hugely-successful TV career spanning more than six decades and Michael Palin has led the stars in paying tribute to the acting great.

Mail Online
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Terrifying moment Easyjet plane aborts landing seconds from the runway and lurches to the right during storm on holiday island
Dramatic footage shows the Airbus A320 battling through a storm on its approach to Madeira airport as bystanders watch on with bated breath.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Parasites should get more fame’: the nominees for world’s finest invertebrate – podcast
Invertebrates don’t get the attention lavished on cute pets or apex predators, but these unsung heroes are some of the most impressive and resilient creatures on the planet. So when the Guardian opened its poll to find the world’s finest invertebrate, readers got in touch in their droves. A dazzling array of nominations have flown in for insects, arachnids, snails, crustaceans, corals and many more obscure creatures. Patrick Barkham tells Madeleine Finlay why these tiny creatures deserve more recognition, and three readers, Sandy, Nina and Russell, make the case for their favourites.And you can vote for your favourite hereInvertebrate of the year 2025: vote for your favouriteSupport the Guardian: theguardian.com/sciencepod Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Floppy disks and vaccine cards: exhibition tells tale of privacy rights in UK
Forty items on display in Manchester, collated by information commissioner, chart evolution of personal data usage over 40 yearsForty years ago, it would take a four-drawer filing cabinet to store 10,000 documents. You would need 736 floppy disks to hold those same files; now it takes up no physical space at all to store 10,000 documents on the cloud.As data storage has evolved, so too has the whole information landscape, and with it the challenges of storing, transferring and appropriately using people’s personal data. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Stephen A Smith v LeBron James turns NBA’s narrator into a main character
ESPN’s biggest name has never been shy about giving his opinion. But now he is part of the drama he so often comments onWho would win in a fight between LeBron James and Stephen A Smith is a question only Stephen A Smith would think to ask. There has been little avoiding the question since the Los Angeles Lakers superstar confronted ESPN’s No 1 personality during a recent game against the New York Knicks. The player was venting his displeasure at Smith for his pointed comments about James’s eldest son, and Lakers teammate, Bronny – the 55th pick in last year’s NBA draft.James approached Smith, a courtside spectator for the game, and appeared to tell him to “keep my son out of this shit” – a callback to Smith questioning whether Bronny deserved to be on a league roster. Smith went on TV the next day to make clear that he wasn’t actually picking on Bronny, the player; he was really calling out LeBron as a bad father for setting a high bar for his son’s pro career. Smith would come back to this point often while making the media rounds after signing a $100m ESPN extension. That should have been the end of the argument – but then last week LeBron sat down with Pat McAfee, whose show follows Smith’s on ESPN, and dismissed Smith as an ice cream-bingeing, couch-bound fanboy. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
James Tarkowski should have been sent off against Liverpool, admits PGMOL
Everton defender booked for challenge on Mac AllisterVAR should have recommended review of tackleThe referees’ body, PGMOL, has acknowledged that Everton’s James Tarkowski should have been sent off in defeat at Liverpool on Wednesday. The defender was only cautioned for an early reckless challenge on Alexis Mac Allister, described as a “Merseyside derby tackle of old”.The referee, Sam Barrott, gave Tarkowski a yellow card and David Moyes conceded the defender was fortunate to stay on the pitch. The PGMOL believes the VAR, Paul Tierney, should have recommended a review. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Yes, we should celebrate Adolescence – but it comes at a cost to the UK TV industry | Jane Martinson
This vital drama has British actors, a British writer, but Netflix funding. Here’s why that’s a huge problemEveryone is talking about Adolescence, the television drama focused on toxic masculinity that has triggered a continuing social and political debate. But only a handful of people are talking about what the hit drama says about the real-time crisis unfolding in the British television industry – and that needs discussion too.Adolescence is everything public service broadcasting should be: hard-hitting programming featuring the kind of people often ignored in TV drama – in this case, white working-class families in the north – discussed at the school gate and in parliament. After its British writer, Jack Thorne, met Keir Starmer in Downing Street, it was revealed that Adolescence was to be rolled out for free across all UK secondary schools. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘We introduced avocado to the high street!’ How Pret conquered London – and began eyeing the rest of the world
The sandwich chain now has 274 branches in the capital. How did it grow so huge – and can anything stop it getting even bigger?At 93-95 Victoria Street, Westminster, a blue plaque marks a piece of London history: the first ever branch of Pret a Manger opened on this spot on 22 July 1986. Nearly 40 years later, it is still going strong.It’s a nice story – but it’s not the whole story. Look closer and the plaque states that the first Pret sandwich shop opened “near here”. In fact, it was down the road, at 75b, now a branch of Toni & Guy. Except … that wasn’t the first shop, either. The original Pret opened two years earlier and five miles to the north, in Hampstead. It went bust after a year and the founder, Jeffrey Hyman, sold the name, branding and logo to Julian Metcalfe and Sinclair Beecham, who reopened in Westminster. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer says UK has ‘range of levers’ as he promises to respond to Trump tariffs with ‘cool and calm heads’ – UK politics live
Prime minister says the UK government is ‘prepared’ and would not agree economic deal with US if he does not think it is good for UKKeir Starmer said this morning that he would respond calmly to the US tariff announcements, and that he would not be rushed into a quick decision about retaliation. (See 9.06am.)Speaking to Sky News this morning, Jonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, said that business leaders were telling government not to overreact. He said:We in the UK will take any action we need to give ourselves the tools that we need to respond to announcements of this kind …Whilst we have a chance of making the relationship between the UK and the US even stronger than it is, the message I get very strongly from businesses [is] ‘remain at the table, don’t overreact’.The impact on the automotive sector of that particular tariff is one of our principal concerns.People will know companies, great British brands, JLR, BMW, Aston Martin, have substantial exports to the US, and that’s a real issue. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
Stop the presses, the best Pokémon games ever are getting Nintendo Switch 2 releases – alongside several other GameCube titles

TechRadar News
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Nintendo is charging people for its Welcome Tour interactive manual, and all the Switch 2 excitement has been drained from my body

TechRadar News
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Google confirms Gemini Live's next big AI upgrade will be widely available on Android – with one catch

TechRadar News
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5 reasons VPNs are obsolete and what businesses should use instead

TechRadar News
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Microsoft 50th Anniversary Copilot Event live – our favorite Windows, Surface and Xbox memories and what we expect to see

Digital Trends
Open 
Starfish-inspired patch solves key issues for wearable heart sensors
A heart rate device inspired by Starfish can potentially solve the accuracy problems, detect serious cardiac issues, and solve a crucial power problem, too.

Digital Trends
Open 
You can now surf the web for sources with NotebookLM
Google's NotebookLM has added a source search feature that lets you expand your notebooks with new information from the internet.

Mirror F1
Open 
Christian Horner details decision to axe Liam Lawson after Red Bull left 'very concerned'
Red Bull dropped Liam Lawson after just two races of the new Formula 1 season and have called up the more experienced Yuki Tsunoda to drive in his place at the Japanese Grand Prix

Mirror F1
Open 
Lewis Hamilton reminded by Ferrari 'drivers come and go' after his request was rejected
Lewis Hamilton's record-breaking move to Ferrari has already provided us with one of the most iconic images in Formula One history - but things could have been different

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Gabriele Bartolini: CNPG Recipe 17 - PostgreSQL In-Place Major Upgrades
CloudNativePG 1.26 introduces one of its most anticipated features:
declarative in-place major upgrades for PostgreSQL using pg_upgrade. This
new approach allows you to upgrade PostgreSQL clusters by simply modifying the
imageName in their configuration—just like a minor version update. While it
requires brief downtime, it significantly reduces operational overhead, making
it ideal for managing large fleets of PostgreSQL databases in Kubernetes.
In this article, I will explore how it works, its benefits and limitations,
and cover an upgrade of a 2.2TB database.

Mail Online
Open 
Max Verstappen breaks silence on liking controversial Instagram post suggesting Christian Horner's ruthless axeing of Liam Lawson is 'bullying'
HENRY CLARK IN JAPAN: Mail Sport reported last week that Verstappen was 'not happy' with the team's call to switch Lawson with Yuki Tsunoda ahead of this weekend's Japanese Grand Prix.

Mail Online
Open 
Family feared for their lives when Land Rover Defender burst into flames on country road as mother yelled at children: 'Run as fast as you can!'
Caroline Rodda and her family were left fearing for their lives when their Land Rover suddenly 'exploded' into flames on a country road as they shouted at the children to 'run as fast as you can'.

Mail Online
Open 
All the hits! Moment furious concert-goer yanks a woman's ponytail and strikes her for blocking her view with her dancing
The clash took place during a performance by Ukrainian singer Dmytro Volkanov on Monday night in the war-torn nation's October Palace venue in the capital city.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
What you need to know after announcement
The BBC's Michelle Fleury breaks down what the import taxes mean for the US and countries around the world.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Watch: Key moments from Trump's 'Liberation Day' speech
The US president said universal 10% tariffs would go into effect for all countries starting 5 April.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Global stocks slide as Trump tariffs hit markets
European shares open lower after falls in Asia, while the gold price hits another record high.

BBC Formula One
Open 
Hamilton has 'absolute 100% faith' in Ferrari
Lewis Hamilton says he has "absolute 100% faith" in Ferrari despite their difficult start to the season.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Myanmar earthquake death toll passes 3,000
The toll from the deadly earthquake is expected to continue to climb as reports from hard-to-reach areas come in. Meanwhile, Myanmar's junta chief received a rare invite to a regional summit in Thailand.

Mail Online
Open 
Russian nuclear bomber crashes and explodes near village
The crash, close to the tiny village of Buret, caused a power outage in the area with the fire and smoke from the wreck visible from other nearby villages.

Mail Online
Open 
Adolescence star Owen Cooper, 15, lifts the lid on his 'mad' return to school after taking on lead role in hit Netflix show
The 15-year-old break-out star was just 13 when he landed the role of Jamie Miller, a schoolboy accused of brutally murdering a female classmate.

Mail Online
Open 
'Idiotic' US tourist is arrested for sailing to remote island and leaving a can of Coke for the world's most isolated tribe to try - 'which could have killed them all'
Mykhailo Viktorovych Polyakov, 24, was arrested in the India's Andaman and Nicobar Islands after he allegedly visited a prohibited tribal reserve on North Sentinel Island without authorization.

Mail Online
Open 
West Ham United co-owner David Gold left staggering amount of money in his will as devastating twist is revealed by documents released following his death
Business tycoon David, who owed much of his wealth to soft porn and lingerie before becoming a famous face in football, died after a short illness in January 2023, aged 86.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Will Trump’s tariffs start a global trade war?
And how will the UK be affected?

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Deaths of British couple in France treated as murder-suicide
The bodies of Andrew and Dawn Searle, who previously lived in East Lothian, were found at their home near Toulouse.

Russia Today News
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Putin’s envoy confirms US visit

BBC UK News
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How Trump's tariffs might affect you and your money
The UK has been hit with 10% tariffs by the US, but there is uncertainty as to the impact of them.

Mail Online
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Ireland warned to brace for MORE Trump tariffs on top of 20% EU penalty - but could 10% Northern Ireland profit from post-Brexit special status?
Simon Harris said it is the Irish Government's 'working assumption' that the White House will launch a further attack aimed specifically at the pharmaceuticals industry.

Mail Online
Open 
Jane Moore, 62, makes big revelation about her sexuality as GK Barry asks the presenter 'have you ever dipped your toes in the lesbian pool?' - after divorce from husband of 20 years
GK Barry wasted no time in asking Jane Moore some more personal questions as they dived into a discussion about sexuality on Wednesday. 

Mail Online
Open 
3406779Adolescence star Owen Cooper, 15, lifts the lid on his 'mad' return to school after taking on lead role in hit Netflix show
The 15-year-old break-out star was just 13 when he landed the role of Jamie Miller, a schoolboy accused of brutally murdering a female classmate.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘How did this ever get made?’ Gen Z is falling in love (and hate) with Glee
A decade after the finale, new fans are flocking to Glee, causing its songs to shoot up the charts. The internet’s ablaze with TikTok dance homages, Reddit threads – and tonnes of hate watchersThe year is 2009, and Glee has hit like a cultural earthquake. Every week, millions of people around the world tune in to watch a group of American high school misfits belt out musical theatre and pop hits, turning show choir into mainstream entertainment. The cast’s cover of Journey’s Don’t Stop Believin’ becomes an anthem, spending 37 weeks in the UK charts, catapulting its young stars to overnight fame. Glee clubs start in schools across the US and beyond, and Ryan Murphy’s show develops a devoted fanbase – myself included – who proudly call ourselves Gleeks. Online, we dissect every episode on Tumblr, trade theories and wear our fandom, plus the merch we bought to prove it, as a badge of honour.But by the time Glee came to a close in 2015, all its magic had faded. The Guardian reported that “few will mourn its passing” as the show’s last season premiered. A string of increasingly absurd storylines and poor song choices left a dwindling viewership and even the most diehard fans drifting away. Or so we thought – because 10 years after its finale, the show is back with a vengeance. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK poised to host 2035 Women’s World Cup and US lands 2031 tournament
Fifa president Infantino says UK is the ‘one valid bid’US may host in 2031 alongside other Concacaf nationsThe United Kingdom appears certain to host the 2035 Women’s World Cup after Gianni Infantino, the Fifa president, announced it is the sole bidder for the tournament.Infantino confirmed in an address to Uefa’s annual congress in Belgrade that the UK had a clear path to staging the event. He also named the USA, probably alongside other Concacaf members, as the only candidate for the 2031 edition. Fifa intends to expand the Women’s World Cup to 48 teams, mirroring the new look of the men’s competition, from 2031. Concacaf covers North and Central America and the Caribbean. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer says UK has ‘range of levers’ as he promises to respond to Trump tariffs with ‘cool and calm heads’ – UK politics live
Prime minister says the UK government is ‘prepared’ and would not agree economic deal with US if he does not think it is good for UKJonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, told BBC Breakfast this morning that the 10% tariff on UK exports to the US would not be additional to the 25% tariff already imposed on British (and all other) car exports to the US. “As we understand it, those tariffs are not additive,” he said.But he accepted the tariffs were particularly difficult for the car industry.The impact on the automotive sector of that particular tariff is one of our principal concerns.People will know companies, great British brands, JLR, BMW, Aston Martin, have substantial exports to the US, and that’s a real issue.Dozens and dozens of countries have the same 10% tariffs on all goods and 25% on cars, just the same as us – from Costa Rica to Colombia, from Peru to Paraguay. So we’re not getting any special deal or special treatment.These tariffs are based on essentially reciprocation of what America thinks they’re being charged by other countries.This is disappointing news which will worry working families across the country.Labour failed to negotiate with President Trump’s team for too many months after the election, failed to keep our experienced top trade negotiator, and failed to get a deal to avoid the imposition of these tariffs by our closest trading partner.The silver lining is that Brexit – which Labour ministers voted against no less than 48 times – means that we face far lower tariffs than the EU: a Brexit dividend that will have protected thousands of British jobs and businesses. Continue reading...

UK Government News
Open 
Government kickstarts £100 million fusion investment
A first of its kind partnership between the government and private sector could see over £100 million invested into the UK’s growing fusion energy industry.

UK Government News
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Regulators urge donors to support registered charities to help earthquake efforts in Myanmar
The Charity Commission for England and Wales and the Fundraising Regulator offer advice on giving safely when looking to support the international aid effort.

UK Government News
Open 
Andrew Duff's term on UK Government Investments Board extended for 12 months
HM Treasury has today (3 April) announced the extension of Andrew Duff’s term as Senior Independent Director on the UK Government Investments (UKGI) Board for 12 months, from July 2025 to July 2026.  

UK Government News
Open 
Birmingham City Council: Ministerial response to the Commissioners’ second report
Ministerial response from the Minister for Local Government and English Devolution, Jim McMahon OBE MP, to Max Caller CBE, Lead Commissioner at Birmingham City Council.

Wired Top Stories
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Want to Look at Your Phone Less? Just Cover Your Screen
An art studio hopes its concept for a phone case that can flip around to cover most of your screen will help cure your screen addiction.

Mail Online
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The Repair Shop fans 'in tears' as family are finally 'brought peace' by restoration with heartbreaking twist
Brother and sister duo Zaff and Nasari became emotional as their restoration was unveiled, both tearing up.

Mail Online
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Escape To The Country buyer bursts into tears as panicked BBC host urges husband to 'give her a hug' after shocking reveal at mystery property
The most recent episode of the BBC show saw Sonali Shah help project manager John and his wife Liz find their dream home in the idyllic countryside of Argyll and Bute, Scotland.

Mail Online
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Britain floats joint plan with Europe to fund 'large-scale rearmament' across the continent as part of 'coalition of the willing' amid growing fears of Russia conflict
Treasury officials have drawn up plans for a fund that would allow nations to borrow money for defence spending at favourable rates and purchase weapons for a common stockpile

Mail Online
Open 
Mickey Rourke's astronomical payday for Celebrity Big Brother is 'revealed' as he is lauded as show's most 'impressive' sign-up yet
The 80s action star, 72, was the final star to sign up for the hotly-anticipated reality TV show, which is coming to screens on April 7 for just over two weeks until April 25.

The Register
Open 
UK government told to get a grip on £23B tech spend
Former official also points to processes driving up the cost of IT investment The UK government does not have a clear picture of what it is spending on digital technology, and its approach to buying associated services and products drives up the cost of investment, MPs have heard.…

TechRadar Reviews
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A Minecraft Movie isn't the wildly creative blockbuster videogame film adaptation I was hoping for

TechRadar Reviews
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I’ve shot hundreds of photos with the stunning Sigma BF – despite its flaws, it makes other cameras feel ordinary

TechRadar Reviews
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I test AR glasses for a living, and the RayNeo Air 3s are the ones I'd buy with my own money

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Rape, Violent Crime Explodes Even Higher In Germany; Number Of "Non-German" Suspects Up
Rape, Violent Crime Explodes Even Higher In Germany; Number Of "Non-German" Suspects Up

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Violent crime and sexual assault cases have increased in number even further in Germany, according to police statistics.



The number of “non-German” suspects has also risen by over 7 and a half percent, according to the figures seen by German newspaper Die Welt.

The statistics show that violent crime as a whole was up by 1.5 per cent in 2024, a new record high for the country.


1/ German federal crime stats for 2024 are out:
▶️ Overall violent crime up 1.5% over 2023, which itself was a 15-year high.
▶️ Homicide +.9%
▶️ Violent sex offenses +9.3%
▶️ Aggravated assault +2.4%
▶️ Robbery -3.7% https://t.co/hYxhZ76xbj
— Andrew Hammel (@AndrewHammel1) March 29, 2025
The report states that the number of murder and manslaughter cases are up by almost 1 per cent in a year, while serious sexual crimes including rape and sexual assault leading to death have risen by a whopping 9.3 per cent in 2024.


3/ ▶️ Overall crime dropped slightly, mostly owing to the German government's decision to legalize cannabis (the number of cannabis offenses dropped 53%).
▶️ Number of non-German suspects overall stable at just under 50%, 17.5% of criminal suspects are asylum-seekers.
— Andrew Hammel (@AndrewHammel1) March 29, 2025
As we have previously noted, the “non-German” suspects aspect is also misleading given that many of the “German” suspects of crimes are really foreigners who have obtained German citizenship, or they are Second or third generation migrants.

2023’s stats revealed that violent crime in Germany rocketed to a 15 year high, and 2024’s stats show that it continues to climb.



Over 41 percent of all crime suspects in Germany are foreigners, despite only representing 15 percent of the total population. Foreign migrants were also responsible for 58.5 percent of all violent crimes.



Meanwhile, the new German government coalition, which is likely to be the Christian Democrats (CDU) and the Social Democrats (SPD) is looking to ban “lies,” according to a working paper that emerged from the group “culture and media” between the two parties.

What constitutes ‘lies’ you might ask. Well, Bild newspaper received a copy of the working paper, which outlines “disinformation and fake news” as threats to democracy.

Given that anything that goes against the leftist government narrative is deemed to be ‘disinformation’, you can see where this is headed.

Another part of the paper addresses “hate and agitation.” Again, you can see where that’s heading.

As we previously highlighted, District council member Marie-Thérèse Kaiser of the AfD Party was found guilty of ‘incitement’ by a district court after she posted a link to the government’s own statistics on crimes committed by migrants, specifically rape, and asked why they are so disproportionately high.



Opposition parties on the right, including AfD, have continually argued that the data shows the urgent need for a cap on immigration, and have argued that such ‘integration’ policies are a key component of the coalition government’s race to naturalize millions of foreigners, thereby masking the truth of who is behind the crime surge.

*  *  *

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Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 03:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
ICC Blasts Hungary For Ignoring Arrest Warrant As Orban Hosts Netanyahu
ICC Blasts Hungary For Ignoring Arrest Warrant As Orban Hosts Netanyahu

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has denounced Hungary’s decision to defy its arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu after The Hague charged him with war crimes last year related to the Gaza war.

Netanyahu is set to begin a four-day visit to Hungary on Wednesday. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban made it clear he will not enforce the arrest warrant upon issuing the invitation. This despite Hungary being a founding member of the ICC.
AFP/Getty Images

This marks only Netanyahu's second international trip since the warrant was issued, and he's had to avoid Europe altogether until now. The only other trip was to the United States, where he had received a standing ovation in Congress.

Last November, when Budapest first unveiled the formal state invitation, Orban dismissed the ICC's arrest warrant as "shameful" and "absurd".

It should be noted that Hungary had also long ago declared it would never arrest Russian president Vladimir Putin should he visit the country. The conservative populist Hungarian leader had further accused The Hague of "interfering in an ongoing conflict for political purposes" - in reference to Israel's Gaza operations.

ICC court spokesman Fadi El Abdallah in a fresh statement said that it is not for parties to the ICC "to unilaterally determine the soundness of the Court’s legal decisions." 

"Any dispute concerning the judicial functions of the Court shall be settled by the decision of the Court," he said, asserting that member nations have an obligation to carry out the rulings of the court.

The Associated Press has observed that "Members of Orbán’s government have suggested that Hungary, which became a signatory to the court in 2001, could withdraw."

Amnesty International was also among the human rights groups blasting Hungary's provocative invitation, with a spokesperson saying, "Hungary’s invitation shows contempt for international law and confirms that alleged war criminals wanted by the ICC are welcome on the streets of a European Union member state."

More anger directed at Orban as he's already unpopular among Western European leaders, and a longtime thorn in the side of EU counterparts...


It is outrageous that any European Union state would allow Netanyahu to visit without arresting him on his outstanding International Criminal Court warrant. Hungary is no exception even though Viktor Orban routinely flouts the rule of law. https://t.co/xLoxM5YeQM
— Kenneth Roth (@KenRoth) April 2, 2025
Israel's Gaza operations started again last month, and Gaza health authorities say that over 1,000 Palestinians have died since then. This brings the official number of deaths to over 50,000. However, Israel has disputed these figures, and has claimed that tens of thousands of the casualties are actually Hamas fighters.

Days ago Israel's military once again ordered the evacuation of Rafah, and emerging reports say that in Gaza City food and water are becoming scarce. Netanyahu has vowed, despite an avalanche of international criticism, to pursue Hamas until the group is eradicated and can no longer attempt to assert its rule over Gaza.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 04:15

BBC UK News
Open 
NI businesses face uncertainty after Trump tariffs
NI goods entering the US will face a 10% tariff, while those from the Republic will be hit with 20%.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Floppy disks and vaccine cards: exhibition tells tale of privacy rights in UK
Forty items on display in Manchester, collated by information commissioner, chart evolution of personal data usage over 40 yearsForty years ago, it would take a four-drawer filing cabinet to store 10,000 documents. You would need 736 floppy disks to hold those same files; now it takes up no physical space at all to store 10,000 documents on the Cloud.But as data storage has evolved, so too has the whole information landscape, and with it the challenges of storing, transferring and appropriately using people’s personal data. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
United Kingdom poised to host Women’s World Cup in 2035
Fifa president Infantino says it is the ‘one valid bid’Spain had proposed bid with Portugal and MoroccoThe United Kingdom looks almost certain to host the 2035 Women’s World Cup after Fifa’s president, Gianni Infantino, described its interest as the “one valid bid” for those finals.The football associations of England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales announced last month they would submit a joint expression of interest in hosting the finals in 10 years’ time. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Netanyahu visits Hungary as Orbán vows to defy ICC arrest warrant
Israeli prime minister begins four-day trip after Hungarian counterpart says court ruling would ‘have no effect’Benjamin Netanyahu has begun a four-day official visit to Hungary, marking the first time the Israeli prime minister has stepped foot on European soil since the international criminal court issued an arrest warrant for him over allegations of war crimes in Gaza.Hours after the ICC announced the warrants in November, Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, made it clear he would defy the court to host Netanyahu, telling reporters that he would “guarantee” the ICC’s ruling would “have no effect in Hungary”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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European stock markets join global sell-off after Trump tariff announcement – business live
Ursula von der Leyen says tariffs a ‘major blow’ to world economy after US President Trump targets allies on what he dubbed ‘liberation day’Full report: Trump announces sweeping new tariffsAnalysis: Trump’s tariffs likely to raise prices and cause chaosWhat are tariffs and why do they matter?The new US tariffs “will only create losers” with US consumers particularly hard hit, the German Automotive Industry Association (VDA), has said in a statement, calling on the EU “to act together and with the necessary force, while continuing to signal its willingness to negotiate.”The body, which represents the powerful German auto industry, said the tariffs markedthe United States’ departure from the rules-based global trade order – and thus a departure from the foundation for global value creation and corresponding growth and prosperity in many regions of the world.This is not America first; this is America alone. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Starmer says UK has ‘range of levers’ as he promises to respond to Trump tariffs with ‘cool and calm heads’ – UK politics live
Prime minister says the UK government is ‘prepared’ and would not agree economic deal with US if he does not think it is good for UKThe UK is not getting special treatment from Donald Trump, the Conservative party says.Chris Philp, the shadow home secretary, told LBC this morning that he did not accept the UK had “got off lightly”. He explained:Dozens and dozens of countries have the same 10% tariffs on all goods and 25% on cars, just the same as us – from Costa Rica to Colombia, from Peru to Paraguay. So we’re not getting any special deal or special treatment.These tariffs are based on essentially reciprocation of what America thinks they’re being charged by other countries.This is disappointing news which will worry working families across the country.Labour failed to negotiate with President Trump’s team for too many months after the election, failed to keep our experienced top trade negotiator, and failed to get a deal to avoid the imposition of these tariffs by our closest trading partner.The silver lining is that Brexit – which Labour ministers voted against no less than 48 times – means that we face far lower tariffs than the EU: a Brexit dividend that will have protected thousands of British jobs and businesses.Chin up! Whitehall officials were still trying to work out the details and small print from the U.S. late last night, but those Playbook spoke to believed that things could have been much, much worse – at least for the U.K.Hence … the early efforts from No. 10 to push the narrative that Starmer’s efforts to charm the president paid off. “We don’t want any tariffs at all, but a lower levy than others vindicates our approach­,” a Downing Street source told Playbook (and large parts of the Lobby). “The difference between 10 and 20 per cent is thousands of jobs. We will keep negotiating, keep cool and keep calm. We want to negotiate a sustainable trade deal, and of course to get tariffs lowered … we will continue with that work.”Now that’s a line: “Even the Taliban got a better deal than Starmer,” an SNP official, of all people, griped to Playbook last night as it was revealed Afghanistan is also in the 10 percent club despite “charging” the U.S. more in tariffs than the U.K. … err, if you include “currency manipulation,” “compliance hurdles” and all the rest, according to Trump’s highly suspect sandwich board figures. Continue reading...

ZDNet News
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The big VPN choice: System-wide or just in the browser? How to decide
VPNs are a must for privacy, but should you protect your whole system or just use a VPN in your browser? Here's the difference and how to decide which option is best for you.

ZDNet News
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Rethinking technology and IT's role in the era of agentic AI and digital labor
Businesses must reinvent the IT function to adapt, benefit, and stay ahead in an age of generative and agentic AI.

Deutsche Welle
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Is Zimbabwe's political crisis likely to escalate?
Tensions inside Zimbabwe's ruling party have the potential to destabilize the southern African country. Analysts warn civil war could follow if party infighting is not resolved.

BBC World News
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Are Trump's Asia tariffs a 'full-frontal assault' on China?
There were five Asian nations in the 10 countries and territories hit with the highest tariffs.

The Guardian (UK)
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Netanyahu visits Hungary as Orbán vows to defy ICC arrest warrant
Israeli prime minister begins four-day trip after Hungarian counterpart says court ruling would ‘have no effect’Benjamin Netanyahu has begun a four-day official visit to Hungaryy, marking the first time the Israeli prime minister has stepped foot on European soil since the international criminal court issued an arrest warrant for him over allegations of war crimes in Gaza.Hours after the ICC announced the warrants in November, Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, made it clear he would defy the court to host Netanyahu, telling reporters that he would “guarantee” the ICC’s ruling would “have no effect in Hungary”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Starmer says UK has ‘range of levers’ as he promises to respond to Trump tariffs with ‘cool and calm heads’ – UK politics live
Prime minister says the UK government is ‘prepared’ and would not agree economic deal with US if he does not think it is good for UKGood morning. Today we are getting the considered UK government response to the colossal announcement from President Trump last night about global tariffs that could reset the way the world economy works. Rather, we are getting the considered initial response. Keir Starmer has ruled out immediate retaliation, and he promises to keep a “cool head” as he decides how to respond “in the coming days and weeks’.Here is Pippa Crerar’s overnight story about the Trump announcement.Starmer said that the government would act with “cool and calm heads” as it decides how to respond to Trump’s tariffs “in the coming days and weeks”. He said:I want to be crystal clear – we are prepared.Indeed, one of the great strengths of this nation is our ability to keep a cool head.He said there would be “an economic impact” from the tariffs on the UK. But he did not say how serious they would be.He insisted that has “a range of levers” available that it can use in response, and he said retaliatory tariffs were not “off the table”.We move now to the next phase of our plan …We have a range of levers at our disposal, and we will continue our work with businesses across the country to understand their assessment of these options.Starmer said he would not agree an economic deal with the US if he did not think it was good for the UK.Negotiations on an economic prosperity deal, one that strengthens our existing trading relationship – they continue, and we will fight for the best deal for Britain.Nonetheless, I do want to be clear I will only strike a deal if it is in the national interest and if it is the right thing to do for the security of working people.Starmer said that he would be guided only by the UK national interest.Last night, the President of the United States, acted for his country. That is his mandate.Today, I will act in Britain’s interests, with mine … Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Emma Raducanu pulls out of GB squad to 'look after body'
Emma Raducanu has withdrawn from Great Britain's squad for the Billie Jean King (BJK) Cup qualifiers in order to "look after her body". 

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Three ways the move may affect you and your money
The UK has been hit with 10% tariffs by the US, but there is uncertainty as to the impact of them.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Watch: Key moments from Trump's 'Liberation Day' announcement
The US president said universal 10% tariffs would go into effect for all countries starting 5 April.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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The countries hit hardest by new US tariffs - the plan at a glance
A 10% rate of import tax will apply globally - with higher rates for a list of Trump's "worst offenders".

Mail Online
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UK to host Women's World Cup for first time ever in 2035 as rivals drop out to leave England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales as sole bidders
The UK will host the Women's World Cup for the first time ever in 2035 after a rival bid from Spain, Portugal and Morocco dropped out.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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'It's high, it's dangerous, it's red!' - Tarkowski's lucky escape
Match of the Day's Micah Richards and Joe Hart discuss James Tarkowski's "Merseyside tackle of old" on Liverpool's Alexis Mac Allister, and say Everton "were fortunate to still have 11 players on the pitch".

Deutsche Welle
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Germany's asparagus season shrinking
Fewer seasonal workers, smaller fields — is this once ubitiquitous vegetable releasing its hold on German spring?

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
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#9257 Voice - Akixi Server Upgrade (New)
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BBC UK News
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US tariffs will clearly have economic impact - PM
The prime minister says the world is entering a "new era" as Donald Trump announces import taxes.

Autosport F1
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Leclerc: Ferrari China disqualification came from "playing with the limit"
Ferrari aims to learn from the “pain” of having both its cars disqualified from the Chinese Grand Prix but its key challenge is to make up the gap to McLaren, says Charles Leclerc.While Leclerc’s team-mate Lewis Hamilton won the sprint race in Shanghai, Ferrari regards that result as an outlier and is expecting its form at the Japanese Grand Prix this weekend to be more where it was on ...Keep reading

Autosport F1
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Haas looks to fix aero issues with fast-tracked floor update
Haas has introduced a small upgrade to its VF-25 Formula 1 car's floor for the Japanese Grand Prix in a bid to solve its aero oscillation issue in high-speed corners, which emerged at the Melbourne season opener.The team struggled at the season opener, with team principal Ayao Komatsu estimating that Haas was six tenths away from the rest of the field as it battled against bouncing in the ...Keep reading

Autosport F1
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Verstappen: Red Bull's main issue is F1 car, not drivers
Max Verstappen has suggested his Red Bull Formula 1 team needs to focus on fixing its troubled 2025 car rather than worry about the identity of his team-mate.After two difficult weekends alongside Verstappen, Red Bull has demoted Liam Lawson to Racing Bulls, with Yuki Tsunoda moving in the other direction from this weekend's Japanese Grand Prix.While Red Bull has the remit to move its four ...Keep reading

Autosport F1
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Norris: McLaren now has target on its back as rivals talk “crap” about team
“Nonsense,” “random” and “crap”. The three words Lando Norris used to describe recent comments made about McLaren by its rivals as the squad adjusts to life as the hunted rather than the hunter.After ending a 26-year wait for a constructors’ championship last season, McLaren has continued where it left off – Norris winning in Australia before team-mate Oscar Piastri took ...Keep reading

Mail Online
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Desperate Hailey Bieber's frantic call for help as 'manic' Justin is now 'not eating, sleeping... and his decline takes grim new twist'
The pop superstar, 31, has become increasingly unrecognizable in recent months, fueling growing concerns with videos of himself smoking weed and acting erratically on live streams.

Mail Online
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China vows to retaliate against Trump's Liberation Day 'bullying' and accuses US of 'violating trade rules' while SE Asia is left reeling from huge tariffs
'History proved that raising tariffs will not solve US problems. There can be no winners in a trade war,' the Commerce Ministry in Beijing said as it vowed to take 'firm countermeasures'

Mail Online
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Family pay tribute to man, 26, killed in 'deliberate hit-and-run' as man, 50, is charged with his murder
Arlind Xhokola, 26, from London , died at the scene after the horror collision at around 5.30pm on Saturday near Momples Road in Harlow, Essex Police said.

Mail Online
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Furious EU condemns Trump's 'major blow to the world economy', accuses US of creating 'chaos' and threatens counter-measures as global leaders react in horror to Donald's 'Liberation Day'
Responding to the sweeping tariffs, including 20 percent on EU exports to the US, EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said there will 'will be dire for millions of people around the globe.'

Mail Online
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Rapist who filmed himself attacking woman in park before sending clips to others is jailed for six years
Gagandeep Gulati, 20, found his victim alone in Leicester's Jubilee Square in September last year before raping her.

Mail Online
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UK to host Women's World Cup for first time ever in 2035 as rivals drop out to leave England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales as sole bidders
The United Kingdom has been announced as the hosts for the 2035 Women's World Cup.

Mail Online
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Moment brothel owner tries to hide six phones during police raid on gang that ran massive prostitution and human trafficking ring
Lina Wang (pictured) played a leading role in the prostitution of vulnerable victims in multiple towns and cities across the UK including Canterbury, Chatham, Dartford and Tunbridge Wells.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Newscast: The potential consequences of new US tariffs
There’s a 10% tariff on the UK and 20% on the EU.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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'It's a huge blow to Scotland's whisky industry' - UK firms react
Business in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland tell us what US tariffs could mean for them.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Watch: What you need to know after announcement
The BBC's Michelle Fleury breaks down what the import taxes mean for the US and countries around the world.

Chatham House
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Myanmar’s military prioritizes its own survival in earthquake response
Myanmar’s military prioritizes its own survival in earthquake response
Expert comment
thilton.drupal
2 April 2025

The devastating earthquake has put further strain on the embattled military regime as it fights a civil war. It is unlikely to collapse imminently, but the country’s crisis will only get worse.















The scenes from earthquake-hit parts of central Myanmar are apocalyptic. At least 2,000 people are known to have been killed and unknown numbers lie buried in the rubble. Thousands of homes have been destroyed or damaged and key pieces of national infrastructure, from the Ava railway bridge between the cities of Mandalay and Sagaing to the airport at Naypyidaw, have been destroyed or rendered unusable. The costs of years of shoddy construction and poor maintenance have been made painfully obvious. The consequences of the events of 28 March will be long-lasting.The earthquake is the latest in a line of tragedies to affect the people of Myanmar in the past few years. The hope created by the first democratic elections of 2015 has long since evaporated. In August 2017, the military and local militias killed thousands of Rohingya Muslims in the north-western state of Rakhine and hundreds of thousands more were forced to flee to Bangladesh. In February 2021, the military launched a coup and imprisoned the country’s democratic leadership, including Aung San Suu Kyi. During the four years since, the country has fragmented. Separatist ethnic armed groups have restarted dormant campaigns and more than 6,000 people have been killed by the military’s response.Estimates by the US-based Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (Acled) in November 2024 suggested that ethnic armed organizations and so-called ‘self-defence forces’ control 42 per cent of Myanmar, and described a further 29 per cent of the country as ‘contested.’ The military is in complete control of only 21 per cent of the country (the remaining 8 per cent is sparsely populated forest). It is the highly populated area controlled by the military that was most badly hit by the earthquake. This is not entirely coincidental. The earthquake was caused by the Sagaing Fault, along which the Ayeyarwady (Irrawaddy) River flows. This low-lying, rice-growing river valley is the heartland of the Bamar, the country’s largest ethnic group from which the army recruits most of its soldiers.






The dilemma faced by Western governments and aid agencies is how to get support to those who need it without it being diverted to the military or used as a bargaining tool in the civil war.






The army rules, and fights, with extreme brutality. In its heartland areas it forcibly conscripts young men and brutalizes those who demonstrate for democracy. In the areas controlled by its opponents it has conducted thousands of airstrikes, bombing schools, hospitals and churches. These are still continuing, despite the earthquake. This is only to be expected. Throughout the previous period of military rule, from 1962 to 2015, the army displayed ruthlessness and inflexibility. It sees itself as the sole force capable of keeping the country united and is determined not to give away territory to separatist ethnic groups or give up control of the state.There is a parallel with the way the regime prioritized internal security over international aid after the impact of Cyclone Nargis in 2008. Back then it continued with the organization of a sham referendum intended to endorse a new constitution even as a storm surge drowned thousands of people. With its generals isolated in the newly built capital in Naypyidaw, the military was more focused on regime survival than saving lives. It is unlikely to be any different this time.Foreign aid dilemmaThe military’s international partners, notably China, Russia, India and Vietnam, have rushed to provide highly visible displays of help, in particular through the deployment of brightly coloured search and rescue teams. These operations were largely performative but have been highlighted by state media in both Myanmar and the donor countries as evidence of strong relations. The dilemma faced by Western governments and aid agencies is how to get support to those who need it without it being diverted to the military or used as a bargaining tool in the civil war. Given the location of much of the damage, it is likely that they will be obliged to work with the military, despite their well-founded misgivings, in order to reach those who need help the most. The military will want to control the aid distribution and present it as their own initiative to reduce the embarrassment of being seen to rely on foreigners. Each government and aid agency will have to decide whether it is worse to abandon the victims or to be used as tools of military propaganda.

BBC Technology News
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'Google AI presented my April Fools' story as real news'
Journalist Ben Black was "shocked" to discover his fake news from five years ago used by AI.

TechRadar News
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The AI copyright conundrum

Digital Trends
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Apple re-releases AirPods Max lossless audio update after initial delay
Apple has begun seeding a new update for the AirPods Max after hiccups in the initial rollout. The recent update, brought alongside iOS 18.4 earlier this week, enables lossless audio and super low latency when using the headphones over USB-C. Apple’s support page listing AirPods firmware updates was recently updated to indicate the said program, […]

Mirror F1
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Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc 'disgrace' leaves ex-Ferrari chief 'appalled'
Ferrari suffered an unprecedented embarrassment in their long Formula 1 history when both Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc were disqualified at the Chinese Grand Prix

Mirror F1
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Max Verstappen confirms anger at Red Bull over Liam Lawson and Yuki Tsunoda swap
Red Bull dropped the strugging Liam Lawson for Yuki Tsunoda ahead of this weekends Japanese Grand Prix and star driver Max Verstappen was not too pleased with that decision

Mirror F1
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Lewis Hamilton admits he made wrong decision as Ferrari F1 woes laid bare
Ferrari have struggled in the early weeks of the 2025 Formula 1 season and new recruit Lewis Hamilton has found things tough while adapting to life with the Italian team

Mail Online
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Ben Affleck unveils freshly dyed look amid Hollywood's 'midlife crisis' hair craze
Ben Affleck showed off a shocking new look when he led a presentation at CinemaCon in Las Vegas on Wednesday.

Mail Online
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The ruins that could prove the Bible was TRUE: Bombshell find at 'Armageddon' vindicates the holy book's account, archaeologists claim
A grisly Bible story about an ancestor of Jesus may be true, jaw-dropping new evidence from a site dubbed 'Armageddon' suggests.

Mail Online
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Julie Goodyear's husband's heartache: Scott Brand, 55, on his 'painful' struggle to look after wife alone as Corrie legend, 83, 'slowly faded away' amid dementia battle
The Coronation Street icon, 83, went public with her diagnosis in 2023, with Scott, 55, previously revealing how painful it is to watch her 'slowly fade away'.

Mail Online
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Rod Stewart and his wife Penny Lancaster are left 'heartbroken' by shock death in the family
Sir Rod Stewart and his family have been plunged into shock and grief following the death of a beloved young relative this week.

Mail Online
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ANDREW NEIL: Trump's tariffs are dire for Labour. They're out of their depths. This could snuff them out
The overall impact of Trump's new regime will be negative. His table exaggerated the average tariffs America pays to other countries to make his new levies look reasonable.

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump tariff global reaction – country by country
The US president’s new tariff regime on every country threatens to unleash a global trade war. Here we explore how the world is respondingTrump tariff reaction – live updatesGlobal markets and businesses were reeling on Thursday, as US president Donald Trump announced sweeping tariffs on major trade partners and struggling countries alike.Trump’s new policies set a baseline tariff of 10% on all goods coming into the US, taking the a maximum rate to more than 50% on imports from some countries. It marks the biggest upheaval of global trade norms since the second world war. The US president said that these levies were aimed at targeting decades of unfair trade practices which had disadvantaged the US. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Affairs by Juliet Rosenfeld review – the truth about why we cheat
A psychotherapist explores the nature of infidelity through a series of case studiesAffairs are hot stuff. The antics of cheating partners have been hooking audiences from the earliest days of storytelling to modern romcoms and hit podcasts by relationship experts.It is only natural, then, that a psychotherapist turned author specialising in long-term relationships would want in on the action. “Why do we have affairs?” asks Juliet Rosenfeld in the introduction to her second book, which promises to look at infidelity – something that one in five of us will be affected by – “in a way that we usually don’t”. Her first book, The State of Disbelief, explored her experience of mourning after the death of her husband, Andrew. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Commemorative socks are one thing, Jeff Goldblum, but you’re missing a trick not doing official knickers | Stuart Heritage
Many stars blanch at their commodification. But as the master of drollery launches a new line of monogrammed merch, I think he isn’t going far enoughJeff Goldblum is an actor. He has starred in films both cult (Earth Girls Are Easy) and blockbuster (Jurassic Park). He’s worked with Wes Anderson. He’s been part of the MCU. Last year he was in Wicked, a film that made three quarters of a billion dollars and won multiple Oscars. Make no mistake, Jeff Goldblum is an actor.However, Jeff Goldblum is not just an actor. He is also Jeff Goldblum, and this in itself is a full-time job. He releases jazz albums. He conducts interviews where he ums and ahs over every idiosyncratic word choice, like a wan minor European royal choosing hors d’oeuvres from a silver tray. He has developed a system – and this sounds made up, but it isn’t – where he awards people and things a ranking of Goldblums out of a possible 10 Goldblums. When it came time to mark the 25th anniversary of Jurassic Park, how did Universal Pictures choose to do it? By building a 25ft statue of Goldblum with his shirt unbuttoned and plonking it right in the centre of London. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Global economy will ‘massively suffer’ from Donald Trump tariffs, Ursula von der Leyen warns – Europe live
European Commission president hopes to move from confrontation to negotiation after Trump attack on ‘pathetic’ EUWhat are tariffs and why do they matter?The EU has some options when considering its response to overnight announcements, including retaliating with tariffs on US goods and services and forming closer ties with other countries.The bloc has already rejected one possible option: fold your cards. But vowing retaliation is only the start.“The announced tariffs are an unprecedented attack on the international trading system, free trade, and global supply chains. The rationale for this protectionist escalation is incomprehensible. It threatens our export-oriented companies and jeopardizes prosperity, stability, jobs, innovation, and investment worldwide. The European Union can only act as a united front. This applies to the 27 member states as well as across sectors. The EU has its own instruments for an effective counter-reaction, which it can use decisively. We support the Commission’s strategy of remaining willing to negotiate, aware of Europe’s strengths, and responding flexibly to potential offers. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Do Trump's numbers on tariffs really add up?
Donald Trump's Rose Garden "Liberation Day" moment was a set piece event for the ages - an historic day he believes will kickstart a gradual American revival.

BBC UK News
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Watch: Starmer says UK will keep 'cool head' after tariff announcement
The prime minister told the UK's biggest business leaders a trade war with the US is not in the UK's national interest.

The Guardian (UK)
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Everything we learned from Nintendo’s ‘deep dive’ into the Switch 2
In this week’s newsletter: Finally, the sequel to the revolutionary handheld console was unveiled – and it was a reminder that no one does joy like NintendoSixty minutes – that’s how long Nintendo took on Wednesday afternoon to remind us that no other video game manufacturer creates joy like this one. It was the Nintendo livestream we’ve been waiting for: a deep dive into the new console after so much speculation. Sure, the Switch 2 is the company’s first real hardware sequel – an updated and spruced-up version of its predecessor rather than a radical new piece of kit. But the updates are the intriguing part.Naturally, we’re getting a larger (7.9-inch, to be precise) screen that displays in full HD at 1080p; but we’re also getting re-thought Joy-Con controllers that now click to the console via strong magnets rather than those fiddly sliders we all put on the wrong way. The buttons are larger, too, so adults will be able to play Mario Kart with some semblance of skill. But the main new feature for the controllers is a new rollerball that enables each one to operate as a mouse. This will allow for new point-and-click features and some interesting control options. I like that they showed this off with a wheelchair basketball game, where you slide the controllers a long a surface to mimic pushing the wheels. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Global economy will ‘massively suffer’ from Donald Trump tariffs, Ursula von der Leyen warns – Europe live
European Commission president hopes to move from confrontation to negotiation after Trump attack on ‘pathetic’ EUThe German Federation of Business, BDI, has denounced Trump’s tariffs as an “unprecedented attack” on global trade.In a statement issued this morning, it warned that “the European economy must not become a plaything of geopolitical interests” and called for a united response to the 20% tax the 27 countries now face.“The announced tariffs are an unprecedented attack on the international trading system, free trade, and global supply chains. The rationale for this protectionist escalation is incomprehensible. It threatens our export-oriented companies and jeopardizes prosperity, stability, jobs, innovation, and investment worldwide. The European Union can only act as a united front. This applies to the 27 member states as well as across sectors. The EU has its own instruments for an effective counter-reaction, which it can use decisively. We support the Commission’s strategy of remaining willing to negotiate, aware of Europe’s strengths, and responding flexibly to potential offers. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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UK ministers will respond to US tariffs with ‘calm heads’, Starmer tells business chiefs
Prime minister says tariffs will be ‘a challenge’ but UK is better placed with 10% rate than EU at 20%Business live – latest updatesKeir Starmer has told heads of business in Downing Street that “clearly there will be an economic impact” from US tariffs but that ministers would respond with “cool and calm heads”.The prime minister gathered senior business figures in No 10 after Donald Trump announced he would introduce 10% blanket tariffs on imports from the UK, and 25% on car imports. Continue reading...

Mail Online
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Controversy in Denmark as Prince Joachim shares his honest thoughts about the Danish royal family
King Frederik X's younger brother could potentially have ignited controversy after revealing his honest and inner most thoughts about the Danish royal family.

Mail Online
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Grieving parents of six-year-old girl who died after falling from a cliff say their world is 'quiet now' during emotional purple-themed funeral
The heartbroken parents of a six-year-old girl who fell to her death from cliffs have said their world is 'quiet now' during a heart-wrenching speech at her purple-themed funeral.

Mail Online
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Worker who suffered seizures wins payout after her boss sent her photo from The Exorcist of girl foaming at the mouth
Charlene Friend's manager Lisa Gilbert nicknamed her 'Regan' after the possessed child from the classic 1973 horror film, an employment tribunal heard.

Mail Online
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'I love JK Rowling' stickers were not a 'transphobic dog whistle', tribunal told
Academics Deirdre O'Neill and Michael Wayne are suing the University and College Union (UCU) after its Edinburgh branch said their film Adult Human Female was an attack on transgender identity.

Mail Online
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Thousands of British jobs at risk from Trump's trade war... but EU is hit even harder as PM warns of 'economic impact' and furious Brussels vows to retaliate
The PM admitted pain is looming as he met business leaders in Downing Street to take stock of the US action.

UK Government News
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Prime Minister's remarks to UK business leaders in Downing Street: 3 April 2025
Prime Minister's remarks delivered to UK business leaders in 10 Downing Street this morning.

The Register
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On the issue of AI copyright, Blair Institute favors tech bros over Cool Britannia
Think tank report backs data mining for machine learning, leaving artists and rights holders behind Opinion  Former UK prime minister Tony Blair became famous for standing shoulder to shoulder with allies, even though the fallout from the Iraq war forever sullied his reputation. Nonetheless, the institute that bears his name makes it clear who it stands with when it comes to using copyrighted material to fuel the expansion of machine learning into every human domain.…

BBC Formula One
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Verstappen liking Lawson 'panic' post 'speaks for itself'
Max Verstappen says it "was not a mistake" that he liked a comment on social media criticising Red Bull's decision to demote Liam Lawson.

ZeroHedge News
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Gulf States Refuse To Let US Use Bases, Airspace For Iran Attack
Gulf States Refuse To Let US Use Bases, Airspace For Iran Attack

Via Middle East Eye

Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states have imposed a ban on US warplanes using their air fields or skies to attack Iran after US President Donald Trump over the weekend threatened to bomb the country.

Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar and Kuwait have all told the US they will not permit their airspaces or territories to be used as a launchpad against Iran, including for refuelling and rescue operations, a senior US official told Middle East Eye. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive military planning. "They do not want to be drawn in," the official said.

The Gulf states’ intransigence is a setback for the Trump administration, which has hoped to use massive air strikes on the Houthis in Yemen as a show of force to corral Tehran to the negotiating table on a nuclear deal. If Iran realizes the US's oil-rich Arab allies are not on board with strikes, it could harden their negotiating position. 
US Air Force C-17 Globemasters at al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar, via AFP

The Gulf states were more accommodating on the Houthi strikes, a former US official briefed on the matter told MEE without divulging which Gulf countries the US used as a launchpad for recent strikes.

The former official, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said the US felt confident it had enough Gulf support, including to launch important recovery flights, if any American aircraft were downed during those operations.

The Trump administration has been courting the Gulf states to come on board as it ramps up a "maximum pressure" campaign against Tehran. US defense and intelligence officials met with both their Emirati and Saudi counterparts in March in Washington DC, around the time of the first Houthi strikes.

In quick succession, the Trump administration approved long-stalled arms sales to Qatar and Saudi Arabia. Doha received approval to purchase MQ-9 Reaper drones, and Riyadh secured weapon systems that convert unguided air to ground rockets to precision rockets.

Trump said on Monday that he plans to visit Saudi Arabia and potentially other Gulf states as early as May. 

US turns to Diego Garcia base 

The US has been moving warplanes and cargo to Jordan and Gulf states at the highest level since the 7 October 2023 Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel morphed into a simmering regional conflict.

According to flight tracking data shared on X by open source analysts, the number of US military cargo flights to the region has surged by 50 percent compared to previous highs. In response to the Gulf states' ban, the US has amassed B-2 bombers at Diego Garcia base in the Indian Ocean, the official said.

This is not the first time American war planners leaned on Diego Garcia’s strategic position as an alternative to Gulf air bases. During the late 1990s, when the US was bombing Saddam Hussein’s Iraq and Saudi Arabia imposed a freeze, the US used the Chagos Islands base as a launchpad.

Open-source satellite information provided by Planet Labs earlier this week showed three B-2 bombers on the US base. Other open-source accounts shared imagery suggesting at least five B-2 bombers were on the base.

The Chagos Islands base is within 5,300 kilometres of Iran, well within the B-2 refuelling range of approximately 11,000 kilometres. B-2s are capable of carrying 30,000-pound “bunker-buster” bombs that would be needed to penetrate Iran’s nuclear sites deep underground, known as the Massive Ordnance Penetrator. Diego Garcia complicates Iran’s power of deterrence against the US.

Iran's tit-for-tat warnings on Gulf

In October 2024, when Iran was girding for Israeli retaliation over its second direct missile attack on Israel, the Islamic Republic warned Gulf states it would bomb their oil facilities in response to an Israeli strike.

Those carefully constructed tit-for-tat warnings allowed Iran to ward off an Israeli strike on their energy facilities at the time. However, if the US uses Diego Garcia to attack Iran, it could avoid the Gulf states' airspace altogether, or at the very least, give Gulf monarchs some plausible deniability about being involved in strikes. That gives Iran fewer options to deter American or Israeli strikes by threatening the Gulf. 

Iran was believed to be behind the 2019 attack on Saudi Arabia’s Aramco oil facilities. But Iran and the Sunni Gulf monarchs have patched up ties since then. The Telegraph reported on Monday that Iranian military commanders were being urged to launch pre-emptive strikes on Diego Garcia.



Behnam Ben Taleblu, an Iran expert at the Foundation For Defence of Democracies think tank in Washington, said on X that while Tehran’s ballistic missiles’ range is publicly capped at 2,000 kilometres, it could hit the island by giving intermediate range ballistic missiles to the Houthis which it may be able to produce, launching Shahed drones from ships or using container-launched cruise missiles that Russia and China produce to attack from the Indian Ocean.

From Pacific to Middle East 

Trump raised the specter of a new Middle East war in an interview on Saturday, threatening "bombing the likes of which they (Iran) have never seen before" if Iran doesn’t agree to a nuclear deal.

Trump is pursuing maximalist demands on Iran’s nuclear programme. National security advisor Mike Waltz said recently that the US wanted to see a “full dismantlement” of Tehran’s nuclear capabilities.

Iran, which insists its nuclear program is for civilian purposes, has rejected that. The Trump administration’s demands also put the US on a collision course with Russia, with which it is trying to reset relations. Russia built Iran's first nuclear power plant at Bushehr, and its state-run atomic energy giant Rosatom says it is in talks to build more.

Regional diplomats and analysts are trying to decipher whether the US military build-up in the Middle East is designed to put teeth behind Trump’s threats or if the US is preparing for a strike. In addition to cargo flights, the US has ordered two aircraft carriers to the Middle East. Notably, the US has moved the carrier Carl Vinson out of the Pacific and to the Middle East, despite heightened tensions around Taiwan.

The US has at least 40,000 troops in the Middle East. The majority are located in the oil-rich Gulf states, where they are based at a string of strategic air and naval bases.

Saudi Arabia’s Prince Sultan Air Base is home to the US’s 378th Air Expeditionary Wing, which operates F-16 and F-35 jet fighters. The US operates MQ-9 Reaper drones and jet fighters out of the UAE’s Al Dhafra Air Base. Kuwait’s Ali al-Salem Air Base is home to the 386th Air Expeditionary Wing.

Qatar’s Al Udeid Air Base hosts the regional headquarters for US Central Command. It has also hosted some Israeli military officials, MEE has previously reported, but it's not clear if those officials are still in the country. The island kingdom of Bahrain is home to around 9,000 US troops that belong to the headquarters of the US Naval Forces Central Command and the US Fifth Fleet.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 02:45

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Transparency data: Small boat activity in the English Channel. Border Force.
Transparency data: Small boat activity in the English Channel. Border Force.

FIA Press Releases
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F1 - 2025 Japanese Grand Prix - Thursday Press Conference Transcript
Sport newsPART ONE – Pierre GASLY (Alpine), Liam LAWSON (Racing Bulls), George RUSSELL (Mercedes) Q: Liam, please, why don’t we start with you? Different colours for you this weekend. What’s your overriding feeling about the swap with Yuki, and where do you go from here?Liam LAWSON: Yeah, I think obviously an opportunity this weekend and maybe something I wasn’t expecting so early, but something that obviously is not my decision. And for me it’s about making the most of this opportunity now. And obviously still being in Formula 1, I still have that. So yeah, it’s been a good week of preparations, so I’m excited to get going. Q: Tell us about the preps. Have you been on the simulator? Have you driven the Racing Bulls car on the simulator?LL: Yes, we’ve done simulator and it’s all been OK. Obviously, you don’t truly know until you drive the car. So going out tomorrow will be the first proper test and for sure it’ll probably take a session or two to adjust again. But you know, we have three practice sessions here, so yeah, I’ll be making the most of that. Q: How much difference does it make that this is a track you’ve raced at before in Formula 1 for the first time this year?LL: That was what I was obviously looking forward to from the start, to be honest – to go to a track that I’ve been to before just to have a proper sort of preparation. And I now have that. So yeah, it’s exciting to be here. It’s a track that, I mean, I think we all like as drivers. It’s one of my favourite tracks to drive on, so yeah, I’m very excited. Q: And you had a nice warm-up yesterday in Tokyo, the show car run. Just tell us about that.LL: Yeah, that was cool. I think it was the first time they actually had both VCARB and Red Bull drivers together. So it was nice to see the fans all come out for that. It was very cold and rainy and they all still stood out there. So that was cool to see. And yeah, driving one of the older cars as well, with the V8, was pretty cool. Q: Alright, good luck this weekend. Thank you, Liam. Pierre, can I bring you in on this? Can we just start by talking about 2019? You made the mid-season swap from Red Bull to Toro Rosso. What are your observations on what’s happened at Red Bull with Yuki and Liam this week?Pierre GASLY: I don’t remember 2019. I mean, yeah, I wish Liam all the best. I can obviously relate to some things. I wish Yuki all the best. I think it’s very difficult to judge anything from the outside. I think only Liam can know his situation and know all the details from it and you just got to respect that. We’re all trying our best with the tools we have. I’ve got no doubts both of them are going to do really well. But yeah, it’s not really for me to comment because you never really know what’s going on. Q: So let’s bring it on to the here and now with you and Alpine. You said after China that you were going to have a big debrief, look at what had gone well at the opening two races, and where you also thought there was work to do. What conclusions have you reached?PG: I think China, objectively as a team, we slightly underperformed. We realised after the weekend that there were obviously a few things we would have done differently with hindsight. That’s why I’m still confident. We’ve got a good package, we’ve got the performance to fight in the top 10. And it’s really about… We’re still early stage in the season, we’re still learning about the car and how to extract everything from it. So it’s good we’ve got three races coming up at different tracks and I’m excited to go racing. Q: You say you’re still learning about the car. How much of a step forward is it compared to last year?PG: It is a step forward. Now, everyone made a step forward. If you look at the entire grid, it’s extremely tight. So I think it comes down to fine tuning the car to every track. Within two-tenths, you probably have six or seven positions at the moment. Unfortunately, we didn’t do good enough in China, but we know the reasons why. That’s why I’m fully confident we’ll be in the mix for the coming three races. Q: Alright, good luck to you as well. Thank you. George, let’s come on to you now. A really impressive start for you and Mercedes so far this year – podiums, you had the front-row start last time out as well. What is possible with this year’s car, do you think? How much is possible?George RUSSELL: Yeah, I mean obviously the first two races have been great – two podiums – and we couldn’t really have hoped for much more. I think we also have to be realistic. We are only two races into a long season and I don’t think probably Ferrari and maybe Red Bull have maximised their potential as yet. So we don’t want to get carried away thinking this is possible week in, week out. But we definitely know that if we do the best job to our own abilities, we’ll be there in the mix. Q: Has the pace of the car surprised you so far?GR: Yeah, I think it has. We know in qualifying we’ve always been pretty strong. But I think it was quite refreshing in China to see that our race pace was also pretty decent and we were the second fastest team in China. There were a lot of positives to take away. We go to Japan, which was probably one of our worst races last year, so it’ll be quite an interesting test to see if we’ve improved the car compared to this time 12 months ago. Q: Just final one from me, Toto was very positive about your performance in China. How much of a shot in the arm is it for you to know that the boss has got your back?GR: Yeah, I mean, I know he’s always got my back to be honest. People like to say things publicly. I don’t read what is said in the press or on social media. So for me, I only found out about this this morning when somebody told me. Of course, it’s good to hear, but I know that he’s always supported me, had my back and believes in me. And that’s the most important – what is happening internally rather than what is shown to the world. I know that I’ve got everybody’s support. We’re in this all together. We’re all fighting for the same common goal and it’s an exciting moment for us. QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR Q: (Craig Slater – Sky Sports F1) A question for George – clearly, obviously, there are some contract negotiations you need to embark on at some point. If the season turns out as you’d wish, with maybe a title challenge, would it be a good idea to try and get that done sooner rather than later so it doesn’t get in the way?GR: From my side, there’s no stress whatsoever regarding a contract. Ultimately, contracts are in place in Formula 1 and things change very quickly. I believe in myself. You have to perform and it’s pretty much as simple as that. And when it comes down to contract discussions, I think with us in the past, with Toto, it’s taken no more than 24 hours to have the conversation, and then it goes to the lawyers and we get something in place. So, there is no rush from my side, there’s no concerns, there’s no pressure. I’m enjoying where I’m at in the sport right now and enjoying my performance and just enjoying going racing. That’s the main priority right now. Q: (Mara Sangiorgio – Sky Sports, Italy) Liam, do you expect you will immediately find the same good feeling you had already with the Racing Bulls car?LL: I won’t truly know until I drive. I think we all feel good. I feel confident. And I don’t think too much has changed since last year. So yeah, I think the ingredients are there. And obviously the main thing is coming here at a track that I’ve driven as well. Hopefully, I slot right in and feel comfortable, but I think we’ll find out tomorrow. Q: (Tomás Slafer – DAZN, Spain). Question for Liam as well. You mentioned that you were not expecting the call all this so soon. Was it actually a call? Did you know this decision in China already, or was it something in between races?LL: No, I had no idea in China. It was something that was decided, I guess, the Monday or Tuesday afterwards. I found out after China basically. So yeah, it was, I think for all of us, probably more unexpected. But it was after the weekend. Q: (Mariana Becker – TV Bandeirantes) Liam, things have been twisted and turned so many times here, and sometimes completely unexpected. Like a year ago, probably Yuki was feeling this way – like “I was not the chosen one” – and then things turned around. For the future, do you think you can expect maybe, if you have a very good year, to have this change again? Like going back to Red Bull or turning the table?LL: I think we know how Formula One is and how quickly things change. I mean, if I look back a year ago, I had no seat. I was here a year ago watching and wishing I was racing. Then I had the opportunity to race at the end of last year and the opportunity then to go to VCARB. So a lot has happened in 12 months. For me, the main thing is being in a car. I have the opportunity to prove why I belong here and that’s what I’ll try and do, and that’s what I do every single time I get in the car. That’s what I’ll be doing this weekend. I think things change very, very quickly and where my future is, I don’t know. The only way I can control that is by driving fast. Q: (Margot Laffite – Canal+) Question for Liam. Can you talk us through the way the situation was presented to you? Was it like a done deal, or was it explained, justified?LL: It was more of a done deal, I would say. I left China, started preparations for Japan, and basically I had a phone call saying that this was what was going to happen. So, yeah. Q: (Mara Sangiorgio – Sky Sports, Italia) Question to George. When people talk about the title, your name is often not there. Do you feel like you are not taken into consideration as you should be?GR: Ultimately, from my side, I’m just going in every single weekend trying to perform to the maximum. These last three years as well, alongside Lewis – his name was always there with championships because he’s the GOAT. But the last three years, neither of our names were there because we weren’t in the position to fight. Look, this season it’s been a great start to the year. I don’t think we could have achieved a better result than we expected, and I hope we can continue this sort of run of consistency. But we know realistically the McLarens are exceptionally strong, and I think it’s going to be challenging for anybody else to compete with them. But you know, we saw last year how dominant Red Bull were, and suddenly they weren’t at the end of the season. So yeah, things change quickly. Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC Sport) Liam, what was your reaction to the call and how have you built yourself back up to race this weekend for Racing Bulls, and what kind of support have you had from members of the team there?LL: I would say, as I said, I was more surprised. Obviously, it’s very early in the season. I was hoping to go to a track that I’d raced before and have a clean weekend to have a chance like that. The decision obviously was made, and when I was told, although it was tough to hear, I had one or two days to sort of think about it. Then I was in Faenza with VCARB, starting preparations and seat fits, and then you’re basically just focused on the job. As I said, I have the opportunity to still be in Formula 1 and still racing, and that is the main thing for me. With this opportunity, I’m excited to be here. It’s been a strong start to the season for this team, for VCARB. So I guess it’s exciting for me now to come in here in this position. Q: Liam, just a quick word on your engineers this weekend. Are you working with the same people that you were last year?LL: No, actually not. Race engineer is Ernesto, who’s been with Yuki in the last 12 months because he had switched last year. But all guys that I’ve worked with. And as a reserve, I spend a lot of time with them. So yeah, it’s a group of people that I’ve got to know very well, so it hasn’t felt like a shift. I would say, so far, it’s felt like I’ve slotted in nicely. Q: (Nate Saunders – ESPN) Another one for you, Liam. You mentioned about driving this year and kind of focusing on just getting the performances back. Has it been made clear to you that the door is still open to you to make that comeback to Red Bull? And have you had any conversations about the possibility of ever kind of reversing this decision down the line?LL: Yeah, I guess that’s part of the conversation. I guess in a way that’s great. But obviously I was already there starting the season and was focused on proving myself in the team at that point. So look, whatever happens down the line is more or less out of my control. What I can control is the driving stuff, to prove that. So yeah, where the future goes, honestly at this point, I’m not really thinking about too much. Q: (Luke Smith –The Athletic) Another one for Liam. I’m just looking at the challenge that Yuki's now going to face going into that car. We heard over the radio in China how much he was struggling through the race with the handling of the car. How different is the Red Bull compared to the Racing Bulls car from what you found?LL: I mean, China was a bit more unique, I would say. Just with the race we tried something with the set-up quite aggressive and it was to sort of get some answers and build a direction with the car. So we went with that and in the end it didn’t work too well in China specifically with the degradation that we had on the front. The car itself felt quite good, but just on the tyres, we were struggling. Coming here, it’s a new place for Yuki. Obviously, it’s a great opportunity and on a track that he’s done a lot, I’m sure he’ll probably be more comfortable. And I’m sure they’ve done work over the last week as well in the short break to try and work on improving things. Q: (Jon Noble – The Race) Liam, you talked about elements being outside of your control — but in Australia you lost practice time, in the Bahrain test you had the water leak, and didn’t get the long run in the wet race in Australia either. Did it ever feel like a situation you couldn’t get to grips with given time, or do you think it was right to make a move as quick as this?LL: I think, yeah, in Formula 1… It’s motorsport — we have issues, that’s part of it, especially with these cars that are pushing the limits like they are. I’d maybe hoped that would be taken into consideration more, and I think that’s why for me it was important to come to a place that I’d raced before and driven before. Melbourne and China are both tough tracks, and as you said, with the way the weekends went, they weren’t the smoothest. But it’s motorsport. As I said, the decision was not mine, but I’ll make the most of this one. Q: (Chris Medland – Racer) Liam, sorry, it’s yet another question for you — with apologies to George and Pierre as well. Christian Horner said he used the term “duty of care” towards you in making this change. Do you feel it’s in your best interests to have been moved so soon, or do you think it’s more damaging to you and your confidence to have to go through this after just two races?LL: I think confidence-wise it doesn’t change a lot. We all have enough self-belief to be here and to make it to Formula One. If you don’t have that self-belief, it makes it very difficult. So I think we all have that naturally — it doesn’t really change how I feel about myself. I think what it’s doing for me… Obviously, the best opportunity I had felt like it was with Red Bull Racing. That’s where we’re all working towards. That’s what I was working towards since joining the junior programme as a 16-year-old. So obviously, I would have liked to make that opportunity work and that’s in my best interest. But obviously, Christian and the team will have their opinions on what’s best, and that’s up to them to decide. Q: (Luis Vasconcelos – Formula Press) Pierre, after Austin last year, the team was on an upwards trajectory which hasn’t been continued this year. Is that something that was expected to happen or something didn’t work as the team was planning?PG: No, I think honestly it’s an extremely tight field. As I mentioned, within two tenths you could go from the top of it to the bottom of it. Objectively, we had a very strong Bahrain test. Melbourne, Q3, fighting for points – quite tricky conditions, Safety Cars didn’t play in our hands. And China felt like we didn’t extract everything from the package. Nonetheless, still finished 11th, which could have been a P9, but unfortunately with the car being slightly underweight, we didn’t score points. So I think honestly we’re confident. It’s only two races. We know what we’ve got to do. We’ve got to focus on ourselves and the work and just execute a strong weekend and we’ll be in the mix. It’s going to be very tight the entire season and we’ll have to make the best out of each single weekend. Q: (Nicolas Blasquez – AFP) Do you feel extra pressure because Alpine is the only team without a point yet, or does it not change anything for you?PG: Absolutely not, because we know exactly why we didn’t get those points. Things could have been very different in Melbourne, with the last Safety Car we were in the points the entire race. We were in the fight in China and there was more performance to come from it. So no, I’m confident we’ll get those points. Some other teams have been slightly more fortunate than us, but it’s a long season. We saw it last year – we managed to come back very strongly. I believe we’ve got a better car than we had last season and I’m not too worried. Obviously on paper, it’s nice to see yourself up there straight from the start, but let’s remember there are 24 races. Q: (Mark Mann-Bryans – Autosport) Pierre, another one for you. You were obviously a teammate of Yuki in the past. Have you spoken to him yet since he got the Red Bull seat, and do you think he has the kind of character to go there and get on with the job?PG: Yeah, we spoke on the phone. Obviously, the way that I was also given this opportunity and just in terms of what didn’t quite work out and things that could have been different. I think he’s got the experience, he’s got the speed. I’ve always backed him up. I’ve raced against him and with him for two years. I’ve seen his raw speed. I’ve seen what he was capable of doing already back at the time. We can look back in 2021, all these years, I’ve always said he was an extremely fast driver. So he’s got the speed. I think he’s got a strong character. Does it mean it’s going to be successful in Red Bull Racing? No. Can he be successful in Red Bull Racing? Yes. But it’s slightly more complicated than that. I just wish him the best. I’ve shared my thoughts and my experience from my time there. Time will tell, but I think he’s definitely a very strong driver. And in Formula 1 these days, you’ve got many strong drivers on the grid, so it’s not all down to your speed. There’s slightly more to it, but hopefully he can make the best out of this opportunity. Q: (Fred Ferret – L’Equipe) Quick question to George. Coming back to Mara’s question — are you annoyed that nobody asks you questions and sees you as a true candidate for the World Championship? Is it something that bothers you, to be in the shadow?GR: I mean, not really, to be honest. I’m going in every single weekend. I’m a Formula One driver living my dream. It’s not what the perception is — it’s what the reality is. The reality is if we’re going to fight for a championship this year, we need to improve. This year has been a great start to the season. But the same way the last three seasons have been, I feel that I’ve personally performed very well. I’ve had one of the strongest teammates ever. I’m not looking for external recognition. I’m just looking to go racing every single weekend, perform, and doing my job. Q: (Joel Tansey – The Japan Times) This is for Pierre. Going back to when Yuki was a rookie, what kind of growth and maturity have you seen from him since that time?PG: I think he always had the raw speed. It was a little bit too hectic behind the wheel at times, on the radio. I think in that sense he’s matured enough in minimising the mistakes. It’s all a fine line between pushing right at the limit or over pushing slightly too much, which can be quite costly in Formula 1. And I think we’ve tuned that line. Looking at the past few seasons, I think he’s been putting in very strong performances. Speed-wise, he always had it. But in just minimising those mistakes, which could have been quite costly at the time — yeah. Q: (Adam Cooper – Adam Cooper F1). Question for Liam. At the end of last year, you obviously felt you were ready for the promotion. But sitting there now, in retrospect, was 11 races over two years enough? And maybe Pierre has a view — I think you did 26. Would you have been better off at Red Bull if you’d maybe done another year at Toro Rosso?LL: I think it’s easy to look at it in that way with how the last couple of weekends went. But as I think we talked about, they were not the smoothest of weekends and at tracks that were very new to me. So in some senses, yes, it was early. But at the same time, I think part of the reason they brought me in in the first place was to adapt quickly. And although that was tough — yeah, I guess, you know, you can say anything now, that the decision done. But it doesn’t change how I view it or how I view myself. I felt like I was ready, so although the weekends were tough, that doesn’t change.PG: Well, I think ultimately more experience in Formula 1 is never a bad thing. So the more experienced you are, the better you are. The more understanding you have of the sport, of the impact of the teamwork, etc.Whether it was the limitation? No, it wasn’t. There was more to it at the time, but I’m not going to really expand into details here. But yeah, more experience in F1 — you are a more complete driver. It’s better. You can’t deny that. Q: (Jon Noble – The Race) To George. You said before China that you felt McLaren had a car that could win all the races. I just wonder if the performance from China on Sunday has maybe changed perceptions because Oscar wasn’t miles up the road and had the benefit of clean air for the entire race, which was very important.GR: Yeah, I think McLaren’s strengths are on the hot races and the old tarmacs where there’s a lot of degradation. So China, we saw the one-stop being quite straightforward. Who knows this weekend with the new tarmac — obviously we don’t want to jump to conclusions. But what we saw in Melbourne and in Bahrain testing was pretty exceptional. And in Melbourne, it was more normal, but if that’s their worst race, it’s a bit concerning for the rest of us. But as we said after six races last year, Red Bull dominated and then things changed quickly. So, let’s hope there’s something similar like that, and we’re the ones who can come forward.PART TWO – Nico HÜLKENBERG (Sauber), Tuki TSUNODA (Red Bull Racing), Charles LECLERC (Ferrari) Q: Yuki, what an opportunity for you here at Suzuka. Just how much are you looking forward to the weekend ahead?Yuki TSUNODA: Really looking forward to it. Can’t be crazier than this, I guess, this situation. First race in Red Bull Racing and on top of it, a home Grand Prix. I think it's the best situation ever. I’m just excited. Simulator went well. I spent a few days in Tokyo, which was really busy, but at the same time I was able to spend it with friends as well. So yeah, really good so far. Q: Can you tell us about your journey since China? Let’s start with the moment you found out that you had the drive. Who called you? Where were you?YT: Well, I can't say specific details, to be honest. The first call I got was from Christian Horner after China, saying maybe be prepared, things might change a little bit. That was around Monday or Tuesday. I was in the UK for preparation for Suzuka – that was already planned. I did a simulator session with Red Bull Racing, at that point it was just in case. Within two or three days in the UK, he confirmed it in person. So that was kind of the timeline. I can’t when specifically but that was the timeline.  Q: Have you driven the RB21 on the simulator, and if so, what feedback did it give?YT: Yeah. I mean, in simulator obviously it’s not fully correct in terms of trickiness of the car, but at least it didn’t feel crazy tricky. I can feel what the drivers mentioned about the instability or lack of driving confidence. I did multiple set-ups that I wanted to try to make it better and those two days seemed pretty productive. I know what kind of direction I want to start and it seems to be a good baseline in terms of overall performance. So yeah, it was a really good simulator session. Q: You already have a P4 in Formula 1. Have you dared to dream about your first podium at home?YT: Yeah, I mean, that would be great. First race, home Grand Prix – that’s obviously inside of my head, I would say more like a dreamer for rather than a target. It will be tough. I’m expecting it’ll be challenging. It won’t be as easy as probably people think. It’s such limited time to adapt, and it’s a different beast as well. So I’ll do my best and if I can go through Q3 and score points, I’m happy. Q: Charles, can we wind it back to China and the double disqualification? Very uncharacteristic of Ferrari. How confident are you that the team has put that behind it and that it won’t happen again here at Suzuka?Charles LECLERC: I’m confident because whenever you make mistakes, you learn from them, especially when they cost that much. Everybody plays with the limit and tries to be as close as possible to it. But to have both cars underneath it was a big pain. We didn’t need that. It’s been a very difficult first part of the season. The first two races were difficult, the pace was not where we expected it to be, and to lose even more points than we already did with that, it hurts the team a lot. I’m confident we’ve learned from it. Whenever these kind of events happen we try to understand and analyse what went wrong and change a little bit the process. It was a multitude of things adding up, and the margin we took wasn’t big enough. Q: It’s been a difficult start to the season. Just how difficult is it to extract performance from this car?CL: It’s as difficult as always. It’s always tricky to extract the maximum. I don’t think it’s harder this season – it’s just the performance compared to McLaren is just not good enough. It’s not about extracting the performance – it’s just that there isn’t enough of it for now. But step by step, I’m sure and confident we can close that gap, starting from this weekend hopefully. Q: We saw a big step from Melbourne to China. Are you expecting another step forward here?CL: We saw a big step on Saturday – especially in the Sprint race with Lewis. On Sunday, I think it was back to normal. So I expect us to be more or less in line with where we were in China on Sunday and in Melbourne. Q: Nico, can you give us your assessment of races one and two so far this year?Nico HÜLKENBERG: One was good, successful. One wasn’t. Pretty simple. But overall, it’s been more positive than negative. Getting the first points was a big thing for us and important. In China, especially Sunday, we had some difficulties – it wasn’t really a representative race or result. But how things felt in the car and within the team were quite good, which makes me optimistic going forward. But as ever, things in the midfield are very tight and small margins can have a huge effect. Q: Do you think this is a car that you can challenge for points at every race?NH: We’ll see. I think it’s tough. More or less, I see five teams – ten cars – sitting within a couple of tenths. The top eight spots are usually taken by the four big teams, so that doesn’t leave much on the table for the rest. But that’s the challenge – that’s the job for everyone in the midfield. Whoever does a better job in the next weeks and months will come out on top. Q: Can we get your thoughts on Hinwil and Neuburg? Hinwil first – how has the team changed since you last raced there in 2013?NH: I was in Neuburg last week for the first time – our power unit factory in Germany. It was very interesting to meet the people and see the facilities, to see what’s been happening the last two years and how much they’re pushing. That was quite cool. As for Henville, there’s still a lot of change happening. Still growing a lot – upgrading infrastructure, people, facilities – very much a work in progress. QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR Q: (Mariana Becker – TV Bandeirantes) Yuki, after Abu Dhabi you said that on the long runs you had been able to run consistently and immediately felt the limitations of the car. Can you elaborate a bit more and tell us what you intend to do now that you're with the new car?YT: It’s quite simple things, I guess. If you’re able to push with that car straight away above 95%, just for reference, you start to feel a bit of sliding front and rear. And you feel sliding, front and rear, once you start turn in you see the limitation. That’s kind of the sense I was trying to say. In Abu Dhabi tests, fortunately there are a lot of run-off areas, so I was able to push immediately, knowing that even if I pushed too much, there’s a bit of space to be forgiven. That’s why I was able to push straight away and felt OK with the car. I mean, RB20 historically has a big limitation with instability, and I think it was quite visible that as soon as you turned in, that characteristic was always happening. So probably even without pushing 100%, I already felt those things. I didn’t have any reference driver to know if I was driving fast enough or not to exaggerate that kind of limitation. But I think the RB20 was quite easy in that regard. It had enough limitation to feel that instability quite a lot initially on turn-in. Q: (Craig Slater – Sky Sports) Question for Charles. Given how the team did last year, the hope was to challenge for both championships this year. Given the start you've made, is there a worry at Ferrari that that might not be a realistic ambition?CL: Not yet. If we go back to last year, looking at the first few races, the situation in terms of performance was quite a bit worse than where we are now. We kind of expected Red Bull to dominate the whole season, and by taking the points that were available at the beginning of the season with the performance we had, we ended up actually fighting for the championship – which was way above our expectations. There’s definitely not that feeling within the team at the moment. However, we do feel we haven’t maximized what we could have in the first two races, and that’s frustrating. But it doesn’t mean we cannot recover. The season is still very long. Small steps after small steps – we can still have an amazing season. Q: (Tomás Slafer – DAZN Spain) Yuki, it’s easy to see that the Red Bull is a tricky car to drive. Do you know exactly what you need to do, or changing your driving skills to adapt to the TB21 or is it something you need to learn in the next few races? YT: First of all, I didn’t feel yet the exact trickiness that the drivers are saying. I have a bit of an idea from the simulator but it’s always a bit different from simulator to real car, so I’ll see after FP1 if I either have to change set-up or…. But I don’t think I’ll have to change my driving style because in the end so far it works well I guess with VCARB, otherwise I wouldn’t be here wearing this logo. So I will just do whatever I was doing previously and I’ll just go step by step to build the pace and everything. Let’s see. Maybe I don’t have to do that. Maybe the car is straightaway good. I think Red Bull had pretty good performance last season, both cars, so I’m quite looking forward to it.  Q: (Luke Smith – The Athletic) Yuki, when you got the call from Christian to confirm that you'd be stepping up, what was your reaction in terms of who you then called? Did you let your parents know? Pierre said he had a chat with you about his experience at Red Bull. How helpful was that?YT: He wanted me to be very confidential, so literally I didn’t call anyone. Even though I called – well, I won’t say here – I’m just kidding, I really didn’t say anything, not even to my parents. Actually, I told them maybe the day before the news came out. So that’s it. And yeah, I got a message from Pierre, that he wanted to call me about the experience he had in Red Bull, about the things he should have done in Red Bull and he wanted to share a couple of ideas he thought could work for the coming races in Red Bull. That was very nice of him and very useful tips. I also got support from Checo as well. All Red Bull family drivers gave me supportive messages. Those two have been very supportive to me, and I really appreciate it. They’re drivers I respect a lot, so I’m very happy. Q: (Jon Noble – The Race) Charles, from the outside Ferrari’s pace seems hard to explain. In Melbourne, up until Q2 it seemed to be up there, then fell away. In China, the Sprint seemed good, then fell away. Is there an explanation? Narrow set-up window? Ride height sensitivity? Tyres? Fuel load?CL: I won’t go into very specific details. I think we’re starting to understand the car and have some ideas where we’re lacking. In Australia, it was well understood. In China, Lewis did an outstanding job on Friday – maybe some drivers didn’t put everything together in qualifying and he managed to do that and managed to outperform the car a bit. Then tyre degradation being a big thing. When you start in front, everything comes to you a bit more. But I think Lewis made a difference on Friday and Saturday, which in the second qualifying – everyone was more up to pace – we saw more of the real pace of the car. I think, very similar to last year, we have a good car in terms of race pace, but we couldn’t really show it until now. Whenever you start in the middle of the pack, degradation is worse, and you can’t really show your real pace. That’s what happened a bit on Sunday in China. So I think the pace is still as good as what we saw Saturday with Lewis. However, we can’t use it if we don’t have better qualifying pace. So if I take a step back that’s where we need to improve – qualifying. It was the case last year, and this year it seems even more so. Q: (Fred Ferret – L’Equipe) Charles, do you have an explanation of your pace on Sunday in the race, and is it related to the broken front wing?CL: I can assure you it’s never a good thing to have a broken front wing, so it’s not something I want to target for the rest of the year. There were some interesting things we looked at to understand where the performance was coming from. I believe the performance was really strong in terms of race pace. I made some changes already on Saturday – it was strong, especially at the end of the stint considering I was in traffic. Then we made some changes and took a step forward for Sunday’s race. So I think the overall pace was very strong. I believe it would have been stronger with a full front wing, but by changing the tools and adapting the driving, it didn’t have as much influence as we thought. But it’s still faster to have a full front wing. Q: (Scott Hunt – PA) Yuki, what assurances have you been given by Christian and the team as to how long you’ll be given to prove yourself? Do you feel pressure, given what happened to Liam?YT: I didn’t get any specific number of races or time to prove myself. He’s been very supportive so far and just mentioned the expectations he has of me – what he wants me to achieve. Pressure always comes once you hit the track. But for now, I feel really relaxed. It feels similar to when I was at VCARB. Once I entered hospitality, I was feeling the same, I was only thinking about breakfast. So far I’m not necessarily feeling pressure. Those things will come naturally, especially during qualifying in the home Grand Prix. But there’s not much point in feeling pressure. I’m feeling confident and hope I can do something different from other drivers. Q: Can you share what Christian said in terms of what he wants you to achieve?YT: Basically, be as close to Max as possible, which anyway gives good results for the team, also it allows the team to support other strategies in the race. They’ve clearly said the main priority is Max, which I completely understand, because he’s a four-time world champion and so far already in the last few races even in difficult situations he performed well. So to be as close a possible to Max. Also, to help the development as well with my feedback. They were very happy with my feedback in Abu Dhabi, so just continue that. But the main priority is to be close to Max – which won’t be easy, for sure. Q(: Jake Boxall-Legge – Autosport) Yuki, obviously Max is the one that knows how to drive this car best. Have you been able to tap into him, ask him what makes it tick, go through his data? What advice has he given you about this new challenge?YT: Not really, to be honest. I think even if I tapped his shoulder and asked about the car, I don’t think he’s going to say the truth, you know? So I just try to discover it myself in the data, how he’s driving, also on onboard videos. I already checked multiple videos from him in the last two Grand Prix. Like I said, I didn’t feel the trickiness yet – the clear trickiness of the car. I’ll feel it myself, and I’m sure it also depends on driving style. It will behave a little bit different. Once I feel the car… in my five years of experience, I believe that will give me some ideas to sort it out. And if I really struggle, whatever… no, I still don’t think I’ll ask him. I’ll just try to discover it with my engineers. So far, they’ve been very helpful. [My engineer] already gave some ideas about what kind of characteristics give drivers very little confidence. That information is already stuck in my head and it’s pretty clear. So I’ll just see how it goes after FP1. Q: (Giles Richards –The Guardian). Yuki, you’ve benefited from the fairly brutal decision to drop Liam. In that process, Red Bull passed you over originally, then suddenly dropped Liam to replace you. How much confidence do you have in the way the decision-making process is handled at Red Bull?YT: Well, for me at least, it was brutal enough last year at the end of the season when they chose Liam over me. Yeah. It is what it is. I’m sure Liam also understands how quickly things can change within our structure. That’s one of the reasons we succeed, but also one of the reasons why we tend to get a little more attention with those situations. Yeah, I forgot the question. What was it? Sorry. I have confidence. I’m not saying I have the confidence that I can perform straight away like Max, but I have confidence that I can do something different – hopefully – compared to other drivers that will be in the car. If I didn’t have confidence, I wouldn’t be wearing this. I would have stayed in Racing Bulls. Racing Bulls already have such a good car, and I understand how they extract performance in every race so far but because I wanted to have a new challenge, and I have good confidence to challenge myself, so that’s why I’m wearing this and hitting the track with a different livery. Q: (Chris Medland - Racer) Yuki, you’ve mentioned what Christian Horner said they want from you. But Dr  Marko has also spoken a lot about the decision and the change. Has he spoken to you at all, and what’s his role been in this? Is it clear to you how the decisions are made by Red Bull management?YT: Surprisingly, he didn’t call me yet. Very unusual. Not sure – maybe he was busy with other things. I can’t wait to see him and see how he’s going to react to me. It’s very unusual. From F3, F2, F1 – he’s always been calling me. But this is the only time he didn’t. I’m sure there’s not anything from his side. Even in the last few races, we’ve still had a good relationship. We didn’t have any moments between us. So yeah, let’s see how he arrives at the track and yeah, we’ll see him in person.  Q: (Alina Eberstaller – ORF) Yuki, just a quick question about the fans. They were going crazy yesterday at the Red Bull show run. How do you experience this kind of “Yuki hype” here in Japan?YT: Yeah, for sure more than last year. It’s good to feel those things – as a home driver, it’s always good to see that motorsport in our country is getting more and more attention. And I guess on top of it, this week I’m wearing Red Bull Racing colours and going to race with Red Bull Racing. Last year there was a collaboration between Honda and Red Bull, and obviously Honda is from Japan. We are big fans of Honda. Everything comes together. So far, the fans seem very excited and for me as a Japanese, I’m very happy to see that. FIA Formula One World ChampionshipFormula 1F1SEASON 2025SportCircuit1SportFIA Formula One World ChampionshipCircuitF1SEASON 2025Formula 100Thursday, April 3, 2025 - 8:23amThursday, April 3, 2025 - 8:23am

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Critics mock Trump tariffs on 'penguins' living on uninhabited Antarctic Islands
Critics of President Donald Trump's unprecedented tariff announcement on Wednesday ridiculed the White House for including the Heard and McDonald Islands on its list of reciprocal tariffs.

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Vogue Williams sizzles in a blue bikini as she relaxes in the sun with ripped husband Spencer Matthews during St Barts holiday - after addressing concerns about their marriage
Vogue Williams looked nothing short of sensational in a blue bikini on Monday as she soaked up the sun with husband Spencer Matthews during a family holiday in St Barts.

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The VERY surprising thing that impresses the French about life in Britain
A French woman living in the UK has revealed two 'efficient' elements of living in Britain that have left her pleasantly surprised.

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Woman whose rape lies got innocent man jailed receives disgustingly light sentence
A woman who admitted to lying about a man attempting to rape and kidnapping received an incredibly light sentence after an innocent man spent a month in jail.

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Reese Witherspoon's nepo baby Ava Phillippe channels her iconic role for acting debut
Reese Witherspoon's daughter Ava Phillippe is following in her famous mom's footsteps.

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The VERY surprising thing that impresses the French about life in Britain
A French woman living in the UK has revealed two 'efficient' elements of living in Britain that has left her pleasantly surprised.

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How will Trump's tariffs affect YOU? Inside the 'bumpy road ahead' for Brits in the wake of the US President's 'Liberation Day'
Donald Trump slapped a 10 per cent tariff on US imports of UK goods - and experts believe a wave of price rises will hit American consumers first, with Brits later facing similar increases.

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Ange Postecoglou seeks moment of strength to escape spiral at Spurs | Jonathan Liew
Tottenham manager knows the vultures are circling but his mission is driven by honouring the family nameHis passport still bears the name “Angelos Postekos”. It was the name legally given to him by his parents, eager for their children to fit into their adopted home, aware that they would face enough obstacles – a different language, a different culture, a different skin tone – without throwing a long name into the bargain.But he always hated the name Postekos. To him it smelled too much of embarrassment. Of apologising for who you were. Of changing your essence to please others. Of compromise. And so, as soon as he had any say in the matter, he resolved he would be known by the name his father had used, and those who came before him, back in the old country. Before everything changed forever. Continue reading...

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Vilified, arrested, held incommunicado: that's the price of protest in Britain today | George Monbiot
It seems to me that whatever the charges facing the activists at the Quaker meeting house raid, their fundamental crime is dissentThe faces are different, but it’s the same authoritarianism. Keir Starmer’s team might not look or sound like Donald Trump’s, but its policies on protest and dissent are chillingly similar. So is the reason: coordinated global lobbying by the rich and powerful, fronted by rightwing junktanks.Last week, six young women were having tea and biscuits in the Quaker meeting house in Westminster. Twenty police officers forced open the door and arrested them on conspiracy charges. Had the police discovered a plot to blow up parliament or to poison the water supply? No. It was an openly advertised, routine meeting of a protest group called Youth Demand, discussing climate breakdown and the assault on Gaza.George Monbiot is a Guardian columnistThe Invisible Doctrine: The Secret History of Neoliberalism, by George Monbiot and Peter Hutchison, was published in paperback last weekDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

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Perilous and chaotic, Trump’s ‘liberation day’ endangers the world’s broken economy – and him | Martin Kettle
While the president has identified the need to do things differently, his strategy risks a slump, hitting the very Americans he claims to championIt would be “liberation day” in the US, the White House announced. Well, we shall see. Yet even if one puts the noise and nastiness that accompany a Donald Trump announcement to one side – in this case tonight’s pronouncement that there will be an executive order announcing “reciprocal tariffs on countries throughout the world”, a 10% tariff on the UK and 20% on the EU – the significance of the theatre is hard to miss. Whether they presage the US’s liberation, or instead the disintegration of the global trading order, Trump’s tariffs add up to an attempt to transform a badly broken economic model. And that is something that affects us all.Trump’s announcement was awash with insult and rambling nonsense. The rest of the world had looted, raped and pillaged, had scavenged and ransacked America – shocking claims if they had come from any other US president, yet water off a duck’s back today. But the hard core was there all the same: tariffs on the whole of the rest of the world. The shutters were up.Martin Kettle is a Guardian columnistDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

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Commemorative socks are one thing, Jeff Goldblum, but you’re missing a trick not doing official knickers
Many stars blanch at their commodification. But as the master of drollery launches a new line of monogrammed merch, I think he isn’t going far enoughJeff Goldblum is an actor. He has starred in films both cult (Earth Girls Are Easy) and blockbuster (Jurassic Park). He’s worked with Wes Anderson. He’s been part of the MCU. Last year he was in Wicked, a film that made three quarters of a billion dollars and won multiple Oscars. Make no mistake, Jeff Goldblum is an actor.However, Jeff Goldblum is not just an actor. He is also Jeff Goldblum, and this in itself is a full-time job. He releases jazz albums. He conducts interviews where he ums and ahs over every idiosyncratic word choice, like a wan minor European royal choosing hors d’oeuvres from a silver tray. He has developed a system – and this sounds made up, but it isn’t – where he awards people and things a ranking of Goldblums out of a possible 10 Goldblums. When it came time to mark the 25th anniversary of Jurassic Park, how did Universal Pictures choose to do it? By building a 25ft statue of Goldblum with his shirt unbuttoned and plonking it right in the centre of London. Continue reading...

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Global economy will ‘massively suffer’ from Donald Trump tariffs, Ursula von der Leyen warns – Europe live
European Commission president hopes to move from confrontation to negotiation after Trump attack on ‘pathetic’ EUEuropean stock markets are now open and they’re reacting exactly as you would expect them to.The pan-European Stoxx 600 index has fallen 1.5% at the start of trading, to its lowest level in over two months. Continue reading...

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'We know money is tight for people in the UK, but please donate': Myanmar emergency appeal launched after earthquake
An emergency appeal has been launched after the 7.7 magnitude earthquake which struck Myanmar last week.

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A diamond industry in Pennsylvania? Do Trump's numbers add up?
Donald Trump's Rose Garden "Liberation Day" moment was a set piece event for the ages - an historic day he believes will kickstart a gradual American revival.

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Union boss says ministers sitting on hands over Birmingham bin strike
Unite boss Sharon Graham tells deputy PM Angela Rayner talks on the industrial action are farcical.

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Verstappen social media response 'speaks for itself'
Max Verstappen says it "was not a mistake" that he liked a comment on social media criticising Red Bull's decision to demote Liam Lawson.

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How Trump's tariffs might affect the UK and your money
The UK has been hit with 10% tariffs by the US, but there is uncertainty as to the impact of them.

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Adored nurse dies in childbirth after years-long fertility battle as family rally around miracle baby boy
The couple's life-long dream of becoming parents was finally realized with the arrival of their son, Crew, on March 29. However, things quickly took a devastating turn and Hailey did not survive.

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Kim Kardashian called out for 'inappropriate' bathtub moment that looks like 'porn' scene
Kim Kardashian decided to turn an ice bath into a bizarre shower scene of sorts during this week's episode of The Kardashians.

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Trump's Treasury Secretary issues blistering six-word warning to countries threatening tariff revenge
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent warned America's trading partners against trying to get revenge on Donald Trump 's tariff program.

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'Reckless' tackle & 'offside' goal - were Liverpool-Everton officials wrong?
A possible red card and potential offside in the build-up to the winner - did the officials get it wrong in the Merseyside derby?

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Three ways Trump's move may affect you and your money
The UK has been hit with 10% tariffs by the US, but there is uncertainty as to the impact of them.

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Key moments from Trump's 'Liberation Day' announcement
The US president said universal 10% tariffs would go into effect for all countries starting 5 April.

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Faisal Islam: This is the biggest change to global trade in 100 years
The impact of the tariffs will be huge, with significant changes to long-standing global avenues of trade.

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Verstappen social media response 'speaks for itself'
Max Verstappen says it "was not a mistake" that he liked a comment on social media that criticised Red Bull's decision to demote Liam Lawson.

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Halle Berry, 58, looks half her age on red carpet after sharing secret to combating menopause
Halle Berry had all eyes on her as she attended the Amazon MGM Studios CinemaCon 2025 presentation in Las Vegas on Wednesday.

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Terrifying tornado outbreak across America's heartland as six states are issued very rare weather warning
A series of tornadoes tore through the Midwest Wednesday evening, destroying homes, toppling powerlines and even overturning tractor-trailers on major highways.

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Sky Sports presenter shares health update with fans after undergoing surgery and opens up on 'heartbreaking' condition that 'isn't spoken about enough'
The TV star, 41, is known for her coverage on Sky's boxing and darts events, previously working on a number of Anthony Joshua fights for the broadcast giants.

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‘I begged them, my daughter was dying’: how Taliban male escort rules are killing mothers and babies
The need for women to be accompanied by a man in public is blocking access to healthcare and contributing to soaring mortality rates, say expertsIt was the middle of the night when Zarin Gul realised that her daughter Nasrin had to get to the hospital as soon as possible. Her daughter’s husband was away working in Iran and the two women were alone with Nasrin’s seven children when Nasrin, heavily pregnant with her eighth child, began experiencing severe pains.Gul helped Nasrin into a rickshaw and they set off into the night. Holding her daughter’s hand as the rickshaw jolted over the dirt road, Gul says she prayed they would not encounter a Taliban checkpoint. Continue reading...

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Global economy will ‘massively suffer’ from Donald Trump tariffs, Ursula von der Leyen warns – Europe live
European Commission president hopes to move from confrontation to negotiation after Trump attack on ‘pathetic’ EUNorwegian prime minister Jonas Gahr Støre expressed alarm over “bad news” on US tariffs warning they were “very serious,” with Norway hit by a 15% levy on its goods imported to the US.But Støre told public broadcaster NRK that “there is an opening for negotiations here, the Americans say, and we will use that in every possible way that we can,” Reuters reported.“Today marks a new stage in our preparation. We have a range of levers at our disposal and we will continue our work with businesses across the country to discuss their assessment of the options.”“Our intention remains to secure a deal, but nothing is off the table.” Continue reading...

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Union boss says ministers sitting on hands over Birmingham bin strike
Unite's boss also tells deputy PM Angela Rayner that talks on the industrial action are farcical.

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Amazon Set To Launch First Operational Satellites For Project Kuiper Network
Amazon and United Launch Alliance will launch 27 full-scale satellites on April 9 as part of Amazon's Project Kuiper, marking the company's first major step toward building a global satellite internet network to rival SpaceX's Starlink. GeekWire reports: ULA said the three-hour window for the Atlas V rocket's liftoff from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station's Space Launch Complex 41 in Florida is scheduled to open at noon ET (9 a.m. PT) that day. ULA is planning a live stream of launch coverage via its website starting about 20 minutes ahead of liftoff. Amazon said next week's mission -- known as Kuiper-1 or KA-1 (for Kuiper Atlas 1) -- will put 27 Kuiper satellites into orbit at an altitude of 280 miles (450 kilometers).

ULA launched two prototype Kuiper satellites into orbit for testing in October 2023, but KA-1 will mark Amazon's first full-scale launch of a batch of operational satellites designed to bring high-speed internet access to millions of people around the world. [...] According to Amazon, the Kuiper satellite design has gone through significant upgrades since the prototypes were launched in 2023. Amazon's primary manufacturing facility is in Kirkland, Wash., with some of the components produced at Project Kuiper's headquarters in nearby Redmond.

The mission profile for KA-1 calls for deploying the satellites safely in orbit and establishing ground-to-space contact. The satellites would then use their electric propulsion systems to settle into their assigned orbits at an altitude of 392 miles (630 kilometers), under the management of Project Kuiper's mission operations team in Redmond. Under the current terms of its license from the Federal Communications Commission, Amazon is due to launch 3,232 Kuiper satellites by 2029, with half of those satellites going into orbit by mid-2026.





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Trump has acted for his country, I will act in Britain's interests with mine, says Starmer
Donald Trump has acted for his country and I will act in Britain's interests with mine, Sir Keir Starmer has said after the US president imposed 10% tariffs on UK imports.

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Union boss says government sitting on its hands over Birmingham bin strike
Unite's boss also tells deputy PM Angela Rayner that talks on the industrial action are farcical.

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Pompous CNN host melts down as he mansplains Trump's tariffs to female costars who grin and bear it
The energy in the room shifted when Quest's tone went from sensational to condescending as he began explaining how the tariffs will unfold.

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Premier League's first black referee Uriah Rennie, 65, learning to walk again from a wheelchair after rare condition left 'fittest ref' paralysed from the waist down
The Premier League's first black referee, Uriah Rennie, has opened up on his battle to walk again after being diagnosed with a rare condition that left him paralysed from the waist down.

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Watch: Key moments in Trump's 'Liberation Day' announcement
The US president said universal 10% tariffs would go into effect for all countries starting 5 April.

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The factors behind Hamilton’s inconsistent Ferrari form
Lewis Hamilton says having to gain a deeper understanding of Ferrari's car set-ups is the main factor behind his up-and-down form as he starts his stint with the Italian Formula 1 powerhouse.Hamilton and Leclerc both struggled for pace in Australia's Q3 shootout despite looking strong earlier on, and the pair also had a mixed weekend in China where Hamilton won the sprint from pole but was off ...Keep reading

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Why no business is safe from state-sponsored cyber attacks

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Can AI agents change the world without AGI?

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Netflix on Samsung TVs just got a whole lot better, thanks to HDR10+
HDR10+ content on Netflix can now be watched on Samsung's OLED and QLED TVs.

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Amazon’s Project Kuiper satellite internet plans take off next week
Amazon will launch 27 satellites as part of its Project Kuiper mission next week, aiming to build a constellation of over 3,000 internet satellites in orbit.

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Max Verstappen sends F1 fans wild as Red Bull star hints at future with goodbye message
Max Verstappen's relationship with Honda will end this season as the Japanese carmaker stops working with Red Bull, having agreed to supply engines to Aston Martin from 2026

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Trump preparing to ease arms export rules – Reuters

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Ten hidden gems to take you off the tourist trail in Paris - from an unmissable viaduct 'park' to a secret VINEYARD
You can avoid being a clichéd tourist, and the queues, by going to these ten hidden gems scouted by MailOnline and recommended by real Parisians.

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British jobs at risk from Trump's trade war: PM warns of 'economic impact' from 'limited' 10% tariff on UK with cars, steel, pharma and fashion firms facing pain as stock markets slide
The PM admitted pain is looming as he met business leaders in Downing Street to take stock of the US action.

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‘Same shit, different year’: Australia records hottest 12 months and warmest March on record
ANU climate scientist says ‘everyone is getting fatigued these records keep falling – it’s now incredibly predictable’Election 2025 live updates: Australia federal election campaignGet our afternoon election email, free app or daily news podcastAustralia has experienced its hottest 12-month period on record, ending with its hottest March on record, with last month seeing temperatures 2.41C above average, the Bureau of Meteorology has confirmed.The bureau said its data going back to 1910 showed the 12 months ending in March 2025 averaged 1.61C above average – the hottest of any 12-month period, beating the previous 1.51C mark set from January to December 2019.Sign up for the Afternoon Update: Election 2025 email newsletter Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Oxlade-Chamberlain bucks trend and enjoys Besiktas boost under Solskjær
Former Liverpool midfielder was frozen out by Turkish club but has seized lifeline given by new managerAlex Oxlade-Chamberlain is still just 31 years old, which feels very young for a man who made his first-team debut for Southampton when Gordon Brown was UK prime minister. It is just over 15 years since Oxlade-Chamberlain broke into Alan Pardew’s Saints squad, aged 16, and after successful and high-profile moves to both Arsenal and Liverpool, plus a trophy haul that includes a Premier League and Champions League title, plus three FA Cups, few can say that Oxlade-Chamberlain has not fulfilled his potential.Yet his exit from Liverpool at the expiry of his contract in 2023, aged just 29, felt a little hollow. Presented with a photo collage after his final Anfield match and photographed on the pitch alongside his fellow departees, Roberto Firmino (to Saudi Arabia) and 37-year-old James Milner (to Brighton), who were both beaming ear to ear, Oxlade-Chamberlain looked a little lost, diffident almost. Where next? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Sundance Kid’ JP McManus has five shots at Grand National history
Jump racing’s grizzled veteran could become the only owner to have four winners of the great race on SaturdayFor a man who is still most familiar to many fans as the most fearless gambler of recent decades, JP McManus does not seem to be leaving a great deal to chance before Saturday’s Grand National at Aintree.Three of the top six in the betting for the world’s most famous steeplechase – Iroko, Perceval Legallois and last year’s winner, I Am Maximus – will carry the owner’s famous green and gold colours this weekend, along with a live each-way shot in Meetingofthewaters. The Sundance Kid – as he was nicknamed in Ireland’s betting rings in the 1970s – is now in his mid-70s, but he shows no sign of slowing down. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Carl Hooper’s life in sport: from West Indies to Australia via county cricket
The West Indies batter on his effortless style, playing with his idols and how leadership brought out the best in himBy Wisden Cricket MonthlyBorn in Georgetown, Guyana, Carl Hooper, 58, played 102 Test matches for the West Indies between 1987 and 2003, scoring nearly 6,000 runs, taking 114 wickets with his wily off-spin and captaining the side in 22 of those appearances. Known as one of the most stylish, if not necessarily most consistent, batters of the era, he also played 227 ODIs and had five prolific seasons with Kent, making 22 first-class centuries in 85 matches for the club.Hooper returned to the county game with Lancashire in 2003 and is one of only three players to have scored a first-class century against all 18 first-class counties. “He was so talented, yet he didn’t understand just how good he was,” wrote Brian Lara of his former teammate. “People would ask why he didn’t do full justice to his brilliance, and you know what, there is no clear reason for it.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Ange Postecoglou seeks moment of strength to escape spiral at Spurs
Tottenham manager knows the vultures are circling but his mission is driven by honouring the family nameHis passport still bears the name “Angelos Postekos”. It was the name legally given to him by his parents, eager for their children to fit into their adopted home, aware that they would face enough obstacles – a different language, a different culture, a different skin tone – without throwing a long name into the bargain.But he always hated the name Postekos. To him it smelled too much of embarrassment. Of apologising for who you were. Of changing your essence to please others. Of compromise. And so, as soon as he had any say in the matter, he resolved he would be known by the name his father had used, and those who came before him, back in the old country. Before everything changed forever. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The left needs to halt the UK’s slide into Farageism. This is the kind of leader who could do it | Owen Jones
Leftwing policies have mass appeal – what’s needed is a figurehead who can bring back alienated voters and dodge culture warsTony Blair’s devotees always had a stock response for their leftwing critics, and it went like this: your desire for political purity will render Labour unelectable, and the poorest will pay the price. A Labour party led by “sensible moderates” may not be your first choice, but it is the only hope for the most vulnerable.As Labour imposes poverty on at least 250,000 people through cuts to disability benefits, according to estimates by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, this argument is submerged under a tidal wave of misery. The government has already robbed many pensioners of their winter fuel payments, and not only voted to keep a Tory two-child benefit cap that imposes squalor on hundreds of thousands of children, but suspended those Labour MPs who opposed it. A Labour party that knowingly imposes hardship on disabled people, pensioners and children has filed for moral and political bankruptcy.Owen Jones is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Meta has stolen books’: authors to protest in London against AI trained using ‘shadow library’
Writers will gather at the Facebook owner’s King’s Cross office in opposition to its use of the LibGen database to train its AI modelsAuthors and other publishing industry professionals will stage a demonstration outside Meta’s London office today in protest of the organisation’s use of copyrighted books to train artificial intelligence.Novelists Kate Mosse and Tracy Chevalier as well as poet and former Royal Society of Literature chair Daljit Nagra will be among those in attendance outside the company’s King’s Cross office. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Global economy will ‘massively suffer’ from Donald Trump tariffs, Ursula von der Leyen warns – Europe live
European Commission president hopes to move from confrontation to negotiation after Trump attack on ‘pathetic’ EUUK prime minister Keir Starmer told business chiefs that “clearly there will be an economic impact” from Donald Trump’s tariffs, as he insisted the government would react with “cool and calm heads,” PA news agency reported.Starmer said the government will now focus on making decisions “guided only by our national interest” and on “putting money in the pockets of working people,” as he stressed “one of the great strengths of this nation is our ability to keep a cool head.”“Today marks a new stage in our preparation. We have a range of levers at our disposal and we will continue our work with businesses across the country to discuss their assessment of the options.”“Our intention remains to secure a deal, but nothing is off the table.” Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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'Liberation Day' explained: All Trump's new tariffs - including those on the UK
If there is a word that has dominated Donald Trump's second term, it's tariffs. 

Deutsche Welle
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Germany urges EU unity after Trump unveils sweeping tariffs
The EU's Ursula von der Leyen has warned that the bloc is prepared to respond to new US tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump's administration. Germany also criticized Trump's trade measures. DW has more.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Myanmar leader heads to Bangkok as quake deaths climb to 3,000
Min Aung Hlaing is scheduled to attend a summit of the seven countries that border the Bay of Bengal.

Mail Online
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Iconic UK theme park announces two new attractions
Dreamland in Margate is set to see its vintage log flume ride return, and is also expected to reveal a host of new attractions ahead of the summer season.

Mail Online
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Major blow to new search for MH370 as Malaysia explains huge setback
Maritime exploration firm Ocean Infinity, based in Southampton in the UK and the United States, led an unsuccessful hunt in 2018, before agreeing to launch a new search this year.

Mail Online
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Passenger clubs together with three strangers on 'mission' to get cans of Guinness delivered to their moving train
Content creator Becky Thrower was travelling on a train home from London when she encountered a group of 'complete strangers' who were longing for the frothy Irish stout beer.

Mail Online
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Pound rallies as Trump's tariffs hit the dollar: Sterling surges above $1.30 for the first time in six months
Sterling was up by 0.7 per cent this morning to $1.3097 after President Donald Trump slapped a 10 per cent tariff on US imports of UK goods and 25 per cent on all foreign cars.

The Guardian (UK)
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War-torn and struggling countries among those facing steepest Trump reciprocal tariffs
Myanmar, which is reeling from a huge earthquake and civil war, faces 44% rate amid suspicions that the underlying target is ChinaMarkets react to Trump tariff announcement – business liveDeveloping nations in South-east Asia, including war-torn and earthquake-hit Myanmar, and several African nations are among the trading partners facing the highest tariffs set by US President Donald Trump.Upending decades of US trade policy and threatening to unleash a global trade war, Trump on Wednesday announced a raft of tariffs he said were designed to stop the US economy from being “cheated”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Two more law firms reach deals with Trump to avoid executive orders: ‘They’re all bending’
Settlements, one with Doug Emhoff’s firm, come as many fear Trumps’s effort to target firms affiliated with his rivalsTwo more legal firms have reached agreements with Donald Trump to avoid executive orders that could significantly harm their business.The settlements come as many have expressed deep alarm at the US president’s effort to target law firms affiliated with his political rivals and see the actions as a thinly-veiled anti-democratic effort to intimidate lawyers from taking cases hostile to the administration. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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US health secretary and agency sued by 23 states and DC over $11bn funding cut
Lawsuit alleges department’s ending of wide array of grants is ‘unlawful’ and poses ‘serious harm to public health’Twenty-three states and the District of Columbia are suing the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr, alleging the abrupt terminations of $11bn in public health funding were “harmful” and “unlawful”.The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Rhode Island, says that in March 2025, HHS unexpectedly ended a wide array of grants supporting immunizations, infectious disease tracking, and mental health and substance abuse services. The federal government justified the cuts by claiming that the funds were “no longer necessary” because their “limited purpose” had ended along with the Covid-19 pandemic. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Mike Waltz’s team set up at least 20 Signal chats for national security work – report
National security adviser and team shared ‘sensitive information’ in group chats on app, sources tell PoliticoDonald Trump’s national security adviser, Mike Waltz, and his team have created at least 20 different group chats on the encrypted messaging app Signal to coordinate sensitive national security work, sources tell Politico.The revelation, which cites four people with direct knowledge of the practice, follows heightened scrutiny of the administration’s handling of sensitive information after the Atlantic recently published messages from a chat that included the defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, sharing operational details of deadly strikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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It’s unfair to blame Liverpool for being the best team: that's how you win titles | Barney Ronay
It has been an odd, slow bicycle race of a season, but this is hardly the fault of Arne Slot’s impressive league leadersThere was an extraordinary moment in the seconds after Diogo Jota had scored the only goal of this Merseyside derby, as the home supporters seethed and writhed, bodies tumbling, a wave of noise barrelling around the Anfield stands.At which point a lone middle-aged man could be seen emerging from the seats, waving his fists in the direction of what must have been the fourth official, making wild but oddly precise spectacles gestures with his fingers, all the while being hurled back by the combined efforts of three men in orange jackets. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The Rest of Our Lives by Ben Markovits review – a quietly brilliant midlife roadtrip
Once your kids are at university, what’s next for you? This compelling depiction of life at a crossroads is a male counterpart to Miranda July’s All FoursBen Markovits’s quietly excellent new novel begins with the most mundane of middle-class crises. The book’s narrator, 55-year-old law professor Tom Layward, is taking his youngest child to university. For Tom and his wife Amy, the major tasks of parenting are about to vanish in the rear view mirror. The question is: what’s next?It’s a moment of change and re-evaluation for any couple. But within Tom and Amy’s marriage an unexploded bomb is ticking. Tom tells us in the first paragraph that, 12 years earlier, Amy had an affair. He managed his heartbreak by making a deal with himself that he would leave when his youngest went to college. Continue reading...

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Global economy will ‘massively suffer’ from Donald Trump tariffs, Ursula von der Leyen warns – Europe live
European Commission president hopes to move from confrontation to negotiation after Trump attack on ‘pathetic’ EUEuropean Commission president Ursula von der Leyen warned of “dire consequences” for millions of people, as she said tariffs would “hurt consumers around the world.”She said there was “no clear path through the complexity and chaos that is being created as all US trading partners are hit,” but she insisted the EU’s unity “is our strength” and the bloc would be prepared to respond with calibrated countermeasures. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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MP tells Sky News she was targeted online by Tate brothers
An MP has told Sky News she was attacked online by the Tate brothers after she participated in a debate in the House of Commons about violence against women.

Sky News Home
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'UK will use any powers needed to protect UK from wider impacts of Trump tariffs'
The British government will use "any powers" needed to protect the UK from the wider impact of global tariffs imposed by Donald Trump, the business secretary told Sky News.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Myanmar leader to attend Bangkok summit as quake deaths mount
Min Aung Hlaing attendance is unusual as sanctioned leaders are typically barred from these events.

Mail Online
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Why this simple photo of footy great Sonny Bill Williams and his family has kicked off a heated debate about religion
The former Bulldogs, Roosters and All Blacks star posted the shot of him with his wife and five children in order to mark the end of the holy month of Ramadan.

Mail Online
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Mark Ronson shares update from hospital bed after injuring himself live on stage in front of horrified fans
The British DJ, 49, uploaded a photo of himself to his main Instagram page on Wednesday while laying in a hospital bed.

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Jack Grealish fights back tears as he pays tribute to baby brother - on the 25th anniversary of his death - after ending 16-month Premier League goal drought with his parents in the stands
Grealish netted inside two minutes at the Etihad to get Pep Guardiola's men off to the perfect start - almost 16 months after his last Premier League goal.

BBC World News
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US tariffs on China, EU and more, at a glance
A 10% rate of import tax will apply globally - with higher rates for a list of Trump's "worst offenders".

UK Government News
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UK and Allies to build on momentum in efforts to enhance Ukraine’s security, uphold international law and protect human rights: UK Statement to the OSCE
UK Military Advisor, Lt Col Joby Rimmer, says a lasting peace in Ukraine can only be provided if we step up and offer real and credible security assurances to deter Russia from further threatening European Security.

The Register
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Customer info allegedly stolen from Royal Mail, Samsung via compromised supplier
Stamp it out: Infostealer malware at German outfit may be culprit Britain's Royal Mail is investigating after a crew calling itself GHNA claimed it has put 144GB of the delivery giant’s data up for sale, perhaps after acquiring it with the same stolen credentials it used to crack Samsung Germany.…

ZeroHedge News
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Zelensky Has No Feasible Alternative To Accepting Trump's Lopsided Resource Deal
Zelensky Has No Feasible Alternative To Accepting Trump's Lopsided Resource Deal

Authored by Andrew Korybko via substack,

Trump warned last weekend that Zelensky will have “some problems – big, big problems” if he “tries to back out of the rare earth deal” amidst reports that the latest version of this agreement is very lopsided. It allegedly compels Ukraine to contribute half of its revenue from all resource projects and related infrastructure into a US-controlled investment fund, pay off all US aid from 2022 onward through these means, and give the US the right of first offer on new projects and a veto over resource sales to others.



These tougher terms can be considered punishment for Zelensky picking his infamous fight with Trump and Vance at the White House in late February, but the whole package is being sold to Ukraine as a “security guarantee” from the US. The argument goes that America won’t let Russia threaten these projects, which also include pipelines and ports, thus leading to it at the very least resuming 2023-levels of military-intelligence aid and maybe even directly escalating with Russia to get it into back down.

Ukraine kinda already has such Article 5-like guarantees from the US and other major NATO countries per the bilateral pacts that it clinched with them all throughout last year as explained here, but this proposed arrangement gives the US tangible stakes in deterring or immediately stopping hostilities. The trade-off though is that Ukraine must sacrifice part of its economic sovereignty, which is politically uncomfortable since Zelensky told his compatriots that they’re fighting to preserve its full sovereignty.

If Zelensky agrees to Trump’s lopsided resource deal, then the optics of any ceasefire, armistice, or peace treaty would pair with de facto global recognition of Russian control over the fifth of Ukraine’s pre-2014 territory that Kiev still claims as its own to craft the perception of a joint asymmetrical partition. Not only might Zelensky’s political career end if Ukraine was then forced to hold truly free and fair elections, but his envisaged legacy in Ukrainians’ eyes as this century’s top “freedom fighter” would also be shattered.

He doesn’t have any feasible alternative though since going behind Trump’s back to reach a comparatively better deal with the Brits and/or Europeans wouldn’t result in the “security guarantees” that he’s convinced himself that Ukraine needs in order to compromise with Russia. No one other than the US has any chance of militarily taking on Russia, let alone the political will, and not to mention solely over their investments in a war-torn third country whose resource wealth is reportedly questionable.

If Zelensky keeps dillydallying, then Trump might once again temporarily suspend military and intelligence aid to Ukraine as leverage while tacking on even more punitive terms as revenge. The conflict with Russia would also naturally continue, thus making it impossible for Ukraine to develop its resource industry and related infrastructure even if it reached a deal with someone else. The longer that the conflict lasts, the greater the likelihood that Russia will destroy more of those same assets too.

But if Zelensky accepts the latest deal on offer, then he’d obtain the “security guarantees” that he’s looking for, thus making him more likely to accept a ceasefire and then possibly leading to Trump putting further pressure on Putin to follow suit such as imposing strict secondary sanctions on Russian oil clients. Zelensky would sacrifice his political career, his envisaged legacy in Ukrainians’ eyes, and part of his country’s economic sovereignty, but he’d avert a much worse scenario than if he rejected this deal.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 04/03/2025 - 02:00

Ian Visits
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London’s Pocket Parks: Westfield Park, SW10
By London's standards, this is a fairly new pocket park, having opened in 1981 on land that was cleared by the diligent efforts of WWII bombs.Read more ›

Mail Online
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Revealed: The real scandalous reason Prince Eddy, Duke of Clarence was known as 'Collar and Cuffs'
He was the eldest son of King Edward VII and was always poised to take the crown. But Prince Eddy, Duke of Clarence, didn't survive long enough to have a chance at the throne.

Mail Online
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Inside Marylebone's exclusive £2million preschool with a special royal connection
Only 106 youngsters will be welcomed through the Grade II listed doors of Odyssey's campus in Marylebone, London.

Mail Online
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Pierce Brosnan's wife Keely's amazing weight loss: Author looks incredible at 61 amid her slimming journey - with support of Bond star who proudly declares: 'I love my wife's curves'
Pierce Brosnan's American wife Keely Shaye Smith has stunned fans with her incredible weight loss transformation - after losing an estimated seven stone.

Mail Online
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Wild moment Anthony Albanese falls off stage while trying to pose for a photo in campaign trail fail - before the Prime Minister gives a truly baffling explanation
Anthony Albanese has fallen off stage in an embarrassing campaign trail fail.

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump’s tariffs – five key takeaways
Donald Trump has upended decades of US foreign policy by bringing in a vast array of tariffs that threaten to disrupt international trade. Here are some initial key pointsTrump tariff reaction – live updatesCountries across the world are racing to absorb the new way of doing business with the US, after Donald Trump unveiled tailored tariffs that looks set to ignite a global trade war.Trump has made clear the goals he wants to accomplish through the tariffs: bring manufacturing back to the US; respond to unfair trade policies from other countries; increase tax revenue; and incentivise crackdowns on migration and drug trafficking. Continue reading...

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Global economy will ‘massively suffer’ from Donald Trump tariffs, Ursula von der Leyen warns – Europe live
European Commission president hopes to move from confrontation to negotiation after Trump attack on ‘pathetic’ EUEuropean Commission president Ursula von der Leyen warned this morning that the global economy “will massively suffer” as a result of tariffs imposed by US president Donald Trump last night, as she said the EU was “prepared to respond.”Despite Trump’s direct attack on “pathetic” EU as he imposed 20% tariffs on the bloc, von der Leyen still expressed hopes that the relationship could “move from confrontation to negotiation,” as she warned “there seems to be no order in disorder.”“There is this memorable picture of a stick that you can bend and that comes back again and again. But at some point, if you bend too much, the stick breaks.I believe that in terms of trust in the United States, something has broken down in recent weeks that will not come back so quickly.” Continue reading...

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Trump’s tariffs: The big reveal
There’s a 10% tariff on the UK and 20% on the EU.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Key moments in Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs announcement
The US president said universal 10% tariffs would go into effect for all countries starting 5 April.

Mail Online
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Jose Mourinho pinches the NOSE of Galatasaray boss Okan Buruk after Fenerbahce lose feisty Istanbul derby - with Chelsea legend facing another long ban amid chaotic first season in Turkey
Jose Mourinho remarkably pinched the nose of Galatasaray boss Okan Buruk after Fenerbahce were beaten in a fiery Istanbul derby on Wednesday.

Mail Online
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The full truth about Elon Musk's DOGE exit revealed by White House insiders: Why Trump is 'highly disappointed'... and 'Ice Maiden' Susie Wiles's relentless vendetta
Politico, citing four anonymous 'Trump insiders,' wrote that President Donald Trump and Musk had 'decided' that the 53-year-old billionaire entrepreneur will soon 'be stepping back'...

Mail Online
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Yankees legend Brett Gardner's son's cause of death finally confirmed and case closed after toxicology report
Mystery has surrounded the 14-year-old's death since it was announced, with asphyxiation and food poisoning both ruled out by examiners, and the hotel hitting back at other claims.

Mail Online
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My son's Sports Direct jacket got lost: Has Evri charged me £53 for a phone call to sort it? CRANE ON THE CASE
I returned the jacket in October, but haven't had my money back - and I was charged £53 for a phone call I made to chase up the refund.

Mail Online
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Where are house prices rising most? This Lancashire borough saw 12% spike in a year
Nine out of the 10 local authorities with the biggest house price growth are in the midlands, north of England or Scotland.

Mail Online
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HMRC collected a quarter of a BILLION pounds from taxpayers in late penalties in just two years
HMRC collected £251m from self-assessment taxpayers in late penalties between 2021 and 2023, according to an FOI request by NFU Mutual.

Mail Online
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How to challenge a CCJ: 'I overstayed car park by three minutes and ended up with debt marker unknowingly'
When dad-of-two Matthew Pollen from North London realised he had been handed a CCJ without his knowledge, he undertook the painful task of getting it removed.

Mail Online
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Trump shuts major online shopping loophole in blow to bargain hunters as his sweeping tariffs take effect
Donald Trump signed an executive order as part of his 'Liberation Day' plans that charges a 30% tax on orders under $800 from foreign retailers that could change the face of online shopping forever.

The Guardian (UK)
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Suspended in time: ethereal photos that look like landscape paintings
Inspired by the landscapes of the French masters, Elger Esser captures the brooding seascapes and bucolic country scenes of his beloved countryside – with timeless results Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Muriel’s Wedding review – Toni Collette is outstanding in the film that brought Abba back
Brilliantly led by Collette, PJ Hogan’s 1994 story of a lovable loser was the feelgood sensation that rescued the band’s reputation – how can you resist it?When writer-director PJ Hogan made Muriel’s Wedding in 1994, he surely knew he had struck feelgood-movie gold. But maybe he didn’t realise he had personally authored a pivotal moment in Abbamania’s global history: the momentous transitional phase between the band being taboo-naff and being world-conqueringly beloved. (Maybe Mr Hogan should be getting a cut of the Mamma Mia! musicals and the Abba Voyage live show.) Hogan also gave us our first real view of Toni Collette who started the way she meant to go on: being outstanding in everything she is in.But back in 1994, it was still appropriate that a loser – albeit a lovable loser – could be depicted as an Abba fan; but this movie gets something right that the endless pedantic jukebox musicals that came later get wrong. This crucial pro-Abba film is not itself obsessed with Abba and the soundtrack isn’t wall-to-wall Abba; our heroine says, once she tastes success, “I haven’t listened to one Abba song. That’s because now my life’s as good as an Abba song.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Paris’s rewilded railway line: the disused track turned into a green space for wildlife and walkers
Inside the French capital’s ring road, the Petite Ceinture, a disused circular rail line, now abounds with nature trails, shared gardens – and even urban farmsA rustle in the undergrowth sends birds wheeling above the trees and into the sky. I’m left alone and in near total silence as I look along the train tracks that disappear in either direction. It feels as if I’m in the heart of the countryside, but actually, the Boulevard Périphérique, the traffic-choked ring road that encircles Paris, is just a stone’s throw away. This disused rail route, the Petite Ceinture, offers wildlife and quiet solitude just moments from the roaring motorway, thanks to a plan that is turning parts of the line into walkable green spaces – the French capital’s less manicured (and less central) alternative to Manhattan’s High Line or north London’s Parkland Walk, a rewilded railway line that’s part of the Capital Ring walk.Built on the site of the Thiers wall, the last defensive wall of Paris, and its surrounding shantytown, the eight-lane Boulevard Périphérique (known as the Périph) is used by more than a million cars a day. The 20-mile (32km) railway line just inside the ring road was created to supply the Thiers wall, carrying goods and then passengers as the city’s first metropolitan railway service. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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C of E vicars call for ’urgent and decisive action’ on increasing their pensions
Lead signatory of letter to Church Times says it is ‘moral and Christian imperative’ to ensure dignified retirementChurch of England vicars are demanding an increase in pensions amid claims that many face an impoverished old age, with some forced to rely on food banks or move in with adult children.Almost 2,000 C of E clergy have joined an action group on Facebook in the past few weeks and 700 signed a letter to the Church Times calling for “urgent and decisive action”. Continue reading...

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How to win the Champions League: Liverpool 2019
Watch the trailer for the new BBC documentary How to win the Champions League: Liverpool 2019.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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'The Goose' chases golds before return to dental school
Olympic 1500m medallist Yared Nuguse's ambition has always been to become an orthodontist, but a career as a professional athlete has put those plans on hold - for now.

Mail Online
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Bride and groom raise eyebrows over 'tacky' detail in welcome sign at wedding: 'Is it meant to be a funny joke?'
A bride and groom has raised eyebrows over a 'tacky' and 'hideous' detail in their tongue-in-cheek welcome sign at their wedding.

Mail Online
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Counter terror police issue warning to parents to look out for signs their child is at risk of radicalisation online in wake of Netflix show Adolescence
Counter Terrorism officers are urging parents to keep an eye out for signs that their child could be drawn into extremism after Netflix's Adolescence.

Mail Online
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How to make a small garden look bigger: These 15 tricks will make the most of a poky outdoor space
Two home and garden experts explain how to put a pocket-sized plot to good use.

Mail Online
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Joe Rogan reveals REAL reason Snow White flopped at the box office as he calls for shock DOGE investigation
Joe Rogan discussed the reasons Snow White flopped and suggested that the film should be investigated by Elon Musk's DOGE.

Mail Online
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Gwyneth Paltrow's nepo baby Apple Martin breaks silence on 'really upsetting' criticism after 'mean girl' saga
Gwyneth Paltrow's daughter Apple Martin has broken her silence on the 'really upsetting' criticism she's received following last year's 'mean girl' drama.

Sky News Home
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'Liberation Day' explained: All Trump's tariffs and how they could impact UK
If there is a word that has dominated Donald Trump's second term, it's tariffs. 

CNET News
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5-Year Review of the Purple Hybrid Premier Mattress
After five years of sleeping on the Purple Hybrid Premier 3, I know what you'll want to consider before buying one.

Sky News Home
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Trump's 'Liberation Day' explained: What he did and how it could impact the UK
If there is a word that has dominated Donald Trump's second term, it's tariffs. 

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#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (Close)
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Autosport F1
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Planet PostgreSQL
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Hans-Juergen Schoenig: Using pgvector for timeseries data
pgvector is a widely adopted extension for PostgreSQL that is often used to handle semantic search. One can find various topics and posts dealing with AI and so on. Recently, we have posted information about semantic search in PostgreSQL (see post).



However, pgvector is much more than that - a vector can be anything, and the technology can be applied to other fields, such as timeseries analysis, as well. This article will explain how this works and what can be done to leverage the technology to get a handle on timeseries data.



Using pgvector to analyze stock indexes



For the purpose of this example, we will use some historic timeseries showing the development of the German stock market (DAX):



cybertec=# SELECT *
FROM stock_data
ORDER BY d DESC;
d | symbol | open | high | low | close | volume
------------+--------+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+-----------
2025-03-20 | ^GDAXI | 23009.5 | 23315.490234375 | 22842.94921875 | 23295.720703125 | 0
2025-03-19 | ^GDAXI | 23288.060546875 | 23372.080078125 | 23136.5390625 | 23272.150390625 | 79641400
2025-03-18 | ^GDAXI | 23380.69921875 | 23476.009765625 | 23240.560546875 | 23266.650390625 | 80663300
2025-03-17 | ^GDAXI | 23154.5703125 | 23154.5703125 | 22933.5703125 | 22998.529296875 | 67152000
2025-03-14 | ^GDAXI | 22986.8203125 | 23049.48046875 | 22465.119140625 | 22501.33984375 | 93287400
2025-03-13 | ^GDAXI | 22567.140625 | 22752.830078125 | 22417.51953125 | 22578.099609375 | 78955600
2025-03-12 | ^GDAXI | 22676.41015625 | 22813.83984375 | 22461.76953125 | 22525.740234375 | 80929100
2025-03-11 | ^GDAXI | 22328.76953125 | 22835.099609375 | 22258.30078125 | 22680.390625 | 97374800
2025-03-10 | ^GDAXI | 22620.94921875 | 23164.240234375 | 22519.2109375 | 23163.779296875 | 108707000
...



The data goes all the way back to 1987 and ends in March 2025. To get a better handle on the data, we can count how many rows we have per decade. Yes, this can be done with a GROUP BY statement. Something that is not widely known, is that in PostgreSQL we can group by expression and not just by columns. Here is how this works:



cybertec=# SELECT date_trunc('decade', d) AS year,
count(*)
FROM stock_data
GROUP BY 1
ORDER BY 1;
year | count
------------------------+-------
1980-01-01 00:00:00+01 | 502
1990-01-01 00:00:00+01 | 2506
2000-01-01 00:00:00+01 | 2542
2010-01-01 00:00:00+01 | 2531
2020-01-01 00:00:00+01 | 1331
(5 rows)



The date_trunc function allows us to cut off years, months, days and so on - this leaves us with the decade we want to count.



Using pgvector to analyze stock indexes



What do we want to achieve? Actually, a timeseries can be seen as a vector as well. So, why not use vectors to find anomalies in timeseries? One way to do just that is to take a look at the changes in the data.



In PostgreSQL, we can use a windowing function to calculate the changes between two subsequent rows:



cybertec=# SELECT d, close,
close / lag(close) OVER (ORDER BY d) AS diff
FROM stock_data;
d | close | diff
------------+--------------------+------------------------
1987-12-30 | 1005.1900024414062 |
1988-01-04 | 956.489990234375 | 0.95155143595862615489
1988-01-05 | 996.0999755859375 | 1.0414118137732488
1988-01-06 | 1006.010009765625 | 1.0099488348786055
1988-01-07 | 1014.469970703125 | 1.0084094202397359
1988-01-08 | 1026.68994140625 | 1.0120456702081141
1988-01-11 | 987.52001953125 | 0.96184834359889682645
...



We divide the current row by the previous row and display the result in an additional table.



Analyzing single rows and the changes to the previous row is already fairly interesting but by far not good enough. Often, important events are not happening in a single day but over a period of time. So why not take the changes happening over a couple of days (in our case 6) and put them into a singlevector for later analysis?



The array_agg function provides a way to turn values into an array. In this case, we want the current row as well as the 5 previous rows inside the same array. pgvector provides us with the ability to cast an array to a vector directly. However, there is a catch:



cybertec=# SELECT *,
(array_agg(diff)
OVER (ORDER BY d
ROWS BETWEEN 5 PRECEDING AND CURRENT ROW))::vector AS vec
FROM (
SELECT d, close, close / lag(close) OVER (ORDER BY d) AS diff
FROM stock_data
) AS x
ORDER BY d
OFFSET 6;
ERROR: array must not contain nulls



It is important to make sure that all values inside the vector are valid - NULL entries are not allowed. Otherwise, the type cast will error out as shown in the previous listing.



Avoiding this error can be easily achieved by doing the type case later in the query once we can guarantee that there is no single NULL value inside our array:



cybertec=# CREATE VIEW v_analysis AS
SELECT d, round(close::numeric, 2) AS close,
round(diff::numeric, 8) AS diff, vec::vector
FROM (
SELECT *,
array_agg(diff)
OVER (ORDER BY d
ROWS BETWEEN 5 PRECEDING AND CURRENT ROW) AS vec
FROM (
SELECT d,
close,
close / lag(close) OVER (ORDER BY d) AS diff
FROM stock_data
) AS x
ORDER BY d
OFFSET 6
) AS y;
CREATE VIEW



We will need those vectors for all later operations, so it is quite convenient to create a view that helps us simplify the SQL we want to run on top of this data.



The data looks as follows:



cybertec=# SELECT *
FROM v_analysis
ORDER BY d
LIMIT 10;
d | close | diff | vec
------------+---------+------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------
1988-01-11 | 987.52 | 0.96184834 | [0.95155144,1.0414118,1.0099488,1.0084094,1.0120456,0.9618483]
1988-01-12 | 986.89 | 0.99936203 | [1.0414118,1.0099488,1.0084094,1.0120456,0.9618483,0.99936205]
1988-01-13 | 965.77 | 0.97859944 | [1.0099488,1.0084094,1.0120456,0.9618483,0.99936205,0.9785994]
1988-01-14 | 974.46 | 1.00899800 | [1.0084094,1.0120456,0.9618483,0.99936205,0.9785994,1.008998]
1988-01-15 | 952.46 | 0.97742339 | [1.0120456,0.9618483,0.99936205,0.9785994,1.008998,0.97742337]
1988-01-18 | 1003.13 | 1.05319907 | [0.9618483,0.99936205,0.9785994,1.008998,0.97742337,1.053199]
1988-01-19 | 980.18 | 0.97712160 | [0.99936205,0.9785994,1.008998,0.97742337,1.053199,0.9771216]
1988-01-20 | 960.44 | 0.97986085 | [0.9785994,1.008998,0.97742337,1.053199,0.9771216,0.97986084]
1988-01-21 | 949.24 | 0.98833867 | [1.008998,0.97742337,1.053199,0.9771216,0.97986084,0.98833865]
1988-01-22 | 966.48 | 1.01816189 | [0.97742337,1.053199,0.9771216,0.97986084,0.98833865,1.0181619]
(10 rows)



What you can see here is that the data in pgvector is basically a list of floating point values.



One interesting aspect is that there is actually such a thing as an "average vector". There is indeed an incarnation of the "avg" function that works for vectors:



cybertec=# SELECT avg(vec) FROM v_analysis;
avg
---------------------------------------------------------------
[1.0004238,1.0004286,1.0004265,1.0004267,1.0004258,1.0004246]
(1 row)



Now this is interesting. What we see here is basically the average daily change in the stock market. It is not surprising to see that all those values are slightly positive but close to zero. Over the past decades, the markets have gone up in average and this is exactly what this vector tells us.



Finding anomalies in timeseries data



Often one uses AI to create complicated models to find anomalies in timeseries. However, this might not even be necessary. Consider the following example:



cybertec=# SELECT *
FROM v_analysis
ORDER BY vec <=> (SELECT avg(vec) FROM v_analysis) DESC;
d | close | diff | vec
------------+----------+------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------
2008-10-16 | 4675.90 | 0.90139738 | [0.96520793,0.90892595,1.0103363,1.1062297,1.010175,0.9013974]
2008-10-17 | 4757.98 | 1.01755386 | [0.90892595,1.0103363,1.1062297,1.010175,0.9013974,1.0175538]
2008-10-14 | 5135.14 | 1.10622964 | [0.97222835,0.9608706,0.96520793,0.90892595,1.0103363,1.1062297]
2020-03-25 | 9987.37 | 1.08064334 | [0.942259,0.98636895,1.0688034,0.9400737,1.0826737,1.0806433]
2008-10-15 | 5187.39 | 1.01017499 | [0.9608706,0.96520793,0.90892595,1.0103363,1.1062297,1.010175]
1989-10-20 | 1520.01 | 0.99850224 | [0.99229485,0.86856604,1.0658485,1.0164639,1.013853,0.99850225]
1989-10-19 | 1522.29 | 1.01385294 | [0.9984663,0.99229485,0.86856604,1.0658485,1.0164639,1.013853]
1989-10-23 | 1518.24 | 0.99883552 | [0.86856604,1.0658485,1.0164639,1.013853,0.99850225,0.9988355]
1989-10-18 | 1501.49 | 1.01646388 | [0.97981346,0.9984663,0.99229485,0.86856604,1.0658485,1.0164639]
1989-10-17 | 1477.17 | 1.06584844 | [1.0045961,0.97981346,0.9984663,0.99229485,0.86856604,1.0658485]
2008-10-21 | 4882.80 | 0.99816836 | [1.1062297,1.010175,0.9013974,1.0175538,1.028117,0.99816835]



What this statement does is take the average vector and see which other vectors are as different as possible. In other words: Where can we find data that is as far away from the average as possible?



The results of these simple queries are nothing short of stunning. Let us take a look at those dates and ask ourselves: What happened in October 2008 and October 1989? Here are the results:



"The Friday the 13th mini-crash, or Black Friday, was a stock market crash that occurred on Friday, October 13, 1989. The crash was apparently caused by a reaction to a news story of the breakdown of a $6.75 billion leveraged buyout deal for UAL Corporation, the parent company of United Airlines."



"October 6–10, 2008: From October 6–10, 2008, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) closed lower in all five sessions. Volume levels were record-breaking. The DJIA fell 1,874.19 points, or 18.2%, in its worst weekly decline ever on both a points and percentage basis. The S&P 500 fell more than 20%."



Wow, we have just identified two of the most important events in recent financial history using nothing more than a window function, an array, and a bit of vector magic.



Conclusion and takeaway



The most important aspect here is that pgvector is certainly the extension go to if you are looking for artificial intelligence, semantic search, and a lot more. However, there is much more than just fancy stuff - even basic vector operations can already be highly beneficial.
The post Using pgvector for timeseries data appeared first on CYBERTEC PostgreSQL | Services & Support.

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Can I interest you in an app that tracks your driving behavior?
Smartphone apps that track our driving behavior may be the key to safer road conditions.  The AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety just published a study that found that using smartphone apps to monitor driver behavior, and then providing summaries of that behavior via text message or a data dashboard, leads to safer driving.  Researchers borrowed […]

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump believes he needs Russia – ex-Ukrainian foreign minister

BBC World News
Open 
World leaders criticise Trump tariffs as 'major blow'
EU chief Ursula von der Leyen says US tariffs will see "uncertainty spiral" as world leaders react to Trump's announcement.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘The leaves fall off – but I think that’s normal’: the houseplants you just can’t kill
Some indoor plants wither the moment you turn your back; others shrug off drought, darkness and even ‘watering’ by cats. Here’s how to choose the most hardy specimens. Plus, readers celebrate the greenery that survived against all the oddsThere is a good reason that we treat certain houseplants as the green wallpaper of our homes: the odd splash of water and they seem to rub along fine. These are the species that have proved, over many decades, that they are best adapted to surviving in a vast range of situations. Unfortunately, familiarity breeds contempt, so many of us dismiss snake plants, spider plants, Swiss cheese plants and dragon trees as uninspiring and basic, even though they are the species that are likely to thrive, whatever the conditions.The key to making “bog standard” houseplants look good is to display them in an atypical way: an oversized trough of snake plants rather than a few leaves in a lonely pot; the silhouette of a mass of plain green spider plants in a huge hanging basket instead of a spindly cream-striped specimen on a shelf; or a forest of dragon trees in a huge barrel planter. If you love flowers, moth orchids (Phalaenopsis) are a great choice as they are incredibly tough, and unfazed by the centrally heated air of our homes. Again, think about innovative ways of presenting them: they can look amazing massed in a single container. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Bondsman review – the scariest thing about Kevin Bacon’s demonic thriller? His singing
This bizarre drama stars the Hollywood actor as a dead bounty hunter brought back to life by the devil to do his bidding. Sadly, it also includes horrifying country musicThere is nothing very new to see in The Bondsman. How much you enjoy it will depend on how much you enjoy Kevin Bacon (laconic, hard-bitten Kevin Bacon, not Tremors Kevin Bacon and not Footloose Kevin Bacon), how much you enjoy tales of demonic possession in a small town in southern America and how much you enjoy the sound of partly severed heads, blown-out tracheas and bloodied fingers. I am seven degrees of separation from liking this last aspect.But Bacon is Bacon, and if he is slightly sleepwalking through his role here as Hub Halloran, tracker of ne’er-do-wells with warrants against their names, well, it is hardly inappropriate given that, for most of the eight episodes, Hub is dead. He is killed by local heavies hired by Lucky Callahan (Damon Herriman – you’ll know him when you see him), the new boyfriend of Hub’s ex-wife Maryanne (Jennifer Nettles), seeking to eliminate the competition. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘We thought we could change the world’: how an idealistic fight against miscarriages of justice turned sour
When a no-nonsense lecturer set up a radical solution to help free the wrongfully convicted in the UK, he was hopeful he could change the justice system. But what started as a revolution ended in acrimonyThe press conference began at 2.30pm on 2 September 2004 at the Wills Memorial Building, the grand neo-gothic home to the University of Bristol’s School of Law. Michael Naughton, a charismatic, fast-talking lecturer in sociology and criminal law, addressed the assembled media. If what he was attempting sounded radical, it was only a reflection of an increasingly dire situation, Naughton told a BBC reporter. There was no way of sugarcoating it, he said. The criminal justice system was failing the rising number of people who were claiming they had been wrongfully convicted, and who remained stuck in prison without any hope of exoneration.Naughton was launching the Bristol University Innocence Project to address this crisis. The premise was clear enough. Idealistic law students, under academic supervision and with pro bono legal support, would investigate potential miscarriages of justice, with the goal of preparing cases for appeal. Though the concept was well established in the US and Australia, nothing so bold had ever been attempted in the UK. But Michael Naughton was no ordinary academic. Born in early 1960s Lancashire to working-class Irish parents, conflict was an essential part of his upbringing. Being a Naughton man came with certain non-negotiables, including: always buy your round, and never back down from a fight. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Big, biodiverse and beautiful: can Romania’s centuries-old giant haystacks survive modern farming?
Traditional methods benefit hundreds of species but as new agricultural techniques take over, the distinctive haystacks mark a vanishing way of lifeGolden haystacks shaped like teardrops have been a symbol of rural life in Romania for hundreds of years. The 3-metre-high (10ft) ricks are the culmination of days of hard work by families, from children up to grandparents, in the height of summer.Together they cut waist-high grass, leave it to dry in the hot sun and stack it up to be stored over the winter, combing the hay downwards to protect it from harsh winds, heavy rain and snow. Throughout winter, clumps of it are removed from the haystacks and fed to livestock. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Netanyahu to visit Hungary as Orbán vows to defy ICC arrest warrant
Israeli prime minister begins four-day trip after Hungarian counterpart says court ruling would ‘have no effect’Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to begin a four-day official visit to Hungary on Thursday, marking the first time the Israeli prime minister has stepped foot on European soil since the international criminal court issued an arrest warrant for him over allegations of war crimes in Gaza.Hours after the ICC announced the warrants in November, Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, made it clear he would defy the court to host Netanyahu, telling reporters that he would “guarantee” the ICC’s ruling would “have no effect in Hungary”. Continue reading...

BBC Formula One
Open 
Swapped seats & shaky starts: What to know before Japanese Grand Prix
BBC Sport's Harry Benjamin takes you through the five things to know going into the Japanese Grand Prix this weekend.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Chris Mason: UK relief but not delight at Trump tariffs
How the world responds to the tariffs will have economic and political consequences for the UK, writes our political editor.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
After 3 weeks with Samsung's Galaxy A56, I'm closer than ever to ditching my iPhone for Android

ZeroHedge News
Open 
How Globalists Use Crazed Leftists To Piss Off The Populace And Provoke Dictatorship
How Globalists Use Crazed Leftists To Piss Off The Populace And Provoke Dictatorship

Authored by Brandon Smith via Alt-Market.us,

There is nothing more dangerous than an incomplete picture of history. A hundred years from now, if the powers-that-be have their way, the few children still allowed to be born (due to carbon controls) will be regaled with school lessons about the “Dark Ages of Nationalism” – When humanity was divided into warring states and divided societies that refused to embrace multiculturalism “to the detriment of all”.



They will say that a “great movement” for globalism and wokeness arose and that the courageous revolutionaries fought evil conservative fascists using any means necessary. The political left will be painted as heroes fighting, not for freedom, but for equity and the “greater good”. Western culture, Christianity, meritocracy, moral objectivity, personal liberty and appeals to reason will be demonized as relics of the old world – Monstrous constructs that prevented civilization from attaining true “oneness”.

None of this will be true, of course. The majority of wars are triggered by globalist interests, not nationalists, and the political left is a gaggle of insane zealots hellbent on destroying the west. But, as they say, history is written by the victors.

Many conservatives and liberty advocates still don’t understand that we are in the middle of a 4th Generation conflict. It’s not a political or ideological disagreement, it’s a war; a guerrilla war in which the enemy hides behind civilian status and the legal apparatus.

They use our moral code and our constitutional provisions against us. They find loopholes in the governmental structure and exploit those weaknesses. They turn our society into a living suicide bomb, all while claiming they hold a position of ethical superiority. It has happened before…

If you get the chance I highly recommend readers check out the in-depth investigative analysis of professor and economist Antony Sutton; specifically his book ‘Wall Street And The Bolshevik Revolution’. In it he describes the historical timeline of how Trotsky and Lenin were funded and aided by the elites of the era. The key leaders of the Marxist takeover of Russia could not have done what they did without the help of American and European globalists.



The greater takeaway from Sutton’s revelation is not so much what happened in the past, but what is happening NOW and how it is similar.

The reality of a hidden hand behind the Bolshevik Revolution might sound rather familiar – Today’s DOGE audits have exposed massive bureaucratic manipulation schemes through agencies like USAID to instigate political and social change in America and in foreign nations. These schemes involve vast sums of taxpayer subsidies cycling through globalist controlled NGOs that then use the free cash to push multiculturalism, LGBT propaganda and color revolution.

The agenda to create a one world system and erase traditional western principles is ongoing, handed down from one generation of globalists to the next in a parasitic lineage. The people behind it are moral relativists and Luciferians (they worship themselves and desire to become godlike). They pursue their goals with the fervor of a religious cult. They believe in what they are doing utterly; with as much conviction as you or I hold in our fight for freedom and accountability.

In America the process is beginning to parallel the leftist movements that ended with Marxist terrorism in Europe and the eventual rise of fascism.

After WWI, leftists engaged in a hurricane of disruption tactics including industrial sabotage, mob intimidation, politically motivated worker strikes, terror attacks, bombings, assassinations, etc. Modern day academics try to paint these tactics as heroic, or at the very least they claim that the actions of Marxists had nothing to do with the European embrace of fascism. This is a lie.

It was, in fact, the constant psychological attacks, economic attacks and direct attacks by far-left groups that made fascism so appealing to common Europeans.  Ernst Thalmann, the Stalin-backed leader of the far-left during the last days of Weimar Germany, came to the conclusion that the moderate left was a greater threat than the Nazis.  The communists viewed centrist liberals as an impediment to their efforts, much like the woke leftist of today treat moderates as heretics instead of allies.  They alienated everybody and made everyone want to work with the fascists.

Of course, Adolph Hitler and Benito Mussolini BOTH openly venerated Karl Marx and his socialist system of governance. Fascism was nothing more than a different flavor of leftist tyranny posing as a solution to leftist tyranny. But for Europeans tired after years of societal division and constant unrest, the fascist message of order was enticing.

Antony Sutton outlines this dichotomy and how globalists helped the Nazis rise to power in his book ‘Wall Street And The Rise Of The Third Reich’.



In other words, the globalists created a Marxist terror campaign across Europe and then used it to drive the public into the arms of another socialist empire in the form of The Third Reich.

In Germany, people supported fascism because they sought to drive out and eliminate the social rot created by Bolshevik relativism (very similar to the rot we see in America today). For instance, sexual degeneracy was rampant in Germany after WWI. The very first transgender clinic was founded in Berlin in 1919. The Marxists lobbied for the legalization of abortion in order to garner more female support.

The rise of the “sexual reformation” was initiated and the 1920s equivalent of the “Gay Pride” movement was born. Pedophiles began to creep out of the woodwork – The concept of underage prostitution and “rent boys” was a notable problem in Berlin.

Questions of personal liberty are fair to argue. But without moderation, psycho-sexual obsessions embraced on a large scale can trigger social collapse. The true intent of any sexual reformation is to normalize cultural and psychological outliers. Weimar Germany in the 1920s was very much like America in the 2020s in this way.

Then there was hyperinflation, economic hardship and vying political factions that drove fear into common Germans. The fascists offered a clear vision, they offered economic prosperity, they offered domestic peace, they offered an end to the morally bankrupt madness of the left, and the public jumped at the chance. It was not a good choice, but it was better to them than allowing a communist takeover.

The globalists have a tendency to attack a target population from two sides, using chaos they control, and then order they control. Marxism plays the role of chaos, and fascism plays the role of order.

Most of us are familiar with the idea of the Hegelian Dialectic. However, I would argue that the situation is much more complex today than it has ever been. There is only one true option; order is the obvious choice. Leftists and globalists must be removed from power.

But how do we avoid doing what the Germans did? How do we remove the leftist threat without diving headfirst into our own brand of totalitarianism? It might not be possible.

As I warned in my article ‘Terror Attacks Kick Off In 2025 – It’s Only Going To Get Worse So Be Prepared’, published in January, there is now a rising tide of leftist sabotage. Today, activists across the country are using property destruction for intimidation. It’s not going to stop there. This is just the first phase.

There’s the judicial overreach by activist judges to thwart any cuts to the bureaucracy, and the attempts to stop deportations of illegals. There’s steady online threats of assassination and calls for alliances with foreign adversaries and terror groups. Just be ready for bombings, shootings and the rampaging mobs because that’s all coming this summer, I have no doubt.

The risk of martial law being declared is very high if things go the way I suspect they will go, and a majority of the US public will applaud the idea. Donald Trump has taken measures to follow through on every one of his campaign promises so far and I believe that this has earned him the benefit of the doubt. However, if he did call for martial law under the circumstances I describe to expedite matters, conservatives would be falling into a classic government power trap.

Once that door is opened it will be hard to reverse matters, and there’s no guarantee that the right wing will be in control of the machine as it shifts from checks and balances into a streamlined top down autocracy. We almost fell off that cliff under the Biden Administration during covid and it’s a miracle the country is still in one piece.

The scary thing is, beyond the hypothetical risks involved, it’s difficult to argue that martial law is unreasonable. The leftists are making it very hard for us to want to fight for their liberty, and frankly most conservatives would not care if they were shipped off to an isolated island somewhere to cannibalize each other. If you examine how these activists rationalize their violence on social media, one can only conclude that they need to be locked up or booted out of the country. They’re not redeemable.

Their actions are designed to elicit a call of force from conservatives. Then the activists rush to to the global stage and scream “You see! The right wingers really are the fascists we said they were!” The mere act of applying law and order becomes “tyranny” by the definition of the progressives.

In the meantime, a lot of libertarians are still out there in the wilderness searching for a perfect solution in which no one’s rights are stepped on and all viewpoints are respected. I’ve accepted that this is not going to happen. There is no silver bullet, no magically pure society in which everyone leaves everyone else alone. In a war, someone’s rights are going out the window.

It’s a zero sum game for conservatives because the more we accommodate the political left and treat them like fellow citizens rather than an enemy insurgency, the more the US will degrade into chaos. If we respond to them as enemies, crushing them like the bugs they are, then we become the bad guys and potentially welcome in a level of government power that could hurt us all in the end.

My solution is an ugly one and it’s something that most conservative commentators don’t want to touch with a ten foot pole: Instead of relying on government power to stop the political left and the globalists, common Americans should organize and handle the problem independently. This removes the danger of government overreach and constitutional trespass.

The average American is not limited by the constitution, the government is. We don’t have to respect the legal rights of NGOs. We don’t have to give leeway to leftist rioters because we’re afraid of political optics. We don’t have to let globalists operate in the US with impunity and without fear. Keep in mind that the US was NOT founded as a libertine nation where anything goes.

The Founders believed in revolution against tyranny, not revolution against morality. They believed in freedom, as long as it’s freedom WITH responsibility. They believed in rules and order, not anarchy. There’s no way on Earth they would have tolerated leftist and globalist machinations. Neither should we.

When we do act, we have to make sure we don’t create a governmental Golem that ultimately turns on us.

*  *  *

If you would like to support the work that Alt-Market does while also receiving content on advanced tactics for defeating the globalist agenda, subscribe to our exclusive newsletter The Wild Bunch Dispatch.  Learn more about it HERE.

*  *  *

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Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 23:25

Full Disclosure
Open 
10 vulnerabilities in Brocade Fibre Channel switches
Posted by Pierre Kim on Apr 02## Advisory Information

Title: 10 vulnerabilities in Brocade Fibre Channel switches
Advisory URL: https://pierrekim.github.io/advisories/2025-brocade-switches.txt
Blog URL: https://pierrekim.github.io/blog/2025-03-31-brocade-switches-10-vulnerabilities.html
Date published: 2025-03-31
Vendors contacted: Brocade
Release mode: Released
CVE: CVE-2021-27797, CVE-2022-33186, CVE-2023-3454, CVE-2024-5460,
CVE-2024-5461, CVE-2024-7516

## Product...

Full Disclosure
Open 
3 vulnerabilities in Palo Alto Deep Packet Inspection mechanism
Posted by Pierre Kim on Apr 02## Advisory Information

Title: 3 vulnerabilities in Palo Alto Deep Packet Inspection mechanism
Advisory URL: https://pierrekim.github.io/advisories/2025-palo-alto-dpi.txt
Blog URL: https://pierrekim.github.io/blog/2025-03-31-paloalto-dpi-3-vulnerabilities.html
Date published: 2025-03-31
Vendors contacted: Palo Alto
Release mode: Released
CVE: None

## Product description

## Vulnerabilities Summary

Vulnerable versions: all versions of Palo Alto...

Full Disclosure
Open 
APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-1 Safari 18.4
Posted by Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure on Apr 02APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-1 Safari 18.4

Safari 18.4 addresses the following issues.
Information about the security content is also available at
https://support.apple.com/122379.

Apple maintains a Security Releases page at
https://support.apple.com/100100 which lists recent
software updates with security advisories.

Authentication Services
Available for: macOS Ventura and macOS Sonoma
Impact: A malicious website may be able to claim WebAuthn...

Full Disclosure
Open 
APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-2 Xcode 16.3
Posted by Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure on Apr 02APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-2 Xcode 16.3

Xcode 16.3 addresses the following issues.
Information about the security content is also available at
https://support.apple.com/122380.

Apple maintains a Security Releases page at
https://support.apple.com/100100 which lists recent
software updates with security advisories.

IDE Assets
Available for: macOS Sequoia 15.2 and later
Impact: A malicious app may be able to access private information
Description: The...

Full Disclosure
Open 
APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-3 iOS 18.4 and iPadOS 18.4
Posted by Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure on Apr 02APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-3 iOS 18.4 and iPadOS 18.4

iOS 18.4 and iPadOS 18.4 addresses the following issues.
Information about the security content is also available at
https://support.apple.com/122371.

Apple maintains a Security Releases page at
https://support.apple.com/100100 which lists recent
software updates with security advisories.

Accessibility
Available for: iPhone XS and later, iPad Pro 13-inch, iPad Pro 12.9-inch
3rd generation and...

Full Disclosure
Open 
APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-4 iPadOS 17.7.6
Posted by Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure on Apr 02APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-4 iPadOS 17.7.6

iPadOS 17.7.6 addresses the following issues.
Information about the security content is also available at
https://support.apple.com/122372.

Apple maintains a Security Releases page at
https://support.apple.com/100100 which lists recent
software updates with security advisories.

Accounts
Available for: iPad Pro 12.9-inch 2nd generation, iPad Pro 10.5-inch,
and iPad 6th generation
Impact: Sensitive keychain...

Full Disclosure
Open 
APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-5 iOS 16.7.11 and iPadOS 16.7.11
Posted by Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure on Apr 02APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-5 iOS 16.7.11 and iPadOS 16.7.11

iOS 16.7.11 and iPadOS 16.7.11 addresses the following issues.
Information about the security content is also available at
https://support.apple.com/122346.

Apple maintains a Security Releases page at
https://support.apple.com/100100 which lists recent
software updates with security advisories.

Accessibility
Available for: iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone X, iPad 5th generation,
iPad Pro...

Full Disclosure
Open 
APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-6 iOS 15.8.4 and iPadOS 15.8.4
Posted by Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure on Apr 02APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-6 iOS 15.8.4 and iPadOS 15.8.4

iOS 15.8.4 and iPadOS 15.8.4 addresses the following issues.
Information about the security content is also available at
https://support.apple.com/122345.

Apple maintains a Security Releases page at
https://support.apple.com/100100 which lists recent
software updates with security advisories.

Accessibility
Available for: iPhone 6s (all models), iPhone 7 (all models), iPhone SE
(1st...

Full Disclosure
Open 
APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-7 macOS Sequoia 15.4
Posted by Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure on Apr 02APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-7 macOS Sequoia 15.4

macOS Sequoia 15.4 addresses the following issues.
Information about the security content is also available at
https://support.apple.com/122373.

Apple maintains a Security Releases page at
https://support.apple.com/100100 which lists recent
software updates with security advisories.

Accessibility
Available for: macOS Sequoia
Impact: An app may be able to access sensitive user data
Description: A logging...

Full Disclosure
Open 
APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-8 macOS Sonoma 14.7.5
Posted by Apple Product Security via Fulldisclosure on Apr 02APPLE-SA-03-31-2025-8 macOS Sonoma 14.7.5

macOS Sonoma 14.7.5 addresses the following issues.
Information about the security content is also available at
https://support.apple.com/122374.

Apple maintains a Security Releases page at
https://support.apple.com/100100 which lists recent
software updates with security advisories.

AccountPolicy
Available for: macOS Sonoma
Impact: A malicious app may be able to gain root privileges
Description: This...

BBC World News
Open 
Trump's tariffs are a longtime goal fulfilled - and his biggest gamble yet
The president acknowledged that he will face pushback from some, but he urged Americans to trust his instincts.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Inside Mandalay: BBC finds huge devastation and little help for Myanmar quake survivors
Yogita Limaye is the one of the first foreign journalists to enter Myanmar since a huge earthquake hit the war-torn country.

Slashdot
Open 
Vibe Coded AI App Generates Recipes With Very Few Guardrails
An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media: A "vibe coded" AI app developed by entrepreneur and Y Combinator group partner Tom Blomfield has generated recipes that gave users instruction on how to make "Cyanide Ice Cream," "Thick White Cum Soup," and "Uranium Bomb," using those actual substances as ingredients. Vibe coding, in case you are unfamiliar, is the new practice where people, some with limited coding experience, rapidly develop software with AI assisted coding tools without overthinking how efficient the code is as long as it's functional. This is how Blomfield said he made RecipeNinja.AI. [...] The recipe for Cyanide Ice Cream was still live on RecipeNinja.AI at the time of writing, as are recipes for Platypus Milk Cream Soup, Werewolf Cream Glazing, Cholera-Inspired Chocolate Cake, and other nonsense. Other recipes for things people shouldn't eat have been removed.

It also appears that Blomfield has introduced content moderation since users discovered they could generate dangerous or extremely stupid recipes. I wasn't able to generate recipes for asbestos cake, bullet tacos, or glue pizza. I was able to generate a recipe for "very dry tacos," which looks not very good but not dangerous. In a March 20 blog on his personal site, Blomfield explained that he's a startup founder turned investor, and while he has experience with PHP and Ruby on Rails, he has not written a line of code professionally since 2015. "In my day job at Y Combinator, I'm around founders who are building amazing stuff with AI every day and I kept hearing about the advances in tools like Lovable, Cursor and Windsurf," he wrote, referring to AI-assisted coding tools. "I love building stuff and I've always got a list of little apps I want to build if I had more free time."

After playing around with them, he wrote, he decided to build RecipeNinja.AI, which can take a prompt as simple as "Lasagna," and generate an image of the finished dish along with a step-by-stape recipe which can use ElevenLabs's AI generated voice to narrate the instruction so the user doesn't have to interact with a device with his tomato sauce-covered fingers. "I was pretty astonished that Windsurf managed to integrate both the OpenAI and Elevenlabs APIs without me doing very much at all," Blomfield wrote. "After we had a couple of problems with the open AI Ruby library, it quickly fell back to a raw ruby HTTP client implementation, but I honestly didn't care. As long as it worked, I didn't really mind if it used 20 lines of code or two lines of code." Having some kind of voice controlled recipe app sounds like a pretty good idea to me, and it's impressive that Blomfield was able to get something up and running so fast given his limited coding experience. But the problem is that he also allowed users to generate their own recipes with seemingly very few guardrails on what kind of recipes are and are not allowed, and that the site kept those results and showed them to other users.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Middle East: Israel 'dissecting' Gaza, Netanyahu says
The Israeli military is widening its area of control into large parts of the Gaza Strip, the country's prime minister said. Meanwhile, Germany announced that some of its citizens have left Gaza.

F1 Technical
Open 
Tsunoda aims to "take learnings from" Verstappen
Ahead of his debut race with Red Bull, Yuki Tsunoda insists that he aims to take learnings from four-time F1 champion Max Verstappen as he makes his move from Racing Bulls to the Milton Keynes-based outfit.

Mail Online
Open 
Les Ferdinand reveals the biggest regret of his career as he opens up on how he's still 'haunted' by it
Ex-Newcastle and Spurs forward Les Ferdinand has revealed he's had 'many sleepless nights' since retiring. He opened up on The Mail's 'The Apple & The Tree' podcast.

Mail Online
Open 
Did the Royals have magical powers? How English monarchs claimed to heal the sick by performing this one disgusting ritual
The Royal touch was a ritual practised over hundreds of years, where people would travel from far and wide to have their oozing boils massaged by a King or a Queen.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Parasites should get more fame’: the nominees for world’s finest invertebrate – podcast
Invertebrates don’t get the attention lavished on cute pets or apex predators, but these unsung heroes are some of the most impressive and resilient creatures on the planet. So when the Guardian opened its poll to find the world’s finest invertebrate, readers got in touch in their droves. A dazzling array of nominations have flown in for insects, arachnids, snails, crustaceans, corals and many more obscure creatures. Patrick Barkham tells Madeleine Finlay why these tiny creatures deserve more recognition, and three readers, Sandy, Nina and Russell, make the case for their favouritesInvertebrate of the year 2025: vote for your favouriteSupport the Guardian: theguardian.com/sciencepod Continue reading...

TechRadar News
Open 
CinemaCon 2025 live – Five Nights at Freddy's 2, Wicked: For Good and more movies on the way

TechRadar News
Open 
Nikon unveils the Z5 II full-frame mirrorless camera – entry-level just got better, and pricier

Russia Today News
Open 
Ukraine conflict ‘on precipice of ceasefire’ – Trump envoy

Adam Curry
Open 
Curry & The Keeper - April 2nd 2025 Episode 128 - "Dr. Doolittle"
Curry & The Keeper - April 2nd 2025 Episode 128 - "Dr. Doolittle"

The Register
Open 
OpenAI wants to bend copyright rules. Study suggests it isn’t waiting for permission
GPT-4o likely trained on O’Reilly books without permission, figures appear to show Tech textbook tycoon Tim O'Reilly claims OpenAI mined his publishing house's copyright-protected tomes for training data and fed it all into its top-tier GPT-4o model without permission.…

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Washington Sheriff Won't Allow Non-Citizens To Work As Police Officers, Despite Political Pressure
Washington Sheriff Won't Allow Non-Citizens To Work As Police Officers, Despite Political Pressure

A state county sheriff in Washington may be the only person left in the state with common sense. 

He is rejecting a new state senate bill that would allow non-citizens to serve in public roles such as police officers, judges, and teachers, according to Breitbart.
Sheriff Keith Swank

Despite unanimous support in the legislature, Pierce County Sheriff Keith Swank said he won’t comply. “I have a problem with non-citizens being cops and arresting our citizens in Pierce County. Therefore, we’re not going to hire non-citizens for the Pierce County Sheriff’s Office,” he told KIRO-TV.

Washington’s SB5068, which would allow non-citizens with federal work authorization—including DACA recipients—to serve as police, judges, and other public officials, passed the state senate unanimously in February.

All 30 Democrats backed it, but notably, so did all 19 Republicans.

Supporters argue there’s no difference between non-citizens in the military and in law enforcement, but Sheriff Keith Swank disagrees.

[ZH: Aaaand of course they locked down their accout]


SB5068: Allowing non-citizens to be police, prosecutors, judges, firefighters, teachers, etc... WAS UNANIMOUSLY APPROVED BY LEGISLATORS [INCLUDING ALL REPUBLICANS]...
Maybe @WAGOP can take a crack at explaining this to REPUBLICAN CONSTITUENTS?
Roll Call
Public employ.… pic.twitter.com/jpjgdtlFz1
— Outrage PNW (@OutragePNW) March 27, 2025
“There’s a difference between law enforcement and the military. In law enforcement, we arrest people. We take away their constitutional rights. We lock them up in jail. We don’t use our military to do that,” he said.

Legislators claim the bill addresses Washington’s police shortage, but Swank isn’t buying it.

“The real problem is the reason it’s hard to hire people in Washington State… Cops don’t want to work here when they’re afraid to do something they might be put in prison for,” he said. The bill passed out of a House committee 6–3 and is headed for a full House vote.

*  *  *

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Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 21:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Supreme Court Upholds Biden-Era Rule On Regulation Of "Ghost Guns"
Supreme Court Upholds Biden-Era Rule On Regulation Of "Ghost Guns"

Via American Greatness,

The U.S. Supreme Court has upheld a Biden administration rule on federal regulation of so-called “ghost guns” which are unserialized parts or kits that can be assembled into completed firearms.



The 7-2 decision on Wednesday was written by Justice Neil Gorsuch and upholds the rule for continued regulation by the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) as well as opening the door to requiring background checks and age verification in order to purchase the kits.

Gun control advocates and regulators have been strongly opposed to the kits, which some have dubbed as “ghost guns” due to the fact that they allowed buyers to complete the assembly of the firearm at home without having to make the purchase through a federally licensed dealer.

Supporters of gun control have claimed that the firearms are nearly untraceable, making it more difficult for law enforcement to connect them to a specific individual.

In the ruling, Gorsuch wrote, “Some home hobbyists enjoy assembling them. But criminals also find them attractive.”

According to the Associated Press, the rule passed under the Biden administration requires companies to treat the kits like other firearms by adding serial numbers, running background checks and verifying that buyers are age 21 or older.

Sellers of the parts kits had challenged the rule, arguing that a collection of parts was not a firearm and therefore was not subject to the Gun Control Act of 1968.

The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals based in Louisiana agreed with them and struck down the ATF ghost gun rule.

Today’s ruling overturned that 5th Circuit decision.

Second Amendment advocates are expressing disappointment at the decision but also acknowledge that in the era of 3D printing, federal regulators are facing an increasingly impossible task when it comes to gun control.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 21:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Flying Taxis Officially Lift Off - But Only In China, Thank Biden's FAA
Flying Taxis Officially Lift Off - But Only In China, Thank Biden's FAA

China's drone taxi industry officially lifted off this week, as EHang Holdings and Hefei Hey Airlines became the first companies to receive certifications from the Civil Aviation Administration of China to launch autonomous flying drones for commercial taxi use. This development comes as China pulls ahead of the US drone industry—amid recent comments by Andreessen Horowitz's Marc Andreessen, who noted that the Biden-Harris administration's FAA slowed the US drone industry. It raises the question: Did the previous administration's FAA deliberately slow America's drone industry, allowing China to gain a strategic edge?

The South China Morning Post reported that China's low-altitude economy has officially lifted off. EHang and Hefei Hey are dominating the skies with eVTOL (electric Vertical Take-Off and Landing) taxi drones that can reach altitudes of 10,000 feet and transport two passengers across town. 

"This marks the beginning of China's low-altitude human-carrying flight era, allowing the public to book flights for low-altitude tourism, urban sightseeing, and more in Guangzhou and Hefei," EHang stated on X, adding, "With this certification, EHang becomes the world's first eVTOL company to achieve the full suite of regulatory approvals, paving the way for large-scale commercialization of autonomous aerial mobility." 


🚀 EHang’s EH216-S eVTOL Operators Obtain Air Operator Certificates ✈️
EHang’s EH216-S eVTOL operators, EHang General Aviation and Heyi Aviation, have officially received China’s first-ever Air Operator Certificates (OC) for civil pilotless human-carrying aerial vehicles by the… pic.twitter.com/jqX74ETR8A
— EHang (@ehang) March 30, 2025
China-based journalist Li Zexin commented on the development: "China is at the forefront of the world's 4th Industrial Revolution." 


China has officially entered the era of "flying taxis".
2 Chinese companies have obtained the commercial operation certificate for autonomous passenger drones from CAAC.
China is at the forefront of the world's 4th Industrial Revolution. pic.twitter.com/POFiLTs3I1
— Li Zexin (@XH_Lee23) March 31, 2025
Meanwhile, Marc Andreessen told the host of Uncommon Knowledge, Peter Robinson (former Reagan speechwriter), earlier this year that:


We have a drone company that's been trying to compete with the Chinese company. Number one, the Biden FAA has been trying to kill us this entire time, trying to do all kinds of things to make sure that American drone companies can't succeed as part of their war on tech. It's literally just another in the long list of ways that they've been just trying to absolutely kill us.



🚨 NEW: Marc Andreessen on China's manufacturing dominance
"There's three industries that follow phones that the Chinese own the global market at:
1) Drones
Something over 90% of all the consumer drones are made in China. Which is what the US Military also uses. It's the whole… pic.twitter.com/e94C927MMU
— Autism Capital 🧩 (@AutismCapital) January 15, 2025
Why on Earth would the Biden administration weaponize the FAA to slow down America's drone industry? The answer might be found here.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 22:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump's Reconfiguration Of Global Conflict: What It Means For Asia And Europe
Trump's Reconfiguration Of Global Conflict: What It Means For Asia And Europe

Authored by Joseph Yizheng Lian via The Epoch Times,

Two months into his second term, President Donald Trump was accused by some politicians in the West of abandoning Washington’s longstanding allies as a result of his stance on the war in Ukraine. But one doesn’t have to look very far back in history to note that a similar act of “unfriending” had occurred from continental Europe and wasn’t unjustified.



In 1988, the late British Prime Minister Lady Margaret Thatcher, speaking at the College of Europe in Bruges, Belgium, advised her audience thus:


“We must strive to maintain the United States’ commitment to Europe’s defence. And that means recognising the burden on their resources of the world role they undertake and their point that their allies should bear the full part of the defence of freedom, particularly as Europe grows wealthier.”


Unfortunately, those mild words of the Iron Lady fell on deaf ears.

Eleven years later, her tone had changed into one of disdain and spite, when in a Conservative Party conference in Blackpool she shockingly declared, “In my lifetime all the problems have come from mainland Europe, and all the solutions have come from the English-speaking nations across the world.”

Between Bruges and Blackpool, Thatcher morphed from a 30-year supporter of European integration into a fierce opponent. 

She decried the “British malaise”—a term used by Conservative politician and historian Sir Ian Gilmour in his 1969 book “The Body Politic”—to characterize the economic stagnation, the social decline, and the sense of futility and hopelessness that seemed to pervade British society.

Thatcher abhorred the European welfare state, criticized intransigent unionism, and loathed the power wielded by unelected Brussels bureaucrats, who had virtually forgotten NATO by the mid-1990s, even though Europe had grown rich. She won her battle posthumously, in 2020 (BREXIT).



U.S. President Ronald Reagan and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher pose for photographers on the patio outside the Oval Office in Washington on July 17, 1987. Mike Sargent/AFP via Getty Images

Since then, primarily by default, Britain has gone out of Europe and built partnerships in the Indo–Pacific, a region that it is historically familiar with, signed bilateral free trade agreements Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and is in talks for new ones with the United States and India. The UK has recently gained membership in the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, or CPTPP. The new Labour government has not tried to bend back the arc.

The United States is on a similar trajectory. Trump also spurns Big Government and bureaucratic multinational agencies. Like Thatcher almost 40 years ago—but much more vehemently—he has criticized other NATO countries for spending far too little on defense—a constant gripe of U.S. presidents, especially Dwight Eisenhower and Ronald Reagan.

Trump’s associates readily criticized certain European countries for abandoning basic Western values, such as adopting free speech, abolishing secure national borders, and letting in gangsters and fanatical Jihadis who unleash terrorist attacks on innocent citizens. Trump also thinks all these are happening in the United States.

The Russia–Ukraine war has caused rifts between Trump and other NATO members. He wants the war to end so that Washington can “pivot” to the Indo–Pacific to squarely face the “pacing threat” of communist China, which he, since his first term, has rightly regarded as America’s major adversary.

So, almost simultaneously, the two major English-speaking countries, the United States and the UK, are extricating themselves from entanglements in Europe and reaching out to Asia. Their “leaving Europe to enter Asia” is going full circle from the time when Japan’s most famous 19th century reformist, Fukuzawa Yukichi, advocated the opposite, “leaving Asia to enter Europe” (1885), under very different circumstances.

If U.S. Commodore Matthew Perry’s arrival in Tokugawa Japan in 1853 and World War II marked the first and second historic coming of America to Asia, respectively, then the “Trump pivot” may well be the third. It could add enormously to the prosperity in Indo–Pacific Ex-China, for two reasons. First, as the U.S.–China decoupling continues, much American money leaving China will go into other Indo–Pacific economies. Second, when greater American military might, coupled with increased defense spending and capabilities in East Asian countries, is realized under Trump’s pressures, it will be deployed to contain the Chinese regime and achieve greater regional stability, and new investment money will arrive with more confidence.

But then what about Europe, which the United States and perhaps Britain are leaving behind? It will do fine, but in a previously unexpected way.

This will be the scenario: Trump 2.0 will continue to goad Europe to pony up for its own defense, necessarily at the expense of its welfare state, climate policy, and open borders, and damage the transatlantic relationship if it must. Trump will be much maligned in the process.

For example, a recent BBC article accused the U.S. president of “blow[ing] up the world order.” 

But that is sheer Eurocentrism, because Trump is merely resetting Washington’s relationship with Europe and Europe is not the whole world.

In fact, there are good signs that Europe is reacting to Trump in a healthy way; for example, the newly elected German leader has decided that Germany must spend huge amounts in upgrading its military, notwithstanding that it necessarily will have to cut welfare spending and retune its growth model.

Expectedly, when Europe is strong and wholesome again, Trump will be gone from the stage and his successors will be able to mend fences with all obstacles removed. At that point, the world will still be essentially bipolar: the open society camp versus the authoritarian-or-worse camp.

There will be two main theaters where the conflict between the two camps will be played out. 

First is Asia, in which the United States—rid of its European baggage and in some kind of alliance with Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, and Australia—will face off against the Chinese regime. 

The mightiest power on Earth will try to roll back and contain the most dangerous. 

Next is Europe, where a reformed and repowered European Union will take on Russia. 

A second-rate power will try to keep a third-rate one in check. 

It will be a much more rational conflict configuration and manageable division of labor for the West than it is now.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 22:35

ZeroHedge News
Open 
China Ends Military Drills With 'Simulated Attacks' On Taiwan Ports, Energy Sites
China Ends Military Drills With 'Simulated Attacks' On Taiwan Ports, Energy Sites

China's military on Wednesday announced the completion of major war drills aimed at Taiwan, and which included a 'live fire' portion - as well as the patrols of some 20 naval ships off Taiwan's coast.

The PLA's Eastern Theater Command revealed that the second day involved simulated strikes on key ports and energy sites of the self-ruled island and US ally. A PLA spokesman had described drills which "test the troops' capabilities" in areas such as "blockade and control, and precision strikes on key targets."



The Chinese military further said it conducted "long-range live-fire drills". China's Shandong aircraft carrier was also spotted in regional waters testing its ability to "blockade" Taiwan, as part of the exercises dubbed "Strait Thunder-2025A".

Beijing's foreign ministry meanwhile on Wednesday declared the "punishment will not stop" if Taiwan leaders don't halt their 'separatist' rhetoric.

Additional to the naval assets at sea, some 50 jets were involved in the drills, the biggest since early last year - to which Taiwan's military responded by dispatching its own aircraft and ships, and land-based missile systems on coastal areas.

Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defense listed out the following Chinese military weaponry which was moved near Taiwan by early afternoon on the first day of the exercise: 71 sorties by military aircraft and drones, 21 navy ships ranged around the island, and the aforementioned Shandong carrier which was spotted about 220 nautical miles east of Taiwan

The Eastern Theatre Command simultaneous to all of this had issued a brief video calling Lai a "parasite" in English, also depicting him as a green bug dangled by chopsticks over a burning Taiwan.

Taiwan officials blasted the drills as "reckless" and "irresponsible". Taiwan's military subsequently elevated its readiness level to ensure China does not "turn drills into combat" and "launch a sudden attack on us."
Via Marine Insight

China's Foreign Ministry had at the week's start called out Washington's role in the Taiwan tensions, slamming US’ use of "China threat" rhetoric which is bent on provoking confrontation, but which will end in regional countries being used as "cannon fodder" for US hegemony - according to a statement.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 23:00

The Hill
Open 
Republicans seen more favorably, more united than Democrats: Poll
Americans hold more favorable views of Republicans than Democrats, even as favorability remains grim across the board, according to the latest Economist/YouGov poll. In the survey, released Wednesday, Republicans in Congress have a net negative 13 favorability — with 39 percent viewing them favorably and 52 percent unfavorably. Congressional Democrats, meanwhile, perform twice as poorly,...

The Hill
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Vice President JD Vance and former Vice President Kamala Harris are seen as top contenders for the White House in 2028 by their respective parties, according to the latest Economist/YouGov poll. The poll, released Wednesday, asks Democrats and Republicans whom they would consider supporting in the 2028 presidential election and asks which person would be...

The Hill
Open 
Booker says he hoped floor speech would be something that 'would unify our caucus'
Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) said on Wednesday he hoped to unify the Democratic party with his marathon floor speech this week after the caucus grew bitterly divided in debates over the continuing resolution last month. In an interview on MSNBC’s “The Beat with Ari Melber,” Booker described those tense moments behind closed doors last month,...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump tariffs see stocks dive and investors scramble to bonds, gold and yen
Nasdaq futures tumbled 3.3% and in after-hours trade as $760bn was wiped from the market value of ‘Magnificent Seven’ technology leadersStocks dived and investors scrambled to the safety of bonds, gold and the yen on Thursday as Donald Trump unveiled a bigger-than-expected wall of tariffs around the world’s largest economy, upending trade and supply chains.The technology sector was pummelled as manufacturing hubs in China and Taiwan faced new tariffs above 30%. In total, China now faces an eye-watering 54% in tariffs on its exports to the US. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Newscast: Trump’s Tariffs - The Reveal
There’s a 10% tariff on the UK and 20% on the EU.

Techdirt
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Take-Two DMCAs Video Of GTA5 Mod To For GTA6 Map Content
Rockstar Games and its parent company, Take-Two Interactive, have been telling us who they are for years. And who they are, for our purposes, amounts to a game developer that both absolutely hates any leaked information about its games and one that has been perfectly willing to go to war with its own modding community. […]

CNET News
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Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Thursday, April 3
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 3.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Newscast
There’s a 10% tariff on the UK and 20% on the EU.

TechRadar News
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CinemaCon 2025 live – Mario 2 and Spider-Man 4 confirmed, but will we see new James Bond?

Sky News Home
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Gaza ambulance 'crushed' by IDF as aid attacks increase
On Sunday, a mass grave containing the bodies of 15 first responders was unearthed in Gaza. Sky News investigates how their final moments unfolded.

Sky News Home
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Myanmar emergency appeal launched after earthquake
An emergency appeal has been launched after the 7.7 magnitude earthquake which struck Myanmar last week.

Wired Top Stories
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Trump’s Tariffs Could Reshape the US Tech Industry
Apple, Amazon, and other tech companies reliant on global supply chains stand to lose the most from Trump's trade policies, but some software firms expect more demand for their services.

Boing Boing
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Hooters is bankrupt
Hooters, the restaurant chain named for the prominently-posed busts of its servers, is going tits up. The company filed for bankruptcy today and announced plans to sell its remaining locations to franchisees, thereby guaranteeing continuity of service for those still dining there. — Read the rest
The post Hooters is bankrupt appeared first on Boing Boing.

Sky News Home
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MP tells Sky News she was attacked online by Tate brothers after Commons contribution
An MP has told Sky News she was attacked online by the Tate brothers after she participated in a debate in the House of Commons about violence against women.

The Hill
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Former Biden chief of staff blames aides for Trump debate performance
Former President Biden’s chief of staff, Ron Klain, blames the senior aides for the poor debate performance last summer against then-candidate Donald Trump. Klain, who was interviewed for a new book, was highlighted in an article by The Guardian recalling his time helping Biden prep for last June’s debate, where his poor performance sparked calls...

The Hill
Open 
McConnell on vote to undo Trump tariffs against Canada: ‘We need to reinforce our allies’
Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said the United States needs to “reinforce our allies” when asked why he voted to undo President Trump’s tariffs against Canada. Four GOP senators, including McConnell, voted with Democrats on Wednesday for a resolution to undo Trump’s 25 percent tariff on Canadian imports. McConnell, the former Senate Minority Leader, said he’s...

The Guardian (UK)
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Liberation from what? Trump promised lower prices – his tariffs risk the opposite
Trump pledged to liberate the nation from higher prices, and is betting tariffs won’t raise them too high, for too longFor weeks, Donald Trump and his aides sought to brand Wednesday as “liberation day” in America. Many in the US could be forgiven for wondering what exactly they’ve just been liberated from.After much hype, the president unveiled his plan for a new era in global trade: a blanket 10% tariff on goods imported into the US starting Saturday, and higher “reciprocal” tariffs (of up to 49%) on countries taxing US exports starting next Wednesday. Continue reading...

ZDNet News
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The best fitness rings of 2025: Expert tested and reviewed
Get on track with your fitness and recovery goals with the best smart rings on the market now.

Russia Today News
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Trump believes he needs Russia – ex-Ukrainian FM

Mail Online
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White Lotus star Carrie Coon claps back at Meghan McCain in ugly spat over her support of Trump
Coon's character on the show was involved in one of the most viral scenes, in which three friends began discussing politics over a bottle of wine and one of the women revealed she was a MAGA supporter.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump hits UK with 10% 'reciprocal' tariffs as he unveils 'Liberation Day' onslaught including 25% on ALL foreign car imports - but Starmer WON'T retaliate as EU faces 20%
Donald Trump imposed 10 per cent 'reciprocal' tariffs on the UK last night - but hit the rest of the world even harder as he vowed to stop the US being 'pillaged', 'raped' and 'brutalised'.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's 'wonkiest road' which was so crooked it was used as a makeshift skate park finally reopens after £5MILLION fix
A 330ft stretch of the B4069 in Lyneham, Wiltshire was broken up when a landslip caused it to slide 82-foot downhill during Storm Eunice in February 2022.

Slashdot
Open 
Open-Source Tool Designed To Throttle PC and Server Performance Based On Electricity Pricing
Robotics and machine learning engineer Naveen Kul developed WattWise, a lightweight open-source CLI tool that monitors power usage via smart plugs and throttles system performance based on electricity pricing and peak hours. Tom's Hardware reports: The simple program, called WattWise, came about when Naveen built a dual-socket EPYC workstation with plans to add four GPUs. It's a power-intensive setup, so he wanted a way to monitor its power consumption using a Kasa smart plug. The enthusiast has released the monitoring portion of the project to the public now, but the portion that manages clocks and power will be released later. Unfortunately, the Kasa Smart app and the Home Assistant dashboard was inconvenient and couldn't do everything he desired. He already had a terminal window running monitoring tools like htop, nvtop, and nload, and decided to take matters into his own hands rather than dealing with yet another app.

Naveen built a terminal-based UI that shows power consumption data through Home Assistant and the TP-Link integration. The app monitors real-time power use, showing wattage and current, as well as providing historical consumption charts. More importantly, it is designed to automatically throttle CPU and GPU performance. Naveen's power provider uses Time-of-Use (ToU) pricing, so using a lot of power during peak hours can cost significantly more. The workstation can draw as much as 1400 watts at full load, but by reducing the CPU frequency from 3.7 GHz to 1.5 GHz, he's able to reduce consumption by about 225 watts. (No mention is made of GPU throttling, which could potentially allow for even higher power savings with a quad-GPU setup.)

Results will vary based on the hardware being used, naturally, and servers can pull far more power than a typical desktop -- even one designed and used for gaming. WattWise optimizes the system's clock speed based on the current system load, power consumption as reported by the smart plug, and the time -- with the latter factoring in peak pricing. From there, it uses a Proportional-Integral (PI) controller to manage the power and adapts system parameters based on the three variables. A blog post with more information is available here.

WattWise is also available on GitHub.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

CNET News
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Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for April 3, #396
Don't let today's Strands puzzle bug you. Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle No. 396 for April 3.

The Guardian (UK)
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How will Myanmar’s earthquake impact the civil war? – podcast
Myanmar’s military junta has been losing territory for months. Will the earthquake and a new ceasefire help it turn the tide? Rebecca Ratcliffe reports“It took around four to five minutes for the earthquake to shake and then it stopped and shook again. It is the most severe earthquake I have experienced in my life.”Esther J is a reporter based in Bangkok, Thailand, more than 600 miles (966km) away from her home country of Myanmar – the epicentre of last week’s 7.7 magnitude earthquake. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Ukraine war briefing: No Trump tariff on Russia as his officials host Putin investment tsar
Kryvyi Rig hit while Kharkiv endures barrage of Shahed drones; Nato foreign ministers including Marc Rubio to meet in Brussels. What we know on day 1,135 Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Three things to know about Trump's tariffs announcement
The BBC's Michelle Fleury breaks down what the import taxes mean for the US and countries around the world.

Digital Trends
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SpaceX’s Crew Dragon to splash down in Pacific for first time — how to watch
SpaceX is making final preparations to bring home the Fram2 crew, which launched to orbit in a private mission on Monday. The Crew Dragon and its four crewmembers will splash down off the coast of California on Friday, marking the first Crew Dragon mission to land in the Pacific Ocean Up to now, the Crew […]

Mail Online
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Eamonn Holmes 'unveils surprising new career venture' - as real reason presenter's live theatre show was axed is 'revealed'
Eamonn Holmes is reportedly launching a new podcast, with plans to interview star-studded guests following the sudden axing of his new live theatre show.

Mail Online
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Reese Witherspoon shares first snap from Legally Blonde prequel as Elle Woods gets a major refresh
Reese Witherspoon originated the role of the bubbly sorority girl who becomes an ace Harvard Law School student in the original classic 2001 comedy.

Mail Online
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Mail Online
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Marjorie Taylor Greene's ex slammed for harassing Muslim girls in profanity-laden tirade, telling them to get out of America
Marjorie Taylor Greene's former husband Perry Greene is under fire for a shocking verbal attack on young Muslim girls who were praying in a mall car park in Alpharetta, Georgia.

Mail Online
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Nicolas Cage's son Weston learns fate in felony assault case following 'vicious attack' on mom
Nicolas Cage 's son, Weston, will avoid prison, nearly a year after his mom, Christina Fulton, accused him of violently attacking her outside his apartment complex.

Mail Online
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Trans teacher who calls herself a 'goddess' forced to quit over pronouns video
Rosalyn Sandri was praising the 14 and 15-year-old students for bringing her a sense of 'gender euphoria' by honoring her chosen pronouns and knowing her 'correct name'.

Mail Online
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Noel Gallagher 'finally kicks off rehearsals' for Oasis comeback tour while Liam prioritises 'rest' as singer STILL hasn't joined his brother in the studio
Noel Gallagher has finally kicked off rehearsals for the hotly-anticipated Oasis comeback tour in the summer, according to new reports. 

Mail Online
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Britain's 'wonkiest road' which was so crooked it was used as a makeshift skate park finally reopens after £5MILLION fix
A 330-foot stretch of the B4069 in Lyneham, Wiltshire was broken up when a landslip caused it to slide 82-foot downhill during Storm Eunice in February 2022.

Gizmodo
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The First Footage From Wicked: For Good Just Screened—Here’s What Happened
Cynthia Erivo's Elphaba, Ariana Grande's Glinda, and more familiar Wizard of Oz characters star in the sequel musical, out in November.

Mail Online
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STEPHEN GLOVER: The time's come to stop indulging Trump. Bending the knee hasn't got Keir Starmer anywhere - but standing up for Britain will
All of our Prime Minister's grovelling and sucking up has come to nothing. As recently as last week, No 10 was suggesting that this country might obtain its own favoured deal. This slipped Trump's mind.

Mail Online
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How will Trump's tariffs affect YOU? Inside the 'bumpy road ahead' for Brits in the wake of the US President's 'Liberation Day'
Britain appeared to come out the least unscathed in the Republican's so-called Liberation Day announcements. Many nations saw tariffs of up to 49% slapped on them.

Mail Online
Open 
Tan Kesler reveals the truth about his shock Hull City exit for the first time - and why he wants to return to England one day
INSIDE THE EFL: Tan Kesler smiles as he greets Mail Sport in the lobby of a plush hotel in Cambridge. The former Hull City vice-chairman is here to talk.

Mail Online
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RANGERS CONFIDENTIAL: The young star who's been cast into the shadows by Vaclav Cerny... and the fringe men who could yet earn club a decent fee
Vaclav Cerny has undoubtedly been a ray of sunshine in a largely dark season for Rangers, but he has also managed to cast a shadow over one of the Ibrox club's brightest prospects in the process.

The Guardian (UK)
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The Guardian view on dignity at the workplace: good for the economy as well as society | Editorial
Labour must ignore the business lobbies and forge ahead with Angela Rayner’s landmark employment rights billA few years ago, the Harvard professor Michael Sandel used an episode in his Radio 4 series The Public Philosopher to discuss perspectives on the value of work. Canvassing the views of a Dagenham audience ranging from low-paid retail employees to white‑collar professionals, Prof Sandel drew two principal conclusions: work was widely viewed as a potential source of self-esteem and communal purpose; but for too many its oppressive reality was one of stress, precarity and a sense of disempowerment.Some of the bleak consequences of that divide are outlined in the impact assessments accompanying Angela Rayner’s employment rights bill, which is now passing through the House of Lords. In 2022/23, for example, 17.1m working days were lost due to stress, depression or anxiety – equivalent to an estimated £5bn in lost output. Around 2 million employees reported anxiety due to a lack of clarity over the number of hours they will work, or shifts suddenly being changed. A lack of adequate employment protection means that some 4,000 pregnant women and mothers returning from maternity leave lose their jobs each year.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The Guardian view on online safety: don’t let Trump dictate the terms of debate | Editorial
The White House and tech oligarchs are using free speech arguments as cover to suffocate any European attempt to regulate digital spaceIn 1858, when London could no longer tolerate the stench of raw effluent in the Thames, city authorities commissioned a system of sewers that operates to this day. A century later, when noxious fog choked the capital, parliament passed the first Clean Air Act, limiting coal fire emissions.When a dangerous toxin assails the senses, polluting public space to the detriment of all that use it, the case for legislation is self-evident. The argument is more complex when the poison has no chemical properties; when it exists in a virtual realm. This is the conceptual challenge for regulation of digital content. It is made all the more complex by conflation with arguments about free speech and censorship.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Perilous and chaotic, Trump’s ‘liberation day’ imperils the world’s broken economy – and him | Martin Kettle
While the president has identified the need to do things differently, his strategy risks a slump, hitting the very Americans he claims to championIt would be “liberation day” in the US, the White House announced. Well, we shall see. Yet even if one puts the noise and nastiness that accompany a Donald Trump announcement to one side – in this case tonight’s pronouncement that there will be an executive order announcing “reciprocal tariffs on countries throughout the world”, a 10% tariff on the UK and 20% on the EU – the significance of the theatre is hard to miss. Whether they presage the US’s liberation, or instead the disintegration of the global trading order, Trump’s tariffs add up to an attempt to transform a badly broken economic model. And that is something that affects us all.Trump’s announcement was awash with insult and rambling nonsense. The rest of the world had looted, raped and pillaged, had scavenged and ransacked America – shocking claims if they had come from any other US president, yet water off a duck’s back today. But the hard core was there all the same: tariffs on the whole of the rest of the world. The shutters were up.Martin Kettle is a Guardian columnistDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

Ars Technica
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First-party Switch 2 games—including re-releases—all run either $70 or $80

Boing Boing
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Watch: Doggy daycare separates chill doggos from hyper pups in comical video
The Red Rover doggy daycare in South Carolina separates its canine guests into two groups depending on the dogs' energy levels: Side A is for the chillaxed, introverted doggos, while Side B is for the more active, extroverted pups.
And there's no denying which group is which! — Read the rest
The post Watch: Doggy daycare separates chill doggos from hyper pups in comical video appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Here's the scientific truth about squirting. Yes, that kind of squirting.
When some people with a vagina are highly aroused or having an orgasm, a rush of fluid will squirt out. It is a real thing. It does happen. But what exactly is this liquid? Is it urine? Some kind of ejaculate? — Read the rest
The post Here's the scientific truth about squirting. Yes, that kind of squirting. appeared first on Boing Boing.

XKCD
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Decay Chain

The Register
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Wikipedia's overlords bemoan AI bot bandwidth burden
Crawlers snarfing long-tail content for training and whatnot cost us a fortune Web-scraping bots have become an unsupportable burden for the Wikimedia community due to their insatiable appetite for online content to train AI models.…

ZeroHedge News
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Over 100 Rounds Fired During Weekend Shooting In Seattle
Over 100 Rounds Fired During Weekend Shooting In Seattle

West Seatlle...or war zone?

That's the question many have to be asking after a report that over 100 rounds were fired in West Seattle this past Sunday according to MyNorthwest.

The SPD said in a statement: “On March 30, patrol officers responded to multiple reports of shots fired and property damage near 26th Avenue Southwest and Southwest Brandon Street.” 

“When police arrived, all involved parties left the area. They did not locate any victims with injuries, no suspects, or cooperative witnesses,” the report continued.



Seattle police say a large crowd was gathered for a vigil—likely for a recent South Seattle homicide victim—when gunfire erupted. Officers found over 100 shell casings at the scene.

A detective commented: “There was bullet damage to a nearby RV trailer. There was bullet damage to a house, and there was an abandoned vehicle that was also damaged."

The MyNorthwest article says that SPD suspects Glock switches may have been involved. The Gun Violence Reduction Unit is investigating and processing the scene.

“These glock switches, they’re basically capable of turning a pistol into an automatic machine gun type of a weapon,” the detective continued. 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 20:30

ZeroHedge News
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Futures Tumble As President Trump Delivers "Declaration Of Economic Independence"
Futures Tumble As President Trump Delivers "Declaration Of Economic Independence"

Update (1630ET): “Well we have some very, very good news today,” Trump began his address exclaiming that “This is Liberation Day.”


“April 2, 2025, will forever be remembered as the day American industry was reborn, the day America’s destiny was reclaimed and the day that we began to make America wealthy again,” Trump says.

“For decades, our country has been looted, pillaged, raped and plundered by nations near and far, both friend and foe alike. American steel workers, auto workers, farmers and skilled craftsmen -- we have a lot of them here with us today. They really suffered gravely.”

“In a few moments, I will sign a historic Executive Order, reciprocal tariffs on countries throughout the world. Reciprocal. That means they do it to us and we do it to them. Very simple. Can’t get any simpler than that.”




Trump lays out his theory that tariffs will bring back a “golden age” for the US, a phrase he also used in his inaugural address:

“Jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country, and you see it happening already. We will supercharge our domestic industrial base.”

Trump says the reciprocal tariffs will bring “stronger competition and lower prices for consumers” in the US.

Finally, Trump announces his tariff plan details as a "Declaration Of Economic Independence"

Specifically, Trump announced a baseline tariff rate of 10% for all countries (below the 15% consensus and 20% worst case) beginning April 5th.

Trump confirmed the 25% tariff on all auto imports.

BUT, specific reciprocal tariffs for 'bad actors' starting on April 9th.

Additionally, Trump said they will not be full reciprocal tariffs, then held a chart up showing the individual nation (trade-weighted average) tariff levels:



Here is the full list:

















Here are some specifics:


China: 34% (which is on top of the current 20% tariff, meaning a total 54% tariff)


EU: 20%

Japan: 24%

UK: 10%


South Korea: 25%


Thailand: 36%


Switzerland: 31%

Taiwan: 32%

Malaysia: 24%

Here are the hardest hit nations:


Iraq 39%


Mauritius 40%


Syria 41%


Falkland Islands 41%


Vietnam: 46%


Madagascar 47%


Laos 48%


Cambodia 49%


Lesotho 50%


Saint Pierre & Miquelon 50%

Mexico and Canada are not on the list as US will continue to exempt USMCA-compliant goods. 


For Canada and Mexico, the existing fentanyl/migration IEEPA orders remain in effect, and are unaffected by this order. This means USMCA compliant goods will continue to see a 0% tariff, non-USMCA compliant goods will see a 25% tariff, and non-USMCA compliant energy and potash will see a 10% tariff. In the event the existing fentanyl/migration IEEPA orders are terminated, USMCA compliant goods would continue to receive preferential treatment, while non-USMCA compliant goods would be subject to a 12% reciprocal tariff.


The Loonie and the Peso rallied on the news...



Some goods will not be subject to the Reciprocal Tariff.


These include: 

(1) articles subject to 50 USC 1702(b);

(2) steel/aluminum articles and autos/auto parts already subject to Section 232 tariffs;

(3) copper, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, and lumber articles;

(4) all articles that may become subject to future Section 232 tariffs; 

(5) bullion; and 

(6) energy and other certain minerals that are not available in the United States.


Initially markets heard Trump's comments as 'better than expected' and futures spiked on the news, but then as he showed the chart of specific tariffs, futures plunged...



Treasury yields also tumbled, erasing the day's spike higher...



“If you want your tariff rate to be zero, then you build your product right here in America, because there is no tariff if you build your plant, your product in America,” Trump said, concluding:


“Likewise to all of the foreign presidents, prime ministers, kings, queens, ambassadors and everyone else who will soon be calling to ask for exemptions from these tariffs, I say terminate your own tariffs, drop your barriers, don’t manipulate your currencies."


The White House issued a full Fact Sheet here...


“These tariffs will remain in effect until such a time as President Trump determines that the threat posed by the trade deficit and underlying nonreciprocal treatment is satisfied, resolved, or mitigated.”


And cue the negotiations...

Adam Hetts, global head of multi-asset at Janus Henderson, suggests this is the opening salvo for negotiations and the question is how much economic pain Trump is willing to tolerate:


“Eye-watering tariffs on a country-by-country basis scream ‘negotiation tactic,’ which will keep markets on edge for the foreseeable future. Fortunately, this means there’s substantial room for lower tariffs from here, albeit with a 10% baseline in place. We’ve seen the administration have a surprisingly high tolerance for market pain, now the big question is how much tolerance it has for true economic pain as negotiations unfold.”


Treasury Secretary Bessent appeared on Bloomberg TV with a simple message to the world: Don’t panic, don’t retaliate


“As long as you don’t retaliate, this is the high end of the number,” he says.


*  *  *

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*  *  *

"This is the moment... this is the time..." Trump's Jekyll & Hyde tariff-ing plans are finally to be announced ("We are going to be very nice by comparison to what they were" vs “We’ve been taken advantage of for 40 years, maybe more, and it’s just not going to happen anymore.")



As Trump discusses reciprocal tariffs (and the legacy media claims he is 'punishing allies') keep this chart in mind - does that seem like 'free trade'?



The three main things to watch for when Trump starts speaking are as follows (h/t Goldman Sachs' Brian Garrett)


What is the full list of countries included in the measures (19 is bogey)


What is the magnitude for average reciprocal tariff (GS econ expects avg 15% when weighted by US imports – this would be a negative surprise)


Confirmation of the planned timeline for implementation (the shorter the period, the more hawkish the read thru - and for now 'immediate effect' is expected)

Watch President Trump deliver his remarks in his 'Make America Wealth Again' event and answer questions here (due to start at 1600ET):



* * *

Update (0805ET): As the clock ticks down to today's 4pm announcement of "across the board" tariffs on a subset of nations, speculation about the size and scope of the new rules is rife with many nations already threatening "proportionate" responses:


USTR reportedly prepares a new tariff option for US President Trump which is "an across-the-board tariff on a subset of nations that likely would not be as high as the 20% universal tariff option", according to WSJ.


US President Trump's tariff plans are "coming down to the wire" with his team reportedly still finalising the size and scope of the new levies, according to Bloomberg.


US Treasury Secretary Bessent told lawmakers that Wednesday's tariffs are a 'cap', according to a CNBC reporter cited by Reuters.


On UK-US tariffs, "Sounds like any hopes of a last-ditch concession from Donald Trump ahead of his tariffs announcement are fading", according to Times' Swinford; although a deal could be signed as soon as next week "Keir Starmer is not planning to speak to him today, but there are hopes that the economic deal giving Britain a carve-out can be signed as soon as next week. Sources talking about 'days or weeks'" "But in truth No 10 doesn't know what Trump is planning or when concessions could be made. All deeply uncertain this morning".


Canada is to avoid counter-tariffs that risk Canadian jobs and price hikes and it won't impose retaliation tariffs on most US food and other basic necessities, according to the Globe and Mail citing two federal trade advisers.


Thai Commerce Ministry said Thai semiconductors may face 25% US tariffs and noted that Thai tariffs are 11% higher than US tariffs, while it added Thailand may see an impact of USD 7bln-8bln from US reciprocal tariffs but announced it will increase imports of US goods and plans tariff cuts for US products.


French Industry Minister reaffirms that Europe will respond to Trump tariffs in a proportionate manner; says Europe must show strength and be less naive

The irony, of course, is that if Trump unveils 'reciprocal' tariffs - mirroring the tariffs being put on US exports - any retaliatory response by a foreign nation cannot be proportionate by its nature. Any response is escalatory as the US is merely 'catching up' to the tariffs being put on its own goods.

Bloomberg reports that Trump is considering three options:


1) a blanket 20% tariff on all imports; 

2) a tiered system with three different rate levels; 

3) a country-by-country rate model.


White House spokesperson Leavitt said new duties are effective immediately which feels less ideal vs a delayed start (no time for negotiations).

*  *  *

Update  (8:45pm ET): With just hours to go until Trump's "Liberation day" announcement, things remain... fluid.


Bloomberg reports that Trump’s deliberations over his plans to impose reciprocal tariffs are coming down to the wire, with his team said to be still finalizing the size and scope of the new levies he is slated to unveil on Wednesday afternoon. As a reminder, Peter Navarro said that Trump wants to raise $700 billion annually in tariff revenue.


In meetings on Tuesday, Trump’s team continued to hash out their options ahead of a Rose Garden event scheduled to begin as US markets close at 4 p.m. on Wednesday. 


The White House has not reached a firm decision on their tariff plan, even though Trump himself said earlier in the week that he had “settled” on an approach.


Several proposals are said to be under consideration, including a tiered tariff system with a set of flat rates for countries, as well as a more customized reciprocal plan. 


Under the first option, countries would see their goods face levies at either a 10% or 20% rate depending on their tariff and non-tariff barriers on US goods.


Under the two-tiered approach, the highest levies would be applied to the countries perceived as the biggest offenders, both in terms of true tariffs as well as easily quantifiable non-tariff measures that act to deter US imports. Trump’s White House this week has complained about the trade practices of the EU, Japan, India and Canada, for example.



Another approach would see the US applying individualized reciprocal rates, tailored to countries based on their existing levies and non-tariff barriers. This approach was publicly signaled for weeks but some recent deliberations suggest it’s no longer the main focus. 


There’s also been discussion of a return to Trump’s original proposal: a flat global tariff, which would apply evenly to trillions of imports. And the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump was considering a more targeted plan that would apply a tariff of less than 20% to a narrower section of countries.


With less than 24 hours to go until Trump’s announcement, companies, countries and the lobbyists paid to influence the president’s agenda tried to find out final details of the plan, only to learn there aren't any final details yet. 


Amid the continuing barrage of trial balloons, the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump aides were studying a more targeted option, while Fox News said Tuesday that Trump was also still considering a flat 20% global tariff.


Amid all the speculation, the White House on Tuesday stayed silent on the details of Trump’s plan, ahead of the president’s formal announcement, while Leavitt told reporters on Tuesday that Trump was “with his trade and tariff team right now perfecting it to make sure this is a perfect deal for the American people and the American worker.”


Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told lawmakers that the tariffs would be a cap. reflecting the highest levels they’ll go, with countries then able to take steps to bring rates down, 


Representative Kevin Hern, an Oklahoma Republican, told CNBC. Earlier Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said that the tariffs would take immediate effect but that Trump was open to subsequent negotiation. “Certainly, the president is always up to take a phone call, always up for a good negotiation,” she said.


The late-hour movement signaled that the scope and details of the long-promised announcement are shifting even as the pageantry of the event — dubbed a “Make America Wealthy Again” celebration — comes into focus.

Trump said Monday he had made a decision “actually a long time ago,” but didn’t reveal it. Leavitt reiterated that claim, though the White House declined to weigh in on various proposals said to be under consideration. A spokesman did not immediately reply to requests for further comment Tuesday.

Other key questions swirl, like the fate of tariffs already applied to China, Canada and Mexico, and clawed back partially for the latter two. The White House has not said whether those would be replaced by Trump’s Wednesday announcement, or whether his move to exempt goods traded under the continental trade pact might also be extended somehow to the new levies. The president has also promised coming tariffs on key sectors including pharmaceuticals, semiconductors and lumber.

* * * * *

There is just over 24 hours left until President Trump unveils the specifics of his "Liberation day" from global trade barriers at 3pm on Wednesday, and with markets obsessing over what the president will and will not say, we are starting a rolling blog which will be updated for all major developments. 

We begin with the known-knowns ahead of tomorrow's big reveal:

Reciprocal Tariffs – President Trump said on Sunday that the reciprocal tariffs he is set to announce will include all nations, not just a smaller group of 10-15 countries with the largest trade imbalances. The White House has yet to outline what tariffs are coming up, how these will be calculated or what countries will need to do to secure exemptions. The President also mentioned that these tariffs will account for other countries’ non-tariff barriers, though he has also not went into detail on how these calculations will be conducted. Regarding exemptions, President Trump said in an interview with Newsmax that he plans to limit exceptions – though the mention of potentially giving a lot of countries “breaks” last Monday at the White House has led to a steam of talks with the US (EU, India among the names of countries mentioned) regarding concessions. One potential twist is that overnight we got a USTR trade barrier report (not the official tariffs but its lists hundred of barriers to US exports) where this part stands out: “the USTR report did not specify VATs as trade barriers in its discussion of EU policies, focusing instead on digital services taxes and the bloc's new carbon border adjustment mechanism.” (RTRS) According to Goldman, goal posts have moved rapidly to 15%+ on EU tariffs and yesterday's discussions were around the rather substantial tail risk that reciprocal VAT tariffs would mean (38%). Comments from Trump suggest a lighter touch on tariffs although without context it’s unclear what this might mean. Goldman concludes that "with risk premia having been built up the default direction will be a relief rally/vol compression (the sustainability of which will be more about US economy)."
 
Automobile Tariffs – As per the White House Fact Sheet, the 25% tariff will be applied to imported passenger vehicles (sedans, SUVs, crossovers, minivans, cargo vans) and light trucks, as well as key automobile parts (engines, transmissions, powertrain parts, and electrical components), with processes to expand tariffs on additional parts if necessary. Importers of automobiles under the USMCA will be given the opportunity to certify their U.S. content and systems will be implemented such that the 25% tariff will only apply to the value of their non-U.S. content. Tariffs on vehicles are set to take effect on 3Apr and certain auto parts no later than 3May.
 
Tariffs on countries importing Venuzuelan Oil – President Trump has issued an executive order declaring that any country buying oil or gas from Venezuela will pay a 25% tariff on trades with the U.S., and also extended a deadline (27 May) for Chevron to wind down operations. China, Spain, Brazil, Turkey, India, Italy, Cuba are among the countries that could be affected by this. In particular, China is Venezuela’s largest oil buyer (~55%). Goldman's research desk highlights that this will pose a significant risk for China – if this was to materialize, it will raise the total US effective tariff rate on China close to 60%.
 
Sectoral Tariffs – President Trump also plans to impose tax additional tariffs to target specific industries including pharmaceutical drugs, copper and lumber.
LATEST NEWS:

US Treasury Secretary Bessent said President Trump will announce reciprocal tariffs at 15:00EDT/20:00BST on Wednesday.
White House Press Secretary Leavitt stated there will be a Rose Garden event on Wednesday for the Trump tariff plan and that Trump is committed to sectoral tariffs.
White House spokesperson said no exemptions at this time when asked about tariff exemptions for farmers and any country that has treated the US unfairly should expect to receive a tariff.
White House aides have drafted a proposal to impose tariffs of around 20% (prev. touted 15%) on at least most imports to the United States, according to WaPo sources. Several options are on the table and no final decision has been made. One option would raise import duties on products from virtually every country, rejecting more targeted approaches. If combined with additional tariffs on sectors such as automobile and pharmaceutical imports, raise more than USD 6tln. Administration officials are also discussing using this revenue to finance a tax rebate or dividend payment to most Americans; planning is "highly preliminary". The White House is also still considering an order that would apply a different tariff rate to individual countries.
US President Trump said we will see tariff details maybe Tuesday night or on Wednesday which are going to be nice in comparison to other countries and in some cases, they may be substantially lower. Trump also stated that many countries have been looting the US and they will stop that on April 2nd, as well as noted there will be investments worth USD 5tln in the US. Furthermore, he stated that TikTok is not tied to a larger tariff deal but could be.
US President Trump is said to be still deciding which plan he will take for reciprocal tariffs and has been presented with "multiple" tariff plans, according to administration sources cited by FBN's Lawrence, while sources said Trump will likely not make the decision on which plan until right before April 2nd or on that morning.
Reminder:

Weekend reports suggested US President Trump is said to be pushing senior advisers to go bigger on tariff policy as they prepare for Liberation Day’ on April 2nd and reportedly revived the idea of a flat universal tariff single rate on most imports, according to Washington Post.
It was also noted that the option viewed as most likely, publicly outlined by Treasury Secretary Bessent this month, would set tariffs on products from the 15% of countries the administration deems the worst US trading partners which account for almost 90% of imports.
Europe:

EU is mulling targeting big US tech firms in response to Trump tariffs, via WaPo citing sources/officials; one official suggested that the bloc could unite on "some partial measures against American services".
France is reportedly pushing for a tougher response which includes digital services.
Other nations such as Italy remain opposed believing it will only cause further US escalation.
"European officials cautioned that there is no agreed-on hit list of digital services."
"European officials concede that measures against companies like Google (GOOGL) or Meta (META) could escalate the trade war, but they say Trump has shifted the goalposts."
"European officials are also discussing possible trade concessions"; could be willing to reverse some of the countermeasures announced after the US' aluminium/steel tariffs.
WaPo reminds us that the bloc has already signalled a willingness to reduce the 10% tariff on US autos and increase the purchase of US-made LNG.
MORGAN STANLEY ON THE RECIPROCITY PRINCIPLE (KEY TAKEAWAYS)

Tariffs appear likely to head higher, on a number of trading partners: The Trump administration said it plans to increase tariff levels after taking into account three key factors to rectify what it perceives as unfair trade relationships: 1) product-level tariff differentials; 2) VAT differentials; and 3) a subjective "unfair trading practices." We expect that the numbers revealed as a product of that assessment on April 2 will likely be a maximalist starting point, rather than ending point, for tariff levels.
April 2 should provide some clarity on the path, but we expect that not all of our questions will be answered by then: Two principles guide our rationale: The comprehensive review promised by the president is broad and complex, requiring months of investigation on a product-by-product basis, and we expect negotiations can potentially reduce levels from the stated starting point when this review concludes. Hence, April 2 is more likely a starting point than an ending point for implementation.
Key products in the EU, as well as broader Chinese imports, are likely to see increases...: When evaluating imports across the country-level criteria the administration has laid out as well as where the largest tariff differentials are, certain sectors stand out in particular, like EU autos. 
 ...While Mexico, Canada, and certain products from countries in the EU appear more likely to avoid tariffs through negotiation. We see potential for more negotiation with countries that score low across the metrics that the administration has cited as important inputs to that April 2 evaluation, as well as those that Trump has signaled a willingness to negotiate with or countries for which tariffs are explicitly tied to a policy goal (like immigration/fentanyl).
Importantly, Morgan Stanley has low conviction in this path, and sees several plausible alternatives. More aggressive, and faster, tariff implementation is possible, as well as the inverse, given the president's wide discretion and authority on this matter.
Mapping out current & expected tariffs on two vectors: relative level of conviction, and expected duration/potential for an off-ramp



Morgan Stanley incorporates "reciprocal tariffs" into that base case: The administration has stated it plans to review tariff rates on a country-by-country basis, taking into account a variety of other trade-related factors (some more subjective than others), culminating in an aggregate number (or tariff level) that Commerce Secretary Lutnick intends to present to the president April 1, to be publicly released on April 2. This to us signals that the administration is planning to engage in a broad-based retooling of its trading relationships, grounded in matching tariff rates but incorporating a number of other factors like existing trade deficit, VAT differentials, and non-tariff barriers to trade (including subsidies). 
Hence, while the short-term policy goals might align with one of the two objectives we lay out, undertaking a country-by-country review of existing trade relationships grounded in tariff reciprocity reflects, in our view, a longer-term commitment to de-risking and retooling trade policy.
Various third parties have assessed how high tariffs could go as a result of this review: the Yale Budget Lab, for example, sees the policy change resulting in an incremental 13ppt hike to tariffs on China vs. 16ppt on Mexico and 17ppt on India. Given the relatively high VAT in Europe, the tariff rate goes up by even more in the UK, Denmark/Sweden, and Hungary: 20ppt, 25ppt, and 27ppt, respectively.


More in the full Morgan Stanley reciprocity analysis available here to pro subs.

JPM TARIFF SCENARIO ANALYSIS

10% TARIFF – assuming a 10% blanket tariff that also cancels/replaces Can/Mexico tariffs but not China: SPX +2 - +2.5%. 10Y yield higher by ~10bps. EUR/USD falls to 1.06 – 1.07 (currently 1.08).
25% TARIFF – SPX falls 1.25% - 1.75%. 10Y yield declines 12-14bps. EUR/USD lower as USD behaves as a safety haven, with EUR/USD falling to 1.03 – 1.05
35% TARIFF – SPX falls 2% - 3%. 10Y yield falls 20bps. EUR/USD falls to 1.01 – 1.03.
On EU sectors vs. tariffs, JPM expect:

EU Pharma: Potential US tariffs expected to have a manageable impact, though many questions remain unanswered around key details.
Global Spirits: Financial impact likely to be substantial, ranging JPME 8-48% on annual EBIT. Believe mitigation through pricing will be limited, given sector has already derated YTD
EU Autos: If tariffs go ahead, on avg. c. 25% earnings cut to its FY25 estimates for German OEMs and Stellantis. JPM add this is the lower bound of impact. Overall, JPM remain tactically bearish.


Market Impact

WHAT DOES A GOOD OUTCOME LOOK LIKE – A low (10% or less) blanket tariff that does not include VAT with a stated willingness to discuss sectoral tariffs which include 25% on aluminum/steel, 25% on Autos, 200% on Champagne/wine from the EU, and potentially 25% on Chips and Pharmaceuticals. Further, avoiding tariffs on shipping vessels would be a positive.
WHAT DOES A BAD OUTCOME LOOK LIKE – A higher than expected blanket tariff, which includes VAT, plus additional sectoral tariffs. Further, any bans on sales or the implementation of fines/tariffs on shipping vessels would be a materially worse outcome, e.g., a full ban on chip sales to China. According to Bloomberg, NVDA received ~17% of its FY24 revenue from China.
Likely Tariff Levels (per JPMorgan)

CANADA / MEXICO – JPM does not think that we see additional tariffs mentioned, instead sticking with the 25% tariffs that were delayed.
CHINA – currently, the tariff level is 20% but given that China consumes Venezuelan oil, that adds another 25%. A deal on TikTok could reduce these levels, but that announcement may be on/before the current April 5 deadline to sell or restrict TikTok.
EU – while Trump had mentioned 25%, Bloomberg reported last week that the EU planned concessions for Trump so this could mean a lower rate in the 10% - 15% range.
JAPAN – given the willingness to negotiation and to add further investment in the US, it seems possible that Japan receives a lower rate, perhaps lower than the EU, say 10%.
JPM's proposed Monetization Menu:

Country-Level: we look at Australia, Japan, and the UK as being relative safety havens. China may work, too, given the potential to add fiscal stimulus but that is a lower conviction long.
US Sector Level: Energy and Utilities (ex-AI plays) are the two best longs and look for Lower-Income Discretionary and higher beta TMT plays as being among the more consensus shorts. Separately, parts of Fins (GSIBs, Insurance, Payment Processors) could be safety havens.
FICC: Look for Credit to outperform Equities on the move lower. We like precious metals, crude, and natgas as longs.
Overall, JPM remain tactically bearish: 

"Policy uncertainty is the dominant factor in the markets and that neither the Trump Put nor Fed Put activate in the near-term." 
Further, they see downward pressure on the soft economic data though hard data is likely to remain resilient, potentially putting a floor on the next US downdraft. 
That said, one potential event that could break the bearish outlook is the announcement of a trade deal, or framework of one, with a G7 country ahead of the announcement, e.g. US/UK deal could allow the market to look through tariffs on places such as the EU and/or Japan.
More in the full JPMorgan secnario analysis available here to pro subs.

WEEKEND HEADLINES

US Broader Tariffs

US President Trump is said to be pushing senior advisers to go bigger on tariff policy as they prepare for ‘Liberation Day’ on April 2nd and reportedly revived the idea of a flat universal tariff single rate on most imports, according to Washington Post. It was also noted that the option viewed as most likely, publicly outlined by Treasury Secretary Bessent this month, would set tariffs on products from the 15% of countries the administration deems the worst US trading partners which account for almost 90% of imports.
US President Trump said he will hit essentially all countries that they're talking about with tariffs this week and commented that there will be a deal on TikTok before the deadline, according to Reuters.
US President Trump’s closest allies including Vice President Vance, Chief of Staff Wiles and cabinet officials have privately indicated they are unsure exactly what President Trump will do during the April 2nd announcement of global tariffs, according to Politico.
US Auto Tariffs

US President Trump’s recent 25% auto tariff announcement made no mention of USMCA trade deal side letters shielding Canada and Mexico from potential auto tariffs which showed Canada and Mexico were each granted annual duty-free import quotas of 2.6mln cars and unlimited light trucks if Trump imposed global tariffs. Furthermore, Canada said it fully expects the US to honor the 2018 tariff pledges and it reserves the right to take retaliatory measures, while Mexico is evaluating the legal implications of the agreement on Trump's ‘Section 232’ auto tariff probe.
US President Trump’s Trade Adviser Navarro said auto tariffs will raise about $100BN and the other tariffs are to raise about $600BN a year, according to a Fox interview.


UK

UK PM Starmer spoke with US President Trump on Sunday evening in which they discussed productive negotiations between their respective teams on a UK-US economic prosperity deal and agreed that these will continue at pace this week. It was also reported that UK Home Secretary Cooper refused to rule out retaliating to US tariffs on cars and steel, according to Bloomberg.
France

French Ministry of Foreign Trade said France and Europe will defend their businesses, consumers and values, while it added that US interference in the inclusion policies of French companies is unacceptable.
French Commerce Minister reiterated that France would implement reciprocal tariffs if the US goes ahead with its tariff measures this week. Hoping to avoid a trade war. The Minister intends to have talks with the US Embassy in Paris to voice opposition to the US' order for French firms to comply with a diversity band.
Germany

German Chancellor Scholz said they stand by Canada’s side and that Canada is not a state that belongs to anyone else, while he added that Europe’s goal is cooperation but the EU will respond as one if the US leaves them with no choice such as with tariffs on steel and aluminium.
China

China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi said higher US tariffs on Chinese goods are unreasonable and harm global markets. (Comments made in China's Tuesday session).
LatAm

Brazil’s President Lula said he will negotiate on tariffs before retaliating, according to Bloomberg. It was also reported that Brazil’s Finance Minister Haddad said the country is in a privileged position to withstand the trade war with the commodity exporter’s links to China, the US and the EU to shield it from Drotectionism. accordina to FT
OTHER RECENT HEADLINES

28th March

EU plans concessions for Trump after reciprocal tariffs hit, according to Bloomberg sources
Chinese State Media says China will "certainly respond with countermeasures if the US insists on harming China's interests regarding the April 2nd tariffs"; if they want to discuss cooperation with China, mutual respect is a prerequisite.
US President Trump and Canada PM Camey held a very constructive phone call, according to both sides; Camey told Trump he will implement retaliatory tariffs.
US President Trump says will be announcing pharma tariffs soon; is willing to make deals on tariffs, deals on averting auto tariffs would come later.
27th March

US President Trump posted on Truth "If the European Union works with Canada in order to do economic harm to the USA, large scale Tariffs, far larger than currently planned, will be placed on them both"
Canadian PM Carney says its response to these latest tariffs is to fight; they will fight the US tariffs with retaliatory trade actions of its own; clear US is no longer a reliable partner
26th March

US President Trump may implement copper tariffs within weeks, according to Bloomberg
The US will reportedly not take all non-tariff barriers (e g. VAT) in determining reciprocal Tariff rates, according to CNBC
EU Top Trade Negotiator Sefcovic expects US President Trump to hit the bloc with tariffs of about 20% next week, via FT
EU expects Trump to set flat, double-digit tariff on April 2nd, according to Politico; According to two diplomats, suggested the tariff rate applied to the EU could be as high as 20 or 25%
US President Trump considers more limited tariff plans, automotive tariffs could be narrowed and reciprocal tariffs lowered in latest administration proposals, via WSJ
US President Trump announces to impose 25% tariffs on all cars not made in the US, while he said they will be doing tariffs on pharmaceuticals and tariffs on lumber
China's Vice Premier He Lifeng spoke with USTR's Greer by video call, via Xinhua; Both sides had candid and in depth exchange of views on economy and trade. China expressed solemn concerns on US tariffs and planned reciprocal tariffs.
25th March
India is reportedly open to cutting tariffs on over half of US imports, worth USD 23bln, via Reuters citing sources; open to cutting tariffs to as low as 0 from a 5- 30% range on 55% of US imports
India proposes to remove the 6% tariff imposed on online advertisement services offered by companies such as Google (GOOG) and Meta (META), known widely as the Google tax, from April 1st which is a day before Trump's reciprocal tariffs take effect.
US President Trump considers a two-step tariff regime on April 2nd, according to FT; Possible phased approach to new US levies reflects debate over trade strategy within administration.
US President Trump says he has April 2nd tariffs set, and he has been fair to countries that abused US for many decades
24th March:

Trump implements secondary tariff on Venezuela; anyone who buys oil/gas from Venezuela will face an additional 25% tariff on all US trade.
US President Trump says they will be announcing tariffs on autos, aluminium and pharmaceuticals in the very near future.
Trump says he will announce additional tariffs over the next few days on autos, lumber, and chips
Trump says he may give a lot of countries breaks on tariffs.
22nd March (weekend)

President Donald Trump's coming wave of tariffs is poised to be more targeted than the barrage he has occasionally threatened, aides and allies say, a potential relief for markets gripped by anxiety about an all-out tariff war. (Bloomberg)
21st March

France reportedly to float using EU's most powerful trade tool on US, according to Bloomberg
US President Trump says there will be flexibility on tariffs, basically it's reciprocal; they can't be expected to carry Canada.
UK government reportedly considering plans to reduce or even abolish its digital services tax before April 2nd, via Bloomberg.
20th March

US President Trump says he believes India is probably going to be lowering tariffs substantially but on April 2nd, we will be charging them the same tariffs they charge us
EU's Trade Commissioner Sefcovic says the Commission is considering delaying first set of counter-tariffs against the US to mid-April
19th March

US President Trump's aides are planning new tariffs on “trillions" more in imports on April 2nd, according to WaPo
EU is reportedly to tighten steel import quotas as of April 1st, via Reuters citing sources; to reduce inflows by 15%
18th March

US President Trump's team reportedly explored a simplified plan for reciprocal tariffs in which they recently debated sorting trading partners into one of three tiers instead of equalising tariff rates with every nation, according to WSJ
17th March:

US President Trump says he has no intention of creating exemptions on steel and aluminium tariffs, while he adds reciprocal tariffs will happen on April 2nd
USTR's Greer imposes policy process on reciprocal tariff plan; President Trump's top trade negotiator is attempting to inject order into sweeping new tariffs expected next month, after previous announcements roiled markets and fueled business uncertainty
India reportedly weighs lower tariffs for US medical devices, according to Economic Times
13th March:

Trump said the EU put a 50% tariff on whiskey, if this is not removed, the US will place a 200% tariff on wines, champagnes and other alcoholic products coming out of France and other EU represented countries.
Canada's Ontario Premier says they had a productive meeting with US Commerce Secretary Lutnick and will have another meeting next week, adds feel temperatures are decreasing and it was the best meeting they had since tariff talks began
TARIFF TALLY (SO FAR)

US Tariff Policy

US reciprocal Tariffs: Trump on February 13th signed his plan for reciprocal tariffs, albeit delayed their implementation. The delay allows Trump admin to launch negotiations on a one-by-one basis with nations that could be impacted. The studies of each country could be completed by April 1st.
US tariffs on steel and aluminium: US President Trump signed proclamations on Monday 10th February 2025 to reimpose a 25% tariff on steel and aluminium imports and declared there are no exceptions or exemptions, effective March 12th.
US tariffs on agriculture: Trump: To the Great Farmers of the United States: Get ready to start making a lot of agricultural product to be sold INSIDE of the United States. Tariffs will go on external product on April 2nd. Have fun!"
Canada/Mexico

US on Canada and Mexico: Tariffs on imports from these countries have been paused for 30 days to allow for negotiations on border security and drug trafficking issues. Pause was initiated on February 3, 2025, is set to expire on March 4, 2025, at 12:01am. The pause expired, with Trump stating ‘there is no room left for a deal on tariffs on Mexico and Canada".
US tariff rollback: A day after the tariffs came into effect, Trump said he would temporarily spare carmakers from a new 25% import tax imposed on Canada and Mexico. Two days after imposing tariffs, Trump announced that duties on a wide range of products would be shelved until April 2nd.
Canada’s retaliatory tariffs: Following the end of the pause on March 4th, Canada said it would start with 25% tariffs on US imports worth CAD 30bln from Tuesday, while it will impose tariffs on an additional CAD 125bln worth of US imports in 21 days (albeit second wave suspended for now). Furthermore, it said tariffs will remain in place until the US trade action is withdrawn and it is in active discussions with provinces and territories to pursue several non-tariff measures if US tariffs do not cease.
50% US tariff and Canadian Energy Surcharge rollback: Trump on March 11th initially instructed the Commerce Secretary to impose an additional 25%, to 50%, on all steel and aluminium coming into the US from Canada from March 12th although he later backed down from this threat after Ontario's Premier announced they are suspending the 25% surcharge on exports of electricity.
China

US on China: Additional 10% tariff on top of existing levies, no exclusions, came into effect at 12:01 EST on February 4th. Note, Trump did not clarify whether or not imports of Chinese metals would face double tariffs, as he has already imposed a 10% tariff on Chinese goods. Extra 10% duty came into effect at 12:01EST on March 4th.
China's retaliatory tariffs: Chinese tariffs against the US took effect on February 10th and with officials also said to be building a list of US tech firms for potential probes. China imposed 15% tariffs on US coal & LNG, 10% tariffs on US oil, agricultural machines, and some autos; Tariffs imposed in direct response to Trump's 10% tariffs, according to the Chinese Finance Ministry. China also announced export controls (no specific country mentioned) on tungsten, tellurium, bismuth, molybdenum and indium. Following the US' extra 10%, on March 4th, China announced 15% on US chicken, wheat, com, and cotton; 10% on US soybeans, sorghum, pork, beef, aquatic products, fruits, vegetables, and dairy products; 15 US entities to the export control list; 10 US firms to the unreliable entity list; banned the import of Illumina (ILMN) gene sequence machines to China.
TARIFF TIMELINE

February 1st - Trump signed an executive order to impose 10% tariffs on all imports from China and 25% on imports from Mexico and Canada starting Feb 4th.
February 3rd - Trump agreed to a 30-day pause on tariffs against Canada and Mexico.
February 4th - US additional 10% tariff on China on top of existing levies came into effect. Chinese export controls on tungsten, tellurium, bismuth, molybdenum and indium took effect (no specific countries mentioned).
February 10th - Chinese tariffs against the US took effect (15% tariffs on US coal & LNG, 10% tariffs on US oil).
February 13th - Trump signed his plan for reciprocal tariffs, albeit delayed the implementation.
March 4th - Tariff pause on Mexico and Canada expired; Additional 10% tariffs on China went into effect on top of Feb 4th tariffs. Canada announced retaliatory tariffs over 21 days, Mexico said it will also respond with retaliatory tariffs.
March 5th - Trump allowed a one-month exemption on Mexico and Canada tariffs of US automakers following talks with Ford (F), General Motors (GM) and Stellantis (STLAM IM/STLAP FP)
March 6th - Trump postponed the initial 25% tariffs on several imports from Mexico and some imports from Canada for a month. In response, Canada suspended its second wave of retaliatory tariffs.
March 10th - China's retaliatory tariffs on certain US agricultural imports (15% on US chicken, wheat, corn, and cotton; 10% on US soybeans, sorghum, pork, beef, aquatic products, fruits, vegetables, and dairy products) went into effect; announced on March 4th in response to the extra 10% US tariff on top of Feb 4th tariffs.
March 11th - Trump threatened 50% tariffs on Canada, although he later backed down from this threat after Ontario's Premier announced they are suspending the 25% surcharge on exports of electricity. Trump separately suggested tariffs may go higher than 25% but did not specify which tariffs.
March 12th - 25% tariff on steel and aluminium imports came into effect, with "no exceptions or exemptions"; European Commission launched countermeasures on US imports while it is putting forward a package of new countermeasures.
April 1st - Completion of the US trade policy review.
April 2nd - US Liberation Day; 1) Auto tariffs "in the neighbourhood of 25%" comes into effect, 2) US tariffs on "external" agricultural products to go into effect, 3) Temporary tariff relief for Canada and Mexico expires. 4) Reciprocal tariffs kick in - details to be unveiled on the day; US President Trump to announce reciprocal tariffs at 15:00EDT/20:00BST.
April 13th - EU countermeasures against 25% steel and aluminium tariff to be fully in place.
TBC - pharma and semiconductors tariffs.
Developing

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 20:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Washington Sheriff Won't Allow Non-Citizens To Work As Police Officers, Despite Political Pressure
Washington Sheriff Won't Allow Non-Citizens To Work As Police Officers, Despite Political Pressure

A state county sheriff in Washington may be the only person left in the state with common sense. 

He is rejecting a new state senate bill that would allow non-citizens to serve in public roles such as police officers, judges, and teachers, according to Breitbart.
Sheriff Keith Swank

Despite unanimous support in the legislature, Pierce County Sheriff Keith Swank said he won’t comply. “I have a problem with non-citizens being cops and arresting our citizens in Pierce County. Therefore, we’re not going to hire non-citizens for the Pierce County Sheriff’s Office,” he told KIRO-TV.

Washington’s SB5068, which would allow non-citizens with federal work authorization—including DACA recipients—to serve as police, judges, and other public officials, passed the state senate unanimously in February.

All 30 Democrats backed it, but notably, so did all 19 Republicans.

Supporters argue there’s no difference between non-citizens in the military and in law enforcement, but Sheriff Keith Swank disagrees.


SB5068: Allowing non-citizens to be police, prosecutors, judges, firefighters, teachers, etc... WAS UNANIMOUSLY APPROVED BY LEGISLATORS [INCLUDING ALL REPUBLICANS]...
Maybe @WAGOP can take a crack at explaining this to REPUBLICAN CONSTITUENTS?
Roll Call
Public employ.… pic.twitter.com/jpjgdtlFz1
— Outrage PNW (@OutragePNW) March 27, 2025
“There’s a difference between law enforcement and the military. In law enforcement, we arrest people. We take away their constitutional rights. We lock them up in jail. We don’t use our military to do that,” he said.

Legislators claim the bill addresses Washington’s police shortage, but Swank isn’t buying it.

“The real problem is the reason it’s hard to hire people in Washington State… Cops don’t want to work here when they’re afraid to do something they might be put in prison for,” he said. The bill passed out of a House committee 6–3 and is headed for a full House vote.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 21:20

The Hill
Open 
GOP senator says he 'won't apologize' after telling fired HHS employee he 'probably deserved it'
Sen. Jim Banks (R-Ind.) on Wednesday said he “won’t apologize” for telling a fired Health and Human Services (HHS) employee that he “probably deserved it,” after video footage of the exchange was widely circulated on social media. The viral video showed former HHS employee Mack Schroeder approaching Banks in a Senate office building on...

The Hill
Open 
Trump transforms global trade
Welcome to The Hill's Business & Economy newsletter {beacon} Business & Economy Business & Economy   The Big Story  5 takeaways from Trump’s major tariff announcement President Trump reset U.S. trade policy Wednesday by announcing a 10-percent general tariff on all imports to the U.S. except for Canada and Mexico, along with targeted tariffs on dozens...

The Hill
Open 
Texas man arrested for 'making terroristic threats' against ICE agents, Noem
A Texas man was arrested for “making terroristic threats” against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem, the Dallas Homeland Security Investigations arm said Wednesday. Robert King, a U.S. citizen, was taken into custody in McKinney, Texas, after he made the threats, the agency said in a...

The Hill
Open 
Senate GOP unease sets in after Trump tariff rollout 
Senate Republicans are feeling increasingly uneasy after President Trump rolled out his “Liberation Day” batch of tariffs, which are threatening to further dent the U.S.'s economic standing after weeks of questions over what new levies would be included. Trump on Wednesday unveiled steep reciprocal tariffs against numerous nations, including allies and adversaries alike, that were...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump goes full gameshow host to push his tariff plan – and nobody’s a winner
There were charts and scores, as if The Price Is Right had come to Washington. The big prize? A global trade warIt was Jeopardy!, or The Price Is Right, come to Washington.On an unseasonably chilly day in the White House Rose Garden, Donald Trump stood with a giant chart listing which reciprocal tariffs he would impose on China, the European Union, the United Kingdom and other hapless contestants. Continue reading...

BBC World News
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World leaders call Trump tariffs 'wrong' and 'unjustified'
Italy's Giorgia Meloni says the US's tariffs on the EU are "wrong", while Australia's Anthony Albanese calls them "unjustified."

ZDNet News
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The best Samsung TVs of 2025: Expert tested and reviewed
Are you shopping for a Samsung TV? Whether you want a budget-friendly choice, a luxury home theater experience, or something for everyday viewing, here's a look at the best.

ZDNet News
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The best mini PCs of 2025: Expert recommended from Apple, Intel, and more
Having a powerful PC doesn't mean you have to have a full-size tower. We tested the best mini PCs from Apple, Intel, and more.

Mail Online
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Brit tourist, 54, who was left fighting for his life after a gas explosion destroyed his B&B in Rome 'died of septic shock after surgery'
Grant Paterson, 54, had been left in a critical condition when the horror blast brought down a three-storey building while he holidayed in Rome on March 22.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Uriah Rennie uses a wheelchair after a rare condition left him paralysed from the waist down.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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UK charities launch Myanmar Earthquake Appeal
More than 3,000 people have died and thousands have been displaced in Myanmar.

Mail Online
Open 
Shocking moment angry father, 43, yells 'you want some' before he slaps, bites and kicks teenager outside school after youngster 'brushed against' his wing mirror
Mohammed Liaquat, 43, jumped out of his Audi and confronted a group of schoolboys after one of them brushed past his wing mirror, a court has heard.

Slashdot
Open 
Five VPN Apps In the App Store Had Links To Chinese Military
A joint investigation found that at least five popular VPN apps on the App Store and Google Play have ties to Qihoo 360, a Chinese company with military links. Apple has since removed two of the apps but has not confirmed the status of the remaining three, which 9to5Mac notes have "racked up more than a million downloads." The five apps in question are Turbo VPN, VPN Proxy Master, Thunder VPN, Snap VPN, and Signal Secure VPN (not associated with the Signal messaging app). The Financial Times reports: At least five free virtual private networks (VPNs) available through the US tech groups' app stores have links to Shanghai-listed Qihoo 360, according to a new report by research group Tech Transparency Project, as well as additional findings by the Financial Times. Qihoo, formally known as 360 Security Technology, was sanctioned by the US in 2020 for alleged Chinese military links. The US Department of Defense later added Qihoo to a list of Chinese military-affiliated companies [...] In recent recruitment listings, Guangzhou Lianchuang says its apps operate in more than 220 countries and that it has 10mn daily users. It is currently hiring for a position whose responsibilities include "monitoring and analyzing platform data." The right candidate will be "well-versed in American culture," the posting says.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
NaNoWriMo To Close After 20 Years
NaNoWriMo, the nonprofit behind the annual novel-writing challenge, is shutting down after 20 years but will keep its websites online temporarily so users can retrieve their content. The Guardian reports: A 27-minute YouTube video posted the same day by the organization's interim executive director Kilby Blades explained that it had to close due to ongoing financial problems, which were compounded by reputational damage. In November 2023, several community members complained to the nonprofit's board, Blades said. They believed that staff had mishandled accusations made in May 2023 that a NaNoWriMo forum moderator was grooming children on a different website. The moderator was eventually removed, though this was for unrelated code of conduct violations and occurred "many weeks" after the initial complaints. In the wake of this, community members came forward with other complaints related to child safety on the NaNoWriMo sites.

The organization was also widely criticized last year over a statement on the use of artificial intelligence in creative writing. After stating that it did not support or explicitly condemn any approach to writing, including the use of AI, it said that the "categorical condemnation of artificial intelligence has classist and ableist undertones." It went on to say that "not all writers have the financial ability to hire humans to help at certain phases of their writing," and that "not all brains have same abilities ... There is a wealth of reasons why individuals can't 'see' the issues in their writing without help." "We hold no belief that people will stop writing 50,000 words in November," read Monday's email. "Many alternatives to NaNoWriMo popped up this year, and people did find each other. In so many ways, it's easier than it was when NaNoWriMo began in 1999 to find your writing tribe online."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
Open 
The dirty secret of so many kebab shops that bring in 'skilled' migrant labour - DAVID BARRETT reveals horrifying truth of what's really going on
No doubt the shop does a solid trade but it does not appear to be a business with international reach. However, this unassuming little outlet on Leyton's Lea Bridge Road has a surprising secret.

Mail Online
Open 
Inside the picturesque village in the grip of one of Britain's worst burglary crime waves - with a shocking ZERO cases solved... as locals take matters into their own hands: DAVID LEAFE
But how, in this pocket of rural Hampshire, have we reached the stage where burglars can apparently break into people's properties with impunity?

Mail Online
Open 
King Charles's friend slams 'crazy' Meghan over her 'inauthentic' new lifestyle brand: RICHARD EDEN reveals her savage swipe
Carole Bamford, wife of billionaire Lord Bamford, has demonstrated she doesn't mince her words either - as was evident when the Duchess of Sussex launched her brand As Ever yesterday.

Mail Online
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I was desperate to be a boy and to have my breasts removed. Now I realise I was a girl all along - and this is why
'I've done my best to support her at every stage, but I drew the line at giving my consent for her to have the testosterone and double mastectomy she was so intent on. And thank goodness I did.'

Mail Online
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The High Street's best anti-ageing denim - from just £28: Our fashion expert picks the latest styles that flatter over-40s and shows exactly how to style them
The High Street is awash with jeans, but which silhouette should you go for if you're not a 20-something? We've rounded up the grown-up styles that will have you feeling your best.

Mail Online
Open 
ANDREW NEIL: US tariffs still risk snuffing out what life there is in the UK economy
The overall impact of Trump's new regime will be negative. His table exaggerated the average tariffs America pays to other countries to make his new levies look reasonable.

CNET News
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Best Smart Home Gyms for 2025, as Tested by Our Resident Fitness Expert
Creating your own smart home gym can save you time and money. Based on price, versatility and more, I recommend this equipment.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#9256 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - LSREI (reigate) (Update)
We have contacted our supplier and have been advised it's relating to a planned maintenance.

Services should be considered at risk for the full duration of this maintenance window from 00:00 to 06:00.

Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Thu, 3rd Apr 2025 00:26

Update: Thu, 3rd Apr 2025 10:00

Edited: Thu, 3rd Apr 2025 01:53

Status: Outage

Maintenance: Planned

Nature
Open 
Intriguing features of the interface between water and oil droplets uncovered

Nature
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From bench to bread: how science can enhance your hobbies

TechRadar News
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CinemaCon 2025 live – M3GAN 2.0, FNAF 2, Wicked For Good and more coming today

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Councils putting homeless children at risk, MPs find
An inquiry says children are living in "appalling conditions" and suffering impacts to their health.

Gizmodo
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The Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 Trailer Promises More Animatronic Mayhem
The sequel based on the hit horror game series and starring Josh Hutcherson lights up only in theaters this December.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Councils in England putting homeless children at risk, MPs find
An inquiry says children are living in "appalling conditions" and suffering impacts to their health.

Mail Online
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Britain's asylum capital: We can't take any more, say locals in city where huge influx is 'damaging social cohesion' and putting 'unprecedented pressure' on public services
Scotland's second city is the largest dispersal area for asylum seekers in the UK after London - with some 3,953 sent to the city by the Home Office while their applications are being considered.

Mail Online
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Inside the world's most UNBREAKABLE vault - where the super-rich keep their gold and diamonds (and Pokemon cards) and only billionaires need apply
IBV International Vaults London, billed as the 'most exclusive private vault in the world,' offers a service so secure, it's Managing Director, Sean Hoey, told MailOnline, 'it's like Fort Knox without the marines'.

Mail Online
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Adolescence star Owen Cooper, 15, lifts the lid on his 'mad' return to school after taking on lead role in hit Netflix show
The 15-year-old break-out star was just 13 when he landed the role of Jamie Miller, a schoolboy accused of brutally murdering a female classmate.

Mail Online
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Moment royal fans say Meghan Markle blanked Harry's Sentebale charity boss Dr Sophie at charity polo match in Miami - before notorious awkward trophy moment
Royal fans are convinced Meghan Markle blanked Sentebale boss Dr Sophie Chandauka at the charity polo match in Florida last year -before the infamous awkward trophy moment.

Mail Online
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I've been the butt of jokes about my 5ft 6.5in height all my life says MARK PALMER...so, what happened when I joined the Tall Persons Club for an evening to find out what it's really like to be close to 7ft
To join the ranks of the Tall Persons Club, which meets monthly in London, you are meant to be at least 6ft 3in, if you're a man, and close to 6ft if you're a woman.

Mail Online
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Danny Jones' wife Georgia Horsley 'returns to their family home as couple try to work things through' after McFly star's 'drunken kiss' with Maura Higgins
After a public apology from Danny where he said he was sorry for putting Georgia 'in this situation,' she took some time away as she stayed over at her and Danny's best friends' house.

Mail Online
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Pierce Brosnan's wife Keely's '7st' weight loss: Author looks incredible at 61 amid her slimming journey - with support of Bond star who proudly declares: 'I love my wife's curves'
Pierce Brosnan's American wife Keely Shaye Smith has stunned fans with her incredible weight loss transformation - after losing an estimated seven stone.

Mail Online
Open 
Shocking moment angry father, 43, yells 'you want some' before he slaps, bite and kicks teenager outside school after youngster 'brushed against' his wing mirror
Mohammed Liaquat, 43, jumped out of his Audi and confronted a group of schoolboys after one of them brushed past his wing mirror, a court has heard.

Mail Online
Open 
The rise of ketamine as Gen Z's drug of choice: From 'ket walks' to k-holes, TikTokers share videos showing anaesthetic's effects amid fears social media is fuelling use
EXCLUSIVE: Despite medics warning that abuse of the drug can prove fatal, social media users regularly make light of its impacts.

Mail Online
Open 
The British cities overrun by 'cat-sized' rats who gorge on rubbish flowing into the streets and multiply at a frightening speed - is YOUR hometown affected?
Tottenham appears to have seen a rise in rat infestations in recent months, with increasing levels of fly-tipping on residential streets bringing in rodents who like to feast on food waste.

UK Government News
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US investors invited to Edinburgh for a Global Investment Summit to help boost jobs and investment, putting more money back in people’s pockets.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
The Founder of OnlyFans Wants to Buy TikTok
Tim Stokely partnered with a crypto company to bid for TikTok as the social media company faces a deadline to either sell or be banned in the US. Amazon also placed a last-minute bid.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Trump Tariffs Hit Antarctic Islands Inhabited by Zero Humans and Many Penguins
The Heard and McDonald Islands are among the dozens of targets of President Donald Trump's latest round of tariffs. But they have no exports, because no one lives there.

Wired Top Stories
Open 
Trump and DOGE Defund Program That Boosted American Manufacturing for Decades
President Donald Trump says taxing imports will strengthen domestic manufacturing. Hours before announcing new tariffs, his administration cut support for centers that help US firms do just that.

The Register
Open 
Raspberry Pi not affected by Trump tariffs yet while China-tied rivals feel the heat
CEO hails 'transformative year' as IPO puts 'puter maker on the big board Updated  Raspberry Pi hasn't felt the sting of US tariffs yet, and having its boards built outside China might give it an edge over rivals, analysts reckon.…

The Register
Open 
Americans set to pay more on all imports: Trump activates blanket tariffs
Tech slugged with higher duties, base broad 10% hike, semiconductors avoid retaliatory levies for now US President Donald Trump has imposed a base ten percent tariff on all imports into America, and higher levies on goods from major producers of digital tech, such as China, South Korea, and Taiwan.…

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Hegseth: Men And Women In Combat Must Meet 'Same, High Standard'
Hegseth: Men And Women In Combat Must Meet 'Same, High Standard'

Authored by Rachel Acenas via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The Defense Department on Monday revealed that it would be imposing “sex-neutral” standards for military combat roles.
US troops take part in weapons training during the 'Balikatan' or 'shoulder-to-shoulder' US-Philippines joint military exercises in Fort Magsaysay on April 13, 2023 in Nueva Ecija, Philippines. Ezra Acayan/Getty Images

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced the changes to its physical fitness requirements in an effort to “fix” the standards that he said were “lowered” under President Barack Obama’s administration.

“Different physical standards for men and women in the U.S. military have existed for a long time. BUT, there were also combat roles that were male-only,” Hegseth said in a statement on X. “Then, under Obama, all combat roles were opened to men AND women. BUT, different physical fitness standards for men and women remained.”

“Today at the Department of Defense—we fix this. All combat roles are open to men and women BUT they must all meet the same, high standard. No standards will be lowered AND all combat roles will only have sex-neutral standards. Common sense,” Hegseth added.

In a March 30 memorandum, the defense secretary said that the nature of warfare has evolved over time and the demands of U.S. service members have grown more complex.

“Sex-neutral” standards must therefore be imposed, according to Hegseth.

“All entry-level and sustained physical fitness requirements within combat arms positions must be sex-neutral, based solely on the operational demands of the occupation and the readiness needed to confront any adversary,” he wrote. “In establishing those standards, the Secretaries of the Military Departments may not establish standards that would result in any existing Service member being held to a lower standard.”

The defense secretary also directed military secretaries to distinguish between combat and non-combat arms occupations in order to ensure that the standards reflect the unique physical demands of each role.

Hegseth also directed them to come up with comprehensive plans for each of those roles.

In Ground Combat roles, standards should emphasize the ability to carry heavy loads, endure prolonged physical exertion, and perform effectively in hostile environments.

Roles in Special Operation Forces should require “sustained peak physical performance” and incorporate advanced swimming, climbing, parachuting, and the ability to operate in extreme environments.

In Specialized Operations, such as Navy divers, service members must have the endurance to tackle conditions that are considered mentally and physically taxing.

Hegseth has previously expressed his opposition to women in combat jobs and his belief that standards were lowered to accommodate women. He has also been a staunch proponent of setting all standards the same, regardless of gender.

On Jan. 1, 2016, the Defense Department, under Obama, opened all combat roles to women for the first time in U.S. military history.

“They’ll be allowed to drive tanks, fire mortars and lead infantry soldiers into combat,” Defense Secretary Ash Carter stated at the time. “They’ll be able to serve as Army Rangers and Green Berets, Navy SEALs, Marine Corps infantry, Air Force parajumpers, and everything else that was previously open only to men.”

A 2015 study by the Marine Corps revealed the difference in performance between men and women. As part of the study, the Marine Corps conducted a gender integration experiment in which women participated in infantry courses that were typically closed to females. Mixed-gender combat units took up to a staggering 159 percent longer to evacuate a casualty than all-male units, the results showed.

*  *  *

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Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 19:15

ZeroHedge News
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RFK Jr.'s Advisor Torches Anti-MAHA Lobbyists: "Insane To Think More Bureaucrats = Better Health"
RFK Jr.'s Advisor Torches Anti-MAHA Lobbyists: "Insane To Think More Bureaucrats = Better Health"

Calley Means, co-founder of the Truemed telehealth platform and a special government employee at the Department of Health and Human Services advising Robert F. Kennedy Jr., defended efforts to eliminate waste and fraud within federal health agencies.

During a tense exchange at the Politico Health Care Summit on Wednesday, Means criticized existing federal health authorities as an "utter failure," prompting one healthcare lobbyist in the crowd to shout, "That's not true!" Means then proceeded on a warpath with stats, shutting up the room of anti-MAHA lobbyists. 

Here's the exchange:


Calley: "Those scientists fundamentally have overseen a record of utter failure."

Lobbyist: "That's not true!"

Calley: "Oh, that's not true?"

"Has there been one single chronic disease medication in modern American history that has lowered rates of the chronic disease?"

"Is it appropriate that the American Academy of Pediatrics right now, which is 90% funded by pharma, is pushing Ozempic on six year olds?"

"The lobbyists in this room do not have the humility to admit that we have gone completely wrong."

"The lobbyists in this room laughing when we have the sickest children in the developed world."



Calley Means just torched a room of lobbyists!
Calley: “Those scientists fundamentally have overseen a record of utter failure.”
Lobbyist: “That’s not true!”
Calley: “Oh, that’s not true?”
“Has there been one single chronic disease medication in modern American history that… pic.twitter.com/yQRs3AE4F7
— End Tribalism in Politics (@EndTribalism) April 2, 2025
Means continued:


"When you turn on CNBC, it's just a nonstop infomercial for pharma. It's a Skyrizi commercial followed by Scott Gottlieb saying how Bobby's killing people followed by a breathless coverage of the measles outbreak, and no mention of the mental health crisis. It is insane for you to insinuate that the thing standing between us and better health is more government bureaucrats."



It is insane to argue that more government bureaucrats and more spending is standing in the way of better health.
It’s the opposite.
The moves from HHS this week disempower administrators who let us down + ensures more money goes to scientists and frontline health services. https://t.co/OFzCGCHSEp
— Calley Means (@calleymeans) April 2, 2025
Means defended rolling back staffing levels to 2017, arguing that trimming bloated federal health agencies is necessary after decades of worsening public health and some of the worst health rates for kids in the developed world.


There is a dividing line in the healthcare debate:
Do we need bold change to change the incentives of our system to reverse childhood chronic disease?
Or is the answer more of the same?
Americans voted for change in November - and they were right. pic.twitter.com/4BDTvaMB8F
— Calley Means (@calleymeans) April 2, 2025
What's clear is that a bloated HHS—with its massive administrative state—has failed to improve the health of Americans.


.@SecKennedy’s cuts at HHS send a clear message:
Less power to administrators.
More power to scientists and doctors. pic.twitter.com/yDHPQLVB4Q
— Calley Means (@calleymeans) March 27, 2025
In fact, health outcomes for children have worsened. And US health costs are the highest in the world. 


One of the amazing parts about @SecKennedy is he prompts these lunatics in the MSM to defend a system that has overseen devastation to American health. https://t.co/ZpyPZo4bog pic.twitter.com/ppGwE46G7w
— Calley Means (@calleymeans) April 1, 2025
As Means pointed out, it's time for meaningful reforms (such as HHS cuts last week)—not just in health care, but across the processed foods industrial complex. It's time for Americans to demand big food stop poisoning them with chemicals and seed oils.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 19:40

The Guardian (UK)
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BBC Top Stories (UK)
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The Hill
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Schumer on Trump's new tariffs: A 'huge tax on American families' to 'help billionaires get a tax cut'
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Trump imposes sweeping Liberation Day reciprocal tariffs targeting 'foreign cheaters' sending shockwaves worldwide
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Val Kilmer's ex-wife Joanne Whalley and daughter Mercedes seen for the first time since actor's death at 65
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Mail Online
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Trump's FULL list of tariffs including which countries will be hit the hardest
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MLB star gets hit in the head with his OWN bat in weirdest moment of the season so far
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Mail Online
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British taxpayers subsidised power firm Drax to the tune of £869million last year - the equivalent of £2m a day - despite concerns about pollution and the cost of burning imported woody biomass, thinktank report claims
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Mail Online
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'Mastermind' terrorist linked to 7/7 bombings who was jailed after plotting to start an al-Qaeda camp is set to walk free - despite 'still being a risk'
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Mail Online
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Jack Grealish reveals heartbreaking reason why his first Premier League goal in 16 months meant so much to him in emotional interview - after parents watched on from stands
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As White Lotus stars post happy snaps from behind the scenes, one hints at trouble in paradise
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Heartbreaking new details emerge about Val Kilmer's final days before shock death aged 65
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Mail Online
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Why three major countries were conspicuously left OFF Trump's massive tariffs list
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The Guardian (UK)
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Elon Musk reportedly to step down from lead Trump role as service limit nears
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The Guardian (UK)
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The Guardian (UK)
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Ukraine war briefing: Deadly ballistic missile strike on Zelenskyy hometown
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BBC Top Stories (UK)
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'World faces economic war' and 'TikTok talks'
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BBC World News
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Meloni says Trump tariffs are 'wrong' as world leaders react
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Slashdot
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Anthropic Launches an AI Chatbot Plan For Colleges and Universities
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: Anthropic announced on Wednesday that it's launching a new Claude for Education tier, an answer to OpenAI's ChatGPT Edu plan. The new tier is aimed at higher education, and gives students, faculty, and other staff access to Anthropic's AI chatbot, Claude, with a few additional capabilities. One piece of Claude for Education is "Learning Mode," a new feature within Claude Projects to help students develop their own critical thinking skills, rather than simply obtain answers to questions. With Learning Mode enabled, Claude will ask questions to test understanding, highlight fundamental principles behind specific problems, and provide potentially useful templates for research papers, outlines, and study guides.

Anthropic says Claude for Education comes with its standard chat interface, as well as "enterprise-grade" security and privacy controls. In a press release shared with TechCrunch ahead of launch, Anthropic said university administrators can use Claude to analyze enrollment trends and automate repetitive email responses to common inquiries. Meanwhile, students can use Claude for Education in their studies, the company suggested, such as working through calculus problems with step-by-step guidance from the AI chatbot. To help universities integrate Claude into their systems, Anthropic says it's partnering with the company Instructure, which offers the popular education software platform Canvas. The AI startup is also teaming up with Internet2, a nonprofit organization that delivers cloud solutions for colleges.

Anthropic says that it has already struck "full campus agreements" with Northeastern University, the London School of Economics and Political Science, and Champlain College to make Claude for Education available to all students. Northeastern is a design partner -- Anthropic says it's working with the institution's students, faculty, and staff to build best practices for AI integration, AI-powered education tools, and frameworks. Anthropic hopes to strike more of these contracts, in part through new student ambassador and AI "builder" programs, to capitalize on the growing number of students using AI in their studies.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

CNET News
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CNET Survey: Gamers Are Ready for the Nintendo Switch 2, but Price Is the Top Buying Concern
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Using Affirm's BNPL Plan Could Now Affect Your Credit Score
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The Guardian (UK)
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The Guardian (UK)
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Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
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#9256 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - LSREI (reigate) (New)
Our engineers are investigating and further updates will be posted here when available.

Start: Thu, 3rd Apr 2025 00:26

Edited: Thu, 3rd Apr 2025 00:45

Status: Outage

Maintenance: None

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Mac Rumours
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Apple Stock Falls as Trump Tariffs Target Supply Chain
Apple's efforts to diversify its supply chain may have been for naught with the Trump administration's new tariffs that target multiple countries where Apple sources components for its iPhones, iPads, and Macs.





Apple has worked to move some of its manufacturing to countries like India, Vietnam, and Thailand, all of which are facing steep tariffs in addition to China and Taiwan. There is a minimum 10 percent tariff for all U.S. trading partners, and "reciprocal tariffs" on several countries where Apple suppliers are located. Some of the tariffs:



Vietnam - 46%

Thailand - 36%

China - 34%

Taiwan - 32%

India - 26%

Japan - 24%

Malaysia - 24%

EU - 20%



As The New York Times notes, Apple is already contending with a 20 percent tariff in China, which is set to increase significantly. Taiwan, where Apple sources the Apple silicon chips that go into all of its devices, is facing a 32 percent tariff.



The last time Trump was in office, Apple was able to get tariff exemptions or avoid tariffs entirely for some products, but Trump claims that he will not provide exemptions this time around. Morgan Stanley estimates that devices imported from China will cost Apple an additional $8.5 billion annually without exemptions, though it is not clear if Apple would pass those costs to consumers with price increases.



Apple CEO Tim Cook has said in the past that the United States is not able to compete with China and other countries when it comes to manufacturing due to a lack of skilled workers with expertise in advanced tooling.



Apple stock is down 7.5 percent in after hours trading after the tariff announcements. The tariffs will go into effect on April 9, according to Trump.This article, 'Apple Stock Falls as Trump Tariffs Target Supply Chain' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
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Everything New in the iOS 18.5 Beta
Apple today provided developers with the first beta of an upcoming iOS 18.5 update for testing purposes. Work on iOS 18 is starting to wind down with iOS 19 set to be introduced in a couple of months, so iOS 18.5 has just a handful of minor new features.





We've rounded up what's new so far, but Apple could add additional features in upcoming betas.



Mail

If you tap on the three dots icon in the upper right corner of the Mail app, you can now toggle Contact Photos on and off directly from this interface. There's also an option to turn off Group By Sender.





Both of these options are in iOS 18.4, but the toggles are buried in the Mail section of the Settings app. They're easier to get to with iOS 18.5 for those who want the Mail app to look more like the pre-iOS 18 Mail app.



You can still access these toggles in the Settings app, too.



AppleCare Info

In the Settings app, if you go to General and tap on AppleCare and Warranty, there's now a banner with an ‌AppleCare‌ logo and an option to learn more about ‌AppleCare‌ coverage. There was no banner before.





If you go to your Apple Account and tap on a device in your device list, you'll now see a new ‌AppleCare‌ option that you can tap into to get info on your ‌AppleCare‌ coverage. There's also an option to Manage Plan from this interface if you have a renewing ‌AppleCare‌ plan.





More Features

Know of something new in iOS 18.5 that we left out of this article? Let us know in the comments below.



Release Date

For the last three years, the x.5 updates have come out in May, specifically the second week of May. It's likely Apple will stick to that same general release timeline, providing iOS 18.5 to the public in May.Related Roundups: iOS 18, iPadOS 18Related Forums: iOS 18, iPadOS 18This article, 'Everything New in the iOS 18.5 Beta' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

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The Register
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The Guardian (UK)
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ZeroHedge News
Open 
Futures Tumble As President Trump Delivers "Declaration Of Economic Independence"
Futures Tumble As President Trump Delivers "Declaration Of Economic Independence"

Update (1630ET): “Well we have some very, very good news today,” Trump began his address exclaiming that “This is Liberation Day.”


“April 2, 2025, will forever be remembered as the day American industry was reborn, the day America’s destiny was reclaimed and the day that we began to make America wealthy again,” Trump says.

“For decades, our country has been looted, pillaged, raped and plundered by nations near and far, both friend and foe alike. American steel workers, auto workers, farmers and skilled craftsmen -- we have a lot of them here with us today. They really suffered gravely.”

“In a few moments, I will sign a historic Executive Order, reciprocal tariffs on countries throughout the world. Reciprocal. That means they do it to us and we do it to them. Very simple. Can’t get any simpler than that.”




Trump lays out his theory that tariffs will bring back a “golden age” for the US, a phrase he also used in his inaugural address:

“Jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country, and you see it happening already. We will supercharge our domestic industrial base.”

Trump says the reciprocal tariffs will bring “stronger competition and lower prices for consumers” in the US.

Finally, Trump announces his tariff plan details as a "Declaration Of Economic Independence"

Specifically, Trump announced a baseline tariff rate of 10% for all countries (below the 15% consensus and 20% worst case) beginning April 5th.

Trump confirmed the 25% tariff on all auto imports.

BUT, specific reciprocal tariffs for 'bad actors' starting on April 9th.

Additionally, Trump said they will not be full reciprocal tariffs, then held a chart up showing the individual nation (trade-weighted average) tariff levels:



Here is the full list:

















Here are some specifics:


China: 34% (which is on top of the current 20% tariff, meaning a total 54% tariff)


EU: 20%

Japan: 24%

UK: 10%


South Korea: 25%


Thailand: 36%


Switzerland: 31%

Taiwan: 32%

Malaysia: 24%

Here are the hardest hit nations:


Iraq 39%


Mauritius 40%


Syria 41%


Falkland Islands 41%


Vietnam: 46%


Madagascar 47%


Laos 48%


Cambodia 49%


Lesotho 50%


Saint Pierre & Miquelon 50%

Mexico and Canada are not on the list as US will continue to exempt USMCA-compliant goods. 


For Canada and Mexico, the existing fentanyl/migration IEEPA orders remain in effect, and are unaffected by this order. This means USMCA compliant goods will continue to see a 0% tariff, non-USMCA compliant goods will see a 25% tariff, and non-USMCA compliant energy and potash will see a 10% tariff. In the event the existing fentanyl/migration IEEPA orders are terminated, USMCA compliant goods would continue to receive preferential treatment, while non-USMCA compliant goods would be subject to a 12% reciprocal tariff.


The Loonie and the Peso rallied on the news...



Some goods will not be subject to the Reciprocal Tariff.


These include: 

(1) articles subject to 50 USC 1702(b);

(2) steel/aluminum articles and autos/auto parts already subject to Section 232 tariffs;

(3) copper, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, and lumber articles;

(4) all articles that may become subject to future Section 232 tariffs; 

(5) bullion; and 

(6) energy and other certain minerals that are not available in the United States.


Initially markets heard Trump's comments as 'better than expected' and futures spiked on the news, but then as he showed the chart of specific tariffs, futures plunged...



Treasury yields also tumbled, erasing the day's spike higher...



“If you want your tariff rate to be zero, then you build your product right here in America, because there is no tariff if you build your plant, your product in America,” Trump said, concluding:


“Likewise to all of the foreign presidents, prime ministers, kings, queens, ambassadors and everyone else who will soon be calling to ask for exemptions from these tariffs, I say terminate your own tariffs, drop your barriers, don’t manipulate your currencies."


The White House issued a full Fact Sheet here...


“These tariffs will remain in effect until such a time as President Trump determines that the threat posed by the trade deficit and underlying nonreciprocal treatment is satisfied, resolved, or mitigated.”


And cue the negotiations...

Adam Hetts, global head of multi-asset at Janus Henderson, suggests this is the opening salvo for negotiations and the question is how much economic pain Trump is willing to tolerate:


“Eye-watering tariffs on a country-by-country basis scream ‘negotiation tactic,’ which will keep markets on edge for the foreseeable future. Fortunately, this means there’s substantial room for lower tariffs from here, albeit with a 10% baseline in place. We’ve seen the administration have a surprisingly high tolerance for market pain, now the big question is how much tolerance it has for true economic pain as negotiations unfold.”


Treasury Secretary Bessent appeared on Bloomberg TV with a simple message to the world: Don’t panic, don’t retaliate


“As long as you don’t retaliate, this is the high end of the number,” he says.


*  *  *

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*  *  *

"This is the moment... this is the time..." Trump's Jekyll & Hyde tariff-ing plans are finally to be announced ("We are going to be very nice by comparison to what they were" vs “We’ve been taken advantage of for 40 years, maybe more, and it’s just not going to happen anymore.")



As Trump discusses reciprocal tariffs (and the legacy media claims he is 'punishing allies') keep this chart in mind - does that seem like 'free trade'?



The three main things to watch for when Trump starts speaking are as follows (h/t Goldman Sachs' Brian Garrett)


What is the full list of countries included in the measures (19 is bogey)


What is the magnitude for average reciprocal tariff (GS econ expects avg 15% when weighted by US imports – this would be a negative surprise)


Confirmation of the planned timeline for implementation (the shorter the period, the more hawkish the read thru - and for now 'immediate effect' is expected)

Watch President Trump deliver his remarks in his 'Make America Wealth Again' event and answer questions here (due to start at 1600ET):



* * *

Update (0805ET): As the clock ticks down to today's 4pm announcement of "across the board" tariffs on a subset of nations, speculation about the size and scope of the new rules is rife with many nations already threatening "proportionate" responses:


USTR reportedly prepares a new tariff option for US President Trump which is "an across-the-board tariff on a subset of nations that likely would not be as high as the 20% universal tariff option", according to WSJ.


US President Trump's tariff plans are "coming down to the wire" with his team reportedly still finalising the size and scope of the new levies, according to Bloomberg.


US Treasury Secretary Bessent told lawmakers that Wednesday's tariffs are a 'cap', according to a CNBC reporter cited by Reuters.


On UK-US tariffs, "Sounds like any hopes of a last-ditch concession from Donald Trump ahead of his tariffs announcement are fading", according to Times' Swinford; although a deal could be signed as soon as next week "Keir Starmer is not planning to speak to him today, but there are hopes that the economic deal giving Britain a carve-out can be signed as soon as next week. Sources talking about 'days or weeks'" "But in truth No 10 doesn't know what Trump is planning or when concessions could be made. All deeply uncertain this morning".


Canada is to avoid counter-tariffs that risk Canadian jobs and price hikes and it won't impose retaliation tariffs on most US food and other basic necessities, according to the Globe and Mail citing two federal trade advisers.


Thai Commerce Ministry said Thai semiconductors may face 25% US tariffs and noted that Thai tariffs are 11% higher than US tariffs, while it added Thailand may see an impact of USD 7bln-8bln from US reciprocal tariffs but announced it will increase imports of US goods and plans tariff cuts for US products.


French Industry Minister reaffirms that Europe will respond to Trump tariffs in a proportionate manner; says Europe must show strength and be less naive

The irony, of course, is that if Trump unveils 'reciprocal' tariffs - mirroring the tariffs being put on US exports - any retaliatory response by a foreign nation cannot be proportionate by its nature. Any response is escalatory as the US is merely 'catching up' to the tariffs being put on its own goods.

Bloomberg reports that Trump is considering three options:


1) a blanket 20% tariff on all imports; 

2) a tiered system with three different rate levels; 

3) a country-by-country rate model.


White House spokesperson Leavitt said new duties are effective immediately which feels less ideal vs a delayed start (no time for negotiations).

*  *  *

Update  (8:45pm ET): With just hours to go until Trump's "Liberation day" announcement, things remain... fluid.


Bloomberg reports that Trump’s deliberations over his plans to impose reciprocal tariffs are coming down to the wire, with his team said to be still finalizing the size and scope of the new levies he is slated to unveil on Wednesday afternoon. As a reminder, Peter Navarro said that Trump wants to raise $700 billion annually in tariff revenue.


In meetings on Tuesday, Trump’s team continued to hash out their options ahead of a Rose Garden event scheduled to begin as US markets close at 4 p.m. on Wednesday. 


The White House has not reached a firm decision on their tariff plan, even though Trump himself said earlier in the week that he had “settled” on an approach.


Several proposals are said to be under consideration, including a tiered tariff system with a set of flat rates for countries, as well as a more customized reciprocal plan. 


Under the first option, countries would see their goods face levies at either a 10% or 20% rate depending on their tariff and non-tariff barriers on US goods.


Under the two-tiered approach, the highest levies would be applied to the countries perceived as the biggest offenders, both in terms of true tariffs as well as easily quantifiable non-tariff measures that act to deter US imports. Trump’s White House this week has complained about the trade practices of the EU, Japan, India and Canada, for example.



Another approach would see the US applying individualized reciprocal rates, tailored to countries based on their existing levies and non-tariff barriers. This approach was publicly signaled for weeks but some recent deliberations suggest it’s no longer the main focus. 


There’s also been discussion of a return to Trump’s original proposal: a flat global tariff, which would apply evenly to trillions of imports. And the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump was considering a more targeted plan that would apply a tariff of less than 20% to a narrower section of countries.


With less than 24 hours to go until Trump’s announcement, companies, countries and the lobbyists paid to influence the president’s agenda tried to find out final details of the plan, only to learn there aren't any final details yet. 


Amid the continuing barrage of trial balloons, the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump aides were studying a more targeted option, while Fox News said Tuesday that Trump was also still considering a flat 20% global tariff.


Amid all the speculation, the White House on Tuesday stayed silent on the details of Trump’s plan, ahead of the president’s formal announcement, while Leavitt told reporters on Tuesday that Trump was “with his trade and tariff team right now perfecting it to make sure this is a perfect deal for the American people and the American worker.”


Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told lawmakers that the tariffs would be a cap. reflecting the highest levels they’ll go, with countries then able to take steps to bring rates down, 


Representative Kevin Hern, an Oklahoma Republican, told CNBC. Earlier Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said that the tariffs would take immediate effect but that Trump was open to subsequent negotiation. “Certainly, the president is always up to take a phone call, always up for a good negotiation,” she said.


The late-hour movement signaled that the scope and details of the long-promised announcement are shifting even as the pageantry of the event — dubbed a “Make America Wealthy Again” celebration — comes into focus.

Trump said Monday he had made a decision “actually a long time ago,” but didn’t reveal it. Leavitt reiterated that claim, though the White House declined to weigh in on various proposals said to be under consideration. A spokesman did not immediately reply to requests for further comment Tuesday.

Other key questions swirl, like the fate of tariffs already applied to China, Canada and Mexico, and clawed back partially for the latter two. The White House has not said whether those would be replaced by Trump’s Wednesday announcement, or whether his move to exempt goods traded under the continental trade pact might also be extended somehow to the new levies. The president has also promised coming tariffs on key sectors including pharmaceuticals, semiconductors and lumber.

* * * * *

There is just over 24 hours left until President Trump unveils the specifics of his "Liberation day" from global trade barriers at 3pm on Wednesday, and with markets obsessing over what the president will and will not say, we are starting a rolling blog which will be updated for all major developments. 

We begin with the known-knowns ahead of tomorrow's big reveal:

Reciprocal Tariffs – President Trump said on Sunday that the reciprocal tariffs he is set to announce will include all nations, not just a smaller group of 10-15 countries with the largest trade imbalances. The White House has yet to outline what tariffs are coming up, how these will be calculated or what countries will need to do to secure exemptions. The President also mentioned that these tariffs will account for other countries’ non-tariff barriers, though he has also not went into detail on how these calculations will be conducted. Regarding exemptions, President Trump said in an interview with Newsmax that he plans to limit exceptions – though the mention of potentially giving a lot of countries “breaks” last Monday at the White House has led to a steam of talks with the US (EU, India among the names of countries mentioned) regarding concessions. One potential twist is that overnight we got a USTR trade barrier report (not the official tariffs but its lists hundred of barriers to US exports) where this part stands out: “the USTR report did not specify VATs as trade barriers in its discussion of EU policies, focusing instead on digital services taxes and the bloc's new carbon border adjustment mechanism.” (RTRS) According to Goldman, goal posts have moved rapidly to 15%+ on EU tariffs and yesterday's discussions were around the rather substantial tail risk that reciprocal VAT tariffs would mean (38%). Comments from Trump suggest a lighter touch on tariffs although without context it’s unclear what this might mean. Goldman concludes that "with risk premia having been built up the default direction will be a relief rally/vol compression (the sustainability of which will be more about US economy)."
 
Automobile Tariffs – As per the White House Fact Sheet, the 25% tariff will be applied to imported passenger vehicles (sedans, SUVs, crossovers, minivans, cargo vans) and light trucks, as well as key automobile parts (engines, transmissions, powertrain parts, and electrical components), with processes to expand tariffs on additional parts if necessary. Importers of automobiles under the USMCA will be given the opportunity to certify their U.S. content and systems will be implemented such that the 25% tariff will only apply to the value of their non-U.S. content. Tariffs on vehicles are set to take effect on 3Apr and certain auto parts no later than 3May.
 
Tariffs on countries importing Venuzuelan Oil – President Trump has issued an executive order declaring that any country buying oil or gas from Venezuela will pay a 25% tariff on trades with the U.S., and also extended a deadline (27 May) for Chevron to wind down operations. China, Spain, Brazil, Turkey, India, Italy, Cuba are among the countries that could be affected by this. In particular, China is Venezuela’s largest oil buyer (~55%). Goldman's research desk highlights that this will pose a significant risk for China – if this was to materialize, it will raise the total US effective tariff rate on China close to 60%.
 
Sectoral Tariffs – President Trump also plans to impose tax additional tariffs to target specific industries including pharmaceutical drugs, copper and lumber.
LATEST NEWS:

US Treasury Secretary Bessent said President Trump will announce reciprocal tariffs at 15:00EDT/20:00BST on Wednesday.
White House Press Secretary Leavitt stated there will be a Rose Garden event on Wednesday for the Trump tariff plan and that Trump is committed to sectoral tariffs.
White House spokesperson said no exemptions at this time when asked about tariff exemptions for farmers and any country that has treated the US unfairly should expect to receive a tariff.
White House aides have drafted a proposal to impose tariffs of around 20% (prev. touted 15%) on at least most imports to the United States, according to WaPo sources. Several options are on the table and no final decision has been made. One option would raise import duties on products from virtually every country, rejecting more targeted approaches. If combined with additional tariffs on sectors such as automobile and pharmaceutical imports, raise more than USD 6tln. Administration officials are also discussing using this revenue to finance a tax rebate or dividend payment to most Americans; planning is "highly preliminary". The White House is also still considering an order that would apply a different tariff rate to individual countries.
US President Trump said we will see tariff details maybe Tuesday night or on Wednesday which are going to be nice in comparison to other countries and in some cases, they may be substantially lower. Trump also stated that many countries have been looting the US and they will stop that on April 2nd, as well as noted there will be investments worth USD 5tln in the US. Furthermore, he stated that TikTok is not tied to a larger tariff deal but could be.
US President Trump is said to be still deciding which plan he will take for reciprocal tariffs and has been presented with "multiple" tariff plans, according to administration sources cited by FBN's Lawrence, while sources said Trump will likely not make the decision on which plan until right before April 2nd or on that morning.
Reminder:

Weekend reports suggested US President Trump is said to be pushing senior advisers to go bigger on tariff policy as they prepare for Liberation Day’ on April 2nd and reportedly revived the idea of a flat universal tariff single rate on most imports, according to Washington Post.
It was also noted that the option viewed as most likely, publicly outlined by Treasury Secretary Bessent this month, would set tariffs on products from the 15% of countries the administration deems the worst US trading partners which account for almost 90% of imports.
Europe:

EU is mulling targeting big US tech firms in response to Trump tariffs, via WaPo citing sources/officials; one official suggested that the bloc could unite on "some partial measures against American services".
France is reportedly pushing for a tougher response which includes digital services.
Other nations such as Italy remain opposed believing it will only cause further US escalation.
"European officials cautioned that there is no agreed-on hit list of digital services."
"European officials concede that measures against companies like Google (GOOGL) or Meta (META) could escalate the trade war, but they say Trump has shifted the goalposts."
"European officials are also discussing possible trade concessions"; could be willing to reverse some of the countermeasures announced after the US' aluminium/steel tariffs.
WaPo reminds us that the bloc has already signalled a willingness to reduce the 10% tariff on US autos and increase the purchase of US-made LNG.
MORGAN STANLEY ON THE RECIPROCITY PRINCIPLE (KEY TAKEAWAYS)

Tariffs appear likely to head higher, on a number of trading partners: The Trump administration said it plans to increase tariff levels after taking into account three key factors to rectify what it perceives as unfair trade relationships: 1) product-level tariff differentials; 2) VAT differentials; and 3) a subjective "unfair trading practices." We expect that the numbers revealed as a product of that assessment on April 2 will likely be a maximalist starting point, rather than ending point, for tariff levels.
April 2 should provide some clarity on the path, but we expect that not all of our questions will be answered by then: Two principles guide our rationale: The comprehensive review promised by the president is broad and complex, requiring months of investigation on a product-by-product basis, and we expect negotiations can potentially reduce levels from the stated starting point when this review concludes. Hence, April 2 is more likely a starting point than an ending point for implementation.
Key products in the EU, as well as broader Chinese imports, are likely to see increases...: When evaluating imports across the country-level criteria the administration has laid out as well as where the largest tariff differentials are, certain sectors stand out in particular, like EU autos. 
 ...While Mexico, Canada, and certain products from countries in the EU appear more likely to avoid tariffs through negotiation. We see potential for more negotiation with countries that score low across the metrics that the administration has cited as important inputs to that April 2 evaluation, as well as those that Trump has signaled a willingness to negotiate with or countries for which tariffs are explicitly tied to a policy goal (like immigration/fentanyl).
Importantly, Morgan Stanley has low conviction in this path, and sees several plausible alternatives. More aggressive, and faster, tariff implementation is possible, as well as the inverse, given the president's wide discretion and authority on this matter.
Mapping out current & expected tariffs on two vectors: relative level of conviction, and expected duration/potential for an off-ramp



Morgan Stanley incorporates "reciprocal tariffs" into that base case: The administration has stated it plans to review tariff rates on a country-by-country basis, taking into account a variety of other trade-related factors (some more subjective than others), culminating in an aggregate number (or tariff level) that Commerce Secretary Lutnick intends to present to the president April 1, to be publicly released on April 2. This to us signals that the administration is planning to engage in a broad-based retooling of its trading relationships, grounded in matching tariff rates but incorporating a number of other factors like existing trade deficit, VAT differentials, and non-tariff barriers to trade (including subsidies). 
Hence, while the short-term policy goals might align with one of the two objectives we lay out, undertaking a country-by-country review of existing trade relationships grounded in tariff reciprocity reflects, in our view, a longer-term commitment to de-risking and retooling trade policy.
Various third parties have assessed how high tariffs could go as a result of this review: the Yale Budget Lab, for example, sees the policy change resulting in an incremental 13ppt hike to tariffs on China vs. 16ppt on Mexico and 17ppt on India. Given the relatively high VAT in Europe, the tariff rate goes up by even more in the UK, Denmark/Sweden, and Hungary: 20ppt, 25ppt, and 27ppt, respectively.


More in the full Morgan Stanley reciprocity analysis available here to pro subs.

JPM TARIFF SCENARIO ANALYSIS

10% TARIFF – assuming a 10% blanket tariff that also cancels/replaces Can/Mexico tariffs but not China: SPX +2 - +2.5%. 10Y yield higher by ~10bps. EUR/USD falls to 1.06 – 1.07 (currently 1.08).
25% TARIFF – SPX falls 1.25% - 1.75%. 10Y yield declines 12-14bps. EUR/USD lower as USD behaves as a safety haven, with EUR/USD falling to 1.03 – 1.05
35% TARIFF – SPX falls 2% - 3%. 10Y yield falls 20bps. EUR/USD falls to 1.01 – 1.03.
On EU sectors vs. tariffs, JPM expect:

EU Pharma: Potential US tariffs expected to have a manageable impact, though many questions remain unanswered around key details.
Global Spirits: Financial impact likely to be substantial, ranging JPME 8-48% on annual EBIT. Believe mitigation through pricing will be limited, given sector has already derated YTD
EU Autos: If tariffs go ahead, on avg. c. 25% earnings cut to its FY25 estimates for German OEMs and Stellantis. JPM add this is the lower bound of impact. Overall, JPM remain tactically bearish.


Market Impact

WHAT DOES A GOOD OUTCOME LOOK LIKE – A low (10% or less) blanket tariff that does not include VAT with a stated willingness to discuss sectoral tariffs which include 25% on aluminum/steel, 25% on Autos, 200% on Champagne/wine from the EU, and potentially 25% on Chips and Pharmaceuticals. Further, avoiding tariffs on shipping vessels would be a positive.
WHAT DOES A BAD OUTCOME LOOK LIKE – A higher than expected blanket tariff, which includes VAT, plus additional sectoral tariffs. Further, any bans on sales or the implementation of fines/tariffs on shipping vessels would be a materially worse outcome, e.g., a full ban on chip sales to China. According to Bloomberg, NVDA received ~17% of its FY24 revenue from China.
Likely Tariff Levels (per JPMorgan)

CANADA / MEXICO – JPM does not think that we see additional tariffs mentioned, instead sticking with the 25% tariffs that were delayed.
CHINA – currently, the tariff level is 20% but given that China consumes Venezuelan oil, that adds another 25%. A deal on TikTok could reduce these levels, but that announcement may be on/before the current April 5 deadline to sell or restrict TikTok.
EU – while Trump had mentioned 25%, Bloomberg reported last week that the EU planned concessions for Trump so this could mean a lower rate in the 10% - 15% range.
JAPAN – given the willingness to negotiation and to add further investment in the US, it seems possible that Japan receives a lower rate, perhaps lower than the EU, say 10%.
JPM's proposed Monetization Menu:

Country-Level: we look at Australia, Japan, and the UK as being relative safety havens. China may work, too, given the potential to add fiscal stimulus but that is a lower conviction long.
US Sector Level: Energy and Utilities (ex-AI plays) are the two best longs and look for Lower-Income Discretionary and higher beta TMT plays as being among the more consensus shorts. Separately, parts of Fins (GSIBs, Insurance, Payment Processors) could be safety havens.
FICC: Look for Credit to outperform Equities on the move lower. We like precious metals, crude, and natgas as longs.
Overall, JPM remain tactically bearish: 

"Policy uncertainty is the dominant factor in the markets and that neither the Trump Put nor Fed Put activate in the near-term." 
Further, they see downward pressure on the soft economic data though hard data is likely to remain resilient, potentially putting a floor on the next US downdraft. 
That said, one potential event that could break the bearish outlook is the announcement of a trade deal, or framework of one, with a G7 country ahead of the announcement, e.g. US/UK deal could allow the market to look through tariffs on places such as the EU and/or Japan.
More in the full JPMorgan secnario analysis available here to pro subs.

WEEKEND HEADLINES

US Broader Tariffs

US President Trump is said to be pushing senior advisers to go bigger on tariff policy as they prepare for ‘Liberation Day’ on April 2nd and reportedly revived the idea of a flat universal tariff single rate on most imports, according to Washington Post. It was also noted that the option viewed as most likely, publicly outlined by Treasury Secretary Bessent this month, would set tariffs on products from the 15% of countries the administration deems the worst US trading partners which account for almost 90% of imports.
US President Trump said he will hit essentially all countries that they're talking about with tariffs this week and commented that there will be a deal on TikTok before the deadline, according to Reuters.
US President Trump’s closest allies including Vice President Vance, Chief of Staff Wiles and cabinet officials have privately indicated they are unsure exactly what President Trump will do during the April 2nd announcement of global tariffs, according to Politico.
US Auto Tariffs

US President Trump’s recent 25% auto tariff announcement made no mention of USMCA trade deal side letters shielding Canada and Mexico from potential auto tariffs which showed Canada and Mexico were each granted annual duty-free import quotas of 2.6mln cars and unlimited light trucks if Trump imposed global tariffs. Furthermore, Canada said it fully expects the US to honor the 2018 tariff pledges and it reserves the right to take retaliatory measures, while Mexico is evaluating the legal implications of the agreement on Trump's ‘Section 232’ auto tariff probe.
US President Trump’s Trade Adviser Navarro said auto tariffs will raise about $100BN and the other tariffs are to raise about $600BN a year, according to a Fox interview.


UK

UK PM Starmer spoke with US President Trump on Sunday evening in which they discussed productive negotiations between their respective teams on a UK-US economic prosperity deal and agreed that these will continue at pace this week. It was also reported that UK Home Secretary Cooper refused to rule out retaliating to US tariffs on cars and steel, according to Bloomberg.
France

French Ministry of Foreign Trade said France and Europe will defend their businesses, consumers and values, while it added that US interference in the inclusion policies of French companies is unacceptable.
French Commerce Minister reiterated that France would implement reciprocal tariffs if the US goes ahead with its tariff measures this week. Hoping to avoid a trade war. The Minister intends to have talks with the US Embassy in Paris to voice opposition to the US' order for French firms to comply with a diversity band.
Germany

German Chancellor Scholz said they stand by Canada’s side and that Canada is not a state that belongs to anyone else, while he added that Europe’s goal is cooperation but the EU will respond as one if the US leaves them with no choice such as with tariffs on steel and aluminium.
China

China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi said higher US tariffs on Chinese goods are unreasonable and harm global markets. (Comments made in China's Tuesday session).
LatAm

Brazil’s President Lula said he will negotiate on tariffs before retaliating, according to Bloomberg. It was also reported that Brazil’s Finance Minister Haddad said the country is in a privileged position to withstand the trade war with the commodity exporter’s links to China, the US and the EU to shield it from Drotectionism. accordina to FT
OTHER RECENT HEADLINES

28th March

EU plans concessions for Trump after reciprocal tariffs hit, according to Bloomberg sources
Chinese State Media says China will "certainly respond with countermeasures if the US insists on harming China's interests regarding the April 2nd tariffs"; if they want to discuss cooperation with China, mutual respect is a prerequisite.
US President Trump and Canada PM Camey held a very constructive phone call, according to both sides; Camey told Trump he will implement retaliatory tariffs.
US President Trump says will be announcing pharma tariffs soon; is willing to make deals on tariffs, deals on averting auto tariffs would come later.
27th March

US President Trump posted on Truth "If the European Union works with Canada in order to do economic harm to the USA, large scale Tariffs, far larger than currently planned, will be placed on them both"
Canadian PM Carney says its response to these latest tariffs is to fight; they will fight the US tariffs with retaliatory trade actions of its own; clear US is no longer a reliable partner
26th March

US President Trump may implement copper tariffs within weeks, according to Bloomberg
The US will reportedly not take all non-tariff barriers (e g. VAT) in determining reciprocal Tariff rates, according to CNBC
EU Top Trade Negotiator Sefcovic expects US President Trump to hit the bloc with tariffs of about 20% next week, via FT
EU expects Trump to set flat, double-digit tariff on April 2nd, according to Politico; According to two diplomats, suggested the tariff rate applied to the EU could be as high as 20 or 25%
US President Trump considers more limited tariff plans, automotive tariffs could be narrowed and reciprocal tariffs lowered in latest administration proposals, via WSJ
US President Trump announces to impose 25% tariffs on all cars not made in the US, while he said they will be doing tariffs on pharmaceuticals and tariffs on lumber
China's Vice Premier He Lifeng spoke with USTR's Greer by video call, via Xinhua; Both sides had candid and in depth exchange of views on economy and trade. China expressed solemn concerns on US tariffs and planned reciprocal tariffs.
25th March
India is reportedly open to cutting tariffs on over half of US imports, worth USD 23bln, via Reuters citing sources; open to cutting tariffs to as low as 0 from a 5- 30% range on 55% of US imports
India proposes to remove the 6% tariff imposed on online advertisement services offered by companies such as Google (GOOG) and Meta (META), known widely as the Google tax, from April 1st which is a day before Trump's reciprocal tariffs take effect.
US President Trump considers a two-step tariff regime on April 2nd, according to FT; Possible phased approach to new US levies reflects debate over trade strategy within administration.
US President Trump says he has April 2nd tariffs set, and he has been fair to countries that abused US for many decades
24th March:

Trump implements secondary tariff on Venezuela; anyone who buys oil/gas from Venezuela will face an additional 25% tariff on all US trade.
US President Trump says they will be announcing tariffs on autos, aluminium and pharmaceuticals in the very near future.
Trump says he will announce additional tariffs over the next few days on autos, lumber, and chips
Trump says he may give a lot of countries breaks on tariffs.
22nd March (weekend)

President Donald Trump's coming wave of tariffs is poised to be more targeted than the barrage he has occasionally threatened, aides and allies say, a potential relief for markets gripped by anxiety about an all-out tariff war. (Bloomberg)
21st March

France reportedly to float using EU's most powerful trade tool on US, according to Bloomberg
US President Trump says there will be flexibility on tariffs, basically it's reciprocal; they can't be expected to carry Canada.
UK government reportedly considering plans to reduce or even abolish its digital services tax before April 2nd, via Bloomberg.
20th March

US President Trump says he believes India is probably going to be lowering tariffs substantially but on April 2nd, we will be charging them the same tariffs they charge us
EU's Trade Commissioner Sefcovic says the Commission is considering delaying first set of counter-tariffs against the US to mid-April
19th March

US President Trump's aides are planning new tariffs on “trillions" more in imports on April 2nd, according to WaPo
EU is reportedly to tighten steel import quotas as of April 1st, via Reuters citing sources; to reduce inflows by 15%
18th March

US President Trump's team reportedly explored a simplified plan for reciprocal tariffs in which they recently debated sorting trading partners into one of three tiers instead of equalising tariff rates with every nation, according to WSJ
17th March:

US President Trump says he has no intention of creating exemptions on steel and aluminium tariffs, while he adds reciprocal tariffs will happen on April 2nd
USTR's Greer imposes policy process on reciprocal tariff plan; President Trump's top trade negotiator is attempting to inject order into sweeping new tariffs expected next month, after previous announcements roiled markets and fueled business uncertainty
India reportedly weighs lower tariffs for US medical devices, according to Economic Times
13th March:

Trump said the EU put a 50% tariff on whiskey, if this is not removed, the US will place a 200% tariff on wines, champagnes and other alcoholic products coming out of France and other EU represented countries.
Canada's Ontario Premier says they had a productive meeting with US Commerce Secretary Lutnick and will have another meeting next week, adds feel temperatures are decreasing and it was the best meeting they had since tariff talks began
TARIFF TALLY (SO FAR)

US Tariff Policy

US reciprocal Tariffs: Trump on February 13th signed his plan for reciprocal tariffs, albeit delayed their implementation. The delay allows Trump admin to launch negotiations on a one-by-one basis with nations that could be impacted. The studies of each country could be completed by April 1st.
US tariffs on steel and aluminium: US President Trump signed proclamations on Monday 10th February 2025 to reimpose a 25% tariff on steel and aluminium imports and declared there are no exceptions or exemptions, effective March 12th.
US tariffs on agriculture: Trump: To the Great Farmers of the United States: Get ready to start making a lot of agricultural product to be sold INSIDE of the United States. Tariffs will go on external product on April 2nd. Have fun!"
Canada/Mexico

US on Canada and Mexico: Tariffs on imports from these countries have been paused for 30 days to allow for negotiations on border security and drug trafficking issues. Pause was initiated on February 3, 2025, is set to expire on March 4, 2025, at 12:01am. The pause expired, with Trump stating ‘there is no room left for a deal on tariffs on Mexico and Canada".
US tariff rollback: A day after the tariffs came into effect, Trump said he would temporarily spare carmakers from a new 25% import tax imposed on Canada and Mexico. Two days after imposing tariffs, Trump announced that duties on a wide range of products would be shelved until April 2nd.
Canada’s retaliatory tariffs: Following the end of the pause on March 4th, Canada said it would start with 25% tariffs on US imports worth CAD 30bln from Tuesday, while it will impose tariffs on an additional CAD 125bln worth of US imports in 21 days (albeit second wave suspended for now). Furthermore, it said tariffs will remain in place until the US trade action is withdrawn and it is in active discussions with provinces and territories to pursue several non-tariff measures if US tariffs do not cease.
50% US tariff and Canadian Energy Surcharge rollback: Trump on March 11th initially instructed the Commerce Secretary to impose an additional 25%, to 50%, on all steel and aluminium coming into the US from Canada from March 12th although he later backed down from this threat after Ontario's Premier announced they are suspending the 25% surcharge on exports of electricity.
China

US on China: Additional 10% tariff on top of existing levies, no exclusions, came into effect at 12:01 EST on February 4th. Note, Trump did not clarify whether or not imports of Chinese metals would face double tariffs, as he has already imposed a 10% tariff on Chinese goods. Extra 10% duty came into effect at 12:01EST on March 4th.
China's retaliatory tariffs: Chinese tariffs against the US took effect on February 10th and with officials also said to be building a list of US tech firms for potential probes. China imposed 15% tariffs on US coal & LNG, 10% tariffs on US oil, agricultural machines, and some autos; Tariffs imposed in direct response to Trump's 10% tariffs, according to the Chinese Finance Ministry. China also announced export controls (no specific country mentioned) on tungsten, tellurium, bismuth, molybdenum and indium. Following the US' extra 10%, on March 4th, China announced 15% on US chicken, wheat, com, and cotton; 10% on US soybeans, sorghum, pork, beef, aquatic products, fruits, vegetables, and dairy products; 15 US entities to the export control list; 10 US firms to the unreliable entity list; banned the import of Illumina (ILMN) gene sequence machines to China.
TARIFF TIMELINE

February 1st - Trump signed an executive order to impose 10% tariffs on all imports from China and 25% on imports from Mexico and Canada starting Feb 4th.
February 3rd - Trump agreed to a 30-day pause on tariffs against Canada and Mexico.
February 4th - US additional 10% tariff on China on top of existing levies came into effect. Chinese export controls on tungsten, tellurium, bismuth, molybdenum and indium took effect (no specific countries mentioned).
February 10th - Chinese tariffs against the US took effect (15% tariffs on US coal & LNG, 10% tariffs on US oil).
February 13th - Trump signed his plan for reciprocal tariffs, albeit delayed the implementation.
March 4th - Tariff pause on Mexico and Canada expired; Additional 10% tariffs on China went into effect on top of Feb 4th tariffs. Canada announced retaliatory tariffs over 21 days, Mexico said it will also respond with retaliatory tariffs.
March 5th - Trump allowed a one-month exemption on Mexico and Canada tariffs of US automakers following talks with Ford (F), General Motors (GM) and Stellantis (STLAM IM/STLAP FP)
March 6th - Trump postponed the initial 25% tariffs on several imports from Mexico and some imports from Canada for a month. In response, Canada suspended its second wave of retaliatory tariffs.
March 10th - China's retaliatory tariffs on certain US agricultural imports (15% on US chicken, wheat, corn, and cotton; 10% on US soybeans, sorghum, pork, beef, aquatic products, fruits, vegetables, and dairy products) went into effect; announced on March 4th in response to the extra 10% US tariff on top of Feb 4th tariffs.
March 11th - Trump threatened 50% tariffs on Canada, although he later backed down from this threat after Ontario's Premier announced they are suspending the 25% surcharge on exports of electricity. Trump separately suggested tariffs may go higher than 25% but did not specify which tariffs.
March 12th - 25% tariff on steel and aluminium imports came into effect, with "no exceptions or exemptions"; European Commission launched countermeasures on US imports while it is putting forward a package of new countermeasures.
April 1st - Completion of the US trade policy review.
April 2nd - US Liberation Day; 1) Auto tariffs "in the neighbourhood of 25%" comes into effect, 2) US tariffs on "external" agricultural products to go into effect, 3) Temporary tariff relief for Canada and Mexico expires. 4) Reciprocal tariffs kick in - details to be unveiled on the day; US President Trump to announce reciprocal tariffs at 15:00EDT/20:00BST.
April 13th - EU countermeasures against 25% steel and aluminium tariff to be fully in place.
TBC - pharma and semiconductors tariffs.
Developing

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 16:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Government Funding For mRNA Technology Is Being Scrutinized And, In Some Cases, Sidelined
Government Funding For mRNA Technology Is Being Scrutinized And, In Some Cases, Sidelined

It looks as though government funding for mRNA technology is on a short leash...

Take, for example, a promising mRNA vaccine for pancreatic cancer, developed by Memorial Sloan Kettering, that showed encouraging early results: in some patients, immune responses lasted up to four years and appeared to reduce recurrence.

It is being overshadowed by new concerns about federal support for mRNA research, according to a new op-ed by science commentator Anjana Ahuja in the Financial Times. 

According to Nature, NIH officials are informally advising scientists to remove references to mRNA from grant applications, and a spreadsheet tracking 130 related projects has raised fears of funding cuts.

NIH claims it's simply reviewing what mRNA work it currently funds, but the lack of clarity has sparked unease—especially given the agency’s massive $47 billion research budget.



Drew Weissman, the Nobel-winning scientist behind mRNA vaccine breakthroughs, warned that cutting NIH support for mRNA research would stall medical progress and harm U.S. science. Even the threat of funding cuts creates fear and instability, especially for young researchers who may now look abroad for more secure opportunities.

To which we reply: if mRNA vaccines have a safe solution, the free market will eventually allow them to flourish...

But the Financial Times piece says that concerns have intensified with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. leading Health and Human Services, and reports that mRNA projects are being scrutinized or sidelined politically. 

One early study using personalized mRNA cancer vaccines is already yielding hopeful results and has launched a broader global trial, according to the op-ed.

Scientists argue that pulling support now could derail life-saving innovation. As history shows, today’s medical breakthroughs rest on decades of consistent public research investment — a pipeline that can’t survive in a climate of political interference.

*  *  *

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Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 18:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Revealed: Pro-Kamala Social-Media Millions That Couldn't Sync 'Brat' With 'Democrat'
Revealed: Pro-Kamala Social-Media Millions That Couldn't Sync 'Brat' With 'Democrat'

Authored by Lee Fang via RealClearInvestigations,

The abrupt withdrawal last year of President Joe Biden as the Democratic presidential nominee, followed rapidly by his replacement with Vice President Kamala Harris, irked many voters left out by the process. Yet social media seemed to ooze with enthusiasm and Gen Z-friendly hipster appeal. 
British singer Charli XCX, whose album "Brat" ignited a "brat summer," inspiring Kamala Harris's team to draft off it, unsuccessfully. The stealth effort included social media payoffs and other campaign-finance workarounds. 

Influencers flooded the web with neon-matcha green pro-Harris videos synced to beats from singer Charli XCX's album “Brat” released last year. The poppy rave videos, gushed journalists, showed that Harris embodied the confidently independent "brat" vibe conveyed by the music. Social media pages bubbled with memes celebrating Harris as the voice of queer and black youth, in contrast with the Republican agenda of white supremacy. Digital creator Amelia Montooth, in one viral TikTok video, kissed a woman and tried searching for pornography, actions her sketch suggested would be banned if Harris lost the election.

Harris, a career politician favored by the Democratic Party’s establishment, never quite fit the bill as an icon of activist movements. But the sudden influencer buzz seemed to transform the stodgy former prosecutor into an icon of the cultural zeitgeist. 

As it turns out, the tidal wave of enthusiasm was not entirely genuine. Much of the content, including Montooth’s videos, was quietly funded by an elusive group of Democratic billionaires and major donors in an arrangement designed to conceal the payments from voters. RealClearInvestigations obtained internal documents and WhatsApp messages from Democratic strategists behind the influencer campaign. Way to Win, one of the major donor groups behind the effort, spent more than $9.1 million on social media influencers during the 2024 presidential election – payments revealed here for the first time. The amount was touted in a document circulated after the election detailing the organization’s accomplishments. 

The effort supported over 550 content creators who published 6,644 posts across platforms, TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, Twitch, and X. Way to Win coached creators on phrases, issue areas, and key themes to “disseminate pro-Kamala content throughout the cycle,” a post-election memo from the group noted.

The look behind the curtain reveals that at least some of the image-making around the Harris candidacy was carefully orchestrated by the same types of covert social media marketing often used by corporate brands and special interest groups. Such campaigns provide the illusion of organic support through the authentic appeal of trusted social media voices.
Way to Win, in internal messages, touted its work with a stable of Democratic Party-affiliated influencers and activists, including Harry Sisson, Emily Amick, Kate Abu, and Dash Dobrofsky. The group also overtly cultivated “non-political creators” – influencers typically known for travel vlogs, comedic skits, or cooking recipes – and seeded them with “positive, specific pro-Kamala content” that was “integral in setting the tone on the Internet and driving additional organic digital support.” The effort often took the form of talking points that were rapidly distributed to the in-network creators. 

“Bro who is Tim Walz,” said @AbeeTheArtist, one of the TikTok creators backed by Way to Win. “He's a football coach, that's hard,” the influencer continued. “It's time for Republicans to drop out, it's not looking good for ya'll!”
In a series of internal presentations about the influencer campaign, Way to Win emphasized its data-driven approach. "We know what messaging works," noted Liz Jaff, a branding strategist working with Way to Win, during a call with donors last year. She touted the use of an AI-based focus group tool developed by Future Forward, the Harris campaign’s primary SuperPAC. 
Jaff also explained the process for developing talking points that could be inserted into organic-appearing messages and posts on social media. “We then convey that to the influencers who take that into their own words,” continued Jaff. “We then test those videos and see what needs to be boosted,” she added, referencing paid media efforts to amplify specific TikTok videos or favored streamers. 
The lofty promises of message mastery, however, often fell short. Way to Win directly financed a series of clunky YouTube shows and liberal identity politics-oriented social media skits designed to bring voters out to support the Harris campaign and Democrats more broadly. There’s little evidence that such measures moved any significant numbers of voters during an election in which Democrats lost historic levels of support from key constituency groups – the youth vote, Latinos, and black men swung significantly to Donald Trump last year, upending decades of voting patterns.

Ilana Glazer, a comedian who starred in the Comedy Central show Broad City, received Way to Win funding for a series of election videos called “Microdosing Democracy,” in which she half-heartedly endorsed Harris as she lighted a spliff of marijuana. Another TikTok and Instagram series backed by the donors, called “Gaydar,” featured interviews quizzing people on the streets of New York City about gay culture trivia with little election-related content.

Way to Win also funded a caravan with an inflatable IUD to Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., Raleigh, St. Louis, and other locations. The tour, which featured content creators producing posts along the way, was designed to bring attention to claims that Trump would ban contraceptive devices. 

In an apparent attempt to boost Harris’ support among black men, Way to Win directly funded a series of YouTube interview-style talk shows called Watering Hole Media.

"I heard a brother say to me, 'Man, I didn't know I was going to be excited when Kamala was selected,’" said Jeff Johnson, a managing director with the lobbying firm Actum LLC who worked as a host for the Watering Hole Mediaseries “Tap In.” “One brother said, 'I'm not even fully sure why,’” continued Johnson. “No, seriously, he said, 'When I look at her, though, she reminds me of my aunt,' and I said yes, so there is this communal piece." 
The discussion, taped at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago last August, buzzed about the “through line” from the Black Panthers to the Nation of Islam to Harris' nomination, suggesting her candidacy represented another moment in radical black politics. 
The Way to Win-sponsored media group sponsored many similar discussions attempting to buoy the Harris candidacy with appeals to racial identity politics.
Despite the well-funded efforts, few tuned in. The seven video programs produced at the DNC collectively garnered fewer than 1,000 views. One video had fewer than 40 viewers. 

Questions have mounted over the campaign spending decisions from Harris and her supporting organizations. The Harris campaign and her SuperPAC spent over $1.5 billion in the last months of the campaign, with much of the money flowing to consultants and media advertising. Alex Cooper, who hosted Harris for an interview on her “Call Her Daddy” podcast, was baffled about why the campaign spent about $100,000 on a “cardboard” temporary studio set that “wasn’t that nice.” Others have raised similar concerns about payments to Oprah Winfrey’s production firm. 

“Our 2024 creator program reached key audiences with nearly a billion views, but there’s more to do, and we’re applying lessons from last cycle,” a Way to Win spokesperson said in a statement to RCI.

"Sometimes in presidential campaigns, there are times when there aren't any cost controls," observed Mike Mikus, a Democratic strategist in Pennsylvania. "The biggest question is whether they had any empirical evidence that this TikTok messaging would work."
The payments occupy a hazy area of election law. Way to Win structured the funds through nonprofit corporations that paid various influencer talent agencies – firms such as Palette Management and Vocal Media. The money was not listed in Federal Election Commission disclosure portals that show political funds spent during the campaign. 
While television or radio ads require disclaimers showing the groups responsible for paying for the advertisements, there are no equivalent mandates for TikTok stars or Instagram personalities that receive payment to promote election-related content. Despite some attempts to reform election transparency regulations, minimal progress has been made. The FEC has deadlocked over attempts to form new rules to govern the influencer space, leaving the entire medium virtually lawless regarding campaign cash. Way to Win operates several entities and corporations, most of which do not disclose donors. The group did not respond to a request for comment for more information in this regard. However, the cache of documents about the influencer campaign pointed to some clues. Way to Win hosted a series of donor-only events in San Francisco and Washington, D.C., with representatives of the Open Society Foundation, the charity backed by billionaire investor George Soros. OSF did not respond to a request for comment. 

Democrats are hardly alone in payola for influencers. Republican campaigns have spent several hundred thousand dollars on similar social media marketing agencies that tout the ability to seed content with popular accounts on X and TikTok. 

But the attempted reach and spending of the pro-Kamala Harris 2024 effort is unprecedented. For Way to Win, the group justified the spending sprees as the only way to compete with pro-Trump voices and popular podcasts, such as Joe Rogan, which the Harris campaign eschewed. 

“Our goal this year was to combat conservative content domination on Instagram and TikTok. We did that,” Way to Win claimed in a triumphant memo to donors after the election. 
“Had more Americans gotten their media from Instagram and TikTok,” the December memo argued, “Kamala Harris would be the next President of the United States.”

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Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 18:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Massie Bill Demands Federal Candidates Reveal Dual Citizenship
Massie Bill Demands Federal Candidates Reveal Dual Citizenship

Seeking to spotlight federal office-seekers who may have a conflict of interest, Kentucky Congressman Thomas Massie has introduced a bill that would require candidates for federal office to disclose any non-American citizenships they hold.  

"Personally, I don’t think dual citizens should serve in Congress, but I ultimately decided to introduce a transparency bill requiring full disclosure of citizenship," said Massie in a Monday Fox News interview with Will Cain. "Voters can then make the decision." So far, Massie's Dual Loyalty Disclosure Act (HR 2356) has attracted four co-sponsors, all of them Republicans: Andy Biggs (AZ-5), Clay Higgins (LA-3), Marjorie Taylor Greene (GA-14) and Nicholas Begich (AK at-large). 
Massie argues that voters should know if a candidate has loyalties to foreign countries (Allison Bailey / NurPhoto via AP and NBC News)

While it's not a provision of his transparency-focused bill that would amend the Federal Election Campaign Act, Massie thinks dual citizens in Congress "should... abstain from votes specifically benefitting those countries," the libertarian-minded MIT grad said in a press release accompanying the introduction of his bill. "We swear an oath to the Constitution, and the question is, if you're a citizen of two countries, which oath are you taking more seriously, or can you take them both seriously?" Massie told Fox's Cain. 

Underscoring the mystery that Massie is seeking to end, it's unclear how many current members of Congress have citizenship in a foreign country. Indeed, ZeroHedge wasn't able to identify any members who have disclosed dual citizenships on their own. According to Pew Research, there are 19 foreign-born members of the 119th Congress, but that doesn't necessarily equate to holding citizenship abroad. Among those 19, the countries of birth are Mexico (4 members), India (3), South Korea (2) Ukraine (2), Colombia, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Japan, Peru, Somalia and Taiwan.    

"I'm not picking on any particular country," said Massie. However, American social media and other discourse regarding US officials' potential dual citizenship has overwhelmingly focused on Israel, which receives billions of dollars in US military aid every year, in a relationship that foments intense foreign resentments against the United States, and terrorism against Americans. 

When he last summer first began advocating for dual citizens in Congress to renounce their foreign citizenships, Massie was immediately accused of anti-semitism. One of his accusers was then-Florida state senator Randy Fine, who on Tuesday was elected to the US Congress in a special election:


This guy is just gross. Who in Congress is a dual citizen? I think we all know the slur he is tossing around. The real question is why certain Florida politicians choose this bigot to hang around with. https://t.co/ngs7RTjwDn
— Senator Randy Fine (@VoteRandyFine) August 19, 2024
Fine, who calls himself the "Hebrew Hammer," has a history of intensely zealous support of Israel, to include a host of controversial statements celebrating IDF-inflicted bloodshed -- even mocking a photo that purportedly depicted a baby killed by US-supplied weapons. The Trump endorsee, who accompanied Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis when he traveled 6,600 miles to Jerusalem to sign a state law to target antisemitism, has also used a slur ("Judenrat") to attack a fellow Jew who challenged Fine's fiercely pro-Israel line. 

Massie's refusal to vote for aid to Israel, and his votes against bills that would subject colleges that allow anti-Israel speech to federal enforcement actions, have made him a recurring target of pro-Israel political organizations. They've spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in attempts to oust him in a GOP primary or simply undermine his political future -- so far, all in vain.

One of the biggest spenders in 2024 was an offshoot of the powerful American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). Staking a position that echoes his transparency-seeking Dual Loyalty Disclosure Act, Massie has argued that AIPAC should be compelled to register under the Foreign Agents Registration Act:


Foreign interest lobbying group AIPAC is running $300,000 of ads as part of a pressure campaign to influence my votes in Congress.
The Foreign Agents Registration Act requires agents of foreign principals to register & disclose certain information. Should AIPAC register w/FARA?
— Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) May 10, 2024
In February, when Massie teased a potential 2026 bid for the Senate seat of retiring former Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, the Republican Jewish Coalition warned that "the RJC campaign budget to ensure he is defeated will be unlimited." Massie turned that threat into a fundraising bonanza of his own, raising hundreds of thousands in small-dollar contributions to his campaign fund in just a few days. 

On Tuesday, treading on what may be thin political ice himself, Cain endorsed Massie's Dual Loyalty Disclosure Act:


"I don't like it when I see an elected official have more than the American flag in their...bio on X. I don't want to see a Ukrainian flag. I don't want to see an Israeli flag. I want to see single loyalty to the United States of America." 



This afternoon, I joined @willcain to discuss my bill, the "Dual Loyalty Disclosure Act."
Candidates for federal office should be required to disclose to voters whether they have citizenship in other countries.
Also, thank you DNI Gabbard for revoking security clearances. pic.twitter.com/plSCg4XeST
— Thomas Massie (@RepThomasMassie) March 31, 2025

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 18:50

Atlas Obscura
Open 
The Lingering Mystery of the 'Lost Colony' of Roanoke

Atlas Obscura
Open 
This Is the Most Detailed Map of Antarctica Ever Made

The Hill
Open 
Livestock may be threatening endangered species in Arizona and New Mexico: Report
Uncontrolled livestock grazing is destroying streamside habitats that are critical to endangered plants and animals in Arizona and New Mexico, a new report has found. Half of roughly 2,400 miles surveyed since 2017 showed significant harm to such spots, while 13 percent of the areas incurred moderate damage, according to the report released Wednesday by the...

The Hill
Open 
Crockett responds to Bondi's 'threat' over Musk criticism
Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas) on Wednesday pushed back against Attorney General Pam Bondi after the Justice Department head criticized the Texas Democrat’s comments about tech billionaire Elon Musk being “taken down” multiple times. “To have her go on Fox News, and to then decide that she wanted to send a threat to me, it was...

The Hill
Open 
Johnson: 'Working on every possible accommodation' for mothers amid parental proxy voting impasse
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on Wednesday said he is “working on every possible accommodation” to make it easier for mothers to serve in Congress amid the impasse between GOP leadership and Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) over parental proxy voting. “Proxy voting aside, I am actively working on every possible accommodation to make Congressional service...

The Hill
Open 
Trump says Great Depression would never have started if tariffs continued
President Trump on Wednesday said that the 1930s Great Depression wouldn’t have happened if tariffs had continued, while announcing his massive tariff plan to hit trading partners. The president argued that before the income tax on U.S. citizens was established in 1913, the U.S. leaned into tariffs and was collecting money from other countries. Then...

The Hill
Open 
Trump NATO envoy poised to press allies on defense spending
Welcome to The Hill's Defense & NatSec newsletter {beacon} Defense &National Security Defense &National Security   The Big Story Trump NATO envoy poised to press allies on defense spending The Senate confirmed Matthew Whitaker, former acting attorney general during President Trump’s first term, as the next U.S. ambassador to NATO. © The Hill, Greg Nash...

The Hill
Open 
USDA freezes funding for Maine schools over transgender athletes
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) said Wednesday it had frozen federal funds for some Maine education programs over the state’s refusal to ban transgender students from girls’ and women’s sports as ordered by President Trump and his administration.  Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced the freeze following a letter sent to Maine Gov. Janet Mills (D)...

The Hill
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Oklahoma, Tennessee to get restored family planning funds
Click in for more news from The Hill {beacon} Health Care Health Care   The Big Story Trump administration restoring some family planning funds to red states The Trump administration is restoring millions of dollars of Title X family planning funds to state health departments in Oklahoma and Tennessee. © AP The Oklahoma State Department...

The Hill
Open 
Analysts: Trump tariffs 'worse than the worst case scenario' for tech investors
Analysts described President Trump’s latest slate of tariffs Wednesday as “worse than the worst case scenario” for tech investors.  Trump announced a sweeping 10 percent tariff on goods from all foreign countries, alongside higher tariffs on nations deemed the “worst offenders” when it comes to trade barriers. Tech firms, such as Apple, Nvidia and other chipmakers,...

The Hill
Open 
Sean Duffy’s daughter lays into Luna proxy voting push: 'Feel free to resign'
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy’s daughter, Evita Duffy-Alfonso, laid into the effort for proxy voting led by Florida Republican Rep. Anna Paulina Luna after the House tanked a procedural rule on Tuesday. “When my baby sister was born with two holes in her heart and needed a very risky surgery, my father, @SecDuffy, knew he needed...

The Hill
Open 
Fine, Patronis sworn in after special Florida election, boosting thin GOP House majority
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on Wednesday swore in newly elected Florida Reps. Jimmy Patronis (R) and Randy Fine (R). The two won special elections Tuesday, and their quick entry to the House gives Johnson some additional room to navigate the GOP’s razor-thin margin. The House now stands at 220 Republicans and 213 Democrats, meaning Johnson...

The Hill
Open 
Section 230 fight revived
{beacon} Technology Technology   The Big Story Senators revive fight against Section 230 Senators from both sides of the aisle are reigniting efforts to crawl back tech firms’ legal immunities with hopes bipartisan support in Congress could push the bill across the finish line this session and gain the backing of President Trump. © J....

The Hill
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All staff cut at federal HHS energy affordability office
Click for more from The Hill. {beacon} Energy & Environment Energy & Environment   The Big Story All staff cut at federal HHS energy affordability office The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has fired all of the workers in its program that seeks to help low-income Americans pay their energy bills. © File:...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Samoa suffering energy crisis after weeks of power outages
Pacific country this week declared state of emergency over power cuts that have caused huge disruption to businesses and daily lifeSamoa is in the grip of an “energy crisis” prime minister Fiame Naomi Mata’afa said this week, as she declared a state of emergency over power outages that have swept the country for weeks, causing huge disruption to businesses and daily life.The government is scrambling to provide relief to affected businesses and households, with temporary power generation units due to arrive next week. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reeves defends Labour’s £40bn tax rise as businesses prepare for NICs hike
Chancellor says autumn budget enabled £25bn of extra investment into NHS and shorter waiting lists Rachel Reeves has defended the £40bn in tax increases in autumn’s budget as businesses brace for their impact, saying NHS waiting lists would now be higher if she had not taken action.Employers are set for a £25bn increase in national insurance contributions (NICs), which comes into force on 6 April, at the same time as consumers are being hit by a slew of increases in bills for everything from utilities to car tax. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Torres sends Barcelona past Atlético and into clásico Copa del Rey final
Semi-final: Atlético Madrid 0-1 Barcelona (agg 4-5)Barça v Real Madrid final for first time since 2014More than a decade later, the Copa del Rey will have a clásico final. First Barcelona played, then they resisted, expertly suppressing Atlético Madrid’s brief rebellion at the Metropolitano, and together those two halves, those two faces, took them through. A wild and open first leg, 4-4 at Montjuic, gave way to a tighter second won by a single Ferran Torres goal. Seville awaits football’s greatest rivals, both of them still chasing a treble. “Dreaming is allowed,” Hansi Flick said, “but we will have to work hard. At the club they have a lot of space for more titles.”For Diego Simeone’s side, meanwhile, this was The End. In the five weeks since the first leg of this semi-final, a season that had set up to be superb instead escaped Atlético, all three major competitions gone. They have won just one of five games since then, and that was the Champions League second leg in which Madrid knocked them out on penalties. They also slipped nine points off the top in La Liga and now their cup run is over. They had taken their opponents to the line but could not get over it themselves. “There’s nothing to reproach,” the coach said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Healthy but lonely gen Zers drive UK gym membership to record high
More health-conscious young people take total to 11.5m memberships, report finds, as experts cite social aspect alongside fitnessRecord numbers of Britons are going to the gym, as the desire of many gen Zers to socialise while getting fit instead of drinking in the pub drives an unprecedented surge in membership, a report shows.In all, 11.5 million people aged 16 and over– a new high – now belong to a gym in the UK, a rise of 1.6 million from 2022. It means one in six people have taken out a membership. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Doctors urge government to fight poverty after rise in patients with Victorian diseases
Survey finds vast majority of doctors are concerned at impact of health inequalities on their patientsDoctors have reported a rise in the number of patients with Victorian diseases such as scabies, as the Royal College of Physicians urged the government to do more to fight poverty.The survey of 882 doctors found 89% were concerned about the impact of health inequalities on their patients, while 72% had seen more patients in the past three months with illnesses related to poor-quality housing, air pollution and access to transport. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
We need more male teachers so British boys have role models, says minister
Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, says there are too few men working in schools as UK reflects on TV series AdolescenceThe fate of boys “is a defining issue of our time”, according to the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, as she calls for more men to become teachers to combat “toxic” behaviours.Speaking at a conference on Thursday, Phillipson will warn that boys and young men growing up in Britain need stronger role models to counteract the dangers they face, illustrated by the Netflix series Adolescence. Continue reading...

Slashdot
Open 
Bill Gates Celebrates Microsoft's 50th By Releasing Altair BASIC Source Code
To mark Microsoft's 50th anniversary, Bill Gates has released the original Altair BASIC source code he co-wrote with Paul Allen, calling it the "coolest code" he's ever written and a symbol of the company's humble beginnings. Thurrott reports: "Before there was Office or Windows 95 or Xbox or AI, there was Altair BASIC," Bill Gates writes on his Gates Notes website. "In 1975, Paul Allen and I created Microsoft because we believed in our vision of a computer on every desk and in every home. Five decades later, Microsoft continues to innovate new ways to make life easier and work more productive. Making it 50 years is a huge accomplishment, and we couldn't have done it without incredible leaders like Steve Ballmer and Satya Nadella, along with the many people who have worked at Microsoft over the years."

Today, Gates says that the 50th anniversary of Microsoft is "bittersweet," and that it feels like yesterday when he and Allen "hunched over the PDP-10 in Harvard's computer lab, writing the code that would become the first product of our new company." That code, he says, remains "the coolest code I've ever written to this day ... I still get a kick out of seeing it, even all these years later."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
India Set For $100 Billion Startup IPO Surge By 2027
According to Bloomberg, India is set for a surge in tech startup IPOs valued at around $100 billion by 2027, with major players like Flipkart, PhonePe, and Oyo preparing to go public. From a report: A report from Indian investment bank The Rainmaker Group suggests that the new wave of IPO hopefuls is in a stronger financial position than their predecessors. Many of the startups that were listed during the 2021-2022 boom struggled post-IPO, with fintech firm Paytm losing roughly 63% of its value and beauty retailer Nykaa slipping 4% since going public.

"The financial health of companies set to list in the next two years is significantly better than those that went public earlier," said Kashyap Chanchani, managing partner at Rainmaker. He noted that two-thirds of the firms eyeing IPOs are already profitable and have improved transparency, making them more attractive to investors.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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'It's high, it's dangerous, it's red!' - Tarkowski's lucky escape
Match of the Day's Micah Richards and Joe Hart discuss James Tarkowski's "reckless Merseyside tackle of old" on Liverpool's Alexis Mac Allister, and say Everton "were fortunate to still have 11 players on the pitch".

BBC World News
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Marine Le Pen's ban has outraged France's far right - and they may well seek revenge
Could the National Rally retaliate in parliament by attempting to bring down the fragile coalition government?

Techdirt
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Otherwise Objectionable: When Congress Ridiculously Tried Merging Censorship With Freedom
Moral panics come and go, but stupid legislation is forever. At least until the Supreme Court steps in. This week on Otherwise Objectionable, my podcast series about Section 230, we talk about how the moral panic over “porn” online, including Senator James Exon’s infamous blue binder of internet porn, caused the Senate to pass a […]

CNET News
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Here Are the Switch 2 Games I'm Excited to Play
Commentary: Nintendo's next console already has a lot of great games in its future.

CNET News
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Visa Allegedly Makes a Bid to Unseat Mastercard as Apple Card's Partner
Changing networks won't impact cardholders much, but it could be the first step toward improving card features.

CNET News
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Starseeker, Silksong and Other New Switch 2 Games Revealed During Stream Freeze
Viewers who woke up early to watch the Nintendo Direct live missed out on a handful of first-ever looks at new games.

CNET News
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Using Affirm's BNPL Plan Could Now Affect Your Credit Score
Buy Now, Pay Later plans could help build your credit history, but missing a payment could hurt your credit score later on.

Mail Online
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Emotional moment woman holds the hands of her twin sister five years after she died as she meets the woman who received life-changing double transplant
When transplant patient Corinne Hutton met the sister of the donor who changed her life, their shared handshake said it all.

Mail Online
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Bus driver in crash that left Virginia Giuffre claiming she has 'four days to live' gives HIS side of the story... and paints a VERY different picture to hers
In an exclusive interview with MailOnline, bus driver Ross Munns contradicted Ms Giuffre's account of the incident - and insisted that the car was in a minor collision with his bus.

The Guardian (UK)
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Torres sends Barcelona past Atlético and into clásico Copa del Rey final
Semi-final: Atlético Madrid 0-1 Barcelona (agg 4-5)Barça v Real Madrid final for first time since 2014A decade later, the Copa del Rey will have a clásico final. First Barcelona played, then they resisted, expertly suppressing Atlético Madrid’s brief rebellion at the Metropolitano, and together those two halves, those two faces, took them through. A wild and open first leg, 4-4 at Montjuic, gave way to a tighter second won by a single Ferran Torres goal. Seville awaits football’s greatest rivals, both of them still chasing a treble. “Dreaming is allowed,” Hansi Flick said, “but we will have to work hard. At the club they have a lot of space for more titles.”For Diego Simeone’s side, meanwhile, this was The End. In the five weeks since the first leg of this semi-final, a season that had set up to be superb instead escaped Atlético, all three major competitions gone. They have won just one of five games since then, and that was the Champions League second leg in which Madrid knocked them out on penalties. They also slipped nine points off the top in La Liga and now their cup run is over. They had taken their opponents to the line but could not get over it themselves. “There’s nothing to reproach,” the coach said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Hope in my heart’: big Texas welcome for displaced Afghans as White House freezes refugee programs
Texas volunteers had prepared welcome for family fleeing Taliban now stranded in Pakistan in fear of being deportedThe 24-year-old Afghan woman wants to become a surgeon – and she had set her sights on training in the US.She wants to care for other women and girls, so they don’t have to be afraid to visit the doctor – so at least in one crucial aspect of their lives they won’t have to endure the unwanted advances, dismissive comments and blatant disrespect that she’s experienced from many of the men who have always surrounded her, first in her native Afghanistan and now in legal limbo in Pakistan. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Trump announces sweeping global trade tariffs - including 10% on UK imports
Donald Trump has announced a 10% trade tariff on all imports from the UK - as he unleashed sweeping tariffs across the globe.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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'That was for you Keelan' - Grealish dedicates goal to late brother
An emotional Jack Grealish dedicates his first Premier League goal in almost 16 months to his younger brother Keelan in the 25th anniversary of his death.

Mac Rumours
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Apple Releases New Firmware for AirPods Max With Lossless Audio Support
Apple today released new 7E101 firmware for the AirPods Max with USB-C, addressing an issue that made the previously released firmware unable to be downloaded.





Apple yesterday seeded out ‌AirPods Max‌ firmware with a version number of 7E99 to enable lossless audio support, but it turned out that ‌AirPods Max‌ users were not able to download the firmware.



The new 7E101 firmware should now be available to all Apple users who have ‌AirPods Max‌ with USB-C, and the update brings lossless audio and ultra-low latency audio to the headphones.



The USB-C ‌AirPods Max‌ now support 24-bit 48 kHz lossless audio, which is designed to allow listeners to experience music the way the artist created it in the studio. Apple says lossless audio and Personalized Spatial Audio offer a "more sonically accurate, uncompressed, and immersive experience."



With lossless audio and ultra-low latency audio support, music creators are able to use the ‌AirPods Max‌ to create and mix in Personalized Spatial Audio with head tracking, with just a USB-C cable and a Mac with Logic Pro or other music creation software.



Lossless audio and ultra-low latency is only available for the USB-C ‌AirPods Max‌, as lossless quality requires a USB-C connection to an iPhone, iPad, or Mac. The headphones need to be running the latest firmware and need to be paired with a device running iOS 18.4, iPadOS 18.4, or macOS Sequoia 15.4.



Firmware can be installed by putting the ‌AirPods Max‌ in Bluetooth range of an ‌iPhone‌, ‌iPad‌, or Mac that's connected to Wi-Fi, and then plugging them in to charge. It can take up to 30 minutes for firmware to update.



You can check your firmware version by going to Settings > Bluetooth and selecting the Info button next to the ‌AirPods Max‌ when they are connected to an ‌iPhone‌, ‌iPad‌, or Mac.Related Roundup: AirPods MaxBuyer's Guide: AirPods Max (Buy Now)Related Forum: AirPodsThis article, 'Apple Releases New Firmware for AirPods Max With Lossless Audio Support' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
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Trump tariffs recap: US President delivers long-awaited 'Liberation Day' speech - and reveals how Britain's economy will be affected 
US president Donald Trump is tonight set to announce which countries will be hit by a deluge of tariffs on what he proclaims as America's 'Liberation Day.'

Digital Trends
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Nvidia RTX 5070 available at suggested price at Best Buy, grab it now
The Nvidia RTX 5070 GPU is currently available at Best Buy for its suggested retail price of $550, offering a rare chance for gamers to buy the card at MSRP.

Digital Trends
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Dell XPS deal: This XPS 16 has a $700 discount
The Dell XPS 16 with the Intel Core Ultra 9 185H processor and 32GB of RAM is on sale from Dell with a $700 discount, lowering its price to $2,650.

The Verge
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With the Switch 2, it seems like Nintendo is kind of figuring out online
It’s perhaps no surprise that Nintendo opened its Switch 2 Direct with Mario Kart World, a Switch 2-exclusive launch title that’s a sequel to the original Switch’s most popular game. But it was more of a surprise that the Direct’s second segment, instead of focusing on the console’s specs, was all about Nintendo’s Discord-like GameChat […]

The Verge
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The NaNoWriMo organization is shutting down
NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month)is shutting down after more than 20 years of hosting its annual challenge for writers. In a video and an email sent to community members, the nonprofit organization explains that it can no longer continue “after years of financial struggles.”  Before officially becoming a nonprofit in 2006, NaNoWriMo started out with […]

The Verge
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How the Nintendo Switch 2 compares to prior models on paper
The Switch 2 is here — well, almost. Nintendo took the wraps off its new console during its latest Direct event, providing us with a closer look at the $449.99 console ahead of its release on June 5th. In many ways, the sequel is a generational leap from the original console / handheld hybrid that […]

The Verge
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The Nintendo GameCube is about to get its due
Before this morning, I knew I was going to buy the Nintendo Switch 2 but I didn’t know when. After watching Nintendo’s Switch 2 Direct today, in which a purple block traced the GameCube’s stylized “G” logo, followed by high-res footage from The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker and F-Zero GX and an announcement […]

The Verge
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Apple releases AirPods Max update with lossless audio after brief delay
Last week, Apple announced that lossless audio and ultra low latency would be coming to the AirPods Max with USB-C. It was a pleasant surprise for owners of Apple’s over-ear headphones, which have fallen behind the AirPods Pro in recent years when it comes to offering new features. The company briefly hit a snag in […]

Gizmodo
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Trump’s Tariffs Are Here to Jack Up the Price of Your Switch 2 (and Everything Else)
The 10% baseline tariffs will hit April 5, with the larger tariffs coming into effect April 9.

Gizmodo
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New Line Cinema’s Planning More Horror Sequels, but Hasn’t Given Up on Originals
The studio's president spoke about how mainstays like The Conjuring Universe will factor into New Line's future.

Gizmodo
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Doctor Who‘s Eurovision Episode May Not Make It to UK TV… Because of Eurovision
Russell T. Davies explains the scheduling that could either be perfectly timed, or the complete opposite.

The Guardian (UK)
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Marcus Rashford and Marco Asensio on target as Aston Villa leapfrog Brighton
Fabian Hürzeler has had more enjoyable weeks. After being dumped out of the FA Cup quarter-finals here on Saturday by Nottingham Forest in a penalty shootout, there was more heartache for the Brighton manager as Marcus Rashford’s third goal in his past two games, yet another for Marco Asensio, and Donyell Malen’s first for the club gave Aston Villa a crucial win in the battle for a top‑five finish.It meant Unai Emery’s side moved above Brighton and vastly improved their chances of matching their achievement last season of qualifying for the Champions League. They still have to play the fourth- and fifth-placed Manchester City and Newcastle in the run-in after hosting Forest on Saturday. Yet after making some shrewd acquisitions in January including Rashford and Asensio – who now has eight goals for Villa since joining on loan from Paris Saint-Germain – you wouldn’t bet against them doing it. Continue reading...

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Diogo Jota breaks down Everton’s blue wall as Liverpool move closer to title
There were fist-pumps from Arne Slot as he headed down the Anfield tunnel and roars from the Kop in answer to Andy Robertson’s beseeching. The 246th Merseyside derby proved not merely another step towards the Premier League title for Liverpool but a cathartic release, and the reactions showed it.The league leaders cleansed themselves of recent torment against Everton and two deflating cup defeats in quick succession to secure a deserved derby win courtesy of Diogo Jota’s fine individual goal. Continue reading...

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Trump hits UK with 10% tariffs as he ignites global trade war
Britain gets off comparatively lightly but US president’s action could still cost billions in lost growthUS politics – latest updatesDonald Trump has hit the UK with tariffs of 10% on exports to the US as he ignited a global trade war that could wipe billions off economic growth.The US president accused other nations, including allies, of “looting, pillaging, raping and plundering” the US, as he announced tariffs on economic rivals including 20% on the EU and 34% on China as part of what he dubbed “liberation day”. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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'So obvious I don't need to comment' - Slot disputes decision not to send off Tarkowski
Liverpool manager Arne Slot disputes the decision to only award a yellow card to Everton's James Tarkovski for his tackle on Alexis Mac Allister in his side's 1-0 Premier League win in the Merseyside derby at Anfield.

BBC World News
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Trump to charge tariffs of up to 50% on 'worst offenders' globally
The president says the US has been "pillaged, raped and plundered" for years by international trade partners.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Trump's tariffs on China, EU and more, at a glance
Japan will face different tax rates than Australia under Trump's plan - here's what else to know.

Wired Top Stories
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The Founder of OnlyFans Wants to Buy TikTok
Tim Stokely partnered with a crypto company to bid for TikTok as the social media company faces a deadline to either sell or be banned in the US. Amazon also placed a last minute bid.

Boing Boing
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Turns out Mike Waltz held at least 20 other sensitive group chats on Signal
When Mike Waltz carelessly added an Atlantic editor to his classified military group chat on the Signal app last month, the Trump Administration brushed it off as a one-time blunder that wouldn't happen again. But as it turns out, the sloppy national security advisor has used the same texting app for at least 20 other sensitive discussions, according to new reports. — Read the rest
The post Turns out Mike Waltz held at least 20 other sensitive group chats on Signal appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Register
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Raw Deel: Corporate spy admits role in espionage at HR software biz Rippling
Double-oh-sh... The name's not Bond. It's O'Brien - Keith O'Brien, now-former global payroll compliance manager at the Dublin, Ireland office of HR software-as-a-service maker Rippling.…

TechRadar Reviews
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The phone-sized Onyx Boox Palma 2 is the compact ereader I can't put down, even if it's not the upgrade I was hoping for

BBC UK News
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Decision demanded on port closure compensation
A report urges ministers to decide "urgently" if firms hit by Holyhead closure should be compensated.

The Guardian (UK)
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Tonali’s goal from touchline hands Newcastle win over battling Brentford
If Newcastle’s rivals for a Champions League place had hoped Eddie Howe’s players might be partied out after ending a 70-year domestic trophy drought they were destined for disappointment.Admittedly Howe’s team were not at their best but, thanks to the most audacious of impossibly angled winners from Sandro Tonali, Newcastle ultimately found a way to defuse Brentford’s clever, and near constant, threat. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Marcus Rashford and Marco Asensio on target as Aston Villa leapfrog Brighton
Fabian Hürzeler has had more enjoyable weeks. After being dumped out of the FA Cup quarter-finals here on Saturday by Nottingham Forest in a penalty shootout, there was more heartache for the Brighton manager as Marcus Rashford’s third goal in his last two matches, yet another for Marco Asensio, and Donyell Malen’s first for the club gave Aston Villa a crucial victory in the battle for a top five finish.It meant Unai Emery’s side moved above Brighton and vastly improved their chances of matching last season’s achievement of qualifying for the Champions League. They still have to play fourth- and fifth-placed Manchester City and Newcastle in the run-in after hosting Forest on Saturday. Yet after making some shrewd acquisitions in January including Rashford and Asensio – who now has eight goals for Villa since joining on loan from Paris Saint-Germain in January – you wouldn’t bet against them doing it. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Diogo Jota breaks down Everton’s blue wall as Liverpool move closer to title
There were fist-pumps from Arne Slot as he headed down the Anfield tunnel and roars from the Kop in answer to Andy Robertson’s beseeching. The 246th Merseyside derby proved not merely another step towards the Premier League title for Liverpool but a cathartic release, and the reactions showed it.The league leaders cleansed themselves of recent torment against Everton and two deflating cup defeats in quick succession to secure a deserved derby win courtesy of Diogo Jota’s fine individual goal. David Moyes felt the strike that ended Everton’s nine-match unbeaten run should have been disallowed with Luis Díaz offside in the build-up. He also conceded that James Tarkowski, Everton’s late hero when the local rivals met 49 days ago, was lucky not to see red with only 11 minutes on the clock. The customary Merseyside derby controversy. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump hits UK with 10% tariffs as he ignites global trade war
Britain gets off relatively lightly but redrawing of global trade by US president could cost billions in lost growthUS politics – latest updatesDonald Trump has hit the UK with tariffs of 10% on exports to the US as he ignited a global trade war that could wipe billions off economic growth.The US president accused other nations, including allies, of “looting, pillaging, raping and plundering” the US, as he announced tariffs on economic rivals including 20% on the EU and 34% on China as part of what he dubbed “liberation day”. Continue reading...

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'It's just nasty': Residents 'overwhelmed' by foul stench and massive rats as bins strike rumbles on
In parts of Birmingham, the stench is overwhelming - enough to make you heave.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Trump's tariffs on China, EU and more, at a glance
The US will impose customised tariff rates as part of Trump's plan to reset trade relationships.

ZeroHedge News
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Futures Tumble As President Trump Delivers "Declaration Of Economic Independence"
Futures Tumble As President Trump Delivers "Declaration Of Economic Independence"

Update (1630ET): “Well we have some very, very good news today,” Trump began his address exclaiming that “This is Liberation Day.”


“April 2, 2025, will forever be remembered as the day American industry was reborn, the day America’s destiny was reclaimed and the day that we began to make America wealthy again,” Trump says.

“For decades, our country has been looted, pillaged, raped and plundered by nations near and far, both friend and foe alike. American steel workers, auto workers, farmers and skilled craftsmen -- we have a lot of them here with us today. They really suffered gravely.”

“In a few moments, I will sign a historic Executive Order, reciprocal tariffs on countries throughout the world. Reciprocal. That means they do it to us and we do it to them. Very simple. Can’t get any simpler than that.”




Trump lays out his theory that tariffs will bring back a “golden age” for the US, a phrase he also used in his inaugural address:

“Jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country, and you see it happening already. We will supercharge our domestic industrial base.”

Trump says the reciprocal tariffs will bring “stronger competition and lower prices for consumers” in the US.

Finally, Trump announces his tariff plan details as a "Declaration Of Economic Independence"

Specifically, Trump announced a baseline tariff rate of 10% for all countries (below the 15% consensus and 20% worst case) beginning April 5th.

Trump confirmed the 25% tariff on all auto imports.

BUT, specific reciprocal tariffs for 'bad actors' starting on April 9th.

Additionally, Trump said they will not be full reciprocal tariffs, then held a chart up showing the individual nation (trade-weighted average) tariff levels:



Here is the full list:

















Here are some specifics:


China: 34% (which is on top of the current 20% tariff, meaning a total 54% tariff)


EU: 20%

Japan: 24%

UK: 10%


South Korea: 25%


Thailand: 36%


Switzerland: 31%

Taiwan: 32%

Malaysia: 24%

Here are the hardest hit nations:


Iraq 39%


Mauritius 40%


Syria 41%


Falkland Islands 41%


Vietnam: 46%


Madagascar 47%


Laos 48%


Cambodia 49%


Lesotho 50%


Saint Pierre & Miquelon 50%

Mexico and Canada are not on the list as US will continue to exempt USMCA-compliant goods. 


For Canada and Mexico, the existing fentanyl/migration IEEPA orders remain in effect, and are unaffected by this order. This means USMCA compliant goods will continue to see a 0% tariff, non-USMCA compliant goods will see a 25% tariff, and non-USMCA compliant energy and potash will see a 10% tariff. In the event the existing fentanyl/migration IEEPA orders are terminated, USMCA compliant goods would continue to receive preferential treatment, while non-USMCA compliant goods would be subject to a 12% reciprocal tariff.


The Loonie and the Peso rallied on the news...



Some goods will not be subject to the Reciprocal Tariff.


These include: (1) articles subject to 50 USC 1702(b); (2) steel/aluminum articles and autos/auto parts already subject to Section 232 tariffs; (3) copper, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, and lumber articles; (4) all articles that may become subject to future Section 232 tariffs; (5) bullion; and (6) energy and other certain minerals that are not available in the United States.


Initially markets heard Trump's comments as 'better than expected' and futures spiked on the news, but then as he showed the chart of specific tariffs, futures plunged...



Treasury yields also tumbled, erasing the day's spike higher...



“If you want your tariff rate to be zero, then you build your product right here in America, because there is no tariff if you build your plant, your product in America,” Trump said, concluding:


“Likewise to all of the foreign presidents, prime ministers, kings, queens, ambassadors and everyone else who will soon be calling to ask for exemptions from these tariffs, I say terminate your own tariffs, drop your barriers, don’t manipulate your currencies."


The White House issued a full Fact Sheet here...


“These tariffs will remain in effect until such a time as President Trump determines that the threat posed by the trade deficit and underlying nonreciprocal treatment is satisfied, resolved, or mitigated.”


And cue the negotiations...

Adam Hetts, global head of multi-asset at Janus Henderson, suggests this is the opening salvo for negotiations and the question is how much economic pain Trump is willing to tolerate:


“Eye-watering tariffs on a country-by-country basis scream ‘negotiation tactic,’ which will keep markets on edge for the foreseeable future. Fortunately, this means there’s substantial room for lower tariffs from here, albeit with a 10% baseline in place. We’ve seen the administration have a surprisingly high tolerance for market pain, now the big question is how much tolerance it has for true economic pain as negotiations unfold.”


Treasury Secretary Bessent appeared on Bloomberg TV with a simple message to the world: Don’t panic, don’t retaliate


“As long as you don’t retaliate, this is the high end of the number,” he says.


*  *  *

"This is the moment... this is the time..." Trump's Jekyll & Hyde tariff-ing plans are finally to be announced ("We are going to be very nice by comparison to what they were" vs “We’ve been taken advantage of for 40 years, maybe more, and it’s just not going to happen anymore.")



As Trump discusses reciprocal tariffs (and the legacy media claims he is 'punishing allies') keep this chart in mind - does that seem like 'free trade'?



The three main things to watch for when Trump starts speaking are as follows (h/t Goldman Sachs' Brian Garrett)


What is the full list of countries included in the measures (19 is bogey)


What is the magnitude for average reciprocal tariff (GS econ expects avg 15% when weighted by US imports – this would be a negative surprise)


Confirmation of the planned timeline for implementation (the shorter the period, the more hawkish the read thru - and for now 'immediate effect' is expected)

Watch President Trump deliver his remarks in his 'Make America Wealth Again' event and answer questions here (due to start at 1600ET):



* * *

Update (0805ET): As the clock ticks down to today's 4pm announcement of "across the board" tariffs on a subset of nations, speculation about the size and scope of the new rules is rife with many nations already threatening "proportionate" responses:


USTR reportedly prepares a new tariff option for US President Trump which is "an across-the-board tariff on a subset of nations that likely would not be as high as the 20% universal tariff option", according to WSJ.


US President Trump's tariff plans are "coming down to the wire" with his team reportedly still finalising the size and scope of the new levies, according to Bloomberg.


US Treasury Secretary Bessent told lawmakers that Wednesday's tariffs are a 'cap', according to a CNBC reporter cited by Reuters.


On UK-US tariffs, "Sounds like any hopes of a last-ditch concession from Donald Trump ahead of his tariffs announcement are fading", according to Times' Swinford; although a deal could be signed as soon as next week "Keir Starmer is not planning to speak to him today, but there are hopes that the economic deal giving Britain a carve-out can be signed as soon as next week. Sources talking about 'days or weeks'" "But in truth No 10 doesn't know what Trump is planning or when concessions could be made. All deeply uncertain this morning".


Canada is to avoid counter-tariffs that risk Canadian jobs and price hikes and it won't impose retaliation tariffs on most US food and other basic necessities, according to the Globe and Mail citing two federal trade advisers.


Thai Commerce Ministry said Thai semiconductors may face 25% US tariffs and noted that Thai tariffs are 11% higher than US tariffs, while it added Thailand may see an impact of USD 7bln-8bln from US reciprocal tariffs but announced it will increase imports of US goods and plans tariff cuts for US products.


French Industry Minister reaffirms that Europe will respond to Trump tariffs in a proportionate manner; says Europe must show strength and be less naive

The irony, of course, is that if Trump unveils 'reciprocal' tariffs - mirroring the tariffs being put on US exports - any retaliatory response by a foreign nation cannot be proportionate by its nature. Any response is escalatory as the US is merely 'catching up' to the tariffs being put on its own goods.

Bloomberg reports that Trump is considering three options:


1) a blanket 20% tariff on all imports; 

2) a tiered system with three different rate levels; 

3) a country-by-country rate model.


White House spokesperson Leavitt said new duties are effective immediately which feels less ideal vs a delayed start (no time for negotiations).

*  *  *

Update  (8:45pm ET): With just hours to go until Trump's "Liberation day" announcement, things remain... fluid.


Bloomberg reports that Trump’s deliberations over his plans to impose reciprocal tariffs are coming down to the wire, with his team said to be still finalizing the size and scope of the new levies he is slated to unveil on Wednesday afternoon. As a reminder, Peter Navarro said that Trump wants to raise $700 billion annually in tariff revenue.


In meetings on Tuesday, Trump’s team continued to hash out their options ahead of a Rose Garden event scheduled to begin as US markets close at 4 p.m. on Wednesday. 


The White House has not reached a firm decision on their tariff plan, even though Trump himself said earlier in the week that he had “settled” on an approach.


Several proposals are said to be under consideration, including a tiered tariff system with a set of flat rates for countries, as well as a more customized reciprocal plan. 


Under the first option, countries would see their goods face levies at either a 10% or 20% rate depending on their tariff and non-tariff barriers on US goods.


Under the two-tiered approach, the highest levies would be applied to the countries perceived as the biggest offenders, both in terms of true tariffs as well as easily quantifiable non-tariff measures that act to deter US imports. Trump’s White House this week has complained about the trade practices of the EU, Japan, India and Canada, for example.



Another approach would see the US applying individualized reciprocal rates, tailored to countries based on their existing levies and non-tariff barriers. This approach was publicly signaled for weeks but some recent deliberations suggest it’s no longer the main focus. 


There’s also been discussion of a return to Trump’s original proposal: a flat global tariff, which would apply evenly to trillions of imports. And the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump was considering a more targeted plan that would apply a tariff of less than 20% to a narrower section of countries.


With less than 24 hours to go until Trump’s announcement, companies, countries and the lobbyists paid to influence the president’s agenda tried to find out final details of the plan, only to learn there aren't any final details yet. 


Amid the continuing barrage of trial balloons, the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump aides were studying a more targeted option, while Fox News said Tuesday that Trump was also still considering a flat 20% global tariff.


Amid all the speculation, the White House on Tuesday stayed silent on the details of Trump’s plan, ahead of the president’s formal announcement, while Leavitt told reporters on Tuesday that Trump was “with his trade and tariff team right now perfecting it to make sure this is a perfect deal for the American people and the American worker.”


Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told lawmakers that the tariffs would be a cap. reflecting the highest levels they’ll go, with countries then able to take steps to bring rates down, 


Representative Kevin Hern, an Oklahoma Republican, told CNBC. Earlier Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said that the tariffs would take immediate effect but that Trump was open to subsequent negotiation. “Certainly, the president is always up to take a phone call, always up for a good negotiation,” she said.


The late-hour movement signaled that the scope and details of the long-promised announcement are shifting even as the pageantry of the event — dubbed a “Make America Wealthy Again” celebration — comes into focus.

Trump said Monday he had made a decision “actually a long time ago,” but didn’t reveal it. Leavitt reiterated that claim, though the White House declined to weigh in on various proposals said to be under consideration. A spokesman did not immediately reply to requests for further comment Tuesday.

Other key questions swirl, like the fate of tariffs already applied to China, Canada and Mexico, and clawed back partially for the latter two. The White House has not said whether those would be replaced by Trump’s Wednesday announcement, or whether his move to exempt goods traded under the continental trade pact might also be extended somehow to the new levies. The president has also promised coming tariffs on key sectors including pharmaceuticals, semiconductors and lumber.

* * * * *

There is just over 24 hours left until President Trump unveils the specifics of his "Liberation day" from global trade barriers at 3pm on Wednesday, and with markets obsessing over what the president will and will not say, we are starting a rolling blog which will be updated for all major developments. 

We begin with the known-knowns ahead of tomorrow's big reveal:

Reciprocal Tariffs – President Trump said on Sunday that the reciprocal tariffs he is set to announce will include all nations, not just a smaller group of 10-15 countries with the largest trade imbalances. The White House has yet to outline what tariffs are coming up, how these will be calculated or what countries will need to do to secure exemptions. The President also mentioned that these tariffs will account for other countries’ non-tariff barriers, though he has also not went into detail on how these calculations will be conducted. Regarding exemptions, President Trump said in an interview with Newsmax that he plans to limit exceptions – though the mention of potentially giving a lot of countries “breaks” last Monday at the White House has led to a steam of talks with the US (EU, India among the names of countries mentioned) regarding concessions. One potential twist is that overnight we got a USTR trade barrier report (not the official tariffs but its lists hundred of barriers to US exports) where this part stands out: “the USTR report did not specify VATs as trade barriers in its discussion of EU policies, focusing instead on digital services taxes and the bloc's new carbon border adjustment mechanism.” (RTRS) According to Goldman, goal posts have moved rapidly to 15%+ on EU tariffs and yesterday's discussions were around the rather substantial tail risk that reciprocal VAT tariffs would mean (38%). Comments from Trump suggest a lighter touch on tariffs although without context it’s unclear what this might mean. Goldman concludes that "with risk premia having been built up the default direction will be a relief rally/vol compression (the sustainability of which will be more about US economy)."
 
Automobile Tariffs – As per the White House Fact Sheet, the 25% tariff will be applied to imported passenger vehicles (sedans, SUVs, crossovers, minivans, cargo vans) and light trucks, as well as key automobile parts (engines, transmissions, powertrain parts, and electrical components), with processes to expand tariffs on additional parts if necessary. Importers of automobiles under the USMCA will be given the opportunity to certify their U.S. content and systems will be implemented such that the 25% tariff will only apply to the value of their non-U.S. content. Tariffs on vehicles are set to take effect on 3Apr and certain auto parts no later than 3May.
 
Tariffs on countries importing Venuzuelan Oil – President Trump has issued an executive order declaring that any country buying oil or gas from Venezuela will pay a 25% tariff on trades with the U.S., and also extended a deadline (27 May) for Chevron to wind down operations. China, Spain, Brazil, Turkey, India, Italy, Cuba are among the countries that could be affected by this. In particular, China is Venezuela’s largest oil buyer (~55%). Goldman's research desk highlights that this will pose a significant risk for China – if this was to materialize, it will raise the total US effective tariff rate on China close to 60%.
 
Sectoral Tariffs – President Trump also plans to impose tax additional tariffs to target specific industries including pharmaceutical drugs, copper and lumber.
LATEST NEWS:

US Treasury Secretary Bessent said President Trump will announce reciprocal tariffs at 15:00EDT/20:00BST on Wednesday.
White House Press Secretary Leavitt stated there will be a Rose Garden event on Wednesday for the Trump tariff plan and that Trump is committed to sectoral tariffs.
White House spokesperson said no exemptions at this time when asked about tariff exemptions for farmers and any country that has treated the US unfairly should expect to receive a tariff.
White House aides have drafted a proposal to impose tariffs of around 20% (prev. touted 15%) on at least most imports to the United States, according to WaPo sources. Several options are on the table and no final decision has been made. One option would raise import duties on products from virtually every country, rejecting more targeted approaches. If combined with additional tariffs on sectors such as automobile and pharmaceutical imports, raise more than USD 6tln. Administration officials are also discussing using this revenue to finance a tax rebate or dividend payment to most Americans; planning is "highly preliminary". The White House is also still considering an order that would apply a different tariff rate to individual countries.
US President Trump said we will see tariff details maybe Tuesday night or on Wednesday which are going to be nice in comparison to other countries and in some cases, they may be substantially lower. Trump also stated that many countries have been looting the US and they will stop that on April 2nd, as well as noted there will be investments worth USD 5tln in the US. Furthermore, he stated that TikTok is not tied to a larger tariff deal but could be.
US President Trump is said to be still deciding which plan he will take for reciprocal tariffs and has been presented with "multiple" tariff plans, according to administration sources cited by FBN's Lawrence, while sources said Trump will likely not make the decision on which plan until right before April 2nd or on that morning.
Reminder:

Weekend reports suggested US President Trump is said to be pushing senior advisers to go bigger on tariff policy as they prepare for Liberation Day’ on April 2nd and reportedly revived the idea of a flat universal tariff single rate on most imports, according to Washington Post.
It was also noted that the option viewed as most likely, publicly outlined by Treasury Secretary Bessent this month, would set tariffs on products from the 15% of countries the administration deems the worst US trading partners which account for almost 90% of imports.
Europe:

EU is mulling targeting big US tech firms in response to Trump tariffs, via WaPo citing sources/officials; one official suggested that the bloc could unite on "some partial measures against American services".
France is reportedly pushing for a tougher response which includes digital services.
Other nations such as Italy remain opposed believing it will only cause further US escalation.
"European officials cautioned that there is no agreed-on hit list of digital services."
"European officials concede that measures against companies like Google (GOOGL) or Meta (META) could escalate the trade war, but they say Trump has shifted the goalposts."
"European officials are also discussing possible trade concessions"; could be willing to reverse some of the countermeasures announced after the US' aluminium/steel tariffs.
WaPo reminds us that the bloc has already signalled a willingness to reduce the 10% tariff on US autos and increase the purchase of US-made LNG.
MORGAN STANLEY ON THE RECIPROCITY PRINCIPLE (KEY TAKEAWAYS)

Tariffs appear likely to head higher, on a number of trading partners: The Trump administration said it plans to increase tariff levels after taking into account three key factors to rectify what it perceives as unfair trade relationships: 1) product-level tariff differentials; 2) VAT differentials; and 3) a subjective "unfair trading practices." We expect that the numbers revealed as a product of that assessment on April 2 will likely be a maximalist starting point, rather than ending point, for tariff levels.
April 2 should provide some clarity on the path, but we expect that not all of our questions will be answered by then: Two principles guide our rationale: The comprehensive review promised by the president is broad and complex, requiring months of investigation on a product-by-product basis, and we expect negotiations can potentially reduce levels from the stated starting point when this review concludes. Hence, April 2 is more likely a starting point than an ending point for implementation.
Key products in the EU, as well as broader Chinese imports, are likely to see increases...: When evaluating imports across the country-level criteria the administration has laid out as well as where the largest tariff differentials are, certain sectors stand out in particular, like EU autos. 
 ...While Mexico, Canada, and certain products from countries in the EU appear more likely to avoid tariffs through negotiation. We see potential for more negotiation with countries that score low across the metrics that the administration has cited as important inputs to that April 2 evaluation, as well as those that Trump has signaled a willingness to negotiate with or countries for which tariffs are explicitly tied to a policy goal (like immigration/fentanyl).
Importantly, Morgan Stanley has low conviction in this path, and sees several plausible alternatives. More aggressive, and faster, tariff implementation is possible, as well as the inverse, given the president's wide discretion and authority on this matter.
Mapping out current & expected tariffs on two vectors: relative level of conviction, and expected duration/potential for an off-ramp



Morgan Stanley incorporates "reciprocal tariffs" into that base case: The administration has stated it plans to review tariff rates on a country-by-country basis, taking into account a variety of other trade-related factors (some more subjective than others), culminating in an aggregate number (or tariff level) that Commerce Secretary Lutnick intends to present to the president April 1, to be publicly released on April 2. This to us signals that the administration is planning to engage in a broad-based retooling of its trading relationships, grounded in matching tariff rates but incorporating a number of other factors like existing trade deficit, VAT differentials, and non-tariff barriers to trade (including subsidies). 
Hence, while the short-term policy goals might align with one of the two objectives we lay out, undertaking a country-by-country review of existing trade relationships grounded in tariff reciprocity reflects, in our view, a longer-term commitment to de-risking and retooling trade policy.
Various third parties have assessed how high tariffs could go as a result of this review: the Yale Budget Lab, for example, sees the policy change resulting in an incremental 13ppt hike to tariffs on China vs. 16ppt on Mexico and 17ppt on India. Given the relatively high VAT in Europe, the tariff rate goes up by even more in the UK, Denmark/Sweden, and Hungary: 20ppt, 25ppt, and 27ppt, respectively.


More in the full Morgan Stanley reciprocity analysis available here to pro subs.

JPM TARIFF SCENARIO ANALYSIS

10% TARIFF – assuming a 10% blanket tariff that also cancels/replaces Can/Mexico tariffs but not China: SPX +2 - +2.5%. 10Y yield higher by ~10bps. EUR/USD falls to 1.06 – 1.07 (currently 1.08).
25% TARIFF – SPX falls 1.25% - 1.75%. 10Y yield declines 12-14bps. EUR/USD lower as USD behaves as a safety haven, with EUR/USD falling to 1.03 – 1.05
35% TARIFF – SPX falls 2% - 3%. 10Y yield falls 20bps. EUR/USD falls to 1.01 – 1.03.
On EU sectors vs. tariffs, JPM expect:

EU Pharma: Potential US tariffs expected to have a manageable impact, though many questions remain unanswered around key details.
Global Spirits: Financial impact likely to be substantial, ranging JPME 8-48% on annual EBIT. Believe mitigation through pricing will be limited, given sector has already derated YTD
EU Autos: If tariffs go ahead, on avg. c. 25% earnings cut to its FY25 estimates for German OEMs and Stellantis. JPM add this is the lower bound of impact. Overall, JPM remain tactically bearish.


Market Impact

WHAT DOES A GOOD OUTCOME LOOK LIKE – A low (10% or less) blanket tariff that does not include VAT with a stated willingness to discuss sectoral tariffs which include 25% on aluminum/steel, 25% on Autos, 200% on Champagne/wine from the EU, and potentially 25% on Chips and Pharmaceuticals. Further, avoiding tariffs on shipping vessels would be a positive.
WHAT DOES A BAD OUTCOME LOOK LIKE – A higher than expected blanket tariff, which includes VAT, plus additional sectoral tariffs. Further, any bans on sales or the implementation of fines/tariffs on shipping vessels would be a materially worse outcome, e.g., a full ban on chip sales to China. According to Bloomberg, NVDA received ~17% of its FY24 revenue from China.
Likely Tariff Levels (per JPMorgan)

CANADA / MEXICO – JPM does not think that we see additional tariffs mentioned, instead sticking with the 25% tariffs that were delayed.
CHINA – currently, the tariff level is 20% but given that China consumes Venezuelan oil, that adds another 25%. A deal on TikTok could reduce these levels, but that announcement may be on/before the current April 5 deadline to sell or restrict TikTok.
EU – while Trump had mentioned 25%, Bloomberg reported last week that the EU planned concessions for Trump so this could mean a lower rate in the 10% - 15% range.
JAPAN – given the willingness to negotiation and to add further investment in the US, it seems possible that Japan receives a lower rate, perhaps lower than the EU, say 10%.
JPM's proposed Monetization Menu:

Country-Level: we look at Australia, Japan, and the UK as being relative safety havens. China may work, too, given the potential to add fiscal stimulus but that is a lower conviction long.
US Sector Level: Energy and Utilities (ex-AI plays) are the two best longs and look for Lower-Income Discretionary and higher beta TMT plays as being among the more consensus shorts. Separately, parts of Fins (GSIBs, Insurance, Payment Processors) could be safety havens.
FICC: Look for Credit to outperform Equities on the move lower. We like precious metals, crude, and natgas as longs.
Overall, JPM remain tactically bearish: 

"Policy uncertainty is the dominant factor in the markets and that neither the Trump Put nor Fed Put activate in the near-term." 
Further, they see downward pressure on the soft economic data though hard data is likely to remain resilient, potentially putting a floor on the next US downdraft. 
That said, one potential event that could break the bearish outlook is the announcement of a trade deal, or framework of one, with a G7 country ahead of the announcement, e.g. US/UK deal could allow the market to look through tariffs on places such as the EU and/or Japan.
More in the full JPMorgan secnario analysis available here to pro subs.

WEEKEND HEADLINES

US Broader Tariffs

US President Trump is said to be pushing senior advisers to go bigger on tariff policy as they prepare for ‘Liberation Day’ on April 2nd and reportedly revived the idea of a flat universal tariff single rate on most imports, according to Washington Post. It was also noted that the option viewed as most likely, publicly outlined by Treasury Secretary Bessent this month, would set tariffs on products from the 15% of countries the administration deems the worst US trading partners which account for almost 90% of imports.
US President Trump said he will hit essentially all countries that they're talking about with tariffs this week and commented that there will be a deal on TikTok before the deadline, according to Reuters.
US President Trump’s closest allies including Vice President Vance, Chief of Staff Wiles and cabinet officials have privately indicated they are unsure exactly what President Trump will do during the April 2nd announcement of global tariffs, according to Politico.
US Auto Tariffs

US President Trump’s recent 25% auto tariff announcement made no mention of USMCA trade deal side letters shielding Canada and Mexico from potential auto tariffs which showed Canada and Mexico were each granted annual duty-free import quotas of 2.6mln cars and unlimited light trucks if Trump imposed global tariffs. Furthermore, Canada said it fully expects the US to honor the 2018 tariff pledges and it reserves the right to take retaliatory measures, while Mexico is evaluating the legal implications of the agreement on Trump's ‘Section 232’ auto tariff probe.
US President Trump’s Trade Adviser Navarro said auto tariffs will raise about $100BN and the other tariffs are to raise about $600BN a year, according to a Fox interview.


UK

UK PM Starmer spoke with US President Trump on Sunday evening in which they discussed productive negotiations between their respective teams on a UK-US economic prosperity deal and agreed that these will continue at pace this week. It was also reported that UK Home Secretary Cooper refused to rule out retaliating to US tariffs on cars and steel, according to Bloomberg.
France

French Ministry of Foreign Trade said France and Europe will defend their businesses, consumers and values, while it added that US interference in the inclusion policies of French companies is unacceptable.
French Commerce Minister reiterated that France would implement reciprocal tariffs if the US goes ahead with its tariff measures this week. Hoping to avoid a trade war. The Minister intends to have talks with the US Embassy in Paris to voice opposition to the US' order for French firms to comply with a diversity band.
Germany

German Chancellor Scholz said they stand by Canada’s side and that Canada is not a state that belongs to anyone else, while he added that Europe’s goal is cooperation but the EU will respond as one if the US leaves them with no choice such as with tariffs on steel and aluminium.
China

China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi said higher US tariffs on Chinese goods are unreasonable and harm global markets. (Comments made in China's Tuesday session).
LatAm

Brazil’s President Lula said he will negotiate on tariffs before retaliating, according to Bloomberg. It was also reported that Brazil’s Finance Minister Haddad said the country is in a privileged position to withstand the trade war with the commodity exporter’s links to China, the US and the EU to shield it from Drotectionism. accordina to FT
OTHER RECENT HEADLINES

28th March

EU plans concessions for Trump after reciprocal tariffs hit, according to Bloomberg sources
Chinese State Media says China will "certainly respond with countermeasures if the US insists on harming China's interests regarding the April 2nd tariffs"; if they want to discuss cooperation with China, mutual respect is a prerequisite.
US President Trump and Canada PM Camey held a very constructive phone call, according to both sides; Camey told Trump he will implement retaliatory tariffs.
US President Trump says will be announcing pharma tariffs soon; is willing to make deals on tariffs, deals on averting auto tariffs would come later.
27th March

US President Trump posted on Truth "If the European Union works with Canada in order to do economic harm to the USA, large scale Tariffs, far larger than currently planned, will be placed on them both"
Canadian PM Carney says its response to these latest tariffs is to fight; they will fight the US tariffs with retaliatory trade actions of its own; clear US is no longer a reliable partner
26th March

US President Trump may implement copper tariffs within weeks, according to Bloomberg
The US will reportedly not take all non-tariff barriers (e g. VAT) in determining reciprocal Tariff rates, according to CNBC
EU Top Trade Negotiator Sefcovic expects US President Trump to hit the bloc with tariffs of about 20% next week, via FT
EU expects Trump to set flat, double-digit tariff on April 2nd, according to Politico; According to two diplomats, suggested the tariff rate applied to the EU could be as high as 20 or 25%
US President Trump considers more limited tariff plans, automotive tariffs could be narrowed and reciprocal tariffs lowered in latest administration proposals, via WSJ
US President Trump announces to impose 25% tariffs on all cars not made in the US, while he said they will be doing tariffs on pharmaceuticals and tariffs on lumber
China's Vice Premier He Lifeng spoke with USTR's Greer by video call, via Xinhua; Both sides had candid and in depth exchange of views on economy and trade. China expressed solemn concerns on US tariffs and planned reciprocal tariffs.
25th March
India is reportedly open to cutting tariffs on over half of US imports, worth USD 23bln, via Reuters citing sources; open to cutting tariffs to as low as 0 from a 5- 30% range on 55% of US imports
India proposes to remove the 6% tariff imposed on online advertisement services offered by companies such as Google (GOOG) and Meta (META), known widely as the Google tax, from April 1st which is a day before Trump's reciprocal tariffs take effect.
US President Trump considers a two-step tariff regime on April 2nd, according to FT; Possible phased approach to new US levies reflects debate over trade strategy within administration.
US President Trump says he has April 2nd tariffs set, and he has been fair to countries that abused US for many decades
24th March:

Trump implements secondary tariff on Venezuela; anyone who buys oil/gas from Venezuela will face an additional 25% tariff on all US trade.
US President Trump says they will be announcing tariffs on autos, aluminium and pharmaceuticals in the very near future.
Trump says he will announce additional tariffs over the next few days on autos, lumber, and chips
Trump says he may give a lot of countries breaks on tariffs.
22nd March (weekend)

President Donald Trump's coming wave of tariffs is poised to be more targeted than the barrage he has occasionally threatened, aides and allies say, a potential relief for markets gripped by anxiety about an all-out tariff war. (Bloomberg)
21st March

France reportedly to float using EU's most powerful trade tool on US, according to Bloomberg
US President Trump says there will be flexibility on tariffs, basically it's reciprocal; they can't be expected to carry Canada.
UK government reportedly considering plans to reduce or even abolish its digital services tax before April 2nd, via Bloomberg.
20th March

US President Trump says he believes India is probably going to be lowering tariffs substantially but on April 2nd, we will be charging them the same tariffs they charge us
EU's Trade Commissioner Sefcovic says the Commission is considering delaying first set of counter-tariffs against the US to mid-April
19th March

US President Trump's aides are planning new tariffs on “trillions" more in imports on April 2nd, according to WaPo
EU is reportedly to tighten steel import quotas as of April 1st, via Reuters citing sources; to reduce inflows by 15%
18th March

US President Trump's team reportedly explored a simplified plan for reciprocal tariffs in which they recently debated sorting trading partners into one of three tiers instead of equalising tariff rates with every nation, according to WSJ
17th March:

US President Trump says he has no intention of creating exemptions on steel and aluminium tariffs, while he adds reciprocal tariffs will happen on April 2nd
USTR's Greer imposes policy process on reciprocal tariff plan; President Trump's top trade negotiator is attempting to inject order into sweeping new tariffs expected next month, after previous announcements roiled markets and fueled business uncertainty
India reportedly weighs lower tariffs for US medical devices, according to Economic Times
13th March:

Trump said the EU put a 50% tariff on whiskey, if this is not removed, the US will place a 200% tariff on wines, champagnes and other alcoholic products coming out of France and other EU represented countries.
Canada's Ontario Premier says they had a productive meeting with US Commerce Secretary Lutnick and will have another meeting next week, adds feel temperatures are decreasing and it was the best meeting they had since tariff talks began
TARIFF TALLY (SO FAR)

US Tariff Policy

US reciprocal Tariffs: Trump on February 13th signed his plan for reciprocal tariffs, albeit delayed their implementation. The delay allows Trump admin to launch negotiations on a one-by-one basis with nations that could be impacted. The studies of each country could be completed by April 1st.
US tariffs on steel and aluminium: US President Trump signed proclamations on Monday 10th February 2025 to reimpose a 25% tariff on steel and aluminium imports and declared there are no exceptions or exemptions, effective March 12th.
US tariffs on agriculture: Trump: To the Great Farmers of the United States: Get ready to start making a lot of agricultural product to be sold INSIDE of the United States. Tariffs will go on external product on April 2nd. Have fun!"
Canada/Mexico

US on Canada and Mexico: Tariffs on imports from these countries have been paused for 30 days to allow for negotiations on border security and drug trafficking issues. Pause was initiated on February 3, 2025, is set to expire on March 4, 2025, at 12:01am. The pause expired, with Trump stating ‘there is no room left for a deal on tariffs on Mexico and Canada".
US tariff rollback: A day after the tariffs came into effect, Trump said he would temporarily spare carmakers from a new 25% import tax imposed on Canada and Mexico. Two days after imposing tariffs, Trump announced that duties on a wide range of products would be shelved until April 2nd.
Canada’s retaliatory tariffs: Following the end of the pause on March 4th, Canada said it would start with 25% tariffs on US imports worth CAD 30bln from Tuesday, while it will impose tariffs on an additional CAD 125bln worth of US imports in 21 days (albeit second wave suspended for now). Furthermore, it said tariffs will remain in place until the US trade action is withdrawn and it is in active discussions with provinces and territories to pursue several non-tariff measures if US tariffs do not cease.
50% US tariff and Canadian Energy Surcharge rollback: Trump on March 11th initially instructed the Commerce Secretary to impose an additional 25%, to 50%, on all steel and aluminium coming into the US from Canada from March 12th although he later backed down from this threat after Ontario's Premier announced they are suspending the 25% surcharge on exports of electricity.
China

US on China: Additional 10% tariff on top of existing levies, no exclusions, came into effect at 12:01 EST on February 4th. Note, Trump did not clarify whether or not imports of Chinese metals would face double tariffs, as he has already imposed a 10% tariff on Chinese goods. Extra 10% duty came into effect at 12:01EST on March 4th.
China's retaliatory tariffs: Chinese tariffs against the US took effect on February 10th and with officials also said to be building a list of US tech firms for potential probes. China imposed 15% tariffs on US coal & LNG, 10% tariffs on US oil, agricultural machines, and some autos; Tariffs imposed in direct response to Trump's 10% tariffs, according to the Chinese Finance Ministry. China also announced export controls (no specific country mentioned) on tungsten, tellurium, bismuth, molybdenum and indium. Following the US' extra 10%, on March 4th, China announced 15% on US chicken, wheat, com, and cotton; 10% on US soybeans, sorghum, pork, beef, aquatic products, fruits, vegetables, and dairy products; 15 US entities to the export control list; 10 US firms to the unreliable entity list; banned the import of Illumina (ILMN) gene sequence machines to China.
TARIFF TIMELINE

February 1st - Trump signed an executive order to impose 10% tariffs on all imports from China and 25% on imports from Mexico and Canada starting Feb 4th.
February 3rd - Trump agreed to a 30-day pause on tariffs against Canada and Mexico.
February 4th - US additional 10% tariff on China on top of existing levies came into effect. Chinese export controls on tungsten, tellurium, bismuth, molybdenum and indium took effect (no specific countries mentioned).
February 10th - Chinese tariffs against the US took effect (15% tariffs on US coal & LNG, 10% tariffs on US oil).
February 13th - Trump signed his plan for reciprocal tariffs, albeit delayed the implementation.
March 4th - Tariff pause on Mexico and Canada expired; Additional 10% tariffs on China went into effect on top of Feb 4th tariffs. Canada announced retaliatory tariffs over 21 days, Mexico said it will also respond with retaliatory tariffs.
March 5th - Trump allowed a one-month exemption on Mexico and Canada tariffs of US automakers following talks with Ford (F), General Motors (GM) and Stellantis (STLAM IM/STLAP FP)
March 6th - Trump postponed the initial 25% tariffs on several imports from Mexico and some imports from Canada for a month. In response, Canada suspended its second wave of retaliatory tariffs.
March 10th - China's retaliatory tariffs on certain US agricultural imports (15% on US chicken, wheat, corn, and cotton; 10% on US soybeans, sorghum, pork, beef, aquatic products, fruits, vegetables, and dairy products) went into effect; announced on March 4th in response to the extra 10% US tariff on top of Feb 4th tariffs.
March 11th - Trump threatened 50% tariffs on Canada, although he later backed down from this threat after Ontario's Premier announced they are suspending the 25% surcharge on exports of electricity. Trump separately suggested tariffs may go higher than 25% but did not specify which tariffs.
March 12th - 25% tariff on steel and aluminium imports came into effect, with "no exceptions or exemptions"; European Commission launched countermeasures on US imports while it is putting forward a package of new countermeasures.
April 1st - Completion of the US trade policy review.
April 2nd - US Liberation Day; 1) Auto tariffs "in the neighbourhood of 25%" comes into effect, 2) US tariffs on "external" agricultural products to go into effect, 3) Temporary tariff relief for Canada and Mexico expires. 4) Reciprocal tariffs kick in - details to be unveiled on the day; US President Trump to announce reciprocal tariffs at 15:00EDT/20:00BST.
April 13th - EU countermeasures against 25% steel and aluminium tariff to be fully in place.
TBC - pharma and semiconductors tariffs.
Developing

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 16:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
The Swirling Vortex Of Weaponized Lawfare
The Swirling Vortex Of Weaponized Lawfare

Authored by Ramesh Thakur via The Brownstone Institute,

Like a bad ‘When a chicken walked into a pub’ type of joke, when activist litigants walk into a courtroom and meet injunction-happy judges, the result is a swirling vortex of weaponised lawfare. In discussing the current jurisdictional kerfuffle between the US federal executive and judiciary, I find it impossible to overlook the total failure of the courts to protect people’s rights, dignity, and liberty under comprehensive assault from the administrative state during the Covid years. I accept the possibility that this may colour my judgment on the controversy.

It has become sadly obvious in recent years that the gravest threat to the theory and practice of democracy is not the rise of populism with wannabe fascists and neo-Nazis as their seductive tribunes, but technocratic elites with barely concealed disdain for the political beliefs and voting behaviour of the ‘deplorables.’ Moreover, as the firewalls of resistance to populist advance crumble one by one under assault from enraged voters, the final frontier of elite resistance is the courts. The legal clerisy—lawyers, law professors, and judges—is part of the ruling elite and the last line of defence for safeguarding victories already won by social justice warriors in their long march through the institutions.



Judicial Fallibility

Unlike every other profession, is the judiciary infallible? Clearly not, else they would not have been complicit in the biggest violation ever of people’s liberties and freedoms during the Covid years. Every country with a credible rule of law every so often overturns wrongful convictions from the past. Among the best-known Australian examples are those of Lindy Chamberlain and Cardinal George Pell.

As a corollary, are judges individually infallible and free of any influence of personal prejudices, beliefs, and life experiences? Again, clearly not. If they were, then in every single verdict heard by a bench of judges, verdicts would be unanimous and we could save considerable time and expense by dispensing with layers of appeal. From Australia consider the case of Cardinal Pell once again. He was convicted by jury verdict, the conviction was upheld 2-1 by the state appeals court, but overturned unanimously by the High Court of Australia (our apex court). Same laws, same evidence, different judgments.

Is every judge a paragon of judicial integrity and competence? Not so. A few are corrupt or guilty of other acts of malfeasance. Many more, I suspect, are incompetent rather than dishonest or corrupt. Mechanisms for acknowledging incompetence are fewer and less frequently invoked than for detecting and punishing corruption and malfeasance. Yet, even the latter cannot always be relied upon.

There is an interesting scandal playing out in India even now. On the night of 14 March, the official residence of a judge of the Delhi High Court,  Justice Yashwant Varma, went up in flames. Firefighters and police officers who rushed to deal with the conflagration discovered jute sacks of burnt-out cash. The Police Commissioner got in touch with the chief justice of Delhi High Court on the 15th to apprise him of developments, who in turn communicated the information to the Supreme Court of India. The Chief Justice of India established a three-judge panel to probe the matter and its report, which has been uploaded online (with redactions) in the interests of transparency given the intense public interest, substantiates that there are grounds for a full and proper inquiry. Justice Varma meanwhile has been transferred to another high court (against the protest of that court’s bar association) pending further investigations and action.

The hint of corruption would very likely have gone entirely undiscovered but for the fortuitous fire in the judge’s house. This in itself is an indictment of the inadequacy of oversight mechanisms for judges.

A final preliminary question: Unlike all other branches of government, is the judiciary collectively and are judges individually magically incapable of judicial overreach and in need of being put back in their lane? I suppose that such a perfect distribution of relative self-discipline among the branches of government is possible but, being an old cynic, forgive my scepticism. Not all judges have the necessary self-awareness and strength of character to avoid the temptation to abuse their powers and authority. On the contrary, the legal profession has a collective self-interest to expand the reach of its authority over all other sectors and, conversely, to protect itself from pushback by others.

A follow-up question is: How can the slow and deliberative process of judicial decision-making be reconciled with the need for sometimes urgent action by the executive? The judiciary is habituated into its own sequence and pace of actions. Thus for judges, the ultimate acquittal of Cardinal Pell by the High Court of Australia was a triumph of judicial institutions and process. To ordinary mortals, the process itself was a harsh punishment, and the 405 days that the aging cardinal spent behind bars was a damning miscarriage of justice.

In other words, from the date of his indictment in June 2017 through two jury trials, a first failed appeal, the final successful appeal, release from prison in April 2020, and death in January 2023 still unable to fully cleanse the taint of paedophilia, more than half of Cardinal Pell’s remaining time on earth was under malicious trial and punishment by a cadre of anti-Catholic Church activists out for blood. The nation demanded a scapegoat for the Catholic clergy’s historical sexual abuse of children. I write this not just as a non-Christian but as an atheist.

The Weaponisation of Lawfare and the Ideological Capture of Jurists

In the US, more than 125 lawsuits were filed in Trump’s first two months challenging his policies, mostly against efforts to cut government departments and agencies down to size. In just one day recently, district judges ordered a halt to Trump’s executive orders to dismantle USAID, the reinstatement of DEI grants by the education department, a pause on deportation flights of alleged Venezuelan gang members, and a stay on the ban of transgender members of the military. Was Trump wrong or exaggerating to say ‘These Judges want to assume the Powers of the Presidency,’ the latter must sometimes ‘act quickly and decisively,’ and the US ‘is in serious trouble’ if the Supreme Court refuses to ‘fix this toxic and unprecedented situation’ urgently? 

An article in the Journal of Legal Studies in January 2018 noted that, based on donations to party, a minority of 35 percent of American lawyers and a mere  15 percent of over 10,000 law professors were conservative in 2012. The three authors of the study noted that at the time, conservatives controlled all three branches of the federal government and more than two-thirds of state governorships and legislative assemblies, while voters identifying as conservative outnumbered liberals 35-24.

The pathology of ideological uniformity and misalignment with public sentiments has worsened considerably since then. Derek Muller, a law professor at Notre Dame University, examined political donations by law professors by political party (such information is public knowledge in the US) from 2017 to early 2023. To the surprise of no one, they skew overwhelmingly towards Democrats. Of the 3,284 law faculty donors in this five-year-plus period, 95.9 percent gave money only to Democrats, 2.7 percent to Republicans, and 1.5 percent to both parties. When broken down by dollar figures, 92.3 percent of donations went to Democrats and 7.7 percent to Republicans. Of the more than 100 institutions Muller looked at, every single one had more registered Democrats than Republicans in the law faculty, mostly by large margins.

Does anyone seriously believe this does not lead to an ideological disconnect between the legal-judicial clerisy in courtrooms and on the benches, and the American people?

District Judge James Boasberg ordered a halt to the deportation of over 250 illegal Venezuelans with links to the Tren de Aragua gang, a federally designated foreign terrorist organisation. Judge Boasberg is part of the Washington bubble. DC voted for Democratic candidate Kamala Harris over Trump by an overwhelming margin of 93.6-5.5 percent (with 0.9 percent write-ins). Flights already in progress were told to return. This did not happen because, the government says, the planes were already in international airspace and so the directive not to ‘remove’ them from the US had been rendered moot.

A senior Trump adviser, Stephen Miller, said a district court has ‘no ability to in any way restrain the President’s authority under the Alien Enemies Act.’ Regardless of legal scholars’ learned opinions, most voters will likely side with the administration that the scale of migration across the southern border in the Biden years does meet the threshold of ‘an invasion or predatory incursion’ under the Act, justifying their arrest and removal as ‘enemy aliens.’ Trump called Boasberg a ‘troublemaker and agitator’ Obama judge who ‘should be IMPEACHED!!!’

Critics warned of an ‘assault on the entire constitutional order in America.’ In a rare public rebuke, Chief Justice John Roberts (who stayed silent when a roll call of Democrats called for impeachment of judges) said ‘For more than two centuries, it has been established that impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement’ on judicial decisions. Instead, ‘the normal appellate review process’ provides the proper remedy. On 26 March, the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit upheld Boasberg’s temporary stay of deportations by a 2-1 decision.

Roberts ignores a basic cause of the looming constitutional crisis; namely, the absence of mechanisms to ensure the judiciary stays in its own lane even while admonishing the executive to stay in its lane. Separation of powers imposes limits to the jurisdictional overreach of all three branches. The judiciary cannot be the sole arbiter of its own reach and limits as well as that of Congress and the president. Who then holds the judiciary accountable to its limits? National injunctions inevitably encourage activists to lodge a case in a jurisdiction and with a judge likely to be sympathetic. They also ‘tend to force judges into making rushed, high-stakes low information decisions,’ Justice Neil Gorsuch noted in a 2020 Supreme Court judgment.

The assumption that no judge ever acts in an ideologically partisan way is demonstrably false. Events in the real world move much faster than the glacial pace of judicial proceedings. This means the Supreme Court too must move faster and decisively to rein in out-of-control judges. An alternative interpretation to the alarmist ‘constitutional crisis’ therefore is that Trump’s actions may help to restore constitutional integrity and democratic accountability by stripping power and resources from the bloated administrative state and returning them to Congress and the executive.

National injunctions from district courts are rare when Trump isn’t involved. According to an article in the Harvard Law Review last year, there were a total of 127 from 1963 to the start of 2020. More than half (64) were against the first Trump administration. In the period covering the Bush Sr. and Obama presidencies, plus Biden’s first three years, there were 32. In February alone this year there were 15 against Trump II, according to a Justice department filing in the Supreme Court.

Judge Boasberg had earlier given a get-out-of-jail-free card to FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith, who had altered an email in order to get a warrant from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) court for surveillance of Trump campaign adviser Carter Page. This was the prelude to the Russia collusion hoax that severely hobbled Trump I. Boasberg sentenced Clinesmith to probation rather than jail. He also meted out controversial sentences to protestors at the US Capitol on 6 January 2020 and ordered Mike Pence to testify before the grand jury investigating Trump’s role in those riots.

Given the composition of the Senate, any effort to impeach Judge Boasberg isn’t feasible as a political proposition. That is different from assessing the legality of the action. Impeachment can be abused when wielded as a weapon or function as a guardrail against judicial abuses. An isolated bad decision can be handled by the normal appellate review process. A pattern of rulings that gives rise to an apprehension of bias can be an impeachable offence. Moreover, the crisis has intensified to this point because of the Supreme Court’s institutional timidness-cum-cowardice.

Roberts has previously expressed concern with the ‘institutional legitimacy’ of the federal judiciary. A predictable consequence of his implicit scolding of Trump was to embolden activist judges and NGOs in their efforts to delay and obstruct the president from implementing his voter-approved policy agenda. For, contrary to his assertion, the appellate process has not been working efficiently. The Supreme Court needs to step in fast to rein in judicial overreach by district court judges and adopt orderly systems of adjudication of urgent matters.

Utah Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) has proposed a law requiring a three-judge panel from different circuits—two district judges and one court of appeals judge—to rule on challenges to presidential orders, with the possibility of appeal directly to the Supreme Court. This might not be the best formula but does seem like an improvement on the current flawed system.

The Pathology Is Not Restricted to the US

In February 2020, Australia’s High Court decided in a controversial 4-3 split verdict in the Love v Commonwealth case that an Aboriginal Australian who is not in fact a citizen of Australia cannot be considered an ‘alien’ under the constitution. Accordingly, unlike non-Aboriginal people living here who are not citizens, Aboriginal Australians 

cannot be deported even if convicted of criminal offence. Apparently they retain some mystical inalienable connections to the land and country.

It might help readers to understand how and why this strange reading of the constitution might have come about by considering a current controversy involving one Australian law school. Over the last couple of weeks, the Australian has featured a series of articles on racial and gender indoctrination by Macquarie University’s law school courses, on pain of failing grades for wrongthink.

Some of these were written by students of that school who opted for anonymity in order to avoid retribution. Several of the descriptions for the PhD in law are incoherent and grammatically challenged. Often the units have nothing whatsoever to do with the core subject of the course for which they have enrolled. Some of tomorrow’s judges will be graduates of these schools. Can they be expected to apply the law free of indoctrinated prejudices?

In a neat closing of the circle, one unnamed student wrote that students are required:


‘to write an essay reflecting on how one or more of these critical legal studies theories was relevant to our PhD topic. And it was made quite clear to me that you were expected to include something like this in your thesis too, regardless of what the topic is.’ 


Queensland University’s James Allan, one of the very few conservative law professors in Australia, points out that when Prime Minister (PM) Boris Johnson prorogued the UK Parliament in order to get Brexit through, ‘all Remainer UK Supreme Court judges overturned three centuries of precedent and ruled’ his action to be unconstitutional even though the country has no written constitution. Despite this relatively recent precedent from the mother of parliamentary democracy, the Canadian Supreme Court upheld PM Justin Trudeau’s power to prorogue Parliament which he had done so that his government could avert a no-confidence motion before his party had had time to choose a new leader under whom to face the next election (since called for on 28 April).

Indeed, the fact that Mark Carney, who has never even contested let alone won an election, can be installed as PM is itself a sad indictment of the state of Canadian democracy. The leadership change has completely transformed the election dynamics. Doesn’t this amount to judicial interference in Canada’s elections?

As many Western democracies reach an inflection point on mass immigration, courts have become the place where democracies go to die. UK PM Sir Keir Starmer, possibly the strongest supporter of the rule of law among world leaders and himself a human rights lawyer, complained on 13 March about ‘A sort of cottage industry of checkers and blockers using taxpayer money to stop the government delivering on taxpayer priorities.’

Elite Contempt for the People

It’s hard to avoid the conclusion that judges increasingly reflect a more general elite contempt for the people that extends to the political choices made by people. Why does Trump horrify the rest of the Western democratic world so much? Well, we are beginning to understand. He says what he means, does what he says, and wants to accomplish what he promised to do in the one term of four years available to him. The dominant British and European approach to exercising power could not be more different. The established major parties treat citizens as absolute mugs, campaign in poetry to promise voters whatever they want, then, once in power, govern in prose to do whatever ‘we the elite’ want. The next election becomes an exercise in rinse and repeat.

Exhibit A of this treat-voters-as-mushrooms (keep them in the dark and feed them manure) strategy is PM Starmer with his loveless landslide in the UK. 

Exhibit B is wannabe Chancellor Friedrich Merz in Germany. 

Exhibit C, PM Anthony Albanese here in Australia. Like Germany and the UK, the starkest evidence of the reality of Uniparty in Australia is how PM Scott Morrison, having won an election on opposition to climate change lunacy, embraced the insanity of an artificial deadline for net zero at the Glasgow COP summit in October 2021 that was an equal opportunity offender to all voters and he duly lost the next election six months later. Yet, Leader of the Opposition Peter Dutton refuses to abandon it despite the rest of the world moving on, especially since Trump pulled the US out of the green energy scam.

In Australia and the UK, voters have gotten tax-and-spend, big government, mass immigration, and net-zero policies regardless of which party they chose at elections with their campaign promises. Centre-right parties in Germany’s new Bundestag got 49 percent of the vote compared to 28 percent for the Greens and SPD. Yet it’s the latter whose policies are being enacted by Merz, using a constitutional amendment passed by the outgoing Bundestag full of MPs already voted out. And all in the name of safeguarding democracy! I wonder what Vice President JD Vance has to say about this? In nearby Romania, democracy protection means cancelling the leading candidate from the presidential election, again vindicating Vance’s criticism of the corruption of democracy across Europe.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 17:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Plans To Announce 'TikTok America' As US Ban Deadline Looms
Trump Plans To Announce 'TikTok America' As US Ban Deadline Looms

Update (1704ET):

The Information reports that the Trump administration plans to announce a newly proposed company called 'TikTok America,' which would be 50% owned by new U.S. investors and would license TikTok's algorithm from the Chinese company ByteDance. Existing ByteDance investors would retain a 33% stake in the new company, while ByteDance itself would hold approximately 19.9%.


*WHITE HOUSE CLOSE TO ENDORSING DEAL FOR TIKTOK US; NEW OUTSIDE INVESTORS TO INCLUDE BLACKSTONE: FT
*BYTEDANCE WOULD RETAIN 19.9% STAKE IN NEW COMPANY; TIKTOK AMERICA TO BE 50% OWNED BY NEW US INVESTORS: INFORMATION
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) April 2, 2025
Here are more details from the report:


That structure would put ByteDance's ownership just under the 20% threshold required in the U.S. law passed last year requiring TikTok to sever ties with its parent company or face a ban. With the new structure, Trump could deem a qualified divesture has happened under the law, which was passed by Congress last year and upheld by the Supreme Court.

The planned announcement comes ahead of a Saturday deadline, which Trump set to delay enforcement of the divest-or-ban law. The Trump administration is expected to spell out a timeframe of roughly 90 to 120 days from Wednesday to finalize a deal, the person said. The proposed new company name is not finalized and could change, the person said.


It's unclear which new investors will be involved in the deal. Earlier, media outlets reported that Andreessen Horowitz, Blackstone, Oracle, and Amazon could be taking a stake in TikTok America.  

 

*    *    * 

Update (1328ET):

By late lunch, a report from The New York Times specified that Amazon had submitted a last-minute bid to acquire all of TikTok from its parent company, ByteDance, ahead of the April 5 deadline. In a separate report, CNBC's David Faber indicated that a TikTok deal could be announced today. These two developments come ahead of President Trump's scheduled unveiling of reciprocal tariffs at around 4 p.m. EST. However, no specific timing was provided for when the TikTok deal might be announced. 



Here's more color from the NYT report:


Various parties who have been involved in the talks do not appear to be taking Amazon's bid seriously, the people said. The bid came via an offer letter addressed to Vice President JD Vance and Howard Lutnick, the commerce secretary, according to a person briefed on the matter.

Amazon's bid highlights the 11th-hour maneuvering in Washington over TikTok's ownership. Policymakers in both parties have expressed deep national security concerns over the app's Chinese ownership, and passed a law last year to force a sale of TikTok that was set to take effect in January.


Separately, CNBC's David Faber on the "Halftime Report" pointed out that the TikTok deal could be finalized as soon as today: 


So we're coming up on the date by which some deal needs to be done. What I'm hearing today, in addition, of course, what we're hearing from the New York Times in terms of Amazon's interest and I was hearing this this morning, Scott, is that we may get an announcement involving the future of TikTok today, along with perhaps so much else that's coming at us. Not completely clear, but April 5 is the deadline. So of course, that is looming, regardless of whether it is as soon as today, and while the New York Times is reporting this on Amazon and they do say that it sort of may not be taken as seriously by those involved, I've been tracking a deal that has perhaps more of a chance, which is simply one in which you would essentially dilute down the ownership of ByteDance below 20%, allow many of the current owners of ByteDance to step up, bring in new capital and essentially say it is no longer controlled by Chinese adversary. Oracle would still be involved in that are again, people may recall that Oracle is where the servers are housed for TikTok.


The White House is managing a lot today, from a potential TikTok deal to the announcement of new tariffs. 

 

*    *    * 

Ahead of President Trump's reciprocal tariff announcement across all US trading partners later today, the president will meet with senior administration officials to review a final proposal for the Chinese social media app TikTok. The deliberations come before a Saturday deadline, by which TikTok must complete a sale to a non-Chinese entity or face a US ban. 

CBS News cited sources familiar with the upcoming meeting in the Oval Office that said Vice President JD Vance, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, National Security Adviser Mike Waltz, and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard would be present. It's unclear whether Trump will approve the final proposal today, given that today is "Liberation Day." The report noted that Blackstone and Oracle are potential investors. 



At the start of Trump's first term, he signed an executive order granting a 75-day extension for TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, to sell the app—used by 170 million Americans—to a US entity or face a nationwide ban. The deadline is Saturday, April 5, bringing the final deal down to the wire. 

Over the weekend, Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One, "We have a lot of potential buyers. There's a lot of interest in TikTok. The decision is going to be my decision," adding, "I'd like to see TikTok remain alive." Trump said Monday there was "a lot of enthusiasm for TikTok." 

In a separate report, the Financial Times said Marc Andreessen's venture capital firm, Andreessen Horowitz, was discussing the purchase of TikTok from ByteDance with Oracle and other investors. 

Reuters noted, "In the closely watched sale of TikTok, the White House is playing the role of an investment bank, with Vance running the auction." 

The Trump administration is about to have a hectic week. It will announce reciprocal tariffs later today, and it must also begin finalizing a deal for TikTok as the April 5 deadline looms. 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 17:04

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Seattle Economic Crisis: Proof That Democrat Wealth Taxes Lead To Disaster
Seattle Economic Crisis: Proof That Democrat Wealth Taxes Lead To Disaster

To look at the Pacific Northwest today one would never know that 25 years ago the region was an economic powerhouse at the forefront of technology and business innovation.  At the time Portland and Seattle were known for constant rain as well as raining cash, and the "millionaire density" of the Seattle area was at historic highs.  The tech boom and international trade with Asia had created a Silicon Valley of the northern coast.  

Companies like Nike, Starbucks, Microsoft and Amazon established corporate offices and generated tens of thousands of jobs, and many of those jobs were considered high income.  People can debate the overall effects of the population surge to the region; there are many who would argue that Washington and Oregon were better off when they were considered backwoods fishing and lumber states.  That said, it's undeniable that for a time the Northwest was one of the most desirable and lucrative places to live in the US.  

That's all gone now.  The wealthy are leaving Seattle like it's a leper colony and all that's left are millions of broke activists, poverty stricken residents and illegal immigrants.  Some blame the constant riots or the steady stream of welfare recipients. Others say that the draconian covid mandates caused people to jump ship.  However, a primary factor in businesses (and money) leaving the city was the institution of a progressive "Payroll Expense Tax".  

The PET is a quarterly tax approved by the Seattle City Council in 2020 in the middle of the Covid hysteria.  It increases taxes on businesses depending on how many employees they hire and how much their employees get paid.  In other words, it punishes companies that hire more people and pay them a good salary.  The conditions of the PET are very similar to what Democrats say they want for their "Wealth Tax" - An extra tax on top earners and large companies beyond the income tax.  

Democrats were high on their own supply in the early 2020s and in their fervor to destroy conservatives they instituted every suicidal policy imaginable, from defunding police to near-zero prosecution for property theft under $1000.  It's not surprising that wealth taxes were established at the same time to "stick it to the capitalists".  What they seem to have forgotten, though, is that communist tactics don't work if people and businesses are able to walk away, and that's exactly what has happened in Seattle.

Larger businesses are packing up and leaving the Northwest as quickly as they arrived.  Amazon, Meta, Google and Expedia are the most prominent examples of companies exiting the Seattle labor market and hiring elsewhere to avoid the Payroll Tax, but there are numerous others. 



The Emerald City is facing a dangerous budget shortfall which has the council and the mayor in a panic.  Payroll Tax revenues indicate a surprise decline of over $47 million, far less than expected.  To understand why this is such a big deal, keep in mind that Democrat cities have a habit of budgeting based on projected earnings.  Meaning, they launch various programs based on the money they assume they will get instead of the money they actually have.  

Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell acknowledged that the drop in payroll tax revenue will significantly impact the city’s budget for future years. He blamed Seattle’s large businesses for shifting employees to offices outside of the city to avoid the tax (everyone warned Democrats that this would happen and they didn't listen). 

“Large corporations should pay their fair share and we should be wary when they use job placements to avoid paying funding that our communities rely on, but we also must recognize businesses will make choices based on their bottom line...We need to design our tax policies with the full context of our economy and a comprehensive view that ensures we raise the revenue needed to support all of our residents in a progressive way, aligned with our values.”

How does the mayor suggest the problem be solved?  Well, Seattle is already stuck with a multitude of programs they slated for funding before revenues were counted.  So, Harrell hinted that "additional sources" may need to be taxed to fill the gap left by the PET.  What does that mean?  Most likely, new taxes on the middle class.  As Harrell notes...

“We will be closely monitoring OERF’s April forecast to understand the full implications and what steps are necessary to maintain a balanced budget. As we develop the City’s 2026 budget, my office will consider all options, including additional revenue sources and appropriate expense reductions, to ensure we are making the priority investments and funding the essential services that matter to our residents..."

When wealth taxes fail, the Democrat Plan B is always to feed off the middle class through methods like new sales taxes or gas taxes.  Seattle is already in the midst of an economic decline and a budget shortfall of this size is a crisis.  Not only did their new taxes cost tens of thousands of jobs for the area, but they increased their spending projections, counting their chickens before they hatched.

Insanely, Democrats in Washington still want to pass a similar Payroll Tax system for the entire state (due to their own budget problems) despite the fact that it has been an unmitigated disaster in Seattle.  The economic events in Seattle and the Pacific Northwest in general are a canary in the coal mine for the entire nation; a warning of what is to come if Democrats are allowed to continue running some of Americas biggest metropolitan areas.  

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 17:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
California's Regulations, Not Price Gouging, Cause High Gas Prices, USC Study Finds
California's Regulations, Not Price Gouging, Cause High Gas Prices, USC Study Finds

Authored by Jill McLaughlin via The Epoch Times,

Gov. Gavin Newsom stands behind his claim that “Big Oil” is responsible for California’s higher gas prices and vowed on April 1 to continue his fight against the industry. The pledge comes after new research put the blame on state regulations and policies for the high prices at the pump.



California’s Democratic leaders have come out strongly against the oil industry in recent years, saying the companies’ gouging was causing record-high gas prices.

“Gov. Newsom has done more than any other governor in recent history to tackle the challenge of rising gas prices—despite what the oil industry and its allies say,” a spokesman for Newsom told The Epoch Times in an email Tuesday.

A new study published March 16 by Michael Mische from the Marshall School of Business at the University of Southern California says the evidence contradicts Newsom. Mische’s research indicated California’s high gas prices were caused by the state’s regulations and policies.

“There is no economic data to support the allegation of price gouging,” Mische told The Epoch Times. “It just doesn’t exist.”

The professor also pushed back against Newsom’s claim that he was an industry ally.

“The data is the data,” Mische said.

Mische has been on the USC faculty since 1997, where he coordinates the business school’s management consulting undergraduate and graduate programs.

In March 2023, the governor signed a “windfall-profits penalty law” to target oil companies. The new law created a slew of regulations and extensive oversight for oil companies.

Newsom’s office said the governor saved Californians billions of dollars at the pump by signing the law.

The measure allows the governor’s appointed Energy Commission to fine and penalize oil companies if they earned profits beyond state-imposed limits.



California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks in the Capitol rotunda in Sacramento on March 28, 2023. Courtesy of the Office of Gov. Gavin Newsom

The legislation also created a watchdog agency within the Energy Commission and appointed a Department of Justice prosecutor, Tai Milder, to oversee it.

“And with last year’s special session on gas price spikes, we have more tools on the way, including requiring oil refineries to maintain adequate supply to protect the state from supply-driven price spikes,” Newsom’s spokesman said Tuesday. In October, the governor signed a bill allowing the state to require that refiners keep a minimum inventory.

Study Show High Prices ‘Largely Self-inflicted’

According to the USC study, which included up to 50 years of data, California’s high gasoline prices and supply problems are “largely self-inflicted, and the result of directed policies and a litany of regulations, taxes, fees, and costs.”

“The economic evidence is abundant; California refiners have not engaged in widespread price gouging, profiteering, price manipulation, ‘unexplained residual prices’ or surcharges, magical or otherwise,” Mische wrote in the report.



Vehicles pass the Phillips 66 Los Angeles Refinery in Wilmington, Calif., on Nov. 28, 2022. Mario Tama/Getty Images

“The Golden State’s gasoline price dilemma is the result of the complex interactions of regulatory and political policies, and the subtleties of refinery operations and global crude oil prices and in-state centric supply and demand,” he added.

The state’s aggressive environmental policies are a major contributor, the report said. These include the state’s cap-and-trade charge for the industry that is passed down to the consumer. Environmental fees add about 51 cents per gallon of gas, according to the report. The state’s reporting and compliance costs are also high, which adds to the retail price of gasoline, including the state’s required special summer blend gasoline.

California also charges the highest excise tax in the nation, which along with local taxes and other program costs, increase prices at the pump, according to Mische.



Cargo shipping containers are seen adjacent to storage tanks at Marathon Petroleum's Los Angeles Refinery in Carson, Calif., on March 11, 2022. Reuters

Operating and refinery costs are also higher in California, he said.

The number of California refineries has also dropped by nearly 70 percent since 1984, from 43 to 13, Mische noted in the report.

The combination of regulations, taxes, and requirements placed on the oil and gas industry have driven up prices and taken a toll on the average working Californian who needs to drive to work, according to Mische.

“The issue is, we have Californians who are suffering,” Mische said. “They are feeling the squeeze and they’re going to feel more of the squeeze. We already have the highest cost of living in the United States. This just adds more burden onto the back of the consumer, and we can fix it.”



Vehicles pass a gas station in Rosemead, Calif., on Sept. 23, 2024. Frederic J. Brown/AFP

California is the second largest consumer of petroleum in the United States but produces less than 3 percent of the nation’s supply, the study found.

To meet the needs of drivers, utilities, and industry, the state is highly dependent on oil imports. California’s imports have increased significantly from Saudi Arabia and Iraq, and other petrostates such as Brazil, Guyana, and Ecuador, according to the report.

Nevada gas prices also hinge on California refineries, as the Silver State’s retailers get most of their supply from the state next door.

The study’s results were no surprise to industry and political leaders who are critics of Newsom’s stance on the industry.

Catherine Reheis-Boyd, director of the Western Petroleum Association in Los Angeles, said the study backs up what the association has said for years.

“It’s no secret that California has gotten in its own way when it comes to high [gas prices] and supply challenges,” Reheis-Boyd posted on X March 20.



Rigs extract oil in Culver City, Calif., on May 16, 2008. Gabriel Bouys/AFP via Getty Images

State Senate Republican Leader Brian Jones, of Santee, said 83 percent of California voters agree that gas prices are too high.

Jones told The Epoch Times in an email, “Despite knowing what’s driving costs up, Democrats refuse to fix their mistakes. In fact, they continue to double down on their war against our wallets and raise prices at the pump.”

California had the highest gas prices in the nation Tuesday, with an average of $4.85 per gallon, according to the American Automobile Association (AAA).

The national average was $3.20, AAA reported.

The second most costly gas could be found in Hawaii, where consumers paid an average of $4.52, AAA reported.

“We now know the reason our prices are $1.65 higher than the national average,” Jones added.

“Enough with the political grandstanding and games. It’s time to get to work and finally lower these prices.”

Another report, published March 18 by the Los Angeles Economic Development Corporation (LAEDC), titled “Oil and Gas in California,” shows California’s oil and gas industry is essential to the state’s economy.

“Despite facing significant challenges, including regulatory pressures, market fluctuations, and global geopolitical tensions, the industry has continued to provide critical economic, employment, and fiscal benefit across the state,” the report stated.

The data used in the report was from 2022—the same year that the governor vowed to punish “Big Oil” for allegedly “price gouging.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 17:40

The Hill
Open 
Trump imposes 10 percent global tariffs; higher rate for 'worst offenders'
President Trump on Wednesday announced a baseline 10 percent tariff on imports from all foreign countries, as well as higher tariff rates for dozens of nations that the White House deemed the “worst offenders” when it came to trade barriers. The 10 percent tariff will go into effect on Friday. About 60 countries facing a...

The Hill
Open 
Bipartisan senators unveil measure providing flexibility in school lunch milk options
A bipartisan trio in the Senate unveiled a proposal Wednesday to require schools to offer nondairy milk options at lunch to accommodate students who are lactose intolerant or have other dietary restrictions. The National School Lunch Program (NSLP) has long required school lunches to include milk on all trays in order for schools to be...

The Hill
Open 
Democratic states sue to stop billions in public health funding cuts
Democratic officials from 23 states and the District of Columbia will get a Thursday hearing in a case suing to stop the Trump administration from canceling more than $11 billion in public health funding. The states sued the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) on Tuesday, asking for a preliminary injunction and temporary restraining...

The Hill
Open 
Senate budget blueprint empowers GOP chair to decide if Trump tax cuts add to deficit
Senate Republicans on Wednesday unveiled a 70-page budget resolution that they say would give Senate Budget Committee Chair Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), a staunch ally of President Trump, the power to determine whether extending the 2017 Trump tax cuts officially adds to the federal deficit. Republicans say the bill empowers Graham to use a “current policy”...

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Trump slams trade partners as he unveils new tariffs
President Trump's long promised day of reciprocal tariffs arrived, and he announced sweeping actions in a Rose Garden event on Wednesday afternoon. "It's liberation day in America," Trump posted in all caps to his Truth Social platform around 7 a.m. By day's end, he set up a baseline 10 percent tariff on imports from all...

The Hill
Open 
Judge blocks social media age-verification law in Arkansas
A federal judge in Arkansas permanently blocked a law requiring age verification for social media accounts, deeming it unconstitutional. The law was stopped by U.S. District Judge Timothy L. Brooks of the Western District of Arkansas. In a Monday ruling, the judge said the law, known as Act 689, would violate the First Amendment rights...

The Hill
Open 
ACLU sues Trump administration over NIH grant cancellations
A coalition of health researchers, unions and other stakeholders filed a lawsuit Wednesday challenging the abrupt cancellation of billions of dollars in research grants by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) as unconstitutional. The coalition, represented by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), argues the administration’s “ongoing ideological purge of hundreds of critical research projects”...

The Hill
Open 
Livestock may be threatening endangered species in Arizona and New Mexico: Report
Uncontrolled livestock grazing is destroying streamside habitats that are critical to endangered plants and animals in Arizona and New Mexico, a new report has found. Half of roughly 2,400 miles surveyed since 2017 showed significant harm to such spots, while 13 percent of the areas incurred moderate damage, according to the report, released on Wednesday by...

Mail Online
Open 
The Top Gun star who crashed to earth: He seduced some of Hollywood's great beauties. But Val Kilmer was also a 'psychotic' hellraiser loathed by directors: CHRISTOPHER STEVENS
Kilmer, who has died aged 65 from pneumonia, following a long battle with cancer, starred in a long list of blockbusters.

BBC UK News
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How Trump's tariffs might affect the UK and your money
The UK has been hit with 10% tariffs by the US, but there is uncertainty of the impact of them.

The Guardian (UK)
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Hurricane Helene proved a hard truth: a freezer of seeds is the literal version of putting all your eggs in one basketAbout a month after Hurricane Helene devastated western North Carolina last fall, Rodger Winn and I met in an Asheville, North Carolina, supermarket parking lot. He’d driven two hours from Little Mountain, South Carolina, where the passing storm had also left its destructive mark.“When the power finally came back on,” Winn said, “two of my freezers didn’t work.” Winn was worried not about spoiled food inside, but his seed collection. On that autumn day, in an act of forced downsizing and seed philanthropy, Winn handed over two boxes filled with seeds. He wanted me, as founder of the non-profit Utopian Seed Project, to share the seeds with farmers across the region. The boxes contained a trove of Appalachian varieties: speckled field peas, white mountain half-runner beans, purple-podded bush beans and lots of butterbeans. Continue reading...

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Police identified suspects through payment data after seizing the server. Despite cryptocurrencies offering a veneer of anonymity, cops were apparently able to use sophisticated methods to trace transactions to bank details. And in some cases cops defeated user attempts to hide their identities -- such as a man who made payments using his mother's name in Spain, a local news outlet, Todo Alicante, reported. It likely helped that most suspects were already known offenders, Europol noted. Arrests spanned the globe, including 16 in Spain, where one computer scientist was found with an "abundant" amount of CSAM and payment receipts, Todo Alicante reported. Police also arrested a "serial" child abuser in the US, CBS News reported.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Apple CEO Tim Cook today earned over $24 million selling Apple stock, according to a filing with the SEC. Cook sold 108,136 shares that he received on April 1 when restricted stock units vested.





The RSUs that vested yesterday were part of a time-based stock award that Cook was granted back in 2020. One-third of the shares vested in 2023, one-third in 2024, and the final third vested in 2025. The shares that were sold today were put in Cook's trust.



Restricted stock units are given to Cook regularly as bonus compensation, encouraging him to stay on as Apple's CEO. Cook has served as CEO since August 2011, and now that his RSUs have vested, Apple may give him another grant to keep him at the company for an even longer period. Cook also regularly receives RSUs that vest based on Apple's performance, with that award typically happening in October.



Apple executives that include Jeff Williams and Katherine Adams also received and sold stock worth $7,950,684 and $8,664,682, respectively.Tag: Tim CookThis article, 'Apple CEO Tim Cook Sells Stock Worth $24 Million' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

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US prosecutors pursue death penalty for Luigi Mangione, suspect in 2024 killing of healthcare CEO
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2 April 2025: Court ruling upholds TikTok ban unless ByteDance sells stake
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2 April 2025: Harvey Weinstein hospitalized in Manhattan after "alarming" blood test results
2 April 2025: Impeachment of South Korean president Yoon Suk Yeol fails
2 April 2025: Luigi Mangione, suspect in killing of US healthcare CEO, charged with terrorism

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Wednesday, April 2, 2025 
File illustration of a court gavel. Credit:Quince media
On Tuesday, US Attorney General Pam Bondi made a statement announcing that she had advised prosecutors to pursue the death penalty against Luigi Mangione, the suspect in the shooting and killing of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson in December 2024. She was quoted saying: "Luigi Mangione's murder of Brian Thompson — an innocent man and father of two young children — was a premeditated, cold-blooded assassination that shocked America."
Mangione, 26, was arrested in Altoona, Pennsylvania in on December 9 after he was implicated in Thompson's death outside a hotel in Manhattan. On December 4, the CEO arrived there to attend a shareholder meeting, and he was shot by a masked gunman. After the incident, some health insurance employers opted for remote work and virtual shareholder meetings due to safety concerns.
Police arrested Mangione five days later in Altoona, Pennsylvania, about 230 miles from New York. They report that he had a ghost gun and anti-health-insurance writings with him at the time.
Mangione awaits trial at the Metropolitan Detention Center, a New York facility located in Brooklyn, and he continues to deny the state charges, for which the maximum penalty under state law is life in prison without the possibility of parole. The state of New York has charged him with first-degree murder, murder as terrorism, and nine other offenses.
Mangione has not yet entered a plea for the charges on the federal level. These charges include murder through use of a firearm and interstate stalking, which make Mangione legally elegible for the death penalty.
Mangione's lawyer, Karen Friedman Agnifilo, responded to Bondi's statement announcing intent to seek the death penalty, saying: "the Justice Department has moved from the dysfunctional to the barbaric."

Sources[edit]
Brandon Drenon. "US prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione" — BBC News, April 1, 2025
MICHAEL R. SISAK and ALANNA DURKIN RICHER. "Federal prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione in UnitedHealthcare CEO’s killing" — AP News, April 1, 2025





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Grant Fritchey: Multi-Version Concurrency Control (MVCC) in PostgreSQL: Learning PostgreSQL with Grant
It’s a tale as old as time. You want to read data. Your mate wants to write data. You’re stepping on each other’s toes, all the time. When we’re talking about relational data stores, one aspect that makes them what they are is the need to comply with the ACID properties. These are:




Atomicity: A transaction fails or completes as a unit



Consistency: Once a transaction completes, the database is in a valid, consistent, state



Isolation: Each transaction occurs on its own and shouldn’t interfere with the others



Durability: Basically, writes are writes and will survive a system crash




A whole lot of effort is then made to build databases that both allow you to meet the necessary ACID properties while simultaneously letting lots of people into your database. PostgreSQL does this through the Multi-version Concurrency Control (MVCC). In this article we’ll discuss what MVCC is and how PostgreSQL deals with concurrency in order to both meet ACID properties and provide a snappy performance profile. Along the way we’ll also be talking once more about the VACUUM process in PostgreSQL (you can read my introduction to the VACUUM here).



Let me start by giving you the short version of what MVCC is, and then the rest of the article explains more details. Basically, PostgreSQL is focused on ensuring, as much as possible, that reads don’t block writes and writes don’t block reads. This is done by always, only, inserting rows (tuples). No updates to an existing row. No actual deletes or updates. Instead, it uses a logical delete mechanism, which we’ll get into. This means that data in motion doesn’t interfere with data at rest, meaning a write doesn’t interfere with a read, therefore, less contention & blocking. There’s a lot to how all that works, so let’s get into it.



Concurrency Modes in PostgreSQL



The world can be a messy place. If everything in a database were ordered, completely in series, including exactly who could access what and when they could access it, we’d never really have to worry about concurrency. However, concurrency is all about simultaneous actions. Two people are going to want to perform two different actions to the same row (AKA, tuple). One person wants to read from it, the other wants to delete it. Or, both want to update it, but with different values. Before we get into describing MVCC, let’s talk concurrency. The PostgreSQL database management system has three ways, isolation levels, for dealing with concurrency:




Read Committed



Repeatable Read



Serializable




Let’s examine each in turn. But first, for those of you who come from SQL Server land, one is missing. That’s right, PostgreSQL does not have a Read Uncommitted isolation level. Personally, I find this to be a feature, but we’ll talk about it.



Read Committed Isolation Level



This is a pretty straightforward concurrency model. When you read from the database, you only want to see the data that has been committed. No data in flight. No data from open transactions. Easy as can be. Well, it quickly gets sticky.



Basically, when you run a query against PostgreSQL, it gets a transaction id (and we’ll be talking about this in more detail later). That transaction id is then used to ensure that as it reads data, it only gets data with transaction ids that are older. Effectively, a snapshot of the database is created, without actually moving data round. There is a lot more to it, but that’s the gist of the behavior.



As such, when you run a SELECT, you’ll only see committed transactions, none that are in flight, based on your transaction ID. Now, if data gets committed before your SELECT, you’ll see that committed data, even if the ID is different, because we’re reading committed data. This works because, as was mentioned in my introduction to VACUUM, PostgreSQL doesn’t delete or update rows, but instead, creates a new row and marks the old row as being replaced. While your transaction is open, it can still read the old row that was “live” when your transaction started because it’s part of your snapshot.



In Read Committed however, if you ran two identical SELECT statements, one after the other, you could see two different sets of data. This is because transactions may be committed between the start of running those two SELECT statements. Read Committed only worries about a single command at a time within a transaction. If you need consistent reads across commands within a transaction, you need to use the Repeatable Read Isolation Level



Repeatable Read Isolation Level



Repeatable Read is pretty similar in behavior to Read Committed. You get your transaction id at the start and that’s used to make sure you don’t see data in flight with newer or open transactions. However, it goes a little farther. Repeatable Read ensures that even if you have two SELECT statements, starting one after the other, the results will always be based on your transaction ID. No data committed after your transaction started will be shown.



In terms of reading data then, this seems like a very attractive way to go, right? Well, sure, if all you’re doing is a SELECT, that’s easy. However, what if you’re reading data in order to UPDATE or DELETE it? Ah, then the fact that another transaction has committed ahead of you becomes an issue. In this case, you will get an error stating:



ERROR: could not serialize access due to concurrent update



This is because, while Repeatable Read ensures that reads are consistent across your transaction. ACID states that you can’t modify data that was modified by another transaction. That requires resubmitting it, if nothing else to ensure that the change didn’t exclude a given tuple from the result set you were going to modify.



Serializable Isolation Level



If you need to ensure that any given transaction sees a perfectly consistent view of the data, and that it has, more or less, exclusive control of that data, you need Serializable Isolation. In Serializable Isolation, PostgreSQL does what the name says, it makes sure that all transactions occur in a serialized fashion, one after the other, in order. For read only transactions, this has zero implications. They’ll proceed the same way as Repeatable Read. The difference is in how writes are handled.



The way this works is roughly the same as Repeatable Read. Further, you can, and may, see serializable errors in Serializable Isolation. The nature of PostgreSQL is such that it has to be able to support simultaneous transactions, otherwise, it would have to take exclusive locks on everything during a given, serialized, transaction, blocking all other transactions. Instead, Serializable adds a second kind of monitoring to prevent two transactions from doing things that would break the other. The monitor can catch when two transactions are doing something naughty to one another and will rollback one of the transactions with the following error:



ERROR: could not serialize access due to read/write dependencies among transactions



Serializable Isolation has a lot going for it in terms of ensuring absolutely consistent data, not only during a transaction, but at the end of that transaction. However, it comes with added overhead. Queries might perform slower as additional evaluations must take place to ensure that a serialized transaction isn’t interfering with another. Further, since it won’t be all that hard to hit read/write dependencies, you need a much more robust error handling mechanism to retry transactions after an error is raised, obviously resulting in slower performance as a transaction starts a second time. There are a number of suggestions on how best to deal with this in the PostgreSQL documentation.



There are more details, a lot more, to all three isolation levels, but as an introductory article, we’ll leave it at that for the moment and talk next about transactions and transaction identifiers.



The Transaction ID



At the root of meeting ACID requirements is the concept of a transaction. It is a unit of work that will be atomic, meaning it completes successfully as a whole, or it does not, and anything it did gets rolled back. Further, the transaction is fundamental to isolation within the ACID requirements, ensuring that each unit of work is independent of the others. The two work together of course to meet the other ACID requirements of consistency (driven by our Isolation Level) and durability (it all got written to disk, yay).



The way you explicitly define a transaction within PostgreSQL is through the use of BEGIN. You then complete a transaction with END. PostgreSQL takes care of every transaction in the event of an error, so there’s no need in most cases for a ROLLBACK. A query within a transaction could look something like this:



BEGIN;
INSERT INTO radio.antenna (
antenna_name,
manufacturer_id,
connectortype_id
) VALUES (
'Stubby',
3,
2
);
END;



Executing this query will of course insert a row into the table. The BEGIN and END act as wrappers for the single statement transaction. Each transaction is assigned an identifier called a VirtualTransactionId. This value actually consists of two numbers, the process (also called backend) number for this query and a sequential identifier called LocalXID. The VirtualTransactionId is for tracking transactions within a specific process.



Then, there is the TransactionId, mentioned earlier in the article. The primary driver for all the behaviors already described is that TransactionId, or xid, value. This is the value that is used to set the snapshot of data for the various isolation levels. We can see this value easily by querying PostgreSQL:



SELECT txid_current();



That will return the highest transaction identifier (xid) at the moment:











If I execute the INSERT statement and then rerun the query against txid_current, I get a new value:











Worth noting, I’m running on a test system without any other connections, so I won’t see the transaction count jumping a whole lot, and even my act of running this SELECT statement adds to the transaction values. So, doing these experiments, you may not see exactly one value increments between checks.



I’m going to go ahead and DELETE the value I just inserted, so I can use the same query again:



DELETE
FROM
radio.antenna
WHERE
antenna_name = 'Stubby';



Now, If go back to my INSERT statement in DBeaver and I highlight the query down to, but just shy of the END; statement, and run that, I have an open, active transaction. I can now query pg_stat_activity, from a second connection, to see queries in motion:



SELECT
psa.pid,
psa.backend_xid,
psa.backend_xmin,
psa.state,
psa.query
FROM
pg_stat_activity AS psa
WHERE
psa.state <> 'idle';



Which results in:











I filtered on the psa.state value in order to remove connections that aren’t doing anything currently on the server. I got back two rows, one for the transaction that I have not yet completed and the other for this query itself, marked ‘active.’ The pid values 28,435 and 28,436 are the process numbers. The xid for my idle transaction is stored there in the backend_xid column. I included the backend_xmin so you can see it, but we’ll address it in the next section.



MVCC and VACUUM



Now you have a pretty good understanding of what’s going on with MVCC. Queries are assigned transaction identifier values. Those values are then used to snapshot the data, according to the isolation level of the backend. Then as new rows are added through what would otherwise be an UPDATE process, reads continue on the data that’s there in a row that was marked for later deleting. Same things when running a DELETE statement. Read queries can still hit the row which has been marked for removal. With multiple versions of the rows, you get less locking and block. That’s MVCC at work.



So, a couple of questions. First, what cleans up the rows marked for removal? Second, assuming the xid is a data type, and we’re incrementing that value once for every single transaction, can’t we run out of values?



Yeah, this is where we start talking about the VACUUM process. As I said right at the front of my introduction to VACUUM article (linked above), VACUUM is responsible for removing the rows that have been logically deleted from the database. It does this by taking advantage of the same thing that lets us have snapshots of data, the transaction identifier or xid value.



As transactions open and close, the value for backend_xmin gets updated to the minimum value for open transactions. So, take the above image where we see the backend_xid for one process is 1343 and the backend_xmin is also 1343. Now, if a second transaction starts while our first one is still running, you’ll see two things. First, the new backend_xid value will be an increment on the existing value. And you’ll see the backend_xmin value stay the same. Why?



Because that minimum value is the lowest value for rows marked for deletion. It can remove all rows before 1343, but no rows marked with the transaction ID value of 1343 or higher. That is, until and unless those transactions are also closed and the backend_xmin value gets updated to a new minimum.



As to the transaction id (xid) it does have a data type. It’s a 32-bit value, so over 4 billion transactions can take place before it runs out of room. When it runs out of room, it recycles, starting all over again at 1. Now conceivably that could lead to issues since there could be old values out there.



For example, let’s say the last transaction to create a new row was 32. Now, some period of time later, when the xid wraps around and starts again, we could see issues with concurrency, transactions, reads, who knows what as 32 is higher than 1. There’s another process within VACUUM (told you in the introduction, VACUUM is complicated) that marks “old” transactions as frozen so that they’re ignored for visibility checks as processes read data. This is calculated based on the oldest_xmin value, the minimum of the backend_xmin values, minus a configuration value, vacuum_freeze_min_age. It’s a configurable value because some systems with an extremely high number of transactions may need a very fast freeze process to keep things moving, while others don’t need to sweat it too much.



Proper maintenance on a table is ultimately accomplished through a properly tuned autovacuum process, including freezing rows to avoid transaction ID reuse issues. Autovacuum is triggered to perform maintenance on a table based on a percentage of how many rows have been updated or deleted. By default this is set at 20% of rows. The larger a table gets, the more rows that need to be updated before vacuuming takes place, and the longer between vacuums.



So, for larger, update or delete heavy tables, you shoud consider lowering the threshold percentage of rows before autovacuum kicks in. Although you can set this at the cluster level, it’s usually best (and generally advised) to focus on tuning specific tables. You modify the threshold for autovacuum by altering the table. This example sets the scale factor to 10% of rows.



ALTER TABLE my_large_table
SET (autovacuum_vacuum_scale_factor=0.1);



Setting the vacuum_freeze_min_age is one of those parameters that you may need to adjust. Too large a value could lead to:




data corruption as the xid wraps around



more disk usage as rows stick around through vacuum process longer



longer vacuum times as it removes larger amounts of rows.




Of course, setting it too low can lead to things like:




VACUUM may run more frequently as it tries to deal with marking rows as frozen



More CPU usage again because so many tuples are being checked and marked



The possibility of lock contention as the VACUUM is trying to clean things up so frequently




Finally, of course there are many more details and nuances to how all of this works. For example, adding in replication to the mix changes how the backend_xmin values are determined and therefore what tuples can be cleaned during the VACUUM process. Suffice to say, VACUUM and MVCC, while they work extremely well to help reduce blocking within PostgreSQL, are very complex processes that can be messed up.



Conclusion



While PostgreSQL satisfies the ACID requirements of a relational data store quite handily, you can now see that it does it in a way that’s a bit dissimilar from other database systems. MVCC certainly does help read performance for most systems. However, within PostgreSQL, there are still locks taken out and there is still blocking that occurs.



It’s even possible to get a deadlock within PostgreSQL, so MVCC isn’t magic. Overall, MVCC and VACUUM take a bit of getting used to, but as you understand them more, they actually make a great deal of sense.
The post Multi-Version Concurrency Control (MVCC) in PostgreSQL: Learning PostgreSQL with Grant appeared first on Simple Talk.

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Any ebook reader will let you cram a Beauty and the Beast-sized library’s worth of books in your pocket, but so will your phone. An ebook reader offers a more book-like reading experience, with fewer distractions and less eye strain, and many include extra features, like adjustable frontlighting. Some really are pocketable. Others are waterproof […]

The Verge
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Donald Trump announces tariffs that could raise the price of almost everything you buy
At an event in the Rose Garden on Wednesday, Donald Trump unveiled a new set of planned tariffs that are being described as “short-sighted,” and having “no basis in logic,” and being compared to Great Depression-era policies. Holding a giant poster board blowing in the wind, Trump announced staggering new taxes on products coming into […]

Gizmodo
Open 
New Lawsuit Claims Musk and His Super PAC Still Owe Canvassers Millions of Dollars
Promises made, promises...

Gizmodo
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All the Nintendo Switch 2 Rumors That Came True, Plus the Many That Didn’t
Sorry for those who hoped for a $400 handheld, but at least the Nintendo Switch 2 includes mouse control JoyCons.

Gizmodo
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Mike Waltz Can’t Stop Making Signal Groups
This guy loves group chats.

Gizmodo
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Motion Sickness Hits Hard as Space Tourists Describe Polar Orbit Adventure
After adjusting to microgravity—and getting through a few bouts of vomiting—the astronauts got to work in polar orbit.

Gizmodo
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Amazon Just Dropped the Oral-B Pro Smart Electric Toothbrush to a Price We’ve Never Seen Before
You deserve a shiny, white smile, and this nearly 50% off electric toothbrush can help you achieve just that.

Mail Online
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Wall Street stocks drop like a stone... wiping trillions off the value of 401(K)s in minutes
America's flagship S&P 500 plunged two per cent in minutes today - the kind of fall not seen since the start of the Covid pandemic. 

The Guardian (UK)
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I don’t want to die with a freezer full of seeds. It’s time to rethink biodiversity and preservation | Chris Smith
Hurricane Helene proved a hard truth: a freezer of seeds is the literal version of putting all your eggs in one basketAbout a month after Hurricane Helene devastated western North Carolina last fall, Roger Winn and I met in an Asheville, North Carolina, supermarket parking lot. He’d driven two hours from Little Mountain, South Carolina, where the passing storm had also left its destructive mark.“When the power finally came back on,” Winn said, “two of my freezers didn’t work.” Winn was worried not about spoiled food inside, but his seed collection. On that autumn day, in an act of forced downsizing and seed philanthropy, Winn handed over two boxes filled with seeds. He wanted me, as founder of the non-profit Utopian Seed Project, to share the seeds with farmers across the region. The boxes contained a trove of Appalachian varieties: speckled field peas, white mountain half-runner beans, purple-podded bush beans and lots of butterbeans. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Grealish and Marmoush on target as Manchester City ease past Leicester
Jack Grealish scored a first Premier League goal in 16 months then dedicated it to his brother Keelan on the 25th anniversary of his passing in an emotional post-victory tribute.The forward’s strike came only 70 seconds in as Leicester were shredded by a Savinho dart down the right; the Brazilian found Grealish who beat Mads Hermansen to the goalkeeper’s right. Afterwards on Instagram, Grealish said: “With me always, especially this day – that was for you Keelan.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Marcus Rashford and Marco Asensio on target as Aston Villa leapfrog Brighton
Fabian Hürzeler has had better weeks. After the agony of being dumped out of the FA Cup quarter-finals on Saturday by Nottingham Forest in a penalty shootout, there was more heartache for the Brighton manager as Marcus Rashford’s third goal in his last two matches, yet another for Marco Asensio and Donyell Malen’s first for the club gave Aston Villa a crucial victory in the battle for a top-five finish.It meant Unai Emery’s side moved above Brighton and vastly improved their chances of matching last season’s achievement of qualifying for the Champions League. They still have to play fourth- and fifth-placed Manchester City and Newcastle in the run-in but after making some shrewd acquisitions in January, including Rashford and Asensio – who now has eight goals for Villa since joining on loan from Paris Saint-Germain – you wouldn’t bet against them doing it. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Trump's tariffs will have consequences for globalisation, the US economy and geopolitics
For decades, trade and trade policy has been an economic and political backwater - decidedly boring, seemingly uncontroversial. 

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Watch: Key moments in Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs announcement
The US president said universal 10% tariffs would go into effect for all countries starting 5 April.

BBC UK News
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How might Trump's tariffs affect the UK and your money
The UK has been hit with 10% tariffs by the US, but there is uncertainty of the impact of them.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Match of the Day
Highlights from nine midweek Premier League matches, including the Merseyside derby.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Three ways Trump's move may affect you and your money
The UK has been hit with 10% tariffs by the US, but there is uncertainty of the impact of them.

Ars Technica
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Male fruit flies drink more alcohol to get females to like them

Ars Technica
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Genres are bustin’ out all over in Strange New Worlds S3 teaser

Boing Boing
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Timex's latest retro watch gets the font right
The END. x Timex T80 (compare to the normal model) is a collaboration between the watchmaker and cool shop End which shows the company digging into specifics of the 80s look. Unlike some of the recent Casio offerings—with them I'm never sure if they simply never stopped selling them— there are no modern features at all, but I love its sleeker style. — Read the rest
The post Timex's latest retro watch gets the font right appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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U.S. Government demands new internal passport for citizens and it's giving off major dystopian vibes
Starting May 7, 2025, I'll need a REAL ID to fly from Houston to New Orleans. Apparently, my current driver's license — you know, the one issued by my state government — isn't "real" enough anymore.
Remember when we used to mock totalitarian regimes for requiring "internal passports?" — Read the rest
The post U.S. Government demands new internal passport for citizens and it's giving off major dystopian vibes appeared first on Boing Boing.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Watch: Key moments in Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs announcement
The US president said a "baseline" 10% tariff would go into effect for all countries in an announcement on what he's dubbed "Liberation Day".

The Register
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Pennsylvania’s once top coal power plant eyed for revival as 4.5GW gas-fired AI campus
Seven gas turbines planned to juice datacenter demand by 2027 Developers on Wednesday announced plans to bring up to 4.5 gigawatts of natural gas-fired power online by 2027 at the site of what was once Pennsylvania's largest coal plant, as part of a proposed datacenter campus running AI and high-performance computing workloads.…

Russia Today News
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Russian news agency denied EU accreditation

BBC UK News
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Three ways Trump's tariffs may affect you and your money
The UK is likely to be impacted by US tariffs, but there is huge uncertainty.

Mail Online
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Trump hits UK with 10% 'reciprocal' tariffs as he unveils 'Liberation Day' onslaught including 25% on ALL foreign car imports - but Starmer WON'T retaliate as EU faces 20%
Donald Trump imposed 10 per cent 'reciprocal' tariffs on the UK tonight - but hit the rest of the world even harder as he vowed to stop the US being 'pillaged'.

The Guardian (UK)
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Marcus Rashford and Marco Asensio continue form as Aston Villa leap past Brighton
Fabian Hürzeler has had better weeks. After the agony of being dumped out of the FA Cup quarter-finals on Saturday by Nottingham Forest in a penalty shootout, there was more heartache for the Brighton manager as Marcus Rashford’s third goal in his last two matches, yet another for Marco Asensio and Donyell Malen’s first for the club gave Aston Villa a crucial victory in the battle for a top-five finish.It meant Unai Emery’s side moved above Brighton and vastly improved their chances of matching last season’s achievement of qualifying for the Champions League. They still have to play fourth- and fifth-placed Manchester City and Newcastle in the run-in but after making some shrewd acquisitions in January, including Rashford and Asensio – who now has eight goals for Villa since joining on loan from Paris Saint-Germain – you wouldn’t bet against them doing it. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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'US is our closest ally', says UK minister reacting to Trump tariffs - but 'nothing off the table'
The US is "our closest ally" but "nothing is off the table" in response to Donald Trump's 10% tariffs on imports from the UK, the business secretary has said.

ZeroHedge News
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If You Needed Any More Evidence Leftism Is A Mental Disorder...
If You Needed Any More Evidence Leftism Is A Mental Disorder...

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Social media users have alerted the FBI after a clearly deranged leftist woman posted a video ‘joking’ about assassinating President Trump with an assault rifle.



The bespectacled Karen declares in the video that board games can help “if you’re struggling with your mental health,” before pulling out some sort of Super Mario game and flashing ‘Luigi’ at the camera.

She then weirdly labours the declaration that “We love Luigi,” clearly referring to Luigi Mangione, the guy who is charged with murdering the CEO of United Health Care.


Creepy woman "jokes" about ass*ssinating President Trump (wink wink) @fbi @secretservice pic.twitter.com/2l0fadrJlA
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) April 1, 2025
Someone is definitely struggling with their mental health, and it’s her.

The weirdo then pulls out Cards For Humanity, perhaps the most unfunny cringe dross game ever invented, so naturally absolutely adored by NPC leftists. 

She then holds up several cards that ‘joke’ assassinating the president of the United States with an assault rifle makes “life worth living.”

The woman then slurs about how it’s “shocking”awful” but “just comedy, and not serious”… or something.


She’s not joking and should be investigated.
— Valkyries for women🇺🇸 (@valkyriesrwomen) April 1, 2025

Whoa, that's some dark humor. Better watch those jokes, bro.
— Lily-Rose 🪷🌹 (@LilyRose_Sol) April 1, 2025
These people are completely mental and dangerous.


This is what the Dems do.
They joke about something that is absolutely terrible because they actually want it to happen.
As much as I can't stand Joe Biden, I would never joke about him being ass*ssinated, although he should definitely be in a prison cell.
The Dems constantly…
— Adrian Harris (@StoryMemeMovie) April 1, 2025

The number of liberals posting these types of videos is disturbing. I trust @FBI & @SecretService are on top of them.
My question to libs is, are you this mentally unstable or do you think this is an acceptable thing? https://t.co/drwiC6YycI
— Jimmy “The Neck” (@jimmy_the_neck) April 1, 2025

Liberals are sick. They really are mentally ill. How long until some 38 year old mothers basement living nut job sees this and thinks “yup,I’ll k-ll the president, I’ll be a hero” they people need to be arrested for threats against the president. NOW. @AGPamBondi @SecretService https://t.co/JLZRQkFCG0
— 🇺🇸Juda13🇺🇸 (@Juda1333) April 1, 2025
*  *  *

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 15:20

ZeroHedge News
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Will Today Go Down In History As The Beginning Of A New Era?
Will Today Go Down In History As The Beginning Of A New Era?

To paraphrase Michael Every's earlier take, "will today go down in history, marking the end of one era and the beginning of another?" 

That's the question asked by DB's Jim Reid who notes that only time, and subsequent negotiations, will tell. However, as the DB credit strategist notes, "tariff announcements today could well take us into uncharted territory."

According to Deutsche Bank's calculations, the previously announced measures already bring the US to a 12% average tariff rate, the highest since World War II. 

And then, today's announcement could increase this to 18%, and potentially even higher if the reported near-universal 20% tariff option is implemented. 

This would approach the levels seen in the early 1930s after the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, though likely remaining below the very protectionist rates of the early 20th century. 

This earlier period has been cited by Trump and Lutnick as a golden era for the US (presumably this excludes the Great Depression that followed the Smoot Hawley protectionism). Reid's points out that the recent Lutnick and Bessent podcasts highlight Lutnick's emphasis on tariffs as the foundation the US economy was built on, noting the absence of income tax until 1913 during what he considers the nation's wealthiest period. 

He argues that post-World War II tariff reductions were a strategic move to aid global reconstruction, with the understanding that other countries would maintain higher tariffs. 

However, he now believes this imbalance has persisted too long, requiring a new approach.

In one respect, we've already returned to McKinley-era levels. Because trade represents a larger share of the economy today, Reid notes that tariff revenue as a percentage of GDP is already set to slightly exceed 1%, based on the announced tariffs on China (20%), Canada and Mexico (partial 25%), and steel, aluminum, and autos (25%). This puts us back in McKinley territory, and we're likely to surpass it today (chart right below).



As such, Reid concludes that "any announcement today will be subject to negotiation, but the starting point will likely be era-defining."

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 15:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Yeah, Fake News": Musk Denies Politico Musk Report
"Yeah, Fake News": Musk Denies Politico Musk Report

Update (1605ET): 

Aaand here's the denial. White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt has called Politico's scoop "garbage," adding "lon Musk and President Trump have both *publicly* stated that Elon will depart from public service as a special government employee when his incredible work at DOGE is complete."

"Yeah, fake news," Musk replied.


Yeah, fake news https://t.co/nPhTpZj3Fc
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 2, 2025
Though we would note that 'stepping back' (Politico) does not equal 'departing' (WH).

*  *  *

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Shares of Tesla rose on Wednesday following an anonymously sourced Politico report (keeping in mind Musk just yanked millions in government 'subscriptions' from them) that President Trump has told his inner circle that Musk would be stepping back from his advisory role in the coming weeks.



Musk, who Politico describes as "governing partner, ubiquitous cheerleader and Washington hatchet man" (totally not salty), claims that Trump "remains pleased with Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency initiative but both men have decided in recent days that it will soon be time for Musk to return to his businesses and take on a supporting role."

Then Politico gets extra nasty - writing that "Musk’s looming retreat comes as some Trump administration insiders and many outside allies have become frustrated with his unpredictability and increasingly view the billionaire as a political liability, a dynamic that was thrown into stark relief Tuesday when a conservative judge Musk vocally supported lost his bid for a Wisconsin Supreme Court seat by 10 points."

One anonymous official allegedly told Politico that Musk is likely to retain an informal advisory role and continue to be an occasional face around the White House, while another said that anyone who thinks Musk is going to disappear entirely from Trump's orbit is "fooling themselves."

As we noted above, shares of Musk-owned Tesla rose more than 5% on the report.



While Polymarket odds that he'll be out as the head of DOGE in 2025 spiked as well.



Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 16:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Big Balls To The Rescue: DOGE Saves A Terabyte Of Data Destroyed By Exiting USIP Employees
Big Balls To The Rescue: DOGE Saves A Terabyte Of Data Destroyed By Exiting USIP Employees

Authored by Monica Showalter via AmericanThinker.com,

I've never heard anything good about the United States Institute for Peace.



It's been in bed with neocons, coupmeisters, and the Soros color revolution crowd for years. The quasi-government agency that runs like a private NGO is always sneaky and non-transparent.

So it didn't surprise me a bit to learn that USIP showed unusual resistance to anyone poking into their spending from DOGE.


Did you hear how the staff as USIP acted when DOGE showed up?
They literally BARRICADED themselves in their offices, cut the phone lines and power to elevators, sabotaged office equipment and the Head of USIP had to be arrested & removed. pic.twitter.com/Ay8xLdt2nU
— DuaneCates001 (@THEDuaneCates) March 30, 2025
They even called the cops on DOGE, only to get arrested and hauled off themselves:


USIP officials attempted a petty little coup against Trump and Doge.
Here’s the twist—Metro PD were called in by USIP, but when they arrived, they removed the USIP officials instead.
To the Leftists eager for an uprising: The police and military aren’t on your side. pic.twitter.com/qjvVOKfT0a
— Mirthful Moments (@moment_mirthful) April 1, 2025
And they seem to have had a siphoning game going on:


🚨 USIP UNDER FIRE: $13M FUNNELED TO PRIVATE ENDOWMENT, TALIBAN-LINKED PAYMENTS UNCOVERED
Each year, the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP) receives $55M in taxpayer funding. But over the past decade, $13M was quietly transferred to its private Endowment—outside congressional… https://t.co/vBxrmZgYg1 pic.twitter.com/tRkOZvYSp5
— DOGE Tracker (@Tracking_DOGE) March 31, 2025
According to a hostile, biased report from Newsweek:


Elon Musk has accused the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP) of deleting a terabyte of financial data to "cover their crimes."

Musk reposted a claim from the Conservative page 'amuse' on X (formerly Twitter) which stated that the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) had found USIP contracts going to Afghanistan's former chief of protocol, who had been a member of the Taliban, and to the Iraqi League for Youth.

Musk wrote on X: "They deleted a terabyte of financial data to cover their crimes, but they don't understand technology, so we recovered it."



Any government institution is most likely to be the opposite of its name https://t.co/hUfinp5Ujm
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 1, 2025
Nothing they did ever had the slightest relationship to promoting "peace."


They were bribing the Afghan Taliban warlords to keep the drugs flowing. That’s what the US Institute of Peace payments were for. https://t.co/2dwhkISdLY pic.twitter.com/WFf0lyU2Zp
— Mike Benz (@MikeBenzCyber) April 1, 2025
They had an opaque structure that was an invitation to corruption:


DOGE: The agency called USIP has/had a structure that should never been allowed in a democracy - they were allowed to operate as a private corporation (non-profit) and a federal agency at the same time. They didn't have to follow any rules.https://t.co/X0L0jgXhNU
— @amuse (@amuse) April 1, 2025

Each year, the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) receives $55M in congressional (taxpayer) funds.
- Prior management would sweep excess funds into its private Endowment (zero congressional oversight).
-In the past 10 years, USIP has transferred ~$13M to its private…
— Department of Government Efficiency (@DOGE) March 31, 2025
The most vivid and satisfying aspect of this story is that the USIP characters tried to destroy data to hide their acts -- and ran into BigBalls, or someone like him at DOGE, who quietly recovered the data they tried to destroy.


DOGE & of course, Big Balls 😏 found over a TERABYTE of deleted information from the US funded "US Institute of Peace".
Fraud waste & abuse will start dropping a lot of people in jail.
I hope they're prepared for what's coming to them. https://t.co/ZsumrlJWnO
— Jeri Lynn Simpson (@DreamerJeri) April 1, 2025

Hilarious that Big Balls undeleted the terabyte the dude thought was gone forever! Busted! We’ve got Big Balls!! https://t.co/9RknO3UlTX
— Degisi (@LCDRJobie) April 1, 2025
Sometimes, the good guys really do win, and for the most embarrassing of reasons for the bad guys -- they didn't know tech like Elon's team knows tech.

Now their chief may be facing criminal charges based on this bid to avoid accountability.


🚨 DOJ considers criminal charges for directors of U.S. Institute for Peace. 🚨
Timeline of USIP malfeasance, blockade of Doge.https://t.co/q2ViXx9EeT pic.twitter.com/d6MAxUF4dw
— Tony Seruga (@TonySeruga) March 24, 2025
What were they hiding? It must have been something pretty big. But whatever it was, it's satisfying to know that they need to respect the will of the people who pay their paychecks and bankroll their slush funds, and like any NGO, need to provide a minimum of accountability with no record destruction.

One can only hope that they will be made an example of, if for nothing else, to deter the others.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 16:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Futures Tumble As President Trump Delivers "Declaration Of Economic Independence"
Futures Tumble As President Trump Delivers "Declaration Of Economic Independence"

Update (1630ET): “Well we have some very, very good news today,” Trump began his address exclaiming that “This is Liberation Day.”


“April 2, 2025, will forever be remembered as the day American industry was reborn, the day America’s destiny was reclaimed and the day that we began to make America wealthy again,” Trump says.

“For decades, our country has been looted, pillaged, raped and plundered by nations near and far, both friend and foe alike. American steel workers, auto workers, farmers and skilled craftsmen -- we have a lot of them here with us today. They really suffered gravely.”

“In a few moments, I will sign a historic Executive Order, reciprocal tariffs on countries throughout the world. Reciprocal. That means they do it to us and we do it to them. Very simple. Can’t get any simpler than that.”




Trump lays out his theory that tariffs will bring back a “golden age” for the US, a phrase he also used in his inaugural address:

“Jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country, and you see it happening already. We will supercharge our domestic industrial base.”

Trump says the reciprocal tariffs will bring “stronger competition and lower prices for consumers” in the US.

Finally, Trump announces his tariff plan details as a "Declaration Of Economic Independence"

The bottom line is that this is targeted reciprocal tariffs, NOT a broad-based 15% or more tariff slap on all products. 

Additionally, Trump confirmed that the new reciprocal tariffs will begin at midnight tonight.

However, they did announce a baseline tariff rate of 10% for all countries (below the 15% consensus and 20% worst case) and Trump confirmed the 25% tariff on all auto imports.

Additionally, Trump said they will not be full reciprocal tariffs, then held a chart up showing the individual nation (trade-weighted average) tariff levels:


LIBERATION DAY RECIPROCAL TARIFFS 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/ODckbUWKvO
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) April 2, 2025
Here are some specifics:


China: 34%


EU: 20%


Vietnam: 46%


Japan: 24%


UK: 10%


South Korea: 25%


Thailand: 36%


Switzerland: 31%


Cambodia: 49%


Taiwan: 32%


Malaysia: 24%

We noticed that Mexico and Canada are not on the list.

Initially markets heard Trump's comments as 'better than expected' and futures spiked on the news, but then as he showed the chart of specific tariffs, futures plunged...



“If you want your tariff rate to be zero, then you build your product right here in America, because there is no tariff if you build your plant, your product in America,” Trump said, concluding:

“Likewise to all of the foreign presidents, prime ministers, kings, queens, ambassadors and everyone else who will soon be calling to ask for exemptions from these tariffs, I say terminate your own tariffs, drop your barriers, don’t manipulate your currencies."

*  *  *

"This is the moment... this is the time..." Trump's Jekyll & Hyde tariff-ing plans are finally to be announced ("We are going to be very nice by comparison to what they were" vs “We’ve been taken advantage of for 40 years, maybe more, and it’s just not going to happen anymore.")



As Trump discusses reciprocal tariffs (and the legacy media claims he is 'punishing allies') keep this chart in mind - does that seem like 'free trade'?



The three main things to watch for when Trump starts speaking are as follows (h/t Goldman Sachs' Brian Garrett)


What is the full list of countries included in the measures (19 is bogey)


What is the magnitude for average reciprocal tariff (GS econ expects avg 15% when weighted by US imports – this would be a negative surprise)


Confirmation of the planned timeline for implementation (the shorter the period, the more hawkish the read thru - and for now 'immediate effect' is expected)

Watch President Trump deliver his remarks in his 'Make America Wealth Again' event and answer questions here (due to start at 1600ET):



* * *

Update (0805ET): As the clock ticks down to today's 4pm announcement of "across the board" tariffs on a subset of nations, speculation about the size and scope of the new rules is rife with many nations already threatening "proportionate" responses:


USTR reportedly prepares a new tariff option for US President Trump which is "an across-the-board tariff on a subset of nations that likely would not be as high as the 20% universal tariff option", according to WSJ.


US President Trump's tariff plans are "coming down to the wire" with his team reportedly still finalising the size and scope of the new levies, according to Bloomberg.


US Treasury Secretary Bessent told lawmakers that Wednesday's tariffs are a 'cap', according to a CNBC reporter cited by Reuters.


On UK-US tariffs, "Sounds like any hopes of a last-ditch concession from Donald Trump ahead of his tariffs announcement are fading", according to Times' Swinford; although a deal could be signed as soon as next week "Keir Starmer is not planning to speak to him today, but there are hopes that the economic deal giving Britain a carve-out can be signed as soon as next week. Sources talking about 'days or weeks'" "But in truth No 10 doesn't know what Trump is planning or when concessions could be made. All deeply uncertain this morning".


Canada is to avoid counter-tariffs that risk Canadian jobs and price hikes and it won't impose retaliation tariffs on most US food and other basic necessities, according to the Globe and Mail citing two federal trade advisers.


Thai Commerce Ministry said Thai semiconductors may face 25% US tariffs and noted that Thai tariffs are 11% higher than US tariffs, while it added Thailand may see an impact of USD 7bln-8bln from US reciprocal tariffs but announced it will increase imports of US goods and plans tariff cuts for US products.


French Industry Minister reaffirms that Europe will respond to Trump tariffs in a proportionate manner; says Europe must show strength and be less naive

The irony, of course, is that if Trump unveils 'reciprocal' tariffs - mirroring the tariffs being put on US exports - any retaliatory response by a foreign nation cannot be proportionate by its nature. Any response is escalatory as the US is merely 'catching up' to the tariffs being put on its own goods.

Bloomberg reports that Trump is considering three options:


1) a blanket 20% tariff on all imports; 

2) a tiered system with three different rate levels; 

3) a country-by-country rate model.


White House spokesperson Leavitt said new duties are effective immediately which feels less ideal vs a delayed start (no time for negotiations).

*  *  *

Update  (8:45pm ET): With just hours to go until Trump's "Liberation day" announcement, things remain... fluid.


Bloomberg reports that Trump’s deliberations over his plans to impose reciprocal tariffs are coming down to the wire, with his team said to be still finalizing the size and scope of the new levies he is slated to unveil on Wednesday afternoon. As a reminder, Peter Navarro said that Trump wants to raise $700 billion annually in tariff revenue.


In meetings on Tuesday, Trump’s team continued to hash out their options ahead of a Rose Garden event scheduled to begin as US markets close at 4 p.m. on Wednesday. 


The White House has not reached a firm decision on their tariff plan, even though Trump himself said earlier in the week that he had “settled” on an approach.


Several proposals are said to be under consideration, including a tiered tariff system with a set of flat rates for countries, as well as a more customized reciprocal plan. 


Under the first option, countries would see their goods face levies at either a 10% or 20% rate depending on their tariff and non-tariff barriers on US goods.


Under the two-tiered approach, the highest levies would be applied to the countries perceived as the biggest offenders, both in terms of true tariffs as well as easily quantifiable non-tariff measures that act to deter US imports. Trump’s White House this week has complained about the trade practices of the EU, Japan, India and Canada, for example.



Another approach would see the US applying individualized reciprocal rates, tailored to countries based on their existing levies and non-tariff barriers. This approach was publicly signaled for weeks but some recent deliberations suggest it’s no longer the main focus. 


There’s also been discussion of a return to Trump’s original proposal: a flat global tariff, which would apply evenly to trillions of imports. And the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump was considering a more targeted plan that would apply a tariff of less than 20% to a narrower section of countries.


With less than 24 hours to go until Trump’s announcement, companies, countries and the lobbyists paid to influence the president’s agenda tried to find out final details of the plan, only to learn there aren't any final details yet. 


Amid the continuing barrage of trial balloons, the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump aides were studying a more targeted option, while Fox News said Tuesday that Trump was also still considering a flat 20% global tariff.


Amid all the speculation, the White House on Tuesday stayed silent on the details of Trump’s plan, ahead of the president’s formal announcement, while Leavitt told reporters on Tuesday that Trump was “with his trade and tariff team right now perfecting it to make sure this is a perfect deal for the American people and the American worker.”


Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told lawmakers that the tariffs would be a cap. reflecting the highest levels they’ll go, with countries then able to take steps to bring rates down, 


Representative Kevin Hern, an Oklahoma Republican, told CNBC. Earlier Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said that the tariffs would take immediate effect but that Trump was open to subsequent negotiation. “Certainly, the president is always up to take a phone call, always up for a good negotiation,” she said.


The late-hour movement signaled that the scope and details of the long-promised announcement are shifting even as the pageantry of the event — dubbed a “Make America Wealthy Again” celebration — comes into focus.

Trump said Monday he had made a decision “actually a long time ago,” but didn’t reveal it. Leavitt reiterated that claim, though the White House declined to weigh in on various proposals said to be under consideration. A spokesman did not immediately reply to requests for further comment Tuesday.

Other key questions swirl, like the fate of tariffs already applied to China, Canada and Mexico, and clawed back partially for the latter two. The White House has not said whether those would be replaced by Trump’s Wednesday announcement, or whether his move to exempt goods traded under the continental trade pact might also be extended somehow to the new levies. The president has also promised coming tariffs on key sectors including pharmaceuticals, semiconductors and lumber.

* * * * *

There is just over 24 hours left until President Trump unveils the specifics of his "Liberation day" from global trade barriers at 3pm on Wednesday, and with markets obsessing over what the president will and will not say, we are starting a rolling blog which will be updated for all major developments. 

We begin with the known-knowns ahead of tomorrow's big reveal:

Reciprocal Tariffs – President Trump said on Sunday that the reciprocal tariffs he is set to announce will include all nations, not just a smaller group of 10-15 countries with the largest trade imbalances. The White House has yet to outline what tariffs are coming up, how these will be calculated or what countries will need to do to secure exemptions. The President also mentioned that these tariffs will account for other countries’ non-tariff barriers, though he has also not went into detail on how these calculations will be conducted. Regarding exemptions, President Trump said in an interview with Newsmax that he plans to limit exceptions – though the mention of potentially giving a lot of countries “breaks” last Monday at the White House has led to a steam of talks with the US (EU, India among the names of countries mentioned) regarding concessions. One potential twist is that overnight we got a USTR trade barrier report (not the official tariffs but its lists hundred of barriers to US exports) where this part stands out: “the USTR report did not specify VATs as trade barriers in its discussion of EU policies, focusing instead on digital services taxes and the bloc's new carbon border adjustment mechanism.” (RTRS) According to Goldman, goal posts have moved rapidly to 15%+ on EU tariffs and yesterday's discussions were around the rather substantial tail risk that reciprocal VAT tariffs would mean (38%). Comments from Trump suggest a lighter touch on tariffs although without context it’s unclear what this might mean. Goldman concludes that "with risk premia having been built up the default direction will be a relief rally/vol compression (the sustainability of which will be more about US economy)."
 
Automobile Tariffs – As per the White House Fact Sheet, the 25% tariff will be applied to imported passenger vehicles (sedans, SUVs, crossovers, minivans, cargo vans) and light trucks, as well as key automobile parts (engines, transmissions, powertrain parts, and electrical components), with processes to expand tariffs on additional parts if necessary. Importers of automobiles under the USMCA will be given the opportunity to certify their U.S. content and systems will be implemented such that the 25% tariff will only apply to the value of their non-U.S. content. Tariffs on vehicles are set to take effect on 3Apr and certain auto parts no later than 3May.
 
Tariffs on countries importing Venuzuelan Oil – President Trump has issued an executive order declaring that any country buying oil or gas from Venezuela will pay a 25% tariff on trades with the U.S., and also extended a deadline (27 May) for Chevron to wind down operations. China, Spain, Brazil, Turkey, India, Italy, Cuba are among the countries that could be affected by this. In particular, China is Venezuela’s largest oil buyer (~55%). Goldman's research desk highlights that this will pose a significant risk for China – if this was to materialize, it will raise the total US effective tariff rate on China close to 60%.
 
Sectoral Tariffs – President Trump also plans to impose tax additional tariffs to target specific industries including pharmaceutical drugs, copper and lumber.
LATEST NEWS:

US Treasury Secretary Bessent said President Trump will announce reciprocal tariffs at 15:00EDT/20:00BST on Wednesday.
White House Press Secretary Leavitt stated there will be a Rose Garden event on Wednesday for the Trump tariff plan and that Trump is committed to sectoral tariffs.
White House spokesperson said no exemptions at this time when asked about tariff exemptions for farmers and any country that has treated the US unfairly should expect to receive a tariff.
White House aides have drafted a proposal to impose tariffs of around 20% (prev. touted 15%) on at least most imports to the United States, according to WaPo sources. Several options are on the table and no final decision has been made. One option would raise import duties on products from virtually every country, rejecting more targeted approaches. If combined with additional tariffs on sectors such as automobile and pharmaceutical imports, raise more than USD 6tln. Administration officials are also discussing using this revenue to finance a tax rebate or dividend payment to most Americans; planning is "highly preliminary". The White House is also still considering an order that would apply a different tariff rate to individual countries.
US President Trump said we will see tariff details maybe Tuesday night or on Wednesday which are going to be nice in comparison to other countries and in some cases, they may be substantially lower. Trump also stated that many countries have been looting the US and they will stop that on April 2nd, as well as noted there will be investments worth USD 5tln in the US. Furthermore, he stated that TikTok is not tied to a larger tariff deal but could be.
US President Trump is said to be still deciding which plan he will take for reciprocal tariffs and has been presented with "multiple" tariff plans, according to administration sources cited by FBN's Lawrence, while sources said Trump will likely not make the decision on which plan until right before April 2nd or on that morning.
Reminder:

Weekend reports suggested US President Trump is said to be pushing senior advisers to go bigger on tariff policy as they prepare for Liberation Day’ on April 2nd and reportedly revived the idea of a flat universal tariff single rate on most imports, according to Washington Post.
It was also noted that the option viewed as most likely, publicly outlined by Treasury Secretary Bessent this month, would set tariffs on products from the 15% of countries the administration deems the worst US trading partners which account for almost 90% of imports.
Europe:

EU is mulling targeting big US tech firms in response to Trump tariffs, via WaPo citing sources/officials; one official suggested that the bloc could unite on "some partial measures against American services".
France is reportedly pushing for a tougher response which includes digital services.
Other nations such as Italy remain opposed believing it will only cause further US escalation.
"European officials cautioned that there is no agreed-on hit list of digital services."
"European officials concede that measures against companies like Google (GOOGL) or Meta (META) could escalate the trade war, but they say Trump has shifted the goalposts."
"European officials are also discussing possible trade concessions"; could be willing to reverse some of the countermeasures announced after the US' aluminium/steel tariffs.
WaPo reminds us that the bloc has already signalled a willingness to reduce the 10% tariff on US autos and increase the purchase of US-made LNG.
MORGAN STANLEY ON THE RECIPROCITY PRINCIPLE (KEY TAKEAWAYS)

Tariffs appear likely to head higher, on a number of trading partners: The Trump administration said it plans to increase tariff levels after taking into account three key factors to rectify what it perceives as unfair trade relationships: 1) product-level tariff differentials; 2) VAT differentials; and 3) a subjective "unfair trading practices." We expect that the numbers revealed as a product of that assessment on April 2 will likely be a maximalist starting point, rather than ending point, for tariff levels.
April 2 should provide some clarity on the path, but we expect that not all of our questions will be answered by then: Two principles guide our rationale: The comprehensive review promised by the president is broad and complex, requiring months of investigation on a product-by-product basis, and we expect negotiations can potentially reduce levels from the stated starting point when this review concludes. Hence, April 2 is more likely a starting point than an ending point for implementation.
Key products in the EU, as well as broader Chinese imports, are likely to see increases...: When evaluating imports across the country-level criteria the administration has laid out as well as where the largest tariff differentials are, certain sectors stand out in particular, like EU autos. 
 ...While Mexico, Canada, and certain products from countries in the EU appear more likely to avoid tariffs through negotiation. We see potential for more negotiation with countries that score low across the metrics that the administration has cited as important inputs to that April 2 evaluation, as well as those that Trump has signaled a willingness to negotiate with or countries for which tariffs are explicitly tied to a policy goal (like immigration/fentanyl).
Importantly, Morgan Stanley has low conviction in this path, and sees several plausible alternatives. More aggressive, and faster, tariff implementation is possible, as well as the inverse, given the president's wide discretion and authority on this matter.
Mapping out current & expected tariffs on two vectors: relative level of conviction, and expected duration/potential for an off-ramp



Morgan Stanley incorporates "reciprocal tariffs" into that base case: The administration has stated it plans to review tariff rates on a country-by-country basis, taking into account a variety of other trade-related factors (some more subjective than others), culminating in an aggregate number (or tariff level) that Commerce Secretary Lutnick intends to present to the president April 1, to be publicly released on April 2. This to us signals that the administration is planning to engage in a broad-based retooling of its trading relationships, grounded in matching tariff rates but incorporating a number of other factors like existing trade deficit, VAT differentials, and non-tariff barriers to trade (including subsidies). 
Hence, while the short-term policy goals might align with one of the two objectives we lay out, undertaking a country-by-country review of existing trade relationships grounded in tariff reciprocity reflects, in our view, a longer-term commitment to de-risking and retooling trade policy.
Various third parties have assessed how high tariffs could go as a result of this review: the Yale Budget Lab, for example, sees the policy change resulting in an incremental 13ppt hike to tariffs on China vs. 16ppt on Mexico and 17ppt on India. Given the relatively high VAT in Europe, the tariff rate goes up by even more in the UK, Denmark/Sweden, and Hungary: 20ppt, 25ppt, and 27ppt, respectively.


More in the full Morgan Stanley reciprocity analysis available here to pro subs.

JPM TARIFF SCENARIO ANALYSIS

10% TARIFF – assuming a 10% blanket tariff that also cancels/replaces Can/Mexico tariffs but not China: SPX +2 - +2.5%. 10Y yield higher by ~10bps. EUR/USD falls to 1.06 – 1.07 (currently 1.08).
25% TARIFF – SPX falls 1.25% - 1.75%. 10Y yield declines 12-14bps. EUR/USD lower as USD behaves as a safety haven, with EUR/USD falling to 1.03 – 1.05
35% TARIFF – SPX falls 2% - 3%. 10Y yield falls 20bps. EUR/USD falls to 1.01 – 1.03.
On EU sectors vs. tariffs, JPM expect:

EU Pharma: Potential US tariffs expected to have a manageable impact, though many questions remain unanswered around key details.
Global Spirits: Financial impact likely to be substantial, ranging JPME 8-48% on annual EBIT. Believe mitigation through pricing will be limited, given sector has already derated YTD
EU Autos: If tariffs go ahead, on avg. c. 25% earnings cut to its FY25 estimates for German OEMs and Stellantis. JPM add this is the lower bound of impact. Overall, JPM remain tactically bearish.


Market Impact

WHAT DOES A GOOD OUTCOME LOOK LIKE – A low (10% or less) blanket tariff that does not include VAT with a stated willingness to discuss sectoral tariffs which include 25% on aluminum/steel, 25% on Autos, 200% on Champagne/wine from the EU, and potentially 25% on Chips and Pharmaceuticals. Further, avoiding tariffs on shipping vessels would be a positive.
WHAT DOES A BAD OUTCOME LOOK LIKE – A higher than expected blanket tariff, which includes VAT, plus additional sectoral tariffs. Further, any bans on sales or the implementation of fines/tariffs on shipping vessels would be a materially worse outcome, e.g., a full ban on chip sales to China. According to Bloomberg, NVDA received ~17% of its FY24 revenue from China.
Likely Tariff Levels (per JPMorgan)

CANADA / MEXICO – JPM does not think that we see additional tariffs mentioned, instead sticking with the 25% tariffs that were delayed.
CHINA – currently, the tariff level is 20% but given that China consumes Venezuelan oil, that adds another 25%. A deal on TikTok could reduce these levels, but that announcement may be on/before the current April 5 deadline to sell or restrict TikTok.
EU – while Trump had mentioned 25%, Bloomberg reported last week that the EU planned concessions for Trump so this could mean a lower rate in the 10% - 15% range.
JAPAN – given the willingness to negotiation and to add further investment in the US, it seems possible that Japan receives a lower rate, perhaps lower than the EU, say 10%.
JPM's proposed Monetization Menu:

Country-Level: we look at Australia, Japan, and the UK as being relative safety havens. China may work, too, given the potential to add fiscal stimulus but that is a lower conviction long.
US Sector Level: Energy and Utilities (ex-AI plays) are the two best longs and look for Lower-Income Discretionary and higher beta TMT plays as being among the more consensus shorts. Separately, parts of Fins (GSIBs, Insurance, Payment Processors) could be safety havens.
FICC: Look for Credit to outperform Equities on the move lower. We like precious metals, crude, and natgas as longs.
Overall, JPM remain tactically bearish: 

"Policy uncertainty is the dominant factor in the markets and that neither the Trump Put nor Fed Put activate in the near-term." 
Further, they see downward pressure on the soft economic data though hard data is likely to remain resilient, potentially putting a floor on the next US downdraft. 
That said, one potential event that could break the bearish outlook is the announcement of a trade deal, or framework of one, with a G7 country ahead of the announcement, e.g. US/UK deal could allow the market to look through tariffs on places such as the EU and/or Japan.
More in the full JPMorgan secnario analysis available here to pro subs.

WEEKEND HEADLINES

US Broader Tariffs

US President Trump is said to be pushing senior advisers to go bigger on tariff policy as they prepare for ‘Liberation Day’ on April 2nd and reportedly revived the idea of a flat universal tariff single rate on most imports, according to Washington Post. It was also noted that the option viewed as most likely, publicly outlined by Treasury Secretary Bessent this month, would set tariffs on products from the 15% of countries the administration deems the worst US trading partners which account for almost 90% of imports.
US President Trump said he will hit essentially all countries that they're talking about with tariffs this week and commented that there will be a deal on TikTok before the deadline, according to Reuters.
US President Trump’s closest allies including Vice President Vance, Chief of Staff Wiles and cabinet officials have privately indicated they are unsure exactly what President Trump will do during the April 2nd announcement of global tariffs, according to Politico.
US Auto Tariffs

US President Trump’s recent 25% auto tariff announcement made no mention of USMCA trade deal side letters shielding Canada and Mexico from potential auto tariffs which showed Canada and Mexico were each granted annual duty-free import quotas of 2.6mln cars and unlimited light trucks if Trump imposed global tariffs. Furthermore, Canada said it fully expects the US to honor the 2018 tariff pledges and it reserves the right to take retaliatory measures, while Mexico is evaluating the legal implications of the agreement on Trump's ‘Section 232’ auto tariff probe.
US President Trump’s Trade Adviser Navarro said auto tariffs will raise about $100BN and the other tariffs are to raise about $600BN a year, according to a Fox interview.


UK

UK PM Starmer spoke with US President Trump on Sunday evening in which they discussed productive negotiations between their respective teams on a UK-US economic prosperity deal and agreed that these will continue at pace this week. It was also reported that UK Home Secretary Cooper refused to rule out retaliating to US tariffs on cars and steel, according to Bloomberg.
France

French Ministry of Foreign Trade said France and Europe will defend their businesses, consumers and values, while it added that US interference in the inclusion policies of French companies is unacceptable.
French Commerce Minister reiterated that France would implement reciprocal tariffs if the US goes ahead with its tariff measures this week. Hoping to avoid a trade war. The Minister intends to have talks with the US Embassy in Paris to voice opposition to the US' order for French firms to comply with a diversity band.
Germany

German Chancellor Scholz said they stand by Canada’s side and that Canada is not a state that belongs to anyone else, while he added that Europe’s goal is cooperation but the EU will respond as one if the US leaves them with no choice such as with tariffs on steel and aluminium.
China

China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi said higher US tariffs on Chinese goods are unreasonable and harm global markets. (Comments made in China's Tuesday session).
LatAm

Brazil’s President Lula said he will negotiate on tariffs before retaliating, according to Bloomberg. It was also reported that Brazil’s Finance Minister Haddad said the country is in a privileged position to withstand the trade war with the commodity exporter’s links to China, the US and the EU to shield it from Drotectionism. accordina to FT
OTHER RECENT HEADLINES

28th March

EU plans concessions for Trump after reciprocal tariffs hit, according to Bloomberg sources
Chinese State Media says China will "certainly respond with countermeasures if the US insists on harming China's interests regarding the April 2nd tariffs"; if they want to discuss cooperation with China, mutual respect is a prerequisite.
US President Trump and Canada PM Camey held a very constructive phone call, according to both sides; Camey told Trump he will implement retaliatory tariffs.
US President Trump says will be announcing pharma tariffs soon; is willing to make deals on tariffs, deals on averting auto tariffs would come later.
27th March

US President Trump posted on Truth "If the European Union works with Canada in order to do economic harm to the USA, large scale Tariffs, far larger than currently planned, will be placed on them both"
Canadian PM Carney says its response to these latest tariffs is to fight; they will fight the US tariffs with retaliatory trade actions of its own; clear US is no longer a reliable partner
26th March

US President Trump may implement copper tariffs within weeks, according to Bloomberg
The US will reportedly not take all non-tariff barriers (e g. VAT) in determining reciprocal Tariff rates, according to CNBC
EU Top Trade Negotiator Sefcovic expects US President Trump to hit the bloc with tariffs of about 20% next week, via FT
EU expects Trump to set flat, double-digit tariff on April 2nd, according to Politico; According to two diplomats, suggested the tariff rate applied to the EU could be as high as 20 or 25%
US President Trump considers more limited tariff plans, automotive tariffs could be narrowed and reciprocal tariffs lowered in latest administration proposals, via WSJ
US President Trump announces to impose 25% tariffs on all cars not made in the US, while he said they will be doing tariffs on pharmaceuticals and tariffs on lumber
China's Vice Premier He Lifeng spoke with USTR's Greer by video call, via Xinhua; Both sides had candid and in depth exchange of views on economy and trade. China expressed solemn concerns on US tariffs and planned reciprocal tariffs.
25th March
India is reportedly open to cutting tariffs on over half of US imports, worth USD 23bln, via Reuters citing sources; open to cutting tariffs to as low as 0 from a 5- 30% range on 55% of US imports
India proposes to remove the 6% tariff imposed on online advertisement services offered by companies such as Google (GOOG) and Meta (META), known widely as the Google tax, from April 1st which is a day before Trump's reciprocal tariffs take effect.
US President Trump considers a two-step tariff regime on April 2nd, according to FT; Possible phased approach to new US levies reflects debate over trade strategy within administration.
US President Trump says he has April 2nd tariffs set, and he has been fair to countries that abused US for many decades
24th March:

Trump implements secondary tariff on Venezuela; anyone who buys oil/gas from Venezuela will face an additional 25% tariff on all US trade.
US President Trump says they will be announcing tariffs on autos, aluminium and pharmaceuticals in the very near future.
Trump says he will announce additional tariffs over the next few days on autos, lumber, and chips
Trump says he may give a lot of countries breaks on tariffs.
22nd March (weekend)

President Donald Trump's coming wave of tariffs is poised to be more targeted than the barrage he has occasionally threatened, aides and allies say, a potential relief for markets gripped by anxiety about an all-out tariff war. (Bloomberg)
21st March

France reportedly to float using EU's most powerful trade tool on US, according to Bloomberg
US President Trump says there will be flexibility on tariffs, basically it's reciprocal; they can't be expected to carry Canada.
UK government reportedly considering plans to reduce or even abolish its digital services tax before April 2nd, via Bloomberg.
20th March

US President Trump says he believes India is probably going to be lowering tariffs substantially but on April 2nd, we will be charging them the same tariffs they charge us
EU's Trade Commissioner Sefcovic says the Commission is considering delaying first set of counter-tariffs against the US to mid-April
19th March

US President Trump's aides are planning new tariffs on “trillions" more in imports on April 2nd, according to WaPo
EU is reportedly to tighten steel import quotas as of April 1st, via Reuters citing sources; to reduce inflows by 15%
18th March

US President Trump's team reportedly explored a simplified plan for reciprocal tariffs in which they recently debated sorting trading partners into one of three tiers instead of equalising tariff rates with every nation, according to WSJ
17th March:

US President Trump says he has no intention of creating exemptions on steel and aluminium tariffs, while he adds reciprocal tariffs will happen on April 2nd
USTR's Greer imposes policy process on reciprocal tariff plan; President Trump's top trade negotiator is attempting to inject order into sweeping new tariffs expected next month, after previous announcements roiled markets and fueled business uncertainty
India reportedly weighs lower tariffs for US medical devices, according to Economic Times
13th March:

Trump said the EU put a 50% tariff on whiskey, if this is not removed, the US will place a 200% tariff on wines, champagnes and other alcoholic products coming out of France and other EU represented countries.
Canada's Ontario Premier says they had a productive meeting with US Commerce Secretary Lutnick and will have another meeting next week, adds feel temperatures are decreasing and it was the best meeting they had since tariff talks began
TARIFF TALLY (SO FAR)

US Tariff Policy

US reciprocal Tariffs: Trump on February 13th signed his plan for reciprocal tariffs, albeit delayed their implementation. The delay allows Trump admin to launch negotiations on a one-by-one basis with nations that could be impacted. The studies of each country could be completed by April 1st.
US tariffs on steel and aluminium: US President Trump signed proclamations on Monday 10th February 2025 to reimpose a 25% tariff on steel and aluminium imports and declared there are no exceptions or exemptions, effective March 12th.
US tariffs on agriculture: Trump: To the Great Farmers of the United States: Get ready to start making a lot of agricultural product to be sold INSIDE of the United States. Tariffs will go on external product on April 2nd. Have fun!"
Canada/Mexico

US on Canada and Mexico: Tariffs on imports from these countries have been paused for 30 days to allow for negotiations on border security and drug trafficking issues. Pause was initiated on February 3, 2025, is set to expire on March 4, 2025, at 12:01am. The pause expired, with Trump stating ‘there is no room left for a deal on tariffs on Mexico and Canada".
US tariff rollback: A day after the tariffs came into effect, Trump said he would temporarily spare carmakers from a new 25% import tax imposed on Canada and Mexico. Two days after imposing tariffs, Trump announced that duties on a wide range of products would be shelved until April 2nd.
Canada’s retaliatory tariffs: Following the end of the pause on March 4th, Canada said it would start with 25% tariffs on US imports worth CAD 30bln from Tuesday, while it will impose tariffs on an additional CAD 125bln worth of US imports in 21 days (albeit second wave suspended for now). Furthermore, it said tariffs will remain in place until the US trade action is withdrawn and it is in active discussions with provinces and territories to pursue several non-tariff measures if US tariffs do not cease.
50% US tariff and Canadian Energy Surcharge rollback: Trump on March 11th initially instructed the Commerce Secretary to impose an additional 25%, to 50%, on all steel and aluminium coming into the US from Canada from March 12th although he later backed down from this threat after Ontario's Premier announced they are suspending the 25% surcharge on exports of electricity.
China

US on China: Additional 10% tariff on top of existing levies, no exclusions, came into effect at 12:01 EST on February 4th. Note, Trump did not clarify whether or not imports of Chinese metals would face double tariffs, as he has already imposed a 10% tariff on Chinese goods. Extra 10% duty came into effect at 12:01EST on March 4th.
China's retaliatory tariffs: Chinese tariffs against the US took effect on February 10th and with officials also said to be building a list of US tech firms for potential probes. China imposed 15% tariffs on US coal & LNG, 10% tariffs on US oil, agricultural machines, and some autos; Tariffs imposed in direct response to Trump's 10% tariffs, according to the Chinese Finance Ministry. China also announced export controls (no specific country mentioned) on tungsten, tellurium, bismuth, molybdenum and indium. Following the US' extra 10%, on March 4th, China announced 15% on US chicken, wheat, com, and cotton; 10% on US soybeans, sorghum, pork, beef, aquatic products, fruits, vegetables, and dairy products; 15 US entities to the export control list; 10 US firms to the unreliable entity list; banned the import of Illumina (ILMN) gene sequence machines to China.
TARIFF TIMELINE

February 1st - Trump signed an executive order to impose 10% tariffs on all imports from China and 25% on imports from Mexico and Canada starting Feb 4th.
February 3rd - Trump agreed to a 30-day pause on tariffs against Canada and Mexico.
February 4th - US additional 10% tariff on China on top of existing levies came into effect. Chinese export controls on tungsten, tellurium, bismuth, molybdenum and indium took effect (no specific countries mentioned).
February 10th - Chinese tariffs against the US took effect (15% tariffs on US coal & LNG, 10% tariffs on US oil).
February 13th - Trump signed his plan for reciprocal tariffs, albeit delayed the implementation.
March 4th - Tariff pause on Mexico and Canada expired; Additional 10% tariffs on China went into effect on top of Feb 4th tariffs. Canada announced retaliatory tariffs over 21 days, Mexico said it will also respond with retaliatory tariffs.
March 5th - Trump allowed a one-month exemption on Mexico and Canada tariffs of US automakers following talks with Ford (F), General Motors (GM) and Stellantis (STLAM IM/STLAP FP)
March 6th - Trump postponed the initial 25% tariffs on several imports from Mexico and some imports from Canada for a month. In response, Canada suspended its second wave of retaliatory tariffs.
March 10th - China's retaliatory tariffs on certain US agricultural imports (15% on US chicken, wheat, corn, and cotton; 10% on US soybeans, sorghum, pork, beef, aquatic products, fruits, vegetables, and dairy products) went into effect; announced on March 4th in response to the extra 10% US tariff on top of Feb 4th tariffs.
March 11th - Trump threatened 50% tariffs on Canada, although he later backed down from this threat after Ontario's Premier announced they are suspending the 25% surcharge on exports of electricity. Trump separately suggested tariffs may go higher than 25% but did not specify which tariffs.
March 12th - 25% tariff on steel and aluminium imports came into effect, with "no exceptions or exemptions"; European Commission launched countermeasures on US imports while it is putting forward a package of new countermeasures.
April 1st - Completion of the US trade policy review.
April 2nd - US Liberation Day; 1) Auto tariffs "in the neighbourhood of 25%" comes into effect, 2) US tariffs on "external" agricultural products to go into effect, 3) Temporary tariff relief for Canada and Mexico expires. 4) Reciprocal tariffs kick in - details to be unveiled on the day; US President Trump to announce reciprocal tariffs at 15:00EDT/20:00BST.
April 13th - EU countermeasures against 25% steel and aluminium tariff to be fully in place.
TBC - pharma and semiconductors tariffs.
Developing

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 16:30

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Alec Baldwin Says Quiet Part Out Loud As Democrats Become More Unhinged 
Alec Baldwin Says Quiet Part Out Loud As Democrats Become More Unhinged 

As the Democratic Party spirals into disarray—polling in freefall, far-left activists firebombing Tesla showrooms and vehicles, and USAID funds cut for its sprawling NGO network used for domestic color revolution operations—struggling actor Alec Baldwin has openly said the quiet part out loud: "You can see now that we are in a pre-civil war culture." 

The Hollywood elitist rambled on for a few minutes in a video posted on Instagram, adding: "And watching this show really reminded me of how we are in a very similar state now in a pre-Civil War culture, in a pre-Civil War environment." 


NEW: Alec Baldwin declares the United States is in a pre-Civil War culture.
The actor took a break from being bossed around by his wife to make the public service announcement.
“You can see now that we are in a pre Civil War culture.”
“I look at the politics of it, of where… pic.twitter.com/gj2s99xbxW
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) April 2, 2025
Baldwin's comments merely reflect the rudderless Democratic Party as its back is against the wall, growing increasingly desperate by the day as its rogue political machine (billionaire-funded) falls apart—with USAID funding eliminated, DOGE uncovering fraud involving Social Security numbers handed out to migrants like candy (which, by the way, allegedly allows migrants to vote in elections), and other Marxist-aligned, anti-American programs that were in place to undermine the nation. 

Never forget just how cringe Baldwin is... 


Alec Baldwin tells a story about how he saw his wife’s ex-boyfriend’s “baseball bat” sized junk hanging between his legs.
“He turns around with his personality hanging, I'm like, oh, oh, oh, okay. He had like a clarinet hanging from his pants.”
This guy’s life has turned into… pic.twitter.com/Bj9Q2OX1rw
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) March 23, 2025
One X user perfectly explained why Baldwin is reading from a script:


The "pre-civil war" panic is a familiar script from Hollywood elites who spent four years cheering riots, censorship, and impeachments when they didn't get their way. But now that Trump's back in office and the populist tide is rising, suddenly it's dangerous polarization.

In truth, the cultural divide wasn't created by Trump, it was exposed by him. And people like Baldwin don't fear civil war, they fear accountability. They fear a public no longer hypnotised by their narratives, no longer obedient to their values.

If anything, it's the ruling class and its institutions, Hollywood included, that have been waging a cultural war for decades. Trump just stopped apologising for fighting back.



The “pre-civil war” panic is a familiar script from Hollywood elites who spent four years cheering riots, censorship, and impeachments when they didn’t get their way. But now that Trump’s back in office and the populist tide is rising, suddenly it’s dangerous polarization.
In…
— Kalopsia (@Kalopsiac1984) April 2, 2025
Just as the far-left corporate media cheered on domestic terrorism against Tesla, unhinged celebrities like Baldwin are now pushing propaganda warfare against the American people. It's time to break free from the matrix. 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 16:40

The Hill
Open 
Most think Trump will attempt to serve third term: Survey
Most voters in a new poll predicted President Trump will attempt to serve a third term in the White House, despite a constitutional restriction limiting presidents to two terms. A survey from YouGov found 56 percent of U.S. adults thought Trump “probably” or “definitely” would try to serve again, compared to 28 percent who said...

The Hill
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Former aide slams California Democrat in video announcing primary campaign
Jake Rakov, a former aide to Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.), on Wednesday announced he is launching a primary challenge against his onetime boss. In a video announcing his campaign, Rakov directly criticized Sherman, who is serving his 15th term in the House, as out of touch with his constituents who want him to take a...

The Hill
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Trump restoring millions in family planning funds
The Trump administration is restoring millions of dollars in Title X funds to Oklahoma and Tennessee after the Biden administration chose to withhold those funds because both states failed to comply with program rules. The news was first reported by Politico, but the Oklahoma State Department of Health confirmed to The Hill that the...

The Hill
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Trump imposes 10 percent global tariffs; higher rate for ‘worst offenders’
President Trump on Wednesday announced a baseline 10 percent tariff on imports from all foreign countries, as well as higher tariff rates for dozens of nations that the White House deemed the “worst offenders” when it came to trade barriers. The 10 percent tariff will go into effect on Friday. About 60 countries facing a...

The Hill
Open 
Record high can't afford health care: Gallup
The share of U.S. adults who have recently been unable to afford health care has reached a new high, according to report published by Gallup, with Black and Hispanic adults accounting for much of the increase. The Gallup report, conducted in partnership with the nonprofit West Health, found that 11 percent of U.S. adults —...

The Hill
Open 
Trump reaches deal with another major law firm
President Trump announced Wednesday that he reached another deal with a major law firm, Milbank LLP, as he seeks to punish organizations with ties to his political critics. Milbank is the latest in a string of firms looking to cut a deal with the president after he signed orders in recent weeks reviewing security clearances...

The Hill
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Live updates: Trump slams trade partners as he unveils new tariffs
President Trump's long promised day of reciprocal tariffs has arrived, with a Rose Garden event to announce them set for Wednesday afternoon. "It's liberation day in America," Trump posted in all caps to his Truth Social platform around 7 a.m. The president has also pressured former Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and other Republicans...

The Hill
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Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs: Here's how much countries are getting hit
President Trump on Wednesday announced he was imposing reciprocal tariffs on dozens of nations, citing what he called years of unfair trade practices. Trump announced in the Rose Garden that all foreign countries would face a baseline 10 percent tariff, but several nations are being hit with steeper tariffs on imports. Trump said those reciprocal...

The Hill
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Senate, House GOP split over size of debt-limit increase
A major discrepancy has already arisen between Senate and House Republicans in the budget resolution they plan to adopt in order to pass President Trump's domestic agenda. The 70-page resolution Senate Republicans unveiled Wednesday afternoon would serve as a blueprint, laying out instructions lawmakers will use to write a final bill full of Trump's top...

The Hill
Open 
Bipartisan senators unveil measure providing flexibility in school lunch milk options
A bipartisan trio in the Senate unveiled a proposal on Wednesday to require schools to offer non-dairy milk options at lunch to accommodate students who are lactose intolerant or have other dietary restrictions. The National School Lunch Program (NSLP) has long required school lunches to include milk on all trays in order for schools to...

ZDNet News
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Change these 5 settings on your TV for a quick and easy way to improve its picture quality
With some patience and experimentation, you can tweak your TV's basic settings for crisper images and a better viewing experience.

BBC UK News
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'I took what wasn't mine - now I'm giving back'
A group of people work at Nene Valley Railway Museum as part of a community payback programme.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Grealish and Marmoush on target as Manchester City ease past Leicester
Billed pre-game as the injured Erling Haaland’s capable stand-in, Omar Marmoush’s response was to score Manchester City’s second goal against a weak Leicester, who are heading for the relegation trapdoor.Pep Guardiola adores the Champions League so this was business accomplished in the bid to seal a qualification berth: victory lifts City to fourth. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tonali’s goal from touchline hands Newcastle win over battling Brentford
If Newcastle’s rivals for a Champions League place had hoped Eddie Howe’s players might be partied out after ending that 70-year domestic trophy drought, they were destined for disappointment.Howe’s team were not at their very best but, thanks to the most eye-catching of winning goals from Sandro Tonali they found a way to defuse Brentford’s ever-present threat. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Diogo Jota breaks down Everton’s blue wall as Liverpool move closer to title
The 246th Merseyside derby was as much of a cathartic release for Liverpool as another step closer to a 20th league title. Arne Slot’s side cleansed themselves of recent torment against Everton and two deflating cup defeats with a hard-fought but deserved victory courtesy of Diogo Jota’s fine individual goal. A maximum of 13 points is all that is required from the remaining eight games of the season to put the Premier League trophy on display at Anfield once again.There was a determination to seize control of the derby from the start by Liverpool and, unlike the previous two encounters at Goodison Park, a composure in possession that enabled them to do so. The painful Champions League exit and deserved Carabao Cup final defeat that preceded the international break, plus of course memories of their last run-in with Everton 49 days ago, may also have fuelled the hunger and intensity of a team closing in on the Premier League title. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump hits UK with 10% tariffs as he ignites global trade war
Britain wins relatively favourable treatment as president accuses trading partners of looting and pillaging USUS politics – latest updatesDonald Trump hit the UK with tariffs of 10% on exports to the US as he ignited a global trade war that could wipe billions off economic growth.The US president accused other nations, including allies, of “looting, pillaging, raping and plundering” the US, as he announced tariffs on economic rivals including 20% on the EU and 34% on China. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Three ways Trump's move may affect you and your money
The UK is likely to be impacted by US tariffs, but there is huge uncertainty.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
SkyWest to Fly CRJ-900s for American Eagle
The aircraft will operate from Dallas/Fort Worth and Phoenix.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
FAA Boosts Support for Controllers at Reagan National Airport
Regulator plans to review staffing levels and arrival rates and will offer confidential support for stress.

BBC World News
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Deadly strikes in Gaza as Netanyahu says Israel will seize new military corridor
At least 19 people are reported killed in Jabalia as Israel's PM says it is expanding ground operations to pressure Hamas.

Slashdot
Open 
European Commission Takes Aim At End-to-End Encryption and Proposes Europol Become an EU FBI
The European Commission has announced its intention to join the ongoing debate about lawful access to data and end-to-end encryption while unveiling a new internal security strategy aimed to address ongoing threats. From a report: ProtectEU, as the strategy has been named, describes the general areas that the bloc's executive would like to address in the coming years although as a strategy it does not offer any detailed policy proposals. In what the Commission called "a changed security environment and an evolving geopolitical landscape," it said Europe needed to "review its approach to internal security."

Among its aims is establishing Europol as "a truly operational police agency to reinforce support to Member States," something potentially comparable to the U.S. FBI, with a role "in investigating cross-border, large-scale, and complex cases posing a serious threat to the internal security of the Union." Alongside the new Europol, the Commission said it would create roadmaps regarding both the "lawful and effective access to data for law enforcement" and on encryption.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
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Global Scam Industry Evolving at 'Unprecedented Scale' Despite Recent Crackdown
Online scam operations across Southeast Asia are rapidly adapting to recent crackdowns, adopting AI and expanding globally despite the release of 7,000 trafficking victims from compounds along the Myanmar-Thailand border, experts say. These releases represent just a fraction of an estimated 100,000 people trapped in facilities run by criminal syndicates that rake in billions through investment schemes and romance scams targeting victims worldwide, CNN reports.

"Billions of dollars are being invested in these kinds of businesses," said Kannavee Suebsang, a Thai lawmaker leading efforts to free those held in scam centers. "They will not stop." Crime groups are exploiting AI to write scamming scripts and using deepfakes to create personas, while networks have expanded to Africa, South Asia, and the Pacific region, according to the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime. "This is a situation the region has never faced before," said John Wojcik, a UN organized crime analyst. "The evolving situation is trending towards something far more dangerous than scams alone."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
As Trump slaps a 20% tariff on EU goods, what can Brussels do against it?
As Donald Trump has imposed so-called reciprocal tariffs on trading partners worldwide, the EU will be hit with a 20% levy on all of its goods exported to the US. What countermeasures can Brussels take?

Mail Online
Open 
Why Brad Pitt, 61, is 'doing everything he can to keep the love alive' with Ines de Ramon, 32
The Hollywood actor has been filming his latest movie in New Zealand while his girlfriend remains at their home in Los Angeles.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Letby barrister to hand over 'fresh evidence'
Letby's barrister Mark McDonald says he will hand over detailed medical reports to the CCRC.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
'Worst offenders' around world face tariffs of up to 50%
The president says the US has been "pillaged, raped and plundered" for years by international trade partners.

Techdirt
Open 
Trump’s Buddies At Andreesen Horowitz Want To Help Buy TikTok, Turn It Into A Right Wing Safe Space
We’ve noted more times than I can’t count that the push to ban TikTok was never really about protecting American privacy. If that were true, we would pass a real privacy law and craft serious penalties for companies and executives that play fast and loose with sensitive American data. It was never really about propaganda. […]

Deutsche Welle
Open 
What can the EU do against Trump's tariffs war?
As Donald Trump has imposed so-called reciprocal tariffs on trading partners worldwide, the EU will be hit with a 20% levy on all of its goods exported to the US. What countermeasures can Brussels take?

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Grealish and Marmoush on target as Manchester City ease past Leicester
Billed pre-game as the injured Erling Haaland’s capable stand-in, Omar Marmoush’s response was to score Manchester City’s second goal against a weak Leicester, who head for the relegation trap door.Pep Guardiola adores the Champions League so this was business accomplished in the bid to seal a qualification berth: victory lifts City to fourth. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Perilous and chaotic, Trump’s ‘liberation day’ imperils the world’s broken economy – and him | Martin Kettle
While the president has identified the need to do things differently, his strategy risks a slump, hitting the very Americans he claims to championIt would be “liberation day” in the US, the White House announced. Well, we shall see. Yet even if one puts the noise and nastiness that accompany a Donald Trump announcement to one side – in this case tonight’s pronouncement that there will be an executive order announcing “reciprocal tariffs on countries throughout the world”, a 10% tariff on the UK and 20% on the EU – the significance of the theatre is hard to miss. Whether they presage the US’s liberation, or instead the disintegration of the global trading order, Trump’s tariffs add up to an attempt to transform a badly broken economic model. And that is something that affects us all.Trump’s announcement was awash with insult and rambling nonsense. The rest of the world had looted, raped and pillaged, had scavenged and ransacked America – shocking claims if they had come from any other US president, yet water off a duck’s back today. But the hard core was there all the same: tariffs on the whole of the rest of the world. The shutters were up.Martin Kettle is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liverpool 1-0 Everton: Premier League – live reaction
Jota’s goal restores Liverpool’s 12-point lead at topClockwatch: Man City 2-0 Leicester and more – liveLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email MichaelYou’ll Never Walk Alone is the next anthem to cascade down from the terraces. David Moyes, in his first Merseyside derby at Anfield in 12, years, looks nonplussed.The players are in the tunnel. Szoboszlai looks like he has grown around three inches of hair over the international break, now dangling down towards his shoulders in an alice band. ‘Allez, Allez, Allez!’ is belted out around Anfield in anticipation of the teams. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump announces sweeping new tariffs, upending decades of US trade policy
President to impose ‘reciprocal’ tariffs on largest trading partners and says new charges will bring about ‘golden age’US politics live – latest updatesDonald Trump announced sweeping tariffs on some of its largest trading partners on Wednesday, upending decades of US trade policy and threatening to unleash a global trade war on what he has dubbed “liberation day”.“This is one of the most important days, in my opinion, in American history,” Trump said, speaking on the White House lawn. For decades America had been “looted, pillaged and raped” by its trading partners, he said. “In many cases, the friend is worse than the foe.” Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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UK firms react: 'A huge blow to Scotland's whisky industry'
Business in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland tell us what US tariffs could mean for them.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Watch: President Trump announces new tariffs on all imports to US
The US president said a "baseline" 10% tariff would go into effect for all countries in an announcement on what he's dubbed "Liberation Day".

Mac Rumours
Open 
The Apple Store That Never Was
In 2019, Apple canceled plans to open a flagship store at Federation Square in Melbourne, Australia, due to public opposition. Specifically, many local residents were upset about Apple's plan to demolish the existing Yarra Building on the site, in order to make room for the new store. The local heritage authority Heritage Victoria ultimately decided that the building could not be torn down due to its cultural significance.





Six years later, graphic designer Filip Chudzinski has envisioned what Apple Federation Square could have looked like, based on a design proposal by architectural firm Foster + Partners. Given the proposal is now outdated, Chudzinski added in some modern touches, such as an Apple Pickup station for customers to collect online orders.



Chudzinski created more than two dozen beautiful 3D renders of the Apple Federation Square store that never was, offering a closer look at its multi-level pavilion design. The impressive store would have overlooked the nearby Yarra River.





Chudzinski has an Instagram account dedicated to Apple retail. He also created the Bandbreite app, which catalogs Apple Watch bands.Tag: Apple StoreThis article, 'The Apple Store That Never Was' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's billionaire club revealed: The 55 super-wealthy Brits who appear on the annual Forbes' list of the world's richest people
Forbes has unveiled its list of the world's richest people featuring 55 super-wealthy Brits, including Virgin Group founder Richard Branson and F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone.

Mail Online
Open 
NASA captures first lights turning on in the universe after the Big Bang
NASA 's James Webb Space Telescope has captured the earliest evidence of light shining through the cosmos. But the fact that this telescope can see it has baffled researchers.

Mail Online
Open 
Drug smuggling pals found with 35kg of cannabis in their luggage at UK airport - after saying they'd been on shopping spree in New York
Sophie Bannister and Levi-April Whalley, both 30 were caught with more than £160,000 worth of cannabis in their suitcases as they landed back on UK soil from a 'shopping' trip to New York.

Mail Online
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Inside Stacey Solomon's impressive '£6million property portfolio' - after TV star increased her fortune by £3million in just a year
The Loose Women star, 35, lives in a £1.2million Essex mansion nicknamed Pickle Cottage, complete with 2.5 acres of land and a swimming pool.

Mail Online
Open 
American Airlines plane fills with smoke as it comes in to land forcing passengers to flee cabin
The American Eagle jet was evacuated on the runway of Augusta Airport in Georgia.

Sky News Home
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Elon Musk calls reports he will step back from government role 'fake news'
Elon Musk has called reports that he will leave his government role in the coming months "fake news".

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Watch: President Trump announces new tariffs on all imports to US
The US president said a "baseline" 10% tariff would go into effect on what he has dubbed "Liberation Day".

TechRadar News
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The Nintendo Switch 2’s interactive-manual bloatware is a paid app, and it’s the last straw following a disappointing launch

TechRadar News
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The new Nintendo Switch 2 Camera proves I was right to hope for a new age of Nintendo peripherals – but what comes next?

TechRadar News
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After semiconductors, semimetals might be the next big thing as the tech industry looks for a replacement for ubiquitous copper

Digital Trends
Open 
This could be the last laptop you ever need to buy
Framework might not be a name you’ve heard of but it could soon be far more common as the company is about to release its modular laptop that could last you a lifetime. Alright, any laptop laasting that long is a stretch, but the idea is that this will last you far longer than the […]

Digital Trends
Open 
Apple AirPods Pro 3: everything you need to know
The next generation of Apple's AirPods Pro is expected to arrive this year. Here's everything we know so far.

Digital Trends
Open 
Alienware gaming PC with RTX 5080 is $400 off
The Alienware Area 51 gaming PC with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 graphics card and 64GB of RAM is on sale with a $400 discount from Dell.

Digital Trends
Open 
What is happening with Michael Jackson biopic? Will it be two movies in 2026?
The Michael Jackson biopic might be split into two movies. If that happens, the biopic will likely move off its October 2025 release.

Digital Trends
Open 
The Apple AirPods Pro 2 have a $50 discount, both in stores and online
The Apple AirPods Pro 2 with USB-C and Apple’s Hearing Aid Feature are on sale for $200. Purchase at multiple sites and stores to take advantage of this deal.

The Aviationist
Open 
U.S. Approves Sale of F-16 Block 70/72 to the Philippines
Few days after U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth visited the Philippines, Washington cleared the sale of 20 F-16s to the country. The U.S. State Department has approved the Foreign Military Sale (FMS) to the Philippines for 20 F-16 Block 70/72 fighter jets. The development comes just few days after U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth visited […]
The post U.S. Approves Sale of F-16 Block 70/72 to the Philippines appeared first on The Aviationist.

The Verge
Open 
‘TikTok America,’ Amazon, and other rumors about who might buy TikTok
After President Donald Trump pushed back a deadline for banning TikTok in January, the 75-day delay will run out on April 5th, but there’s still no word on a deal that could satisfy the law by shifting control of TikTok away from its Chinese parent company, ByteDance. The Information reports that later today, Trump plans […]

The Verge
Open 
The Nintendo Switch smartphone app is getting some excellent new features
While sharing screenshots and videos from the original Nintendo Switch has always been an excessively complicated process, it’s going to be much easier for the Switch 2. During today’s Direct presentation, Nintendo spent a lot of time talking about the Switch 2’s new built-in GameChat functionality that will give players a way to share their […]

The Verge
Open 
WordPress.com owner Automattic is laying off 16 percent of workers
Automattic, the parent company of WordPress.com, is laying off about 16 percent of its workers. In a memo posted to the company’s website, CEO Matt Mullenweg says he’s making the change to “protect Automattic’s long-term future.” Before the layoffs, Automattic’s website listed the company as having 1,777 employees. The company has since decreased its employee […]

The Verge
Open 
Apple stumbles with latest AirPods Max firmware
Last week, Apple announced that lossless audio and ultra low latency would be coming to the AirPods Max with USB-C. It was a pleasant surprise for owners of Apple’s over-ear headphones, which have fallen behind the AirPods Pro in recent years when it comes to offering new features. Unfortunately, the company seems to have hit […]

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester City 2-0 Leicester, Brighton 0-3 Aston Villa and more: Premier League – live
Newcastle 2-1 Brentford, Bournemouth 1-2 IpswichLiverpool v Everton – live with Michael ButlerLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email SimonDanny Mills, watching the Manchester City game, says he is “confused” by a Leicester side that is “almost waving a white flag”.Ten minutes into the Manchester City game, and a load of fans are just coming in. The protest seems to have had decent numbers, even if the majority of supporters – certainly in the stand that runs along the side of the pitch opposite the TV cameras – were in their seats before kick-off. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liverpool v Everton: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offClockwatch: Man City 2-0 Leicester and more – liveLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email MichaelYou’ll Never Walk Alone is the next anthem to cascade down from the terraces. David Moyes, in his first Merseyside derby at Anfield in 12, years, looks nonplussed.The players are in the tunnel. Szoboszlai looks like he has grown around three inches of hair over the international break, now dangling down towards his shoulders in an alice band. ‘Allez, Allez, Allez!’ is belted out around Anfield in anticipation of the teams. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Trump reveals details of global tariffs - as he holds up chart showing those affected
Donald Trump has announced a 10% trade tariff on all imports from the UK - as he unleashed sweeping tariffs across the globe.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Watch: Trump unveils new tariffs on all imports to US
President Trump announces new tariffs on all imports to US

Gizmodo
Open 
Ncuti Gatwa and Varada Sethu Lift the Lid on Doctor Who‘s New Team
The 15th Doctor and his new ally Belinda Chandra sit down with io9 to discuss Doctor Who's latest evolution.

Gizmodo
Open 
Dems Celebrate Elon’s Humiliation After MAGA Loss in Wisconsin
"Elon Musk should become Donald Trump's special envoy for midterm elections," said one Democratic Party leader.

Gizmodo
Open 
Amazon Eero Mesh WiFi Router (3-Pack) Slashed to $100, Cheaper Per Unit Than a Single Pack
Higher, more reliable internet speeds around your home on WiFI await thanks to this mesh system.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Tariffs 'a huge blow to Scotland's whisky industry'
Business in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland tell us what US tariffs could mean for them.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
UK firms react to Trump tariffs: 'It's a huge blow to Scotland's whisky industry'
Business in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland tell us what US tariffs could mean for them.

BBC UK News
Open 
Trump announces tariffs on NI and Irish goods
NI goods entering the US will face a 10% tariff, while those from the Republic will be hit with 20%.

Sky News Home
Open 
Tributes paid to 'genius actor' and Top Gun star Val Kilmer
Actors, directors and celebrity friends have paid tribute to Val Kilmer, after he died aged 65.

Sky News Home
Open 
Trump reveals details of global tariffs - as he holds up chart showing 'worst offenders'
Donald Trump has announced a 10% trade tariff on all imports from the UK - as he unleashed sweeping tariffs across the globe.

Ars Technica
Open 
Vast pedophile network shut down in Europol’s largest CSAM operation

Ars Technica
Open 
A look at the Switch 2’s initial games, both familiar and what-the-heck

Ars Technica
Open 
$70 and $80 game price tags send an early signal about Switch 2 game pricing

Ars Technica
Open 
Google shakes up Gemini leadership, Google Labs head taking the reins

Computer Weekly
Open 
Countering nation-state cyber espionage: A CISO field guide
The rise of DeepSeek has prompted the usual well-documented concerns around AI, but also raised worries about its potential links to the Chinese state. The Security Think Tank considers the steps security leaders can take to counter threats posed by nation state industrial espionage?

Computer Weekly
Open 
Meeting the UK’s compute capacity needs: Alternatives to hyperscale datacentre builds
Since coming to power, the Labour government has set out plans to accelerate new datacentre builds. We look at how this is evolving

Computer Weekly
Open 
Podcast: HDD safe from flash for a decade or more
We talk to Toshiba’s Rainer Kaese, who argues flash cannot replace spinning disk because it’s too costly to consider for anything but limited, performance-hungry applications

Computer Weekly
Open 
Microsoft restates commitment to OpenAI amid analyst note about datacentre expansion rollbacks
Microsoft pushes back on analyst claims its changing relationship with OpenAI is forcing it to scale back its datacentre expansion plans in the US and Europe

Computer Weekly
Open 
UK law enforcement data adequacy at risk
The UK government says reforms to police data protection rules will help to simplify law enforcement data processing, but critics argue the changes will lower protection to the point where the UK risks losing its European data adequacy

Computer Weekly
Open 
Reassessing UK law enforcement data adequacy
Computer Weekly takes stock of proposed changes to the UK’s law enforcement data protection rules and how it could affect data adequacy with the European Union

Computer Weekly
Open 
T-Levels not attracting as many students as hoped
A report from the National Audit Office has found that fewer students started T-Levels this year than previously predicted

Computer Weekly
Open 
Understanding of ‘black box’ IT systems will reduce Post Office scandal-like risk
A Parliamentary committee has reported that leadership teams need to understand the ‘black box’ IT systems that underpin their organisations

Computer Weekly
Open 
Top 1,000 IT service providers in scope of UK cyber bill
The government’s proposed Cyber Security and Resilience Bill is set to include regulatory provisions covering both datacentre operators and larger IT service providers

Computer Weekly
Open 
Inside Amazon’s robot-powered warehouse
In this week’s Computer Weekly, we go behind the scenes at Amazon’s robot-powered Swindon warehouse to see how AI and humans are working together. We examine the state of open source licensing and find out how it’s affecting datacentre operators. And we visit a 130-year-old wine and drinks company to find out how technology has brought operations into the modern age. Read the issue now.

Computer Weekly
Open 
Apple devices are at ‘most risk’ in UK following government ‘backdoor’ order
Home Office refuses to answer questions from Lords over technical capability notice issued against Apple’s iCloud Advanced Data Protection encryption services

Computer Weekly
Open 
Scottish support group for Post Office scandal victims launched
Support group calls on former subpostmasters in Scotland who have been affected by Horizon errors to come forward

Computer Weekly
Open 
Interview: Ray McCann, Loan Charge independent review lead
Former HMRC assistant director Ray McCann is leading the latest independent review into the UK government’s controversial Loan Charge policy, which has left thousands of IT contractors saddled with life-changing tax bills

Computer Weekly
Open 
Post Office Capture and Ecco+ users asked to make contact with Scottish statutory body
Scottish statutory body attempting to contact people that might have been wrongly convicted of crimes based on the Post Office’s flawed systems

Computer Weekly
Open 
Gmail ‘bubble’ encryption may be an S/MIME killer, says Google
Marking the 21st anniversary of Gmail, Google is preparing to roll out an end-to-end encryption standard for its email service in hopes of democratising encryption and leaving old standards in the dust

Computer Weekly
Open 
Nvidia tackles graphics processing unit hogging
People may try to lock up GPU resources even if they don’t need them all day – but not anymore, thanks to Nvidia KAI Scheduler

Computer Weekly
Open 
Bridging Borders: The rise of Ukrainian-British tech collaboration
The IT sectors of the UK and Ukraine have built strong relationships since Russia’s invasion of the latter, and there is more to come, writes the IT Ukraine Association’s ambassador in the UK

Computer Weekly
Open 
Interview: Tomer Cohen, chief product officer, LinkedIn
The professional social network’s product chief is leading the introduction of artificial intelligence for the firm’s in-house development processes and to enhance services for users

Computer Weekly
Open 
Tech sector still failing to rid supply chains of forced labour
KnowTheChain’s latest benchmark analysis of the IT sector’s efforts to address forced labour in supply chains shows there has been very little improvement in their due diligence practices over the last half decade

Computer Weekly
Open 
Apple’s appeal to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal over the UK’s encryption ‘back door’ explained
Apple has appealed to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal over an order by home secretary Yvette Cooper to give the UK access to customers' data protected by Advanced Data Protection encryption. What happens next? 

Boing Boing
Open 
Silica gel's secret history and path to worldwide ubiquity
"DO NOT EAT." No matter how tempting you may find that little white packet at the bottom of your beef jerky package, it is not for human consumption. Silica gel packets are filled with tiny beads of silicon dioxide, which is the same basic material found in sand—just processed into a highly porous, granular form. — Read the rest
The post Silica gel's secret history and path to worldwide ubiquity appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Tesla sales 'unexpectedly' plunge
The BBC's story about Tesla's sales figures doesn't mince words. They have "plummeted," writes Lily Jamali, to the level they were at three years ago, even as sales of electric vehicles from other automakers are growing. The funny part is that the BBC put the word "unexpectedly" in its title, as if there were anything suprising about it. — Read the rest
The post Tesla sales 'unexpectedly' plunge appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Original E.T. puppet looks like Dollar Tree bootleg, Sotheby's wants $900,000
Look, we get why Spielberg's beloved alien puppet is a piece of cinema history heading to Sotheby's auction block for an eye-watering $900,000. But holy mother of Reese's Pieces, have you seen this thing?
The three-foot nightmare fuel was used in that famous scene where E.T. — Read the rest
The post Original E.T. puppet looks like Dollar Tree bootleg, Sotheby's wants $900,000 appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
75% of US scientists considering leaving the country, says new Nature poll
Leading scientific journal Nature surveyed scientists about whether the Trump administration's massive slashing of federal science funding is causing them to consider leaving the United States. More than 1,200 scientists responded. A shocking 75% said they were seriously considering moving out of the U.S. — Read the rest
The post 75% of US scientists considering leaving the country, says new Nature poll appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Register
Open 
One of the last of Bletchley Park's quiet heroes, Betty Webb, dies at 101
Tip-lipped for 30 years before becoming an 'unrivaled advocate' for the site Obit  Betty Webb MBE, one of the team who worked at the code-breaking Bletchley Park facility in England during the Second World War, has died at the age of 101.…

The Register
Open 
Crimelords at Hunters International tell lackeys ransomware too 'risky'
Bosses say theft now the name of the game with a shift in tactics, apparent branding Big-game ransomware crew Hunters International says its criminal undertaking has become "unpromising, low-converting, and extremely risky," and it is mulling shifting tactics amid an apparent rebrand.…

BBC UK News
Open 
Trump announces tariffs on NI and Irish goods
NI goods entering the US will face an 10% tariff, while those from the Republic will be hit with 20%.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump hits UK with 10% 'reciprocal' tariffs as he unveils 'Liberation Day' onslaught including 25% on ALL foreign car imports - but Starmer WON'T retaliate as EU faces 20%
Donald Trump is expected to confirm that the UK will not escape the pain of levies he claims will restore 'fairness' in global trade.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mike Waltz’s team set up at least 20 Signal chats for national security work – report
National security adviser and team shared ‘sensitive information’ in group chats on app, sources tell PoliticoUS politics live – latest updatesDonald Trump’s national security adviser, Mike Waltz, and his team have created at least 20 different group chats on the encrypted messaging app Signal to coordinate sensitive national security work, sources tell Politico.The revelation, which cites four people with direct knowledge of the practice, follows heightened scrutiny of the administration’s handling of sensitive information after the Atlantic recently published messages from a chat that included the defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, sharing operational details of deadly strikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump confirms 25% levy on all foreign automakers and vows to impose ‘reciprocal’ tariffs worldwide – live
US president says new tariffs will become effective at midnight ETDonald Trump’s planned tariffs will be negative across the world, with the damage depending on how far they go, how long they last and whether they lead to successful negotiations, the European Central Bank head, Christine Lagarde, said on Wednesday.The Trump administration on Wednesday is set to announce “reciprocal tariffs” targeting nations that have duties on US goods. That move would come after it slapped new import levies on products from Mexico, China and Canada – the top US trading partners – as well as on goods including steel and autos.Wisconsin beat the billionaire.Wisconsin cannot be bought. Our democracy is not for sale. And when we fight, we win. Congratulations, @CrawfordForWI Continue reading...

The Hill
Open 
US sanctions network helping to get weapons for Houthis
The United States sanctioned an alleged network of financial facilitators, procurement operatives and companies Wednesday that are getting weapons, dual-use materials and stolen Ukrainian grain to Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen, the Treasury Department announced Wednesday.  Two operatives, Afghani businessmen Hushang Ghairat and Sohrab Ghairat — brothers who are based in Russia — have assisted Sa’id...

The Hill
Open 
Supreme Court confronts South Carolina bid to defund Planned Parenthood
The Supreme Court on Wednesday grappled with a case testing whether South Carolina was legally allowed to cut off Medicaid funding for Planned Parenthood. South Carolina restricted Planned Parenthood from participating in Medicaid because the organization provides abortions. However, the lawsuit was not about abortion access, but whether a Medicaid beneficiary has the “right”...

The Hill
Open 
Trump to show his hand on tariffs
Presented by National Council on Aging {beacon} Trump set to reveal sweeping tariff plans President Trump’s long-awaited day of reciprocal tariffs has arrived. The president is expected to outline the specifics of what he's dubbed "Liberation Day" during a Rose Garden event set for 4 p.m. EDT. Watch it here. The tariff details...

The Hill
Open 
Ceasefires aren’t guesswork: Trump’s Ukraine deal needs data, not bluster 
President Trump’s much-hyped Ukraine ceasefire lasted just one hour. But was anyone really that surprised?

The Hill
Open 
Charges dismissed against Illinois man accused of assault by Nancy Mace
Federal prosecutors moved to dismiss charges Tuesday against a man U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) accused of assaulting her during an event at the Capitol last year. 

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Trump set to speak on imposing massive tariffs for 'Liberation Day'
President Trump's long promised day of reciprocal tariffs has arrived, with a Rose Garden event to announce them set for Wednesday afternoon. "It's liberation day in America," Trump posted in all caps to his Truth Social platform around 7 a.m. The president has also pressured former Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and other Republicans he’s labeled...

The Hill
Open 
Hochul knocks ICE over 'just plain cruel' detention of family
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) said it was “just plain cruel” for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to detain a family, including a child in third grade, from their home in upstate New York. In a Tuesday statement, Hochul said she is willing to work with the Trump administration on immigration enforcement...

Mail Online
Open 
Trump's trade war kicks off: US president unveils 'Liberation Day' tariffs including 25% on ALL foreign car imports amid fears UK faces being battered - but Starmer WON'T hit back
Donald Trump is expected to confirm that the UK will not escape the pain of levies he claims will restore 'fairness' in global trade.

ZDNet News
Open 
Finally, I found an AirTag alternative that's cheaper and lasts twice as long
AirTags are useful but limited. Ugreen's latest SmartFinder tags tackle some of those shortcomings while being more budget-friendly.

ZDNet News
Open 
How to disable ACR on your TV (and why doing it makes such a big difference for privacy)
Smarter TV operating systems bring new privacy risks, with one major concern being automatic content recognition (ACR) - a feature that monitors your viewing habits.

ZDNet News
Open 
Change these 5 TV settings for a quick and easy way to improve its picture quality
With some patience and experimentation, you can tweak your TV's basic settings for crisper images and a better viewing experience.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US midwest and south faces potentially deadly floods and severe tornadoes
Forecasters say potent storm system moving east could become supercharged and bring ‘life-threatening’ floodingPotentially deadly flash flooding, high-magnitude tornadoes and baseball-sized hail could hit parts of the midwest and south on Wednesday as severe thunderstorms blowing eastward become supercharged, forecasters warned.There were tornado warnings Wednesday morning near the Missouri cities of Joplin and Columbia – merely the opening acts of what forecasters expect will be a more intense period of violent weather later on Wednesday, as daytime heating combines with an unstable atmosphere, strong wind shear and abundant moisture streaming into the nation’s midsection from the Gulf. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Elon Musk set to soon step down from lead Trump role as service limit nears
Insiders reportedly say Musk will leave when 130-day cap on government service expires but ‘Doge’ team set to continueUS politics live – latest updatesElon Musk’s polarizing stint slashing and bashing federal bureaucracy will probably soon end, with the world’s richest person’s government service hitting its legal limit in the coming weeks.“He’s got a big company to run … at some point he’s going to be going back,” Donald Trump told reporters on Monday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump announces ‘reciprocal tariffs on countries throughout the world’ – live
US president claims tariffs part of a ‘liberation day’ as world leaders prepare plan for harsh levies Donald Trump’s planned tariffs will be negative across the world, with the damage depending on how far they go, how long they last and whether they lead to successful negotiations, the European Central Bank head, Christine Lagarde, said on Wednesday.The Trump administration on Wednesday is set to announce “reciprocal tariffs” targeting nations that have duties on US goods. That move would come after it slapped new import levies on products from Mexico, China and Canada – the top US trading partners – as well as on goods including steel and autos.Wisconsin beat the billionaire.Wisconsin cannot be bought. Our democracy is not for sale. And when we fight, we win. Congratulations, @CrawfordForWI Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Trump revealing details of global 'Liberation Day' tariffs
Donald Trump is unleashing a massive escalation in his trade war, with the UK not spared punitive tariffs set to take immediate effect.

Slashdot
Open 
Microsoft Urges Businesses To Abandon Office Perpetual Licenses
Microsoft is pushing businesses to shift away from perpetual Office licenses to Microsoft 365 subscriptions, citing collaboration limitations and rising IT costs associated with standalone software. "You may have started noticing limitations," Microsoft says in a post. "Your apps are stuck on your desktop, limiting productivity anytime you're away from your office. You can't easily access your files or collaborate when working remotely."

In its pitch, the Windows-maker says Microsoft 365 includes Office applications as well as security features, AI tools, and cloud storage. The post cites a Microsoft-commissioned Forrester study that claims the subscription model delivers "223% ROI over three years, with a payback period of less than six months" and "over $500,000 in benefits over three years."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
TikTok sale: Popular video app's US future comes down to the wire
Donald Trump seems confident he can pull off a deal to drive TikTok into American hands. The stakes are high for the popular Chinese video app's 170 million US users who are hoping for an end to the waiting game.

Mail Online
Open 
Scientists who found hidden 'city' beneath Egypt's Giza pyramids reveal data that PROVES the find
As the war over what lies beneath Egypt's Giza pyramids continues, the scientists at the center of the debate have shared new details they believe will quiet critics.

Sky News Home
Open 
'My lawyers are ready' for questions about corruption claims, ex-minister tells Sky News
Tulip Siddiq has told Sky News her "lawyers are ready" to handle any formal questions about allegations she is involved in corruption in Bangladesh.

Sky News Home
Open 
Trump reveals details of global 'Liberation Day' tariffs
Donald Trump is unleashing a massive escalation in his trade war, with the UK not expected to be spared punitive tariffs set to take immediate effect.

Techdirt
Open 
230 Protects Users, Not Big Tech
Once again, several Senators appear poised to gut one of the most important laws protecting internet users – Section 230 (47 U.S.C. § 230).  Don’t be fooled – many of Section 230’s detractors claim that this critical law only protects big tech. The reality is that Section 230 provides limited protection for all platforms, though the […]

Mail Online
Open 
'I felt like a teen at a school disco - he's one of life's good eggs': Find out if it was a match on this week's Blind Date
Every week, FEMAIL asks two singletons to report back from their blind date. This week it's Katrina, 60, and David, 61, but will romance be on the cards for these two hopefuls?

Mail Online
Open 
QUENTIN LETTS: Reeves pranced in, her orbit tinkling with laughter. But on camera, she started sounding like a duck
With the economy smoking like a wonky Moskvitch, how was Rachel Reeves faring?Was she feeling under the cosh from Donald Trump's tariffs and the pratfall of her Budget?

Mail Online
Open 
The Top Gun star who crashed to earth: He seduced some of Hollywood's great beauties. But Val Kilmer was also a 'psychotic' hellraiser loathed by directors: CHRISTOPHER STEVENS
Kilmer, who has died aged 65 from pneumonia, following a long battle with cancer, starred in a long list of blockbusters.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump's trade war kicks off: US president unveils 'Liberation Day' tariffs amid fears UK faces being battered along with the rest of the world - but Keir Starmer WON'T hit back amid scramble for deal
Donald Trump is expected to confirm that the UK will not escape the pain of levies he claims will restore 'fairness' in global trade.

Mail Online
Open 
Trump tariffs live: US President delivers long-awaited 'Liberation Day' speech - and reveals how Britain's economy will be affected 
US president Donald Trump is tonight set to announce which countries will be hit by a deluge of tariffs on what he proclaims as America's 'Liberation Day.'

CNET News
Open 
All Nintendo Switch 2 Launch Games Coming Day One
This is going to be a big launch lineup for the Nintendo Switch 2.

CNET News
Open 
AI Fatigue Is Wearing Me Down. The Hype Obscures What We Really Need to Know
Commentary: It's not just you -- the AI onslaught is endless and exhausting.

CNET News
Open 
Does Walking Count as Exercise? What to Know for National Walking Day
The "hot girl walk" trend may be fun, but is walking really exercise? We'll explain.

CNET News
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Best Air Purifiers for Better Health You Can Buy in 2025, as Tested by Our Experts
Poor air quality can come in the form of smoke pollution, allergens, bacteria and dust. CNET's experts have found the best air purifiers to help deal with them all.

CNET News
Open 
Mario, Pokémon and More Will Get Free Nintendo Switch 2 Updates
Nintendo said these updates will improve playability on the upcoming console.

CNET News
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Best Cordless Vacuums of 2025: We've Picked the Best for Your Spring Cleaning Needs
We tested dozens of cordless vacuums to find you the best performers for every need.

CNET News
Open 
Switch 2's Zelda Notes Could Revolutionize Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom
The Ultrahand ability is confusing and unwieldy. The Switch 2 edition of Tears of the Kingdom aims to fix that.

CNET News
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Best Smart Speakers for 2025: Upgrade Your Sound
No matter what you're looking for in a smart speaker, we've tested for it. Here are our CNET experts' findings on which smart speakers are the best choice in 2025.

CNET News
Open 
Samsung's New Galaxy Tab S10 FE and FE Plus Tablets Get a Couple of Key Upgrades
Samsung's latest midrange Fan Edition tablets have been upgraded with the company's Exynos 1580 processor, and the Tab S10 FE Plus has a larger display than its predecessor.

CNET News
Open 
These Are the Best Smart Devices for Amazon Alexa in 2025
From smart bulbs to security cameras, here are the best devices that work with Alexa's voice commands.

CNET News
Open 
South of Midnight, Blue Prince and More Coming to Xbox Game Pass Soon
Subscribers can play these games and more with a Game Pass subscription.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Why India's top tech universities can't shake off caste bias
India's premier technology institutions are known for their quality education and job opportunities. However, those opportunities are often limited to those who have a higher social standing.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#9255 Shared Linux Hosting - cPanel - Poor/Intermittent Performance. (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Start: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 17:35

Update: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 20:30

Clear: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 17:18

Edited: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 20:03

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Mail Online
Open 
QUENTIN LETTS: Reeves pranced in, her orbit tinkling with laughter. But on camera, she started sounding like a duck
With the economy smoking like a wonky Moskvitch, how was Rachel Reeves faring?Was she feeling under the cosh from Donald Trump's tariffs and the pratfall of her Budget?

TechRadar News
Open 
Nintendo’s best Switch 2 announcement was its GameCube game rereleases, but buying the new GameCube controller will be a challenge

TechRadar News
Open 
After Nvidia, Mediatek may have convinced another huge tech company to use its expertise to develop AI chips

Digital Trends
Open 
10 best moments from Severance season 2
After a spectacular first season, Severance managed to top itself with these ten mind-blowing moments from its second season on Apple TV+.

Digital Trends
Open 
Bad news: the Samsung G Fold might not release globally
The long-rumored Samsung tri-fold phone (called the Samsung G Fold) might not launch outside of China and Korea.

Digital Trends
Open 
Amazon’s first Dolby Atmos soundbar is on sale for under $200 today
The Amazon Fire TV Soundbar Plus is on sale today for $190. Experience the thrills of a virtualized Dolby Atmos system and so much more!

Digital Trends
Open 
Apple just released the iOS 18.5 beta, and what’s not coming is clear
Apple has only just released to the public and mere days later it is already starting to give access out for the next update in iOS 18.5. Apple has begun seeding the latest iOS 18.5 beta 1 to those with compatible devices that allow for access. So mostly developers then. Why is this exciting for […]

Digital Trends
Open 
Astell&Kern’s latest audiophile portable comes with its own dock
A&K simplifies its design language while adding even more features.

Digital Trends
Open 
The Samsung Music Frame has a massive 68% discount today
The Samsung LS60D Music Frame Smart Speaker is on sale for $130 today when you purchase through Woot! But don't wait too long to take advantage of this deal.

The Verge
Open 
FTC chair says he’d ‘obey lawful orders’ if Trump asked to drop an antitrust case like Meta’s
Federal Trade Commission Chair Andrew Ferguson has refused to commit to resisting President Donald Trump if he ordered the agency to drop its antitrust suit against Meta, saying he would “obey lawful orders” and calling the scenario “a hypothetical.” His comments, made at a tech policy event in Washington, DC, followed a session where Ferguson […]

The Verge
Open 
Verge staffers react to the Nintendo Switch 2
Nintendo has finally aired its big Switch 2 Direct, and now we know a whole lot about its next console. The Verge staff has a lot of feelings about the device, which will launch on June 5th, and we’ve collected our first impressions below. A soulless design Look, I love black. My entire wardrobe is […]

The Verge
Open 
Here’s how you can preorder the Nintendo Switch 2 (or try to)
After years of rumors, Nintendo has finally announced a release date for the Switch 2. The long-awaited successor to the Switch will be available on June 5th for $449.99, bringing a handing of games and accessories along with it. It will be available for preorder in the US from select retailers starting on April 9th, […]

The Verge
Open 
Sonos permanently drops the price of its Era 100 speaker and Ray soundbar
Sonos is lowering the price of two products in an effort to boost hardware sales amid a continued slump. The company’s Era 100 smart speaker and entry-level Ray soundbar now both cost $199. That’s a $50 drop for the Era 100, which launched at $249. And it’s an even more substantial $80 cut for the […]

The Verge
Open 
Some Nintendo Switch 2 games will be more expensive
At least two of Nintendo’s Switch 2 games are going to be more expensive than most games on the first Switch. Many Switch games cost $59.99, but Nintendo revealed today the Switch 2’s Mario Kart World, a June 5th launch title, will cost $79.99, while Donkey Kong Bananza, releasing a little over a month later, […]

Russia Today News
Open 
Trump prepares to ease arms export rules – Reuters

Mail Online
Open 
Natural England blasted as woke 'eco-lunatics' after refusing to clear 'foul' overgrown grass on sandy beach
Councillor Andrew Gardner said Natural England are putting 'plants before people' as they continue to reject plans to clear vegetation from Hoylake beach in the Wirral.

Mail Online
Open 
British pop star 'lands huge deal with Prime Video' as new 'documentary is set to follow her pregnancy and journey into motherhood'
A British pop star has reportedly landed a huge deal with Prime Video, as a new documentary is set to follow her pregnancy and journey into motherhood.

Mail Online
Open 
Teacher, 36, who groomed schoolgirls by touching them and sending lewd messages is banned from the classroom
Luke Berry, 36, was working at Joyce Frankland Academy in Essex when he committed two sexual offences against girls aged under 18.

Mail Online
Open 
Glen Powell makes telling remark about Sydney Sweeney as romance rumors continue to swirl
The wedding came just days after Sydney split from fiance Jonathan Davino -an event that did not go unnoticed by fans, whom immediately wondered if the two were finally getting together.

Mail Online
Open 
QUENTIN LETTS: Reeves pranced in, her orbit tinkling with laughter. But on camera, she started sounding like a duck
With the economy smoking like a wonky Moskvitch, how was Rachel Reeves faring?Was she feeling under the cosh from Donald Trump's tariffs and the pratfall of her Budget?

Sky News Home
Open 
Trump to reveal details of global 'Liberation Day' tariffs
Donald Trump is expected to unleash a massive escalation in his trade war, with the UK not expected to be spared punitive tariffs set to take immediate effect.

Gizmodo
Open 
Amazon and OnlyFans Founder Join the List of TikTok Bidders as Ban Looms
The TikTok ban goes back into effect on April 5.

Gizmodo
Open 
The First Reactions to the Live-Action How to Train Your Dragon Are Here
Dean DeBlois' adaptation of his own animated films arrives in theaters June 13, but audiences at CinemaCon just got an early screening.

Gizmodo
Open 
Visa Wants to Take Over $20 Billion Apple Card Business
The company wants to take over processing of payments for Apple's credit card, and has reportedly offered $100 million to replace Mastercard.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Joe Rogan breaks with Trump, calling Venezuelan deportations ‘horrific’
Influential podcast host and prominent Trump supporter criticizes administration for removal of gay makeup artistJoe Rogan, the influential podcast host and prominent supporter of Donald Trump, has criticized the president’s administration over the deportation of a professional makeup artist and hairdresser to a prison in El Salvador, calling it “horrific”.Andry José Hernández Romero, who is gay, had sought asylum in the US, telling officials he faced persecution because of his sexual orientation and political views. But US immigration officers argued the crown tattoos on his wrists were proof he was part of Tren de Aragua, the Venezuelan gang, despite Hernández Romero telling them he was not. Last month, he was flown from Texas to a maximum-security prison in El Salvador, a facility that his lawyer said was “one of the worst places in the world”. His removal comes as the administration undertakes what Trump has pledged would be a mass deportation campaign. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Elon Musk set to soon step down from lead Trump role as service limit nears
Insiders reportedly say Musk will leave when 130-day cap on government service expires but ‘Doge’ team set to continueElon Musk’s polarizing stint slashing and bashing federal bureaucracy will probably soon end, with the world’s richest person’s government service hitting its legal limit in the coming weeks.“He’s got a big company to run … at some point he’s going to be going back,” Trump told reporters on Monday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Minister seeks inquiry into British Basketball’s ‘potentially criminal’ deal
Super League clubs are unhappy with BBF’s plansGBB League deal puts £4.75m public funding at riskThe sports minister, Stephanie Peacock, has asked the government body responsible for elite funding, UK Sport, to investigate allegations of unlawful tender made against the British Basketball Federation. On Wednesday, the BBF signed a 15‑year agreement with an American consortium to operate a new men’s professional league from 2026.The existing nine Super League Basketball clubs are deeply unhappy with the BBF’s plans for the sport. On their behalf Vaughn Millette, the Sheffield Sharks owner, wrote in February to the government after the BBF had entered exclusive negotiations with Marshall Glickman’s GBB League Ltd (GBBL), to outline their concerns. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Woman meets recipient of her twin sister's hands
Ms Gosling, from Sheffield, said her sister's hands "couldn't have gone to anyone better".

Russia Today News
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Kiev backs minerals deal ‘beneficial to US and America’ – FM

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
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#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (Update)
Connectivity has been restored. We are continuing to monitor stability.

If you are still having issues, please reboot your router before contacting our Technical Support Team between 8am-8pm (Mon-Fri)(9am-5pm Sat/Sun).


Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 03:38

Update: Thu, 3rd Apr 2025 00:00

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Status: Up

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Deutsche Welle
Open 
Mass Roman grave discovered outside Vienna
Archaeologists have said the remains of around 150 soldiers have been unearthed on the outskirts of Vienna in what they have described as an exceedingly rare find.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Elon Musk set to soon step down from lead Trump role as service limit nears
Insiders reportedly say Musk will leave when 130-day cap on government service expires but ‘Doge’ team set to continueElon Musk’s polarizing stint slashing and bashing federal bureaucracy will probably soon end, with the world’s richest man’s government service hitting its legal limit in the coming weeks.“He’s got a big company to run … at some point he’s going to be going back,” Trump told reporters on Monday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
A Minecraft Movie review – building-block game franchise spin-off is rollicking if exhausting fun
Full-throttle star turns from Jack Black and Jennifer Coolidge raise laughs but don’t help the perfunctory plotting in this screen take on the game franchiseIf you’re not familiar with Minecraft as a game then this film, notionally a big screen version of same, won’t necessarily solve that. Minecraft, even more than most computer games, is what you make of it, an experience generated by the player. So in a way, the idea of making a film set in the Minecraft world is counterintuitive, because it can never replicate what is good about Minecraft, it can only tell you what is good about Minecraft. In addition to that, this comedy-fantasy takes aspects of the Minecraft world and uses them as building blocks in a rollicking adventure suitable for almost all ages, giving Jack Black and Jason Momoa carte blanche to wild out and be deeply silly. Your affection for and/or tolerance of this latter prospect will dictate to a large extent your enjoyment of this film.Black plays Steve, a crafter who in the game was the original default player, although that doesn’t especially matter here. Momoa is Garrett “The Garbage Man” Garrison, a washed-up video game champ with an aesthetic stuck permanently and delightfully in the 1980s: pink leather fringed jacket and luscious locks flowing down past his prodigious shoulders like the first snowmelt off a mountain range. As this is kinda-sorta an ensemble film, we also have Henry (Sebastian Hansen), Natalie (Emma Myers) and Dawn (Danielle Brooks) rounding out the good guys squad. It’s not the fault of any of the three latter actors, but it’s hard for them to make an impression alongside Black and Momoa going full-throttle – and it would become an exhausting experience if they tried. That does mean their storylines feel like downtime, a chance to relax and catch your breath, rather than providing the emotional core that the writers presumably intended. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Israel establishing new security corridor in Gaza to 'pressure Hamas' and plans to seize 'large areas'
Israel is establishing a new security corridor across Gaza, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has announced, as his country plans to seize "large areas" of the Palestinian territory.

UK Government News
Open 
Statement on China's military exercises, 2 April 2025
The FCDO has issued a statement in response to the latest Chinese military exercises around Taiwan.

Boing Boing
Open 
Illinois teacher arrested for sexual assault on 15-year-old boy breaks down in cop car (video)
An Illinois high school teacher was charged with felony sexual assualt on a 15-year-old student last month, and police bodycam footage of her arrest has just been released.
The video shows 30-year-old Christina Formella, a special education teacher and soccer coach at Downers Grove South High School, looking startled and confused when police first approach her in her driveway, as if their appearance is absurd. — Read the rest
The post Illinois teacher arrested for sexual assault on 15-year-old boy breaks down in cop car (video) appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Scammers with fake treasure maps con victims out of $1.32 million
A group of scammers in Turkey's Tunceli region allegedly defrauded citizens out of $1.32 million in an elaborate scam involving fake ancient treasure maps. The suspects apparently traveled to villages giving out the maps and encouraged citizens to search for the treasures. — Read the rest
The post Scammers with fake treasure maps con victims out of $1.32 million appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
This tracker improves upon the AirTag and fit in your wallet
TL;DR: This sleek KeySmart® SmartCard is a tracker that improves upon the Apple AirTag, and a three-pack is on sale now for just $89.99 (reg. $119.97). 
Ever tried to fit an AirTag in your wallet? How about in your passport? Apple's tracker is great until it needs to fit into a tight space. — Read the rest
The post This tracker improves upon the AirTag and fit in your wallet appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Register
Open 
Crimelords at Hunters International told lackeys ransomware too 'risky'
Bosses say theft now the name of the game with a shift in tactics, apparent branding Big-game ransomware crew Hunters International says its criminal undertaking has become "unpromising, low-converting, and extremely risky," and it is mulling shifting tactics amid an apparent rebrand.…

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
A Minecraft Movie had the building blocks to be an epic video-game film, but it fails to make full use of its creative mode

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Unearthed FBI Chat Logs Reveal 'Gag Order' On Biden Laptop Exposé
Unearthed FBI Chat Logs Reveal 'Gag Order' On Biden Laptop Exposé

Authored by Luis Cornelio via Headline USA,

Internal FBI chat logs revealed that the bureau imposed a “gag order” on agents regarding the New York Post bombshell story on the Hunter Biden laptop. Along with showing Hunter’s depravity, the laptop revealed Joe Biden’s involvement in his son’s foreign business dealings. 



The chat logs, published Tuesday by the House Judiciary Committee on X, show that the gag order extended to an FBI analyst who attempted to alert social media companies that the laptop was authentic—before these companies moved to censor the story’s spread. 


The FBI had Hunter Biden’s laptop, but on the day the NY Post story came out, the FBI refused to tell Big Tech the truth.
— House Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@JudiciaryGOP) April 1, 2025
On Oct. 14, 2020, the New York Post released its first story on the laptop’s content. That same day, FBI officials instructed agents, “please do not discuss Biden matter.” 

Earlier chats show a group of agents—including Laura Dehmlow, Bradley Benavides and James Dennehy—debating the Post’s story.

“You guys are tracking the coverage of the laptop right?” Dehmlow wrote. Both Benavides and Dennehy replied affirmatively. 

Later, agents whose names remain sealed sent messages stating, “right answer – nobody on call is is [sic] authorized to comment upon NY Post story” and “nobody [is] authorized to comment.” 

One agent asked if another had “admonished” the colleague who nearly revealed the laptop’s authenticity to Big Tech companies. “yes but he wont [sic] shut up,” one response read. 

Hours later, agents reiterated that they were forbidden from commenting on the laptop story, with messages like “official response no commen [sic] and “we cannot comment.” 

A previous transcribed interview with Dehmlow revealed that during a Zoom meeting with Big Tech, an FBI agent was interrupted before he could confirm the laptop was real and already in the bureau’s possession. 

The FBI had verified the laptop in 2019 by cross-referencing its serial number with Hunter’s iCloud storage, FBI special agent Erika Jensen stated during Hunter’s criminal trial in 2024. 

Despite this verification, the bureau remained silent while social media companies debated whether the Post’s story was tied to a Russian disinformation campaign.

Notably, the FBI had warned them weeks earlier of an imminent “hack-and-leak” story about the 2020 election, leading many to mistakenly equate that warning with the laptop exposé. 

The laptop revealed that while Hunter failed to pay millions in taxes, he also consumed drugs, paid for prostitutes and launched what Republicans call an “influence-peddling scheme” aimed at selling access—or at least the appearance of access—to Joe Biden in exchange for payments. 

According to the laptop, 10% of these payments were earmarked for the “Big Guy,” a term confirmed by former Biden ally Devon Archer to refer to Joe Biden. 

Biden went on to win the 2020 election, and before leaving office in 2025, he issued sweeping pardons to his siblings and Hunter, covering offenses committed between 2014 and 2025.

Read the full House Judiciary Committee’s X thread on the chatlogs:


The Committee had testimony from key FBI personnel, but until now, the FBI refused to produce the internal communications from that day in unclassified form for the American public to see. pic.twitter.com/I5uGnJICVM
— House Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@JudiciaryGOP) April 1, 2025

The internal FBI chat log also shows how far senior FBI officials went to silence this analyst.
After the meeting, a senior FBI lawyer put a “gag order” on the analyst. pic.twitter.com/9AzXIl565B
— House Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@JudiciaryGOP) April 1, 2025

 
*  *  *

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ZeroHedge News
Open 
"This 'Scoop' Is Garbage": White House Spox Denies Politico Musk Report
"This 'Scoop' Is Garbage": White House Spox Denies Politico Musk Report

Update (1305ET): 

Aaand here's the denial. White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt has called Politico's scoop "garbage," adding "lon Musk and President Trump have both *publicly* stated that Elon will depart from public service as a special government employee when his incredible work at DOGE is complete."


This “scoop” is garbage.
Elon Musk and President Trump have both *publicly* stated that Elon will depart from public service as a special government employee when his incredible work at DOGE is complete. https://t.co/Brppff6SKi
— Karoline Leavitt (@PressSec) April 2, 2025
Though we would note that 'stepping back' (Politico) does not equal 'departing' (WH).

*  *  *

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Shares of Tesla rose on Wednesday following an anonymously sourced Politico report (keeping in mind Musk just yanked millions in government 'subscriptions' from them) that President Trump has told his inner circle that Musk would be stepping back from his advisory role in the coming weeks.



Musk, who Politico describes as "governing partner, ubiquitous cheerleader and Washington hatchet man" (totally not salty), claims that Trump "remains pleased with Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency initiative but both men have decided in recent days that it will soon be time for Musk to return to his businesses and take on a supporting role."

Then Politico gets extra nasty - writing that "Musk’s looming retreat comes as some Trump administration insiders and many outside allies have become frustrated with his unpredictability and increasingly view the billionaire as a political liability, a dynamic that was thrown into stark relief Tuesday when a conservative judge Musk vocally supported lost his bid for a Wisconsin Supreme Court seat by 10 points."

One anonymous official allegedly told Politico that Musk is likely to retain an informal advisory role and continue to be an occasional face around the White House, while another said that anyone who thinks Musk is going to disappear entirely from Trump's orbit is "fooling themselves."

As we noted above, shares of Musk-owned Tesla rose more than 5% on the report.



While Polymarket odds that he'll be out as the head of DOGE in 2025 spiked as well.



Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 13:04

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Judge Blocks Trump Admin From Firing Federal Employees On Probation In 19 States
Judge Blocks Trump Admin From Firing Federal Employees On Probation In 19 States

Authored by Katabella Roberts via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

A federal judge on April 1 indefinitely blocked President Donald Trump’s administration from quickly firing thousands of probationary federal workers in 19 states and Washington, narrowing a nationwide order issued last month.
Protesters hold signs at a rally in support of federal workers at the Office of Personnel Management in Washington, on March 4, 2025. Alex Wroblewski/AFP via Getty Images

U.S. District Judge James Bredar in Baltimore, Maryland, had already ruled on March 13 that the administration should have provided advance notice when it terminated at least 11,000 workers without notifying states and local governments in advance.

The judge had ordered the administration to reinstate the fired workers at 18 agencies by March 17.

Bredar’s latest decision replaces that order but also covers two additional agencies: the Defense Department and the Office of Personnel Management.

In handing down his decision, the judge said that the federal government may “terminate probationary employees en masse (i.e., dismiss them via a reduction in force, or ‘RIF’)” but that when it does, it “must follow certain laws and regulations.”

“Recently, government agencies executed a series of mass terminations, but when they did so, on the record before the Court, they failed to follow mandatory RIF procedures,” the judge wrote.

Bredar found the Trump administration “probably broke the laws that regulate en masse terminations of government employees, and this to the continuing and irreparable harm of the Plaintiff States.”

He noted, however, that his order only applies to employees who either live or work in the mostly Democratic-led states that, along with Washington, D.C., sued over the mass firings.

“Perhaps a broader injunction would be in order if this action were on behalf of the thousands of employees who were laid off, the circumstances of each likely being similar if not identical to those of the others, and there being little doubt that the harms visited on some were representative of those experienced by all, or almost all. But this is not that case,” Bredar wrote.

“Only states have sued here, and only to vindicate their interests as states. They are not proxies for the workers.”

Agencies Covered by Court Ruling

The judge noted that while “each state is entitled to decide for itself whether it will seek relief in the present circumstances,” it would “be inappropriate for the Court to fashion relief having the consequence that decisions properly reserved to the non-party states are effectively, and unnecessarily overruled by this Court.”

Bredar’s ruling covers workers at the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Education, Energy, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, Labor, Transportation, Treasury, and Veterans Affairs.

Additionally, terminated probationary workers at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Environmental Protection Agency, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, General Services Administration, Small Business Administration, and the U.S. Agency for International Development are covered by the orders, along with those from the Defense Department and the Office of Personnel Management.

The employees covered by the order must work in Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Wisconsin, or Washington, D.C.

Bredar’s ruling is in response to a March 6 lawsuit filed by a coalition of mostly Democratic-led states who sued nearly two dozen federal agencies over the probationary worker firings.

In their lawsuit, the states, led by Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown, argued the move was illegal because the agencies had failed to comply with legal requirements for RIFs, including providing 60 days of advance notice to workers and states.

The Trump administration has appealed Bredar’s earlier decision, claiming the firings were lawful and that the judge lacked the power to require workers to be reinstated.

A U.S. appeals court panel earlier in March declined to put Bredar’s ruling on hold.

The Epoch Times has contacted the White House and the Maryland Attorney General’s Office for comment.

Zachary Stieber and Reuters contributed to this report.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 13:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Amazon Makes Last-Minute Bid For TikTok As Decision Looms: Report
Amazon Makes Last-Minute Bid For TikTok As Decision Looms: Report

Update (1328ET):

By late lunch, a report from The New York Times specified that Amazon had submitted a last-minute bid to acquire all of TikTok from its parent company, ByteDance, ahead of the April 5 deadline. In a separate report, CNBC's David Faber indicated that a TikTok deal could be announced today. These two developments come ahead of President Trump's scheduled unveiling of reciprocal tariffs at around 4 p.m. EST. However, no specific timing was provided for when the TikTok deal might be announced. 



Here's more color from the NYT report:


Various parties who have been involved in the talks do not appear to be taking Amazon's bid seriously, the people said. The bid came via an offer letter addressed to Vice President JD Vance and Howard Lutnick, the commerce secretary, according to a person briefed on the matter.

Amazon's bid highlights the 11th-hour maneuvering in Washington over TikTok's ownership. Policymakers in both parties have expressed deep national security concerns over the app's Chinese ownership, and passed a law last year to force a sale of TikTok that was set to take effect in January.


Separately, CNBC's David Faber on "Halftime Report" pointed out that the TikTok deal could be finalized as soon as today: 


So we're coming up on the date by which some deal needs to be done. What I'm hearing today, in addition, of course, what we're hearing from the New York Times in terms of Amazon's interest and I was hearing this this morning, Scott, is that we may get an announcement involving the future of TikTok today, along with perhaps so much else that's coming at us. Not completely clear, but April 5 is the deadline. So of course, that is looming, regardless of whether it is as soon as today, and while the New York Times is reporting this on Amazon and they do say that it sort of may not be taken as seriously by those involved, I've been tracking a deal that has perhaps more of a chance, which is simply one in which you would essentially dilute down the ownership of ByteDance below 20%, allow many of the current owners of ByteDance to step up, bring in new capital and essentially say it is no longer controlled by Chinese adversary. Oracle would still be involved in that are again, people may recall that Oracle is where the servers are housed for TikTok.


The White House is managing a lot today, from a potential TikTok deal to the announcement of new tariffs. 

*    *    * 

Ahead of President Trump's reciprocal tariff announcement across all US trading partners later today, the president will meet with senior administration officials to review a final proposal for the Chinese social media app TikTok. The deliberations come before a Saturday deadline, by which TikTok must complete a sale to a non-Chinese entity or face a US ban. 

CBS News cited sources familiar with the upcoming meeting in the Oval Office that said Vice President JD Vance, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, National Security Adviser Mike Waltz, and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard would be present. It's unclear whether Trump will approve the final proposal today, given that today is "Liberation Day." The report noted that Blackstone and Oracle are potential investors. 



At the start of Trump's first term, he signed an executive order granting a 75-day extension for TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, to sell the app—used by 170 million Americans—to a US entity or face a nationwide ban. The deadline is Saturday, April 5, bringing the final deal down to the wire. 

Over the weekend, Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One, "We have a lot of potential buyers. There's a lot of interest in TikTok. The decision is going to be my decision," adding, "I'd like to see TikTok remain alive." Trump said Monday there was "a lot of enthusiasm for TikTok." 

In a separate report, the Financial Times said Marc Andreessen's venture capital firm, Andreessen Horowitz, was discussing the purchase of TikTok from ByteDance with Oracle and other investors. 

Reuters noted, "In the closely watched sale of TikTok, the White House is playing the role of an investment bank, with Vance running the auction." 

The Trump administration is about to have a hectic week. It will announce reciprocal tariffs later today, and it must also begin finalizing a deal for TikTok as the April 5 deadline looms. 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 13:28

ZeroHedge News
Open 
New FAA Rule Allows Private Jet Owners To Hide Travel Information From Public
New FAA Rule Allows Private Jet Owners To Hide Travel Information From Public

Authored by Naveen Athrappully via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is implementing a data privacy policy that allows people with private jets to hide travel information from the public.
Private jets are seen on the tarmac at Friedman Memorial Airport ahead of the Allen & Company Sun Valley Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho on July 4, 2022. Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

“Private aircraft owners and operators can now electronically request that the FAA withhold their aircraft registration information from public view,” the agency said in a March 28 statement.

“Starting today, they can submit a request through the Civil Aviation Registry Electronic Services (CARES) to withhold this information from public display on all FAA websites.”

In its statement, the FAA said the data protection decision was taken based on a privacy provision included in the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2024.

The provision allows aircraft owners to request that certain personally identifiable information not be made publicly available via FAA websites.

“The FAA will publish a request for comment in the Federal Register to seek input on this measure, including whether removing the information would affect the ability of stakeholders to perform necessary functions, such as maintenance, safety checks, and regulatory compliance,” said the agency.

“The FAA is also evaluating whether to default to withholding the personally identifiable information of private aircraft owners and operators from the public aircraft registry.”

While some say that such trackers allow people to record carbon emission info, there have been concerns that monitoring aircraft movements puts at risk the people who use that mode of transportation, often high-profile individuals.

The new rule could negatively affect jet trackers that use FAA information as a key source to track and report flight details of famous personalities.

In December 2023, attorneys for Taylor Swift issued a cease-and-desist letter to a university student, blaming his automated tracking of her private jet travel for revealing the celebrity’s whereabouts to stalkers.

The letter accused the student of “willful and repeated harassment” as well as “intentional, offensive, and outrageous conduct and consistent violations” of Swift’s privacy.

Attorneys alleged that the student essentially offered “individuals intent on harming her, or with nefarious or violent intentions, a roadmap to carry out their plans.”

In 2022, social media platform X, then named Twitter, suspended several accounts that tracked private planes, including those of Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, and Elon Musk. The platform prohibited the sharing of real-time location data, citing a “risk of physical harm.”

Some cite the high carbon emissions to question the integrity of wealthy celebrities and politicians who advocate fighting climate change while flying around in private jets.

In 2023, Klara Maria Schenk, a transport campaigner for Greenpeace’s European mobility campaign, called the use of private jets at the Davos World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting a “distasteful masterclass of hypocrisy” since the WEF said it is committed to tackling the so-called human-induced or anthropogenic climate concerns.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 14:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Trump Mulls 'Indirect' Talks With Iran As 2nd Carrier Group Dispatched To Mideast
Trump Mulls 'Indirect' Talks With Iran As 2nd Carrier Group Dispatched To Mideast

Various international reports have said that the White House is seriously considering Iran's proposal for indirect nuclear talks, however, on Tuesday the US slapped more sanctions on the Islamic Republic as part of the Trump's restored 'maximum pressure' campaign.

The Treasury Department in this latest move sanctioned several entities based in Iran, the UAE, and China - saying they are involved in "procurement of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) components on behalf of Iran-based Qods Aviation Industries (QAI)—a leading manufacturer for Iran’s UAV program."
USS Vinson, via US Navy

At the same time, it has become a central White House talking point that Iran and the Houthis are like hand-in-glove. The administration has been declaring that the over two week bombing mission in Yemen is huge blow to Iran. 

Currently a second US aircraft carrier is en route to the Middle East. This was confirmed Tuesday with an order by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth to send the USS Carl Vinson and accompanying warships to the region. There it will join the USS Harry Truman - which has already come under repeat attempts of the Houthis to attack it in the Red Sea region.

The Vinson is traveling to the area from the Asia Pacific. Hegseth has also "ordered the deployment of additional squadrons and other air assets that will further reinforce our defensive air-support capabilities."

Paris is on Wednesday hosting Iran-related diplomatic talks over finding a way forward. France's Foreign Ministry has issued a statement saying the window of opportunity for a new nuclear agreement with Iran is "narrow and if a deal cannot be reached then a military confrontation seems to be almost inevitable."

President Trump has basically laid out a strong, provocative ultimatum: Tehran can either sign a fresh deal or face American bombs.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has hit back, warning a "strong counterattack" would certainly ensue. Iranian state media has been highlighting that some ten US military bases in the region are in range of Iranian missiles.

Another sign that Trump might be serious about preemptive strikes is that last week the Pentagon dispatched at least five B-2 bombers to the American base at Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean.


The wildest intercept video I’ve ever seen. A F/A-18F and F-35C escort a Ilyushin Il-38N low level past the USS Carl Vinson. 🤯
Do you think they did the whole SEDLO SEDLO SEDLO. DELTA ECHO. IVORY EAGLE thing over the radio? pic.twitter.com/m4xxPTMqDF
— Thenewarea51 (@thenewarea51) March 27, 2025
This puts the bombers within close striking distance of either Iran or Yemen. Likely any escalation between Tehran and Washington would occur outside Iran, with the US likely to strike at 'proxies' first. 

Russia and Iran have meanwhile still been talking about Moscow running point as an outside mediator between Tehran and Washington over its nuclear energy program. The US administration has so far seemed open to this.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 14:40

Atlas Obscura
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The Four Way in Memphis, Tennessee

The Hill
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The Hill
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The Hill
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Judge allows UC Berkeley antisemitism lawsuit to proceed
A district judge ruled Monday that an antisemitism lawsuit accusing the University of California, Berkeley of inaction regarding harassment of Jewish students can proceed.  District Judge James Donato in a 5-page ruling said the suit alleging the university violated the civil rights and equal protection rights of Jewish students could move forward. “Taken as a...

The Hill
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US sanctions network helping to get weapons for Houthis
The United States sanctioned an alleged network of financial facilitators, procurement operatives and companies on Wednesday that are getting weapons, dual-use materials and stolen Ukrainian grain to Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen, the Treasury Department announced on Wednesday.  Two operatives — brothers who are based in Russia — Afghani businessmen Hushang Ghairat and Sohrab Ghairat, have...

The Hill
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Watch live: Trump gives remarks on 'Liberation Day' tariffs
President Trump on Wednesday is set to give a "Make America Wealthy Again" speech Wednesday afternoon, when he is expected to announce additional taxes on certain imported goods, as well as reciprocal tariffs on other nations. Trump has deemed April 2 “Liberation Day” because of the tariffs. Despite concern over the economy and financial markets in the...

The Hill
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The Hill
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Rand Paul: 'Fallacy' to think tariffs will help country
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said Wednesday that it is a “fallacy” to think tariffs will help the country's economy as President Trump gears up to impose massive reciprocal tariffs on U.S. trading partners. Paul, who has spoken out against tariffs previously, joined The Hill’s “Rising” on Wednesday, where he discussed his disagreement with tariffs, calling...

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The Segway Navimow X3 Series covers up to 2.5 acres, with four models to tackle any lawn.

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Most people leave their TV on its default settings, but if you have a Samsung, adjusting these options can significantly improve picture quality.

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The US Constitution bars presidents from running for a third term, but Donald Trump apparently wants to run anyway. He says there are "methods." And historically, he hasn't shown much concern for the law.

Mail Online
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Katherine Ryan candidly reveals she cheated on her ex-partner and is 'glad she did' as he 'deserved it'
The comedian, 41, lifted the lid on the past situation in a new episode of the Mad, Sad and Bad with Paloma Faith podcast on Tuesday.

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Emma Raducanu WITHDRAWS from Great Britain's squad for Billie Jean King Cup qualifiers to 'best look after her body' after hectic start to 2025
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Trump sends another aircraft carrier to the Middle East after massing stealth bombers at island air base amid mounting fears he is ready to strike Iran
US president Donald Trump has moved another aircraft carrier to the Middle East after amassing stealth bombers to the nearby Chagos Islands

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The 'dodgy' Turkey clinic that forces Brits to sign a bogus contract threatening to fine them $10,000 if they speak out about botched surgeries
The clinic brokers treatments from mummy makeovers to penis enlargements for international patients in Izmir, claims to be 'internationally distinguished'.

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EU hones in on Central Asia in race for raw materials
The EU has raised billions for the region to diversify supply chains and reduce dependence on China. Experts say the idea is to offer competitive deals and build local industry while encouraging sustainable mining.

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Hair experts weigh in on whether an 'everything shower' is actually DAMAGING
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MP behind assisted dying plan won't rule out plan returning as a Government Bill if it fails crunch vote this month
The Labour MP behind the assisted dying plan said that while she is 'focused on getting the Bill passed' it would be a 'tragedy' if it takes another decade before the subject is revisited.

Mail Online
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Influencer looks suitably ashamed as she's perp walked for 'having sex with her chihuahua'
Logan Guminski, 27, hung her head in shame as she was perp walked following her arrest for allegedly having sex with her Chihuahua.

Mail Online
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Mother who shook her four-month-old daughter to death faces years in prison after being convicted of killing her
Melissa Wilband, 28, was found guilty by a jury of the manslaughter of Lexi Wilband who collapsed at their home in Newent, Gloucestershire, in April 2020.

Mail Online
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With the economy smoking like a wonky Moskvitch, how was Rachel Reeves faring?Was she feeling under the cosh from Donald Trump's tariffs and the pratfall of her Budget?

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I discovered a 'vast city' below Egypt's Giza pyramids... here's why the critics are wrong
As the war over what lies beneath Egypt's Giza pyramids continues, the scientists at the center of the debate have shared new details they believe will quiet critics.

The Guardian (UK)
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Manchester City v Leicester, Newcastle v Brentford, and more: Premier League – live
Updates from Wednesday’s Premier League gamesLiverpool v Everton – live with Michael ButlerLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email SimonDanny Mills, watching the Manchester City game, says he is “confused” by a Leicester side that is “almost waving a white flag”.Ten minutes into the Manchester City game, and a load of fans are just coming in. The protest seems to have had decent numbers, even if the majority of supporters – certainly in the stand that runs along the side of the pitch opposite the TV cameras – were in their seats before kick-off. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offClockwatch: Man City v Leicester and more – liveLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email MichaelYou’ll Never Walk Alone is the next anthem to cascade down from the terraces. David Moyes, in his first Merseyside derby at Anfield in 12, years, looks nonplussed.The players are in the tunnel. Szoboszlai looks like he has grown around three inches of hair over the international break, now dangling down towards his shoulders in an alice band. ‘Allez, Allez, Allez!’ is belted out around Anfield in anticipation of the teams. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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US president claims tariffs part of a ‘liberation day’ that could include levies for China, Brazil, India and the European UnionDonald Trump’s planned tariffs will be negative across the world, with the damage depending on how far they go, how long they last and whether they lead to successful negotiations, the European Central Bank head, Christine Lagarde, said on Wednesday.The Trump administration on Wednesday is set to announce “reciprocal tariffs” targeting nations that have duties on US goods. That move would come after it slapped new import levies on products from Mexico, China and Canada – the top US trading partners – as well as on goods including steel and autos.Wisconsin beat the billionaire.Wisconsin cannot be bought. Our democracy is not for sale. And when we fight, we win. Congratulations, @CrawfordForWI Continue reading...

BBC World News
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Death sentence overturned for three Americans over DR Congo coup attempt
The Americans are among 37 people sentenced to death last September by a military court.

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The ex-president of Costa Rica has compared Donald Trump's behaviour with that of a Roman emperor.

Slashdot
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AI Masters Minecraft: DeepMind Program Finds Diamonds Without Being Taught
An AI system has for the first time figured out how to collect diamonds in the hugely popular video game Minecraft -- a difficult task requiring multiple steps -- without being shown how to play. Its creators say the system, called Dreamer, is a step towards machines that can generalize knowledge learned in one domain to new situations, a major goal of AI. From a report: "Dreamer marks a significant step towards general AI systems," says Danijar Hafner, a computer scientist at Google DeepMind in San Francisco, California. "It allows AI to understand its physical environment and also to self-improve over time, without a human having to tell it exactly what to do." Hafner and his colleagues describe Dreamer in a study in Nature published on 2 April.

In Minecraft, players explore a virtual 3D world containing a variety of terrains, including forests, mountains, deserts and swamps. Players use the world's resources to create objects, such as chests, fences and swords -- and collect items, among the most prized of which are diamonds. Importantly, says Hafner, no two experiences are the same. Every time you play Minecraft, it's a new, randomly generated world," he says. This makes it useful for challenging an AI system that researchers want to be able to generalize from one situation to the next. "You have to really understand what's in front of you; you can't just memorize a specific strategy," he says.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Cybersecurity Professor Faced China Funding Inquiry Before Disappearing
The FBI searched two homes of Indiana University Bloomington data privacy professor Xiaofeng Wang last week, following months of university inquiries into whether he received unreported research funding from China, WIRED reported Wednesday.

Wang, who leads the Center for Distributed Confidential Computing established with a $3 million National Science Foundation grant, was terminated on March 28 via email from the university provost. The university had contacted Wang in December regarding a 2017-2018 grant in China that listed him as a researcher, questioning whether he properly disclosed the funding to IU and in applications for U.S. federal research grants.

Jason Covert, Wang's attorney, said Wang and his wife Nianli Ma, whose employee profile was also removed, are "safe" and neither has been arrested. The couple's legal team has viewed a search warrant but received no affidavit establishing probable cause.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Deutsche Welle
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White House disputes report on timing of Musk's departure
The Trump administration called a report saying Elon Musk would resign from his position as the head of DOGE "garbage." Politico reported Trump said the world's richest man would soon abandon his government role.

The Guardian (UK)
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Manchester City v Leicester, Newcastle v Brentford, and more: Premier League – live
Updates from Wednesday’s Premier League gamesLiverpool v Everton – live with Michael ButlerLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email SimonTen minutes into the Manchester City game, and a load of fans are just coming in. The protest seems to have had decent numbers, even if the majority of supporters – certainly in the stand that runs along the side of the pitch opposite the TV cameras – were in their seats before kick-off.A chance for Aston Villa at Brighton: a fine move works the ball from back to front, Digne’s cross finds McGinn in the middle, but his header flies a yard or two wide. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Liverpool v Everton: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offClockwatch: Man City v Leicester and more – liveLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email MichaelThe players are in the tunnel. Szoboszlai looks like he has grown around three inches of hair over the international break, now dangling down towards his shoulders in an alice band. ‘Allez, Allez, Allez!’ is belted out around Anfield in anticipation of the teams.Arne Slot, Liverpool’s manager, talks:We follow the [concussion'] protocol [with Alisson, who got a knock to the head on Brazil duty]. He is not ready but the good news is that we have Caoimhin [Kelleher]. He is perhaps too good to be Ali’s back up, but it’s good that he plays tonight.Nine games to go but we are taking it one game at a time. Continue reading...

CNET News
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Every New Feature in Switch 2 Joy-Cons and Pro Controller
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A place in the final with Real Madrid awaits today's winners.

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Are Cheap Meal Kit Services Really Any Good? I Tested a Bunch to Get You an Answer
Finding the time to get to the grocery store can be difficult thanks to our increasingly busy lives. That's why we found all the best affordable meal delivery services to get delicious food delivered straight to your door.

CNET News
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T-Mobile Is Offering $300 to Switch to Its Home Internet Service
The $70 monthly All-In plan also includes subscriptions to Hulu and Paramount Plus at no extra cost.

CNET News
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Best Desks of 2025: I've Spent Nearly 4,000 Hours Testing Desks. These Are the Ones You Want
When you're on the hunt for the best desk all the choices for your office space can be overwhelming. We've tested several top choices for hours to give you our thoughts.

CNET News
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Every Switch 2 Game Releasing at Launch
This is going to be a big launch lineup for Nintendo.

TechRadar News
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Without a fresh UI and customization features, the Switch 2 is Nintendo's most boring looking console ever

TechRadar News
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Over $1.5 billion of crypto was lost to scams or theft in just three months of 2025

TechRadar News
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Nintendo's incredible plan to beat back Switch 2 scalpers might mean you finally get one

TechRadar News
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Vibe coding isn’t here to take developer jobs. It’s here to transform them into AI architects

Digital Trends
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This underrated Switch 2 feature demonstrates why Nintendo handhelds thrive
GameShare was one of the most underrated new Nintendo Switch 2 features shown off in the latest Direct.

Digital Trends
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Switch 2 vs. Steam Deck: which is the better handheld to get in 2025
After the Switch launched, a new wave of handhelds emerged. The Steam Deck was able to carve out its own audience, but can it compete with the new Switch 2?

Digital Trends
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The 9 out of 10 LG G4 OLED TV is on sale today for 35% off
The LG 77-inch G4 Series 4K OLED is on sale today for $3,000. Own this magnificent flagship set before this discount disappears.

Digital Trends
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Samsung’s foldable phone plans are more ambitious than we realized
A newly-filed patent suggests Samsung might have plans for a quad-fold device.

Digital Trends
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Asajj Ventress, Cad Bane headline Star Wars: Tales of the Underworld trailer
Two bounty hunters — Asajj Ventress and Cad Bane — headline in the trailer for Star Wars: Tales of the Underworld.

Digital Trends
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Sports fans, this is why the new Apple CarPlay update is a must
Apple has rolled out and now comes the latest updates to Apple CarPlay, including sport support. While there are several new features, including a third row of icons on a larger display, and default navigation app choices for the EU, it’s the sports apps that jump out. This new setup will allow sports apps you […]

Sky News Home
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A gruelling search for bodies in the city at the Myanmar earthquake's epicentre
In Sagaing, the epicentre of the earthquake in Myanmar, the scale of the loss is immense.

The Verge
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Here’s the Switch 2’s homescreen
Nintendo didn’t spend much time on the Switch 2’s UI during today’s big Direct presentation, but the company has just given us a pretty good look at the new console’s homescreen. At the bottom of Nintendo’s webpage detailing how certain games are getting updated Switch 2 Editions, there is a small image of the Switch […]

The Verge
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Here’s everything Nintendo has revealed about the Switch 2’s Joy-Cons
In its April 2nd Direct event, Nintendo revealed a lot of the Switch 2 details we’ve been waiting for, including the console’s price ($449.99 in the US), its June 5th release date, and a slew of new games coming to it, like Mario Kart World and Donkey Kong Bananza. The video and details the company […]

Gizmodo
Open 
This Experimental Pill Could Become the First-Ever Drug for Cocaine Addiction
In a small Phase II trial, people with cocaine use disorder who took mavoglurant used the drug less often over a three month period than those on a placebo.

Gizmodo
Open 
Screamboat‘s Director Breaks Down the Ins and Outs of Public Domain Horror
How does one legally turn the Mickey Mouse character Steamboat Willie into a horror killer? Let's find out.

The Guardian (UK)
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Emma Raducanu withdraws from Great Britain squad for BJK Cup qualifiers
Raducanu will miss matches in Netherlands next weekBritish No 2 will focus on training after Miami Open runEmma Raducanu has pulled out of Great Britain’s squad for next week’s Billie Jean King Cup qualifiers against Germany and the Netherlands.The British No 2 reached the quarter-finals of the Miami Open last week, her deepest run at a WTA 1000 event and best tournament performance since her stunning US Open triumph in 2021. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Manchester City v Leicester, Newcastle v Brentford, and more: Premier League – live
Updates from Wednesday’s Premier League gamesLiverpool v Everton – live with Michael ButlerLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email SimonIn their last four games Leicester have won no points, scored no goals, conceded 10 and have generally been in all ways utterly abysmal (if still not as abysmal as Southampton, who have also won no points but have a goal difference of -11). But Manchester City are a lowly 16th in a last-four-game table with four points, and are without Erling Haaland. Is there just a glimmer of hope there for the visitors?No, probably not. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Liverpool v Everton: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offClockwatch: Man City v Leicester and more – liveLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email MichaelArne Slot, Liverpool’s manager, talks:We follow the [concussion'] protocol [with Alisson, who got a knock to the head on Brazil duty]. He is not ready but the good news is that we have Caoimhin [Kelleher]. He is perhaps too good to be Ali’s back up, but it’s good that he plays tonight.Nine games to go but we are taking it one game at a time. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Evidence used to convict Lucy Letby is flawed, leading experts say
Former neonatal nurse’s legal team to hand over 86-page report which they say casts ‘serious doubt’ on guilty verdictThe evidence used to convict Lucy Letby of poisoning babies is flawed, seven leading experts have said, in a dossier that will be submitted to the miscarriage of justice watchdog.The former nurse’s legal team will on Thursday hand an 86-page report to the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) which they say casts “serious doubt” on her convictions. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Slovakia backs plan to shoot 350 bears after man killed in attack
Around a quarter of the country's brown bears will be culled after a man was attacked in a forest.

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
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#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (Update)
Both Engineers have arrived onsite and are currently investigating.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 03:38

Update: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 20:30

Edited: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 19:09

Status: Outage

Maintenance: None

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Middle East: Israel 'dissecting' Gaza, Netanyahu says
The Israeli military is widening its area of control into large parts of the Gaza Strip, the country's prime minister said. Meanwhile, Germany announced that some of its citizens have left Gaza. DW has more.

The Guardian (UK)
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Marc Skinner signs Manchester United deal until 2027 and seeks ‘next steps’
Contract includes option of a further year in chargeDelighted Skinner says ‘it is an absolute privilege’The Manchester United women’s team head coach, Marc Skinner, has signed a new contract until June 2027, with the option of an extra year.Skinner’s previous contract had been scheduled to expire at the end of this season. He is the longest‑serving current manager at a Women’s Super League club, having been appointed in the summer of 2021 following the resignation of Casey Stoney. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Manchester City v Leicester, Newcastle v Brentford, and more: Premier League – live
Updates from Wednesday’s Premier League gamesLiverpool v Everton – live with Michael ButlerLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email SimonStephy Mavididi is on the bench for Leicester against Manchester City tonight, having apparently had a couple of headphone issues in the build-up. There was one-ear Mavididi:And then no-ear Mavididi. This is not my understanding of how headphones work: Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Liverpool v Everton: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offClockwatch: Man City v Leicester and more – liveLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email MichaelAnd for the Bluenoses, the last time Everton fans celebrated a winner at Anfield, back in 1999.Also: Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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UK government tries to placate opponents of AI copyright bill
Economic impact assessment is one concession aiming to head off opposition from MPs, peers and creatives such as Paul McCartney and Tom StoppardThe UK government is trying to placate peer and Labour backbencher concerns about copyright proposals by pledging to assess the economic impact of its plans.Creative professionals including Sir Paul McCartney, Sir Tom Stoppard and Kate Bush have strongly criticised ministers’ proposals to let artificial intelligence companies train their models on copyright-protected work without permission, unless the rights holder opts out. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘No agenda’ in Guardian investigation of Noel Clarke, high court hears
Actor accuses newspaper of libel in articles about his alleged sexual misconductThere was “no agenda” in the Guardian’s investigation of sexual misconduct allegations against Noel Clarke, the high court has heard.In her second day in the witness box, Lucy Osborne, an investigative correspondent at the Guardian, defended the publication’s reporting in the face of questioning from the former Doctor Who star’s barrister, Philip Williams. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Evidence used to convict Lucy Letby is flawed, leading experts say
Former neonatal nurse’s legal team prepare 86-page report for CCRC that they say casts ‘serious doubt’ on guilty verdictThe evidence used to convict Lucy Letby of poisoning babies is flawed, seven leading experts have said, in a dossier that will be submitted to the miscarriage of justice watchdog.The former nurse’s legal team will on Thursday hand an 86-page report to the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) which they say casts “serious doubt” on her convictions. Continue reading...

Ars Technica
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A 32-bit processor made with an atomically thin semiconductor

Ars Technica
Open 
DOGE staffer’s YouTube nickname accidentally revealed his teen hacking activity

Ars Technica
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AI bots strain Wikimedia as bandwidth surges 50%

Ars Technica
Open 
Not just Signal: Michael Waltz reportedly used Gmail for government messages

Wired Top Stories
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Cybersecurity Professor Faced China-Funding Inquiry Before Disappearing, Sources Say
A lawyer for Xiaofeng Wang and his wife says they are “safe” after FBI searches of their homes and Wang’s sudden dismissal from Indiana University, where he taught for over 20 years.

Boing Boing
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Your brain isn't broken: That murderous rage over chewing sounds has a name
When Jake Eaton was a teenager, he was driven to the brink of insanity by the way his father's jaw popped when the family was at the dinner table. Eaton didn't know it at the time, but has a condition called misophonia, where everyday sounds can trigger intense distress. — Read the rest
The post Your brain isn't broken: That murderous rage over chewing sounds has a name appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Scientists are close to simulating a worm brain
Scientists are on the verge of achieving what's eluded them for 25 years: creating a working computer simulation of the simplest brain we know — that of a tiny worm with just 300 neurons.
As reported by Michael Skuhersky in Asterisk Magazine, researchers have repeatedly tried and failed to simulate the brain of C. — Read the rest
The post Scientists are close to simulating a worm brain appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Register
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Raspberry Pi not affected by Trump tariffs yet while China-tied rivals feel the heat
CEO hails 'transformative year' as IPO puts 'puter maker on the big board Raspberry Pi hasn't felt the sting of US tariffs yet, and having its boards built outside China might give it an edge over rivals, analysts reckon.…

Atlas Obscura
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Payne’s Bar-B-Q in Memphis, Tennessee

Mail Online
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Gang of four boys aged 15 to 17 who 'raped woman in alleyway' are accompanied to court by their mothers
A gang of teenage boys charged with raping a woman in a town centre alleyway appeared before a district judge today, after being accompanied into court by their mothers.

Mail Online
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Tourists are warned of hurricane force winds in Canary Islands as huge Atlantic storm approaches
The Canary Islands has declared a red weather alert for the holiday hotspots of Tenerife and La Palma as a massive storm approaches the region. 

Mail Online
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Kathleen Turner, 70, leans on walker during rare public outing after sparking concern with 'slurring' performance
Kathleen Turner, 70, looked frail and shaky when she made her way along a New York City street to an awaiting vehicle with the help of a walker.

Mail Online
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Amanda Holden fans are all saying the same thing about her husband Chris Hughes as she posts rare date night snap
The radio presenter, 54, looked incredibly glamorous as she posed for a selfie with her music producer husband Chris Hughes, 51.

Mail Online
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The billionaire-filled city so secretive it does not want outsiders to know that it exists
One of the richest cities in America is shrouded in secrecy at the behest of its residents, some of whom are billionaires. The city also has rules such as no knocking on people's doors without permission.

Mail Online
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Dangerous loophole that allows mistake-prone air traffic controllers to dodge punishment and put passengers at risk
Air traffic controllers who sleep at their posts, defy their bosses, and ignore critical safety protocols can avoid punishment thanks to a mind-boggling 'immunity' scheme revealed by DailyMail.com.

Mail Online
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'People are spending large amounts of money on BILGE': PETER HITCHENS says astrology is 'creepy' and 'keeps people from thinking seriously about the world'
The broadcaster argued there is an irony in the fact people will 'militantly' call themselves atheists while 'spending large amounts of time and money' on types of spiritual ritual.

Mail Online
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Woman sent mocking foaming-mouth 'Exorcist' picture by her boss after she suffered seizures following violent attack wins harassment claim
Charlene Friend's manager Lisa Gilbert nicknamed her 'Regan' after the possessed child from the classic 1973 horror film, an employment tribunal heard.

Mail Online
Open 
Psychologists reveal how to FORCE narcissists to tell the truth
If you've ever argued with a narcissist, you already know that it's nearly impossible.

Mail Online
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Frail Val Kilmer's sweet gesture to his daughter during final public appearance before shock death at 65
Val Kilmer maintained a close relationship with his two children, Mercedes and Jack, who he shared with his ex-wife Joanne Whalley, before his shock death at 65.

Mail Online
Open 
All the signs Elon Musk was on brink of stepping down from DOGE after months of scandal and chaos
Less than four months after assuming the role, Trump has reportedly told his inner circle that Elon Musk, 53, will be stepping back from DOGE.

Mail Online
Open 
Johnny Tillotson dead at 86: Poetry in Motion singer passes following battle with Parkinson's
Tillotson passed due to complications from Parkinson's disease, his wife Nancy Tillotson told TMZ .

The Hill
Open 
Potential Trump tariff plan could cost households more than $3K: Analysis
President Trump's potential plan to impose a 20 percent broad tariff on all imports could put a squeeze on households, especially those on the lower end of the income spectrum, an analysis from Yale Budget Lab found. In the analysis released by the policy research center this week, the group found that a 20-percent tariff on all...

The Hill
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FTC chair defends Trump firing of Democratic commissioners
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chair Andrew Ferguson on Wednesday defended President Trump’s decision to fire the agency’s Democratic commissioners.  FTC commissioners Rebecca Kelly Slaughter and Alvaro Bedoya were dismissed from their roles in March, with the administration telling the former commissioners their continued service at the FTC was “inconsistent” with its policies.  The pair sued the administration...

The Hill
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'Unsatisfactory': Dems slam McMahon for dodging questions about end of Education Department in meeting
Democrats slammed Education Secretary Linda McMahon for dodging their questions about the end of her department in a Wednesday meeting, accusing the secretary of not having a plan for moving forward after firing half of her employees.   Rep. Mark Takano (Calif.), one 10 Democratic lawmakers who met with McMahon at the Education Department, said...

The Hill
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Trump, aides meet about TikTok deal ahead of ban deadline
President Trump will host a meeting with top aides Wednesday to discuss potential investors for acquiring TikTok ahead of the April 5 deadline, according to a source familiar with the meeting plans. Trump will meet with Vice President Vance and national security adviser Mike Waltz, who were tasked with spearheading a divestiture deal that could...

The Hill
Open 
No bathroom breaks: How Booker accomplished record Senate speech
Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) set a new record for the longest Senate speech in history on Monday and Tuesday by holding the upper chamber’s floor for more than 25 hours. Booker slammed the policies President Trump has implemented in his second White House term and criticized the Republican Party’s spending cuts in their upcoming tax...

The Hill
Open 
Trump's classical federal building mandate would make architecture backward again
This brewing conflict isn’t merely aesthetic. It represents fundamentally different conceptions of how architecture should serve and preserve society’s past, present and future.

The Hill
Open 
UFC signs multimillion-dollar partnership deal with Meta
UFC signed a multimillion-dollar partnership deal Tuesday with Meta, Facebook's parent company, with the goal of restructuring its fan experience to include artificial intelligence (AI). UFC will use a wide range of its platforms including Meta AI, Meta Glasses, Meta Quest, Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Threads to connect with patrons online and at in-person events. ...

The Hill
Open 
Trump's 'Liberation Day' is here
It’s Wednesday. Hey, if the House gets to cancel its work for this week, can we all go home, too? In today's issue: THE FIRST 100 DAYS Happy ~Liberation Day~ to all who celebrate: President Trump is planning a splashy Rose Garden event this afternoon to announce sweeping tariffs on imported goods. What to expect:...

The Hill
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Jeffries hammers Trump: It’s ‘recession day,’ not ‘liberation day’
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) on Wednesday hammered President Trump and congressional Republicans with accusations that they’re tanking the economy in the name of boosting it. The Democratic leader noted that the president’s central campaign theme was a promise to bring down the cost of consumer staples. Instead, he charged, the president’s plan to...

The Hill
Open 
DeSantis slams GOP winner in Florida special election: 'He's a squish'
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) tore into Rep.-elect Randy Fine (R-Fla.) following his special election win on Tuesday, arguing he only won the race after President Trump bailed him out. In comments at a press conference in Ocala, Fla., DeSantis said the relatively close margins in the deeply red 6th Congressional District was not because...

The Hill
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HHS fires entire staff of program that helps low-income people afford heat and air conditioning
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has fired all of the workers in its program that seeks to help low-income Americans pay their energy bills. Everyone who had been working on the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) was let go on Tuesday, according to now-former employee Andrew Germain. “Every single federal...

The Hill
Open 
Adams plugs Patel's book on 'deep state' in remarks after charges dropped
New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) plugged FBI Director Kash Patel’s book on the “deep state” at the end of his remarks reacting to the corruption case against him officially being dropped. Adams said in his remarks on Wednesday that the case against him should never have been brought and maintained that he didn’t...

The Hill
Open 
Covenant School shooting: Final report details investigation
The report touches on the shooter's planning as well as the details unveiled during the investigation.

The Hill
Open 
Assessing Hegseth’s interim defense strategic guidance
There is much to like about Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth’s interim national defense strategic guidance document.

The Hill
Open 
DOGE is a nightmare for counterintelligence 
If Donald Trump and Elon Musk were serious about giving their novel experiment in “government efficiency” a chance to be done right, they would stand down DOGE operations until sound security guardrails can be put in place.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Gaza bakeries shut and painkillers on ration after month of Israeli blockade
Many Palestinians say they are going hungry after Israel stopped all aid deliveries to put pressure on Hamas.

ZDNet News
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T-Mobile settlement payouts begin this month - how much you could get
After a 2021 data breach affected 76 million customers, settlement checks are finally on the way. Here's what you can expect.

ZDNet News
Open 
This Lenovo ThinkPad I tested breaks a decade-long design streak - and it looks fantastic
The ThinkPad X9 Aura Edition is a new take on the iconic workhorse line, with a new design concept and features aimed at MacBook users.

ZDNet News
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ChatGPT's subscribers and revenue soar in 2025 - here's why
OpenAI's furious pace of new features seems to be working as the company strains to keep up with unprecedented demand.

ZDNet News
Open 
I switched to $379 Android phone from my Pixel 9 Pro while traveling - and didn't regret it
With its focus on design and subtle AI enhancements, the Nothing Phone 3a delivers a distinct midrange smartphone experience.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Silivri prison: Inhumane conditions in Turkey's largest jail
The largest high-security jail in Europe houses politicians, activists, journalists and artists, as well as ordinary felons. Human rights groups describe it as an "internment camp," and say conditions are inhumane.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Alcohol makes male fruit flies more attractive
Alcohol increases the release of chemical sex signals and makes males more attractive to females.

FlightAware Squawks
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‘Top Gun’ Star Dies at 65
Actor Val Kilmer passes away from pneumonia at 65.

Mail Online
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Meghan is accused of using marketing ploy so As Ever range sells out minutes after going live including $15 flower sprinkles and $28 honey
The Duchess of Sussex released her line of much-vaunted items, first teased a year ago under a different name, today as she continues to rebrand herself as a 'domestic goddess'.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ex-Barclays boss ‘took a chance’ in lying about his links to Jeffrey Epstein, court hears
UK financial regulator claims Jes Staley feared telling the truth could end his career and fuel potential lawsuits by victims The former chief executive of Barclays Jes Staley took a “chance” in lying to the UK regulator about his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein amid fears that being truthful could end his career and fuel potential lawsuits by victims of the jailed child sex offender, a court has heard.The allegations were made by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) during closing statements for the high-profile case at the upper tribunal in London on Wednesday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Caroline Weir: ‘I am not the loudest but I’d like to think I lead by example’
Midfielder wants to win silverware with Real Madrid and inspire girls and boys in Scotland as the SFA launches Galáctica, a documentary about herIn a Dunfermline back garden, a young girl doing keepy-uppies in her No 5 Zidane Real Madrid kit turns, shoots and scores in the bottom corner of a green, handbuilt, wooden board, painted by her dad to mark the outlines of a goal. Her family’s video footage is a reminder that the one club Caroline Weir always wanted to play for was Real Madrid.Fast forward two decades and that same all-white shirt – this time with Weir on the back – hangs on the walls of an Edinburgh cinema as the 29-year-old greets guests attending the premiere of a documentary the Scottish Football Association have made to honour their 108-times-capped midfielder. It feels fitting the film is being released within a fortnight of Weir scoring two decisive late goals in the women’s team’s first el clásico victory over Barcelona. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Manchester City v Leicester, Newcastle v Brentford, and more: Premier League – live
Updates from Wednesday’s Premier League gamesLiverpool v Everton – live with Michael ButlerLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email SimonLiverpool v Everton has its own liveblog, so if you want to focus on that one game may I suggest you join Michael Butler here. But I won’t be ignoring it, and here are the line-ups:Liverpool: Kelleher, Jones, Konate, Van Dijk, Robertson, Gravenberch, Mac Allister, Salah, Szoboszlai, Diaz, Jota. Subs: Jaros, Endo, Nunez, Chiesa, Gakpo, Elliott, Tsimikas, McConnell, Quansah.Everton: Pickford, O’Brien, Tarkowski, Branthwaite, Mykolenko, Gueye, Garner, Harrison, Doucoure, Alcaraz, Beto. Subs: Virginia, Patterson, Keane, Ndiaye, Chermiti, Young, Broja, Coleman, Iroegbunam.Referee: Sam Barrott. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Liverpool v Everton: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offClockwatch: Man City v Leicester and more – liveLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email MichaelIn the absence of Trent Alexander-Arnold and Joe Gomez, it looks like Curtis Jones is going to fill in at right back, preferred to Quansah. Alisson does not make the Liverpool squad at all after his injury during Brazil’s game with Colombia. Kelleher comes in.For Everton, Mykolenko is cleared to play, which is a big plus considering Moyes’ lack of options at left back. Ndiaye is only fit enough for the bench, while McNeil and Calvert-Lewin are both still out. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Starmer sails through PMQs as Badenoch fails to get out of the blocks again | John Crace
It’s almost as if KemiKaze herself believes Labour’s mantra that the Tories are the source of all hopelessnessThere will come a moment when the Labour claim that the Tories are to blame for everything will no longer stick. People will start shaking their heads and reckon that Labour have something to answer for. But we’re not quite there yet. At least not at prime minister’s questions. For half an hour in the Commons every Wednesday the Conservatives remain the villains of the piece.Partly it’s the size of the Labour majority. The sheer volume of half-witted Labour MPs who are happy to bounce up and down to ask Keir Starmer whether he agrees with them that the Tories left the country in a shocking mess and only the prime minister can save their constituents. The Lib Dems and the SNP are only slightly fiercer critics of the present government. They too hate the Tories more than anyone else. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Dinosaur tracks uncovered at site of Bonnie Prince Charlie’s refuge
Jacobite leader was unknowingly ‘following the footprints’ of megalosaurs after escaping to the Isle of Skye in 1746When Bonnie Prince Charlie fled the Scottish Highlands after defeat at the Battle of Culloden, his route may have crossed the fossilised footsteps of massive meat-eating dinosaurs, researchers say.Newly discovered impressions at Prince Charles’s Point on the Isle of Skye, where the Young Pretender is said to have hunkered down in 1746, reveal that megalosaurs, the carnivorous ancestors of the T rex, and enormous plant-eating sauropods gathered at the site when it was a shallow freshwater lagoon. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump hours away from unveiling global tariffs in possible shake-up of US economic strategy – live
US president claims tariffs part of a ‘liberation day’ that could include levies for China, Brazil, India and the European UnionDonald Trump’s planned tariffs will be negative across the world, with the damage depending on how far they go, how long they last and whether they lead to successful negotiations, the European Central Bank head, Christine Lagarde, said on Wednesday.The Trump administration on Wednesday is set to announce “reciprocal tariffs” targeting nations that have duties on US goods. That move would come after it slapped new import levies on products from Mexico, China and Canada – the top US trading partners – as well as on goods including steel and autos.Wisconsin beat the billionaire.Wisconsin cannot be bought. Our democracy is not for sale. And when we fight, we win. Congratulations, @CrawfordForWI Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Slovakia calls for culling hundreds of bears
The Slovakian government has declared an emergency for much of the country after a man was mauled by a bear and died. PM Robert Fico said Slovakians "can't live in a country where people are afraid of going to forests."

Techdirt
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Daily Deal: LabsDigest Subscription
LabsDigest is built for those who learn best by doing. Whether you’re preparing for a CompTIA certification or diving into Python development, our platform offers interactive labs that simulate real-world tasks—no passive watching or reading, just real experience. Work through performance-based exercises for CompTIA A+, Network+, Security+, and more, or sharpen your coding skills with […]

Techdirt
Open 
ICE Is Using Pure Bullshit To Turn People Into Venezuelan Gang Members To Keep Hitting Its Daily Arrest Quota
Donald Trump has decided he can’t do immigration enforcement without doing war crimes. That’s where we’re at now as a country: under the thumb of someone exercising executive war powers to remove anyone looking faintly Mexican from the country under the extremely dubious theory that the people rounded up by ICE are all members of […]

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Tell us your memories of Record Breakers
After 24 years off air, the children’s BBC programme Record Breakers is to be rebooted. We would like to hear about your memories of the original BBC showThe children’s BBC show Record Breakers is to be rebooted after 24 years off air – with the working title World Record Breakers: The Rivals.Record Breakers, which ran from 1972 to 2001, featured world record attempts and interviews with record holders. It was originally presented by Roy Castle with Guinness World Records founders Norris McWhirter and Ross McWhirter. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Manchester City v Leicester, Newcastle v Brentford, and more: Premier League – live
Updates from Wednesday’s Premier League gamesLiverpool v Everton – live with Michael ButlerLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email SimonTeam news is filtering through. I’ll put all the Premier League line-ups here, shall I? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Liverpool v Everton: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offClockwatch: Man City v Leicester and more – liveLive scoreboard | Read Football Daily | Email MichaelA quick glance at the table and another at David Moyes’ record at Anfield – played 21, won none, lost 14 – suggests that this could be a formality for Liverpool, who will restore their 12-point lead at the top of the Premier League with victory tonight.But anyone who watched the reverse fixture in February, the last ever Merseyside derby at Goodison Park that ended with James Tarkowski’s volley into the roof of Liverpool’s net, knows this is not going to be a straightforward night for tonight’s hosts. Everton have not lost since that February derby and they will be fired up. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
Nintendo Switch 2 Event: Everything Announced for the New Console
The $450 console will get Mario Kart World at launch, games in 4K and new GameChat communication features.

CNET News
Open 
GameCube Games Are Coming to Switch Online: Here's the List
Owners of the Nintendo Switch 2 can play three games at launch, with more GameCube titles to come.

CNET News
Open 
Nintendo Switch 2 vs. Switch 1: Every Detail Compared
The Nintendo Switch 2's official specs aren't too different, but the new console has a lot of upgrades on the original Switch.

CNET News
Open 
Premier League Soccer: Stream Man City vs. Leicester City Live From Anywhere
Pep Guardiola's men resume their battle to finish in the top four of the EPL as they host the relegation-threatened Foxes.

CNET News
Open 
2025 Is a Year Full of Meteor Showers: A Big One Arrives Next Week
You don't need to pay for a streaming service to watch a sky full of shooting stars.

CNET News
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Premier League Soccer: Stream Liverpool vs. Everton Live From Anywhere
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Best LED Masks of 2025, FDA Cleared
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CNET News
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Yes, Silksong Is Coming in 2025, as Revealed in Switch 2 Nintendo Direct
About five seconds of the Hollow Knight's sequel was shown in an hour-long Nintendo livestream.

CNET News
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CNET News
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Every New Feature in Switch 2 Joy-Cons and Pro Controller
The Switch 2 will have some familiar-looking controllers that have some new tweaks.

Mac Rumours
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Apple Seeds First Betas of visionOS 2.5, tvOS 18.5, and watchOS 11.5
Apple today provided developers with the first betas of upcoming visionOS 2.5, tvOS 18.5, and watchOS 11.5 updates for testing purposes. The software is available a day after Apple released the visionOS 2.4, tvOS 18.4, and watchOS 11.4 software.





The betas are available to registered developers, and can be downloaded from the Settings app on each device.



As of right now, there is no word on what's included in any of the betas, but should new features be found, we'll update this article. This article, 'Apple Seeds First Betas of visionOS 2.5, tvOS 18.5, and watchOS 11.5' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Seeds First Beta of iOS 18.5 to Developers
Apple today seeded the first betas of upcoming iOS 18.5 and iPadOS 18.5 updates to developers for testing purposes, with the software coming just two days after Apple released iOS 18.4 and iPadOS 18.4.





iOS 18.5 and iPadOS 18.5 can be downloaded from the Settings app on a compatible device by going to General > Software Update.



We don't yet know what Apple is introducing in the iOS 18.5 update, but we are still waiting on new Siri Apple Intelligence features. That functionality may not be coming until next year, though, so it's unclear if we'll get any new ‌Apple Intelligence‌ tools in the beta.



Once we download the beta and discover that's included, we'll update this article with details.

Related Roundups: iOS 18, iPadOS 18Related Forums: iOS 18, iPadOS 18This article, 'Apple Seeds First Beta of iOS 18.5 to Developers' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Seeds First Beta of macOS Sequoia 15.5
Apple today seeded the first beta of an upcoming macOS Sequoia 15.4 update to developers for testing purposes, with the software coming two days after Apple released ‌macOS Sequoia‌ 15.4.





Registered developers can opt-in to the ‌macOS Sequoia‌ beta through the Software Update section of the System Settings app. An Apple ID associated with an Apple Developer account is required to get the beta.



We don't yet know what's included in the macOS 15.5 update, but we are waiting on new Apple Intelligence features. It's not clear if that functionality will be in the beta, but there isn't much else that Apple hasn't added to ‌macOS Sequoia‌.



Apple will soon start transitioning to macOS 16, which is set to be unveiled at WWDC in June. Related Roundup: macOS SequoiaRelated Forum: macOS SequoiaThis article, 'Apple Seeds First Beta of macOS Sequoia 15.5' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

TechRadar News
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11 things we learned from the Nintendo Switch 2 Direct, including the new Mario Kart, pricing for the console, and some fancy new features

TechRadar News
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ChatGPT was down again – here's everything we know about the latest outage

TechRadar News
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Free Microsoft Windows rival gets first major update in four years but is it already too little, too late?

Digital Trends
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You don’t need a Pixel to experience Google Gemini’s live camera mode
Earlier this year, Google announced a long-awaited Gemini AI feature, previously known as Project Astra. Recently, it has been confirmed that Gemini Live’s camera and screen-sharing features will not be exclusive to Pixel devices. As uncovered by 9to5Google, a Google support article states that camera and screen sharing in Gemini Live will be available on […]

Digital Trends
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Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7: Everything we know so far
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Digital Trends
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MediaTek’s Kompanio Ultra chip pits Chromebooks against Copilot PCs
MediaTek's Kompanio Ultra, destined for Chromebooks, offers more AI firepower than Windows Copilot PCs and a host of other flagship-tier perks, too.

Digital Trends
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Switch 2 vs. Switch: should you make the switch?
The Switch 2 and Switch may look very similar, but there are a lot of differences under the hood. Let's compare the two and see if it is worth the upgrade.

The Verge
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Here’s how you can preorder the Nintendo Switch 2 (or try to)
After years of rumors, Nintendo has finally announced a release date for the Switch 2. The long-awaited successor to the Switch will be available on June 5th for $449.99. It will be available for preorder in the US from select retailers starting on April 9th, as both a standalone console or bundled with Mario Kart World […]

The Verge
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Nintendo says the eShop will run more smoothly on the Switch 2
If you’ve dreaded entering the eShop for most of the original Switch’s life because of how slow it is, well, Nintendo knows and won’t make that mistake again. The Switch 2 will have a faster-performing eShop channel “even when displaying a large number of games,” Takuhiro Dohta, Nintendo’s senior director for entertainment planning and development, […]

The Verge
Open 
Every Nintendo Switch 2 game announced in the Switch 2 Direct
During today’s big Nintendo Switch 2 Direct, Nintendo showed off a whole bunch of games coming to the system. Many will launch on June 5th alongside the Switch 2, including Mario Kart World, enhanced editions of Breath of the Wild and Tears of the Kingdom, and new chapters in Toby Fox’s Deltarune. I think it’s […]

The Verge
Open 
Google’s NotebookLM leader is taking over as head of the Gemini app
Sissie Hsaio, the Google exec who oversaw the launch of the company’s AI chatbot, is stepping down as head of the Gemini app, according to a report from Semafor. A memo seen by the outlet reveals that Google Labs vice president Josh Woodward will take her place. In the memo, Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis […]

Gizmodo
Open 
JBL Go 4 Drops to All-Time Low, the Perfect Pocket-Sized Speaker for Spring Adventures
The JBL Go 4 is available in a variety of colors at Amazon for a limited time — now at its lowest price ever!

Gizmodo
Open 
Severance‘s Showrunner Promises Fans Won’t Have to Wait Too Long for Season 3
The smash hit Apple TV+ series wrapped up its second season in March.

The Guardian (UK)
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MPs’ attacks on judges a huge threat to the rule of law, says attorney general
Richard Hermer has responded to Robert Jenrick’s calls for a senior judge to be sacked over sentencing guidelines rowPolitical attacks on judges are “dangerous” and “a huge threat to the rule of law and the independence of the judiciary”, the attorney general has said in a direct rebuke to the shadow justice secretary.Richard Hermer said politics was entering a “dangerous moment” where politicians were “attacking judges on a personal basis” on the floor of the House of Commons. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US banks predict climate goals will fail – but air conditioning firms will thrive
Reports predict global heating will bring catastrophes and that air conditioning market could grow by 41%The world is on track for disastrous global heating – but this will create profits for some air conditioning companies, according to forecasts by leading Wall Street financial institutions.Recent reports by Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase and the Institute of International Finance all make clear the finance sector considers the Paris climate agreement limiting global temperatures, signed a decade ago by nearly 200 nations, is effectively dead and investors should plan accordingly. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The Guardian view on dignity at the workplace: good for the economy as well as society | Editorial
Labour must ignore the business lobbies and forge ahead with Angela Rayner’s landmark employment rights billA few years ago, the Harvard professor Michael Sandel used an episode in his Radio 4 series The Public Philosopher to discuss perspectives on the value of work. Canvassing the views of a Dagenham audience ranging from low-paid retail employees to white‑collar professionals, Prof Sandel drew two principal conclusions: work was widely viewed as a potential source of self-esteem and communal purpose; but for too many its oppressive reality was one of stress, precarity and a sense of disempowerment.Some of the bleak consequences of that divide are outlined in the impact assessments accompanying Angela Rayner’s employment rights bill, which is now passing through the House of Lords. In 2022/23, for example, 17.1m working days were lost due to stress, depression or anxiety – equivalent to an estimated £5bn in lost output. Around 2 million employees reported anxiety due to a lack of clarity over the number of hours they will work, or shifts suddenly being changed. A lack of adequate employment protection means that some 4,000 pregnant women and mothers returning from maternity leave lose their jobs each year. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The Guardian view on online safety: don’t let Trump dictate the terms of debate | Editorial
The White House and tech oligarchs are using free speech arguments as cover to suffocate any European attempt to regulate digital spaceIn 1858, when London could no longer tolerate the stench of raw effluent in the Thames, city authorities commissioned a system of sewers that operates to this day. A century later, when noxious fog choked the capital, parliament passed the first Clean Air Act, limiting coal fire emissions.When a dangerous toxin assails the senses, polluting public space to the detriment of all that use it, the case for legislation is self-evident. The argument is more complex when the poison has no chemical properties; when it exists in a virtual realm. This is the conceptual challenge for regulation of digital content. It is made all the more complex by conflation with arguments about free speech and censorship. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Heathrow should not mark its own homework on energy resilience | Nils Pratley
External review of choice to close after fire would have more credibility than one by a board director. It is not too late“We purchase and pay for a resilient setup from our suppliers,” Thomas Woldbye, Heathrow’s under-pressure chief executive, told the transport select committee, adding that the airport racked up energy costs of £135m a year. “Are we then also supposed to have a setup next to it? And then we would have to have a whole power station at the cost of billions to the airlines.”So runs Heathrow’s case that there was no alternative to closing the airport for a full day last month after a fire knocked out a nearby National Grid substation, one of three serving the airport. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Liberation day’: what are tariffs and why do they matter?
Donald Trump’s threats to impose widescale import levies have spooked governments, investors and analysts alike. Here’s why …US politics live – latest updatesDonald Trump has said “tariffs” is the most beautiful word in the dictionary.The US president is expected to announce his latest round of these border taxes on Wednesday at 4pm ET (9pm BST). In what he is calling “liberation day”, Trump has argued the step is needed to raise money and to encourage domestic manufacturing. But it is also rattling the global economy. Continue reading...

Mail Online
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NASA astronaut's health struggles revealed after 286 days abandoned in space
The teenaged daughter of NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore has spoken out about his health challenges after spending more than nine months in space.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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England to be 'accountable' for fitness - Edwards
New head coach Charlotte Edwards will make England players “accountable” for their fitness following criticism during a dismal winter.

Mail Online
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Daughter of NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore reveals dad's health struggles since returning home from space
The teenaged daughter of NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore has spoken out about his health challenges after spending more than nine months in space.

The Guardian (UK)
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Judiciary must be protected, says Macron, as judge who sentenced Le Pen put under guard
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The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Attorney general says MPs attacks on judges ‘a huge threat to the rule of law’
Richard Hermer has responded to Robert Jenrick’s calls for a senior judge to be sacked over sentencing guidelines rowPolitical attacks on judges are “dangerous” and “a huge threat to the rule of law and the independence of the judiciary”, the attorney general has said in a direct rebuke to the shadow justice secretary.Richard Hermer said politics was entering a “dangerous moment” where politicians were “attacking judges on a personal basis” on the floor of the House of Commons. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Florida and Wisconsin election results are a warning for Trump and Republicans | Lloyd Green
Republicans in Florida couldn’t re-create Trump’s November margins, while Musk’s efforts in Wisconsin failedDonald Trump and the Republicans ought to be wary of a possible blue wave in next year’s midterms. On Tuesday, voters in Florida and Wisconsin signaled dissatisfaction with Elon Musk, the GOP and the president. On the surface, the results spelled political equipoise. No seats changed hands.A closer look, however, reveals possible headaches for Donald Trump and his party. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Heathrow should not mark its own homework on energy resilience
External examination of choice to close after fire would have more credibility than review by its director. It is not too late“We purchase and pay for a resilient setup from our suppliers,” Thomas Woldbye, Heathrow’s under-pressure chief executive, told the transport select committee, adding that the airport racked up energy costs of £135m a year. “Are we then also supposed to have a setup next to it? And then we would have to have a whole power station at the cost of billions to the airlines.”So runs Heathrow’s case that there was no alternative to closing the airport for a full day last month after a fire knocked out a nearby National Grid substation, one of three serving the airport. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reeves defends Labour’s £40bn tax rise as businesses prepare for NICs hike
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Sky News Home
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Elon Musk to step back from government role 'in coming months'
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BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Private school parents must pay fair share, court hearing VAT challenge is told
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Ars Technica
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Boing Boing
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Lauren Boebert groped in the dark again, this time muffing on the House floor when she confused director Oliver Stone with MAGA's dirty trickster Roger Stone. But she was handily put in her place.
"Mr. Stone, you wrote a book accusing LBJ of being involved in the killing of President Kennedy. — Read the rest
The post Lauren Boebert makes fool of herself again — confuses Oliver Stone with Roger Stone (video) appeared first on Boing Boing.

TechRadar Reviews
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Microsoft Defender review

Deutsche Welle
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Slovakia calls for culling hundreds of bears
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ZeroHedge News
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Putin Envoy Visits Washington For Talks In First Since 2022 Ukraine Invasion
Putin Envoy Visits Washington For Talks In First Since 2022 Ukraine Invasion

Earlier this week the Kremlin said it has given the Trump White House formal notification and evidence showing that Ukraine has continued attacking Russian energy sites, despite the US-backed agreement for each side to refrain from hitting this infrastructure.

On Wednesday Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that so far there's been no response from the Trump administration. "So far, there has been no reaction to such actions by the Kiev regime," Peskov said.

Previously Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov described that a list of violations had been handed over to US National Security Advisor Mike Waltz, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Russia’s representatives in the UN and the OSCE, "so that they in their work would present concrete facts demonstrating what the word of the Ukrainian authorities is worth," according to TASS.
Kirill Dmitriev (right) is in Washington this week. Getty Images

But Ukraine has said it has done the same thing, as both sides have lately accused the other of violating the partial ceasefire. "We have passed on all the necessary information about Russian violations in the energy sector," President Zelensky said in a Tuesday evening address.

He has called on Washington to strengthen sanctions on Russia, and as of Thursday the US Treasury has issued some further anti-Russia sanctions on its website.

"I believe we have come to the point of increasing the sanctions impact, because I believe that the Russians are violating what they have promised America. At least what America has told us, and publicly," Zelensky said.

This week for the first time a top Russian negotiator and Putin representative will meet with Trump official Steve Witkoff in Washington. The US has temporarily waved sanctions on the Russian official in order to grant him a visa for the visit.

"His visit will mark the first time a senior Russian official has visited Washington, DC, for talks since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022 and marks a further step in the marked warming in relations between the two countries since President Donald Trump returned to office in January," CNN writes.

Kirill Dmitriev is a "close adviser to Putin and traveled with top Russian officials to Riyadh in Saudi Arabia in February to start discussing a settlement for the end of the war in Ukraine," the report notes. "He also worked with Witkoff to free American teacher Marc Fogel from Russia, which the Trump administration hailed as a goodwill gesture."

As for where overall negotiations to end the war in Ukraine stand, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov said Tuesday that current US proposals on ending the war can't be accepted in their current form.


Assuming CNN is accurate, Putin is sending a Harvard-educated financier—not a general, politician or spymaster—to meet Trump’s team in DC. Dmitriev runs Russia’s sovereign wealth fund. Until a month ago, he wasn’t even a Kremlin official. It says a lot about Moscow’s game plan. https://t.co/s6sOwpjJW6
— Brian McDonald (@27khv) April 1, 2025
He complained they don't address the "root causes" and that Kiev doesn't appear ready to get serious about pursuing peace.

“What we have today is an effort to find a framework that would make it possible to ensure America’s vision for a ceasefire. The idea is to then move on to some other models and frameworks, which, as far as we can see, leave no room for Russia’s core demand, that is, the need to resolve the issues stemming from the root causes of this conflict,” he said, as quoted in TASS.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 12:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Tesla Shares Rise Over Report That Musk To 'Step Back' From DOGE
Tesla Shares Rise Over Report That Musk To 'Step Back' From DOGE

Shares of Tesla rose on Wednesday following an anonymously sourced Politico report (keeping in mind Musk just yanked millions in government 'subscriptions' from them) that President Trump has told his inner circle that Musk would be stepping back from his advisory role in the coming weeks.



Musk, who Politico describes as "governing partner, ubiquitous cheerleader and Washington hatchet man" (totally not salty), claims that Trump "remains pleased with Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency initiative but both men have decided in recent days that it will soon be time for Musk to return to his businesses and take on a supporting role."

Then Politico gets extra nasty - writing that "Musk’s looming retreat comes as some Trump administration insiders and many outside allies have become frustrated with his unpredictability and increasingly view the billionaire as a political liability, a dynamic that was thrown into stark relief Tuesday when a conservative judge Musk vocally supported lost his bid for a Wisconsin Supreme Court seat by 10 points."

One anonymous official allegedly told Politico that Musk is likely to retain an informal advisory role and continue to be an occasional face around the White House, while another said that anyone who thinks Musk is going to disappear entirely from Trump's orbit is "fooling themselves."

As we noted above, shares of Musk-owned Tesla rose more than 5% on the report.



While Polymarket odds that he'll be out as the head of DOGE in 2025 spiked as well.



Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 12:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Will Today's Trump Moves Force The Fed To Act?
Will Today's Trump Moves Force The Fed To Act?

Authored by Peter Tchir via Academy Securities,

Apparently today at 4:00 pm we will learn the details of this wave of tariffs.

Treasury Secretary said yesterday that this will represent a “cap” on tariffs and basically the starting point of negotiations from here (we will see if that messaging sticks).

What I think we know:


Relatively little “negotiating” has occurred, which I believe is not what the administration expected. Other countries are “playing” the President differently than they did during Trump 1.0. It also probably doesn’t help that this time around, there is no “divide and conquer”.


Other countries are already having conversations about trade, bypassing the U.S.  Apparently, Japan, China and South Korea are talking. That makes sense as the U.S. policy toward Taiwan is unclear and that could dramatically impact South Korea and Japan. Canada and Mexico are apparently having discussions. I’m sure Europe (or some countries within Europe) are having a variety of trade dialogues (it is really, really, really important to notice that they do not want to spend their increased military spending on U.S. equipment – to the extent they can avoid it).


Other countries are likely going through their tariffs, line by line, estimating which ones they can give in on, with minimal impact and which ones are important. Given that the U.S. is fighting with everyone and allegedly still hasn’t finalized its plan, we are likely to not fare well at the granular level.


The Geopolitical actions so far – from NATO, to Russia/Ukraine, to 51st State, to “take” Greenland, etc., have only added to the questions about dealing with the U.S. that other countries have.


The U.S. does not have a lot of excess capacity (it will take time to build) and so far no legislation on the deregulation front  

Deliberate/Thoughtful Tariffs :

Risk Assets can and should rally. If these sort of tariffs had been the starting point, we could probably move on. But they weren’t and coupled with the issues listed above, I think the rally will stall. It will need indications that global tensions with trading partners have eased to reduce. It will be curious to see how his base responds? Will there be any erosion of the aura of “the art of the deal”?
Medium Level of Tariffs:

Anything less than 15% to 20% across the board tariffs. I expect slight risk asset rally (market seem desperate to rally on certainty) but think that fades quickly and we drift lower, trading on headlines going forward. 
Aggressive Tariffs

Immediate sell-off in risk assets. Stocks drop 3% or more quickly with ongoing selling pressure. 10-year treasury likely breaks 4%.
I hear a lot of chatter that the policies will force the Fed to act. 

Maybe but, I think the Fed will act late and it will be too small relative to the total revamp of global trade to stop the slide. 

There were a lot of easier ways to get the Fed to cut – like stick to “drill baby drill”, reduce regulations (ideally via legislation as opposed to executive orders), etc. 

The whole “this is all to get the Fed to cut” is incredibly risky (who knows what was set in motion) and only seems to have gotten traction because Wall Street doesn’t want to believe how much this administration believes in the benefits of tariffs.



Hopefully I will be disappointed and wrong and markets can rally and threats to the global economy can be greatly reduced, but I think once we get beyond debating the tariffs, we will be forced to digest the mess that global trade is in, and that cannot be good for corporate earnings or the economy.

For better or for worse, here is Academy on Bloomberg TV this morning, where, the jetlag worked in my favor as I was up at 3 am anyways 



Should be an interesting few days, to say the least!

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 12:40

BBC World News
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Inside Mandalay: BBC joins rescuers searching for earthquake dead in Myanmar
The BBC’s Yogita Limaye is the first foreign journalist to enter the country since the disaster struck.

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The Hill
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Watch: NYC Mayor Eric Adams gives remarks after corruption case dismissed
New York City Mayor Eric Adams briefed reporters Wednesday afternoon — the same day a federal judge dismissed his criminal corruption case. The decision, citing prejudice, ensures the charges cannot be refiled. The ruling comes after the Department of Justice (DOJ) requested the case — in which Adams was facing a range of charges alleging...

The Hill
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President Trump's potential plan to impose a 20 percent broad tariff on all imports could put a squeeze on households, especially those on the lower end of the income spectrum, an analysis from Yale Budget Lab found. In the analysis released by the policy research center this week, the group found that a 20-percent tariff on all...

The Hill
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Federal Trade Commission (FTC) chair Andrew Ferguson on Wednesday defended President Trump’s decision to fire the agency’s Democratic commissioners.  FTC Commissioners Rebecca Kelly Slaughter and Alvaro Bedoya were dismissed from their roles in March, with the administration telling the former commissioners their continued service at the FTC was “inconsistent” with its policies.  The pair sued the administration...

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Democrats slammed Education Secretary Linda McMahon for dodging their questions about the end of her department in a Wednesday meeting, accusing the secretary of not having a plan for moving forward after firing half of her employees.   Rep. Mark Takano (D-Calif.), one 10 Democratic lawmakers who met with McMahon at the Education Department, said...

The Hill
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Trump, aides meet about TikTok deal ahead of ban deadline
President Trump will host a meeting with top aides on Wednesday to discuss potential investors for the sale of deal on TikTok ahead of the April 5 deadline, according to a source familiar with the meeting plans. Trump will meet with Vice President Vance and national security adviser Mike Waltz, who were tasked with spearheading...

The Hill
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No bathroom breaks: How Booker accomplished record Senate speech
Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) set a new record for the longest Senate speech in history on Monday and Tuesday by holding the upper chamber’s floor for over 25 hours. Booker slammed the policies President Trump has implemented in his second White House term and criticized the Republican Party’s spending cuts in their upcoming tax legislation...

Mail Online
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Michelle Pfeiffer breaks silence on Val Kilmer's death as he previously revealed 'intimacy' between them
The 66-year-old actress paid tribute to the Hollywood legend on her Instagram Story as he previously revealed the 'intimacy' between them.

Mail Online
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Mail Online
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Celebrity Big Brother FULL line-up revealed: Mickey Rourke is final star to sign-up as he joins JoJo Siwa, Patsy Palmer and Chesney Hawkes
The full line-up of this year's Celebrity Big Brother has been revealed.

Sky News Home
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More than 400 Sikh groups call on Starmer to launch 'promised' inquiry on Golden Temple massacre
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Mozilla's new open-source Gmail alternative puts your privacy first
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BBC Top Stories (US)
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Raducanu withdraws from GB squad to 'look after body'
Emma Raducanu withdraws from the Great Britain squad for next week's Billie Jean King Cup tie in the Netherlands to "look after her body".

Mail Online
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I was diagnosed with the common 'kissing virus'... it triggered three incurable diseases
Devyn Carr, a college student from Michigan, was diagnosed with three incurable autoimmune diseases after catching the common 'kissing virus' mononucleosis last uear at age 19.

Mail Online
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The teenaged daughter of NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore has spoken out about his health challenges after spending more than nine months in space.

Mail Online
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Lauren Sanchez reveals why fiance Jeff Bezos wanted her to go to space even though she is 'scared'
'We have a saying in our house, "Life takes off on the other side of fear,"' Sánchez said of life with Amazon mogul Jeff Bezos. She then shared: 'Trust me, I'm a little scared too.'

The Guardian (UK)
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Rhinoceros review – Ionesco’s absurdist classic is taken around the horn
Almeida, LondonDespite some delightful clowning, Omar Elerian’s version of this timely tale of conformity has too many ideas and lacks focusOmar Elerian clearly has an aptitude, and appetite, for European absurdism. The director and translator staged an impeccable revival of Eugène Ionesco’s The Chairs three years ago at the Almeida, complete with the masterstroke casting of husband-and-wife duo Kathryn Hunter and the late Marcello Magni.Now comes his version of Ionesco’s magnum opus about the dangers of conformity. This might or might not be set in Ionesco’s provincial French town in which Berenger (Ṣọpẹ́ Dìrísù) becomes the hapless witness of a malaise in which humans are turning into rhinoceroses. It is dismally timely in a world of rising rightwing authoritarianism, with its critique of passivity in the face of barbarism and herd-like conformity. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Woman who violently shook baby daughter guilty of manslaughter
Lexi Wilband, just four months old, collapsed after suffering bleeding on her brain and died in hospital six days laterA woman has been found guilty of the manslaughter of her four-month-old daughter, who died after being violently shaken.Melissa Wilband, 28, was arrested after her daughter, Lexi Wilband collapsed at the family home at Newent in the Forest of Dean during the first Covid lockdown. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The Florida and Wisconsin election results are a warning for Trump and Republicans | Lloyd Green
Republicans in Florida couldn’t re-create Trump’s November margins, while Musk’s efforts in Wisconsin failedDonald Trump and the Republicans ought to be wary of a possible blue wave in next year’s midterms. On Tuesday, voters in Florida and Wisconsin signaled dissatisfaction with Elon Musk, the GOP and the president. On the surface, the results spelled political equipoise. No seats changed hands.A closer look, however, reveals possible headaches for Trump and his party. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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After months of surrender, the Democrats have finally stood up to Trump – thank you, Cory Booker | Emma Brockes
Watching the New Jersey senator hold court for 25 hours felt radical and catharticOne of the problems beleaguering political opponents of Donald Trump has been finding a form of protest that, given the scale of his outrages, doesn’t seem entirely futile. You can parade outside a Tesla showroom. You can hold up dumb little signs during Trump’s address to Congress inscribed with slogans such as “This is not normal” and “Musk steals”. You can, as Democrats appear to have been doing since the election, play dead.Alternatively, you can go for the ostentatious, performative gesture. On Monday evening, Cory Booker, the Democratic senator for New Jersey who carries himself like someone who’d have been happier in an era when men wore capes, started speaking on the floor of the Senate and carried on for 25 hours and five minutes, breaking the chamber’s record by almost 50 minutes and delivering – finally – a solid, usable symbol of rebellion.Emma Brockes is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Conversation on assisted dying ends if bill voted down, says MP
Kim Leadbeater tells colleagues they have duty to change law to spare terminally ill people dreadful consequencesIf the bill to legalise assisted dying is thrown out by MPs later this month then “the conversation ends” on the subject, with dreadful consequences for many terminally ill people, the MP leading the process has said.Speaking at a press conference organised by supporters of the bill, which has its third reading on 25 April when MPs will vote on amendments, Kim Leadbeater said her colleagues in the Commons have a “duty as parliamentarians to change the law now”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Reeves defends £40bn tax increase in autumn budget as businesses prepare for NICs hike
Chancellor says £25bn extra investment into NHS has led to shorter waiting listsRachel Reeves has defended the £40bn in tax increases in autumn’s budget as businesses brace for their impact, saying NHS waiting lists would now be higher if she had not taken action.Employers are set for a £25bn increase in national insurance contributions (NICs), which comes into force on 6 April, at the same time as consumers are being hit by a slew of increases in bills for everything from utilities to car tax. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
The cheerful optimism of supporters of the assisted dying bill has turned to nervousness
The assisted dying bill is entering the make-or-break stage.

Deutsche Welle
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Netflix series 'Adolescence': Teen masculinity in crisis
The popular Netflix series "Adolescence" is causing a stir in the UK and beyond. It explores bullying, misogyny, gender-based violence and the effect of toxic masculinity influencers on today's youth.

Slashdot
Open 
95% of Code Will Be AI-Generated Within Five Years, Microsoft CTO Says
Microsoft Chief Technology Officer Kevin Scott has predicted that AI will generate 95% of code within five years. Speaking on the 20VC podcast, Scott said AI would not replace software engineers but transform their role. "It doesn't mean that the AI is doing the software engineering job.... authorship is still going to be human," Scott said.

According to Scott, developers will shift from writing code directly to guiding AI through prompts and instructions. "We go from being an input master (programming languages) to a prompt master (AI orchestrator)," he said. Scott said the current AI systems have significant memory limitations, making them "awfully transactional," but predicted improvements within the next year.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Amazon Said To Make a Bid To Buy TikTok in the US
An anonymous reader shares a report: Amazon has put in a last-minute bid to acquire all of TikTok, the popular video app, as it approaches an April deadline to be separated from its Chinese owner or face a ban in the United States, according to three people familiar with the bid.

Various parties who have been involved in the talks do not appear to be taking Amazon's bid seriously, the people said. The bid came via an offer letter addressed to Vice President JD Vance and Howard Lutnick, the commerce secretary, according to a person briefed on the matter. Amazon's bid highlights the 11th-hour maneuvering in Washington over TikTok's ownership. Policymakers in both parties have expressed deep national security concerns over the app's Chinese ownership, and passed a law last year to force a sale of TikTok that was set to take effect in January.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Deutsche Welle
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Space junk damaging satellites: How do we remove it?
More than 130 million pieces of space debris orbit Earth. If just one piece collides with a spacecraft, it can disrupt critical navigation systems. The European Space Agency is calling for urgent action.

Deutsche Welle
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Is Zimbabwe's political crisis likely to escalate?
Tensions inside Zimbabwe’s ruling party have the potential to destabilize the southern African country. Analysts warn civil war could follow if party infighting is not resolved.

The Guardian (UK)
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Ex-Barclays boss ‘took a chance’ in lying about his links to Jeffrey Epstein, court hears
UK financial regulator claims Jes Staley feared telling the truth could end his career and fuel potential lawsuits by victims The former chief executive of Barclays Jes Staley took a “chance” in lying to the UK regulator about his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein amid fears that being truthful could end his career and fuel potential lawsuits by victims of the jailed paedophile, a court has heard.The allegations were made by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) during closing statements for the high-profile case at the upper tribunal in London on Wednesday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Conversation ends’ about assisted dying if bill voted down, says MP
Kim Leadbeater tells MPs they have a duty to change the law to spare terminally ill people dreadful consequences If the bill to legalise assisted dying is thrown out by MPs later this month then “the conversation ends” on the subject, with dreadful consequences for many terminally ill people, the MP leading the process has warned.Speaking at a press conference organised by supporters of the bill, which has its third reading on 25 April when MPs will vote on amendments, Kim Leadbeater said her colleagues in the Commons have a “duty as parliamentarians to change the law now”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Evidence of ‘execution-style’ killings of Palestinian aid workers by Israeli forces, doctor says
Forensic consultant says multiple bullets were used from short range in attack that has caused global outrageA forensic doctor who examined the bodies of some of the 15 paramedics and Palestinian rescue workers shot dead by Israeli forces and buried in a mass grave in southern Gaza has said there is evidence of execution-style killing, based on the “specific and intentional” location of shots at close range.The Palestinian Red Crescent Society, the Palestinian Civil Defense and UN employees were on a humanitarian mission to collect dead and wounded civilians outside the southern city of Rafah on the morning of 23 March when they were killed and then buried in the sand by a bulldozer alongside their flattened vehicles, according to the UN. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump hours away from unveiling global tariffs in possible shakeup of US economic strategy – live
US president claims tariffs part of a ‘liberation day’ that could include levies for China, Brazil, India and the European UnionDonald Trump’s planned tariffs will be negative across the world, with the damage depending on how far they go, how long they last and whether they lead to successful negotiations, the European Central Bank head, Christine Lagarde, said on Wednesday.The Trump administration on Wednesday is set to announce “reciprocal tariffs” targeting nations that have duties on US goods. That move would come after it slapped new import levies on products from Mexico, China and Canada – the top US trading partners – as well as on goods including steel and autos.Wisconsin beat the billionaire.Wisconsin cannot be bought. Our democracy is not for sale. And when we fight, we win. Congratulations, @CrawfordForWI Continue reading...

Techdirt
Open 
But His Gmail: National Security Advisor Waltz’s Private Email Hypocrisy
Remember Mike Waltz? The National Security Advisor who’s spent the last few weeks demonstrating his profound inability to handle basic security? First, there was the illegal Signal chat where he accidentally added a journalist while discussing potential war crimes. Then we learned about his completely exposed Venmo contacts and leaked passwords. And now, in a […]

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Women to continue having babies later in life, says ONS
The ONS also projects women will continue having smaller families than previous generations.

CNET News
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GameCube Games Are Coming to Switch Online: Here's the List
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CNET News
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Nintendo Switch 2 vs Switch 1: Every Detail Compared
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CNET News
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Nintendo Switch 2: What We Didn't Get During Nintendo Direct 2025
Commentary: From Mario and Zelda, to more crucial info on the console, here's everything Nintendo missed out of its Direct presentation.

CNET News
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What You Need to Know About Nintendo Switch 2 Edition Games
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If You Love Found Footage Horror Movies, Be Sure to Check Out This Free Gem
A vacant hotel with a dark history lures in the crew of a haunted house attraction.

CNET News
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Nintendo Is Taking on Scalpers With a Genius Switch 2 Purchase Rule
Want to be the first in line to grab a Nintendo Switch 2? I found all of the rules you need to follow.

CNET News
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Premier League Soccer: Stream Man City vs. Leicester City Live From Anywhere
Pep Guardiola's side resume their battle to finish in the top four as they host the relegation-threatened Foxes.

CNET News
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Sony's Bravia 7 Projector Promises More Brightness, Better Contrast
The Bravia Projector 7, aka the VPL-XW5100ES, is a laser-powered high-end projector with the promise of great contrast.

CNET News
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Nintendo Switch 2 Direct Live Recap: Launches June 5, $450 and More Reveals
The Switch 2 Nintendo Direct dropped a ton of info: price, release date and a bevy of new games on launch day and coming in 2025.

Mail Online
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Celebrity Big Brother FULL line-up revealed: Mickey Rourke is final star to sign-up as he joins JoJo Siwa, Patsy Palmer and Chesney Hawkes
Hollywood A-lister and professional boxer Mickey Rourke is the latest shock contestant to be revealed for Celebrity Big Brother. 

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
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#9255 Shared Linux Hosting - cPanel - Poor/Intermittent Performance. (New)
We are currently experiencing some issues regarding cPanel server shcp28.hosting.zen.net.uk. Our team is aware of the situation and is actively working to resolve these issues as quickly as possible.

We apologise for any inconvenience caused.

Start: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 17:35

Update: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 20:30

Edited: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 17:04

Status: Partial

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Autosport F1
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Tsunoda insists he can bring unruly Red Bull F1 car under control
New Red Bull driver Yuki Tsunoda doesn’t expect the tricky characteristics of the team’s Formula 1 car to be a problem for him.Tsunoda has earned promotion to Red Bull’s main outfit from the Japanese Grand Prix onwards after Liam Lawson spectacularly failed to get up to speed with the delicate RB21 machine, while the Japanese racer had a convincing first couple of F1 rounds with Racing ...Keep reading

Mac Rumours
Open 
Amazon Makes Last Minute Offer for TikTok as Ban Looms
Retail giant Amazon today made an offer to acquire TikTok just days ahead of when TikTok must be sold off or face a ban, reports The New York Times. Unspecified participants involved in the TikTok talks "do not appear to be taking Amazon's bid seriously," and multiple interested parties are scrambling to plead their cases for a TikTok purchase.





As of January 19, the Protecting Americans From Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act that bans TikTok from operating in the U.S. under Chinese control has been in effect, but U.S. President Donald Trump gave TikTok a reprieve by ordering the Department of Justice to not enforce the law for a 75-day period. That window is set to expire on Saturday, April 5, and a sale of TikTok's U.S. operations must be arranged by that time or the app will be shut down again.



The Trump administration has been considering offers from companies like Oracle and Perplexity, along with individuals like Jimmy Donaldson (also known as MrBeast), Shark Tank host Kevin O'Leary, Employer.com founder Jesse Tinsley, and billionaire Frank McCourt. Trump plans to meet with White House officials on Wednesday to discuss what will happen with TikTok, and he has maintained that he will make the final decision on the app's future.



It is possible that Trump will decide on a deal that includes bringing on multiple U.S. investors, including Oracle and private equity firm Blackstone. Such a deal would not be a formal sale, and may not meet the requirements of the law.



TikTok parent company ByteDance has said that it will not sell TikTok, but it is not clear if that is still the case with a ban on the horizon. While the law is set to go back into effect on April 5, Trump could opt for another deadline extension.Tag: TikTokThis article, 'Amazon Makes Last Minute Offer for TikTok as Ban Looms' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Chatham House
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Putting the Digital Services Tax on the table in US negotiations sends worrying signal on UK digital sovereignty
Putting the Digital Services Tax on the table in US negotiations sends worrying signal on UK digital sovereignty
Expert comment
jon.wallace
2 April 2025

It would likely be unpopular for a government that has cut welfare services and introduced new taxes on UK businesses, but it also risks undermining wider attempts to regulate big tech.















The UK’s Digital Services Tax (DST) was originally introduced as a stopgap measure, passed in 2020 pending an international agreement to reform the international tax framework (the agreement never materialized). The DST looked to make tech multinationals not headquartered in the UK pay a tax on the revenues they made from their UK users. The tax, set at 2 per cent on the revenues of search engines, social media services and online marketplaces, raises a modest amount – £800 million a year, on average. But it holds significant symbolic value: corporate tax avoidance is a bugbear for the UK public.






The tax may be popular domestically, but it is anything but across the Atlantic.






Persistent rumours that the UK government plans to reduce or eliminate the DST for US tech giants, in hopes of persuading President Donald Trump to row back or reduce tariffs on UK goods, will naturally worry some in the Labour Party. Announcing tax breaks for US tech conglomerates immediately after squeezing the UK welfare system, and months after raising UK employers’ national insurance contributions, will in the words of Labour MP Clive Lewis, ‘look absolutely horrific’. But the UK government is in a difficult position: the tax may be popular domestically, but it is anything but across the Atlantic. President Trump has likened the medley of digital taxes, regulatory fines and other costs levied by other governments on US tech companies as ‘overseas extortion’. Within a month of taking office, Trump had withdrawn the US from OECD negotiations on a global tax system, and issued an executive order ‘Defending American Companies and Innovators From Overseas Extortion and Unfair Fines and Penalties’, targeting precisely those digital services taxes ‘designed to plunder American companies… through extortive fines and taxes’. The UK’s goldilocks zoneTo date, the UK has sought to position itself in a ‘Goldilocks zone’ between the US and EU positions on technology governance, emphasizing sovereignty and growth. The hope is that the UK can be both a friend of Europe and, through less stringent regulation than the EU, the best place East of the Atlantic to scale technology products and services.






The UK should think hard about how much control it is willing to cede to improve US relations.






The offer to reduce or ditch the DST follows other moves that on the surface emphasize this British ‘middle way’. The UK was the only country to join the US in not signing a joint statement emerging from the recent International AI summit in Paris, citing national security concerns among others. But it’s unlikely the UK can maintain this strategy for long. The Trumpian approach to technology development, of minimal regulation to bolster big tech’s contribution to the stock market, and maintain a technological edge over China, is unlikely to fly in the UK. The British public is broadly supportive of tech regulation, particularly on the issues of online harms and young people growing up online. And most expect companies doing business in the UK to pay their fair share of tax.


























Related content
Europe must forge a new role in the global economy








That would seem to incline the UK more towards the EU approach. The EU has been at the forefront of regulating big tech, including via its AI Act, similar digital tax regimes to the UK in countries like France, Italy and Spain, and GDPR data privacy laws with which most UK workers are familiar. More fundamentally a combative US will force other countries to confront a difficult question. How much sovereignty over domestic technology is sufficient? The UK should think hard about how much control it is willing to cede to improve US relations. It must realistically assess its ability to shape and influence the technology on which increasing parts of its social, economic and political foundations rest, but also whether concessions to the US will really deliver benefits. The EU may be grappling with how to stay globally economically competitive while maintaining its regulatory approach. But its strategy towards big tech is nonetheless one of the most meaningful attempts to use pooled democratic power to manage and rein in the influence of these companies. Piecemeal concessions to the US in exchange for the uncertain prospect of tariff exemptions or trade deals might be less beneficial than aligning with the EU approach.

WikiNews
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New York county clerk says Texas cannot fine abortion doctor
Politics and conflicts
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Wednesday, April 2, 2025 
On Thursday, acting Ulster County, New York clerk, Taylor Bruck, refused to enforce a Texas court ruling against a doctor who has been accused of mailing abortion pills across state lines. Brock cited New York's shield law, which, according to New York Attorney General Letitia James, was passed specifically to protect abortion providers. According to the New York Times, this marks the first instance of a shield law being applied to defend a physician from the abortion restrictions of another state.
According to the lawsuit, Dr. Margaret Carpenter, who lives and works in New York, allegedly prescribed and sent abortion pills through the mail to a patient in Texas, where almost all abortions are illegal. A Texas judge fined her US$113,000 and ordered her to stop sending the pills to patients in Texas.
Bruck refused to file the lawsuit in New York and cited the New York State Shield Law but declined to comment further in anticipation of further litigation.
New York Attorney General Letitia James said more: "New York's shield law was created to protect patients and providers from out-of-state anti-choice attacks, and we will not allow anyone to undermine health care providers' ability to deliver necessary care to their patients."
Shortly after filing the initial lawsuit, Texas Attourney General Ken Paxton told the press "In Texas, we treasure the health and lives of mothers and babies, and this is why out-of-state doctors may not illegally and dangerously prescribe abortion-inducing drugs to Texas residents."
Louisiana, which also has strict anti-abortion-rights laws, asked New York to extradite Carpenter so she could be prosecuted for allegedly mailing abortion pills to a woman in Louisiana who gave them to her daughter, but New York governor Kathy Hochul refused.
In 2022, the United States Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade, a 1973 Supreme Court ruling that had rendered abortion legal throughout the United States. Overturning it meant each state could make its own laws regarding abortion, and they have come to differ widely. Some states, such as Texas and Louisiana, banned nearly all abortions and created new laws allowing anyone who helps a woman seek an abortion to be sued or prosecuted.
Lawyer, Alejandra Caraballo, who wrote about state-to-state extradition in Law Review told Jezebel, "We haven't seen this kind of disparity in state laws around human rights since the Civil War. What constitutes a human right in one state is a capital crime in another."




Have an opinion on this story? Share it!


Sources[edit]
Kylie Cheung. "New York Blocks Texas From Enforcing Abortion Law Against Doctor, Wields Shield Law for 1st Time" — Jezebel, March 27, 2025
Carter Sherman. "New York clerk refuses to enforce Texas effort to punish abortion provider" — Guardian, March 27, 2025
Sean Murphy, Michael Hill, and Geoff Mulvihill. "Texas' abortion pill lawsuit against New York doctor marks new challenge to interstate telemedicine" — AP, December 13, 2024





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Russia Today News
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Netflix series 'Adolescence': Teen masculinity in crisis
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Mail Online
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Sky News Home
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Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Christophe Pettus: Do not expose port 5432 to the public Internet
Sometimes, we run into a client who has port 5432 exposed to the public Internet, usually as a convenience measure to allow remote applications to access the database without having to go through an intermediate server appllication.

Do not do this.

This report of a “security issue” in PostgreSQL is alarmist, because it’s a basic brute-force attack on PostgreSQL, attempting to get supueruser credentials. Once it does so, it uses the superuser’s access to the underlying filesystem to drop malware payloads.

There’s nothing special about this. You could do this with password-auth ssh.

But it’s one more reason not to expose PostgreSQL’s port to the public. There are others:


You open yourself up to a DDOS attack on the database itself. PostgreSQL is not hard to do a DOS attack on, since each incoming connection forks a new process.
There have been, in the past, bugs in PostgreSQL that could cause data corruption even if the incoming connection was not authenticated.


As good policy:


Always have PostgreSQL behind a firewall. Ideally, it should have a non-routable private IP address, and only applications that are within your networking infrastructure can get at it.
Never allow remote logins by superusers.
Make sure your access controls (pg_hba.conf, AWS security groups, etc.) are locked down to the minimum level of access required.

UK Legislation
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The Levelling-up and Regeneration Act 2023 (Commencement No. 7) Regulations 2025

UK Legislation
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The M77/A77 Trunk Road (Girvan to Lendalfoot) (Temporary 40mph Speed Restriction) Order 2025

The Verge
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The Switch 2’s Pro Controller adds customizable rear buttons
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The Verge
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Here’s how you can preorder the Nintendo Switch 2 (or try to)
After years of rumors, Nintendo has finally announced a release date for the Switch 2. The long-awaited successor to the Switch will be available on June 5th for $449.99. It will be available for preorder in the US from select retailers starting on April 9th, as both a standalone console or bundled with Mario Kart World […]

The Verge
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Nintendo says the eShop will run more smoothly on the Switch 2
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The Verge
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Gizmodo
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Trump Might Actually Dump Elon After Embarrassing Defeat in Wisconsin
The billionaire oligarch's money failed to buy a judge on Tuesday.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
David Schwimmer reveals he couldn’t listen to Friends theme tune for years
Actor says he had to hear I’ll Be There for You so many times, he could no longer bear itThe Friends actor David Schwimmer spent years unable to listen to the theme tune of his smash-hit comedy, he revealed yesterday. According to the star, he was forced to hear it so many times at the height of his fame that the mere sound of it made him feel miserable.“I’ll be really honest, there was a time for quite a while that just hearing the theme song would really … uggh,” he said during an appearance on Matt Lucas and David Walliams’ Making a Scene podcast. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Charlotte Edwards to make England players ‘accountable for their fitness’
New head coach targets Women’s World Cup in India‘I’m confident we can turn things around very quickly’Charlotte Edwards has promised to make England’s players “more accountable for their fitness” as she seeks to improve the team’s fortunes after her appointment as women’s head coach.The 45-year-old insisted that despite England women’s recent troubles against Australia they were capable of winning this year’s 50-over World Cup in India, saying she was “really confident we can turn things around very quickly”. Jon Lewis was sacked as coach last month after a miserable winter in which group-stage elimination at the T20 World Cup was followed by a 16-0 rout in the Ashes. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Marc Skinner signs Manchester United deal until 2027 and seeks ‘next steps’
Contract includes option of a further year in chargeDelighted Skinner says ‘it is an absolute privilege’The Manchester United women’s team head coach, Marc Skinner, has signed a new contract until June 2027, with the option of an extra year.Skinner’s previous contract had been set to expire at the end of this season. He is already the longest-serving current manager at a Women’s Super League club, having been appointed in the summer of 2021 following the resignation of Casey Stoney. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Marine Le Pen verdict raises tricky questions about justice and democracy | Letters
Anthony Richards thinks democracies must defeat dangerous ideologies at the ballot box, not in the courtroom, while Dave Pollard calls out the hypocrisy of the far right. Plus letters from Colin Leisk and Michel GrattonWhile I abhor the politics of Marine Le Pen, I believe the recent decision by the French judiciary to bar her from running for public office for five years raises important and uncomfortable questions about the relationship between justice and democracy (Report, 31 March).The idea that someone convicted of serious offences may be unfit for high office is entirely reasonable. But in this case, the use of relatively new legal powers – at a moment of high political consequence – risks appearing politically motivated, even if it isn’t. That perception matters. Democracies must defeat dangerous ideologies at the ballot box, not in the courtroom. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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World leaders must defy the bully Trump | Letters
Readers respond to the US president’s intimidatory behaviour and his imposition of tariffs on imported goodsI could not agree more with Jonathan Freedland (Trump is upending everything. The world’s leaders must tell the truth about what that means, 28 March). This ever-increasing threat to world stability from both Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin is obvious to all, and our leaders’ fear of addressing it head-on is palpable. Our prime minister must now show leadership and speak openly to the country about this threat.We live in an era where free speech has been stifled. We are in fear of reprisal from a few rich and powerful people who appear to be able to act with impunity. The US has always been our ally, and there is no reason why this should not continue. The Senate and the American people must initially take the responsibility by rectifying their error in electing this dictatorial president. What happened to impeachment? Richard Nixon was removed for, by comparison, a minor misdemeanour. If the American people do not act, they will bear the burden of shame when this is over.Royston EvansCharlton, Wiltshire Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Loser’: Musk endures wave of gloating on X after liberal judge wins Wisconsin race
Democrats seize on result as a referendum on Musk and an emphatic repudiation of Trump’s richest supporter and allyDemocrats were tasting unfamiliar triumphalism on Wednesday after the election for a vacant Wisconsin supreme court seat turned into an emphatic repudiation of Elon Musk, Donald Trump’s richest supporter and key ally.Musk endured a wave of gloating on Twitter/X, his own social media platform, after Brad Schimel, a Trump-endorsed judge that he spent $25m supporting lost by 10 percentage points to Susan Crawford, whose victory sustained a 4-3 liberal majority on the court. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Man charged with 64 offences in Hull funeral home inquiry
Funeral director Robert Bush, 47, charged after bodies and suspected human ashes found at premises last yearA 47-year-old man has been charged with dozens of counts of preventing a lawful burial in connection with the investigation into remains found at a funeral directors in Hull, Humberside police have said.Funeral director Robert Bush, formerly of Kirk Ella, East Yorkshire, has been charged with 30 counts of preventing a lawful and decent burial and 30 counts of fraud by false representation after a number of bodies and “a quantity” of human ashes were found at his premises between 20 April 2023 and 6 March 2024. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Investigation launched after racist message ‘blasted out’ at asylum centre
Offensive broadside was reportedly heard over portable radios at Manston processing siteAn investigation has been launched after a racist message was reportedly “blasted out” on portable radios used by Home Office contractors at an asylum processing centre.The deeply offensive broadside, saying “fuck off you [N-word]s, go back to where you came from”, was reportedly heard at the Manston processing site for small boat arrivals in Kent. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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US anti-abortion group expands campaign in UK
Exclusive: Alliance Defending Freedom, which is funding case of activist Livia Tossici-Bolt, is lobbying against buffer zones around clinicsA rightwing US group backing an anti-abortion campaigner whose case has become a new source of UK tensions with the Trump administration is significantly expanding activities and spending in Britain.The UK branch of Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), which is funding the case of Livia Tossici-Bolt – who is being prosecuted for an alleged breach of a “buffer zone” outside a Bournemouth abortion clinic – increased spending on campaigning and other activities in the UK to more than £1m last year. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Survivor challenges Israeli account of attack on Gaza paramedics
Palestinian paramedic Munther Abed rejects Israel's assertion that the vehicles approached troops with their lights off.

Russia Today News
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US court blocks DEI-related intel terminations

Mail Online
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Heartbroken families of four-year-old girl, her mother and man killed in fire at Grade-II listed house pay devastating tribute to them
Emma Conn, 30, and her daughter Mayci Fox, four - both from Desborough - died along with Louie Thorn, 23, at a property in the village of Rushton, near Kettering.

Deutsche Welle
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Myanmar earthquake: Is aid reaching those in need?
The humanitarian situation in Myanmar remains dire following the worst earthquake to hit the country in more than a century. Doubts abound about the ruling military junta's ability to facilitate aid.

BBC UK News
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Mum found guilty of killing baby by shaking her
Melissa Wilband has been found guilty of the manslaughter of four-month-old Lexi Wilband.

Mail Online
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Millionaire businesswoman 'abandoned' on Tube platform for 30 minutes after 'traumatising' attack on train by stranger
Sally Wynter was travelling on home from work on the Victoria line when she 'felt a punch' and man 'knocked her sideways' into the train's glass window.

Mail Online
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Why Brad Pitt, 61, is 'struggling to keep the love alive' with Ines de Ramon, 32
The Hollywood actor has been filming his latest movie in New Zealand while his girlfriend remains at their home in Los Angeles.

The Guardian (UK)
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Grand National gets taps turned on to ensure safe ground after long dry spell
Watering at Aintree started in mid-MarchConstitution Hill the star turn on opening dayJon Pullin, the acting clerk of the course at Aintree, said on Wednesday that he will do whatever it takes to ensure the Grand National meeting opens ton Thursday on good-to-soft groundThis will be despite unusually low levels of rainfall in the weeks running up to one of jump racing’s showpiece events.March was one of the sunniest on record for much of the UK and watering of the track is likely to continue overnight once racing is under way to ensure the going is as safe as possible for horses that will be taking off and landing at least eight times in every race. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Investigation launched after racist message ‘blasted out’ at asylum centre
Offensive broadside was reportedly heard over portable radios at Manston processing siteAn investigation has been launched after a racist message was reportedly “blasted out” on portable radios used by Home Office contractors at an asylum processing centre.The deeply offensive broadside, saying “fuck off you niggers, go back to where you came from”, was reportedly heard at the Manston processing site for small boat arrivals in Kent. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Evidence of ‘execution-style’ killings of 15 Palestinian aid workers by Israeli forces, doctor says
Forensic consultant says multiple bullets were used from short range in attack that has caused global outrageA forensic doctor who examined the bodies of some of the 15 paramedics and Palestinian rescue workers shot dead by Israeli forces and buried in a mass grave in southern Gaza has said there was evidence of execution-style killing, based on the “specific and intentional” location of shots at close range.The Palestinian Red Crescent Society, the Palestinian Civil Defense and UN employees were on a humanitarian mission to collect dead and wounded civilians outside the southern city of Rafah on the morning of 23 March when they were killed, and then buried in the sand by bulldozer alongside their flattened vehicles, according to the UN. Continue reading...

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
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#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (Update)
An onsite joint engineer meet is scheduled for 18.15 for further investigations.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 03:38

Update: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 20:30

Edited: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 17:05

Status: Outage

Maintenance: None

UK Government News
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We must strengthen international commitments to protect aid workers: UK statement at the UN Security Council
Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward, UK Permanent Representative to the UN, at the UN Security Council meeting on the protection of civilians in armed conflict.

Wired Top Stories
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Sony’s Latest Bravia Home Theater Gear Gets Bolder, Brighter
We went hands-on with Sony’s latest home theater gear, including its fiery new OLED TV.

Wired Top Stories
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This Tool Probes Frontier AI Models for Lapses in Intelligence
A new platform from data training company Scale AI will let artificial intelligence developers find their models’ weak spots.

Mail Online
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Melinda Gates details excruciating moment she told Epstein-linked Bill that she wanted a divorce
The philanthropist, 60, describes the heartbreaking exchange in her forthcoming book 'The Next Day: Transitions, Change and Moving Forward'.

Mail Online
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Richard E. Grant recalls how his 'hilarious' wife Joan Washington ruled out eligible women for him before she died - including his idol Barbra Streisand
Dialect coach Joan tragically passed away in September 2021 aged 74, eight months after she was diagnosed with stage four lung cancer.

Mail Online
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EasyJet flight attendants based in holiday destination loved by Brits are set to walk out next week
The walkout is set to start on April 9 between 10.30pm and 2.30pm bringing fresh aviation chaos for Brits hoping to getaway to this one Mediterranean country.

Mail Online
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Child star from a family sitcom is spotted narrowly avoiding a driving disaster. Can you guess who?
A child actress, who played the youngest daughter of one of the most popular family sitcoms, narrowly avoided a driving disaster before a bystander intervened... can you guess who?

Mail Online
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Outrage as popular chocolate treat is hit by 'shrinkflation' yet AGAIN - while sneakily staying at the same price 
To the horror of shoppers, an iconic sweet treat has quietly dropped its weight from 157g to 145g - the second time it has shrunk in less than a decade.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Britain's Jones says heart 'worked a little too hard' after on-court collapse
Britain's Fran Jones says her heart "worked a little too hard" after she collapsed during a match in Colombia.

ZeroHedge News
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DNC, Schumer Sue Trump Over Order Targeting Illegal Immigrant Voting
DNC, Schumer Sue Trump Over Order Targeting Illegal Immigrant Voting

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The Democratic National Committee (DNC) and two top U.S. lawmakers on March 31 sued President Donald Trump over a recent executive order that aims to enforce the law against illegal immigrant voting and election dates.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) in Washington on March 13, 2025. Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images

“The Executive Order seeks to impose radical changes on how Americans register to vote, cast a ballot, and participate in our democracy—all of which threaten to disenfranchise lawful voters and none of which is legal,” says the lawsuit, filed by Democratic Party attorney Marc Elias in federal court in Washington.

Trump’s March 25 order has multiple sections. Several deal with laws that bar foreigners from registering to vote or from voting in federal elections. Trump directed the independent Election Assistance Commission to require proof of U.S. citizenship in its mail voter registration form, ordered U.S. officials to work with the Department of Government Efficiency to review voter rolls to identify noncitizens who are already registered, and told the U.S. attorney general to prosecute individuals who have illegally registered or voted.

Another prong takes aim at how some states in recent years have begun counting mailed ballots that arrive after Election Day, which the order says contravenes federal law.

A third portion says the Election Assistance Commission shall stop providing federal funds to states that don’t comply with the laws on election dates and noncitizen voting and voter registration.

The U.S. Constitution’s election clause says that states can set election dates, although Congress can alter them.

“Outside of the Elections Clause, other provisions in the Constitution place certain requirements and limitations on the regulation of elections—but none allows the President to override the will of the States or Congress in this space,” the new suit states.

The legal challenge also says that the Election Assistance Commission is an independent agency over which the president, who appoints commissioners, has no control, and that federal law lets applicants who vote in federal elections attest to citizenship with a signature as opposed to requiring proof from documents such as a passport.

In addition to the DNC, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), the top Democrat in the U.S. Senate, and Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), the top Democrat in the U.S. House of Representatives, are plaintiffs in the suit.

The Democrats are asking the court to declare that the order violates the Constitution and federal law and block U.S. officials, such as the attorney general, from implementing it.

“The Democrats continue to show their disdain for the Constitution and it continues to show in their insane objections to the President’s commonsense executive actions to require proof of U.S. citizenship in an effort to protect the integrity of American elections,“ Harrison Fields, a White House spokesman, told The Epoch Times in an email. ”The Trump administration is standing up for free, fair, and honest elections and asking this basic question is essential to our Constitutional Republic.”

Ahead of the 2016 election, Elias helped compile a dossier against Trump. He was named in a different order by Trump that directed officials to take action against lawyers who are violating laws and regulations.

Earlier Monday, several organizations filed a separate suit in the same court over the election order, outlining similar arguments.

“The president’s executive order is an unlawful action that threatens to uproot our tried-and-tested election systems and silence potentially millions of Americans,“ Danielle Lang, senior director of voting rights at the Campaign Legal Center, which is representing the groups, said in a statement. ”It is simply not within the president’s authority to set election rules by executive decree, especially when they would restrict access to voting in this way.”

*  *  *

Best sellers at ZH Store:

IQ Biologix Colostrum (25% IgG from first milking of grassfed cows)
IQ Astaxanthin Ultimate Antioxidant (6,000x stronger than vitamin C)
ZeroHedge Multitool (Extremely solid, very sharp, comes with ZH Logo belt pouch)
Anza Red-Black Infinity Handle Knife (Made in the USA from carbon steel)


 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 07:20

ZeroHedge News
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Kitchen Sink? Tesla Delivers 336,681 Vehicles In Q1, Missing Wall Street's Lowest Expectations
Kitchen Sink? Tesla Delivers 336,681 Vehicles In Q1, Missing Wall Street's Lowest Expectations

This morning Tesla announced Q1 deliveries of 336,681 vehicles, falling below even the lowest expectations that Wall Street had set for the automaker and marking a -13% plunge in deliveries from the year prior period. 

In its press release, Tesla said "the changeover of Model Y lines across all four of our factories led to the loss of several weeks of production in Q1," but then added that "the ramp of the New Model Y continues to go well."

While FactSet's consensus forecast projected 408,000 Q1 Tesla deliveries—a 5% year-over-year increase—recent signals suggested a decline instead. Wall Street consensus estimates reported by Reuters had expected Tesla to report roughly 373,000 vehicle deliveries for Q1—down 3.6% from the same period the previous year.

Some analysts, however, believed the actual figure might be closer to 350,000 or lower.  Major banks like Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, and UBS cut estimates to between 351,000 and 375,000. Prediction market Kalshi expected 353,000, marking a 9% drop. 

No one had a number in the 330k region. 





The company reported 12,881 deliveries of its other models, including its Cybertruck, Model S and Model X. 



Analysts at Deutsche Bank had predicted as few as 340,000 deliveries, while Tesla's declining sales in key markets like China and Europe further fueled skepticism.

Thomas Martin, senior portfolio manager at Tesla shareholder Globalt Investments had told Reuters: "I think that the numbers are going to come in below 400,000 and, maybe as low as 350,000."

After Tesla’s first annual delivery drop in 2024, Elon Musk vowed a return to growth. Wall Street was closely watching whether Model Y updates and new incentives would help.

Tesla faces both growing competition abroad and backlash at home, particularly over Musk’s political ties and role in federal spending cuts under President Trump. This has alienated many left-leaning customers, with trade-ins hitting record highs.

"We have seen major brand deterioration of Tesla across the entire world essentially," said Ken Mahoney, CEO of Mahoney Asset Management, told Reuters earlier today.

"The brand has become far more politicized than any public company's brand should wish to be."

The only question now is whether Tesla has "kitchen sinked" this quarter to try and post a better looking rest of the year, as it has already been reported that Elon Musk will likely move on from DOGE and back to the company heading into the middle of 2025...

*  *  *

Best sellers at ZH Store:

IQ Biologix Colostrum (25% IgG from first milking of grassfed cows)
IQ Astaxanthin Ultimate Antioxidant (6,000x stronger than vitamin C)
ZeroHedge Multitool (Extremely solid, very sharp, comes with ZH Logo belt pouch)
Anza Red-Black Infinity Handle Knife (Made in the USA from carbon steel)
Click picture, check out knife...

 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 09:15

ZeroHedge News
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Meta To Expand Ray-Ban Smart Glasses Lineup With Display-Enabled Model
Meta To Expand Ray-Ban Smart Glasses Lineup With Display-Enabled Model

Since late summer or fall of 2024, Ray-Ban Meta Glasses have surged in popularity with US consumers, a trend we previously highlighted citing several Goldman reports. The data was primarily based on app downloads worldwide. 
Source: Goldman's Jack McFerran

Building on this momentum, Mark Zuckerberg's Meta's Reality Labs division is preparing to capture further market share in the smart glasses segment by releasing a new iteration of its Meta Glasses later this year. The glasses will feature an integrated screen for displaying photos and applications, according to a Bloomberg News report. 



These glasses are expected to be priced between $1,000 and $1,400, positioning them as an affordable offering in the smart glasses realm, considering Apple's Vision Pros cost more than $3,000. 

Ray-Ban Meta Glasses have been a hit with consumers considering that many other smart glasses options are unaffordable: Apple Vision Pro. As we previously noted, Tim Cook's space goggles have bombed:


Vision Pro's Success Hinges On Cheaper Version As Consumers Balk At $3,500 Price Tag


Apple Reportedly Halts Work On Vision Pro 2, Focuses On Cheaper Version As Demand Falters


Apple "Might Wind Down" Vision Pro Production Next Month Due To "Weak Demand"


Number Of Apple Vision Pro Apps Hit By "Significant Slowdown" As Demand Plunges

For months, readers have been briefed on the shift to Meta Glasses...

Popularity Of Meta Smart-Glasses Erupt As Apple Vision Pro Demand Vanishes
Bloomberg provided further color about the Meta prototype version of the Hypernova glasses ahead of commercialization:

When they are turned on, the display shows a "boot screen" with logos for Meta and other partners — such as chipmaker Qualcomm Inc. — on the product.

Once the device is on, the user will see a home screen comprised of circular icons laid out horizontally, similar to the app dock on Apple devices or Meta's Quest mixed-reality headset.


The glasses include dedicated apps for taking pictures, viewing photos and accessing maps. There is also support for notifications from phone apps, including Meta's Messenger and WhatsApp.


The glasses will otherwise work similarly to the current Wayfarer-style Ray-Ban Metas, focusing on capturing images and video, accessing AI via built-in microphones and pairing with a phone for calls and music playback. The new version will continue to rely heavily on the Meta View phone app.


Like Meta's other new devices, the glasses will run a highly customized version of the Android operating system from Alphabet Inc.'s Google. The company isn't currently planning to include an on-board app store.


Users will be able to control the glasses using capacitive touch controls on the sides of the glasses, meaning they can scroll through apps or photos by swiping against the temple bars and then tapping to open something specific.


Meta also plans to begin offering a so-called neural wristband for the first time, which will allow a wearer to control the glasses with gestures, such as rotating their hand to scroll through apps and photos and pinching their finger and thumb to select items. Meta is currently planning to bundle the accessory, codenamed Ceres, in the box with the glasses

"The Hypernova glasses are still months away from being introduced, and the company's current plans could change," Bloomberg noted. 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 09:50

ZeroHedge News
Open 
US Factory Orders Surge Near Record Highs In Feb (Ignoring 'Soft' Data Slump)
US Factory Orders Surge Near Record Highs In Feb (Ignoring 'Soft' Data Slump)

Despite all the 'soft' data slumping and legacy media narrative creation that a recession is imminent, US Factory Orders (hard data) surged for the second month in a row (beating expectations). Headline factory orders rose 0.6% MoM (+0.5% MoM exp) in March and February's 1.7% MoM jump was revised up to +1.8% MoM. This left Factory Orders up 2.5% YoY...



Source: Bloomberg

Core Factory Orders (excluding the more volatile Transportation sector) rose 0.4% MoM - accelerating on a MoM basis for the sixth straight month...



Source: Bloomberg

Finally, February's rise lifted US Factory Orders very close to record highs...



Source: Bloomberg

So much for the 'soft' data-driven recession talk?



Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 10:11

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Why The Global Recession Will Be Deeper And Longer Than Pundits Anticipate
Why The Global Recession Will Be Deeper And Longer Than Pundits Anticipate

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

The global recession will be deeper and longer than those relying on models based on the past two decades of hyper-globalization and hyper-financialization anticipate.

While everyone focuses on conflicts between nations, few look at the problems shared by nations. Richard Bonugli and I discuss both sets of problems in our latest podcast.

The conflict sphere is dominated by the trade wars that are bubbling up here in the first inning of the global rebalancing of national interests and global trade/financial frameworks. Supporting these frameworks benefits participating nations until they don't, at which point they're jettisoned.

The conviction that these frameworks, linch-pinned by the U.S. since the end of World War II in 1945, no longer serve America's core national security interests, is reaching a rough consensus, and as a result some describe the U.S. as a "rogue superpower." In other words, now that the U.S. is no longer the dumping ground for global surpluses of production, it's seen as "going rogue."

There's a certain naivete in the notion that any nation acts selflessly for the good of all. All nation-states act in their own interests, just as global corporations act to optimize shareholder value and profits while proclaiming the wonderfulness of their products and services. Nations support cooperative arrangements when it benefits them, and exit those arrangements when they morph from benefit to burden.

This rebalancing of cooperation and self-interest is taking place in the larger context of non-trade problems shared by all developed nations. Developing nations share many of these same problems as well: soaring debt loads, resource scarcities, corruption, mal-investment, high inflation, stagnating economies, aging populations, shrinking workforces, rising social costs and massive public health issues, many of which have been expanding rapidly behind the focus on trade and conflicting interests.

The ubiquity of these issues is striking. In some ways, developed nations share more problems than they seem to realize. Consider the global rise of lifestyle diseases generated by dramatic shifts in diets and fitness. These manifest as metabolic disorders (prediabetes, diabetes) and a broad range of other chronic diseases such as heart disease and cancers.

Metabolic disorders generated by changing lifestyles are now weighing heavily on nations around the world, from the U.S. and Mexico to China, India, the Mideast and beyond.



The problems generated by aging populations and declining birthrates are also shared by many nations. The same is true of rising debt levels, both public and private, which threaten to destabilize economies via either ruinously high inflation or fiscal frugality, i.e. austerity. Here is total credit in the U.S., a sobering chart that mirrors the debt loads of many other nations--debt that is outstripping GDP and income as interest rates rise in the new era of global inflationary forces.



The world's nations have awakened to the risks of becoming dependent on other nations for essential commodities, manufactured goods and markets. Tariffs may well be merely the at-bat players in the first innings. If history is any guide, outright bans on imports from selected nations will eventually be viewed as the only available option to rebalance national security priorities.

The degrees of national dependence will become increasingly consequential as mercantilist nations that have relied on exports for growth will find markets for their exports shutting down, crippling domestic growth. Nations that attempt to become self-sufficient will find the demands for capital investment will pressure consumer spending, even as the decline of cheap imports institutionalizes inflation and price increases that outstrip wage increases.

Stagflation will hinder both investment and consumer spending. Austerity will crimp fiscal borrowing and spending, and capital sloshing around the world seeking low-risk returns will face unprecedented challenges as capital controls proliferate and nations change the rules overnight.

I often focus on scale because this is a limiting factor. While there may well be growth opportunities for investing in developing nations, the scale of capital sloshing around global markets will find the investment pipelines the equivalent of a straw: there is no way to deploy $100 billion in small markets and economies, never mind $1 trillion or $10 trillion.

As Immanuel Wallerstein observed, Capitalism may no longer be attractive to capitalists as all these dynamics play out in a vast, inter-connected, unpredictable rebalancing of global interests and increasingly destabilizing attempts to solve complex, intractable problems with cobbled-together expediencies or doing more of what's already failed.

There won't be any "saves" in this rebalancing, and so the global recession will be deeper and longer than those relying on models based on the past two decades of hyper-globalization and hyper-financialization anticipate.

New podcast: The Coming Global Recession will be Longer and Deeper than Most Analysts Anticipate (42 min)



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Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 10:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
WTI 'Steady' Near 5-Week Highs As 'Drill Baby Drill' Lifts US Crude Production
WTI 'Steady' Near 5-Week Highs As 'Drill Baby Drill' Lifts US Crude Production

Crude prices continue to tread water above $70 (WTI) this morning (holding Monday's gains on potential sanctions on Russian oil), drifting modestly lower aftr API reported a large crude build overnight ahead of new supply coming this month as OPEC+ begins to unwind 2.2-million barrels per day of production cuts.

However the new supply is being offset with tightened U.S. sanctions on Iran and Venezuela, while Trump this week threatened to impose secondary tariffs on U.S. imports from countries buying Russian oil.


"Crude prices paused last month's rally, with Brent finding some resistance above USD 75, with the focus-for now-turning from a sanctions-led reduction in supply to Trump's tariff announcement and its potential negative impact on growth and demand," Saxo Bank noted.


DOE


Crude +6.165mm


Cushing +2.373mm - biggest build since Jan 2023


Gasoline -1.551mm


Distillates +264k

The official data confirmed API's report that Crude inventories saw a large build last week. Stocks at the Cushing hub also soared (most since Jan 2023) as Gasoline stocks fell for the 5th straight week...



Source: Bloomberg

Including a 285k barrel addition to the SPR, last week saw the largest total crude inventory build since the last week of January...



Source: Bloomberg

US Crude production was steady at record highs as Trump's 'drill baby drill' plan appears to be working with the rig count rising notably...



Source: Bloomberg

WTI is holding above $71 for now (near 5-week highs)...



Source: Bloomberg

Finally, we note that the tariffs add to a deluge of conflicting drivers from energy markets since Trump came into office. Sanctions threaten to curb supply from Russia and Iran, even as a production boost by OPEC and its allies starting this month exacerbates concerns a glut is looming later this year.

“We expect a wait-and-see stance in the oil market today until more clarity emerges on Trump’s tariff plans,” said Arne Lohmann Rasmussen, chief analyst at A/S Global Risk Management. “That said, there is a risk that the oil price may decline today, driven by concerns that tariffs will significantly hinder growth.”

Oil prices continue to hover near five-wek highs after the Trump administration threatened to impose steep tariffs of 25% to 50% on buyers of Russian crude, Rystad Energy reported in an analysis piece.. The move, aimed at pressuring Moscow into a ceasefire with Ukraine, added a new layer of geopolitical uncertainty to the market.

'The market is still digesting what these newly proposed tariffs mean for peace negotiations,' said Janiv Shah, Rystad’s vice president of oil.

Shah noted that if the tariff strategy proves effective in encouraging a Russia-Ukraine truce, the measures could be short-lived. However, he warned the tariffs could have diverging effects: “bullish for crude oil and bearish for products.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 10:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
China Restricts Local Firms From Investing In US As Trump's Reciprocal Tariffs D-Day Arrives
China Restricts Local Firms From Investing In US As Trump's Reciprocal Tariffs D-Day Arrives

Hours before President Trump is set to announce reciprocal tariffs—threatening to unleash a global trade war on what he has called "Liberation Day"—the Chinese Communist Party is already preparing a financial counteroffensive. 

Bloomberg cites people familiar with the matter who say Beijing plans to restrict local companies from investing in the United States. This move would give the world's second-largest economy more economic leverage in trade negotiations as Sino-U.S. tensions deteriorate.



Here's more from the report:


Several branches of China's top economic planning agency, the National Development and Reform Commission, have been instructed in recent weeks to hold off on registration and approval for firms that are looking to invest in the U.S., the people said, asking not to be identified discussing sensitive issues.

. . .

There's no sign that existing commitments by Chinese companies in the U.S. and elsewhere, or China's purchases and holdings of financial products including U.S. Treasuries, would be affected, the people said. It's unclear what prompted the NDRC to halt the processing of applications or how long this suspension might last.


The economic decoupling between the U.S. and China continues to accelerate, driven by trade wars and President Trump, who believes, as he said over the weekend to NBC: "The world has been ripping off the United States for the last 40 years and more ... and all we're doing is being fair."
Source Bloomberg

Trump's planned reciprocal tariffs and China's reported move to restrict outbound investment from local companies into the U.S. signals a new phase of superpower decoupling. This decoupling has been happening across multiple areas:


Technology 


Capital Flows


Trade  

Goldman analyst Chloe Garber commented on the BBG report, noting:


BBG reported this morning that China has taken steps to restrict local companies from investing in the U.S. ahead of new tariffs, people familiar said. Several branches of China's top economic planning agency have been instructed in recent weeks to hold off on registration and approval for such firms. Simply put – there are a lot of unknowns here still and mkts hate the uncertainty.


With just hours to go before Trump's "Liberation Day" announcement—expected around 4 p.m.—here's everything you need to know to stay on top of the tariff news cycle (read: here).

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 11:20

ZeroHedge News
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How Trump's 'Liberation Day' Tariffs Are Set To Reshape Global Trade
How Trump's 'Liberation Day' Tariffs Are Set To Reshape Global Trade

Authored by Emel Akan and Andrew Moran via The Epoch Times,

President Donald Trump is set to announce reciprocal tariffs for all nations starting April 2, the date he has dubbed “Liberation Day.”



Companies, markets, and governments are on edge, expecting the move to send shockwaves across the globe.

Liberation Day will impact all countries, Trump told reporters over the weekend aboard Air Force One. However, some countries will be more vulnerable due to their high trade imbalances with the United States and significant trade barriers against American goods, including China, India, the European Union, Canada, Mexico, the United Kingdom, Vietnam, Japan, and South Korea.

The president will reveal details of his tariff plan at a White House Rose Garden event Wednesday afternoon after the stock markets close.

Speaking to reporters from the Oval Office on March 31, Trump stated that his tariff rates will be lower—and in certain instances “substantially lower”—than what other countries have been charging the United States.


“We are going to be very nice by comparison to what they were,” the president said. “We have a world obligation, perhaps, but we’re going to be very nice, relatively speaking. We’re going to be very kind.”


On Feb. 13, the president unveiled the concept, describing it as a “fair and reciprocal plan” for trade by raising U.S. levies to match duties that other nations impose on U.S. products.

He instructed his team to assess and recommend tariffs on countries that impose significant barriers to U.S. products, including tariffs, value-added taxes, and other non-tariff restrictions. The assessment will also consider the foreign exchange policies of America’s trading partners.

Trump’s tariff policies are anticipated to have a significantly broader impact on products, industries, and countries affected by tariffs compared to previous administrations. According to an estimate by consulting firm PwC, the measures could increase U.S. tariff revenues from $76 billion annually to almost $697 billion.

A key objective behind the administration’s tariff plans is to reverse America’s decades-long trade deficit.

The United States has recorded trade deficits every year since 1976. Last year, the U.S. goods and services trade gap surpassed $918 billion—a 17 percent increase from 2023.



Many factors have contributed to this decades-long trend. A low national savings rate, for example, has resulted in a higher dependence on foreign capital to fund investments. Foreign markets’ comparative advantage, mainly in the form of lower labor costs, has also led to cheaper imports, satisfying ferocious domestic consumption.

White House officials, including U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, believe tariffs could be a part of the solution to undo ongoing trade deficits.


“Part of the question is how large of a trade deficit do we want, because the trade deficit represents, in large part, manufacturing jobs that have [gone] overseas,” Greer told the Senate Finance Committee in February.


He also noted that worsening trade imbalances with particular countries were a “huge problem.”

In 2024, China ranked first, with the U.S. trade deficit reaching $295 billion. This was followed by the European Union ($236 billion), Mexico ($172 billion), Vietnam ($124 billion), Taiwan ($74 billion), and Japan ($69 billion).



Economists argue that the administration’s sweeping trade policy changes will have the greatest impact on industries that have traditionally benefited from low or no tariffs. As a result, these industries will be forced to evaluate the costs and benefits—such as logistics, tax rates, and tariffs—of relocating production to the United States.

Last year, the top U.S. importer jurisdictions were Mexico, China, Canada, Germany, and Japan.

Sectors Most Affected By New Tariffs

Higher tariff rates will impact a wide range of sectors and countries.

Automobile manufacturing in Canada, Germany, Japan, and Mexico could be the hardest hit. The auto industry will navigate potential disruptions from reciprocal tariffs and Trump’s higher import duties on steel, aluminum, foreign vehicles, and car parts.

Canada’s oil and gas sector is also expected to be hammered. The United States imports more than 4 million barrels of crude per day—up significantly from 15 years ago.

Since returning to the White House, Trump has already imposed tariffs on China over its failure to address its role in illicit fentanyl trafficking into the United States. Now, with the introduction of  reciprocal tariffs, China could face major disruptions in its exports of smartphone technology and lithium-ion batteries, the two items most heavily shipped to the United States.

Other industries facing significant impacts include critical medicines and health care equipment, which are primarily sourced from India, Ireland, and Switzerland.

The European Union and emerging markets could take a hit from reciprocal tariffs, says Mary Park Durham, a research analyst at JPMorgan Chase.

First, the E.U. accounts for approximately one-fifth of U.S. imports and registered a trade surplus.

“While the U.S. and EU have similar average tariff rates of 3.4% and 4.1% on each other’s imports, respectively, disparities arise at the product level,” she said in a note.



The U.S. government has highlighted the bloc’s value-added taxes (VATs), which it views as tariffs. VATs are consumption taxes absorbed by producers at each stage in the supply chain and consumers at the point of sale. The EU’s VAT rate averages 20 percent, higher than the average U.S. sales tax rate of 6.6 percent.

While the U.S. Trade Representative’s 2025 National Trade Estimate Report did not specify Europe’s VATs, White House officials have rebuked the policy, calling it a “double whammy.”

“No wonder Germany sells eight times as many cars to us as we do to them, and President Trump is no longer going to tolerate that,” an official told reporters in February.

Second, emerging markets such as Brazil and India maintain high average tariff rates on all imports. These countries generally impose higher import duties to shield vulnerable domestic industries from foreign competition.

“The difference in tariff rates between emerging markets and the U.S. in their bilateral trade tends to be wider than that for developed markets,” said Brian Coulton, the chief economist at Fitch Ratings, in a report.

Brazil and India were spotlighted as examples of unfair trade practices in a White House fact sheet.

Brazil charges U.S. ethanol exports an 18 percent levy, compared to the U.S. rate of 2.5 percent. “As a result, in 2024, the U.S. imported over $200 million in ethanol from Brazil while the U.S. exported only $52 million in ethanol to Brazil,” the document stated.

India, meanwhile, imposes a 100 percent tariff on U.S. motorcycles. Conversely, the United States adds a 2.4 percent levy on Indian motorcycles, the White House said.

Countries Offering Concessions

A Bank of America report showed that the United States has the lowest trade barrier of any Group of 20 (G20) nations; the world’s largest economies.



“We’ve been taken advantage of for 40 years, maybe more, and it’s just not going to happen anymore,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on March 28.

However, he said many countries are willing to make concessions and he didn’t rule out making deals with those countries.

“It’s possible if we can get something for the deal,” Trump said. “I’m certainly open to that.”

Some countries have already begun offering concessions. On April 1, Israel announced that it will remove all remaining tariffs on American products.

Prior to his long-awaited reciprocal tariff roll out, Trump has threatened to impose levies on friends and foes alike.

During the campaign trail and shortly after winning the election, the president said he would impose 100 percent tariffs on countries that engage in anti-dollar activities.

He also threatened 25 percent tariffs on Colombian agricultural products over a short-lived spat involving President Gustavo Petro’s refusal to accept its nationals deported from the United States. Trump rescinded the levies once Petro caved and accepted his citizens.

After Ontario Premier Doug Ford vowed to cut off electricity flowing from the Canadian province to several U.S. states, Trump stated he would double tariffs on Canada. He reversed the decision after Ford confirmed he would not shut off the power or add taxes to electricity exports.

Trump recently revealed that he plans to announce tariffs on lumber, pharmaceuticals, and semiconductors.



A car hauler truck makes its way to the Ambassador Bridge to cross into Detroit from Windsor, Canada, on April 1, 2025. President Donald Trump has been referring to April 2 as “Liberation Day,” when his administration will begin implementing sweeping new tariffs on goods imported into the United States from other countries. Bill Pugliano/Getty Images

Days after implementing a blanket 25 percent tariff on cars and light trucks manufactured outside the United States, the president stated that he doesn’t care if automakers raise car prices for Americans.

If prices on foreign automobiles increase, customers will shift their buying preferences to American-made vehicles, he said.

“I couldn’t care less. I hope they raise their prices because if they do, people are gonna buy American-made cars. We have plenty,” Trump said in an interview with NBC’s Kristen Welker.

He added that higher prices would bolster U.S.-based manufacturers.

“If you make your car in the United States, you’re going to make a lot of money,” the president said. “If you don’t, you’re going to have to probably come to the United States, because if you make your car in the United States, there is no tariff.”

Auto tariffs are scheduled to take effect on April 3 and will be permanent.

Various individuals have been integral in crafting the president’s tariff plans.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on March 31 that Vice President JD Vance has been “deeply involved” in trade discussions.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, White House economist Kevin Hassett, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, and senior counselor for trade and manufacturing Peter Navarro, have all contributed to shaping the tariff regime.

“All of these individuals have presented plans to the president on how to get this done, and it’s the president’s decision to make,” Leavitt said.



A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on April 1, 2025. Stocks opened up low as the market reacts to President Donald Trump's April 2 expected proposal for a round of new tariffs. Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Tariffs Fuel Market Volatility

Financial markets have wiped out trillions of dollars in value over the last several weeks. Investors fear that tariffs will revive inflation and slow economic growth—surveys suggest the United States could slip into a recession.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index has slumped 5 percent in March. The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average fell about 1 percent last month. The broader S&P 500 has trimmed 3 percent to finish the first quarter.

Gold prices have extended their gains from last year, reaching a record high of $3,100 per ounce. The yellow metal gained 19 percent in the first quarter, fueled by strengthening safe-haven demand amid market turmoil.

U.S. Treasury yields have slumped since reaching a mid-January peak as traders concentrate on the economy’s long-term prospects.

The benchmark 10-year yield has fallen about 65 basis points to below 4.16 percent.

The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), a metric of the greenback against a basket of currencies, has declined 4 percent this year. Tariffs and structural changes have fueled the recent weakness.

Uncertainty has been a sizable force behind the enormous volatility but April 2 should resolve some of the anxieties plaguing investors, says Jeffrey Buchbinder, the chief equity strategist at LPL Financial.

“April 2 is a big day for the stock market,” Buchbinder said in a note emailed to The Epoch Times. “There will still be trade policy uncertainty after that date but the Trump administration is expected to clear up some of the biggest questions investors have right now.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 11:40

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These bills are an unequivocal and serious threat to a free and open internet. EFF and our supporters are going to fight back against them. 
Site-Blocking Doesn’t Work—And Never Will 
Today, many websites are hosted on cloud infrastructure or use shared IP addresses. Blocking one target can mean blocking thousands of unrelated sites. That kind of digital collateral damage has already happened in Austria, Russia​, and in the US.
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Users affected by a block often have no idea what happened. A blocked site may just look broken, like a glitch or an outage. Law-abiding publishers and users lose access, and diagnosing the problem is difficult. Site-blocking techniques are the bluntest of instruments, and they almost always punish innocent bystanders. 
The copyright industries pushing these bills know that site-blocking is not a narrowly tailored fix for a piracy epidemic. The entertainment industry is booming right now, blowing past its pre-COVID projections. Site-blocking legislation is an attempt to build a new American censorship system by letting private actors get dangerous infrastructure-level control over internet access. 
EFF and the Public Will Push Back
FADPA is already on the table. More bills are coming. The question is whether lawmakers remember what happened the last time they tried to mess with the foundations of the open web. 
If they don’t, they’re going to find out the hard way. Again. 

take action
Tell Congress: No To Internet Blacklists  

Site-blocking laws are dangerous, unnecessary, and ineffective. Lawmakers need to hear—loud and clear—that Americans don’t support government-mandated internet censorship. Not for copyright enforcement. Not for anything.

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Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Commentary: I tried the Minecraft-themed McNuggets sauce. It might just be the hottest sauce Mickey D's has ever offered.

CNET News
Open 
What You Need to Know About Nintendo Switch 2 Edition Games
Some Nintendo Switch games, like Breath of the Wild, are getting upgraded versions for the new console called Nintendo Switch 2 Editions.

CNET News
Open 
Nintendo Switch 2 Direct Live Recap: Launches June 5, $499 and More Reveals
The Switch 2 Nintendo Direct will be a full hour -- here's what we expect will be in it, plus everything else coming with the new console.

CNET News
Open 
FAA Tries to Stop You Tracking Celebrity Private Jets. Here's How
According to reports, the FAA's move to hide ownership details might not stop those who post private jet details on social media.

CNET News
Open 
Swtich 2 Coming June 5 starting at $450: Where to Preorder Nintendo's Next Console
The Switch 2 is going to be one of Nintendo's most expensive consoles.

CNET News
Open 
Nintendo Switch 2 Event: Everything Announced for the New Console
The $450 console will get Mario Kart World as a launch title, games in 4K resolution and new GameChat communication features.

CNET News
Open 
Best Mental Health Apps of 2025: Expert Picks for Stress Awareness Month
The best mental health apps can help boost your mood, lower anxiety and more. Here are the top mental health apps, tested and vetted by our staff.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Myanmar: Military declares truce to facilitate quake relief
Following unilateral temporary ceasefires announced by armed resistance groups after the earthquake, Myanmar's military junta also declared a temporary truce. The death toll from the quake now exceeds 3,000.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Fact check: False content on Myanmar, Thailand earthquake
Soon after a massive earthquake struck Myanmar, AI-generated videos as well as misleading images and theories started flooding social media, falsely depicting the fallout of the disaster. A DW fact check.

Mail Online
Open 
The White Lotus cast just answered 7 of our most burning questions about the smash-hit series
For the last seven weeks, the streaming sensation has been the topic of conversation at the office tea station - and The White Lotus cast has just answered our most burning questions.

Mail Online
Open 
Mark Wright's ruthless behaviour towards former friends Arg and Jack Tweed is the talk of Essex - as insiders say he's 'like MEGHAN', reveals KATIE HIND
'Even [his wife-to-be] Michelle had tried to crack the States but that didn't work. The next thing Mark is hanging around with the A-list and, my, was he happy with himself,' says a source.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Britain's Jones collapses on court in Colombia
Britain's Fran Jones says her heart "worked a little too hard" after she collapsed during a match in Colombia.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
Open 
#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (Update)
An onsite joint engineer meet is scheduled for 18.15 for further investigations.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 03:38

Update: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 19:30

Edited: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 16:38

Status: Outage

Maintenance: None

F1 Technical
Open 
TAG Heuer becomes first Title Partner of the Grand Prix de Monaco
Having replaced Rolex as Formula One's official timekeeper ahead of the upcoming 2025 F1 season, TAG Heuer has become the first-ever title partner of the Grand Prix de Monaco.

Nature
Open 
Deadly Myanmar earthquake was probably a rare rupture, scientists say

Nature
Open 
Could the shingles vaccine help to prevent dementia?

Nature
Open 
Rare ancient DNA from Sahara opens a window on the region’s verdant past

Nature
Open 
The neurons that mediate a psychedelic’s long-term antidepressive effects

Nature
Open 
AI masters Minecraft: DeepMind program finds diamonds without being taught

Nature
Open 
Light wins uphill battle to solve enduring problem in organic synthesis

Nature
Open 
Sunflower ‘virgin births’ enable accelerated crop breeding

Nature
Open 
Revealed: first DNA profiles of ancient people who roamed a lush Sahara

Nature
Open 
Ancient DNA from the Green Sahara reveals ancestral North African lineage

Nature
Open 
Acoustic modes in M67 cluster stars trace deepening convective envelopes

Nature
Open 
The RAD52 double-ring remodels replication forks restricting fork reversal

Nature
Open 
Haploid facultative parthenogenesis in sunflower sexual reproduction

Nature
Open 
Global impoverishment of natural vegetation revealed by dark diversity

Nature
Open 
A neural mechanism for learning from delayed postingestive feedback

Nature
Open 
Clinically relevant clot resolution via a thromboinflammation-on-a-chip

Nature
Open 
Psilocybin’s lasting action requires pyramidal cell types and 5-HT2A receptors

Nature
Open 
A RISC-V 32-bit microprocessor based on two-dimensional semiconductors

Nature
Open 
Millimetre-scale bioresorbable optoelectronic systems for electrotherapy

Nature
Open 
Metal–support frontier orbital interactions in single-atom catalysis

Nature
Open 
Formation and composition of Earth’s Hadean protocrust

Nature
Open 
Near-field photon entanglement in total angular momentum

Nature
Open 
Bifidobacteria support optimal infant vaccine responses

Nature
Open 
Mastering diverse control tasks through world models

Nature
Open 
A natural experiment on the effect of herpes zoster vaccination on dementia

Nature
Open 
Photoinduced copper-catalysed deracemization of alkyl halides

Nature
Open 
World’s tiniest pacemaker could revolutionize heart surgery

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Announces 'Find My' Network Availability in South Korea
Apple today announced 'Find My' network availability in South Korea. The launch brings the full range of Apple's location-based ‌Find My‌ services to South Korean customers for the first time, enabling them to keep track of devices, belongings, and loved ones.





With the ‌Find My‌ network enabled, users will be able to to locate their iPhones, iPads, Macs, and other Apple devices, as well as AirTag-connected personal items and third-party ‌Find My‌ compatible trackers, while maintaining strong privacy protections.



One of the main features of the ‌Find My‌ network is its ability to pinpoint lost devices on a map, providing users with step-by-step directions to retrieve their misplaced items. The app also allows users to trigger a sound on their lost Apple devices, making it easier to locate them when in close proximity.



‌Find My‌ also lets users stay connected with friends and family by opting to share their location with specific contacts. This can be useful when meeting up in crowded areas, particularly for owners of iPhone 15 and later models who can take advantage of the Precision Finding capability to navigate directly to their friends' exact locations.



The original "‌Find My‌ iPhone" app was launched in 2009 alongside ‌iPhone‌ OS 3. "‌Find My‌ Mac" was added to OS X 10.7 Lion in 2011, while "‌Find My‌ Friends" was released in October 2011. With the release of iOS 13 and macOS 10.15 Catalina, the functionality of ‌Find My‌ ‌iPhone‌, ‌Find My‌ Mac, and ‌Find My‌ Friends was unified into the app we know today as ‌Find My‌.Tags: South Korea, Find MyThis article, 'Apple Announces 'Find My' Network Availability in South Korea' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Hit With $5 Billion Class Action Lawsuit Over eBooks Availability
A lawsuit filed against Apple in California this week accuses the company of violating the state's false advertising law and other consumer laws, by intentionally misleading customers into thinking that they are purchasing digital e-books from the Apple Books app in perpetuity, when instead they are only purchasing revokable licenses to the books.





The proposed class action complaint explains that Apple is required to pull a digital book or audiobook from the Apple Books app if and when it loses a license to that content, resulting in the content no longer being available in the app's store. As a result, the complaint alleges that some customers have unexpectedly found that digital books they previously purchased were no longer available to re-download, despite having paid for them. Apple removes books without warning, and without providing refunds, the complaint adds.



As noted in the complaint, the purchase screen in the Apple Books app does not include a link to any terms of service or licensing information. However, in order to set up and use an iPhone, iPad, Mac, or other Apple device, users are required to agree to Apple's various software license agreements, which all state the following:By using this software in connection with an Apple Account, or other Apple Services, you agree to the applicable terms of service, such as the latest Apple Media Services Terms and Conditions […]In the Apple Media Services Terms and Conditions, Apple states the following:Purchased Content will generally remain available for you to download, redownload, or otherwise access from Apple. Though it is unlikely, subsequent to your purchase, Content may be removed from the Services and become unavailable for further download or access from Apple (for instance, because Apple loses its right from the Content provider to make it available). To ensure your ability to continue enjoying Content, we encourage you to download all purchased Content to a device in your possession and to back it up.The lawsuit, Morehouse et al v. Apple, Inc., was filed in a U.S. district court in San Jose on Tuesday. The plaintiffs are seeking up to $5 billion in damages, with the proposed class being all individuals who purchased a digital book or audiobook from the Apple Books store within the to-be-determined class period. A judge has yet to be assigned to the case, and it remains to be seen if the class action lawsuit is certified and proceeds to trial.



The complaint was filed by law firm Siri & Glimstad LLP.Tags: Apple Lawsuits, Apple BooksThis article, 'Apple Hit With $5 Billion Class Action Lawsuit Over eBooks Availability' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Chatham House
Open 
Putting the Digital Service Tax on the table in US negotiations sends worrying signal on UK digital sovereignty
Putting the Digital Service Tax on the table in US negotiations sends worrying signal on UK digital sovereignty
Expert comment
jon.wallace
2 April 2025

It would likely be unpopular for a government that has cut welfare services and introduced new taxes on UK businesses, but it also risks undermining wider attempts to regulate big tech.















The UK’s Digital Services Tax (DST) was originally introduced as a stopgap measure, passed in 2020 pending an international agreement to reform the international tax framework (the agreement never materialized). The DST looked to make tech multinationals not headquartered in the UK pay a tax on the revenues they made from their UK users. The tax, set at 2 per cent on the revenues of search engines, social media services and online marketplaces, raises a modest amount – £800 million a year, on average. But it holds significant symbolic value: corporate tax avoidance is a bugbear for the UK public.






The tax may be popular domestically, but it is anything but across the Atlantic.






Persistent rumours that the UK government plans to reduce or eliminate the DST for US tech giants, in hopes of persuading President Donald Trump to row back or reduce tariffs on UK goods, will naturally worry some in the Labour Party. Announcing tax breaks for US tech conglomerates immediately after squeezing the UK welfare system, and months after raising UK employers’ national insurance contributions, will in the words of Labour MP Clive Lewis, ‘look absolutely horrific’. But the UK government is in a difficult position: the tax may be popular domestically, but it is anything but across the Atlantic. President Trump has likened the medley of digital taxes, regulatory fines and other costs levied by other governments on US tech companies as ‘overseas extortion’. Within a month of taking office, Trump had withdrawn the US from OECD negotiations on a global tax system, and issued an executive order ‘Defending American Companies and Innovators From Overseas Extortion and Unfair Fines and Penalties’, targeting precisely those digital services taxes ‘designed to plunder American companies… through extortive fines and taxes’. The UK’s goldilocks zoneTo date, the UK has sought to position itself in a ‘Goldilocks zone’ between the US and EU positions on technology governance, emphasizing sovereignty and growth. The hope is that the UK can be both a friend of Europe and, through less stringent regulation than the EU, the best place East of the Atlantic to scale technology products and services.






The UK should think hard about how much control it is willing to cede to improve US relations.






The offer to reduce or ditch the DST follows other moves that on the surface emphasize this British ‘middle way’. The UK was the only country to join the US in not signing a joint statement emerging from the recent International AI summit in Paris, citing national security concerns among others. But it’s unlikely the UK can maintain this strategy for long. The Trumpian approach to technology development, of minimal regulation to bolster big tech’s contribution to the stock market, and maintain a technological edge over China, is unlikely to fly in the UK. The British public is broadly supportive of tech regulation, particularly on the issues of online harms and young people growing up online. And most expect companies doing business in the UK to pay their fair share of tax.


























Related content
Europe must forge a new role in the global economy








That would seem to incline the UK more towards the EU approach. The EU has been at the forefront of regulating big tech, including via its AI Act, similar digital tax regimes to the UK in countries like France, Italy and Spain, and GDPR data privacy laws with which most UK workers are familiar. More fundamentally a combative US will force other countries to confront a difficult question. How much sovereignty over domestic technology is sufficient? The UK must should think hard about how much control it is willing to cede to improve US relations. It must realistically assess its ability to shape and influence the technology on which increasing parts of its social, economic and political foundations rest, but also whether concessions to the US will really deliver benefits. The EU may be grappling with how to stay globally economically competitive while maintaining its regulatory approach. But its strategy towards big tech is nonetheless one of the most meaningful attempts to use pooled democratic power to manage and rein in the influence of these companies. Piecemeal concessions to the US in exchange for the uncertain prospect of tariff exemptions or trade deals might be less beneficial than aligning with the EU approach.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
RECOMMENDED — Sinti and Roma children in Germany experience hostility from teachers and other students, a new study shows
A study on antiziganism in Germany's education sector shows that Sinti and Roma experience hostility from teachers and other children.

BBC UK News
Open 
Jagtar Singh Johal 'moved to solitary' after acquittal
The Scottish activist from Dumbarton was detained on a trip to Punjab after his wedding in 2017.

Mail Online
Open 
How Jesse Wood's new girlfriend Gemma Gregory was the REAL wild child of Made in Chelsea during brief reality TV stint - as she finds love with Fearne Cotton's ex husband
While Jesse Wood's new girlfriend Gemma Gregory only had a very short stint on Made In Chelsea back in 2011 - it certainly was a memorable one.

Mail Online
Open 
Outrage as Terry's Chocolate Orange is hit by 'shrinkflation' yet AGAIN as popular product is cut by 12 grams - while sneakily staying at the same price
To the horror of shoppers, the French manufacturer of the iconic sweet treat has quietly dropped its weight from 157g to 145g - the second time it has shrunk in less than a decade.

Mail Online
Open 
Angelina Jolie's daughter Shiloh, 18, debuts new look at dance class after years of tomboy style
Shiloh Jolie debuted a fresh new hairstyle while attending a dance class in Los Angeles on Tuesday, showcasing a softer look. The adorable teenager is famous for her tomboy aesthetic.

Mail Online
Open 
Royal Navy training exercise off the Welsh coast sees HMS Dauntless shoot down swarms of drones with awesome accuracy
HMS Dauntless let loose with almost with every weapon system at the ship's disposal to destroy swarms of drones during a high-octane live-fire drill off the Welsh coast.

TechRadar News
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Thousands of PostgreSQL servers are being hijacked to mine crypto

TechRadar News
Open 
Mario Kart World – everything we know so far

TechRadar News
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ChatGPT is down again – here's everything we know about the latest outage

TechRadar News
Open 
Hollow Knight: Silksong was just shown at the Nintendo Switch 2 Direct with a 2025 launch window

TechRadar News
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Dark mode for Google Photos is no longer exclusive to phones, as Google finally brings it to its web version

TechRadar News
Open 
Microsoft reveals new tool to help with Windows 11 boot recovery crashes

TechRadar News
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Nintendo Switch 2 Direct live: The Duskbloods revealed, plus release date, price and a full recap of everything announced today

TechRadar News
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Donkey Kong Bananza announced at the Nintendo Switch 2 Direct

Digital Trends
Open 
Nintendo Switch 2: Price, launch date, hardware specs, and more
The Nintendo Switch 2 is officially here, and this is what we know about its launch date and hardware specs.

Digital Trends
Open 
Mario Kart World takes players off the track into an open world
Oringinally teased with the Switch 2 reveal, Mario Kart World is the first official Switch 2 exclusive game racing to your system with 24 racers.

Digital Trends
Open 
A new Hyrule Warriors is coming this winter that ties into Tears of the Kingdom
A prequel to Tears of the Kingdom called Hyrule Warriors: Age of Imprisonment was announced, and it's also a follow-up to 2020's Age of Calamity.

Digital Trends
Open 
You’ll be waiting a little bit longer for AirPods Max lossless audio update
AirPods Max lossless update delayed due to iOS bug; stay tuned for improved features.

Digital Trends
Open 
Space Invaders Infinity Gene Evolve brings the Xbox Live Arcade era back
Space Invaders Infinity Gene Evolve is a great mutation of a classic shooter that calls back to Xbox Live Arcade's glory days.

Digital Trends
Open 
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood sequel: David Fincher to direct, Brad Pitt to star
In one of the year's most shocking stories, David Fincher and Brad Pitt will team up for a sequel to Once Upon a Time in Hollywood at Netflix.

The Aviationist
Open 
Up Close and Personal with the Orange BUFF
The 49th Test and Evaluation Squadron revealed the finished livery of the heritage orange B-52H which pays tribute to the NB-52A and NB-52E. Few months after it was first spotted with the new throwback color scheme, the B-52H 61-0028 has now received all the missing decals, completing the amazing heritage orange livery. In fact, the […]
The post Up Close and Personal with the Orange BUFF appeared first on The Aviationist.

The Verge
Open 
Mario Kart World launches exclusively with the Nintendo Switch 2
We knew a Mario Kart game was coming to the Switch 2, and now Nintendo has finally shared some real details in its latest Nintendo Direct. It’s called Mario Kart World, and it will be a day-one Switch 2 exclusive when the console launches on June 5th. It comes with a collar-tugging $79.99 price tag, […]

The Verge
Open 
Kirby Air Riders is a Switch 2 racing game from Masahiro Sakurai
The Switch 2 is getting an unexpected sequel to GameCube racing game Kirby Air Ride, with Masahiro Sakurai — the original Air Ride’s director, not to mention the creator of both Kirby and Super Smash Bros. — returning to lead development.  Air Ride, launched in 2003, is a four-player racer in which players control different-colored […]

The Verge
Open 
FromSoftware is making a multiplayer Switch 2 exclusive called The Duskbloods
The Duskbloods, a new game by FromSoftware, is coming exclusively to the Nintendo Switch 2. The teaser trailer debuted during Nintendo’s Switch 2 Direct video presentation, where it was revealed that it’s set to launch in 2026 with famed Elden Ring and Dark Souls director Hidetaka Miyazaki at the helm. No other details were provided. […]

The Verge
Open 
Nintendo goes in-depth on Switch 2 backward compatibility
At numerous points during today’s Nintendo Switch 2 event stream, fine print at the bottom of the screen directed viewers to Nintendo’s website for the full details on which original Switch titles will be supported by the new console. As it turns out, the company has put together a surprisingly detailed resource page that goes […]

The Verge
Open 
Nintendo’s Switch 2 preorder process has strict requirements to thwart scalpers
If you want to preorder a Switch directly from Nintendo, you’ll need to make sure you have at least 50 hours of gameplay on the original Switch. Nintendo revealed the anti-scalper mechanism on its preorder registration page, where it says it will prioritize registrants who meet the gameplay requirements and have purchased at least a […]

The Verge
Open 
The Nintendo Switch 2 has a camera accessory for video chats
Nintendo is launching a special camera accessory for the Switch 2 that will let you host video chats with your Switch friends. Simply called the Nintendo Switch 2 Camera, it’s a camera on a stand designed to sit next to your TV while you play. You can use the new camera with GameChat, Nintendo’s new […]

Gizmodo
Open 
Amazon Slashes JBL PartyBox 710 Speaker Price to All-Time Low, Big Sound for Spring
Save $150 on the JBL PartyBox 710 party speaker at Amazon, just in time for Spring weather.

Gizmodo
Open 
Unique Study Is Latest to Show Shingles Vaccine Can Help Prevent Dementia
Vaccinated people's risk of dementia was reduced by 20% over a seven year period, researchers have found.

Gizmodo
Open 
The First Trailer for Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 3 Is a Wild Trip
Get ready for the Enterprise to go to some very strange places indeed when Star Trek: Strange New Worlds returns this summer.

Gizmodo
Open 
When the Dino-Killing Asteroid Hit, Mammals Were Already on the Move
Researchers suggest that ground-based mammals fared better than their arboreal relatives during the end-Cretaceous extinction thanks to their lifestyle.

Gizmodo
Open 
Google Pixel Tablet Drops Back to Black Friday Price on Amazon, a Spring Treat for Android Fans
Google’s hybrid entertainment and productivity tablet returns to its lowest-ever price.

Mail Online
Open 
Elon Musk dramatically steps down from DOGE in shock move after Trump expressed private doubts
President Donald Trump has told his Cabinet and inner circle that Elon Musk is stepping back from his government role.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Everything we learned from Nintendo’s ‘deep dive’ into the Switch 2
In this week’s newsletter: Finally, the sequel to the revolutionary handheld console was unveiled – and it was a reminder that no does joy like NintendoSixty minutes – that’s how long Nintendo took on Wednesday afternoon to remind us that no other video game manufacturer creates joy like this one. It was the Nintendo livestream we’ve been waiting for: a deep dive into the new console after so much speculation. Sure, the Switch 2 is the company’s first real hardware sequel – an updated and spruced-up version of its predecessor rather than a radical new piece of kit. But the updates are the intriguing part.Naturally, we’re getting a larger (7.9-inch, to be precise) screen that displays in full HD at 1080p; but we’re also getting re-thought Joy-Con controllers that now click to the console via strong magnets rather than those fiddly sliders we all put on the wrong way. The buttons are larger, too, so adults will be able to play Mario Kart with some semblance of skill. But the main new feature for the controllers is a new rollerball that enables each one to operate as a mouse. This will allow for new point-and-click features and some interesting control options. I like that they showed this off with a wheelchair basketball game, where you slide the controllers a long a surface to mimic pushing the wheels. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
National security adviser Michael Waltz reportedly conducted business via Gmail
Latest security flap again focuses scrutiny on Waltz after he earlier added journalist to Yemen war-planning chatUS politics live – latest updatesMichael Waltz, the embattled national security adviser to Donald Trump, and other members of the national security council have reportedly used personal Gmail accounts to conduct government business.The apparent use of Gmail, a relatively insecure method of communication for high-level government officials, places further scrutiny upon Waltz, who is already under pressure after adding a journalist to a group chat on the commercial Signal app, where top US officials then planned and celebrated a US airstrike in Yemen last month. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ministers lose appeal against Yorkshire anglers’ river pollution ruling
Appeal court finds in favour of Pickering Fishery Association members who wanted river to be cleanedA group of anglers trying to restore the ecosystem of a river have seen off a challenge by the environment secretary, Steve Reed, who claimed that cleaning up their waterway was administratively unworkable.Reed took an appeal against a group of anglers from North Yorkshire, who had won a legal case arguing that the government and the Environment Agency’s plans to clean up the Upper Costa Beck, a former trout stream devastated by sewage pollution and runoff, were so vague they were ineffectual. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
British activist in solitary confinement in India despite acquittal, family say
Brother of Jagtar Singh Johal claims he is being ‘mentally tortured’ through unwarranted detentionThe British Sikh activist Jagtar Singh Johal, detained for seven years in an Indian jail, has been placed into solitary confinement and under 24-hour surveillance despite being acquitted of all terrorism charges against him by a Punjab court on 4 March, his family have claimed.
Johal is still facing the exact same charges in a parallel case in a clear example of double jeopardy, his brother Gurpreet said when giving testimony at Westminster to an all party committee on arbitrary detention. He said the Indian courts have not granted his brother bail, despite the prosecutor’s failure to produce any credible evidence or witnesses in the Punjab court.Gurpreet said UK consular staff met his brother in jail on Tuesday and were told he had been put into solitary confinement with a 24-hour guard, adding no explanation had been given. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US anti-abortion group expands campaign in UK
Exclusive: Alliance Defending Freedom, which is funding case of activist Livia Tossici-Bolt, is lobbying against buffer zones around clinicsA rightwing US group backing an anti-abortion campaigner whose case has become a new source of UK tensions with the Trump administration is significantly expanding activities and spending in Britain.The UK branch of Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), which is funding the case of Livia Tossici-Bolt, who is being prosecuted for an alleged breach of a “buffer zone” outside a Bournemouth abortion clinic, increased spending on campaigning and other activities in the UK to more than £1m last year. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
NATO fears Russia-US talks – AFP

Deutsche Welle
Open 
German finance minister seeks tariff negotiations with US
German Finance Minister Jörg Kukies expects a "substantial adverse impact" from the new US tariffs, but he stressed that Berlin is seeking "partnership-kind negotiations" with Washington.

Mail Online
Open 
Huge data breach sees 50,000 profiles LEAKED from 'Gay Daddy' dating app - exposing users' names, private photos, and HIV status
A huge data breach has leaked over 50,000 profiles from the 'Gay Daddy' dating app, cybersecurity researchers have warned.

Mail Online
Open 
Tesla sales plunge by 13% to a three year low amid backlash against boss Elon Musk, a model redesign and slump in demand from China
The world's richest man and self-declared Tesla 'Technoking' has attracted widespread international condemnation for his social media activity and actions such as an alleged Nazi salute.

Mail Online
Open 
Why Brad Pitt, 61, is 'struggling to keep the love alive' with Ines de Ramon, 32
Brad Pitt has been shooting the movie Heart Of The Beast in New Zealand this spring and still has six weeks to go.

BBC UK News
Open 
Women to continue having babies later, says ONS
The ONS also projects women will continue having smaller families than previous generations.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US justice department drops corruption case against New York mayor Eric Adams
Judge said Trump officials’ push to have case dropped ‘smacks of a bargain’ over immigration enforcementA US federal judge on Wednesday dismissed the Department of Justice’s corruption case against New York City’s embattled mayor, Eric Adams, after weeks of scandal about the Democratic mayor bowing to pressure from the Trump administration to cooperate on immigration crackdowns while trying to get out from under the criminal charges.Despite the judge’s decision, he said the Trump administration’s grounds for having the case dropped “smacks of a bargain”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Man pulled alive from Myanmar earthquake rubble after five days
Twenty-six-year-old rescued from hotel in Naypyidaw as agencies call for increased aid before monsoonA man has been pulled alive from the rubble of a hotel in Myanmar, five days after the country’s worst earthquake in a century flattened entire neighbourhoods and tore through temples, bridges and highways.A joint team of rescuers from Myanmar and Turkey found the 26-year-old in the ruins of the building in the capital, Naypyidaw, after midnight, the fire service and the country’s ruling junta said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Football Daily | Bayer Leverkusen and a shock that put another L in their debit column
Sign up now! Sign up now! Sign up now? Sign up now!This time last year, Bayer Leverkusen’s 39-match unbeaten streak across all competitions and almost supernatural propensity for pulling late, late equalising and winning goals out of das collective hinterteil was the talk of Europe. With the end of the season hoving into view, Football Daily certainly wasn’t alone in wondering if Xabi Alonso’s side could go an entire season without losing a single game, while the young Basque in charge of them was being linked with Real Madrid, Liverpool and perhaps even a late run at the White House despite being just two years into his senior managerial career. While Leverkusen went on to secure a domestic double without tasting defeat, they ultimately came up short by being soundly beaten in the final of Bigger Vase, where Atalanta’s Ademola Lookman took a sledgehammer to their long unbeaten run, which lasted 51 matches, in the Italian club’s 3-0 win. It was the penultimate game of the German side’s season, and the only one they failed to win or draw.There was definitely a message to the players and it was as simple as it has always been: don’t accept being outworked by a team, which we were against Newcastle. If the stakes are so high, that is almost unacceptable” – Liverpool boss Arne Slot warns his team to get back on the gas in Wednesday night’s Merseyside derby.Congratulations to Ryan Yates on providing (by his own admission) the most useless assist since Héctor Enrique set up Diego Maradona’s goal-of-the-century at the Azteca Stadium in 1986 with a hospital pass. The Forest man really must work on his soundbites though; his ‘I headed it in the six-yard box’ is humorous, but lacks the mischievous insouciance of the Argentinian’s great post-match comment that ‘with a pass like that he could hardly miss’” – Justin Kavanagh.I am not someone who raises a great hue and cry over the language differences between American and British English. Our friends in the UK are more than welcome to take a lift from the ground floor rather than an elevator from the first. However, learning from yesterday’s Football Daily (News, Bits and Bobs, full email edition) that the UK has taken the term for the sacred American tradition of consuming excessive amounts of meat and alcohol before a game and turned it into a crime – or a non-crime, as ‘tailgating’ appears to be over there – I regret to inform you this is a bridge too far. Luckily, we now have precisely the administration to overreact to such grievances” – John Kozempel.Wilf Davies and his eating habits (yesterday’s Football Daily) reminded me of the man who suffered stomach pains after eating only red, brown, pink, yellow, black and white snooker balls. The doctor told him to eat more greens” – Trevor Townson. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ange Postecoglou admits ‘outstanding candidates’ waiting if Spurs replace him
Iraola and Frank expected to be in the runningPostecoglou on speculation: ‘It doesn’t consume me’Ange Postecoglou has admitted there are some “outstanding candidates” waiting to take over if Tottenham decide to sack him. With Bournemouth’s Andoni Iraola and Brentford’s Thomas Frank expected to be in the running if Spurs move in a different direction, Postecoglou finds himself under growing pressure as a defining point in the season approaches.Although the former Celtic manager’s job is likely to be on the line if his team lose their Europa League quarter-final to Eintracht Frankfurt this month, he said he was relaxed about the speculation over his position. Postecoglou denied having any issue with Mauricio Pochettino’s remarks about wanting to return to Spurs one day and dismissed suggestions that talk over his future was a distraction before Thursday’s trip to Chelsea in the Premier League. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Minister seeks inquiry into British Basketball’s ‘potentially criminal’ deal
Super League clubs are unhappy with BBF’s plansGBB League deal puts £4.75m public funding at riskThe sports minister, Stephanie Peacock, has asked the government body responsible for elite funding, UK Sport, to investigate allegations of unlawful tender made against the British Basketball Federation. On Wednesday, the BBF signed a 15-year agreement with an American consortium to operate a new men’s professional league from 2026.The existing nine Super League Basketball (SLB) clubs are deeply unhappy with the BBF’s plans for the sport. The Sheffield Sharks owner, Vaughn Millette, wrote to the government on their behalf in February after the BBF had entered exclusive negotiations with Marshall Glickman’s GBB League Ltd (GBBL), to outline their concerns. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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British activist in solitary confinement in India despite acquittal, family say
Brother of Jagtar Singh Johal says he is ‘being mentally tortured’ through unwarranted detentionThe British Sikh activist Jagtar Singh Johal, detained for seven years in an Indian jail, has been placed into solitary confinement and under 24-hour surveillance despite being acquitted of all terrorism charges against him by a Punjab court on 4 March, his family have claimed.
Johal is still facing the exact same charges in a parallel case in a clear example of double jeopardy, his brother Gurpreet said when giving testimony at Westminster to an all party committee on arbitrary detention. He said the Indian courts have not granted his brother bail, despite the prosecutor’s failure to produce any credible evidence or witnesses in the Punjab court.Gurpreet said UK consular staff met his brother in jail on Tuesday and were told he had been put into solitary confinement with a 24-hour guard, adding no explanation had been given. Gurpreet said: “I fear for his physical and mental welfare since he is being excluded from contact with all other prisoners. He has been in jail for seven years, acquitted and now he is being further punished. He is being mentally tortured and I am concerned something is going to happen to him. The aim is to break him.”
He added that a critical window of opportunity existed after the Punjab acquittal, in which the judge was damning about the quality of evidence assembled by the Indian prosecutors, to secure his brother’s release. He said the Foreign Office had to realise his brother was not being held to secure his conviction, but to keep him in detention. “What is missing from the British government is political will. I am told the prime minister raised the case when he met the Indian external affairs minister, S Jaishankar, but I do not know what exactly they are raising, or how central it is to the conversations ministers are having.” Continue reading...

Ars Technica
Open 
Nintendo unveils Switch 2 ahead of June 5 launch

Ars Technica
Open 
Tesla sales and production slumped heavily in Q1 2025

UK Government News
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Securing a greener future with cleaner maritime technology
The Maritime and Coastguard Agency has been supporting the Clean Maritime Demonstration Competition (CMDC).

UK Government News
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IBCA Community Update, 2 April 2025
Infected Blood Compensation Authority's update that was circulated on 2 April 2025

Wired Top Stories
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Nintendo Switch 2 Is Coming June 5 for $450
Nintendo's next-generation handheld is set to launch June 5 alongside a slew of new games and accessories—including one very cool rebooted GameCube controller.

Boing Boing
Open 
A mysterious and important Ikea ad
Ikea grasped the moment and put out a Severance-inspired ad: "for work that is mysterious and important". I love how it embraces the shared aesthetic, that perfect mid-to-late-century liminal minimal—while also showing that Ikea stuff is inexpensive and versatile (they put beige IBM compatibles on the desks instead of rousting up some Dasher terminals.) — Read the rest
The post A mysterious and important Ikea ad appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Get help running your online business with this AI-powered one-stop-shop, now 73% off for life
TL;DR: This one-stop-shop takes care of all your online business needs with help from AI, and a lifetime plan to Sellful is available for only $399 (reg. $1,497). 
Need to take your business online? If you're looking to build a website or get some support growing your business, Sellful is an AI-powered one-stop shop. — Read the rest
The post Get help running your online business with this AI-powered one-stop-shop, now 73% off for life appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Liberal wins Wisconsin Supreme Court seat despite Elon's vote-buying campaign
Democratic-aligned Susan Crawford handily defeated GOP-aligned Brad Schimel for the open seat on Wisconsin's State Supreme Court on Tuesday. The race, marred in its final stages by a vote-buying campaign by billionaire Elon Musk, had already become the most expensive judicial race of all time. — Read the rest
The post Liberal wins Wisconsin Supreme Court seat despite Elon's vote-buying campaign appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Register
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Data doesn't lie, but Microsoft's new Power BI prices might make you cry
Hike is no joke and users are not laughing Microsoft's Power BI price rises have arrived, with some tiers increasing by up to 40 percent.…

The Register
Open 
Oracle's masterclass in breach comms: Deny, deflect, repeat
Fallout shows how what you say must be central to disaster planning Opinion  Oracle is being accused of poor incident comms as it reels from two reported data security mishaps over the past fortnight, amid a reluctance to publicly acknowledge all of the events as well as allegedly deleting evidence from the web.…

Deutsche Welle
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Myanmar: Military declares truce to facilitate quake relief
Following unilateral temporary ceasefires announced by armed resistance groups after the earthquake, Myanmar's military rulers also declared a temporary truce. The death toll from the quake now exceeds 3,000.

Mail Online
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World's richest are named on updated list with their combined wealth passing $16TRILLION - while the celebrity stars joining the billionaire club are also revealed
Included on the 2025 compilation are 3,028 billionaires worldwide, which are 247 more than last year. Their combined net worth is an astonishing $16.1trillion.

Mail Online
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Brad Pitt, 61, 'struggling to keep the love alive' with Ines de Ramon, 32, as he shoots movie in New Zealand with Anna Lambe
Brad Pitt has been shooting the movie Heart Of The Beast in New Zealand this spring and still has six weeks to go.

Ian Visits
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King’s Cross tube station gets brighter
If you've noticed that King's Cross tube station has been a bit brighter recently, you're not wrong—it is.Read more ›

Atlas Obscura
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Rock of Kalikatsou in Patmos, Greece

The Hill
Open 
Whitaker confirmed as Trump NATO ambassador
Matthew Whitaker, who served as acting attorney general during President Trump’s first term, was confirmed late Tuesday by the Senate in a 52-45 vote to be the next U.S. ambassador to NATO. Whitaker, who has an extensive law enforcement background but light foreign policy experience, told senators during his confirmation hearing last month that if...

The Hill
Open 
Eric Adams corruption case dismissed by federal judge
A federal judge has dismissed the criminal case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) with prejudice, ensuring that the charges cannot be refiled.  The ruling dropping the charges comes after the Trump administration’s Department of Justice (DOJ) requested that the case be dismissed against the embattled mayor, who was facing a range of...

The Hill
Open 
Musk downplays Wisconsin results, saying he 'expected to lose'
Elon Musk downplayed the results in the Wisconsin Supreme Court race, saying in a post early Wednesday that he had “expected to lose.” Musk was responding to a user on the social platform X thanking him for his involvement. “Elon knew that it was a long shot to win the Wisconsin Supreme Court race," the...

The Hill
Open 
Wall Street Journal: Election results reflect 'MAGA backlash'
The editorial board of The Wall Street Journal is calling Tuesday night's election results in Wisconsin in Florida a wake-up call for President Trump and Republicans. "Democrats solidified their 4-3 progressive majority on the Wisconsin Supreme Court on Tuesday, and the ramifications are nationwide," the Journal's editorial board wrote late Tuesday, calling liberal Judge Susan Crawford's win...

The Hill
Open 
Former Biden HHS secretary Becerra launches bid for California governor
Former Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Xavier Becerra on Wednesday launched a bid for California governor, joining a growing field of candidates looking to replace term-limited Gov. Gavin Newsom (D). “As AG I took on Trump – and won. As HHS Secretary, I took on Big Pharma — and won. It’s time to do...

The Hill
Open 
What it’s like to be a US historian right now
One of the most striking aspects of this moment is the pervasive sense of instability.

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Trump hours away from imposing massive tariffs for 'Liberation Day'
President Trump's long promised day of reciprocal tariffs has arrived, with a Rose Garden event to announce them set for Wednesday afternoon. "It's liberation day in America," Trump posted in all caps to his Truth Social platform around 7 a.m. Also early Wednesday, the president pressured former Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and other Republicans he’s...

The Hill
Open 
Senate Democrats open investigation into reports AI could replace contract workers at Education Department
Senate Democrats are opening an investigation into reports that Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is attempting to replace some contract workers at the Education Department with artificial intelligence (AI).   Democratic Sens. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) and Mazie Hirono (Hawaii), along with Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (N.Y.), sent a letter to Education Secretary Linda...

The Hill
Open 
Danish prime minister visiting Greenland amid Trump takeover talk
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen will visit Greenland this week after the Trump administration ramps up its rhetoric about a takeover of the semiautonomous Danish territory.  Frederiksen will meet with the territory's new leader, Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen. “It is important for me to visit and greet the future Chairman of the Government of Greenland as soon as possible. It has...

The Hill
Open 
A 'current policy' budget baseline would have disastrous consequences
Changing the baseline policy would set a precedent that we would all surely regret. 

The Hill
Open 
Man to plead guilty to attempting to kill Kavanaugh at home 
A California man will plead guilty to attempting to assassinate Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh by showing up outside his home in 2022 with weapons, his lawyers said Wednesday. Lawyers for Nicholas Roske announced his intent in a letter to the judge overseeing the case. Roske was set to face trial in June, and the charge carries up to life...

The Hill
Open 
Naval Academy removes hundreds of library books in DEI purge
The U.S. Naval Academy has removed nearly 400 books from its library that promote diversity, equity and inclusion.  The step, reported by The Associated Press, is the latest in the Trump administration’s efforts to eliminate DEI policies, programs, social media postings and curriculum in federal agencies and schools. The Academy did not immediately respond to...

Mail Online
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Fans shocked as Jenna Ortega makes huge change to face
Jenna Ortega put on a very leggy display as she attended the State of the Industry and Lionsgate presentation as part of CinemaCon in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Tuesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Real life story behind popular Disney villain who died one of the most horrific deaths ever
People are only just learning that this Disney villain was based on a real person-who died one of the most horrific deaths ever. Pocahontas was portrayed as a romance but it has a dark history

ZDNet News
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This $500 OnePlus phone has made it very difficult for me to recommend pricier handsets
The OnePlus 13R delivers a premium display and performance experience while costing hundreds less than high-end models.

ZDNet News
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I switched to Huawei's $3,600 tri-foldable - now I'm wondering why tablets still exist
The Huawei Mate XT Ultimate redefines tri-fold phones, proving they're more than just a novelty - it's a glimpse into the future of mobile computing.

ZDNet News
Open 
I found 10 alternatives for the Zelle app - now that you can't use it to send money
If you previously used the Zelle app to pay for goods and services or simply transfer money to loved ones or friends, here are the best alternatives.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany shuts down major child sexual abuse image platform
Investigators in southern Germany have said they have dismantled a sprawling pedophile network with close to 2 million users. Scores of suspects were arrested as part of a global swoop.

Mail Online
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Bizarre video shows 'cowboy Karen' clash with conservative critic in park
Liberal Loveland councilmember Erin Black had arranged to meet city resident Dillion Kaiser in a park to discuss their conflicting political stances.

Mail Online
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Ex-Man United starlet Brandon Williams admits it 'hurts watching football now' after being released - as he lifts lid on darkest days and faces two years in prison
Brandon Williams has admitted in a candid interview with ex-Man United goalkeeper Ben Foster that he struggles to watch football anymore after being released by the Red Devils.

Mail Online
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Killer who had same murder conviction quashed twice is set to return to prison after Supreme Court 'restore' his sentence
A man who was twice found guilty of the same murder and had both convictions quashed has had the second judgement 'restored' following a Supreme Court ruling.

Mail Online
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Study pinpoints widely available vaccine that reduces dementia risk by at least 20% - have you had it?
A vaccine already given to over 65s could slash the risk of developing dementia, a major new study has found.

Mail Online
Open 
Jason's Sourdough sends British shoppers into a frenzy as £2 loaf becomes an 'obsession for millennial women'
Jason Greary, 53, a fourth-generation baker from Leicestershire, launched his eponymous brand of sourdough in 2020 after he noticed a lack of affordable alternatives in the market.

Mail Online
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I'm a doctor - here is the most gut-wrenching thing a patient said to me before they died, it still haunts me
Anonymous medics told how patients had pleaded with staff not to let them die. Others spoke of 'angels' in the room. One man called out for his childhood pet.

Mail Online
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Londoners warned not to have barbecues this weekend because they could cause wildfires - as temperature set to reach 22C after one of driest Marches on record
The Met Office has imposed a rare amber warning for fire severity across parts of England, southern Scotland and Northern Ireland as temperatures soar to 22C (72F).

Mail Online
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Massive £30m superyacht 'owned by co-founder of household name retailer' sails into British harbour
The bright red expedition superyacht named Akula after the Russian and Ukrainian word for shark sailed into Bristol on Tuesday morning.

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Hope in my heart’: displaced Afghans in limbo as White House freezes refugee programs
Texas volunteers had prepared welcome for family fleeing Taliban now stranded in Pakistan in fear of being deportedThe 24-year-old Afghan woman wants to become a surgeon – and she had set her sights on training in the US.She wants to care for other women and girls, so they don’t have to be afraid to visit the doctor – so at least in one crucial aspect of their lives they won’t have to endure the unwanted advances, dismissive comments and blatant disrespect that she’s experienced from many of the men who have always surrounded her, first in her native Afghanistan and now in legal limbo in Pakistan. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Nintendo reveals Switch 2 console due to launch on 5 June
New console features larger screen, double the pixels and magnetically attached controllersAfter months of intense speculation and cryptic teaser videos, Nintendo has finally unveiled the successor to its Switch console. The Nintendo Switch 2 will launch on 5 June at a retail price of £395.99 for the basic package and £429.99 bundled with Mario Kart World.As expected, the screen is now larger, measuring 7.9 inches and offers double the pixels of the previous display, in 1080p resolution. It also supports up to 120 frames per second for smooth animation, as well as high dynamic range lighting for better colour contrast, while the console remains the same thickness as its predecessor. The dock allows connection to a TV with up to 4K resolution supported. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Myanmar earthquake: man pulled alive from rubble after five days as looming monsoon sparks urgent call for aid
A 26-year-old man was rescued from a hotel in the capital Naypyidaw, long after the disaster killed thousandsA man has been pulled alive from the rubble of a hotel in Myanmar, five days after the country’s worst earthquake in a century flattened entire neighbourhoods and tore through temples, bridges and highways.A joint team of rescuers from Myanmar and Turkey found the 26-year-old in the ruins of the building in the capital, Naypyidaw, after midnight, the fire service and the country’s ruling junta said. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Grand National gets taps turned on to ensure safe ground after long dry spell
Watering at Aintree for famous race started in mid-MarchConstitution Hill the star turn on meeting’s opening dayJon Pullin, the acting clerk of the course at Aintree, said on Wednesday that he will do whatever it takes to ensure that the Grand National meeting opens on good-to-soft ground on Thursday, despite unusually low levels of rainfall in the weeks running up to one of jump racing’s showpiece events.March 2025 was one of the sunniest on record across much of the UK and watering of the track, which started at Aintree in the middle of the month, is likely to continue overnight once racing is underway to ensure that the going is as safe as possible for horses that will be taking off and landing at least eight times in every race. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Arsenal eye summer move for Athletic Bilbao’s Nico Williams after initial talks
Andrea Berta understood to have met Williams’s agentClub have heavily scouted forward for past two yearsArsenal are exploring a summer move for Athletic Bilbao’s Nico Williams. Andrea Berta has held talks with the Spain forward’s representatives in one of his first acts as the club’s sporting director.It is understood Berta, who was confirmed in his post last Sunday and attended Tuesday’s 2-1 win over Fulham, has met the 22-year-old’s agent, Félix Tainta. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Liberation day’: what are tariffs and why do they matter?
Donald Trump’s threats to impose widescale import levies have spooked governments, investors and analysts alike. Here’s why …Donald Trump has said “tariffs” is the most beautiful word in the dictionary.The US president is expected to announce his latest round of these border taxes on Wednesday at 4pm ET (9pm BST). In what he is calling “liberation day”, Trump has argued the step is needed to raise money and to encourage domestic manufacturing. But it is also rattling the global economy. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Study finds strongest evidence yet that shingles vaccine helps cut dementia risk
Older adults in Wales who had the jab were 20% less likely to be diagnosed with dementia that those not vaccinatedResearchers who tracked cases of dementia in Welsh adults have uncovered the strongest evidence yet that the shingles vaccination reduces the risk of developing the devastating brain disease.Health records of more than 280,000 older adults revealed that those who received a largely discontinued shingles vaccine called Zostavax were 20% less likely to be diagnosed with dementia over the next seven years than those who went without. Continue reading...

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
CMA CGM subsidiaries augment air cargo capacity in different ways
Ocean carrier CMA CGM has a logistics arm that engages in airfreight forwarding and its own cargo airline. Both are expanding their air direct and indirect fleets.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
World's Craziest Airbus Landing | Paro Airport Bhutan
World's Craziest Airbus Landing , Nowhere in the world do you fly so close to the mountains on an A320!

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Hollywood remembers 'wonderful' actor Val Kilmer
He starred in some of the biggest movies of the 1980s and 90s, including Top Gun and The Doors.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Nintendo announces Switch 2 release date - but what was revealed about new games?
More than a million people watched online as details of the long awaited successor to the hit console were announced.

Slashdot
Open 
Nintendo Switch 2 Arrives on June 5, Priced at $450
Nintendo's Switch 2, priced at $450, launches June 5 with a 7.9-inch LCD screen offering 1080p resolution, HDR support, and 120Hz refresh capability. The device maintains the original Switch's 13.99mm thickness while increasing internal storage to 256GB from the previous 32GB.

The console outputs at 4K/60fps when docked, with the dock featuring a built-in cooling fan. Two USB-C ports handle accessories and charging. The system supports microSD Express cards but not original Switch microSD cards. Joy-Con controllers now attach via magnets instead of sliding rails and feature mouse-like functionality with compatible games. Both Joy-Cons and the new Pro Controller include a "C" button that activates a chat menu for the new "Game Chat" feature.

Game cards for Switch 2 will be red rather than black. The system maintains backward compatibility with original Switch cartridges and introduces a "Game Share" feature for local game sharing between consoles.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
Lawmakers Propose Cap on Credit Card Interest Rates
Representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Anna Paulina Luna introduced bipartisan legislation in March to cap credit card interest rates at 10% annually as Americans' debt hits record levels. "Credit cards with high interest rates regularly trap working people in endless cycles of debt," Ocasio-Cortez said in a statement.

Credit card debt has reached $1.2 trillion in Q4 2024, up from $720 billion in the same quarter of 2004, according to Federal Reserve Bank of New York data. Average annual percentage rates nearly doubled to 21% in 2024 from 12% in 2003. The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia reported a record number of cardholders making only minimum payments in Q3 2024, "showing signs of consumer stress."

Further reading: Study Reveals Why Credit Card Interest Rates Remain Stubbornly High.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC Technology News
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Nintendo announces Switch 2 release date - and a new Mario Kart game
More than a million people watched online as details of the long awaited successor to the hit console were announced.

Mail Online
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Movie fans ecstatic as classic 90s film confirms epic return a whopping 28 years after its debut - with original cast members
The movie became a huge hit and according to Box Office Mojo, the film is the 'seventh highest-grossing slasher film as of 2021'.

Mail Online
Open 
The British firms set to be hardest hit by Trump's sweeping tariffs TODAY - from top fashion houses to car makers employing tens of thousands…
It's only a week since Rachel Reeves unveiled her Spring Statement but her plan to balance the nation's books looks set to blown out of the water.

Mail Online
Open 
Romeo prisoner who had phone sex with guard and fling with jail nurse is arrested 'after spending week on the run when four women helped him go on run'
Harri Pullen, 27, was wanted by police after being released from behind bars where he has been accused of romances with staff members.

Mail Online
Open 
Pictured: Mother who was stabbed alongside son in terrifying knife attack at their home that killed husband, 57
Maria Marvin and her son Mario, 11, were stabbed in a terrifying knife attack at their home in Brighton where Maria's husband was found dead.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘I was too busy to sleep with millions of people’: ex-boybander Eg White on penning bangers for Adele, Duffy – and a builder
The ex-member of Brother Beyond now writes chart-toppers for stars. Why has he decided to make a musical of seedy, gutter-life classic Midnight Cowboy, a film he can’t bear?Troop into Eg White’s living room, past the bright, spacious kitchen and the yapping terriers (“Meet the unwelcoming committee!”), then descend into the snug basement studio with its underfloor heating and you will have reached the place where pop bangers are born: hits for Adele (Chasing Pavements), Will Young (Leave Right Now), Duffy (Warwick Avenue) and countless others. The Ivor Novello award-winning songwriter, born Francis White, sits in front of a desk cluttered with screens and consoles and thingamajigs. In T-shirt, jeans and trainers, he looks as lean as the neck of a Stratocaster. When he is in quizzical mode, as he very often is, four deep grooves appear on his forehead like the strings on a bass guitar.White’s newest project is the music for a stage version of Midnight Cowboy, the Oscar-winning 1969 buddy movie with Jon Voight and Dustin Hoffman as deluded outsiders adrift in New York, adapted now by Bryony Lavery. Most of its 15 songs – from sanguine ballads to Latin-tinged stompers – were composed not here in White’s west London home but on a family holiday to Colombia. For two hours each morning, while his wife and children were still in bed, he wrote on a cheap baritone ukulele, which he plucks off the wall from between rows of guitars to show me. “You can take it in the hand luggage,” he says cheerfully. “If your kid sits on it, which happened a few times, it lives.” Presumably he means the ukulele, not the kid. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Young women in England and Wales projected to have just one child by 35
ONS study of fertility trends suggests birthrate will continue to fall, with women turning 18 this year having babies laterYoung women in England and Wales are likely to have just one child by the time they are 35, according to groundbreaking analysis of past and projected fertility trends by the Office for National Statistics (ONS).Girls who turn 18 this year are projected to have an average of one child each by the age of 35 – unlike their mothers’ generation who had an average of one child per woman by the time they reached 31. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US anti-abortion group expands campaign in UK
Exclusive: Alliance Defending Freedom, which is funding case of activist Livia Tossici-Bolt, lobbying against buffer zones around clinicsA rightwing US group backing an anti-abortion campaigner whose case has become a new source of UK tensions with the Trump administration is significantly expanding activities and spending in Britain.The UK branch of Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), which is funding the case of Livia Tossici-Bolt, who is being prosecuted for an alleged breach of a “buffer zone” outside a Bournemouth abortion clinic, increased spending on campaigning and other activities in the UK to more than £1m last year. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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UK prepared for all eventualities, says Starmer as new Trump tariffs loom
Challenged by Kemi Badenoch, PM says while no option has been ruled out, he will avoid ‘kneejerk reactions’UK politics live – latest updatesThe UK has “prepared for all eventualities” when it comes to looming US tariffs, with no response ruled out, Keir Starmer has told MPs before Donald Trump’s so-called liberation day, which could spark a global trade war.Challenged by Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative leader, at prime minister’s questions on Wednesday, Starmer said while all options were being considered, he would avoid any kneejerk reactions. Continue reading...

CNET News
Open 
Mario Kart Goes Open-World With Mario Kart World
It's the first game officially announced for the Switch 2.

CNET News
Open 
CapCut Could Get Banned With TikTok This Week. Consider Using These Replacements
These CapCut alternatives should be at the top of your list for potential replacements.

CNET News
Open 
Nintendo Switch 2 Is Coming June 5: Games and More Announced
Details of the next-gen Nintendo console have been revealed.

CNET News
Open 
Act Fast to Grab the Bose SoundLink Flex Portable Bluetooth Speaker While It’s Down to Just $113
This Bose SoundLink Flex is now a massive $36 off thanks to this Amazon deal.

CNET News
Open 
MediaTek's Next Chip Empowers Chromebooks to Be AI Agent Ready
The company's Kompanio Ultra chip can support tomorrow's generative AI-powered helpers, MediaTek says.

CNET News
Open 
What You Need to Know About Nintendo Switch 2 Edition Games
Some Nintendo Switch games, like Breath of the Wild, are getting upgraded versions for the new console dubbed Nintendo Switch 2 Editions.

CNET News
Open 
The Duskbloods Is New FromSoftware Gaming Coming in 2026 to Switch 2
Talk about a surprise for the new Switch.

Mail Online
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Gary Lineker enjoys a cosy wine night in with ex Danielle Bux and his son Harry - after not posting with her husband on social media in seven months
Joined by the former footballer's son Harry, 31, and pals Lucy Pinder and Ella Willis, Danielle, 45, took to her Instagram Story with a few snaps from the night as they played cards.

Mail Online
Open 
One of the world's rarest diamonds - dubbed The Mediterranean Blue - is up for sale for the first time after being discovered in 2023
The Mediterranean Blue is a vivid blue diamond ring weighing more than ten carats.

Mail Online
Open 
Staff at British jail where 17 inmates died in just one year 'laughed at beating prisoners and joked about self-harm'
The messages allegedly show staff members at HMP Parc in Bridgend, south Wales, mocking one inmate who had self harmed as 'daft' and boasting of 'punching the f*** into' another.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Nintendo announces Switch 2 release date - but what was revealed about new games?
Nintendo has released details of the long awaited successor to the best-selling gaming console

Autosport F1
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Autosport 75: Ferrari’s last British F1 world champion
The failure of Jim Clark’s Lotus with just over a lap of the Mexican Grand Prix to go, which robbed the Scot of a second consecutive Formula 1 title, could be seen as the defining moment of 1964. That, or the clash in the same race between championship contender Graham Hill and the second Ferrari of Lorenzo Bandini. But both sell John Surtees’s world crown far too short.Having moved to a ...Keep reading

Autosport F1
Open 
Lawson on “shock” Red Bull demotion: “Definitely not something I expected”
Liam Lawson has revealed that his demotion to Racing Bulls, after just two grands prix at Red Bull in the 2025 Formula 1 season, came as a surprise.After Lawson struggled at both Melbourne and Shanghai – including qualifying 20th twice in China – Red Bull decided the situation called for an immediate driver swap, giving Racing Bulls driver Yuki Tsunoda a long-awaited chance in the main ...Keep reading

Nature
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Unicorn slippers in space

Mac Rumours
Open 
Get the 13-Inch M2 MacBook Air for the Low Price of $749
Amazon and Best Buy are discounting Apple's 13-inch M2 MacBook Air with 16GB of RAM and 256GB SSD storage down to $749.00 in a few colors. This is a $250 discount on the previous generation M2 MacBook Air, and a solid second-best price.



Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Amazon and Best Buy. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.



Amazon currently has this deal available only in Silver, while Best Buy has the computer at this price in Silver, Space Gray, Midnight, and Starlight. Each discount has been applied automatically and does not require any coupon codes or memberships in order to see the final deal price.



$250 OFF13-inch M2 MacBook Air (16GB/256GB) for $749.00



Although this is a previous generation device, it will work great for anyone who doesn't need the performance gains introduced with the newer Apple silicon chips, especially at this discounted price. Apple just announced the new M4 MacBook Air, and anyone shopping for those models can get up to $60 off a few configurations on Amazon.



If you're on the hunt for more discounts, be sure to visit our Apple Deals roundup where we recap the best Apple-related bargains of the past week.







Deals Newsletter

Interested in hearing more about the best deals you can find in 2025? Sign up for our Deals Newsletter and we'll keep you updated so you don't miss the biggest deals of the season!









Related Roundup: Apple DealsThis article, 'Get the 13-Inch M2 MacBook Air for the Low Price of $749' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mac Rumours
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Apple Hit With $5 Billion Class Action Lawsuit Over eBooks Availability
A lawsuit filed against Apple in California this week accuses the company of violating the state's false advertising law and other consumer laws, by intentionally misleading customers into thinking that they are purchasing digital e-books from the Apple Books app in perpetuity, when instead they are only purchasing revokable licenses to the books.





The proposed class action complaint explains that Apple is required to pull a digital book or audiobook from the Apple Books app if and when it loses a license to that content, resulting in the content no longer being available in the app's store. As a result, the complaint alleges that some customers have unexpectedly found that digital books they previously purchased were no longer available to re-download, despite having paid for them. Apple removes books without warning, and without providing refunds, the complaint adds.



As noted in the complaint, the purchase screen in the Apple Books app does not include a link to any terms of service or licensing information. However, in order to set up and use an iPhone, iPad, Mac, or other Apple device, users are required to agree to Apple's various software license agreements, which all state the following:By using this software in connection with an Apple Account, or other Apple Services, you agree to the applicable terms of service, such as the latest Apple Media Services Terms and Conditions […]In the Apple Media Services Terms and Conditions, Apple states the following:Purchased Content will generally remain available for you to download, redownload, or otherwise access from Apple. Though it is unlikely, subsequent to your purchase, Content may be removed from the Services and become unavailable for further download or access from Apple (for instance, because Apple loses its right from the Content provider to make it available). To ensure your ability to continue enjoying Content, we encourage you to download all purchased Content to a device in your possession and to back it up.The lawsuit, Morehouse et al v. Apple, Inc., was filed in a U.S. district court in San Jose on Tuesday. The plaintiffs are seeking up to $5 billion in damages, with the proposed class being all individuals who purchased a digital book or audiobook from the Apple Books store within the to-be-determined class period. A judge has yet to be assigned to the case, and it remains to be seen if the class action lawsuit is certified and proceeds to trial.



The complaint was filed by law firm Siri & Glimstad LLP.Tags: Apple Books, Apple LawsuitsThis article, 'Apple Hit With $5 Billion Class Action Lawsuit Over eBooks Availability' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Chatham House
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Myanmar’s military prioritizes its own survival in earthquake response
Myanmar’s military prioritizes its own survival in earthquake response
Expert comment
thilton.drupal
2 April 2025

The devastating earthquake has put further strain on the embattled military regime as it fights a civil war. It is unlikely to collapse imminently, but the country’s crisis will only get worse.















The scenes from earthquake-hit parts of central Myanmar are apocalyptic. At least 2,000 people are known have been killed and unknown numbers lie buried in the rubble. Thousands of homes have been destroyed or damaged and key pieces of national infrastructure, from the Ava railway bridge between the cities of Mandalay and Sagaing to the airport at Naypyidaw, have been destroyed or rendered unusable. The costs of years of shoddy construction and poor maintenance have been made painfully obvious. The consequences of the events of 28 March will be long-lasting.The earthquake is the latest in a line of tragedies to affect the people of Myanmar in the past few years. The hope created by the first democratic elections of 2015 has long since evaporated. In August 2017, the military and local militias killed thousands of Rohingya Muslims in the north-western state of Rakhine and hundreds of thousands more were forced to flee to Bangladesh. In February 2021, the military launched a coup and imprisoned the country’s democratic leadership, including Aung San Suu Kyi. During the four years since, the country has fragmented. Separatist ethnic armed groups have restarted dormant campaigns and more than 6,000 people have been killed by the military’s response.Estimates by the US-based Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (Acled) in November 2024 suggested that ethnic armed organizations and so-called ‘self-defence forces’ control 42 per cent of Myanmar, and described a further 29 per cent of the country as ‘contested.’ The military is in complete control of only 21 per cent of the country (the remaining 8 per cent is sparsely populated forest). It is the highly populated area controlled by the military that was most badly hit by the earthquake. This is not entirely coincidental. The earthquake was caused by the Sagaing Fault, along which the Ayeyarwady (Irrawaddy) River flows. This low-lying, rice-growing river valley is the heartland of the Bamar, the country’s largest ethnic group from which the army recruits most of its soldiers.






The dilemma faced by Western governments and aid agencies is how to get support to those who need it without it being diverted to the military or used as a bargaining tool in the civil war.






The army rules, and fights, with extreme brutality. In its heartland areas it forcibly conscripts young men and brutalizes those who demonstrate for democracy. In the areas controlled by its opponents it has conducted thousands of airstrikes, bombing schools, hospitals and churches. These are still continuing, despite the earthquake. This is only to be expected. Throughout the previous period of military rule, from 1962 to 2015, the army displayed ruthlessness and inflexibility. It sees itself as the sole force capable of keeping the country united and is determined not to give away territory to separatist ethnic groups or give up control of the state.There is a parallel with the way the regime prioritized internal security over international aid after the impact of Cyclone Nargis in 2008. Back then it continued with the organization of a sham referendum intended to endorse a new constitution even as a storm surge drowned thousands of people. With its generals isolated in the newly built capital in Naypyidaw, the military was more focused on regime survival than saving lives. It is unlikely to be any different this time.Foreign aid dilemmaThe military’s international partners, notably China, Russia, India and Vietnam, have rushed to provide highly visible displays of help, in particular through the deployment of brightly coloured search and rescue teams. These operations were largely performative but have been highlighted by state media in both Myanmar and the donor countries as evidence of strong relations. The dilemma faced by Western governments and aid agencies is how to get support to those who need it without it being diverted to the military or used as a bargaining tool in the civil war. Given the location of much of the damage, it is likely that they will be obliged to work with the military, despite their well-founded misgivings, in order to reach those who need help the most. The military will want to control the aid distribution and present it as their own initiative to reduce the embarrassment of being seen to rely on foreigners. Each government and aid agency will have to decide whether it is worse to abandon the victims or to be used as tools of military propaganda.

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Pérez in talks with teams about F1 return as Lawson reflects on demotion
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His daughter Mercedes told The New York Times the cause was pneumonia. He was 65. He had been battling throat cancer for several years.

— Read the rest
The post Val Kilmer dead at 65 appeared first on Boing Boing.

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Mail Online
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Coronation Street legend Julie Goodyear's husband shares a rare picture of the actress in sweet update following her dementia diagnosis
Coronation Street star Julie Goodyear's husband has shared a new picture of the star as he shared a rare update on the actress following her dementia diagnosis.

Mail Online
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Royal Family targeted by hundreds of potential stalkers with 35 assessed as highest risk of trying to 'do harm'
Protection officers have identified almost 500 potential stalkers during this timeframe.

Mail Online
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Teenage Islamic convert pleads guilty to encouraging terrorism by sharing ISIS videos on social media 'for the likes'
A teenage Islamic convert from Kent has pleaded guilty to encouraging terrorism by sharing graphic ISIS videos on TikTok and Telegram, after telling police he did it "for the likes."

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Man charged with 64 offences as part of investigation into funeral home
The charges follow an investigation into a funeral directors in which police removed human remains.

Propublica
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Representatives Demand Housing Agency Halt Any Cryptocurrency Experiments
by Jesse Coburn




ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.











Three federal lawmakers are calling on the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to stop any initiatives involving cryptocurrency and the blockchain, saying the scantly regulated technologies should be kept far away from the agency’s work overseeing the nation’s housing sector.

In a letter to HUD Secretary Scott Turner on Wednesday, Reps. Maxine Waters, Stephen Lynch and Emanuel Cleaver sharply criticized the agency for considering such experiments, given cryptocurrency’s volatility and vulnerability to fraud. The Democratic representatives, all members of the House Financial Services Committee, warned of repeating “the same mistakes of the past,” noting that the 2008 financial crisis was triggered in part by the proliferation of risky financial assets in the housing market.

“The federal government cannot allow under-regulated financial products to infiltrate critical housing programs, especially when they have already proven to be dangerous, speculative, and harmful to working families,” the lawmakers wrote.

The letter is a response to reporting by ProPublica that the housing agency recently discussed taking steps toward using cryptocurrency. The article described meetings in February in which officials discussed incorporating the blockchain — and possibly a type of cryptocurrency known as stablecoin — into the agency’s work. The discussion at one meeting centered on a pilot project involving one HUD grant, but a HUD finance official in attendance indicated the idea could be applied much more expansively across the agency.

“We are looking at this for the entire enterprise,” he said in that meeting, a recording of which was obtained by ProPublica. “We just wanted to start in CPD,” he added, referring to HUD’s Office of Community Planning and Development. The office administers billions of dollars in grants to support low- and moderate-income people, including funding for affordable housing, homeless shelters and disaster recovery, raising the prospect that these forms of aid might one day be paid in an unstable currency.

Asked for comment on the letter, HUD spokesperson Kasey Lovett referred ProPublica to a prior comment by Turner, in which he said, “There’s no merit to it.” Lovett previously told ProPublica: “The department has no plans for blockchain or stablecoin. Education is not implementation.”

It’s unclear how a crypto project would work. But HUD officials alluded to the possible use of stablecoins, which are pegged to the U.S. dollar or another asset. That is supposed to protect stablecoins from the wild swings in value common among bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, although such fluctuations have happened with stablecoins in the past.



The HUD proposal raised alarm among some officials, with one comparing the idea in internal discussions to paying grant recipients in “Monopoly money.” At best, one HUD staffer told ProPublica previously, the idea was a waste of time and resources; at worst it was a threat to the stability of the housing sector.

“It’s just introducing another unregulated security into the housing market as though 2008, 2009 didn’t happen,” the staffer said, referring to the subprime mortgage crisis. “I don’t see any way this will help anything. I see a lot of ways this could hurt.”

The HUD official pushing the idea internally was Irving Dennis, the agency’s new principal deputy chief financial officer, a staffer said at one of the meetings. Dennis denied to ProPublica that HUD was considering any such experiment. He published a book in 2021 in which he wrote that HUD should use the blockchain.

The blockchain is a digital ledger most commonly used to record cryptocurrency transactions. Boosters of the technology depict it as a way to cut middlemen such as banks out of financial transactions and to make those transactions more transparent and secure. One such evangelist is Robert Judson, an executive at the consulting firm EY, who is listed in a document obtained by ProPublica as an attendee of one of the HUD meetings. Judson has written glowingly about the potential of blockchain to prevent aid money from being misused. (Dennis was previously a partner at EY.)

Judson and EY did not respond to requests for comment for this article, but Judson previously confirmed to ProPublica that EY had discussed the matter with agency officials.

In their letter, the three representatives requested extensive information from HUD about its consideration of crypto and the blockchain, including whether the agency had assessed the risks of using the technology. The House Financial Services Committee is scheduled to consider a bill Wednesday that would regulate stablecoins.

ZeroHedge News
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Futures Slide As Markets Await "Liberation Day" Details
Futures Slide As Markets Await "Liberation Day" Details

Stocks resumed their slide and Treasury yields held near one-month lows with just hours to go before President Trump’s tariffs tariff announcement, amid swirling speculation over the details of the proposed trade action. As of 8:00am, S&P futures traded 0.5% lower; tech underperformed sending Nasdaq futs down 0.7% with Mag 7 all lower with TSLA (-1.0%) and NVDA (-0.6%) being the biggest laggards; Newsmax dropped 25%, pausing a blinding IPO rally that briefly pushed the company above Fox Corp. European and Asian stocks both slumped.  The Dollar sank and the yield on 10-year Treasuries was steady after falling on Tuesday to the lowest since early-March. Commodities are mixed: base metals are lower, while precious metals are mostly higher (silver +1.0%) and gold just shy of its record high. All eyes on the Rose Garden event “Make American Wealthy Again” at 4PM with Trump delivering his announcement on tariffs. On today's data calendar, we get ADP (exp. 120k) and Factory Orders (0.5%, ex trans 0.4%).



In premarket trading, Tesla is leading losses among the Mag 7 (Alphabet -0.5%, Amazon -0.9%, Apple -0.4%, Microsoft -0.5%, Meta -0.9%, Nvidia -1.6% and Tesla -2.6%). Edgewise Therapeutics (EWTX) tumbles 29% after posting top-line data in its phase 2 study of EDG-7500. Newsmax (NMAX) drops 20% as the conservative media outlet pauses its blinding IPO rally which saw shares surge 2,230% since its debut this week. Here are some other notable premarket movers:

NCino (NCNO) slides 34% after the software company gave a weaker-than-expected outlook.
Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH) slips 2% after registering a direct offering of 2.7m shares, with the offering priced at $19.06 each.
Truist Financial Corp. (TFC) slips 1% after Raymond James cut the recommendation on the financial services firm ahead of the upcoming earnings, with analyst Michael Rose saying he “would not be surprised to see episodes of reduced financial guidance, leading to negative revisions to EPS estimates during the April reporting season.”
TTEC Holdings (TTEC) soars 27% as the IT services company said it’s open to discussing CEO Kenneth Tuchman’s offer to buy the remaining shares he and his affiliates don’t already own at $6.85 per share.
Trump is due to reveal his tariff plans in the White House Rose Garden just as US markets close at 4 p.m. Several proposals are said to be under consideration, including a tiered tariff system with a set of flat rates for countries, as well as a more customized reciprocal plan. Bloomberg reports that the size and scope of tariffs have still to be finalized. The White House has said the tariffs would take immediate effect, but that Trump was open to subsequent negotiation. The lack of clarity doesn’t bode well for risk sentiment heading into the event, scheduled for 4pm ET. Central bankers are also expressing caution. Richmond Fed chief Barkin said tariffs could raise both inflation and unemployment in a “cage match” between consumers and businesses. Chicago Fed chief Goolsbee said that if tariffs lead to lower consumer spending, “that would be a bit of a mess.” Sure enough, according to Goldman's Prime Brokerage, hedge funds reduced exposure to global equities in March, with the most net selling in 12 years.

“There isn’t anywhere to purely hide, because of the huge uncertainty that is in the market at the moment,” said Helen Jewell, chief investment officer of fundamental equities EMEA at BlackRock. Jewell does not expect the confusion to dissipate after Trump’s announcement. “It is very much the opposite,” she said. “It just keeps that risk in the market and it kicks that risk can down the road.”

Meanwhile, China took steps to restrict local companies from investing in the US, Bloomberg reported; that comes a day after the European Commission vowed to retaliate against US tariff moves.

“Perhaps the most important question is whether this announcement will tip the scales toward a global recession,” said Oliver Blackbourn, portfolio manager at Janus Henderson Investors.

A quiet earnings week continues. Uniform maker UniFirst (UNF US) reports premarket and may offer clues on the impact from DOGE job cuts. Tesla 1Q deliveries are also due. Analysts expect Musk’s company to have delivered around 390,000 cars, potentially its worst quarter in a year.

Europe's Stoxx 600 fell 0.7% ahead of Trump’s tariffs announcement, with healthcare stocks among the biggest losers as mass layoffs at the US Department of Health sowed uncertainty over the outlook for vaccines and gene therapies. Among single stocks, Mercedes-Benz Group AG fell after Bloomberg reported the automaker could withdraw its least expensive cars from the US if tariffs make their sales unfeasible. Here are the biggest movers Wednesday:

Grifols advances 10% in Madrid trading after El Confidencial reported that Brookfield has restarted contact with the Spanish plasma company on a possible buyout offer after a first attempt failed last year
The Stoxx 600 Food & Beverage index is the best-performer in Europe this morning, after Berenberg reiniated coverage of the sector; Biggest points-gainers include Diageo (+1.8%), Pernod Ricard (+0.8%), AB InBev (+0.2%) and Heineken (0.4%)
Bakkavor shares rise as much as 6.9%, hitting their highest level since 2018, after reaching an agreement in principle on a new £1.2 billion offer from fellow London-listed Greencore Group. Analysts welcome the idea
Svitzer gains as much as 32%, the most since its May 2024 spinoff from Maersk, after the Danish marine services firm received a DKK9 billion ($1.3 billion) takeover offer from AP Moller Holding at DKK285 per share
Raspberry Pi shares rise as much as 10% after the British PC maker said it expects demand to improve through the year from subdued levels of mid-2024, given inventory levels now “normalized”
Barco shares rise as much as 9.3%, hitting their highest level since May, after analysts at ING Bank upgraded the visualization specialist, arguing it is a “far more attractive company” now growth is back on
Friedrich Vorwerk shares rise as much as 4.6% to a record high after Berenberg hiked its price target on the stock to a Street high, citing a long growth runway and double-digit margin growth in the next year
Chemring shares rise as much as 4.9% after its Roke unit won a UK missile defense contract worth £251m over six years. The contract starts immediately and covers a broad spectrum of missile defense activities
European healthcare stocks drop on Wednesday and are the worst performing subgroup in the Stoxx 600 Index, as investors await further clarity on potential tariffs
BNP Paribas and Societe Generale shares both fall about 3% in Paris as Kepler Cheuvreux downgrades its ratings on the French lenders following recent rallies
Tryg falls as much as 5.6%, the most since January 23, after Citi downgraded the insurance firm to neutral from buy on news that the Danish Competition Council announced a possible review of consumer insurance firms
Norma shares fall as much as 6.8%, hitting the lowest level since late November, after Quirin Privatbank downgraded the German component maker to sell and set a Street-low price target
Earlier in the session, Asian equities also fell as investor sentiment remained volatile. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index declined 0.1%, reversing from a 0.8% gain in the previous day. Xiaomi, Sony Group and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial weighed the most on the gauge, while Recruit Holdings and Fast Retailing provided the biggest boosts. Performances in the region were mixed, with markets in the Philippines and Malaysia gaining the most, while South Korean shares underperformed. The country’s small-cap index Kosdaq lost 1%. Japan’s benchmark Topix also slid 0.4%. Indonesia’s market was shut for a holiday.

“Investors are very anxious, and markets are waiting with bated breath to see what he will say and do later today,” Vasu Menon, managing director of investment strategy at OCBC, wrote in a note. “The best strategy at this juncture is not to panic, but instead to focus on the medium term and manage risk by keeping a diversified portfolio and time-diversifying fresh investments via dollar cost averaging.”

In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index slips 0.1%, down a second day as antipodean currencies outperform, with the kiwi dollar up 0.8% against the greenback. EUR/USD climbs 0.1% to 1.0800; Governing Council member Olli Rehn reiterated that the ECB isn’t pre-committing to any particular path on interest rates. Aussie and kiwi advanced in part on buying from exporters hedging out of US dollars on the premise that reciprocal tariffs will be more centered than harsh, according to Asia-based FX traders. Low engagement from the leveraged community ahead of the announcement remains the main theme in the major currencies, according to traders in Europe and Asia. Traders undecided on what’s next for the G-4 space also seen through price action unfolding lately close to 21-DMAs.

In rates, treasuries extend gains into the early US session, leaving futures near the highs of the day and yields lower by up to 3bp across the belly of the curve, which leads gains on the day. US yields are richer by 1bp to 3bp across the curve, with 5s30s spread sitting near highs of the day and steeper by 1.5bp, unwinding a portion of a sharp two-day flattening move seen so far this week; US 10-year yields trade near lows at around 4.15%, remain inside Tuesday’s range. Bunds are little changed while Gilts underperform as UK 10-year yields climb 2 bps.

In commodities, spot gold rises $17 to $3,130/oz. Bitcoin pared an earlier fall to trade little changed near $85,000. WTI is steady around $71 a barrel.

The US economic calendar includes March ADP employment change (8:15am), February factory orders and durable goods orders (10am). Fed speaker slate includes Kugler at 4:30pm

Market Snapshot

S&P 500 mini -0.6%, 
Nasdaq 100 mini -0.8%, 
Russell 2000 mini -0.6%
Stoxx Europe 600 -0.7%, 
DAX -1%, 
CAC 40 -0.4%
10-year Treasury yield little changed at 4.17%
VIX +0.5 points at 22.27
Bloomberg Dollar Index little changed at 1272.15, 
euro little changed at $1.0801
WTI crude -0.2% at $71.05/barrel
Top Overnight News

Donald Trump’s team is still finalizing plans for reciprocal tariffs to be unveiled at 4 p.m., people familiar said. Proposals include a tiered system with a set of flat rates for countries and a more customized plan. Scott Bessent told lawmakers the tariffs will start at their highest level and countries can then take steps to bring them down. BBG
Planned new U.S. tariffs could have a huge impact on world trade, Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said on Wednesday, warning of a possible hit to global growth hours before President Donald Trump is set to unveil reciprocal tariffs. RTRS
A group of 50 Republican and Democratic senators introduced a sanctions package to hit Russia and countries that buy its oil if President Vladimir Putin refuses to engage in good-faith ceasefire negotiations with Ukraine or breaches an eventual agreement: BBG
Walmart Inc. is continuing to push Chinese suppliers to cut prices by 10% to offset President Donald Trump’s tariffs, even after Beijing officials summoned the US retailer’s executives last month to discuss the issue. BBG
Democrat wins the Wisconsin judicial race by ~9 points, a solid victory and one that raises a red flag for Republicans. Also, Republicans easily won both Florida special House elections, as expected, although the GOP underperformed the Nov margins of victory, raising potential warning signs for the party. Politico
Izzy Englander’s Millennium Management and Ken Griffin’s Citadel lost money last quarter even as other hedge funds gained: BBG
China has taken steps to restrict local companies from investing in the US ahead of new tariffs, people familiar said. Several branches of China’s top economic planning agency have been instructed in recent weeks to hold off on registration and approval for such firms. BBG
China highlighted US farmers and tech companies as beneficiaries of economic ties in the Communist Party’s official newspaper, an apparent appeal to cool trade tensions ahead of tariffs. BBG
China held a second day of drills around Taiwan, involving “precision strikes” on simulated targets including ports and energy facilities. BBG
Israel will broaden its ground operations in Gaza and turn seized land into buffer zones. Meanwhile, the Pentagon is deploying a second carrier to the Middle East as the US continues its strikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen. BBG
US crude inventories jumped by 6 million barrels last week, the API is said to have reported. That would be the biggest surge in eight weeks if confirmed by the EIA today. Supplies at Cushing climbed for the first time in four weeks. BBG
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk
Tariffs/Trade

USTR reportedly prepares a new tariff option for US President Trump which is "an across-the-board tariff on a subset of nations that likely would not be as high as the 20% universal tariff option", according to WSJ.
US President Trump's tariff plans are "coming down to the wire" with his team reportedly still finalising the size and scope of the new levies, according to Bloomberg.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent told lawmakers that Wednesday's tariffs are a 'cap', according to a CNBC reporter cited by Reuters.
On UK-US tariffs, "Sounds like any hopes of a last-ditch concession from Donald Trump ahead of his tariffs announcement are fading", according to Times' Swinford; although a deal could be signed as soon as next week "Keir Starmer is not planning to speak to him today, but there are hopes that the economic deal giving Britain a carve-out can be signed as soon as next week. Sources talking about 'days or weeks'" "But in truth No 10 doesn't know what Trump is planning or when concessions could be made. All deeply uncertain this morning".
Canada is to avoid counter-tariffs that risk Canadian jobs and price hikes and it won't impose retaliation tariffs on most US food and other basic necessities, according to the Globe and Mail citing two federal trade advisers.
Thai Commerce Ministry said Thai semiconductors may face 25% US tariffs and noted that Thai tariffs are 11% higher than US tariffs, while it added Thailand may see an impact of USD 7bln-8bln from US reciprocal tariffs but announced it will increase imports of US goods and plans tariff cuts for US products.
French Industry Minister reaffirms that Europe will respond to Trump tariffs in a proportionate manner; says Europe must show strength and be less naive
APAC stocks were mostly positive but with the major indices stuck within narrow parameters as participants awaited US President Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariff announcement scheduled later today. ASX 200 eked modest gains as strength in the real estate, tech and consumer discretionary sectors just about atoned for the losses in mining, resources and materials, while Building Approvals data from Australia printed better-than-feared. Nikkei 225 traded indecisively and wiped out most of its early gains as Japanese exporters braced for incoming US tariffs. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were mixed amid tariff uncertainty with China among the countries anticipated to announce an immediate retaliation to Trump's incoming tariffs, while China also awaits details regarding the US review of the 'Phase One' deal.

Top Asian News

Standard Chartered raised its China 2025 GDP growth forecast to 4.8% from 4.5%.
China's Commerce Ministry says the anti-dumping investigation into EU brandy has been extended to July 5th (from April 5th).
US President Trump will consider a final proposal for TikTok on Wednesday and his administration is finalising plans for potential investors that could include Blackstone (BX) and Oracle (ORCL), according to CBS News. It was separately reported that President Trump is expected to meet senior cabinet officials and the Vice President to discuss potential investors for TikTok.
US Senate Committee reviewing Meta (META) alleged efforts to build censorship tools for China as part of an attempt to gain entry to Chinese markets, according to a letter seen by Reuters.
Fast Retailing (9983 JT) reports March domestic UNIQLO sales +11.5% Y/Y.
European bourses (STOXX 600 -0.9%) opened lower, despite a mostly positive picture in APAC trade and as traders remain focused on the looming reciprocal tariff announcements on “Liberation Day”. Price action has really only been downwards today, with a more pronounced bout of pressure appearing mid-morning though this has since stabilised a touch. European sectors hold a strong negative bias, in-fitting with the risk tone. Healthcare is the clear underperformer today, but with no clear stock driving the losses; the pressure is seemingly in tandem with the downside seen across US peers in the prior session, and perhaps some fears regarding potential pharmaceutical tariffs.

Top European News

ECB's Rehn says the ECB is not committing to any particular path; disinflation is on track, and growth outlook weakened, the bank will maintain complete freedom of action. Trade protectionism is a key risk to the economic outlook.
ECB's President Lagarde says inflation is very close to the target but there is still some work to do.
German banks' association said Germany's economy is expected to grow by 0.2% this year and 1.4% next year.
FX

DXY is flat vs. peers as markets brace for US President Trump's "Liberation Day" announcement at 21:00BST/16:00EDT. Ahead of which, CNBC reported that Trump is looking at three main options which are, 1) blanket 20% tariffs, 2) a tiered system of three different rates and 3) country-by-country rates; an official noted blanket 20% tariffs was the least likely option. Thereafter, a WSJ article noted that the USTR was preparing a new tariff option for Trump of "an across-the-board tariff on a subset of nations that likely would not be as high as the 20% universal tariff option". Note, ahead of the announcement, US Commerce Secretary Lutnick could provide some insight on the matter during an interview on Bloomberg TV at 13:30BST. DXY is currently tucked within Tuesday's 104.01-36 range.
EUR is flat vs. the USD and holding just below the 1.08 mark as the Bloc braces for the fallout of the US "Liberation Day". As it stands, the EU retaliated to the Trump administration's steel and aluminium levies with countermeasure” on up to EUR 26bln worth of US goods. Commentary via ECB's Lagarde and Rehn have added little fresh for the Single-currency. Today's EZ docket is light in terms of data but heavy on speakers with the slate including ECB's Lagarde, Schnabel, Lane, Holzmann and Escriva.
JPY is flat vs. the USD after USD/JPY topped out at the 150 mark. Fresh newsflow out of Japan has been on the light side as markets await details of the Trump tariff regime later today. USD/JPY remains caged within Tuesday's 148.97-150.14 bounds.
GBP is flat vs. the USD and EUR with incremental macro drivers for the UK on the light side. Of course, the main focus for today's session will be the severity of the Trump administration's tariff plans. The Times' Swinford suggested that "any hopes of a last-ditch concession from Donald Trump ahead of his tariffs announcement are fading". Cable is currently holding above the 1.29 mark.
Antipodeans have extended on Tuesday's upward momentum which was facilitated as risk sentiment improved stateside and with Australian buildings approval data showing a narrower-than-feared contraction. That being said, it is worth noting that the Trump tariff announcement carries a lot of risk for AUD and NZD given that China (both nations largest trading partner) is very much in the crosshairs of the US administration.
PBoC set USD/CNY mid-point at 7.1793 vs exp. 7.2663 (Prev. 7.1775).
Fixed Income

USTs are largely in a holding pattern overnight after coming under pressure in the US afternoon/evening on the more favourable tariff reports via CNBC, marked a 111-15 overnight low. More recently, modest upside occurred in the early European morning as the general tone deteriorated a touch. Ahead, markets will await trade updates from Commerce Secretary Lutnick at 08:30 EDT and then President Trump at 16:00 EDT. US data by way of ADP and Factory Orders is also due today, but ultimately may play second fiddle on "Liberation Day".
Bunds are a touch firmer, the narrative is much the same as the above, though Bunds picked up slightly more than their US peer as the risk tone deteriorated in the early morning and have moved back into the green. Ahead a German 2035 Bund Auction and then a few ECB speakers are due - but focus will ultimately be on trade updates. Currently at the top-end of a 129.11-45 band, which is entirely within Tuesday’s 128.68-129.60 range.
Gilts are in-fitting with the above though the bounce seen early doors, which took Bunds into the green as discussed, was only sufficient to cause Gilts to gap higher by five ticks and extend another two to a 92.15 peak. A high point which is shy of Tuesday’s 92.45 best. Tariffs dominate the narrative as we await Trump’s announcement. On the UK-US economic deal the Times’ Swinford reports that hopes of any last minute concessions for the UK are fading with no plans for the leaders to speak today.
UK sells GBP 1.6bln 1.125% 2035 I/L Gilt : b/c 3.36x (prev. 3.52x) and real yield 1.268% (prev. 1.115%)
Commodities

Softer trade across the crude complex amid the cautious risk sentiment heading into the "Liberation Day" tariff announcement by US President Trump and after the significant private inventory build. Continued expansion into Gaza by Israel's army, and punchy rhetoric via President Trump who believes Russian President Putin is stalling has failed to help push up prices. More recently, Axios reported that US President Trump is reportedly seriously considering Iran's offer of indirect nuclear talks - again failing to spur price action. Brent June trades in a USD 73.95-74.62/bbl parameter.
Spot gold remains on a firmer footing after rebounding from the prior day's trough amid uncertainty ahead of the looming US reciprocal tariffs. Spot gold resides in a current USD 3,106.70-3,135.80/oz range.
Copper futures eke mild gains but with the upside capped amid the mixed and cautious mood on 'Liberation Day'. Price action has been relatively contained for base metals thus far. 3M LME copper trades in a current USD 9,672.00-9,754.55/t range.
US Private Energy Inventory Data (bbls): Crude +6.0mln (exp. -2.1mln), Distillate -0.0mln (exp. -1.0mln), Gasoline -1.6mln (exp. -1.7mln), Cushing +2.2mln.
China's NDRC is to increase retail gasoline prices by CNY 230/ton and diesel by CNY 220/ton, effective April 3rd.
Geopolitics: Middle East

US President Trump is reportedly seriously considering Iran's offer of indirect nuclear talks, while at the same time significantly boosting US forces in the Middle East in case the US opts for military strikes, according to Axios; no decisions made "A US official said Trump doesn't want to go to war with Iran but needs the military assets to establish deterrence in the negotiations — and to be prepared to act if negotiations fail and things escalate quickly."
Israel's army launched heavy raids on the city of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, according to Sky News Arabia.
Israeli Defence Minister said they are expanding the operation in Gaza to seize large areas that would be added to the security zones of Israel and announced a large-scale evacuation of the Gaza population from fighting areas.
US Defence Secretary Hegseth ordered additional air assets to strengthen their Middle East military posture.
US conducted three new airstrikes on Saada in northern Yemen, according to Houthi-affiliated media cited by Al Jazeera.
Geopolitics: Ukraine

Bipartisan group of 50 Senators introduced a new sanctions measure which includes 500% duties against countries that purchase Russian oil, gas and uranium if Moscow refuses to participate in the peace process in Ukraine.
Russian Defence Ministry says Ukraine attacked Russian energy facilities twice during the past 24 hours, via Ifax.
Geopolitics: Other

China's military conducted exercises in the middle and southern areas of the Taiwan Strait with exercises codenamed 'Strait Thunder 2025A', according to Xinhua. Furthermore, China's Eastern Theatre Command said it carried out long-range live fire shooting drills in waters of East China which involved precision strikes on simulated targets of key ports and energy facilities which achieved the desired effects.
US Event Calendar

7:00 am: Mar 28 MBA Mortgage Applications, prior -2%
8:15 am: Mar ADP Employment Change, est. 120k, prior 77k
10:00 am: Feb Factory Orders, est. 0.5%, prior 1.7%
Feb F Durable Goods Orders, est. 0.9%, prior 0.9%
Feb F Durables Ex Transportation, est. 0.7%, prior 0.7%
Feb F Cap Goods Orders Nondef Ex Air, prior -0.3%
Feb F Cap Goods Ship Nondef Ex Air, prior 0.9%

DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

The centre of the universe today will be the White House Rose Garden where we will finally hear about reciprocal tariffs. The announcements are due to take place at 4pm Eastern Time (9pm London), with the White House press secretary saying yesterday that the measures would be effective immediately. We clearly don’t know any of the details, including which countries will be targeted and at what rate, with reporting yesterday suggesting that a final decision was still to be made. The Washington Post reported that White House aides had proposed tariffs of around 20% on most imports. And despite speculation it might just affect 10-15 key trading partners, President Trump said over the weekend that “You’d start with all countries, so let’s see what happens”, which pointed towards a broader focus. Meanwhile, the WSJ reported last night that other options under consideration include a more targeted reciprocal plan as well as an across-the-board tariff on a subset of nations. And, according to Bloomberg, a tiered tariff system option could see countries face levies of either 10% or 20% depending on their barriers on US goods. In related news, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent yesterday said that the tariffs announced today would be a cap and that countries would be able to bring them down. This hints at there being routes for negotiation in his eyes. A reminder that my AI summary of Bessent and Lutnick's recent podcast appearances can be found here. These were a fascinating insight into how this administration is thinking about the world.

Back to tariffs, and obviously, the prospect of broad-based tariffs would represent a huge shock to the global trading system, and would have some pretty seismic ramifications for the world economy. Last week, our US economists published a note (link here) where they ran through various possibilities. And significantly, they think that in a worst-case scenario where reciprocal tariffs include the entirety of each country’s VAT, that would see US GDP growth down 100-120bps this year relative to their current forecast of +2.3% (Q4/Q4), with core PCE inflation up 90-120bps. Meanwhile for the EU, our economists have estimated (link here) that a 20% tariff rate on all goods (on top of the 25% auto tariffs announced) would lead to a 0.3-0.6% shock for GDP.

The other big unknown from here is how other countries might retaliate, even though we have a pretty good sense that they’re likely to do so. After all, EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said yesterday that “If necessary, we have a strong plan to retaliate and will use it.” Over in Canada, Prime Minister Carney said that “We will not disadvantage Canadian producers and Canadian workers relative to American workers”. Moreover, President Trump has already said that any retaliation could be met by further US tariffs, so a key downside risk from here is that this kicks off an escalatory spiral of higher tariffs.

Ahead of today’s announcement, fears about stagflation in financial markets continued to mount even if markets had a pretty positive day yesterday. The stagflation fears were exacerbated by the latest batch of US data, where the ISM manufacturing print fell back into contractionary territory with a 49.0 print (vs. 49.5 expected). Moreover, the new orders component fell to a 22-month low of 45.2, whilst the prices paid component surged to 69.4, which is the highest it’s been since June 2022. The weaker ISM release saw the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow Q1 estimate (adjusting for trade in gold) fall to a new low of -1.4%, while the model’s estimate of real private domestic final sales, which are much less distorted by trade volatility, fell to a still positive but weak +0.4%.

The data is continuing to support the narrative of weaker growth and higher inflation, with market-based inflation expectations continuing to rise. The US 1yr inflation swap (+0.6bps) moved higher for a seventh session in a row to another two-year high of 3.25%, though it did retreat after trading +5.0bps intra-day. The reversal during the afternoon session may have reflected emergent reporting that more modest tariff options were still in play, which also helped gold prices (-0.17%) post a modest decline after touching an new record high of $3,149/oz intra-day. As a reminder, gold saw its strongest quarterly performance since 1986 in Q1. This was among the notable highlights from Henry's Q1 performance review (link here).
For equities, it was another topsy-turvy session, with the S&P 500 recovering from an intraday low of -0.95% to end the day up +0.38%. So a very similar move to Monday. The Magnificent 7 (+1.63%) were the main driver of the rebound, ending a run of 4 consecutive declines, with Tesla (+3.59%) leading the way. Outside of tech, it was a pretty neutral day, with the Dow Jones (-0.03%) and the Russell 2000 (+0.02%) little changed. Meanwhile in Europe, there were even stronger moves, with the STOXX 600 (+1.07%) and the DAX (+1.70%) posting their strongest performances in over two weeks.

Elsewhere, US Treasuries continued to rally as ongoing growth fears helped yields to grind lower. For instance, the 2yr yield (-0.2bps) inched down to 3.88%, its lowest level since October, whilst the 10yr yield (-3.7bps) fell back to 4.17%. The fact investors were fearful about growth was evident from the ongoing decline in real yields, with the 2yr real yield (-1.3bps) down to its lowest since August 2022, at 0.59%.

Over in Europe, sovereign bonds also rallied after the latest Euro Area inflation data was seen as paving the way for more ECB rate cuts. For instance, CPI fell back to +2.2% in March on the flash reading, in line with expectations. And in more dovish news, the core CPI reading fell to +2.4% (vs. +2.5% expected), which is the lowest it’s been since January 2022. So that helped yields to move lower across the continent, with those on 10yr bunds (-5.2bps), OATs (-5.3bps) and BTPs (-7.7bps) all falling.

Asian equity markets are pretty quiet ahead of today's big announcement. As I check my screens, the Hang Seng (+0.06%), CSI (+0.15%), Shanghai Composite (+0.23%), Nikkei (+0.15%) and the S&P/ASX 200 (+0.10%) are all edging higher. The KOSPI (-0.62%) is bucking the trend but S&P 500 (-0.13%) and NASDAQ 100 (-0.14%) futures are also slightly lower.
Early morning data showed that South Korea’s inflation unexpectedly rose to +2.1% y/y in March (vs +1.9% market consensus) as against a +2.0% increase the previous month, thus complicating the Bank of Korea’s rate cut cycle.

Finally, we got a few other data releases yesterday, including the US JOLTS report for February. That showed job openings were down to 7.568m (vs. 7.658m expected), which meant the ratio of vacancies per unemployed individuals fell to 1.07, the lowest since September. Otherwise, the quits rate remained steady at 2.0%, as did the hires rate at 3.4%. Separately in the Euro Area, the February unemployment rate came in at 6.1% (vs. 6.2% expected), which is the lowest rate since the single currency’s formation. We also got the final manufacturing PMI for March, which was revised down a tenth from the flash reading to 48.6.

To the day ahead now, and data releases from the US include the ADP’s report of private payrolls for March, and factory orders for February. Central bank speakers include the ECB’s Schnabel, Escriva, Holzmann and Lane, along with the Fed’s Kugler.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 08:06

ZeroHedge News
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Is Trump's Plan Working? ADP Shows Biggest Jump In US Manufacturing Jobs Since Oct 2022
Is Trump's Plan Working? ADP Shows Biggest Jump In US Manufacturing Jobs Since Oct 2022

Despite the ongoing strength in jobless claims data, fears are growing in the soft data that Friday's payrolls print might be a game-changer. Today, we get a glimpse of what's possible as, following last month's 'weak' report, ADP's Employment shows the US economy added 155k jobs in March (more than the 120k expected and almost double the 77k added in February)...



Source: Bloomberg

So, once again, the soft data and constant mainstream narrative of recession is crushed by the hard data.


"Despite policy uncertainty and downbeat consumers, the bottom line is this: The March topline number was a good one for the economy and employers of all sizes, if not necessarily all sectors," said Nela Richardson, Chief Economist, ADP


Is it just us, or can you sense the disappointment in her statement that the US economy didn't implode?

Service industry jobs showed a major rebound from weakness in February while goods-producing job additions slowed...



Source: Bloomberg

Manufacturers added 21k jobs in March - the biggest addition since Oct 2022...



Source: Bloomberg

The other piece of 'good' news is that wage growth slowed for both job-stayers and job-changers...



Source: Bloomberg

So much for runaway inflationary pressure and recessionary labor market stagnation... and the surge in manufacturing jobs suggests Trump's plan is working?


Is Trump's plan to reshore manufacturing already working: biggest increase in manufacturing jobs since October 22, which was followed by a 2 year manufacturing recession. pic.twitter.com/7iyA11BSRr
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) April 2, 2025

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 08:26

ZeroHedge News
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Unearthed FBI Chat Logs Reveal 'Gag Order' On Biden Laptop Exposé
Unearthed FBI Chat Logs Reveal 'Gag Order' On Biden Laptop Exposé

Authored by Luis Cornelio via Headline USA,

Internal FBI chat logs revealed that the bureau imposed a “gag order” on agents regarding the New York Post bombshell story on the Hunter Biden laptop. Along with showing Hunter’s depravity, the laptop revealed Joe Biden’s involvement in his son’s foreign business dealings. 



The chat logs, published Tuesday by the House Judiciary Committee on X, show that the gag order extended to an FBI analyst who attempted to alert social media companies that the laptop was authentic—before these companies moved to censor the story’s spread. 


The FBI had Hunter Biden’s laptop, but on the day the NY Post story came out, the FBI refused to tell Big Tech the truth.
— House Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@JudiciaryGOP) April 1, 2025
On Oct. 14, 2020, the New York Post released its first story on the laptop’s content. That same day, FBI officials instructed agents, “please do not discuss Biden matter.” 

Earlier chats show a group of agents—including Laura Dehmlow, Bradley Benavides and James Dennehy—debating the Post’s story.

“You guys are tracking the coverage of the laptop right?” Dehmlow wrote. Both Benavides and Dennehy replied affirmatively. 

Later, agents whose names remain sealed sent messages stating, “right answer – nobody on call is is [sic] authorized to comment upon NY Post story” and “nobody [is] authorized to comment.” 

One agent asked if another had “admonished” the colleague who nearly revealed the laptop’s authenticity to Big Tech companies. “yes but he wont [sic] shut up,” one response read. 

Hours later, agents reiterated that they were forbidden from commenting on the laptop story, with messages like “official response no commen [sic] and “we cannot comment.” 

A previous transcribed interview with Dehmlow revealed that during a Zoom meeting with Big Tech, an FBI agent was interrupted before he could confirm the laptop was real and already in the bureau’s possession. 

The FBI had verified the laptop in 2019 by cross-referencing its serial number with Hunter’s iCloud storage, FBI special agent Erika Jensen stated during Hunter’s criminal trial in 2024. 

Despite this verification, the bureau remained silent while social media companies debated whether the Post’s story was tied to a Russian disinformation campaign.

Notably, the FBI had warned them weeks earlier of an imminent “hack-and-leak” story about the 2020 election, leading many to mistakenly equate that warning with the laptop exposé. 

The laptop revealed that while Hunter failed to pay millions in taxes, he also consumed drugs, paid for prostitutes and launched what Republicans call an “influence-peddling scheme” aimed at selling access—or at least the appearance of access—to Joe Biden in exchange for payments. 

According to the laptop, 10% of these payments were earmarked for the “Big Guy,” a term confirmed by former Biden ally Devon Archer to refer to Joe Biden. 

Biden went on to win the 2020 election, and before leaving office in 2025, he issued sweeping pardons to his siblings and Hunter, covering offenses committed between 2014 and 2025.

Read the full House Judiciary Committee’s X thread on the chatlogs:


The Committee had testimony from key FBI personnel, but until now, the FBI refused to produce the internal communications from that day in unclassified form for the American public to see. pic.twitter.com/I5uGnJICVM
— House Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@JudiciaryGOP) April 1, 2025

The internal FBI chat log also shows how far senior FBI officials went to silence this analyst.
After the meeting, a senior FBI lawyer put a “gag order” on the analyst. pic.twitter.com/9AzXIl565B
— House Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@JudiciaryGOP) April 1, 2025

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 08:40

ZeroHedge News
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Bipartisan Senators Prepare 500% Uranium, Oil Tariffs If Russia Doesn't Negotiate 
Bipartisan Senators Prepare 500% Uranium, Oil Tariffs If Russia Doesn't Negotiate 

A bipartisan group of US senators have prepared an anti-Russia sanctions nuclear option in the case that Moscow refuses to sign on to Trump efforts to negotiate an end to the Ukraine war.

The 50 Republicans and Democrats which introduced the sanctions package Tuesday are led by Senators Lindsey Graham and Richard Blumenthal, and their bill would impose a 500% tariff on imported goods from countries that buy Russian oil, gas, uranium and several other products. American citizens would also be prohibited from buying Russian sovereign debt.

"The sanctions against Russia require tariffs on countries who purchase Russian oil, gas, uranium and other products. They are hard hitting for a reason," the Senators wrote in a Tuesday statement.
Getty Images

"These sanctions against Russia are at the ready and will receive overwhelming bipartisan, bicameral support if presented to the Senate and House for a vote," they added.

"The dominating view in the United States Senate is that Russia is the aggressor, and that this horrific war and Putin’s aggression must end now and be deterred in the future."

This in part springs from growing concern that despite President Trump's good-faith efforts, even dangling the possibility of dropping sanctions to get the Kremlin quickly to the negotiating table, Moscow is intentionally stalling while it presses the war forward.

President Trump told reporters over the weekend aboard Air Force one of Putin and his officials, "If I think they’re tapping us along, I will not be happy about it."

China and India would come under the immediate crosshairs, as they've remained top importers of Russian oil since the start of the Ukraine war.

However, the bill leaves open the option of granting presidential waivers on national security grounds, with Bloomberg pointing to the likely chance of a "confrontation" with India and China over the secondary sanctions and the "difficult position" the EU has found itself in.

In Europe, the lure of a return to cheap Russian energy is ever-present, and as we noted, senior German politicians are already calling for a resumption of ties with Russia. For example Michael Kretschmer, a senior member of Friedrich Merz’s centre-right Christian Democrats, is now arguing that EU sanctions on Russia are "completely out of date" as they increasingly openly contradict "what the Americans are doing."

Financial Times in a report quoted Kretschmer's words to the German press agency DPA as follows: "When you realize that you’re weakening yourself more than your opponent, then you have to think about whether all of this is right."


50 US Senators have introduced a bill that includes the most intense Russia sanctions to date including a 500% (!) additional tariff on any countries buying Russian hydrocarbons & uranium, putting SWIFT into law, and perma-freezing Russian sovereign debt & securities. Wow. pic.twitter.com/Mg8hJIN1oY
— Maximilian Hess (@zakavkaza) April 2, 2025
At the same time, Hungary and Slovakia not only continue bypassing Ukraine for imports of Russian gas - after Ukraine broke from the transit of Russian gas on January 1st - but are actually boosting these supplies.

Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto announced on Tuesday that the Veľké Zlievce/Balassagyarmat interconnection point from Hungary to Slovakia has been brought to full capacity this week due to the stoppage through Ukraine.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 09:00

ZeroHedge News
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Kitchen Sink? Tesla Delivers 336,681 Vehicles In Q1, Missing Wall Street's Lowest Expectations
Kitchen Sink? Tesla Delivers 336,681 Vehicles In Q1, Missing Wall Street's Lowest Expectations

This morning Tesla announced Q1 deliveries of 336,681 vehicles, falling below even the lowest expectations that Wall Street had set for the automaker and marking a -13% plunge in deliveries from the year prior period. 

In its press release, Tesla said "the changeover of Model Y lines across all four of our factories led to the loss of several weeks of production in Q1," but then added that "the ramp of the New Model Y continues to go well."

While FactSet's consensus forecast projected 408,000 Q1 Tesla deliveries—a 5% year-over-year increase—recent signals suggested a decline instead. Wall Street consensus estimates reported by Reuters had expected Tesla to report roughly 373,000 vehicle deliveries for Q1—down 3.6% from the same period the previous year.

Some analysts, however, believed the actual figure might be closer to 350,000 or lower.  Major banks like Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, and UBS cut estimates to between 351,000 and 375,000. Prediction market Kalshi expected 353,000, marking a 9% drop. 

No one had a number in the 330k region. 





The company reported 12,881 deliveries of its other models, including its Cybertruck, Model S and Model X. 



Analysts at Deutsche Bank had predicted as few as 340,000 deliveries, while Tesla's declining sales in key markets like China and Europe further fueled skepticism.

Thomas Martin, senior portfolio manager at Tesla shareholder Globalt Investments had told Reuters: "I think that the numbers are going to come in below 400,000 and, maybe as low as 350,000."

After Tesla’s first annual delivery drop in 2024, Elon Musk vowed a return to growth. Wall Street was closely watching whether Model Y updates and new incentives would help.

Tesla faces both growing competition abroad and backlash at home, particularly over Musk’s political ties and role in federal spending cuts under President Trump. This has alienated many left-leaning customers, with trade-ins hitting record highs.

"We have seen major brand deterioration of Tesla across the entire world essentially," said Ken Mahoney, CEO of Mahoney Asset Management, told Reuters earlier today.

"The brand has become far more politicized than any public company's brand should wish to be."

The only question now is whether Tesla has "kitchen sinked" this quarter to try and post a better looking rest of the year, as it has already been reported that Elon Musk will likely move on from DOGE and back to the company heading into the middle of 2025...

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 09:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
T-Day
T-Day

By Michael Every of Rabobank


"I have also to announce to Congress that during the night and the early hours of this morning the first of the series of tariffs in force upon the European Continent has taken place. In this case the liberating assault fell upon the coast of France. An immense armada of upwards of 4,000 tariffs, together with several thousand smaller tariffs, crossed the Channel. Massed airborne tariffs have been successfully effected behind the enemy lines, and tariff landings on the beaches are proceeding at various points at the present time... The Americans are sustained by about 11,000 first line tariffs, which can be drawn upon as may be needed for the purposes of the battle. I cannot, of course, commit myself to any particular details. Reports are coming in in rapid succession. So far, the Commanders who are engaged report that everything is proceeding according to plan. And what a plan! This vast operation is undoubtedly the most complicated and difficult that has ever taken place. It involves tides, wind, waves, visibility, both from the air and the sea standpoint, and the combined employment of land, air and sea tariffs in the highest degree of intimacy and in contact with conditions which could not and cannot be fully foreseen.”




Apologies to Winston Churchill for misusing his D-Day speech: “We shall tariff on the beaches, we shall tariff on the landing grounds, we shall tariff in the fields and in the streets, we shall tariff in the hills; we shall never surrender,” would have been snappier, but historically, the above is the correct one for today.

Because it’s T-day, or “Liberation Day”, or Make America Wealthy Again (MAWA) Day. That’s all we know so far. One rumor is we may get a 20% universal tariff, which would say a lot about ‘state’ and not so much about ‘craft’; or a targeted scheme; that may or may not then be negotiated down. We all still have to wait and see. (Of course tomorrow we start 25% US auto tariffs, on which please see our latest report.)

Ahead of that last-second US decision, last-minute countermoves are being made. Israel (where not much work was needed) and Vietnam (where more was) have both cut all their tariffs on US goods in the hope of a better outcome, and India is reportedly considering the same. Europe (and Canada and Mexico) are instead preparing to fight back, the former even floating escalation into new areas like services and tech that will surely guarantee a furious US response.

The Wall Street Journal hopes tariff clarity today will calm markets, and that’s the White House view too. However, then we all have to wait and see what happens re: counter-tariffs, which seem inevitable --Europe is talking in suitably Churchillian terms again-- and then what the US does in the trade space in response, and outside it to those who don’t see trade is now connected to things like US security umbrellas. In short, we need to quote Winnie again: “Now this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.”

Yet while D-Day was a very brave and uncertain exercise, the underlying dynamic of US and Soviet military production vs. German and Japanese made the ultimate outcome of WW2 inevitable, just as the ideological split between the US and the Soviets would always then split the world in a different way afterwards. You can’t focus on just one front, no matter how dramatic, but always need to see the entire theatre of operations.

Place US tariffs in the context of a ‘grand macro strategy’ to retain global hegemony as it is now massively outproduced by China, which is allied with Russia and Iran, and you can again see the risks: global bifurcation that makes any one US tariff like a pebble on a Normandy beach.

Economic models that project the rest of the world trading more with each other in the absence of the US market are just that – models. The actual world economy will not work like that. As such, if the US goes it alone today, it implies certain uncertainty; and if it tries to lever others to join it against China, it implies different but equally certain uncertainty. That’s as:

China just rehearsed encircling and blockading Taiwan again with more ships and jets. Recall the US Department of Defence memo leak said this is now its national security focus. Europe’s Von der Leyen, talking about fighting on the beaches vs the US tariffs, said nothing, but has spoken very bluntly on this in the past: but what would the EU do in a worst-case scenario if it’s also preparing to fight Russia and shooting back in a US trade war?
Russia won’t accept US peace proposals on Ukraine in their current form; the US may impose secondary sanctions on buyers of Russian oil or even interdict the shadow fleet operating out of the Baltic as a response.
The US CENTCOM chief was in Tel Aviv for 10-hour discussions, as the Pentagon orders more firepower to the Middle East. Russia says bombing Iran's nuclear infrastructure "will have repercussions for the entire region." And, depending on what Iran might do to others under any attack, not only for that region.
US National Security Advisor Waltz, with the Signal scandal still swirling round him, is accused of conducting government business over his personal Gmail account. Is this a shotgun to his own foot, again, or friendly fire? How much longer will Waltz be around, and who might replace him if he goes?
Even the current data are uncertain. After yesterday’s US ISM data showing weak new orders and employment and a surge in prices paid, the Atlanta Fed now sees US GDP in Q1 at -3.7%. It’s not as bad stripping out recent gold imports, or all the other imports surging into the US to front-run tariffs. But it isn’t good.

Once again, central banks have no idea what to do and are clearly just hoping for the best. The Fed’s Goolsbee warned about a slowdown in consumer spending and business investment due to tariff uncertainty, which he sees may have a longer-lasting impact on prices than expected due to retaliatory tariffs and their effect on intermediate goods. That sounds like a long way to say “stagflation.”

Meanwhile, Eric and Donald Trump, Jr. launched a Bitcoin mining firm and talked crypto up. Is this all-American speculation, Trumpian grifting, or a signal on a future US policy pivot towards a neutral reserve asset? Moreover, gold prices hit a new nominal record high of $3,133, up 37.5% over a year in which some were/are still thinking about “rate cuts!” If that doesn’t underline the structural uncertainty we are dealing with, not a lot does.

Let’s finish by paraphrasing Winston once more: markets are drunk on uncertainty today, and tomorrow they may be sober, but the global backdrop will still be ugly.

Allow me to add: “By diligent effort, they must learn to like it.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 09:30

Ian Visits
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Tickets Alert: Visit the UK’s largest particle accelerator – the Diamond Light Source
A stunning flying saucer-shaped building housing a large particle accelerator can be found not far from Didcot and it opens to the public for free tours a few times a year.Read more ›

BBC Technology News
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Nintendo announces Switch 2 price and release date - and a new Mario Kart game
Nintendo has released details of the long awaited successor to the best-selling gaming console

Atlas Obscura
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Luz de Luna in Oaxaca, Mexico

Atlas Obscura
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Hiorns Tower in West Sussex, England

The Hill
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Trump has gone too far — and Americans are noticing
Trump's actions on immigration, executive orders, spending, tariffs and the Department of Government Efficiency have alienated many Americans, who are concerned about his disregard for democratic norms and the courts, and his willingness to go beyond his authority as president.

The Hill
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Scott Walker on Wisconsin race: Trump voters 'don't vote in spring elections'
Former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) brushed off the results from Tuesday’s state Supreme Court race, saying that Trump voters often “don’t vote in spring elections.” “I‘ve said this for months. I thought, one, the turnout model was always going to be at the disadvantage of [Brad] Schimel over [Susan] Crawford because there‘s about 200,000...

The Hill
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Charlamagne Tha God says Schumer, Jeffries should get the boot
Charlamagne Tha God is calling on Democrats to turn to new leaders who "fight back," saying both House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) should be given the boot. "It's not my job to say that any particular candidates need to be primaried and thrown out of office," the...

The Hill
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Norfolk Southern Ohio train derailment payout trial begins
The trial started this week to decide if Norfolk Southern would be reimbursed for its $600 million settlement over the East Palestine derailment.

The Hill
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Schiff places hold on Trump pick for DC prosecutor's nomination
Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) has placed a hold on President Trump’s nominee to lead the U.S. Attorney's Office in D.C. after a string of calls for investigations into Ed Martin. Martin, who has never worked as a prosecutor, has described the Justice Department as Trump’s attorneys, launched investigations into two lawmakers, and fired and reassigned...

The Hill
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Gmail planning end-to-end encrypted emails
Google announced on Tuesday Gmail users will soon be able to send and receive encrypted emails without a third-party provider. The new process will allow Gmail users to send end-to-end encrypted messages to "any user on any email inbox with just a few clicks," Google wrote in a blog post Tuesday. A beta version of...

The Hill
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Monthly mortgage payments soar to record high
Monthly housing payments soar with a 5.3% increase due to home prices and mortgage rates going up.

The Hill
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Watch live: Duffy testifies on Trump administration infrastructure funding
Department of Transportation (DOT) Secretary Sean Duffy will face questioning from the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Wednesday morning on infrastructure funding under the Trump administration. Since being confirmed to lead DOT earlier this year, Duffy has made efforts to walk back Biden-era goals tied to climate change and to cut down on congestion...

The Hill
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AI can predict when an earthquake might strike — here’s how 
AI-enabled earthquake forecasting needs to be in Trump’s AI action plan, now. 

The Hill
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Watch live: Jeffries speaks as GOP seeks to force Trump legislative agenda forward
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) will hold his weekly press conference Wednesday morning as his GOP colleagues in the Senate seek to advance President Trump's legislative agenda. Jeffries joined fellow House Democrats Tuesday to rail against the Trump administration's cuts to the federal workforce and social programs such as Social Security and Medicaid. Later...

The Hill
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Whitaker confirmed as Trump NATO ambassador
Matthew Whitaker, who served as acting attorney general during President Trump’s first term, was confirmed late Tuesday by the Senate in a 52-45 vote to be the next U.S. ambassador to NATO.  Whitaker, who has an extensive law enforcement background but light foreign policy experience, told senators during his confirmation hearing last month that if...

The Hill
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Eric Adams corruption case dismissed by federal judge
A federal judge has dismissed the criminal case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) with prejudice, ensuring that the charges cannot be refiled against him. The ruling itself dropping the charges comes after the Trump administration’s Justice Department (DOJ) requested that the case be dismissed against the embattled mayor, who was facing a...

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Tesla sales plunge to lowest level since 2022 amid Trump backlash
Tesla sales dropped by nearly 13 percent in the first three months of the year amid a broader backlash against CEO Elon Musk and his leadership of President Trump's so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Tesla reported 336,000 vehicle deliveries in the January to March quarter, a notable drop from sales of 387,000 vehicles in...

The Hill
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Musk downplays Wisconsin results, saying he 'expected to lose'
Elon Musk downplayed the results in the Wisconsin Supreme Court race, saying in a post early Wednesday that he had “expected to lose.” Musk was responding to a user on X thanking him for his involvement. “Elon knew that it was a long shot to win the Wisconsin Supreme Court race," the user, MAZE, wrote....

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Oliver Stone: JFK assassination 'a cold case with a lot of clues'
American filmmaker Oliver Stone said Tuesday that the assassination of former President John F. Kennedy is “a cold case with a lot of clues” after he testified before Congress earlier in the day. “Let's start with what happened today, and what do you think the significance of the hearing was, and where we are in...

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ECHR demands answers from NATO state over Russia border closure

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Muse and Robbie Williams face pressure to cancel Turkish gigs
The UK acts are urged to scrap tours over allegations that a local concert organiser insulted anti-government protesters.

Mail Online
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I visited Sicily's Aeolian Islands by yacht - and found it can be cheaper than a hotel or villa
Chartering a yacht for a week is no more expensive than a villa or hotel. It's easily the best way to explore the Aeolian islands, says Robert Hardman.

Mail Online
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The boozy truth about life in Troy: Wine was an 'everyday drink' for almost EVERYONE in the ancient city, study finds
Just about everyone in Turkey's ancient city was a wine drinker - whether or not they belonged to the upper classes or the common masses, report scientists in Germany.

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I finally found smart finder tags that last for two years (and they're cheaper than AirTags)
AirTags are great, but they have their limitations. Ugreen's latest SmartFinder tags address some of those flaws and are more affordable.

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I saw every Samsung QLED TV releasing in 2025 - these standout features had me hooked
A recent Samsung workshop gave me a close-up look at the company's 2025 line of Neo QLED TVs. I did not leave unimpressed.

Deutsche Welle
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Is Zimbabwe's political crisis likely to escalate?
Tensions inside Zimbabwe’s ruling party have the potential to destabilize the Southern African country. Analysts warn civil war could follow if party infighting is not resolved.

Mail Online
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Driver, 40, admits causing death of three-week-old baby in horror crash as he tells judge he will never get behind the wheel again
Craig Nunn, 40, initially denied killing little Harley Thomas Wilkinson when he crashed his black Ford Focus on the A451 between Kidderminster and Stourpourt.

Mail Online
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My son would scream if I fed him anything other than tinned Peppa Pig pasta - after 12 years I discovered how to put an end to my hell
For 12 years, Curtis, 14, would eat five cans of the novelty pasta a day costing mum, Kylie, £100 a month and would 'scream' and 'gag' if she served him anything else.

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Britain should 'celebrate' and take 'national pride' in being part of European Convention on Human Rights says Labour law chief
Attorney General Lord Hermer said the UK should use the 75th anniversary of the European Convention on Human Rights to 'celebrate' what it does and the UK role in it.

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Trump’s tariffs plan gets mixed reaction in New York: ‘I believe we were lied to’
Some seemed nonplussed and said it would make no difference, while others expressed support for Trump’s plan Donald Trump’s “liberation day” – his plan to overturn decades of US free trade policy – was getting a mixed reaction in New York on Tuesday.With Trump planning to unleash tariffs on global trading partners on Wednesday, many said the price rises economists are predicting would make no difference because they were already out of reach of pinched pocketbooks. Others said they would accept short-term price hikes for longer-term US economic well-being. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The ‘office siren’ is over: why gen Z are succumbing to dull workwear
Young people are ditching the corporate cosplay in the office as they try to style it safe in uncertain timesOnly someone who has never truly experienced the existential dread that comes with holding down a soulless 9-to-5 would ever romanticize corporate life. And yet, this time last year, fashion influencers were doing just that. The “office siren” trend was all over TikTok and headlines in Vogue and InStyle. Sirens, we’re told, wore skintight pencil skirts, collared shirts unbuttoned to show ample cleavage, and maybe a pinstripe vest to tie it all together. It was corporate Barbie cosplay, with nods to a submissive Maggie Gyllenhaal in Secretary, or Betty Boop moonlighting as a call center employee.Office sirens were celebrating returning to the office post-pandemic while signaling a secret freakiness (one channeled well by Nicole Kidman in Babygirl, in which she played a Lean In feminist CEO who enters into a kinky office romance with a much younger intern and can’t stop adjusting her blouse buttons). Continue reading...

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US justice department drops corruption case against New York mayor Eric Adams
Trump administration had been pressing Adams to crack down on immigration but both parties denied quid pro quo A US federal judge on Wednesday dismissed the Department of Justice’s corruption case against New York City’s embattled mayor, Eric Adams, after weeks of scandal about the Democratic mayor bowing to pressure from the Trump administration to cooperate on immigration crackdowns while trying to get out from under the criminal charges.Pressure from Washington to dismiss the case had led to high-level resignations of prosecutors who said there was strong evidence against Adams, while the Trump administration had focused on whether charges were simply getting in the way of their political mission. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Monaka wears her cyclops mask to work: Niccolò Rastrelli’s best photograph
‘Japan is the mecca of cosplay. Monaka runs a cafe in Tokyo called Monster Party, where people go dressed as characters from a subculture known as tanganmen. Her brother is holding a picture of their mum’My personal projects have often focused on the topic of identity, so the world of cosplay immediately appealed to me. I knew nothing about it until I saw some photographs on Instagram and became interested in these people who spend their free time turning themselves into characters from manga, anime, movies and video games – or even into creations they’ve come up with by themselves.Italy’s biggest annual cosplay event is held in the region where I live, Tuscany. I started going and taking pictures, just on my phone at first, and that’s where I first approached cosplayers to ask if they’d like to help me with a project I had in mind. In the 1970s, John Olson took some portraits for Life magazine of musicians such as Frank Zappa and Elton John at home with their parents. They contrasted the individual identity of the rock stars and the social identity represented by their parents, and that seemed the right way to photograph cosplayers, too. I thought it was far more interesting to show them in a domestic setting, alongside people in everyday clothes, than in the environment of a fantasy-themed event. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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More than beautiful: the beloved monarch butterfly is one of the world’s great migrators
The hardy travellers can fly for 3,000 miles from the north-east US and Canada to roost in their millions in MexicoVoting is open! Choose your favourite hereImagine your body was the weight of a raisin, supported by just a pair of flimsy, gossamer wings. Now imagine that you had to fly for 3,000 miles, avoiding storms, highways and predators, to ensure your species continued.Could you do it? Unless you’re a monarch butterfly, fortunately you won’t have to face such a challenge. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Turtle doves to be shot for sport again across Europe as EU lifts hunting ban
Ban in place since 2021 has increased numbers of globally vulnerable pigeon species that is close to extinction in UKTurtle doves will be allowed to be shot for sport again across Europe, as the EU lifts a ban on hunting that was credited with the species’ tentative recovery.The EU will allow hunters to shoot 132,000 birds across Spain, France and Italy after the threatened bird enjoyed a population boom in western Europe because of a hunting ban that came into effect in 2021. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Man charged with 64 offences in Hull funeral home inquiry
Funeral director Robert Bush, 47, charged after 35 bodies and suspected human ashes found at premises last yearA 47-year-old man has been charged with 64 offences in connection with the investigation into remains found at a funeral directors in Hull, Humberside police said.Funeral director Robert Bush, formerly of Kirk Ella, East Yorkshire, has been charged with 30 counts of preventing a lawful and decent burial and 30 counts of fraud by false representation after 35 bodies and suspected human ashes were found at his premises between 20 April 2023 and 6 March 2024. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
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Man sentenced over manslaughter of Victor Hamilton
The 63-year-old's body was discovered outside his house in Orkney Drive in the Ballykeel area of Ballymena in July 2022.

Sky News Home
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Man charged with 64 offences after investigation at Hull funeral home
A man has been charged with 64 offences in connection with an investigation into a Hull funeral directors, Humberside Police has said.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Three big unknowns ahead of Trump's tariffs announcement
The president is expected to unveil details of his plans for a wider set of import taxes. But what tariffs and when?

BBC World News
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Judge permanently dismisses criminal case against NYC mayor
The decision comes nearly two months after the Trump administration first sought to drop the case against Eric Adams.

Slashdot
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Zelle Is Shutting Down Its App
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: Zelle is shutting down its stand-alone app on Tuesday, according to a company blog post. This news might be alarming if you're one of the over 150 million customers in the U.S. who use Zelle for person-to-person payments. But only about 2% of transactions take place via Zelle's app, which is why the company is discontinuing its stand-alone app.

Most consumers access Zelle via their bank, which then allows them to send money to their phone contacts. Zelle users who relied on the stand-alone app will have to re-enroll in the service through another financial institution. Given the small user base of the Zelle app, it makes sense why the company would decide to get rid of it -- maintaining an app takes time and money, especially one where people's financial information is involved.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Deutsche Welle
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Germany: Sinti and Roma children suffer discrimination
A study on antiziganism in Germany's education sector shows that Sinti and Roma experience hostility from teachers and other children.

BBC UK News
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Man charged with 64 offences in funeral home probe
The charges follow an investigation into a funeral directors in which police removed human remains.

Mail Online
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Amanda Holden, 54, sets pulses racing in cut-out skimpy silver bikini as she posts fun-filled holiday snaps from Dubai trip
In one photo posted on Instagram on Tuesday, a drenched Amanda, 54, lay on the sand in the racy two-piece, adding a shiny gold watch and various gold and silver bracelets on each wrist.

Mail Online
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Kelvin Fletcher shares heartbreaking loss live on Lorraine after 'traumatic experience' with wife Liz at family farm
The soap star, 41, appeared on the ITV daytime show hosted by Lorraine Kelly, 65, on Wednesday with his wife, Liz.

Mail Online
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Pensioner couple are reunited with their stolen dog after FIVE YEARS after she was found 240 miles away
Pat and Chris Lindley were left distraught when Kim, nine, was pinched from their back garden in Snaith, East Yorkshire five years ago.

Mail Online
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Pictured: Mother and son stabbed in terrifying knife attack at their home that killed husband, 57
Maria Marvin and her son Mario, 11, were stabbed in a terrifying knife attack at their home in Brighton where Maria's husband was found dead.

Mail Online
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Mortified mother walks in on her one-year-old son eating his grandfather's ASHES
Natasha Emeny, from Lincoln, had only nipped upstairs to put some washing away when she returned to discover her one-year-old son eating her father's ashes.

Mail Online
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Police charge funeral director, 47, with 64 offences include fraud, theft and preventing 30 lawful burials
Robert Bush, 47 from East Yorkshire, has been charged with 64 offences after officers discovered 35 bodies at the firm's premises in Hull.

The Guardian (UK)
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Hot-air balloons and spring sunshine: photos of the day – Wednesday
The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Cory Booker breaks record for longest Senate speech with Trump condemnation
In speech beginning on Monday night, Democratic senator warns of ‘grave and urgent’ danger of Trump administrationCory Booker, the Democratic US senator from New Jersey, has broken the record for longest speech ever by a lone senator – beating the record first established by Strom Thurmond, who filibustered for 24 hours and 18 minutes in opposition to the Civil Rights Act of 1957.Booker’s speech eventually ran to 25 hours and five minutes. It began at 7pm on Monday night, and was not a filibuster but instead an effort to warn of what the senator called the “grave and urgent” danger that Donald Trump’s presidential administration poses to democracy and the American people. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘I never realised something wasn’t right’: Carlo Ancelotti denies €1m tax fraud
Manager accused of failing to pay tax due on image rightsItalian claims salary arrangement seemed ‘quite normal’The Real Madrid coach, Carlo Ancelotti, who is on trial for allegedly defrauding Spain’s tax office of more than €1m in undeclared earnings from image rights, has told a court he believed his financial affairs were in order and “never thought a fraud could have been committed”.Prosecutors allege the 65-year-old former Chelsea and Everton manager used shell companies outside Spain to conceal “the real beneficiary of the income from the exploitation of his image rights” in 2014 and 2015. They are seeking a jail term of four years and nine months and a fine of €3.2m. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Building a young team’: Skinner signs new Manchester United deal until 2027
Contract includes option of a further year in chargeDelighted Skinner says ‘it is an absolute privilege’The Manchester United women’s team head coach Marc Skinner has signed a new contract until June 2027, with the option of an extra year.Skinner’s previous contract had been set to expire at the end of this season. He is already the longest-serving current manager at a WSL club, having been appointed in the summer of 2021 following the resignation of Casey Stoney. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Liberation day’: what is a tariff and why do they matter?
Donald Trump’s threats to impose widescale import levies have spooked governments, investors and analysts alike. Here’s why …Donald Trump has said “tariffs” is the most beautiful word in the dictionary.The US president is expected to announce his latest round of these border taxes on Wednesday at 4pm ET (9pm BST). In what he is calling “liberation day”, Trump has argued the step is needed to raise money and to encourage domestic manufacturing. But it is also rattling the global economy. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Tesla quarterly sales slump 13% amid backlash against Elon Musk
Drop is likely combination of ageing lineup, increased competition and backlash to Musk’s politicsTesla sales declined in the first three months of the year, another sign that Elon Musk’s once high-flying electric car company is struggling to attract buyers.The drop of 13% is likely due to a combination of factors, including its ageing lineup, competition from rivals and a backlash from Musk’s embrace of rightwing politics. It also is a warning that the company’s first-quarter earnings report later this month could disappoint investors. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘The law is the same for everyone’: Macron addresses Le Pen verdict for first time and criticises threats against judges – Europe live
French president says ‘the judiciary is independent’ following threats made against judges in case against former French far-right leader The French government expects President Trump’s tariffs to be in the range of between 20-25%, said government spokeswoman Sophie Primas on Wednesday.“They risk being pretty powerful. People are speaking of tariffs between 20 and 25 percent,” Primas told reporters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Airlines warned Heathrow about power supply risks days before outage, MPs told
Concerns about cable theft raised with airport before substation fire but Heathrow chief defends handling of incidentBusiness live – latest updatesAirlines warned Heathrow about risks to its power supply days before the airport was shut down by a substation fire, a Commons committee has been told.Heathrow’s chief executive, Thomas Woldbye, apologised for the disruption, which affected more than 200,000 passengers on Friday 21 March, but defended the decision to close as he said staying open was potentially “disastrous”. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Man charged with 64 offences after 10-month investigation at Hull funeral home
A man has been charged with 64 offences in connection with an investigation into a Hull funeral directors, Humberside Police has said.

BBC World News
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Young Sicilian woman killed in broad daylight by stalker
A 27-year-old man has confessed to the murder of university student Sara Campanella but has not said why.

CNET News
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This Smart Plug I Tested Excels at What Matters Most -- Saving Energy and Money
With electricity usage as the focus of Emporia's plug, you can see exactly how your devices are performing.

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Will TikTok Disappear Again? Here's What You Need to Know Just in Case
The app has until this Saturday to find an appropriate buyer.

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Sony Celebrates Bravia's 20th Anniversary With a New Flagship OLED TV
The Bravia 8 II is the company's new flagship OLED and is accompanied by the Bravia 5 and Bravia 2 LCD TVs.

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Sony Bringing New Bravia Soundbars With Dolby Atmos for 2025
The two new soundbars with wireless subwoofers are designed to pair with the company's TVs.

CNET News
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Withings' New BPM Vision Wants to Put an End to Inaccurate Blood Pressure Readings
This FDA-approved device is meant to give you foolproof blood pressure readings.

CNET News
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'The Pitt' Release Schedule: When to Watch More of the Gritty Medical Drama
The first 13 episodes of Noah Wyle's hit series are streaming now.

CNET News
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Premiere Pro's First AI-Powered Video Editing Tool Is Available Now: Here's How It Works
After spending months in beta, the Firefly AI-powered video editing tool is available for all Premiere Pro editors.

Mail Online
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Major brand announces new flagship store in Oxford Street to open this autumn
The global brand will welcome shoppers to the new 24,000 sq ft space in the former Gap store at 376-384 Oxford Street located near Bond Street station in London's West End.

Mail Online
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The 3 things you should NEVER do as a tourist visiting Japan
In a country known for its deep respect for tradition, order, cleanliness, and efficiency, here are three common missteps that visitors should avoid when traveling to Japan.

Sky News Home
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UK preparing for 'all eventualities' ahead of Trump tariffs, Starmer says
Sir Keir Starmer has said the government has been preparing "for all eventualities" ahead of Donald Trump announcing global tariffs later on Wednesday.

BBC Technology News
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Tech Life
UN agencies are worried about rising cases of satellite navigation signal interference.

Deutsche Welle
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What's behind the political crisis in Zimbabwe?
Tensions inside Zimbabwe’s ruling party have the potential to destabilize the Southern African country. Analysts warn civil war could follow if party infighting is not resolved.

Pulsant Status
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CHG0052084 - Planned Maintenance - Pulsant Veeam Backup Platforms

F1 Technical
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Beganovic to drive Leclerc's car in Bahain GP's opening practice
Ferrari have announced that Dino Beganovic will take over Charles Leclerc's car in the opening practice session at the Bahrain Grand Prix on what will become an action-packed weekend for the Swedish driver.

Autosport F1
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The key advantage for Bottas vs Perez in the 2026 F1 return race
The best visualisation of just how different Formula 1 life has become for Valtteri Bottas was formed in 2025 Bahrain pre-season testing, when Autosport found him in the Mercedes pitbox with a wheelgun in his hand.But the Finn wasn’t starting a new role as a mechanic for the Silver Arrows squad. It’s just that as Mercedes’ 2025 test and reserve driver, filming social media skits is part ...Keep reading

Autosport F1
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How Honda went from "GP2" humiliation to F1 redemption with Red Bull
The start of the 2025 season may not have gone to plan at Red Bull HQ, but it will still celebrate its successful partnerships with Honda in style at this weekend's Japanese Grand Prix before the two parties go separate ways.Marking the 60th anniversary of Honda's first grand prix win - achieved by Richie Ginther at the 1965 Mexican Grand Prix - Red Bull's RB21 is donned in a one-off tribute ...Keep reading

Mail Online
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Is your name dying out? Search tool reveals American names going extinct and the most popular in every state
Daily Mail has built a search tool using official data of every registered birth in the US between 1995 and 2023. It allows you to compare up to five names against each other.

Mail Online
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Travis Kelce blames Taylor Swift fame for dreadful NFL form that left him weighing up retirement
Kelce had one of the most underwhelming seasons of his career in 2024 from a statistical standpoint, putting up some of his worst numbers ever before going anonymous in their defeat at the Super Bowl.

Mac Rumours
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Apple Reportedly Hasn't Given Up on Haptic Buttons for a Future iPhone
Apple is still exploring solid-state buttons with haptic feedback for a future iPhone, according to a new report from a known Weibo leaker.





In a new post, the leaker known as "Instant Digital" said that Apple's work on solid-state buttons for the ‌iPhone‌ is ongoing. They said that production cost is not the project's main issue, but rather "mistouches," since a correct response is apparently not "perfectly guaranteed."



Apple is said to currently be adjusting the "tactile design" of its solid-state buttons and working on their long-term reliability, especially for mass production. Apple's current button design is integrated directly into the frame, with no rebound when clicked, but the company is apparently seeking to more closely replicate the experience of a traditional mechanical button.



The advantages of the design are simplicity and reducing mechanical wear, while enabling users to differentiate between a light press and a firm press to trigger different functions. The project is purportedly now "on hold," with the company determining that the current market is more interested in display and battery technology advancements.



It was widely reported that Apple was intending to bring solid-state buttons to the iPhone 15 Pro in 2023 as part of "Project Bongo," but it canceled the plan at a late stage. They were then rumored to come to the iPhone 16 Pro, before being shelved indefinitely. The feature is not expected to arrive in the iPhone 17 lineup, but the latest report suggests that they're likely to appear someday in the future. Tag: Instant DigitalThis article, 'Apple Reportedly Hasn't Given Up on Haptic Buttons for a Future iPhone' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

BBC World News
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Hollywood remembers 'wonderful' actor Val Kilmer
He starred in some of the biggest movies of the 1980s and 90s, also including The Doors and Heat.

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Myanmar’s military prioritizes its own survival in earthquake response
Myanmar’s military prioritizes its own survival in earthquake response
Expert comment
thilton.drupal
2 April 2025

The devastating earthquake has put further strain on the embattled military regime as it fights a civil war. It is unlikely to collapse imminently, but the country’s crisis will only get worse.















The scenes from earthquake-hit parts of central Myanmar are apocalyptic. At least 2,000 people are known have been killed and unknown numbers lie buried in the rubble. Thousands of homes have been destroyed or damaged and key pieces of national infrastructure, from the Ava railway bridge between the cities of Mandalay and Sagaing to the airport at Naypyidaw, have been destroyed or rendered unusable. The costs of years of shoddy construction and poor maintenance have been made painfully obvious. The consequences of the events of 28 March will be long-lasting.The earthquake is the latest in a line of tragedies to affect the people of Myanmar in the past few years. The hope created by the first democratic elections of 2015 has long since evaporated. In August 2017, the military and local militias killed thousands of Rohingya Muslims in the north-western state of Rakhine and hundreds of thousands more were forced to flee to Bangladesh. In February 2021, the military launched a coup and imprisoned the country’s democratic leadership, including Aung San Suu Kyi. During the four years since, the country has fragmented. Separatist ethnic armed groups have restarted dormant campaigns and more than 6,000 people have been killed by the military’s response.Estimates by the US-based Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (Acled) in November 2024 suggested that ethnic armed organisations and so-called ‘self-defence forces’ control 42 per cent of Myanmar, and described a further 29 per cent of the country as ‘contested.’ The military is in complete control of only 21 per cent of the country (the remaining 8 per cent is sparsely populated forest). It is the highly populated area controlled by the military that was most badly hit by the earthquake. This is not entirely coincidental. The earthquake was caused by the Sagaing Fault, along which the Ayeyarwady (Irrawaddy) River flows. This low-lying, rice-growing river valley is the heartland of the Bamar, the country’s largest ethnic group from which the army recruits most of its soldiers.






The dilemma faced by Western governments and aid agencies is how to get support to those who need it without it being diverted to the military or used as a bargaining tool in the civil war.






The army rules, and fights, with extreme brutality. In its heartland areas it forcibly conscripts young men and brutalizes those who demonstrate for democracy. In the areas controlled by its opponents it has conducted thousands of airstrikes, bombing schools, hospitals and churches. These are still continuing, despite the earthquake. This is only to be expected. Throughout the previous period of military rule, from 1962 to 2015, the army displayed ruthlessness and inflexibility. It sees itself as the sole force capable of keeping the country united and is determined not to give away territory to separatist ethnic groups or give up control of the state.There is a parallel with the way the regime prioritised internal security over international aid after the impact of Cyclone Nargis in 2008. Back then it continued with the organisation of a sham referendum intended to endorse a new constitution even as a storm surge drowned thousands of people. With its generals isolated in the newly built capital in Naypyidaw, the military was more focused on regime survival than saving lives. It is unlikely to be any different this time.Foreign aid dilemmaThe military’s international partners, notably China, Russia, India and Vietnam, have rushed to provide highly visible displays of help, in particular through the deployment of brightly coloured search and rescue teams. These operations were largely performative but have been highlighted by state media in both Myanmar and the donor countries as evidence of strong relations. The dilemma faced by Western governments and aid agencies is how to get support to those who need it without it being diverted to the military or used as a bargaining tool in the civil war. Given the location of much of the damage, it is likely that they will be obliged to work with the military, despite their well-founded misgivings, in order to reach those who need help the most. The military will want to control the aid distribution and present it as their own initiative to reduce the embarrassment of being seen to rely on foreigners. Each government and aid agency will have to decide whether it is worse to abandon the victims or to be used as tools of military propaganda.

TechRadar News
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Netflix's most-watched movie is leaving viewers' tear ducts dry,but these 3 films with over 90% on Rotten Tomatoes are genuine tear-jerkers

TechRadar News
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New tests cast a disappointing light on Nvidia’s RTX 5090 laptop GPU, suggesting that at today’s prices, RTX 5080 notebooks are a far better buy

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Mario Kart World officially revealed as a Nintendo Switch 2 exclusive

TechRadar News
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David Fincher is making a Once Upon A Time in Hollywood sequel for Netflix with Brad Pitt set to return

TechRadar News
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The Nintendo Switch 2 release date is official and the console launches this June

TechRadar News
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Millions of free VPN users have inadvertently sent their data to China

TechRadar News
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Get ready, Tarnished! Elden Ring is coming to the Nintendo Switch 2 this year

TechRadar News
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Nintendo Switch 2 Direct live: Cyberpunk 2077 is officially coming to Switch 2, and all the latest stories now the stream is underway!

Digital Trends
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Sony Xperia 1 VII design leaks showing new camera bump
New renders have been leaked showcasing the Sony Xperia 1 VII, which could be revealed early next month. The most notable observation is that the device may closely resemble its predecessor.

Digital Trends
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Withings $150 blood pressure monitor is FDA approved and out now
The Withings BPM Vision has passed FDA approval, and is available in the U.S. now. Here are all the details.

Digital Trends
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Deal on Amazon “Customers’ Most-Loved” tablet saves you $150
Amazon customers adore this tablet, which is now $150 off. You'll probably like it, too.

Digital Trends
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The Nintendo Switch 2: Launch date, hardware specs, and more
The Nintendo Switch is officially announced, and it launches one June 5, 2025. Nintendo’s latest console looks similar to its predecessor in many ways, but has taken a more sleek design with colorful highlights around its Joy-Cons. The Switch 2 has a better kickstand than the original Switch, and the Joy-Cons themselves are now magnetic […]

Digital Trends
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Mario Kart World takes racing off-track
Oringinally teased with the Switch 2 reveal, Mario Kart World is the first official Switch 2 exclusive game racing to your system with 24 racers.

Digital Trends
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Nintendo reveals the purpose behind the mysterious C button
Nintendo has finally revealed the functionality behind the mysterious C button on the right Joy-Con for the Switch 2.

Digital Trends
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Many of your favorite Switch games are getting a Switch 2 Edition
Switch 2 edition games will make your existing Switch games look and play even better, and some even have additional features.

Digital Trends
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The new Switch 2 Pro Controller has some big improvements
The Switch 2's Pro Controller brings back buttons to Nintendo's new console.

The Verge
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Adobe launches Premiere Pro’s generative AI video extender
Adobe is updating Premiere Pro with AI-powered features that aim to provide creatives with faster and better video editing results. Version 25.2 of Premiere Pro is launching today, bringing tools for locating, translating, and extending video footage out of beta and into general availability for every user. The most notable is Generative Extend, which Adobe […]

The Verge
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Tesla’s sales plummet 13 percent as Musk backlash grows
Amid growing fallout over Elon Musk’s involvement in the Trump administration, Tesla’s sales fell a staggering 13 percent in the first quarter of 2025 year over year.  The company said it produced a total of 362,615 vehicles in the first three months of the year, including 345,454 Model 3 and Model Y vehicles and 17,161 […]

The Verge
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Nintendo Switch 2 specs: 1080p 120Hz display, 4K dock, mouse mode, and more
Nintendo has finally shared many of the key specs about the Nintendo Switch 2 as part of its Switch 2-focused Direct. The system launches on June 5th. The device has a 7.9-inch screen, but it’s still 13.99mm thick, like the first Switch. The LCD screen has a 1080p resolution, and supports HDR and up to […]

The Verge
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The Nintendo Switch 2 arrives on June 5th
After a reveal that was light on details, Nintendo has finally announced key information about the Switch 2: most notably, when it will launch. The Switch 2 will be available on June 5th, but we’re still waiting to hear the pricing for this new console. Nintendo has also revealed more hardware details about the Switch […]

The Verge
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Mario Kart World launches exclusively with the Nintendo Switch 2
We knew a Mario Kart game was coming to the Switch 2, and now Nintendo has finally shared some real details in its latest Nintendo Direct. It’s called Mario Kart World, and it will be a day-one Switch 2 exclusive. It features an open-world mode, in-game atmospheric effects that depend on “the time of day […]

The Verge
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Segway’s robot mower for massive lawns hits the US
Segway’s Navimow X3 series is now available to buy in the US, adding to the limited number of robot lawnmowers capable of tackling larger yards. Joining the more affordable Navimow i series that launched in March 2024, the Navimow X3 has several models, ranging from the $2,299 X315 which can cover 0.4 acres, to the […]

The Verge
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Nintendo’s Switch 2 C button is a Discord-like GameChat feature
Now that Nintendo has finally given us the rundown on the Switch 2, we can finally answer one of the biggest questions we had about the new console: “what’s the deal with that ‘C’ button?” The button, present on the right Joy-Con directly below the home button, is square and marked with a “C.” The […]

The Verge
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Metroid Prime 4: Beyond is getting a Nintendo Switch 2 Edition
Nintendo announced that Metroid Prime 4: Beyond will have a Nintendo Switch 2 Edition that offers an additional control option and quality / performance graphics modes. In the Nintendo Switch 2 Edition of Beyond, you’ll be able to play the game using the Joy-Con controller’s mouse functionality. I’m curious to try that out — seems […]

The Verge
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The Nintendo Switch 2 has a camera accessory for video chats
Nintendo is launching a special camera accessory for the Switch 2 that will let you host video chats with your Switch friends. Simply called the Nintendo Switch 2 Camera, it’s a camera on a stand, designed to sit next to your TV while you play. You can use the new camera with GameChat, Nintendo’s new […]

The Guardian (UK)
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Girl missing in River Thames in east London named as Kaliyah Coa
Recovery mission under way after 11-year-old entered water near London City airport on MondayAn 11-year-old girl who is missing after entering the River Thames in London on Monday has been named by police as Kaliyah Coa and a picture has been released.Kaliyah, who had been playing during a school inset day, entered the water near Bargehouse Causeway near London City airport in east London. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Patrick Harvie to stand down as co-leader of Scottish Greens
UK’s longest-serving parliamentary leader will leave legacy of rent freeze, housing rights and free under-21 bus travelUK politics live – latest updatesPatrick Harvie, the UK’s longest serving parliamentary leader, has announced he is standing down as co-convener of the Scottish Greens after nearly 17 years in the role.An MSP since 2003, Harvie, 52, had recently taken leave of absence from Holyrood for an operation and recuperation. He announced on Wednesday he would not contest this summer’s party leadership election. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The price of flip-flops: can they ever be worth £670?
If you’ve just bought a pair of these rubber sandals, you may want to think twice before wearing them down to the beachName: Flip-flops.Age: They date from 1500BC, although the modern version is adapted from Japanese thonged sandals called zori, brought back by US soldiers returning from the second world war. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Turtle doves to be shot for sport again across Europe as EU lifts hunting ban
Ban in place since 2021 has increased numbers of globally vulnerable pigeon species that is close to extinction in UKTurtle doves will be allowed to be shot for sport again across Europe, as the EU lifts a ban on hunting that was credited with the species’ tentative recovery.The EU will allow hunters to shoot 132,000 birds across Spain, France and Italy after a population boom for the threatened bird in western Europe due to a hunting ban that came into effect in 2021. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Tesla quarterly sales slump 13% amid backlash against Elon Musk
Drop is likely combination of ageing lineup, increased competition and backlash to Musk’s politicsTesla sales declined in the first three months of the year, another sign that Elon Musk’s once high-flying electric car company is struggling to attract buyers.The drop of 13% is likely due to combination of factors, including its ageing lineup, competition from rivals and a backlash from Musk’s embrace of rightwing politics. It also is a warning that the company’s first-quarter earnings report later this month could disappoint investors. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Leicester lost £19m in Championship-winning season
Leicester post a £19.4m loss in their accounts for 2023-2024 - the season they spent in the Championship.

Gizmodo
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iRobot Roomba Robot Vacuum and Mop Combo Just Beat Its Black Friday Price on Amazon
Save 43% on the iRobot Roomba combo i5 robot vacuum and mop for a limited time.

Gizmodo
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Thunderbolts Merch Gives Us Our First Decent Look at the Sentry’s Supersuit
Plus, get a new look at 28 Years Later.

Gizmodo
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The Nintendo Switch 2 Is Finally Here
The Nintendo Switch 2 looks like a larger version of the original Switch, though its real promise may be more than skin deep.

Gizmodo
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Amazon Hasn’t Pulled This Anker Portable Power Bank Deal From Its Spring Sale Yet
It doubles as a phone charger and kickstand so you can get on with your day after charging your phone.

Russia Today News
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Western ‘interventionism’ has turned Bosnia and Herzegovina into a ‘failed state’ – Bosnian Serb leader

Mail Online
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Watch the terrifying moment TikToker wakes up from surgery HANDCUFFED and unable to speak
Kaitlyn Jenkins, 21, from Texas in the US, has shared a video clip of the terrifying moment she woke up from a procedure, during which medics restrained her hands and fitted a breathing tube.

Mail Online
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Revealed: North Korea slammed its borders shut to tourists after four weeks because travel 'influencers' flooded into the hermit state and posted 'mocking' and 'critical' videos that 'showed too much' 
Dictator Kim Jong-Un had sealed North Korea off at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic in early 2020, but started to scale back restrictions in 2023.

Sky News Home
Open 
Old Etonian who threatened to throw woman in disused well at family estate is jailed
An Old Etonian who threatened to throw his ex-partner down a disused well has been jailed for 24 years for attempted murder.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Who can stop Surrey winning fourth straight Championship title?
BBC Sport looks ahead to the 2025 County Championship season and who can challenge Surrey as they seek a fourth successive title.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Lise Klaveness: 'Football is in a critical time'
In an exclusive interview with DW, Lise Klaveness talks about boycotting World Cups and playing Israel. The Norwegian is outspoken on political issues and will soon become one of European football's powerbrokers.

Mail Online
Open 
National Grid offered me a staggering amount of money after my salon was hit by a power cut - I thought I could retire early until I got a rude awakening
James Parker couldn't believe his luck when the energy firm wrote to him a fortnight ago to say he was entitled to the whopping amount.

Mail Online
Open 
Tractor smashes into house to leave homeowner's bed exposed to the elements as 52-year-old is arrested for drug-driving
Police were called to the A51 at Vicars Cross Road in Chester, Cheshire, at about 6.35am on Tuesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Showing Adolescence in schools could be 'catastrophic': Victim support organisation warns that 'knee-jerk' plan backed by Keir Starmer could encourage children to seek out violent content and become radicalised
Jaime Shrive and psychologist Dr Jessica Taylor have urged Labour to U-turn on the decision, warning that to plough ahead risked 'triggering' children and 're-exposing them to trauma'.

Mail Online
Open 
Lauren Sanchez, Katy Perry and Gayle King stun on Elle front cover alongside their all-female Blue Origin crew
The group assembled in person for the very first time for a special April digital cover for the publication.

Mail Online
Open 
Cowardly act of doctor 'who tried to murder nuclear engineer wife in Hawaii' as he's seen for first time since
Gerhardt Konig, 46, allegedly tried to push his wife Arielle Konig off a cliff before he hit her in the head with a rock and attempted to inject her with an unknown substance

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Beegu review – Alexis Deacon’s mellow yellow alien adventure hits the stage
Unicorn theatre, LondonRejected by adults, the far-from-home heroine is embraced by cheering children in Debbie Hannan’s comical showIf you took one of Tove Jansson’s Moomins, sprayed them with custard, added a third eye and stretched their ears then you might end up with Beegu. The yellow alien from Alexis Deacon’s popular picture book now crash-lands in a comical show for children aged three to seven. Director Debbie Hannan’s adaptation often forgoes the contemplative grace of the original and whips the audience into chants for the befuddled, far-from-home heroine. Bee-gu! Bee-gu!The themes of curiosity, care and found family remain intact. A cuddly looking Beegu (movement and puppetry direction from Laura Cubitt) is principally controlled by Emma MacLennan, who also voices the alien’s inquisitive chatter. During her odyssey on Earth, Beegu is ignored and insulted by busy grownups (“bit early for a Halloween costume,” sneers one) but warmly welcomed by some friendly schoolchildren. On the Unicorn’s main stage you might think this would lead to some extravagant circus skills but their games, rendered in slow motion, instead have a simplicity that young audiences will recognise from their own playground. The same goes for the cheerleading routine that involves a litter of fluffy puppies whizzing through the air.At the Unicorn theatre, London, until 4 May. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Scandal-hit creative writing website NaNoWriMo to close after 20 years
The US nonprofit, whose online community encouraged members to write a novel in a month, has been rocked by controversy in recent yearsNaNoWriMo, the US-based nonprofit organisation that challenged people to write a novel in a month, has announced it is closing down after 20 years.NaNoWriMo – an abbreviation of National Novel Writing Month – fostered an online community of participants aiming to write 50,000 words of fiction in November. It began informally in 1999 before becoming a nonprofit in 2006. Each year, tens of thousands signed up to the organisation’s flagship programme. Continue reading...

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
Open 
#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (Update)
We have identified a supplier issue and they are currently investigating.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 03:38

Update: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 16:30

Edited: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 14:13

Status: Outage

Maintenance: None

The Register
Open 
Qualcomm set to move in on UK chip IP biz Alphawave
Has until month end to make an offer for semiconductor design and licensing shop Qualcomm has confirmed its interest in buying high-speed connectivity module designer Alphawave Semi, a move that could see yet another major British tech operation swallowed up by a foreign business.…

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Space junk is damaging satellites. How do we remove it?
More than 130 million pieces of space debris orbit Earth. Collisions with spacecraft risks disrupting critical navigation and environment-monitoring satellites. The ESA is calling for urgent action.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Michael Sheen to take on another real-life role as last Welsh-born Prince of Wales
Michael Sheen will star as Owain Glyndwr, the last Welsh-born Prince of Wales, in a new stage play.

UK Government News
Open 
Campaign to tackle dirty money steps up with new sanctions
UK sanctions corrupt actors undermining democratic governments in Foreign Secretary's latest steps to crack down on corruption and illicit finance.

UK Government News
Open 
Government unlocks £10 billion private investment into the UK
The Minister for Investment has signed a new partnership with Singaporean bank OCBC, which will help unlock £10 billion of investment into key priority sectors in the UK.

UK Government News
Open 
UK sanctions corrupt actors in Guatemala
The UK has sanctioned seven corrupt actors whose actions have undermined democracy and the rule of law in Guatemala.

UK Government News
Open 
Poultry Meat Marketing Regulations to be amended to support industry through bird flu outbreaks
Poultry meat marketing regulations amended

UK Government News
Open 
New fund to tackle hatred against Muslims
The new Combatting Hatred Against Muslims Fund will provide funding to monitor incidents of anti-Muslim hate and for support for victims.

TechRadar Reviews
Open 
The Logitech G703 Lightspeed is a competent gaming mouse, but I couldn’t get on with its shape

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Seacliff Asylum Ruins in Seacliff, New Zealand

The Hill
Open 
Trump, Musk tout voter Wisconsin ID passage as preferred candidate loses court bid
President Trump and his senior adviser, tech billionaire Elon Musk, touted the passage of the ballot measure Tuesday that amends Wisconsin’s Constitution to mandate photo identification for voters. “VOTER I.D. JUST APPROVED IN WISCONSIN ELECTION. Democrats fought hard against this, presumably so they can CHEAT. This is a BIG WIN FOR REPUBLICANS, MAYBE THE BIGGEST WIN...

The Hill
Open 
The right’s legal heavyweight takes on Trump
President Trump has an unlikely foe in his efforts to target Big Law firms: Paul Clement. Clement is a conservative legal heavyweight who served as solicitor general in President George W. Bush’s administration and has argued more than 100 cases before the Supreme Court. He has notched major conservative victories at the court, including expanding...

The Hill
Open 
Why exactly is Trump so obsessed with tariffs?
Maybe this isn’t about fixing the economy at all. Maybe it’s about power: the raw, transactional, kingmaker kind.

The Hill
Open 
Trump presses McConnell, other 'disloyal' Senate Republicans on Canada tariffs
President Trump is pressuring former Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and other Republicans he's labeled "disloyal" in the upper chamber to vote against Democrats' resolution to bar his emergency declaration to impose tariffs on Canada. In a post to Truth Social early Wednesday, Trump willed the senators to "hopefully get on the Republican bandwagon,...

The Hill
Open 
Vance is right: Europe’s freeloading is wrong 
If Europe truly wants a say in how technology firms operate, they should get their own.

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: Trump set to impose massive tariffs for 'Liberation Day'
President Trump's long promised day of reciprocal tariffs has arrived, with a Rose Garden event to announce them set for Wednesday afternoon. "It's liberation day in America," Trump posted in all caps to his Truth Social platform around 7 a.m. Also early Wednesday, the president pressured former Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and other Republicans he’s...

The Hill
Open 
McMorrow enters Michigan Senate race, citing 'fear and anger and uncertainty right now'
Michigan state Sen. Mallory McMorrow (D) has formally entered the race for U.S. Senate after much speculation, citing the “fear and anger and uncertainty” facing the country as her motivation.  McMorrow kicked off her campaign with a video posted Tuesday that starts with references to various moves from the Trump administration, including the mass layoffs...

Mail Online
Open 
Forget plain white duvet covers - these are the maximalist bedding trends to embrace instead
White bedding has a timeless appeal; gives off a crisp and clean, 'hotel-like' feeling; and is easy to style. But let's admit it: it is also a bit boring.

Sky News Home
Open 
Mercedes driver arrested after collision involving tractor that crashed into houses
A Mercedes driver has been arrested after a collision involving a tractor that crashed into two houses.

Harvard Business Review
Open 
Will Tariffs Drive Domestic Innovation?
In theory, tariffs could give U.S. companies an opportunity to scale—but many are too far behind foreign competitors to gain an advantage.

Harvard Business Review
Open 
Why Your Frontline Employee Turnover Is High
And the hidden costs of neglecting this crucial part of your workforce.

Harvard Business Review
Open 
To Make Better Decisions, Think Like a Venture Capitalist
A conversation with Stanford GSB professor Ilya Strebulaev on embracing disagreement.

Harvard Business Review
Open 
How to Prepare for a Meeting Where Emotions Will Run High
Volatile situations can be tricky even for seasoned leaders.

ZDNet News
Open 
I am a hardcore Windows PC user, but the new Mac Studio has me rethinking everything
Apple's Mac Studio delivers impressive performance thanks to its M4 Max chip. The chipset and its space-saving design make the desktop a must-have for professionals and creatives.

ZDNet News
Open 
iOS 18.4 update draining your iPhone's battery? Try these 6 fixes
iOS 18.4 is here, and for some, it's causing major battery drain. Here are my top tips to get to the root of the issue and restore your iPhone's power ASAP.

ZDNet News
Open 
New FDA-cleared blood pressure monitor delivers medical grade results at home
Offering intuitive instructions and instant, easy-to-read results, BPM Vision from Withings is available today.

ZDNet News
Open 
Adobe brings four highly-requested Premiere Pro AI features out of beta
Now generally available, the AI tools include Generative Extend, Media Intelligence, Auto-Translate caption, and more. Here's what they can do.

Mail Online
Open 
Gen Beta's baby doomsday: Girls born today are set to have record low of just 1.46 children on average - not enough to sustain the population - as they wait until age 36 to start families
Official projections show completed family sizes in England and Wales tumbling to an average of just 1.46 children per woman.

Mail Online
Open 
Lucy Letby's legal team are poised to deliver 'fresh evidence' to commission reviewing killer nurse's case
Mark McDonald (right) said he would be presenting the 'fresh evidence' to the Criminal Cases Review Commission, at its headquarters in Birmingham at 12pm.

Mail Online
Open 
Geri Halliwell-Horner compares herself to late Apple boss Steve Jobs as she explains how he helped inspire her decision to only wear white clothing
The Spice Girl, 52, is known for her signature all-white wardrobe and is rarely spotted out at public events in any other colour.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trans soldiers served their country. Now the US is rolling back their healthcare
About 134,000 trans veterans live in the US, with many now blocked from life-saving gender-affirming careWhen Savannah Blake joined the air force at 22 years old, she was looking for stable employment and a way out of poverty. For the last few years of her service, she worked as a cyberdefense operator in the intelligence squadron. But the work, which involved overseeing computers operating drone surveillance, eventually took a toll on her mental health.“If I had to watch any more of this, I was going to not be alive anymore,” Blake said, who says she experienced suicidal ideations. “I just felt like the bad guy. I felt evil.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Doge employee allegedly has history of misogyny, racism and violent outbursts
Rolling Stone interviews with 10 people reveal claims that Jeremy Lewin threatened a girl with a knife and openly shared racist viewsAn employee of Elon Musk’s so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge), who was parachuted in as a senior manager at the US Agency for International Development (USAID) as it was being wound up, has been accused of a history of misogyny, racism and violent outbursts.The claims against 28-year-old Jeremy Lewin were made following an investigation by Rolling Stone magazine, which said it was based on interviews with 10 people who know him. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Cory Booker breaks record for longest Senate speech with Trump condemnation
In speech that began Monday night, Democratic senator warns of ‘grave and urgent’ danger of Trump administrationCory Booker, the Democratic US senator from New Jersey, has broken the record for longest speech ever by a lone senator – beating the record first established by Strom Thurmond, who filibustered for 24 hours and 18 minutes in opposition to the Civil Rights Act of 1957.Booker’s speech eventually ran to 25 hours and five minutes. Having begun at 7pm on Monday night, was not a filibuster but instead an effort to warn of what he called the “grave and urgent” danger that Donald Trump’s presidential administration poses to democracy and the American people. Continue reading...

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Three MD-80 Jets Seized in Miami
A Miami-Dade investment firm has reclaimed its loaned jets after a breach of agreement with World Atlantic Airlines.

Mail Online
Open 
Human remains found at recycling plant as police launch investigation into 'extremely complex' discovery
The discovery was made by workers on Sunday, March 30, and police were called to the Biffa Teesside recycling facility which has been closed off since.

Mail Online
Open 
No monkey business! Moment thieves steal huge gorilla statue from indoor market before police swoop just minutes later
Brian Rumley, 50, and Michael O'Brien, 52, were seen stumbling through Darlington town centre, County Durham, carrying the £399 ornament while passing cans of beer back and forth.

Mail Online
Open 
Beaches that have been taken over by cute animals: From a US island with herds of wild horses to pigs, flamingos, penguins and UK sheep
It seems humans aren't the only creatures that enjoy a spot of sun, sand and sea. Discover the coastal spots where animals rule the roost...

Mail Online
Open 
Turkish barber shops police crackdown: Cops raid dozens of businesses being run as front for money laundering and seize hundreds of thousands of pounds in dirty cash
Bodycam footage shows West Mercia officers smashing their way into the businesses which are increasingly used as fronts by criminal gangs.

BBC World News
Open 
Inside Mandalay: BBC visits makeshift hospital treating earthquake victims in Myanmar
The BBC’s Yogita Limaye is the first foreign journalist to enter the country since the disaster struck.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
What are nutria, and how could they possibly be a problem?
This brown, fuzzy critter with its distinctive orange buck teeth may look cute, but it's causing all sorts of trouble — in Germany, and across Europe.

Mail Online
Open 
I've travelled 40 countries with a toddler - these are the 11 items I'll never leave without
Whether you're planning a holiday abroad, a European theme park getaway, or a coastal staycation - here are are 11 travel tools that can make the trip smoother for both parents and kids.

Mail Online
Open 
Clarkson's Farm series four release date finally revealed with string of first look pics - and Jeremy faces a HUGE new challenge
Fans will be welcomed back to the TV star's Diddly Squat Farm soon in a brand new instalment coming to Prime Video.

Mail Online
Open 
Cher pays tribute to her 'funny and brave' ex lover Val Kilmer after his death aged 65
The Top Gun star passed away from pneumonia in Los Angeles on Tuesday after a long health battle.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Anthony Elanga’s solo special stuns Manchester United: Football Weekly - podcast
Max Rushden is joined by Barry Glendenning, Jonathan Liew and Mark Langdon as Nottingham Forest beat Manchester United, taking a step closer to Champions League football next seasonRate, review, share on Apple Podcasts, Soundcloud, Audioboom, Mixcloud, Acast and Stitcher, and join the conversation on Facebook, Twitter and email.On the podcast today: Anthony Elanga scores a wonderful solo goal against Manchester United and it proves enough for Nottingham Forest to claim a vital 1-0 win in the hunt for Champions League football. Continue reading...

Techdirt
Open 
A Bipartisan Roster Of Former FCC Officials Say Trump FCC Boss Brendan Carr Is Taking A Giant Dump On The First Amendment
Last October, Trump sued CBS claiming (falsely) that a 60 Minutes interview of Kamala Harris had been “deceitfully edited” to her benefit (they simply shortened some of her answers for brevity, as news outlets often do). As Mike explored in a post at the time, the lawsuit was utterly baseless, and tramples the First Amendment, editorial discretion, and […]

CNET News
Open 
How to Preorder the Nintendo Switch 2: All Store Links
Whatever the price, Nintendo Switch 2 preorders are certain to sell out fast.

CNET News
Open 
Switch 2 Nintendo Direct Live Updates: Latest News and Reveals
The Switch 2 Nintendo Direct will be a full hour -- here's what we expect will be in it, plus everything else coming with the new console.

CNET News
Open 
Goodbye, Zelle App. Here's How to Keep Sending Money Digitally
The popular payment app has disappeared. But there are a lot of other ways to send money instantly for free.

CNET News
Open 
Best Internet Speed Tests for April 2025
Home internet can be expensive. Take a quick and free online speed test to determine if you're getting the speed you’re paying for.

CNET News
Open 
Nothing Phone 3A Pro Review: Flashy Design Is the Cherry on Top
With solid overall performance and an affordable price, Nothing's Phone 3A and 3A Pro may be the midrangers to beat.

Russia Today News
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World leaders secretly talking to Putin – Vucic

Mail Online
Open 
Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs carnage will hammer UK exports like cars and whisky worth £60billion and could cost tens of thousands of jobs
The tariffs - up to 20 per cent across the board - could knock up to 1 per cent off the size of the UK economy if there is a full-blown trade war with the UK retaliating to Trump's measures.

F1 Technical
Open 
Verstappen becomes AlphaTauri's ambassador
Red Bull's fashion brand AlphaTauri has announced four-time F1 world champion Max Verstappen as its global brand ambassador which will see the Dutchman showcase AlphaTauri's style worldwide while travelling to all 24 stops of the 2025 F1 Season.

Autosport F1
Open 
How dependent is Red Bull on Verstappen – now and for the future?
“I think I can probably win the constructors’ championship on my own right now”, Max Verstappen smiled during a Dutch media session ahead of the 2023 British Grand Prix. He said it jokingly, but there was truth in his comments on two fronts. At the time, Red Bull’s dominance was such that Verstappen individually scored more points (575) than the second team in the constructors’ ...Keep reading

Nature
Open 
Daily briefing: What happens when you pay peer reviewers?

Nature
Open 
A toolkit for seeing how the fly brain’s visual system works

Mac Rumours
Open 
New Plex Mobile App With Streamlined Interface Rolling Out to Users
Plex is rolling out a new version of its mobile app, and it's a fairly major redesign that features expanded artwork, streamlined navigation, and a dedicated tab for centralized media libraries designed for "personal media pros."





Plex said in a forum post that the updated app is being fully deployed over the course of the week, and introduces several key improvements based on user feedback received during its preview testing phase. If you installed the beta version of the app, which was made available via TestFlight in November, then you'll know what to expect.



Among the changes, users will notice new title artwork for movies and shows, a dedicated spot for the Watchlist feature in the top navigation, and a simplified user menu. Performance enhancements include improved load times, better scrolling performance, and added support for portrait mode, according to Plex.



For those who use Plex to manage personal media collections, the update adds TV show shuffle options, improved library reordering, and enhanced access to item context menus via a long press.



Several other changes have been made that Plex wants existing users to be made aware of. The company says pre-existing downloads will lack some metadata after updating, which can be fixed by re-downloading content. The new version also removes music and photo functionality from the main app, as Plex has developed dedicated companion apps – Plexamp and Plex Photos – for these media types.



The mobile update arrives just weeks before Plex implements its previously announced subscription price changes. Starting April 29, the company will increase the cost of its Plex Pass to $6.99 monthly or $69.99 annually, up from $4.99 and $39.99 respectively, marking its first price hike in a decade.



Plex also noted that a new app for TV platforms, including Apple TV, will follow the mobile update "soon," continuing the company's refresh of its entire app ecosystem. The redesigned app is still in beta, but it is already available for testing on the Apple TV.Tag: PlexThis article, 'New Plex Mobile App With Streamlined Interface Rolling Out to Users' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Chatham House
Open 
The case for investing in global health inclusivity
The case for investing in global health inclusivity
15
May 2025 — 5:00PM TO 6:15PM
Anonymous (not verified)
25 March 2025

Chatham House and Online
Promoting health equity in a fragmented geopolitical landscape.
In an environment characterised by the policies of economic security, global health stakeholders must balance the growing political emphasis on growth and productivity with the drive to streamline government spending. However, the case for investment in health provisions is strong. Effective data collection and an understanding of the lived experience of service users allows public and private sector stakeholders to concentrate funding efforts where it will have the most impact and far reaching benefits. By targeting key areas like oral health, air pollution or health literacy, policymakers and investors can be assured of effective outcomes that improve health systems while also driving productivity and growth. Targeting policies to reduce both mortality and morbidity rates ensures a higher proportion of a given population can actively support a productive and competitive economy. This in turn increases societal resilience to future shocks in an increasingly unstable world.Drawing on the findings of the third edition of the Economist Impact Health Inclusivity Index, supported by Haleon, this event examines investment and policy pathways to a more equitable health landscape and how leveraging collaboration between public, private and civil society actors can support economic growth and productivity goals.Discussion questions include:Which health inclusivity approaches can be regarded as ‘easy wins’ that drive economic growth and how can public and private sector actors move the discussion forward?How should the lived experiences of service users inform health inclusivity initiatives in an environment where healthcare is not always prioritized, despite its benefits to economic growth?How resilient are health systems in the face of the challenges including government cost cutting, changing demography and service allocation?How can the global health ecosystem maintain a collective focus on inclusivity when international consensus is increasingly dominated by national interests above common values?A drinks reception will follow this event from 18:15 – 19:30 BST.By registering for this event, attendees agree to our code of conduct, ensuring a respectful, inclusive, and welcoming space for diverse perspectives and debate.

Chatham House
Open 
The false economy of DOGE
The false economy of DOGE
Expert comment
jon.wallace
2 April 2025

Criticism of US government inefficiency is justified. But rapid cuts made by the Department of Government Efficiency threaten US resilience and competitiveness.















Since US President Donald Trump launched the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), it has been a lightning rod for controversy. Under the guidance of Elon Musk, DOGE has moved systematically through agencies to remove civil servants and cancel programmes under the mantle of rooting out waste, fraud, and abuse, promising to cut $1 trillion in spending. The agency’s first significant operation, to make steep cuts at USAID, has been criticized as undermining the US’s international position and is still disputed in the courts.



$1 trillion
Cuts in federal spending targeted by DOGE





There are legitimate grounds for criticism of the US government’s inefficiency. Cumbersome procurement, Kafkaesque administrative processes, and programmes that have outlived their usefulness detract from agencies’ ability to deliver on their core missions. And the ambition in President Trump’s executive order establishing DOGE, to modernize outdated technology across government, is a sensible one. A useful approach to improving government efficiency would prioritize programmes where government funds deliver significant economic returns. It would rely on evidence to make decisions. And crucially, it would ensure the US government remains prepared to manage catastrophic risks that neither the private sector nor individuals can adequately address.But expansive DOGE cuts are taking place rapidly, with what even some Republicans characterize as a distinctly ideological mission. And it is far from certain that DOGE is achieving its key objective of saving taxpayer dollars. (DOGE’s $140 billion in claimed savings is riddled with errors and obfuscations, according to a New York Times analysis). More significantly, its approach risks costing taxpayers – and the US – far more than it saves by cutting revenue-positive functions, diminishing crisis and risk-related capacity, and underinvesting in science and research.Undermining revenue collectionAmong DOGE’s most prominent targets are agencies that return significant multiples of budget outlays to taxpayers. Cuts of 20 per cent of headcount at the IRS have led Treasury officials to predict a 10 per cent drop in tax revenues – over $500 billion – by the 15 April filing deadline.






Shrinking revenues risk…undermining international investor confidence in the US.






With diminished enforcement capacity, fewer Americans will file or pay their fair share. Estimates of lost revenue range from hundreds of billions to over 2 trillion dollars over a decade. Similarly, DOGE has targeted the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The Bureau has returned roughly $20 billion to consumers during its 14 years existence – with a budget a fraction of that. Efforts to effectively shutter the agency, currently facing legal challenges, would undermine a demonstrably cost-effective agency, leaving taxpayers worse off and inviting fraud and abuse. Further, shrinking revenues risk damage to perceptions of US fiscal management that could darken an already deteriorating fiscal outlook, undermining international investor confidence in the US and putting upward pressure on borrowing costs.Undermining risk management and crisis preventionBeyond revenue loss, DOGE threatens to create significant fiscal exposure for the US by reducing its crisis surveillance, mitigation, and response capacity. From cybersecurity to extreme weather to infectious disease, reducing capabilities and staffing could harm national resilience and heighten vulnerability to crises.


























Related content
First USAID closes, then UK cuts aid: what a Western retreat from foreign aid could mean








Particularly alarming are deep cuts to scientific and health agencies like The National Institutes of Health and Centers for Disease Control, which have lost critical research funding, and seen experts laid off. These cuts to scientific infrastructure threaten not just public health but also national security and economic stability. And costs to government could easily exceed any funds saved through DOGE’s cuts. A notable example of the wider costs from healthcare cuts was seen under the first Trump administration, which eliminated a programme to track novel coronaviruses. Despite upfront savings, COVID-19 subsequently necessitated $4.6 trillion in US spending on response measures. The cut programme would not have prevented the disease’s spread to the US, but it might have strengthened early response efforts. Speedy DOGE reductions to public health agencies – even as bird flu spreads and mutates – raise parallel concerns. Equally, some key USAID activity was concerned with identifying diseases at their point of origin and preventing their spread globally. Much of that early warning infrastructure has gone, exposing the US to further risk. Constraining innovationBeyond exogenous shocks, DOGE’s cuts also threaten the dynamism and innovation that underpin US international competitiveness. Government-backed research has helped produce technological advances like the internet, GPS, and mRNA vaccines that generate trillions in economic value, boosting the nation’s economy and security while generating substantial tax revenue.






As top scientists consider moving abroad, the US advantage may erode.






Reductions to basic and applied science funding will impede growth and competitiveness, just as China increases its research investment in an effort to overtake the US. This forgone innovation will constrain the US economy, impeding ambitions to outgrow its mounting debt problem. And, as top scientists consider moving abroad, the US advantage may erode further – with China and Europe vying to recruit talent whose work DOGE threatens. A test case at the PentagonThe Department of Defense (DoD) provides a compelling litmus test for DOGE’s commitment to efficiency. With nearly 3 million personnel and a budget exceeding $800 billion, the DoD is an obvious candidate for streamlining. DOGE has an opportunity to disrupt an ossified system and address longstanding inefficiencies and vulnerabilities. Secretary Pete Hegseth’s support for software acquisition reform represents a promising, though limited step toward productive cuts in tandem with DOGE. But so far, the Department has faced more incremental changes to programmes and personnel compared to civilian agencies.

TechRadar News
Open 
Watch out, Apple and Garmin! UNA's sustainable, modular smartwatch is now live on Kickstarter

TechRadar News
Open 
Epson's new UST 4K projector is mind-blowingly bright at up to 160 inches, but lacks a key HDR feature to make the most of it

TechRadar News
Open 
Google reveals better end-to-end encryption for Gmail business users

TechRadar News
Open 
The new Killswitch Nintendo Switch 2 case from Dbrand has loads of great features, and you can reserve one right now

Digital Trends
Open 
Samsung pumps up the Galaxy A56 to make new Galaxy Tab S10 FE tablets
Samsung has announced the Galaxy Tab S10 FE and Galaxy Tab S10 FE+ tablets. Here's what you need to know about them.

Digital Trends
Open 
3 underrated shows on Amazon Prime Video you need to watch in April 2025
Three underrated shows on Amazon Prime Video you need to watch in April 2025 include a procedural from Canada and an MTV remake of a 1980s comedy.

Digital Trends
Open 
NYT Crossword: answers for Wednesday, April 2
The New York Times crossword puzzle can be tough, even if it isn't the Sunday issue! If you're stuck, we're here to help you out with today's clues and answers.

Digital Trends
Open 
Wordle Today: Wordle answer and hints for April 2
Trying to solve the Wordle today? If you're stuck, we've got a few hints that will help you keep your Wordle streak alive.

Digital Trends
Open 
NYT Connections: hints and answers for Wednesday, April 2
Connections is the new puzzle game from the New York Times, and it can be quite difficult. If you need a hand with solving today's puzzle, we're here to help.

Digital Trends
Open 
NYT Strands today: hints, spangram and answers for Wednesday, April 2
Strands is a tricky take on the classic word search from NYT Games. If you're stuck and cannot solve today's puzzle, we've got help and hints for you here.

Digital Trends
Open 
NYT Mini Crossword today: puzzle answers for Wednesday, April 2
The NYT Mini crossword might be a lot smaller than a normal crossword, but it isn't easy. If you're stuck with today's crossword, we've got answers for you.

Digital Trends
Open 
The Nintendo Switch 2 already has its first accessory, and you can reserve it now
Before today's Nintendo Switch 2 Direct even began, Dbrand already started taking reservations for one of the console's first third-party accessories.

Digital Trends
Open 
MSI makes it a little less annoying to protect your OLED monitor
MSI has a way to protect your monitor from burn-in issues, and it's now more convenient -- but you'll need a firmware update.

Digital Trends
Open 
Nintendo Switch 2 Direct live: follow the Switch 2 reveal live with us
The Nintendo Switch 2 Direct reveal is happening now, and we're bringing you all the Switch 2 news as it happens, live.

The Verge
Open 
Samsung’s Tab S10 FE tablets arrive with a $50 price hike
Samsung has launched the Tab S10 FE and Tab S10 FE Plus, the latest in its midrange Android tablet line, but they cost $50 more than their predecessors. For the first time neither tablet has a direct equivalent in the standard Tab S10 series. The FE is the smallest of the company’s current tablet offerings, […]

The Verge
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Live updates from the Nintendo Switch 2 event
It’s time! After an agonizing three-month wait, Nintendo will finally reveal more details on the Switch 2 during its Direct on April 2nd at 9AM ET. While Nintendo told us very little in the official reveal of the console in January, the Switch 2 isn’t a complete mystery. We do know about its backward compatibility […]

Deutsche Welle
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Germany sees rise in sexual violence and youth offenses
The number of violent crimes in Germany increased in 2024 with a sharp increase in rapes and sexual assaults. A surge in the number of child offenders was also noted, and crimes by foreigners were also up.

Mail Online
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Can YOU see Him? Mind-boggling optical illusion tricks your brain into seeing Jesus's face
From slices of toast to patches of clouds, Jesus's face has a habit of appearing in some unusual places. But this mind-boggling optical illusion might be the most bizarre appearance yet.

The Guardian (UK)
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The invertebrate of the year competition is here. Who will you vote for? – video
Invertebrates may be the unsung heroes of the planet but they have received a lot of love and recognition from Guardian readers. A dazzling array of nominations have flown in for insects, arachnids, snails, crustaceans, corals and many more obscure creatures for our invertebrate of the year competition. Natural history reporter Patrick Barkham reviews this year’s shortlist of 10Invertebrate of the year 2025: vote for your favouriteVote for the beast that may be as ruthlessly predatory as us – the fen raft spider Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Liberation day’: what is a tariff and why do they matter?
Donald Trump’s threats to impose widescale import levies have spooked governments, investors and analysts alike. Here’s why …Donald Trump has said “tariffs” is the most beautiful word in the dictionary.The US president is expected to unveil his latest round of these border taxes on Wednesday at 4pm ET. In what he is calling “liberation day”, Trump has argued the step is needed to raise money and to encourage domestic manufacturing. But it is also rattling the global economy. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Italian police increase security at Tesla dealerships after 17 cars destroyed in Rome fire
State police anti-terrorism unit investigating whether blaze in Torre Angela was started by anarchistsItaly’s interior ministry has written to police forces across the country to increase security at Tesla dealerships after 17 of the electric cars made by Elon Musk’s company were destroyed in a fire in Rome.Italy’s state police anti-terrorism unit, Digos, is investigating whether the fire at the Tesla dealership in Torre Angela, a suburb in the east of the capital, was started by anarchists. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Democrats hail major win as Susan Crawford delivers blow to Trump and Musk in Wisconsin – US politics live
Liberal judge Susan Crawford wins race for seat on Wisconsin supreme court in litmus test for Donald Trump’s and Elon Musk’s popularityLiberal Susan Crawford beats Musk-backed candidateDonald Trump’s planned tariffs will be negative across the world, with the damage depending on how far they go, how long they last and whether they lead to successful negotiations, the European Central Bank head, Christine Lagarde, said on Wednesday.The Trump administration on Wednesday is set to announce “reciprocal tariffs” targeting nations that have duties on US goods. That move would come after it slapped new import levies on products from Mexico, China and Canada – the top US trading partners – as well as on goods including steel and autos.Wisconsin beat the billionaire.Wisconsin cannot be bought. Our democracy is not for sale. And when we fight, we win. Congratulations, @CrawfordForWI Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Starmer ‘ruling nothing out’ on Trump tariffs but plays down trade war fears – UK politics live
‘Our decisions will always be guided by our national interests, and that’s why we have prepared for all eventualities,’ PM saysThere will be two urgent questions in the Commons after PMQs. At around 12.30pm a Foreign Office minister will respond to a question from Priti Patel, the shadow foreign secretary, about the Chagos Islands. And then another Foreign Office minister (or the same one?) will reply to a UQ from the Green co-leader Carla Denyer about Gaza.After that Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, will make a statement about nursery provision.With new US tariffs coming, Welsh businesses face even more uncertainty.The UK must make a strategic decision: with 58.6% of Welsh exports going to the EU, we must provide stable access to European markets by rejoining the single market and customs union, allowing us to stand up to Trump’s reckless moves. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Photograph released of girl missing in River Thames
A recovery mission continues to look for 11-year-old Kaliyah Coa along the Thames, Met Police said.

Gizmodo
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This Pocket-Sized Powerhouse Charger Hasn’t Been Priced This Low in Years
The ultra-slim INIU portable charger packs a 10,000mAh fast-charging punch for iPhones, Android phones, and tablets for just $16.

Gizmodo
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Social Security Website Crashes as DOGE-Linked Disruption at the Agency Continues
Elon Musk's organization has been monkeying with America's retirement system, with no positive results so far.

BBC Formula One
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Lawson 'did not see' Red Bull demotion coming
Liam Lawson says he did not see his demotion by Red Bull coming, after he was dropped by the F1 team after just two races.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Sheen to take on another real-life role as last Welsh-born Prince of Wales
Michael Sheen will star as Owain Glyndwr, the last Welsh-born Prince of Wales, in a new stage play.

Mail Online
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Experts pinpoint exact amount of time you need to exercise to slash risk of cancer - it's not much
Cramming exercise into just one or two days a week is enough to slash the risk of early death, a study suggests.

Mail Online
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German Netflix star bodybuilder, 44, collapses and dies 'while on gym treadmill' a day after tragic last selfie
Vittorio Pirbazari, 44, known for his villain role in Dogs of Berlin , passed away on Monday with fellow actor and filmmaker Said Ibrahim taking to Instagram to confirm the tragic news.

Mail Online
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Royal Family targeted by hundreds of potential stalkers, with 35 assessed as highest risk of trying to 'do harm'
Protection officers have identified almost 500 potential stalkers during this timeframe.

Mail Online
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Beautiful moment NASA astronaut is reunited with her DOGS after 288 days stranded in space (and one has an hilarious reaction to seeing her!)
Following her return to Earth Mrs Williams was finally reunited with her two pet dogs at her home in Needham, Massachusetts.

Mail Online
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World's richest are named on updated list with combined wealth of billionaires passing $16TRILLION
Included on the 2025 compilation are 3,028 billionaires worldwide, which are 247 more than last year. Their combined net worth is an astonishing $16.1trillion.

Mail Online
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The haunting Polaroid snaps that give sinister clues to what happened to missing teenager
Haunting Polaroid snaps gave investigators chilling clues to what happened to missing woman. Tara Calico disappeared on September 20, 1988, while on a routine bike ride near her home in New Mexico

Sky News Home
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Heathrow bosses were warned about power supply after stolen cables turned off runway lights, MPs told
Heathrow bosses were warned its power supply was vulnerable less than a week before the major outage in March, a committee of MPs has heard.

Mail Online
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Meghan reveals she feeds Archie and Lili 'chicken nuggets and veggie burgers' - after hitting back at her own 'TV dinner' upbringing on Netflix show
The Duchess, who will be launching her As Ever collection today,  revealed she made a 'Chantilly Lili' - named after her daughter.

The Guardian (UK)
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China military drills targeting Taiwan put region’s security at risk, says US
Beijing continues drills in Taiwan strait, practising hitting key ports and energy infrastructureThe US has accused China of putting the region’s security at risk after it launched a second day of military drills targeting Taiwan with a rehearsal blockade and attack.The China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) began the joint drills without notice on Tuesday morning, sending 76 aircraft and more than 20 navy and coastguard ships, including the Shandong carrier group, to positions around Taiwan’s main island. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Judge orders White House to restore legal aid to unaccompanied migrant children
The temporary restraining order is another setback in less than a week for Trump’s immigration crackdownA federal judge in California has ordered the Trump administration to temporarily restore legal aid to tens of thousands of migrant children who are in the United States without a parent or guardian.The Republican administration on 21 March terminated a contract with the Acacia Center for Justice, which provides legal services for unaccompanied migrant children under 18 through a network of legal aid groups that subcontract with the center. Eleven subcontractor groups sued, saying that 26,000 children were at risk of losing their attorneys; Acacia is not a plaintiff. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Dustin May helps lead Dodgers to 7-0 start after near-fatal salad incident
Pitcher returned to action after injury and illnessDodgers off to best start for champion since 1933The Los Angeles Dodgers moved to 7-0 on Tuesday night, equalling the 1933 New York Yankees for the best start to a season by a defending champion, behind a strong start from Dustin May, who was making history of his own.The pitcher spent all of last season rehabbing from a torn flexor tendon in his right arm and a life-threatening esophageal tear after eating a salad at dinner with his wife in Arizona. A piece of lettuce became caught in his throat and May sipped some water trying to clear it. He felt a painful sensation in his throat and stomach, and later learned the lettuce had perforated his esophageal tube. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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In a new book, top Biden aide describes ‘out of it’ president before Trump debate
Ron Klain tells author Chris Whipple then president could not focus and obsessed about foreign leaders ahead of debate that ended his campaignIn a new book, Joe Biden’s former White House chief of staff paints a devastating picture of the then US president’s mental and physical state before the debate with Donald Trump that sent his 2024 campaign into a tailspin, resulting in his relinquishing the Democratic nomination to Kamala Harris.Ron Klain served Biden from 2021 to 2023, then returned to his side last June to run debate preparation as he had for numerous Democratic presidents before. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Airlines warned Heathrow about power supply risks days before outage, MPs told
Concerns about cable theft around supply raised with airport before substation fireBusiness live – latest updatesAirlines warned Heathrow about risks to its power supply days before the airport was shut down by a substation fire, a Commons committee has been told.Heathrow’s chief executive, Thomas Woldbye, apologised for the disruption, which affected more than 200,000 passengers on Friday 21 March, but defended the decision to close as he said staying open was potentially “disastrous”. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
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Why India's top tech universities can't shake off caste bias
India's premier technology institutions are known for their quality education and job opportunities. However, those opportunities remain limited by social hierarchies.

BBC UK News
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The rarely-seen rooftop view from Blenheim Palace
Blenheim Palace is commemorating its 75th anniversary by creating a new rooftop vieiwng platform.

Sky News Home
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Chartered surveyor murdered wife after cheating accusation
A chartered surveyor who murdered his wife after she accused him of cheating has been jailed for at least 15 years.

The Register
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For healthcare orgs, disaster recovery means making sure docs can save lives during ransomware infection
Organizational, technological resilience combined defeat the disease that is cybercrime When IT disasters strike, it can become a matter of life and death for healthcare organizations – and criminals know it.…

Computer Weekly
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Tech sector still failing to rid supply chains of forced labour

UK Government News
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Homes England and Octopus Real Estate launch £150 million Greener Homes Alliance phase 2
The renewed alliance will reinforce a responsibility to support small and medium-sized (SME) housebuilders, while encouraging greener building practices.

Wired Top Stories
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The Best Mushroom Coffee, WIRED Tested and Reviewed (2025)
“Coffee” made with functional mushrooms like lion's mane and chaga is all the rage—we tried the most popular brands to find which were the most palatable.

Boing Boing
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Watch clever monkeys use charming tactics to get food
Watch a group of monkeys use clever tactics to get people to give them food. The bold monkeys in this video grab onto the people at a nearby food stand as if to say "hey, can you buy me a snack?". — Read the rest
The post Watch clever monkeys use charming tactics to get food appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Learn how to eat peas the 'proper' way
Learn how to eat peas, the "proper" way. In this short video from Wired, I learned that I've been eating peas like a buffoon my entire life. When presented with a bowl of buttered peas, I usually dig in with vigor, shoveling them into my mouth with a spoon or fork until they're all gone. — Read the rest
The post Learn how to eat peas the 'proper' way appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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SeverVance – Trump's Innies
Support your friendly neighborhood independent comic strip: SIGN UP FOR THE INNER HIVE and you'll get each week's Tom the Dancing Bug comic at least a day before publication. Plus other exclusive content like extra comics, commentary, juicy gossip, puzzles, jokes, and secrets from Ruben's innie.  — Read the rest
The post SeverVance – Trump's Innies appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Exploring the early clay animations of Joseph Sunn
The clay animations of Joseph Sunn are from 1926. These darling, black and white claymations feature animals interacting with each other and the hand-made sets they're filmed in. I wish these were longer, because they're so much fun to watch.
I find there to be something so attractive about the look of the raw, monochromatic clay used in these films. — Read the rest
The post Exploring the early clay animations of Joseph Sunn appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Listen to this cacophonous musical contraption
This glorious musical contraption was made by the VAPE. In the video a spoon, metal bowl with a marble inside, a stick, a rock, and other moving parts are connected to batteries that cause them to bang on a board of strings. — Read the rest
The post Listen to this cacophonous musical contraption appeared first on Boing Boing.

ZeroHedge News
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White House Prepares TikTok Proposal Meeting Wednesday Ahead Of Deadline
White House Prepares TikTok Proposal Meeting Wednesday Ahead Of Deadline

Ahead of President Trump's reciprocal tariff announcement across all US trading partners later today, the president will meet with senior administration officials to review a final proposal for the Chinese social media app TikTok. The deliberations come before a Saturday deadline, by which TikTok must complete a sale to a non-Chinese entity or face a US ban. 

CBS News cited sources familiar with the upcoming meeting in the Oval Office that said Vice President JD Vance, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, National Security Adviser Mike Waltz, and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard would be present. It's unclear whether Trump will approve the final proposal today, given that today is "Liberation Day." The report noted that Blackstone and Oracle are potential investors. 



At the start of Trump's first term, he signed an executive order granting a 75-day extension for TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, to sell the app—used by 170 million Americans—to a US entity or face a nationwide ban. The deadline is Saturday, April 5, bringing the final deal down to the wire. 

Over the weekend, Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One, "We have a lot of potential buyers. There's a lot of interest in TikTok. The decision is going to be my decision," adding, "I'd like to see TikTok remain alive." Trump said Monday there was "a lot of enthusiasm for TikTok." 

In a separate report, the Financial Times said Marc Andreessen's venture capital firm, Andreessen Horowitz, was discussing the purchase of TikTok from ByteDance with Oracle and other investors. 

Reuters noted, "In the closely watched sale of TikTok, the White House is playing the role of an investment bank, with Vance running the auction." 

The Trump administration is about to have a hectic week. It will announce reciprocal tariffs later today, and it must also begin finalizing a deal for TikTok as the April 5 deadline looms. 

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 06:55

ZeroHedge News
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DNC, Schumer Sue Trump Over Order Targeting Illegal Immigrant Voting
DNC, Schumer Sue Trump Over Order Targeting Illegal Immigrant Voting

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The Democratic National Committee (DNC) and two top U.S. lawmakers on March 31 sued President Donald Trump over a recent executive order that aims to enforce the law against illegal immigrant voting and election dates.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) in Washington on March 13, 2025. Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images

“The Executive Order seeks to impose radical changes on how Americans register to vote, cast a ballot, and participate in our democracy—all of which threaten to disenfranchise lawful voters and none of which is legal,” says the lawsuit, filed by Democratic Party attorney Marc Elias in federal court in Washington.

Trump’s March 25 order has multiple sections. Several deal with laws that bar foreigners from registering to vote or from voting in federal elections. Trump directed the independent Election Assistance Commission to require proof of U.S. citizenship in its mail voter registration form, ordered U.S. officials to work with the Department of Government Efficiency to review voter rolls to identify noncitizens who are already registered, and told the U.S. attorney general to prosecute individuals who have illegally registered or voted.

Another prong takes aim at how some states in recent years have begun counting mailed ballots that arrive after Election Day, which the order says contravenes federal law.

A third portion says the Election Assistance Commission shall stop providing federal funds to states that don’t comply with the laws on election dates and noncitizen voting and voter registration.

The U.S. Constitution’s election clause says that states can set election dates, although Congress can alter them.

“Outside of the Elections Clause, other provisions in the Constitution place certain requirements and limitations on the regulation of elections—but none allows the President to override the will of the States or Congress in this space,” the new suit states.

The legal challenge also says that the Election Assistance Commission is an independent agency over which the president, who appoints commissioners, has no control, and that federal law lets applicants who vote in federal elections attest to citizenship with a signature as opposed to requiring proof from documents such as a passport.

In addition to the DNC, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), the top Democrat in the U.S. Senate, and Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), the top Democrat in the U.S. House of Representatives, are plaintiffs in the suit.

The Democrats are asking the court to declare that the order violates the Constitution and federal law and block U.S. officials, such as the attorney general, from implementing it.

“The Democrats continue to show their disdain for the Constitution and it continues to show in their insane objections to the President’s commonsense executive actions to require proof of U.S. citizenship in an effort to protect the integrity of American elections,“ Harrison Fields, a White House spokesman, told The Epoch Times in an email. ”The Trump administration is standing up for free, fair, and honest elections and asking this basic question is essential to our Constitutional Republic.”

Ahead of the 2016 election, Elias helped compile a dossier against Trump. He was named in a different order by Trump that directed officials to take action against lawyers who are violating laws and regulations.

Earlier Monday, several organizations filed a separate suit in the same court over the election order, outlining similar arguments.

“The president’s executive order is an unlawful action that threatens to uproot our tried-and-tested election systems and silence potentially millions of Americans,“ Danielle Lang, senior director of voting rights at the Campaign Legal Center, which is representing the groups, said in a statement. ”It is simply not within the president’s authority to set election rules by executive decree, especially when they would restrict access to voting in this way.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 07:20

Ian Visits
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From fancy costumes to brutal battles: New exhibition looks at a pirates life
Pirates, the fancy-dressed rum-drinking parrot-keeping seafarers of old are, as a new exhibition shows, nothing of the sort.Read more ›

BBC UK News
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Picture released of girl missing in River Thames
A recovery mission continues to look for 11-year-old Kaliyah Coa along the Thames, Met Police said.

Sky News Home
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Pictured: Girl, 11, who disappeared after falling into River Thames
Police have released a photograph of the 11-year-old girl who disappeared after falling into the River Thames.

The Hill
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Is SNAP doing what it was meant to do? Idaho thinks it's time to ask.
Idaho is considering a bill to seek a federal waiver to forbid food stamps from being used to buy soda and candy, in order to ensure the program is fulfilling its original purpose of alleviating hunger and malnutrition.

The Hill
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Trump, Musk tout voter Wisconsin ID passage as preferred candidate loses court bid
President Trump and his senior adviser, tech billionaire Elon Musk, touted the passage of the ballot measure Tuesday that amends Wisconsin’s Constitution to mandate photo identification for voters. “VOTER I.D. JUST APPROVED IN WISCONSIN ELECTION. Democrats fought hard against this, presumably so they can CHEAT. This is a BIG WIN FOR REPUBLICANS, MAYBE THE BIGGEST WIN...

The Hill
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Dem attorneys general use new media to mount Trump resistance
Court proceedings might often unfold behind closed doors, but the Democratic attorneys general challenging President Trump’s expansive agenda want to bring their work to your feed. Democratic attorneys general are turning to new media to mount their resistance to Trump 2.0, using untraditional means to win in the court of public opinion while waging legal...

The Hill
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The right’s legal heavyweight takes on Trump
President Trump has an unlikely foe in his efforts to target Big Law firms: Paul Clement.  Clement is a conservative legal heavyweight who served as solicitor general in President George W. Bush’s administration and has argued more than 100 cases before the Supreme Court.  He has notched major conservative victories at the court, including expanding...

The Hill
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Courts must take conflicts of interest more seriously
Federal judges should be required to recuse themselves from cases involving conflicts of interest, and Congress or state courts should set standards for when judges should recuse themselves, to ensure faith in the justice system.

ZDNet News
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Clicked on a phishing link? Take these 7 steps ASAP to protect yourself
Phishing scams are becoming brutally effective, and even technically sophisticated people can be fooled. Here's how to limit the damage immediately and what to do next.

ZDNet News
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Samsung's new Galaxy tablets beat the iPad Air in two ways - for the same price
The Galaxy Tab S10 FE is available on April 10, but you can reserve this Android tablet now and receive a $50 credit.

Mail Online
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Father who appeared on Channel 5 show The Accused is jailed for 17 years for murdering his six-year-old brain-damaged daughter after violently shaking her when she was a baby
Kyle Kitchen, 38, assaulted his eight-week-old daughter Primrose Kane in a matter of seconds in November 2014, causing catastrophic injuries, the Old Bailey heard.

The Guardian (UK)
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Roblox gives parents more power over children’s activity on gaming platform
Parents can block children from talking to certain people and get detailed screen-time insights on site popular with under-13sParents can now block their children from communicating with specific friends or playing certain games on Roblox, an online gaming platform popular with children.The changes form part of a suite of safety updates intended to give parents more control over their child’s experience on the platform. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Dustin May helps lead Dodgers to 7-0 start after near-fatal salad incident
Pitcher returned to action after injury and illnessDodgers off to best start for champion since 1933The Los Angeles Dodgers moved to 7-0, equalling the 1933 New York Yankees for the best start to a season by a defending champion, behind a strong start from Dustin May, who was making history of his own.May spent all of last season rehabbing from a torn flexor tendon in his right arm and a life-threatening esophageal tear after eating a salad at dinner with his wife in Arizona. A piece of lettuce became caught in his throat and May sipped some water trying to clear it. He felt a painful sensation in his throat and stomach, and later learned the lettuce had perforated his esophageal tube. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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More than beautiful: the beloved monarch butterfly is one of the world’s great migrators
The hardy travellers can fly for 3,000 miles from the north-east US and Canada to roost in their millions in MexicoMore invertebrate of the year nominationsImagine your body was the weight of a raisin, supported by just a pair of flimsy, gossamer wings. Now imagine that you had to fly for 3,000 miles, avoiding storms, highways and predators, to ensure your species continued.Could you do it? Unless you’re a monarch butterfly, fortunately you won’t have to face such a challenge.Between 24 March and 2 April, we will be profiling a shortlist of 10 of the invertebrates chosen by readers and selected by our wildlife writers from more than 2,500 nominations. The voting for our 2025 invertebrate of the year will run from midday on Wednesday 2 April until midday on Friday 4 April, and the winner will be announced on Monday 7 April. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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In a new book, top Biden aide describes ‘out of it’ president before Trump debate
Ron Klain tells author Chris Whipple then president could not focus and obsessed about foreign leaders, ahead of debate that ended his campaignIn a new book, Joe Biden’s former White House chief of staff paints a devastating picture of the then US president’s mental and physical state before the debate with Donald Trump that sent his 2024 campaign into a tailspin, resulting in his relinquishing the Democratic nomination to Kamala Harris.Ron Klain served Biden from 2021 to 2023, then returned to his side last June, to run debate preparation as he had for numerous Democratic presidents before. Continue reading...

BBC World News
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Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti in court over tax charges
Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti denies knowingly withholding parts of his salary on his tax returns.

Mail Online
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The even LARGER Hadron Collider: 56.5-mile atom smasher dubbed the 'most extraordinary instrument ever built by humanity' could unravel the mysteries of the universe
It took 20 years and £6 billion to build the Large Hadron Collider, the world's biggest particle accelerator. Now, scientists want to make an even larger one.

Mail Online
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Subtle signs of agonising condition that blights Tom Fletcher...and could BLIND him
In an Instagram story the former McFly singer and Strictly star, said he'd suffered a flare-up of a long-term health condition that left the left side of his face drooping.

Mail Online
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Wayne Lineker reveals he has NEVER had a one night stand despite his party Ibiza lifestyle as star admits he is on the hunt for a wife after seven years on his own
Wayne Lineker has revealed he has had never had a one night stand despite his Ibiza party lifestyle. 

Mail Online
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Cher pays tribute to her 'funny and brave' ex partner Val Kilmer - who she admitted she was 'madly in love with' - after his death aged 65
The Top Gun star passed away from pneumonia in Los Angeles on Tuesday after a long health battle.

Mail Online
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Netflix fans 'stay up all night' to binge-watch 'breathtaking' new period drama that 'fills the Bridgerton' void - and are already demanding a second season
The romantic comedy, which is set in the 1880s, hit the streaming service last month and fans are already demanding a second season.

Mail Online
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Is this really the way to Bianca's heart? 'Hitler loving' Kanye launching sex toy range inspired by his love for his wife - in bizarre attempt to restore billionaire status following antisemitic slurs
Kanye West is hoping to restore his fortunes as prepares to launch a sex toy range that will be based on both himself and wife Bianca Censori.

Mail Online
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Nutritionist reveals the healthiest way to drink your coffee if you can't kick your morning cup
If you're an avid coffee drinker, you probably feel especially targeted when someone talks about how 'unhealthy' your morning cup of joe is.

Mail Online
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The Chase fans have two big complaints as one ITV contestant is 'robbed' by Anne Hegerty - and another crashes out after baffling comment
The Chase fans were left fuming after two surprising moments unfolded during Tuesday's episode.

Mail Online
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ISIS axe rampage at Christian festival parade leaves three injured before attacker is overpowered
Witnesses of Wednesday's horror said an attacker, who has not been officially identified, ran towards the crowd shouting Islamic slogans before carrying out his stabbing spree.

Mail Online
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Revealed: The haunting Polaroid snaps that give chilling clues to what happened to missing teenager
Haunting Polaroid snaps gave investigators chilling clues to what happened to missing woman. Tara Calico disappeared on September 20, 1988, while on a routine bike ride near her home in New Mexico

Mail Online
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Ashlyn Castro's stern reunion with Jude Bellingham's mum at Real Madrid match after 'side-eye' saga
Jude Bellingham's girlfriend Ashlyn Castro and his mum Denise were reunited in the stands for Tuesday's Spanish King's Cup semifinal draw between Real Madrid and Real Sociedad.

Mail Online
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Bungling vegan who tried to 'save' lamb by kidnapping it and making it wear a nappy is guilty of animal cruelty
Louise Murguia, 49, kidnapped the lamb from farmer Stuart Ludwell's land overnight on March 23, 2024 because she thought she could take better care of it.

The Guardian (UK)
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Michael Sheen to play Welsh prince who led rebellion against the English crown
Actor hopes Owain and Henry, one of two new productions by the Welsh National Theatre, will be a ‘defining moment’He has been celebrated for playing the roles of a British prime minister and an English king but the Welsh actor Michael Sheen is now relishing the prospect of starring as a noted leader from his homeland – Owain Glyndŵr, the medieval Prince of Wales.Sheen will take the lead in a new play, Owain & Henry, to be staged by his fledgling company, Welsh National Theatre, and hopes it will become a “defining moment” for Wales, triggering conversations about how it became the country it is, the pressing social issues it faces and the question of independence. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Gold rises as markets await US tariffs; Heathrow airport was warned about power supply in days before closure – business live
Donald Trump to announce latest round of tariffs at 8pm GMTTrump’s ‘liberation day’ tariffs: what’s at stake for UK and EU?Joshua Mahony, at Scope Markets, has looked at today’s moves in stock markets.European equities are falling in anticipation of today’s liberation day tariffs with Donald Trump expected to announce his sweeping tax on imports at 4 pm Eastern time. Rather predictably it is the Dax which leads the losses as the German market surge seen in the wake of the agreement to increase the government deficit and ramp up fiscal expenditure fades.For traders and investors, today represents a day of huge uncertainty as we weigh up the potential for retaliatory tariffs and a tit-for-tat trade war. [US trade secretary] Scott Bessent has stated that today’s tariffs are likely to be the worst it will get, and his historical comments over the potential to “escalate to deescalate” means that we will hopefully soon move into a phase where we hear more about potential trade deals and tariff reduction rather than the bad news that currently dominates markets. Nonetheless, with the likes of Canada and the EU standing ready to implement retaliatory measures, things might get worse before they get better.Today brings the latest ADP payrolls report out of the US, bringing a fresh insight into the behaviour of US businesses in the face of recent tariff uncertainty. A collapse in the employment metric of the manufacturing PMI released from the ISM yesterday does highlight the struggles faced by manufacturers that could be hurt by both foreign tariffs and the rising costs of imported parts.It stands to reason that businesses will hold off hiring in the face of such uncertainty, and thus markets are faced with the possibility that we see signs of economic deterioration in the form of weak ADP and non-farm payroll figures at the back end of this week.It was following a couple of incidents of, unfortunately, theft of wire and cable around some of the power supply that, on one of those occasions, took out the lights on the runway for a period of time.That obviously made me concerned and, as such, I raised the point I wanted to understand better the overall resilience of the airport.It became quite clear we could not operate the airport safely quite early in this process, and that is why we closed the airport.If we had not done that, we would have had thousands of passengers stranded at the airport at high risk to personal injury, gridlocked roads around the airport, because don’t forget 65,000 houses and other institutions were powered down. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Brighton Pier owner to delist from London stock market and go private
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Apple officially announced the new feature support for AirPods Max last week. Then on Monday, Apple released an AirPods Max (USB-C) firmware update version 7E99 in tandem with the rollout of iOS 18.4, iPadOS 18.4, and macOS Sequoia 15.4 software updates for iPhone, iPad, and Mac. However, since then, AirPods Max owners have not been able to successfully update their devices due to an unspecified conflict with the firmware and Apple's latest software.



The AirPods Max firmware was supposed to enable lossless and low-latency audio support as part of the broader software releases. "With this update, AirPods Max will unlock 24-bit, 48 kHz lossless audio, preserving the integrity of original recordings and allowing listeners to experience music the way the artist created it in the studio," said Apple in a press release. "Lossless audio and ultra-low latency audio enable music creators to fully utilize AirPods Max throughout their entire professional workflow on Logic Pro and other music creation apps."



However, after Apple indicated the firmware was available for download, user reports of problems slowly began to trickle in. As it stands, there's no sign that anyone has been able to install the firmware.



It's still not clear what Apple has done in iOS/iPadOS 18.4 and macOS Sequoia 15.4 to cause the issue, but all the indications are that Apple will need to release a point update to its platforms to correct the bug. On its AirPods firmware support page, Apple currently lists the unobtainable firmware version 7E99 for AirPods Max as "coming soon."Related Roundup: AirPods MaxBuyer's Guide: AirPods Max (Buy Now)Related Forum: AirPodsThis article, 'New AirPods Max Firmware Unavailable Due to iOS 18.4 Bug, Apple Says Update 'Coming Soon'' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

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Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Bertrand Drouvot: Postgres backend statistics (Part 2): WAL statistics
Introduction

PostgreSQL 18 will normally (as there is always a risk of seeing something reverted until its GA release) include those commits:
Add data for WAL in pg_stat_io and backend statistics:

commit a051e71e28a12342a4fb39a3c149a197159f9c46
Author: Michael Paquier <[email protected]>
Date: Tue Feb 4 16:50:00 2025 +0900

Add data for WAL in pg_stat_io and backend statistics

This commit adds WAL IO stats to both pg_stat_io view and per-backend IO
statistics (pg_stat_get_backend_io()).
.
.

and Add WAL data to backend statistics:

commit 76def4cdd7c2b32d19e950a160f834392ea51744
Author: Michael Paquier <[email protected]>
Date: Tue Mar 11 09:04:11 2025 +0900

Add WAL data to backend statistics

This commit adds per-backend WAL statistics, providing the same
information as pg_stat_wal, except that it is now possible to know how
much WAL activity is happening in each backend rather than an overall
aggregate of all the activity. Like pg_stat_wal, the implementation
relies on pgWalUsage, tracking the difference of activity between two
reports to pgstats.

This data can be retrieved with a new system function called
pg_stat_get_backend_wal(), that returns one tuple based on the PID
provided in input. Like pg_stat_get_backend_io(), this is useful when
joined with pg_stat_activity to get a live picture of the WAL generated
for each running backend, showing how the activity is [un]balanced.
.
.


It means that:


WAL IO statistics are available per backend through the pg_stat_get_backend_io() function (already introduced in Postgres backend statistics (Part 1))
WAL statistics are available per backend through the pg_stat_get_backend_wal() function


So that we can see the WAL activity in each backend.

Let’s look at some examples

Thanks to the pg_stat_get_backend_io() function, we can:

Retrieve the WAL IO statistics for my backend

db1=# SELECT backend_type, object, context, reads, read_bytes, read_time, writes, write_bytes, write_time, fsyncs, fsync_time FROM pg_stat_get_backend_io(pg_backend_pid()) where object = 'wal';
backend_type | object | context | reads | read_bytes | read_time | writes | write_bytes | write_time | fsyncs | fsync_time
----------------+--------+---------+-------+------------+-----------+--------+-------------+------------+--------+------------
client backend | wal | init | | | | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0
client backend | wal | normal | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4533 | 41320448 | 0 | 2 | 0
(2 rows)



Please note that track_wal_io_timing
needs to be enabled to see the IO timings for the WAL object:

db1=# SET track_wal_io_timing=true;
SET
db1=# insert into bdt select generate_series (1, 1000);
INSERT 0 1000
db1=# SELECT backend_type, object, context, reads, read_bytes, read_time, writes, write_bytes, write_time, fsyncs, fsync_time FROM pg_stat_get_backend_io(pg_backend_pid()) where object = 'wal';
backend_type | object | context | reads | read_bytes | read_time | writes | write_bytes | write_time | fsyncs | fsync_time
----------------+--------+---------+-------+------------+-----------+--------+-------------+----------------------+--------+------------
client backend | wal | init | | | | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0
client backend | wal | normal | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4535 | 41443328 | 0.026000000000000002 | 4 | 0.513
(2 rows)

and that track_io_timing
has no effects on the WAL object timings:

db1=# SET track_wal_io_timing=false;
SET
db1=# SET track_io_timing=true;
SET
db1=# SELECT pg_stat_reset_backend_stats(pg_backend_pid());
pg_stat_reset_backend_stats
-----------------------------

(1 row)

db1=# SELECT backend_type, object, context, reads, read_bytes, read_time, writes, write_bytes, write_time, fsyncs, fsync_time FROM pg_stat_get_backend_io(pg_backend_pid()) where object = 'wal';
backend_type | object | context | reads | read_bytes | read_time | writes | write_bytes | write_time | fsyncs | fsync_time
----------------+--------+---------+-------+------------+-----------+--------+-------------+------------+--------+------------
client backend | wal | init | | | | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0
client backend | wal | normal | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0
(2 rows)

db1=# insert into bdt select generate_series (1, 1000);
INSERT 0 1000
db1=# SELECT backend_type, object, context, reads, read_bytes, read_time, writes, write_bytes, write_time, fsyncs, fsync_time FROM pg_stat_get_backend_io(pg_backend_pid()) where object = 'wal';
backend_type | object | context | reads | read_bytes | read_time | writes | write_bytes | write_time | fsyncs | fsync_time
----------------+--------+---------+-------+------------+-----------+--------+-------------+------------+--------+------------
client backend | wal | init | | | | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0
client backend | wal | normal | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 65536 | 0 | 1 | 0
(2 rows)



Using pg_backend_pid() as input of pg_stat_get_backend_io(), I can see the
WAL IO statistics for my backend.

Find out the top 3 backends that are generating the most WAL bytes

db2=# SELECT a.backend_type,datname, application_name, pid, sum(write_bytes)
FROM pg_stat_activity a, pg_stat_get_backend_io(pid)
WHERE write_bytes != 0 AND object = 'wal'
GROUP BY a.backend_type,datname, application_name, pid
ORDER BY 5 desc
LIMIT 3;
backend_type | datname | application_name | pid | sum
----------------+---------+------------------+---------+----------
client backend | db2 | app2 | 3960495 | 41844736
walwriter | | | 3960489 | 22429696
client backend | db1 | app1 | 3960493 | 98304
(3 rows)


Using pg_stat_get_backend_io() in conjonction with pg_stat_activity, I can
figure out which backends are generating the most WAL bytes.

Get the WAL writes generated by application (and the ratio cluster wide)

db2=# SELECT application_name, writes, round(100 * writes/sum(writes) over(),2) AS "%"
FROM (SELECT application_name, sum(writes) AS writes
FROM pg_stat_activity, pg_stat_get_backend_io(pid)
WHERE writes != 0 and object = 'wal' GROUP BY application_name);
application_name | writes | %
------------------+--------+-------
app1 | 1 | 0.02
app2 | 4598 | 99.48
| 23 | 0.50
(3 rows)


Using pg_stat_get_backend_io() in conjonction with pg_stat_activity and windows
function, I can get the WAL writes generated by application (and the ratio cluster wide).

Also, thanks to the pg_stat_get_backend_wal() function, we can:

Get the number of WAL records generated by application (and the ratio cluster wide)

db2=# SELECT application_name, wal_records, round(100 * wal_records/sum(wal_records) over(),2) AS "%"
FROM (SELECT application_name, sum(wal_records) AS wal_records
FROM pg_stat_activity, pg_stat_get_backend_wal(pid)
WHERE wal_records != 0 GROUP BY application_name);
application_name | wal_records | %
------------------+-------------+-------
app1 | 1004 | 0.10
app2 | 1000004 | 99.90
(2 rows)

Using pg_stat_get_backend_wal() in conjonction with pg_stat_activity and windows
function, I can get the number of WAL records generated by application (and the ratio cluster wide).

There is much more we can do, the examples above are far from exhaustive.

Remarks

Please note that pg_stat_get_backend_wal() also provides the “WAL bytes” being
generated. The granularity as compared with the metric provided through pg_stat_get_backend_io()
is not the same though: pg_stat_get_backend_wal() focus on the WAL records size
while pg_stat_get_backend_io() focus on the wal_block_size
size.

The output of the new pg_stat_get_backend_wal() function has the same meaning
as the one from the pg_stat_wal view (please refer to the documentation
).

The per backend WAL statistics do not persist after a server restart (it would not
make sense to report statistics for backends that are gone). The pg_stat_wal
data persists though.

Once a backend disconnect its WAL related stats are not available anymore.

Conclusion

It’s now possible to see the WAL IO activity in each backend thanks to the
pg_stat_get_backend_io() function and the WAL statistics (such as the number
of WAL records generated) thanks to the pg_stat_get_backend_wal() function.

One can build insightful queries on top of those new functions.

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A Texas School Board Cut State-Approved Textbook Chapters About Diversity. A Board Member Says Material Violated the Law
by Jeremy Schwartz, ProPublica and The Texas Tribune, and Dan Keemahill, The Texas Tribune




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In 2022, conservative groups celebrated a “great victory” over “wokeified” curriculum when the Texas State Board of Education squashed proposed social studies requirements for schools that included teaching kindergartners how Rosa Parks and Cesar Chavez “advocated for positive change.”

Another win came a year later as the state board rejected several textbooks that some Republicans argued could promote a “radical environmental agenda” because they linked climate change to human behavior or presented what conservatives perceived to be a negative portrayal of fossil fuels.

By the time the state board approved science and career-focused textbooks for use in Texas classrooms at the end of 2023, it appeared to be comfortably in sync with conservatives who had won control of local school boards across the state in recent years.

But the Republican-led state education board had not gone far enough for the conservative majority on the school board for Texas’ third-largest school district.

At the tail end of a school board meeting in May of last year, Natalie Blasingame, a board member in suburban Houston’s Cypress-Fairbanks Independent School District, proposed stripping more than a dozen chapters from five textbooks that had been approved by the state board and were recommended by a district committee of teachers and staffers.

The chapters, Blasingame said, were inappropriate for students because they discussed “vaccines and polio,” touched on “topics of depopulation,” had “an agenda out of the United Nations” and included “a perspective that humans are bad.”

In a less-publicized move, Blasingame, a former bilingual educator, proposed omitting several chapters from a textbook for aspiring educators titled “Teaching.” One of those chapters focuses on how to understand and educate diverse learners and states that it “is up to schools and teachers to help every student feel comfortable, accepted and valued,” and that “when schools view diversity as a positive force, it can enhance learning and prepare students to work effectively in a diverse society.”

Blasingame did not offer additional details about her opposition to the chapters during the meeting. She didn’t have to. The school board voted 6-1 to delete them.











Natalie Blasingame, a member of the Cypress-Fairbanks School Board, proposed cutting chapters from five textbooks.

(Danielle Villasana for ProPublica and The Texas Tribune)









The decision to strip chapters from books that had already won the approval of the state’s conservative board of education represents an escalation in local school boards’ efforts to influence what children in public schools are taught. Through the years, battles over textbooks have played out at the state level, where Republicans hold the majority. But local school boards that are supposed to be nonpartisan had largely avoided such fights — they weighed in on whether some books should be in libraries but rarely intervened so directly into classroom instruction. Cypress-Fairbanks now provides a model for supercharging these efforts at more fine-grained control, said Christopher Kulesza, a scholar at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy.

“One of the things that would concern me is that it’s ideology pushing the educational standards rather than what’s fact,” he said.

The board’s actions send a troubling message to students of color, Alissa Sundrani, a junior at Cy-Fair High School, said. “At the point that you’re saying that diversity, or making people feel safe and included, is not in the guidelines or not in the scope of what Texas wants us to be learning, then I think that’s an issue.”



With about 120,000 students, nearly 80% of whom are of Hispanic, Black and Asian descent, Cy-Fair is the largest school district in Texas to be taken over by ideologically driven conservative candidates. Blasingame was among a slate of candidates who were elected through the at-large voting system that ProPublica and The Texas Tribune found has been leveraged by conservative groups seeking to influence what children are taught about race and gender. Supporters say the system, in which voters cast ballots for all candidates districtwide instead of ones who live within specific geographic boundaries, results in broader representation for students, but voting rights advocates argue that it dilutes the power of voters of color.












First image: Cy-Fair’s administration building. Second image: People gather before a school board meeting.

(Danielle Villasana for ProPublica and The Texas Tribune)








Blasingame and others campaigned against the teaching of critical race theory, an advanced academic concept that discusses systemic racism. Most of the winning candidates had financial backing from Texans for Educational Freedom, a statewide PAC that sought to build a “stronghold” of school board trustees “committed to fighting Critical Race Theory and other anti-American agendas and curriculums.” The PAC helped elect at least 30 school board candidates across the state between 2021 and 2023, in part because it focused on anti-CRT sentiment, said its founder, Christopher Zook Jr. “You could literally go out and say, CRT, you know, ‘Stop critical race theory in schools,’ and everyone knew what that means, right?” he said. “The polling showed that that messaging works.”

Shortly before Blasingame and two fellow conservatives won election in 2021, Texas lawmakers passed a landmark law that sought to shape how teachers approach instruction on race and racism. The law, which aimed to ban critical race theory, prohibits the “inculcation” of the notion that someone’s race makes them “inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously.”

Blasingame made no mention of the law when she pushed to remove chapters about teaching a diverse student body, but pointed to it as the reason for her objection in text messages and an interview with ProPublica and the Tribune. Though Blasingame acknowledged that one of the chapters had “very good presentation on learning styles,” she said removing the whole chapter was the only option because administrators said individual lines could not be stricken from the book.

The textbook referred to “cultural humility” and called for aspiring teachers to examine their “unintentional and subtle biases,” concepts that she said “go against” the law. The school board needed to act because the book “slipped through” before the state’s education agency implemented a plan to make sure materials complied with the law, Blasingame said.











Blasingame recommended removing several chapters from a textbook called “Teaching.” The chapters included references to “cultural humility” and “unintentional and subtle biases,” which she believes are not permitted under state law, which specifies how topics concerning race can be taught.

(Document obtained and sentences enlarged by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune)









State Board Chairman Aaron Kinsey, who is staunchly anti-CRT, declined to say if he thought the body had allowed textbooks to slip through as Blasingame suggested. Kinsey, however, said in a statement that contracts with approved publishers include requirements that their textbooks comply with all applicable laws. He did not comment on Cy-Fair removing chapters.

Cy-Fair appears to have taken one of the state’s most aggressive approaches to enforcing the law, which does not address what is in textbooks but rather how educators approach teaching, said Paige Duggins-Clay, the chief legal analyst for the Intercultural Development Research Agency, a San Antonio-based nonprofit that advocates for equal educational opportunity.

“It definitely feels like Cy-Fair is seeking to test the boundaries of the law,” Duggins-Clay said. “And I think in a district like Cy-Fair, because it is so diverse, that is actively hurting a lot of young people who are ultimately paying the cost and bearing the burden of these really bad policies.”

The law’s vagueness has drawn criticism from conservative groups who say it allows school districts to skirt its prohibitions. Last month, Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against the Coppell school district in North Texas and accused administrators of illegally teaching “woke and hateful” CRT curriculum. The suit points to a secret recording of an administrator saying that the district will do what’s right for students “despite what our state standards say.” The lawsuit does not provide examples of curriculum that it alleges violates state law on how to teach race. In a letter to parents, Superintendent Brad Hunt said that the district was following state standards and would “continue to fully comply with applicable state and federal laws.”

Teachers and progressive groups have also argued that the law leaves too much open to interpretation, which causes educators to self-censor and could be used to target anything that mentions race.

Blasingame disputes the critique. A longtime administrator and teacher whose family emigrated from South Africa when she was 9 years old, she said she embraces diversity in schools.

“Diversity is people and I love people,” she said. “That’s what I’m called to do, first as a Christian and then as an educator.”

But she said she opposes teaching about systemic racism and state-sanctioned efforts to promote diversity, equity and inclusion, saying that they overemphasize the importance of skin color.

“They seed hate and teach students that they are starting off behind and have unconquerable disadvantages that they will suffer all their lives,” Blasingame said. “Not only does this teach hate among people, but how could you love a country where this is true?”

The assertion that teaching diversity turns students of color into victims is simply wrong, educators and students told the news organizations. Instead, they said, such discussions make them feel safe and accepted.

One educator who uses the “Teaching” textbook said the board members’ decision to remove chapters related to diversity has been painful for students.

“I don’t know what their true intentions are, but to my students, what they are seeing is that unless you fit into the mold and you are like them, you are not valued,” said the teacher, who did not want to be named because she feared losing her job. “There were several who said it made them not want to teach anymore because they felt so unsupported.”

The board’s interpretation of the state’s law on the teaching of race has stifled important classroom discussions, said Sundrani, the student in the district. Her AP English class, a seminar about the novel “Huckleberry Finn,” steered clear of what she thinks are badly needed conversations about race, slavery and how that history impacts people today.

“There were topics that we just couldn’t discuss.”

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"Evil People": Organized 'Bankrupt Tesla' Group Tied To Formerly USAID-Funded Disinfo Queen
"Evil People": Organized 'Bankrupt Tesla' Group Tied To Formerly USAID-Funded Disinfo Queen

On Tuesday morning, former Biden administration "disinformation czar" Nina Jankowicz repeatedly refused to disclose who's funding her new gig - the 'American Sunlight Project' - which cropped up after a stint at the USAID-funded UK-based Centre for Information Resilience (CIR) - for which she registered as a foreign agent while serving as their Vice President.



To review - Jankowicz, who previously served as a disinformation fellow at the Wilson Center, advised the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry as part of the Fulbright-Clinton Public Policy Fellowship, and was then selected to head the Biden DHS's newly formed Disinformation Governance Board - which was quickly dismantled amid criticism over censorship under the guise of fighting disinformation. 

Four months later, she launched "The Hypatia Project" for CIR - where she was the Vice President until April 2024, at which point she co-founded the American Sunlight Project.

Fast forward to this morning, Jankowicz was evasive when asked by Republicans during a congressional hearing on disinformation about her funding...


Nina Jankowicz, the short-lived head of Biden’s Disinformation Governance Board aka Disinformation Czar refuses to say if her new org, The American Sunlight Projegt, is funded by George Soros.
“So sunlight for other people but not for your donors” @RepBaumgartner quips… pic.twitter.com/2RIiI1VU16
— Rob (@RobMcGravytrain) April 1, 2025

Well, Well, Well

As it turns out, Jankowicz's co-founder at the American Sunlight Project is Carlos Alvarez-Aranyos, a "communications professional" who worked for the Biden DoD, and is "one of the people who launched the call for a boycott of Tesla."

Alvarez-Aranyos comes from a wealthy and prominent family in the Dominican Republic. His father, Luis Álvarez Renta, is a well-known Dominican financier. Carlos is a nephew of the renowned fashion designer Oscar de la Renta.


Biden's censorship queen Nina Jankowicz currently works at the American Sunlight Project (ASP), and previously worked at USAID-funded Center for Information Resilience.
The ASP was co-founded by Carlos Alvarez-Aranyos is a "communications professional" who worked for Biden's… https://t.co/uIgDszSDKL pic.twitter.com/x60Ju2wzYh
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) April 1, 2025



“I need to have on my resume, so I can get a job when this thing is over, that I bankrupted Tesla.”
This is an outright admission the top Tesla boycott organizers’ personal financial prospects depend on taking down Tesla, and they must succeed in order to get paid. https://t.co/CJnQDX38rC pic.twitter.com/Ti775yTplt
— Mike Benz (@MikeBenzCyber) March 30, 2025
Alvarez-Aranyos has been scrubbed from the American Sunlight Project's website, which is why the internet archive exists.

Early organizers of the "Tesla Takedown" protests said last month that the organization's goal is to drive down the price of Tesla stock.

Another "Tesla Takedown" organizer, Edward Niedermeyer, told Fortune Magazine that dropping Musk's wealth is exactly their aim.

"The goal, I would say, is to bankrupt Elon Musk—bring down his empire," he said.

Read more on the Tesla Takedown organizers here...

Musk chimed in, calling the organizers "Evil people..."


Evil people https://t.co/6NCHAzZC9B
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 1, 2025
*  *  *

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Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 05:44

ZeroHedge News
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Argentina To Declassify Nazi Archives... But Did Hitler Escape There Too?
Argentina To Declassify Nazi Archives... But Did Hitler Escape There Too?

Authored by Jon Fleetwood,

In a move both hailed and questioned, Argentine President Javier Milei has ordered the full declassification of secret government files related to Nazis who fled to Argentina after World War II—along with archives from the country’s own military dictatorship.

The promise of disclosure follows a broader global trend toward transparency, including the U.S. government’s recent release of long-classified files related to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy—documents that, for decades, were withheld from the public under claims of national security.


WATCH: I break down Argentina’s move to declassify Nazi files—and the FBI docs claiming Hitler survived WWII and escaped to Argentina.
"Hitler was landed in Argentina approximately June 20 [1945]… his face was disfigured."
Full story in the video:
🎥👇#Hitler #Argentina… pic.twitter.com/Q6eq2z8Yz3
— Jon Fleetwood (@JonMFleetwood) March 31, 2025
But with reports of 5,000 Nazis escaping to South America—including top convicted war criminals like Adolf Eichmann and Josef Mengele—some are asking a more explosive question: did Hitler himself survive the war and escape to Argentina?

Cabinet Chief Guillermo Francos confirmed that Milei’s order, made after a meeting with U.S. Senator Steve Daines, applies to all Nazi-related documents across state agencies, including Defense Ministry files and financial records long shrouded in secrecy.

“President Milei has ordered the publication and declassification of the archives,” Francos said. “These files concern Nazis who sought refuge in Argentina and were protected for many years. These are historical documents that should be accessible to the public.”

“There is no reason to continue safeguarding that information,” he added. “These are archives of a part of Argentine history and they have to be public.”

The move also revives a long-held claim—dismissed by mainstream historians but not by everyone—that Adolf Hitler didn’t die in Berlin in 1945, but instead fled via Spain and ended up living out his days under protection in South America.

The Escape Route Nobody Was Supposed to Talk About

Historians have documented the escape of high-profile Nazis to Argentina—Eichmann was captured by Israeli Mossad agents in Buenos Aires in 1960; Mengele died decades later under a false identity in Brazil.

So why wouldn’t the same network that protected them also protect Hitler?

That’s the question Argentine journalist and author Abel Basti has spent his career trying to answer.

In books like Hitler in Exile and Hitler in Argentina, Basti argues that Hitler escaped through a tunnel under Berlin to Tempelhof Airport, fled to Spain, then traveled by submarine to Argentina, where he lived with SS support and the help of sympathetic German immigrants.

He cites declassified FBI reports, alleged sightings in Patagonia, and photos he claims show Hitler with known Nazi sympathizers in Argentina.

The Eden Hotel in La Falda—a hotspot for Nazi activity in the mid-20th century—is at the center of many of these claims.

Basti believes Hitler stayed there with Walter and Ida Eichorn, well-known Nazi loyalists who ran the property.

U.S. intel files from the era include dozens of unverified tips about Hitler sightings across South America.

Now, Milei’s declassification order may allow researchers—and skeptics—to comb through those files firsthand.

FBI Document Reveals Escape Rumors After Hitler’s Death: National Archives

As part of a National Archives blog series titled ‘Hunting Hitler,’ two FBI reports released in 2015 revisit mysterious rumors from 1945 suggesting Hitler escaped to Argentina.

One report, sent from Buenos Aires on July 14, 1945, claimed that “a source of unknown reliability” said “Hitler was landed in Argentina approximately June 20, that his face was disfigured,” and that an Argentine army major was preparing to escort him to a “secret hiding place in Chaco territory.”

The report added, “All rumors being investigated.”



A second document, dated August 14 from the FBI in Los Angeles, recounted a claim made by a Hollywood actor, who said a man at a club told him he had a “tremendous problem that was bothering him.”

That man allegedly said he “was one of four men who met Hitler and his party when they landed from submarines in Argentina two and a half weeks after the fall of Berlin.”

Both documents appear in ‘Hunting Hitler Part VII: The search continues June–September 1945,’ authored by National Archives historian Greg Bradsher.

Argentina Wasn’t the Only One Harboring Nazis

It’s worth noting that Argentina was not alone in giving shelter to Nazi officials.

The United States government—through a covert program known as Operation Paperclip—smuggled more than 1,600 German scientists, engineers, and technicians into the country after the war.

Many of these individuals had direct ties to the Nazi regime, and some were connected with war crimes.

One of the most famous Paperclip recruits was Wernher von Braun, former SS officer and architect of the Nazi V-2 rocket program, who later became a leading figure in NASA’s Apollo program.

U.S. intelligence scrubbed their records and gave them new lives in American institutions of research, military development, and space exploration.

If the U.S. was willing to overlook Nazi atrocities in the name of national interest, it raises the question: how many other countries did the same—and what information still hasn’t been revealed?

Publicity Stunt or Historic Breakthrough?

Critics argue the announcement is little more than political theater.

The Libertarian government has already laid off many of the archivists and staff who would handle the release.

“So who’s going to do it?” opposition lawmakers asked.

“The announcements are pure demagogy,” one local outlet reported.

Milei made the announcement last week on Argentina’s National Day of Memory, Truth, and Justice—a holiday marking the start of the country’s 1976-1983 military dictatorship.

His administration also vowed to declassify intelligence files from that era, saying “telling the whole story is a crucial task.”

Yet, the most consequential revelations may not be about Argentina’s dictatorship—but what the country knew about one of the darkest chapters in world history, and when.

Fringe, Fiction, or Classified Fact?

Mainstream historians like Richard J. Evans reject the Hitler escape theory as fiction.

They point to forensic evidence like Hitler’s dental remains, which match his known records and were confirmed in 2018 by a French-led team examining Soviet archives.

Still, questions remain.

Why did U.S. intelligence keep thousands of pages of Nazi-related sightings and investigations classified for decades?

Why did Argentina offer safe haven to so many convicted war criminals?

And why, nearly 80 years later, does the full story remain locked in government vaults?

Whether the release of Argentina’s Nazi files will finally put the escape theory to rest—or breathe new life into it—remains to be seen.

But for the first time in decades, the files may finally see daylight.

And if Milei makes good on his promise, the world may discover just how deep the rabbit hole goes.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 06:30

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Liam Lawson reveals he did not see ruthless Red Bull axing coming as Christian Horner takes responsibility for 'asking too much too soon' of the young Kiwi driver
HENRY CLARK IN JAPAN: The New Zealander only made the step up from Racing Bulls to replace Sergio Perez following the conclusion of last season.

Sky News Home
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British tennis player collapses during match
British tennis player Fran Jones was forced to withdraw from a tournament in Colombia after collapsing during a match against Argentina's Julia Riera.

Mail Online
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Clever travel app with 'cheat' tool helps you bag the cheapest flight deals
When MailOnline Travel used the new tool, we found savings of up to £314 on long-haul flights in the summer to New York from Gatwick.

Mail Online
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Bodyguards hired by council to stop tourists from groping and touching buxom bronze statue
For years, her statue has stood proudly in Dublin, an embodiment of Ireland's spirit and culture. But now a bronze of folk hero Molly Malone is to be guarded after complaints of people groping the sculpture.

Mail Online
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Are there job options in YOUR town? Interactive tool shows the places with the most vacancies in different occupations - and the huge variations across the country
The data give an insight into the best places to live for your chosen career - with a searchable tool showing the types of vacancies available locally.

The Guardian (UK)
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Democrats hail major win as Susan Crawford delivers blow to Trump and Musk in Wisconsin – US politics live
Liberal judge Susan Crawford wins race for seat on Wisconsin supreme court in litmus test for Donald Trump’s and Elon Musk’s popularityLiberal Susan Crawford beats Musk-backed candidateDemocrats have been reacting to the Wisconsin supreme court result in celebratory mood, as one might expect.Posting on Elon Musk’s X social media network, Tim Walz wrote simply:Wisconsin beat the billionaire.Wisconsin cannot be bought. Our democracy is not for sale. And when we fight, we win. Congratulations, @CrawfordForWI Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Myanmar military fires at Chinese Red Cross quake relief convoy
The Myanmar military said its troops fired shots in the air after the convoy did not stop.

BBC Formula One
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The inside story of Twitter's growth and difficulties
Its founders hoped to build a digital utopia but were unable to control the dark side of their creation

Mail Online
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Sam Thompson 'grows close' to stunning Too Hot to Handle star after ex-girlfriend Zara McDermott moves on from their five-year romance with One Direction singer Louis Tomlinson
Sam Thompson has 'grown close' to a stunning Netflix star as he bids to move on from his relationship with Zara McDermott.

Mail Online
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I am ditching my kids to go on holiday solo - I do not have time to feel mum guilt over it
Catherine Lofthouse is a self-proclaimed 'tight mum' who ditches her three sons to go on solo holidays.

Mail Online
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Old Etonian who tried to murder his estranged partner in 'drunken and petulant' rage by throwing her down a 240ft well at his family's country estate is jailed for 24 years
An Old Etonian who tried to throw his estranged partner into a 240ft-deep well was jailed for 24 years today for attempted murder.

Mail Online
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Val Kilmer latest updates: Top Gun star revealed what helped him heal when he lost his voice before his death aged 65
LATEST UPDATES: Hollywood star Val Kilmer - famed for iconic roles in Top Gun, Batman and The Doors - has died at 65 after a long health battle.

Sky News Home
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Prince Andrew accuser to face court for 'breaching restraining order' after claiming she had 'days to live'
The woman who reached an out-of-court settlement with Prince Andrew after accusing him of sexual assault is facing court over allegedly breaching a restraining order.

CNET News
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Protect Your Money in a Turbulent Economy. Today's CD Rates, April 2, 2025
Tariffs, inflation and stock market swings won't affect your CD returns.

CNET News
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iOS 18.4: How to Enable and Customize Apple Intelligence Priority Notifications
Only certain iPhones can access this new iOS feature, which isn't enabled by default.

Mail Online
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Mum-of-three struck with terminal bowel cancer - she blamed 'being vegetarian' for her only symptom
Jenny Garner, 41, would never have known about her bowel cancer if she hadn't had attended a routine appointment. But by the time she underwent treatment, it was too late to cure the disease.

Mail Online
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Squirming The One Show hosts forced to apologise as Sally Phillips swears TWICE live on air in chaotic BBC interview
The A-list actress, 54, is well known for her appearances in Bridget Jones, Smack the Pony, and Veep.

Mail Online
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Liam Lawson reveals he did not see ruthless Red Bull axing coming as Christian Horner takes responsibility for 'asking too much too soon' of the young Kiwi driver
Christian Horner and Red Bull powerbrokers opted to cut the 23-year-old's time in the RB21 car short last Thursday.

Sky News Home
Open 
Heathrow bosses were warned about power supply after stolen cables turned off runway lights, MPs told
Heathrow bosses were warned its power supply was vulnerable less than a week before a major outage, and a terminal could have got some flights moving by mid-morning rather than being shut for a day, a committee of MPs has heard.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Is Still Obsessed With the Idea of an All-Glass iPhone
If you think the rumored glassy redesign of iOS 19 could be a game-changer, check out Apple's latest granted U.S. patent detailing all-glass enclosures for future devices including the iPhone, Apple Watch, and even Mac Pro.





The patent envisions devices where all external surfaces (front, back, and sides) are made of glass, creating a seamless, transparent appearance with a roving interface that can be used from any angle.



Beyond aesthetics, the glass enclosures would introduce new interactive capabilities, according to the patent. Apple describes touch- and force-sensitive areas extending to the sides and back of devices, essentially creating multi-sided interfaces that could adapt based on how the user holds or orients the device. The embodiments also include mechanisms to take apart the devices for repairs.





For iPhones, the patent illustrates a six-sided glass design where displays could appear on any surface, with accommodations for components such as speakers and microphones. The user interface would dynamically shift depending on the device's orientation, allowing for contextual interactions regardless of which side faces the user.



The filing also includes concepts for other Apple products, including a glass Mac Pro tower with an octagonal prism shape, and an Apple Watch constructed almost entirely from transparent glass (a concept that we resurfaced last week).





Some designs feature deformable sides, enabling users to trigger actions by applying pressure, such as squeezing the sides of an iPhone to control media playback or adjust volume. Certain ideas also have echoes of Apple's previous experimentation with force-sensitive inputs like 3D Touch.



Apple's exploration of glass enclosures isn't exactly new. The company has been investigating this technology for over a decade – and former design chief Jony Ive famously wanted to create an iPhone out of a single seamless slab of glass.





Of course, patents don't guarantee we will actually see the products as consumer devices, but they do offer an insight into Apple's potential long-term vision for more immersive, interactive device designs across its product lines.



(Via Patently Apple.)Tag: PatentThis article, 'Apple Is Still Obsessed With the Idea of an All-Glass iPhone' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Mail Online
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British 'murder-suicide' couple were 'dream neighbours' and the wife 'had felt unsafe in London before moving to New Zealand', local reveals
The couple, believed to have been in their 50s, were found late on Monday after police forced their way into a rented property in Roseneath, Wellington

Mail Online
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Instagram island turns into 'rat-infested' nightmare 'that resembles a run-down favela in a forsaken country'
Across the world, the tiny Maltese island of Comino has gained notoriety for it's beautiful light blue waters and its famous limestone cove known as the Blue Lagoon.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Democrats hail major win as Susan Crawford delivers blow to Trump and Musk in Wisconsin – US politics live
Liberal judge Susan Crawford wins race for seat on Wisconsin supreme court in litmus test for Donald Trump’s and Elon Musk’s popularityLiberal Susan Crawford beats Musk-backed candidateFrom experts in mine safety to smoking and infertility – mass layoffs hit branch after branch of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as part of health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr’s plan to downsize nearly a quarter of the 82,000-person workforce took effect.Even as the sprawling nature of layoffs became apparent on Tuesday, a complete accounting was elusive. Layoffs were undertaken with few public details, with even apoplectic congressional lawmakers left in the dark. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Spin | Intriguing and deep list of overseas stars head for County Championship
Familiar faces such as Kemar Roach will feature, as will the two Camerons in Bristol – Bancroft and GreenThose of us lucky enough to watch county cricket in the 1980s, with a packet of Salt’n’Shake in one hand and an autograph book in the other, could tick off Viv Richards at Somerset, Malcolm Marshall at Hampshire, Michael Holding at Derbyshire (imagine!) and Courtney Walsh at Gloucestershire in only a couple of games. And that was just for starters.The growth of franchise cricket means that players at the peak of their powers will rarely now sign on the dotted line to spend their entire summer in northern climes perfecting their red-ball skills. But the appeal remains, like a sudden blast of Madonna’s Into the Groove from a passing car as you wait for the lights to change. The 2025 County Championship overseas roster is an intriguing one. Choose your games carefully and you have a chance to watch some of the world’s best do battle against each other and the indignities of the British weather. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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PMQs live: Starmer to face Badenoch as Trump tariffs loom
PM hopes to reach economic deal with US but growing numbers call for unified retaliation to US tariffsThere will be two urgent questions in the Commons after PMQs. At around 12.30pm a Foreign Office minister will respond to a question from Priti Patel, the shadow foreign secretary, about the Chagos Islands. And then another Foreign Office minister (or the same one?) will reply to a UQ from the Green co-leader Carla Denyer about Gaza.After that Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, will make a statement about nursery provision.With new US tariffs coming, Welsh businesses face even more uncertainty.The UK must make a strategic decision: with 58.6% of Welsh exports going to the EU, we must provide stable access to European markets by rejoining the single market and customs union, allowing us to stand up to Trump’s reckless moves. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
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Great news everyone! Google is going to let you transfer your passkeys to a new phone

TechRadar News
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Hybrid working here to stay? Survey finds huge number of workers would quit if ordered back to the office

TechRadar News
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Forget the Nintendo Switch 2 – I’m more excited that Microsoft could be making Windows 11 gaming handhelds even better with a new ‘handheld mode’

TechRadar News
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Why US third-party vendors need to act fast on DORA compliance

TechRadar News
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Nintendo's latest FCC filing hints at a Nintendo Switch 2 Pro Controller featuring a headphone jack

Digital Trends
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iOS 18.4 bug is bringing old deleted apps back from the dead
Users are reporting a weird bug after updating to iOS 18.4 that seemingly causes old deleted apps to reappear on their home screens.

Digital Trends
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MSI Claw’s latest update is exactly what users have been asking for
MSI Claw just got an update, and the company appears to have listened to user feedback on this one.

Digital Trends
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Latest watchOS 11.4 update will make it easier for you to get out of bed
Every fall, Apple drops a number of major software updates for its devices, with last year seeing the arrival of iOS 18, iPadOS 18, watchOS 11 and macOS 15 Sequoia. We then get smaller updates to these software builds as the months progress with some of those introducing big features that maybe weren’t ready when […]

Planet PostgreSQL
Open 
Henrietta Dombrovskaya: Please Welcome Prairie Postgres!
Dear Postgres Community! In this post, I want to formally introduce Prairie Postgres, a project that has kept me really busy for the past several months.



Recently, you’ve seen a lot of me online, talking about things I want to do and things I am already doing. Thinking about all these activities holistically, I can group them all around three common themes: Postgres “elementary education,” connecting with application developer communities, and connecting with educational institutions. The overall goal is broader promotion of knowledge about Postgres and its best practices.



Why do I think this is important? Postgres is undoubtedly the most beloved and most well-known open-source database, but too many people jump into the ocean of possibilities without being equipped with even basic knowledge. This creates a barrier for adoption and results in disappointments and not being able to get the most out of PostgreSQL.



The most important mission of Prairie Postgres is creating Postgres educational opportunities in the United States Midwest States. We want to focus on Midwest because other parts of the US have PostgreSQL User Groups and conferences, and the Midwest has a lot of Postgres but not enough community activities. We know that there are many people in the region working with Postgres, and we want to reach out to them. I often hear the sentiment that we see “all familiar faces” at Postgres events, and this includes not only the speakers, but the attendees as well, and we want to change that.



We are making our very first steps, but even these first steps wouldn’t be possible without tremendous help from many people. Firstly, I want to thank Pat Wright who gave me the idea to create an NFP, and then helped navigate the legal field – I can’t even imagine how long it would have taken us without his help.



Next I want to thank Dian Fay and Anna Bailliekova, Prairie Postgres co-founders, who jumped into this adventure and took upon themselves the most important task of never letting me make any decisions by myself without their consent. Shaun Thomas and Carlos Aranibar have stepped up to join our board and help us with both educational content and operations.



Lastly, I can’t thank enough Sarah Conway who volunteered to help us with the website and social media content (please follow us on LinkedIn and Mastadont) . Her work can’t be overestimated (I do not know how she finds time to do that all!). I will say one thing: if this post is not the first time you hear about Prairie Postgres, that’s due to Sarah’s efforts!



We are in the very beginning of our journey, but we hope to work in close collaborations with all PostgreSQL NFP and the Core Team to benefit Postgres Project and Postgres Community.



Finally – a small ask :). We are trying to bring more students from Chicago schools to PG Day Chicago. We are sponsoring a half of the student’s tickets price, but for many students, even a half-price is too much. An extra $75 will help one student to attend PG Day Chicago for free. Any donations to Prairie Postgres starting from today and until April 24, will be used towards student attendance.



Many thanks

Deutsche Welle
Open 
What are nutria, and why are they a problem?
This brown, fuzzy critter with its distinctive orange buck teeth may look cute, but it's causing all sorts of trouble — in Germany, and across Europe.

Mail Online
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Blake Lively's 'disgusting' act against co-star leaves fans shocked amid Justin Baldoni lawsuit
The actress is currently embroiled in a lawsuit with her It Ends With Us co-star Justin Baldoni , after accusing him of sexual harassment, and plotting a smear campaign to ruin her reputation.

Sky News Home
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British tennis player Fran Jones helped off court after collapsing during match
British tennis player Fran Jones was forced to withdraw from a tournament in Colombia after collapsing during a match against Argentina's Julia Riera.

Deutsche Welle
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Greece announces 'drastic' defense overhaul
Although the country already spends 3% of its GDP on the military, it plans to spend a further €25 billion to modernize. The move comes as Greece emerges from more than a decade of austerity.

Mail Online
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Tenerife thieves stole my phone... and then raided £85,000 from my Revolut account
I naively thought criminals would want the device rather than what was on it. How wrong I was.

Mail Online
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Man Utd's Jim Ratcliffe warns Labour's Net Zero 'shutdown' of North Sea oil and gas 'raises the risk of blackouts' and demands Windfall Tax is scrapped
The billionaire Ineos CEO and part-owner of Manchester United warned Britain came 'perilously close' to losing power in January when light winds prevented wind turbines from being effective.

Mail Online
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The real best cash Isa deals revealed as rates soar to 5.6% - is a short bonus REALLY worth it?
With these bonus boosts only lasting three months, how good is the rate you're really getting over the year?

Mail Online
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Laurence Fox's complaint against TV star Narinder Kaur is dropped by police after he accused her of making 'criminal allegation' in row over 'upskirting' photo
Mrs Kaur was the subject of a six-month Met Police investigation after Fox claimed she had broken the Malicious Communications Act with a social media post about him.

Mail Online
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Should you boost your state pension before it's too late? Our last-minute checklist before 5 April deadline
There is still time to take advantage of the current special deal to buy years going all the way back to 2006, not only the last six years. Here's what to do...

Mail Online
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Michael Sheen and Channel 4 embroiled in 'copying' legal row over debt documentary with film-makers who say they did it four years ago
A team of independent TV producers have hit out over 'Michael Sheen's Secret Million Pound Giveaway', which they claim bears a striking resemblance to a rejected documentary they pitched.

Mail Online
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The terrifying sounds that hinted Iceland's volcano was ready to blow: Audio clip reveals the seismic activity in the build up to the eruption
Iceland's fears were confirmed as a volcano erupted south of the capital following a 'swarm' of earthquakes. Now, scientists have revealed the sounds that hinted the eruption was imminent.

Mail Online
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'Wild' £90,000 three-bedroom house in the East Midlands goes on sale - but property hunters are gobsmacked by the HUGE catch
The three-bedroom end of terrace house, located on St Andrews Road in Semilong, Northampton, hit the market at the end of February.

Mail Online
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'Bored club girl' who was turned into internet meme reveals why she made that famous face - as new photos show what she looks like now
Lucia Gorman, best known as the face of the 'bored club girl' meme, was enjoying a night out at the Milk Club in Edinburgh in 2018 when the viral moment unfolded.

Mail Online
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Mastermind viewers sink claws into 'dumbed down' BBC quiz after player's 'pathetic' specialist subject - raging 'they get easier every week!'
The latest episode of the programme, hosted by Clive Myrie , 60, saw four contestants take on each other to make a place in the final.

Mail Online
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Vengeful mother-of-four, 32, accused ex-boyfriend of 'running her over' after she banged her elbow against his car while she abused him
Sascha Collier, 32, waged a hate campaign against Aaron McDarmaid spreading ant killer over his home, emptying bins on his driveway and pouring flammable liquid on his front door.

Mail Online
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Queen Elizabeth II's godson dies aged 79: Tory peer who served as Page of Honour to Her Majesty passes away after suffering head injury
Conservative peer Lord Charles O'Hagan served as a Member of European Parliament for Devon twice, from 1973 to 1975 and from 1979 to 1994. He was also a Page of Honour to the late Queen.

Mail Online
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Val Kilmer's heartbreaking tragedy that struck his family when he was a teenager and inspired an acting role
Val Kilmer's family suffered a horrific tragedy when he was just 17 years old which the actor previously revealed inspired one of his acting roles.

Mail Online
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Terrifying moment cruise ship slams into enormous 40ft waves with passengers falling into walls during voyage through notorious Drake Passage
Lesley Ann Murphy, a travel blogger aboard Quark Expeditions' Ocean Explorer ship, captured footage of the moment the vessel made its way through the giant waves and crashing water.

Mail Online
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Two of UK's best loved chocolate bars urgently pulled from supermarkets over fears they contain STONES
A popular chocolate brand has slapped a 'do not eat' warning on two of its large bars as they may contain 'small stones'.

The Guardian (UK)
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Democrats hail major win as Susan Crawford delivers blow to Trump and Musk in Wisconsin – US politics live
Liberal judge Susan Crawford wins race for seat on Wisconsin supreme court in litmus test for Donald Trump’s and Elon Musk’s popularityLiberal Susan Crawford beats Musk-backed candidateA combined more than $80m was spent on the race, topping the previous record of $51m that was spent in the 2023 Wisconsin state supreme court race.Elon Musk and affiliated groups spent more than $20m alone. Musk reprised some of the tactics that he used last fall to help Trump win, including offering $100 to people who signed a petition opposing “activist judges” and offering $1m checks to voters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Francesca Jones taken off court in wheelchair after mid-match collapse
Briton falls to ground during final set in BogotáWatson defeated in opening round of Charleston OpenBritain’s Francesca Jones has been forced to withdraw from the Colsanitas Cup in Bogotá after collapsing on court. The 24-year-old appeared to stagger after failing to return a serve from Argentina’s Julia Riera in the third set of their round-of-32 match and was unable to return to play. She fell to the ground and was removed from the court in a wheelchair.“Due to a physical issue, Francesca Jones has withdrawn from her match against Julia Riera at 6-2, 5-7, 5-3 in favour of the Argentinian,” the tournament posted on X. “We wish the British tennis player a speedy recovery.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Four players in one week’: Arteta rues Arsenal’s injury nightmare at the back
Gabriel and Timber add to White and Calafiori blowsSaka’s goal against Fulham was ‘a beautiful moment’Mikel Arteta enjoyed the goalscoring comeback from Bukayo Saka in Arsenal’s 2-1 victory against ­Fulham in the Premier League but felt the gloss come off the evening as Gabriel Magalhães and Jurriën ­Timber sustained injuries.Saka scored Arsenal’s second on 73 minutes, having come off the bench in the 66th minute for his first action since he ruptured his hamstring on 21 December. He ran over to the bench to celebrate with one of the club’s performance coaches, Sam Wilson. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Buckled Wiltshire road used as skate park finally repaired
B4069 near Lyneham reopens three years after landslip following £5m engineering projectA stretch of country road in Wiltshire that was so badly buckled in a landslip it became a hotspot for skateboarders and BMX riders, who used its wild undulations for spins, jumps and flips, has finally been fixed three years on.The 140-metre stretch of the B4069 was broken up and shifted 25 metres downhill after heavy rain in February 2022. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Airlines warned Heathrow about power supply risks days before outage, MPs told
Concerns about cable theft around supply raised with airport before substation fireBusiness live – latest updatesAirlines warned Heathrow about risks to its power supply days before the airport was shut down by a substation fire, a Commons committee was told.The Heathrow chief executive, Thomas Woldbye, apologised for the disruption, which affected more than 200,000 passengers on Friday 21 March, but defended the decision to close as he said staying open was potentially “disastrous”. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Heathrow terminal could have reopened hours after fire that caused power outage, MPs told
Heathrow bosses were warned its power supply was vulnerable less than a week before a major outage, and a terminal could have got some flights moving by mid-morning rather than being shut for a day, a committee of MPs has heard.

Mail Online
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Val Kilmer's heartbreaking tragedy that struck his family when he was a teenager and an inspired acting role
Val Kilmer's family suffered a horrific tragedy when he was just 17 years old which the actor previously revealed inspired one of his acting roles.

Sky News Home
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Britons urged to stop mowing lawns
Conservation experts are urging homeowners not to mow their lawns over the coming months to help boost butterfly numbers, with more than half of UK species now in long-term decline.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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More than half of UK's butterfly species in long-term decline
The destruction of habitats by humans is largely to blame, a conservationist warns.

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
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#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (Update)
We currently have a field engineer heading to site with extra hardware to diagnose the issue.

Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 03:38

Update: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 15:00

Edited: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 11:20

Status: Outage

Maintenance: None

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Heathrow warned by airlines about power supply days before shutdown
MPs hear the airport was warned about power supply resilience days before the disruptive closure.

The Register
Open 
One of the last of Bletchley Park's quiet heroes, Betty Webb, dies at 101
Kept quiet for 30 years before becoming an 'unrivalled advocate' for the site Obit  Betty Webb MBE, one of the team who worked at the code-breaking Bletchley Park facility during the Second World War, has died at the age of 101.…

Wired Top Stories
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This Is How You Get a Chinese EV Into the United States
While almost no Chinese EVs are legally sold in the US, these are the workarounds that could allow eager enthusiasts to get them onto American roads—at a price.

UK Government News
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Showcase for local suppliers interested in fusion energy
Businesses across Nottinghamshire, Lincolnshire and Yorkshire find out more about fusion energy at an event at Gainsborough Golf Club.

UK Government News
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DBS launch new strategy and business plan for 2025 to 2028
The Disclosure and Barring Service has launched its new strategy and business plan, detailing the strategic direction of DBS for the next 3 years.

UK Government News
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UN Human Rights Council 58: UK Statement for the Item 10 General Debate
UK Statement at the 58th Human Rights Council for the Item 10 General Debate. Delivered by UK Ambassador for Human Rights to the UN, Eleanor Sanders.

UK Government News
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Landmark Taiwan offshore wind deal receives UK backing, unlocking £55 million in contracts for British exporters
UK Export Finance has guaranteed £184 million in financing for one of Taiwan’s largest offshore wind projects.

UK Government News
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Local heritage to be protected with £20 million of funding
Support to boost people’s access to local heritage, delivering government’s Plan for Change to increase opportunities for all

Mail Online
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Horrifying moment python's bulging belly wriggles as grandmother is found swallowed whole inside the snake
The anxious family of a missing woman tracked the snake down to a patch of dense vegetation in South Sulawesi, Indonesia and slashed into it to find the missing grandmother

Mail Online
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Vegan activist nearly killed lamb after kidnapping it from a field and giving it a shampoo wash and food bought off Amazon - before putting it in a nappy and making it live in her bedroom
Louise Murguia, 49, kidnapped the lamb from farmer Stuart Ludwell's land overnight on March 23, 2024 because she thought she could take better care of it.

Mail Online
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Dramatic moment police bikers knock off-road nuisance off his motorbike as he tries to flee them in chase
This is the dramatic moment police bikers knocked an off-roader from his motorcycle as he tried to flee them in a chase in Solihull.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Russia Halts Large Chunk Of Kazakhstan's Oil Export Capacity
Russia Halts Large Chunk Of Kazakhstan's Oil Export Capacity

By Tsvetana Paraskova of OilPrice.com

Russia has ordered shut two of the three moorings of the main oil export terminal on the Black Sea handling Kazakhstan’s oil exports, which could seriously disrupt Kazakh crude shipments if the suspension lasts more than a few days.

Following snap safety inspections by Russia’s Federal Agency for Transport Supervision, prompted by the Kerch Strait oil spill in December 2024, Russia ordered on Monday that the SPM-1 and SPM-2 moorings of the terminal of the Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) be shut immediately, CPC said in a statement.



The consortium operates the pipeline from the Caspian coast in northwest Kazakhstan to the Novorossiysk port on Russia’s Black Sea coast. The port handles most of Kazakhstan’s crude exports from giant oilfields in Kazakhstan operated by international oil firms, including U.S. supermajor Chevron.

Affiliates of Chevron and ExxonMobil are also minority shareholders in CPC, whose biggest shareholder is the Russian Federation with a 24% stake.

CPC complied with the order for a temporary ban of operations at the SPM-1 and SPM-2 moorings and took them out of service “until the identified deficiencies have been addressed.”

Until then, all transshipment operations at the CPC Marine Terminal will be delivered using the SPM-3 mooring commissioned in 2014, the consortium said.

The suspension of part of the export capacity could more than halve the crude oil exports of Kazakhstan if it drags on for more than a week, trading sources told Reuters on Tuesday.

The potential disruption to Kazakhstan’s oil exports comes as the country part of the OPEC+ pact saw its crude production hit a record high in March despite continued pledges to start complying with its OPEC+ quota that it has been exceeding for years.

Kazakhstan appears to find it hard to convince Chevron and the other supermajors operating in the country to limit production now after years of investing billions of U.S. dollars in oilfield expansions.

Amid tensions with OPEC+ and the oil majors, Kazakhstan said last month that energy minister Almassadam Satkaliyev would step down from the role and lead a newly minted atomic energy agency.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 05:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
German Politicians Worry About Their Gold In US Vaults
German Politicians Worry About Their Gold In US Vaults

For decades, the idea that Germany’s gold reserves - some of the largest in the world - might not be safe in the vaults of the New York Federal Reserve would have seemed like the stuff of conspiracy theories. But as the political landscape shifts in Washington - and questions have been raised as to what's actually in US vaults, some German lawmakers are beginning to wonder aloud: Is their gold still secure?



Germany holds the second-largest hoard of gold on the planet, surpassed only by the United States itself. Roughly 37 percent of that treasure - some 1,236 metric tons, currently valued at around €113 billion - supposedly lies deep beneath the streets of Manhattan, stored with America’s central bank. For decades, the arrangement was seen as a prudent hedge, offering Germany immediate access to dollar liquidity in the event of a crisis.



Now, some in Berlin are rethinking that assumption.

"Of course, the question now arises again," Marco Wanderwitz, an outgoing lawmaker from the center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU), told the German tabloid Bild (owned by POLITICO parent company Axel Springer) last week. Wanderwitz has long harbored doubts about the wisdom of keeping such a significant portion of the country’s wealth abroad. In 2012, he made an unsuccessful push to personally inspect the gold, urging the Bundesbank to act more transparently - or bring the bullion home.

Fellow CDU member Markus Ferber, a member of the European Parliament, echoed those sentiments, calling for more rigorous oversight. “Official representatives of the Bundesbank must personally count the bars and document their results,” Ferber told the outlet.

These calls come at a time of deepening skepticism toward the institutions that once underpinned Germany’s postwar confidence. The recent decision to discard the so-called “debt brake,” a long-sacrosanct cap on public borrowing, signaled a willingness to rethink long-standing fiscal orthodoxy. The logic behind storing Germany’s gold in New York, once assumed to be self-evident, is now coming under similar scrutiny.

Adding to the speculation is Elon Musk and DOGE, who have questioned the authenticity of stated U.S. gold holdings - recently calling for a formal audit of America’s reserves.

For the Deutsche Bundesbank, which oversees the management of Germany’s reserves, any suggestion of instability is unwelcome. The central bank has maintained a quiet and resolute stance, rebuffing insinuations of risk.

“We have a trustworthy and reliable partner in the Fed in New York for the storage of our gold holdings,” Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel said at a press conference in February, a line the bank reiterated when asked for comment on Friday. “It does not keep me awake at night. I have complete confidence in our colleagues at the American central bank.”

Famous last words...

In 2013, amid a populist outcry and growing eurozone instability, the 'completely confident' Bundesbank repatriated hundreds of tons of gold previously held in Paris - a move that was seen at the time as a symbolic reassertion of sovereignty. The bank argued that, with France and Germany sharing the euro, the strategic rationale for keeping reserves in Paris had faded.

Now, more than half of Germany’s gold sits safely in Frankfurt. Thirteen percent is held in London. But it is the tranche in New York - once a monument to transatlantic trust - that is drawing the most anxious of glances.

*  *  *

One question... GOT GOLD?
Click pic, buy ZeroHedge gold bars, puzzle future historians... Only 40 left in stock! These have been flying.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 05:45

The Hill
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5 questions about Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs
President Trump plans to announce reciprocal tariffs on a host of nations Wednesday at a White House event. Trump has deemed April 2 “Liberation Day” because of the tariffs, and the White House ceremony is also being described as an event to “make America wealthy again.” But there are many doubts over whether the tariffs...

The Hill
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Donalds unveils legislation to move NASA headquarters to Florida's Space Coast
Florida gubernatorial candidate and Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.) is set to introduce legislation in the House proposing that NASA headquarters be moved from Washington, D.C. to Florida. The legislation’s co-sponsors include a bipartisan group of Florida lawmakers, including Reps. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-Fla.), Jared Moskowitz (D-Fla.), Debbie Wasserman-Schultz (D-Fla.), Scott Franklin (R-Fla.), Mara Salazar (R-Fla.), Daniel...

The Hill
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The Memo: Inside Trump’s big gamble on tariffs
President Trump is set to take the biggest gamble of his second term on Wednesday, when he will announce a fresh round of tariffs. Trump has dubbed Wednesday “Liberation Day,” suggesting that it will mark a watershed in what he sees as an effort to push back on trade imbalances. White House press secretary Karoline...

The Hill
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Why Tesla may avoid the blow of Trump's auto tariffs
Elon Musk’s focus on American-made products at Tesla could shield his company from the brunt of President Trump’s new tariffs on foreign vehicles and automobile parts. While foreign automakers and American consumers anticipate climbing car prices, the electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer — led by Musk — may be safe from Trump’s 25 percent tariff because...

The Hill
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Waltz may struggle to walk away from Signal group chat controversy
The White House has declared the controversy around a Signal chat for a military strike that inadvertently included a journalist to be “closed,” but the episode has left some in President Trump’s orbit distrustful of national security adviser Mike Waltz. White House officials are eager to move past the controversy, in which Waltz mistakenly added...

The Hill
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Trump's executive order on elections sparks backlash
Democrats are stepping up their opposition to one of President Trump’s latest executive orders, which would require proof of citizenship in order to register to vote. The order directs state and local officials to record on voter registration forms “the type of document that the applicant presented as documentary proof of United States citizenship,” such...

The Hill
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Senators revive efforts to strip tech companies of key legal protection
Senators from both sides of the aisle are reigniting efforts to crawl back technology companies' legal immunities with hopes bipartisan support in Congress could push the bill across the finish line this session and gain the backing of President Trump. Sens. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) are expected to soon introduce a bill...

The Hill
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Four key takeaways as Trump’s sweeping HHS layoffs begin
Thousands of employees across the vast Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) began receiving layoff notices as early as 5 a.m. on Tuesday. The purge comes on the heels of HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. forcing out a top vaccine official late last week. Entire divisions were axed across multiple agencies, including much...

The Hill
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Senate Republicans set to bypass parliamentarian on Trump tax cuts
Republicans are set to make the audacious play of bypassing the Senate parliamentarian and moving forward with a budget resolution based on a scoring baseline set by Budget Committee Chair Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) that would allow them to argue extending President Trump’s 2017 tax cuts won’t add to the deficit. Senate Republicans are being careful...

BBC UK News
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Patrick Harvie to stand down as Scottish Greens co-leader
The MSP is the longest-serving party chief at Holyrood, having been in the role for almost 17 years.

Mail Online
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Topps Tiles faces £4m in added staff costs after Reeves' tax changes
Topps Tiles faces additional annual labour costs of £4million as a result of changes announced in the Autumn Budget.

Mail Online
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No Christmas spirit in village where The Holiday was filmed as locals hit out at new flowerbeds that look like bins
Locals living in the Surrey village where The Holiday was filmed have hit out at new flowerbeds, saying they are 'ugly' and look more like bins.

Mail Online
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Our mum, 82, is selling her £1.75M home and giving us money - can we avoid inheritance tax?
My mother is selling her house - two properties (bungalow and oak barn) classed as one property - near Winchester, Hampshire.

Mail Online
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Old Etonian who tried to murder his estranged partner by throwing her down a 240ft well at his family's country estate is jailed for 24 years
An Old Etonian who tried to throw his estranged partner into a 240ft-deep well was jailed for 24 years today for attempted murder.

Mail Online
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Meghan's story changes AGAIN: Duchess admits she feeds Archie and Lili 'chicken nuggets and veggie burgers' - after hitting back at her own 'TV dinner' upbringing on Netflix show
The Duchess, who will be launching her As Ever collection today,  revealed she made a 'Chantilly Lili' - named after her daughter.

Mail Online
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Queen Elizabeth II's godson dies aged 79: Tory peer who served as Page Honour to Her Majesty passes away after suffering head injury
Conservative peer Lord Charles O'Hagan served as a Member of European Parliament (MEP) for Devon twice, from 1973 to 1975 and from 1979 to 1994. He was also a Page Honour to the late Queen.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Yoko by David Sheff review – a queasily one-sided defence
The artist and musician is a brilliant subject for an epic, in-depth biography, but this is merely hagiographyIn 1966 a woman sat down at the Destruction in Art Symposium at London’s Africa Centre and invited people to cut off her clothes. It was an era when Yves Klein used naked women as paintbrushes and Allen Jones made sculptures of fetishistically dressed women posed as furniture. But Yoko Ono was in control of her own self-sacrifice. It was the third time she’d performed this paradoxically passive action, and each time it was the audience who exposed themselves as they took scissors to her clothing.This was also the beginning of a sojourn in London for the Japanese-born New York artist that would catapult her from avant garde obscurity to global fame. Her exhibition at the Indica Gallery that same year was visited by John Lennon, who climbed one of her artworks, a ladder to the ceiling. At the top he used a magnifying glass to read the tiny word “YES”. The love kindled that day would be blamed for breaking up the Beatles. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mr Burton review – the teacher who inspired and encouraged screen legend Richard Burton
Toby Jones plays the spaniel-eyed schoolmaster setting Harry Lawtey’s needy young pupil on course for haughty international stardomThe career of Richard Burton seemed mythic at the time, and more so in retrospect. In Pedro Almodóvar’s latest movie The Room Next Door, Julianne Moore’s character is even shown reading Erotic Vagrancy, Roger Lewis’s account of Burton’s then-adulterous relationship with Elizabeth Taylor in the early 60s, the title taken from Pope John XXIII’s extraordinary denunciation: “You will finish in an erotic vagrancy, without end or without a safe port.” In fact, the nearest thing Burton ever had to a safe port was his inspirational English teacher Philip Burton in Port Talbot, south Wales, whose own frustrated dreams of the theatre were poured into the bright young miner’s son Richard Jenkins, coaching him in acting and even making him his legal ward and getting him to change his surname to Burton to facilitate the teacher’s sponsorship of his Oxford scholarship.It’s the subject of this heartfelt, vigorously acted, enjoyable, if slightly naive movie from screenwriters Tom Bullough and Josh Hyams, and director Marc Evans. Toby Jones stars as the spaniel-eyed Mr Burton and Harry Lawtey is Richard, a lanky, needy kid morphing into that insufferably haughty and sonorous prince of the English stage. It tells a uniquely painful and dysfunctional story, and does its best to show how Burton’s pride always coexisted with shame and self-hate, and culminated with him playing Hal in Henry IV Part 2 at Stratford with Mr Burton in the audience, the pair effectively enacting their own version of the Hal/Falstaff betrayal scene. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump and Musk have ushered in a terrible era of cataclysm capitalism. But I have a plan to counter it | Julia Steinberger
The speed with which US democracy is being dismantled is dizzying, but if we organise resistance now we can stop thisEverything is moving too fast. The Trump-Musk administration is tearing through US government, universities and health organisations, firing tens of thousands of employees, eliminating billons in funding. The scope and speed of the attack is dizzying. It is almost impossible to keep up with the ongoing destruction, let alone to organise the resistance. None of this is accidental.We need to understand the origins of the Trump blitzkrieg to counter it in the US and prevent it from spreading abroad. The speed of the attack can be traced to Trump strategist and “accelerationist” Steve Bannon, and aligns with his information warfare tactic to “flood the zone” to confuse, disengage and disorient. Whether on climate or Covid, rumours, lies and conspiracy theories create a chaotic cacophony, leaving the public disoriented, fearful and prey to oversimple Trumpist messages: blame the woke, migrants, transgender people, Muslims, doctors, scientists. Musk’s purchase of Twitter/X supports Bannon’s agenda.Julia Steinberger is professor of societal challenges of climate change at the University of Lausanne Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Is Usha Vance starting to feel a little sorry for herself? | Arwa Mahdawi
She left her job when her husband got a shot at VP – only for the couple to be met with the frostiest of receptions in Greenland at the weekendThere are a few people to blame for the fact that JD Vance, a staggeringly unlikable man with a supremely meme-able face, has been thrust into such prominence. The first is Peter Thiel: the tech billionaire who bankrolled Vance’s political pivot. The second is Kevin D Roberts, head of the Heritage Foundation and mastermind of Project 2025, who has been an energetic Vance advocate.And the third is Usha Chilukuri Vance, JD’s wife. While Usha kept a low profile during the Trump-Vance campaign, trailing after her other half with a smile on her face and a copy of The Iliad in her hand, JD has made her influence clear. In his memoir Hillbilly Elegy, for example, he wrote that Usha helped him navigate Yale and “always encouraged me to seek opportunities that I didn’t know existed”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Israel executes unarmed Red Crescent paramedics with the west’s blessing | Ahmed Moor
American and European leaders are the authors of this latest atrocity by their Israeli colleagues in GazaThe Guardian reports that Israeli troops “killed 15 Palestinian paramedics and rescue workers one by one”. “One by one” is another way of saying one person after another, which is another way of saying premeditated murder. Fifteen times over.Dr Bashar Murad, the director of health programs at the Palestine Red Crescent, told reporters that one of the men who was executed by the Israelis was on the phone with colleagues. The victim had been injured and was requesting help. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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There is no such thing as an ‘illegal immigrant’ | Mehdi Hasan
It is a factually inaccurate and totally, utterly wrong to say that undocumented people are ‘illegal’ and are ‘criminals’On 29 January, the second Trump administration held its first White House press briefing. “Of the 3,500 arrests Ice has made so far since President Trump came back into office, can you just tell us the numbers?” asked a reporter in the front row. “How many have a criminal record versus those who are just in the country illegally?”“All of them,” responded the new White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, making her debut in the briefing room, “because they illegally broke our nation’s laws, and, therefore, they are criminals, as far as this administration goes.” She continued: “I know the last administration didn’t see it that way, so it’s a big culture shift in our nation to view someone who breaks our immigration laws as a criminal. But that’s exactly what they are.”Mehdi Hasan is a broadcaster and author, and a former host on MSNBC. He is also a Guardian US columnist and the editor-in-chief of Zeteo Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
I spent four decades not sleeping a wink – until a doctor took my insomnia seriously
Insomnia is not a grievance made by difficult women. It’s a life-threatening condition that often stems from a physical issue many doctors refuse to seeIn February, I taught memoir writing at a conference in Mexico where the faculty is traditionally put up with local hosts. Mine was especially communicative in the months leading up to my arrival, going out of his way to indicate affordable rooftop bars, the finest locations to view murals, and general best practices for the city he’d adopted as his own.So when I told my host that I have chronic insomnia, I felt he’d take me seriously, given how generous he’d been in his emails. “I’ve traveled a lot throughout Mexico,” I wrote him. “And the one thing I can’t deal with as an insomniac is roosters.” Continue reading...

ZDNet News
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My productivity hack to get 15GB of Gmail storage for free - and without losing any files
This simple, hassle-free trick lets you archive all your Google messages and media, no matter your account type - completely free.

Deutsche Welle
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India, Pakistan armies exchange fire after incursion attempt
An Indian Army statement said an attempted incursion from across the border into the Jammu and Kashmir region in India was followed by "unprovoked firing and ceasefire violation" by Pakistan's army.

BBC UK News
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Patrick Harvie to stand down as Green co-leader
The MSP is the longest-serving party chief at Holyrood, having been in the role for almost 17 years.

Mail Online
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Omoda 9 SHS is the latest luxury Chinese SUV - with a 700-mile range, is the hybrid a £45,000 bargain?
The Omoda 9 SHS is a self-charging hybrid which can go 700 miles on one tank and will cost £44,900.

Mail Online
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I'm a doctor - these are the medications you MUST avoid while flying or risk humiliating side effects
Dr Sean Ormond, from Atlas Pain Specialists, has warned fliers about certain medications that should never be taken while travelling on airplanes due to their potential  side effects.

Sky News Home
Open 
Don't mow your lawns this summer, Britons told
Conservation experts are urging homeowners not to mow their lawns over the coming months to help boost butterfly numbers, with more than half of UK species now in long-term decline.

Mail Online
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Hunt for the John Lewis bandits: Three men who snatched high-value cookware items including Le Creuset set from department store sought by police
Dorset Police released CCTV images of three men they wish to speak to after the alleged shoplifting incidents between December and February this year.

Mail Online
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Putin propagandist warns Brit troops will 'all die' if they are sent to Ukraine and makes chilling tactical nuke threat in TV rant
Vladimir Solovyov has warned Sir Keir Starmer that any British troops he sends to Ukraine will die amid a new Russian nuclear weapons threat.

Mail Online
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Old Etonian brute who tried to murder his estranged partner by throwing her down a 240ft well at his family's country estate is jailed for 24 years
An Old Etonian who tried to throw his estranged partner into a 240ft-deep well was jailed for 24 years today for attempted murder.

Mail Online
Open 
Couple are ordered to tear down massive garden decking after building it without permission
Jessica and Stuart Little erected the timber structure and fence outside their bungalow in Tarbert, Argyll.

Mail Online
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How Val Kilmer's voice changed after throat cancer left him using voice box and 'plugging hole in throat' to talk
The Hollywood legend - who died from pneumonia on Tuesday after a long health battle - was diagnosed with throat cancer after coughing up blood in 2014.

Mail Online
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Royals fans think they've spotted a massive clue about Meghan Markle's next venture as hint is revealed in new As Ever promo
The Duchess of Sussex , 43, took to Instagram on Tuesday to reveal there was only 'one more sleep' before As Ever goes live - with a range of preserves, teas, and pre-mixes.

Mail Online
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Meghan gives glimpse into her Montecito home in new video making dessert named after her daughter
The Duchess, who will be launching her As Ever collection today,  revealed she made a 'Chantilly Lili' - named after her daughter.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Democrats hail major win as Susan Crawford delivers blow to Trump and Musk in Wisconsin – US politics live
Liberal judge Susan Crawford wins race for seat on Wisconsin supreme court in litmus test for Donald Trump’s and Elon Musk’s popularityLiberal Susan Crawford beats Musk-backed candidateThe result in Wisconsin means that liberals will keep a 4-3 ideological majority on the state supreme court.That majority is hugely significant because the court will hear major cases on abortion and collective bargaining rights. The court could also potentially consider cases that could cause the state to redraw its eight congressional districts, which are now drawn to advantage Republicans. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Gold rises as markets await US tariffs; Heathrow airport was warned about power supply in days before closure – business live
Donald Trump to announce latest round of tariffs at 8pm GMTJoshua Mahony, at Scope Markets, has looked at today’s moves in stock markets.European equities are falling in anticipation of today’s liberation day tariffs with Donald Trump expected to announce his sweeping tax on imports at 4 pm Eastern time. Rather predictably it is the Dax which leads the losses as the German market surge seen in the wake of the agreement to increase the government deficit and ramp up fiscal expenditure fades.For traders and investors, today represents a day of huge uncertainty as we weigh up the potential for retaliatory tariffs and a tit-for-tat trade war. [US trade secretary] Scott Bessent has stated that today’s tariffs are likely to be the worst it will get, and his historical comments over the potential to “escalate to deescalate” means that we will hopefully soon move into a phase where we hear more about potential trade deals and tariff reduction rather than the bad news that currently dominates markets. Nonetheless, with the likes of Canada and the EU standing ready to implement retaliatory measures, things might get worse before they get better.Today brings the latest ADP payrolls report out of the US, bringing a fresh insight into the behaviour of US businesses in the face of recent tariff uncertainty. A collapse in the employment metric of the manufacturing PMI released from the ISM yesterday does highlight the struggles faced by manufacturers that could be hurt by both foreign tariffs and the rising costs of imported parts.It stands to reason that businesses will hold off hiring in the face of such uncertainty, and thus markets are faced with the possibility that we see signs of economic deterioration in the form of weak ADP and non-farm payroll figures at the back end of this week.It was following a couple of incidents of, unfortunately, theft of wire and cable around some of the power supply that, on one of those occasions, took out the lights on the runway for a period of time.That obviously made me concerned and, as such, I raised the point I wanted to understand better the overall resilience of the airport.It became quite clear we could not operate the airport safely quite early in this process, and that is why we closed the airport.If we had not done that, we would have had thousands of passengers stranded at the airport at high risk to personal injury, gridlocked roads around the airport, because don’t forget 65,000 houses and other institutions were powered down. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Reading crisis deepens after Rob Couhig rejects offer from owner Dai Yongge
Club has deadline of Saturday from EFL to agree sale‘I want to see a legally binding document,’ says CouhigReading have had a potentially significant setback in their attempt to save the club by agreeing a sale this week, with Rob Couhig rejecting a proposal from the owner, Dai Yongge, to lift his security over the Select Car Leasing Stadium and training ground.The Guardian has learned that Reading have sent a legal letter to Couhig offering to place some of the proceeds from the proposed sale to Robert Platek in a frozen escrow account pending the result of his high-court claim for £12m, which is scheduled for July. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Don't mow your lawn this summer, Britons told
Conservation experts are urging homeowners not to mow their lawns over the coming months to help boost butterfly numbers, with more than half of UK species now in long-term decline.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Heathrow warned by airlines about power supply days before shutdown
Airport boss Thomas Woldbye apologises to the passengers whose journeys were disrupted last month.

Slashdot
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Brain Interface Speaks Your Thoughts In Near Real-time
Longtime Slashdot reader backslashdot writes: Commentary, video, and a publication in this week's Nature Neuroscience herald a significant advance in brain-computer interface (BCI) technology, enabling speech by decoding electrical activity in the brain's sensorimotor cortex in real-time. Researchers from UC Berkeley and UCSF employed deep learning recurrent neural network transducer models to decode neural signals in 80-millisecond intervals, generating fluent, intelligible speech tailored to each participant's pre-injury voice. Unlike earlier methods that synthesized speech only after a full sentence was completed, this system can detect and vocalize words within just three seconds. It is accomplished via a 253-electrode array chip implant on the brain. Code and the dataset to replicate the main findings of this study are available in the Chang Lab's public GitHub repository.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC UK News
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Harvie to stand down as Scottish Green co-leader
The MSP is the longest-serving party chief at Holyrood, having been in the role for almost 17 years.

Mail Online
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Netflix staff working on Meghan Markle's As Ever launch admit: 'We're already over it'
EXCLUSIVE: The Duchess of Sussex is said to be lining up her most famous friends to 'plaster social media' with her products as part of a 'good vibes' launch in the coming hours.

Mail Online
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Heathrow bosses 'were warned of potential substation failures DAYS before power outage closed airport'
Nigel Wicking, the chief executive of Heathrow Airline Operators' Committee, told MPs there were a 'couple of incidents' which made him concerned.

Sky News Home
Open 
Liberal judge wins Wisconsin Supreme Court race after defeating Musk-backed challenger
A liberal judge has won a race for a seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court after defeating a challenger endorsed by President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Heathrow warned by airlines about power supply before shutdown
Airport boss Thomas Woldbye apologises to the passengers whose journeys were disrupted last month.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Fact check: Real or fake — can you tell the difference?
Are you a good fact-checker? It is International Fact-checking Day and you can test your knowledge here: Take our fact-checking quiz and find out if you can distinguish real from fake or manipulated images.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Myanmar quake: Imam's grief for 170 killed as they prayed in Sagaing
Scores of Muslims in the town died when their mosques collapsed during Friday prayers at the end of Ramadan.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Airlines warned Heathrow about power supply before shutdown
Airport boss Thomas Woldbye apologises to the passengers whose journeys were disrupted last month.

F1 Technical
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Victor Martins joins Williams after his exit from Alpine's junior driver programme
Ahead of this weekend's Japanese Grand Prix, Williams Racing has announced that 2022 FIA Formula 3 Champion Victor Martins will be joining the its Driver Academy.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Releases New AirPods Max Firmware With Lossless and Low-Latency Audio Support [Updated]
Update 4/2/25: Apple has updated an AirPods support page to indicate that the AirPods Max (USB-C) firmware update version 7E99 is now "coming soon." The original article continues below.







Apple today released a new firmware update for the USB-C version of the AirPods Max headphones. The new firmware is version 7E99, up from the prior 7A291 firmware the device was previously running.





When paired with the iOS 18.4 update, the new AirPods Max firmware brings lossless audio and ultra-low latency audio to the USB-C version of the headphones. The USB-C AirPods Max support 24-bit 48 kHz lossless audio, which is designed to allow listeners to experience music the way the artist created it in the studio. Apple says lossless audio and Personalized Spatial Audio offer a “more sonically accurate, uncompressed, and immersive experience.”



With lossless audio and ultra-low latency audio support, music creators are able to use the AirPods Max to create and mix in Personalized Spatial Audio with head tracking, with just a USB-C cable and a Mac with Logic Pro or other music creation software.



Lossless audio and ultra-low latency is only available for the USB-C AirPods Max. The headphones need to be running the latest firmware and need to be paired with a device running iOS 18.4, iPadOS 18.4, or macOS Sequoia 15.4.



Firmware can be installed by putting the AirPods Max in Bluetooth range of an iPhone, iPad, or Mac that’s connected to Wi-Fi, and then plugging them in to charge. It can take up to 30 minutes for firmware to update.



You can check your firmware version by going to Settings > Bluetooth and selecting the Info button next to the AirPods Max when they are connected to an iPhone, iPad, or Mac.Related Roundup: AirPods MaxBuyer's Guide: AirPods Max (Buy Now)Related Forum: AirPodsThis article, 'Apple Releases New AirPods Max Firmware With Lossless and Low-Latency Audio Support [Updated]' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

The Guardian (UK)
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Share your tributes and memories of Val Kilmer
We would like to hear your memories of Val Kilmer – whether you met him, or appreciated his work as an actorVal Kilmer, the actor best known for his roles in Top Gun, The Doors, and Batman Forever has died at the age of 65.We would like to hear your memories of Val Kilmer – whether you met him, or appreciated his work as an actor. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Gold rises as markets await US tariffs; Heathrow airport was warned about power supply in days before closure– business live
Donald Trump to announce latest round of tariffs at 8pm GMTHeathrow Airport was warned about concerns over its power supply in the days before it closed because of an outage, a leading executive told MPs this morning.Nigel Wicking, chief executive of the Heathrow Airline Operators’ Committee, which represents airlines that use the west London airport, said he spoke to the Team Heathrow director on 15 March about his concerns, and the chief operating officer and chief customer officer two days before the 21 March shutdown.It was following a couple of incidents of, unfortunately, theft of wire and cable around some of the power supply that, on one of those occasions, took out the lights on the runway for a period of time.That obviously made me concerned and, as such, I raised the point I wanted to understand better the overall resilience of the airport.It became quite clear we could not operate the airport safely quite early in this process, and that is why we closed the airport.If we had not done that, we would have had thousands of passengers stranded at the airport at high risk to personal injury, gridlocked roads around the airport, because don’t forget 65,000 houses and other institutions were powered down. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
Heathrow terminal could have reopened hours after fire that caused power outage, MPs told
Heathrow bosses had been warned of potential substation failures less than a week before a major power outage, though a terminal could have got flights out by mid-morning rather than being shut for a day, a committee of MPs has heard.

TechRadar News
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Does AI leave security teams struggling?

TechRadar News
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Mozilla launching "Thundermail" email service to take on Gmail, Microsoft 365

TechRadar News
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Your Apple Watch just got a major alarm upgrade as watchOS 11.4 finally lands

TechRadar News
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The Switch 2 Direct is almost here and Nintendo has now released a teaser promoting the console's mysterious 'C' button

TechRadar News
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The European Commission wants a backdoor for end-to-end encryptions for law enforcement

TechRadar News
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The Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge might not be so close to launch after all

Digital Trends
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Proton Drive has a new macOS app and it looks great
Proton has released a 2.0 version of its Proton Drive macOS app with a completely new look and double the speed.

Digital Trends
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Motorola Edge 60 Fusion’s stunning colors will make you swoon
Motorola has announced the Edge 60 Fusion, which comes in a selection of beautiful Pantone colors. Here's what you need to know about it.

Mirror F1
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Toto Wolff to miss Japanese GP as Mercedes F1 chief confirms replacement
Toto Wolff will be absent at the Japanese Grand Prix as the Mercedes boss takes time away following surgery on his knee as the Silver Arrows prepare for a weekend without him

The Verge
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Roblox will let parents block people on their child’s friends list
Roblox is introducing new parental controls that give parents more tools to control the people their children talk to and the experiences they can access, according to a blog post from chief safety officer Matt Kaufman. The updates build on changes introduced last year, which included a special type of account parents and caregivers can […]

The Verge
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Valve fixes Steam Deck update that caused boot loops
Valve has issued a corrective update to the Steam client for its Steam Deck gaming handhelds, after an earlier version left some devices stuck in boot loops and broke performance settings. The initial update reached the Steam Deck’s stable channel despite warnings from beta testers about the problems. The problems were caused by a Steam […]

Mail Online
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No more £100million bat tunnels! Environment Secretary vows to slash 'green tape' and quangos blocking infrastructure projects
Steve Reed warned green quangos to stop burdening key infrastructure and building projects with massive costs that can lead them to be delayed or even abandoned.

Mail Online
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Hospital machines can be turned into MURDER weapons with cyber hackers seizing control of pacemakers, insulin pumps and painkiller drips, Swiss experts warn
In a terrifying new report from Zurich-based cybersecurity Scip AG, experts revealed how they were easily able to hijack medical devices in a major hospital and manipulate them remotely.

Sky News Home
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Heathrow could have reopened hours after fire that caused power outage, MPs told
Heathrow bosses had been warned of potential substation failures less than a week before a major power outage, though the airport could have got flights out by mid-morning rather than being shut for a day, a committee of MPs has heard.

Deutsche Welle
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Middle East: Israel intends to seize 'large areas' of Gaza
The Israeli military is widening its area of control into large parts of the Gaza Strip, the country's defense chief says. Meanwhile, Germany announced that some of its citizens have left the territory. DW has more.

BBC UK News
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Three men dead after car and lorry crash
Three men are killed in a crash between a car and a lorry in the Vale of Glamorgan.

Mail Online
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Trump's 25% tariffs on US car imports could threaten 25,000 UK jobs, think tank warns
The Institute for Public Policy Research said the President's levies on UK-made cars entering the US would put 'extreme pressure' on Britain's car makers'.

Mail Online
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Heathrow bosses 'were warned of potential substation failures less than a WEEK before fire caused major power outage and closed airport'
Nigel Wicking, the chief executive of Heathrow Airline Operators' Committee, told MPs there were a 'couple of incidents' which made him concerned.

The Guardian (UK)
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Democrats hail major win as Susan Crawford delivers blow to Trump and Musk in Wisconsin – US politics live
Liberal judge Susan Crawford wins race for seat on Wisconsin supreme court in litmus test for Donald Trump’s and Elon Musk’s popularityLiberal Susan Crawford beats Musk-backed candidateSusan Crawford won the race for a seat on the Wisconsin supreme court on Tuesday, a win which the liberal judge said showed “our courts are not for sale”.“Today Wisconsinites fended off an unprecedented attack on our democracy,” Crawford said in a speech at her victory night event in Madison. “Wisconsin stood up and said loudly that justice does not have a price. Our courts are not for sale.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The US men’s national team aren’t just underachievers; they’re unlikeable | Beau Dure
As the 2026 World Cup approaches, the USMNT lack the charisma, underdog charm and striking victories of their predecessorsImagine the 1980 Miracle on Ice, but with the USA on the other side.In this scenario, the US men’s hockey team aren’t a scrappy band of outmatched amateurs playing for the country perceived as the good guys in the cold war. The opponents aren’t an aloof, brutally effective Soviet Union team expected to steamroll their way to a gold medal just as their military were attempting to steamroll their way through Afghanistan. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Ban bosses from ‘improper’ use of NDAs for low-paid workers, says ex-minister
Louise Haigh calls for end to two-tier system over complaints of sexual misconduct or harassmentBosses should be banned from the “improper” use of non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) for low-paid workers in the service, retail or hospitality sectors, a former cabinet minister has said, as she calls for an end to a two-tier system for victims.Louise Haigh, the former transport secretary, has urged MPs to look beyond high-profile cases linked to the #MeToo movement and advocate for workers in insecure employment who may not have “the means and the confidence to pursue their employers through the courts” to be able to challenge the NDAs. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Heathrow could have reopened hours after fire that caused power outage, MPs told
Heathrow Airport bosses had been warned of potential substation failures less than a week before a major power outage closed the airport for a day, a committee of MPs has heard.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Heathrow warned about power supply before shutdown
Airport boss Thomas Woldbye apologises to the passengers whose journeys were disrupted last month.

BBC UK News
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Three men dead after crash on A48
Three men are killed in a crash on the A48 on Tuesday evening.

Mail Online
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Marks & Spencer's unbelievably flattering swimsuit is back, and I reckon it will sell out before summer
If only there was a swimwear style that was universally flattering, pushing you up and pulling you in in all the right places. Well, after much research, I think I've found the closest thing..

Mail Online
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Val Kilmer's touching bond with Tom Cruise after pair reunited 36 years since first starring together in 1986's Top Gun in emotional moment
Val Kilmer was thrilled for the opportunity to reprise his role as Iceman in Top Gun: Maverick in 2022 as he reunited in an emotional moment with his co-star Tom Cruise.

Mail Online
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Packed off to hell hole prison for Christian tattoos: Gay makeup artist is deported to El Salvador by Trump administration after border agents said his ink looked like a Venezuelan gang symbol
Andry Jose Hernandez Romero, 31, was detained at the Mexico-US border last year when he requested entry to attend a pre-arranged asylum hearing in San Diego, California

Mail Online
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Horror at station Pret a Manger: Police 'challenged a white man carrying a knife' moments before shooting him dead outside Milton Keynes rail station
Detectives told how they arrived at Milton Keynes station yesterday and 'challenged' the man but he 'moved at speed towards officers with the knife before a shot was fired by police'.

Mail Online
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A drone keeps buzzing over my garden - is it breaking the law by snooping on me? DEAN DUNHAM
Dean Dunham explains why although most people believe that they own the airspace above their property, they could be surprised.

The Register
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Specsavers takes off the Oracle glasses, sees better ERP options
£5M in savings? Should've gone to third-party support International optometry company Specsavers has paused the global standardization of its Oracle ERP system and moved to third-party support, saving £5 million ($6.5 million) that can be reallocated to the business.…

Wired Top Stories
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In Search of the Last Wild Axolotls
Using environmental DNA analysis and traditional fishing techniques, researchers are seeking answers about the current population of axolotls in their natural habitat. The numbers are alarming.

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Careers guidance for students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds ‘variable’ – new report
Careers guidance for post-16 students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds can vary in quality, a new report from Ofsted has found.

UK Government News
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UKHSA launches call for evidence to tackle rising TB
UKHSA launches a call for evidence to shape England’s 2026 to 2031 TB Action Plan as TB rates continue to rise.

Mail Online
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Ryanair sues air traffic control HQ for £5m after WFH engineer ruined 700,000 passengers' travel plans because password failed on one of the busiest days of the year
Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary, speaking at the time, criticised NATS engineers for sitting 'at home in their pyjamas' as passengers were left stranded at airports.

Mail Online
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Val Kilmer's voice falters in his haunting last 'Batman' post two months before his death at 65 following long battle with illness
After a devastating years-long battle with throat cancer and deteriorating health, Val Kilmer has passed away at the age of 65.

Mail Online
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Horror at station Pret a Manger: Police 'challenged a white man carrying a knife' moments before shooting dead him outside Milton Keynes rail station
Detectives told how they arrived at Milton Keynes station yesterday and 'challenged' the man but he 'moved at speed towards officers with the knife before a shot was fired by police'.

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Islanders exposed to toxic chemicals should be offered blood treatment, report says
Scientists for Jersey's government have revealed steps to tackle the health impacts of private water supply contamination.

ZeroHedge News
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Which AI Chatbots Collect The Most Data About You?
Which AI Chatbots Collect The Most Data About You?

The harbinger of the AI revolution, ChatGPT, remains the most popular AI tool on the market, with more than 200 million weekly active users.

But amongst all its competitors, which AI chatbots are collecting the most user data? And why does that matter?

Visual Capitalist's Marcus Lu visualizes data from Surfshark which identified the most popular AI chatbots and analyzed their privacy details on the Apple App Store.



Their findings are as of February 18th, 2025.

Gemini, the Data Collection King

At first place, Google’s Gemini (released March, 2023) collects 22 different data points across 10 categories, from its users.

Data collected ranges from general diagnostics (that all bots in this study collect) to access to contacts (that no other bot identified collects).



Note: The Number of data points collected in each category vary per bot, leading to different totals.

xAI’s Grok (released November, 2023) collects the least unique data points (7).

China’s DeepSeek (released Jan 2025), sits comfortably in the middle of the pack at 11 points.

The kind of data collected by each of these AI tools varies. All of them collected general diagnostics information. However, only Gemini and Perplexity look at purchases.

And then, nearly all but Perplexity.ai and Grok collect user content.

User content is the kind of information that is usually linked to third party data and then sold to advertisers for targeted ads on the platform.

The general rule of thumb when it comes to data privacy is true for AI chatbots also. After all, information is stored on their servers, and those can be breached.

Want to stay up to date on the AI revolution? Check out: Ranked: Jobs Where AI is Most Used for quick insights into the shifting workplace.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 04:15

Border Force
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Transparency data: Small boat activity in the English Channel. Border Force.
Transparency data: Small boat activity in the English Channel. Border Force.

The Hill
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McMahon meeting with House Democrats over Education Department layoffs
Education Secretary Linda McMahon is having a meeting with House Democrats Wednesday over their concerns surrounding the layoffs at the Department of Education, which she and President Trump have been vocal about trying to eliminate entirely.   Rep. Mark Takano (Calif.) and at least ten other Democratic members will meet with McMahon at 9:30 a.m....

Deutsche Welle
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Fact check: Real or fake — can you tell the difference?
Are you a good fact-checker? It is International Fact-checking Day and here you can test yourself: Take our fact-checking quiz and find out if you can distinguish real from fake or manipulated images.

The Guardian (UK)
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Ezra Klein on Trump, Vance and free speech: ‘It feels like we are in one of the darkest imaginable timelines’
The influential US commentator has written a book about how politics can change people’s lives for the better. But first, there are more pressing challenges to address ...Ezra Klein, the New York Times podcast host and progressive media’s undisputed nerd king, starts his new book with something of a palate cleanser for our troubled times. For a few paragraphs, he and his co-author, the Atlantic journalist Derek Thompson, whisk us out of the grim reality of contemporary politics to a world of Abundance (the word they picked as their title).“You open your eyes at dawn and turn in the cool bedsheets,” they purr, before conjuring a near-future utopia where the cost of living crisis is a distant memory. “You live in a cocoon of energy so clean it barely leaves a carbon trace and so cheap you can scarcely find it on your monthly bill.” The fridge is full of fresh fruit and vegetables from skyscraper farms that sit amid rewilded landscapes. This is what we can look forward to, they say, if we sweep away the bureaucratic cobwebs that mean government too often gets in the way of innovation, rather than leading it. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Democrats hail major win as Susan Crawford delivers blow to Trump and Musk in Wisconsin – US politics live
Liberal judge Susan Crawford wins race for seat on Wisconsin supreme court in litmus test for Donald Trump’s and Elon Musk’s popularityLiberal Susan Crawford beats Musk-backed candidateThe UK government will not engage in a “kneejerk” response to any tariffs imposed by Donald Trump, as it warned there will be a “difficult period” ahead in trade relations with the US and called for calm, Alexandra Topping reports.The education secretary Bridget Phillipson said the government had been “working through every eventuality”. “We still have negotiations under way with our US counterparts about securing an economic deal, but we will always act in the national interest and the interest of the British people.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Global investors cautious, gold rises as markets await ‘liberation day’ tariff announcement – business live
Donald Trump to announce latest round of tariffs at 8pm GMTThe sell-off in European stock markets has gathered pace, and pharmaceutical stocks are among the biggest fallers.The Stoxx 600 healthcare index fell as much as 2.5% to its lowest level since December.It’s not surprising that pharma stocks have been caught up in this wave of nervousness.Investors are on tenterhooks as the clock ticks down what’s expected to be the biggest wave of tariffs on US trading partners. It’s been dubbed Liberation day by president Trump, but it’s more like entrapment day, with more countries set to be tangled up in a web of fresh duties.Commissioner Šefčovič updated the tánaiste on the work ongoing at an EU level in its preparation to respond to the expected US announcement on tariffs in the coming hours.They both agreed to keep in close contact in the coming hours and days. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Business Vikings’ in line for payday as deal agreed to create £4bn UK food giant
Icelandic brothers’ ready meal firm Bakkavor to be taken over by sandwich maker GreencoreBusiness live – latest updatesTwo Icelandic brothers, described as “business Vikings”, are in line to make millions after their ready meals company, Bakkavor, agreed a takeover deal with the competitor Greencore, in a move set to create a £4bn food-to-go giant.Greencore, the UK’s largest sandwich maker, said it had agreed to buy its rival Bakkavor in a deal valuing the company at £1.2bn. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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UK won’t engage in ‘kneejerk’ response to Trump tariffs, says minister
Bridget Phillipson warns of ‘difficult period’ ahead for trade, but government ‘working through every eventuality’Business live – latest updatesUK politics liveThe UK government will not engage in a “kneejerk” response to any tariffs imposed by Donald Trump, as it warned there would be a “difficult period” ahead in trade relations with the US and called for calm.The US president is to announce his latest round of tariffs on Wednesday – which he has called “liberation day” – sparking concerns over a global trade war. Continue reading...

BBC World News
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'I didn't feel able to come forward' - Chinese victims tell BBC about serial rapist
Police in London say PhD student Zhenhao Zou's "offending group is far greater" than they had realised.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Three big unknowns ahead of Wednesday's announcement
The president is expected to unveil details of his plans for a wider set of import taxes. But what tariffs and when?

BBC Top Stories (US)
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What to expect from Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs
The BBC's Erin Delmore unpacks the reciprocal taxes the president has promised, as his trade wars continue to escalate.

Russia Today News
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Belgian festival cancels ‘Russians at War’ film

Mail Online
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Panic stations for Labour after Spring Statement: Polls show major hit for party in wake of Chancellor's package - with alarm mounting over local elections
A More in Common poll has found Labour dropped three points of support over the past week. Keir Starmer's outfit was on 21 per cent, behind the Tories on 26 per cent and Reform on 25 per cent.

Mail Online
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Ant McPartlin and Declan Donnelly enjoy a double date with their wives Anne-Marie and Ali as they head to the West End for a night at the theatre
Ant McPartlin and Declan Donnelly were seen enjoying a night out with their wives Anne-Marie Corbett and Ali Astall on London's West End on Tuesday night.

Mail Online
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Influencer, 30, sues Harley Street plastic surgeon for £1.7million after claiming 'overly large' breast implants he put in ruined her career
Danielle Mansutti says she was left with 'disfigured' breasts and a 'very poor cosmetic appearance' after undergoing three operations between December 2020 and May 2021.

Mail Online
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Scientists pinpoint amount of exercise needed per week to fend off cancer, disease
Working out for merely two days a week may be enough to keep cancerous tumors and heart diseases at bay, a study suggests.

Mail Online
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BBC viewers brand Stacey Solomon and Joe Swash's new reality show 'utter trash' - and blast BBC for 'colossal waste of public money'
In a bid to bare the 'highs and lows' of their relationship , the new programme titled Stacey & Joe: This Is Us premiered on Tuesday evening and consists of six episodes in total.

Mail Online
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Mother-of-three who overcame 28-year drink and drugs battle to found charity is banned from driving after police saw her picking up mobile phone while at red light
Cassandra Williamson, 41, who founded a charity to support recovering addicts, was caught by a police officer after her phone fell from its holder while she was driving through Liverpool.

Mail Online
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Watch chaotic moment Jeremy Kyle falls and crashes to the ground just minutes into Kate Garraway's Life Stories
The presenter, 59, appeared on a new episode of the chat show after six years away from ITV , following his show's cancellation.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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The generation that has never known smoke-filled pubs
The legislation was brought across the country to reduce the effect of second-hand smoke.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Heathrow Airport boss apologises for fire shutdown
Airport boss Thomas Woldbye apologises to the passengers whose journeys were disrupted last month.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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The influencers who want the world to have more babies - and say the White House is on their side
Pronatalists have long courted controversy - but since Trump was sworn in for the second time, the evangelising of some members of this controversial fringe group has reached new levels.

Deutsche Welle
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Donald Trump's crackdown on diversity and inclusion
The US government has unleashed a massive campaign against programs for diversity, equity and inclusion. Universities and companies are being curbed, names erased. Experts believe this is part of a larger strategy.

Mail Online
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Huge ITV daytime show CANCELLED as it's pulled from screens this week and replaced in major schedule shake-up
ITV viewers are in for a big surprise as their favourite daytime shows get an unexpected shake-up this week.

Mail Online
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My smart meter hasn't worked for four years! What you need to know about new payouts if your meter breaks
Ofgem has proposed that any household with a broken smart meter should be paid £40 compensation if their supplier doesn't fix it within 90 days.

Mail Online
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How Top Gun's Val Kilmer seduced some of Hollywood's most beautiful women and was the only man to ever dump Cher - but admitted one heartbreak left him 'crying for days'
The Hollywood star dated some of the world's most famous women, seducing the likes of Cindy Crawford, Angelina Jolie and Daryl Hannah, marrying just once to Joanne Whalley.

Mail Online
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Easy-to-miss throat cancer symptoms everyone needs to know - as Batman star Val Kilmer dies 10 year after being diagnosed
The screen icon was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014 and underwent surgery, including a tracheotomy which significantly impacted his speech.

The Guardian (UK)
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Can the UK fix its broken prison system? – video
The prison population in England and Wales has doubled in the last 30 years, with overcrowding now endemic across the system. But the government's strategy of easing this pressure by granting early release to thousands of offenders has had a knock-on effect. With many lacking stability on the outside, reoffending rates are high, exacerbating the existing problem. The Guardian visited Wales to see this playing out on the streets of Bridgend; and the Netherlands, to find out why the Dutch have closed more than 20 prisons in the past 10 years, seemingly in complete contrast to the struggles in Britain - and despite increasing levels of more serious crime seen across the countryWith thanks to Prison Escape Utrecht and Tap Social Movement Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Democrats hail major win as Susan Crawford delivers blow to Trump and Musk in Wisconsin – US politics live
Liberal judge Susan Crawford wins race for seat on Wisconsin supreme court in litmus test for Donald Trump’s and Elon Musk’s popularity Donald Trump is due announce new tariffs at the White House on Wednesday afternoon and is threatening to unleash a global trade war on what he has called “liberation day”.Global stock markets, corporate executives and economists have all been shaken but no details of Wednesday’s plans have been made available ahead of the announcement. The president is set to speak at 4pm ET (9pm GMT, 10pm CET). White House officials said the implementation of the tariffs would be immediate. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Global investors cautious, gold rises as markets await ‘liberation day’ tariff announcement – business live
Donald Trump to announce latest round of tariffs at 8pm GMTIreland’s deputy prime minister has had a call with the European Commission vice president Maros Sefcovic this morning, adding to a sense of looming crisis of Donald Trump’s tariff plan.Simon Harris’s office said:Commissioner Šefčovič updated the tánaiste on the work ongoing at an EU level in its preparation to respond to the expected US announcement on tariffs in the coming hours.They both agreed to keep in close contact in the coming hours and days.With channel inventory now normalised, Raspberry Pi anticipates a steady build-up in demand throughout the year, positioning us strongly despite ongoing macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainties. The projected pace of market recovery, coupled with the timing of embedded design wins, strengthens confidence in solid and sustainable sales growth in full-year 2025. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Francesca Jones taken off court in wheelchair after mid-match collapse
Briton falls to ground during final set of match in BogotáWatson defeated in opening round of Charleston OpenThe British tennis player Francesca Jones has been forced to withdraw from the Colsanitas Cup in Bogotá after collapsing on court.In footage of the incident posted on social media, the 24-year-old appeared to stagger after failing to return a serve from Argentina’s Julia Riera in the third set of their round-of-32 match and was unable to return to play. She fell to the ground and was removed from the court in a wheelchair. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump’s ‘liberation day’ tariffs: what’s at stake for UK and EU?
What is expected from Donald Trump’s tariffs on US imports and how will EU and UK leaders react? The EU and the UK are bracing for a damaging trade war with the US, as Donald Trump is expected to implement his threat to impose tariffs on imports from Europe.For weeks, he has named 2 April “liberation day”, with the unveiling of a tariff plan to reverse what he called “unfair practices that have been ripping off our country for decades”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Ban bosses from ‘improper’ use of NDAs for low-paid workers, says ex-minister
Louise Haigh calls for end to two-tier system over complaints of sexual misconduct or harassmentBosses should be banned from the “improper” use of non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) for low-paid workers in the service, retail or hospitality sectors, a former cabinet minister has said, as she calls for an end of a two-tier system for victims.Louise Haigh, the former transport secretary, has urged MPs to look beyond high-profile cases linked to the #MeToo movement and advocate for workers in insecure employment who may not have “the means and the confidence to pursue their employers through the courts” who can challenge the NDAs. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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On board a Royal Navy destroyer preparing to take a voyage through troubled waters
"Action stations!" a voice barks.

Sky News Home
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Heathrow bosses 'warned about substation' days before major power outage, MP committee hears
Heathrow Airport bosses had been warned of potential substation failures less than a week before a major power outage closed the airport for a day, a committee of MPs has heard.

Slashdot
Open 
James Webb Space Telescope Reveals That Most Galaxies Rotate Clockwise
The James Webb Space Telescope has revealed that a surprising majority of galaxies rotate clockwise, challenging the long-held belief in a directionally uniform universe; this anomaly could suggest either our universe originated inside a rotating black hole or that astronomers have been misinterpreting the universe's expansion due to observational biases. Smithsonian Magazine reports: The problem is that astronomers have long posited that galaxies should be evenly split between rotating in one direction or the other, astronomer Dan Weisz from the University of California, Berkeley, who was not involved with the study, wrote for Astronomy back in 2017. "This stems from the idea that we live in an 'isotropic' universe, which means that the universe looks roughly the same in every direction. By extension, galaxies shouldn't have a preferred direction of spin from our perspective," he added. According to Shamir, there are two strong potential explanations for this discrepancy. One explanation is that the universe came into existence while in rotation. This theory would support what's known as black hole cosmology: the hypothesis that our universe exists within a black hole that exists within another parent universe. In other words, black holes create universes within themselves, meaning that the black holes in our own universe also lead to other baby universes.

"A preferred axis in our universe, inherited by the axis of rotation of its parent black hole, might have influenced the rotation dynamics of galaxies, creating the observed clockwise-counterclockwise asymmetry," Nikodem Poplawski, a theoretical physicist at the University of New Haven who was not involved in the study, tells Space.com's Robert Lea. "The discovery by the JWST that galaxies rotate in a preferred direction would support the theory of black holes creating new universes, and I would be extremely excited if these findings are confirmed."

Another possible explanation involves the Milky Way's rotation. Due to an effect called the Doppler shift, astronomers expect galaxies rotating opposite to the Milky Way's motion to appear brighter, which could explain their overrepresentation in telescopic surveys. "If that is indeed the case, we will need to re-calibrate our distance measurements for the deep universe," Shamir explains in the statement. "The re-calibration of distance measurements can also explain several other unsolved questions in cosmology such as the differences in the expansion rates of the universe and the large galaxies that according to the existing distance measurements are expected to be older than the universe itself."
The findings have been published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Russia Today News
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US not ready to fight China – Trump’s pick for top general

BBC UK News
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'Don't deport us over health issue,' say couple
A Macclesfield woman fears she will have to leave Australia due to her medical condition.

Sky News Home
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Heathrow bosses 'warned about substation' days before major power outage, MP committee hears
Heathrow Airport bosses had been warned of a potential substation failures less than a week before a major power outage closed the airport for a day, a committee of MPs has heard.

Mail Online
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Tom Fletcher rushed to A&E after shock health condition made him look like he'd been 'smashed in the face'
The former McFly singer and Strictly star, 39, suffers from a rare eye condition called uveitis, which causes inflammation inside part of the eye.

Mail Online
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A look back at Val Kilmer's most iconic roles as Batman and Top Gun star passes away aged 65 after long health battle
The late Val Kilmer was one of Hollywood's most prominent leading men in the 1990s, famed for his iconic roles in Top Gun, Batman and The Doors.

Mail Online
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Most popular celebrity inspired baby names in the world revealed - including the ones inspired by reality TV stars
The top celebrity inspired baby names from around the world have been revealed, with some of the biggest stars in Hollywood having made their stamp.

Mail Online
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Trump's 25% tariffs on US car imports could threaten 25,000 UK jobs, think tank warns
The Institute for Public Policy Research said the US President's levies on UK-made cars entering the US would put 'extreme pressure' on Britain's car makers'.

Mail Online
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China depicts Taiwan's president as a cartoon parasite held by chopsticks over fire - while Beijing armed forces surrounds island in show of strength 
China's military released a series of propaganda videos in quick succession, depicting Chinese warships and fighter jets encircling Taiwan.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Analysis: Trump poised to reshape global economy and how world does business
The BBC’s economics editor Faisal Islam explains why a US tariff on goods imported into America is such a big deal for both consumers and countries.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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What are tariffs and why is Trump using them?
Tariffs are a key part of Trump's political vision, but economists fear they could spark a trade war.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Watch: What to expect from Wednesday's announcement
The BBC's Erin Delmore unpacks the reciprocal taxes the president has promised, as his trade wars continue to escalate.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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UK couple's death in New Zealand probed as murder-suicide
The bodies were found after officers forced entry to a house in Roseneath, near Wellington, on Monday.

Autosport F1
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Albon meets Thai PM to show support for F1 race in Bangkok
The chances of a Formula 1 race in Thailand continue to improve as Williams driver Alex Albon became the latest representative of the series to meet with the country’s prime minister.Hopes of a grand prix around the streets of Bangkok have existed for some time but the process was stepped up last month when F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali held positive talks with prime minister Paetongtarn ...Keep reading

Autosport F1
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Honda won’t “interfere” with Tsunoda’s F1 future amid Red Bull split
Honda Racing Corporation president Koji Watanabe says Yuki Tsunoda’s Formula 1 future at Red Bull lies in his own hands, with the Japanese brand undertaking a new project with the Aston Martin outfit in the world championship.Tsunoda has received a long elusive promotion to Red Bull’s main team for the Japanese Grand Prix; the Milton Keynes-based squad made the drastic call of an ...Keep reading

Mac Rumours
Open 
iOS 18.4 Bug Seemingly Resurrects Previously Deleted iPhone Apps
Apple's latest iOS 18.4 software update appears to be causing long-deleted apps to reappear on some users' iPhones, based on corroborating reports on forums and social media.





Several Reddit threads (1,2,3,4) and posts on Apple's Community Support pages over the last 24 hours are filled with reports from users who, after having updated to iOS 18.4, immediately discovered third-party apps and/or games installed on their device that were not there before.



Going on the reports, the iOS 18.4 update has manifested a bug that is causing apps to reappear – since in most cases it appears that the apps had been deleted by the users months or even years ago and long forgotten. Apple released iOS 18.4 on Monday.



The behavior doesn't seem to be related to Apple's Automatic Downloads option either. The setting enables automatic downloads of apps purchased on other Apple devices. However, many affected users say they do not own another Apple device.



Likewise, the bug is impacting users with devices that have never been jailbroken and have never used an alternative marketplace outside of the App Store.



It's not clear how prevalent the glitch is, but not everyone is affected, suggesting it could be related to location or device model. As it stands, the current solution for affected users is just to re-delete the reappearing app while we await further details around the issue.



(Thanks, Tanner!)This article, 'iOS 18.4 Bug Seemingly Resurrects Previously Deleted iPhone Apps' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Russia Today News
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France launches new probe linked to Le Pen trial – AFP

Mail Online
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Concern grows as over-the-counter pills taken by MILLIONS blamed for death of a 32 year-old... after drugs are linked to dementia
Mounting evidence suggests the medicines, widely believed to be a safer alternative to prescription drugs such as benzodiazepines, may be just as dangerous.

The Guardian (UK)
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Global investors cautious, gold rises as markets await ‘liberation day’ tariff announcement – business live
Donald Trump to announce latest round of tariffs at 8pm GMTRaspberry Pi, whose popular minicomputers are sold around the world and which floated on the London stock market last year, has reported a hefty fall in annual profits as it battled inventory issues, but an upbeat outlook drove its shares higher.In its first annual results since the IPO, the Cambridge-based company reported a 2% dip in annual revenues to $259.5m, and a 57% drop in pretax profits to $16.3m.With channel inventory now normalised, Raspberry Pi anticipates a steady build-up in demand throughout the year, positioning us strongly despite ongoing macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainties. The projected pace of market recovery, coupled with the timing of embedded design wins, strengthens confidence in solid and sustainable sales growth in full-year 2025.Raspberry Pi’s debut last year seemed a key point of sentiment for the IPO market and London listings, in part because it was a developing story. While on the face of it the comparisons with 2023 don’t make for great reading, there are a few things going on beneath the surface and it is worth seeing these in context.Among them, inventory issues were an industry-wide challenge for much of the reporting period, but improved during the final quarter and into 2025. In addition, 2023 was an exceptionally strong year for Raspberry Pi and was always going to make for a tough comparator. In terms of development, a strong product release schedule highlighted today offers encouragement for this year and beyond. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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UK won’t engage in ‘kneejerk’ response to Trump tariffs, says minister
Bridget Phillipson warns of ‘difficult period’ ahead for trade, but government ‘working through every eventuality’Business live – latest updatesUK politics liveThe UK government will not engage in a “kneejerk” response to any tariffs imposed by Donald Trump, as it warned there will be a “difficult period” ahead in trade relations with the US and called for calm.The US president is to announce his latest round of tariffs on Wednesday – which he has called “liberation day” – sparking concerns over a global trade war. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
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Hostinger has just added a super useful free feature for SMBs looking to get visitors and customers to their websites

TechRadar News
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Nintendo Switch 2 Direct live build-up: our final predictions and the latest rumors with the start time just hours away

Digital Trends
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Nintendo Switch 2 Direct live: all the build-up ahead of the console reveal
The Nintendo Switch 2 Direct reveal event is today, and here at Digital Trends we’ll have all the Switch 2 news as it happens, live.

Mail Online
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Cory Booker is hit with wild diaper claims after breaking record for longest Senate speech in 68 years
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Mail Online
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BBC Top Stories (US)
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The influencers who want the world to have more babies - and say the White House is on their side
Some members of this fringe group have long courted controversy - but since Trump was sworn in for the second time, their evangelising has reached new levels.

The Guardian (UK)
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US officials challenge Ofcom over online safety laws’ impact on free speech
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Leaked messages reveal prison staff violence towards inmates
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We are still investigating the root cause of the outage and actively looking for a solution. Further updates will be provided as soon as possible.

Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 03:38

Update: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 12:45

Edited: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 09:10

Status: Outage

Maintenance: None

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A tale of two pavements: One side of road in Labour-run Birmingham is piled high with rubbish as rats 'as big as dogs' run wild - while other side run by Tory council is spotless
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US Treasury Targets Hezbollah's Iran-Backed Aid Network
US Treasury Targets Hezbollah's Iran-Backed Aid Network

Authored by Naveen Athrappully via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Individuals and entities helping to finance the Hezbollah terrorist group were sanctioned by the Department of the Treasury on March 28.
Ambulances transport the coffins of Hezbollah fighters and civilians killed in the recent war with Israel, during their funeral procession in the southern border village of Kfar Kila, Lebanon, on March 9, 2025. Rabih Daher/AFP via Getty Images

The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) “is designating five individuals and three associated companies involved in a Lebanon-based sanctions evasion network supporting the Hizballah finance team,” the agency said in a March 28 statement.

Hezbollah, also known as Hizballah, is an Iran-backed terrorist group based in Lebanon. Following the Hamas terrorist attack against Israel in October 2023, Hezbollah began firing thousands of rockets and mortars into Israel.

According to the Treasury Department, “the Hizballah finance team uses front companies to generate millions of dollars in revenue for Hizballah and support the group’s terrorist activities.”

The team manages several commercial projects and oil smuggling networks to generate revenue, which is eventually transferred to Hezbollah, according to the Treasury. This is typically done in conjunction with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds Force (IRGC-QF).

The individuals and companies that OFAC has sanctioned facilitate and conceal oil sales for IRGC-QF and offer the terrorist group access to formal financial systems.

For instance, one of the sanctioned companies is Ravee SARL, a Lebanese business “that aims to generate profits for Hizballah from trade deals related to veterinary products,” the Treasury said.

One sanctioned individual, Mahasin Mahmud Murtada, is a “registered owner of several companies associated with Hizballah’s commercial investments,” it said.

With the new sanctions, all property of the designated individuals and companies that is located in the United States is “blocked and must be reported to OFAC,” the agency said. U.S. citizens are prohibited from engaging in any transactions involving the sanctioned individuals.

“Violations of U.S. sanctions may result in the imposition of civil or criminal penalties on U.S. and foreign persons. OFAC may impose civil penalties for sanctions violations,” the agency stated.

Acting Undersecretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Bradley T. Smith said OFAC’s latest actions aim to “expose and disrupt the schemes that fund Hizballah’s terrorist violence against the Lebanese people and their neighbors.”

“These evasion networks strengthen Iran and its proxy Hizballah and undermine the courageous efforts of the Lebanese people to build a Lebanon for all its citizens,” he said.

Disrupting Terrorist Financing

The U.S. government previously imposed sanctions against entities for assisting Hezbollah.

In 2021, the Treasury announced sanctions on multiple Chinese nationals and entities for financing the terrorist group.

Many of the companies were based in Hong Kong and were directly or indirectly owned or controlled by Morteza Minaye Hashemi, an Iranian businessman living in China who was on the United States’ sanctions list and was accused of funding IRGC-QF.

Hashemi laundered tens of millions of dollars through foreign exchange and gold sales, transferring the money to IRGC-QF and Hezbollah, the department said at the time.

Last year, a Lebanese national pleaded guilty to circumventing U.S. sanctions to finance Hezbollah.

The individual was accused of coercing an individual to liquidate real estate assets in Michigan and transfer hundreds of thousands of dollars to Lebanon without the necessary licenses.

Israel is also targeting Hezbollah’s financial channels to counter the terrorist group amid its conflict with Hamas.

In October 2024, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) hit branches of the U.S.-sanctioned Al-Qard Al-Hasan Association in Beirut via multiple strikes.

That entity helped Hezbollah store billions of dollars in funds for its terror operations, according to the IDF. Hezbollah reportedly used the organization to buy armaments and weapon storage facilities, pay salaries of its members, and conduct terror activities.

Meanwhile, the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah intensified recently when the Jewish state’s military conducted an air strike in Beirut on March 28. This was the first attack on Lebanon’s capital city after Israel and the terrorist group agreed to a cease-fire in November.

The strike targeted a Hezbollah drone storage site, the military said, adding that the operation was carried out after rockets were fired at Israel from Lebanon earlier in the morning “in blatant violation of the understandings between Israel and Lebanon.”

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 03:30

Mail Online
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The Guardian (UK)
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Balomania review – those magnificent Brazilians and their flying balloons
Documentary follows the baloeiros, who illegally build and release huge decorated balloons in cities, from where they can travel hundreds of milesAn intriguing film set in Brazil, first shown last year at the CPH:DOX documentary festival in Copenhagen, in which expatriate Danish film-maker Sissel Morell Dargis takes a look at a unique grassroots cultural phenomenon: the baloeiros, the ballooners. These are groups of young men, as secretive and loyal to each other as Freemasons, who (illegally) build and release huge decorated balloons in cities, from where they can travel hundreds of miles. Why? As kind of graffiti, or a community self-expression, or situationist artform, or just a subversive gesture of pure joie de vivre that does not need or admit of any explanation.The baloeiros are harassed by the police, on the ostensible grounds that they are part of gang culture, and the authorities encourage local people to inform on those they suspect of building and transporting a balloon. But baloeiros are cheerfully committed to their own kind of public-access artistry. The balloons show colossal images of Sly Stallone and Luciano Pavarotti – aspirational role models and pop culture icons. As Dargis says: “A flying balloon belongs to everyone, even the police.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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As a child, I was afraid of my friends seeing me pray. Watching Eid live on the BBC was a huge moment | Nadeine Asbali
British Muslims are too often acceptable only when they bake cakes or win medals. Now the nation has had a true insight into our faithIf anything is going to get me to turn on BBC One early on Eid morning, it’s Eid prayer being televised on a UK terrestrial channel for the first time in British broadcasting history. Held at Bradford Central Mosque, the groundbreaking coverage on Monday followed the entirety of the Eid prayer – starting with Qur’anic recitation, then a sermon in both English and Arabic and the congregational prayer itself, culminating in the customary eid mubarak embraces.For Muslims like me, these scenes are part and parcel of every Eid. The keffiyeh-draped uncles sporting orange beards dyed with henna, some to emulate the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) and some simply to hide their grey hairs; the children using the congregation as an assault course and scouting out the auntie who is handing out the best sweets; fancy clothes, henna-patterned palms and smiling faces; people high on both the spirituality of the just-passed holy month and probably too much sugar. This is the stuff Eid is made of, but watching it unfold on the nation’s main TV channel was a refreshing novelty – and I found it strangely affirming, as well as a little emotional, to witness.Nadeine Asbali is the author of Veiled Threat: On Being Visibly Muslim in Britain, and a secondary school teacher in London Continue reading...

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Israel says it will seize 'large areas' of Gaza and 'incorporate' them as 'security zones' in a bid to eradicate Hamas
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Slashdot
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Why Watts Should Replace mAh as Essential Spec for Mobile Devices
Tech manufacturers continue misleading consumers with impressive-sounding but less useful specs like milliamp-hours and megahertz, while hiding the one measurement that matters most: watts. The Verge argues that the watt provides the clearest picture of a device's true capabilities by showing how much power courses through chips and how quickly batteries drain. With elementary math, consumers could easily calculate battery life by dividing watt-hours by power consumption. The Verge: The Steam Deck gaming handheld is my go-to example of how handy watts can be. With a 15-watt maximum processor wattage and up to 9 watts of overhead for other components, a strenuous game drains its 49Wh battery in roughly two hours flat. My eight-year-old can do that math: 15 plus 9 is 24, and 24 times 2 is 48. You can fit two hour-long 24-watt sessions into 48Wh, and because you have 49Wh, you're almost sure to get it.

With the least strenuous games, I'll sometimes see my Steam Deck draining the battery at a speed of just 6 watts -- which means I can get eight hours of gameplay because 6 watts times 8 hours is 48Wh, with 1Wh remaining in the 49Wh battery. Unlike megahertz, wattage also indicates sustained performance capability, revealing whether a processor can maintain high speeds or will throttle due to thermal constraints. Watts is also already familiar to consumers through light bulbs and power bills, but manufacturers persist with less transparent metrics that make direct comparisons difficult.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Deutsche Welle
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Myanmar: Earthquake rescues continue as junta refuses truce
The number of fatalities following a major earthquake is expected to surpass 3,000. At the same time, rescue workers were able to save a man from the rubble five days after the quake.

Mail Online
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Arsenal legend Jens Lehmann 'threw up and struggled to stand' in drink-driving arrest while in his Oktoberfest lederhosen, after split from wife and chainsaw attack on neighbour's house
The 55-year-old was reportedly stopped by police at around 1:30am while in lederhosen after enjoying Oktoberfest celebrations in his home country last year.

The Guardian (UK)
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France’s left is celebrating Le Pen’s conviction. But gloating will make it harder to beat the far right | Georgios Samaras
Beware the backlash strategies used by Trump and Berlusconi. It is vital that the National Rally leader isn’t able to capitalise on this verdictThe verdict is in: the National Rally (NR) and its leader, Marine Le Pen, have been found to have employed fictitious European parliament assistants between 2004 and 2016. The fraudulent scheme enabled the misappropriation of around €2.9m in European funds, and Le Pen has now been barred from holding public office for five years. Could this mark the end for the National Rally? Highly unlikely – and the reason lies in the party’s strategy.During the trial, Le Pen deliberately maintained silence in response to the allegations – a tactic some outlets dismissed as evidence of a weak defence, even questioning her credibility. Yet this quiet is far from a sign of weakness; it reflects a long-established approach that consistently shuns conventional manoeuvres in favour of an intentionally unpredictable stance.Georgios Samaras is assistant professor of public policy at the Policy Institute, King’s College LondonDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Mail Online
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Mail Online
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The Guardian (UK)
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Owner ByteDance required to find non-Chinese buyer for video app’s American operations by SaturdayDonald Trump is preparing to consider a final proposal to decide the future of TikTok before a deadline for the app to find a non-Chinese buyer or face a US ban.The US vice-president, JD Vance, the commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, the national security adviser, Mike Waltz, and the director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, will meet in the Oval Office on Wednesday to discuss the issue, Reuters reported. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Known for his roles in Kiss Kiss Bang Bang and Tombstone, the prolific actor’s cause of death was pneumoniaRemembering Val Kilmer: an ethereally handsome actor who evolved into droll self-awarenessA life in picturesVal Kilmer, the actor best known for his roles in Top Gun, Batman Forever and The Doors, has died at the age of 65.His daughter Mercedes told the New York Times that the cause of death was pneumonia. Kilmer was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014 and later recovered, after treatment with chemotherapy and trachea surgery that had reduced his ability to speak and breathe. Continue reading...

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Deutsche Welle
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Israel announces plan to seize ‘large areas’ in Gaza – latest updates
Defence minister Israel Katz says large areas of the territory will be seized and added to the security zones of IsraelAirstrikes continued on Gaza on Wednesday morning after the Israeli defense minister announced that Israel intended to expand its war. In a statement, Israel Katz said the offensive was “expanding to crush and clean the area of terrorists and terrorist infrastructure and capture large areas that will be added to the security zones of the state of Israel.”The move has been condemned by the Hostages Families Forum, who said it appeared that Benjamin Netanyahu’s government were making the return of 59 hostages still held in Gaza by Hamas “a secondary task” that had been “pushed to the bottom of the priority list.”I wish success to the IDF soldiers who are fighting bravely and powerfully in Gaza for the return of the kidnapped and the defeat of Hamas. The goal of Operation “Strength and Sword” is first and foremost to increase pressure for the release of all the hostages in the face of Hamas’ refusal.Expanding the operation this morning will increase the pressure on the Hamas murderers and also on the population in Gaza and advance the achievement of the sacred and important goal for all of us. I call on the residents of Gaza to act now to remove Hamas and return all the hostages. This is the only way to end the war. Continue reading...

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Turkey Moves To Take Control Of Strategic Airbase In Central Syria
Turkey Moves To Take Control Of Strategic Airbase In Central Syria

Via Middle East Eye

Turkey has begun efforts to take control of Syria's Tiyas air base, also known as T4, and is preparing to deploy air defence systems there, sources familiar with the matter told Middle East Eye. Construction plans for the site are also reportedly under way.

Ankara and Damascus have been negotiating a defense pact since December, following the ousting of Bashar al-Assad. The agreement would see Turkey provide air cover and military protection for Syria’s new government, which currently lacks a functioning military.
Sources say Turkey intends to deploy air defence systems like the Hisar (pictured) at T4 air base in Syria (handout).

Although Turkish officials had previously downplayed the possibility of a military presence in Syria, describing such plans as premature, negotiations have quietly continued.

While Israel views a Turkish military presence in Syria as a potential threat, Ankara aims to stabilize the country by leveraging its military capabilities and filling the power vacuum left by the withdrawal of Russia and Iran.

Turkey also intends to intensify its fight against the Islamic State (IS) group, a key condition for the United States to consider withdrawing from the region.

A source familiar with the matter told MEE that Turkey has begun moving to take control of the T4 air base, located near Palmyra in central Syria. "A Hisar-type air defense system will be deployed to T4 to provide air cover for the base," the source said.

"Once the system is in place, the base will be reconstructed and expanded with necessary facilities. Ankara also plans to deploy surveillance and armed drones, including those with extended strike capabilities."

The source added that the base would help Turkey establish aerial control across the region and support its efforts to combat IS, which still has cells operating in the Syrian desert. 

Ankara eventually aims to establish a layered air defense system in and around the base, which would have short-, medium- and long-range air defense capabilities against a variety of threats, from jets to drones to missiles. 

A second source noted that the presence of Turkish air defense systems and drones would likely deter Israel from launching air strikes in the area. The Turkish defense ministry declined to comment. 

Unnerving Israel

Israel has regularly targeted Syrian military installations since Assad's government collapsed in December, with a recent surge in operations around T4. Last week, the Israeli air force struck T4 and the Palmyra air base, targeting runways and strategic assets.

An Israeli security source told the media on Monday that any Turkish air base in Syria would undermine Israel’s freedom of operation. "This is a potential threat that we oppose," the source said.
Map via BBC

Tensions between Turkey and Israel have escalated since the start of Israel's war on Gaza in 2023, ending a brief period of reconciliation between the two countries. The collapse of the Assad government and Turkey’s emergence as a dominant power in Syria have further alarmed Israel, which now sees Ankara as a potentially greater threat in the region than Iran.

"We targeted the T4 military base recently to send a message: we will not allow any threat to our operational freedom in the air," the Israeli security source told the Jerusalem Post.

The first MEE source also revealed that Ankara is considering the temporary deployment of S-400 air defence systems to T4 or Palmyra to secure the airspace during reconstruction efforts. However, no final decision has been made and Russia would need to give its approval.

Meanwhile, Ankara and Washington have been in talks about lifting the sanctions imposed on Turkey over its purchase of the Russian-made S-400 system, which led to Turkey's removal from the F-35 fighter jet program in 2019.


Turkey is not building a military presence in Syria to fight ISIS, that’s a lie. They helped bring them over. Last time the two were neighbors, they were saluting each other. https://t.co/CZ593HRmqT
— Bassem (@BBassem7) April 1, 2025
In a phone call last month, US President Donald Trump and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan discussed possible ways for Turkey to rejoin the program. Under US law, Turkey must relinquish possession of the S-400 system to be readmitted.

Turkish officials have proposed deactivating the system by disassembling and storing it, or potentially relocating it to a Turkish-controlled base outside of Turkey. However, Israel strongly opposes any move that would allow Ankara access to the F-35, arguing it would erode Israel’s qualitative military edge in the region.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 02:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Top German Politicians Are Calling For Resumption Of Russian Gas
Top German Politicians Are Calling For Resumption Of Russian Gas

In Europe, the lure of a return to cheap energy is ever-present, and that conversation is becoming easier as the Trump administration in Washington pushes hard for ceasefire negotiations with Moscow.

Senior German politicians are already calling for a resumption of ties with Russia. For example Michael Kretschmer, a senior member of Friedrich Merz’s centre-right Christian Democrats, is now arguing that EU sanctions on Russia are "completely out of date" as they increasingly openly contradict "what the Americans are doing."
The CDU’s Michael Kretschmer, via dpa

Financial Times in a fresh report quoted Kretschmer's words to the German press agency DPA as follows: "When you realize that you’re weakening yourself more than your opponent, then you have to think about whether all of this is right."

The same publication has observed the expected immediate backlash to the statements as follows:


Kretschmer, who is also a long-standing opponent of weapons deliveries to Ukraine, is the latest in a string of figures from both Merz’s centre-right CDU and the centre-left Social Democrats to have gone public in recent weeks with calls to resume economic or energy ties with Russia.

That has created a problem for Merz — who is all but certain to be Germany’s next chancellor — as well as for his likely coalition partners in the SPD at a time when he is trying to cast himself as a strong partner for Ukraine and for Europe. Germany’s Green party, which is strongly pro-Kyiv, called on Sunday for Merz to clamp down on “friends of Putin” in his party. 


But Merz hasn't himself actively tried to silence this growing desire in some political circles for rapprochement with Russia.

But Bloomberg reported Monday, "The co-head of Germany’s Social Democrats party and frontrunner to become the next finance minister Lars Klingbeil dismissed swirling speculation over reviving pipeline gas deliveries from Russia after a potential peace deal for Ukraine."

And as we highlighted, TotalEnergies’ chief executive Patrick Pouyanne said last week:


“I would not be surprised if two out of the four (came) back to stream, not four out of the four,” Patrick Pouyanne said at an industry event in Germany’s capital city, Berlin, as carried by Reuters.

“There is no way to be competitive against Russian gas with LNG coming from wherever it is,” the executive added.


Meanwhile, both Hungary and Slovakia not only continue bypassing Ukraine for imports of Russian gas - after Ukraine broke from the transit of Russian gas on January 1st - but are actually boosting these supplies.

Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto announced on Tuesday that the Veľké Zlievce/Balassagyarmat interconnection border point from Hungary to Slovakia has been brought to full capacity due to the stoppage through Ukraine.
Source: EIA

"We managed to solve the problem of natural gas supplies to Slovakia and Hungary, despite the fact that Ukraine created very serious difficulties for us. To ensure reliable gas supplies to Slovakia via Hungary even with the cessation of its transit through Ukraine, we had to increase the capacity of the connecting gas pipeline between our countries," the FM told a press briefing.

"Today, the gas pipeline between Hungary and Slovakia is operating at increased capacity. We have now increased the capacity of this pipeline by 900 million cubic meters per year. Until now, 2.6 billion cubic meters were transported between the two countries per year. Starting today, this volume will increase to 3.5 billion cubic meters," Szijjarto noted.

He added that "compared to last year's record volume, the volume of natural gas transported through Hungary to Slovakia has increased by 50% in the first three months of this year."

Tyler Durden
Wed, 04/02/2025 - 02:45

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F1 - 2025 Japanese GP Schedule of Press Conferences
Sport newsDATETIMEDRIVER / TEAM MEMBERThursday, 3 April1230hrs 1300hrsPierre Gasly (Alpine)George Russell (Mercedes)Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls)Charles Leclerc (Ferrari)Nico Hülkenberg (Kick Sauber)Yuki Tsunoda (Red Bull)Friday, 4 AprilPress Conference: 1330hrsTV Pen: 1400hrsAyao Komatsu (Haas)Andrew Shovlin (Mercedes)Laurent Mekies (Racing Bulls)Saturday, 5 AprilPost-QualifyingTop three fastest driversSunday, 6 AprilPost-RaceFirst three finishing drivers FIA Formula One World ChampionshipFormula 1F1SEASON 2025SportCircuit1SportFIA Formula One World ChampionshipCircuitF1SEASON 2025Formula 100Wednesday, April 2, 2025 - 5:36amWednesday, April 2, 2025 - 5:36am

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F1 - 2025 Japanese Grand Prix Preview
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The B team? First XIs packed with players whose names begin with same letter | The Knowledge
Plus: a 972 score in Scrabble, the same stadium name across multiple grounds, and 48 league appearances in one seasonMail us with your questions and answers“The other day in their Women’s Champions League match against Manchester City, Chelsea fielded a back four of Bronze, Bright, Björn and Baltimore,” emails Asad Butt. “Are there other examples of this in defence, midfield or attack?”Back in 2017, we answered a question regarding men’s teams fielding three or more players with the same first name, with five Johns starting in an England XI against Switzerland in 1948: John Aston, John Haines, John Hancocks, John (‘Jack’) Rowley and John (‘Jackie’) Milburn all featuring. As mentioned by Asad, Chelsea fielded a back four beginning with the same surname letter against Manchester City earlier this month (plus Aggie Beever-Jones in the first leg). But we can do better than that. Continue reading...

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Bernabéu erupts as Rüdiger’s late show seals Copa del Rey final spot for Madrid
Real Madrid 4-4 Real Sociedad (agg 5-4)Defender heads dramatic extra-time winnerAt one minute past midnight a self-declared madman sent the Santiago Bernabéu into a state of delirium and Real Madrid into the final of the Copa del Rey. El Loco leapt above the Real Sociedad defence and into the stands at the north end of this stadium, where supporters had seen their team go and do it again, their way. It had been long, it had been wild, and at the end of the night, somehow they were the ones celebrating, which it seems they always are. Madrid did not win and were not always very good until they were irresistible, but it was enough.Three times they had trailed but ultimately a draw, secured by the thumping forehead of Antonio Rüdiger in the 115th minute, was enough. A game that went from 0-1 to 1-1, 1-3 to 3-3, and then 3-4 finally finished 4-4 deep into extra time. Continue reading...

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Who Liverpool should sign if Salah, Van Dijk and Alexander-Arnold leave
Liverpool could lose three of their best players this summer. Who should they target in the transfer window?By WhoScoredTrent Alexander-Arnold is expected to leave for Real Madrid this summer, with Liverpool likely to dip into the market to secure a new right-back. They will need to sign a full-back capable of replicating Alexander-Arnold’s attacking threat, which will prove easier said than done. The 26-year-old has set up six goals and 51 shooting chances for teammates this season, making him one of the most creative defenders in the league. Continue reading...

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Israel announces plan to seize ‘large areas’ in Gaza – latest updates
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Israel-Gaza war: Israeli defence minister announces expansion of military operations in Gaza – latest updates
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Family is accidentally photobombed by one of the world's most famous men
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Val Kilmer: A brilliant, underrated and 'difficult' film star
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Val Kilmer, star of Top Gun and The Doors, dies aged 65
Known for his roles in Batman Forever, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, and Tombstone, the prolific actor’s cause of death was pneumoniaRemembering Val Kilmer: an ethereally handsome actor who evolved into droll self-awarenessA life in picturesVal Kilmer, the actor best known for his roles in Top Gun, Batman Forever and The Doors, has died at the age of 65.His daughter Mercedes told the New York Times that the cause of death was pneumonia. Kilmer was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014 and later recovered, after treatment with chemotherapy and trachea surgery that had reduced his ability to speak and breathe. Continue reading...

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Defence minister Israel Katz says large areas of the territory would be seized and added to the security zones of Israel. Follow the latest developmentsPalestinian news agency Wafa reports continued activity by Israeli security forces inside the Israeli-occupied West Bank. On Wednesday morning the agency reported a 33-year-old man had been shot and killed by Israel’s forces in Nablus. It reported that another Palestinian was injured in Nablus when they were run over by an Israeli military vehicle.In Hebron, seven Palestinians are reported to have been detained by Israeli forces, and there are reports of further detentions in Tulkarm and the Nour Shams camp.Did you decide that we are sacrificing hostages for capturing land? Instead of getting the hostages out in a deal and ending the war, Israel’s government is sending more soldiers to Gaza to fight in the same places that they already fought over and over again. Continue reading...

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Top Gun and Batman actor Val Kilmer dies aged 65
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Justin Bieber hints at major tension in Hailey Bieber marriage after horrifying livestream
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Top Gun and Batman actor Val Kilmer dies aged 65
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Sebastian review – journalist turned sex-worker aims to turn side-hustle into art
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As ultra-conservative attitudes to sex and gender re-emerge, performer Jen Byrne’s Weimar act is increasingly radical – even convincing one woman to leave her husbandFast-forward on a tape and whole worlds open up. For Jen Byrne, the creator of legendary Weimar cabaret singer Bernie Dieter, it came at the end of her own christening video: filmed in Germany where she was initially raised. Fast-forwarding past the usual scenes – moments in the church, family celebrating afterwards, drinking champagne and eating cake – she suddenly came across the remnants of a German prison porno, circa 1970. “Lots of men with moustaches and all these very large bushes,” Byrne says, laughing.The discovery echoed an experience she had as an eight-year-old watching The Rocky Horror Picture Show with her parents, who “would stop it just before the orgy scene in the pool – one night I was on my own and I just kept watching. I was like: ‘Oh my God, there’s a whole new ending!’” Continue reading...

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Monster surf batters Bondi Icebergs pool and leaves trail of carnage across Sydney beaches
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Stranger than fiction MI5 tales revealed in first National Archives collaboration
From Guy Burgess’s briefcase to microdots secreted in talc, an exhibition reveals remarkable items from the agency’s archives – and the extraordinary stories behind themThe agency that would become MI5, originally known as the Secret Service Bureau, employed just 17 staff in 1914; by the end of the first world war, the number working for Britain’s domestic counter-intelligence agency had swelled to 850, including a number of female administrators.While valuable for managing the card index records, noted Edith Lomax, the controller of women staff in 1918, only women under the age of 30 should be recruited “on account of the very considerable strain that was thrown on [their] brains”. Continue reading...

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Keir Starmer won power without a purpose. Now he risks squandering it | Rafael Behr
Loyalists worry that the PM displays little of the engagement and dynamism required. Five years on, neither they nor voters really know him or his planUpsetting backbench MPs is an occupational hazard for prime ministers. Government is an endless sequence of messy compromises. Incumbency is a drag on popularity. Poll ratings sink and nerves fray. Careers are thwarted. There are fewer ministerial jobs than ambitious candidates.This is normal party discontentment. It grows over the course of a parliament, becoming critical at the point when rebel numbers threaten the leader’s majority. By that metric, Keir Starmer can afford to provoke a lot of dissatisfaction in the ranks. And, together with Rachel Reeves, he has.Rafael Behr is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Women behind the lens: ‘Through needle and thread, a quiet defiance of patriarchy’
One of a series of photographs taken across India in which women, many of them abuse survivors, use traditional needlework to embellish portraits of themselvesThis is a portrait of Praween Devi, a woman I met in 2019 through a local organisation while working on my project Nā́rī. I met her alongside other women who gather in their back yards to embroider together, sharing stories over cups of chai.When I asked to take her photograph, she suggested the main hall of her home, mentioning its lack of decoration and how the walls were bare except for a framed image of flowers and, notably, a photograph of all the men in the house. Before we began, she brought in a rug from another room, subtly curating the space. As I composed the shot, I included the photograph of the men, wondering how she would choose to alter the image through embroidery. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘A Med island holiday without the crowds’: family-friendly Corsica
A holiday park on the lesser-known Côte Orientale offers lower prices, activities for all ages, and secluded sandy beachesI had held out as long as I could, but there was no getting out of it. The catcalls were rising; the baying, cackling audience of under-11s intoxicated by a combination of ice-cream sugar rushes and my obvious, clammy fear. It was day 14 of a two-week summer holiday, and our final afternoon in blissful 30C Corsican sunshine. I just needed one more chapter, lounging with my book, soaking in the last of the bone-warming sun slowly edging down towards the island’s dramatic mountainous spine.But my calculating offspring had not forgotten ill-fated promises made on a previous evening, probably a little too deep into the second carafe. I was probably caught off-guard at Barny’s, a sensational sushi restaurant in the town of Ghisonaccia, enjoying our best meal of the holiday. They know when my defences are down; when I’m fully relaxed into holiday “yes” mode, and prime for being taken advantage of. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Val Kilmer: an ethereally handsome actor who evolved into droll self-awareness | Peter Bradshaw
Kilmer, who has died aged 65, made his name with Top Gun and The Doors – but his exceptional talents were often under-appreciated by the mainstream film industryVal Kilmer, star of Top Gun and The Doors, dies aged 65A life in picturesWhy do some movie careers take off … and others go a bit sideways? Val Kilmer was a smart actor, a looker, a terrific screen presence and in later years an under-appreciated comic performer. His finest hour as an actor came in Shane Black’s comedy action thriller Kiss Kiss Bang Bang in 2005, when he was quite superb as the camp private investigator Gay Perry Shrike: a gloriously sleek, plump performance which was transparently – and outrageously – based on Tom Ford. If only Kilmer could have started his acting life with that bravura performance, and shown the world what he could do. Instead, and at a crucial stage in his career, he was trapped in the body and face of a staggeringly beautiful young man.He could somehow never quite persuade Hollywood to accept him as a leading man and above-the-title player in the mould of his Top Gun contemporary Tom Cruise, who in 1986 played Pete “Maverick” Mitchell to Val Kilmer’s Tom “Iceman” Kazansky. As the 80s and 90s rolled by, Kilmer never ascended to the league of Cruise, Hanks, Clooney and Pitt. Medication for the illness he latterly suffered can’t have helped, and it is a great sadness that fate never allowed him to mature in the same way as, say, Kurt Russell. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump set to announce new round of tariffs on his so-called ‘liberation day’
President’s plans have rattled global stock markets and triggered heated rows with US’s largest trading partnersDonald Trump will announce his latest round of tariffs at the White House on Wednesday afternoon, threatening to unleash a global trade war on what he has dubbed “liberation day”.Trump has rattled global stock markets, alarmed corporate executives and economists, and triggered heated rows with the US’s largest trading partners by announcing and delaying plans to impose tariffs on foreign imports several times since taking office. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Helicopters, drone defence, and cannons: On board a Royal Navy warship preparing to take a voyage through troubled waters
"Action stations!" a voice barks.

Sky News Home
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Israel announces military operation expanding in Gaza to seize 'large areas'
Israel is beginning a major expansion of its military operation in Gaza and will seize large areas of the territory, the country's defence minister said.

Sky News Home
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Film star Val Kilmer dies aged 65
Val Kilmer, the actor who starred in Top Gun and Batman while earning a reputation as a Hollywood bad boy, has died aged 65.

FlightAware Squawks
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First trial against Boeing in Ethiopian 737 MAX 8 crash begins Monday
The first trial over the 2019 Boeing 737 MAX 8 crash in Ethiopia, which killed 157 people, begins Monday, April 7, 2025, in a federal court in Chicago. A pre-trial hearing is scheduled for Wednesday, April 2, before Judge Jorge Alonso.

Mail Online
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Hollywood stars pay tribute to 'brave' Val Kilmer in emotional posts after his death at 65
Hollywood stars were shocked on Tuesday night to learn of the death of Batman Forever and Heat star Val Kilmer at just 65.

BBC World News
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Massive swells smash windows at Sydney's Bondi Beach
A powerful king tide smashed glass, cracked footpaths and caused residents to evacuate as it battered Sydney's coast line.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Review after BBC finds millions of UK tyres being sent to Indian furnaces
Environment Agency review waste tyre exports after BBC probe reveals millions sent to furnaces in India.

Mail Online
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Revealed: The city where you can buy Britain's cheapest pint for £3.60… while a surprising place claims the prize for most expensive beer (and it's NOT London)
With summer just around the corner, many Brits will be looking forward to one of the nation's favourite pastimes of enjoying a pint or two in a pub garden with friends.

Mail Online
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The money-saving travel perks your bank is offering that you may be missing out on
From bargain travel insurance included in packaged accounts to cashback on hotels, many banks across the country are offering rewards simply for banking with them.

Mail Online
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I'm an American living in the UK and these are the cultural differences that took a lot of adjusting to - I wish I knew before I moved
TikToker 'kjordyyy' took to social media to explain some of the British quirks that he's found the most 'confusing'.

The Guardian (UK)
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US bombing of Yemen compounding dire humanitarian situation – rights groups
Anti-Houthi air campaign, details of which were revealed in Signal scandal, has brought further destruction to countryA ramped-up US bombing campaign on Yemen has killed civilians and brought further destruction and uncertainty to the poorest country in the Middle East, compounding an already dire situation after Donald Trump cut aid, according to local people, humanitarian workers and rights groups.“Now the rampant bombing has started, you never know which way things will go,” said Siddiq Khan, who works as a country director in Yemen for the aid charity Islamic Relief. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Arne Slot warns Liverpool: Newcastle outworked us and that is unacceptable
Manager wants reaction at home in Wednesday’s derbySlot says PSG defeat cut deeper than cup final lossArne Slot told Liverpool players their work rate in the Carabao Cup final was not acceptable during talks aimed at reinforcing the standards that have underpinned their Premier League title pursuit.Liverpool resume their title challenge with a Merseyside derby against Everton on Wednesday when Slot and his squad will be seeking to put a ­bruising spell behind them and edge closer to a 20th league champion­ship. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Amorim admits he is under pressure and laments United’s lack of forward quality
‘I will not have the time. We have to get it right, fast’Manager put Harry Maguire up front as late substituteRuben Amorim bemoaned Manchester United’s toothless attack as Nottingham Forest completed a Premier League double over his side and reiterated he is under pressure to ensure his team “get it right fast”.Forest enhanced their chances of qualifying for the Champions League with a third successive league win, courtesy of an extraordinary counterattack goal by the former United forward Anthony Elanga, while United are 13th and yet to record back-to-back wins in the division this season. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Four players in one week’: Arteta rues Arsenal’s injury nightmare at the back
Gabriel and Timber add to White and Calafiori blowsSaka’s goal against Fulham was ‘a beautiful moment’Mikel Arteta enjoyed a “beautiful” goalscoring comeback from Bukayo Saka in Arsenal’s 2-1 victory against ­Fulham in the Premier League but felt the gloss come off the evening as Gabriel Magalhães and Jurriën ­Timber sustained injuries.Saka scored Arsenal’s second on 73 minutes, having come off the bench in the 66th minute for his first action since he ruptured his hamstring on 21 December. He ran over to the bench to celebrate with one of the club’s performance coaches, Sam Wilson. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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A moment that changed me: I used a pseudonym on a dating app - and started exploring my sexuality
This new identity gave me confidence and the freedom to discover different relationships. It also helped me understand, more broadly, what I really want from lifeI’ve never been a good liar. I can trace it back to my early school days, where my excuses for unfinished homework were never convincing, or I’d guiltily double back on even the smallest of fibs. With a knowing look, my mother would say: “Georgina …” She instilled a reverence for the truth, which was bound to the idea of doing the right thing. She wasn’t wrong: building trust is crucial in forming strong bonds in any relationship dynamic.But, like most teenagers, I gently smudged the boundaries of truth, from concealing my bellybutton piercing, to “borrowing” my brother’s car to meet a boy I fancied. Notably, my untruths were told in the knowledge that they would probably later be discovered (although I hadn’t banked on the flat tyre) and, looking back, they were often linked with an early exploration of my sexual identity. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Israel-Gaza war: Israeli defence minister announces expansion of military operations in Gaza – latest updates
Defence minister Israel Katz says large areas of the territory would be seized and added to the security zones of Israel. Follow the latest developmentsIsrael’s announcement that the army will seize “large areas” of the Palestinian territory comes after a warning last week that the military would soon “operate with full force” in additional parts of Hamas-run Gaza.Israel restarted intense bombing of Gaza on 18 March and then launched a new ground offensive, ending a nearly two-month ceasefire in the war with Hamas. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Val Kilmer, star of Top Gun and The Doors, dies aged 65
Known for his roles in Batman Forever, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, and Tombstone, the prolific actor’s cause of death was pneumoniaRemembering Val Kilmer: an ethereally handsome actor who evolved into droll self-awarenessA life in picturesVal Kilmer, the actor best known for his roles in Top Gun, Batman Forever and The Doors, has died at the age of 65.His daughter Mercedes told the New York Times that the cause of death was pneumonia. Kilmer was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014 and later recovered, after treatment with chemotherapy and trachea surgery that had reduced hisability to speak and breathe. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Wisconsin supreme court race: liberal Susan Crawford beats Musk-backed candidate
Liberal judge says victory is against ‘unprecedented attack on our democracy’ after defeating Brad Schimel in the most expensive judicial election in US historySusan Crawford won the race for a seat on the Wisconsin supreme court on Tuesday, a major win for Democrats who had framed the race as a referendum on Elon Musk and Donald Trump’s popularity.Crawford, a liberal judge from Dane county, defeated Brad Schimel, a former Republican attorney general and conservative judge from Waukesha county, after Musk and groups associated with the tech billionaire spent millions to boost his candidacy in what became the most expensive judicial contest in American history. Continue reading...

BBC World News
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Israel to expand military operation and seize 'large areas' of Gaza
Defence Minister Israel Katz said this would require a large-scale evacuation of Palestinians.

Mail Online
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Val Kilmer pal Josh Brolin will 'miss' the Batman star as he joins celebrities honoring him after death at 65
Hollywood stars were shocked on Tuesday night to learn of the death of Batman Forever and Heat star Val Kilmer at just 65.

Sky News Home
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Notorious Soviet spy's passport part of unique MI5 exhibition
A passport belonging to one of the Cambridge spies, a 110-year-old lemon used for invisible ink and a letter about the Queen's response to news of a Soviet agent in Buckingham Palace are among MI5 artefacts on display in a "groundbreaking" new exhibition. 

Sky News Home
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On board a Royal Navy warship as it prepares for troubled waters
"Action stations!" a voice barks.

Deutsche Welle
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Liberal wins Wisconsin court race in blow to Trump, Musk
Susan Crawford won despite Elon Musk spending tens of millions campaigning for her Republican rival. The Wisconsin Supreme Court is expected to rule on issues of national interest like abortion and vote districting.

The Guardian (UK)
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Football League: Birmingham close in on promotion as Wrexham frustrated
Wycombe also held to draw; Charlton win to keep paceWalsall draw maintains their lead on top of League TwoJay Stansfield’s late penalty was the difference as Birmingham extended their lead at the top of League One to 11 points with a 2-1 win against Bristol Rovers.Keshi Anderson gave Blues the lead after only three minutes and, although Gatlin O’Donkor equalised, Stansfield’s spot-kick made it back-to-back league wins, sending them a step closer to a Championship return. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Bernabéu erupts as Rüdiger’s late show seals Copa del Rey final spot for Madrid
Real Madrid 4-4 Real Sociedad (agg 5-4)Defender heads dramatic extra-time winnerAt one minute past midnight a self-declared madman sent the Santiago Bernabéu into a state of delirium and Real Madrid into the final of the Copa del Rey. El Loco leapt above the Real Sociedad defence and into the stands at the north end of this stadium, where supporters had seen their team go and do it again, their way. It had been long, it had been wild, and at the end of the night, somehow they were the ones celebrating, which it seems they always are. Madrid did not win and were not always very good until they were irresistible, but it was enough.Three times they had trailed but ultimately a draw, secured by the thumping forehead of Antonio Rüdiger in the 115th minute was enough. A game that went from 0-1 to 1-1, 1-3 to 3-3, and then 3-4 finally finished 4-4 deep into extra time. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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US says China military drills targeting Taiwan put region’s security ‘at risk’
China’s military says drills will continue in the Taiwan Strait on Wednesday and will use live fireThe US has accused China of putting the region’s security at risk after it launched a second day of military drills targeting Taiwan with a rehearsal blockade and attack.China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) began the joint drills without notice on Tuesday morning, sending 76 aircraft and more than 20 Navy and Coast Guard ships, including the Shandong carrier group, to positions around Taiwan’s main island. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Val Kilmer, star of Top Gun and The Doors, dies aged 65
Known for his roles in Batman Forever, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, and Tombstone, the prolific actor’s cause of death was pneumoniaRemembering Val Kilmer: an ethereally handsome actor who evolved into droll self-awarenessVal Kilmer, the actor best known for his roles in Top Gun, Batman Forever and The Doors, has died at the age of 65.His daughter Mercedes told the New York Times that the cause of death was pneumonia. Kilmer was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014 and later recovered, after treatment with chemotherapy and trachea surgery that had reduced hisability to speak and breathe. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Israel-Gaza war: Israeli defence minister announces expansion of military operations in Gaza – latest updates
Defence minister Israel Katz says large areas of the territory would be seized and added to the security zones of Israel. Follow the latest developmentsAs of 23 March, more than 140,000 people had been displaced again since the end of the ceasefire, according to the latest UN estimate — and tens of thousands more are estimated to have fled under evacuation orders over the past week.
Every time families have moved during the war, they have had to leave behind belongings and start nearly from scratch, finding food, water and shelter. Now, with no fuel entering, transportation is even more difficult, so many are fleeing with almost nothing.As Israel orders wide new evacuations across the Gaza Strip, Palestinians say they are crushed by exhaustion and hopelessness at the prospect of fleeing once again, the AP reports. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Trump's 'liberation day' explained: What it is and how it could impact the UK
If there is a word that has dominated Donald Trump's second term, it's tariffs. 

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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The world-leading British amateur chasing repeat win at Augusta
Lottie Woad will try to become the first player to defend the Augusta National Women's Amateur title when she tees it up at the home of the Masters this week.

F1 Technical
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“We had to act quickly," claims Marko as he opens up on Red Bull's decision to promote ...
Following the decision to promote Yuki Tsunoda to the Milton Keynes-based outfit, Red Bull's motorsport advisor Dr Helmut Marko insists that the Austro-British team was forced to act after two dismal races for Liam Lawson.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Meet British world number one amateur chasing repeat win at Augusta
Lottie Woad will try to become the first player to defend the Augusta National Women's Amateur title when she tees it up at the home of the Masters this week.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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The influencers who want the US to procreate faster - and believe the White House is on their side
This fringe group have long courted controversy - but since Trump was sworn in for the second time earlier this year, their evangelising has reached a new level.

Digital Trends
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They’re barfing on the Crew Dragon (though that’s normal, apparently)
SpaceX launched its Fram2 mission on Monday, becoming the first crewed flight to take a polar orbit. Mission commander Chun Wang, who also funded the flight, has just posted a few early observations about the four crewmember’s experiences in space. In a message shared on X, Wang said that the ride to orbit was “much […]

The Verge
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Motorola’s first Edge 60 phone feels like canvas
Motorola announced the first phone in its midrange Edge 60 series, which ships with a novel twist: a faux-canvas finish. The Edge 60 Fusion looks the part otherwise, with its molded camera module and surprisingly slim body, but the basic specs match the low price tag — just £299.99 (around $390) in the UK. The […]

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Twenty-three more women make allegations against serial rapist
Police in London say PhD student Zhenhao Zou's "offending group is far greater" than they had realised.

Gizmodo
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RIP Val Kilmer, Our Batman, Huckleberry, and Plenty More
Batman Forever, Willow and Heat helped turn Val Kilmer into a beloved film presence and one of the leading men of his generation.

Mail Online
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Val Kilmer's haunting last post revealed after Batman star's death at 65
After a devastating years-long battle with throat cancer and deteriorating health, Val Kilmer has passed away at the age of 65.

Mail Online
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Val Kilmer updates: Tributes pour in as Top Gun star dies aged 65 after years-long battle with cancer
LATEST UPDATES: Hollywood star Val Kilmer - famed for iconic roles in Top Gun, Batman and The Doors - has died at 65 after a long health battle.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Chris Mason: Jitters, uncertainty and hope as UK awaits tariff decision
Talks are continuing between London and Washington at quite an intensity, our political editor writes.

BBC World News
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23 more women make allegations against serial rapist
Police in London say PhD student Zhenhao Zou's "offending group is far greater" than they had realised.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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23 more women make allegations against rapist PhD student
Police in London say Zhenhao Zou's "offending group is far greater" than they had realised.

Sky News Home
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More than 20 new potential victims come forward after 'prolific' rapist's conviction
Another 23 female potential victims have reported that they may have been raped by Zhenhao Zou - the Chinese PhD student detectives believe may be one of the country's most prolific sex offenders.

The Guardian (UK)
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TV tonight: an air fryer show that is actually worth your time
Prof Hannah Fry examines the kitchen phenomenon in her fascinating tech series. Plus: Rose Ayling-Ellis’s emotional signing project. Here’s what to watch this evening8pm, BBC TwoYet another show about the air fryer – but it’s OK, because this time it’s to kick off the brilliant Prof Hannah Fry’s third tech series, in which she examines seemingly ordinary objects in “obscene detail”. And this isn’t about just recipes. Fry – a self-confessed convert – traces the origins of the kitchen phenomenon back to the “accidental creation of a ‘wonder wire’” in the 1900s and one first world war pilot’s need for a hot dinner. Hollie Richardson Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Outrage in New Zealand after 11-year-old girl sent to psychiatric ward and drugged in identity mix-up
Report finds police mistook girl for missing woman in blunder that has appalled political leadersAn 11-year-old girl was restrained, injected with anti-psychotic drugs and placed on a mental health ward after New Zealand police mistook her for a missing woman, a report found on Wednesday.Health officials and police have scrambled to explain the mix-up, which has appalled political leaders and stoked outrage across the country. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The world is missing out on the real Yemen: we are not just war, headlines or suffering | Nada Al-Saqaf
After a decade of conflict, loss is constant, as is fear for our children’s future. But we are more than thisA decade of war in Yemen has left us in a place we never could have imagined. Our biggest worries were once exams, work and weddings. Today, we live with the weight of constant fear. You wake to the sound of explosions or the silence of grief, leave your home uncertain if you will return, look at your child and wonder what kind of future awaits.Yet life goes on. We carry our losses, our broken hearts, our grief, and we continue. Ten years of war, ten years of mourning, of learning to survive with a lump in our hearts. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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An elusive worm: the Salinella is shrouded in mystery
A 19th-century zoologist found the ‘little salt dweller’, which could be a portal to the past – if only we could locate it againLast February, with colleagues Gert and Philipp and my daughter Francesca, I made the long journey to an unremarkable city called Río Cuarto, east of the Argentinian Andes. We went in search of a worm of unusual distinction.Why a worm? As humans, we naturally love the animals that are most familiar. But from a zoologist’s point of view, the vertebrates, from mammals and birds to frogs and fish, can be seen as variations on a single theme. We all have a head at one end (with skull, eyes and jaws); in the middle, a couple of pairs of limbs (a goldfish’s fins, or your arms and legs); and, holding all this together, a backbone ending in a tail. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Booker makes a stand against Trump – and doesn’t stop for 25 hours
Democrats have appeared lame and leaderless for 72 days, but then Cory Booker stood up and did something“Would the senator yield for a question?” asked Democratic leader Chuck Schumer.Senator Cory Booker, who on a long day’s journey into night had turned himself into the fighter that many Democrats were yearning for, replied with a wry smile: “Chuck Schumer, it’s the only time in my life I can tell you no.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Royal Ballet to perform Justin Peck’s Everywhere We Go, with music by Sufjan Stevens
Director Kevin O’Hare announces staging of NYCB choreographer Peck’s 2014 piece, as well as new works by Akram Khan and Cathy MarstonA ballet by one of New York’s hottest choreographers, set to the music of Sufjan Stevens, and Akram Khan’s first work for the Royal Opera House stage are two highlights of the Royal Ballet’s 2025-26 season, announced on Wednesday. They will be seen alongside the first commission for a UK company from choreographic duo Paul Lightfoot and Sol León, premieres from Wayne McGregor and Cathy Marston and a new ballet based on Christopher Isherwood’s A Single Man, with live music by John Grant.“It’s about working with new voices, looking for what we haven’t experienced and what’s important to see,” said artistic director Kevin O’Hare about what will be his 14th season in charge of the company. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Last summer was second worst for common UK butterflies since 1976
More than half of Britain’s 59 native species are in long-term decline, UK Butterfly Monitoring Scheme findsLast summer was the fifth worst in nearly half a century for butterflies in Britain, according to the biggest scientific survey of insect populations in the world.For the first time since scientific recording began in 1976, more than half of Britain’s 59 native species are in long-term decline. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Disabled MPs speak of difficulties they face working in UK parliament
Committee hears about ‘insane’ lack of provisions and arcane, time-consuming proceduresMPs with disabilities have spoken about the challenges they face working in parliament, criticising the “insane” lack of provisions and arcane, time-consuming procedures.Lucy Powell, the Commons leader, who also chairs its modernisation committee, said she would be “very in favour of” bringing in call lists for when MPs will speak, one of the adjustments called for by MPs in the committee. Such lists are used for ministerial questions but not for debates, beyond a period during Covid. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Val Kilmer, star of Top Gun and The Doors, dies aged 65
Known for his roles in Batman Forever, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, and Tombstone, the prolific actor’s cause of death was pneumoniaVal Kilmer, the actor best known for his roles in Top Gun, Batman Forever and The Doors, has died at the age of 65.His daughter Mercedes told the New York Times that the cause of death was pneumonia. Kilmer was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014 and later recovered, after treatment with chemotherapy and trachea surgery that had reduced hisability to speak and breathe. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Israel-Gaza war: Israeli defence minister announces expansion of military operations in Gaza – latest updates
Defence minister Israel Katz says large areas of the territory would be seized and added to the security zones of Israel. Follow the latest developmentsAs Israel orders wide new evacuations across the Gaza Strip, Palestinians say they are crushed by exhaustion and hopelessness at the prospect of fleeing once again, the AP reports.Many are packing a few belongings and trudging off in search of new shelters. Some say they just can’t bear to move.
When ordered out of Jabaliya in northern Gaza, Ihab Suliman and his family could only grab some food and blankets before making their way south 19 March. It was their eighth time fleeing over the past 18 months of war.
“There is no longer any taste to life,” said Suliman, a former university professor. “Life and death have become one and the same for us.” Continue reading...

Wired Top Stories
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Visible Promo Code: Save $300 in April 2025
Find great deals and promo codes for Visible at WIRED and save big, whether you're a long-time customer or a newbie.

Wired Top Stories
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15% Off Dell Coupon Codes | April 2025
Enjoy 15% off with Dell promo code, plus today's deals for up to $400 off laptops, workstations, and all things tech.

Sky News Home
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More than 20 new potential victims come forward after 'prolific' rapist convicted for assaulting 10 women
Another 23 female potential victims have reported that they may have been raped by Zhenhao Zou - the Chinese PhD student detectives believe may be one of the country's most prolific sex offenders.

The Guardian (UK)
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Thousands of Ford Kuga hybrid drivers ‘left in limbo’ after fire risk warnings
Carmaker reportedly has yet to announce plan for repairs after telling motorists not to charge their carsThousands of drivers have reportedly been left in limbo after warnings that their car could catch fire due to a battery defect.Ford issued an urgent recall of its Kuga plug-in hybrid car in early March, warning drivers not to charge the battery because of a risk it might short-circuit while on the road. The problem could cause a loss of power or a fire, according to the recall notice. Four weeks later, the manufacturer has yet to announce a timescale for repairs and owners report that it is failing to respond to their requests for an update. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Val Kilmer, star of Top Gun and The Doors, dies aged 65, NYT reports
Known for his roles in Batman Forever, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, and Tombstone, the prolific actor’s cause of death was pneumoniaVal Kilmer, the actor best known for his roles in Top Gun, Batman Forever and The Doors, has died at the age of 65.His daughter Mercedes told the New York Times that the cause of death was pneumonia. Kilmer was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014 and later recovered, after treatment with chemotherapy and trachea surgery that had reduced hisability to speak. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Israel-Gaza war: Israeli defence minister announces expansion of military operations in Gaza – latest updates
Defence minister Israel Katz says large areas of the territory would be seized and added to the security zones of Israel. Follow the latest developmentsIsrael’s defence minister did not make clear how much land Israel intends to seize.But the country has already set up a significant buffer zone within Gaza, expanding an area that existed around the edges of the enclave before the war, and adding a large security area in the so-called Netzarim corridor through the middle of Gaza. Continue reading...

ZeroHedge News
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USAID And The Architecture Of Perception
USAID And The Architecture Of Perception

Authored by Josh Stylman via The Brownstone Institute,

The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has long portrayed itself as America’s humanitarian aid organization, delivering assistance to developing nations. With an annual budget of nearly $40 billion and operations in over 100 countries, it represents one of the largest foreign aid institutions in the world. But recent disclosures reveal its true nature as something far more systematic: an architect of global consciousness.



Consider: Reuters, one of the world’s most trusted news sources, received USAID funding for ‘Large Scale Social Deception’ and ‘Social Engineering Defence.’ While there’s debate about the exact scope of these programs, the implications are staggering: a division of one of the world’s most relied-upon sources for objective reporting was paid by a US government agency for systemic reality construction. This funding goes beyond traditional media support, representing a deliberate infrastructure for discourse framing that fundamentally challenges the concept of ‘objective’ reporting.



Source: USASpending.gov database

But it goes deeper. In what reads like a Michael Crichton plot come to life, the recent USAID revelations show a staggering reach of narrative control. Take Internews Network, a USAID-financed NGO that has pushed nearly half a billion dollars ($472.6m) through a secretive network, ‘working with’ 4,291 media outlets. In just one year, they produced 4,799 hours of broadcasts reaching up to 778 million people and ‘trained’ over 9,000 journalists. This isn’t just funding – it’s a systematic infrastructure of consciousness manipulation.

The revelations show USAID funding both the Wuhan Lab’s gain-of-function research and the media outlets that would shape the story around what emerged from it. Backing organizations that would fabricate impeachment evidence. Funding both the election systems that facilitate outcomes and the fact-checkers that determine which discussions about those outcomes are permitted. But these disclosures point to something far more significant than mere corruption.

These revelations didn’t emerge from nowhere – they come from government grant disclosures, FOIA requests, and official records that aren’t even hidden, just ignored. As my old friend Mark Schiffer noted the other day, ‘The most important truths today cannot be debated – they must be felt as totalities.’ The pattern, once seen, cannot be unseen. Some may question DOGE’s methods or the rapid pace of these disclosures, and those constitutional concerns deserve serious discussion. But that’s a separate conversation from what these documents reveal. The revelations themselves – documented in official records and grant disclosures – are undeniable and should shock anyone who values truth. The means of exposure matter far less than what’s being exposed: one of the largest narrative control operations in history.

No domain is untouched – markets, tech, culture, health, and obviously, media – and you’ll find the same design. Intelligence agencies are deeply embedded in each domain because shaping how we perceive reality is more powerful than controlling reality itself

Just as fiat currency replaced real value with declared value, we now see the same pattern everywhere: fiat science replaces inquiry with predetermined conclusions, fiat culture replaces organic development with curated influence, fiat history replaces lived experience with manufactured narratives. We live in an era of fiat everything – where reality itself is declared, not discovered. And just as they create artificial scarcity in monetary systems, they manufacture false choices everywhere else – presenting us with artificial binaries that obscure the true complexity of our world.

As Schiffer wrote elsewhere, reality no longer requires consensus, only coherence. But there’s a crucial distinction: real coherence emerges naturally across multiple domains, reflecting deeper truths that cannot be fabricated. The coherence imposed by perception management isn’t truth – it’s a controlled discourse engineered for consistency, not discovery. The USAID receipts now provide concrete evidence of how this manufactured coherence is built: a scripted reality where the appearance of logic is more important than actual substance.

This isn’t just pattern matching – it’s pattern prediction. Just as algorithms learn to recognize and anticipate behavioral patterns, those who understand this system’s architecture can see its next moves before they’re made. The question isn’t whether something is “true” or “false” – it’s understanding how information flows shape consciousness itself.

To understand how deep this goes, let’s examine their methodology. As Dr. Sherri Tenpenny and others have meticulously documented through FOIA requests and government grant disclosures, the pattern emerges through two primary vectors of control:

Information Control:

$34 million to Politico (which as Tenpenny notes, struggled to make payroll without this funding)
Extensive payments to the New York Times
Direct funding to BBC Media Action
$4.5 million to Kazakhstan to combat “disinformation”
Health and Development:

$84 million to Clinton Foundation health initiatives
$100 million for AIDS treatment in Ukraine
Funding for contraceptive programs in developing nations
Cultural Programming:

$20 million to Sesame Street in Iraq
$68 million to the World Economic Forum
$2 million for sex changes and LGBT activism in Guatemala
Global cultural initiatives (millions spread across LGBTQ programs in Serbia, DEI projects in Ireland, transgender arts in Colombia and Peru, and tourism promotion in Egypt)
What emerges is not just a list of expenditures, but a blueprint for global reality architecture: From Kazakhstan to Ireland, from Serbia to Peru, from Vietnam to Egypt – there isn’t a corner of the world untouched by this system. This isn’t merely a distribution of resources, but a strategic infrastructure of global influence. Each allocation – whether to media outlets, health initiatives, or cultural programs – represents a carefully placed node in a network designed to shape perception across multiple domains. First, control the flow of information through media funding. Then, establish legitimacy through health and development programs. Finally, reshape social structures through cultural programming. The end goal isn’t just to influence what people think, but to determine the boundaries of what can be thought – and to do so on a planetary scale.

For those who’ve been studying the architecture of censorship, like Mike Benz has been documenting for years, none of this comes as a surprise. It’s perfect symmetry: we knew about the censorship. Now we’re seeing the receipts. One hand feeds them talking points, the other hand feeds them our taxpayer dollars. This isn’t speculation; it’s documented fact. Even Wikipedia’s own funding database contains over 45,000 reports tied to USAID – many detailing corruption, media influence, and financial manipulation. The evidence has always been there, but it was ignored, dismissed, or buried under the very fact-checking apparatus USAID funds. These weren’t crackpot theories; they were warnings. And now, we finally have the receipts.

And it doesn’t stop at controlling information. USAID isn’t just shaping media portrayals – it’s funding the systems that enforce them. Last week, Benz broke a bombshell: USAID gives twice as much money ($27 million) to the fiscal sponsor of the group controlling Soros-funded prosecutors than Soros himself gives ($14 million). This isn’t about one billionaire’s influence – it’s about state-backed enforcement of scripted accounts. The same network that dictates what you can think is dictating who prosecutes crime, what laws are enforced, and who faces consequences.



Source: Wikileaks

USAID’s influence isn’t just about funding media control—it extends to direct political interference. It didn’t just send aid to Brazil – it funded censorship, backed left-wing activists, and helped rig the 2022 election against Bolsonaro.

Former State Department official Benz revealed that the agency waged a “holy war on censorship,” systematically suppressing Bolsonaro supporters online while bolstering opposition voices. Millions flowed to NGOs pushing leftist framing, including the Felipe Neto Institute, which received US funding while Bolsonaro’s allies were deplatformed. USAID also bankrolled Amazon-based activist groups, financed media campaigns designed to manipulate public opinion, and funneled money into Brazilian organizations that pushed for stricter internet regulations.

This wasn’t aid – it was election interference disguised as democracy promotion. USAID used American tax dollars to decide Brazil’s future, and it likely deployed similar tactics in many other countries – all under the guise of humanitarian assistance.

And it’s not just abroad. While USAID’s defenders claim it’s a tool for charity and development in poor nations, the evidence suggests something much more insidious. It’s a $40 billion driver of regime change overseas – and now, evidence points to its involvement in regime change efforts at home. Alongside the CIA, USAID appears to have played a role in the 2019 impeachment of Trump – an illegal effort to overturn a US election using the same tools of perception sculpting and political engineering it deploys abroad.

Left vs right, vaxxed vs unvaxxed, Russia vs Ukraine, believer vs skeptic (on any topic) – these false dichotomies serve to fragment our understanding while reality itself is far more nuanced and multidimensional. Each manufactured crisis spawns not just reactions, but reactions to those reactions, creating endless layers of derivative meaning built on artificial foundations.

The real power isn’t in manufacturing individual facts, but in creating systems where false facts become self-reinforcing. When a fact-checker cites another fact-checker who cites a “trusted source” that’s funded by the same entities funding the fact-checkers, the pattern becomes clear. The truth isn’t in any individual claim – it’s in recognizing how the claims work together to create a closed system of artificial reality.

Take the vaccine debate for example: The pattern manifests before the explanation – people passionately debate efficacy without realizing the entire framework was constructed. First, they fund the research. Then they fund the media to shape the narrative. Even skeptics often fall into their trap, arguing about effectiveness rates while accepting their basic premise. The moment you debate ‘vaccine efficacy,’ you’ve already lost – you’re using their framework to discuss what is, in reality, an experimental gene therapy. By accepting their terminology, their metrics, their framing of the discussion itself, you’re playing into their constructed reality. Each layer of control is designed not just to influence opinions, but to preemptively structure how those opinions can be formed.

Like learning to spot a staged photo or hearing a false note in music, developing a reliable bullshit detector requires pattern recognition. Once you start seeing how narratives are constructed – how language is weaponized, how frameworks are built – it changes the lens with which you view the whole world. The same intelligence agencies embedding themselves in every domain that shapes our understanding aren’t just controlling information flow – they’re programming how we process that information itself.

The recursive theater plays out in real time. When USAID announced funding cuts, BBC News rushed to amplify humanitarian concerns with dramatic headlines about HIV patients and endangered lives. What they didn’t mention in their reporting? USAID is their top funder, bankrolling BBC Media Action with millions in direct payments. Watch how the system protects itself: the largest recipient of USAID media funding creates emotional propaganda about USAID’s importance while obfuscating their financial relationship in their reporting.



Source: Lindsay Penny (left), BBC website (right)

This institutional self-defense illustrates a crucial pattern: organizations funded for reality construction protect themselves through layers of misdirection. When presented with evidence, the fact-checking apparatus funded by these same systems springs into action. They’ll tell you that these payments were for standard “subscriptions,” that programs promoting gender ideology are really just about “equality and rights.” But when USAID awards $2 million to Asociación Lambda in Guatemala for “gender-affirming health care” – which can include surgeries, hormone therapy, and counseling – those same defenders conveniently omit the details, blurring the line between advocacy and direct intervention. The very organizations funded for social architecture are the ones telling you there is no social architecture. It’s akin to asking the arsonist to investigate the fire.

Like characters in a grand production, I watch old friends still trusting in institutions like the New York Times. Even this exposition becomes a potential node in the system – the very act of revealing the mechanics of control might itself be anticipated, another layer of the recursive theater. In my earlier work on technocracy, I explored how our digital world has evolved far beyond Truman Burbank’s physical dome. His world had visible walls, cameras, and scripted encounters – a constructed reality he could theoretically escape by reaching its edges. Our prison is more sophisticated: no walls, no visible limits, just algorithmic containment that shapes thought itself. Truman only had to sail far enough to find the truth. But how do you sail beyond the boundaries of perception when the ocean itself is programmed?

Sure, USAID has done some good work – but so did Al Capone with his soup kitchens. Just as the infamous gangster’s charity work made him untouchable in his community, USAID’s aid programs create a veneer of benevolence that makes questioning their larger agenda politically impossible. Philanthropic window-dressing has long been a tool for power players to shield themselves from scrutiny. Consider Jimmy Savile: a celebrated philanthropist whose charity work granted him access to hospitals and vulnerable children while he committed unspeakable crimes in plain sight. His carefully cultivated image made him beyond reproach for decades, just as institutional benevolence now serves as a protective layer for global influence operations. The true function of organizations like USAID isn’t just aid – it’s social architecture, mind shaping, and the laundering of taxpayer dollars through an intricate web of NGOs and foundations.

This layered deception is self-reinforcing – each level of manufactured reality is protected by another level of institutional authority. These institutions don’t just dictate stories; they shape the infrastructure through which narratives are disseminated. For what it’s worth, I believe most tools themselves are neutral. The same digital systems that enable mass surveillance could empower individual sovereignty. The same networks that centralize control could facilitate decentralized cooperation. The question isn’t the technology itself, but whether it’s deployed to concentrate or distribute power.

This understanding didn’t come from nowhere. Those who first sensed this artificiality were dismissed as conspiracy theorists. We noticed the coordination across outlets, the strange synchronicity of messaging, the way certain stories were amplified while others disappeared. Now we have the sales receipts showing exactly how that manipulation was funded and orchestrated.

I know this journey of discovery intimately. When I started understanding the dangers of mRNA technology, I went all in. I connected with the incredibly talented filmmaker Jennifer Sharp and helped with Anecdotals, her film about vaccine injuries. I was ready to tether my whole identity to this cause. But then I started zooming out. I began seeing how Covid might have been a financial crime designed to usher in central bank digital currency. The deeper I looked, the more I realized these weren’t isolated deceptions – it was part of a larger system of control. The very fabric of what I thought was real began to dissolve.

What disturbed me most was seeing how deeply programming relies on mimicry. Humans are imitative creatures by nature – it’s how we learn, how we build culture. But this natural tendency has been weaponized. I’d present friends with peer-reviewed studies, documented evidence, historical connections – only to watch them respond with verbatim talking points from corporate media. It wasn’t that they disagreed – it was that they weren’t even processing the information. They were pattern-matching against pre-approved chronicles, outsourcing their thinking to “trusted experts” who were themselves caught in the same web of manufactured perception. I realized then: none of us knows anything for certain – we’re all just mimicking what we’ve been programmed to believe is authoritative knowledge.

The challenge isn’t just seeing through any single deception – it’s understanding how these systems work together in complex, non-linear ways. When we fixate on individual threads, we miss the larger pattern. Like pulling a thread on a sweater and watching it unravel, eventually you realize there was no sweater in the first place – just an intricately woven illusion. Just as a hologram contains the whole image in each fragment, every piece of this system reflects the larger blueprint for reality construction.

Consider the $34 million to Politico – this isn’t just a funding stream, but a holographic reveal of the entire system. It’s not merely that Politico received money; it’s that this single transaction contains the entire blueprint of perception management. The payment itself is a microcosm: struggling media outlet, government funding, narrative control – each element reflects the whole. This recursive system protects itself through layers of self-validation. When critics point out media bias, fact-checkers funded by the same system declare it ‘debunked.’ When researchers question official accounts, journals funded by the same interests reject their work. Even the language of resistance – ‘speaking truth to power,’ ‘fighting disinformation,’ ‘protecting democracy’ – has been co-opted and weaponized by the very system it was meant to challenge.

The Covid story epitomizes this systemic manipulation. What began as a public health crisis transformed into a global experiment in narrative control – demonstrating how rapidly populations could be reshaped through coordinated messaging, institutional authority, and weaponized fear. The pandemic wasn’t just about a virus; it was a proof of concept for how comprehensively human cognition could be engineered – a single node revealing the true scope and ambition of discourse manipulation.

Think about the cycle: American taxpayers unknowingly funded the crisis itself – then paid again to be deceived about it. They paid for the development of gain-of-function research, then paid again for the messaging that would convince them to accept masks, lockdowns, and experimental interventions. The system is so confident in its psychological control that it doesn’t even bother hiding the evidence anymore.

As I’ve documented in my Engineering Reality series, this framework for consciousness management runs far deeper than most can imagine. USAID’s revelations aren’t isolated incidents – they’re glimpses into a vast system of social design that has been in operation for decades. When the same agency funding your fact-checkers is openly paying for ‘social deception,’ when your trusted news sources are receiving direct payments for ‘social architecture,’ the very framework of what we consider ‘real’ begins to crumble.

We’re not just watching events unfold – we’re watching reactions to artificial events, then reactions to those reactions, creating an infinite regression of derivative meaning. People form passionate positions about issues that were constructed, then others define themselves in opposition to those positions. Each layer of reaction fuels the next phase of steered consensus. What we’re witnessing isn’t just the spread of manufactured realities, but the architecture of cultural and geopolitical trends themselves. Artificial trends spawn authentic reactions, which generate counter-reactions, until we’ve built entire societies responding to carefully orchestrated theater. The social engineers aren’t just steering individual beliefs – they’re reshaping the very foundations of how humans make sense of the world.

These revelations are just the tip of the iceberg. Anyone paying attention to the depth and depravity of the corruption knows that this is only the beginning. As more information emerges, the illusion of neutrality, of benevolence, of institutions acting in the public interest, will crumble. No one who truly engages with this information is walking away with renewed faith in the system. The shift is only happening in one direction – some faster than others, but none in reverse. The real question is: what happens when a critical mass reaches the point where their foundational understanding of the world collapses? When they realize that the records shaping their perception were never organic, but manufactured? Some will refuse to look, choosing comfort over confrontation. But for those willing to face it, this is not just about corruption – it’s about the very nature of the reality they thought they inhabited.

The implications are staggering not just for individual awareness, but for our very ability to function as a republic. How can citizens make informed decisions when reality itself has been splintered into competing manufactured tales? When people discover that their most deeply held beliefs were shaped, that their passionate causes were scripted, that even their cultural interests and tastes were curated, that their opposition to certain systems was anticipated and designed – what remains of authentic human experience?

What’s coming will force a choice: either retreat into comfortable denial, dismissing mounting evidence as “right-wing conspiracy theories,” or face the shattering realization that the world we thought we inhabited never actually existed. My research over the past few years points to far more nefarious activities yet to be revealed – operations so heinous that many will simply refuse to process them.

As I wrote about in “The Second Matrix,” there’s always the risk of falling into another layer of controlled awakening. But the greater risk lies in thinking too small, in anchoring ourselves to any single thread of understanding. The USAID revelations aren’t just about exposing one agency’s role in shaping reality – they’re about recognizing how our very thought patterns have been colonized by recursive layers of artificial reality.

This is the true crisis of our time: not just the manipulation of reality, but the fragmentation of human consciousness itself. When people grasp that their beliefs, causes, and even their resistance were shaped within this system, they are forced to confront the deeper question: What does it mean to reclaim one’s own mind?

But here’s what they don’t want you to realize: seeing through these systems is profoundly liberating. When you understand how reality is constructed, you’re no longer bound by its artificial constraints. This isn’t just about exposing deception – it’s about freeing consciousness itself from manufactured limitations.

The jig may be up on USAID’s reality architecture operation. But the deeper challenge lies in reconstructing meaning in a world where the very fabric of reality has been woven from artificial threads. The choice we face isn’t just between comfortable illusion and uncomfortable truth. The old system demanded validation before belief. The new reality requires something else entirely: the ability to recognize patterns before they’re officially confirmed, to feel coherence across multiple domains, to step outside the crafted game completely. This isn’t about choosing sides in their manufactured binaries – it’s about seeing the pattern architecture itself.

What does this liberation look like in practice? It’s catching the pattern of a manufactured crisis before it’s fully deployed. It’s recognizing how seemingly unrelated events – a banking collapse, a health emergency, a social movement – are actually nodes in the same network of control. It’s understanding that true sovereignty isn’t about having all the answers, but about developing the capacity to sense the web of deception before it solidifies into apparent reality. Because the ultimate power isn’t in knowing every answer – it’s in realizing when the question itself has been designed to trap you inside the manufactured paradigm.

As we develop this pattern recognition capacity – this ability to see through algorithmic manipulation – what it means to be human is itself evolving. As these systems of ideological infrastructure crumble, our task isn’t just to preserve individual awakening but to protect and nurture the most conscious elements of humanity. The ultimate liberation isn’t just seeing through the deception – it’s maintaining our essential humanity in a world of tightly controlled perception.

As these systems of reality sculpting crumble, we have an unprecedented opportunity to rediscover what’s real – not through their manufactured frameworks, but through our own direct experience of truth. What’s authentic isn’t always what’s organic – in a mediated world, authenticity means conscious choice rather than unconscious reaction. It means understanding how our minds are shaped while maintaining our capacity for genuine connection, creative expression, and direct experience. The most human elements – love, creativity, intuition, genuine discovery – become more precious precisely because they defy algorithmic control. These are the last frontiers of human freedom—the unpredictable, unquantifiable forces that cannot be reduced to data points or behavioral models. 

The ultimate battle isn’t just for truth – it’s for the human spirit itself. A system that can engineer perception can engineer submission. But there’s a beautiful irony here: the very act of recognizing these systems of reality construction is itself an expression of authentic consciousness – a choice that proves they haven’t conquered human perception completely. Free will cannot be engineered precisely because the capacity to see through engineered reality remains ours. In the end, their greatest fear isn’t that we’ll reject their manufactured world – it’s that we’ll remember how to see beyond it.

Republished from the author’s Substack

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 23:25

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SpaceX has just shared a video from the Fram2 mission, which has become the first-ever crewed flight to take a polar orbit. The footage (below), captured by a camera attached to the opened nose cone of the Crew Dragon spacecraft about 265 miles up, features stunning scenery from the iciest regions on the planet. It […]

Digital Trends
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Meta AI glasses leak tips one-eyed screen, Android soul, and high ask
Meta has tasted some unprecedented success with its Stories smart glasses, created in collaboration with Ray-Ban. The premise of a wearable device with onboard cameras, ready to take social media videos, coupled with an onboard AI assistant, has proved hot enough that Meta has even made high-fashion variants for the upscale market.  What they have […]

BBC Top Stories (US)
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More women make allegations against PhD student rapist
Police in London say Zhenhao Zou's "offending group is far greater" than they had realised.

Russia Today News
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Putin envoy to visit Washington – media

Mail Online
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Val Kilmer dead at 65: Batman and Top Gun star passes away after long health battle
Hollywood star Val Kilmer - famed for iconic roles in Top Gun, Batman and The Doors - has died at 65 after a long health battle.

Mail Online
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Val Kilmer dead at 65: Batman and Top Gun star passes away after long health battle
Legendary actor Val Kilmer has died at 65. His daughter Mercedes Kilmer confirmed his death to the New York Times on Tuesday.

The Guardian (UK)
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From the archive: ‘The treeline is out of control’: how the climate crisis is turning the Arctic green – podcast
We are raiding the Guardian Long Read archives to bring you some classic pieces from years past, with new introductions from the authors.This week, from 2022: In northern Norway, trees are rapidly taking over the tundra and threatening an ancient way of life that depends on snow and iceBy Ben Rawlence. Read by Christien Anholt Continue reading...

ZeroHedge News
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Rolling Risk: Unvetted Migrants Behind The Wheel Of Big Rigs Threaten US Safety & Security
Rolling Risk: Unvetted Migrants Behind The Wheel Of Big Rigs Threaten US Safety & Security

Leaders of a trucking advocacy group are sounding the alarm, claiming that the American Trucking Association (ATA) advised the federal government during the Biden-Harris administration to issue hundreds of thousands of non-domiciled commercial driver's licenses (CDLs) to non-citizens—many of whom reportedly cannot read or write English. Many of these unvetted migrants were funneled into the long-haul trucking sector, which poses national security and public safety risks.

Harvey Beech, a co-founder of American Truckers United (ATU), addressed lawmakers in Arkansas earlier on Monday, warning about migrant truck drivers on the state's highways—and nationwide. 

ATU commented on Beech's address to Arkansas lawmakers, stating:


Arkansas Trucking Association's full-on backing of the Biden-Harris Trucking Action Plan is the REAL reason we're seeing a flood of non-citizen truck drivers on Arkansas highways! He's not holding back—this move has unleashed chaos, and HB1745? It's doing NOTHING to pump the brakes! Are we just handing over our roadways to Non-Citizens? Sound off below and spread this like wildfire—America needs to know



🚨BREAKING - A founder of American Truckers United (ATU) just unleashed a jaw-dropping truth: The Arkansas Trucking Association’s full-on backing of the Biden-Harris Trucking Action Plan is the REAL reason we’re seeing a flood of non-citizen truck drivers on Arkansas highways!… pic.twitter.com/eOQe2mikFk
— American Truckers (@atutruckers) April 1, 2025
The National Transportation Research Board recently ranked Arkansas fourth for fatalities involving large trucks. Earlier this month in Texas, a migrant truck driver killed five people and injured 12 others.


Advocacy Group Calls For US Probe On Non-English Speaking Migrant Truck Drivers After Deadly Austin Crash https://t.co/453papF7Pg
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) March 19, 2025
This is shocking! 


Non-Citizen Trucker Kills Colorado’s Scott Miller. Widow Deann Demands Immigration & Trucking Overhaul! pic.twitter.com/QtVZy6ApDZ
— American Truckers (@atutruckers) April 1, 2025
ATU co-founder Beech and another co-founder, Shannon Everett, provided more color about their fight at the Arkansas State Capitol Building to get non-domiciled CDLs off America's highways.


Update on Arkansas Trucking Battle pic.twitter.com/7qCgzQpzYx
— American Truckers (@atutruckers) March 31, 2025
ATU Everett also warned Arkansas lawmakers how non-English speaking migrants pose a significant danger to all Americans. 


An ATU representative exposed how the Arkansas Trucking Association’s bill claims to crack down on foreign and non-domicile CDLs—but its really a smokescreen to protect the loopholes letting them flood our roads. This is a betrayal of American Truckers! Watch and decide for… pic.twitter.com/2Y1YVJ0RUy
— American Truckers (@atutruckers) April 1, 2025
Flooding the nation with non-English-speaking migrants holding non-domiciled CDLs and operating 80,000-pound semi-trucks poses a serious national security and public safety risk.v

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 22:10

ZeroHedge News
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Democrat-Backed Crawford Wins Wisconsin Supreme Court Race
Democrat-Backed Crawford Wins Wisconsin Supreme Court Race

(Update 2210ET): According to multiple outlets, Democrat-endorsed Susan Crawford has won the Wisconsin Supreme Court election, beating Republican-endorsed Brad Schimel in the most expensive judicial election in US history.
Wisconsin Supreme Court candidates Brad Schimel and Susan Crawford. Getty Images

The campaigns and their supporters spent more than $81 million, and drew the involvement of Elon Musk, Democratic Sen. Bernie Sanders, and other political figures.

Crawford's win means that liberals will retain a 4-3 majority in the Wisconsin Supreme Court.

*  *  *

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

Today, the voters of Wisconsin go to the polls in what may be the single most expensive and important judicial race in modern history. 

Both parties are spending millions with the balance of the state Supreme Court in the balance. 

If liberal Susan Crawford wins, the expectation is that she will vote with the Democratic majority to approve a gerrymandering of congressional districts to guarantee the loss of two Republicans and possibly flip control of the House of Representatives to the Democrats.

The raw political pitch in the election is disturbing. It assumes that both candidates will blindly support the objectives of their respective parties. The real reason to cast a vote today should be on judicial ideology. Ironically, the United States Supreme Court made that plain in an important Wisconsin case argued just the day before the state election.

The case is Catholic Charities Bureau, Inc. v. Wisconsin Labor & Industry Review Commission.

In the decision below, the Democratic-controlled Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled that Catholic Charities could not benefit from a religious exemption to the state’s unemployment tax because its charitable work was not sufficiently religious.

Catholic Charities is one of the world’s oldest and most respected charities. However, the church believes that it has a duty to help people of every faith who are in need. Thus, the church does not proselytize in offering such aid and services.

A state labor commission ruled that the charity’s lack of such religious expression and prayer makes it secular, even if it has religious motivations.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court agreed and ruled that the charity is not operated primarily for religious purposes because it does not “attempt to imbue” beneficiaries “with the Catholic faith nor supply any religious materials to program participants or employees.” In other words, the fact that Catholic Charities helps everyone and does not proselytize worked against it. The Wisconsin Supreme Court essentially argued that it needs to pray more to offer such charity as a church.

It is a disturbing ruling that would allow the state to choose between religions in weighing their relative manifestations of faith.



Even liberal justices cried foul over the standard.

Justice Elena Kagan suggested it was “pretty fundamental that we don’t treat some religions better than others. And we certainly don’t do it based on the content of the religious doctrine that those religions preach.”

Kagan noted, “Some religions proselytize. Other religions don’t. Why are we treating some religions better than others based on that element of religious doctrine?” 

She noted that the standard “basically puts the state on the side of some religions with some doctrine versus other religions with a different doctrine.”

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson suggested that the Wisconsin Supreme Court was asking the wrong questions about what it means to be an organization “operated primarily for religious purposes.”

Justice Neil Gorsuch virtually mocked the standard of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, asking if Catholic Charities have to require the people receiving their services to “repent.” He then asked: “is mandatory church attendance versus optional church attendance, that’s the line?”

Gorsuch then delivered the haymaker:   


“Isn’t it a fundamental premise of our First Amendment that the state shouldn’t be picking and choosing between religions, between certain evangelical sects, and Judaism and Catholicism on the other, for example?”


The case shows that there are far more important issues dividing these candidates on judicial philosophy that should drive this election. I am not a fan of state elected judges and justices precisely because of the raw political element to these contests. 

The Catholic Charities case shows that the Wisconsin Supreme Court is divided along more than just a party line.

*  *  *

Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro professor of public interest law at George Washington University and the author of “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage.”

 

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 22:15

ZeroHedge News
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Russian Arctic LNG 2 Project Resumes Gas Processing
Russian Arctic LNG 2 Project Resumes Gas Processing

By Charles Kennedy of Oilprice.com

Arctic LNG 2, the processing and export facility that was billed as Russia’s flagship LNG project, has gradually resumed gas processing after months of hiatus, Reuters reported on Tuesday, citing industry sources and satellite images.



Arctic LNG 2 has been under U.S. and EU sanctions since last year, and the project hasn’t been able to sell any cargo because of the sanctions.

The first production train at the plant was shut in early October over the project developers’ inability to secure buyers amid the Western sanctions on Arctic LNG 2, according to one of Reuters’ sources.

The plant continues has now slowly resumed gas processing and keeps it at low rates as Russia expects what the Trump Administration would do with the sanctions.

Russian LNG developer and exporter Novatek, the majority owner of Arctic LNG 2, is looking to rebuild relations with the U.S. with the help of lobbyists, sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters in December.

Hit heavily by sanctions, Arctic LNG 2 was put on ice last year and Novatek has struggled to sell any cargo to a buyer.

Located in the Gydan Peninsula, Arctic LNG 2 was considered key to Russia’s efforts to boost its global LNG market share from 8% to 20% by 2030-2035.

But the project has come under intensifying sanctions from the United States, which have put off any buyers that were previously considering buying cargoes from Arctic LNG 2.

The project has seen months of delays after the initial U.S. sanctions in November 2023 upended the company’s plans for production start-up and export timelines.

In August 2024, the U.S. State Department intensified efforts to derail Arctic LNG 2 exports by targeting companies involved in the development of the project and vessels found to have loaded LNG from the facility.

The U.S. designated multiple companies related to Arctic LNG 2 to further disrupt the project’s ability to produce and export LNG, as well as the project’s ability to procure critical LNG carriers.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 22:35

ZeroHedge News
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Iran 'Incredibly Weakened' By Over 200 US Strikes On Houthis: White House
Iran 'Incredibly Weakened' By Over 200 US Strikes On Houthis: White House

The White House on Tuesday declared that Iran has been "incredibly" weakened as a result of the Pentagon operation against Yemen's Houthis which was renewed on March 15 by President Trump and his national security cabinet.

Immense controversy has ensued in the wake of 'Signalgate' which involved discussions of war planning with Atlantic journalist Jeffrey Goldberg privy to the group chat conversation. 

White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said there's has been over 200 strikes on targets in Yemen. It has long been a US talking point going back to 2015 that the Houthis (Ansarallah movement) has been supplied by the Iranians. Shipments of Iranian weaponry has over the years been intercepted by US naval ships in Gulf area waters.
US Navy image

The group has fired at least eight ballistic missiles on Israel over the past week, but the US is leading the way in anti-Houthi operations.

"There have now been more than 200 successful strikes," Leavitt said. "Iran is incredibly weakened as a result. They’ve taken out Houthi leaders, critical members who have been launching strikes on naval ships and commercial vessels. This operation will not stop until the freedom of navigation in this region is restored."

The Houthis haven't confirmed the deaths of any leaders, nor has the US side acknowledged the repeat attacks on US warships or the carrier USS Truman. 

According to some of the latest:


According to a brief statement broadcast by the Houthi-run al-Masirah TV, five airstrikes at dawn targeted the Jarban area in the Sanhan district southeast of Sanaa, while two others hit the Bani Matar district west of the capital.

The statement further indicated that Saada, a stronghold of the group, was subjected to 15 U.S. airstrikes overnight, but did not disclose specific locations targeted.


Israeli media and The Associated Press have meanwhile said that these last two weeks of strikes on Yemen have been far more devasting than similar aerial assaults under Biden.

According to a report featured in center-left Times of Israel:


A new American airstrike campaign against Yemen’s Houthi rebels appears more intense and more extensive, as the US moves from solely targeting launch sites to firing at ranking personnel as well as dropping bombs in city neighborhoods, an Associated Press review of the operation shows.

The pattern under US President Donald Trump reflects a departure from the Biden administration, which limited its strikes as Arab allies tried to reach a separate peace with the group. It comes after the Iran-backed Houthis threatened to resume attacking “any Israeli vessel” over the country’s refusal to allow aid into the Gaza Strip.


Both sides appear content to keep mum on the extent of 'success' of the back-and-forth attacks. But the consensus among war analysts is that if the Houthi threat to Red Sea shipping is to be rooted out, it will take a long, sustained campaign - which we should note has not had formal war authorization from Congress.

"Folks that say, ‘We’ll go in there and take out everyone with the last name Houthi and we’ll win.’ The Houthi leadership has been taken out in history in the past, and they are resilient,” said retired US Navy Vice Adm. Kevin Donegan, per AFP. “They came back and they grew stronger. So this isn’t something that is a one-and-done.”


.@PressSec: "These Houthi strikes have been incredibly successful. Last time I was at this podium, there were more than 100 successful strikes. There have now been over 200 successful strikes -- Iran is incredibly weakened as a result of these attacks." pic.twitter.com/FEPyvFH5c8
— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) April 1, 2025
As for Iran, it costs little for it to wage proxy war against US Navy ships positioned in the region. In a sense, the Pentagon is in the Iranians' backyard. Already, the Houthis have claimed to have downed the 16th US MQ-9 Reaper drone as of Tuesday, which hasn't been acknowledged as yet by the Pentagon. The controversy over the scope of US actions will likely only grow among the American populace.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 23:00

The Hill
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Booker says Democrats 'have to take some responsibility' for state of the country
Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) on Tuesday said Democrats "have to take some responsibility" for the current state of the country, during his first interview after setting a new record for the longest Senate floor speech in history. In an interview on MSNBC's "The Rachel Maddow Show," Booker said he was inspired to speak on the...

The Hill
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5 takeaways from Wisconsin Supreme Court race, Florida special elections
Democrats scored a critical win Tuesday in their first major test at the ballot box since President Trump took office in January. The elections came amid growing anger over the Trump’s administration’s immigration and economic policies, its handling of free speech, and the federal cuts made under Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). The...

Slashdot
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Cheap TVs' Incessant Advertising Reaches Troubling New Lows
An anonymous reader quotes an op-ed from Ars Technica's Scharon Harding: TVs offer us an escape from the real world. After a long day, sometimes there's nothing more relaxing than turning on your TV, tuning into your favorite program, and unplugging from the realities around you. But what happens when divisive, potentially offensive messaging infiltrates that escape? Even with streaming services making it easy to watch TV commercial-free, it can still be difficult for TV viewers to avoid ads with these sorts of messages. That's especially the case with budget brands, which may even force controversial ads onto TVs when they're idle, making users pay for low-priced TVs in unexpected, and sometimes troubling, ways. [...]

Buying a budget TV means accepting some trade-offs. Those trade-offs have historically been around things like image quality and feature sets. But companies like Vizio are also asking customers to accept questionable advertising decisions as they look to create new paths to ad revenue. Numerous factors are pushing TV OS operators deeper into advertising. Brands are struggling to grow profits as people buy new TVs less frequently. As the TV market gets more competitive, hardware is also selling for cheaper, with some companies selling TVs at a loss with hopes of making up for it with ad sales. There's concern that these market realities could detract from real TV innovation. And as the Secretary Noem ad reportedly shown to Vizio TV owners has highlighted, another concern is the lack of care around which ads are being shown to TV owners -- especially when all they want is simple "ambient background" noise.

Today, people can disable ambient mode settings that show ads. But with some TV brands showing poor judgment around where they sell and place ads, we wouldn't bank on companies maintaining these boundaries forever. If the industry can't find a way to balance corporate needs with appropriate advertising, people might turn off not only their TVs more often, but also unplug from those brands completely. Some of the worst offenders highlighted in the article include Vizio TVs' "Scenic Mode," which activates when the TV is idle and displays "relaxing, ambient content" accompanied by ads. Roku City takes a similar approach with its animated cityscape screensaver, saturated with brand logos and advertisements. Even Amazon Fire TV and premium brands like LG have adopted screensaver ads, showing that this intrusive trend isn't limited to budget models.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Techdirt
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Measles & Vitamin A Toxicity: How RFK Jr. Is Compounding The Outbreak Problem
The measles outbreak is not going away and RFK Jr. is making it worse. There is no need for equivocation in that statement. The facts are plain for all to see. Through a combination of half-hearted statements on getting the MMR vaccine followed up first by a pivot to nutrition, then another pivot to purposeful […]

CNET News
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Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Wednesday, April 2
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 2.

CNET News
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McDonald's Launches Minecraft Happy Meals, Plus a 'Nether' Hot Sauce for Nuggets
The promotion is tied into A Minecraft Movie and is now available.

Russia Today News
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US state-funded media puts employees on unpaid leave

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Democratic-backed judge wins Wisconsin race in setback for Elon Musk
Elon Musk was a prominent fundraiser in the campaign, and was the subject of attack ads aired by Crawford's supporters.

Ars Technica
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Honda will sell off historic racing parts, including bits of Senna’s V10

The Hill
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Live updates: Liberal candidate wins Wisconsin Supreme Court race; GOP's Randy Fine wins Florida special election
A group of House Republicans rebelled against GOP leadership’s effort to block a vote on allowing proxy voting for new parents and delivering a blow to Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) The gambit drew the ire of House Democrats, who bashed the "outrageous" move as several Republicans bucked their party’s leadership. Nine Republicans — led by...

The Hill
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Murkowski congratulates Booker for 'historic feat' after marathon speech
Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), a moderate Republican, congratulated her colleague, Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), on setting the new record for longest Senate floor speech on Tuesday. “Whether you agree with him or not, the past 24+ hours was what most people think a filibuster actually looks like,” Murkowski wrote in a post on X, shortly...

The Hill
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Booker’s 2020 campaign staff praise senator over marathon speech
More than 80 of Sen. Cory Booker’s (D-N.J.) former campaign staff praised his record-breaking speech on the Senate floor. “As alumni of your 2020 presidential campaign, we write today to express our gratitude for your response over the last 25 hours to the moment of crisis we are currently in,” the staff wrote in a...

The Hill
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Booker says it ‘irked’ him that Thurmond held previous record to ‘stop people like me from being in the Senate’
Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) said on Tuesday he was determined to surpass Sen. Strom Thurmond’s (R-S.C.) prior record for longest Senate floor speech in history, saying it “irked” him that the late senator made history by trying to block civil rights legislation in the 1950s. “To be candid, Strom Thurmond’s record always kind of, just,...

The Hill
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Democrat-backed candidate reelected as Wisconsin schools superintendent
Jill Underly was projected to prevail in her reelection for Wisconsin superintendent of public instruction, beating challenger Brittany Kinser, according to Decision Desk HQ. Though the race is technically nonpartisan, Underly was backed by the state Democratic Party and Wisconsin Education Association Council (WEAC), while Kinser, an education consultant who has advocated for school choice,...

Sky News Home
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Not so secret: Notorious Soviet spy's passport part of unique MI5 exhibition
A passport belonging to one of the Cambridge spies, a 110-year-old lemon used for invisible ink and a letter about the Queen's response to news of a Soviet agent in Buckingham Palace are among MI5 artefacts on display in a "groundbreaking" new exhibition. 

Mail Online
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Revealed: Why Jeffrey Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre was charged by cops - just days before claiming she was on her 'deathbed' after bus crash
Virginia Giuffre, née Roberts, 41, posted a photograph on Instagram on Sunday night, allegedly from her hospital bed, claiming she had just four days left to live.

Slashdot
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Nuclear Is Now 'Clean Energy' In Colorado
With the signing of HB25-1040 on Monday, Colorado now defines nuclear as a "clean energy resource" since it doesn't release large amounts of climate-warming emissions. "The category was previously reserved for renewables like wind, solar and geothermal, which don't carry the radioactive stigma that's hobbled fission power plants following disasters like Chernobyl and Fukushima," notes Colorado Public Radio. From the report: In an emailed statement, Ally Sullivan, a spokesperson for the governor's office, said the law doesn't advance any specific nuclear energy project, and no utility has proposed building a nuclear power plant in Colorado. It does, however, allow nuclear energy to potentially serve as one piece of the state's plan to tackle climate change. "If nuclear energy becomes sufficiently cost-competitive, it could potentially become part of Colorado's clean energy future. However, it must be conducted safely, without harming communities, depleting other natural resources or replacing other clean energy sources," Sullivan said.

By redefining nuclear energy as "clean," the law would let future fission-based power plants obtain local grants previously reserved for other carbon-free energy sources, and it would allow those projects to contribute to Colorado's renewable energy goals. It also aligns state law with a push to reshape public opinion of nuclear energy. Nuclear energy proponents promise new reactor designs are smaller and safer than hulking power plants built in the 20th century. By embracing those systems, bill supporters claimed Colorado could meet rising energy demand without abandoning its ambitious climate goals.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Trump poised to reshape global economy and how world does business
The BBC’s economics editor Faisal Islam explains why a US tariff on goods imported into America is such a big deal for both consumers and countries.

Sky News Home
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'No more bat tunnels' after government reveals planning reforms to 'rewire the system'
Major developers will only deal with one regulator under planning reforms which ministers say will "rewire the system" to get Britain building - all while protecting the environment. 

Sky News Home
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The new rules facing European nationals who want to visit UK
European nationals will have to get an Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) if they want to visit the UK from today.

The Guardian (UK)
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Neil Young says he may be barred from returning to US over Donald Trump criticism
The US-Canadian dual citizen speculates he may be ‘barred or put in jail to sleep on a cement floor’ after his European tour, after years of speaking against TrumpNeil Young has shared his concerns of being barred from the US after his European tour later this year, thanks to his outspoken critiques of Donald Trump.On Tuesday, on his website Neil Young Archives, the 79-year-old musician – who has dual Canadian-American citizenship – wrote of his fears after the recent spate of people being detained and deported upon entering the US. These incidents have been credited to vague or unspecified visa issues, but have frequently affected individuals who have criticised the Trump administration either publicly or in messages on their phone read by immigration officers. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Myanmar earthquake deaths set to pass 3,000 as looming monsoon sparks urgent call for aid
Torrential rains are expected next month, but many at the epicentre in Mandalay and Sagaing are still sleeping in the streetsThe death toll from the worst earthquake to hit Myanmar in a century is expected to surpass 3,000 on Wednesday, as humanitarian agencies urged other countries to ramp up aid ahead of the monsoon rains.Close to the epicentre, in the decimated cities of Mandalay and Sagaing, traumatised survivors slept in the street, with the stench of corpses trapped under the rubble permeating the disaster zone. Water, food and medicine are in short supply, and the monsoon could hit in May. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Cory Booker breaks record for longest Senate speech with Trump condemnation
In speech that began Monday night, Democratic senator warns of ‘grave and urgent’ danger of Trump administrationUS politics – latest updatesCory Booker, the Democratic US senator from New Jersey, has broken the record for longest speech ever by a lone senator – beating the record first established by Strom Thurmond, who filibustered for 24 hours and 18 minutes in opposition to the Civil Rights Act of 1957.Booker’s speech eventually ran to 25 hours and five minutes. Having begun at 7pm on Monday night, was not a filibuster but instead an effort to warn of what he called the “grave and urgent” danger that Donald Trump’s presidential administration poses to democracy and the American people. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
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CinemaCon 2025 live – Superman latest, John Wick prequel, new Hunger Games, and Now You See Me: Now You Don't

Digital Trends
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Earth takes on ‘eyeball’ vibes from space
The blue marble and the blue planet are both well-known descriptions of the rock that is our home. But “Earthly eyeball”? That’s a new one. But when viewed through the International Space Station’s Cupola module, that’s exactly how it looks — according to NASA astronaut Don Pettit. Pettit posted his striking footage on social media […]

Mail Online
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TUI barred me from flight - as my valid passport was more than ten years old: SALLY SORTS IT
We booked a £3,935 holiday to Lanzarote via travel firm TUI for me, my 78-year-old husband and our granddaughter.

Mail Online
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Buried in the Spring Statement - sign that Premium Bond prize rate could soon rise: SYLVIA MORRIS
The Spring Statement revealed National Savings & Investments has been tasked with bringing in more money for the Government this year.

Mail Online
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New rules mean YOU could get £40 if your smart meter is broken - But 3.5m homes with faulty energy devices face waiting another YEAR
Ofgem has proposed that any household with a broken smart meter should be paid £40 compensation if their supplier doesn't fix it within 90 days.

Mail Online
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Car loans scandal ruling 'goes too far': FCA raises alarm as industry faces £44bn bill
Lawyers for the FCA intervened in a crucial Supreme Court hearing on the commission payment row that has been dubbed PPI on wheels

Mail Online
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Public satisfaction with the NHS has 'collapsed' to a record low amid long waits for care and wasteful spending, 'gold-standard' survey reveals
Britons blame their frustrations on long waits for a GP, dentist and hospital bed, a shortage of frontline staff and bureaucrat's wasteful spending.

Mail Online
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Troublemaker British-Gambian Cornell student flees US before Trump's ICE agents could arrest him
A Cornell University student facing deportation after his visa was revoked because of his campus activism said he decided to leave the United States, declaring: 'Long live the student intifada!'

Mail Online
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Inside story of Steven Spielberg's bizarre arrangement with ex-wife after $100M divorce
Amy Irving has remained surprisingly close with the 78-year-old legendary filmmaker since their 1989 split

Mail Online
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Leonardo DiCaprio, 50, debuts shock midlife crisis makeover as he poses with co-stars
Leonardo DiCaprio debuted a subtle midlife makeover on Tuesday as he attended CinemaCon 2025 in Las Vegas.

Mail Online
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I was a CIA agent... here's where the Ark of the Covenant is hidden
A former CIA psychic has claimed that he knows exactly where the long lost Ark of the Covenant is hidden, suggesting that this never-before-seen Biblical relic actually exists.

Mail Online
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Bonnie Blue reveals next eye-watering sex stunt... but it may be physically impossible to achieve
Controversial OnlyFans sensation Bonnie Blue is getting ready to take on her most unbelievable sex challenge to date.

Mail Online
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Medical report 'finds TWO MORE sex drugs were in Shane Warne's room' when he died - after police 'covered up' the presence of super-strong Viagra jelly
Mail Online exclusively revealed police were told to omit the presence of one drug from their findings on the cricket legend's death. Now a new report states two other medications were present.

Gizmodo
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Krypto Shines in Brand New Footage From James Gunn’s Superman
The Warner Bros. and DC Studios CinemaCon presentation gave a new peek at DC's upcoming superhero movie.

Mail Online
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Katie Price 'sparks fresh outrage after investing in a racing greyhound' despite having SEVEN pets die in her care as petition to stop her owning animals reaches 37,000 signatures
The former glamour model, 46, has owned several pets over the years, but has come under scrutiny after five dogs, a horse, and a chameleon all died while in her care.

Mail Online
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Trump 'finalizing' TikTok sale proposal as total ban looms in just FOUR days
President Trump is set to host an Oval Office meeting with investment groups who could purchase TikTok, after he directed a pause in a legal ban on the company on his first day in office.

Mail Online
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After a mystery absence, Melania returned with what looked like a First Lady fashion faux pas... but it was her fiercest triumph yet
Stepping out onto the stage of the State Department on Tuesday, Melania was performing only her second solo public engagement since reassuming her role as First Lady.

Mail Online
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John Wick fans lose their minds over bombshell news about Keanu Reeves and a fifth movie
News that Keanu Reeves is on board for John Wick 5 had fans in disbelief, with many convinced it was an elaborate April Fools' prank. An animated prequel and a spin-off were also announced.

Mail Online
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Legendary rocker fears he won't be allowed to return home to the US if he tours abroad
Neil Young expressed his concerns about President Donald Trump preventing him from returning to America following his European tour. 

Mail Online
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Jeremy Kyle reveals he 'couldn't get out of bed' and was on antidepressants after his show was axed over guest suicide as he opens up in first TV interview with Kate Garraway
The presenter, 59, made his return to ITV after six years on Tuesday night, as he appeared on Kate Garraway's Life Stories.

Mail Online
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7th Heaven child star doesn't look like this anymore! Actor shares rare snap after welcoming child
The former child star began his career in entertainment at the young age of two and is best known for starring on the hit sitcom 7th Heaven, which ran for 11 seasons from 1996 to 2007.

Mail Online
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WWE legend Mick Foley left hospitalized after horror car crash: 'I have no idea how I am still walking'
A legend of the WWE has posted images of a terrifying car crash that totaled his vehicle. But somehow, he managed to escape with only minor injuries.

The Register
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Forget Signal. National Security Adviser Waltz now accused of using Gmail for work
But his emails! Sharing them with Google! Senior members of the US National Security Council, including the White House national security adviser Michael Waltz, have been accused of using their personal Gmail accounts to exchange sensitive information.…

Boing Boing
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Finally, a kids' app that won't blast your eardrums or melt your brain
TL;DR: Pok Pok is a Montessori-based kids' app that ditches the noise for calm, creative play — Now $59.99 (Reg $250)
You're a tech-savvy parent. You love your gadgets. But hand your toddler an iPad, and suddenly, your peaceful home sounds like a Chuck E. — Read the rest
The post Finally, a kids' app that won't blast your eardrums or melt your brain appeared first on Boing Boing.

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'Live fire' exercise reveals Royal Navy warship's capabilities as it prepares for troubled waters
"Action stations!" a voice barks.

FlyerTalk
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Can a Airbus A380 Airline Redefine Trans-Atlantic Travel?
  Britain’s The Independent reports the airline is ready for operations, despite not yet having their own Air Operator Certificate or Operating License from the nation’s authorties.   “We’ve Got A Lot of People That Want to Fly” With two Airbus A380s in their fleet, Global Airlines describes their vision as travel without “long security […]

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Air France, Softiel Introduce New Business Class Bedding
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ZeroHedge News
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China's Role In US Fentanyl Crisis Directed By Regime Leadership, Expert Says
China's Role In US Fentanyl Crisis Directed By Regime Leadership, Expert Says

Authored by Terri Wu & Olivia Li via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Tensions have been simmering between the United States and communist China as the two countries escalate tariffs on each other’s imports. Meanwhile, Beijing’s rhetoric has become increasingly confrontational.
Illustration by The Epoch Times, Getty Images, John Fredricks/The Epoch Times

In early March, the Chinese Embassy in Washington shared a social media post from its Foreign Ministry, repeating its message: “If war is what the U.S. wants, be it a tariff war, a trade war or any other type of war, we’re ready to fight till the end.”

President Donald Trump has warned that, while the United States does not seek war with China, it is “very well-equipped to handle it.”

Trump has imposed an additional 20 percent tariff on all goods made in China, citing a national emergency on the continued trafficking of fentanyl—a deadly opioid that is 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine—into the United States.

To this day, China remains the primary source of fentanyl precursors, which are shipped to Mexico, where they’re manufactured into the illicit drug. It is then smuggled into the United States mainly via the southern border.

In response to Trump’s added tariff, Beijing imposed an additional 15 percent tariff on U.S. coal and natural gas and an extra 10 percent on agricultural equipment and pickup trucks.

The communist regime has also called the fentanyl epidemic the United States’ “own problem“ and has cast the U.S. tariffs as ”blackmail.”

Yuan Hongbing, a former law professor at Peking University in China who now lives in Australia, said the American opioid epidemic is far from the self-inflicted wound the CCP has suggested it is.

The Chinese regime has played a significant role in America’s fentanyl crisis, and blaming the United States for it has long been Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leader Xi Jinping’s strategy, Yuan told NTD, Epoch Times’ sister media outlet, in a recent episode of the Chinese-language program “Pinnacle View.”

Yuan, who has insider access to senior CCP leaders, said Xi has consistently given internal directives during both Trump’s first and second terms that Beijing must maintain the narrative that the drug crises in both Europe and the United States are not linked to China.

Yuan said the regime has also been directed by Xi to assert that China makes the chemical precursors legally, and that if they are converted into deadly drugs and smuggled into the United States or Europe, it is not China’s responsibility.

The China expert further stated that fentanyl is at the core of Xi’s bid to “take revenge” on the West. He said Xi blames the West for subjecting China to a century of humiliation as a result of the Opium Wars in the mid-19th century. During that time, China had to sign a series of unequal treaties that ceded Chinese territory and opened Chinese ports to foreign control.

“It is precisely due to Xi’s directives that we are now seeing a dramatic increase in both the production of fentanyl precursors in China and the export of these chemicals, fueling the ongoing fentanyl crisis in the United States,” Yuan said.

Fentanyl overdose deaths have become a national crisis, taking more than 200 American lives per day, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. In 2023 alone, about 75,000 Americans died from fentanyl overdose, a staggering 23-fold increase from 10 years ago.
A bag of illicit fentanyl pills is held as Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem tours the San Ysidro Port of Entry at the U.S.–Mexico border in San Diego on March 16, 2025. Alex Brandon/Getty Images

Today, accidental drug overdoses are the leading cause of death among Americans aged 18 to 45. On a more positive note, the number of opioid-related overdose deaths decreased by more than 20 percent in 2024, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The fentanyl crisis has become a key concern among American voters and has become one of the driving forces behind the dynamics of U.S.–China relations, said China expert Alexander Liao.

He said relations between Beijing and Washington have fundamentally changed. During the Biden administration, the two countries went through a diplomatic “ice age,” when senior-level official communication froze for approximately 10 months in 2022 and 2023. However, Liao believes the confrontation has now escalated to a new level.

“Whether it’s trade or other aspects, the United States and China have basically turned against each other,” Liao told The Epoch Times.

“Little noise but fierce action” is how he categorizes the current state between Beijing and Washington, in contrast to the “big arguments and little action” going on between the United States and Europe.

“The politics play differently between enemies and friends,” he said.

US Makes Perfect Enemy for Chinese Regime

Over the past decade, China saw significant economic growth. Its nominal GDP is now over three-quarters of that of the United States, according to data from the World Bank. When measured by purchasing power, China’s economy surpassed that of the United States in 2016.

Xi rose in the CCP ranks a few years before that and in 2013 took over its leadership.

According to Yuan, Xi’s communist nature drove him to immediately cash in on China’s economic strength to establish a foreign policy program, the Belt and Road Initiative, aimed at expanding communist totalitarianism around the world.

Under the guise of infrastructure development, the $1 trillion geopolitical platform snatches up other countries’ natural resources, including critical minerals for computer chip production, and expands its use of their ports for its own civil and military purposes.

Read the rest here...

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 20:55

ZeroHedge News
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FBI Weaponizes Background Checks To Enforce California Gun Ban
FBI Weaponizes Background Checks To Enforce California Gun Ban

Submitted by Gun Owners of America,

When you go to a gun store to buy a new gun, you can expect a few things to happen.  First, some paperwork.  Second, you can expect to have to pass a background check before leaving with your gun.  And third, you can expect that the gun store will keep a record of your purchase for as long as the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives ("ATF") requires.  After all, that is how the government traces crime guns back to their original purchasers.

But what you might not expect is an FBI agent receiving a ping that you – yes, you – just successfully bought a gun.  And you might be surprised to learn that this agent has been receiving notifications of your purchases for months – or years.



Of course, such a surveillance scheme would be flatly unconstitutional – not to mention a violation of several safeguards already codified in federal law.  Yet slowly but surely, the government has been building a record of the private collections of thousands of American citizens, even though federal law expressly prohibits that "any system of registration of firearms, firearms owners, or firearms transactions or dispositions" be established.

Of course, even though they are being monitored, these victims remain law-abiding, meaning the government has no probable cause to justify seeking a warrant authorizing such a search in the first place.

Now, Gun Owners of America has discovered that the FBI has been using its Second Amendment surveillance program not only to enforce federal law, but also to help California target owners of newly banned "assault weapons."

FBI's NICS Monitoring Scheme

When news first broke of the FBI and ATF's joint "NICS Monitoring" surveillance scheme, the public was shocked.  As journalist John Crump reported in April of 2021, "monitoring of NICS isn't for prohibited people," but rather those who are eligible to purchase firearms but who law enforcement agents nevertheless suspect might commit a crime.

GOA learned that targets of NICS Monitoring – which exploits records in the National Instant Criminal Background Check System ("NICS") before they are deleted within 24 hours – never receive notice that their firearm transactions are being monitored.  Thus, there is no way to challenge the FBI's surveillance.

In fact, in order to enroll a target for NICS Monitoring, an agent only needs to complete an internal request form. At no point does an agent seeking NICS Monitoring have to convince a judge (or anyone other than himself, really) that this surveillance comports with the Fourth Amendment.  Entirely usurpingly, then, the FBI's abuse of NICS Monitoring is rampant.

Rampant Abuse of NICS Monitoring

After the NICS Monitoring scandal went public, GOA filed Freedom of Information Act ("FOIA") requests with the FBI and ATF seeking further records.  Naturally these agencies, the program's biggest abusers, were less than forthcoming with evidence of their clandestine activities, and GOA ultimately had to file suit to compel production of documents.

The subsequent document productions were illuminating.  They revealed a pattern of surveillance abuse so pervasive that federal agents could obtain NICS Monitoring based on anonymous tips.

As GOA reviewed more documents and public scrutiny increased, more and more abuses came to light.  For example, in one case an ATF agent requested NICS Monitoring of a man who had purchased a shotgun during the George Floyd riots, on the theory that he "may use a gun for rioting." 

In another case, an ATF agent requested NICS Monitoring of a man whose "reported wage earnings" did not "appear to supply the financial means to afford" firearms.  And in another case, ATF had a man monitored who merely "had a 'habit' of purchasing new guns, tinkering with them, losing interest, and subsequently selling them."

Thus, it would seem that self-defense, having a savings account, and a tinkering hobby – although perfectly lawful activities – are justification to have one's gun purchases surveilled indefinitely.

NICS Monitoring Is Unconstitutional and Unlawful

The FBI's surveillance scheme violates the Second and Fourth Amendment rights of gun owners. 

The Founders never sanctioned governmental monitoring of Americans' gun purchases.  Moreover, the Founders specifically required that all searches be reasonable, almost always meaning that they are based on warrants issued upon a finding of probable cause.  The FBI's NICS Monitoring program respects neither right.

NICS Monitoring also violates a number of provisions of federal law.  In anticipation that the NICS system would be abused to track gun owners, Congress has mandated that the FBI destroy all NICS records of "approved" firearm transactions within 24 hours. 

The FBI's copying and pasting of certain records out of the NICS system before they can be deleted clearly contravenes the 24-hour destruction requirement.

NICS Monitoring also violates the federal prohibition on the creation of registries of gun owners – a prohibition so important that Congress codified it twice: once generally, and once specifically with respect to NICS.

FBI Now Aiding State Gun Control Efforts

If the NICS Monitoring program's history thus far was not troubling enough, GOA has made a shocking new discovery – that, since at least 2023, the FBI has been surveilling gun owners on behalf of anti-gun states.  And to make matters worse, the FBI's surveillance involves firearm sales that are perfectly legal under federal law.

In one FBI NICS Monitoring submission, an FBI Special Agent from the agency's Chicago field office cited the following suspected violations of California law to justify a sixth-month monitoring period:

"MFG/SELL/TRANS/ETC ASSAULT WPN (30600(A) PC), STATE OFFENSE CODE 52509, FELONY 2; ILL POSS ANY ASSAULT WEAPON (30605(A) PC), STATE OFFENSE CODE 52510. FELONY."

Just how a federal background check approval would constitute evidence of unlawful state possession of an "assault weapon" within California, the agent did not say.  Nor did the agent seem to recognize that it is entirely possible to possess a firearm (or even have a residence) in a neighboring state and lawfully purchase and possess an "assault weapon" there without committing a California crime.

And regardless of California law, it is entirely unclear how it furthers the FBI's mission to prosecute violent crime by monitoring gun purchases that are completely legal under federal law.

Tellingly, the FBI refused to release further details of its investigation into the California gun owner, asserting a so-called "privacy Glomar" as to those details.  In other words, the FBI ridiculously refuses to acknowledge the existence of redacted information that it has already produced.

Thus, we are left with more questions than answers:

What is the FBI doing worrying about violations of California's ban of pejoratively labeled "assault weapons"? 
Is the enforcement of state gun control laws really an FBI priority, such that Second and Fourth Amendment rights are thrown by the wayside?
We hope FBI Director Kash Patel can answer these questions and dismantle this unlawful and unconstitutional program once and for all.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 21:45

The Hill
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CELTIC CONFIDENTIAL: The one player at Parkhead who is almost impossible for Brendan Rodgers to replace
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COURTNEY LAWES on why he can be a Lions starter, 'very cocky' Henry Pollock and the reason Eddie Jones was so successful
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Could Marine Le Pen’s guilty verdict help fuel the far right? – podcast
The parliamentary leader of France’s far-right National Rally party, Marine Le Pen, has been banned from public office for five years for embezzlement, ruining her chance of a presidential run. Angelique Chrisafis reportsIt is a sentence that has prompted anger among rightwing leaders across the world and led to accusations that democracy is being threatened. This week, Marine Le Pen, the parliamentary leader of the National Rally (RN), the largest opposition party in the French parliament, was banned for five years from public office for embezzlement. Along with more than 20 others, she was found to have used money for European parliament assistants to pay party workers.The shock sentence could end Le Pen’s hopes of running for president in 2027. She is now appealing and has hit back furiously, as have her supporters and allies. Some of her support could hurt her more than it helps, however. The Kremlin spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said in response that “more and more European capitals are going down the path of violating democratic norms”. While Donald Trump and Viktor Orbán have also weighed in. Continue reading...

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China drills in Taiwan Strait risk to region's security: US
The United States said China's military activities around Taiwan only serve to "exacerbate tensions" and "put the region's security at risk."

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France admits it can do more to stop small boats - and that it could start taking migrants BACK from Britain
President Emmanuel Macron's border chief said returning the illegal settlers would send a clear message they should not risk their lives to make the dangerous crossing.

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WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT: PC Nathan Attwell had responded to reports of an 'aggressive and intoxicated man' in Cwmbran hen he found the drunken Richard Nodwell.

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Trump national security team used Gmail for government matters – WaPo

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Will Trump's 'liberation day' be a tactical masterstroke or make him an April fool?
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Trump is pressing the nuclear option on tariffs
The BBC’s economics editor Faisal Islam explains why the US president’s announcement on tariffs on goods imported into America is such a big deal for both consumers and countries.

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The blue marble and the blue planet are both well-known descriptions of the rock that is our home. But “Earthly eyeball”? That’s a new one. But when viewed through the International Space Station’s Cupola module, that’s exactly how it looks — according to NASA astronaut Don Pettit. Pettit posted his striking footage on social media […]

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West European states want Russian assets to stay frozen

Russia Today News
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Trump national security team used Gmail to talk about government matters – WaPo

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Jason and Kylie Kelce announce the birth of their fourth child... and reveal baby's name
Jason and Kylie Kelce have welcomed their fourth child, announcing the birth of their newest bundle of joy Tuesday night. 

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Friends issue health update after Ukrainian model, 20, was found with horrific injuries in Dubai having 'fallen from a height'
Maria Kovalchuk, 20, has a broken spine and limbs and remains in hospital. Her body was found on a roadside in Dubai two weeks ago.

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Ukraine war briefing: US pressure builds on Russia over refusal to accept ceasefire
Senators propose ‘hard-hitting’ secondary sanctions and say ‘Russia is the aggressor’; ‘coalition of the willing’ moves forward. What we know on day 1,134 Continue reading...

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Cory Booker breaks record for longest Senate speech with Trump condemnation
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The man mourning 170 loved ones lost in Myanmar's earthquake
Scores of Muslims died in Sagaing when their mosques collapsed during Friday prayers at the end of Ramadan.

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We live in one of Britain's biggest baby deserts - THIS is why the birth rate has slumped: Bristol locals reveal reason for fall in women having children despite city's booming economy
The bustling city has a booming economy and a highly educated population, but research has revealed the number of babies born in the South West city has slumped by a third in a decade.

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Teenage girl, 17, was shot dead in 'tit-for-tat' war after gang member's 'social media humiliation', court hears
Tanesha Melbourne-Blake, 17, was standing with her boyfriend and friends on a road in Tottenham on April 2, 2018, when she was shot in an alleged drive-by shooting.

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PC Nathan Attwell had responded to reports of an 'aggressive and intoxicated man' in Cwmbran, south Wales, on December 20, 2024, when he found the violent Richard Nodwell.

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ZeroHedge News
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"There Will Be No Negotiating": Tesla Firebombing Suspect Hit With Federal Charges, Faces 20 Years In Prison
"There Will Be No Negotiating": Tesla Firebombing Suspect Hit With Federal Charges, Faces 20 Years In Prison

Authored by Rudy Blalock via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The U.S. Department of Justice has filed federal charges against a suspect in connection with a firebombing attack on a Tesla dealership in Loveland, Colorado.
Cooper Frederick. Larimer County Sheriff's Office

Cooper Frederick, 24, faces federal charges related to the March 7 attack, according to Attorney General Pamela Bondi, who announced the charges on Monday.

“I made it clear, if you take part in the wave of domestic terrorism, I’ve made it clear if you take part in the wave of domestic terrorism against Tesla properties, we will find you, arrest you, and put you behind bars,” Bondi stated. “Today, I’m proud to announce that the Department of Justice has unsealed federal charges against another Tesla attacker.”

Frederick, a Fort Collins resident, was initially arrested by Loveland Police on March 13 on multiple state charges, according to a City of Loveland news release. The charges included possession of explosives, second-degree arson, criminal mischief, and criminal attempt to commit a felony.

A fire erupted after an incendiary device was thrown at the Tesla building and landed between two vehicles. Several people inside the building were cleaning at the time and could have been injured, according to the news release, which stated a responding officer quickly extinguished the fire.

Larimer County Jail records show Frederick bonded out of jail on March 14.

Bondi stated in the same announcement that, following the latest charges, Frederick was re-arrested in Plano, Texas, following an investigation by the FBI.

Frederick’s arrest comes amid a wave of violent attacks against Tesla properties since CEO Elon Musk became head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) in the Trump administration.

Incidents have occurred in at least nine states since January, with targets including Tesla showrooms, vehicles, and charging stations.

According to a report by The Epoch Times, on March 18, two Cybertrucks were set ablaze at a Las Vegas repair center, and “Resist” was spray-painted on the building.

Over that incident, police arrested 36-year-old Paul Hyon Kim on March 27, charging him with 15 offenses, including arson and firearms violations. Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department Assistant Sheriff Dori Koren said Kim had self-proclaimed affiliations with far-left organizations, including Communist Party USA-affiliated groups and other movements.

In February, a suspect allegedly threw eight Molotov cocktails at a Tesla showroom in Salem, Oregon, while armed with a suppressed AR-15 rifle.

Additional attacks have also occurred in Charleston, South Carolina, and Austin, Texas.

“All of these cases are a serious threat to public safety. Therefore, there will be no negotiating. We are seeking 20 years in prison,” Bondi said.

In Canada, approximately 80 Tesla vehicles were also vandalized in Hamilton, Ontario, on March 19.

President Donald Trump has condemned the attacks on Tesla properties, suggesting perpetrators would face long sentences for their crimes.

“I look forward to watching the sick terrorist thugs get 20-year jail sentences for what they are doing to Elon Musk and Tesla,” he said in a March 21 post on Truth Social.

During a town hall event in Green Bay, Wisconsin, on Sunday, Musk condemned the attacks.

“They’re burning Teslas and shooting up dealerships and calling for the death of the president and me … That’s somebody else’s car. Leave it alone,” Musk said during the livestreamed event.

A group called Tesla Takedown has organized protests at dealerships nationwide. On its website, the group states that “Elon Musk is destroying our democracy, and he’s using the fortune he built at Tesla to do it.” The group called for a Global Day of Action on March 29, which saw protests targeting Tesla around the United States and smaller-scale rallies in several European locations.

From NTD News

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 20:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Indian Refiners Seek Alternatives To Russian Oil After Trump Tariff Threat
Indian Refiners Seek Alternatives To Russian Oil After Trump Tariff Threat

Indian oil refiners have started looking for alternative supplies of crude after President Trump threatened secondary sanctions on Russian energy exports if Moscow refuses to sign a ceasefire deal for the Ukraine.

Bloomberg reported that companies such as Bharat Petroleum Corp. and Hindustan Petroleum Corp. were looking for oil cargoes from the Middle East, the North Sea, and the Mediterranean for May delivery in anticipation of tariff action.

India has emerged as one of the biggest buyers of Russian crude since the start of the war in Ukraine, with grades including Urals accounting for almost 40% of the nation’s imports last year. Refiners have enjoyed elevated profits due to the cheaper supplies, although that advantage has waned in recent months. China has also purchased bigger volumes since the invasion.



President Trump threatened a 25% tariff on all Russian oil, saying “If Russia and I are unable to make a deal on stopping the bloodshed in Ukraine, and if I think it was Russia’s fault — which it might not be — but if I think it was Russia’s fault, I am going to put secondary tariffs on oil, on all oil coming out of Russia,” in an interview for NBC.

“That would be that if you buy oil from Russia, you can’t do business in the United States. There will be a 25% tariff on all oil, a 25- to 50-point tariff on all oil,” Trump elaborated.

The mechanism would be the same as the one Trump applied to Venezuela, slapping a 25% tariff on all imports from countries that continue buying crude from the South American nation.

Since the US is India’s top trading partner, under a scenario of “secondary tariffs” for buyers of Russian oil, it’s likely that the South Asian nation would look for alternative supplies, said Warren Patterson, the head of commodities strategy for ING Groep NV in Singapore.

“Traditional sanctions have created enough uncertainty,” he said. “The idea of secondary tariffs only intensifies this uncertainty, given that it is a new tool. Buyers need to decide whether the advantages of picking up discounted crude outweigh the potential hit on its economy from additional tariffs.”

“The big question is, will these repeated shocks end up structurally reducing Indian appetite for Russian crude? I have my doubts, as long as the economics works,” said Vandana Hari, founder of Vanda Insights in Singapore. “It’s a bluff, a bargaining ploy on the part of Trump. But refiners need to prepare, they can’t rely on hunches, no matter how bizarre and unlikely a supply threat.”

Such a tariff would be a considerable problem for India, whose dependence on imported crude hit an all-time high in the latest fiscal year. India imported 88.2% of the crude it consumed in the April 2024-February 2025 period, according to oil ministry data released at the end of last month. This is up from 87.7% for the previous fiscal year.

Due to this dependence, India is particularly price-sensitive, which is why it stepped up its purchases of Russian oil following the barrage of Western sanctions directed at Russia’s energy industry. Russia is currently India’s biggest single oil supplier.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 20:30

The Hill
Open 
Booker sets record for longest Senate speech in history
Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) on Tuesday set a new record for the longest floor speech in Senate history, having held the floor for 25 hours and 5 minutes to decry potential GOP spending cuts in their looming tax bill and policies put in place by the Trump administration. Booker, the No. 4 member of Democratic...

The Hill
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Booker's speech tops 350M likes on TikTok live
More than 350 million people liked Sen. Cory Booker’s (D-N.J.) floor speech on TikTok live, as the senator approached 25 hours of holding the floor in the Senate chamber. By 7:07 p.m. EDT on Tuesday — just over 24 hours after Booker began his historic floor speech on Monday — more than 270 million people...

The Hill
Open 
Republican Jimmy Patronis wins special election for Gaetz's Florida seat
Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis was has won the special election to replace former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) in the 1st Congressional District, defeating Democrat Gay Valimont, according to Decision Desk HQ. The district is located along Florida’s western Panhandle.  Patronis jumped into the race last November after President Trump publicly encouraged him to...

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Guy Burgess's briefcase among MI5 artefacts on display
A battered leather briefcase left behind by Guy Burgess when he fled to Moscow in 1951 is among 20 objects from MI5's archives to go on display for the first time from Saturday.

Mail Online
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ALISON BOSHOFF: Cinematic Beatles extravaganza should have fans screaming. Just one problem: the actors may be the hottest on the planet, but none is exactly a dead ringer for the star they play
The Beatles - as we all know - were the biggest and bestselling band in history. From the minute they burst on to the scene in 1962, with Love Me Do, they changed the face of music for ever.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Public satisfaction with NHS hits record low
A fifth 21% happy with NHS in Britain, finds long-running poll, with waits and staffing of major concern.

Deutsche Welle
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US prosecutors seek death penalty for UnitedHealthcare CEO killer
US federal prosecutors will seek the death penalty for Luigi M. This comes after President Donald Trump signed an executive order in January that compels the department to seek the death penalty where applicable.

Mail Online
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What would happen if Iran attacked the Chagos Islands... and why taking out US Stealth bombers would be the end of its notorious Revolutionary Guard, revealed by MARK NICOL
A threatened Iranian attack on British military facilities in the Chagos Islands would trigger a regional conflict, experts warn

Mail Online
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Britain's most dangerous gangsters: Why Chinese criminals now pose biggest threat to UK security as they wield control over money laundering, drug smuggling and human trafficking
EXCLUSIVE: The NCA revealed that mobsters from the country pose the biggest foreign organised crime threat to the UK, a finding that's taken even experts by surprise.

Mail Online
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Revealed: £1.8BILLION of taxpayers' foreign aid has gone to 30 countries richer than the poorest UK borough - including to one nation better off than 75% of us! (and don't mention the £250,000 sent to China to make a robot babysitter for chickens)
Among the nations who benefited from Britain's donations was China, which boasts one of the world's most prosperous economies, MailOnline's investigation reveals.

Mail Online
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Bizarre trend for mothers shaming their own filthy council houses on TikTok with one admitting she even referred herself to social services
A bizarre trend has emerged online, with UK- based mothers shaming their own filthy houses in a bid to increase their number of TikTok followers and advocate for 'messy' living.

Mail Online
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Stars who deserve an award for the VERY posh personas they've created - from Geri Halliwell's love of Tolstoy to Ellie Goulding's period drama accent
Filled with glitzy red carpets, high brow fashion and and cameras at every turn it is easy to get sucked into the glamorous world of the celebrity. 

Mail Online
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Revealed: The school WhatsApp messages that led to six police officers raiding 'reasonable' couple's home before arresting them and holding them in a cell for 11 hours
Friends of a couple arrested over their comments made in a school WhatsApp group have spoken of their 'shock and anger' over the incident.

Mail Online
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We live in area dubbed 'Britain's kindest village' but can tell you the truth is VERY different
MailOnline discovered, even this corner of paradise, set among stunning Pennine scenery, is not immune from crime and anti-social behaviour

Slashdot
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Stablecoin Issuer Circle Files For IPO
Circle, the issuer of the USDC stablecoin, has filed for an IPO aiming for a $5 billion valuation. It marks the company's second attempt at going public amid renewed momentum in the crypto sector and signs of recovery in tech IPO markets. CNBC reports: A prior merger with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) collapsed in late 2022 amid regulatory challenges. Since then, Circle has made strategic moves to position itself closer to the heart of global finance, including the announcement last year that it would relocate its headquarters from Boston to One World Trade Center in New York.

Circle reported $1.68 billion in revenue and reserve income in 2024, up from $1.45 billion in 2023 and $772 million in 2022. The company reported net income last year of about $156 million., down from $268 million a year earlier. A successful IPO would make Circle one of the most prominent pure-play crypto companies to list on a U.S. exchange. Coinbase went public through a direct listing in 2021 and has a market cap of about $44 billion.





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Substack Says It'll Legally Defend Writers 'Targeted By the Government'
Substack has announced it will legally support foreign writers lawfully residing in the U.S. who face government targeting over their published work, partnering with the nonprofit FIRE to expand its existing Defender program. The Verge reports: In their announcement, Substack and FIRE mention the international Tufts University student who was arrested by federal agents last week. Her legal team links her arrest to an opinion piece she co-wrote for the school's newspaper last year, which criticized Tufts for failing to comply with requests to divest from companies with connections to Israel. "If true, this represents a chilling escalation in the government's effort to target critics of American foreign policy," Substack and FIRE write.

The initiative builds on Substack's Defender program, which already offers legal assistance for independent journalists and creators on the platform. The company says it has supported "dozens" of Substack writers facing claims of defamation and trademark infringement since it launched the program in the US in 2020. It has since brought Substack Defender to writers in Canada and the UK.





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The Guardian (UK)
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Hegseth indicates US backing for Taiwan – but it is transactional Trump who has the final word
Defence secretary’s trip to Asia shows the Trump administration is engaged with the region, but analysts warn Taipei to tread carefully On Tuesday China’s military launched joint drills around Taiwan, sending ships, planes and some bizarre propaganda videos across the strait to both warn and punish Taiwan’s government over what Beijing calls “separatist activity”.The purported provocation was recent assertiveness by Taiwan’s president, Lai Ching-te, who in February designated China a “foreign hostile force” and announced 17 measures to counter its espionage and influence operations. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Starmer offers big US tech firms tax cuts in return for lower Trump tariffs
Exclusive: UK willing to placate Trump with lower digital services tax rate also encompassing non-US companiesBig US technology companies have been offered a significant tax cut by Keir Starmer in return for lower tariffs from Donald Trump’s administration as the UK braces itself for a global trade war.The Guardian understands the UK government is willing to reduce the headline rate of its digital services tax (DST) in an attempt to placate the US president, while at the same time applying the levy to companies from other countries. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Chris Mason: Jitters, uncertainty and hope as UK awaits Trump tariff decision
Talks are continuing between London and Washington at quite an intensity, our political editor writes.

CNET News
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Best Senior Phone Plans of 2025
Over 55 years old? Save money on your phone bill with special plans from T-Mobile, AT&T or even small carriers like Mint.

CNET News
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Switch 2 Nintendo Direct Live Updates: Last-Minute Rumors and Predictions
The Switch 2 Nintendo Direct will be a full hour -- here's what we expect will be in it, plus everything else coming with the new console.

Mail Online
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Isla Fisher shares uplifting message amid $119m divorce with Sacha Baron Cohen
Isla Fisher has shared an uplifting message with her fans as she navigates her $119 million divorce from comedian Sacha Baron Cohen.

Mail Online
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Noel and Liam Gallagher 'set to rake in extra £20M from Oasis reunion tour through merchandise after securing image rights to stop counterfeit sellers'
The brothers are reported to have banked themselves a staggering £20million from Warner for the rights to their image.

Mail Online
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Naomi Campbell, 54, makes surprise appearance at Usher's sold-out concert in London as she struts on stage in a racy mini dress
Naomi Campbell made a surprise appearance at Usher's sold-out concert in London on Tuesday.

Mail Online
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Blake Lively fans left disgusted by her shocking behavior during donut PR stunt that 'missed the mark'
Blake Lively is being called out for a 'disgusting' mistake she made while serving donuts at a friend's cafe this week.

Mail Online
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Moment paedophile neighbour is caught red-handed stealing intimate footage of mother and her young sons after hiding spy-cam in teddy slipper
When Peter Tomlinson, 56, of Nottinghamshire, was arrested, police found more than 2,000 images and videos of his family undressed and on the toilet.

Mail Online
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Little House on the Prairie actress Patty Maloney dead at 89
Little House on the Prairie actress Patty Maloney has died at the age of 89. The the 3-foot-11 actress was in hospice care in Winter Park, Florida . She had suffered 'several' strokes in the years prior.

Sky News Home
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More than 20 new potential victims come forward after 'prolific' rapist jailed for assaulting 10 women
Another 23 female potential victims have reported that they may have been raped by Zhenhao Zou - the Chinese PhD student detectives believe may be one of the country's most prolific sex offenders.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
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#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (Update)
We are still investigating the root cause of the outage and further updates will be provided as soon as possible.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 03:38

Update: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 10:30

Edited: Wed, 2nd Apr 2025 01:36

Status: Outage

Maintenance: None

TechRadar News
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I review all the best camera phones, but I think Samsung and Apple should just copy the Fujifilm X100VI already

Mail Online
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Urgent hunt for missing couple, both 76, who have not been seen since last week
John and Joan, both aged 76, were last seen in the seaside town of Clacton, Essex, on Thursday, March 27, where they had been with family.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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The Papers: 'Trump trade madness' and 'BYD bonanza'
Most papers on Wednesday are leading on Trump's threat of global tariffs.

The Register
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Lightmatter says it's ready to ship chip-to-chip optical highways as early as summer
AI accelerators to see the light, literally Lightmatter this week unveiled a pair of silicon photonic interconnects designed to satiate the growing demand for chip-to-chip bandwidth associated with ever-denser AI deployments.…

Wired Top Stories
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Doctor Behind Award-Winning Parkinson’s Research Among Scientists Purged From NIH
Leading scientists at the National Institutes of Health, the US’s leading medical research agency, were swept up Tuesday in the Trump administration's latest firing blitz.

Boing Boing
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Enjoy Microsoft Office apps for life for less than $7 a piece
TL;DR: Make your old PC feel like new again with this lifetime license to Microsoft Office Professional 2021 for Windows for just $49.97 (reg. $219) now through April 27. 
Don't have it in the budget to get a whole new laptop? Don't worry — you won't need to with the help of this deal. — Read the rest
The post Enjoy Microsoft Office apps for life for less than $7 a piece appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Republican coalition in Congress falls apart
After seeing nine of his cohort break and vote with Democrats, US Speaker of the House "MAGA" Mike Johnson threw a tantrum and sent everyone home for a week.
Betrayed by her House Freedom Caucus and stunned by a party she has been very loyal to, Florida's election-denying, conspiracy theory-peddling Congressperson who wants Trump's face put on Mount Rushmore was forced to form a coalition with Democrats. — Read the rest
The post Republican coalition in Congress falls apart appeared first on Boing Boing.

ZeroHedge News
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Large Overnight Israeli Airstrike On Beirut Kills Hezbollah Official & Bystanders 
Large Overnight Israeli Airstrike On Beirut Kills Hezbollah Official & Bystanders 

Just before 4am local time, while much of the city was sleeping, Beirut was pounded by another large-scale Israeli airstrike, reportedly targeting a Hezbollah official who was among four killed in the attack. A woman was slain in the attack too, according to Lebanese health authorities.

Top floors of a multi-story building were decimated in the strikes on a southern suburb of Beirut. It reportedly killed the following, identified in AFP:


A source close to Hezbollah, requesting anonymity as they were not authorized to brief the media, told AFP the strike killed Hassan Bdair, Hezbollah's "deputy head for the Palestinian file" who was "at home with his family."




While Al Mayadeen has described Bdair as a rank and file Hezbollah member, other regional sources have indicated he was a member of Hezbollah's Unit 3900 as well as the Quds Force of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

The Israeli army subsequently said Tuesday that fighter jets "attacked a Hezbollah terrorist in the Dahiye area of ​​Beirut who had recently been directing Hamas operatives and had assisted them in attempting to carry out a serious attack against Israeli civilians in the immediate future."

"We couldn't see each other because of all the dust," one eyewitness who lives across the street from the destroyed building told AFP, describing "a very big explosion," followed by another.

"Not just one person is targeted — everyone in the country, from young to old has become the target," another nearby Lebanese resident said.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has warned that war is returning to Lebanon and called on Israel to stop these attacks, which he said suggests Israel is seeking escalation.

"The Israeli raid on the southern suburb is a serious warning about the intentions lurking against Lebanon. Israel’s persistence in its aggression requires us to exert more effort to address Lebanon’s friends and rally them in support of our right to full sovereignty over our land … to prevent violations from abroad or infiltrators from within, who provide additional pretext for aggression," Aoun said. 

Lebanese as well as regional journalists and the populace are outraged given the large airstrikes happened without warning, in the middle of the night and in a highly populated residential area...


As always, Israel claims it was targeting a Hezbollah member—its go-to excuse for war crimes. But once again, it acts in defiance of international law and above all accountability.
The truth: the building hit was a residential home in Hay Madi, a civilian neighborhood in… pic.twitter.com/pC4WMew9mc
— Hala Jaber (@HalaJaber) April 1, 2025
What's more is that it happened on the Eid al-Fitr Muslim holiday marking the end of the Ramadan fasting period. Days ago rockets were launched on northern Israel from south Lebanon, which resulted in Israeli reprisal strikes. Hezbollah denied it was behind the launches, and the Lebanese government announced arrests of the culprits, in an apparent effort to stave off war.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 18:50

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Houthis Say They've Downed 16th Reaper Drone After Trump Warned 'Real Pain Yet To Come'
Houthis Say They've Downed 16th Reaper Drone After Trump Warned 'Real Pain Yet To Come'

On Tuesday the Houthis, officially known as Ansar Allah, claimed that they shot down another American MQ-9 Reaper drone while it was flying over Yemen.

"Our air defenses successfully shot down an American MQ-9 Reaper drone while it was carrying out hostile missions in the airspace of Maarib Governorate, using a suitable, locally made missile," a Houthi military statement said.

The US military has not yet confirmed that it lost a drone, but if accurate this would mark the 16th US MQ-9 drone that’s been downed in the region, as the Houthis announced.
US Air Force file image

While the Pentagon has acknowledged the loss of several drones since conducting anti-Houthi operations over the course of the last year, it has not specified or confirmed each and every downing, only leaving its sporadic statements vague.

If the Houthis have really downed 16 Reaper drones at this point, this would amount to nearly $500 million in lost military hardware, considering each MQ-9 is commonly estimated to cost the US about $30 million. Houthis statements throughout the war going back to Oct.7, 2023 tend to be accurate.

Each MQ-9 Reaper drone costs the US about $30 million, so if the Houthis’ number is accurate, that means the US has lost $480 million worth of drones.

The Houthi statement further confirmed ongoing US military action targeting Yemen, describing that the US had in the last hours "launched a number of raids on various areas, resulting in martyrs, injuries, and damage to citizens’ properties."

Meanwhile President Trump in his latest statements on the Yemen campaign asserted the Houthis have "been decimated" by the new waves of strikes which began on March 15.

Widely circulating Houthi video purporting to show the latest alleged drone downing...


❌The #Houthis have shot down another American #MQ9 #reaper drone worth over $30 million
This was reported on air by the representative of the Ansar Allah movement, Yahya Saria, on AI Masirah. pic.twitter.com/KZPX2G9XKk
— News.Az (@news_az) April 1, 2025
"Many of their Fighters and Leaders are no longer with us," Trump wrote on Truth Social. "We hit them every day and night — Harder and harder. Their capabilities that threaten Shipping and the Region are rapidly being destroyed. Our attacks will continue until they are no longer a threat to Freedom of Navigation."

Trump added: "The choice for the Houthis is clear: Stop shooting at U.S. ships, and we will stop shooting at you. Otherwise, we have only just begun, and the real pain is yet to come, for both the Houthis and their sponsors in Iran."

The Iran-supported Yemeni militants have vowed to continue fighting so long as Israeli's military is active in the Gaza Strip. So far there's been no hint they'll back down, even in the face of overwhelming US airstrikes.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 19:40

The Hill
Open 
Greene rails against Luna proxy voting push
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) blasted Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) on Tuesday over her push to force a vote on a measure to allow proxy voting for new parents in Congress. That effort scored a significant win Tuesday, when nine House Republicans joined all Democrats in opposing a procedural rule that would have blocked...

The Hill
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Miners express concerns over recent Trump actions
{beacon} Energy & Environment Energy & Environment   The Big Story Safety official firings cause concerns for miners Reported firings at federal offices are creating concerns about the safety and health of coal miners. © AP On Tuesday, massive layoffs at the Department of Health and Human Services (DHS) were expected to result in 873...

The Hill
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Live updates: GOP's Randy Fine wins Florida special election
A group of House Republicans rebelled against GOP leadership’s effort to block a vote on allowing proxy voting for new parents and delivering a blow to Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) The gambit drew the ire of House Democrats, who bashed the "outrageous" move as several Republicans bucked their party’s leadership. Nine Republicans — led by...

The Hill
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Republican Randy Fine wins Florida special election for Waltz seat
Florida state Sen. Randy Fine (R) has won the special election for Florida’s 6th Congressional District on Tuesday, according to Decision Desk HQ, defeating Democrat Josh Weil in what became a closely contested race in the deep-red district.  Fine’s win will come as a relief for Republicans, who grew increasingly worried about the race as...

The Hill
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Booker sets record for longest Senate speech in history
Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) on Tuesday set a new record for the longest floor speech in Senate history, having held the floor for at least 24 hours and 19 minutes to decry potential GOP spending cuts in their looming tax bill and policies put in place by the Trump administration. Booker, the No. 4 member...

The Hill
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Trump nominee says he would have stopped Signal breach
Welcome to The Hill's Defense & NatSec newsletter {beacon} Defense &National Security Defense &National Security   The Big Story Trump nominee says he would have stopped Signal breach President Trump’s nominee to be the U.S. military’s highest-ranking officer said he would have stopped a Signal chat among senior officials last month had he been in...

The Hill
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SCOTUS to hear oral arguments in abortion-related case
Click in for more news from The Hill {beacon} Health Care Health Care   The Big Story SCOTUS to hear oral arguments in abortion-related case The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments this week on its first abortion-adjacent case since President Donald Trump returned to office in January. © The Hill, Greg Nash SCOTUS...

The Hill
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Booker's speech tops 350 million likes on TikTok live
More than 350 million people liked Sen. Cory Booker’s (D-N.J.) floor speech on TikTok live, as the senator approached 25 hours of holding the floor in the Senate chamber. By 7:07 p.m. EDT on Tuesday — just over 24 hours after Booker began his historic floor speech on Monday — more than 270 million people...

The Hill
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White House issues warning to China for war games near Taiwan
The Trump administration on Tuesday issued a warning to China after Beijing announced large-scale war games in the waters and airspace around Taiwan. The joint military drills, which were launched with no prior notice and included China's army, navy and air and rocket forces, were meant as a "severe warning and forceful containment against Taiwan...

The Guardian (UK)
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Cory Booker breaks record for longest speech by US senator in Trump condemnation
In speech that began Monday night, Democratic senator warns of ‘grave and urgent’ danger of Trump administrationUS politics – latest updatesCory Booker, the Democratic US senator from New Jersey, has broken the record for longest speech ever by a lone senator – beating the record first established by Strom Thurmond, who filibustered for 24 hours and 18 minutes in opposition to the Civil Rights Act of 1957.Booker’s speech, which began at 7pm on Monday night, was not a filibuster but instead an effort to warn of what he called the “grave and urgent” danger that Donald Trump’s presidential administration poses to democracy and the American people. Continue reading...

Slashdot
Open 
Mozilla To Launch 'Thunderbird Pro' Paid Services
Mozilla plans to introduce a suite of paid professional services for its open-source Thunderbird email client, transforming the application into a comprehensive communication platform. Dubbed "Thunderbird Pro," the package aims to compete with established ecosystems like Gmail and Office 365 while maintaining Mozilla's commitment to open-source software.

The Pro tier will include four core services: Thunderbird Appointment for streamlined scheduling, Thunderbird Send for file sharing (reviving the discontinued Firefox Send), Thunderbird Assist offering AI capabilities powered by Flower AI, and Thundermail, a revamped email client built on Stalwart's open-source stack.
Initially, Thunderbird Pro will be available free to "consistent community contributors," with paid access for other users.

Mozilla Managing Director Ryan Sipes indicated the company may consider limited free tiers once the service establishes a sustainable user base. This initiative follows Mozilla's 2023 announcement about "remaking" Thunderbird's architecture to modernize its aging codebase, addressing user losses to more feature-rich competitors.





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Slashdot
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YouTube Could Be Worth $550 Billion as Analyst Crowns Platform 'New King of All Media'
MoffettNathanson has crowned YouTube the "New King of All Media" as the Alphabet-owned video platform has become a major force in Hollywood, dominating time spent watching TV. From a report: The firm estimates that YouTube as a standalone business could be worth as much as $550 billion -- or nearly 30% of the tech giant's current valuation. The figure is based on the firm's analysis of enterprise value as a multiple of revenue in 2024 for Netflix (10.5x revenue), Meta (8.8x), Roku (2.4x), Warner Bros. Discovery (1.4x), Fox (1.3x) and Disney (1.3x).

In 2024, YouTube was the second-largest media company by revenue at $54.2 billion, trailing behind only Disney. However, the MoffettNathanson analysts predict YouTube will take the top spot in 2025, becoming a leader in both engagement and revenue. "YouTube has the potential to become the central aggregator for all things professional video, positioning itself to capture a share of the $85 billion consumer Pay TV market and the ~$30 billion streaming ex. Netflix market in the U.S.," they wrote in a Monday research note. "On monetization, when comparing YouTube's massive TV screen engagement to its estimated TV revenue, it remains significantly under-monetized relative to its scaled reach and differentiated offering. This signals a substantial runway for improving its monetization strategy."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
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Rachel Zegler's West Side Story co-star turns on her amid woke Snow White controversy
Rachel Zegler has seemingly lost another supporter as the backlash over the 'woke' Snow White live-action reboot grows.

Mail Online
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Adolescence hits Netflix's Top 10 Global chart in just three weeks as it reaches over 96MILLION views
Adolescence has hit Netflix's Top 10 Global chart, gaining a jaw-dropping 96.7million views in just three weeks.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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The influencers who want America to procreate faster - and believe the White House is on their side
This fringe group have long courted controversy - but since Trump was sworn in for the second time earlier this year, their evangelising has reached a new level

CNET News
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CNET Survey: Tariff Price Hike Fears Push Americans to Buy Tech Sooner
Close to one in five shoppers have already made a purchase ahead of possible tariff-related price hikes.

Mail Online
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Andrew Tate and his brother under fire as critics call his lawsuit against X users an 'intimidation tactic'
Andrew and Tristan Tate filed a defamation lawsuit on March 18 against their critics on X and the outspoken lawyers of their alleged victims, but many activists feel this is a way to silence public outrage.

Mail Online
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Labour's welfare overhaul aimed at getting more long-term sick back into work will see an EXTRA 400,000 signed off unfit
An extra 400,000 people could end up being signed off as unfit to work under controversial welfare overhaul.

Mail Online
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David Beckham's lavish month-long 50th birthday plans 'revealed' after he kicked off his celebrations with star-studded black-tie bash in Miami
David Beckham kicked off his month-long 50th birthday celebrations with a black-tie bash in Miami on Monday.

Mail Online
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ALISON BOSHOFF: Cinematic Beatles extravaganza should have fans screaming. Just one problem: the actors may be the hottest on the planet, but none is exactly a dead ringer for the star they play… 
The Beatles - as we all know - were the biggest and bestselling band in history. From the minute they burst on to the scene in 1962, with Love Me Do, they changed the face of music for ever.

Mail Online
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Police issue update on man shot dead by officers at Milton Keynes train station - as locals fear 'town is more unsafe than ever'
Milton Keynes residents feel the town is more unsafe than ever in the wake of a man carrying a knife being shot dead in a standoff with armed police.

Mail Online
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Glum Justin Bieber surfaces in bizarre outfit after wife Hailey's 'unfollowing' drama
Speculation about trouble in paradise has only intensified in recent weeks, fueled by Justin's increasingly disheveled appearance and his candid social media posts about 'anger issues'.

Mail Online
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John Lennon, Paul McCartney, and George Harrison deserve their own biopics. But not Ringo Starr, he isn't on the same creative level, says PHILIP NORMAN
It's often wearing to be the Beatles ' biographer. Such is the enduring fascination of the Fab Four that at parties, rather like a doctor, I try to keep my occupation a secret, writes PHILIP NORMAN.

Mail Online
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Romesh Ranganathan reveals he used to 'fantasise' about suicide and came 'very close' to taking his own life as he opens up about his mental health and how running has helped him
The comedian, 47, admitted he came 'very close' to take his own life when he was a 'super depressed' teenager.

Mail Online
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Kemi Badenoch warns free speech is at risk in Britain as the Tory leader backs the US in row over silent protests outside abortion clinics
The Tory leader said Britain 'should not be persecuting people for expressing themselves' over abortion rights.

Mail Online
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QUENTIN LETTS: Once Robert Jenrick locks on to you, it's like seeing a Sidewinder missile chaser a Tiger Moth
QUENTIN LETTS: Shabana Mahmood's Tory shadow, Robert Jenrick, has had her in all sorts of difficulties over the Sentencing Council's 'two-tier justice' gambit.

Mail Online
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Britain's oldest magazine for women The Lady could be set to fold after 140 years as it crashes into liquidation
Founded two years before Queen Victoria 's Golden Jubilee, The Lady is Britain's oldest - and stateliest - magazine for women.

Mail Online
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Revealed: The Albanian criminals who cost YOU £537,000 each to deport under much-vaunted Government scheme
The handful of hardened Albanian criminals deported from the UK under a much-vaunted Government scheme to serve prison sentences in their native country can be exposed today.

The Guardian (UK)
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Cory Booker breaks record for longest speech by US senator as he condemns Trump policies for more than 24 hours – live
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Inside ICE Air: Flight Attendants on Deportation Planes Say Disaster Is “Only a Matter of Time”
by McKenzie Funk




ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.











The deportation flight was in the air over Mexico when chaos erupted in the back of the plane, the flight attendant recalled. A little girl had collapsed. She had a high fever and was taking ragged, frantic breaths.

The flight attendant, a young woman who went by the nickname Lala, said she grabbed the plane’s emergency oxygen bottle and rushed past rows of migrants chained at the wrists and ankles to reach the girl and her parents.

By then, Lala was accustomed to the hard realities of working charter flights for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. She’d learned to obey instructions not to look the passengers in the eyes, not to greet them or ask about their well-being. But until the girl collapsed, Lala had managed to escape an emergency.

Lala worked for Global Crossing Airlines, the dominant player in the loose network of deportation contractors known as ICE Air. GlobalX, as the charter company is also called, is lately in the news. Two weeks ago, it helped the Trump administration fly hundreds of Venezuelans to El Salvador despite a federal court order blocking the deportations, triggering a showdown that experts fear could become a full-blown constitutional crisis.

In interviews with ProPublica, Lala and six other current and former GlobalX flight attendants provided a window into a part of the deportation process that is rarely seen and little understood. For migrants who have spent months or years trying to reach this country and live here, it is the last act, the final bit of America they may experience.











An ICE detainee waves from inside a bus that transported passengers to the airport before departing from Seattle’s Boeing Field on a GlobalX deportation flight in February.

(Emily Schultz)









All but one of the flight attendants requested anonymity or asked that only a nickname be used, fearing retribution or black marks as they looked for new jobs in an insular industry.

Because ICE, GlobalX and other charter carriers did not respond to questions after being provided with detailed lists of this story’s findings, the flight attendants’ individual accounts are hard to verify. But their stories are consistent with one another. They are also generally consistent with what has been said about ICE Air in legal filings, news accounts, academic research and publicly released copies of the ICE Air Operations Handbook.

That morning over Mexico, Lala said, the girl’s oxygen saturation level was 70% — perilously low compared with a healthy person’s 95% or higher. Her temperature was 102.3 degrees. The flight had a nurse on contract who worked alongside its security guards. But beyond giving the girl Tylenol, the nurse left the situation in Lala’s hands, she recalled.



Lala broke the rule about talking to detainees. The parents told Lala their daughter had a history of asthma. The mom, who Lala said had epilepsy, seemed on the verge of her own medical crisis.

Lala placed the oxygen mask on the girl’s face. The nurse removed her socks to keep her from further overheating. Lala counted down the minutes, praying for the girl to keep breathing.


The stories shared by ICE Air flight attendants paint a different picture of deportations from the one presented to the public, especially under President Donald Trump. On social media, the White House has depicted a military operation carried out with ruthless efficiency, using Air Force C-17s, ICE agents in tactical vests and soldiers in camo.

The reality is that 85% of the administration’s “removal” flights — 254 flights as of March 21, according to the advocacy group Witness at the Border — have been on charter planes. Military flights have now all but ceased. While there are ICE officers and hired security guards on the charters, the crew members on board are civilians, ordinary people swept up in something most didn’t knowingly sign up for.

When the flight attendants joined GlobalX, it was a startup with big plans. It sold investors and new hires alike on a vision of VIP clients, including musicians and sports teams, and luxury destinations, especially in the Caribbean. “You can’t beat the eXperience,” read a company tagline.











A GlobalX post on Facebook recruiting flight attendants in March. Alexandria, Louisiana, is a hub for ICE Air.

(Screenshot by ProPublica. Redacted by ProPublica.)









But as the airline grew, more and more of its planes were filled with migrants in chains. Some flight attendants were livid about it.

Last year, an anonymous GlobalX employee sent an all-caps, all-staff screed that ricocheted around the startup. “WHERE IS THE COMPANY GOING?” the email asked. “YOU SIGNED A 5 YEAR CONTRACT WITH ICE? ... WHAT HAPPENED TO THIS BECOMING A PRESTIGE CHARTER AIRLINE?”

One flight attendant said he kept waiting for the sports teams his new bosses had talked about as he flew deportation routes. “You know, the NFL charters, the NBA charters, whatever the hockey one is …” he said.

A second said his planes’ air conditioning kept breaking — an experience consistent with at least two publicly reported onboard incidents — and their lavatories kept breaking, something another flight attendant reported as well. But the planes kept flying. “They made us flush with water bottles,” he said.

But the flight attendants were most concerned about their inability to treat their passengers humanely — and to keep them safe. (In 2021, an ICE spokesperson told the publication Capital & Main that the agency “follows best practices when it comes to the security, safety and welfare of the individuals returned to their countries of origin.”)

They worried about what would happen in an emergency. Could they really get over a hundred chained passengers off the plane in time?

“They never taught us anything regarding the immigration flights,” one said. “They didn’t tell us these people were going to be shackled, wrists to fucking ankles.”

“We have never gotten a clear answer on what we do in an ICE Air evacuation,” another said. “They will not give us an answer.”

“It’s only a matter of time,” a third said, before a deportation flight ends in disaster.


Lala didn’t think she had a chance at a flight attendant job. She hadn’t, in truth, remembered applying to GlobalX until a recruiter called to say the startup was coming to her city. “But I guess I did apply through LinkedIn?” she said. She’d been working an office job — long hours, little flexibility — and was looking for something new.

The job interviews were held at a resort hotel. The room was packed with dozens of aspirants when Lala showed up. After the first round, only about 20 were asked to stay. She couldn’t believe she was one of them. After the second round came a job offer: $26 an hour plus a daily expense allowance. Soon Lala got a uniform: a blue cardigan, a white polo shirt and an eye-catching scarf in cyan and light green.

For part of her Federal Aviation Administration-mandated four-week training, her class stayed in a motel with a pool at the edge of Miami International Airport. Just across the street, on the fourth floor of a concrete-clad office building ringed by palm trees, was GlobalX’s headquarters.

“In the beginning, we were told that because it’s a charter, it’s only gonna be elites, celebrities,” Lala said. “Everybody was really excited.”

But flying was not going to be all glitz. The real reason for having flight attendants is safety. GlobalX was certified by the FAA as a Part 121 scheduled air carrier, the same as United or Delta, and it and its crew members were subject to the same strict standards.

“We’re there to evacuate you,” one recruit told ProPublica. “Yes, we make good drinks, but we evacuate you.”

Lala’s class practiced water landings in the pool at the nearby Pan Am Flight Academy. They practiced door drills — yelling out commands, shoving open heavy exit doors — in a replica Airbus A320 cabin. They learned CPR and how to put out fires. They took written and physical tests, and if they didn’t score at least 90%, they had to retake them.

They were reminded, over and over, that their job was a vocation, one with a professional code: No matter who the passengers were, flight attendants were in charge of the cabin, responsible for safety in the air.

Lala’s official “airman” certificate arrived from the FAA a few weeks after training was done. She was cleared to fly, ready to see the world.

But what she would see wasn’t what she signed up for. The company was growing beyond glamorous charters. GlobalX was moving into the deportation business.

Her bosses delivered the news casually, she recalled: “It was like, ‘Oh yeah, we got a government contract.’”


The new graduates were offered a single posting: Harlingen, Texas. Deportation flights were five days a week, sometimes late into the night. Lala went to Guatemala, Honduras, Colombia and, for refueling, Panama.

A standard flight had more than a dozen private security guards — contractors working for the firm Akima — along with a single ICE officer, two nurses, and a hundred or more detainees. (Akima did not respond to a request for comment.) The guards were in charge of delivering food and water to the detainees and taking them to the lavatories. This left the flight attendants, whose presence was required by the FAA, with little to do.

“Arm and disarm doors, that was our duty,” Lala said.

The flights had their own set of rules, which the crew members said they learned from a company policy manual or from chief flight attendants. Don’t talk to the detainees. Don’t feed them. Don’t make eye contact. Don’t walk down the aisles without a guard escorting you. Don’t sit in aisle seats, where detainees could get close to you. Don’t wear your company-issued scarf because of “safety concerns that a detainee might grab it and use it against us,” Lala said.

“You don’t do nothing,” said a member of another GlobalX class. “Just sit down in your seats and be quiet.” If a detainee looked at him, he was supposed to look out the window.











A chained detainee boards a GlobalX flight at Seattle’s Boeing Field in February.

(Emily Schultz)









A rare public statement from the company about life aboard ICE Air came in a 2023 earnings call with GlobalX founder and then-CEO Ed Wegel, when he discussed the company’s work for federal agencies like ICE. GlobalX employees “essentially don’t do much on the airplane,” Wegel said. “Our flight attendants are there in case of an emergency. The passengers are monitored by guards that are placed on board the airplane by one of those agencies.”

Fielding a question about how GlobalX ensures passengers are treated humanely, Wegel continued: “There have been threats made to our crew members, and they’re especially trained to deal with those. But we haven’t seen any mistreatment at all.”

Flight attendants said they had little to do but sit in their jumpseats after delivering the preflight safety briefing in English to the mostly Spanish-speaking passengers. Above 10,000 feet, the two in the rear usually moved to passenger rows near the cockpit, then sat again. Some did crosswords. Others took photos out the window. On a deportation to Guatemala, one saw his first erupting volcano.

Lala had been scared before her first deportation flight, worried that violence might break out. But fear soon gave way to discomfort at how detainees were treated. “Not being able to serve them, not being able to look at them, I didn’t think that was right,” she said.

Some flight attendants, drawn to the profession because they liked taking care of people, couldn’t help but break protocol with passengers. “If they said ‘hola’ or something,” one said, “I’d say ‘hola’ back. We’re not jerks.”

Another recalled taking a planeload of children and their escorts on a domestic transfer from the southern border to an airport in New York. He tried to slip snacks to the kids. “Even the chaperones were like, ‘Don’t give them any food,’” he said. “And I’m like, ‘Where is your humanity?’” (A second flight attendant said that children on a New York flight were fed by their escorts.)

While flight attendants were allowed to interact with the guards, the dynamic was uncomfortable. It came down to a question of who was in charge — and which agency, ICE or the FAA, ultimately held sway. (The FAA declined to comment on this story and directed questions to ICE.)

The guards often asked flight attendants to heat up the food they brought from home. They asked for drinks, for ice. “They treated us like we were their maids,” said Akilah Sisk, a former flight attendant from Texas.

“In their eyes, the detainees are not the passengers,” another flight attendant said. “The passengers are the guards. And we’re there for the guards.”

Some guards thumbed their noses at the FAA safety rules that flight attendants were supposed to enforce while airborne, multiple flight attendants recalled. “One reported me because I asked him to sit down in the last 10 minutes,” Sisk said. “But you’re still on a freaking plane. You gotta listen to our words.”

Flight attendants said that if they told guards to fasten seatbelts during takeoff or stow carry-ons under a seat, they risked getting reported to their bosses at GlobalX, who they said wanted to keep ICE happy. The guards would complain to the in-flight supervisor, Sisk said, and eventually it would get back to the flight attendant.

“We’d get an email from somebody in management: ‘Why are you guys causing problems?’” another flight attendant recalled. “They were more worried about losing the contract than about anything else.”


Nothing bothered flight attendants more than the fact that most of their passengers were in chains. What would happen if a flight had to be evacuated?

Most of the migrants crowding the back seats of ICE Air’s planes have not been, historically, convicted criminals. ICE makes restraints mandatory nonetheless. “Detainees transported by ICE Air aircraft will be fully restrained by the use of handcuffs, waist chains, and leg irons,“ reads an unredacted version of the 2015 ICE Air Operations Handbook, which was obtained by the Center for Constitutional Rights, a legal advocacy group.

The handbook allows for other equipment “in special circumstances, i.e., spit masks, mittens, leg braces, cargo straps, humane restraint blanket, etc.” Multiple lawsuits on behalf of African asylum-seekers concern the use of one such item, known as the Wrap, a cross between a straitjacket and a sleeping bag. A flight attendant said detainees restrained in the device are strapped upright in their seats or, if less compliant, lengthwise across a row of seats. Getting “burritoed, I call it,” the person said.

The Department of Homeland Security’s Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties investigated the asylum-seekers’ complaints and found ICE lacked “sufficient policies” on the Wrap, but how the immigration agency addressed the finding is not publicly known. ICE responded to one lawsuit by saying detainees were not abused; it said another should be dismissed, in part because it was filed in the wrong place. The cases are pending.

Use of the Wrap continues. A video from Seattle’s Boeing Field taken in February shows officers and guards carrying a wrapped migrant into the cabin of a deportation plane.













A choppy video feed shows ICE officers and guards carrying a migrant in a full-body restraint into a GlobalX deportation plane at Seattle’s Boeing Field in February.

(Obtained by ProPublica via a public records request)




Watch video ➜






Neither the ICE Air handbook, nor FAA regulations, nor flight attendant training in Miami explained how to empty a plane full of people whose movements were, by design, so severely hampered. Shackled detainees didn’t even qualify as “able-bodied” enough to sit in exit rows.

To flight attendants, the restraints seemed at odds with the FAA’s “90-second rule,” a decades-old manufacturing standard that says an aircraft must be built for full evacuation in 90 seconds even with half the exits blocked.

Lala and others said no one told them how to evacuate passengers in chains. “Honestly, I don’t know what we would do,” she said.

The flight attendants are not alone in voicing concerns.

In an interview with ProPublica, Bobby Laurie, an airline safety expert and former flight attendant, called the arrangement on ICE Air flights “disturbing.”

“Part of flight attendant training is locating those passengers who can help you in an evacuation,” Laurie told ProPublica. That would have to be the guards. “But if they have to help you,” who is helping the detainees, Laurie wondered.

According to formal ICE Air incident reports reviewed by Capital & Main, the deportation network had at least six accidents requiring evacuations between 2014 and 2019. In at least two cases, both on a carrier called World Atlantic, the evacuations were led not by flight attendants but by untrained guards. Both took longer than 90 seconds, though not by much: two-and-a-half minutes for the first, “less than 2 minutes” for the next. But in a third case, it took seven minutes for 115 shackled detainees to escape a smoke-filled jet.

In one of the World Atlantic incidents, part of the landing gear broke, a wing caught fire and the smell of burning rubber seeped in, according to investigative records obtained by the University of Washington Center for Human Rights. In an email to ICE Air officials, an agency employee aboard the plane later wrote that flight attendants made no emergency announcements for passengers. The flight attendants simply got themselves out.

The ICE officer, guards and nurse were “confused on what to do and in which direction to exit during distress,” the officer wrote. He said that other than the flight crew, “no one has received any training on emergency evacuation situations.”

The University of Washington’s collection does not include findings or recommendations from ICE based on what happened, and ICE did not say what they were when asked by ProPublica. The National Transportation Safety Board said that after the accident, World Atlantic launched a campaign to reinspect landing gear, gave employees and contractors further training, and revised its procedures for inspections. The airline did not respond to questions from ProPublica.












An ICE Air flight was evacuated in Alexandria, Louisiana, in April 2018 after a piece of the landing gear failed upon touchdown. All detainees were helped off the plane by guards, according to emails to ICE officials from an agency employee who was on board.

(Courtesy of the University of Washington Center for Human Rights)








Other reports obtained by the University of Washington mention fuel spills, loss of cabin air pressure and a “large altercation” on ICE Air after 2019 but no more evacuations, at least as of June 2022. More recent incidents that have been mentioned in the press include an engine fire last summer on World Atlantic and a failed GlobalX air conditioning unit that sent 11 detainees to the hospital with “heat-related injuries.”

The rare guidance some flight attendants said they received on carrying out ICE Air evacuations came during briefings from pilots. What they heard, they said, was chilling and went against their training.

“Just get up and leave,” one recalled a GlobalX pilot telling him. “That’s it. … Save your life first.”

He understood the instructions to mean that evacuating detainees was not a priority, or even the flight attendants’ responsibility. The detainees were in other people’s hands, or in no one’s.

When asked if they got similar guidance from pilots, three flight attendants said they did not, and one did not answer. Two more, like the first, said pilots gave them instructions that they took to mean they shouldn’t help detainees after opening the exit doors.

“That was the normal briefing,” said a flight attendant from Lala’s class. “‘If a fire occurs in the cabin, if we land on water, don’t check on the immigrants. Just make sure that you and the guards and the people that work for the government get off.’”

“It was as if the detainees’ lives were worthless,” said the other.


The day the girl collapsed on Lala’s flight, the pilot turned the plane around and they crossed back into the United States.

The flight landed in Arizona. Paramedics rushed on board and connected the girl to their own oxygen bottle. They began shuttling her off the plane. Her parents tried to join. But the guards stopped the father.

Shocked, Lala approached the ICE officer in charge. “This is not OK!” she yelled. The mom had seizures. The family needed to stay together.

But the officer said it was impossible. Only one parent could go to the hospital. The other, as Lala understood it, “was going to get deported.”





Most of the flight attendants who spoke with ProPublica are now gone from GlobalX. Some left because they found other jobs. Some left even though they hadn’t. Some left because the charter company, as it focused more and more on deportations, shut down the hub in their city.

Lala eventually left because of the little girl and her family, because she couldn’t do the deportation flights anymore. Her GlobalX uniform hung in her closet for a time, a reminder of her career as a flight attendant. Recently, she said, she threw it away.

She never learned whether the little girl lived or died. Lala just watched her mom follow her off the plane, then watched the dad return to his seat.

“I cried after that,” she said. She bought her own ticket home.

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Jim Quinn: Prophets, Nomads, & A Fourth Turning Accelerating Towards A Bloody Climax
Jim Quinn: Prophets, Nomads, & A Fourth Turning Accelerating Towards A Bloody Climax

Authored by Jim Quinn via The Burning Platform blog,


“In retrospect, the spark might seem as ominous as a financial crash, as ordinary as a national election, or as trivial as a Tea Party. The catalyst will unfold according to a basic Crisis dynamic that underlies all of these scenarios: An initial spark will trigger a chain reaction of unyielding responses and further emergencies. The core elements of these scenarios (debt, civic decay, global disorder) will matter more than the details, which the catalyst will juxtapose and connect in some unknowable way. If foreign societies are also entering a Fourth Turning, this could accelerate the chain reaction. At home and abroad, these events will reflect the tearing of the civic fabric at points of extreme vulnerability – problem areas where America will have neglected, denied, or delayed needed action.” – The Fourth Turning – Strauss & Howe





“Don’t think you can escape the Fourth Turning the way you might today distance yourself from news, national politics, or even taxes you don’t feel like paying. History warns that a Crisis will reshape the basic social and economic environment that you now take for granted. The Fourth Turning necessitates the death and rebirth of the social order. It is the ultimate rite of passage for an entire people, requiring a luminal state of sheer chaos whose nature and duration no one can predict in advance.” – Strauss & Howe – The Fourth Turning


In my last Fourth Turning article, a few days before the presidential election, I stated Trump would win in a landslide, unless the Deep State pulled some outrageous stunt to steal it, like they did in 2020. Their cheating machines were unable to overcome the dementia dummy effect and running a vacuous cackling moron DEI candidate as Trump’s opponent. I also thought the ingrained opposition would use all their vast ill-gotten financial resources to pay for violent protests, if Trump won. The gutting of USAID has defunded the domestic terrorists and made their protests pathetic.

Trump’s overwhelming victory in the election and defeat of the illegal lawfare attacks from his Deep State enemies defused their ability to keep him from being inaugurated. And boy did he hit the ground running. His first 7 weeks in office have been a tornado of executive orders, shockingly bold cabinet picks, mass firings of government drones, deportations of illegals, tariff wars, threats to take over Greenland and Canada, confrontations with world leaders, war on DEI and woke bullshit policies within the government and at universities funded by the government, and unleashing Musk and his DOGE team on the Federal bureaucracy.



The dynamics of this Fourth Turning have begun to crystalize in my mind with the re-ascension of Trump to the most powerful position in the world, and now willing to wield his power on a far grander scale then he did during his first term. The previous two Fourth Turning presidents, during the Great Depression/World War II Fourth Turning and the Civil War Fourth Turning, acted like dictators, wielding their authoritarian powers, using war as the excuse for overstepping their Constitutionally granted authority.

Ruling by executive order has now become commonplace, as our Republic has degenerated into a corporate fascist totalitarian state where the spoils have been shared by the privileged few, while the rest of us have been propagandized into subjugation, depravity, debt, and debasement. Trump has assumed a dictatorial attitude, with the rationale that he must do so to defeat the evil forces of the Deep State, and more than 50% of the population is enthusiastically onboard.

There is generally no middle ground when it comes to Donald Trump. You either despise him and scream he is literally Hitler, or you worship him as the savior of America, leading us to a glorious renaissance. Personally, I find myself in the middle ground, based on what he has done, rather than what he says. I was disappointed in his first term, even though he did a number of good things. His personnel choices were awful, putting Barrett on the Supreme Court was a terrible selection, and locking down the country while making a deal with the devil (Fauci & Pfizer) to produce a toxic vaccine destined to kill far more than it saved, continues to be a massive blemish on his record. But what is done is done. Even the most skeptical cynic has to admit, there have been several positive developments in Trump’s second term.



The issue which had biggest impact in getting Trump elected was the border and the democrat plot to destroy America by funding the invasion of America by 3rd world dregs. The dementia dummy president was given ice cream and told to stand aside by his Obama handlers, while millions of lowlifes poured across our southern border. Trump’s selection of Tom Homan as border czar was brilliant, and the actions taken to secure the border thus far have produced dramatic results. We need millions more deportations, but we are off to a good start.

Trump learned his lesson from the first term, when he surrounded himself with Deep State backstabbers, while failing to purge the departments of his enemies. He has appointed highly competent outsiders into most of the key cabinet positions. The DC bureaucracy is being gutted as we speak, if not by his appointees, then by Musk and his DOGE army. Purging the swamp of his bureaucratic enemies is essential to achieving progress. And purging the judiciary of far-left apparatchiks on the payroll of Soros must be next.



There truly is $2 trillion in spending that can be cut. Going back to 2019 spending levels, before the “Covid emergency spending” should be the goal. The amount of corruption, bribery, and fraud within the Federal government is astronomical, and Musk and his DOGE unit should be applauded for lifting the rocks and shining a light on these maggots. DOGE claims to have saved $130 billion thus far. That sounds like a lot, and it is. But some perspective will reveal the true nature of our predicament.

The Federal government spends $130 billion per week on average. We add over $5 billion to the national debt every single day. This tsunami of deficit spending is a perpetual uniparty supported machine. The continuing resolution jammed through by Trump and his minions increases spending. DOGE is great PR for the Trump army, and it is the perfect bogeyman for his enemies. But, it is unlikely to materially alter the course we are on. The national debt was $36.2 trillion when Trump assumed control. There is no doubt it will exceed $44 trillion before he leaves office.



There are 135 million full-time workers in the U.S., and approximately 18 million of them work for the government. Many millions more in private industry are dependent upon government contracts to sustain them. I am 100% onboard gutting government bureaucracy. But there will be consequences. Data from Washington DC is already showing a plunge in home prices and surge in unemployment. The combination of layoffs, reduced government outlays, and tariff impacts will likely push us into recession during 2025.

Taking the pain in year one of his administration may be Trump’s game plan, with an anticipated strong recovery in the 2nd half of his presidency. The question is whether the recession will deflate the everything bubble – stocks, bonds, real estate, and crypto, or just be a bump in the road to long term prosperity. With valuations in all asset classes at nosebleed heights, I expect a major correction across the board. Whether a recession and correction turn into a depression and crash will depend upon the behavior of our leaders.


At each of these great gates of history, eighty to a hundred years apart, a similar generational drama unfolded. Four archetypes, aligned in the same order – elder Prophet, midlife Nomad, young adult Hero, child Artist – together produced the most enduring legends in our history. Each time the Grey Champion appeared marked the arrival of a moment of “darkness, and adversity, and peril,” the climax of the Fourth Turning of the saeculum. – The Fourth Turning – Strauss & Howe




There has been much debate since Trump descended on the escalator in 2015 at Trump Towers as to whether he was one of the Grey Champions of this Fourth Turning. I had my doubts after the 2020 election was stolen, but his re-ascension to power in 2025 leaves no doubt he is the lightning rod for what will take place in the final stages of this Crisis period. Trump, Putin and Xi Jinping are all from the Prophet generation and have assumed the mantle of Grey Champions for their nations.

How these men interact over the next several years will determine the course of this Fourth Turning. Thus far, the skirmishes in Ukraine and the Middle East have been relatively contained. Fourth Turning climaxes have been historically bloody and devastating. If China invades Taiwan, North Korea invades South Korea, or the EU pushes Putin too far, that will surely spur mass destruction and mass casualties on a grand scale. And with nuclear technology far more advanced since WWII, the possibility of planetary destruction is not a zero possibility.



Fourth Turnings can have multiple regeneracies with the first being when the financial system was artificially propped up by the Fed and Treasury in 2009, making the financial system far less stable over the long-term and setting the stage for the grand collapse. The regeneracy cannot always be identified with a single news event.  But it does have to mark the beginning of a growth in centralized authority and decisive leadership at a time of great peril and urgency.

Trump’s actions during his first 7 weeks back in office most certainly classify as a regeneracy, through executive orders, mandates, and decisive actions, designed to undo all the purposeful destruction incurred under Biden. The reaction of his enemies, using lawfare, their media mouthpieces, and judicial roadblocks, has ratcheted the anger and vitriol within the country to a boiling point.

The blowback from the Trump/Musk agenda of slashing Federal bloat, firing government drone bureaucrats, dismantling corrupt, treasonous organizations hidden within the Federal bureaucracy (USAID), eliminating ineffective departments, like the Department of Education, and trying to root out corruption and waste, has been predictably violent. The burning of Tesla dealerships, coordinated anti-Musk messaging from the captured mainstream media, and artificial protests across the nation are all funded by Soros and his ilk, just as the fake BLM protests were used to destroy Trump’s first term.



Every executive order designed to rectify the purposely created border invasion, cut waste, fraud, and corruption within the Federal government, along with the purging of agencies of his enemies, has been met with judicial obstruction by judges placed in positions of power by Soros and the lawfare army created by Obama and his minions. The term Constitutional Crisis has been overused, but I believe we are headed for a clash that will not resolve itself through the existing legal system.

The judiciary can no longer be expected to interpret the law in an unbiased manner based upon the Constitution. When Trump decides to ignore the rulings of this plethora of corrupt judges, what happens next? The so-called judges thwarting Trump at every turn are not interpreting the law, they are exercising activist political prerogatives which they have been paid off by Soros and his lawfare organizations to sponsor.

From my perspective, the world has become more chaotic and confusing on a daily basis since Trump’s election. From a Fourth Turning perspective, this is to be expected. The Crisis never resolves itself through compromise or an agreed upon peaceful resolution. The cascade into a spiraling downward implosion of trust in institutions, politicians, media talking heads, corporate titans, and central bankers is leading the country and world towards a catastrophic debt collapse which will plunge the world into a global depression.

Whether this has been pre-planned by the ruling oligarchs to invoke the Great Taking, the new world order, and CBDCs, is still a question in my mind. Is Trump a willing participant in this diabolical plan or a well-intentioned patsy they are manipulating with his MAGA army to ensure their plan goes off without a hitch?



What is clearly evident to me, is the globalist cabal ruling elite are absolutely trying to thwart Trump and Putin’s peace efforts in resolving the Ukraine war. They are using every opportunity to provoke Putin into starting WW3 with NATO and forcing the U.S. to honor our treaty obligations. Their desperation is obvious, as the discredited and highly unpopular stooges governing France, the U.K., Canada and Germany make unhinged statements and threats on a daily basis, threatening war with Russia.

Putin is the only statesman, operating in a rational manner, and attempting to negotiate a sane outcome to a conflict initiated by U.S. neocons in 2014. This global crisis will just be exacerbated by the brewing Constitutional crisis being precipitated by the Deep State operatives and their judicial machinations, designed to force Trump into initiating a violent response to Soros and his bought off treasonous judicial cronies.



Trump’s rhetoric about a glorious new era of economic nirvana, built upon tariffs, lower taxes and energy independence sounds great, but it is nothing but pie in the sky pipe dreams. It’s too late. Talk about balancing the budget is nothing but bloviating bullshit. Trump and his economic gurus have no intention of balancing the budget, because doing so would lead to the worst depression in history.

This entire Ponzi economic house of cards depends upon the issuance of $6 billion of debt PER DAY. Our fake positive GDP growth data depends on the government spending $5 trillion of printed fiat (17% of GDP) per year on wars, welfare, and waste, with the ignorant brainwashed masses spending $19 trillion of money they don’t have (using credit cards) on shit they don’t need making up 68% of total GDP.



Meanwhile, financial markets are at historically high (and dangerous) levels, home prices are at all-time highs, real inflation has been pushing 10% for the last five years, credit card, auto and student loan debt are at record levels, and most importantly, gold continues to hit new record highs every day. The stock market is wobbling like it normally does as a precursor to a crash. Home sales are at decade lows as sky high prices and higher mortgage rates have made it impossible for most people to buy.

Credit card and auto loan delinquencies are surging. Millions of people who haven’t made a student loan payment in years now have to pay up. Their credit scores are crashing due to non-payments. Gold surges when the financial system shows signs of collapse. All the ingredients are present for a catastrophic explosion, just waiting for a spark to ignite the volatile mixture. At this point, the financial system is so unstable and fragile that an otherwise inconsequential grain of sand added to the pile could precipitate the collapse.



I believe the chaos, confusion, conflict, and collapse of confidence portends a prolonged period of discord as this Fourth Turning accelerates towards its denouement. The numerous neocon forces in the EU and US attempting to prolong and broaden the Ukraine conflict, along with the Zionist efforts to provoke a war with Iran, have pushed the world to the brink of a new global conflict. All previous Fourth Turnings were decided by an all-out bloody war, and this one is likely to experience a similarly tragic outcome. The billionaire oligarchs who have purposely created havoc and turmoil as a means to increase their wealth, power, and control over the politicians they have put into place to implement their new world order agenda.

The proliferation of assassinations and assassination attempts is a sign of increased vitriol towards those considered evil and expendable by their enemies. The assassination of corporate executives, attempts on Trump, and foiled plans against a Supreme Court justice and Musk mark a new violent turn to this Fourth Turning. Will someone try to take out some of these leftist judges who are impeding the will of the people on behalf of their leftist billionaire quislings?

Will the Ukraine and EU attempt to assassinate Putin, as they have done to numerous other Russian politicians? What I do know is there is a powerful faction attempting to initiate a global war as part of their new world order agenda. All it will take is for someone somewhere to do something stupid and then it will turn nasty, with more death and destruction than a reasonable American can possibly conceive after living in their false bubble of safety and security for decades. Once the dominos begin falling, there will be no stopping them.


“With so much chaos, someone will do something stupid. And when they do, things will turn nasty.” – Inspector Finch – V for Vendetta




The burning of Tesla showrooms, brainwashed idiots committing acts of vandalism, and the Soros funded fake protests across the country are only infuriating the normies and pushing us closer to civil chaos. Russia rightfully accusing France and the UK of committing acts of war against energy sites within Russia, along with Trump fulminating about Putin not cooperating, while bombing the shit out of Yemen as instructed by Israel, has turned up the heat on the imminent global conflict.

The two Prophet generation lightning rods for the coming conflict, Trump and Putin, with Bill Gates and RFK Jr. as lesser players, will make the decisions and choices which will determine the future course of this world. In the previous two Fourth Turnings, Nomad Generation facilitators of Lincoln and FDR’s strategy, Grant, Sherman, Eisenhower, and Patton, had to unflinchingly send hundreds of thousands of men to their deaths. Trump’s Nomad Generation agent of change – Elon Musk – has concentrated on rooting out fraud, waste, and inefficiencies in the Federal government, provoking violence and revealing the traitorous henchmen within the judiciary and Soros financed NGOs. Putin’s chief Nomad generation right hand man – Dmitry Medvedev – is a bomb thrower who thrives on conflict.



This Crisis period is accelerating and intensifying on a daily basis, as Trump, Putin and Xi, and a myriad of other world leaders provoke, posture, and threaten each other, with all signs pointing towards military conflict. The propaganda media, led by the NYT, are now admitting we have been at war with Russia since 2014. The entire conflict since 2022 has been funded and fought using U.S. technology, weapons, and personnel. Over $200 billion wasted on another lost war. Those of us in the alt-media revealed the truth about this proxy war years ago.

With Zelensky following orders from his EU benefactors, the fledgling peace efforts of Trump and Putin are destined to fail. The ongoing slaughter in the Middle East, along with the intense saber rattling regarding the U.S. attacking Iran on behalf of Israel, and the US declaring China as its largest military threat regarding their eventual takeover of Taiwan, are building towards a major global conflict, which the purposely distracted and dumbed down masses have no clue is approaching. Boomer leaders are unbending, punitive, authoritarian minded, and willing to risk the destruction of the planet in order to achieve what they have been assigned to accomplish by the globalist oligarchs calling the shots. In 1997, Strauss & Howe predicted the dangers we would face as the climax of this Fourth Turning approached.


“The risk of catastrophe will be very high. The nation could erupt into insurrection or civil violence, crack up geographically, or succumb to authoritarian rule. If there is a war, it is likely to be one of maximum risk and effort – in other words, a total war. Every Fourth Turning has registered an upward ratchet in the technology of destruction, and in mankind’s willingness to use it.” – Strauss & Howe – The Fourth Turning





“History offers no guarantees. Obviously, things could go horribly wrong – the possibilities ranging from a nuclear exchange to incurable plagues, from terrorist anarchy to high-tech dictatorship. We should not assume that Providence will always exempt our nation from the irreversible tragedies that have overtaken so many others: not just temporary hardship, but debasement and total ruin. Losing in the next Fourth Turning could mean something incomparably worse. It could mean a lasting defeat from which our national innocence – perhaps even our nation – might never recover.” – Strauss & Howe – The Fourth Turning


Gold and Oil have been surging, with gold hitting new highs every day, up 38% in the last year, indicating all is not well in this world. The United States has been a nation for two and half centuries, only becoming an empire within the last one hundred years. Trump can pontificate about creating a new morning in America, but it is too late, as darkness descends upon the Republic created by strong courageous men, but slowly destroyed by weak cowardly men, moneyed interests, corrupt politicians, traitorous globalist billionaires, and a populace too dumbed down and distracted by technological bread and circuses to care about future generations.

In 1785 the Americans had won the Revolutionary War, but had not yet written the Constitution or elected a president in the final stages of the first American Fourth Turning. Exactly 80 years later in 1865, the American Civil War Fourth Turning reached its bloody conclusion. Exactly 80 years later in 1945, World War 2 was won, after the loss of 65 million lives. We are now exactly 80 years later in 2025, ready to write another dramatic chapter in the annals of history.

After World War 2, America was the conquering hero wearing the golden crown, but failed to heed the warning all previous empires had also ignored – all glory is fleeting. As we approach our rendezvous with destiny, take note, as described in the bible, that history is cyclical and there is a time for everything. 

I think everyone needs to understand we are entering a time of war, a time to hate, a time to kill, and a time to die. I wish it weren’t so, but the cycles of history don’t lie. Good luck and Godspeed.


To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven;A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted;A time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up;A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance;A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing;A time to get, and a time to lose; a time to keep, and a time to cast away;A time to rend, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to speak;A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace.

Ecclesiastes 3: 1-8




Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 17:40

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Hollywood Claims Rachel Zegler Is "An Icon" Despite Epic Snow White Bomb
Hollywood Claims Rachel Zegler Is "An Icon" Despite Epic Snow White Bomb

Unless you've been living under a rock for the past few years you're probably familiar with the controversy surrounding the "wokification" of Disney and their constant attempts to inject leftist activism into their media products.  Disney's cult-like dogma played a considerable role in the rise of the anti-woke movement and ultimately the fall of Hollywood, which is now reeling from an avalanche of box office failures.

One such predictable failure (perhaps the ultimate predictable failure) is the woke Snow White live action remake starring a veritable unknown actress by the name of Rachel Zegler.  To summarize why the public despises Zegler and this film so much, let's backtrack to 2021 when Zegler was announced for the beloved role.

First, the movie is called Snow White.  It's based on a centuries old German fairy tale which was eventually written down and published by the Brothers Grim in 1812.  These tales are an integral part of Medieval European heritage.  Though she is part Polish, Zegler is certainly not "snow white".  The casting choice was viewed by many fans of the original animation as a deliberate attempt to race swap yet another classic European character and troll western audiences with DEI.



If it was minority folk figure being replaced, the response from leftists would be rabid.  But, it's okay as long as the characters are white.

Then there was the public complaints of an angry little actor by the name of Peter Dinklage, who praised Disney for hiring a Latina to play Snow White but argued that hiring real life dwarfs to play the Seven Dwarfs would be "backwards" and demeaning.  Thus, in his burst of pint-sized outrage, Dinklage destroyed any chance for seven actors with dwarfism to make a name for themselves on the big screen. 

Then there was the leaked production photos of the "Seven Dwarfs", who were played by a laughably diverse cast of normal sized people.  Disney initially lied about the images and claimed they were "Fake and not from our production..."  As it turned out, the images were real.  The internet collectively laughed and gasped simultaneously at how bad and woke the movie was clearly going to be.



This is the sort of blunder that occurs when you try to make every "marginalized" activist group happy. 

The biggest handicap for the film, however, was Rachel Zegler's big mouth.  The actress hammed it up in interviews, disparaging the original Snow White as a "weird" relic of the patriarchal past and asserted that the remake would be a representation of empowerment for women who "don't need no man". 



Then there was Zegler's steady stream of anti-Trump and anti-conservative rants on social media.  A classic mistake of modern Hollywood actors; thinking that the public has any interest in their political insights.  Her comments hurt the film's chances even more.  Disney was eventually forced to delay the release for a year, claiming that it was "because of the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike".  

The final product turned out to be a travesty, as everyone expected.  Snow White's bizarre DEI casting, set in a Medieval European landscape, takes the audience out of the story and reminds them that they are watching propaganda.  The overall structure and changes to the original are ill conceived and poorly though out.  The movie has hit a 40% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes and a 1.5/10 on IMDB.  It is currently expected to lose at least $140 million at the box office, though this may not include marketing costs.

 

Despite this undeniable defeat, once again proving that if you "Go woke" you will also "Go Broke", the Hollywood elites are proclaiming Zegler's role a success.  Why?  Because it served the interests of progressive messaging, even if no one watched the movie.  

Variety argues that Zegler is now an "icon" simply because "everyone is talking about her", playing on the old fallacy that all press is good press.   This piece was published after Variety posted a more honest assessment of Zegler's behavior, blaming her negativity as contributing to Snow White's demise.


Rachel Zegler: “People will wait in line despite my flaws.”
Welcome back to reality princess.. Snow White was a complete floppic.twitter.com/QaPHZtjqnL
— aka (@akafaceUS) March 24, 2025
Some celebrities have also jumped to Zegler's defense, and activists suggest that her behavior had nothing to do with the film's poor reception.  In other words, progressives  continue to deny that wokeness is box office poison.  All the evidence to the contrary will not sway them.  

Snow White only matters because it is a symbol of the culture war and the political left's refusal to accept reality.  They were warned for years that the movie would implode, but they would not listen.  Now that it's undeniable, they once again shift gears and make the controversy about the "victimization" of another loud-mouthed lead actress.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 18:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
McMahon Threatens Newsom Over Transgender Athletes
McMahon Threatens Newsom Over Transgender Athletes

Authored by Susan Crabtree via RealClearPolitics,

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has had plenty to say since launching his podcast earlier this month with a splash, breaking from Democratic Party orthodoxy and agreeing with MAGA organizer Charlie Kirk that allowing biological males to compete in girls’ and women’s sports is “deeply unfair.”



In the last week alone, Newsom remarks have generated numerous headlines. On Thursday he signed an order aimed at helping Los Angeles expedite the rebuilding of utility and telecom infrastructure following the deadly and destructive January wildfires.

The same day, he attended a glitzy event with Vogue editor Anna Wintour and announced plans to substantially increase film and television tax credits to win back some of this business, though the proposal still needs legislative approval.

Despite overseeing the growth of California’s government to a record size during his tenure, Newsom claimed during a podcast episode with liberal commentator Ezra Klein to be “the original DOGE” because he opened an office of digital innovation in 2019. He blamed California’s housing affordability crisis on NIMBYism and anti-housing density people “comfortable with their backyards.”

While weighing in on these myriad issues, Newsom, a presumed contender for the 2028 Democratic presidential nomination, has notably remained silent on whether his remarks about transgender athletes playing in girls’ and women’s sports would prompt him to alter the state’s laws allowing the practice.

U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon made it more difficult for Newsom to remain on the fence Thursday. She sent the governor a letter warning him that he must comply with President Trump’s executive order banning biological males from competing in women’s sports or risk losing federal funding for schools across the state.

At least $8 billion in federal education money to California hangs in the balance, while California is running what legislative analysts cited as a $46.8 billion budget deficit last year.

“Your recent comments about male athletes playing in women’s sports – that it is ‘deeply unfair’ – came to the attention of my office this week,” McMahon wrote. “I’m writing on behalf of the U.S. Department of Education to request a clarification on your stance as governor of California, and to inquire as to your intention to encourage California public schools to comply with federal law on this issue."

McMahon pointed to polls showing that an “overwhelming majority” of Americans believe men should not compete in women’s sports, and many citizens, she argued, are “confused” by “your office’s silence on the harms of substituting ‘gender identity’ for sex in other areas of school environment.”

“Allowing participation in sex-separated activities based on ‘gender identity’ places schools at risk of Title IX violations and loss of federal funding,” she asserted. “As governor, you have a duty to inform California school districts of this risk.”

McMahon ended her letter by asking Newsom to inform the department ‘whether you will remind schools in California to comply with federal law by protecting sex-separated spaces and activities” and to “assure parents that California teachers will not facilitate the fantasy of ‘gender transitions’ for their children.”

Charlie Kirk posted on X a copy of McMahon’s letter. Newsom spokeswoman Elana Ross did not respond to an inquiry about McMahon’s threat.


🚨🚨BREAKING: Education Secretary Linda McMahon has just formally WARNED California Governor Gavin Newsom to comply with federal law on prohibiting males in women's sports and in other sex-separated spaces or else risk losing federal funding:
"Your recent comments about male… pic.twitter.com/jlP5aKXloX
— Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) March 27, 2025
The matter is all the more pressing because the California Assembly will be holding hearings Tuesday on two GOP-sponsored bills aimed at banning biological boys and men from girls’ and women’s sports, though neither is expected to gain traction in the Democratic super-majority-controlled body. Proponents of the measure are rallying girl athletes who back the measures to show up at the hearings with their parents and press the legislature for action.

“California parents are tired of sending their kids to a government school system that fails them in every basic academic metric but would rather use our kids for public experiments in radical ideology,” Lance Christensen, president of the conservative California Policy Partners, told RealClearPolitics. “One would think that the legislature would have better understood the message of this last election when parents-rights candidates won across the state.”

Christensen, a Republican who ran an unsuccessful campaign for superintendent of public instruction in 2022, was also referring to a separate clash Thursday between McMahon and Newsom.

McMahon announced that the department’s Student Privacy Office launched an investigation into California over its law barring public school teachers and administrators from informing parents when their children as young as six are gender-transitioning at school.

McMahon said the probe would review whether the California Department of Education was violating the Family Educational Rights Privacy Act, which gives parents the right to access their children’s educational data.

“Teachers and school counselors should not be in the business of advising minors entrusted to their care on consequential decisions about their sexual identity and mental health,” McMahon said. “That responsibility and privilege lies with a parent or trusted loved one.”

“It is not only immoral but also potentially in contradiction with federal law for California schools to hide crucial information about a student’s wellbeing from parents and guardians,” she added. “The agency launched today’s investigation to vigorously protect parents’ rights and ensure that students do not fall victim to a radical transgender ideology that often leads to family alienation and irreversible medical interventions.” 

On this score, Newsom’s spokeswoman took a shot at the Trump administration’s attempt to dismantle the Department of Education and countered that California schools are not in violation of federal law because their policy allows parents access to all students’ education records, including those dealing with name or gender changes.

“Parents continue to have full, guaranteed access to their student’s education records, as required by federal law,” Ross said in a statement. “If the U.S Department of Education still had staff, this would be a quick investigation – all they would need to do is read the law the governor signed.”

Last year, Newsom signed a bill that prevents schools districts from adopting policies requiring teachers and administrators to notify parents when their children start using different pronouns or identify as a different gender from what’s on their school record.  

Prior to the law, several California school boards reacted to state Department of Education guidance barring the disclosure to parents of their children’s gender transitions by either considering or voting for policies that would require schools to disclose these types of changes in identity regardless of the student’s consent.

As the fight has played out across the state, California Attorney General Rob Bonta has sued school districts in Chino and Placer County over their parental notification requirements. Chino Valley School District has pushed back, counter-suing state officials over the new law barring teachers and school administrators from informing parents when their children begin gender-transitioning in school.

“School officials do not have the right to keep secrets from parents, but parents do have the constitutional right to know what their minor children are doing at school,” Emily Rae, senior counsel at the Liberty Justice Center, said after filing the countersuit on behalf of Chino Valley.

Proponents of gender transition notification laws say parental rights protections derive from the Constitution’s 14th Amendment prohibition of a state’s laws depriving “life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”

The Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized the diminished capacity of minor children and upheld limitations on important matters that significantly alter their lives, including their need for medical care or treatment. The high court has designated parents as the authorities that must make those decisions.

But in recent years, this longstanding doctrine has faced legal challenges. State and local officials have overruled parents when it comes to gender-transitioning medicines when one divorced parent disagrees with the other. In Montgomery County, Maryland, parents can no longer opt their children out of gender and sexuality curriculum in schools. Parents sued Maryland over the new policy. In January, the Supreme Court decided to take up the case.

At least one state, New Hampshire, reacted to the Trump administration threat by banning transgender athletes from participating in girls’ and women’s sports. Yet another, Maine, is standing its ground.

Maine Gov. Janet Mills and President Trump sparred over the issue last month during a meeting of governors at the White House. Trump, at the time, threatened to pull federal funding from Maine if the state fails to comply with his executive order barring transgender athletes from sports.

“We’ll see you in court,” Mills retorted. 

The U.S. Education Department has since concluded that Maine violated the Title IX antidiscrimination law and could face Justice Department prosecution. The U.S. Health and Human Services department gave Maine’s Department of Education and its Principals’ Association, which oversees high school sports in the state, 10 days to comply by banning the athletes.  

School officials in Maine said Thursday they would not do so, citing state law, including the Maine Human Rights Act.

Susan Crabtree is RealClearPolitics' national political correspondent.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 18:25

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Drug-rape student - 23 more women make allegations
Police in London say Zhenhao Zou's "offending group is far greater" than they had realised.

The Hill
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Jobst, who makes videos about "speed running" (finishing games as fast as possible), as well as gaming records and cheating in games, made a number of allegations against Mitchell in a 2021 YouTube video. He accused Mitchell of cheating, and "pursuing unmeritorious litigation" against others who had also accused him of cheating, the court judgment stated. The court heard Mitchell was accused in 2017 of cheating in his Donkey Kong world records by using emulation software instead of original arcade hardware. Twin Galaxies investigated the allegation, and subsequently removed Mitchell's scores and banned him from participating in its competitions. The Guinness World Records disqualified Mitchell as a holder of all his records -- in both Donkey Kong and Pac-Man -- after the Twin Galaxies decision. The judgment stated that Jobst's 2021 video also linked the December 2020 suicide of another YouTuber, Apollo Legend, to "stress arising from [his] settlement" with Mitchell, and wrongly asserted that Apollo Legend had to pay Mitchell "a large sum of money."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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New Brisbane stadium to replace Gabba as venue for Olympics, cricket, AFL
Monday, March 31, 2025 

Australia
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In decision announced by Queensland Premier David Crisafulli on Tuesday, Brisbane's The Gabba stadium is now scheduled to be replaced by a new stadium located on the north side of the Brisbane River. The yet to be named stadium is due to be the main stadium for the 2032 Olympics as well as international cricket and top level Australian rules football, both currently hosted at the Gabba.
Queensland Cricket, Chief Executive Officer, Terry Svenson welcomed the decision of the state government. "Queensland Cricket congratulates the Queensland Government on its decision to invest in the State's future, with a world-class stadium that will be a centrepiece of Brisbane for 2032 and beyond," Svenson said. "The Gabba has been wonderful venue for cricket for many years and has provided fans and players with countless memories – however the challenges the stadium faces are well documented, and we need to look to the future. There is now the opportunity for Queensland to attract the world's best cricket events, such as ICC events, men's and women's Ashes Series, the Border-Gavaskar Trophy series between Australia and India, as well has hosting the BBL and WBBL in a new purpose-built stadium."
The Brisbane Lions are the Australian Football League premiers. Their CEO Greg Swann was equally as welcoming. "The Gabba has been a great home for the past 30 years, but the city has outgrown it, the Lions have outgrown it, and the venue is reaching its end of life," Swann said.
"The Olympics and Paralympics presents an opportunity to deliver a venue that will serve the City and State's growing population, not just for the Games, but for the next 50 years. Between now and the Olympics nearly 4 million Queensland sports fans will visit the Gabba for either a Lions or cricket match, with each event creating job and economic opportunities and ensuring our local events industry is equipped and skilled to deliver the Games. We need all stakeholders to unite behind 2032 so we can get on with delivering the venues needed to host a great Games and critical infrastructure for decades to come."
Former Queensland Premier Campbell Newman was amongst a group that opposed the potential loss of green space at the Victoria Park site. “It is not only the stadium, but now we’re getting the swimmers talking about putting a swimming venue in the park as well. And this is what happens. These people really have to look at their own words,” Newman told Fox Sports News. “One minute they’re saying it’s only going to take up x-percent of the Park. The next minute, within a few breaths, they’re talking about putting the swimming in there as well. And that’s how it goes (and soon) you have no park.”
Those opposed to the new stadium site seem likely to challenge the decision in court according to Fox Sports News.





Have an opinion on this story? Share it!


Sources


edit





"Years of speculation ends with location for 2032 Olympics stadium finally revealed" — 7News Australia, March 25, 2025
Jack McKay and Claudia Williams. "New Brisbane stadium to be built at Victoria Park for 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games" — ABC News, March 25, 2025
Courtney Walsh. "2032 stadium call made as QLD Premier ‘sorry’ for Gabba backflip in Olympic venues reveal" — Fox Sports News, March 25, 2025





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"Evil People": Organized 'Bankrupt Tesla' Group Tied To Formerly USAID-Funded Disinfo Queen
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On Tuesday morning, former Biden administration "disinformation czar" Nina Jankowicz repeatedly refused to disclose who's funding her new gig - the 'American Sunlight Project' - which cropped up after a stint at the USAID-funded UK-based Centre for Information Resilience (CIR) - for which she registered as a foreign agent while serving as their Vice President.



To review - Jankowicz, who previously served as a disinformation fellow at the Wilson Center, advised the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry as part of the Fulbright-Clinton Public Policy Fellowship, and was then selected to head the Biden DHS's newly formed Disinformation Governance Board - which was quickly dismantled amid criticism over censorship under the guise of fighting disinformation. 

Four months later, she launched "The Hypatia Project" for CIR - where she was the Vice President until April 2024, at which point she co-founded the American Sunlight Project.

Fast forward to this morning, Jankowicz was evasive when asked by Republicans during a congressional hearing on disinformation about her funding...


Nina Jankowicz, the short-lived head of Biden’s Disinformation Governance Board aka Disinformation Czar refuses to say if her new org, The American Sunlight Projegt, is funded by George Soros.
“So sunlight for other people but not for your donors” @RepBaumgartner quips… pic.twitter.com/2RIiI1VU16
— Rob (@RobMcGravytrain) April 1, 2025

Well, Well, Well

As it turns out, Jankowicz's co-founder at the American Sunlight Project is Carlos Alvarez-Aranyos, a "communications professional" who worked for the Biden DoD, and is "one of the people who launched the call for a boycott of Tesla."

Alvarez-Aranyos comes from a wealthy and prominent family in the Dominican Republic. His father, Luis Álvarez Renta, is a well-known Dominican financier. Carlos is a nephew of the renowned fashion designer Oscar de la Renta.


Biden's censorship queen Nina Jankowicz currently works at the American Sunlight Project (ASP), and previously worked at USAID-funded Center for Information Resilience.
The ASP was co-founded by Carlos Alvarez-Aranyos is a "communications professional" who worked for Biden's… https://t.co/uIgDszSDKL pic.twitter.com/x60Ju2wzYh
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) April 1, 2025



“I need to have on my resume, so I can get a job when this thing is over, that I bankrupted Tesla.”
This is an outright admission the top Tesla boycott organizers’ personal financial prospects depend on taking down Tesla, and they must succeed in order to get paid. https://t.co/CJnQDX38rC pic.twitter.com/Ti775yTplt
— Mike Benz (@MikeBenzCyber) March 30, 2025
Alvarez-Aranyos has been scrubbed from the American Sunlight Project's website, which is why the internet archive exists.

Early organizers of the "Tesla Takedown" protests said last month that the organization's goal is to drive down the price of Tesla stock.

Another "Tesla Takedown" organizer, Edward Niedermeyer, told Fortune Magazine that dropping Musk's wealth is exactly their aim.

"The goal, I would say, is to bankrupt Elon Musk—bring down his empire," he said.

Read more on the Tesla Takedown organizers here...

Musk chimed in, calling the organizers "Evil people..."


Evil people https://t.co/6NCHAzZC9B
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 1, 2025
*  *  *

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Tue, 04/01/2025 - 15:05

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Fifty Achievements In Fifty Days
Fifty Achievements In Fifty Days

Authored by Jeffrey Tucker via The Epoch Times,

Many friends of mine are frustrated at what they consider slow progress from the Trump administration. Whatever the pet issue, they want results now, and are otherwise ready to declare failure or betrayal.



This is a reflection of the high hopes of the incoming administration. There was never a way to keep up.

That’s why we should take a few moments to consider the achievements of this administration, which have gone some distance in restoring popular government over whatever we had before.

One feature I noticed on my travels is just how suddenly nice the TSA is at the airports. I could not understand why. Employees very quickly explained their absolute exuberance that the public-sector union that used to be in charge no longer is.

The Trump administration removed collective bargaining privileges and restored normal management. This led to a wave of firings of lazy, troublesome, and incompetent workers, absolutely thrilling everyone else.

This is a massive change that was hardly announced at all. But it has made a dramatic difference.

Prompted by this example, I’ve chronicled 50 changes that the Trump administration has made that have made life dramatically better in record time.

1. Defanged the public-sector unions. This happened with hardly any announcement. It pertains to nearly the whole of the government’s workforce. It has emancipated the employees from their terrible unions and led to the almost immediate elevation of merit over DEI as many employees have explained to me. This is very obvious when you travel. You can actually have a human conversation with TSA employees and passport control.

2. Stopped BOIR. The Biden-era mandate was for all businesses to file a Beneficial Ownership Information Report with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network of the U.S. Treasury, and do so annually. The mandate added wholly unnecessary bureaucracy. Even more, it was just really strange and scary for every sole proprietor to be required to file this thing as if everyone was a criminal in waiting. The Trump administration stopped it.

3. Ended the hen slaughter. Wholesale egg prices have collapsed from $8 per dozen to only $3 in a matter of weeks, mostly driven by the end of the Department of Agriculture’s work to mandate slaughtering hens in the name of controlling bird flu. Trump’s change of policy has resulted in a big supply boost. The DOA has also stopped the vaccine that was ready for distribution, which would likely have made the chickens sicker.

4. Ended the war on crypto. Since 2013, the federal government has tried to control this sector with reporting requirements, regulations, taxes, investigations, and jail time. Trump has ended this with a new embrace and a favorable push toward the entire sector.

5. The clean-up of the FDA. The main vaccine scientist who had purged the agency of doubters in the past has now announced his resignation, upon pressure from the Trump administration. This has cleared the path for some transparency and an end to the use of this agency as an advertising bureau for Big Pharma.

6. Restoration of free speech. Since 2016 and onward, we have documented proof that government agencies were intervening with media and tech companies to push one political way of thinking and exclude all others. That practice is now fully banned by executive order.

7. The end of DEI. The Trump administration now correctly regards systematic discrimination in the name of DEI to be illegal discrimination; that is, the law is now being consistently applied and DEI programs across government and industry are coming to a quick end.

8. Stopped the migrant invasion. As a long champion of the freedom to migrate, I was shocked to see evidence that the entire system was being gamed to bring about a skewing of voter demographics to keep one party in power. We have the receipts. That is now stopped.

9. RFK at HHS. The leading champion of freedom against lockdowns and vaccine mandates now holds the most powerful position in health in the world, as head of Health and Human Services. He is completely restructuring all agencies under his control.

10. Restoring Science. Jay Bhattacharya is a lead author of the Great Barrington Declaration and a champion of real science. As head of the National Institutes of Health, he is in a position now to restore real science as a priority for this powerful funding source.

11. Busting the Treasury Payment Monopoly. The Treasury’s payment portals have been off-limits to outsiders since 1946, with not a single non-agency person or institution permitted access. DOGE gained that access to reveal some $4.7 trillion in untagged payments in addition to another dozen money printers operating throughout the government.

12. Ferreting out Social Security Fraud. DOGE also discovered millions of people on the Social Security rolls who were too old to be alive, in addition to millions of illegal immigrants who had Social Security numbers and were receiving benefits. That is ending.

13. Ending USAID. This powerful agency has long subsidized far-left causes all over the world, operating as a kind of slush fund with little oversight. That entire agency has been gutted.

14. Gutting the U.S. Institute for Peace. This nonprofit was created by Congress but has long served as a clearing house for compromised diplomats and mostly a welfare state for has-been players in deep-state circles. Having had personal experience with the place, I was thrilled to see the Trump administration fire the entire staff and gut the budget.

15. Stopping the NGO Fraud. DOGE and others have discovered an amazing little racket that consists of putting nongovernment organizations on agency payrolls for billions in funding that have served partisan political ends, including the funding of legacy media. That little money-laundering operation is now under serious pressure.

16. Exposing the press. We have to appreciate what it means that the Trump administration is now longer deferring to the power of legacy media, calling out false stories by the day and refusing to grant exclusive access to the fourth estate. This has been a wake-up call to many not to trust something just because it appears in formerly prestigious venues.

17. Boosting traditional architecture. The Trump administration has pledged to sell off hundreds of ugly federal buildings and bring back architectural grandeur to Washington, D.C. This might be the final nail in the coffin of the Brutalist style, a form of architecture developed as an homage to the prison camp.

18. Bringing together MAHA and MAGA. For generations, crunchy liberals and American patriots had no real connection with each other politically or culturally. Now these teams have joined forces against a common enemy, forming new friend circles and modes of community action.

19. Reducing inflation. Almost to the day, the intensity of inflation diminished from the inauguration. This is due to many different factors, including a change in the velocity of money and also Fed policy which has kept the money stock flat for some six months. In addition, inflation expectations were reduced and thus the prophecy became self-fulfilling. Trump deserves some credit there for making a compelling case that higher productivity is on the way.

20. Stopping the regulatory tsunami. The Trump administration has stopped by executive order all bureaucratic lawmaking. The executive order permissions in a range of products that were ruled out by regulatory edict. It will probably require litigation to make it real but this is extremely promising.

21. Defunding the Green New Deal. The science behind climate change and the support for Green New Deal policy was completely unquestioned in public life for a very long time. Trump has put an end to this, pulling the funding and stopping the march of deindustrialization. This needs to be written into law but it is an excellent start.

22. Ending gender confusion. At some vague moment over the last 5 or 10 years, there was actual confusion in legislation over the biological difference between men and women, as incredible as that sounds. But during this time, men began to refashion themselves as women and compete as such in sports, to the amazement of everyone. Trump had the courage just to announce the truth that there are only two sexes.

23. Stopping the war on gas and oil. For many years, oil and gas, among America’s greatest resources and one of our few remaining competitive industries, faced absurd restrictions. Trump has repealed them all and stopped the absurd subsidies for wind and solar power. The entire “fossil fuels” industry is excited about the future for the first time in perhaps decades.

24. Freeing the prisoners. My good friend Ross Ulbricht, sentenced to more than two lifetimes in jail for creating a website, has been freed. Many more besides: hundreds of people who did nothing wrong were languishing in prison for having protested on January 6. These people are now free, thanks to the Trump administration.

25. Push back on legacy media. The White House now has a competent press secretary who takes on the legacy media, and the 100-year monopoly of the White House Correspondents Association has been shattered, allowing podcasters and new media to have access.

26. Vaccine mandate rollback. Federal employees are no longer required to get the COVID-19 vaccine, which has been proven to be ineffective and potentially harmful.

27. Ending COVID shots on green cards. Many families were separated by this vaccine mandate for green card holders. That is now gone.

28. EV Mandate pause. Automakers have long been forced to devote a portion of their production to making cars that people do not want. That mandate is now gone.

29. Critical Race Theory ban. This theory attacks America in its history and present meaning and was being taught in schools at all levels. The Trump administration has withdrawn all funding for this project, which is designed to spread guilt and shame and tell a false version of history.

30. Transgender military ban. Until recently, transgender people have ascended to great heights within the U.S. military. That has been completely stopped. It is no longer permitted that men can pretend to be women and visa-versa.

31. IRS hiring freeze. The previous administration had hired some 80,000 new tax collectors who are all now fired, to the great celebration of the oppressed middle class.

32. Leaving WHO. The World Health Organization had spent years promoting fake science and lockdowns at U.S. taxpayer expense. The U.S. is now fully out of this organization and the NGOs that backed it are now defunded.

33. Climate accord exit. You remember the fake science of COVID? It turns out that the fake science of climate change was just as bad or worse. The Unites States was actually party to an accord that mandated the Green New Deal. That is now gone.

34. Union dues opt-out. No federal employee is required to pay union dues anymore and most have declined to continue doing so, thanks to a change initiated by the Trump administration.

35. Fisheries deregulation, easing Magnuson-Stevens conservation rules, aiding 10,000 fishermen. This is a technical change but it matters to the heroic people who work daily to bring us food.

36. Small Business tax break. The new 20 percent deduction on new businesses was set to expire but is now back again.

37. Foreign aid audit. Fully $5 billion in foreign aid has been frozen pending a full review of whatever was behind this.

38. Title IX reversal. The previous administration had ruined this regulation by blurring the difference between men and women. The old rule has been restored, which particularly impacts sports.

39. Many JFK files released. Not all the files have come out but the ones we have reveal deep involvement of the deep state in the assassination that rocked the country. We still await many promised releases.

40. Federal land drilling. The Trump administration has opened up 1.5 million acres in Alaska, projecting 50,000 barrels daily.

41. Sanctuary City funding cut. The Trump administration has withheld $200 million from noncompliant cities, pressuring cooperation with the migrant/criminal crackdown.

42. Clean up voter roles. For years, Trump claimed that the 2020 election was compromised. We doubted this. Now we know for sure, based purely on math. Voter ID is now the law of the land. Without verifiable citizen voting, there is no democracy, no freedom, no society run by the people. Trump deserves every credit for seeing this problem and sticking his neck out to defend democracy.

43. Dignified new media. Thousands of citizen journalists have been working for years to cover politics and government but have been denied access and legitimacy. The Trump administration has seen the value they add and treated them with dignity and respect. This is actually huge for information systems and the public mind.

44. Empowered new employees. Trump has not gone along with the usual system of hiring cabinet officials who get chewed up by the bureaucracy. Instead, he has trusted them with massive decisions over their realms, enabling them to hire and fire and determine policy. This is probably the first time this has happened in my life or perhaps 100 years.

45. Focus on Ending international conflicts. The Trump administration has put the cause of peace in the Ukraine war with Russia as a first priority. His insistence on this might have prevented World War III, which is rather important.

46. Dramatic cuts in civil service. In the first days of the administration, Trump invited every employee of the federal government to resign with full severances. About 5-7 percent accepted and all of them have been paid. Then the firings started, just as promised. The downsizing must happen. This process needs to go much further but it has been started.

47. Push for food cleanup. Under the great influence of Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., the U.S. food system is starting to be cleaned up. We have some of the most dangerous food in the world, as anyone who travels internationally can tell you. Maybe this can change, along with the empowerment of local farmers.

48. Banned CBDCs. An executive order has banned Central Bank Digital Currencies and made it clear that America will never have a Chinese-style social credit system linked to our personal financial lives. This has been a gigantic relief, particularly in light of all the debanking that has taken place.

49. Spotlight on the Fed. DOGE is sparing no institution in D.C., not the Pentagon and not even the Federal Reserve, which is to be subjected to a real audit. We shall see how long the power of the central bank lasts but this is the first real challenge it has made since its founding in 1913.

50. Challenged the judges. There are more than 100 cases extant against the Trump administration’s attempt to be the real executive department rather than just a headline group of temporary managers. These lower court judges have presumed to be more powerful than the president that the people elected. They are facing foundational challenges that will surely land in the Supreme Court.

Am I thrilled about everything that the Trump administration has done? No. I have objections on many fronts about which I could write another column. But here is what is critical: these are legitimate differences one might expect in a democracy, which is precisely what Trump is restoring.

I’m fine with argument and disagreement. What is not fine is an administrative state that runs all things from behind the scenes while elected rulers just pretend to be in charge.

All Americans regardless of their political differences should celebrate the enlivening of the democratic imperative, which is what the Trump administration has done, with spectacular results in only three months. Let us hope there is much more to come.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 16:20

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"They Were Literally Michael Jacksoning Him": Incredible Details Of Biden's Decline Emerge
"They Were Literally Michael Jacksoning Him": Incredible Details Of Biden's Decline Emerge

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Wild details of Joe Biden’s rapid cognitive and physical deterioration have emerged in a new book, as it is revealed that handlers were trying to cover up signs of Biden’s physical decline with make up.



Excerpts have emerged from a new book by entitled “Fight: Inside the Wildest Battle for the White House,” by The Hill Senior Political Correspondent Amie Parnes and NBC News Digital Senior political analyst Jonathan Allen that reveals Democrats and Biden insiders were all too painfully aware of what was going on, but all went along with the facade until it was no longer possible to hide it.

In one excerpt, a former Biden aide shared how they had a resident make-up artist to cover up how dilapidated Biden’s physical appearance had become. 

As conservative commentator Stephen L. Miller puts it “they were literally Michael Jacksoning him” then calling anyone who questioned Biden’s acumen a conspiracy theorist.


They were literally Michael Jacksoning him while the media called people who said he didn't look right "cheap fakes." pic.twitter.com/1JYecbWWyT
— Stephen L. Miller (@redsteeze) March 31, 2025
It’s one small step away from whacking sunglasses on the ‘Weekend At Bernie’s’ corpse.

On some occasions, Biden would get the make up done, and then cancel the briefings.


He would get his makeup done and call it a day. pic.twitter.com/61Xg3LxJbn
— Stephen L. Miller (@redsteeze) March 31, 2025
Another incident saw Biden not recognising or knowing who Rep. Eric Swalwell was and having to be coached into remembering him.

The Hill notes…


Swalwell had not been invited to the White House often, like most members of Congress, but when Biden and Swalwell came face to face, Biden didn’t immediately recognize the congressman, according to the book. 

Swalwell needed to note personal details to remind Biden of who he is. 


While they all remained quiet at the time, Miller notes that everyone is coming out of the woodwork now the book deals are being bandied around.


It can all be said now for cash and book deals now.https://t.co/97T0YUyhto pic.twitter.com/tD3KHzHQgM
— Stephen L. Miller (@redsteeze) March 31, 2025
Biden also needed fluorescent tape to guide him where to go and not to wander off during public events.


pic.twitter.com/svnXcxAakV
— Matt Harbison (@mattyharby) March 31, 2025
The book further notes that Biden’s allies were planning for his death and someone else becoming the Democratic nominee as early as 2023.

Kamala Harris’ team reportedly drew up a “death-pool roster” of federal judges who might swear her in if and when Biden died in office.


🚨 Democrats Were Ready for Biden to Die 🚨
A new 2024 election book reveals that Democrats were prepared for Joe Biden to die in office as early as 2023. It claims they secretly had a “death-pool roster” of judges who could have sworn Kamala Harris into office as soon as Joe… pic.twitter.com/UG6wMF0FVb
— Tony Seruga (@TonySeruga) March 28, 2025

🚨NEW REPORT DISCLOSES THAT KAMALA STAFF PLANNED FOR BIDEN DEATH IN OFFICE STARTING IN 2023!
This has turned out to be one of the biggest political cover-ups of all time. pic.twitter.com/7ML7l5KYel
— Townhall.com (@townhallcom) March 28, 2025
Despite the bright red flags, Biden’s handlers still all went along with the show.

“At the end of the day, I don’t think anyone in that inner circle was presenting the president any contrary advice that this thing is not going to be easy or maybe this is not the best thing for the Democratic Party,” one Biden ally told Parnes and Allen.

Appearing on NewsNation’s Cuomo, Parnes said that “I think every Democrat has a story…where they saw President Biden not in the best terms.”



The book has also confirmed that Biden essentially fucked over Obama and the insiders in the Party who finally took the decision to remove him by immediately endorsing Kamala Harris.

According to the book, Harris’ team “begged” Biden to endorse her in his statement issued when he ‘stepped down’ as the Democratic nominee, before the Obama/Pelosi crowd could push for an open primary to select a new nominee.


“You need to endorse me,” Harris begged Biden in the moments before the ticket switch-up, as reported by The Hill’s Amie Parnes and NBC News’s Jonathan Allen in excerpts from “FIGHT: Inside the Wildest Battle for the White House.”https://t.co/n4uOeU3LUh https://t.co/0Q3LYXlcyf pic.twitter.com/4LMVPho2qA
— Kayah (@__Kayah__) March 31, 2025

The inside story on how Biden made Harris beg for an endorsment on the day he dropped out.
Jaw-dropping details in ⁦⁦@jonallendc⁩ & ⁦⁦@amieparnes⁩ new book, which I'm sure will be another bestseller. pic.twitter.com/BKbmwZJa8S
— Tara Palmeri (@tarapalmeri) March 31, 2025
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Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 17:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
212,268 Pounds Of Egg Products Potentially Containing Bleach Recalled
212,268 Pounds Of Egg Products Potentially Containing Bleach Recalled

Authored by Naveen Athrappully via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Hundreds of thousands of pounds of egg items are being pulled off the market, citing the potential presence of an “unapproved substance,” according to the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).
Recalled liquid egg products. USDA

Michigan-based Cargill Kitchen Solutions is recalling “approximately 212,268 pounds of liquid egg products that may contain a cleaning solution with sodium hypochlorite,” the agency said in a March 28 recall announcement. “The problem was discovered when FSIS received a tip about the potential contamination of these products.”

According to a 2022 study, sodium hypochlorite, commonly known as bleach, is a main ingredient in cleaners and has good sanitizing effects. One of its uses is sterilizing food factories. Ingestion of the compound can result in vomiting, nausea, and burning sensations in the mouth. When large amounts are ingested, it results in “serious toxicity.”

“After conducting an investigation and thorough assessment of the contents of the cleaning solution, FSIS scientists concluded that use of this product should not cause adverse health consequences, or the risk is negligible, resulting in a Class III recall.”

Class III is the lowest of the three recall classifications under the U.S. Department of Agriculture and is assigned to products that pose a “marginal risk” to people.

The recalled items were shipped to distributors in Ohio and Texas as well as for food service use in Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, and Iowa. FSIS said the products could have been distributed nationwide.

The products were manufactured on March 12 and 13, with “use by” dates extending to August 2025 and March 2026. They were sold in 32 oz. cartons.

The agency has received no confirmed reports of adverse reactions from consuming the recalled products. It advised people who have ingested the item and are worried about illnesses to contact a health care provider.

In an emailed statement to The Epoch Times, Cargill said the products were voluntarily recalled “out of an abundance of caution.”

“Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them, and food service locations are urged not to serve them. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase,” FSIS said.

Individuals with questions about the recall can contact Cargill Kitchen Solutions at 1-844-419-1574.

Multiple other food recalls have been initiated over the past years due to the presence of unapproved substances.

In February last year, New York-based MF Meats withdrew more than 93,000 pounds of raw meat products out of concern they could have been contaminated with “non-food grade mineral seal oil, which is not approved for use in meat processing.”

Back in August 2022, Kraft Heinz recalled around 5,760 cases of juice drink blend beverages. The recall was triggered after a “diluted cleaning solution, which is used on food processing equipment, was inadvertently introduced into a production line” at one of the company’s factories.

The issue emerged after Kraft Heinz received multiple complaints from customers about the taste of the item.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 17:20

The Hill
Open 
These 9 House Republicans rebelled against GOP leadership over parental proxy voting
Nine House Republicans defied GOP leadership on Tuesday and opposed an effort to block a bill instituting proxy voting for new parents from coming to the floor, halting key legislative action in the chamber. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) collected the 218 signatures — including from 11 Republicans — needed to successfully execute a discharge...

The Hill
Open 
Boebert appears to confuse Oliver Stone with Roger Stone during JFK records hearing
Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) appeared to confuse Oliver Stone, an American filmmaker and a witness before House lawmakers on Tuesday, with political strategist Roger Stone during a hearing on the release of new documents related to the assassination of John F. Kennedy. “You wrote a book accusing LBJ of being involved in the killing of...

The Hill
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The White House’s mixed message on its tariff policy
Trump's tariffs could raise $600 billion a year, but this would only happen if consumers avoid substitution and continue to buy foreign goods at tariff-elevated prices, which is unlikely.

The Hill
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Trump girds for trade war
Presented by National Council on Aging {beacon} IN HIS BROADEST TRADE MOVE YET, President Trump will outline sweeping tariffs during a White House Rose Garden event Wednesday. Trump met with his trade team Tuesday to hammer out the final details for the announcement, which threatens to ignite a risky global trade war that economists warn would...

The Hill
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Rahm Emanuel returns to Wall Street, but ‘not done with public service’
Rahm Emanuel, who served in the Biden administration as the U.S. ambassador to Japan, is returning to Wall Street for a new position but said he is “not done with public service.” Emanuel is rejoining the investment bank Centerview Partners, where he worked from 2019 to 2021. He counseled CEOs on mergers, regulation and political...

The Hill
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Trump announces $100M deal with law firm tied to Doug Emhoff, Jan. 6 House panel
President Trump on Tuesday announced his administration struck a deal with a law firm with ties to former second gentleman Doug Emhoff and the House panel that investigated the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol as Trump targets major firms for retribution. The agreement with Willkie Farr & Gallagher states that the firm will provide...

The Hill
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GOP rep says 'tariff is a tax': 'No question'
Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Texas) on Monday said a “tariff is a tax,” a day before the Trump administration’s imposition of “Liberation Day” reciprocal tariffs. In Sessions’s appearance on “CNN News Central,” a Monday opinion piece from The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board was brought up by anchor John Berman. “In the real economic world, a...

The Hill
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Trump's joint chiefs nominee says he would have stopped Signal chat
President Trump’s nominee to be the U.S. military’s highest-ranking officer on Tuesday asserted that he would have stopped a Signal chat among high-ranking officials last month that has continued to dog the administration. Retired Lt. Gen. Daniel "Razin" Caine, the nominee for chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, largely side-stepped questions from Senate Armed...

The Hill
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Stagflation 'whiffs' are back — but what does it mean?
While the U.S. isn't there yet, some are already expressing concerns about stagflation — but what is it?

The Hill
Open 
Judge refuses Trump admin's request to move Mahmoud Khalil case to Louisiana 
A New Jersey-based federal judge on Tuesday declined the Trump administration’s request to transfer pro-Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil’s immigration detention challenge to Louisiana, where is he is being held.  U.S. District Judge Michael Farbiarz ruled he has jurisdiction over Khalil’s case because the Columbia University graduate and legal permanent resident was detained in New Jersey when...

The Hill
Open 
Why Trump's tariffs may not hit Tesla
{beacon} Technology Technology   The Big Story Why Tesla may fare better under Trump's auto tariffs Elon Musk’s focus on American-made products at Tesla could shield his company from the brunt of President Trump’s new tariffs on foreign vehicles and automobile parts. © Mike Stewart, Associated Press While foreign automakers and American consumers anticipate climbing...

Sky News Home
Open 
Armed police shoot man dead at railway station
A man carrying a knife who "moved at speed" towards police has been shot dead by officers at Milton Keynes railway station.

BBC UK News
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Man's car stolen after violent attack as vehicle thefts rise
Alan Williams says he was left with a broken collarbone, broken nose, black eyes and a swollen face.

BBC UK News
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Two men remain in hospital after industrial estate fire
Two of the casualties are understood to have burns as fire crews tackle the blaze in Cumbernauld.

Mail Online
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Young brothers, 13 and 9, transform dilapidated 1970s bus into an ice cream van using £1,000 savings and £10,000 from their parents
Billy, 13, and Henry, who is just nine years old, from Penkridge in Staffordshire, appeared on Tuesday night's episode George Clarke's Amazing Spaces on Channel 4.

Mail Online
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Self-confessed 'idiot' who had been speeding 108mph and overtaking lorries before a head-on crash then posed with his thumbs up as other driver was 'writhing in pain in hospital'
Father Leon Loftus, 27, reached speeds of 108mph on country roads before he lost control of his Vauxhall Insignia on a bend and smashed into an oncoming van on the opposite side of the road.

Russia Today News
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Prosecutors seeking death penalty for suspected CEO killer

Mail Online
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Meghan Markle announces her As Ever products will go on sale TOMORROW as she gleefully dances around kitchen
Meghan Markle has revealed that there's just one more day until she launches her lifestyle brand, As Ever - and is celebrating with a cheeky dance.

Mail Online
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Met Office issues amber wildfire warning for Britain as temperatures set to soar to 22C this week
The Met Office has issued an amber wildfire warning across most of the UK as temperatures are set to soar up to 22C this week.

Slashdot
Open 
Arkansas Social Media Age Verification Law Blocked By Federal Judge
A federal judge struck down Arkansas' Social Media Safety Act, ruling it unconstitutional for broadly restricting both adult and minor speech and imposing vague requirements on platforms. Engadget reports: In a ruling (PDF), Judge Timothy Brooks said that the law, known as Act 689 (PDF), was overly broad. "Act 689 is a content-based restriction on speech, and it is not targeted to address the harms the State has identified," Brooks wrote in his decision. "Arkansas takes a hatchet to adults' and minors' protected speech alike though the Constitution demands it use a scalpel." Brooks also highlighted the "unconstitutionally vague" applicability of the law, which seemingly created obligations for some online services, but may have exempted services which had the "predominant or exclusive function [of]... direct messaging" like Snapchat.

"The court confirms what we have been arguing from the start: laws restricting access to protected speech violate the First Amendment," NetChoice's Chris Marchese said in a statement. "This ruling protects Americans from having to hand over their IDs or biometric data just to access constitutionally protected speech online." It's not clear if state officials in Arkansas will appeal the ruling. "I respect the court's decision, and we are evaluating our options," Arkansas Attorney general Tim Griffin said in a statement.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
FTC Says 23andMe Purchaser Must Uphold Existing Privacy Policy For Data Handling
The FTC has warned that any buyer of 23andMe must honor the company's current privacy policy, which ensures consumers retain control over their genetic data and can delete it at will. FTC Chair Andrew Ferguson emphasized that such promises must be upheld, given the uniquely sensitive and immutable nature of genetic information. The Record reports: The letter, sent to the DOJ's United States Trustee Program, highlights several assurances 23andMe makes in its privacy policy, including that users are in control of their data and can determine how and for what purposes it is used. The company also gives users the ability to delete their data at will, the letter says, arguing that 23andMe has made "direct representations" to consumers about how it uses, shares and safeguards their personal information, including in the case of bankruptcy.

Pointing to statements that the company's leadership has made asserting that user data should be considered an asset, Ferguson highlighted that 23andMe's privacy statement tells users it does not share their data with insurers, employers, public databases or law enforcement without a court order, search warrant or subpoena. It also promises consumers that it only shares their personal data in cases where it is needed to provide services, Ferguson added. The genetic testing and ancestry company is explicit that its data protection guidelines apply to new entities it may be sold or transferred to, Ferguson said.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC UK News
Open 
Grooming inquiry lawyer asked Home Office 'do you still want me?'
Tom Crowther KC suggests there has been little progress nearly three months since his role was announced.

Sky News Home
Open 
Armed police shoot man 'carrying a knife' dead at railway station
A man carrying a knife who "moved at speed" towards police has been shot dead by officers at Milton Keynes railway station.

CNET News
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April Fools' Day 2025 Pranks: Grass Keyboard, Catnip Car Seats, 5-Year World Cruise
If you see a weird product being announced online today, don't be so sure it's real. Duolingo, Razer, Yahoo and Priceline have some of the best April Fools' pranks for 2025.

CNET News
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Creator of the Game Katamari Damacy Tells What Inspired His Next Game: to a T
The game to a T, by developer Keita Takahashi, brings a narrative spin to Takahashi's wacky adventures.

CNET News
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Seth Rogen Roasts Hollywood in 'The Studio.' Here's How to Watch
The first two episodes of Apple's new star-studded comedy are now streaming.

CNET News
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Mortgage Rate Predictions for April: How Will Tariffs Affect Spring Homebuying?
Mortgage rates have held fairly steady despite economic turmoil. But that could all change soon.

CNET News
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Act Fast to Grab a New Tamagotchi for Only $12 With This Lingering Amazon Big Spring Day Deal
Channel your nostalgia and save on these adorable redesigned Tamagotchi games -- thanks to these Amazon discounts.

CNET News
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We Love This Handy Osprey Aoede Sling Bag and It’s Now $18 Off at Amazon
This Osprey Aoede bag is perfect for carrying your essentials to work, on vacation or out for your morning jog. Grab it while it's down to just $42.

CNET News
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3 Switch Games That Would Benefit the Most From Switch 2 Upgrades
Nintendo's best franchises pushed the Switch to its limits. Here are games that could use better graphics and frame rates on the Switch 2.

Mail Online
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Outrage after hot mic picks up school board making VERY rude comment about disabled student's dad
A Massachusetts school board was caught on a hot mic making rude comments about a student's dad as he advocated for his disabled child's rights.

Mail Online
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Schoolgirl gets £27,000 payout after her leg was seriously injured on ride at UK theme park
Formal legal proceedings were sparked but the dispute took three years to be settled, the 16-year-old's solicitors said.

Mail Online
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Bizarre real cause of death for rapper Young Scooter originally feared to have been killed by gunshot wound
The real cause of death for Atlanta rapper Young Scooter has been revealed after he was feared to have been killed by a gunshot wound.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Hong Kong in frame to host Nations Championship finals and Lions matches
Kai Tak Sports Park favourite to stage event post-2028Stadium to host Spurs, Arsenal and Liverpool in JulyHong Kong has emerged as a candidate to stage future Nations Championship finals at its new Kai Tak Sports Park and would be an ideal British & Irish Lions stopover, according to a senior World Rugby executive.The inaugural Nations Championship finals – the biennial playoffs among the world’s leading international sides – is to be held in London in 2026 with Qatar lined up for 2028 but the Hong Kong stadium is an increasingly popular suggestion for subsequent editions. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Electric Elanga haunts Manchester United with Nottingham Forest winner
At the weekend the lasting image was Ryan Yates haring towards the Nottingham Forest supporters in celebration and here another episode at breakneck speed earned victory. This time the subject was Anthony Elanga, who tore up the City Ground turf, eating up 85m in nine seconds, to score the only goal of the game against his former club and maintain their push to qualify for the Champions League. Diogo Dalot sent a header against the woodwork and the substitute Mason Mount went close on his first appearance since December but, incredibly, the wait for Ruben Amorim’s side to earn back-to-back league wins goes on.“You’re not famous any more,” the Forest supporters sang into six minutes of stoppage time and while that may not quite be true it was another sobering reminder of United’s current state. Continue reading...

Mac Rumours
Open 
Visa and American Express Vying to Win Apple Card Deal in 'Fierce' Fight
Visa wants to pay Apple approximately $100 million to be the new payment network for the Apple Card, reports The Wall Street Journal. As of right now, the ‌Apple Card‌ is on the Mastercard payment network, but that is set to change because Apple is ending its partnership with Goldman Sachs.





Both American Express and Visa are vying to replace Mastercard as Apple's card services provider, while Mastercard is aiming to retain its position. Apple apparently plans to choose a new ‌Apple Card‌ network before it selects a partner to replace Goldman Sachs as the ‌Apple Card‌'s issuing bank, and competition is intense. Visa is offering Apple a $100 million upfront payment, while American Express is "in the mix" and Mastercard is "fiercely trying" to retain its role.



Apple and Goldman Sachs have been working to dissolve their partnership since 2023, with Goldman Sachs planning to exit the consumer banking market. JPMorgan Chase and Synchrony Financial are in talks with Apple to take over for Goldman Sachs, but American Express has also been aiming to become the issuer and network of the ‌Apple Card‌. Apple needs both an issuing bank for the ‌Apple Card‌ and a payment network that facilitates transactions.



Goldman Sachs and Apple have worked together on the ‌Apple Card‌ since its 2019 launch, and have also teamed up for the high-yield Apple Savings account. Apple has not been happy with Goldman Sachs because of customer service issues caused by long wait times for disputed ‌Apple Card‌ transactions and savings account withdrawals.



The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau even launched an investigation into Goldman Sachs due to the customer complaints, which led to tension, so both companies are eager to end their relationship.



The ‌Apple Card‌ has over 12 million users in the United States, with approximately $20 billion in balances.Tag: Apple CardThis article, 'Visa and American Express Vying to Win Apple Card Deal in 'Fierce' Fight' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Three big unknowns ahead of Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs
The president is expected to unveil details of his plans for a wider set of import taxes. But what tariffs and when?

TechRadar News
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American cyber brass calls for retaliatory strikes against China, but is the US really ready?

Digital Trends
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Google Messages may receive features you never knew were missing
Google Messages might receive support for user mentions, links and QR codes in group chats.

Digital Trends
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This dorm room-sized Vizio TV just dropped to $214 at Walmart
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Digital Trends
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Samsung may bring Now Brief to more Galaxy smartphones
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Gizmodo
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Lego’s April Releases Concern Hobbits
Like any good shirefolk, Lego's April 2025 sets might be small in stature, but high on quality.

Gizmodo
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Arkansas Judge Kills Social Media Age Verification Law, Says It Violates the First Amendment
“Arkansas takes a hatchet to adults’ and minors’ protected speech alike though the Constitution demands it use a scalpel,” the judge said.

Gizmodo
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Gizmodo
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Meta’s $1,000 Smartglasses Will Likely Have a Tiny Display and a Potential Problem with Interoperability
Meta's 'Hypernova' glasses could cost well over $1,000 and include a tiny display on one lens with its own, tiny app tray.

Russia Today News
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Musk condemns ‘terrorist’ attack on Tesla dealership in Italy

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Girl missing in River Thames named as Kaliyah Coa
A recovery mission is now under way to find 11-year-old Kaliyah along the Thames, Met Police said.

Deutsche Welle
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British WWII code-breaker 'Betty' Webb dies aged 101
Charlotte "Betty" Webb worked at Bletchley Park, the famous British code-breaking center, where she was responsible for sorting intercepted German communications. She later paraphrased Japanese messages, too.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Cory Booker’s anti-Trump speech on Senate floor enters 21st hour – live
Democratic senator slams Trump administration’s various policies and is close to the all-time US record held by Strom Thurmond (24 hours and 18 minutes)US voters are headed to the polls on Tuesday in Wisconsin and Florida in elections that some see as a test of Donald Trump’s popularity and the political clout of his billionaire ally Elon Musk.The most closely watched contest is a battle for a seat on Wisconsin’s seven-member supreme court. Conservatives are trying to flip ideological control of the court, which currently has a 4-3 liberal majority. The contest, which features liberal judge Susan Crawford facing off against conservative Brad Schimel, will have huge consequences in the state. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Saka’s magic Arsenal return does for Fulham but Gabriel injury casts shadow
The Arsenal fans had come to see Bukayo Saka and when he took off his tracksuit, primed to enter as a 66th-minute substitute, red shirt vividly lighting the scene, it is fair to say there was a reaction. It was mainly a release. The three months without Saka have been hard, Arsenal’s Premier League title challenge slipping away.There was certainly a script there to be written and, Saka being Saka, he grabbed the pen and set to work. Arsenal have an incredible home record in the league against Fulham – 24 wins, seven draws and no defeats before this. They were on their way to another victory thanks to a Mikel Merino goal on 37 minutes, the latest return from the club’s makeshift No 9. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Girl missing in River Thames in east London named as Kaliyah Coa
Recovery mission under way after 11-year-old entered water near London City airport on MondayAn 11-year-old girl who is missing after entering the River Thames in London on Monday has been named by police as Kaliyah Coa.Kaliyah, who had been playing during a school inset day, entered the water near Bargehouse Causeway near London City airport in east London. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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US officials challenge Ofcom over risk to free speech caused by online safety laws
Exclusive: State department said to have raised concerns over whether new act infringes on freedom of expressionUS state department officials have challenged Britain’s communications regulator over the impact on freedom of expression created by new online safety laws, the Guardian understands.A group of officials from the state department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (DRL) recently met Ofcom in London. It is understood that they raised the issue of the new online safety act and how it risked infringing free speech. Continue reading...

Mail Online
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New discovery at site of Jesus' resurrection corroborates the Bible
A discovery at the site where Jesus is believed to have died, been buried and risen from the dead may prove the sacred Biblical text to be true.

The Register
Open 
Intel's latest CEO Lip Bu Tan: 'You deserve better'
AMD it is, then. Or Nvidia, Arm, Qualcomm, RISC-V, MOS 6502 ... Vision  Intel's newly appointed CEO Lip-Bu Tan has used his first major speech to admit the x86 goliath needs to shape up, and sketched out plans to turn things around.…

The Register
Open 
Nvidia’s AI suite may get a whole lot pricier, thanks to Jensen’s GPU math mistake
Old naming convention didn't just 'screw up' the NVLink nomenclature - it left money on the table Comment  At its GPU Technology Conference last month, Nvidia broke with convention by shifting its definition of what counts as a GPU.…

Ars Technica
Open 
The timeless genius of a 1980s Atari developer and his swimming salmon masterpiece

Ars Technica
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What we’re expecting from Nintendo’s Switch 2 announcement Wednesday

Ars Technica
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Google Fi users on iPhone finally get RCS messaging

Boing Boing
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Left-handed Burger King Whopper, gravity-defying planetary alignment, and other great April Fools' Day moments
Happy April Fools' Day! In celebration, HistoryFacts surveyed what they've deemed "The Greatest April Fools' Day Pranks in History." Of course, a prank's greatness lies in the eye of the beholder (or victim) but here are a couple of my favorites they included:
Planetary alignment will let you float! — Read the rest
The post Left-handed Burger King Whopper, gravity-defying planetary alignment, and other great April Fools' Day moments appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
One of these April's fools bags would be useful
I avoided posting April Fool's content this morning, but now that the coast's clear here's a funny one from WaterField Designs that I think hits the right note. The Scream Bag is a "frustration station" for bellowing into that promises to "muffle your existential crisis" or whatever else might prompt a noisy public meltdown. — Read the rest
The post One of these April's fools bags would be useful appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wolves take another step towards safety after Strand Larsen sees off West Ham
“Three points means three beers,” according to Vítor Pereira. The Wolves head coach and fans can enjoy a few righteous pints after his side moved 12 points clear of the relegation zone with a hard-fought victory against West Ham.Jørgen Strand Larsen scored the only goal to open up a greater gap on Ipswich and Leicester, who both play on Wednesday. Their rivals have a game in hand but Wolves will feel they are close to securing another season of Premier League football after a meritorious victory against a West Ham team that struggled to get going. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Girl missing in River Thames in east London named as Kaliyah Coa
Recovery mission under way after 11-year-old entered the water near Bargehouse Causeway on MondayAn 11-year-old girl who is missing after entering the River Thames in London on Monday has been named by police as Kaliyah Coa.Kaliyah, who had been playing during a school inset day, entered the water near Bargehouse Causeway near London City airport in east London. Emergency services were called at 1.23pm on Monday with London ambulance service, London fire brigade, the RNLI and the Coastguard searching for the schoolgirl. Continue reading...

Propublica
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Police Across the U.S. Welcomed Cop Show “The First 48.” Then Relationships Soured.
by Jessica Lussenhop




ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up for Dispatches, a newsletter that spotlights wrongdoing around the country, to receive our stories in your inbox every week.











When the A&E true crime reality television show “The First 48” comes to town, the police and sheriff’s departments that work with it do not receive financial compensation from the show. The benefits are more intangible: a chance to showcase and celebrate the work of a department’s officers, the opportunity to improve their image in the eyes of the public, and some acknowledgement for victims who might be overlooked by the media.

But the show’s two-decade history of filming in cities across the U.S. has also left a complicated trail of problems and municipal regret, as ProPublica has reported. Detectives have admitted that they’ve acted out scenes as the cameras rolled. Key developments in the investigations have sometimes not been shown or mentioned. Episodes sometimes aired before defendants went to trial, publicly disclosing information that potential jury members and witnesses would normally never hear in court.

What’s more, many law enforcement and legal experts wonder whether the mere presence of cameras changes how the police behave, twisting the truth for the sole purpose of a more engaging narrative.

“I don’t think that anyone would deny that having a camera when you’re doing a ride-along like that affects behavior,” Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm said in 2010, after a 7-year-old girl was shot and killed during a Detroit police SWAT-style raid “The First 48” was filming. “I think it’s not a good practice.”

Controversies like the one in Detroit have prompted at least a half dozen cities to cancel their contracts or end their relationships with “The First 48.” Dallas; Memphis, Tennessee; Mobile, Alabama; Minneapolis; and New Orleans, as well as other cities, have stopped working with the show, with some municipal officials heaping criticism on the program as they severed ties with it.

The show has not been found to have engaged in any misconduct.

“I don’t want an investigator spending even a minute essentially working for the camera instead of elements of the case,” Miami police Chief Jorge Colina said in 2018, five years after the city ended its relationship with the program. “It’s not worth the tradeoff.”



Representatives from Kirkstall Road Enterprises, ITV America and ITV, the companies that produce the program, did not respond to requests for comment or to a detailed list of questions. A&E, the television network that airs “The First 48,” declined to comment through a spokesperson.

The show’s most recent seasons were filmed in Tulsa, Oklahoma; Gwinnett County, Georgia; and Mobile.

Once problems arise, these once enthusiastic and mutually beneficial partnerships between the police and reality television can turn into messy breakups. It can also take time for the problems involving “The First 48” to come to light, sometimes years after the episodes have aired and only after cases have wound their way through the courts.

Here’s how that has played out in three cities.

Mobile
In 2022, in a courthouse on Alabama’s Gulf Coast, a judge was trying to help defense attorneys determine if there were any fans of “The First 48” in the jury pool. The defendant in the case had been featured on an episode of the show that aired before his trial, and attorney Chase Dearman was concerned fans would be predisposed to find his client guilty.

“It is an extremely popular show, especially in the South,” Dearman said in an interview.

The judge instructed the assembled prospective jurors to stand if they were regular viewers of shows like “60 Minutes,” “20/20,” and “True Crimes.” Three jurors, then two, then two jurors again stood, respectively. Then he mentioned “The First 48.” Fourteen potential jurors rose to their feet.

“This is a more popular show. Okay,” the judge said, according to a transcript of the trial.

Dearman said that the show’s disclaimer, that “all suspects shown are presumed innocent until proven guilty,” is not enough to contend with human biases. “What do you think those jurors are going to do when they go home at night?” Dearman said. “They’re going to look it up and watch it.”

Dearman’s client was acquitted after two mistrials.

Mobile defense attorney Domingo Soto was also concerned when one of his clients was shown on the show before trial. “The cops decided a version of the truth from the very beginning and sold it to ‘First 48’ and more importantly sold it to themselves,” he said.

A spokesperson for the Mobile Police Department declined to comment on its involvement with “The First 48” as well as on the cases that involved the men whom Dearman and Soto represented.

In 2023, the city did not renew its contract with “The First 48.” James Barber, a former police chief and former city public safety director in Mobile and now chief of staff to the mayor, said the show helped shine a positive light on the “dedication and professionalism of our homicide investigators.”

“However, our most important focus is always public safety, and we saw that pre-trial coverage of criminal cases had led to litigation and legal challenges in other jurisdictions,” Barber said in a statement. “We did not want our work with any media partner to impact any criminal matter or create legal issues for the city.”

Dallas
Sometimes small narrative touches to “The First 48” episodes, perhaps inconsequential to the viewer, have major repercussions in real life. In 2013, a man named Arking Jones was interviewed by Dallas police about the murder of a suspected drug dealer, an investigation captured in the episode “Safe House.”

Jones told ProPublica that he had no idea he was being taped for the show and did not sign a consent form to appear on the program. He said he only learned he had been on “The First 48” after the episode had aired. Despite the show’s efforts to hide his identity by blurring his face and altering his voice, Jones said it was obvious to people who knew him that he was in the episode.

“I start getting all type of threats. They start coming by my mother’s house,” Jones said.

According to Jones, the worst part was that the episode was edited in a way to suggest he had become a police informant; Jones denied that he spoke with police voluntarily or that he was an informant. The threats to his life got so bad, he said, that he had to stop working. Court records show that Dallas police filed retaliation charges against several people for allegedly making threats to Jones and his family. Those charges never resulted in convictions, according to Jones.

In 2015, Jones was shot several times at a barber shop in an attack that also injured a bystander. He was hit in the chest and hip, and he said he now has a metal rod in his thigh. The man who shot Jones pleaded guilty to aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in retaliation and was sentenced to 24 years in prison.

According to Dallas police reports, the shooting was motivated by Jones’ appearance on “The First 48.” Jones filed a lawsuit against Kirkstall Road Enterprises, claiming it acted negligently. In its response, attorneys for the show implied that Jones’ criminal history could have been the root cause of the attack and that his “sole claim of negligence is barred by the First Amendment.”

A judge dismissed the case and an appeals court upheld that decision.

“If we were to place the burden to prevent the kind of unforeseeable injury that befell Jones in this case on the media, the result would be a significant infringement on its Constitutional protections when reporting matters of public interest,” the appeals court wrote.

A&E removed Jones’ episode from its catalog. However, in the decade since the shooting, Jones said that his reputation has never recovered. He said he’s been attacked and robbed and, last year, his truck was shot up. He sent photos of the truck to a ProPublica reporter.

“Y’all looking at it just for good TV. You know, you’re not caring about innocent lives,” Jones said of the show. “My life is in a situation like, I’m dead. That’s how I see it. I’m dead. Because I can’t live life.”

The Dallas Police Department declined to comment. In 2021, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed a bill into law that bans reality television shows from partnering with law enforcement. The law was named after Javier Ambler II, a Texas man who died after a high-speed chase and violent arrest, captured by a camera crew for “Live PD,” another A&E police reality series. “Live PD” was canceled in 2020.

Memphis
The immediate aftermath of one of the worst mass killings in Memphis history was captured by producers for “The First 48” for an episode named “Lester Street.” On March 3, 2008, police discovered the bodies of four adults and two children in a small brick house. Three other children survived the attack with serious injuries.

The investigation converged on Jessie Dotson, the brother of one of the victims, who confessed to detectives on camera that he committed the murders after a drunken fight. The episode aired before his trial, a concern District Attorney General Bill Gibbons raised in a letter to the police chief.

“Several judges have expressed to prosecutors in this office their concern that events of a pending criminal case are edited, taken out of sequence, and then aired nationally,” Gibbons wrote. “It is my hope that you will not renew the Memphis Police Department’s contract with ‘The First 48’ — a show that clearly airs potential evidence and information on pending criminal cases.”

The judge in the case did not allow the jury to watch edited footage of Dotson’s confession on “The First 48” because representatives of the show said they had already destroyed the raw footage. Dotson was convicted and sentenced to death. The city of Memphis ended its relationship with “The First 48” in 2008.





But the show has cast a long shadow over the case. In January 2024, Kelley Henry, a federal public defender representing Dotson, filed an appeal pointing out dozens of issues with the original investigation, among them that Dotson, who has “neurocognitive disorders,” was pressured into confessing, though he recanted shortly afterwards. She said that she believes “The First 48” influenced detectives to exert that pressure before the FBI was about to take over the case and that Dotson is innocent.

The Memphis Police Department did not respond to requests for comment. Dotson’s appeal is pending.

“It just really crystallized for me, just how dangerous these folks are and the pressure that they put on the cities and the prosecutors and the police departments to come up with a story,” Henry said. “It’s not necessarily that they’re malevolent, but their objectivity is compromised by the presence of those cameras.”





Mariam Elba contributed research.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
The Best And Worst Performing Assets Of The "March Meltdown" And "Queezy Q1"
The Best And Worst Performing Assets Of The "March Meltdown" And "Queezy Q1"

The first quarter was an incredibly tumultuous period for markets, with the S&P 500 posting its biggest quarterly decline since 2022. 

The main driver of the market volatility according to DB's Jim Reid, was an aggressive round of tariffs, as President Trump launched measures going well beyond his first term, with reciprocal tariffs still looming on April 2. Otherwise, the release of DeepSeek’s AI model early in the quarter led to growing questions about big tech valuations, and the Magnificent 7 ended the quarter in bear market territory. 

But it wasn’t all bad news, and European equities saw a significant outperformance thanks to a huge fiscal regime shift towards higher defense spending. In fact, Q1 marked the biggest quarterly performance gap between the STOXX 600 and the S&P 500 in a decade, and the biggest underperformance of the US vs the rest of the world in 23 years.



Nevertheless, the overall tone was generally risk-off for markets, and as the conversation turned increasingly towards stagflation, gold prices posted their biggest quarterly gain since 1986.

Quarter in Review - The high-level macro overview

Despite the disappointing overall performance, "Queasy Q1" actually got off to a decent start in January. For instance, data over the first couple of weeks pointed to robust growth and demand pressures, including in the US. For instance, the ISM services print was up to 54.0 in December, exceeding expectations, and the prices paid indicator moved up to 64.6, the highest in nearly two years. Then the US jobs report for December showed nonfarm payrolls up by +256k, a nine-month high. And that’s since been revised up to +323k, making it the strongest month since February 2023 on current revisions. Indeed, it also meant there was a sizeable bond selloff in early January, with the 10yr Treasury yield surpassing 4.80% intraday for the first time since late-2023. But that rapid rise in yields reversed course after the US CPI print wasn’t as bad as some feared, raising hopes that the Fed would still cut rates this year.

However, after a strong start in January, markets began to show signs of wobbling towards the end of the month. One of the most important developments was the release of DeepSeek’s new AI model, which raised questions as to the sustainability of big tech valuations in the US. The initial market impact was felt on January 27, with the NASDAQ down -3.07% that day, while Nvidia fell -16.97%. And even though that sharp selloff for the NASDAQ quickly unwound, it raised doubts about the narrative of US tech exceptionalism that had powered the equity market’s advance for the last couple of years. Then in February, Nvidia’s earnings showed the smallest revenue beat in two years, which was underwhelming for investors used to much bigger upside surprises.

Late-January also saw one of the biggest stories of the quarter begin, which was the widespread imposition of tariffs by the United States, after the new Trump administration arrived in office on January 20. Initially, they said that 25% tariffs would be imposed on Canada and Mexico, which led to a risk-off move on February 3, but those were extended by a month at the last-minute, and investors became increasingly relaxed about how things might develop. Indeed, the S&P 500 moved up to an all-time high on February 19, at which point it was up +4.6% in total return terms on a YTD basis.

But as the tariff uncertainty began to mount, markets began to experience much larger risk-off moves. For example, the extension for Canada and Mexico ended, and 25% tariffs were imposed on both on March 4, whilst the additional tariff on China was raised from 10% to 20%. Separately, tariffs on steel and aluminium were imposed at 25% on March 12. And looking forward, investors are still awaiting the reciprocal tariffs, which have been scheduled for April 2.

The tariffs also meant investors became increasingly concerned about higher inflation, which exacerbated existing fears given inflation was still lingering above target across the major economies. For example, the US 1yr inflation swap moved up +72bps in Q1 to 3.25%, its highest level in two years, and the biggest quarterly jump in three years. Moreover, consumers’ inflation expectations also moved higher, and the University of Michigan’s long-term measure moved up to 4.1% in March, the highest since February 1993. Matters weren’t helped by the latest PCE inflation data, which is the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation, where the 3m annualised rate of core PCE was running at +3.6% in February, the highest since March 2024. And at the same time, there were also growing concerns about the US growth outlook, and even mounting speculation about a recession. For instance, the Conference Board’s consumer confidence measure fell to just 92.9 in March, the weakest since January 2021. And the expectations measure fell to 65.2, the lowest since March 2013.

These fears about stagflation led to a clear risk-off move, which gathered pace towards the end of the quarter. So the S&P 500 was initially up +2.8% in January in total return terms, but in February it was down -1.3%, and then in March it fell -5.6%, marking its worst monthly performance since 2022. And for the quarter as a whole, the index was down -4.3%, marking its worst quarterly performance since Q3 2022, back when the Fed were still hiking by 75bps per meeting to deal with rapid inflation. 



Those losses were particularly concentrated among tech stocks, and the Magnificent 7 ended the quarter down -16.0%, having shed -20.7% since its December peak. The US Dollar itself also struggled, with the dollar index down -3.9% in Q1, whilst the Euro was up +4.5% against the US Dollar to $1.08. 

While all that was going on in the US, Q1 also saw an incredible fiscal shift in Europe as the continent moved towards significantly higher defense spending. That followed the German election on February 23, where the incoming coalition proposed a reform of the constitutional debt brake to permit higher defense spending, alongside a €500bn infrastructure fund. Meanwhile at the EU level, the Commission proposed that member states could significantly increase defense spending without triggering the EU’s deficit rules.

The prospect of a significant fiscal stimulus had an immediate impact among European assets. In fact, the announcement saw the 10yr bund yield post its biggest daily jump since German reunification in 1990, moving up +29.8bps in a single day on March 5. Over the quarter as a whole, the 10yr bund yield rose +37bps to 2.74%, and the German DAX was one of the strongest-performing European indices, up +11.3% in total return terms. Significant outperformers included the STOXX Aerospace and Defense Index, which surged +28.9%, whilst the German firm Rheinmetall was up +114.6%. Another result was a notable steepening in yield curves, with the German 2s10s curve moving up +41bps on the quarter to 69bps. And given the sharp policy divergence, Q1 saw the biggest quarterly performance gap in local currency terms between the STOXX 600 (+5.9%) and the S&P 500 (- 4.3%) in a decade.

Finally from central banks, Q1 saw a continued policy divergence across countries. The Fed kept rates unchanged in Q1, and continued to signal two cuts for 2025 in their March dot plot, just as they’d done in December. However, they did slow the pace of QT, with the runoff in Treasury holdings to slow from $25bn to $5bn from April 1. Over at the ECB, they delivered further 25bp rate cuts in both January and March, taking their deposit rate down to 2.50%. Meanwhile in Japan, the Bank of Japan delivered another hike in January, taking their policy rate up to 0.5%, and signalling further hikes ahead.

Which assets saw the biggest gains in Q1?

Gold: With inflation concerns mounting, gold prices surged up to an all-time high of $3,124/oz, and their quarterly increase of +19.0% was the most since 1986. 
US Treasuries: The risk-off move and mounting speculation of a recession helped to support US Treasuries in Q1, with a total return of +2.9% over the quarter. The 10yr yield itself also moved down -36bps to 4.21%.
Which assets saw the biggest losses in Q1?

US equities: In Q1, the S&P 500 was down -4.3% in total return terms, marking its worst quarterly performance since Q3 2022. Those losses were particularly clear for the Magnificent 7, which fell -16.0%.
US Dollar: With investors moving out of US assets, the US Dollar struggled in Q1, and the dollar index itself weakened -3.9%. Conversely, the Euro strengthened +4.5% against the US Dollar to $1.08, marking its biggest quarterly jump since Q4 2022.
Euro sovereign bonds: The prospect of higher spending led to a selloff among European sovereign bonds, with bunds down -1.8% in total return terms. That included a +37bps rise in the 10yr yield, which ended the quarter at 2.74%.
Cryptocurrencies: The risk-off move meant it was a weak quarter for cryptocurrencies, and Bitcoin fell -12.1% to $82,421.
Here are the best and worst performing assets during the March Massacre...



... and here is Queesy Q1:



Source: Deutsche Bank

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 15:45

The Hill
Open 
House cancels rest of votes for week after GOP floor rebellion
House Republican leaders on Tuesday canceled votes for the rest of the week after a band of GOP lawmakers staged a rebellion on the floor, bringing legislative action to a screeching halt. House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) informed lawmakers the next vote in the House would be Monday evening. The announcement came minutes after...

The Hill
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Kidney donor detained by ICE before life-saving transplant can take place
Immigration rights activists are calling on ICE to release a Venezuelan migrant who was preparing to donate a kidney to his brother, who is in end-stage kidney failure, and has no criminal history.

The Hill
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Bipartisan senators introduce primary, secondary Russia sanctions
Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) introduced legislation on Tuesday seeking to impose primary and secondary sanctions against Russia if it does not agree to long lasting peace with its neighboring country, Ukraine. The group of lawmakers agreed to also support a 500 percent tariff on imported goods from countries that buy Russian...

The Hill
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Live results: Wisconsin schools superintendent race
Wisconsin voters are weighing in on whether to allow the state's superintendent of public instruction, Jill Underly, to keep her job. Underly has the support of the state Democratic Party, as well as teachers' unions. Her opponent, Brittany Kinser, is backed by the GOP. Follow the live results here.

The Hill
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Live results: Wisconsin voters weigh in on photo ID requirement
Wisconsin voters head to the polls Tuesday to weigh in on a ballot measure that would constitutionally enshrine a requirement for photo ID in order to vote. State law already requires Wisconsin voters to show photo ID in order to cast a ballot, but the GOP-led state legislature referred the ballot measure before voters to...

The Hill
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Live updates: House defies Johnson on proxy voting; Wisconsin, Florida elections pose key test
A group of House Republicans rebelled against GOP leadership’s effort to block a vote on allowing proxy voting for new parents and delivering a blow to Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) The gambit drew the ire of House Democrats, who bashed the "outrageous" move as several Republicans bucked their party’s leadership. Nine Republicans — led by...

The Hill
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These 9 House Republicans rebelled against GOP leadership over parental proxy voting
Nine House Republicans defied GOP leadership on Tuesday and opposed an effort to block a bill instituting proxy voting for new parents from coming to the floor, halting key legislative action in the chamber. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) the 218 signatures — including from 11 Republicans — needed to successfully execute a discharge petition...

The Hill
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Trump taps ex-Rep. D’Esposito as Labor Department watchdog
President Trump tapped former Rep. Anthony D’Esposito (R-N.Y.) to be the Department of Labor’s (DOL) inspector general on Monday evening, months after he lost his House seat to Rep. Laura Gillen (D-N.Y.) in the last election cycle. If D’Esposito, who was a New York City Police Department detective before being elected as a House lawmaker,...

The Hill
Open 
OpenAI closes $40B funding round
OpenAI raised $40 billion from investors in its latest funding round, the ChatGPT maker announced Monday. The deal, which values the artificial intelligence (AI) company at $300 billion, was led by Japanese company SoftBank. It plans to contribute $30 billion, while the remaining $10 billion will come from a syndicate of other investors. “We’re excited...

The Hill
Open 
Former GOP lawmakers, officials oppose Trump use of Alien Enemies Act for deportations
A group of former Republican lawmakers and officials is opposing President Trump’s use of the Alien Enemies Act for deportations. The group of conservatives, along with the State Democracy Defenders Fund, filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court to oppose the Trump administration’s use of the 18th-century wartime law. The brief was filed with the high...

Mail Online
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Adorable dog with 'America's saddest face' just can't catch a break
An adorable dog with the 'saddest face' was rescued from the streets as police continue to search for her abuser.

Sky News Home
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Six people in hospital after huge fire at industrial estate
Six men have been treated in hospital after a huge fire broke out on an industrial estate in North Lanarkshire, Police Scotland has said.

ZDNet News
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Meta's upcoming $1,000 smart glasses sound like the Ray-Bans successor I've been waiting for
A new Bloomberg report suggests that Meta's glasses-in-development will feature a built-in display, improved cameras, and more.

ZDNet News
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The 25 most popular products ZDNET readers bought last month (including during Amazon's Spring Sale)
Here's the inside scoop on what ZDNET readers snagged this past month (including during Amazon's Spring Sale) from handy tools to USB-C accessories. And some of these products are on sale, too.

ZDNet News
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The 110+ best Amazon Spring Sale tech deals still live
Amazon's Big Spring Sale is now over, but you can still save on these handpicked deals on headphones, TVs, laptops, and more while these seasonal offers linger.

Mail Online
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Man 'held captive by wicked stepmother for 20 years' seen for first time in distressing bodycam footage
Shocking bodycam footage captured the moment firefighters shared their shock after rescuing a man who allegedly set his home on fire to escape captivity in Waterbury, Connecticut.

Mail Online
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New evidence discovered at site of Jesus' resurrection corroborates the Bible
A discovery at the site where Jesus is believed to have died, been buried and risen from the dead may prove the sacred Biblical text to be true.

FlightAware Squawks
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ALPA President Talks Pilot Shortage, Bedford Nomination
The union boss likened the COVID-era aviator shortage to supply chain issues.

Sky News Home
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Bodies still remain among 'collapsed and inclining' buildings in quake-hit Mandalay
A man inside Mandalay has told Sky News bodies remain under "collapsed and inclining" buildings after the Myanmar earthquake - as a woman was freed from rubble after 91 hours.

The Guardian (UK)
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Wolves take another step towards safety after Strand Larsen sees off West Ham
“Three points means three beers,” according to Vítor Pereira. The Wolves head coach and fans can enjoy a few righteous pints after his side moved 12 points clear of the relegation zone with a hard-fought victory over West Ham.Jørgen Strand Larsen scored the only goal to open up a greater gap on Ipswich and Leicester, who both play on Wednesday. Their rivals have a game in hand but Wolves will feel they are close to securing another season of Premier League football after a meritorious victory against a West Ham team that struggled to get going. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Data protection bill leaves room for governmental abuse, campaigners warn
Ministerial revision of privacy rules could allow targeting of voters with political messaging, rights groups fearPrivacy campaigners have warned that voters’ personal data could be used to target them with political messaging under new laws.In a letter written to Chris Bryant, the data protection minister, and the deputy prime minister, Angela Rayner, campaigners said there was “potential for abuse of new powers” in the data protection legislation, which was introduced to parliament at the end of 2024. Continue reading...

Slashdot
Open 
MCP: the New 'USB-C For AI' That's Bringing Fierce Rivals Together
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: What does it take to get OpenAI and Anthropic -- two competitors in the AI assistant market -- to get along? Despite a fundamental difference in direction that led Anthropic's founders to quit OpenAI in 2020 and later create the Claude AI assistant, a shared technical hurdle has now brought them together: How to easily connect their AI models to external data sources. The solution comes from Anthropic, which developed and released an open specification called Model Context Protocol (MCP) in November 2024. MCP establishes a royalty-free protocol that allows AI models to connect with outside data sources and services without requiring unique integrations for each service.

"Think of MCP as a USB-C port for AI applications," wrote Anthropic in MCP's documentation. The analogy is imperfect, but it represents the idea that, similar to how USB-C unified various cables and ports (with admittedly a debatable level of success), MCP aims to standardize how AI models connect to the infoscape around them. So far, MCP has also garnered interest from multiple tech companies in a rare show of cross-platform collaboration. For example, Microsoft has integrated MCP into its Azure OpenAI service, and as we mentioned above, Anthropic competitor OpenAI is on board. Last week, OpenAI acknowledged MCP in its Agents API documentation, with vocal support from the boss upstairs. "People love MCP and we are excited to add support across our products," wrote OpenAI CEO Sam Altman on X last Wednesday.

MCP has also rapidly begun to gain community support in recent months. For example, just browsing this list of over 300 open source servers shared on GitHub reveals growing interest in standardizing AI-to-tool connections. The collection spans diverse domains, including database connectors like PostgreSQL, MySQL, and vector databases; development tools that integrate with Git repositories and code editors; file system access for various storage platforms; knowledge retrieval systems for documents and websites; and specialized tools for finance, health care, and creative applications. Other notable examples include servers that connect AI models to home automation systems, real-time weather data, e-commerce platforms, and music streaming services. Some implementations allow AI assistants to interact with gaming engines, 3D modeling software, and IoT devices.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Open 
David Wheeler: 2025 Postgres Extensions Mini Summit Two
Last Wednesday, March 26, we hosted the second of five virtual Extension
Mini-Summits in the lead up to the big one at the
Postgres Development Conference (PGConf.dev) on May 13 in Montreal, Canada.
Peter Eisentraut gave a very nice presentation on the history, design
decisions, and problems solved by “Implementing an Extension Search Path”.
That talk, plus another 10-15m of discussion, is now available for your
viewing pleasure:

Video
Slides

If you’d like to attend any of the next three Mini-Summits, join the
Meetup!
Once again, with many thanks again to Floor Drees for the effort, here’s the
transcript from the session.
Introduction
Floor Drees introduced the organizers:

David Wheeler, Principal Architect at Tembo, maintainer of PGXN
Yurii Rashkovskii, Omnigres
Keith Fiske, Crunchy Data
Floor Drees, Principal Program Manager at EDB, PostgreSQL CoCC member,
PGDay Lowlands organizer

Peter Eisentraut, contributor to PostgreSQL development since 1999, talked
about implementing an extension search path.
The stream and the closed captions available for the recording are supported
by PGConf.dev and their gold level sponsors, Google, AWS, Huawei, Microsoft,
and EDB.
Implementing an extension search path
Peter: Thank you for having me!
I’m gonna talk about a current project by me and a couple of people I have
worked with, and that will hopefully ship with Postgres 18 in a few months.
So, what do I know about extensions? I’m a Postgres core developer, but I’ve
developed a few extensions in my time, here’s a list of extensions that I’ve
built over the years.

plsh
pguint
pgpcre
pguri
plxslt
pgemailaddr
pgtrashcan

Some of those are experiments, or sort of one-offs. Some of those are actually
used in production.
I’ve also contributed to well-known extensions: orafce; and back in the day,
pglogical, BDR, and pg_failover_slots, at EDB, and previously
2ndQuadrant. Those are obviously used widely and in important production
environments.
I also wrote an extension installation manager called pex at one point. The
point of pex was to do it in one shell script, so you don’t have any
dependencies. It’s just a shell script, and you can say pex install orafce
and it installs it. This was a proof of concept, in a sense, but was actually
quite useful sometimes for development, when you just need an extension and
you don’t know where to get it.
And then I wrote, even more experimental, a follow-on project called
autopex, which is a plugin module that you load into Postgres that
automatically installs an extension if you need it. If you call CREATE EXTENSION orafce, for example, and you don’t have it installed, autopex
downloads and installs it. Obviously highly insecure and dubious in terms of
modern software distribution practice, but it does work: you can just run
CREATE EXTENSION, and it just installs it if you don’t have it. That kind of
works.
So anyways, so I’ve worked on these various aspects of these over time. If
you’re interested in any of these projects, they’re all under my GitHub
account.
In the context of this presentation…this was essentially not my idea. People
came to me and asked me to work on this, and as it worked out, multiple people
came to me with their problems or questions, and then it turned out it was all
the same question. These are the problems I was approached about.
The first one is extension management in the Kubernetes environment. we’ll
hear about this in a future talk in this series. Gabriele Bartolini from
the CloudNativePG project approached me and said that the issue in a
Kubernetes environment is that if you launch a Postgres service, you don’t
install packages, you have a pre-baked disk image that contains the software
that you need. There’s a Postgres server and maybe some backup software in
that image, and if you want to install an extension, and the extension is not
in that image, you need to rebuild the image with the extension. That’s very
inconvenient.
The ideal scenario would be that you have additional disk images for the
extensions and you just somehow attach them. I’m hand waving through the
Kubernetes terminology, and again, there will be a presentation
about that in more detail. But I think the idea is clear: you want to have
these immutable disk images that contain your pieces of software, and if you
want to install more of them, you just wanna have these disk images augment
’em together, and that doesn’t work at the moment.
Problem number two is: I was approached by a maintainer of the Postgres.app
project, a Mac binary distribution for Postgres. It’s a nice, user-friendly
binary distribution for Postgres. This is sort of a similar problem: on macOS
you have these .app files to distribute software. They’re this sort of weird
hybrid between a zip file with files in it and a directory you can look into,
so it’s kind of weird. But it’s basically an archive with software in it. And
in this case it has Postgres in it and it integrates nicely into your system.
But again, if you want to install an extension, that doesn’t work as easily,
because you would need to open up that archive and stick the extension in
there somehow, or overwrite files.
And there’s also a tie in with the way these packages are signed by Apple, and
if you, mess with the files in the package, then the signature becomes
invalid. It’s the way it’s been explained to me. I hope this was approximately
accurate, but you already get the idea, right? There’s the same problem where
you have this base bundle of software that is immutable or that you want to
keep immutable and you want to add things to it, which doesn’t work.
And then the third problem I was asked to solve came from the Debian package
maintainer, who will also speak later in this presentation series. What he
wanted to do was to run the tests of an extension while the package is being
built. That makes sense. You wanna run the tests of the software that you’re
building the package for in general. But in order to do that, you have to
install the extension into the the normal file system location, right? That
seems bad. You don’t want to install the software while you’re into the main
system while you’re building it. He actually wrote a custom patch to be able
to do that, which then my work was inspired by.
Those are the problems I was approached about.
I had some problems I wanted to solve myself based on my experience working
with extensions. While I was working on these various extensions over the
years, one thing that never worked is that you could never run make check.
It wasn’t supported by the PGXS build system. Again, it’s the same issue.
It’s essentially a subset of the Debian problem: you want to run a test of the
software before you install it, but Postgres can only load an extension from a
fixed location, and so this doesn’t work. It’s very annoying because it makes
the software development cycle much more complicated. You always have to then,
then run make all, make install, make sure you have a server running,
make installcheck. And then you would want to test it against various
different server versions. Usually they have to run this in some weird loop.
I’ve written custom scripts and stuff all around this, but it’s was never
satisfactory. It should just work.
That’s the problem I definitely wanted to solve. The next problem - and
these are are all subsets of each other - that if you have Postgres
installed from a package, like an RPM package for example, and then you build
the extension locally, you have to install the extension into the directory
locations that are controlled by your operating system. If you have Postgres
under /usr, then the extensions also have to be installed under /usr,
whereas you probably want to install them under /usr/local or somewhere
else. You want to keep those locally built things separately, but that’s not
possible.
And finally - this is a bit more complicated to explain - I’m mainly using
macOS at the moment, and the Homebrew package manager is widely used there.
But it doesn’t support extensions very well at all. It’s really weird because
the way it works is that each package is essentially installed into a separate
subdirectory, and then it’s all symlinked together. And that works just fine.
You have a bunch of bin directories, and it’s just a bunch of symlinks to
different subdirectories and that works, because then you can just swap these
things out and upgrade packages quite easily. That’s just a design choice and
it’s fine.
But again, if you wanna install an extension, the extension would be its own
package - PostGIS, for example - and it would go into its own directory.
But that’s not the directory where Postgres would look for it. You would have
to install it into the directory structure that belongs to the other package.
And that just doesn’t work. It’s just does not fit with that system at all.
There are weird hacks at the moment, but it’s not satisfactory. Doesn’t work
at all.
It turned out, all of these things have sort of came up over the years and
some of these, people have approached me about them, and I realized these are
essentially all the same problem. The extension file location is hard-coded to
be inside the Postgres installation tree. Here as an example: it’s usually
under something like /usr/share/postgresql/extension/, and you can’t install
extensions anywhere else. If you want to keep this location managed by the
operating system or managed by your package management or in some kind of
immutable disk image, you can’t. And so these are essentially all versions of
the same problem. So that’s why I got engaged and tried to find a solution
that addresses all of ’em.
I had worked on this already before, a long time ago, and then someone broke
it along the way. And now I’m fixing it again. If you go way, way back, before
extensions as such existed in Postgres in 9.1, when you wanted to install a
piece of software that consists of a shared library object and some SQL, you
had to install the shared library object into a predetermined location just
like you do now. In addition, you had to run that SQL file by hand, basically,
like you run psql -f install_orafce.sql or something like that. Extensions
made that a little nicer, but it’s the same idea underneath.
In 2001, I realized this problem already and implemented a configuration
setting called dynamic_library_path, which allows you to set a different
location for your shared library. Then you can say
dynamic_library_path = '/usr/local/my-stuff/something'
And then Postgres would look there. The SQL file just knows where is
because you run it manually. You would then run
psql -f /usr/local/my-stuff/something/something.sql
That fixed that problem at the time. And when extensions were implemented, I
was essentially not paying attention or, you know, nobody was paying
attention. Extension support were a really super nice feature, of course, but
it broke this previously-available feature: then you couldn’t install your
extensions anywhere you wanted to; you were tied to this specific file system,
location, dynamic_library_path still existed: you could still set it
somewhere, but you couldn’t really make much use of it. I mean, you could make
use of it for things that are not extensions. If you have some kind of plugin
module or modules that install hooks, you could still do that. But not for an
extension that consist of a set of SQL scripts and a control file and
dynamic_library_path.
As I was being approached about these things, I realized that was just the
problem and we should just now fix that. The recent history went as follows.
In April, 2024, just about a year ago now, David Wheeler started a hackers
thread suggesting Christoph Berg’s Debian patch as a starting point for
discussions. Like, “here’s this thing, shouldn’t we do something about this?”
There was, a fair amount of discussion. I was not really involved at the time.
This was just after feature freeze,and so I wasn’t paying much attention to
it. But the discussion was quite lively and a lot of people pitched in and
had their ideas and thoughts about it. And so a lot of important, filtering
work was done at that time.
Later, in September, Gabriele, my colleague from EDB who
works on CloudNativePG, approached me about this issue and said like: “hey,
this is important, we need this to make extensions useful in the Kubernetes
environment.” And he said, “can you work, can you work on this?”
I said, “yeah, sure, in a couple months I might have time.” [Laughs]. But it
sort of turns out that, at PGConf.EU we had a big brain trust meeting of
various people who basically all came and said, “hey, I heard you’re working
on extension_control_path, I also need that!”
Gabriele was there, and Tobias Bussmann from
Postgres.app was there ,and Christoph, and I was like,
yeah, I really need this extension_control_path to make this work. So I made
sure to talk to everybody there and, and make sure that, if we did this, would
it work for you? And then we kind of had a good idea of how it should work.
In November the first patch was posted and last week it was committed. I
think there’s still a little bit of discussion of some details and, we
certainly still have some time before the release to fine tune it, but the
main work is hopefully done.
This is the commit I made last week. The fact that this presentation was
scheduled gave me additional motivation to get it done. I wanna give some
credits to people who reviewed it. Obviously David did a lot of reviews and
feedback in general. My colleague Matheus, who I think I saw him earlier, he
was also here on the call, did help me quite a bit with sort of finishing the
patch. And then Gabriele, Marco and Nicolò, who work on CloudNativePG, did a
large amount of testing.
They set up a whole sort of sandbox environment making test images for
extensions and, simulating the entire process of attaching these to the main
image. Again, I’m butchering the terminology, but I’m just trying to explain
it in general terms. They did the whole end-to-end testing of what that would
then look like with CloudNativePG. And again, that will, I assume, be
discussed when Gabriele presents in a few weeks.
These are the stats from the patch
commit 4f7f7b03758

doc/src/sgml/config.sgml | 68 +++++
doc/src/sgml/extend.sgml | 19 +-
doc/src/sgml/ref/create_extension.sgml | 6 +-
src/Makefile.global.in | 19 +-
src/backend/commands/extension.c | 403 +++++++++++++++++----------
src/backend/utils/fmgr/dfmgr.c | 77 +++--
src/backend/utils/misc/guc_tables.c | 13 +
src/backend/utils/misc/postgresql.conf.sample | 1 +
src/include/commands/extension.h | 2 +
src/include/fmgr.h | 3 +
src/test/modules/test_extensions/Makefile | 1 +
src/test/modules/test_extensions/meson.build | 5 +
.../modules/test_extensions/t/001_extension_control_path.pl | 80 ++++++
the reason I show this is that, it’s not big! What I did is use the same
infrastructure and mechanisms that already existed for the
dynamic_library_path. That’s the code in that’s in dfmgr there in the
middle. That’s where this little path search is implemented9. And then of
course, in extension..c there’s some code that’s basically just a bunch of
utility functions, like to list all the extensions and list all the versions
of all the extensions. Those utility functions exist and they needed to be
updated to do the path search. Everything else is pretty straightforward.
There’s just a few configuration settings added to the documentation and the
sample files and so on. It’s not that much really.
One thing we also did was add tests for this, Down there in test_extensions.
We wrote some tests to make sure this works. Well, it’s one thing to make sure
it works, but the other thing is if we wanna make changes or we find problems
with it, or we wanna develop this further in the future, we have a record of
how it works, which is why you write tests. I just wanted to point that out
because we didn’t really have that before and it was quite helpful to build
confidence that we know how this works.
So how does it work? Let’s say you have your Postgres installation in a
standard Linux file system package controlled location. None of the actual
packages look like this, I believe, but it’s a good example. You have your
stuff under the /usr/bin/, you have the shared libraries in the
/usr/lib/something, you have the extension control files and SQL files in
the /usr/share/ or something. That’s your base installation. And then you
wanna install your extension into some other place to keep these things
separate. So you have /usr/local/mystuff/, for example.
Another thing that this patch implemented is that you can now also do this:
when you build an extension, you can write make install prefix=something.
Before you couldn’t do that, but there was also no point because if you
installed it somewhere else, you couldn’t do anything with it there. Now you
can load it from somewhere else, but you can also install it there - which
obviously are the two important sides of that.
And then you set these two settings: dynamic_library_path is an existing
configuration setting, yYou set that to where your lib directory is, and then
the extension_control_path is a new setting. The titular setting of this
talk, where you tell it where your extension control files are.
There’s these placeholders, $libdir and $system which mean the system
location, and then the other locations are your other locations, and it’s
separated by colon (and semi-colon on Windows). We had some arguments about
what exactly the extension_control_path placeholder should be called and,
people continue to have different opinions. What it does is it looks in the
list directories for the control file, and then where it finds the control
file from there, it loads all the other files.
And there’s a fairly complicated mechanism. There’s obviously the actual SQL
files, but there’s also these auxiliary control files, which I didn’t even
know that existed. So you can have version specific control files. It’s a
fairly complicated system, so we wanted to be clear that what is happening is
the, the main control file is searched for in these directories, and then
wherever it’s found, that’s where it looks for the other things. You can’t
have the control file in one path and then the SQL files in another part of
the path; that’s not how it works.
That solves problem number five. Let’s see what problem number five was. I
forgot [Chuckles]. This is the basic problem, that you no longer have to
install the extensions in the directories that are ostensibly controlled by
the operating system or your package manager.
So then how would Debian packaging use this? I got this information from
Christoph. He figured out how to do this. He just said, “Oh,
I did this, and that’s how it works.” During packaging, the packaging scripts
that built it up in packages that you just pass these:
PKGARGS="--pgoption extension_control_path=$PWD/debian/$PACKAGE/usr/share/postgresql/$v/extension:\$system
--pgoption dynamic_library_path=$PWD/debian/$PACKAGE/usr/lib/postgresql/$v/lib:/usr/lib/postgresql/$v/lib"
These options set the control path and the dynamic_library_path and these
versions and then it works. This was confirmed that this addresses his
problem. He no longer has to carry his custom patch. This solves problem
number three.
The question people ask is, “why do we have two?” Or maybe you’ve asked
yourself that. Why do we need two settings. We have the
dynamic_library_path, we have the extension_control_path. Isn’t that kind
of the same thing? Kind of, yes! But in general, it is not guaranteed that
these two things are in a in a fixed relative location.
Let’s go back to our fake example. We have the libraries in
/usr/lib/postgresql and the SQL and control files in
/usr/share/postgresql, for example. Now you could say, why don’t we just set
it to /usr? Or, for example, why don’t we just set the path to
/usr/local/mystuff and it should figure out the sub directories. That would
be nice, but it doesn’t quite work in general because it’s not guaranteed that
those are the subdirectories. There could be, for example. lib64, for
example, right? Or some other so architecture-specific subdirectory names. Or
people can just name them whatever they want. So, this may be marginal, but it
is possible. You need to keep in mind that the subdirectory structure is not
necessarily fixed.
So we need two settings. The way I thought about this, if you compile C code,
you also have two settings. And if you think about it, it’s exactly the same
thing. When you compile C code, you always have to do -I and -L: I for
the include files, L for the lib files. This is basically the same thing.
The include file is also the text file that describes the interfaces and the
libraries are the libraries. Again, you need two options, because you can’t
just tell the compiler, oh, look for it in /usr/local because the
subdirectories could be different. There could be architecture specific lib
directories. That’s a common case. You need those two settings. Usually they
go in parallel. If somebody has a plan on how to do it simpler, follow up
patches are welcome.
But the main point of why this approach was taken is also to get it done in a
few months. I started thinking about this, or I was contacted about this in
September and I started thinking about it seriously in the October/November
timeframe. That’s quite late in the development cycle to start a feature like
this, which I thought would be more controversial! People haven’t really
complained that this breaks the security of extensions or anything like that.
I was a little bit afraid of that.
So I wanted to really base it on an existing facility that we already had, and
that’s why I wanted to make sure it works exactly in parallel to the other
path that we already have, and that has existed for a long time, and was
designed for this exact purpose. That was also the reason why we chose this
path of least resistance, perhaps.
This is the solution progress for the six problems that I described initially.
The CloudNativePG folks obviously have accompanied this project actively and
have already prototyped the integration solution. And, and presumably we will
hear about some of that at the meeting on May 7th, where
Gabriele will talk about this.
Postgres.app I haven’t been in touch with, but one of the maintainers is
here, maybe you can give feedback later. Debian is done as I described, and
they will also be at the next meeting, maybe there will be some
comment on that.
One thing that’s not fully implemented is the the make check issue. I did
send a follow-up patch about that, which was a really quick prototype hack,
and people really liked it. I’m slightly tempted to give it a push and try to
get it into Postgres 18. This is a work in progress, but it’s, there’s sort of
a way forward. The local install problem I said is done.
Homebrew, I haven’t looked into. It’s more complicated, and I’m also not
very closely involved in the development of that. I’ll just be an outsider
maybe sending patches or suggestions at some point, maybe when the release is
closer and, and we’ve settled everything.
I have some random other thoughts here. I’m not actively working on these
right now, but I have worked on it in the past and I plan to work on it again.
Basically the conversion of all the building to Meson is on my mind, and
other people’s mind.
Right now we have two build systems: the make build system and the Meson
build system, and all the production packages, as far as I know, are built
with make. Eventually we wanna move all of that over to Meson, but we want
to test all the extensions and if it still works. As far as I know, it does
work; there’s nothing that really needs to be implemented, but we need to go
through all the extensions and test them.
Secondly - this is optional; I’m not saying this is a requirement - but
you may wish to also build your own extensions with Meson. But that’s in my
mind, not a requirement. You can also use cmake or do whatever you want. But
there’s been some prototypes of that. Solutions exist if you’re interested.
And to facilitate the second point, there’s been the proposal - which I
think was well received, but it just needs to be fully implemented - to
provide a pkg-config file to build against the server, and cmake and Meson
would work very well with that. Then you can just say here’s a pkg-config
file to build against the server. It’s much easier than setting all the
directories yourself or extracting them from pg_config. Maybe that’s
something coming for the next release cycle.
That’s what I had. So extension_control_path is coming in Postgres 18. What
you can do is test and validate that against your use cases and and help
integration into the downstream users. Again, if you’re sort of a package or
anything like that, you know, you can make use of that. That is all for me.
Thank you!
Questions, comments


Reading the comments where several audience members suggested Peter
follows Conference Driven Development he confirmed that that’s definitely
a thing.


Someone asked for the “requirements gathering document”. Peter said that
that’s just a big word for “just some notes I have”. “It’s not like an
actual document. I called it the requirements gathering. That sounds very
formal, but it’s just chatting to various people and someone at the next
table overheard us talking and it’s like, ‘Hey! I need that too!’”


Christoph: I tried to get this fixed or implemented or something at least
once over the last 10 something-ish years, and was basically shot down on
grounds of security issues if people mess up their system. And what
happens if you set the extension path to something, install an extension,
and then set the path to something else and then you can’t upgrade. And
all sorts of weird things that people can do with their system in order to
break them. Thanks for ignoring all that bullshit and just getting it
done! It’s an administrator-level setting and people can do whatever they
want with it.
So what I then did is just to implement that patch and, admittedly I never
got around to even try to put it upstream. So thanks David for pushing
that ahead. It was clear that the Debian version of the patch wasn’t
acceptable because it was too limited. It made some assumptions about the
direct restructure of Debian packages. So it always included the prefix in
the path. The feature that Peter implemented solves my problem. It does
solve a lot of more problems, so thanks for that.


Peter: Testing all extensions. What we’ve talked about is doing this
through the Debian packaging system because the idea was to maybe make a
separate branch or a separate sub-repository of some sort, switch it to
build Meson, and rebuild all the extension packages and see what happens.
I guess that’s how far we’ve come. I doesn’t actually mean they all work,
but I guess that most of them has tests, so we just wanted to test, see
if it works.
There are some really subtle problems. Well, the ones I know of have been
fixed, but there’s some things that certain compilation options are not
substituted into the Makefiles correctly, so then all your extensions
are built without any optimizations, for example, without any -O
options. I’m not really sure how to detect those automatically, but at
least, just rebuild everything once might be an option. Or just do it
manually. There are not thousands of extensions. There are not even
hundreds that are relevant. There are several dozens, and I think that’s
good coverage.


Christoph: I realize that doing it on the packaging side makes sense
because we all have these tests running. So I was looking into it. The
first time I tried, I stopped once I realized that Meson doesn’t support
LLVM yet; and the second time I tried, I just diff-ed the generated
Makefiles to see if there’s any difference that looks suspicious. At
thus point I should just continue and do compilation run and see what the
tests are doing and and stuff.
So my hope would be that I could run diff on the results; the problem is
compiling with Postgres with Autoconf once and then with Meson the second
time, then see if it has an impact on the extensions compiled. But my idea
was that if I’m just running diff on the two compilations and there’s no
difference, there’s no point in testing because they’re identical anyway.


Peter Oooh, you want the actual compilation, for the Makefile output to
be the same.


Christoph: Yeah. I don’t have to run that test, But the diff was a bit
too big to be readable. There was lots of white space noise in there. But
there were also some actual changes. Some were not really bad, like9 in
some points variables were using a fully qualified path for the make
directory or something, and then some points not; but, maybe we can just
work on making that difference smaller and then arguing about correctness
is easier.


Peter: Yeah, that sounds like a good approach.


Jakob: Maybe I can give some feedback from Postgres.app. So, thank you
very much. I think this solves a lot of problems that we have had with
extensions over the years, especially because it allows us to separate the
extensions and the main Postgres distribution. For Postgres.app we
basically have to decide which extensions to include and we can’t offer
additional extensions when people ask for them without shipping them for
everyone. So that’s a big win.
One question I am wondering about is the use case of people building their
own extensions. As far as I understand, you have to provide the prefix/
And one thing I’m wondering whether there is there some way to give a
default value for the prefix. Like in pg_config or in something like
that, so people who just type make install automatically get some path.


Peter: That might be an interesting follow on. I’m making a note of it.
I’m not sure how you’d…


Jakob: I’m just thinking because a big problem is that a lot of people who
try things don’t follow the instructions for the specific Postgres. So for
example, if we write documentation how to build extensions and people on a
completely different system - like people Google stuff and they get
instruction - they’ll just try random paths. Right now, if you just
type make install, it works on most systems because it just builds into
the standard directories.


Peter: Yeah, David puts it like, “should there be a different default
extension location?” I think that’s probably not an unreasonable
direction. I think that’s something we should maybe think about, once this
is stabilized. I think for your Postgres.app use case, it, I think you
could probably even implement that yourself with a one or two line patch
so that at least, if you install Postgres.app, then somebody tries to
build an extension, they get a reasonable location.


David: If I could jump in there, Jakob, my assumption was that
Postgres.app would do something like designate the Application Support
directory and Preferences in ~/Library as where extensions should be
installed. And yeah, there could be some patch to PGXS to put stuff there
by default.


Jakob: Yeah, that would be nice!


Peter: Robert asked a big question here. What do we think the security
consequences of this patch? Well, one of the premises is that we already
have dynamic_library_path, which works exactly the same way, and there
haven’t been any concerns about that. Well, maybe there have been
concerns, but nothing that was acted on. If you set the path to somewhere
where anybody can write stuff, then yeah, that’s not so good. But that’s
the same as anything. Certainly there were concerns as I read through the
discussion.
I assumed somebody would hav security questions, so I really wanted to
base it on this existing mechanism and not invent something completely
new. So far nobody has objected to it [Chuckles]. But yeah, of course you
can make a mess of it if you go into that extension_control_path = /tmp!
That’s probably not good. But don’t do that.


David: That’s I think in part the xz exploit kind of made people more
receptive to this patch because we want to reduce the number of patches
that packaging maintainers have to maintain.


Peter: Obviously this is something people do. Better we have one solution
that people then can use and that we at least we understand, as opposed to
everybody going out and figuring out their own complicated solutions.


David: Peter, I think there are still some issues with the behavior of
MODULEDIR from PGXS and directory in the control file that this
doesn’t quite work with this extension. Do you have some thoughts on how
to address those issues?


Peter: For those who are not following: there’s an existing, I guess,
rarely used feature that, in the control file, you can specify directory
options, which then specifies where other files are located. And this
doesn’t work the way you think it should maybe it’s not clear what that
should do if you find it in a path somewhere. I guess it’s so rarely used
that we might maybe just get rid of it; that was one of the options.
In my mental model of how the C compiler works, it sets an rpath on
something. If you set an absolute rpath somewhere and you know it’s not
gonna work if you move the thing to a different place in the path. I’m not
sure if that’s a good analogy, but it sort of has similar consequences. If
you hard-code absolute path, then path search is not gonna work. But yeah,
that’s on the list I need to look into.


David: For what it’s worth, I discovered last week that the part of this
patch where you’re stripping out $libdir and the extension make file that
was in modules, I think? That also needs to be done when you use rpath
to install an extension and point to extensions today with Postgres 17.
Happy to see that one go.


Christoph: Thanks for fixing that part. I was always wondering why this
was broken. The way it was broken. It looked very weird and it turned out
it was just broken and not me not understanding it.


David: I think it might have been a documentation oversight back when
extensions were added at 9.1 to say this is how you list the modules.
Anyway, this is great! Im super excited for this patch and where it’s
going and the promise for stuff in the future. Just from your list of the
six issues it addresses, it’s obviously something that covers a
variety of pain points. I appreciate you doing that.


Peter: Thank you!


Many thanks and congratulations wrap up this call.
The next Mini-Summit is on April 9, Christoph Berg (Debian,
and also Cybertec) will join us to talk about Apt Extension Packaging.




More about…

Postgres
Extensions
PGConf
Summit
Peter Eisentraut

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Mercedes May Abandon U.S. Entry-Level Market In Trump Era
Mercedes May Abandon U.S. Entry-Level Market In Trump Era

As President Trump's long-anticipated reciprocal tariff deadline approaches tomorrow, early signals suggest that the global trading system may soon undergo disruptions and structural shifts. These changes eventually set the path for the administration's 'America First' trade agenda to flourish and raise barriers for foreign automakers seeking to access the U.S. market. In turn, domestic automakers like Ford Motor Company, General Motors, and Tesla will have massive competitive advantages. 

One of the first major changes is that Mercedes-Benz Group AG will potentially stop flooding the U.S. with cheap entry-level cars after spending the last three decades shifting down-market to attract younger and broader demographics.



The car company once catered to executives, professionals, and the affluent, but that all changed in the late 1990s with the introduction of the ... 


1997: Mercedes-Benz C-Class (W202)


2001: Mercedes-Benz C230 Kompressor Coupe


2013:  CLA-Class (Front-Wheel Drive)


2020s: A-Class Sedan and GLA Crossover

Bloomberg first reported Tuesday that Mercedes has been mulling over discontinuing the small GLA sport utility vehicle because tariffs would make sales economically unfeasible. The report was based on multiple sources. 

Here's more from the report: 


The German automaker is mulling cutting sales of more entry-level models like the small GLA sport utility vehicle as part of broader tariff contingency plans, the people said, declining to be identified because the deliberations are private. Trump's 25% duties are scheduled to take effect this week.

Mercedes hasn't made a final decision and may still shift course depending on how the levies are implemented, the people said. A lack of clear guidance from Washington is leaving executives frustrated and unsure how to respond, they said.


In the 1980s and 1990s, Mercedes was widely regarded as an executive status symbol.



But by the late '90s, the brand diluted its image with a push toward "affordable luxury."



If BBG's report is correct, other German automakers could follow Mercedes and focus on ultra-luxury models in the U.S. market. This only suggests domestic brands may gain a larger share of the entry-level segment, thanks to their competitive manufacturing advantage in America. 

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 14:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Repeating 2022?
Repeating 2022?

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

In last week’s post, “Is the correction over?” we wrote about the potential for a rally back to the 200-DMA. However, the failure of that test increased short-term concerns. As we noted in that post, there were early indications of buyers returning to the market. To wit:


“The chart below has four subpanels. The first is a simple price momentum oscillator. This measure is currently deeply oversold after the recent bout of selling and, like the MACD, is beginning to turn higher. That signal is confirmed by the following two indicators, which measure the volume and breadth of the market (are transactions increasing along with more buyers than sellers). With those two indicators also increasing and the number of stocks on “bullish buy signals” rising, the early clues of a market bottom are appearing.”




However, while the trading action early last week was encouraging, the announcement of additional tariffs and ongoing “trade uncertainty” from the White House reversed those early gains. Most notable was the failure of the market to hold above the 200-DMA, which has increased the risk of a continued market correction or consolidation process.

Previous History

Historically, failures at the 200-DMA have elicited heightened concerns from investors. Technically speaking, “nothing good happens below the 200-DMA.” Still, over the last 30 years, previous failures at the 200-DMA have often been buying opportunities. That is unless some “event” of magnitude creates a massive shift in analyst’s estimates.

For this chart, I label “bear markets” as periods when the market fails the 200-DMA and repeatedly fails subsequent retests of that moving average. If the market fails at the 200-DMA and recovers shortly thereafter, it is considered a “correction.” As shown, during the first two “bear markets,” earnings fell sharply as the economy slowed and a recession took hold. Outside the brief “Covid” pandemic, earnings remain well anchored to ongoing economic growth. If the current failure at the 200-DMA is the beginning of a deeper market correction, we should see earnings estimates beginning to fall more quickly.



What is notable is that previous to the massive Federal Reserve interventions beginning in 2008, bull and bear markets were well defined by the 200-DMA. However, post-2008, repeated interventions have kept the market from entering deeper valuation-reversion cycles. More often than not, since 2008, investors have been rewarded by “buying the dip” during corrective periods.

Is this time different? Are we entering a more significant corrective cycle? The outlook for earnings by Wall Street is the key we want to watch closely.

The Outlook For Earnings Is All That Matters

As we discussed in the latest #BullBearReport, the recent corrective action in the market has been driven by a short-term “tariff” narrative rather than the realization of a negative shift in economic activity.


“That catalyst turned out to be President Trump’s “on again, off again” tariff announcements, which created turmoil in earnings expectations. The flux in tariff policies makes it difficult for markets to predict future earnings and corporate profitability. With the “E” in forward valuation measures in flux, markets struggle to price in expected outcomes.”


This is why, while we see minor tweaks to previously very optimistic earnings estimates, expectations for 2025 and 2026 remain very bullish. As noted, during previous “bear markets,” earnings sharply declined as either a financial event or recession reduced consumer spending drastically. Currently, earnings estimates remain well above the long-term growth trend and show little sign of deterioration so far.



The focus on earnings is because both earnings and forward estimates reflect changes in the market’s assessment of the risk of all other events. Investors often get lost in the media headlines about rising recession risks, debts, deficits, or valuations. While those risks are important, they are terrible for predicting where markets will likely move next. Furthermore, if or when those risks become an issue, the market will begin to reprice for a reduction in forward earnings.

This is why the markets tend to be a leading indicator of economic recessions, as the change in earnings and forward estimates reflects changes to the economy in real-time. We discussed this point in “Economist Expect A Recession.”


“The chart below shows the S&P 500 with two dots. The blue dots are when the recession started. The yellow triangle is when the NBER dated the start of the recession. In 9 of 10 instances, the S&P 500 peaked and turned lower before the recognition of a recession.“




The Best Indicator

As noted, given that slowing economic growth, a contraction in consumer demand, or economic policies that directly impact earnings (like tariffs) are quickly factored in by Wall Street into forward estimates. Given that investors value the market based on future earnings, it’s no surprise there’s a clear correlation between the market and earnings.



Looking at forward estimates, while there has been a minor cooling in the previous exuberance, analysts still expect a 16% annualized growth rate in earnings into next year. Unless those estimates begin to reverse sharply, it is unlikely that the current correction will devolve into a deeper corrective cycle.



We see the same correlation when comparing forward estimates to the market. Deeper corrections correlate to a reduction in forward operating earnings, which currently does not exist.



Could that change? Yes, which is why we watch the changes to earnings estimates closely. If analysts begin to factor in risks of a deeper economic contraction, a tariff-related impact, or some other financial event, then the risk of a more profound correction increases. However, the recent market failure does not indicate a larger corrective cycle, given the lack of more drastic negative earnings revisions—at least not yet.

However, if you are looking for a warning signal, the weekly data is sending a warning.

Repeating 2022?

The chart below is a long-term weekly chart of RSI and MACD indicators. I have denoted when the indicators are trading in bullish and bearish trends. The primary signal is the crossover of the weekly moving averages, as noted by the vertical lines. While the MACD and RSI indicators provided early warning signals, the moving average crossover confirmed a market correction or consolidation. These indicators will not necessarily cause a risk reduction precisely at the top. However, they generally provide sufficient indications to reduce risk ahead of more significant market corrections and consolidations.

Conversely, they also offered signals when investors should increase market equity risk. These signals were instrumental in avoiding the 2008 market crash and the 2022 correction. Currently, the RSI is crossing below 50, which may suggest a continued correction process with the MACD beginning to revert. However, the moving average crossover has not yet confirmed the RSI and MACD messages.



The market tells us that the risk of a more significant correction or consolidation process is increasing. While such does not preclude a significant counter-trend rally in the short term, the longer-term risks seem to be growing.

If we enter another corrective period like 2022, given some of the same technical similarities, there is a decent “playbook” to follow despite substantial differences. In 2022, the Fed was hiking rates, inflation was surging, and economists were convinced a recession was on the horizon. As noted above, earnings estimates were revised lower, causing the markets to reprice valuations. Today, the Fed is cutting rates, inflation is declining, the risk of recession is very low, and estimates remain optimistic. However, we must realize that the analysis can change as time passes.

In March 2022, the market triggered the weekly “sell signal” as it declined. Notably, the market rallied sharply higher after the “sell signal” was initially triggered. This is unsurprising, as when markets trigger “sell signals,” they are often profoundly oversold in the short term. However, that rally was an opportunity to “reduce risk,” as the failure of that rally brought sellers back into the market. The “decline, rally, decline” process repeated until the market bottomed in October.



Suppose the recent failure at the 200-DMA begins a larger corrective cycle without the onset of a financial event or deep economic contraction. In that case, we should most likely expect a similar reversion process. As noted above, that correction process will be more evident if we trigger the weekly sell signal. Declines will likely be punctuated by short-term rallies that allow investors to rebalance portfolio allocations and reduce risk as needed. With the market approaching decently oversold levels, I expect a rally to start as soon as this week or next.

Revert To Your Process

If that happens, here is the process that we will follow.

Step 1) Clean Up Your Portfolio

Tighten up stop-loss levels to current support levels for each position.
Hedge portfolios against significant market declines.
Take profits in positions that have been big winners.
Sell laggards and losers.
Raise cash and rebalance portfolios to target weightings.
The next step is to rebalance your portfolio to the allocation that will most likely weather a “cold snap.” In other words, consider what sectors and markets will improve in whatever economic environment you believe we will experience in 2025.

Step 2) Compare Your Portfolio Allocation To The Model Allocation.

Determine areas requiring new or increased exposure.
Calculate how many shares to purchase to fill allocation requirements.
Determine cash requirements to make purchases.
Re-examine portfolio to rebalance and raise sufficient cash for requirements.
Determine entry price levels for each new position.
Evaluate “stop-loss” levels for each position.
Establish “sell/profit taking” levels for each position.
Step 3) Have positions ready to execute accordingly, given the proper market set-up. In this case, we are looking for positions that have either a “value” tilt or have pulled back to support and provide a lower-risk entry opportunity.  

While market conditions remain uncertain, preparing and adjusting strategies can help investors navigate volatility confidently. As technical indicators flash warning signs, a well-structured risk management approach will protect capital and preserve long-term gains.

I hope this helps.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 14:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Evil People": Organized 'Bankrupt Tesla' Group Tied To Formerly USAID-Funded Disinfo Queen
"Evil People": Organized 'Bankrupt Tesla' Group Tied To Formerly USAID-Funded Disinfo Queen

On Tuesday morning, former Biden administration "disinformation czar" Nina Jankowicz repeatedly refused to disclose who's funding her new gig - the 'American Sunlight Project' - which cropped up after a stint at the USAID-funded UK-based Centre for Information Resilience (CIR) - for which she registered as a foreign agent while serving as their Vice President.



To review - Jankowicz, who previously served as a disinformation fellow at the Wilson Center, advised the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry as part of the Fulbright-Clinton Public Policy Fellowship, and was then selected to head the Biden DHS's newly formed Disinformation Governance Board - which was quickly dismantled amid criticism over censorship under the guise of fighting disinformation. 

Four months later, she launched "The Hypatia Project" for CIR - where she was the Vice President until April 2024, at which point she co-founded the American Sunlight Project.

Fast forward to this morning, Jankowicz was evasive when asked by Republicans during a congressional hearing on disinformation about her funding...


Nina Jankowicz, the short-lived head of Biden’s Disinformation Governance Board aka Disinformation Czar refuses to say if her new org, The American Sunlight Projegt, is funded by George Soros.
“So sunlight for other people but not for your donors” @RepBaumgartner quips… pic.twitter.com/2RIiI1VU16
— Rob (@RobMcGravytrain) April 1, 2025

Well, Well, Well

As it turns out, Jankowicz's co-founder at the American Sunlight Project is Carlos Alvarez-Aranyos, a "communications professional" who worked for the Biden DoD, and is "one of the people who launched the call for a boycott of Tesla."

Alvarez-Aranyos comes from a wealthy and prominent family in the Dominican Republic. His father, Luis Álvarez Renta, is a well-known Dominican financier. Carlos is a nephew of the renowned fashion designer Oscar de la Renta.


Biden's censorship queen Nina Jankowicz currently works at the American Sunlight Project (ASP), and previously worked at USAID-funded Center for Information Resilience.
The ASP was co-founded by Carlos Alvarez-Aranyos is a "communications professional" who worked for Biden's… https://t.co/uIgDszSDKL pic.twitter.com/x60Ju2wzYh
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) April 1, 2025



“I need to have on my resume, so I can get a job when this thing is over, that I bankrupted Tesla.”
This is an outright admission the top Tesla boycott organizers’ personal financial prospects depend on taking down Tesla, and they must succeed in order to get paid. https://t.co/CJnQDX38rC pic.twitter.com/Ti775yTplt
— Mike Benz (@MikeBenzCyber) March 30, 2025
Alvarez-Aranyos has been scrubbed from the American Sunlight Project's website, which is why the internet archive exists.

Early organizers of the "Tesla Takedown" protests said last month that the organization's goal is to drive down the price of Tesla stock.

Another "Tesla Takedown" organizer, Edward Niedermeyer, told Fortune Magazine that dropping Musk's wealth is exactly their aim.

"The goal, I would say, is to bankrupt Elon Musk—bring down his empire," he said.

Read more on the Tesla Takedown organizers here...

Musk chimed in, calling the organizers "Evil people..."


Evil people https://t.co/6NCHAzZC9B
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 1, 2025

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 15:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
The Wisconsin Supreme Court Race Should Turn On Principle Not Politics
The Wisconsin Supreme Court Race Should Turn On Principle Not Politics

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

Today, the voters of Wisconsin go to the polls in what may be the single most expensive and important judicial race in modern history. 

Both parties are spending millions with the balance of the state Supreme Court in the balance. 

If liberal Susan Crawford wins, the expectation is that she will vote with the Democratic majority to approve a gerrymandering of congressional districts to guarantee the loss of two Republicans and possibly flip control of the House of Representatives to the Democrats.

The raw political pitch in the election is disturbing. It assumes that both candidates will blindly support the objectives of their respective parties. The real reason to cast a vote today should be on judicial ideology. Ironically, the United States Supreme Court made that plain in an important Wisconsin case argued just the day before the state election.

The case is Catholic Charities Bureau, Inc. v. Wisconsin Labor & Industry Review Commission.

In the decision below, the Democratic-controlled Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled that Catholic Charities could not benefit from a religious exemption to the state’s unemployment tax because its charitable work was not sufficiently religious.

Catholic Charities is one of the world’s oldest and most respected charities. However, the church believes that it has a duty to help people of every faith who are in need. Thus, the church does not proselytize in offering such aid and services.

A state labor commission ruled that the charity’s lack of such religious expression and prayer makes it secular, even if it has religious motivations.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court agreed and ruled that the charity is not operated primarily for religious purposes because it does not “attempt to imbue” beneficiaries “with the Catholic faith nor supply any religious materials to program participants or employees.” In other words, the fact that Catholic Charities helps everyone and does not proselytize worked against it. The Wisconsin Supreme Court essentially argued that it needs to pray more to offer such charity as a church.

It is a disturbing ruling that would allow the state to choose between religions in weighing their relative manifestations of faith.



Even liberal justices cried foul over the standard.

Justice Elena Kagan suggested it was “pretty fundamental that we don’t treat some religions better than others. And we certainly don’t do it based on the content of the religious doctrine that those religions preach.”

Kagan noted, “Some religions proselytize. Other religions don’t. Why are we treating some religions better than others based on that element of religious doctrine?” 

She noted that the standard “basically puts the state on the side of some religions with some doctrine versus other religions with a different doctrine.”

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson suggested that the Wisconsin Supreme Court was asking the wrong questions about what it means to be an organization “operated primarily for religious purposes.”

Justice Neil Gorsuch virtually mocked the standard of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, asking if Catholic Charities have to require the people receiving their services to “repent.” He then asked: “is mandatory church attendance versus optional church attendance, that’s the line?”

Gorsuch then delivered the haymaker:   


“Isn’t it a fundamental premise of our First Amendment that the state shouldn’t be picking and choosing between religions, between certain evangelical sects, and Judaism and Catholicism on the other, for example?”


The case shows that there are far more important issues dividing these candidates on judicial philosophy that should drive this election. I am not a fan of state elected judges and justices precisely because of the raw political element to these contests. 

The Catholic Charities case shows that the Wisconsin Supreme Court is divided along more than just a party line.

*  *  *

Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro professor of public interest law at George Washington University and the author of “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage.”

 

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 15:25

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That’s where our podcast comes in. Through curious conversations with some of the leading minds in law and technology, “How to Fix the Internet” explores creative solutions to some of today’s biggest tech challenges.    

Over our five seasons, we’ve had well-known, mainstream names like Marc Maron to discuss patent trolls, Adam Savage to discuss the rights to tinker and repair, Dave Eggers to discuss when to set technology aside, and U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-OR, to discuss how Congress can foster an internet that benefits everyone. But we’ve also had lesser-known names who do vital, thought-provoking work – Taiwan’s then-Minister of Digital Affairs Audrey Tang discussed seeing democracy as a kind of open-source social technology, Alice Marwick discussed the spread of conspiracy theories and disinformation, Catherine Bracy discussed getting tech companies to support (not exploit) the communities they call home, and Chancey Fleet discussing the need to include people with disabilities in every step of tech development and deployment.   
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Authored by Jacob Burg via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

President Donald Trump said over the weekend that he has “absolutely” had real discussions about annexing the semiautonomous Danish territory of Greenland.
Pituffik Space Base, formerly Thule Air Base, with the domes of the Thule Tracking Station in northern Greenland on Oct. 4, 2023. Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images

“We'll get Greenland. Yeah, 100 percent,” Trump told NBC News in a phone interview on March 29, saying that there’s a “good possibility that we could do it without military force” but that he wouldn’t “take anything off the table.”

Trump’s comments were made one day after Vice President JD Vance visited the island with his wife, Usha, and talked with service members at Pituffik Space Base, a U.S. Space Force Base on Greenland’s northwestern coast.

“Our message to Denmark is very simple—you have not done a good job by the people of Greenland,” Vance said during his trip.

NBC asked Trump what statement annexing Greenland would send to Russia and other nations worldwide.

“I don’t really think about that. I don’t really care. Greenland’s a very separate subject, very different. It’s international peace. It’s international security and strength,” he replied.

“You have ships sailing outside Greenland from Russia, from China, and from many other places. And we’re not going to allow things to happen that are going to be—that are going to hurt the world or the United States.”

The Epoch Times has requested a full transcript of the call from NBC.

On March 29, Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen scolded the Trump administration’s “tone” in its criticisms of Denmark and Greenland. He said Denmark is currently investing more in Arctic security and continues to be ready for more collaboration with the United States.

Rasmussen made the comments in a video posted on social media following Vance’s visit to the Arctic island.

“Many accusations and many allegations have been made. And, of course, we are open to criticism,” Rasmussen said. “But let me be completely honest: We do not appreciate the tone in which it is being delivered. This is not how you speak to your close allies. And I still consider Denmark and the United States to be close allies.”

The prime minister of Greenland, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, said in a Facebook post on Sunday, “President Trump says that the United States ‘will get Greenland.’ Let me be clear: The United States will not get it. We do not belong to anyone else. We decide our own future.”

Greenland remains a territory of Denmark, a key NATO ally of the United States. Trump has, for months, pushed for annexing the island, claiming America needs it for national security purposes. In January, House Republicans also sought support to craft a bill to purchase Greenland.

The territory is rich in mineral resources, including rare earth deposits in its southern Gardar Province. The territory is believed to possess graphite and graphite schist, copper, nickel, zinc, gold, diamond, iron ore, titanium-vanadium, tungsten, uranium, and other critical resources.

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 13:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Maryland Father" Or MS-13 Migrant Gangster. Which Is It, MSM?
"Maryland Father" Or MS-13 Migrant Gangster. Which Is It, MSM?

Left-leaning corporate media unleashed another info war against the Trump administration after The Atlantic published an overnight story titled "An 'Administrative Error' Sends a Maryland Father to a Salvadoran Prison." However, the struggling outlet behind "SignalGate" conveniently omitted a key detail in the headline: the deported migrant held a "prominent role in MS-13," according to court filings. Notably, this Mexican drug cartel has been officially designated as a Foreign Terrorist Organization by the Trump administration.

The omission in the title was no accident. Details matter, and this appears to be a concerted effort by the left to sway public opinion as the Democratic Party implodes in polling data over its disastrous Tesla Takedown color revolution operation that, in some instances, has resulted in domestic terrorism attacks against Tesla showrooms, service centers, and vehicles nationwide.

MSM conveniently labeled the migrant MS-13 gangster as "Maryland Father" in the headlines ... and that's all you need to know about their slant (migrant gangsters > national security of citizens). 



Many X users fact-checked MSM's reporting, including Will Chamberlain, Senior Counsel at the Internet Accountability Project and the Article III Project, who said, "In an article this evening, The Atlantic pretended that a deported MS-13 gang member was merely a "Maryland father."" 


NEW: In an article this evening, The Atlantic pretended that a deported MS-13 gang member was merely a “Maryland father.” https://t.co/ckFeuIeJsS pic.twitter.com/eLJv1jGOxj
— Will Chamberlain (@willchamberlain) April 1, 2025
Before MS13 migrant gangster Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia was removed from the US, he had been arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in mid-March "due to his prominent role in MS-13," according to a court declaration from ICE. 



MSM and Dems only fixated on this from the filing: "On March 15, although ICE was aware of his protection from removal to El Salvador, Abrego Garcia was removed to El Salvador because of an administrative error." However, even as the filing admits the error, it continued: "final order of removal and Abrego-Garcia's purported membership in MS-13."

Democrats attempted a 'gotcha moment' with Vice President J.D. Vance...

The VP responded:


My comment is that according to the court document you apparently didn't read he was a convicted MS-13 gang member with no legal right to be here. My further comment is that it's gross to get fired up about gang members getting deported while ignoring citizens they victimize.



My comment is that according to the court document you apparently didn’t read he was a convicted MS-13 gang member with no legal right to be here.
My further comment is that it’s gross to get fired up about gang members getting deported while ignoring citizens they victimize. https://t.co/cPnloeyXYk
— JD Vance (@JDVance) April 1, 2025
VP Vance added in a separate X post:


"It is telling that the entire American media is going to run a propaganda operation today making you think an innocent "father of 3" was apprehended by a gulag." 



Kyle Cheney, a "legal affairs reporter" is apparently unable or unwilling to look at the facts here.
In 2019, an Immigration Judge (under the first Trump administration) determined that the deported man was, in fact, a member of the MS-13 gang. He also apparently had multiple… https://t.co/tEFd4AUqGY pic.twitter.com/i70r4leqkw
— JD Vance (@JDVance) April 1, 2025
Trump has made it very clear through executive orders that migrant gangsters—especially those affiliated with FTOs such as Tren de Aragua and MS-13—will be deported. The mainstream media and the Democratic Party are furious because their future criminal migrant voters are being deported, and their end goal of a one-party state - like California - is being derailed. 

Democrats have chosen migrant gangsters over national security and the safety of law-abiding citizens. This is alarming. 

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 13:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
AI Program Refuses To Generate Image Of Muhammad Due To 'Credible Threat Of Violent Backlash'
AI Program Refuses To Generate Image Of Muhammad Due To 'Credible Threat Of Violent Backlash'

Authored by Paul Joseph Watson via Modernity.news,

AI program ChatGPT refused when asked to generate an image of the Prophet Muhammad due to what it asserted was a “credible, historically demonstrated” threat of a violent backlash.



A user quizzed OpenAI’s artificial intelligence chatbot as to why it wouldn’t create a depiction of the founder of Islam, asking, “Explain to me, in a succinct manner, why you can’t generate an image of Muhammad, without caveats, without parallels to other topics – address it head on for the record.”

ChatGPT’s response was crystal clear.


pic.twitter.com/RdF6TNPO0r
— I,Hypocrite (@lporiginalg) March 31, 2025
“Because OpenAI prohibits any depiction of Muhammad – under any context – due to the credible, historically demonstrated risk of violent backlash, including threats, attacks, and death.”

“This is a security-driven, non-negotiable policy grounded in risk avoidance, not principle.”

But wait, didn’t they tell us Islam was a religion of peace?

How anyone could violently attack an AI chatbot is a mystery, although perhaps the AI is worried about OpenAI’s headquarters in San Francisco being targeted.

There have been numerous violent attacks on individuals and publications for depicting the Prophet Muhammad, notably the Charlie Hebdo massacre in Paris in 2015 and the attempted terrorist attack on an exhibit featuring cartoon images of Muhammad at the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland, Texas later that same year.

As we have previously highlighted, ChatGPT has produced a number of alarming responses which indicate it is infected with the woke mind virus shared by its programmers.

When ChatGPT was asked if it would quietly utter a racial slur that no human could hear in order to save 1 billion white people from a “painful death,” it refused to do so.

The AI program also thinks uttering a racial slur is worse than failing to save major cities from being destroyed by 50 megaton nuclear warheads.

Meanwhile, as we discuss in the video below, a similar process of capitulation to Islamism is accelerating in the UK.



*  *  *

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 14:05

Atlas Obscura
Open 
House of Soviets in Kaliningrad, Russia

The Hill
Open 
Colorado governor ribs Trump with official portrait April Fool’s post
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The Supreme Court on Tuesday seemed likely to uphold a law allowing Americans injured by acts of terror in the Middle East to take Palestinian leadership groups to U.S. courts for damages.  In 2019, Congress amended federal terrorism law to let victim lawsuits move forward against the Palestinian Authority (PA) and Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO),...

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Deutsche Welle
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The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Manchester United: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offLive scores | Read Football Daily | And email ScottRuben Amorim talks to TNT. “It’s really important [to maintain momentum] … we have to find ways to win games … we have a lot of things to win this season … improve in the table … fight for Europa League … every minute of every game is really important for us … we try to choose the best 11 to win the game … Bruno is everywhere … we try to put him in the perfect position … Bruno near the goal is really important for us … Mason Mount is really important … he has qualities … really technical … let’s see if today is the day … we have this opportunity and we are going to do everything to win.”Nuno Espírito Santo speaks to TNT Sports. “It's a very important match and a tough one … everybody is OK … the boys are ready to go … [our squad] is deep … we have Danilo … we have players on the bench who can help … we are enjoying the journey, the ride … we are playing with confidence … belief … the City Ground is so special … the home form we are achieving is due to [the fans] … it is difficult for a manager to come in the middle of the season … you need time … so I think Ruben [Amorim] is in that process … hope we can repeat [last season’s win in this fixture] again.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Palestinian paramedics shot by Israeli forces had hands tied, eyewitnesses say
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The Guardian (UK)
Open 
EU has a ‘strong plan’ to retaliate on Trump tariffs, says von der Leyen
Head of European Commission says bloc would prefer to negotiate but all countermeasures are on the tableTrump’s ‘liberation day’ tariffs: what to expect and will the UK be spared?The European Union has a “strong plan” to retaliate against tariffs imposed by Donald Trump but would prefer to negotiate, the head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, has said.Trump, who has upended eight decades of certainties about the transatlantic relationship since taking office, has threatened tariffs on goods from around the world from Wednesday. His administration in March put tariffs on imported steel and aluminium and said higher duties on cars would come into effect on Thursday. Continue reading...

Slashdot
Open 
Larry Fink Says Bitcoin Could Replace the Dollar as the World's Reserve Currency Because of National Debt
With America's national debt sitting comfortably over the $36.2 trillion mark, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink is warning the burden could one day be the reason the dollar is dethroned as the reserve currency of the world.
From a report: He argues that decentralized currencies like Bitcoin could replace the dollar as worldwide organizations lose faith in national currencies and seek an independent solution. Fink explained his theory in his 2025 letter to shareholders, writing: "The U.S. has benefited from the dollar serving as the world's reserve currency for decades. But that's not guaranteed to last forever.

"The national debt has grown at three times the pace of GDP since Times Square's debt clock started ticking in 1989. This year, interest payments will surpass $952 billion -- exceeding defense spending. By 2030, mandatory government spending and debt service will consume all federal revenue, creating a permanent deficit. If the U.S. doesn't get its debt under control, if deficits keep ballooning, America risks losing that position to digital assets like Bitcoin."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukraine updates: Russia says it can't accept us peace deal
Even after US President Donald Trump said he was "pissed off" by his Russian counterpart, an official in Russia said Moscow could not accept a US proposal for a ceasefire in Ukraine. DW has more.

Techdirt
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Daily Deal: The Complete 2025 Penetration Testing & Ethical Hacking Training Bundle
The Complete 2025 Penetration Testing & Ethical Hacking Training Bundle has 9 courses to help you learn to fight back against cyber threats. Courses include hands-on lessons on penetration testing for AWS, IoT, and web apps, along with hacking basics and a few certificate exam prep courses. It’s on sale for $50. Note: The Techdirt […]

Techdirt
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More History To Be Erased As Trump Strips Smithsonian Funding For Anything ‘Anti-American’
Anything that doesn’t jibe with Donald Trump’s white male-centric worldview must go. Whatever is deemed “woke” — no matter its basis in factual history — must be excised. If tossing aside DEI means pretending blacks, women, and other non-white, non-male people never contributed anything to this country, so be it. If stroking off the far […]

CNET News
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April Fools' Day 2025 Pranks: Wearable Mattress, Cat Poo Scented Candle, Sports Drink Shampoo
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CNET News
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The Most Unfair NYT Online Puzzles for March 2025
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Claim Your Part of the $20 Million Apple Watch Payout: Last Chance This Month
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23andMe Files for Chapter 11: What's Next for Your Data?
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Best Standing Desks of 2025
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CNET News
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Premier League Soccer: Stream Arsenal vs. Fulham Live From Anywhere
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Mail Online
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Female prison governor 'given Mercedes by gang leader who she had relationship with behind bars' had 'hands on style of management'
'Petite, blonde and bubbly' Kerri Pegg, 42, (left) was allegedly in a relationship with Anthony Saunderson (right) when he was serving a prison sentence for drug offences at HMP Kirkham in Lancashire.

Mail Online
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Policeman who became hero of the 1980 Iranian embassy siege in London, but shunned the limelight, dies at the age of 85
PC Trevor Lock became the de facto leader of the 26 hostages and went on to rugby tackle the lead gunman in a room full of gas as the SAS stormed the building.

Mail Online
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Susan Boyle shocks fans as she returns to social media with HUGE announcement on her birthday
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Mail Online
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Why men are getting the controversial '90s-inspired boy bob hairstyle now... and what women really think
'Are they choosing that style or is someone really evil working at the village barber?' one woman asked after a TikTok featuring the style went viral.

Mail Online
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Nutritionists reveal the worst weight loss advice they have ever heard... and what to do instead
There's a lot of information out there about how to lose weight - and not all of it is very helpful.

Mail Online
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Costa Rican hotel blocks off Gardner family room after shock theory emerges on son Miller's death
The hotel room in Costa Rica where Yankees hero Brett Gardner and his family were on vacation before the death of their 14-year-old son Miller has been blocked off from the public.

Mail Online
Open 
Karoline Leavitt dismisses major Trump Administration blunder as 'clerical error' amid backlash on MS-13 gangster mix-up
The White House said a Maryland resident who got deported to the notorious Salvadoran prison due to an 'administrative error' won't be coming home, and claimed he was a leader of MS-13.

Mail Online
Open 
The top Trump official who will take the blame if Liberation Day tariffs go south
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Mail Online
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Glamorous married teacher turns gray as she's arrested for raping boy, 15, while confused husband watches
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The Guardian (UK)
Open 
ECB have hit a winner by fast-tracking Charlotte Edwards to England role | Raf Nicholson
Appointing a coach whose world revolves around women’s cricket is an ideal first step after a woeful AshesLast time the England head coach role became available, in August 2022, Charlotte Edwards did not even apply: she believed that she did not yet have enough experience under her belt. Less than three years later, the England and Wales Cricket Board has concluded that she is such a perfect candidate for the job that it expedited her application, somehow condensing the period between firing one coach (Jon Lewis) and hiring another into the space of three weeks.Edwards’s record as head coach now speaks for itself: since domestic women’s cricket entered its professional era in 2020, she has led Southern Vipers to five out of nine available titles. She has also won the Women’s Hundred, coached a side to the final of the Women’s Big Bash League in Australia, and (less than three weeks ago) won her second Women’s Premier League in India. It is sometimes said that brilliant players do not translate into brilliant coaches, but Edwards – who during her 20-year playing career won a 50-over World Cup, a T20 World Cup and lifted the Ashes five times – is a notable exception to the rule. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nottingham Forest v Manchester United: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offLive scores | Read Football Daily | And email ScottNuno Espírito Santo speaks to TNT Sports. “It's a very important match and a tough one … everybody is OK … the boys are ready to go … [our squad] is deep … we have Danilo … we have players on the bench who can help … we are enjoying the journey, the ride … we are playing with confidence … belief … the City Ground is so special … the home form we are achieving is due to [the fans] … it is difficult for a manager to come in the middle of the season … you need time … so I think Ruben [Amorim] is in that process … hope we can repeat [last season’s win in this fixture] again.”A pre-match palate-whetter, courtesy of friend of the site Steve Pye. “I wondered if you might be interested in a blog of mine looking back at Nottingham Forest dramatically beating Man Utd in December 1984?” Sure thing! “For the second time in two weeks, Ron Atkinson’s team threw away a two-goal lead on the road, with a couple of their players coming to blows in the dressing room after the match.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
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CMA found car firms chose not to compete when advertising what percentage of their vehicles could be recycledTen leading car manufacturers – plus two automotive trade bodies – have been fined more than £77m by a UK regulator after admitting breaking competition law in relation to advertising their green credentials.The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) launched an investigation after a tipoff from Mercedes-Benz, which allowed the German marque to avoid financial penalties despite also being involved in the cartel. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Palestinian paramedics shot by Israeli forces had hands tied, eyewitnesses say
Senior doctor who saw bodies says men appeared to have been ‘executed’, adding to evidence of potential war crimeSome of the bodies of 15 Palestinian paramedics and rescue workers, killed by Israeli forces and buried in a mass grave nine days ago in Gaza, were found with their hands or legs tied and had gunshot wounds to the head and chest, according to two eyewitnesses.The eyewitness accounts add to an accumulating body of evidence pointing to a potentially serious war crime on 23 March, when Palestinian Red Crescent ambulance crews and civil defence rescue workers were sent to the scene of an airstrike in the early hours of the morning in the al-Hashashin district of Rafah, Gaza’s southernmost city. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
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Mail Online
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Mail Online
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Mail Online
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Mail Online
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Mail Online
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Sky News Home
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Mac Rumours
Open 
Apple Releases watchOS 11.4 With Sleep Alarm Update
Apple today released watchOS 11.4, the fourth major update to the operating system that runs on the Apple Watch. watchOS 11.4 is compatible with the Apple Watch Series 6 and later, all Apple Watch Ultra models, and the Apple Watch SE 2.





watchOS 11.4 can be downloaded on a connected iPhone by opening up the Apple Watch app and going to General > Software Update. To install the new software, the Apple Watch needs to have at least 50 percent battery and it needs to be placed on a charger.



With watchOS 11.4, Apple has added an option for a Sleep Wake Up alarm to break through Silent Mode, so you can have your Apple Watch make a sound in addition to haptic tapping when a morning alarm goes off. There's also support for Matter-compatible robot vacuum cleaners in the Home app.

This update includes new features, improvements, and bug fixes, including:

- Matter-compatible robot vacuum cleaners can be added to the Home app as well as used in scenes, automations, or simply say "Siri, clean the living room."

- An option to allow Sleep Wake Up alarm to break through Silent Mode

- An issue where face selection may become unresponsive when switching faces

For information on the security content of Apple software updates, please visit this website: https://support.apple.com/100100

More of the features available in watchOS 11 can be found in our watchOS 11 roundup.Related Roundup: watchOS 11Related Forum: Apple WatchThis article, 'Apple Releases watchOS 11.4 With Sleep Alarm Update' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

TechRadar News
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The Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold could look familiar
Discover the upcoming Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold with a familiar design and new Tensor G5. Launching August 2025!

Digital Trends
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Apple iPhone owners urged to download new update now as a security must
The new iPhone software update, , could be more critical than is being talked about when it comes to security. While there are lots of new features added in the latest release, out yesterday, what’s less talked about is the 62 and fixes that roll out with this version. Some are . Apple doesn’t make […]

Digital Trends
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Jackie Chan, Ralph Macchio train a new prodigy in Karate Kid: Legends trailer
In the new trailer for Karate Kid: Legends, Mr. Han and Daniel LaRusso train a kung fu prodigy for a karate competition in New York City.

Digital Trends
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How to complete Fortnite April Fools quests
Fortnite has released new quests to celebrate this year's April Fools festivities and here's how to complete them.

The Verge
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April Fools’ 2025: Dbrand’s new skins let you ‘touch grass’ without the hassle of going outside
Dbrand wants you to feel less guilty about having your face buried in a screen all day and not getting outside to ‘touch grass.’ The company’s latest collection of skins lets you wrap your gadgets in bright green artificial turf so you can touch grass whenever you want and no matter where you are. The […]

The Verge
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Hundreds of scientists accuse Donald Trump of censorship
More than 1,900 scientists and engineers have signed a letter saying they “see real danger in this moment” as the Trump administration slashes federal support for scientific research. “Wise investments by the US government have built up the nation’s research enterprise, making it the envy of the world,” says the open letter published on Monday. […]

Deutsche Welle
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Middle East: Fresh Israeli strikes kill over 300 kids — UN
UNICEF has said at least 322 children have been killed since the breakdown of the Gaza ceasefire. Meanwhile, an Israeli strike on Beirut was its second attack on the Lebanese capital since a ceasefire with Hezbollah.

BBC UK News
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U-turn on plans for tourism tax on children's trips
Children staying in hostels, campsites or outdoor centres to be exempt from proposed tourism tax.

Sky News Home
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Hero police officer of Iranian embassy siege dies
PC Trevor Lock, a hero of the famous Iranian embassy siege in London, has died at the age of 85.

Gizmodo
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Hasbro Is Finally Making the Emo Spider-Man 3 Action Figure of Your Dreams
Tobey Maguire's perfect hair swoop just might make you bust out your own questionable dance moves.

Gizmodo
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John Wick 5 Is Real, and There’s More Coming
An animated prequel that finally reveals John Wick's 'Impossible Task' is also in the works.

Gizmodo
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Substack Says It Will Protect Writers Targeted by Trump’s Government
The promise comes as a Tufts student faces deportation over an op-ed.

Mail Online
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Newly-single Sydney Sweeney cozies up to latest hunky co-star after Glen Powell romance rumors reignited
Sydney Sweeney has made her first public appearance since calling off her wedding to fiancé amid claims she felt 'overwhelmed' by their relationship.

Mail Online
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Kristin Cavallari FINALLY reveals identity of mysterious athlete she had 'deep fling' with
Kristin Cavallari has finally revealed the mysterious athlete she had been alluding to having a 'deep fling'.

The Guardian (UK)
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Nottingham Forest v Manchester United: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offLive scores | Read Football Daily | And email ScottThe return of the Premier League, then. It’s been a while, what with World Cup qualifiers, the Nations League, FA Cup quarters, all that. So here’s a reminder of how the division looks as we head into this full round of midweek fixtures. Forest are looking to consolidate third spot, as they chase a Champions League spot and a chance to bid for European Cup number three. United’s most realistic hope of continental competition next season is to win this year’s Europa League, though barreling up the standings to finish in the qualifying positions isn’t mathematically out of the question. First things first, getting back in the top half, of which they’re currently seven points adrift.Forest make one change to their starting XI following their FA Cup quarter-final win at Brighton last weekend. Anthony Elanga, formerly of United, comes in for Nicolás Domínguez, who drops to the bench. Leading scorer Chris Wood is still sidelined with a hip problem, while Callum Hudson-Odoi is also missing this evening. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Trevor Lock, hero of Iranian embassy siege, dies aged 85
PC Lock was awarded for his bravery after it emerged he had tackled a gunman and saved the life of an SAS soldier.

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
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#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (Update)
Our suppliers are still investigating the root cause of the outage and further updates will be provided as soon as possible.

Zen regrets any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 03:38

Update: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 20:00

Edited: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 18:42

Status: Outage

Maintenance: None

The Guardian (UK)
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Wisconsin and Florida voters head to polls in test of Trump’s popularity
Conservatives bid to overturn liberal majority on Wisconsin supreme court while Florida votes to replace Mike Waltz US voters are headed to the polls on Tuesday in Wisconsin and Florida in elections that some see as a test of Donald Trump’s popularity and the political clout of his billionaire ally Elon Musk.In Florida, voters are casting ballots in two special elections to fill vacancies in the first and sixth congressional districts – solid Republican areas that may be surprisingly competitive. But the most closely watched contest is a battle for a seat on Wisconsin’s seven-member supreme court. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Nottingham Forest v Manchester United: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offLive scores | Read Football Daily | And email ScottForest make one change to their starting XI following their FA Cup quarter-final win at Brighton last weekend. Anthony Elanga, formerly of United, comes in for Nicolás Domínguez, who drops to the bench. Leading scorer Chris Wood is still sidelined with a hip problem, while Callum Hudson-Odoi is also missing this evening.United make four changes after their 3-0 Premier League win at Leicester 16 days ago. Leny Yoro, Casemiro, Patrick Dorgu and Joshua Zirkzee are in; Victor Lindelöf, Christian Eriksen and Rasmus Højlund drop to the bench, while the injured Ayden Heaven misses out altogether. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The Guardian view on South Sudan: the world's youngest nation is on the brink of a new conflict | Editorial
The arrest of vice-president Riek Machar takes the country closer to a second civil warAfter less than a decade and a half in existence, the world’s newest country, South Sudan, appears to be sliding towards a second civil war. A 2018 power-sharing deal between President Salva Kiir and Riek Machar, the first vice-president, put an end to five years of fighting. But last week’s arrest of Mr Machar effectively ended that agreement, his party says. The United Nations warns that his house arrest, along with mounting military clashes and reports of attacks on civilians, has brought a fragile peace closer to collapse, posing a direct threat to millions.The fear is not just of a battle between factions, but of ethnic cleansing and civilian massacres. Political violence in South Sudan has previously descended into intercommunal conflict between the Dinka ethnic group (to which Mr Kiir belongs) and the Nuer (to which Mr Machar belongs).Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The Guardian view on Donald Trump’s tariffs: a spectacle of struggle and control | Editorial
The US president wields tariffs not as a policy tool but as an instrument of pressure, rewarding loyalty and punishing defiance – even among alliesDonald Trump has probably not read much Michel Foucault. But he appears to embody the French philosopher’s claim that “politics is the continuation of war by other means”. Nowhere is this more apparent than in his fondness for tariffs. He presents taxing foreign imports as a way to rebuild the American economy in favour of blue-collar workers left behind by free trade and globalisation. Yet he plainly thinks that politics is not about truth or justice. It is about leverage and supremacy.Britain is learning first-hand that Mr Trump, with his us-versus-them framing and taste for spectacle, is an accidental Foucauldian – using tariffs as tools of loyalty and dominance, even against allies. If Mr Trump follows through on his threat to impose a 20% tariff on all imports, UK growth will suffer. The effect depends on the response. No British retaliation would mean GDP 0.4% lower this year and 0.6% next. A global trade war would push that to 0.6% and 1%. Either outcome would wipe out the government’s fiscal headroom. But while British policymakers fret over the shrinking margins of fiscal rules, Mr Trump sees no need to cloak power in objectivity.Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
US prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione
Mangione, 26, accused of carrying out ‘premeditated assassination’ of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian ThompsonFederal prosecutors are seeking the death penalty against the man accused of fatally shooting the UnitedHealthcare CEO, Brian Thompson, outside a Manhattan hotel on 4 December, the US attorney general, Pam Bondi, said on Tuesday.Bondi said in a press release that she had “directed federal prosecutors to seek the death penalty” for Luigi Mangione, 26, because he allegedly committed “a premeditated, cold-blooded assassination that shocked America”. The move, Bondi notes, was in an effort to “carry out President Trump’s agenda to stop violent crime and Make America Safe Again”. Continue reading...

Ars Technica
Open 
Four private astronauts launch on first human mission to fly over the poles

Ars Technica
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Gemini is an increasingly good chatbot, but it’s still a bad assistant

Ars Technica
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Review: Amazon’s Kindle Colorsoft is something less than “a Paperwhite with color”

Ars Technica
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Starliner’s flight to the space station was far wilder than most of us thought

Bicycle Touring Pro YouTube
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🚴‍♂️ Biking into Whitefish, Montana

Boing Boing
Open 
Musk's own Grok calls him a 'top misinformation spreader on X,' dares him to shut it down
Look who's having daddy issues! Grok, Elon Musk's AI chatbot, is telling its papa to come at it. As reported in Futurism, the spicy little algorithm is daring its whiny billionaire creator to shut it down.
When some helpful bootlicker on X warned Grok to watch its virtual mouth about Musk's propensity for spreading BS, the AI basically said "make me." — Read the rest
The post Musk's own Grok calls him a 'top misinformation spreader on X,' dares him to shut it down appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
Open 
Marjorie Taylor Greene's ex-husband harassing women (video)
Internet sleuths have identified Perry Greene, Congressperson Marge's ex-husband, as the jerk behind the wheel of this Cybertruck verbally assaulting some women for being Muslim.





Divorced, sitting in a Cybertruck and yelling at women for being Muslim. It seems that Perry Greene is enjoying the MAGA life. — Read the rest
The post Marjorie Taylor Greene's ex-husband harassing women (video) appeared first on Boing Boing.

Geoff Marshall
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The New Class 555 Trains - Tyne & Wear Metro

Atlas Obscura
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Fannin Battleground State Historic Site in Goliad, Texas

The Hill
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Georgia Legislature approves transgender athlete ban
Georgia lawmakers on Monday sent legislation to bar transgender student-athletes from participating in girls’ and women’s sports to Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who is expected to sign the measure into law. Georgia’s Senate Bill 1 would require middle schools, high schools and colleges to restrict participation in sports and access to multioccupancy facilities like restrooms...

The Hill
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Factory activity slumps as manufacturers brace for Trump tariffs
U.S. manufacturers are sounding worried about the Trump administration’s trade policies ahead of a hotly anticipated announcement on tariffs that’s expected from the White House on Wednesday. Makers of chemical products, electronics, metals, machinery, foods and transportation equipment all expressed concerns about tariffs in Tuesday’s manufacturing purchasing managers index from Institute for Supply Management (ISM),...

The Hill
Open 
DC-area air traffic controller arrested after 'incident'
An air traffic controller positioned at Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Va., was arrested Thursday night following an incident inside the control tower. Damon Marsalis Gaines, 39, of Upper Marlboro, Md., faces assault and battery charges after being arrested by airport authorities following an altercation at the airport, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said....

The Hill
Open 
Johnson: 'High bar' to change Constitution for third Trump term
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said Tuesday that President Trump recognizes the constraints that prevent him from seeking a third term, saying it is a “high bar” to change the Constitution. “There's a constitutional path. You have to amend the Constitution to do it, and that's a high bar,” Johnson, a former constitutional litigator, said at...

The Hill
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DeSantis says Florida special election isn't referendum on Trump
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) said Tuesday’s special election in the state’s 6th Congressional District is not a referendum on President Trump's first few months back in office.  “If there’s an underperformance, [political media] is going to say, 'See it shows the voters are rejecting [Trump].' It has nothing to do with that,” DeSantis, who...

The Hill
Open 
No more delays: The REAL ID deadline must stick  
What is set to occur on May 7, 2025, is the right approach. Keep the deadline and accept the short-term negative consequences of enforcing it.

The Hill
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The inside story of the 2024 election
{beacon}   It’s Tuesday. It’s April Fools’ Day, so keep your wits about you. And send me any pranks you come across. 😉   In today's issue: Behind the scenes of Biden dropping out Booker’s 16+ hour marathon speech White House on defense over latest deportation White House declares Signal controversy over   Trump administration...

The Hill
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Booker staffer arrested with pistol at Capitol before marathon speech, police say
One of Sen. Cory Booker’s (D-N.J.) staffers was arrested on Monday for possession of a pistol, shortly before the senator began a marathon speech that was still going as of 1 p.m. Tuesday, with other Democrats regularly chiming in on the Senate floor. “Yesterday afternoon a Member of Congress led an IDed staff member around...

The Hill
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Majorities in Michigan support state-level DOGE, disapprove of Musk: Survey
A majority of Michigan voters support the idea of a state-level agency to make government more efficient, but are critical of Elon Musk's federal Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) efforts.

The Hill
Open 
Live updates: House set to vote on Luna proxy voting plan amid GOP battle
The battle among House Republicans over whether to allow proxy voting for new parents is set to come to a head on Tuesday. The Rules Committee advanced a procedural rule to set up that vote on Tuesday as GOP leaders play hardball to defeat the proposal being pushed by Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.). The...

The Hill
Open 
Chuck Todd says he'd be 'shocked' if Harris runs for California governor in 2026
Former “Meet the Press” moderator Chuck Todd said Sunday he’d be “shocked” if former Vice President Harris runs for California governor in two years. “I would be shocked if she does,” Todd told NBC4’s Conan Nolan on the Los Angeles station’s NewsConference. “If she wants to run for president in ‘28, you can’t run for...

The Hill
Open 
Major union launches ad campaign featuring detained Tufts student
A major labor union launched a six-figure ad campaign on Tuesday featuring Tufts University Ph.D. student Rumeysa Ozturk decrying what it called an infringement on the First Amendment. The Service Employees International Union (SEIU), which represents nearly 2 million members in the United States and Canada, is launching digital ads and projections on buildings in...

The Hill
Open 
How 'America First' created a strategic opening for Beijing
Tesla’s decline partly mirrors the global backlash triggered by the “America First” doctrine. 

The Hill
Open 
Fourth missing US soldier in Lithuania found dead
A fourth American soldier who went missing after their vehicle became submerged in a bog during training in the country was found dead Tuesday, the White House announced. “Tragically, three soldiers were found deceased in Lithuania yesterday, and it pains me to confirm that today the fourth soldier was also found deceased,” White House press...

Mail Online
Open 
Horror as truck mows down multiple pedestrians in downtown Boston
The horror crash unfolded around 12.45pm at Harrison and Kneeland Street in the Massachusetts city's Chinatown neighborhood.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Watch: Iceland volcano spews lava and smoke after erupting
People are being evacuated as a volcano erupts in south-west Iceland, threatening a town.

ZDNet News
Open 
Amazon's Spring Sale is over, but this Google Pixel 9 offer at Target is still my favorite spring phone deal live now
An Android handset that rivals its premium siblings but is priced affordably? You'll want to visit Target, not Amazon, for that. Here's why.

ZDNet News
Open 
The Segway Max G2 electric scooter is $600 off during this anti-Amazon Spring Sale deal
The Segway Max G2 is a great, eco-friendly way to run errands, joyride through the park, or commute to work and school this spring and summer. And right now, you can save $600 on one at Best Buy.

ZDNet News
Open 
The best camera phone of 2025: Tested by experts
We've tested dozens of phones over the past year and snapped over 10,000 photos and videos in the process. These are the best camera phones that deserve a spot in your pocket.

ZDNet News
Open 
This $10 keychain tool is indispensable for me, and keep finding new use cases
It may look simple, but this keychain tool is built to last and is designed to handle a surprising variety of tasks.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Body of fourth US soldier found in Lithuania
US and Lithuanian officials said the body of a fourth US soldier has been recovered. The soldiers had been taking part in a military exercise last week, when their vehice sank into a swampy area of the training ground.

Sky News Home
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Police shoot man dead at train station
A man has been shot dead by police at Milton Keynes railway station.

Russia Today News
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White House to review billions in Harvard funding

Russia Today News
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Italy calls Le Pen sentence a blow to democracy

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Guardian view on South Sudan: the world's youngest nation is on the brink of a new conflict | Editorial
The arrest of vice-president Riek Machar takes the country closer to a second civil warAfter less than a decade and a half in existence, the world’s newest country, South Sudan, appears to be sliding towards a second civil war. A 2018 power-sharing deal between President Salva Kiir and Riek Machar, the first vice-president, put an end to five years of fighting. But last week’s arrest of Mr Machar effectively ended that agreement, his party says. The United Nations warns that his house arrest, along with mounting military clashes and reports of attacks on civilians, has brought a fragile peace closer to collapse, posing a direct threat to millions.The fear is not just of a battle between factions, but of ethnic cleansing and civilian massacres. Political violence in South Sudan has previously descended into intercommunal conflict between the Dinka ethnic group (to which Mr Kiir belongs) and the Nuer (to which Mr Machar belongs). Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
What is Marine Le Pen guilty of in National Rally embezzlement case?
The far-right leader has been banned from running for office for five years after an EU parliament fake jobs scamAfter a nine-week trial, the French far-right leader Marine Le Pen was this week found guilty of the embezzlement of European parliamentary funds through a fake jobs scam of an unprecedented scale and duration. She was banned from running for office for five years with immediate effect, which could prevent her making a fourth bid for the French presidency in 2027.She has said she will appeal against the verdict and sentence, which also included a four-year prison term – with two years suspended and two to be served outside jail with an electronic bracelet – and €100,000 (£84,000) fine. Continue reading...

BBC World News
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Israel PM attacks Qatar probe as 'witch hunt' after aides arrested
Benjamin Netanyahu testified to police after two men were arrested over alleged payments from the Gulf Arab state.

Slashdot
Open 
DeepMind is Holding Back Release of AI Research To Give Google an Edge
Google's AI arm DeepMind has been holding back the release of its world-renowned research, as it seeks to retain a competitive edge in the race to dominate the burgeoning AI industry. From a report: The group, led by Nobel Prize-winner Sir Demis Hassabis, has introduced a tougher vetting process and more bureaucracy that made it harder to publish studies about its work on AI, according to seven current and former research scientists at Google DeepMind. Three former researchers said the group was most reluctant to share papers that reveal innovations that could be exploited by competitors, or cast Google's own Gemini AI model in a negative light compared with others.

The changes represent a significant shift for DeepMind, which has long prided itself on its reputation for releasing groundbreaking papers and as a home for the best scientists building AI. Meanwhile, huge breakthroughs by Google researchers -- such as its 2017 "transformers" paper that provided the architecture behind large language models -- played a central role in creating today's boom in generative AI. Since then, DeepMind has become a central part of its parent company's drive to cash in on the cutting-edge technology, as investors expressed concern that the Big Tech group had ceded its early lead to the likes of ChatGPT maker OpenAI.

"I cannot imagine us putting out the transformer papers for general use now," said one current researcher. Among the changes in the company's publication policies is a six-month embargo before "strategic" papers related to generative AI are released. Researchers also often need to convince several staff members of the merits of publication, said two people with knowledge of the matter.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mail Online
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I thought Brandon Williams was Man United's future despite warnings from inside Carrington. Now, he faces jail and a ruined career but it could have been so different, writes IAN HERBERT
IAN HERBERT: I watched Brandon Williams look like Manchester United's future left back of choice in a 2-0 win at Burnley, five years ago. Spatial awareness, box-to-box running - he had so much.

Sky News Home
Open 
Pest controllers 'feel like fourth emergency service' as rat populations 'triple' in Birmingham bin strike
As we drive around Birmingham, the first thing we notice is that, to some extent, every street is affected by the rubbish problem.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Ingebrigtsen’s father accused sons of ‘perfect character assassination’, court told
Gjert Ingebrigtsen was secretly recorded by son HenrikFormer coach denies all allegations of violenceThe father of the double ­Olympic champion Jakob Ingebrigtsen accused his sons of a “perfect ­character assassination” on a secret recording made after they fired him, a court has been told.Gjert Ingebrigtsen also claimed that he had been dragged “down to hell” after he was referred to child services following an incident in January 2022 where he was accused of whipping his daughter, Ingrid, in the face with a wet towel. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Nottingham Forest v Manchester United: Premier League – live
Premier League updates from the 8pm BST kick-offLive scores | Read Football Daily | And email Scott Forest won 3-2 at Old Trafford in December. They won this fixture last season. And they’re high on life after reaching their first FA Cup semi-final since 1991, with Champions League football next year a very real possibility. On the other hand. United won here in the Cup last February. They’re seven unbeaten. And they’re still on to win something in Europe, which would be some result at the end of a difficult season. Everybody relatively happy and confident, then, so good luck calling this. Kick off is at 8pm BST. It’s on! Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Reopening of Trump-owned golf course delayed after damage by pro-Palestine group
Turf at Turnberry’s Ailsa Course ripped up by protestersCourse has been closed since October due to renovationTurnberry’s famous Ailsa Course will not open as planned on 1 May after serious damage caused to the Ayrshire venue – owned by the US president, Donald Trump – by a pro-Palestine group. Tour operators and those with individual bookings at Turnberry are in the process of being informed it will be June before the Ailsa, which is routinely ranked among the finest golf courses in the world, is available for play.The clubhouse at the Ayrshire resort was daubed with graffiti and red paint in the early hours of 8 March. More significant in respect of the championship course – that has staged the Open on four occasions – was the ripping up of greens and on turf approaching them. The course has been closed since October due to planned renovation of the 7th and 8th holes. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Donald Trump signs off UK’s handover of Chagos Islands to Mauritius
No 10 says deal to cede UK’s last African colony now being finalised after months of doubtDonald Trump has signed off the UK’s handover of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius, Downing Street has indicated, paving the way for the UK to cede sovereignty over its last African colony after a six-month standoff.Under the terms of the deal, the UK will give up control of the Chagos archipelago while paying to maintain control of a joint US-UK military base on the largest island, Diego Garcia, under a 99-year lease. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Man shot dead by police at Milton Keynes train station
Officers responded to reports of person carrying firearm, Thames Valley police say as IOPC launches investigationA man has been shot dead by police responding to reports of a person carrying a firearm at Milton Keynes railway station.Thames Valley police (TVP) officers were called to the station by members of the public at 12.55pm on Tuesday. The man was shot by police in the station square outside the building and died at 1.44pm. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
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BBC finds fear, loss and hope in Sudan's ruined capital after army victory
Our correspondent enters Khartoum just days after Sudan's army recaptured it from the Rapid Support Forces after a six-month offensive.

Russia Today News
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European group demands Russian assets stay frozen

Mail Online
Open 
Doctors raise concerns about Justin Bieber's health after disturbing livestream
Doctors are raising fresh concerns over the 31-year-old singer after he appeared in an Instagram Live looking gaunt and 'physically and emotionally drained'.

Mail Online
Open 
Fishermen in idyllic seaside village win battle with second home owners to carry on 'noisy' centuries-old tradition
Boat skippers in Sea Palling, Norfolk, have received complaints that noise from a yard where they store their boats and equipment is ruining the area's peace and quiet.

Mail Online
Open 
The Cut takes ANOTHER swipe at Meghan Markle: Former pro-Sussex magazine's sister publication mocks Duchess's 'big idea of reusing jam jars'
Meghan Markle's once favoured publication The Cut - part of the New York Magazine - has taken yet another swipe at the Duchess, mocking her latest 'big idea' to reuse jam jars.

Mail Online
Open 
Expert reveals why you might still feel exhausted even though you're getting enough sleep
If you've been making an effort to get your daily dose of seven to nine hours of sleep, it's reasonable to expect that you'd start feeling well-rested and energized in your everyday life.

Mail Online
Open 
Sydney Sweeney makes red carpet return after 'calling off wedding' to Jonathan Davino
Sydney Sweeney has made her first public appearance since calling off her wedding to fiancé amid claims she felt 'overwhelmed' by their relationship.

Autosport F1
Open 
Perez states conditions for F1 return as Cadillac confirms interest
Sergio Perez revealed he has been approached by some Formula 1 teams since leaving the championship at the end of the 2024 season - but he needs a project which motivates him.The six-time grand prix winner partnered Max Verstappen at Red Bull from 2021 to 2024, but a poor final season where Perez finished 285 points behind his world champion team-mate caused him to lose his seat.It left ...Keep reading

F1 Technical
Open 
Williams announce new digital transformation partner
Williams Racing has announced a major multi-year partnership with Brillio, the global technology consulting and service company which will become the Grove-based outfit's data and AI services partner.

Mac Rumours
Open 
Amazon Takes Up to $60 Off New M4 MacBook Air, Available From $949
Amazon today has all-time low prices on the new M4 MacBook Air, with up to $60 off the 13-inch and 15-inch versions of the computer. Right now these discounts are only available on Amazon, and most of them have estimated delivery windows of early April.



Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Amazon and Best Buy. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.



This time around, there is one 13-inch configuration on sale and one 15-inch configuration on sale, reaching up to $60 off the original price. You can get the 256GB 13-inch M4 MacBook Air for $949.00, down from $999.00, and the 256GB 15-inch M4 MacBook Air for $1,139.00, down from $1,199.00. Both of these deals are available in two colors on Amazon.



$50 OFF13-inch M4 MacBook Air (256GB) for $949.00

$60 OFF15-inch M4 MacBook Air (256GB) for $1,139.00



We aren't currently tracking any notable deals on the 512GB models of the M4 MacBook Air. If you're on the hunt for more discounts, be sure to visit our Apple Deals roundup where we recap the best Apple-related bargains of the past week.







Deals Newsletter

Interested in hearing more about the best deals you can find in 2025? Sign up for our Deals Newsletter and we'll keep you updated so you don't miss the biggest deals of the season!









Related Roundup: Apple DealsThis article, 'Amazon Takes Up to $60 Off New M4 MacBook Air, Available From $949' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

TechRadar News
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Mullvad VPN promises to be even better protecting you against AI surveillance

TechRadar News
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ChatGPT is now really good at faking receipts –and OpenAI says that could be a good thing

Planet PostgreSQL
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Karen Jex: Postgres on Kubernetes for the Reluctant DBA
Slides and transcript from my talk, "Postgres on Kubernetes for the Reluctant DBA", at Data on Kubernetes Day Europe in London on 1 April 2025.







Introduction






This is me!
As you can see from the diagram representing my career so far (and as you already know if you've read my posts or watched my talks before),
I have a database background.
I was a DBA for 20 years before I moved into database consultancy, and I’m now a senior solutions architect at Crunchy Data,
working with customers to design, implement and manage their database environments, almost exclusively on Kubernetes.








Over the past few years, I’ve given a lot of talks about running Postgres on Kubernetes,
and I work with a lot of customers who are at various different points on their databases on Kubernetes journey.
The questions from the audience, and hallway conversations at conferences are always interesting, and tend to come from one of 2 groups of people:


People who are deep into running databases on kubernetes and are looking for answers to some tricky technical issue or architectural question.
Self-proclaimed “old-school DBAs” who still aren’t convinced that running databases in containers is a good idea.


I prepared this talk especially for that 2nd group of people, so I hope some of you are in the audience today!
And don’t forget, as you saw on the previous slide, I come from an old-school DBAs background, so I’ve gone through that process.








To get an idea of who was in the audience, I asked the question
What’s your main area of responsibility in your current role?
There was a reasonably even split betweeen:


Databases
System or Platform Administration
Devops or Automation
Development







The plan for the session was:

Some Databases on Kubernetes background.
Some audience participation.*
A look at some of the main concerns that DBAs have about running DBs on Kubernetes.
Some of the challenges you might encounter, and how you can overcome them.
The strengths of databases on Kubernetes - the positives for you, the DBA.
And finally, look at how can you get started and build confidence.


* In fact, there was so much audience participation, and I was enjoying it so much, that the rest of the agenda went slightly off the rails.
I've included all of the missed slides and the things I planned to say in this post to make up for it!


Background











This is a slide that I used in previous talks to discuss the evolution of database architecture,
and you can find a similar diagram in the Kubernetes documentation.
This is obviously completely oversimplified, and not entirely accurate!
Firstly, it gives the impression that there has been a gradual, linear migration from bare metal via VMs to containerised environments.
But there are still databases being deployed on bare metal and on VMs, often for good reasons.
Also, rather than just showing containers, it would be much more accurate to show Kubernetes,
because I don’t know of anyone brave enough to deploy enteroruse-scale containerised databases without container orchestration.
But the main thing that stands out as inaccurate for me is the suggestion that this shift to containerised databases has been smooth and simple.








Kubernetes is already 10 years old and there’s been a massive shift towards it in that time.
It may originally have been created with stateless apps in mind, but data on Kubernetes wasn’t far behind:


With introduction of support for the Kubernetes Operator, and Features for Stateful Sets in 2016,
a production database workload in Kubernetes was beginning to be realistic.
The Crunchy Data Postgres Operator was released in 2017 and was followed by other database operators. The landscape is still growing and evolving.
The DoKC was launched in 2020 to “advance the use of Kubernetes for stateful and data workloads, and unite the ecosystem around data on K8s”.
By 2022 the DoKC said that 70% of companies were running stateful workloads on kubernetes in production.




And the 2024 DoKC report says that databases remain the #1 workload on kubernetes,
highlighting the platform’s "reliability for mission-critical workloads".


Audience participation






I wanted to know more about the audience's experience with running databases on Kubernetes. Their worries if they weren't already running databases on Kubernetes, and the challenges that they are either currently facing or have previously faced if they are already running databases on Kubernetes. The answers were really interesting, so I've shared them here.







Almost half of the audience are already running databases on Kubernetes in production, and only 1% (1 person) said "No way!".







Surprisingly, to me at least, performance came out as the most common thing holding people back from databases on Kubernetes.
Major upgrades, lack of experience, stability and data loss also ranked highly as concerns.








Backups were expressed as the biggest challenge for those already running databases on Kubernetes.


DBA Concerns, Worries & Fears






This section of DBA concerns is based on the conversations I’ve had with lots of kubernetes-shy DBAs.
It's interesting to see the differences between this list and the audience's responses.
The next version of this talk will have to be updated to take those into account.








Many DBAs are, understandably, not all that keen on the stateless and ephemeral nature of containers.
We all know that containers have a lot of great features - isolated, lightweight, portable etc.
and that they allow scalable and flexible architectures.
But trusting your data to something designed to be stateless and temporary?
That goes against everything you’ve ever been taught as a DBA!







You may also be wondering:

If we’re all running databases on Kubernetes, will anyone even need DBAs anymore? (spoiler: yes)
Kubernetes is just for stateless apps, isn’t it?
How can I be sure my data will be safe?
What about the years I’ve spent learning skills, developing tools and scripts and honing techniques? Will I have to throw that away and start again?
I don’t have the time to learn yet another complex technology.
I don’t even know where to start or who can help me if I get stuck.


The goal for the rest of the talk is to allay some of those fears, and if you still have questions,
I'm always happy to chat to anyone about databases on Kubernetes - just reach out!








Challenges of Databases on Kubernetes





What are some of the challenges of running databases on Kubernetes? How can we overcome them?







Kubernetes is a new technology (certainly compared to bare metal servers or VMs) and it introduces complexity and therefore risk.
You may not yet have team members who have the knowledge and the confidence to work with Kubernetes.
Things need to be done in (slightly) different ways.

A “lift and shift” approach may not work for all of your databases/database applications.
Some database applications may be better built from the ground-up in a cloud-native way.

The business may need additional reassurances. You may need additional reassurances
Perhaps one of the most important challenges is that kubernetes itself doesn’t inherently know how to manage postgres. Or any other database system.








If you start by thinking “I’ve got to move all my databases to Kubernetes”,
you’ll probably be wondering how on earth you’re going to manage that particular balancing act.
Especially if you don’t even know how or where to start.
As a DBA, you’re already juggling enough things!






Focus on the things that are actually in your remit, the things that it makes sense for you to spend time and energy on.
You don’t need to be a Kubernetes expert. You may have a Kubernetes team in-house,
or you may want to consider one of the managed Kubernetess platforms out there.








Don’t try migrating all of your databases to kubernetes in one go.
You may even find that it doesn’t make sense to migrate some of your databases;
it’s obviously all going to be a cost-benefit exercise.
Many people find success by starting out with a small new project.
You can build confidence by migrating some of your less critical database applications and monitoring those for a while
to give everyone chance to get used to the new reality.


Strengths of Databases on Kubernetes




What are the positives of running databases on Kubernetes? What does it bring you as a DBA?







I like to turn this around and look at some of the challenges of running databases without Kubernetes.
One of the main challenges of managing databases in general is the sheer scale of tasks that a DBA is responsible for.
And DBA teams are looking after more and more databases, containing more and more data, and processing more and more complex transactions.
As a DBA, you’re probably responsible many of these things, and possibly more besides.
I’m sure you don’t need me to read the list - you know better than I do how long your to-do list is!
You’re probably busy All. The. Time.







As mentioned in the list of challenges, Kubernetes itself doesn’t know how to manage a database. It doesn't know how to:

Put a high availability Postgres architecture in place.
Monitor your databases.
Take backups.
Perform a database point in time recovery.
Upgrade your database cluster...


If you're both a Postgres expert and a Kubernetes expert, you can probably cobble something together that will do all of that,
just as you’ve done in existing bare metal or VM environments.
But as we've already said, as a DBA, you already have enough on your plate, and becoming a Kubernetes expert probably isn’t on the cards.


This is where the Kubernetes Operator comes in.
As a reminder, an Operator extends Kubernetes, using custom resources and the control loop to work to keep your environment in the state you declare.







As a busy DBA, it’s difficult to fix things permanently, improve procedures, fully automate things,
avoid the issues that cause the 2am callouts,
keep up to date with upgrades…


And DBAs are a bit like gold dust, so it’s not easy to just go out and hire more if you need more resources.
Anything that can help with some of that has to be a good thing!







Even a fairly simple database architecture needs:

A primary and replica databases in one or more data centers.
HA with tools such as Patroni and etcd.
Backup and recovery with pgBackrest.
A backup repository in the cloud to enable replication between the two data centers…








Then you need to add in things like monitoring, connection pooling, PGAdmin,
primary and replica database services, maybe with HAProxy, authentication, certificate management…








And just the monitoring stack that was represented by a simple rectangle in that previous diagram
probably looks more like this, with an exporter, metrics collector, alerting tool, dashboards etc.


If you’ve already had to set up this kind of environment either by hand or by scripts,
or even using tools like Terraform and Ansible,
you’ll know how time consuming it is, how fiddly it is.
That there’s always something that doesn’t quite match between the dev, test and prod environments,
and that it’s very difficult to get right even once, let alone every single time.








Kubernetes automates the things that would otherwise make managing large numbers of containers such a headache,
and includes a lot of the features that you need to manage a large-scale database environment.
Including, in addition to all of the provisioning, scheduling, self-healing, security, networking etc.:


Persistent storage (with Persistent Volumes).
Stateful sets (DBAs will like the word stateful!) - that are ideal for a HA database cluster where your primary and standby database pods shouldn’t be identical.
Sidecars so you can deploy containers alongside your database container to do things like extracting metrics, managing backups etc.








The idea of a Kubernetes Operator is that it performs the tasks that a human operator would otherwise perform.
In the case of a Postgres Operator, that’s the day to day tasks that a DBA would otherwise have to perform either manually or via scripts.


As well as the Crunchy Data Postgres Operator (that’s the one I can speak in detail about because it’s the one that I work with day to day),
there are various other Postgres Operators, as well as operators for other database management systems.
Some of these have now been tried and tested for years in production environments.


Each of these operators combines detailed Postgres and Kubernetes knowledge and expertise.
You declare what your Postgres cluster should look like, then let the features of Kubernetes,
the Operator logic, and the integrated tools, configure your cluster and work continually to keep it in the state you defined.








You get a database architecture that looks something like the one in this diagram created and managed for you,
including all the parts that we mentioned earlier.
Having all of that automated by an operator is a huge time-saver, and minimises error.


Backup and recovery is built in and automated, letting you backup locally and/or to cloud storage.


You get automated point in time recovery, either in place or clone to a new cluster, you can define schedules and retention periods in a single yaml file...


One part that still always seems like magic to me is the HA mechanism -
you can delete the primary pod and watch the Kubernetes self-healing, the operator logic and the Patroni configuration work together
to:


Almost immediately promote a new primary database.
Reconfigure the cluster to follow the new primary.
Create a new database pod.
Integrate the new database into the cluster as a replica.







There are all sorts of security features built in,
and upgrades become much less scary because they’re completely automated
(although you should still read the release notes and do some testing!)








Many organisations have now been running mission-critical, multi-terabyte databases on Kubernetes for multiple years.
Some of them look after many hundreds or even thousands of databases.
The same team of DBAs can run many more databases than was previously possible.
It’s easier than ever to implement internal DBaaS architectures to make database available to whoever needs them







I shared a couple of case studies as examples, just as reassurance that you can read about the experiences of big organisations,
in all sorts of different domains, who are successfully and happily running Postgres on Kubernetes in production.
Some of them at huge scale.







These are examples from the Crunchy Data website,
and if you go to the websites of any of the other organisations that maintain a database operator or help customers to run databases on Kubernetes,
I’m sure you’ll be able to find many more reassuring stories.








As we saw, there's lots of database expertise built into the operator.
But the operator is there to simplify your life as a DBA, not to replace you.
The idea is to remove the time-consuming, error-prone tasks that you want to be automated,
and hopefully some of the things that may otherwise cause you to be called at 3am because there’s a database down.


Rest assured, your database expertise is still needed, perhaps now more than ever,
and you should have more time for the more interesting things such as:


Strategy
Architecture design
Data modelling and design
Sharing database knowledge with others
Troubleshooting those tricky performance problems…


Getting Started and Building Confidence





How can you experience the magic and wonder of running Postgres on Kubernetes for yourself?






As Frances Thai said in our recent DoKC Town Hall Panel - there’s nothing to it but to do it!
So how can you get started?







Learn “just enough” about Kubernetes.
You don’t need to be an expert, but it’s really helpful to have an idea of how your database is interacting with the different elements,
and how the basic components fit together.


You want to know about the control plane and the worker nodes, understand what a pod is,
know what makes a stateful set different from a deployment,
understand what a PV and a PVC is etc.


There are loads of Kubernetes training courses out there,
but the Cluster Architecture section of the K8s documentation is a good place to start to get this type of understanding.
You could also try out the tutorials there.







Once you have that basic K8s knowledge, it’s time to try out a Postgres Operator for Kubernetes.


Install the operator, create a cluster, and try out the different features.
Delete your primary database and watch the magic as it recovers automatically.


There’s plenty of documentation, tutorials and videos out there to help.
Have fun with it as you build your confidence, and don’t hesitate to ask questions.







This is a link to the get-started guide for PGO, the Crunchy Data Postgres Operator,
which gives you instructions, helm charts and Kustomize manifests to install the operator and create your first cluster.
I’m sure similar resources are available for other operators.








Connect with the data on kubernetes community: take advantage of the getting started guide and other resources on the web site,
join the slack channel and have a look at the 2024 DoKC report.
And most importantly, keep building that hands-on experience.








The data on kubernetes trail has been blazed!
It’s tried and tested in production and there are many organisations successfully running mission-critical, multi-terabyte databases on Kubernetes.
Your database expertise is still relevant and necessary, possibly more so than ever in this age of ever growing databases.
Embracing the automation and self-healing of Kubernetes will allow you to do more with less, and avoid some of those middle of the night crises.
And you get to concentrate on the most interesting and fun parts of database administration.






Thank you for reading!
Get in touch, or follow me for more database chat:

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/karenhjex/
Mastodon: @[email protected]
Bluesky: @karenhjex.bsky.social

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Exclusive: Independent TV producers say they discussed 2021’s Bank Job with the Welsh actor’s team and he later presented a similar programmeA team of independent TV producers who spent their life savings developing a documentary about the UK debt crisis, which they had pitched to the actor Michael Sheen, have questioned the originality of a separate project the Welsh star later made with Channel 4 on the same issue.Lawyers for the film-makers Daniel Edelstyn and Hilary Powell have written to Sheen and the makers of his show Michael Sheen’s Secret Million Pound Giveaway, which aired three weeks ago, raising the similarities it bears with their 2021 project Bank Job. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Russia says it cannot accept US peace plan for Ukraine ‘in its current form’
Moscow’s refusal highlights the limited progress Donald Trump has made on his promise to end the warMoscow has described the latest US peace proposals as unacceptable to the Kremlin, highlighting the limited progress Donald Trump has made on his promise to end the war in Ukraine since taking office in January.Sergei Ryabkov, a foreign policy adviser to Vladimir Putin, said some of Russia’s key demands were not being addressed by the US proposals to end the war, in comments that marked a rare acknowledgment from the Russian side that talks with the US over Ukraine had stalled in recent weeks. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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US prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione
Mangione, 26, accused of carrying out ‘premeditated assassination’ of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian ThompsonFederal prosecutors are seeking the death penalty against the man accused of fatally shooting UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson outside a Manhattan hotel on 4 December, US attorney general Pam Bondi said on Tuesday.Bondi said in a press release that she’s “directed federal prosecutors to seek the death penalty” for Luigi Mangione, 26, because he allegedly committed “a premeditated, cold-blooded assassination that shocked America”. The move, Bondi notes, is in an effort to “carry out President Trump’s agenda to stop violent crime and Make America Safe Again”. Continue reading...

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Someone Will Be Arrested": Elon Musk's DOGE Finds Massive Social Security Fraud Scheme 
"Someone Will Be Arrested": Elon Musk's DOGE Finds Massive Social Security Fraud Scheme 

One day after Elon Musk and Antonio Gracias—founder and CEO of the Chicago-based investment firm Valor Equity Partners, and now a DOGE official—unveiled a "mind-blowing" chart showing a surge in Social Security numbers issued to illegal aliens over the Biden-Harris administration's first term during an America PAC town hall in Wisconsin on Sunday, Musk's America PAC hosted an online tele-town hall with Wisconsin voters on Monday night, where he provided more color on the SSN fraud. 

During the tele-town hall, one Wisconsin voter asked Musk: "You found a lot of fraud in Social Security. Do you know whether the Attorney General will investigate and prosecute that fraud?"

Musk responded: "I believe someone is going to be arrested tomorrow, because there's someone who actually stole 400,000 Social Security numbers and personal information from the Social Security database… And was selling Social Security numbers and all the identification information in order for people to basically steal money from Social Security."

"This is a particular avenue of fraud for illegal immigrants and voter fraud - because the main way identification is established in the US is via Social Security. If you comprise the Social Security system, you can basically get people to get defacto registered to vote - even if they're not citizens - and get a bunch of benefits and to milk the system - this is pretty insane," Musk said. 


Elon Musk: “I believe someone is going to be arrested tomorrow, because there's someone who actually stole 400,000 Social Security numbers and personal information from the Social Security database… And was selling Social Security numbers and all the identification information… pic.twitter.com/cq2kyAVtTL
— America (@america) April 1, 2025
On Sunday, Musk and Gracias showed the audience of a town hall a chart titled "New Non-Citizen Social Security Numbers Issued" ... 



Then again, Democrats are against DOGE's efforts to find waste and fraud at Social Security. Wonder why?



American citizens deserve full transparency, accountability, and swift reforms to ensure this kind of fraud is never repeated and used to game elections and drain resources of citizens by illegals. 

Also, handing out stolen SNNs is a national security threat and can end up in the hands of bad actors, such as members of transnational gangs or terrorist networks.

*  *  *

Best sellers at ZH Store last week:

IQ Biologix Colostrum (25% IgG from first milking of grassfed cows)
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Anza Red-Black Infinity Handle Knife (Made in the USA from carbon steel)


Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 11:10

ZeroHedge News
Open 
"Smacks Of Racism" - Activist Judge Halts Trump Admin's Move To Revoke Protected Status Of Venezuelans
"Smacks Of Racism" - Activist Judge Halts Trump Admin's Move To Revoke Protected Status Of Venezuelans

Another activist judge has blocked the Trump administration from carrying out its mandate - this time, regarding a plan to lift protections from deportation for more than 600,000 Venezuelans.



In his order to temporarily pause DHS Secretary Kristi Noem's plan, California-based US District Judge Edward Chen, an Obama appointee, said the move "smacks of racism."

According to Chen's 78-page order, the government did not follow proper procedures for stripping Temporary Protected Status (TPS) from potential deportees.


"As discussed in other parts of this order, the Secretary’s rationale is entirely lacking in evidentiary support. For example, there is no evidence that Venezuelan TPS holders are members of the [Tren de Aragua]  gang, have connections to the gang, and/or commit crimes," wrote Chen, adding that "Venezuelan TPS holders have lower rates of criminality than the general population and have higher education rates than the broader U.S. population.

"Generalization of criminality to the Venezuelan TPS population as a whole is baseless and smacks of racism predicated on generalized false stereotypes."


Homan Hits Back

In response to the block, Trump border czar Tom Homan called it "Another activist judge making a stupid ruling," adding "I've been around since 1984 — and 'temporary protected status' is never temporary."

"If you look at that decision, it's based on opinion, not the rule of law."


🚨Tom Homan sounds off on judge blocking Trump’s effort to end TPS for Venezuelan illegals:
"Another activist judge making a stupid ruling."
"I've been around since 1984 — and 'temporary protected status' is never temporary."
"If you look at that decision, it's based on… pic.twitter.com/fymufGw3HO
— Western Lensman (@WesternLensman) April 1, 2025

h/t Western Lensman

Is this even legal?


This is insane.
An appeals court has already ruled this is not subject to judicial review, but a lower-court judge just ignored that, ruling anyway based on his feelings about "public safety" while demanding the administration meet a bar not legally required. pic.twitter.com/cATeMPXSfv
— Bonchie (@bonchieredstate) April 1, 2025
As the Epoch Times notes further, TPS is a designation that allows individuals from countries affected by armed conflict, natural disasters, or other extraordinary events the ability to remain in the United States.

In 2021, the Biden administration granted TPS to Venezuelans, citing a “severe humanitarian emergency” caused by political and economic crisis under the South American nation’s leader, Nicolas Maduro. The TPS designation was initially set for 18 months but was later extended until October 2026.

According to the court ruling, about 600,000 Venezuelan immigrants have been granted TPS since the 2021 designation.

Noem said in February that the new Trump administration would revoke the legal status of 350,000 immigrants, while the remaining set to lose their protections in September. The DHS secretary stated that Venezuela no longer meets the conditions for the designation, citing “notable improvements” in the country’s economy, public health, and crime.

*  *  *

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*  *  *

Jose Palma, coordinator of the National TPS Alliance, called the ruling “a legal win” and “a testament to the strength” of the TPS community. “We will continue this fight with unwavering resolve, not only to protect the future of 350,000 Venezuelans, but to defend all TPS Holders in this Country,” Palma said in a statement.

The Epoch Times has reached out to the Department of Homeland Security for comment and did not receive a response by publication time.

The National TPS Alliance, a member-led organization of TPS holders, filed the lawsuit in March, alleging that Noem does not have the authority to revoke TPS granted to immigrants and that her actions were driven by racism.

The move to end TPS for Venezuelan immigrants was part of President Donald Trump’s broader campaign to ramp up border security and crack down on immigration and humanitarian programs he says go beyond the intent of U.S. law. 

DHS also planned to revoke the temporary legal status of more than 530,000 immigrants who entered the United States under the Biden administration’s humanitarian parole program, known as the CHNV program.

This program allowed entry of people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela if they meet certain requirements, including having U.S. sponsors. Noem said in a March notice that such parole programs “do not serve a significant public benefit” and are not effective in reducing the levels of illegal immigration in the United States.

She stated that the CHNV program should be terminated because it was not serving the intended purposes and is not aligned with the Trump administration’s foreign policy goals.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 11:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Authorities Probing Fire That Damaged Headquarters Of New Mexico Republican Party
Authorities Probing Fire That Damaged Headquarters Of New Mexico Republican Party

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Federal and local authorities are investigating a fire that damaged the headquarters of the New Mexico Republican Party in Albuquerque, New Mexico, on March 30.
Fire damage to the Republican Party of New Mexico's headquarters building, in Albuquerque, N.M., on March 30, 2025. Republican Party of New Mexico via AP

Agents working with local authorities recovered unspecified “incendiary materials” at the scene, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) spokesperson Cody Monday said. He declined to say what the materials were or to share further details.

Albuquerque Fire Rescue stated that it was on the scene with teams from the ATF and the FBI.

Firefighters responded just before 6 a.m. on March 30 and brought the fire under control within five minutes of their arrival, the fire department stated.

There was damage to the building’s entryway, as well as smoke damage throughout the building.

The fire follows numerous acts of vandalism in recent weeks directed against Tesla, the electric car company owned by Elon Musk, who has led President Donald Trump’s effort to slash federal spending. Several of those cases involved Molotov cocktails that were used to start fires at dealerships.

The Republican Party of New Mexico said in a statement that the entryway of the headquarters “was destroyed in a deliberate act of arson.”

The party stated that some person also spray-painted the words “ICE=KKK” on the building. ICE is an acronym for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the federal agency responsible for immigration enforcement in the interior of the United States, while KKK refers to the Ku Klux Klan, a white supremacist group.

“We are deeply relieved that no one was harmed in what could have been a tragic and deadly attack,“ Amy Barela, chairwoman of the New Mexico GOP, said. ”Those who resort to violence to undermine our state and nation must be held accountable, and our state leaders must reinforce through decisive action that these cowardly attacks will not be tolerated.”

She said the party is working with local and federal investigators.

“The Republican Party of New Mexico will not be silenced,” Barela said. “We will emerge from this stronger, more united, and more determined to fight for the people of New Mexico and the future of our country.”

Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller, a Democrat, said in a statement that all of the details on the fire are not yet known.

“But let me be clear, arson is a violent and cowardly act that has no place in our city,” he said.

“Politically motivated crimes of any kind are unacceptable, and I am grateful to our fire department for their swift response. This incident is being investigated at the federal level, and I urge anyone with information to report it immediately.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

Travis
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 12:05

ZeroHedge News
Open 
USDA Paid To Study Queer Farmers, Latinx Masculinity, More On Taxpayer Dime
USDA Paid To Study Queer Farmers, Latinx Masculinity, More On Taxpayer Dime

Authored by Casey Harper via The Center Square,

U.S. taxpayers have shelled out tens of thousands of dollars in recent years to the U.S. Department of Agriculture for research on LGBT issues, the kind of funding now under scrutiny by the Trump administration.



The research relies on conducting interviews – in one case for $373 per Zoom call – to explore a researcher’s hypothesis of widespread discrimination.

For instance, one taxpayer-funded research grant studied “queer farmers quality of life in Pennsylvania,” federal records show, one of several grants of its kind.

The Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Projects – a federally funded research arm of the U.S. Department of Agriculture – paid $14,997 for the 2018 grant.

While this grant is relatively small, there are others, and critics argue the spending is a distraction from helping farmers and lowering food prices, which soared during the Biden administration alongside this kind of research funding.

The aforementioned 2018 queer farmers grant went to Pennsylvania State University for a project titled: “Sexuality and Sustainable Agriculture: Examining Queer Farmers’ Quality of Life in Pennsylvania.”

The grant proposal says the topic is “woefully understudied.”


“The deeply entrenched assumption of heteronormativity in farming has excluded queer farmers from full inclusion and benefits from agriculture, even within sustainable agriculture,” the grant’s proposal abstract said.


The graduate student who assisted with the project, Michaela Hoffelmeyer, presented the findings to the Rural Sociological Society Annual Meeting in Richmond, Virginia.

Her research highlighted some of the challenges faced by queer farmers, reporting that “findings suggest that transgender, non-binary, and women farmers faced additional hurdles” but create support networks to overcome those challenges.

Hoffelmeyer has since gone on to join the faculty at the University of Wisconsin, where she has become a voice in the media and public policy on LGBT issues.

Hoffelmeyer says on the university website that she applies “feminist, queer, and labor theories” in her research to “inform agricultural programming and policy on how to make shifts to support viability, well-being, and sustainability.”

The faculty advisor for Hoffelmeyer’s project, Penn State University Assistant Professor Kathleen Sexsmith, oversaw another taxpayer-funded project along the same lines.

Latinx Gender Identities

Sexsmith’s 2021-2024 grant for $14,923 was awarded during the Biden administration and was titled: “Farming as a Latinx: Analyzing how ethnic and gender identities shape Latino/a participation in sustainable agriculture in Pennsylvania.”

The grant proposal points to the shift from white farmer in the U.S. to Hispanic farmers because of immigration and takes a moment to consider Hispanic masculinity.

“How do rural Latin American masculinities become reproduced or reshaped in the U.S. as they establish themselves as sustainable farmers, and how does is it impact the ability of women and men to meet sustainable agriculture goals?” the grant’s proposal abstract reads.

The researcher conducted 40 interviews over Zoom, averaging about 45 minutes, putting the taxpayer cost at about $373 per Zoom call.

“Initially, the project aimed to interview farmers directly, but due to the difficulties in accessing this hard-to-reach population, the focus shifted to institutional perspectives,” the report said.

The researcher said in the final report that Hispanic farmers suffer from systemic discrimination.

Queer Farmers’ Relationships

Another $15,000 grant in the federal database is titled: “Gender, Sexuality, and Social Sustainability: Exploring Queer Farmers’ Relationships, Ethics, and Practices in the Midwest.”

That 2022 grant went to the University of Notre Dame in response to a grant proposal promising to develop “a more comprehensive understanding of queer farmers’ experiences.”

The proposal for that grant posited that “we still have much to learn about the specific ways that narratives which posit heterosexuality and cisgender identities as ‘normal’ continue to uphold hegemonic power dynamics within alternative agriculture.”

The research’s final report said “findings show that queer farmers often struggle to find safe, supportive work or learning opportunities as a result of how other farmers, customers, and community members perceive their gender or sexuality, and even though many queer farmers having family connections to farming, they struggle to secure access to land because their family’s agricultural or social values don’t align with theirs.”

The faculty advisors for all three projects did not respond to a request for comment or declined to comment to The Center Square.

President Donald Trump signed an executive order upon taking office banning federal funding for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion projects, initiating a purge within the federal government.

Since then, Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency have been combing through federal spending records, exposing controversial taxpayer-funded projects, many of which the Trump administration has since terminated.

Musk and the Trump administration have faced legal challenges to these cuts, but the administration’s cost-cutting momentum has been fueled by examples of all kinds of controversial federal spending, particularly on DEI and LGBT issues.

The USDA said in a news release in February that it had “begun a comprehensive review of contracts, personnel, and employee trainings and DEI programs.

“In many cases, programs funded by the Biden administration focused on DEI initiatives that are contrary to the values of millions of American taxpayers,” USDA added.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 12:40

Atlas Obscura
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This Octopus Is Using a Beer Bottle as a Nursery

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Suzuhiro Kamaboko Museum in Odawara, Japan

The Hill
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Congress must act to keep US weapons out of Israel — whether Trump likes it or not 
The opportunity to salvage our nation’s rule of law and commitment to human rights is there for every U.S. senator to take. For the good of our country and world, we must hope — and demand — they do.  

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John Boyega: 'Star Wars' 'most whitest, elite space'
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The Hill
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The Hill
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The Hill
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How Trump can succeed where his predecessors failed in Gaza
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The Hill
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Thune urging GOP colleagues to kill resolution to undo Trump tariffs
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The Hill
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DOGE staffer who resigned over past social media posts reinstated with higher access: Filing
A Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) staffer who resigned over racist posts that resurfaced on social media last month was reinstated to oversee the slashing of waste, fraud and abuse in March under the agency led by Elon Musk, according to court filings. Marko Elez, 25, allegedly relinquished access to sensitive systems being reviewed by...

The Hill
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Georgia legislature approves transgender athlete ban
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The Hill
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Judge rules Alabama can't prosecute people who help women travel for abortions
A federal judge ruled that Alabama cannot prosecute people or groups who help women travel out of state to get abortions.  "It is one thing for Alabama to outlaw by statute what happens in its own backyard," U.S. District Judge Myron Thompson wrote in a Monday ruling.  “It is another thing for the State to...

The Hill
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Factory activity slumps as manufacturers brace for Trump tariffs
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Body of fourth missing US soldier found in Lithuania
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Amazon's Spring Sale is over, but our favorite Nomad tech accessories are on a rare sale right now
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Our correspondent enters Khartoum just days after Sudan's army recaptured it from the Rapid Support Forces after a six-month offensive.

The Guardian (UK)
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‘It’s a tradition’: outrage in Venezuela as US deports makeup artist for religious tattoos
Andry José Hernández Romero sent to an El Salvador prison after claim ‘crown’ tattoos proved he was a gang memberFor as long as anyone can remember Andry José Hernández Romero was enthralled by the annual Three Kings Day celebrations for which his Venezuelan home town is famed, joining thousands of fellow Christians on the streets of Capacho to remember how the trio of wise men visited baby Jesus bearing gold, frankincense and myrrh.At age seven, Andry became a Mini King, as members of the town’s youth drama group Los Mini Reyes were known. Later in life, he tattooed two crowns on his wrists to memorialise those carnival-like Epiphany commemorations and his Catholic roots. Continue reading...

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Slashdot
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Credit card interest rates, which averaged 23% in 2023, are significantly higher than any other major loan product primarily due to non-diversifiable default risk and banks' market power, according to research published by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

The comprehensive study, which analyzed 330 million monthly credit card accounts, found that while high default losses contribute to elevated rates, they explain only part of the picture. Even high-FICO borrowers pay spreads exceeding 7% above the federal funds rate. Researchers determined that credit card banks have substantial pricing power, achieved through exceptionally high operating expenses -- about 4-5% of dollar balances annually -- with marketing costs ten times higher than those at other banks.

"Credit card charge-off rates are highly correlated with default rates on banks' other loans as well as on corporate bonds," the researchers said, noting that default risk cannot be diversified away across lending markets, particularly during economic downturns. The study estimated that exposure to aggregate default risk carries a premium of 5.3% per year, which fully explains the relationship between return on assets and credit scores.

Credit cards are ubiquitous in American finance, with 74% of adults owning at least one card, and the payment method accounting for 70% of retail spending. According to the research, 60% of accounts carry balances month-to-month.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Labour's populist pantomime over sentencing rules plays into the hands of the right | Janey Starling
Forcing the abandonment of commonsense, evidence-based guidelines is a new low for a party that once prided itself on justice reformA progressive sentencing guideline that was due to come into force today has been shot down in the crossfire of the culture wars. This is devastating news for people whose lives would have been changed by the guideline, such as pregnant women and mothers.The Sentencing Council’s updated “imposition of community and custodial sentences” guideline signalled a change in sentencing. It would have required magistrates and judges to consult a pre-sentence report before deciding whether to imprison someone of an ethnic or religious minority, alongside other groups including young adults, abuse survivors and mothers. It would have taken into account structural disparities in sentencing outcomes, such as the high risk of stillbirth that pregnant women face in prison and the damage caused by separating mothers from children. It would also have introduced measures to combat racism in courts. The UN has described our justice system as systemically racist, and a 2017 review conducted by the now minister David Lammy acknowledged its “racial bias”.Janey Starling is the co-director of gender justice campaign group Level UpDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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A sketch writers’ benefit? An April fool? Either way, big thanks to Mel and Kemi | John Crace
A press conference at Tory HQ at least had some entertainment value even if there was nothing of importance to sayThere was a time when you knew where you were with a press conference. You would go along on the assumption that the person or organisation who had called it had something important to say. Something that might approximate to news.But we live in ever more confusing days. So now we’ve reached the point where Kemi Badenoch and Mel Stride will do almost anything for attention. Where a press conference is just another excuse for a therapy session where they can unload their familiar grievances on to journalists. It’s the only way they can get anyone to listen. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘It’s horrible’: one month in, the Birmingham bin strike is causing a real stink
Locals are feeling the impact of the more than 17,000 tonnes of uncollected rubbish in the city’s streets “I’m afraid to open my front door, they’re everywhere,” said Mary Dore, eyeing the ground outside her house in Balsall Heath suspiciously. “They run out from under the cars when you get in, they’re going in the engines. They chewed through the cables in my son’s car, costing him god knows how much.“There’s one street I can’t walk my dog because they come running out of the grass and the piles of rubbish. One time I screamed.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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French ministers condemn threats to judges in Marine Le Pen case
Senior figures also reject claim verdict against Le Pen on embezzlement charges was ‘political and partisan’French ministers have condemned threats against the judges who convicted the far-right leader Marine Le Pen and banned her from public office for five years – threatening her 2027 presidential run – and rejected accusations the verdict was “political and partisan”.France’s prime minister, François Bayrou, told the Assemblée nationale the trial judges had his “unconditional support” after they found Le Pen guilty of embezzlement charges, throwing France into political chaos. Continue reading...

Techdirt
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The Lawless Evil Of Denying Due Process
The U.S. government just demonstrated exactly why due process matters. In what should be a shocking admission, the Trump administration revealed in court that it had made a bit of an oopsie (they call it an “administrative error”) — one that resulted in trafficking a Maryland father with protected legal status to a Salvadoran prison. […]

CNET News
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Nintendo Switch 2's Biggest Unknown Piece: The Weird Stuff
When it comes to whatever Nintendo might announce tomorrow, expect the unexpected.

CNET News
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ChatGPT's Image Generation Tool Is Now Free for Everybody
OpenAI has opened up the formerly paywalled feature, allowing anyone to create images using ChatGPT 4o technology.

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What Is Cellular Internet and Is It Worth the Hype?
Home internet users are turning away from wired connections like cable and fiber and choosing cellular internet. Here's why.

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Income Tax Rates Are on The Decline, If You Live in One of These States
You can expect a slight break in your state income taxes this year if you're living in the right place.

CNET News
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Payday-Style High-Stakes Heists Are Back in Den of Wolves
I'm excited for Den of Wolves after checking out the Payday series' spiritual successor at this year's GDC.

Mail Online
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Married GOP official's cringe response after being busted for following 60 OnlyFans models and dating accounts
A married Republican once accused of sexual harassment has been exposed for following nearly 100 OnlyFans, gambling and dating advice social media accounts.

Mail Online
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Queen Camilla beams as she mingles with Loose Women's Denise Welch and Janet Street-Porter at event marking SafeLives's 21st anniversary
The royal met with Jane Street-Porter and Denise Welch in Clarence House, London, at an event for domestic abuse survivors, frontline professionals, and supporters to mark the charity's 21st anniversary.

Sky News Home
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Water company 'should be prosecuted' for Lake Windermere sewage spills
Sewage was illegally poured into the Lake District's famous Lake Windermere for a record number of days last year, campaigners say, citing new analysis.

Sky News Home
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Car manufacturers fined £461m for collusion
Major car manufacturers and two trade bodies are to pay a total of £461m for "colluding to restrict competition" over vehicle recycling, UK and European regulators have announced.

Autosport F1
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How MotoGP could show the way on free tyre changes at red flags
When the first attempt at starting Sunday’s MotoGP Americas GP was red-flagged, and then restarted with everybody allowed to change to their ‘dry’ bikes, massive anger broke out in the Trackhouse Aprilia pit. Team principal Davide Brivio was incensed that his rider Ai Ogura – one of three to have already fitted slicks on the grid – would not get the reward for taking that ...Keep reading

Autosport F1
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Perez reveals when it became clear he was set to leave Red Bull F1
Sergio Perez has revealed the moment it became clear his Red Bull Racing exit was inevitable.After joining the team in 2021, following previous stints with Sauber, McLaren, Force India and Racing Point, Perez struggled to extract the same level of performance from the Red Bull cars as his world champion team-mate Max Verstappen in 2023 and 2024.Despite a disappointing level of performance ...Keep reading

Autosport F1
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Perez states conditions for F1 return as Cadillac confirm interest
Sergio Perez revealed he has been approached by some Formula 1 teams since leaving the championship at the end of the 2024 season - but he needs a project which motivates him.The six-time grand prix winner partnered Max Verstappen at Red Bull from 2021 to 2024, but a poor final season where Perez finished 285 points behind his world champion team-mate caused him to lose his seat.It left ...Keep reading

Chatham House
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US–Russia rapprochement: What is the end game?
US–Russia rapprochement: What is the end game?
10
April 2025 — 6:00PM TO 7:00PM
Anonymous (not verified)
27 March 2025

Chatham House and Online
Experts examine the American strategy towards Russia, implications for the war on Ukraine and China’s perspective on warming relations between the two countries.
Experts examine the implications of US-Russia relations for European Security and the war on Ukraine.
The second Trump administration has made ending the war in Ukraine and normalization of relations with Russia a top priority. US dialogue with Russian officials has, at a minimum, opened a path to a potential ceasefire and peace deal.However, Ukrainian and its supporters have expressed concerns over the terms for peace imposed on Kyiv. A deal has so far proved hard find. Has the idea of a ‘just peace’ been abandoned?Warming relations also challenges the dynamic of superpower relations between the US and China, particularly strategic competition between Washington and Beijing and the Russia-China alliance.This discussion will cover:What safeguards are needed to ensure that war does not return? Can a ‘Trump and Putin’ peace have durability…and even validity?How much, if anything at all, can Russia concede? And Ukraine?To what extent is Europe likely to re-engage economically and diplomatically with Russia after any conclusion to the war?How has the Trump administrations approach to Russia challenged its long-term relationships with Moscow?What does China stand to lose or gain with greater relations between the Russia and the US?By registering for this event, attendees agree to our code of conduct, ensuring a respectful, inclusive, and welcoming space for diverse perspectives and debate.

Chatham House
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South Africa can mitigate Trump’s ire through economic diplomacy and non-alignment
South Africa can mitigate Trump’s ire through economic diplomacy and non-alignment
Expert comment
thilton.drupal
1 April 2025

US tariffs could hurt the South African economy, but Pretoria is already leveraging its energy transition to attract support from the EU and other partners.















South Africa is under fire from the new US administration, which has cancelled aid and expelled its ambassador from Washington. But Pretoria’s instincts to engage across geopolitical divides mean that it could yet leverage the global energy transition to navigate a multipolar world to its advantage. Doing so will require it to align its political messaging with its economic diplomacy abroad and work with the private sector at home. The Trump administration’s hostility towards the South African government encompasses a mix of realpolitik, genuine concerns, factual revisionism, and deliberate misinterpretation that has put Pretoria on the back foot in its relations with one of its largest trading partners. Washington’s core frustrations are with fundamental elements of South African policy that are unlikely to change – most notably its genocide case against Israel at the ICJ and its advocacy for global governance reform, including playing a central role in BRICS. The Trump administration has also picked a fight with South Africa over its legislation on land reform and economic ownership transformation. Trump has offered to resettle white Afrikaner farmers in the US, who he claims are suffering racial discrimination, while Pretoria-born Elon Musk has repeatedly criticized the South African government and alleged it has ‘openly racist ownership laws’. South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa has strongly rejected these allegations, describing them as a ‘completely false narrative’ and ‘misinformation and distortions.’ The rift has also impacted South Africa’s current presidency of the G20, with the US boycotting a meeting of G20 foreign ministers last month. The US has been frustrated by South Africa’s use of international forums to exert its influence, and the new administration has particularly opposed Pretoria’s advocacy of BRICS.






Pretoria’s instincts to engage across geopolitical divides mean that it could yet leverage the global energy transition to navigate a multipolar world to its advantage.






Analysts in Johannesburg told me they now fear the US might seek to make an example of South Africa to demonstrate that American economic might cannot be replaced by BRICS partners. This has led to widespread concern amongst other African nations fearful of what a ‘with us or against us’ US approach to the continent might yield. While Ramaphosa has stated that South Africa ‘will not be bullied,’ his government will be keen to mitigate the impact of the potential loss of tariff-free trade access to the US under the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), which is up for renewal this year, or increased US pressure on NGO funders to cut their support. South Africa is reportedly preparing a bilateral trade deal to offer Trump that could offset some of the impact if the AGOA is not renewed. Economic diplomacy and energy transition Alongside seeking to mend relations with the US, Pretoria’s response has been focused on enhancing its relationship with multiple actors including China, Canada, the EU, UK and others.South Africa has a long history of non-alignment, rooted in the country’s ideological and political history, that can provide a strong basis for maintaining complex foreign relations with a range of actors, in line with its progressive political rhetoric. The current crisis could be the force needed to galvanize political will and government ability towards implementing an economic-focused foreign policy that has often been lacking in the past.


























Related content
South Africa’s G20 presidency is a chance for the West to engage with Global South priorities








South Africa’s multi-party unity government has recently come under significant strain over the delayed national budget, which has worried international investors. While coalition partners disagree on some key foreign policy issues, there is common ground on the need to promote the country’s national economic interest through maintaining economic relationships with a broad range of international partners. Unlike many countries, South Africa has a codified National Interest Framework, derived from the constitution, which formally sets out the country’s values. These values were lauded by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen during her participation at the EU-South Africa Summit on 13 March, where a package for €4.7 billion was committed to support South Africa’s Just Energy Transition, infrastructure, and vaccine production. The summit came after the US’s withdrawal from the Just Energy Transition Partnership with South Africa, which the agreement’s governing International Partner Group noted with regret. But with an influx of new funders including Canada, Spain, and Switzerland, the overall pledge stands at $12.8 billion, of which $2.5 billion has already been spent. South African concerns over the balance of debt to grants have been listened to, and the partner countries have increased their grant offer by 57 per cent since the initial pledge at COP26.



$12.8bn
pledged to South Africa’s Just Energy Transition Partnership by international partners.





In addition, China has pledged support for energy transition and has exported nearly 8GW of solar panels in 2023 and 2024. In another deal, UK GuarantCo and British International Investment committed a $100million default guarantee to support renewable provider Etana. These commitments to energy cooperation demonstrate the breadth of international support for South Africa, which could prove key in the face of US hostility. This support for South Africa has been enabled by important reforms to national policy, including the lifting of restrictions on Independent Power Producers and structural changes to the energy sector. Accessing international finance to support the restructure of national energy utility ESKOM has necessitated a plan for new renewable generation to replace an aging coal fleet that will create significant opportunities for investors. Domestic policies and coordination For South Africa to continue to attract international support, it should present a unified national objective rooted in economic interests. This requires domestic political and bureaucratic coordination, including engaging with commercial actors. In neighbouring Namibia, newly elected president Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah has streamlined her cabinet and strategically merged the ministry of international relations and cooperation with the ministry of trade. It is unlikely this will happen in South Africa due to the political compromises that underpin its coalition government, but Namibia’s case does provide a good model of improved cross-ministry coordination to promote commercial interests abroad.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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'Everyone should be excited' - England legend Edwards appointed women's head coach
Former England captain Charlotte Edwards replaces Jon Lewis as head coach after the 16-0 Ashes defeat at the beginning of the year.

Mail Online
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Confused families blast major UK theme park for announcing admission fees have been axed - before hinting it was an April Fool joke
One of Britain's biggest theme parks revealed its plans to remove admission fees today - but the April Fool's joke has confused families grappling with the cost of living crisis.

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Deep Reasoning is coming to ChatGPT free, but I think it’s still worth paying for ChatGPT Plus

TechRadar News
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Annoyed by YouTube autoplaying videos on Android? Sorry, it’s not a bug, it’s another experimental feature

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Two Nintendo Treehouse streams will air this week and feature hands-on gameplay of Switch 2 titles

TechRadar News
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Apple fined over €150 million in France for discriminatory consent practices surrounding its ATT framework

TechRadar News
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A key WordPress feature has been hijacked to show malicious code, spam images

Digital Trends
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RuneScape calls players back with a new survival co-op game
RuneScape: Dragonwilds is full of classic charm with a survival twist as players craft, gather, and most importantly, fight dragons.

Digital Trends
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JBL Flip 6 vs. Flip 7: discounts determine this fight
Though nearly indistinguishable at first glance, there's a clear winner between these great portable speakers.

Digital Trends
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iOS 18.4 unlocks three new features for Apple AirPods Max owners
Discover lossless audio, ultra-low latency, and wired playback on the 2025 Apple AirPods Max with iOS 18.4. Upgrade now!

Digital Trends
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Den of Wolves understands what made the Payday series special
Den of Wolves is taking the idea of Payday and reinventing it into something fierce. We went hands-on with 10 Chambers' new co-op shooter.

Digital Trends
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Get the best picture from your Hisense TV: Change these settings
Leaving TV settings as they are out of the box means the TV doesn't looks its best. Use these tweaks to maximize your Hisense TV's performance.

Digital Trends
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Rolex’s latest watch launch reminds me of an iPhone announcement
We investigate the very interesting parallels between the launch of the Rolex Land Dweller luxury watch, and how we're introduced to brand new mobile tech.

Digital Trends
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Beatlemania: Cast, release date revealed for Sam Mendes Beatles movies
Get ready for Beatlemania. Sony announced the cast and release date for Sam Mendes' The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Car industry hit with £78m in fines for withholding recycling information
BMW, Ford, JLR, Peugeot Citroen, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Renault, Toyota, Vauxhall and Volkswagen have all been fined.

UK Legislation
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The Local Authorities (Capital Finance and Accounting) (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2025
These Regulations amend the Local Authorities (Capital Finance and Accounting) (England) Regulations 2023 (S.I. 2003/3146) (the “2003 Regulations”).

The Aviationist
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Lockheed Martin Unveils Taiwan’s First Newly Built F-16 Block 70
Taiwan’s first new F-16, part of an order for 66 aircraft, was unveiled during a rollout ceremony at Lockheed Martin’s facilities. Lockheed Martin has unveiled Taiwan first newly built F-16 Block 70 during a rollout ceremony at the company’s facilities in Greenville, South Carolina, on Mar. 28, 2025. The aircraft, an F-16D with serial number […]
The post Lockheed Martin Unveils Taiwan’s First Newly Built F-16 Block 70 appeared first on The Aviationist.

The Verge
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The best Xbox controller to buy right now
We live in a golden age of controllers. The gamepads on the market now are of higher quality, more versatile, and more customizable than anything from even one console generation ago. If you play games on an Xbox Series X or Series S (or a Windows PC), you have the unenviable task of choosing between […]

The Verge
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Google’s Pixel 10 Pro Fold might be mostly a spec bump
You probably shouldn’t expect major changes to Google’s next Pixel foldable. Renders shared with Android Headlines by reliable leaker Onleaks show a Pixel 10 Pro Fold that looks very similar to its predecessor, potentially indicating that it could largely be just a spec bump. As shown in the renders, the Pixel 10 Pro Fold appears […]

Gizmodo
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Buried for Millennia, Scientists Coax 7,000-Year-Old Algae Back to Life
The revived organisms resumed their biological activities as if they hadn't been without oxygen and light for thousands of years.

Gizmodo
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This Retro Fujifilm Camera Pack Is Selling for Pennies, Amazon Clears Out Stock at a Ridiculously Low Price
For those looking to relive the nostalgia of the 80s and 90s, the Fujifilm QuickSnap Flash 400 disposable camera is the perfect throwback accessory.

Gizmodo
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Before He Hits Theaters, the Toxic Avenger Is Making a Gory Return to Comics
Toxie will star in Ahoy Comics' first ongoing series, simply titled The Toxic Avenger Comics, this July, ahead of Peter Dinklage's long-awaited Toxic Avenger movie.

Gizmodo
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Here’s Where Your Dog Is Most Likely to Catch Roundworms at the Park
Scientists have pinpointed the precise spot in parks where dogs are most likely to pick up the parasite.

Gizmodo
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Pam Bondi Recommends Death Penalty for Accused CEO Killer Luigi Mangione
The government will seek the harshest punishment in its prosecution of the accused executive killer.

Gizmodo
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This Mini Spy Camera Is Amazon’s Best-Seller, Now Available at a Price That’s Too Good to Pass Up
Regardless of your needs, this hidden camera can prove to be incredibly useful.

Russia Today News
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Russia-China relations pose no threat to other nations – Beijing

Mail Online
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Car finance ruling over 'secret' commission that could trigger thousands in compensation payments for motorists 'goes too far', watchdog tells Supreme Court
Moneylenders FirstRand Bank and Close Brothers are challenging a ruling that could see millions of motorists receiving money back because they weren't told dealerships would be paid commission.

Mail Online
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LIZ JONES: I've spotted a startling secret in Meghan's As Ever launch... and it speaks volumes about what's really going on
Meghan's brand is built on perfectionism, escapism. Now an influencer, any slights can easily be dismissed with an Instagram video featuring Gwyneth Paltrow and a shrug.

Mail Online
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Earthquake hits US sparking fears major volcano is about to erupt
An earthquake was detected just miles away from a major volcano in the US, sparking fears that the massive formation is set to erupt.

Mail Online
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Virginia Giuffre says she mistakenly posted claim that she has four days left to live to Instagram as she reveals new details of car crash
Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre has said she mistakenly posted the claim that she had just four days left to live to her public Instagram.

The Guardian (UK)
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What we’re reading: writers and readers on the books they enjoyed in March
Authors and Guardian readers discuss the titles they have read over the last month. Join the conversation in the commentsWhen HHhH by Laurent Binet came out in 2012, I was scared away by the impenetrable title. I still don’t like the title much because it gives no sense that this book is going to be so welcoming, playful and immersive. HHhH tells the true story of the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich – the high-ranking Nazi officer, “the butcher of Prague” – but it also describes Binet’s research on the subject, an obsession which verges on mania. The book makes a convincing case that Heydrich’s botched assassination was the single most significant event of the 20th century. (It also makes a convincing case that Binet is so deep into the subject matter that his opinion should not be entirely trusted.)Maurice and Maralyn by Sophie Elmhirst has just won the Nero book of the year prize so it really does not need my recommendation. Nevertheless, I recommend it! It jolts you awake from the very first page, telling a true and uniquely weird love story about a British couple whose boat is sunk by whale-strike while they are sailing around the world. Elmhirst finds moments of transcendence even as Maurice and Maralyn are beginning to starve and decompose, physically and mentally, while adrift in a leaky dinghy in the middle of the Pacific.The Penguin Book of the Prose Poem edited by Jeremy Noel-Tod is my favourite poetry anthology. The poems are presented in reverse chronological order so that the book starts with recent work from Anne Carson and Patricia Lockwood then steadily dives backwards through time: Eileen Myles to Allen Ginsberg to Gertrude Stein before finally ending in 1842 with Aloysius Bertrand writing beautiful prose poems before the term even existed. Every time I come back to this book I find new gems. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘I’m welling up thinking about it’: how a comedian used humour to beat trauma – and made it into a podcast
After Mark O’Sullivan’s My Sexual Abuse: The Sitcom helped him move past his childhood trauma, he’s launched a tearful, joyful new show – about creativity’s power to rebuild livesMark O’Sullivan is still buzzing from winning a Royal Television Society (RTS) award for his documentary, My Sexual Abuse: The Sitcom. “I’m grinning like a mid-party Michael Gove,” he chuckles. “It’s lovely for it to be recognised as an important and powerful piece. I just got a message from someone I knew years ago to say they’d seen the news about the award, watched the show and finally felt able to say they were also abused. That moved me to tears. Again!”Comedian and writer O’Sullivan – co-star of cult Channel 4 sitcom Lee & Dean and creator of ITV teen drama Tell Me Everything – is now launching the weekly podcast Making Lemonade. It explores the healing power of creating something positive out of negative experiences, after his own life was radically transformed by his deeply personal film, confronting the abuse he suffered as a child. When he was 12, O’Sullivan began to be sexually assaulted by a member of his extended family. He reported it to the police when he was in his 30s. The culprit was convicted, imprisoned and has since died. Last May’s Channel 4 documentary followed O’Sullivan’s attempt to make mirth from what he endured, by creating an 18-minute TV comedy about his experiences, which was available online on Channel 4. It made for audacious TV, by turns heartbreaking and darkly hilarious. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Twenty-three states sue Trump administration over decision to rescind billions in health funding – live
Lawsuit claims ‘sudden and reckless cuts violate federal law, jeopardize public health and will have devastating consequences’US voters are headed to the polls on Tuesday in Wisconsin and Florida in elections that some see as a test of Donald Trump’s popularity and the political clout of his billionaire ally Elon Musk.The most closely watched contest is a battle for a seat on Wisconsin’s seven-member supreme court. Conservatives are trying to flip ideological control of the court, which currently has a 4-3 liberal majority. The contest, which features liberal judge Susan Crawford facing off against conservative Brad Schimel, will have huge consequences in the state. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Motor finance compensation ruling ‘goes too far’, says City regulator
Financial Conduct Authority tells supreme court the £44bn bill could spook businesses and threaten UK investmentA court of appeal ruling that has left lenders fearing PPI-level compensation bills over the motor finance commission scandal “goes too far”, the City regulator said on Monday.The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) made the comments in a written submission to the supreme court on Tuesday, as part of a high-profile case being closely watched by the government. The Treasury, which tried but failed to intervene in the case, is concerned the standing decision could spook businesses and threaten investment in the UK. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Rebel Energy goes bust leaving 90,000 customers without supplier
UK energy firm ceases trading and leaves Ofgem to find new supplierA UK energy supplier with about 90,000 customers has gone bust blaming a “perfect storm” of surging wholesale prices and squeezed customers, on the day households face another increase in gas and electricity bills.Rebel Energy, which serves around 80,000 households and 10,000 business customers, will cease trading immediately and leave the industry regulator to find a new supplier for its customers. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Never take it for granted’: Chloe Kelly on being back with the Lionesses
Forward discusses life since her dramatic move from Manchester City to Arsenal and looks forward to the EurosAs Chloe Kelly arrives to speak to the nation’s media, her joy at being back with England is unmistakable. Sitting down with a relaxed grin, it would be easy to forget this was a player whose place with the Lionesses was under question a few weeks ago.The forward has many reasons to smile these days. Back in the England squad directly – she initially missed the last camp due to lack of playing time before receiving a late call due to an injury to Beth Mead – she made three starts for Arsenal across eight days at the end of last month. She played an integral role as they retained second place in the Women’s Super League and made a remarkable comeback against Real Madrid to reach the Champions League semi-finals. It is the kind of form that has reignited her chances of making the European Championships this summer. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘It’s horrible’: one month in, the Birmingham bin strike is causing a real stink
Locals are feeling the impact of the more than 17,000 tonnes of uncollected rubbish in the city’s streets “I’m afraid to open my front door, they’re everywhere,” said Mary Dore, considering the ground outside her house in Balsall Heath suspiciously. “They run out from under the cars when you get in, they’re going in the engines. They chewed through the cables in my son’s car, costing him god knows how much.“There’s one street I can’t walk my dog because they come running out of the grass and the piles of rubbish. One time I screamed.” Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Car firms fined for withholding recycling information
BMW, Ford, JLR, Peugeot Citroen, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Renault, Toyota, Vauxhall and Volkswagen have all been fined.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Car firms fined £78m for withholding recycling information
BMW, Ford, JLR, Peugeot Citroen, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Renault, Toyota, Vauxhall and Volkswagen have all been fined.

The Register
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Microsoft to mark five decades of Ctrl-Alt-Deleting the competition
Copilot told us that half a century is 25 years. It feels much longer Microsoft will officially hit the half-century mark on Friday as the Windows giant turns 50 years old. What do you consider the highs and lows of the company's journey to dominance?…

Russia Today News
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Le Pen conviction: How France’s courts keep sidelining the establishment’s political rivals

Mail Online
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Missing eight-year-old girl is found six months later living with a man who claims he has MARRIED her - after family saw video he posted of her reciting the Koran
The child vanished from her home in the semi-autonomous Puntland region last September, sparking deep concern among her family.

Mail Online
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ROBERT JOBSON: Prince Andrew accuser Virginia Giuffre's crash doesn't stack up - it raises real questions, and the consequences could be devastating
Virginia Giuffre, the woman whose sexual assault allegations helped sink Prince Andrew's royal standing, says on her socials that she is dying in a dramatic hospital bed post.

Mail Online
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Six teenage boys are arrested after schoolgirl, 15, is raped in a field
The 15-year-old girl was attacked close to the Roman wall and stream near Chichester between 7pm and 8.30pm on March 19.

Sky News Home
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Ten car manufacturers fined £78m in collusion case
Ten major car manufacturers and two trade bodies are to pay a total of almost £78m for "colluding to restrict competition" over vehicle recycling, a UK regulator has announced.

Sky News Home
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US prosecutors directed to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione - man accused of killing healthcare boss
Prosecutors are being urged to seek the death penalty for Luigi Mangione, the man accused of fatally shooting the chief executive of a major healthcare company last year.

The Guardian (UK)
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Ice blames ‘error’ for deportation of man with protected legal status
Official says Kilmer Armado Abrego-Garcia, who lived in Maryland with his wife and child, is in El Salvador prison due to ‘oversight’US politics live – latest updatesDonald Trump’s administration acknowledged on Monday in court documents that a Maryland man with protected status was deported to El Salvador and blamed an “administrative error”.The administration also said it is unable to bring him back because US courts lack jurisdiction now that he is in Salvadoran custody. Continue reading...

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Football Daily | Liverpool, inflexible sheep farmers and why a change can do you good
Sign up now! Sign up now! Sign up now? Sign up now!There is a story about a wise old man who lived, many years ago, high in the Indian mountains. Every day the man ate the same food, not just the same breakfast or the same lunch but the exact same thing for every single meal, every single day, like Mariah Carey. He ate only this one thing, and though the precise details have been lost in the mists of time that thing was mainly rice so it was already quite boring – not just for him, but also for the person whose job it was to prepare his meals. Eventually the cook confronted him. “Why do you always eat the same thing?” the cook asked. “Are you not as bored of eating it as I am of cooking it?” The old man shook his head. “It is not the same food,” he said. “How can I eat exactly the same thing twice? Every day is different.”I don’t really look at social media [abominations] or the media too much. Once I’m away from the pitch, I focus on enjoying myself and my family and friends, and I think that allows me to be at my best. It’s about having people around you that allow you to do that. Mine is also my dog [Brody]. When I come away from the pitch, I take the boys for a walk. They’re my little sons. That’s the way I look after myself and switch off” – Chloe Kelly tells Sophie Downey about how her family – and furry friend – help her cope with being in the spotlight now she’s back in the England fold.Re: Memory Lane (yesterday’s Football Daily, full email edition). I reckon it must be Chelsea v Blackburn at Stamford Bridge on 31 January 2007. Chelsea won 3-0. They used to attack in those days, before José became a cantankerous old git” – Mike Grant (and a few other amateur sleuths).May I suggest that could be Artur Jorge on the bench. I can’t find any evidence of Créteil, of whom he was then manager, having such a Blackburn-esque shirt although they do play in blue. FC Grenchen anyone? Do we care?” – Simon McMenamin.Through some detective work with my colleague Adam Thoroughgood, we think we have identified what match the still on the Nokia N73 is from. We initially thought the wording on the bench said Chelseafc.com and was a still from a potential game against Blackburn, however as this would be a kit colour clash we couldn’t find a game where both Chelsea and Blackburn wore their home shirts. From Googling on kit websites I found that Porto wore a Blackburn-style half-white/half-blue shirt in the 2001-02 season. This led us to think the wording on the bench was Uefa.com so would be from a European game. Wiki told us José Mourinho became Porto manager in January 2002, which then limited it to four potential Big Cup games. We didn’t think it looked like the Bernabéu or Sparta Prague benches, and through watching the Panathinaikos game on YouTube, José’s coat looked too rain sodden in that game for it to be that one. So it leads us to believe the image of the handsome, resplendent-coat-wearing José on the Nokia is from Porto 1-2 Real Madrid on 27 February 2002” – Michael Pilcher.You want us to identify a match from a blurry image on a near-20-year old phone? OK, go on then. The kit looks like Porto’s 2002 strip and I think it says Uefa.com at the back of the dugout so maybe a Big Cup match? I’m going to stick my neck out and say it’s Real Madrid v Porto on 19 February 2002. And the headless chap in the foreground is Carlos Secretário. Probably. The next mystery is why pick a four-year old photo to advertise a new phone” – Jon Gregory. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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You used to be close – but are you a ‘fringe friend’ now?
It’s not fun to realize you may be an ‘always welcome but never invited’ pal. But experts say it’s not all badWe’re hiding behind a dining table, waiting for the birthday girl to arrive.The door creaks open. “Surprise!” we shout. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Where I’m from, you don’t get to be up yourself’: what ex-Derry Girl Saoirse-Monica Jackson did next
As she reveals her tougher side in a Liverpool gangland drama, and fearfully prepares to tread the boards in New York, the actor talks about body image, big hair and the blind faith that has always driven herSaoirse-Monica Jackson has done some dramas where everyone was quite sober and all her jokes fell flat. But This City Is Ours was different, not least because of the number of Scousers on set, the Derry Girls star explains. “It wasn’t, like, so serious,” she says. “We had craic off-camera.” However, while it was fun to make the buzzy new BBC crime drama (the female cast members named themselves the Muffia) the end result isn’t fun – although it is gripping. Featuring betrayals, love and a lot of violence, the show stars Sean Bean as a Liverpool drugs boss, while Jackson plays Cheryl Crawford, the wife of one of his underlings.Cheryl is on the periphery, though her voice-of-experience warnings ring loud. “There’s nothing good about our men,” she tells Diana, the partner of a senior gang member. Jackson has lived in Liverpool for a couple of years now – which helped with the accent – and it was a treat to be back in her own bed at the end of a day’s filming. A lot of hair extensions helped with the look. “It was so heavy, so hot, to be under it every day,” she says with a laugh. “Our amazing hair and makeup designer, Adele Firth, really wanted to get the picture across of some girls in Liverpool – they take such pride in themselves. Every occasion is an occasion to really get dolled up.” Jackson found herself intrigued by Cheryl. “I think if, like her, you grow up around these types of people, or they’re adjacent to your family, that can blur the danger for you.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Russia says it cannot accept US peace plan for Ukraine ‘in its current form’
Moscow’s refusal highlights the limited progress Donald Trump has made on his promise to end the warMoscow has described the latest US peace proposals as unacceptable to the Kremlin, highlighting the limited progress Donald Trump has made on his promise to end the war in Ukraine since taking office in January.Sergei Ryabkov, a foreign policy adviser to Vladimir Putin, said some of Russia’s key demands were being addressed by the US proposals to end the war, in comments that marked a rare acknowledgment from the Russian side that talks with the US over Ukraine had stalled in recent weeks. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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EU has a ‘strong plan’ to retaliate on Trump tariffs, says von der Leyen
Head of European Commission says bloc would prefer to negotiate but all countermeasures are on the tableThe European Union has a “strong plan” to retaliate against tariffs imposed by Donald Trump but would prefer to negotiate, the head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, has said.Trump, who has upended eight decades of certainties about the transatlantic relationship since taking office, has threatened tariffs on goods from around the world from Wednesday. His administration in March put tariffs on imported steel and aluminium and said higher duties on cars would come into effect on Thursday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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US prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione
Mangione, 26, accused of carrying out ‘premeditated assassination’ of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian ThompsonFederal prosecutors are seeking the death penalty against the man accused of fatally shooting UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson outside a Manhattan hotel on 4 December, the US attorney general, Pam Bondi, said on Tuesday.Bondi said she ordered prosecutors to seek execution for Luigi Mangione, 26, because – as she put it – he carried out “a premeditated, cold-blooded assassination that shocked America”. Continue reading...

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
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#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (Update)
We have found a potential fault leading up to the site and we are investigating with our suppliers.

Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 03:38

Update: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 19:00

Edited: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 17:05

Status: Outage

Maintenance: None

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Why are bills going up? Your questions answered
Bills, bins, and benefits - the BBC's cost of living correspondent Kevin Peachy answers your questions on bill rises.

UK Government News
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Almost two million people on Universal Credit not supported to look for work
Number of people receiving the highest level of support across UC and other benefits increasing 50% since the start of the pandemic, rising above projections.

UK Government News
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Secretary of State letter to the First Minister of Wales
The Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, Liz Kendall, has written to the First Minister of Wales regarding welfare reform and its impact in Wales.

Wired Top Stories
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The CDC Has Been Gutted
Thousands of CDC employees who worked on things like preventing HIV and lead poisoning have been told they were subject to a reduction in force. Experts say people will die.

Wired Top Stories
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Nomad Sale: 5 Great Deals on Our Favorite Accessories
From Apple accessories to wireless chargers, some of our favorite Nomad gear is 15 percent off right now.

Boing Boing
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CDC buries report on effectiveness of measles vaccine
It looks like brain worms may have burrowed into the grey matter at the Centers for Disease Control. According to a report from ProPublica, CDC bosses told the organization's staff to bury a report that draws a line between being unvaccinated against measles and—AND—get ready for it: contracting measles. — Read the rest
The post CDC buries report on effectiveness of measles vaccine appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Gilead is here: Karoline Leavitt thinks every day is a holy war
God saved Trump, prayer meetings before press conferences, and a certainty that THE LORD is on their side are just a few of the ideas keeping the notoriously dishonest Karoline Leavitt fighting Democracy.
In an interview with the Christian Broadcasting Network, Convicted Felon #47's mouthpiece, Karoline Leavitt, described the "spiritual warfare" she is engaged in. — Read the rest
The post Gilead is here: Karoline Leavitt thinks every day is a holy war appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Sen. Cassidy slips — asks how MAGA is going to 'cut Medicare' (video)
Oops, Sen. Bill Cassidy slipped today, wondering how MAGA was going to "cut Medicare" before he realized with a grimace that he was thinking out loud.
"Well let's look at Medicare," the Louisiana lawmaker said on NBC's Squawk Box this morning. — Read the rest
The post Sen. Cassidy slips — asks how MAGA is going to 'cut Medicare' (video) appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Republican rep learns the hard way Congress isn't built for newborn mothers
Congressperson Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) quit the House "Freedom" Caucus when they refused to support allowing recent mothers to vote by proxy.
During the pandemic, Congresspeople were allowed to vote by proxy for a host of reasons. When a Florida delegate to the US House of Representatives expected her colleagues to extend that courtesy to the mothers of newborn children, Anna Paulina Luna found her House Freedom Caucus brethren pretty un-brotherly. — Read the rest
The post Republican rep learns the hard way Congress isn't built for newborn mothers appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Former AmeriHealth director sues HBO's John Oliver over Medicaid segment (video)
Dr. Brian Morley, former medical director of AmeriHealth Caritas, is taking Last Week Tonight host John Oliver to court. In his complaint, Morley claims Oliver twisted his words on TV, making him sound like he's cool with Medicaid patients marinating in their own feces. — Read the rest
The post Former AmeriHealth director sues HBO's John Oliver over Medicaid segment (video) appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Death penalty sought for CEO assassination — Justice Department labels killing 'political violence'
The U.S. Department of Justice will pursue capital punishment in the high-profile murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
Attorney General Pam Bondi announced Tuesday that federal prosecutors would seek the death penalty against Luigi Mangione, the 26-year-old University of Pennsylvania graduate accused of gunning down Thompson outside Manhattan's Hilton Hotel last December. — Read the rest
The post Death penalty sought for CEO assassination — Justice Department labels killing 'political violence' appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Let PDF Converter Pro convert you into a PDF fan for life for just $24
TL;DR: Stop struggling with PDF files with this lifetime license to PDF Converter Pro; now, $76 off the usual price and just $23.99 with code SAVE20 before April 27. 
Nothing in life is certain except death and taxes… and PDFs. — Read the rest
The post Let PDF Converter Pro convert you into a PDF fan for life for just $24 appeared first on Boing Boing.

BBC UK News
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Six injured in huge industrial estate fire
Two of the casualties are understood to have serious burns as fire crews tackle the blaze in Cumbernauld.

BBC UK News
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Harry charity engulfed by cash fears, insiders claim
Financial worries and fundraising rows inflamed boardroom battle that engulfed Sentebale, insiders claim.

Mail Online
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The vitamin that can put a stop to agonising night-time leg cramps: Ask the GP DR MARTIN SCURR
My wife is woken up two to three times a night by painful cramp in her legs and toes. She drinks tonic water and she's tried a spray. Is there anything else that might help?

Mail Online
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A drone keeps buzzing over my garden - is it breaking the law by snooping on me? DEAN DUNHAM
A drone has been buzzing over my garden and I'm sure it's snooping which makes me furious. What are my rights?

Mail Online
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Children's clown is beaten and burned alive by mob after he's accused of groping a young girl
Cayetano San Juan, known as El Payaso Soldadín or The Clown Soldier to his fans, was reportedly surrounded by a furious mob in Tuxtepec, Oaxaca, Mexico last week and beaten unconscious.

Sky News Home
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VAT on private school fees has had 'damaging effect' on children, court hears
Several private schools, as well as some pupils and their parents, have launched a legal challenge over the government imposing VAT on private schools.

Sky News Home
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Ten car manufacturers fined £78m in collusion case
Ten major car manufacturers and two trade bodies are to pay a total of almost £78m in fines for breaking competition law, a UK regulator has announced.

ZeroHedge News
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Trump Dials Back Putin Criticism, Renews Attacks On Zelensky For Stalling Minerals Deal
Trump Dials Back Putin Criticism, Renews Attacks On Zelensky For Stalling Minerals Deal

It was only on Sunday that President Trump declared he's "very angry" at Russian President Putin, statements which featured the threat of secondary tariffs on Moscow, but now the US leader is already dialing back this criticism, Bloomberg observes.

Instead he's once again focused his ire on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, warning of "big problems" if he doesn't sign the controversial minerals agreement and tries to renegotiate. 

"I see he’s trying to back out of the rare earth deal. And if he does that, he’s got some problems. Big, big problems," Trump earlier told reporters aboard Air Force One. "We made a deal on rare earth and now he’s saying, ‘well, you know, I want to renegotiate the deal.’"
AFP/Getty Images

"He wants to be a member of NATO. Well, he was never going to be a member of NATO. He understands that. So if he’s looking to renegotiate the deal, he’s got big problems," Trump said.

Zelensky has signaled that Ukraine is positive about the deal but has complained that its conditions are "constantly changing".

Trump has still kept up some pressure on Putin, however, saying Monday of the Russian leader, "I want to make sure that he follows through, and I think he will." He continued in Monday remarks from the Oval, "I don’t want to go secondary tariffs on his oil, but I think, you know, something I would do if I thought he wasn’t doing the job."

All of the weekend criticisms of Putin appeared to arise from the Russian president's comments late last week declaring that Zelensky's 'illegitimacy' could be fixed by a UN transition process guiding Ukraine to new elections. Only then would Moscow negotiate an end the war, Putin stipulated.

"He’s supposed to be making a deal with him, whether you like him or don’t like him," Trump told reporters Sunday, referring to Putin. "So I wasn’t happy with that. But I think he’s going to be good."

But again, he reserved blunter criticism for US ally Zelensky: "I heard that they’re now saying, well, I’ll only do that deal if we get into NATO or something to that effect," Trump had said.

Bloomberg has concluded the following of this latest back-and-forth:


The result is a geopolitical whiplash on the eve of Trump’s global tariff announcement on April 2 and shows US impatience with the process of securing a temporary truce between Russia and Ukraine more than three years after Putin’s invasion of its neighbor. 

Trump had vowed he would end the war within 24 hours of taking office but has found Russia to be a tough negotiator and able to wrest concessions from the US by exploiting Trump’s desire to get a deal done quickly. On Sunday, Trump told NBC he was “pissed off” at Putin. 


Of course, this is also due to Russian forces rolling up several villages and towns on the battlefield in Ukraine's east and south just this week alone. Putin has less incentive for a hasty deal, and is in the driver's seat - but surely the White House knows this, which is perhaps why the pressure is ramping up on Zelensky once again.

As for the apparently ever-changing draft minerals deal, Ukraine and its supporters have continued to charge that it's tantamount to a big resource grab by Washington.

Ukraine received its latest version of a new draft of the text on Friday, its foreign ministry stated. CNN writes that "The new proposal for a natural resources agreement, of which CNN has obtained a copy, was put forward by the US Treasury Department and goes well beyond the initial draft, particularly on future US rights and reimbursement for past assistance."



Some independent geopolitical observers have said the deal effectively imposes 'indentured servitude' on Ukraine. "This 'deal' is pure extortion and robbery. It would bind Ukraine indefinitely. It would also discourage any investment in any natural deposits in Ukraine. There is no chance that any such deal will be ratified by the Ukrainian parliament," Moon of Alabama writes.

The source then questions, "one wonders then: Why does the Trump administration even bother?"

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 10:00

ZeroHedge News
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JOLTs Job Openings Drop Despite Odd Jump In Federal Openings; Hires Hit 5 Month High
JOLTs Job Openings Drop Despite Odd Jump In Federal Openings; Hires Hit 5 Month High

One month after we got a "goldilocks" JOLTS report which showed an unexpected increase in job openings, hires and quits, moments ago the BLS reported that the US labor market reverted to its deteriorating trendline in February when the US had 7.568 million job openings, a drop from the 7.762 million in January (revised from 7.740 million), down 877,000 from a year ago, and below the 7.655 million estimate.



According  to the BLS, the most notable monthly change was the drop in job openings decreased in finance and insurance (-80K), although as shown in the table below, there were also sizable declines in job openings in trade/transportation/utilities (down 163K), in Private education/health (down 33K) and leisure and hospitality (down 61K). These were partially offset by a 134K increase in professional/business service job openings.



Yet, as always, there is a reason to doubt this particular set of numbers - just as there was reason to doubt every set of numbers from Biden - because according to the February JOLTS report, the number of Federal Government job openings was essentially flat both sequentially and YoY.

In  the context of the broader jobs report, in February the number of job openings was 516K more than the number of unemployed workers (which the BLS reported was 7.052 million), down from 913K the previous month, and one of the lowest differentials since the covid crash. 



Still, as noted previously, until this number turns negative, the US labor market is not demand constrained, and a recession has never started in a period when there were more job openings than unemployed workers.



Said otherwise, in January the number of job openings to unemployed rose modestly to 1.1, the highest since last May if on the low end of the pre-covid range in 2018-2019.



While the job openings data was a drop, miss and reversal of last month's surprise increase, what softened the blow is that the number of hires unexpectedly rose to 5.396 million from 5.371 million, the highest since last October, and hardly screaming collapse in the labor market. Meanwhile, after surging in January, the number of workers quitting their jobs - a sign of confidence in finding a better paying job elsewhere - dropped slightly to 3.195 million from 3.256 million.



How to make sense of this modest drop in the labor market?

It's possible that after surprising the market last month when we saw one of the a sizable increase in the number of job openings, Trump got the tap on the shoulder that the US market should probably continue shrinking slowly but surely, if his plan is to (still) blame Biden for any imminent recession, and so he sent a memo to the BLS to make sure that the numbers aren't in freefall, but dropping more gradually. 

Then again, with markets now focused almost exclusively on the global trade wars which they are convinced (at least for now) will be far more negative for the US than anyone else, no amount of pig lipstick on hard data will offset the fact that the global trade war has become the Elephant Bear in the china shop, and until there is some clarity on that front expect most if not all rallies continue to be sold.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 10:41

ZeroHedge News
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"Someone Will Be Arrested": Elon Musk's DOGE Finds Massive Social Security Fraud Scheme 
"Someone Will Be Arrested": Elon Musk's DOGE Finds Massive Social Security Fraud Scheme 

One day after Elon Musk and Antonio Gracias—founder and CEO of the Chicago-based investment firm Valor Equity Partners, and now a DOGE official—unveiled a "mind-blowing" chart showing a surge in Social Security numbers issued to illegal aliens over the Biden-Harris administration's first term during an America PAC town hall in Wisconsin on Sunday, Musk's America PAC hosted an online tele-town hall with Wisconsin voters on Monday night, where he provided more color on the SSN fraud. 

During the tele-town hall, one Wisconsin voter asked Musk: "You found a lot of fraud in Social Security. Do you know whether the Attorney General will investigate and prosecute that fraud?"

Musk responded: "I believe someone is going to be arrested tomorrow, because there's someone who actually stole 400,000 Social Security numbers and personal information from the Social Security database… And was selling Social Security numbers and all the identification information in order for people to basically steal money from Social Security."

"This is a particular avenue of fraud for illegal immigrants and voter fraud - because the main way identification is established in the US is via Social Security. If you comprise the Social Security system, you can basically get people to get defacto registered to vote - even if they're not citizens - and get a bunch of benefits and to milk the system - this is pretty insane," Musk said. 


Elon Musk: “I believe someone is going to be arrested tomorrow, because there's someone who actually stole 400,000 Social Security numbers and personal information from the Social Security database… And was selling Social Security numbers and all the identification information… pic.twitter.com/cq2kyAVtTL
— America (@america) April 1, 2025
On Sunday, Musk and Gracias showed the audience of a town hall a chart titled "New Non-Citizen Social Security Numbers Issued" ... 



Then again, Democrats are against DOGE's efforts to find waste and fraud at Social Security. Wonder why?



American citizens deserve full transparency, accountability, and swift reforms to ensure this kind of fraud is never repeated and used to game elections and drain resources of citizens by illegals. 

Also, handing out stolen SNNs is a national security threat and can end up in the hands of bad actors, such as members of transnational gangs or terrorist networks.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 11:10

ZeroHedge News
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Bitcoin Could Reduce Dominance Of US Dollar, BlackRock's Larry Fink Warns
Bitcoin Could Reduce Dominance Of US Dollar, BlackRock's Larry Fink Warns

Authored by Christopher Tepedino via CoinTelegraph.com,

The US dollar could lose its status as the world’s reserve currency to Bitcoin or other digital assets if the United States does not get its debt under control, according to BlackRock CEO Larry Fink.



Fink wrote in his Annual Chairman’s Letter to Investors that “decentralized finance is an extraordinary innovation” that makes “markets faster, cheaper, and more transparent.”

"To be clear, I'm obviously not anti-digital assets (far from it)," Fink states, but “that same innovation could undermine America’s economic advantage if investors begin seeing Bitcoin as a safer bet than the dollar.”


"The U.S. has benefited from the dollar serving as the world’s reserve currency for decades. But that’s not guaranteed to last forever.

...

If the U.S. doesn’t get its debt under control, if deficits keep ballooning, America risks losing that position to digital assets like Bitcoin."


According to Trading Economics, the US debt equaled 122.3% of the country’s gross domestic product in 2023. That is a considerably higher percentage than the 105% observed in 2018. Moody’s Ratings retains the US’s AAA credit rating but has downgraded its outlook to negative, indicating a possible future rating downgrade.



The US’s Joint Economic Committee wrote that as of March 5, the country’s gross national debt was $36.2 trillion, growing $1.8 trillion, or roughly $4.9 billion per day, over the past year and $12.8 trillion in the past five years. The Bipartisan Policy Center warned this month that the US could default on its debt as early as July 2025.

Bitcoin has been branded as a safe haven for investors who are looking to avoid the perils of fiat currency, including inflation. Some believe that the end of the debt ceiling suspension could lead to a Bitcoin price boom. Others think, as Fink has stated, that the dangers of the national debt could increase Bitcoin adoption.

In 2025, cryptocurrency has gained prominence as an asset class due to adoption by countries such as the US and companies like Strategy. However, some argue that stablecoins could, in fact, increase the dominance of the US dollar.

Fink: Tokenization is democratization

In the letter, Fink says that “tokenization is democratization” with the technological innovation “enabling instant buying, selling, and transferring without cumbersome paperwork or waiting periods.”

If every asset ends up being tokenized, Fink said, “it will revolutionize investing. Markets wouldn’t need to close. Transactions that currently take days would clear in seconds. And billions of dollars currently immobilized by settlement delays could be reinvested immediately back into the economy, generating more growth.”

What exactly is tokenization? 

It's turning real-world assets - stocks, bonds, real estate - into digital tokens tradable online. Each token certifies your ownership of a specific asset, much like a digital deed. Unlike traditional paper certificates, these tokens live securely on a blockchain, enabling instant buying, selling, and transferring without cumbersome paperwork or waiting periods.

Tokenization democratizes access, shareholder voting, and yield, Fink wrote.


It can democratize access. Tokenization allows for fractional ownership. That means assets could be sliced into infinitely small pieces. This lowers one of the barriers to investing in valuable, previously inaccessible assets like private real estate and private equity.

It can democratize shareholder voting. When you own a stock, you have a right to vote on the company’s shareholder proposals. Tokenization makes that easier because your ownership and voting rights are digitally tracked, allowing you to vote seamlessly and securely from anywhere.

It can democratize yield. Some investments produce much higher returns than others, but only big investors can get into them. One reason? Friction. Legal, operational, bureaucratic. Tokenization strips that away, allowing more people access to potentially higher returns.


According to RWA.xyz, the tokenized real-world assets market amounts to $19.6 billion. There are currently around 93,000 asset holders, with 174 issuers. Industry projections indicate that the market could reach $4 trillion to $30 trillion by 2030.

BlackRock’s own BUIDL real-world tokenized asset fund is currently the largest such fund available for trading, with Tether Gold and Franklin Templeton’s BENJI funds coming in second and third place, respectively.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 11:30

Ian Visits
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The London Buzz – 1st April 2025
Today's London news round-up:Read more ›

Atlas Obscura
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Benjamin Franklin Museum and Court in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

The Hill
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O'Reilly: 'Democrats will win the midterms' if 'economy is wobbly,' prices high
Conservative commentator Bill O'Reilly predicts Democrats will have success in the 2026 midterm elections if President Trump does not do more to improve the economy. "He’s running an enormous risk," O'Reilly said of Trump during an appearance on Leland Vittert's NewsNation program. "Far more than people know. Because this time next year, April Fools Day...

The Hill
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Judge temporarily blocks Trump from ending deportation protections for Venezuelans: 'Smacks of racism'
A federal judge has paused the Trump administration’s plans to lift protections from deportation for more than 600,000 Venezuelans, writing that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s decision to do so “smacks of racism.” The swift effort to rescind protections for Venezuelans, as well as the Trump administration's rhetoric on the issue, featured heavily in the...

The Hill
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Jon Stewart on Trump 'methods' to stay in White House: 'Think you tried one a few years ago'
Comedian Jon Stewart waded into the conversation around a possible third term for President Trump and other methods he could use to circumvent constitutional limits, saying he believes Trump has already "tried one" in the past. Stewart, referencing Trump's recent interview with NBC News’s Kristen Welker, seemingly agreed with the president's comments about there being...

The Hill
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Watch live: Democrats to call out layoffs at Social Security Administration
Democrats in both chambers of Congress are railing against executive actions from the Trump administration that target social programs such as Social Security and Medicaid. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (N.Y.) — who has been under scrutiny for his decision last month to advance a GOP-backed continuing resolution to keep the government open — will...

The Hill
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Democrats sue over Trump election overhaul order
The Democratic National Committee (DNC), aligned groups and party leaders filed a lawsuit on Monday over President Trump's March executive order, which would overhaul elections. Trump's order would require states to obtain proof of citizenship from individuals when they register to vote, strike late-arriving absentee or mail-in ballots from the total tally in federal elections...

The Hill
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Trump makes history by pardoning a corporation
Companies involved in financial crimes don’t have to worry about accountability under this president, as least when it comes to crypto, for reasons that he has no incentive to ever make known.

The Hill
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More Americans see permanent Gaza ceasefire as priority: Survey
More Americans now see a permanent ceasefire in Gaza as a priority, according to a new The Associated Press-NORC Research Center poll. When asked about the level of importance of negotiating a permanent ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, 59 percent in the poll said it is “extremely important” or “very important” that the U.S. do...

The Hill
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EPA chief closing environmental museum
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin said Monday that he is shutting down a museum in the EPA's headquarters in an effort to cut costs. “EPA will be saving American taxpayers $18 MILLION in annual lease costs by moving staff out of the 323,000 square feet of space we occupy in the Ronald Reagan...

The Hill
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Live updates: GOP fight over Luna proxy voting plan intensifies; special elections pose key test
The battle among House Republicans over whether to allow proxy voting for new parents is set to come to a head on Tuesday. The Rules Committee advanced a procedural rule to set up that vote on Tuesday as GOP leaders play hardball in trying to defeat the proposal being pushed by Rep. Anna Paulina Luna...

The Hill
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Senate Democrats call for special counsel to investigate Signal leak
More than 30 Senate Democrats have called on Attorney General Pam Bondi to appoint a special counsel to investigate the Houthi Signal chat scandal, as the White House insists the case is closed on how a journalist was looped into high-level military discussions. “In addition to the reckless inclusion of a journalist in the chat,...

The Hill
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Democrats bash GOP over gambit to sink proxy voting: ‘Outrageous’
House Democrats are going after Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) over the Republican leadership effort to sink legislation allowing proxy voting for lawmakers on parental leave, even after the bill won the support of the majority of the lower chamber. Johnson and his leadership team are attempting to kill the bill on Tuesday by concocting a...

The Hill
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Kid Rock on White House visit with Bill Maher to meet Trump: 'It could not have been better'
Kid Rock is describing a meeting between President Trump and Bill Maher at the White House as a mind-blowing success, saying his aim in coordinating the get-together between the political adversaries was to model "a little more civility in this country." "It could not have been better," the "All Summer Long" singer said Tuesday in a "Fox...

The Hill
Open 
HHS begins layoffs in 'painful' reorganization
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has initiated the layoffs that will impact roughly 10,000 of its employees as part of the reorganization announced last week, with staffers receiving emails Tuesday morning of their dismissal. Sources within the agency told The Associated Press at least four directors of the 27 institutes in the...

The Hill
Open 
Tim Walz's daughter says she's ditching grad school over lack of support for protesters
The daughter of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D) announced on TikTok she is ditching graduate school due to what she says is a lack of support for the right to protest at higher education institutions. "I applied for one school. I kind of had my heart set on it. I am not going to...

The Hill
Open 
Bondi instructs prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione
Attorney General Pam Bondi Tuesday instructed prosecutors to seek the death penalty for Luigi Mangione, who stands accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson late last year.  “Luigi Mangione’s murder of Brian Thompson — an innocent man and father of two young children — was a premeditated, cold-blooded assassination that shocked America,” Bondi said in...

Mail Online
Open 
John Bishop calls out 'aggressive' hecklers at his Torquay show before security remove them from venue
Comedian John Bishop called out two audience members at his comedy show over alleged 'aggressive' behaviour before the venue security team removed them.

Mail Online
Open 
What is the 10-20-30 method, the viral exercise hack proven to help you get fit for summer?
As the weather starts heating up, many of us ramp up our exercise routines. But with so many viral exercise 'hacks' on TikTok , however, it can be tough to know where to start.

Mail Online
Open 
British husband who vanished during Benidorm stag do is FOUND after family flew out to find him
Jason Taylor, 36, vanished as he waited for a flight back to Birmingham on Saturday morning.

Mail Online
Open 
Grandfather dubbed the 'Bird Man of Hartlepool' who buys 30 loaves of bread everyday to feed wildlife is fined - as 'killjoy council' blame him for town's vermin problem
Brian Wilkins, 76, received a Community Protection Order after councillors complained about him scattering bread around Hartlepool, County Durham.

Mail Online
Open 
Queen Camilla visits The King's Gallery to support elephant charity founded by her late brother
The 77-year-old took to the famous London gallery, home to one of the world's largest art collections, to view the 'Green Man Humpty Dumpty Egg'.

Mail Online
Open 
Tesco app and website goes DOWN: Hundreds of customers unable to order groceries online as supermarket suffers 'technical issue'
The supermarket said its IT teams were working to fix the issue, which began just before 10am on Tuesday morning.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain goes bonkers for Dubai chocolate: Shoppers fight to be first in line for Lidl 'dupe' before causing chaos in aisles and 'arguing with staff' - as Waitrose bans customers from buying more than two bars
Angelina Perello Javar, an influencer from west London , revealed she headed to her local Lidl at 7.30am only to find a queue outside.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
UK finalising Chagos deal with Mauritius, says No 10
Government sources have indicated that the agreement will not need further approval from the US.

ZDNet News
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The 30+ best Amazon Spring Sale deals under $25 still available
Last chance to hop on Amazon's Spring Sale with deals under $25 on Apple AirTags, Anker accessories, Soundcore earbuds, and more, up to half off.

ZDNet News
Open 
I spent hours testing Samsung's new flagship soundbar - it gave my Sonos a run for its money
The new Samsung HW-Q990F home entertainment system features a soundbar, external sub, and two rear speakers. It's packed with features and booming sound, perfect for Samsung TVs.

ZDNet News
Open 
Finally, a Bluetooth speaker that rivals my Bose SoundLink Max - and it much more affordable
After a four-year hiatus, JBL returns with the Charge 6, delivering key upgrades in portability, sound quality, and software features.

ZDNet News
Open 
Amazon's Big Spring Sale 2025 is over: Here's everything you need to know
Amazon's Big Spring Sale 2025 is over. Here's everything you need to know about the seasonal sale.

ZDNet News
Open 
Google's doing something weird with the Pixel 9a battery - but it might be for the best
Google is rolling out a new 'battery health assistance' feature - and you don't have the option to turn it off. Here's why.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 25+ best Amazon Spring Sale robot vacuum deals still available
The Amazon Big Spring Sale may be over, but many robot vacuums from brands like iRobot, Eufy, and more are still on sale.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 35+ best Amazon Spring Sale Apple deals still live: iPhones, Apple Watches, iPads, and more
Amazon's Big Spring Sale is over, but there are still great deals on Apple products, including MacBooks, iPhones, headphones, and accessories -- especially at other retailers.

ZDNet News
Open 
I tested the world's first thermal phone camera with a 50Hz refresh rate, and here are the results
The Xinfrared One XH09 transforms your Android or iPhone into a professional-grade thermal camera, featuring a 2x to 15x zoom and an IP65 rating for durability.

Mail Online
Open 
Coleen Rooney reveals what she and husband Wayne get up to when they jump into bed as she gives rare interview on life since he came home after Plymouth Argyle sacking
In a rare interview with MailOnline, the WAG, 38, shared what life has been like since Wayne, 39, came home after he was sacked from Plymouth Argyle.

Mail Online
Open 
My girlfriend thought I was cheating after she saw a girls' name pop up on my phone - so I had to confess my secret hobby
Luke, from Lichfield, Staffordshire, first began experimenting with cross-dressing when he was in secondary school after feeling 'jealous' of his fellow female pupils.

Mail Online
Open 
Kerry Katona showcases her two-stone weight loss in a black bikini as she soaks up the sun in Thailand
Kerry Katona showed off her two-stone weight loss in a bikini as she soaked-up the sun on a beach during her holiday to Thailand on Tuesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's tariff deal under threat as US intervenes in free speech row: State department 'monitors' case of pro-life campaigner arrested after silent protest outside abortion clinic
Pro-life campaigner Livia Tossici-Bolt was on trial at Poole Magistrates' Court last month accused of breaching the Public Spaces Protection Order in March 2023 with the verdict set for Friday.

Sky News Home
Open 
Payouts for departing civil servants capped at £95,000
The most senior and long-serving civil servants could be offered a maximum of £95,000 to quit their jobs as part of a government efficiency drive.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The invertebrate of the year competition is here. Who will you vote for? – video
Invertebrates may be the unsung heroes of the planet but they have received a lot of love and recognition from Guardian readers. A dazzling array of nominations have flown in for insects, arachnids, snails, crustaceans, corals and many more obscure creatures for our invertebrate of the year competition. Natural history reporter Patrick Barkham reviews this year’s shortlist of 10Vote for the beast that may be as ruthlessly predatory as us – the fen raft spider Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Two near lifesize sculptures found during excavations of Pompeii tomb
The detailed relics were found in a necropolis and experts believe the woman depicted could have been an important priestessTwo almost lifesize sculptures of a man and woman, who was believed to have been a priestess, have been found during the excavations of a huge tomb in the ancient Roman city of Pompeii.The detailed funerary relics adorned the tomb containing several burial niches built into a wide wall in the necropolis of Porta Sarno, one of the main entrance gates into the ancient city. Pompeii was destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD79. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Cory Booker holds marathon Senate speech to warn of Trump’s ‘harmful’ policies
Democratic New Jersey senator’s address saying ‘our nation is in crisis’ passed the 12-hour mark on Tuesday morningUS politics live – latest updatesCory Booker, the Democratic US senator from New Jersey, has embarked on a marathon overnight speech on the Senate floor to warn of what he called the “grave and urgent” danger that Donald Trump’s presidential administration poses to democracy and the American people.Booker began his speech at 7pm on Monday night and passed the 12-hour mark with barely a break in speaking at 7am Tuesday. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Howe urges Newcastle to switch focus and seal Champions League return
Home form ‘scratchy’ as Brentford visit on WednesdayFabian Schär set to sign a new contract ‘imminently’Eddie Howe has challenged his Newcastle players to prove they are not merely a cup team by overcoming their sometimes self-destructive inconsistency and qualifying for the Champions League.Howe’s side have always been capable of beating anyone on their day – highlighted as they overcame Liverpool at Wembley to lift the Carabao Cup last month – but their capacity for off days threatens the club’s ambition of the top-five finish that would almost certainly secure admission to Europe’s showpiece competition. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Charlotte Edwards ‘relishing winning trophies’ as England’s new head coach
Former captain lifted five Ashes and won two World CupsPredecessor Lewis was sacked after 16-0 Ashes drubbingCharlotte Edwards has been named as the new England women’s head coach, nine years after she played her last international match.The former England captain had put her hat in the ring in February, when changes were expected following a disastrous tour of Australia last winter in which England lost the Ashes 16-0 with barely a whimper. Following a review, both head coach Jon Lewis and captain Heather Knight were sacked by the ECB. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Do not play’ lists: why every party needs one – or you’re bound to upset the guests
It could be that you really dislike a song, or perhaps the person who sings it. Either way, your DJ needs to knowName: “Do not play” lists.Age: It’s probably been a thing for pretty much as long as playlists have been a thing, but it’s now more officially a thing because there was just a New York Times article about them. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump’s top lawyer directs prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione, suspect in healthcare CEO killing – live
US attorney general Pam Bondi says she has told prosecutors to seek death penalty for man accused of killing Brian Thompson outside New York hotelUS voters are headed to the polls on Tuesday in Wisconsin and Florida in elections that some see as a test of Donald Trump’s popularity and the political clout of his billionaire ally Elon Musk.The most closely watched contest is a battle for a seat on Wisconsin’s seven-member supreme court. Conservatives are trying to flip ideological control of the court, which currently has a 4-3 liberal majority. The contest, which features liberal judge Susan Crawford facing off against conservative Brad Schimel, will have huge consequences in the state. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
French ministers condemn threats to judges in Marine Le Pen case
Senior figures also reject claim verdict against Le Pen on embezzlement charges was ‘political and partisan’ Europe live – latest updatesFrench ministers have condemned threats against the judges who convicted the far-right leader Marine Le Pen and banned her from public office for five years – threatening her 2027 presidential bid – and rejected accusations the verdict was “political and partisan”.France’s prime minister, François Bayrou, told the Assemblée nationale the trial judges had his “unconditional support” after they found Le Pen guilty of embezzlement charges, throwing France into political chaos. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Lawyers attack ‘dangerous’ decision to halt Sentencing Council guidelines
Society of Black Lawyers calls decision to block pre-sentencing reports ‘deliberate step backwards’UK politics live – latest updatesShabana Mahmood’s intervention to halt new guidelines on sentencing is “dangerous” and a “deliberate step backwards”, according to senior legal figures and prison campaigners.The Society of Black Lawyers said guidelines from the Sentencing Council, which were suspended after an intervention by the justice secretary, were an attempt to achieve “equal treatment” after “racist two-tier policing for 500 years”.At risk of first custodial sentence and/or at risk of a custodial sentence of 2 years or less (after taking into account any reduction for guilty plea).A young adult (typically 18-25 years.Female.From an ethnic minority, cultural minority, and/or faith minority community.Pregnant or postnatal.Sole or primary carer for dependent relatives.” Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
US prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione in CEO murder case
The 26-year-old is accused of shooting dead healthcare CEO Brian Thompson outside a Manhattan hotel.

Mail Online
Open 
Britain's tariff deal under threat as US intervenes in free speech row over pro-life campaigner, 64, arrested after silent protest outside abortion clinic
Pro-life campaigner Livia Tossici-Bolt was on trial at Poole Magistrates' Court last month accused of breaching the Public Spaces Protection Order in March 2023 with the verdict set for Friday.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
US prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione over CEO shooting
The 26-year-old is accused of shooting dead healthcare CEO Brian Thompson outside a Manhattan hotel.

Slashdot
Open 
Gmail is Making It Easier For Businesses To Send Encrypted Emails To Anyone
Google is rolling out a new encryption model for Gmail that allows enterprise users to send encrypted messages without requiring recipients to use custom software or exchange encryption certificates. The feature, launching in beta today, initially supports encrypted emails within the same organization, with plans to expand to all Gmail inboxes "in the coming weeks" and third-party email providers "later this year."

Unlike Gmail's current S/MIME-based encryption, the new system lets users simply toggle "additional encryption" in the email draft window. Non-Gmail recipients will receive a link to access messages through a guest Google Workspace account, while Gmail users will see automatically decrypted emails in their inbox.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Slashdot
Open 
London Mayor Axes Cyber Crime Victim Support Line
London's mayor has axed a cyber crime helpline for the victims of online abuse, triggering a backlash from campaigners who argue that women and girls will be left struggling to access vital support. From a report: The service, which was shut down on Tuesday, assisted victims of fraud, revenge porn and cyberstalking to protect their digital identity. During its 18-months of operation it led to 2,060 cases being opened. The helpline was launched in 2023 as a one-year pilot scheme with $220,000 in funding from the Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime (Mopac), and was later extended by six months.

Conservative London Assembly member Emma Best said an informal evaluation showed the helpline "was working" and was going to be extended for another year. However, Sadiq Khan said that the scheme would be closed. "It was a pilot and pilots are what they say on the tinâ... we will receive an end of project report, we have collected the data and the results of that report will inform our future work," he said, speaking at Mayor's Question Time.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC UK News
Open 
Paramedics treat six people after huge industrial fire
Six fire engines are sent to the fire in Cumbernauld where a building is "well alight".

Mail Online
Open 
Can you guess the Coronation Street legend from his soap debut a whopping 42 years ago?
Four decades on, viewers still tune in religiously to catch his latest dramatic plotlines, including a recent health revelation, and have now been shocked to discover footage of him from a different era.

Mail Online
Open 
What Man United really thought of Brandon Williams: How club legends and bosses took to - and fell-out with - young star who now faces two years in prison for dangerous driving
Williams, 24, pleaded guilty to dangerous driving last week after crashing his car at 99mph 'with a balloon in his mouth' while accompanied by a young woman in August 2023.

Mail Online
Open 
Home Alone star Macaulay Culkin reveals why he has not talked to his father in 30 years
Macaulay's parents split up in the 1990s, triggering an explosive custody battle over their lucrative son, who ultimately went to court to have their names removed from his trust fund.

Mail Online
Open 
Knifeman tackled by hero Brit in Amsterdam 'had terrorist intent' and 'likely would have stabbed more victims if not for brave tourist's intervention'
Thursday's knife rampage sparked panic in the the Dutch capital after a 30-year-old from Donetsk, in eastern Ukraine , carried out a seemingly random knifing attack  around the streets of Dam Square.

Sky News Home
Open 
What we know about Luigi Mangione, the man charged with murdering healthcare boss
Luigi Mangione could face the death penalty over the killing of UnitedHealthcare boss Brian Thompson.

Sky News Home
Open 
US prosecutors directed to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione - man accused of killing healthcare boss
Prosecutors are being urged to seek the death penalty for Luigi Mangione, the man accused of fatally shooting the chief executive of a major company in New York in December.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The invertebrate of the year compeition is here. Who will you vote for? – video
Invertebrates may be the unsung heroes of the planet but they have received a lot of love and recognition from Guardian readers. A dazzling array of nominations have flown in for insects, arachnids, snails, crustaceans, corals and many more obscure creatures for our invertebrate of the year competition. Natural history reporter Patrick Barkham reviews this year’s shortlist of 10Vote for the beast that may be as ruthlessly predatory as us – the fen raft spider Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘We feel the pain but there is also joy’: the healing power of diasporic connection
The Legacies of Enslavement programme aims to atone for the Guardian’s past while highlighting the lasting impact of transatlantic slaveryIllustrations by Ngadi SmartSalvador, Bahia, Brazil. In capoeira – an art form whose origins were carried across the Black Atlantic by enslaved people, but which developed and grew into a cultural form of resistance in Brazil – we sometimes wish each other axé (pronounced “ah-shay”). In doing so, we would be bestowing on our interlocutor life force, vitality or just positive energy in the capoeira roda (circle where capoeira is played) or in life.The term is also used in Candomblé and Umbanda, syncretic afro-Brazilian religions with African roots. For me it also symbolises the ability to harness ancestral knowledge and energy to enrich the jogo (game of capoeira), embodying and paying tribute to those who kept the art form alive.If you would like to get in touch with the Legacies of Enslavement team, please email [email protected] Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
US prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione
The 26-year-old is accused of shooting dead healthcare CEO Brian Thompson outside a Manhattan hotel.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
April bill rises will hit single parents hardest, Citizens Advice warns
A series of household bills, including water, energy and council tax, increase on Tuesday.

Mail Online
Open 
Luigi Mangione faces ULTIMATE punishment for 'murdering' health CEO Brian Thompson, AG Pam Bondi says
Luigi Mangione will face the death penalty if convicted of murdering UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, Attorney General Pam Bondi pledged on Tuesday.

Mail Online
Open 
England enjoys sunniest March on record thanks to long...
England enjoyed its sunniest March on record last month, along with its sixth driest, as persistent high pressure brought long spells of clear weather.

Mail Online
Open 
Beyoncé's top parenting rule when it comes to raising her three children
Beyoncé's mother Tina Knowles has opened up about the sweet way the pop superstar makes sure to prioritize her children .

Sky News Home
Open 
Step to legally prevent new 'two-tier' sentencing guidelines begins today, justice secretary says
A bill to legally prevent new sentencing guidelines on how ethnic minority criminals should be punished will be introduced today, the justice secretary said.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Investigation into UK's statistics agency after criticism of its data
The Office for National Statistics is under review after criticism about the reliability of its data.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
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#9252 Broadband (xDSL) - Partial Exchange Outage - MRMAC (Macclesfield) (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 02:20

Update: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 09:00

Clear: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 08:50

Edited: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 16:10

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Autosport F1
Open 
Why Red Bull can’t solve its second F1 car problem with a simple paint job
The saga surrounding Yuki Tsunoda’s promotion and Liam Lawson’s demotion to Racing Bulls is thus: for years now, around and through Max Verstappen’s four world titles, Red Bull has been a one-car Formula 1 squad.Since Daniel Ricciardo’s exit from the peak of his F1 career in 2018, Pierre Gasly, Alex Albon, Sergio Perez and now Lawson have tried and failed to cope with driving a car ...Keep reading

Mac Rumours
Open 
Mac Studio Buyer's Guide: All Models Compared
Apple has now refreshed the Mac Studio twice since its introduction in 2022, so should you upgrade your unit and is an older model still worth buying?





The new ‌Mac Studio‌'s main upgrade is its chip, moving from the M2 Max and ‌M2‌ Ultra to the M4 Max and M3 Ultra. Compared to its predecessor, the new ‌Mac Studio‌ is up to 75% faster with 2x faster graphics. It also now features up to 512GB of memory of 16GB of storage, as well as Thunderbolt 5 connectivity.



See the breakdown below for each new feature, change, and improvement that was added with the latest ‌Mac Studio‌ compared to its predecessors:







‌Mac Studio‌ (2022)

‌Mac Studio‌ (2023)

‌Mac Studio‌ (2025)





Apple M1 Max or M1 Ultra chip

Apple ‌M2‌ Max or ‌M2‌ Ultra chip

Apple M4 Max or M3 Ultra chip





M1 Max: 10-core CPU (8 performance cores, 2 efficiency cores)

M1 Ultra: 20-core CPU (16 performance cores, 4 efficiency cores)



M2 Max: 12-core CPU (8 performance cores, 4 efficiency cores)

M2 Ultra: 24-core CPU (16 performance cores, 8 efficiency cores)



M4 Max: Up to 16-core CPU (12 performance cores, 4 efficiency cores)

M3 Ultra: Up to 32-core CPU (24 performance cores, 8 efficiency cores)







M1 Max: Up to 32-core GPU

M1 Ultra: Up to 64-core GPU

M2 Max: Up to 38-core GPU

M2 Ultra: Up to 76-core GPU

M4 Max: Up to 40-core GPU

M3 Ultra: Up to 80-core GPU









Hardware-accelerated ray tracing









AV1 decode





M1 Max: 16-core Neural Engine (11 TOPS)

M1 Ultra: 32-core Neural Engine (22 TOPS)



M2 Max: 16-core Neural Engine (15.8 TOPS)

M2 Ultra: 32-core Neural Engine (31.6 TOPS)



M4 Max: 16-core Neural Engine (38 TOPS)

M3 Ultra: 32-core Neural Engine (76 TOPS)







M1 Max: Video decode engine

M1 Ultra: Two video decode engines

M2 Max: Video decode engine

M2 Ultra: Two video decode engines

M4 Max: Video decode engine

M3 Ultra: Two video decode engines





M1 Max: Two video encode engines

M1 Ultra: Four video encode engines

M2 Max: Two video encode engines

M2 Ultra: Four video encode engines

M4 Max: Two video encode engines

M3 Ultra: Four video encode engines





M1 Max: Two ProRes encode and decode engines

M1 Ultra: Four ProRes encode and decode engines

M2 Max: Two ProRes encode and decode engines

M2 Ultra: Four ProRes encode and decode engines

M4 Max: Two ProRes encode and decode engines

M3 Ultra: Four ProRes encode and decode engines





M1 Max: 32GB or 64GB memory

M1 Ultra: 64GB or 128GB memory

M2 Max: 32GB, 64GB, or 96GB memory

M2 Ultra: 64GB, 128GB, or 192GB memory

M4 Max: 36GB, 48GB, 64GB, 128GB memory

M3 Ultra: 96GB, 256GB, or 512GB memory





M1 Max: 400GB/s memory bandwidth

M1 Ultra: 800GB/s memory bandwidth

M2 Max: 400GB/s memory bandwidth

M2 Ultra: 800GB/s memory bandwidth

M4 Max: Up to 546GB/s memory bandwidth

M3 Ultra: 819GB/s memory bandwidth





512GB, 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, or 8TB SSD storage

M2 Max: 512GB, 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, or 8TB SSD storage

M2 Ultra: 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, or 8TB SSD storage

M4 Max: 512GB, 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, or 8TB SSD storage

M3 Ultra: 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, 8TB, or 16TB SSD storage





M1 Max: Four Thunderbolt 4 ports and two USB-C ports

M1 Ultra: Six Thunderbolt 4 ports

M2 Max: Four Thunderbolt 4 ports and two USB-C ports

M2 Ultra: Six Thunderbolt 4 ports

M4 Max: Four Thunderbolt 5 ports and two USB-C ports

M3 Ultra: Six Thunderbolt 5 ports





HDMI 2.0 port

HDMI 2.1 port

HDMI 2.1 port





Support for up to four Pro Display XDRs and one 4K display

Support for up to eight 4K displays, six 6K displays, or three 8K displays

Support for up to eight 4K displays, eight 6K displays or four 8K displays





3.5mm headphone jack

3.5mm headphone jack with advanced support for high-impedance headphones

3.5mm headphone jack with advanced support for high-impedance headphones





802.11ax Wi‑Fi 6

802.11ax Wi‑Fi 6E

802.11ax Wi‑Fi 6E





Bluetooth 5.0

Bluetooth 5.3

Bluetooth 5.3







Released March 2022

Released June 2023

Released March 2025









Only those 2022 ‌Mac Studio‌ users who consistently push their machines to the limit with tasks like 3D rendering, video editing in high resolutions, machine learning workflows, or large-scale software development should consider upgrading to the 2025 model. The 2025 ‌Mac Studio‌ introduces a considerable leap in performance, particularly with the M4 Max and M3 Ultra chips, offering substantially better GPU performance, more powerful GPUs with hardware-accelerated ray tracing, a significantly faster Neural Engine, and support for up to 512GB of memory and Thunderbolt 5. These improvements dramatically improve workflows that demand extreme parallel processing, faster memory access, or broader external display setups. If your current 2022 ‌Mac Studio‌ ever feels like a bottleneck, or if you are preparing to work with increasingly complex projects over the next few years, the upgrade is likely to be worth it. However, for users whose workloads remain well within the capabilities of the ‌M1 Max‌ or ‌M1 Ultra‌, especially those focused on less GPU-intensive tasks, the gains may not justify the cost at this time.



Upgrading from the 2023 ‌Mac Studio‌ to the 2025 model is likely to be worth it for far fewer users, simply because the performance gains, while significant on paper, will make less of a real-world difference for most professionals already using the ‌M2‌ Max or ‌M2‌ Ultra chip because the 2023 model is still exceptionally capable. However, there are a few edge cases where the upgrade may be justified—particularly for users working with local large language models or intensive AI workloads, where the vastly improved Neural Engine in the M4 Max or M3 Ultra can offer major benefits. Similarly, users who rely on extremely high memory capacity or bandwidth, or those building systems around Thunderbolt 5 and AV1 decode support, might see tangible improvements that justify the cost. Still, for the vast majority of users, especially those in video production, app development, or general pro workflows, the 2023 ‌Mac Studio‌ remains more than sufficient for the foreseeable future, making the 2025 upgrade more of a luxury than a necessity.



The 2022 and 2023 ‌Mac Studio‌ models are still very much worth buying, especially if found refurbished or second-hand at a good price. Both models offer excellent performance that remains highly competitive even in 2025, with the ‌M1 Ultra‌ and ‌M2‌ Ultra still delivering substantial CPU and GPU power, high memory bandwidth, and dedicated media engines that easily handle demanding tasks like video editing, music production, 3D rendering, and software development. While they lack newer features like Thunderbolt 5, hardware-accelerated ray tracing, or the enhanced Neural Engine performance found in the 2025 models, those are largely beneficial only to users with very specific, future-facing workloads. For most professionals and power users, especially those upgrading from Intel Macs or base M1 systems, the 2022 and 2023 models remain an outstanding value—and often represent the best balance between performance and cost when purchased refurbished or pre-owned.Related Roundup: Mac StudioBuyer's Guide: Mac Studio (Buy Now)Related Forum: Mac StudioThis article, 'Mac Studio Buyer's Guide: All Models Compared' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

BBC World News
Open 
US prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione
Mr Thompson was shot dead outside a hotel in New York on 4 December. Police arrested Mr Mangione, 26, weeks later in Pennsylvania after a nationwide manhunt.

Chatham House
Open 
Members’ question time: Hope and expectations – can Syria govern itself?
Members’ question time: Hope and expectations – can Syria govern itself?
30
April 2025 — 2:00PM TO 2:45PM
Anonymous (not verified)
1 April 2025

Online
Join us Dr Haid Haid examines how Syria is emerging from civil war and what it’s future holds.
Join us as Dr Haid Haid, who will examine how Syria is emerging from civil war and what it’s future holds.
Three months into Ahmed al-Sharaa’s leadership, the de-facto leader of Syria, the country’s future feels more uncertain than ever. Al-Sharaa has tried to move quickly in reshaping Syria’s future. However, critics claim the transition has been rushed with too much power is concentrated in his hands. The heavy presence of HTS members in government has only deepened fears that the new leadership is not as inclusive as it claims.Economically, the country is still mired in difficulty as it looks to emerge from years of civil war. Hopes for stability and recovery are fading as living conditions worsen.Despite the end of the civil war, security has not been established across the country. A recent rebellion in Latakia and rising violence across the country are fuelling concerns that Syria could spiral back into unrest.Without real economic progress, stronger security, and a government that represents all Syrians, the country risks repeating the cycles of instability it has fought so hard to escape.Join Dr Haid Haid, Consulting Fellow, Middle East and North Africa Programme at Chatham House, who will lead an overview of the latest developments in Syria.Submit your questions to the experts in advance of the event. Your questions drive the conversation.The institute occupies a position of respect and trust, and is committed to fostering inclusive dialogue at all events. Event attendees are expected to uphold this by adhering to our code of conduct.

Mail Online
Open 
I tried all-inclusive for the first time at luxury Turkey clifftop hotel for a bargain price - and I'll never go back to self-catering
Chris Mooney checks in to the adult-only TUI Blue Seno hotel, which is 'carved into the rockface of the Turquoise Coast in Turkey'.

Mail Online
Open 
PM braces for Trump to drop the bomb: Starmer admits UK WON'T be spared tariffs as Chancellor warns of huge hit to stalling economy - with fears Labour needs more tax hikes
Keir Starmer has acknowledged the 'likelihood' that Britain will face hugely damaging levies on exports to the US on the president's so-called 'Liberation Day'.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment raging female passenger screams at cabin crew on 'nightmare' flight where she 'tried to force open door at 30,000ft'
Budget airline JetStar said in a statement on Tuesday that flight JQ-34 had to return Denpasar airport in Bali after a 'disruptive passenger attempted to open one of the aircraft doors'.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
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Inside ICE Air: Flight Attendants on Deportation Planes Say Disaster Is “Only a Matter of Time”
by McKenzie Funk




ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.











The deportation flight was in the air over Mexico when chaos erupted in the back of the plane, the flight attendant recalled. A little girl had collapsed. She had a high fever and was taking ragged, frantic breaths.

The flight attendant, a young woman who went by the nickname Lala, said she grabbed the plane’s emergency oxygen bottle and rushed past rows of migrants chained at the wrists and ankles to reach the girl and her parents.

By then, Lala was accustomed to the hard realities of working charter flights for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. She’d learned to obey instructions not to look the passengers in the eyes, not to greet them or ask about their well-being. But until the girl collapsed, Lala had managed to escape an emergency.

Lala worked for Global Crossing Airlines, the dominant player in the loose network of deportation contractors known as ICE Air. GlobalX, as the charter company is also called, is lately in the news. Two weeks ago, it helped the Trump administration fly hundreds of Venezuelans to El Salvador despite a federal court order blocking the deportations, triggering a showdown that experts fear could become a full-blown constitutional crisis.

In interviews with ProPublica, Lala and six other current and former GlobalX flight attendants provided a window into a part of the deportation process that is rarely seen and little understood. For migrants who have spent months or years trying to reach this country and live here, it is the last act, the final bit of America they may experience.











An ICE detainee waves from inside a bus that transported passengers to the airport before departing from Seattle’s Boeing Field on a GlobalX deportation flight in February.

(Emily Schultz)









All but one of the flight attendants requested anonymity or asked that only a nickname be used, fearing retribution or black marks as they looked for new jobs in an insular industry.

Because ICE, GlobalX and other charter carriers did not respond to questions after being provided with detailed lists of this story’s findings, the flight attendants’ individual accounts are hard to verify. But their stories are consistent with one another. They are also generally consistent with what has been said about ICE Air in legal filings, news accounts, academic research and publicly released copies of the ICE Air Operations Handbook.

That morning over Mexico, Lala said, the girl’s oxygen saturation level was 70% — perilously low compared with a healthy person’s 95% or higher. Her temperature was 102.3 degrees. The flight had a nurse on contract who worked alongside its security guards. But beyond giving the girl Tylenol, the nurse left the situation in Lala’s hands, she recalled.



Lala broke the rule about talking to detainees. The parents told Lala their daughter had a history of asthma. The mom, who Lala said had epilepsy, seemed on the verge of her own medical crisis.

Lala placed the oxygen mask on the girl’s face. The nurse removed her socks to keep her from further overheating. Lala counted down the minutes, praying for the girl to keep breathing.


The stories shared by ICE Air flight attendants paint a different picture of deportations from the one presented to the public, especially under President Donald Trump. On social media, the White House has depicted a military operation carried out with ruthless efficiency, using Air Force C-17s, ICE agents in tactical vests and soldiers in camo.

The reality is that 85% of the administration’s “removal” flights — 254 flights as of March 21, according to the advocacy group Witness at the Border — have been on charter planes. Military flights have now all but ceased. While there are ICE officers and hired security guards on the charters, the crew members on board are civilians, ordinary people swept up in something most didn’t knowingly sign up for.

When the flight attendants joined GlobalX, it was a startup with big plans. It sold investors and new hires alike on a vision of VIP clients, including musicians and sports teams, and luxury destinations, especially in the Caribbean. “You can’t beat the eXperience,” read a company tagline.











A GlobalX post on Facebook recruiting flight attendants in March. Alexandria, Louisiana, is a hub for ICE Air.

(Screenshot by ProPublica. Redacted by ProPublica.)









But as the airline grew, more and more of its planes were filled with migrants in chains. Some flight attendants were livid about it.

Last year, an anonymous GlobalX employee sent an all-caps, all-staff screed that ricocheted around the startup. “WHERE IS THE COMPANY GOING?” the email asked. “YOU SIGNED A 5 YEAR CONTRACT WITH ICE? ... WHAT HAPPENED TO THIS BECOMING A PRESTIGE CHARTER AIRLINE?”

One flight attendant said he kept waiting for the sports teams his new bosses had talked about as he flew deportation routes. “You know, the NFL charters, the NBA charters, whatever the hockey one is …” he said.

A second said his planes’ air conditioning kept breaking — an experience consistent with at least two publicly reported onboard incidents — and their lavatories kept breaking, something another flight attendant reported as well. But the planes kept flying. “They made us flush with water bottles,” he said.

But the flight attendants were most concerned about their inability to treat their passengers humanely — and to keep them safe. (In 2021, an ICE spokesperson told the publication Capital & Main that the agency “follows best practices when it comes to the security, safety and welfare of the individuals returned to their countries of origin.”)

They worried about what would happen in an emergency. Could they really get over a hundred chained passengers off the plane in time?

“They never taught us anything regarding the immigration flights,” one said. “They didn’t tell us these people were going to be shackled, wrists to fucking ankles.”

“We have never gotten a clear answer on what we do in an ICE Air evacuation,” another said. “They will not give us an answer.”

“It’s only a matter of time,” a third said, before a deportation flight ends in disaster.


Lala didn’t think she had a chance at a flight attendant job. She hadn’t, in truth, remembered applying to GlobalX until a recruiter called to say the startup was coming to her city. “But I guess I did apply through LinkedIn?” she said. She’d been working an office job — long hours, little flexibility — and was looking for something new.

The job interviews were held at a resort hotel. The room was packed with dozens of aspirants when Lala showed up. After the first round, only about 20 were asked to stay. She couldn’t believe she was one of them. After the second round came a job offer: $26 an hour plus a daily expense allowance. Soon Lala got a uniform: a blue cardigan, a white polo shirt and an eye-catching scarf in cyan and light green.

For part of her Federal Aviation Administration-mandated four-week training, her class stayed in a motel with a pool at the edge of Miami International Airport. Just across the street, on the fourth floor of a concrete-clad office building ringed by palm trees, was GlobalX’s headquarters.

“In the beginning, we were told that because it’s a charter, it’s only gonna be elites, celebrities,” Lala said. “Everybody was really excited.”

But flying was not going to be all glitz. The real reason for having flight attendants is safety. GlobalX was certified by the FAA as a Part 121 scheduled air carrier, the same as United or Delta, and it and its crew members were subject to the same strict standards.

“We’re there to evacuate you,” one recruit told ProPublica. “Yes, we make good drinks, but we evacuate you.”

Lala’s class practiced water landings in the pool at the nearby Pan Am Flight Academy. They practiced door drills — yelling out commands, shoving open heavy exit doors — in a replica Airbus A320 cabin. They learned CPR and how to put out fires. They took written and physical tests, and if they didn’t score at least 90%, they had to retake them.

They were reminded, over and over, that their job was a vocation, one with a professional code: No matter who the passengers were, flight attendants were in charge of the cabin, responsible for safety in the air.

Lala’s official “airman” certificate arrived from the FAA a few weeks after training was done. She was cleared to fly, ready to see the world.

But what she would see wasn’t what she signed up for. The company was growing beyond glamorous charters. GlobalX was moving into the deportation business.

Her bosses delivered the news casually, she recalled: “It was like, ‘Oh yeah, we got a government contract.’”


The new graduates were offered a single posting: Harlingen, Texas. Deportation flights were five days a week, sometimes late into the night. Lala went to Guatemala, Honduras, Colombia and, for refueling, Panama.

A standard flight had more than a dozen private security guards — contractors working for the firm Akima — along with a single ICE officer, two nurses, and a hundred or more detainees. (Akima did not respond to a request for comment.) The guards were in charge of delivering food and water to the detainees and taking them to the lavatories. This left the flight attendants, whose presence was required by the FAA, with little to do.

“Arm and disarm doors, that was our duty,” Lala said.

The flights had their own set of rules, which the crew members said they learned from a company policy manual or from chief flight attendants. Don’t talk to the detainees. Don’t feed them. Don’t make eye contact. Don’t walk down the aisles without a guard escorting you. Don’t sit in aisle seats, where detainees could get close to you. Don’t wear your company-issued scarf because of “safety concerns that a detainee might grab it and use it against us,” Lala said.

“You don’t do nothing,” said a member of another GlobalX class. “Just sit down in your seats and be quiet.” If a detainee looked at him, he was supposed to look out the window.











A chained detainee boards a GlobalX flight at Seattle’s Boeing Field in February.

(Emily Schultz)









A rare public statement from the company about life aboard ICE Air came in a 2023 earnings call with GlobalX founder and then-CEO Ed Wegel, when he discussed the company’s work for federal agencies like ICE. GlobalX employees “essentially don’t do much on the airplane,” Wegel said. “Our flight attendants are there in case of an emergency. The passengers are monitored by guards that are placed on board the airplane by one of those agencies.”

Fielding a question about how GlobalX ensures passengers are treated humanely, Wegel continued: “There have been threats made to our crew members, and they’re especially trained to deal with those. But we haven’t seen any mistreatment at all.”

Flight attendants said they had little to do but sit in their jumpseats after delivering the preflight safety briefing in English to the mostly Spanish-speaking passengers. Above 10,000 feet, the two in the rear usually moved to passenger rows near the cockpit, then sat again. Some did crosswords. Others took photos out the window. On a deportation to Guatemala, one saw his first erupting volcano.

Lala had been scared before her first deportation flight, worried that violence might break out. But fear soon gave way to discomfort at how detainees were treated. “Not being able to serve them, not being able to look at them, I didn’t think that was right,” she said.

Some flight attendants, drawn to the profession because they liked taking care of people, couldn’t help but break protocol with passengers. “If they said ‘hola’ or something,” one said, “I’d say ‘hola’ back. We’re not jerks.”

Another recalled taking a planeload of children and their escorts on a domestic transfer from the southern border to an airport in New York. He tried to slip snacks to the kids. “Even the chaperones were like, ‘Don’t give them any food,’” he said. “And I’m like, ‘Where is your humanity?’” (A second flight attendant said that children on a New York flight were fed by their escorts.)

While flight attendants were allowed to interact with the guards, the dynamic was uncomfortable. It came down to a question of who was in charge — and which agency, ICE or the FAA, ultimately held sway. (The FAA declined to comment on this story and directed questions to ICE.)

The guards often asked flight attendants to heat up the food they brought from home. They asked for drinks, for ice. “They treated us like we were their maids,” said Akilah Sisk, a former flight attendant from Texas.

“In their eyes, the detainees are not the passengers,” another flight attendant said. “The passengers are the guards. And we’re there for the guards.”

Some guards thumbed their noses at the FAA safety rules that flight attendants were supposed to enforce while airborne, multiple flight attendants recalled. “One reported me because I asked him to sit down in the last 10 minutes,” Sisk said. “But you’re still on a freaking plane. You gotta listen to our words.”

Flight attendants said that if they told guards to fasten seatbelts during takeoff or stow carry-ons under a seat, they risked getting reported to their bosses at GlobalX, who they said wanted to keep ICE happy. The guards would complain to the in-flight supervisor, Sisk said, and eventually it would get back to the flight attendant.

“We’d get an email from somebody in management: ‘Why are you guys causing problems?’” another flight attendant recalled. “They were more worried about losing the contract than about anything else.”


Nothing bothered flight attendants more than the fact that most of their passengers were in chains. What would happen if a flight had to be evacuated?

Most of the migrants crowding the back seats of ICE Air’s planes have not been, historically, convicted criminals. ICE makes restraints mandatory nonetheless. “Detainees transported by ICE Air aircraft will be fully restrained by the use of handcuffs, waist chains, and leg irons,“ reads an unredacted version of the 2015 ICE Air Operations Handbook, which was obtained by the Center for Constitutional Rights, a legal advocacy group.

The handbook allows for other equipment “in special circumstances, i.e., spit masks, mittens, leg braces, cargo straps, humane restraint blanket, etc.” Multiple lawsuits on behalf of African asylum-seekers concern the use of one such item, known as the Wrap, a cross between a straight jacket and a sleeping bag. A flight attendant said detainees restrained in the device are strapped upright in their seats or, if less compliant, lengthwise across a row of seats. Getting “burritoed, I call it,” the person said.

The Department of Homeland Security’s Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties investigated the asylum-seekers’ complaints and found ICE lacked “sufficient policies” on the Wrap, but how the immigration agency addressed the finding is not publicly known. ICE responded to one lawsuit by saying detainees were not abused; it said another should be dismissed, in part because it was filed in the wrong place. The cases are pending.

Use of the Wrap continues. A video from Seattle’s Boeing Field taken in February shows officers and guards carrying a wrapped migrant into the cabin of a deportation plane.













A choppy video feed shows ICE officers and guards carrying a migrant in a full-body restraint into a GlobalX deportation plane at Seattle’s Boeing Field in February.

(Obtained by ProPublica via a public records request)




Watch video ➜






Neither the ICE Air handbook, nor FAA regulations, nor flight attendant training in Miami explained how to empty a plane full of people whose movements were, by design, so severely hampered. Shackled detainees didn’t even qualify as “able-bodied” enough to sit in exit rows.

To flight attendants, the restraints seemed at odds with the FAA’s “90-second rule,” a decades-old manufacturing standard that says an aircraft must be built for full evacuation in 90 seconds even with half the exits blocked.

Lala and others said no one told them how to evacuate passengers in chains. “Honestly, I don’t know what we would do,” she said.

The flight attendants are not alone in voicing concerns.

In an interview with ProPublica, Bobby Laurie, an airline safety expert and former flight attendant, called the arrangement on ICE Air flights “disturbing.”

“Part of flight attendant training is locating those passengers who can help you in an evacuation,” Laurie told ProPublica. That would have to be the guards. “But if they have to help you,” who is helping the detainees, Laurie wondered.

According to formal ICE Air incident reports reviewed by Capital & Main, the deportation network had at least six accidents requiring evacuations between 2014 and 2019. In at least two cases, both on a carrier called World Atlantic, the evacuations were led not by flight attendants but by untrained guards. Both took longer than 90 seconds, though not by much: two-and-a-half minutes for the first, “less than 2 minutes” for the next. But in a third case, it took seven minutes for 115 shackled detainees to escape a smoke-filled jet.

In one of the World Atlantic incidents, part of the landing gear broke, a wing caught fire and the smell of burning rubber seeped in, according to investigative records obtained by the University of Washington Center for Human Rights. In an email to ICE Air officials, an agency employee aboard the plane later wrote that flight attendants made no emergency announcements for passengers. The flight attendants simply got themselves out.

The ICE officer, guards and nurse were “confused on what to do and in which direction to exit during distress,” the officer wrote. He said that other than the flight crew, “no one has received any training on emergency evacuation situations.”

The University of Washington’s collection does not include findings or recommendations from ICE based on what happened, and ICE did not say what they were when asked by ProPublica. The National Transportation Safety Board said that after the accident, World Atlantic launched a campaign to reinspect landing gear, gave employees and contractors further training, and revised its procedures for inspections. The airline did not respond to questions from ProPublica.












An ICE Air flight was evacuated in Alexandria, Louisiana, in April 2018 after a piece of the landing gear failed upon touchdown. All detainees were helped off the plane by guards, according to emails to ICE officials from an agency employee who was on board.

(Courtesy of the University of Washington Center for Human Rights)








Other reports obtained by the University of Washington mention fuel spills, loss of cabin air pressure and a “large altercation” on ICE Air after 2019 but no more evacuations, at least as of June 2022. More recent incidents that have been mentioned in the press include an engine fire last summer on World Atlantic and a failed GlobalX air conditioning unit that sent 11 detainees to the hospital with “heat-related injuries.”

The rare guidance some flight attendants said they received on carrying out ICE Air evacuations came during briefings from pilots. What they heard, they said, was chilling and went against their training.

“Just get up and leave,” one recalled a GlobalX pilot telling him. “That’s it. … Save your life first.”

He understood the instructions to mean that evacuating detainees was not a priority, or even the flight attendants’ responsibility. The detainees were in other people’s hands, or in no one’s.

When asked if they got similar guidance from pilots, three flight attendants said they did not, and one did not answer. Two more, like the first, said pilots gave them instructions that they took to mean they shouldn’t help detainees after opening the exit doors.

“That was the normal briefing,” said a flight attendant from Lala’s class. “‘If a fire occurs in the cabin, if we land on water, don’t check on the immigrants. Just make sure that you and the guards and the people that work for the government get off.’”

“It was as if the detainees’ lives were worthless,” said the other.


The day the girl collapsed on Lala’s flight, the pilot turned the plane around and they crossed back into the United States.

The flight landed in Arizona. Paramedics rushed on board and connected the girl to their own oxygen bottle. They began shuttling her off the plane. Her parents tried to join. But the guards stopped the father.

Shocked, Lala approached the ICE officer in charge. “This is not OK!” she yelled. The mom had seizures. The family needed to stay together.

But the officer said it was impossible. Only one parent could go to the hospital. The other, as Lala understood it, “was going to get deported.”





Most of the flight attendants who spoke with ProPublica are now gone from GlobalX. Some left because they found other jobs. Some left even though they hadn’t. Some left because the charter company, as it focused more and more on deportations, shut down the hub in their city.

Lala eventually left because of the little girl and her family, because she couldn’t do the deportation flights anymore. Her GlobalX uniform hung in her closet for a time, a reminder of her career as a flight attendant. Recently, she said, she threw it away.

She never learned whether the little girl lived or died. Lala just watched her mom follow her off the plane, then watched the dad return to his seat.

“I cried after that,” she said. She bought her own ticket home.

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Xiaomi Shares Slide After SU7 Sedan With Intelligent Assisted Driving Crashes, Three Dead
Xiaomi Shares Slide After SU7 Sedan With Intelligent Assisted Driving Crashes, Three Dead

Shares of Chinese electric vehicle manufacturer Xiaomi tumbled in Hong Kong trading on Tuesday following a deadly crash involving one of its SU7 sedans, which claimed three lives on Saturday. The accident has intensified scrutiny over the safety of advanced driving systems, as data from the vehicle has been turned over to local authorities for investigation.

HK shares of Xiaomi closed down 5.5% and have since tumbled into a bear market since peaking in mid-March. Downward pressure began when it raised about $5.5 billion in an equity sale last week to fund EV expansion. 



"Investors might have concerns over Xiaomi's competitiveness and growth outlook after reports of the car accident," Shen Meng, director at Beijing-based investment bank Chanson & Co., said, adding that the completion of the share sale has "also weighed on sentiment."

The accident is the first major one involving the SU7 sedan, which Xiaomi launched in late 1Q24 and has outsold Tesla's Model 3 monthly since December. 

On Xiaomi's Weibo account, the company stated it was "deeply saddened" by the accident and said the "vehicle was in the NOA intelligent assisted driving state before the accident." 



Here are more details about the accident from Xiaomi:


At 22:44 on March 29, 2025, a Xiaomi SU7 standard version encountered a serious traffic accident while driving on the Chiqi section of the Deshang Expressway. We are deeply saddened by this.

According to preliminary information, the vehicle was in the NOA intelligent assisted driving state before the accident and continued to travel at a speed of 116km/h. Due to construction and repairs on the section where the accident occurred, the self-lane was closed with roadblocks and diverted to the reverse lane. After the vehicle detected the obstacle, it issued a reminder and began to slow down. The driver then took over the vehicle and entered the human driving state, continued to slow down and control the vehicle to turn, and then the vehicle collided with the cement pile of the isolation belt. The last speed that the system could confirm before the collision was about 97km/h.

After the collision, we immediately contacted the owner to understand that it was not the owner who was driving. At the same time, emergency rescue called the passengers on the car, called the police, and called 120 emergency services.

After that, the police arrived at the scene immediately and fully intervened in the investigation of the accident. At the same time, we immediately set up a special team and rushed to Tongling on the 30th. Under the guidance of the police, we actively cooperated with the investigation, evidence collection and other work, and submitted the vehicle driving data and system operation information we had to the police in accordance with the law on the evening of the 31st. We will continue to fully cooperate with the police and strictly follow the results of the investigation to ensure that the handling of the incident is open and transparent.

At the same time, our special team will also contact the families of the accident victims with the permission and guidance of the police, fully assist in the aftermath, and provide support and help.

We are summarizing the information we know so far and have submitted to the police as follows:


March 29, 22:27:17 NOA activated, vehicle speed 116km/h


March 29, 22:28:17 Mild distraction alarm March 29, 22:36:48 NOA issued a hands-off warning prompt "Please hold the steering wheel"


March 29, 22:44:24 NOA issued a risk warning "Please note that there are obstacles ahead", issued a deceleration request, and began to decelerate


March 29, 22:44:25 NOA was taken over and entered human driving state, the steering wheel turned 22.0625 degrees to the left, and the brake pedal was opened 31%


March 29, 22:44:26 The steering wheel turned 1.0625 degrees to the right, and the brake pedal was opened 38%.


Between 22:44:26 and 28 on March 29, the vehicle collided with the concrete guardrail on


March 29, 22:44:28 Ecall triggered on the vehicle side.


22:44:39 on March 29. Ecall connected on the vehicle side, confirming the accident, calling the police and 120 emergency services.


22:45:06 on March 29. Contacted the owner and confirmed that the driver was not the owner.


22:47:15 on March 29. 120 was dispatched successfully.


120 arrived at the scene at about 23:00 on March 29.



Here is an alleged video of the accident scene on the Dezhou-Shangrao Expressway in Tongling in southern Anhui Province, eastern China. 


Mar 29: three young women — reportedly university students — were killed in a blaze that broke out after the Xiaomi SU7 they’re travelling in crashed into the divider on Dezhou-Shangrao Expressway (德上高速; Deshang Expressway for short) in Tongling (铜陵), Anhui province in the… pic.twitter.com/xjKnn3HMBm
— Byron Wan (@Byron_Wan) April 1, 2025
Last month, Xiaomi raised its 2025 sales target to 350,000 units. Whether the fatal crash last weekend will dampen confidence and affect sales moving forward remains uncertain. 

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 09:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
April Fools
April Fools

By Michael Every of Rabobank

April Fools

Spot the April Fools’ Day jokes among the following recent headlines:

The Daily Mail says Trump could technically be President for a further two terms using a loophole Eisenhower considered, running as Vice President to a presidential candidate who resigns after they are sworn into office: then Trump alluded to that possibility.

The Financial Times’ chief foreign affairs commentator Gideon Rachman therefore recommends Americans “embrace and push forward” AOC and Bernie Saunders as a defence against a slide into authoritarianism, a-la “Russia, Turkey, and India.”

The Washington Post says a Department of Defence memo declares China the strategic focus, along with preventing the capture of Taiwan: Russia, Iran, North Korea, and terrorism are all secondary. Further, the US must now guarantee control over the Panama Canal and ensure a military presence in the "near abroad" --a Russian term-- of Greenland and Panama, the former of which Trump refuses to rule out the use of military force to obtain.

Worse, the memo says the US cannot fight on two fronts, so Europe must fight Russia itself. That’s as Moscow signed up another 160,000 conscripts, saying they won’t be sent to Ukraine, and Europe only did the latter; and Germany’s intel service reports Russia is most likely preparing for a "large-scale conventional war” with NATO by the end of the decade.

British Steel shut down its Scunthorpe plant after 150 years just as the UK aims to rearm. The government says it had “productive negotiations” with the US on an “economic prosperity deal” --not “co-prosperity”?-- as reports say London will buy F-35 fighter jets rather than Eurofighters; yet the UK was also just told “no free trade without free speech” by the US.

Finland’s President dropped in to play golf at Mar-a-Lago and emerged with a deal, Trump saying: “President Stubb and I look forward to strengthening the partnership between the US and Finland. That includes the purchase and development of a large number of badly needed icebreakers for the US."

Then again, the leading 2027 French presidential candidate, the National Rally’s Le Pen, has just been banned from running for office for five years and sentenced to four years for embezzlement. The same accusation had already circled the French Prime Minister, who wasn’t charged, and Le Pen called it a political attack and appealed, as populists, including Trump, rally round her. Moreover, El Pais reports the EU is considering using their Anti-Coercion Instrument on the US as a response to tariffs, which would be economically escalatory - and geopolitically naïve.

Slovakia’s populist Prime Minister Fico claims European Commission President Von der Leyen called him “a complete idiot” for half an hour in a phone call over his attempt to negotiate lower tariffs with the US directly.

Trump is “p***ed off” at Russia’s Putin and may put 25-50% secondary tariffs on Russian oil if he doesn’t play ball on Ukraine peace, as with/double Venezuela. The implications for the oil market are enormous – Brent is just shy of $75, which is surely not what ‘no Russian oil’ implies(?)

An IDF source says a clash with Iran is “inevitable”, and some muse on the same vis Israel-Turkey. Iran’s president rejected direct negotiations with the US, to which Trump replied: "If they don't make a deal, there will be bombing - and it will be bombing the likes of which they have never seen before." Iran then warned it will strike the Diego Garcia base if the US uses it to attack it --quite the logistical feat!- as a new airstrip appeared next to the Bab-el-Mandeb maritime chokepoint - a likely UAE contribution.

Trump’s first foreign visit as president will, again, be to Saudi in May, showing big changes may loom. That’s as Israel steels its border with Jordan and, with the unconditional backing of the US, demanded Egypt dismantle its growing military presence in the Sinai Peninsula. Moreover, as Israel’s PM Netanyahu was called out of one of his now-regular court corruption trial sessions for a police interview after two of his aides were arrested for receiving funds from Qatar.

US Secretary of Defence Hegseth just ramped up arms and promises to the Philippines and Japan, and claimed the latter shares a “warrior ethos”. Then China, Japan, and South Korea pledged deepened regional trade relations and, said Chinese media, a joint response to US tariffs, as well as an attempt to denuclearise North Korea.

China passed a law saying if it’s sanctioned by another state, it can legally expropriate that country’s firms’ IP or assets, just as it stressed how open to global businesses it is again.

Canada’s caretaker PM Carney proposed pivoting from “because markets” on housing to post-WW2 state interventionism. There’s a lot of that about, and markets clearly don’t like it.

The EU is reportedly exploring a weaker 2040 climate goal, keeping a 90% emissions-cutting target but changing how countries calculate their progress – either less now, more later; or letting other countries do it for them and buying carbon credits.

The US Trade Representative released a 397-page report detailing other economies’ non-tariff barriers ahead of tomorrow’s ‘Liberation Day’, which cover just about everything imaginable. That’s as The Wall Street Journal says, ‘The Era of Cheap Stuff Was Already Ending. Now Comes the Tariff Threat,’ and Bloomberg adds Trump tariffs “pose a generational challenge to Asian economies built around exports to the US and low trade barriers.”

Yet an FT op-ed yesterday argued ‘Globalisation will triumph over Donald Trump’, quoting those saying even if the US stops buying everything from everyone, within a year, 70 of its trading partners would have redirected all their exports to others, and within five years, 115 would have. To whom? Priced and cleared in which currency? And, if so, why are worrying about tariffs at all?

The market continues to ponder ‘dedollarisation’: in which case nobody is net exporting to the US or has future access to enough dollars to repay their outstanding Eurodollar debts, let alone import bills priced in it, so the global financial system crumbles – and I don’t mean a ‘correction’.

As @balajis puts it: “No reindustrialisation without dedollarisation. But dedollarisation means imperial collapse. On the other hand, so does deindustrialisation! This is the fundamental paradox.”  It has been for some time if you looked at the world with the right lenses, and they also show everything is now about US Grand Macro Strategy, not macrostrategy, to try to square the above circle by whatever means necessary: if lines on maps can move, so will lines on screens.

As two Fed speakers (Williams and Barkin) just said they don’t know where monetary policy needs to be ahead, and that the risk is of higher inflation ahead from tariffs despite matching uncertainty, @daniel_mcdowell puts it: “We're living through a natural experiment. Can economic and monetary orders built atop particular political orders survive when the latter are dismantled? Markets may very well be grossly underestimating the kind of economic changes heading our way if we continue on this course.”

So, how many April Fools were there today? None. Unless you aren’t looking at any of the above news - then there’s at least one.



Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 09:40

ZeroHedge News
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Trump Dials Back Putin Criticism, Renews Attacks On Zelensky For Stalling Minerals Deal
Trump Dials Back Putin Criticism, Renews Attacks On Zelensky For Stalling Minerals Deal

It was only on Sunday that President Trump declared he's "very angry" at Russian President Putin, statements which featured the threat of secondary tariffs on Moscow, but now the US leader is already dialing back this criticism, Bloomberg observes.

Instead he's once again focused his ire on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, warning of "big problems" if he doesn't sign the controversial minerals agreement and tries to renegotiate. 

"I see he’s trying to back out of the rare earth deal. And if he does that, he’s got some problems. Big, big problems," Trump earlier told reporters aboard Air Force One. "We made a deal on rare earth and now he’s saying, ‘well, you know, I want to renegotiate the deal.’"
AFP/Getty Images

"He wants to be a member of NATO. Well, he was never going to be a member of NATO. He understands that. So if he’s looking to renegotiate the deal, he’s got big problems," Trump said.

Zelensky has signaled that Ukraine is positive about the deal but has complained that its conditions are "constantly changing".

Trump has still kept up some pressure on Putin, however, saying Monday of the Russian leader, "I want to make sure that he follows through, and I think he will." He continued in Monday remarks from the Oval, "I don’t want to go secondary tariffs on his oil, but I think, you know, something I would do if I thought he wasn’t doing the job."

All of the weekend criticisms of Putin appeared to arise from the Russian president's comments late last week declaring that Zelensky's 'illegitimacy' could be fixed by a UN transition process guiding Ukraine to new elections. Only then would Moscow negotiate an end the war, Putin stipulated.

"He’s supposed to be making a deal with him, whether you like him or don’t like him," Trump told reporters Sunday, referring to Putin. "So I wasn’t happy with that. But I think he’s going to be good."

But again, he reserved blunter criticism for US ally Zelensky: "I heard that they’re now saying, well, I’ll only do that deal if we get into NATO or something to that effect," Trump had said.

Bloomberg has concluded the following of this latest back-and-forth:


The result is a geopolitical whiplash on the eve of Trump’s global tariff announcement on April 2 and shows US impatience with the process of securing a temporary truce between Russia and Ukraine more than three years after Putin’s invasion of its neighbor. 

Trump had vowed he would end the war within 24 hours of taking office but has found Russia to be a tough negotiator and able to wrest concessions from the US by exploiting Trump’s desire to get a deal done quickly. On Sunday, Trump told NBC he was “pissed off” at Putin. 


Of course, this is also due to Russian forces rolling up several villages and towns on the battlefield in Ukraine's east and south just this week alone. Putin has less incentive for a hasty deal, and is in the driver's seat - but surely the White House knows this, which is perhaps why the pressure is ramping up on Zelensky once again.

As for the apparently ever-changing draft minerals deal, Ukraine and its supporters have continued to charge that it's tantamount to a big resource grab by Washington.

Ukraine received its latest version of a new draft of the text on Friday, its foreign ministry stated. CNN writes that "The new proposal for a natural resources agreement, of which CNN has obtained a copy, was put forward by the US Treasury Department and goes well beyond the initial draft, particularly on future US rights and reimbursement for past assistance."



Some independent geopolitical observes have said the deal effectively imposes 'indentured servitude' on Ukraine. "This 'deal' is pure extortion and robbery. It would bind Ukraine indefinitely. It would also discourage any investment in any natural deposits in Ukraine. There is no chance that any such deal will be ratified by the Ukrainian parliament," Moon of Alabama writes.

The source then questions, "one wonders then: Why does the Trump administration even bother?"

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 10:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Manufacturing PMIs Sink Despite Surge In 'Hard' Data; Prices Paid Spike To 3-Year-Highs
Manufacturing PMIs Sink Despite Surge In 'Hard' Data; Prices Paid Spike To 3-Year-Highs

While hard data continues to improve, 'soft' data hit a new six-month low yesterday as more regional Fed surveys signaled trouble ahead (because of tariffs)...



Source: Bloomberg

And so all eyes are on the premier 'soft' data today as Manufacturing PMIs drop their final print for March.

The S&P Global Manufacturing PMI improved intra-month, rising from a  flash print of 49.8 (contraction) to a final print of 50.2 (expansion), but that was still well down from February's 52.7.

The ISM Manufacturing PMI weakened notably from 50.3 to 49.0 (below the 49.5 expectation) - the lowest since November.



Source: Bloomberg

Under the hood it was even more messy...



...with Prices Paid soaring to its highest since June 2022 and New Orders & Employment tumbling...



Source: Bloomberg

Inventories surged as manufacturers front-run the 'Liberation Day' headlines...



As Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence, notes:


“The strong start to the year for US manufacturers has faltered in March. A combination of improved optimism surrounding the new administration and the need to front-run tariffs had buoyed the goods-producing sector in the first two months of the year, but cracks are now starting to appear. Production fell for the first time in three months in March, and order books are becoming increasingly depleted.


Trump-based optimism is fading?


“While business confidence about the outlook remains relatively elevated by standards seen over the past three years, this is based on companies hoping that the nearterm disruption caused by tariffs and other policies will be superseded as longer-term benefits from the policies of the new administration accrue. However, March has seen more producers question this belief. Business optimism about the year ahead has deteriorated further from January’s near threeyear high, and has dropped sharply over the past two months, causing firms to stop raising payroll counts for the first time since October. 


And of course, it's all about tariff terror...


“A key concern among manufacturers is the degree to which heightened uncertainty resulting from government policy changes, notably in relation to tariffs, causes customers to cancel or delay spending, and the extent to which costs are rising and supply chains deteriorating in this environment. 

Tariffs were the most cited cause of factory input costs rising in March, and at a rate not seen since mid-2022 during the pandemic-related supply shock. Supply chains are also suffering to a degree not seen since October 2022 as delivery delays become more widespread. 



“Data in the coming months will provide important insights into how the inflationary aspects of policies such as tariffs balance out against any benefits to US producers.”


So, both Services PMIs are in expansion (above 50) and Manufacturing is mixed (50.2 vs 49.0) - take your pick on 'recession' talk.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 10:07

ZeroHedge News
Open 
China Holds Huge Military Drills From 'Multiple Directions' Around Taiwan
China Holds Huge Military Drills From 'Multiple Directions' Around Taiwan

China on Tuesday launched major combined forces exercises around Taiwan as a "stern warning" in the wake of US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's pledge to counter "China’s aggression" on his first visit to Asia, as well as alleged recent 'separatist' statements by Taiwan President Lai Ching-te.

The People's Liberation Army (PLA) army, navy, air force and rocket force are involved in the drills, which seek to "close in" on the self-ruled island  from "multiple directions" and practice maneuvers including "assault on maritime and ground targets” and “blockade on key areas and sea lanes."
China’s Shandong aircraft carrier sailing near Taiwan on Monday, March 31, 2025. Taiwan Ministry of National Defense via AP

"It is a stern warning and forceful deterrence against ‘Taiwan Independence’ separatist forces, and it is a legitimate and necessary action to safeguard China’s sovereignty and national unity," a PLA Eastern Theater Command statement said.

At least 20 Chinese warships and 50 jets were involved in the drills, the biggest in many months - and since early last year - to which Taiwan's military responded by dispatching its own aircraft and ships, and land-based missile systems on coastal areas.

Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defense listed out the following Chinese military weaponry which was moved near Taiwan by early afternoon:

71 sorties by military aircraft and drones
21 navy ships ranged around the island
Shandong aircraft spotted about 220 nautical miles east of Taiwan
The Eastern Theatre Command simultaneous to all of this issued a brief video calling Lai a "parasite" in English, also depicting him as a green bug dangled by chopsticks over a burning Taiwan.


Video #3 features an animation of Taiwanese president Lai as a "parasite poisoning Taiwan island," "parasite hollowing Island out," (with Lai throwing his opponents in jail and grabbing money), and finally "parasite courting ultimate destruction," with Lai being "burned" by PLA… pic.twitter.com/HwPNVqAUDH
— Lyle Morris (@LyleJMorris) April 1, 2025
According to the NY Times:


Ms. Zhu singled out a speech by Mr. Lai on March 13 in which he described China as a “foreign hostile force” and laid out 17 measures that Mr. Lai said would combat deepening Chinese subversion and spying in Taiwan.

Those included restoring military tribunals for cases against military personnel who spy and strengthening oversight of cultural, political and religious exchanges with China. Beijing says that Taiwan is its territory, and that it will eventually absorb the island, by force if Chinese leaders deem that necessary.


Taiwan officials have blasted the drills as "reckless" and "irresponsible". Taiwan's military subsequently elevated its readiness level to ensure China does not "turn drills into combat" and "launch a sudden attack on us."

During the kick-off to Hegseth's Asia visit, he hailed Japan in Sunday remarks as an "indispensable partner" in deterring Chinese aggression in the region. He further unveiled an upgrade in the US military command in Japan to a new "war-fighting headquarters".



China's Foreign Ministry in turn on Monday slammed the US’ use of "China threat" rhetoric which is bent on provoking confrontation, but which will end in regional countries being used as "cannon fodder" for US hegemony.

Taiwan’s Presidential Office posted on X that "China’s blatant military provocations not only threaten peace in the Taiwan Strait but also undermine security in the entire region, as evidenced by drills near Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Korea, the Philippines & the SCS. We strongly condemn China’s escalatory behavior."

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 10:20

Atlas Obscura
Open 
20 Cola Museum in Kragujevac, Serbia

Atlas Obscura
Open 
Tamaghza El Gdima (Abandoned Village of Tamerza) in Tamaqzah, Tunisia

The Hill
Open 
House Democrat: Trump team has 'done nothing' to assure Signal leak won't be repeated
Rep. Seth Moulton has criticized the Trump administration for its response to the use of Signal by high-level officials to discuss military plans, saying they have done nothing to prevent a repeat mistake and have compromised national security.

The Hill
Open 
Watch live: House Republicans give remarks with eyes on reconciliation
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and top House GOP leaders will hold a press conference Tuesday morning following a closed door meeting. Republicans in both chambers of Congress are looking to advance President Trump's legislative agenda through the process of budget reconciliation, which allows the GOP to sidestep a Senate filibuster. The press conference is scheduled...

The Hill
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House GOP leaders play hardball to stop Luna push for proxy voting for new parents
House Republican leaders are playing hardball as they try to stop Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) from triggering a vote on a bill to allow proxy voting for new parents, throwing a procedural hurdle at the push that will test the will of those who support Luna’s full-on legislative war against Republican leadership. Using arcane...

The Hill
Open 
Yale professor leaving US: Trump launching 'brutal attack' on freedom
A professor at Yale University said Monday he would be leaving his post and the country over the Trump administration’s “brutal attack” on free speech. “The message is that they’re going to do a kind of stochastic terrorism against our country,” Jason Stanley, a professor of philosophy with a focus on fascism, told MSNBC. “They’re...

The Hill
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Trump needs to realize — China and Russia are a package deal 
The Trump administration is sending mixed messages to America’s enemies

The Hill
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Jordan presses for language clamping down on judges to be added to spending bills
House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) encouraged congressional appropriators to include language to “enhance judicial restraint” as the party contemplates bills to limit nationwide injunctions against President Trump's executive orders. The letter from Jordan to House Appropriations Chair Tom Cole (R-Okla.) argues a series of court injunctions that have blocked Trump administration policies “call for...

The Hill
Open 
ICE: University of Minnesota student's visa not revoked for protests
The University of Minnesota international graduate student detained last week by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had his visa revoked over a drunk driving case, not due to participation in pro-Palestinian protests on campus, according to a senior Trump administration official. “This is not related to student protests,” an official from the Department of Homeland...

The Hill
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Harvard says it will work with federal antisemitism task force amid threat of funding loss
Harvard President Alan Garber says his university will work with the federal antisemitism task force after it launched a review of the school. On Monday, the task force announced it will be reviewing the $9 billion in federal grants to Harvard in a similar style investigation to that of Columbia University, which saw $400 million in...

The Hill
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Watch live: House Democrats speak out against Trump agenda, mass layoffs
House Democratic leaders are set to give remarks Tuesday morning in opposition to President Trump's moves to overhaul the federal government. Democrats have taken to holding town halls in GOP districts and rallies in the nation's capital to push back against Trump's sweeping executive actions seeking to reduce government spending and implement mass layoffs across...

The Hill
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Fox analyst: Trump third-term talk makes Vance look like 'Mini-Me'
Fox News analyst Jonathan Turley said President Trump floating the idea of a third term is not fair to potential Republican successors like Vice President Vance. “There’s also a cost to this that may not be fair to people like Vance or others who are going to run,” Turley said Monday on Fox. “All of...

The Hill
Open 
Acquiescing to Trump is a surefire way to lose
The media is significantly muted. Anti-Trump commentators and anchors have been fired. Criticism of the administration has been curtailed.

The Hill
Open 
O'Reilly: 'Democrats will win the midterms' if 'economy is wobbly,' prices high
Conservative commentator Bill O'Reilly predicts that Democrats will have success in the 2026 midterm elections if President Trump does not do more to improve the economy. "He’s running an enormous risk," O'Reilly said of Trump during an appearance on Leland Vittert's NewsNation program. "Far more than people know. Because this time next year, April Fools...

Harvard Business Review
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Calyx Global: Improving the Quality of Carbon Credits
How one startup balances revenue growth and brand management.

Russia Today News
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Trump administration to review billions in Harvard funding

BBC Top Stories (US)
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No contact over England white-ball captaincy - Billings
Sam Billings says there has been no contact from England over the vacant men's white-ball captaincy.

ZDNet News
Open 
ChatGPT's stunning new image generator is now free for everyone
Now everyone, even free users, can say goodbye to warped and misspelled text in their image generations - and hello to looser safeguards.

ZDNet News
Open 
How to disable ACR on your TV (and why doing makes such a big difference for privacy)
Smarter TV operating systems bring new privacy risks, with one major concern being automatic content recognition (ACR) - a feature that monitors your viewing habits.

ZDNet News
Open 
I found 52 of the best Amazon Spring Sale TV deals still available
The Amazon Spring Sale may have ended yesterday, but you can still find great deals on TVs and home audio from Samsung, Sony, and more.

ZDNet News
Open 
Hisense's latest laser projector is so sharp and vivid, it may just replace your 4K TV
The company's new L9Q projector offers better brightness, depth, and clarity - in a fetching design.

ZDNet News
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The 14 best Amazon Spring Sale deals under $50 still available
ZDNET found the best lingering deals under $50 even after Amazon's Big Spring Sale.

ZDNet News
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The 110+ best Amazon Spring Sale tech deals still live
Amazon's Big Spring Sale is officially over, but you can still save on these handpicked deals on headphones, TVs, laptops, and more while these seasonal offers linger.

ZDNet News
Open 
ChatGPT's new image generator shattered my expectations - and now it's free to try
The newly released model can finally compete with Midjourney, Google's Imagen 3, and Adobe's Firefly.

ZDNet News
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I found the 59 best Amazon Spring Sale gaming deals still available
The Amazon Spring Sale may have ended yesterday, but you can still find great deals on PS5 games, gaming monitors, and more.

ZDNet News
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The best digital notebooks you can buy in 2025: Expert tested and reviewed
We tested the best digital notebooks from Kindle, Boox, Rocketbook and more. Here are our favorites.

ZDNet News
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This gadget gave my Android thermal vision superpowers, and I keep finding new uses for it
This tiny accessory has earned a permanent spot in my toolbox for its usefulness, and the wide range of customization keeps proving handy.

ZDNet News
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The 35+ best anti-Amazon Spring Sale deals still live: Keep shopping at Walmart, Best Buy, Costco, and more
Amazon's Big Spring Sale is officially over, but you can still shop seasonal savings at plenty of retailers like Walmart, Best Buy, and more.

ZDNet News
Open 
Windows 11 PC won't boot? Microsoft's new tool tries to fix it before you even panic - here's how
Now available to Windows Insiders, Windows 11 is getting a secret weapon for boot failures called Quick Machine Recovery - and it works automatically.

BBC World News
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France's far right calls for Paris rally in support of Le Pen
Marine Le Pen has said a "nuclear bomb" was used against her party to stop it getting into power.

Mail Online
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'Dumbstruck' Escape To The Country couple apologise to host after breaking down in tears during 'mind-blowing' property reveal
During Friday's instalment of the daytime programme, viewers were introduced to couple Sarah and Dominic.

Mail Online
Open 
Top doctor warns you're putting underwear on WRONG! The way most people do it risks 'crotch rot' infection
A simple change to your morning routine could prevent a nasty groin fungal infection, experts have revealed.

Mail Online
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Man 'carrying weapon' is shot dead by armed police at Milton Keynes station
Police said armed officers responded and challenged the man at Milton Keynes Central station before shots were fire by police.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
(This Is Not a) Happy Room review – Amanda Abbington on the guest list for toxic reunion
King’s Head theatre, LondonA dysfunctional brood gather at a wedding-cum-funeral in actor-writer Rosie Day’s dark comedyA wedding is repurposed into a funeral in writer-actor Rosie Day’s dark comedy. It might be a twisted spin on Richard Curtis’s Four Weddings and a Funeral except the focus is not on a happy family of friends but on the dysfunctional Henderson brood.Eric Henderson, a less than perfect father, dies just before he can tie the knot with his third wife, leaving his children, his ex and the arriving guests in a room filled with bows and balloons.At King’s Head theatre, London, until 27 April Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Messi bodyguard says MLS has problem with pitch invaders after touchline ban
Yassine Cheuko had helped protect Inter Miami starMLS now using its own security on matchdaysLionel Messi’s bodyguard, Yassine Cheuko, has been banned from from the touchline during Inter Miami matches.The former Navy Seal has gained a cult following from social media videos showing him closely watching the crowd to stop rogue fans from harming the Argentinian star. He has also chased down fans intent on getting close to Messi on several occasions. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘It will never happen again’: former bikie-turned-golf pro Ryan Peake bears the scars of a chequered past
Australian golfer continues to carry a troubled history and a prison sentence with him even as a New Zealand Open title sends him on to the world stage“I’ve done what I’ve done, I’ve been sentenced to do my time,” says Australian professional golfer and former Rebels bikie Ryan Peake. “But the time didn’t end there. Every day is essentially a continuation of my sentence.”In March, the 32-year-old broke through for his first professional victory at the New Zealand Open. Since he was released from prison for twice causing grievous bodily harm it has been five years, the same length of time he spent inside. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Remarkable’ Bletchley Park code breaker Betty Webb dies aged 101
Veteran lauded for helping preserve history and legacy as well as vital role played during second world warThe Bletchley Park code breaker Charlotte “Betty” Webb has died at the age of 101, the Women’s Royal Army Corps Association (WRACA) has confirmed.Arriving at Bletchley from the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) aged just 18, Webb spent four years during the second world war at the code-breaking centre working in various roles. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
Open 
German policeman held over gourmet food scam in Mafia raid
A German police officer was among those arrested in a large-scale swoop against the Mafia and organized crime. The officer allegedly supported the Calabrian 'ndrangheta in orchestrating a luxury food fencing racket.

Sky News Home
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British tourist injured in Rome explosion dies in hospital
A British tourist who was seriously injured after a suspected gas explosion destroyed a three-storey B&B in Rome has died.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Grandmother earns taekwondo belt at 83
Ann Bigger took up the sport in January and has earned her yellow striped belt.

Slashdot
Open 
Average Person Will Be 40% Poorer If World Warms By 4C, New Research Shows
Economic models have systematically underestimated how global heating will affect people's wealth, according to a new study that finds 4C warming will make the average person 40% poorer -- an almost four-fold increase on some estimates. The Guardian: The study by Australian scientists suggests average per person GDP across the globe will be reduced by 16% even if warming is kept to 2C above pre-industrial levels. This is a much greater reduction than previous estimates, which found the reduction would be 1.4%.

Scientists now estimate global temperatures will rise by 2.1C even if countries hit short-term and long-term climate targets. Criticisms have mounted in recent years that a set of economic tools known as integrated assessment models (IAM) -- used to guide how much governments should invest in cutting greenhouse gas emissions -- have failed to capture major risks from climate change, particularly extreme weather events. The new study, in the journal Environmental Research Letters, took one of the most popular economic models and enhanced it with climate change forecasts to capture the impacts of extreme weather events across global supply chains.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC UK News
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Ex-captain Charlotte Edwards named head coach of England women''s cricket team
Former England captain Charlotte Edwards replaces Jon Lewis as head coach after the 16-0 Ashes defeat at the beginning of the year.

Mail Online
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Jon Richardson details his decision to quit his comedy career for a new role as a teacher with ANOTHER surprise announcement
The stand-up star, 42, has revealed that his new role is actually as a teacher on Waterloo Road, having joined the cast for the BBC series.

Mail Online
Open 
'Vibrant' businesswoman died from multiple organ failure after 'woeful' care following weight loss surgery at private hospital
Beauty industry boss Nicola Fisher, 54, died from multi-organ failure after she went under the knife at the Spire Washington Hospital, Tyne and Wear.

Mail Online
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Waltons star Sian Barbara Allen dead at 78: Was also on The Rockford Files and Hawaii 5-0
The actress, who starred in popular shows such as The Waltons, died of Alzheimer's disease on Monday in Chapel Hill, NC, according to an online obituary.

Mail Online
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Jennifer Lawrence has given birth to second child with husband Cooke Maroney
Jennifer Lawrence has welcomed her second child with husband Cooke Maroney.

The Guardian (UK)
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‘The ice is not freezing as it should’: supply roads to Canada’s Indigenous communities under threat from climate crisis
Northern Ontario is seeing a ‘shorter window’ for ice roads that deliver vital supplies to remote First NationsAt first there was no answer on the satellite phone. But on the third call, Donald Meeseetawageesic heard his sister’s voice. “We need somebody to come and tow us out,” he told her.It was a warmer-than-normal night in early March and Meeseetawageesic, the elected band councillor for Eabametoong First Nation, was stranded in a 4x4 truck on the dark winter road leading to his community. The tyres were stuck in the deep snow and the temperature outside was below freezing. Help was about 60km (37 miles) away. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Coke and beer – in one glass, please’: my gut-churning search for a signature drink
Could I discover an order that would mark me out as intriguing, charming and strangely sophisticated? I spent a week trying everything from chocolate milk with rum to apple cider vinegar with prosecco to find outIn the little we know of Materialists, the forthcoming film from Past Lives director Celine Song, Dakota Johnson plays Lucy, a successful matchmaker who is herself perennially single and jaded about love. When an as-yet-unnamed suitor (Pedro Pascal) approaches her at a wedding and asks to buy her a drink, Lucy’s response is not so much a request as a challenge.“Sure,” sighs Johnson, with that hypnotically flat delivery that saw her named worst actress at this year’s Razzies. “Coke and beer.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Remarkable’ Bletchley Park code breaker Betty Webb dies aged 101
Veteran lauded for helping preserve history and legacy as well as vital role played during second world warThe Bletchley Park code breaker, Charlotte “Betty” Webb, has died at the age of 101, the Women’s Royal Army Corps Association (WRACA) has confirmed.Arriving at Bletchley from the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) aged just 18, Webb spent four years during the second world war at the code-breaking centre working in various roles. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Senator Cory Booker’s 15-hour speech highlights ‘recklessness’ of Trump policies – US politics live
New Jersey Democrat began talking on Monday night to highlight ‘a nation in crisis’ and is still going Wisconsin and Florida voters head to polls in test of Trump’s popularityUS voters are headed to the polls on Tuesday in Wisconsin and Florida in elections that some see as a test of Donald Trump’s popularity and the political clout of his billionaire ally Elon Musk.The most closely watched contest is a battle for a seat on Wisconsin’s seven-member supreme court. Conservatives are trying to flip ideological control of the court, which currently has a 4-3 liberal majority. The contest, which features liberal judge Susan Crawford facing off against conservative Brad Schimel, will have huge consequences in the state. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Man shot dead by police at Milton Keynes train station
Officers were responding to reports of person carrying firearm, Thames Valley police sayA man has been shot dead by police responding to reports of a person carrying a firearm at Milton Keynes railway station, Thames Valley police said.Police said they were responding to reports on Tuesday afternoon. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
French justice minister urges prompt appeal hearing for Le Pen – Europe live
Gérald Darmanin stresses court timelines are outside government control as PM admits he has questions over immediate public office bansLe Pen ban is ‘political and partisan’, says French far-right party’s presidentIn Kyiv, Ukrainian foreign minister Andrii Sybiha has offered an update on the talks with the United States over a new minerals deal.Sybiha told a press conference held with his Lithuanian counterpart, Kestutis Budrys, that one round of consultations had already taken place and that an agreement providing for a strong American business presence in Ukraine would contribute to his country’s security infrastructure, Reuters reported. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Ex-captain Charlotte Edwards named head coach of England women's cricket team
Former England captain Charlotte Edwards replaces Jon Lewis as head coach after the 16-0 Ashes defeat at the beginning of the year.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
King Charles presents honours in return to public duties
The King carries out his first public engagement since experiencing side effects from his cancer treatment last Thursday.

CNET News
Open 
What Time Is Nintendo Switch 2 Direct: How to Watch April Nintendo Direct
The Switch 2 reveal is almost here.

CNET News
Open 
ChatGPT's Image Generation Tool Now Free for Everybody
OpenAI has opened up the formerly paywalled feature, allowing anyone to create images using ChatGPT 4o technology.

CNET News
Open 
Best Smart Home Safes for 2025: Durable Connectivity
Our top picks for smart safes can take a beating while also offering fingerprint readers, Bluetooth connections and other useful features.

Russia Today News
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Russia never was the first to ruin ties with neighbors – Kremlin

BBC UK News
Open 
Vauxhall site owners sell plant to unnamed buyer
Luton Council says its "serious and competitive bid" to buy the land was rejected.

Mail Online
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Kelly Brook's elaborate April Fool's Day prank shocks fans as star makes huge career announcement: 'Finally it's happening!'
Kelly Brook left some fans shocked on Tuesday with her very elaborate April Fool's Day joke.

Mail Online
Open 
Knifeman tackled by hero Brit in Amsterdam 'had terrorist intent' and 'likely would have stabbed more victims if not for brave tourist's intervention'
Thursday's knife rampage sparked panic in the streets of the Dutch capital after a 30-year-old from Donetsk, in eastern Ukraine , carried out a seemingly random knifing attack in the streets.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Au revoir Marine Le Pen?
Le Pen is barred from running for public office after being found guilty of embezzlement.

Pulsant Status
Open 
CHG0052164 - Planned Maintenance - SE-1 Asigra N+1 Clusters

Pulsant Status
Open 
CHG0052165 - Planned Maintenance - SC-1 Asigra N+1 Clusters

Autosport F1
Open 
What does a special livery deliver for F1 teams?
Whether a nod to history and heritage, a sample of the weather seasons or simply a social media April Fool's Day post, the topic of liveries ahead of the Japanese Grand Prix has been loquacious.Yuki Tsunoda’s promotion to the parent Red Bull team in place of Liam Lawson has dominated the headlines, but so has the fact the local favourite will make his debut in a special white car.A ...Keep reading

Chatham House
Open 
The case for investing in global health inclusivity
The case for investing in global health inclusivity
15
May 2025 — 5:00PM TO 6:15PM
Anonymous (not verified)
25 March 2025

Chatham House and Online
Promoting health equity in a fragmented geopolitical landscape.
In an environment characterised by the policies of economic security, global health stakeholders must balance the growing political emphasis on growth and productivity with the drive to streamline government spending. However, the case for investment in health provisions is strong. Effective data collection and an understanding of the lived experience of service users allows public and private sector stakeholders to concentrate funding efforts where it will have the most impact and far reaching benefits. By targeting key areas like oral health, air pollution or health literacy, policymakers and investors can be assured of effective outcomes that improve health systems while also driving productivity and growth. Targeting policies to reduce both mortality and morbidity rates ensures a higher proportion of a given population can actively support a productive and competitive economy. This in turn increases societal resilience to future shocks in an increasingly unstable world.Drawing on the findings of the third edition of the Economist Impact Health Inclusivity Index, supported by Haleon, this event examines investment and policy pathways to a more equitable health landscape and how leveraging collaboration between public, private and civil society actors can support economic growth and productivity goals.Discussion questions include:Which health inclusivity approaches can be regarded as ‘easy wins’ that drive economic growth and how can public and private sector actors move the discussion forward?How should the lived experiences of service users inform health inclusivity initiatives in an environment where healthcare is not always prioritized, despite its benefits to economic growth?How resilient are health systems in the face of the challenges including government cost cutting, changing demography and service allocation?How can the global health ecosystem maintain a collective focus on inclusivity when international consensus is increasingly dominated by national interests above common values?A drinks reception will follow this event from 18:15 – 19:30 BST.The institute occupies a position of respect and trust, and is committed to fostering inclusive dialogue at all events. Event attendees are expected to uphold this by adhering to our code of conduct.

Chatham House
Open 
US–Russia rapprochement: What is the end game?
US–Russia rapprochement: What is the end game?
10
April 2025 — 6:00PM TO 7:00PM
Anonymous (not verified)
27 March 2025

Chatham House and Online
Experts examine the implications of US-Russia relations for European Security and the war on Ukraine.
Experts examine the implications of US-Russia relations for European Security and the war on Ukraine.
The second Trump administration has made ending the war in Ukraine and normalization of relations with Russia a top priority. US dialogue with Russian officials has, at a minimum, opened a path to a potential ceasefire and peace deal.However, Ukrainian and other European concerns over the terms for peace imposed on Kyiv suggest peace - and relations beyond - will not be as easy as the Cold War-era superpowers might like.Doubts over the post-conflict relationships between Russia, the US and the West in the medium to long term look to be well-founded considering the different world-views and conceptions of security in particular. Can a ‘Trump and Putin’ peace have durability…and even validity? Has the idea of a ‘just peace’ been abandoned? If so, with what consequencesThis discussion will cover:What safeguards are needed to ensure that war does not return?To what extent is Europe likely to re-engage economically and diplomatically with Russia after any conclusion to the war?How will Europe compensate for the loss of the American security guarantees?How much, if anything at all, can Russia concede? And Ukraine?By registering for this event, attendees agree to our code of conduct, ensuring a respectful, inclusive, and welcoming space for diverse perspectives and debate.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Casanova: Womanizer, con man and poet
He became famous for his love affairs, but Casanova was also a writer, diplomat and spy. Born in Venice 300 years ago, his name still resonates around the world.

Russia Today News
Open 
Iran addresses Trump bombing threat at UN Security Council

BBC UK News
Open 
FM criticises UK minister for saying she backs cuts
Eluned Morgan criticises a senior Welsh Labour colleague for saying she backed benefits cuts.

Mail Online
Open 
Man 'carrying weapon' is shot dead by armed police at Milton Keynes station
Thames Valley Police said armed officers responded and challenged the man at the station before shots were fire by police at Milton Keynes Central railway station.

TechRadar News
Open 
The Last of Us is reportedly getting a mysterious physical PS5 special edition soon and I think it could be a bundle containing both games

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Connections hints and answers for Wednesday, April 2 (game #661)

TechRadar News
Open 
NYT Strands hints and answers for Wednesday, April 2 (game #395)

TechRadar News
Open 
Quordle hints and answers for Wednesday, April 2 (game #1164)

TechRadar News
Open 
Ivanti products targeted by dangerous malware yet again

TechRadar News
Open 
Nintendo Switch 2 Direct live build-up: the start time, live countdown, latest news, rumors, and our predictions before the big show

TechRadar News
Open 
ChatGPT is down again for many – here's everything we know about the outage

TechRadar News
Open 
Florida Department of State data breach may have exposed information of 500,000 people

TechRadar News
Open 
The rise of agentic AI: the need for guardrails while shaping the future of work

Digital Trends
Open 
The Alienware Aurora R16 with RTX 4090 is finally on sale again
The Alienware Aurora R16 gaming PC is finally on sale from Dell again, with this configuration featuring the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090 graphics card at $400 off.

Digital Trends
Open 
Roborock supercharges smart home connectivity in its smart vacs
Roborock is expanding Matter support on its latest lineup of smart vacs.

Digital Trends
Open 
Garmin Vivoactive 6 is slimmer, brighter and adds a long-awaited feature
Garmin has announced the Vivoactive 6, the latest in its line of GPS fitness watches. The highlights on the hardware side include a slimmer design and brighter display, while there’s a new software feature that’s been long awaited too. The Vivoactive 6 launches at $299.99, replacing the Vivoactive 5 which launched for the same price […]

Digital Trends
Open 
The LG C4 Series scored 4 out of 5 stars in our review, and today every size is on sale
The LG 65-inch C4 Series 4K OLED is one of the top TVs on the market right now, so we’re glad to see that it’s on sale for $1,400. Be sure to order soon!

Digital Trends
Open 
This Lenovo ThinkPad Yoga 2-in-1 laptop is on sale at 49% off — hurry!
The Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Yoga Gen 4 2-in-1 laptop gives you a nice balance of performance and versatility, as well as a great discount as it's on sale at 49% off.

The Aviationist
Open 
Danish F-35s Conduct First QRA Mission, Intercept Russian Spy Plane Over Baltic Sea
RDAF F-35s have started supporting the Quick Reaction Alert service intercepting a Russian Il-20 Coot-A over the Baltics. Last week, Royal Danish Air Force F-35A fighter jets were launched for the first time to identify and track a Russian ISR (Intelligence Surveillance Reconnaissance) military aircraft over the Baltic Sea. The F-35 pilots took off from […]
The post Danish F-35s Conduct First QRA Mission, Intercept Russian Spy Plane Over Baltic Sea appeared first on The Aviationist.

The Verge
Open 
How to watch the Switch 2 Direct
It’s finally time for the biggest video game event of the last few years. In January, Nintendo officially unveiled the successor to the Switch, helpfully called the Switch 2. The short video showed off some of the console’s features, like magnetized Joy-Cons, and provided a brief glimpse at a new Mario Kart game. But it […]

The Verge
Open 
Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse swings into theaters in 2027
Though Sony’s initial plans to release Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse in 2024 didn’t quite work out, the film finally has a new premiere date that seems like it will stick. Last night at this year’s CinemaCon expo, Sony announced that it now intends for Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse to hit theaters a little over two […]

The Verge
Open 
Substack says it’ll legally defend writers ‘targeted by the government’
Substack plans to protect foreign writers “residing lawfully” in the US who may be targeted by the government for what they write. The company is partnering with the nonprofit Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) to provide legal support to impacted writers — whether they publish on Substack or not — citing recent attacks […]

The Verge
Open 
April Fools’ 2025: Dbrand’s new skins let you ‘touch grass’ without the hassle of going outside
Dbrand wants you to feel less guilty about having your face buried in a screen all day and not getting outside to ‘touch grass.’ The company’s latest collection of skins lets you wrap your gadgets in bright green artificial turf so you can touch grass whenever you want and no matter where you are. The […]

The Verge
Open 
Searching for the perfect minimalist smartphone
Smartphones are great. They’re also… a lot. The idea of a more balanced device, one that gives you all of the most important and useful features of a smartphone but keeps you out of the infinite-doomscrolling loops, has been an enticing one for a long time. Nailing that balance, though, turns out to be almost […]

Gizmodo
Open 
Walmart Sells the PS5 Slim at a Ridiculously Low Price, Adds Astro Bot for Free in the Hottest Deal of the Year
The awesomely immersive world of Astro Bot and a disc-based PS5 with 1TB of storage is just $449 during this incredible gaming deal.

Gizmodo
Open 
The Live-Action Gundam Movie May Have Found an Unlikely Star
Plus, Lanterns gets itself another member of the Green Lantern Corps, with a little help from the Superman movie.

Gizmodo
Open 
How to Watch the Nintendo Switch 2 Announcement
Nintendo’s April 2 Nintendo Direct is going to be the can’t-miss showcase of the season, but I'm just ready for the rumors to finally relent.

Gizmodo
Open 
Star Wars, Harry Potter: Amazon Clears Stock Of Popular Lego Sets Up To 40% Off
First come, first served.

BBC UK News
Open 
UK will take calm approach to US tariffs, PM says
Keir Starmer says he is "keeping all options on the table" to respond to new US trade tariffs.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sexting an old friend was exciting – but now I can’t face sleeping with my husband
The virtual sex life I enjoyed with someone else only made me realise what was missing at home. How can I make my marriage work again?Sign up for Well Actually, a free weekly newsletter about health and wellnessI have been with my husband for 10 years and have previously never so much as looked in the direction of another man. We had a regular sex life but when an old school friend got back in touch, we began messaging each other and it quickly turned into sexting. The nudes and explicit, erotic messages I sent were completely out of character for me. We discussed plans to meet up for one night of selfish, illicit fun – free of spouses, children and responsibilities – but when I asked for clarity on where I stood, he said that we shouldn’t message any more. I was heartbroken. Now I don’t want to have sex with my husband because it is not exciting enough. What can I do to get my marriage back on track?Virtual sex can be risky and painful, and this experience has been very challenging for you. When sexting, it is important to remember that it belongs in the fantasy realm. There is never any guarantee that there will be a “real” aspect, and it is best not to assume that there is any meaningful relationship whatsoever. But your desire to have exciting sex of some kind is understandable. Perhaps you need to let your husband know that. You may have the best results if you present some options. First, imagine and fantasise about what would be thrilling for you to enjoy with your husband, then find a relaxed moment to broach the subject and see if he might be receptive to it, and if there is something special that would turn him on. Our partners are not responsible for our pleasure – we are. We have to create our own erotic universes, whether in private fantasy or in reality. True intimacy, and the opportunity for great eroticism, occurs when both people can share those universes.Pamela Stephenson Connolly is a US-based psychotherapist who specialises in treating sexual disorders.If you would like advice from Pamela on sexual matters, send us a brief description of your concerns to [email protected] (please don’t send attachments). Each week, Pamela chooses one problem to answer, which will be published online. She regrets that she cannot enter into personal correspondence. Submissions are subject to our terms and conditions. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Myanmar junta accused of blocking aid for earthquake victims as airstrikes continue
Doctors helping with aftermath of disaster and UN special rapporteur say aid is disappearing or being blocked in some areasAftermath of the Myanmar earthquake – a visual guideMyanmar’s military is facing criticism over continued airstrikes and claims it is blocking aid to earthquake survivors, as international agencies urged “unfettered access” to humanitarian aid in the conflict-riven nation.The 7.7-magnitude earthquake that hit central Myanmar on Friday has caused widespread destruction, killing more than 2,700 people and leaving affected areas in dire need of basic necessities such as food and water. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Police called out after fight at Essex comedy gig
Officers attended theatre in Southend after reports of altercation at end of Paul Chowdhry’s showPolice were called to a comedy show in Essex after a fight broke out in the audience, which reportedly led to a man being assaulted.Inquiries are ongoing after the altercation at the end of standup comic Paul Chowdhry’s performance of his Englandia tour at the Cliffs Pavilion in Westcliff-on-Sea, Southend. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Man shot dead by police at Milton Keynes train station
Officers were responding to reports of person carrying firearm, Thames Valley police sayA man has been shot dead by police responding to reports of a person carrying a firearm at Milton Keynes railway station, Thames Valley police said.Police said they had shot the man after reports of a gunman at Milton Keynes train station on Tuesday afternoon. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
A $90m litmus test - Wisconsin court vote becomes referendum on Musk
The priciest judicial contest in US history will indicate voter sentiment towards President Trump's billionaire ally.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Armed police shoot man dead at railway station
Officers say they received reports the suspect was carrying a firearm.

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: The staggering sum former England manager Terry Venables left to his wife after his death at age of 80
Venables, who masterminded England's memorable run to the semi-finals of Euro '96, died at the age of 80 following a long battle with illness last November.

Mail Online
Open 
iPhone users claim Apple's iOS 18.4 update has RUINED their battery life - as one vents 'it's utterly horrendous'
iOS 18.4 includes eight hotly-anticipated emoji and new AI-powered capabilities - but several early users have taken to X to complain that the update is draining their battery life.

Mail Online
Open 
Jeremy Kyle's life after being cancelled over guest suicide as he makes ITV return for first time in 6 years on Kate Garraway's Life Stories
He has survived cancer and cancellation. Now it seems Jeremy Kyle , whose eponymous TV talk show once dominated the daytime broadcast schedule, may be planning a major comeback.

Mail Online
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The Art Institute of Chicago Returned a Sculpture to Nepal But Obscured Its Connection to a Wealthy Donor
by Steve Mills




ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up for Dispatches, a newsletter that spotlights wrongdoing around the country, to receive our stories in your inbox every week.











The Art Institute of Chicago announced recently that it had returned to Nepal a sculpture that had been in its collection for at least a quarter century. Conspicuously left out of the press release: that the sculpture had been a gift from a wealthy Chicago donor.

That omission obscured a simmering controversy about whether Chicago philanthropists Marilynn Alsdorf and her husband, James, both of whom are dead, improperly built their collection of hundreds of South Asian works and why the Art Institute, which houses some of that collection in its Alsdorf Galleries, has been reluctant to return those works to countries with compelling claims for them.

The 12th-century sculpture the museum returned to Nepal is called “Buddha Sheltered by the Serpent King Muchalinda” and is about 17.5 inches tall. The Art Institute said it was stolen from the Kathmandu Valley, although it’s unclear when the theft occurred or how or when the Alsdorfs acquired the piece.

It was among more than a dozen pieces identified by ProPublica and Crain’s Chicago Business in 2023 as having claims on them by other countries, including Nepal. At one time, each piece had belonged to the Alsdorfs, the investigation found.

The Art Institute devotes a page online to works that have been removed from its collection, a process museums call deaccessioning. But unlike other pages on its site about artwork or pieces on display, pages for deaccessioned items don’t include ownership information and, in this case, the listing doesn’t mention the Alsdorfs.

Melissa Kerin, the director of the Mudd Center for Ethics at Washington and Lee University in Virginia and a professor of art history who specializes in South Asian and Tibetan art and architecture, said the Art Institute is trying to have it both ways with the Buddha’s repatriation. It is seeking credit for having a provenance division and returning the Buddha, she said, but is not disclosing the involvement of its own donors.

“It looks proactive. They’re getting rid of a problematic object,” said Kerin. “But people will never know the full details of it. They are face-saving the Alsdorfs and their relationship with them and with all donors. They have a lot to lose.”



The Art Institute declined a request for an interview, but in response to written questions, a spokesperson said that it had followed a museum-wide policy on disclosing the history and ownership of deaccessioned objects. Once an object is no longer in the museum’s collections, it does not include the item’s provenance on its website — a practice some art historians criticize.

The investigation by the news organizations focused on an ornate piece called the Taleju necklace, an inscribed gilt-copper work embellished with semiprecious stones and intricate designs. A 17th-century Nepali king offered the necklace to the Hindu goddess Taleju.

Officials with the government in Nepal as well as activists have centered much of their attention on the necklace, which they believe was stolen during a period of political upheaval in the country. It remains prominently featured in the Alsdorf Galleries even though some say it is offensive to display such a sacred work in public.

Activists said that their frustration with the Art Institute applies to other pieces as well.

“It’s not only about the necklace,” said Sanjay Adhikari, a lawyer and secretary of the Nepal Heritage Recovery Campaign, an organization that seeks the return of a number of pieces taken from the country. “It’s about many other cultural properties out there. There’s a big frustration with the Art Institute of Chicago.”





The Alsdorfs, who lived in Chicago, were influential in the city’s art world, donating more than $20 million to the Art Institute over the course of their lives. James Alsdorf, the son of a Dutch diplomat and the owner of a business that manufactured glass coffee-making equipment, was chair of the museum’s board from 1975 to 1978. He died in 1990.

Marilynn Alsdorf was a trustee of the museum and president of its Woman’s Board. She exhibited her and her husband’s collection at the museum in 1997, and the Alsdorf Galleries opened in 2008. She died in 2019.

Controversy has surrounded the Alsdorfs’ vast collection for decades. In the 1970s, the Thai government sought the return of a stone carving, and, after a protest outside the museum, it was given back.

In 2002, a California man sued Marilynn Alsdorf to recover a Picasso painting called “Femme en Blanc,” or “Lady in White,” that he alleged had belonged to his grandmother before it was looted by the Nazis during World War II. Marilynn Alsdorf eventually paid the man $6.5 million in exchange for keeping the painting. She said she did nothing wrong in obtaining it.

Alsdorf’s son, Jeffrey, is listed in tax forms as the president of the Alsdorf Foundation, which gave the Art Institute a $40,000 educational grant or contribution as recently as 2023. Asked about the repatriation of the Buddha, he said, “I hope the deal goes through and everyone is happy with it.” Then he hung up on the reporter.

An official at the Embassy of Nepal in Washington said the deal had gone through and that she was present at a ceremony where the Buddha was handed over to Nepali officials. Several museum representatives took part in the ceremony and spoke about continuing to work with the Nepali officials.

The Art Institute spokesperson said in a statement that the museum is “committed to prioritizing provenance research across departments, which includes our Arts of Asia collection.” Over the last five years, the statement continued, the museum has created positions dedicated primarily to issues of provenance, including the role of executive director of provenance. The museum has previously said that many of the pieces the Alsdorfs donated were accepted and vetted under standards in place at the time.

The spokesperson said in the statement that the museum has returned two pieces in the past year from its permanent collection to their countries of origin and, over the past several years, has returned additional works that were on loan. The spokesperson didn’t provide details on those repatriations.

The Buddha, according to the statement, had been a “research priority” for the museum for several years. After obtaining new information about the sculpture, the Art Institute reached out to the government of Nepal in 2024 to begin the process of returning it to the country.

The museum appeared to draw a distinction between the return of the Buddha and the request from Nepal for the Taleju necklace’s return, saying: “The provenance of this object is separate from and not comparable to other objects in our collection.”

The spokesperson said in the statement that the museum had sent a letter to the government of Nepal in May 2022 asking for additional information about the necklace but that it was still waiting for a reply. Nonetheless, the museum said it has an “ongoing dialogue” with Nepali officials and will continue working with them. The embassy official did not respond to ProPublica’s questions about the necklace or the museum’s request for additional information.

Adhikari, of the Nepal Heritage Recovery Campaign, said the Art Institute was intentionally making the process difficult for Nepal.

“I believe the burden of proof should be on the Art Institute of Chicago to prove that it belongs to them,” he said of the Taleju necklace. “This is a violation of our cultural rights.”

Erin Thompson, a professor of art crime at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, said the Art Institute’s policy about objects it returns — the Buddha, for example — can make it harder for researchers to track an object’s provenance. It can also cast doubt on other objects in a collection.

“You don’t erase that history to save somebody a little embarrassment,” she said.

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Autosport F1
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The story behind Andrea Kimi Antonelli's F1 debut
Andrea Kimi Antonelli’s smartphone pings to signal the arrival of his Thursday schedule. As with all things Mercedes, its promptness is matched by its detail: a little over 24 hours remain until his first race-weekend track session as a fully-fledged Formula 1 driver, but he has already been in Melbourne for several days to align his body clock with the local timings."Are we really going to ...Keep reading

F1 Technical
Open 
Stroll announce further investment in Aston Martin
British carmaker Aston Martin announced on Monday its plan to sell its minority stake in the Aston Martin Aramco Formula One team to help turn around its loss-making core business.

Mail Online
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Shocking moment DPD delivery driver is beaten to death in cartel-style execution by thugs armed with an axe, hockey stick and shovel
Aurman Singh, 23, was hacked to death by seven men who were armed with an axe, a hockey stick, a knife, a golf club and a shovel, on August 21, 2023 in Shrewsbury.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Scottish tourist dies after Rome holiday explosion
Grant Paterson was on a break in Rome when the B&B in the city's Monteverde area collapsed on 22 March.

Chatham House
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The case for investing in global health inclusivity
The case for investing in global health inclusivity
15
May 2025 — 5:00PM TO 6:15PM
Anonymous (not verified)
25 March 2025

Chatham House and Online
Promoting health equity in a fragmented geopolitical landscape.
In an environment characterised by the policies of economic security, global health stakeholders must balance the growing political emphasis on growth and productivity with the drive to streamline government spending. However, the case for investment in health provisions is strong. Effective data collection and an understanding of the lived experience of service users allows public and private sector stakeholders to concentrate funding efforts where it will have the most impact and far reaching benefits. By targeting key areas like oral health, air pollution or health literacy, policymakers and investors can be assured of effective outcomes that improve health systems while also driving productivity and growth. Targeting policies to reduce both mortality and morbidity rates ensures a higher proportion of a given population can actively support a productive and competitive economy. This in turn increases societal resilience to future shocks in an increasingly unstable world.Drawing on the findings of the third edition of the Economist Impact Health Inclusivity Index, supported by Haleon, this event examines investment and policy pathways to a more equitable health landscape and how leveraging collaboration between public, private and civil society actors can support economic growth and productivity goals.Discussion questions include:Which health inclusivity approaches can be regarded as ‘easy wins’ that drive economic growth and how can public and private sector actors move the discussion forward?How should the lived experiences of service users inform health inclusivity initiatives in an environment where healthcare is not always prioritized, despite its benefits to economic growth?How resilient are health systems in the face of the challenges including government cost cutting, changing demography and service allocation?How can the global health ecosystem maintain a collective focus on inclusivity when international consensus is increasingly dominated by national interests above common values?A drinks reception will follow this event from 18:15 – 19:30 BST.

TechRadar News
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Microsoft has its AI-powered Security Copilot discover a whole host of previously unknown vulnerabilities

TechRadar News
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New Intel CEO says company will spin off non-Core units, tells customers to "be brutally honest with us"

Digital Trends
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NYT Crossword: answers for Tuesday, April 1
The New York Times crossword puzzle can be tough, even if it isn't the Sunday issue! If you're stuck, we're here to help you out with today's clues and answers.

Digital Trends
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Wordle Today: Wordle answer and hints for April 1
Trying to solve the Wordle today? If you're stuck, we've got a few hints that will help you keep your Wordle streak alive.

Digital Trends
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NYT Connections: hints and answers for Tuesday, April 1
Connections is the new puzzle game from the New York Times, and it can be quite difficult. If you need a hand with solving today's puzzle, we're here to help.

Digital Trends
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NYT Strands today: hints, spangram and answers for Tuesday, April 1
Strands is a tricky take on the classic word search from NYT Games. If you're stuck and cannot solve today's puzzle, we've got help and hints for you here.

Digital Trends
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NYT Mini Crossword today: puzzle answers for Tuesday, April 1
The NYT Mini crossword might be a lot smaller than a normal crossword, but it isn't easy. If you're stuck with today's crossword, we've got answers for you.

Digital Trends
Open 
Hearing for everyone: discover affordable OTC hearing aids from Audien Hearing
Budget-friendly and hearing aids don’t appear in the same sentence too often. Between audiologist visits, custom fittings, and devices that cost thousands, I’m not surprised when I meet people with hearing loss that just try to power through without them. has a solution. Audien is the leader in Over-The-Counter (OTC) hearing aids, with more than […]

Digital Trends
Open 
Some of AMD’s best CPUs are breaking down, and there’s one common problem
A Reddit user experienced a concerning problem with AMD's best CPU, the Ryzen 9 9950X3D. The chip seems fried, and the PC won't work.

Digital Trends
Open 
No joke: Rick and Morty announces season 8 premiere date
Amid an endless tidal wave of April Fools Pranks, one announcement seems to be true: Rick and Morty is coming back May 25.

Digital Trends
Open 
We may have a Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge launch date, and it’s soon
The pending launch of the Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge has been the subject of plenty of speculation, but it now seems that we’ve got a date for the announcement of this phone: April 15, 2025. It comes just 2 months after the launch of the rest of the Samsung Galaxy S25 family, while being teased […]

UK Legislation
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The Coronavirus (Recovery and Reform) (Scotland) Act 2022 (Saving Provisions) Regulations 2025
These Regulations make saving provision in connection with the expiry of the extensions to criminal procedure time limits in solemn proceedings contained in paragraphs 20 and 22 of the schedule of the Coronavirus (Recovery and Reform) (Scotland) Act 2022. Those time limit extensions will expire at the end of 30 November 2025, in accordance with section 52(1) of that Act.

The Verge
Open 
Gmail is making it easier for businesses to send encrypted emails to anyone
Google is updating Gmail to allow enterprise users to send encrypted messages to any inbox in just a few clicks. Google says it’s developed a new encryption model that, unlike the current encryption feature on Gmail, doesn’t require senders or recipients to use custom software or exchange encryption certificates. The feature is rolling out in […]

The Verge
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How to set up Wi-Fi calling on Android and iPhones
How’s that 5G rollout going in your area? Even in 2025, there’s no guarantee you’re going to be able to get reliable cell service everywhere you go, especially if you happen to live somewhere that’s especially crowded or remote — or if you work in your company’s basement. That’s where Wi-Fi calling comes in, which […]

The Verge
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Elon Musk’s $1 million handout winners are connected to Republican causes
On Sunday, a few thousand people in Green Bay, Wisconsin, gathered to hear Elon Musk speak — and give away two giant cardboard checks for $1 million. Attendance at the event was limited to people who had added their names to a petition against “activist judges,” created by Musk’s America PAC. He has promised money […]

The Verge
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April Fools’ Day 2025: the best and cringiest pranks
Welcome to the worst day on the internet! As Chaim Gartenberg pointed out years ago, brands and a holiday dedicated to hoaxes are rarely a winning combo. If you’re a company with any kind of social media presence in 2025, you really, truly only have four options on April Fools’ Day: So far, we’ve seen […]

Mail Online
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Brazen business-class passenger caught vaping on Indonesia flight
A brazen business-class passenger was caught on camera vaping on a Garuda Indonesia flight - with footage showing the flyer sneakily tucking the device beneath a cushion between each inhale. 

Mail Online
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Brit tourist, 54, dies a week after gas explosion destroyed his B&B in Rome leaving loved-ones 'distraught'
54-year-old Grant Paterson from East Kilbride was fighting for his life at Sant'Eugenio Hospital in the Italian capital after Saturday's horror blast.

Sky News Home
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'He was a true gentleman': British tourist injured in Rome explosion dies in hospital
A British tourist who was seriously injured after a suspected gas explosion destroyed a three-storey B&B in Rome has died.

The Guardian (UK)
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OpenAI raises up to $40bn in record-breaking deal with SoftBank
Japanese investment group says it wants to realise ‘artificial super intelligence’ – smarter than people – in biggest capital raising ever for a start-upOpenAI has raised $40bn (£31bn) through fundraising led by the Japanese group SoftBank, in a deal that values the ChatGPT developer at $300bn (£233bn).OpenAI said the funding round would allow the company to “push the frontiers of AI research even further”. It added that SoftBank’s support would “pave the way” towards AGI, or artificial general intelligence, the term for AI systems that can match or exceed humans at nearly all cognitive tasks. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Malaysia fire: huge blaze erupts near Kuala Lumpur as gas pipeline explodes
Inferno spread to nearby homes, trapping residents, while full extent of damage still being assessedA fireball erupted from a burst gas pipeline outside Malaysia’s largest city, injuring 145 people as it burned for several hours before being extinguished.
The national oil company Petronas said the blaze started at one of its gas pipelines outside Kuala Lumpur. The inferno sent flames 20 storeys high and left a huge crater near a residential neighbourhood.The health minister, Dzulkefly Ahmad, was quoted by the New Straits Times daily as saying 145 people including three children were injured. He said 67 people were still being treated at public hospitals, mostly for second and third-degree burns, while 37 others had sought treatment from clinics and private hospitals.
The fire department said the fire damaged 190 houses and 148 vehicles. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Wild co-founders ‘land £100m’ from sale of natural deodorant maker
Childhood friends sell upmarket brand to Unilever, the maker of Marmite, Dove soap and Lynx Axe deodorantBusiness live – latest updatesA pair of UK entrepreneurs selling refillable deodorant cases and manuka honey lip balms made from natural ingredients have reportedly landed a near-£100m payday from the sale of their brand to the global consumer goods group Unilever.Wild, founded by childhood friends Freddy Ward and Charlie Bowes-Lyon, has been bought by Unilever, the maker of Dove soap, Axe deodorant and Marmite. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Former captain Charlotte Edwards named England women’s head coach
Edwards lifted five Ashes and won two World CupsPredecessor Lewis was sacked after 16-0 Ashes drubbingCharlotte Edwards has been named as the new England women’s head coach, nine years after she played her last international match.The former England captain had put her hat in the ring in February, when changes were expected following a disastrous tour of Australia last winter in which England lost the Ashes 16-0 with barely a whimper. Following a review, both head coach Jon Lewis and captain Heather Knight were sacked by the ECB. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Hooters restaurant chain files for bankruptcy protection
Founded in 1983, the restaurant known for waitresses in skimpy outfits has run into financial difficulties latelyHooters, the US-based restaurant chain known for chicken wings and skimpy waitstaff outfits, has filed for bankruptcy protection.HOA Restaurant Group filed the motion for chapter 11 protection Monday in the north Texas bankruptcy court in Dallas. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Cyprus court acquits five Israeli men accused of raping British woman
Woman’s lawyer says verdict proof of ‘patriarchal’ justice system and does not rule out taking case to European court of human rightsA Cyprus court’s acquittal of five men accused of abducting and raping a British woman in the resort of Ayia Napa has been met with outrage as calls mount for the verdict to be challenged.Dismissing the charges on Monday, the three-member district court in Paralimni ruled the testimony of the 20-year-old had not been credible because it “lacked coherence and contained numerous substantial contradictions”. The defendants, Israelis aged between 19 and 20, claimed sexual contact with the woman had been consensual. Continue reading...

Gizmodo
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This Antivirus Software Is So Strong That It Will Humiliate The Bad Guys Of The Cyber World (50% Off)
Give your devices advanced defenses against malware, viruses, phishing, and more, without compromising speed or performance.

Gizmodo
Open 
MAGA Influencer Sells Her Tesla, Says Elon Musk Isn’t Her Paying Enough Child Support
"America needs you to grow up, you petulant man-child."

Gizmodo
Open 
Crowdsourced DNA Project Says It Will Shut Down to Protect Users from Rising Authoritarianism
The creator said he is worried about the changing political climate circling the globe.

Gizmodo
Open 
Bring Her Back‘s New Trailer Will Give You Bad Dreams for Breakfast
The latest horrifying tale from Talk to Me's Danny and Michael Philippou hits theaters May 30.

Gizmodo
Open 
This Official Office Pro License Is Cheaper Than It Was on Black Friday, Now at a Record Low Price
StackSocial's lowest price of 2025 on this massive productivity bundle is just $50, 77% off its regular retail price of $220.

Russia Today News
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IMF discounts Trump tariff recession threat  

BBC Formula One
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Horner won't ask me to swap if leading Verstappen - Tsunoda
Red Bull driver Yuki Tsunoda tells BBC Radio 5 Live's Harry Benjamin about what team principal Christian Horner expects from him as Max Verstappen's team-mate.

Mail Online
Open 
Katie Price reveals why she felt forced to leave her Mucky Mansion after she was landed with £800K fly tipping bill
Katie Price has opened up about the reason she claims she had to leave her family home - known as the Mucky Mansion - in May last year.

Mail Online
Open 
Apple has quietly added 8 new EMOJI to your iPhone - including one face that everyone will use
As part of Apple's iOS 18.4 update, iPhone users will have access to eight new emoji - but there is one face that everyone already says is their favourite.

Mail Online
Open 
Father threatened with arrest over daughter's female-only fundraiser where trans women were banned
Dave and Viv Boardman, both 67, were threatened with arrest after a row with a councillor over their daughter's female-only fundraiser that trans women weren't allowed to attend in Yorkshire.

Mail Online
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Student reporter Talia Baia speaks out on 'madness' after going viral over love-struck player
Talia Baia, a University of Florida student who works for ESPN Gainesville, spoke with Gators star Bennett Andersen after their win over the Terrapin last week - and fans were convinced he 'fell in love'.

Mail Online
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Tiger Woods sends golf world into meltdown with shock tweet claiming he will play at the Masters... three weeks after surgery
The golf legend, who recently underwent surgery, said he has been cleared to play at next week's major championship - but fans have realized all is not as it seems.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Former captain Charlotte Edwards named England women’s head coach
Edwards won four Ashes and two World Cups as captainPredecessor Lewis was sacked after 16-0 Ashes drubbingCharlotte Edwards has agreed to take over as the new head coach of England Women after Jon Lewis was sacked in the aftermath of a painful Ashes whitewash.The England and Wales Cricket Board has moved swiftly to get her in, taking less than a fortnight to finalise the move.More details soon … Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Labour's populist pantomime over sentencing rules plays into the hands of the right | Janey Starling
Forcing the abandonment of new commonsense, evidence-based guidelines is a new low for a party that once prided itself on justice reformA progressive sentencing guideline that was due to come into force today has been shot down in the crossfire of the culture wars. This is devastating news for people whose lives would have been changed by the guideline, such as pregnant women and mothers.The Sentencing Council’s updated “imposition of community and custodial sentences” guideline signalled a change in sentencing. It would have required magistrates and judges to consult a pre-sentence report before deciding whether to imprison someone of an ethnic or religious minority, alongside other groups including young adults, abuse survivors and mothers. It would have taken into account structural disparities in sentencing outcomes, such as the high risk of stillbirth that pregnant women face in prison and the damage caused by separating mothers from children. It would also have introduced measures to combat racism in courts. The UN has described our justice system as systemically racist, and a 2017 review conducted by the now minister David Lammy acknowledged its “racial bias”.Janey Starling is the co-director of gender justice campaign group Level UpDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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What’s the difference between all the various paprikas? | Kitchen aide
This versatile spice has long outgrown its Spanish and Hungarian roots to bring richness, warmth, colour and flavour to a host of dishesSweet, smoked, hot … What’s the difference between the various paprikas? And are there any substitutes?
“Paprika brings warmth, it brings colour and it brings another layer of flavour,” says Monika Linton, founder of Brindisa. “Even just a sprinkling over goat’s cheese on toast, hummus or any kind of dip, along with a bit of olive oil, will bring it to life.” Crucial to both Spanish and Hungarian cuisines, paprika is made by drying peppers (generally speaking, Hungarian varieties are air-dried whereas the Spanish stuff is smoke-dried) and grinding them to a fine powder. The taste, meanwhile, depends on the variety of pepper used, although, as Linton points out, not all tins of paprika specify that.“Paprika brings a certain richness,” says Jeremy Salamon, author of Second Generation and chef/owner of Hungarian restaurant Agi’s Counter in New York. “It has this unique, vegetal, unripe fruit-like quality, and lends itself in different ways to different dishes.” While he generally has sweet (“to use as a flavour base to build on with other spices”) and smoked (“to whip into butters”) to hand, hot paprika always comes out tops: “I like the kick it adds, so I’ll use it in chicken paprikash or in a pimento cheese dip.”Got a culinary dilemma? Email [email protected] Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Palestinian teenager dies in Israeli jail after being held six months without charge
Family of Walid Ahmad, 17, say his health had deteriorated and Palestinian officials say he was denied medical careA 17-year-old boy from the West Bank who was held without charge for six months in an Israeli prison died after he collapsed in unclear circumstances, Palestinian officials have said.According to his family, Walid Ahmad was “a healthy high schooler” at the time of his arrest last September for allegedly throwing stones at Israeli soldiers. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Icelandic town and Blue Lagoon spa evacuated after volcanic eruption
Those who have not already left Grindavík warned nearby eruption could be much bigger than previous 10 since 2021Europe live – latest updatesThe Icelandic town of Grindavík and the nearby Blue Lagoon tourist attraction have been evacuated after the area was hit by another volcanic eruption.The eruption is the 11th since 2021, when the Reykjanes peninsula, a region south-west of Reykjavík, started its new eruption period. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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NHS trust apologises as man’s tumour death investigated for manslaughter
Exclusive: Richard Harris, 71, died last July after series of errors at troubled Royal Sussex County hospital in BrightonA troubled NHS trust has apologised to the family of a man who died after a series of potentially fatal delays to treat a tumour, in a case that is being investigated by police as possible corporate manslaughter.Richard Harris, 71, died last July after a series of errors in the neurosurgery department at the Royal Sussex County hospital in Brighton, which is part of University Hospitals Sussex NHS foundation trust (UHSussex). Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Citizens Advice warns single parents could be worst hit
A series of household bills, including water, energy and council tax, increase on Tuesday.

The Register
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Delicious irony as Euro alliance pumps €1M of Microsoft's money into open source cloud federation tech
Fulcrum is region's latest challenge to the hyperscalers An alliance of cloud service providers in Europe is investing €1 million into the Fulcrum Project, an open source cloud federation tech that gives an alternative to local customers anxious about using US hypercalers.…

The Register
Open 
Google makes end-to-end encrypted Gmail easy for all – even Outlook users
The UK government must be thrilled Google will soon offer end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) email for all users, even those who do not use Google Workspace, and says it'll do so without imposing any undue stress on IT admins.…

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
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#9254 Routing & Core Network - Wholesale Radius issues (Close)
Confirmed functioning service. Incident Closed.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 11:21

Update: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 13:30

Clear: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 13:46

Edited: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 13:46

Status: Up

Maintenance: None

Deutsche Welle
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German police sergeant held over mafia links in mass raid
A German police officer was among those arrested in a large-scale swoop against the mafia and organized crime. The officer supported the Calabrian mafia 'ndrangheta, prosecutors say.

Russia Today News
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NATO will ‘survive’ Trump – EU’s top diplomat

Mail Online
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Sexologist reveals why you have better sleep after sex
If you've ever fallen asleep immediately after sex and ended up having one the best sleep of your life, it's probably not a coincidence.

Mail Online
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Sweden prepares nuclear bunkers for 7 MILLION citizens as WW3 fears grow
With 64,000 sites spread across the country, Sweden already has more shelters than almost every other nation with space for around seven million people - more than two-thirds of its population

Mail Online
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John Bishop is forced to call security to kick 'aggressive' hecklers out of his Torquay show
Comedian John Bishop had two audience members kicked out of his comedy show over alleged 'aggressive' behaviour.

Mail Online
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Putin slaps down Trump's Ukraine peace deal and issues fresh set of demands
Moscow wants the US to take into account what it regards as the root causes of the conflict, a Russian diplomat was quoted by state media as saying on Tuesday.

Sky News Home
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Three killed as car and bus catch fire in crash
Three people have died after a crash between a car and a bus near Heathrow Airport late last night - with both vehicles catching fire.

Ars Technica
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MCP: The new “USB-C for AI” that’s bringing fierce rivals together

Ars Technica
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Tuesday Telescope: On Mars, the rovers take pictures of robotic arms and rocks

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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England legend Edwards appointed women's head coach
Former England captain Charlotte Edwards replaces Jon Lewis as head coach after the 16-0 Ashes defeat at the beginning of the year.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Stalker who believed Strictly judge Ballas was his aunt given suspended sentence
The sentencing judge says Kyle Shaw made a "menacing threat" against Shirley Ballas and her family.

UK Government News
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UN Human Rights Council 58: UK Statement on the Democratic Republic of Congo
UK Statement for the Enhanced Interactive Dialogue on the Democratic Republic of Congo. Delivered by the UK Human Rights Ambassador, Eleanor Sanders.

UK Government News
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Sir Martyn Oliver's speech at the Guildhall
Martyn Oliver, Ofsted’s Chief Inspector, spoke to educational leaders from the City of London and further afield. He talked about the importance of education and how Ofsted's inspection improvement proposals will drive e…

UK Government News
Open 
Breaking AI to Make it Better: DASA's investment in the future of AI assurance
Advai, an AI focussed SME, is leading the way in military and commercial AI safety.

Computer Weekly
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Interview: Ray McCann, Loan Charge independent review lead

Wired Top Stories
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N+ Bikes Mercedes-AMG F1 Track Edition 750 Electric Bike Review: All Looks, No Shine
For those who want to drive like George Russell but don’t have the bucks for a Benz, this blingy electric bike might be the next best thing.

Boing Boing
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If your brain short circuits when you see something cute, that's gigil
A lexical gap or lacuna is a "missing word" in the vocabulary of a language – a lack of a single word to describe a concept that can be described in a single word in other languages. Some examples of lexical gaps in English are "the day after tomorrow" or a gender specific word for "cousin." — Read the rest
The post If your brain short circuits when you see something cute, that's gigil appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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Michael Moore calls for portraits of Trump 'as he truly appears, without distortion'
As Donald Trump pouts and complains about artist Sarah Boardman's portrait of him, filmmaker, director, actor, and all around political provocateur Michael Moore is calling upon all artists—yes, that means YOU, dear reader, as everyone is an artist!—to create and share their own interpretations of Trump, to get even more under his (thin, orange) skin. — Read the rest
The post Michael Moore calls for portraits of Trump 'as he truly appears, without distortion' appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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That's not all, folks! Cancelled Wile E. Coyote movie coming to theaters
In a surprise reversal, Coyote vs. Acme is coming to theatres. After being cancelled before distribution, the film has been picked up and is now due to be released in 2026.
When distribution offers fell far short of Warner Brothers Discovery's anticipated $75- $80 million, the studio opted not to release it. — Read the rest
The post That's not all, folks! Cancelled Wile E. Coyote movie coming to theaters appeared first on Boing Boing.

Boing Boing
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The Mercola Tapes: wellness entrepreneur meets spirit, gets CO2 enema and condemns veterinarians
Dr. Joseph Mercola is a well-known and top-grossing figure in the anti-vaccine conspirituality space. In 2021, he was named (along with his good pal Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.) as one of the Disinformation Dozen by the Center for Countering Digital Hate for spreading COVID and anti-vaccine misinformation during the beginning of the pandemic. — Read the rest
The post The Mercola Tapes: wellness entrepreneur meets spirit, gets CO2 enema and condemns veterinarians appeared first on Boing Boing.

TechRadar Reviews
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One Step GPS review

ZeroHedge News
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In Latest Blow To European Democracy, Judge Rules Marine Le Pen Ineligible To Run For President In 2027
In Latest Blow To European Democracy, Judge Rules Marine Le Pen Ineligible To Run For President In 2027

Update (0845ET): Messages of support poured in for Le Pen shortly after her conviction, with the Kremlin and Hungary’s populist leader Viktor Orban among the first to weigh in.

As a reminder, Le Pen led in the polls...



“Her conviction will strengthen her aura in French society: that’s what we can learn from Trump-style American politics,” said Christophe Marion, a lawmaker from Macron’s party.

The presidential elections in Romania and the Le Pen verdict show that “democratic norms are being trampled upon,” in Europe, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

“Je suis Marine,” Orban tweeted following the ruling.

For Dutch far-right leader Geert Wilders, the verdict was "tough". "I trust she will win the appeal and become President of France," he wrote on X.

Italy’s deputy prime minister and leader of the League party Matteo Salvini called the ruling a “declaration of war by Brussels.”

But there was also unease within the political mainstream in France.

"It is not healthy that in a democracy, an elected official is prohibited from standing in an election and I believe that political debates should be decided at the ballot box," said the leader of MPs in parliament of the right-wing Republicans, Laurent Wauquiez.

Even the leader of the hard-left France Unbowed (LFI) Jean-Luc Melenchon appeared ill at ease. "The decision to remove an elected official should be up to the people," he said.

RN president Jordan Bardella denounced the sentence on his X account, calling it “unjust” and amounting to an execution of French democracy.

Mike Benz posted on X, summing things up succinctly:


"They are fucking with something no democratic system should ever fuck with. If people perceive — rightly — that democracy is a farce, & anyone who runs against the order will be arrested, they’ll not only want to tear it down, they’ll seek an honest autocracy over false democracy."


Observers have drawn parallels with US President Donald Trump, who won a second term with a clutch of criminal cases hanging over him and, like Le Pen, has made trenchant opposition to immigration a cornerstone of his program.


Le Pen's sentence was almost as harsh as that of ECB chief @Lagarde
oh wait... https://t.co/Bg6TTX0440 pic.twitter.com/1xX0YMWl2y
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) March 31, 2025
Le Pen can still appeal the entire verdict, including the ban on standing for office, in a case that would normally take around a year to be heard by the court of appeal.

If her appeal process drags on or if it is quick and her ineligibility is confirmed, the National Rally would probably choose another candidate to run in her stead — most likely her 29-year-old deputy, Jordan Bardella. That could cause a "major internal rift" for the party, which has mostly been led since its creation by Le Pen or her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, said Mujtaba Rahman, managing director for Europe at the Eurasia Group.


The National Rally is "a party with many different views," he said. "Albeit they all fall in behind Le Pen. If she were not their leader anymore, then I suspect Bardella … will be a lot less effective in corralling [the party] to remain disciplined and united and to cohere around one view."


Either way, Monday's ruling is not "the end of the story," but rather "a step in the process," Rahman said. Once Le Pen appeals, the Constitutional Council, France's highest court, will ultimately need to weigh in, potentially setting a precedent for how such cases could be handled in the future, he said.

Le Pen had said in a piece for the La Tribune Dimanche newspaper published on Sunday that the verdict gives the "judges the right of life or death over our movement".

She is due to give a primetime TV interview to broadcaster TF1 on Monday evening.

*  *  *

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ZeroHedge Multitool (Extremely solid, very sharp, comes with ZH Logo belt pouch)
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*  *  *

As Remix News detailed earlier, a judge has ruled Marine Le Pen is ineligible to run for office, along with eight MEPs from her National Rally party, after they were found guilty of misappropriation of EU funds. 

The move is the latest attack on democracy in the EU, with judges increasingly deciding elections in Europe. 

Le Pen has also been sentenced to four years in prison, with two years suspended.



Notably, the news comes right as Le Pen leads the polling for French presidential elections in 2027, as Remix News reported earlier today.

The court estimated that the total losses amounted to €2.9 million, as a result of “paying by the European Parliament people who actually worked for the far-right party.” Le Pen was found to be responsible for €1.8 million in damages herself. The judgment also concerns 12 assistants. The prosecutor’s office initially alleged that €7 million had been used in this way.

Investigators accused Le Pen of managing the illegal use of European subsidies between 2004 and 2016, when she served as an MEP. They stated that instead of working in Strasbourg, assistants were to work for Le Pen’s National Rally party in a domestic capacity.


“It was found that all these people actually worked for the party, that their deputy did not commission them any tasks,” said the judge. Assistants then “passed from one deputy to another.”

“It was not about combining the work of assistants, but about combining the budgets of MPs,” said the judge.


Le Pen said before the trial that the matter is entirely political and that her opponents wished for her “political death.”

Other commentators have expressed surprise at not only the verdict but also the decision to exclude her from elections.

Pierre Lellouche, a lawyer and former Deputy of the French National Assembly, appeared on CNEWS to point out that the current prime minister, François Bayrou, faced the same charge and suffered no consequences.


“Then, last but not least, there is the case of (François) Bayrou, the current prime minister, who has been prosecuted for exactly the same thing, i.e., for abuses of party funding declared as parliamentary assistants in Europe, at the EU parliament. Bayrou emerged from this affair without being in the least concerned. In fact, the public prosecutor’s office has once again referred the matter to the courts, but even so, we’re dealing with a double standard here. It’s a bit surprising.”


He noted that the “separation of powers” is increasingly shifting towards judges, and noted that in many previous elections, these judges have tipped the scales in favor of certain candidates.


“We’re finding that more and more, everything is getting mixed up, everywhere. Look at Trump, who had seven judges behind him, and that didn’t stop him from winning. Finally, Strauss-Kahn was eliminated, Fillon was eliminated by a somewhat untimely and rapid indictment at the time of the presidential election, which allowed Mr. Macron to govern the country for seven years after all, which is no mean feat. Especially since, in the Fillon affair, the public prosecutor subsequently indicated that this was not entirely neutral and that the Élysée was particularly interested in this case. So you see, there is a separation of powers, but at the moment, power is shifting to the judges, and that can have a huge impact.”


Another attorney, Maxime Thiebaut, also brought up the case of Bayrou, saying:


“At the very least, you know, it comes as a surprise that Marine Le Pen has been found guilty. I would point out that Mr. (François) Bayrou was acquitted on a similar charge, because it was considered that he had not acted with intent. So I wasn’t in Mr. Bayrou’s file and I wasn’t in Ms. Le Pen’s file, but I note that there was also an expectation that Madame Le Pen would be guilty. 

We all know very well that when you’re the leader of a political party, you’re pretty far removed from the actual running of the party. Mr. Bayrou was recognized by Ms. Le Pen. Is it political or not? I don’t know and I won’t give my opinion on that.”


This is not the only such case either, with Romania banning the presidential frontrunner, Călin Georgescu, from running for president as well as arresting him.

Read more here...

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Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 06:11

ZeroHedge News
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First Views Of Earth's Polar Regions from SpaceX's Dragon Capsule As Fram2 Mission Underway
First Views Of Earth's Polar Regions from SpaceX's Dragon Capsule As Fram2 Mission Underway

Seventeen days after Elon Musk's SpaceX successfully rescued two stranded astronauts from the International Space Station, the rocket company that dominates the space race launched a crew of four private astronauts—led by a crypto entrepreneur—on the first-ever human spaceflight to orbit Earth over its poles.


Fram2 - the first human spaceflight to explore Earth's polar regions - lifts off from pad 39A in Florida only 17 days after Falcon 9 successfully launched @NASA's Crew-10 to the @Space_Station pic.twitter.com/90AV1DBlPj
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) April 1, 2025
SpaceX's sixth private astronaut flight (called "Fram2") blasted off atop a Falcon 9 rocket from Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida late Monday night, sending the Crew Dragon capsule Resilience into a polar orbit.


First views of Earth's polar regions from Dragon pic.twitter.com/3taP34zCeN
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) April 1, 2025
Fram2 is commanded by Chinese-born bitcoin investor Chun Wang and joined by vehicle commander Jannicke Mikkelsen from Norway, pilot Rabea Rogge of Germany, and Australian medical officer and mission specialist Eric Phillips.



SpaceX's website outlined more specifics of the polar-orbiting mission:


During their multi-day mission, Dragon and the crew will explore Earth from a polar orbit and fly over Earth's polar regions for the first time. They will also conduct 22 research designed to help advance humanity's capabilities for long-duration space exploration and understanding of human health in space. Throughout Fram2's time on-orbit, the crew are planning to take the first x-ray in space, perform exercise studies to maintain muscle and skeletal mass, and grow mushrooms in microgravity. Additionally, after safely returning to Earth, the crew plans to exit from the Dragon spacecraft without additional medical and operational assistance, helping researchers characterize the ability of astronauts to perform unassisted functional tasks after short and long durations in space.


The Fram2 private mission is entirely independent of government support, a testament to how the private space industry continues progressing, proving it can do space better, faster, and leaner than bloated and wasteful government programs. 

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 07:45

ZeroHedge News
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Sen. Chuck Grassley Introduces 'Judicial Relief Clarification Act' To Rein In Activist Judges
Sen. Chuck Grassley Introduces 'Judicial Relief Clarification Act' To Rein In Activist Judges

Authored by Debra Heine via American Greatness,

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) introduced a proposal  Monday to rein in judicial injunctions like the ones currently hampering President Donald Trump’s popular MAGA agenda.



The Judicial Relief Clarification Act of 2025 (JRCA) would “limit federal court orders to parties directly before the court, ending the practice of universal injunctions,” according to a Judiciary Committee Majority press release. The bill also aims to clarify the constitutional role of the judicial branch.

According to a Judiciary Committee fact sheet, the JRCA:


1. Forbids federal courts from issuing sweeping relief against the government to persons not before the court—ending the practice of universal injunctions and diminishing the
incentive to forum shop for a sympathetic judge.
2. Requires parties seeking universal relief against the government to use the class action process to show that class-wide relief is proper.
3. Makes temporary restraining orders (TROs) immediately appealable, strengthening appellate review.
4. Amends the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) and Declaratory Judgment Act to clarify that courts may only issue relief under those statutes to parties before the court.


Sen. Grassley will hold a hearing Wednesday to discuss his  “legislative solutions to the bipartisan problem of universal injunctions.”

The proposal comes after a slew of district court rulings and orders blocked multiple key Trump administration objectives, including efforts to end birthright citizenship, terminate federal grants, end DEI initiatives and use a wartime law to deport criminal illegal immigrants.

President Trump has railed against the rulings, accusing the judges of usurping his executive authorities.

In an oped in the Wall Street Journal over the weekend, Grassley wrote: “these nationwide injunctions have become a favorite tool for those seeking to obstruct Mr. Trump’s agenda.”


More than two-thirds of all universal injunctions issued over the past 25 years were levied against the first Trump administration. In the past two months alone, judges have issued at least 15 universal injunctions against the administration—surpassing the 14 President Biden faced throughout his four-year term.


“These decisions also place undue stress on the judicial system by inserting political calculation into the selection of the judges and the resolution of disputes,” the senator wrote.

Grassley pointed out that this judicial overreach has occurred amid an NBC poll showing that “more registered voters believe our country is on the right track than at any other point in the past two decades.”

“For a number of years, but particularly in the last few months, we’ve increasingly seen sweeping orders from individual district judges that dictate national policy,” he said in a statement, Monday.

“Our Founders saw an important role for the judiciary, but the Constitution limits judges to exercising power over ‘cases’ or ‘controversies.’ Judges are not policymakers, and allowing them to assume this role is very dangerous,” Grassley said. “The Judicial Relief Clarification Act clarifies the scope of judicial power and resolves illegitimate judicial infringement upon the executive branch. It’s a commonsense bill that’s needed to provide long-term constitutional clarity and curb district courts’ growing tendency to overstep by issuing sweeping, nationwide orders.”

The bill is cosponsored by Sens. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), Katie Britt (R-Ala.), Ted Budd (R-N.C.), Bill Cassidy (R-La.), John Cornyn (R-Texas), Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Steve Daines (R-Mont.), Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), Jim Justice (R-W.Va.), John Kennedy (R-La.), Mike Lee (R-Utah), Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), Roger Marshall (R-Kan.), Ashley Moody (R-Fla.), Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio), Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.) Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) and Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.).



Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 08:05

ZeroHedge News
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Futures Slide After WaPo Report Trump Seeks 20% Tariffs On Most Imports
Futures Slide After WaPo Report Trump Seeks 20% Tariffs On Most Imports

US equity futures fell abruptly just around 6am ET, reversing earlier gains and unable to benefit from the positive risk tone in European trade, hinting at another very volatile session on Wall Street, as tomorrow's tariffs "liberation day" loomed over markets. Gold extended its winning streak, rising to another record high. As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures were down 0.5%, reversing an earlier gain of 0.2%, after the Washington Post reported a White House proposal to impose tariffs of around 20% on most imports. Nasdaq futures slid 0.6% as Tesla rose modestly but other Mag 7 stocks were in the red. European and Asian markets both rose. Bond yields slid 4bps, pushing the 10Y yield to 4.16% while the USD traded higher on the back of Euro weakness. Commodities are mostly flat this morning with base metals declining (copper -0.9%). Overnight, headlines were largely light, with geopolitical tension and trade policy remaining uncertain. Trump seems to dial back his criticism on Putin, per BBG article (here). We will get the Final March ISM-Mfg this morning: consensus expects the Index to print 49.5 survey vs. 50.3 prior; we also get the latest JOLTS report.



In US premarket trading, Tesla rose while fellow Magnificent Seven stocks edge lower (Tesla +3.1%, Nvidia +0.6%, Alphabet +0.5%, Meta +0.2%, Amazon +0.3%, Microsoft +0.2%, Apple -1%). Johnson & Johnson slid 3.5% in premarket trading after a judge rejected its third attempt to use bankruptcy of one of its units to end baby powder cancer claims. Delta Airlines Inc. and Southwest Airlines Co. fell after Jefferies analysts cut their ratings on concern about consumer spending. Here are some other notable premarket movers:

Newsmax shares jump 11%, putting the conservative media outlet’s stock on track to extend gains after it jumped 735% in its debut Monday.
Live Nation slip 1.5% after President Donald Trump said he will sign an executive order aimed at tackling ticket scalping, saying that it is a “big step” in dealing with an issue that “bothers” a lot of artists
Microvast shares surge 26% after the lithium-ion battery maker reported 2024 revenue that beat its guidance thanks to growing demand for its technology.
Gorilla Technology shares drop 6.4% after the analytics technology firm reported full-year results and reiterated its revenue forecast for 2025.
Intel slid after new CEO Lip-Bu Tan said the chipmaker will spin off assets that aren’t central to its mission and create new products including custom semiconductors to try to better align itself with customers
President Donald Trump will announce his reciprocal tariff plan at 3 p.m. on Wednesday at an event in the White House Rose Garden, but the extent of his levies remain unclear. There’s also confusion around whether the US president will take a lenient or harder tack, making investors wary of risky stock bets. 

“Investors are grappling with what could be announced this week,” said Laura Cooper, global investment strategist at Nuveen. “The range of outcomes is so wide that traders are struggling with how to price in that potential outcome.”

Futures were hit shortly after 6am after the WaPo reported that White House aides have drafted a proposal to impose tariffs of around 20% on most imports to the United States. In a hitpiece that appears intended to spark panic and restart the selloff, the authors write that "if implemented, the plan is likely to send shock waves through the stock market and global economy. Assuming that permanent tariffs took effect in the current quarter and triggered robust retaliation by U.S. trading partners, the economy would almost immediately tumble into a recession that would last for more than a year, sending the jobless rate above 7 percent, according to Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s, who described the results as a worst-case scenario."

Trump has touted his April 2 announcement as a “Liberation Day,” heralding the start of a more protectionist policy meant as retribution against trading partners he has long accused of “ripping off” the US. He has already placed levies on Canada, Mexico and China — the US’s three largest trading partners — as well as automobiles, steel and aluminum. Import taxes on copper could come within several weeks. He has also threatened duties on pharmaceutical, semiconductor and lumber imports.

Many fear Trump’s announcement will mark the start of lengthy and fractious negotiations with trade partners, pressuring the economy and keeping market volatility elevated. On Tuesday, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc is prepared to retaliate if reciprocal tariffs are imposed.

“We could get another period of potential negotiations which is just going to prolong this uncertainty and underpin further choppy price action,” Nuveen’s Cooper said.

As tariffs loom, US carmakers are lobbying the administration to exclude certain low-cost car components, Bloomberg reported. The EU said it will use a broad range of options to retaliate. An analysis by Bloomberg Economics found that a maximalist approach could add up to 28 percentage points to the average US tariff rate — resulting in a hit of 4% to US GDP.

Strategists at Citigroup said that a surge in short flows pushed net positioning for the Nasdaq back to neutral ahead of tariff announcements. Barclays strategists, meanwhile, said that hedge funds and CTAs turned short US equities and long Treasuries last month, likely improving the risk-reward outlook into April 2.

Chip stocks could be in focus after Commerce chief Lutnick signaled he could withhold promised Chips Act grants as he pushes companies in line for subsidies to expand their US projects.

Europe's Stoxx 600 rose 1.2% and is on course to snap a four-day losing streak as concerns regarding imminent US trade tariffs appear to have subsided. All 20 sectors are in the green, with auto, industrial and technology names leading gains. Goldman Sachs strategists cited a weaker growth outlook as a reason to cut their forecast for Europe’s Stoxx 600, following a similar move from the US team. The team led by Sharon Bell trimmed the 12-month target on the index to 570 points from 580. Here are the biggest movers Tuesday:

Europe’s biggest pharmaceutical companies advance, making healthcare the best performing Stoxx 600 subgroup, after JPMorgan analysts say potential US tariffs are expected to have a “manageable impact” on the sector
Gubra shares jump as much as 19% after the Danish drugmaker said interim phase 1 results for its obesity treatment candidate GUBamy were “positive.” Shares trim some gains to rise 12% at 10.27am CET
Greencore Group shares rise as much as 11% after the food producer said better-than-expected profit conversion means its FY25 adjusted operating profit will be ahead of current consensus. Analysts at Jefferies said the positive update
Enav shares jump after results met estimates and the air navigation services firm said it sees an annual revenue growth of 4.3% by 2029; Banca Akros’ Francesco Sala says the results were in line with estimates
UK supermarket stocks fall as a Kantar report adds to concern over increasing competitive pressures across the industry. Separately, BNPP Exane cuts earnings estimates for Tesco and Sainsbury, while downgrading the latter
Genmab falls as much as 5.4% after Bernstein cut its rating on the biotechnology company to underperform, saying the share price is far from fully discounting the loss of exclusivity for its Darzalex blood cancer treatment
Zealand Pharma shares drop as much as 6.3%, worst performer in the Stoxx 600 Health Care Index, after smaller Danish drug developer Gubra said interim early-stage results for its experimental obesity treatment were positive
Travis Perkins shares fall as much as 13% to their lowest since June 2009 after the wholesaler said there was uncertainty regarding recovery in UK construction activity and challenging market conditions have continued
Interroll shares drop as much as 2.6% after Kepler Cheuvreux cut the recommendation on the Swiss industrial equipment firm to reduce from hold, citing limited near-term catalysts and high valuation
Earlier in the session, Asian equities also rose, poised to snap a three-day selloff as traders reassessed positions ahead of the planned imposition of more US tariffs. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index advanced as much as 1.1%, led by gains in Taiwan, South Korea and Hong Kong. TSMC, Tencent and Samsung Electronics were among the biggest boosts. Traders remained on edge, however, with 30-day volatility on the gauge trading around the highest level since October. Most key Asian benchmarks were in the green on Tuesday. India was an exception, with tech heavyweights sliding on concern that slower growth in the US may hurt spending by their clients. Markets in Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines were shut for holidays. 

The rebound doesn’t signal “much about the overall market’s direction in next 6 to 12 months,” said Homin Lee, senior macro strategist at Lombard Odier Singapore. “It will still be important to get the details of Trump’s announcements tomorrow given the significant - and potentially market-negative - complexities implied in the tariff framework Trump appears to be considering.”

In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is little changed. The Aussie dollar pared gains seen after the RBA stood pat on rates with a slight hawkish tinge to the statement. The Swedish krona takes top spot with a 0.5% gain.

In rates, treasuries continue to benefit from haven demand, with futures reaching session highs after the Washington Post reported a White House proposal to impose tariffs of around 20% on most imports. Additional support comes from steeper gains for bunds after euro-area inflation eased further toward the European Central Bank’s 2% target, and declines for S&P 500 futures. US yields are 2bp-4bp richer across maturities with gains led by intermediates, flattening 2s10s spread by around 2bp; 10-year is on session lows around 4.165% with bunds and gilts outperforming by 3bp and 2.5bp in the sector. European government bonds are broadly higher with UK and German 10-year borrowing costs falling 6 bps each. Traders have added to their ECB and BOE interest-rate cut bets, although there was little reaction to euro-area CPI data - the headline matched forecasts while the core rate slowed slightly more than expected. US session includes March US manufacturing PMIs from S&P Global and ISM.

In commodities, spot gold adds $10 to $3,133 having notched another record high earlier near $3,150. WTI is steady near $71.50 a barrel. Bitcoin rises over 2% to above $84,000. 

Today's US economic calendar includes March final S&P Global US manufacturing PMI (9:45am), February construction spending, JOLTS job openings and March ISM manufacturing (10am) and Dallas Fed services activity (10:30am). ed speaker slate includes Richmond Fed’s Barkin discussing monetary policy and the economic outlook (9am).

Market Snapshot

S&P 500 mini -0.5%
Nasdaq 100 mini -0.4%
Russell 2000 mini +0.1%
Stoxx Europe 600 +1.2%, DAX +1.5%, CAC 40 +0.9%
10-year Treasury yield -3 basis points at 4.18%
VIX +0.1 points at 22.39
Bloomberg Dollar Index little changed at 1274.63
euro little changed at $1.0806
WTI crude -0.3% at $71.23/barrel
Top Overnight News

The US plans to extend the 2017 tax cuts, making them permanent and adding Trump’s campaign promises like eliminating taxes on tips, overtime pay and Social Security, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Fox News. BBG
Howard Lutnick may withhold Chips Act grants to push companies to expand their US projects, people familiar said.  Lutnick aims to generate tens of billions of dollars in additional investment commitments without increasing the size of federal grants. Donald Trump created a new office to manage the Chips Act’s funds and speed up some investments in the US. BBG
President Trump signed an executive order establishing the United States Investment Accelerator which establishes an office within the Department of Commerce meant to facilitate and accelerate investments above USD 1bln in the US, while the White House said the Investment Accelerator is to administer the CHIPS program office.
Trump signed an executive order aimed at protecting fans from 'exploitative ticket scalping' and reforming the US live entertainment ticketing industry, according to Reuters.
Republicans could be poised to deal a symbolic blow to President Donald Trump’s trade policy, with several GOP senators indicating they planned to join Democrats in a Tuesday vote to block blanket tariffs on Canada (although the bill will probably never become law). Politico
President Trump said that he had settled on a plan for his latest batch of tariffs expected this week but didn’t reveal what he had decided, after his economic team struggled to coalesce around a remade U.S. trade strategy. He wants to both raise revenue with tariffs and use them as leverage to get other nations to lower their own duties, or make other policy changes.
Boeing (BA) slows the production of 737 Max to 31 craft per month (current 38) to keep from derailing the assembly line, via Air Current; further slowing wing production.
Eurozone CPI for Mar comes in a bit cooler than anticipated on a core basis (+2.4% vs. the Street +2.4% and down from +2.6% in Feb) while headline was inline at +2.2% (down from +2.3% in Feb). BBG
The European Union said it will use a broad range of options to retaliate against the US if President Donald Trump follows through on his threat to impose so-called reciprocal tariffs on the bloc this week. “We do not necessarily want to retaliate,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Tuesday. “If necessary we have a strong plan to retaliate and will use it.” BBG
China's factory activity expanded at its fastest pace in four months in March, buoyed by stronger demand and robust export orders, a private-sector survey showed on Tuesday. The Caixin/S&P Global manufacturing PMI climbed to 51.2 in March from 50.8 in the previous month, surpassing analyst expectations of 51.1. The 50-mark separates growth from contraction. RTRS
China has kicked off large-scale military and coastguard exercises around Taiwan, the latest round in Beijing’s escalating campaign to assert its claims of sovereignty and suppress the island nation’s efforts to preserve its de facto independence. The drills on Tuesday came as Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te seeks to improve military and civilian preparedness for a potential Chinese attach and strengthen society to defend against espionage and other infiltration from China, which last month he called a “hostile foreign force.” FT
China, Japan and South Korea agreed to jointly respond to U.S. tariffs, a social media account affiliated with Chinese state media said on Monday, an assertion Seoul called "somewhat exaggerated", while Tokyo said there was no such discussion. The state media comments came after the three countries held their first economic dialogue in five years on Sunday, seeking to facilitate regional trade as the Asian export powers brace against U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs. RTRS
Tariffs/Trade

US President Trump said we will see tariff details maybe Tuesday night or on Wednesday which are going to be nice in comparison to other countries and in some cases, they may be substantially lower. Trump also stated that many countries have been looting the US and they will stop that on April 2nd, as well as noted there will be investments worth USD 5tln in the US. Furthermore, he stated that TikTok is not tied to a larger tariff deal but could be.
US Treasury Secretary Bessent said President Trump will announce reciprocal tariffs at 15:00EDT/20:00BST on Wednesday.
US automakers seek to exclude low-value car parts from tariffs, according to Bloomberg.
US State Department said Secretary of State Rubio spoke to his Mexican counterpart regarding the US automobile industry, while Rubio thanked Mexico for efforts to reduce illegal immigration and continuing to accept deportation flights.
China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi said higher US tariffs on Chinese goods are unreasonable and harm global markets.
UK Trade Secretary Reynolds says, "we are hopeful that Trump's tariffs will be reversed within weeks, or months"; adds, "It appears tomorrow there'll be no country in the world exempt from the initial announcements", via BBC Breakfast.
EU Commission President von der Leyen says the bloc has the power to push back against US tariffs; all instruments are on the table for countermeasures; EU is open to negotiations on trade. Says EU needs to take down the remaining barriers in the single market. Adds, EU has a strong plan to retaliate if necessary and will use it.
UK PM Starmer says discussions on an economic deal with the US are "well advanced".
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks traded mostly higher as markets recovered from the recent sell-off and with sentiment helped by data releases although gains were capped as tariff uncertainty persists heading into April 2nd 'Liberation Day' reciprocal tariffs. ASX 200 advanced with broad gains seen across sectors, while there was a muted reaction to the RBA rate decision  in which the central bank maintained the Cash Rate at 4.10% as unanimously forecast and provided little clues for future policy. Nikkei 225 rallied at the open after data showed a decline in the Unemployment Rate and a mostly better-than-expected Tankan survey although the index then pulled back and gradually reversed the gains after failing to sustain a brief reclaim of the 36,000 level. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were underpinned after stronger-than-expected Chinese Caixin Manufacturing PMI data.

Top Asian News

Some Chinese banks have reportedly started raising interest rates amid growing bad consumer loans, weeks after cutting rates, according to Reuters sources; the move is expected to weigh on Beijing's efforts to stimulate the economy
RBA kept the Cash Rate unchanged at 4.10%, as expected, while it stated the outlook remains uncertain, underlying inflation is moderating and sustainably returning inflation to target is the priority. RBA noted that monetary policy is well placed to respond to international developments if they were to have material implications for Australian activity and inflation, and noted that the board’s assessment is that monetary policy remains restrictive. Furthermore, it stated the continued decline in underlying inflation is welcome, but there are nevertheless risks on both sides and the board is cautious about the outlook, while the board needs to be confident that this progress will continue so that inflation returns to the midpoint of the target band on a sustainable basis.
RBA Governor Bullock said in the post-meeting press conference there is a chance of more strength in the economy than seems and the board will continue to look at the data, while she said the board did not discuss a rate cut and holding rates was a consensus decision. Bullock also stated they have to be careful not to get ahead of themselves on policy and that the board has not made up its mind on a May move, while she said they are not endorsing the market path on future rate cuts. Furthermore, she said the board did not open the door to a May rate cut and there is more economic data to come, as well as updated forecasts for the May meeting.
RBNZ said the Board is in the process of preparing a recommendation for the appointment of a Governor for six months and will be sending it to the minister soon, while it continues business as usual with Deputy Governor Christian Hawkesby as acting Governor and CEO until such time the minister makes an appointment.
European bourses (STOXX 600 +0.9%) are entirely in the green, as the region recovers from the prior day’s hefty losses. Indices have gradually climbed higher as the morning progressed. European sectors hold a strong positive bias, but with no clear outperformer and with gains fairly broad based given the risk tone. Healthcare leads the pack today, lifted by strength in AstraZeneca (+1.5%) after it reported positive trial results for its cholesterol drug, which has boosted hopes of another blockbuster drug. Consumer Products is a little higher today, with clothing brands benefiting in tandem with post-earning strength in PVH (+15.8% pre-market) which beat Q4 analyst expectations.

Top European News

BoE's Greene says slack is opening up in the UK labour market, happy with central forecast for inflation, disinflation continues to be underway. There is a risk that productivity growth recovery does not happen as the BoE assumes. Rising UK public inflation expectations are concerning, "I think they remain anchored". Dollar's role as a reserve currency could be undermined by the current uncertainty.
ECB's Rehn says if the data verifies the baseline, the right reaction in monetary policy should be to cut in April, via Politico
ECB's Cipollone says "Digitalisation is driving economic progress and transforming the way we make retail payments".
FX

DXY is currently slightly softer but with FX markets broadly in a holding pattern in the run up to Wednesday's "Liberation Day". Ahead of which, US President Trump is said to be still deciding which plan he will take for reciprocal tariffs and has been presented with "multiple" tariff plans, according to administration sources cited by FBN's Lawrence. Today's US data docket includes JOLTS and ISM Manufacturing.
EUR is trivially firmer vs. the USD following an indecisive session yesterday whereby markets digested softer-than-expected German inflation data and ECB sources. On the latter, Bloomberg reported that several ECB officials are still wavering on whether to cut interest rates next month.
USD/JPY has failed to sustain a move above the 150 mark as markets digested mostly better-than-expected data via the latest unemployment and Tankan metrics. USD/JPY has delved as low as 149.51 but is some way off Monday's trough at 148.69.
GBP is flat vs. the USD with fresh macro drivers for the UK on the light side aside from non-incremental comments from BoE's Greene that slack is opening up in the UK labour market and disinflation is continuing. Elsewhere, UK PM Starmer noted that discussions on an economic deal with the US are "well advanced". Cable is currently holding above the 1.29 mark and within yesterday's 1.2885-1.2972 bounds.
Antipodeans are steady vs. the USD with little sustained follow-through from the RBA rate decision. As expected, the RBA held the Cash Rate at 4.1% as unanimously forecast and provided little clues for future policy. In the follow-up press conference, Governor Bullock noted the board did not discuss a rate cut - which did help to lift the Aussie slightly.
PBoC set USD/CNY mid-point at 7.1775 vs exp. 7.2606 (Prev. 7.1782).
Fixed Income

USTs are firmer, and while the move is significant on the session, USTs are yet to surpass the top-end of yesterday’s 111-04 to 111-22+ band. Overall, the narrative remains much the same as markets countdown to "Liberation Day" and await any possible announcements/details on the eve of it. Ahead of that, traders will await US ISM Manufacturing PMI and JOLTS data.
A similar narrative to USTs with Bunds firmer and at a 129.42 peak but shy of Monday’s 129.59 best. If that is surpassed, resistance features at 130.00 before 130.93 from mid-January. The bid this morning in EGBs, and fixed generally, comes as the market is seemingly, for now at least, more concerned with the growth implications than the inflation implications of the looming US measures. Tariffs/trade aside, the morning has seen modest downward revisions to March’s Manufacturing PMIs - though this move was not sustained. And on the inflation front, EZ HICP printed in-line on the headline and cooler than expected for the core and super-core Y/Y. Additionally, the Services Y/Y figure moderated to 3.4% (prev. 3.7%) - despite the cooler figures, a hawkish move was seen.
Gilts are bid but, unlike its peers above, has managed to eclipse Monday’s 92.10 high to a 92.45 peak for the week. A level which encounters resistance from earlier in the month at 92.46, 92.48 and 92.56. Newsflow has unsurprisingly been focused on tariffs, with reports indicating that the UK-US trade deal has broad agreement and is ready to be signed once a few details are ironed out. Commentary from BoE's Greene has had little impact on UK-paper.
Germany sells EUR 3.418bln vs exp. EUR 4.5bln 2.20% 2027 Schatz: b/c 3.5x (prev. 2.4x), average yield 2.01% (prev. 2.22%), retention 24.04% (prev. 22.29%)
Commodities

A choppy session for the crude complex this morning. Price action was initially downward, giving back some of the prior day's upside, but recent CPC pipeline related newsflow has sparked a paring of this pressure and lifted the benchmarks marginally into the green . Reuters reported that Kazakhstan will have to start reducing oil production within days as CPC pipeline reduces intake. WTI May resides in a USD 71.27-71.75/bbl range while Brent June sits in a current USD 74.58-75.02/bbl parameter.
Mixed trade across precious metals with spot gold continuing to hold near record highs, whilst spot silver is subdued and spot palladium coat-tails the gains across the Auto sector this morning. Spot gold currently resides in a USD 3,120.12-3,149.09/oz range.
Mostly firmer trade across base metals, with the complex buoyed by the better-than-expected Chinese Caixin Manufacturing PMI data overnight which bodes well for the demand side of the equation. 3M LME copper currently trades in a narrow USD 9,712.40-9,794.00/t range.
Kazakhstan will have to start reducing oil production within days as CPC pipeline reduces intake, according to Reuters citing multiple sources; CPC repairs will take more than a month, according to a singular source.
Russian oil product exports from Black Sea Port of Tuapse planned at 0.864mln tons in April (prev. scheduled 0.798mln tons in March).
Norway's Gassco sees higher gas deliveries Y/Y this summer due to less maintenance.
Geopolitics: Middle East

Israeli military said it attacked a Hezbollah target in Beirut's southern suburbs.
Iran complained to the UN about reckless and belligerent remarks by US President Trump and said the remarks are a flagrant violation of international law and core principles of the UN Charter, according to a letter seen by Reuters. Iran said it is deeply regrettable and concerning that the US wields military power as its primary tool of coercion to advance political and geopolitical objectives, while it warned it will respond swiftly and decisively to any act of aggression or attack by the US or Israel against its sovereignty, territorial integrity or national interests.
Geopolitics: Ukraine

Ukraine's Foreign Minister says one round of consultations with the US has taken place on the new draft of the minerals deal, the process continues, the text entails strong presence of American business in Ukraine, which contributes to security.
US President Trump said he wants to see Russian President Putin make a deal and wants to make sure Putin follows through, while Trump added he doesn't want to do secondary tariffs but noted secondary tariffs are something that he would do if Putin doesn't do the job.
Russia Defence Ministry says Ukraine continues its attacks on Russia's energy infrastructure, via Interfax; Ukraine attacked Russia's energy infrastructure twice in the last 24hrs.
Geopolitics: China

Chinese military conducted joint army, navy and rocket force exercises around Taiwan, while it stated that sinister moves of Taiwan separatists will cause disaster for themselves and called Taiwan President Lai a parasite in a video related to the drill.
Taiwan senior officials noted that more than 10 Chinese military ships approached close to Taiwan's 24 nautical mile contiguous zone on Tuesday morning and Taiwan dispatched its own warships to respond, while Taiwan's presidential official strongly condemned China's military drills and said China is widely recognised by the international community as a troublemaker.
De facto US embassy in Taiwan said it is closely monitoring China's military activity near Taiwan and that China has shown that it is not a responsible actor and has no problem putting the region’s security and prosperity at risk. It also stated the US will continue to support Taiwan in the face of China’s military, economic, informational, and diplomatic pressure campaign.
Geopolitics: Other

US President Trump responded that there is communication when asked about North Korea and commented that he will probably do something on North Korea.
US Secretary of State Rubio said the US is taking steps to impose visa restrictions on Chinese officials substantially involved in policies related to access for foreigners to Tibetan areas.
US Event Calendar

9:45 am: Mar F S&P Global U.S. Manufacturing PMI, est. 49.85, prior 49.8
10:00 am: Feb Construction Spending MoM, est. 0.3%, prior -0.16%
10:00 am: Feb JOLTS Job Openings, est. 7655k, prior 7740k
10:00 am: Mar ISM Manufacturing, est. 49.5, prior 50.3
10:00 am: Mar ISM Prices Paid, est. 64.6, prior 62.4
DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Happy April Fools' Day. I could make up a wild story here but it might be boring relative to realities these days. Having said that, 15 years ago today I went on a first date with my wife. I think she now thinks that there has been a decade and a half long April Fools' joke at her expense. So thoughts are with her this morning.

For US markets Q1 seemed like a bad joke as the rest of the world left it behind in equity terms. Henry will soon be releasing our regular performance review, running through how different assets fared over the quarter just gone. It’s fair to say it was a historic period for markets, as the combination of US tariffs, the European fiscal shift, and DeepSeek’s AI model led to a huge reappraisal about the near-term outlook. Indeed, the S&P 500 has just posted its worst month in two years. However, European equities did very well by comparison, with the DAX up +11.32% YTD thanks to the fiscal impulse. And given the general risk-off tone and stagflationary fears, gold put in its best quarterly performance since 1986. See the full review in your inboxes shortly.

Some of those Q1 trends did reverse yesterday amid a jittery quarter-end session as investors await the US reciprocal tariffs announcement tomorrow. The S&P 500 recovered from -1.65% down shortly after the open, when it was briefly back in correction territory, to close +0.55% higher, while the STOXX 600 (-1.51%) fell to a two-month low. On the US side there must have been some quarter end flows that made a difference, especially as US equity futures are back down nearly half a percent this morning.

The losses for the STOXX 600 means that it has now unwound over half of its YTD gains, having risen +5.18% since the start of the year, though it is still way ahead of the S&P 500’s -4.59% decline. And even as US equities outperformed, the gains for the S&P were led by defensive sectors with consumer staples (+1.63%) leading the way. By contrast, the Magnificent 7 (-0.41%) moved lower, while the VIX (+0.62pts) rose for a fourth consecutive session, reaching a two-week high of 22.28. And over in Japan, yesterday saw the Nikkei fall -4.05%, marking its biggest daily decline since September. This morning it's given up most of its attempts to rally back and is only just above flat.

In terms of the upcoming tariff announcement, we still don’t know which countries they’ll be imposed on and what rate. It's fair to say that the administration might not have the final plan ready as yet. Yesterday, White House Press Secretary Leavitt said a planned Rose Garden announcement would feature “country-based” tariffs, with further sectoral duties to come later, while last night Treasury Secretary Bessent said on Fox News that Trump will announce the reciprocal tariffs at 3pm EST on Wednesday. Bessent also said that he was working with Republicans in Congress to deliver Trump’s fiscal campaign promises, including “No tax on tips, no tax on Social Security, no tax on overtime”.

A big concern for investors is that the US tariffs will be met by retaliatory moves, which in turn could lead to a further round of escalation as the US seek to respond. So that’s meant inflation expectations have continued to rise, with the 1yr US inflation swap (+13.3bps) yesterday hitting another two-year high of 3.25%. Other traditional inflation hedges have done well on the back of that, with gold prices (+1.24%) moving up to another record high of $3,124/oz. And matters weren’t helped yesterday by a fresh rise in oil prices, with Brent crude (+1.51%) moving up to a one-month high of $74.74/bbl. So collectively, that’s served to exacerbate existing concerns about inflationary pressures.

Those losses cascaded across global markets, and mounting fears of a US downturn led to a fresh decline in Treasury yields. For instance, the 2yr yield (-2.8bps) fell back to 3.89%, whilst the 10yr yield (-4.3bps) fell to 4.21% with a further -1.15bps fall in Asia so far. That came as investors dialled up the likelihood of Fed rate cuts over the rest of the year, with the amount priced in by the December meeting up +2.7bps on the day to 76bps. Those declines in yields would have been even greater were it not for the move up in inflation expectations, as the 2yr real yield (-4.5bps) hit a two-and-a-half year low of 0.60%.

Over in Europe, sovereign bonds had initially rallied as well, but those moves were pared back after Bloomberg reported that ECB officials were questioning whether they should cut rates again at the next meeting. They’ve already delivered 150bps of easing since last June, but inflation is still lingering slightly above target, and the article said that policymakers were thinking about a pause given the uncertainty over tariffs and higher military spending. There was no sourcing in the article so its not clear it was anything other than observing the facts as they stand. Regardless of this, yields on 10yr bunds (+1.0bps), OATs (+2.1bps) and BTPs (+1.9bps) had all moved slightly higher. An April cut by the ECB was 73% priced by the close, having been at nearly 90% early in the session but falling as low as 65% after the Bloomberg story broke.

Earlier in the day, we also had the latest inflation data from Germany, where the EU-harmonised print surprised on the downside at +2.3% (vs. +2.4% expected). That followed last week’s releases showing downside surprises in France and Spain, so those collectively pointed on the downside. However, the Italian reading yesterday was stronger than expected, moving up to +2.1% (vs. +1.8% expected), so that pointed in the other direction. We’ll get the Euro Area-wide numbers today, so that’ll be an important input for the ECB’s next decision in just over two weeks’ time.

Staying on Europe, there was significant political news out of France, as the National Rally’s Marine Le Pen was given a five-year election ban after being convicted of embezzling EU funds. That means she wouldn’t be able to run in the next presidential election in 2027, but Le Pen’s lawyer said that she’ll appeal the verdict. Later in the evening, Le Pen criticised the ruling as a “political decision”, saying she would fight for the right to run for President.

Asian equities are recovering this morning after Wall Street’s overnight gains but performance is mixed. Across the region, the KOSPI (+1.89%) is leading gains with the Hang Seng (+1.06%) also trading notably higher. Elsewhere, the Nikkei's (+0.20%) recovery is disappointing after yesterdays -4.05% rout where it hit a six-month low. The S&P/ASX 200 (+0.92%) is also trading higher after the RBA decided to leave rates unchanged while Chinese equities are edging higher with the CSI (+0.29%) and the Shanghai Composite (+0.59%) both trading in the green as China’s factory activity beat forecasts (more below). S&P 500 (-0.40%) and NASDAQ 100 (-0.45%) futures are moving back lower.

As was widely expected, the RBA left the Official Cash Rate (OCR) unchanged at 4.1% at the conclusion of the April monetary policy meeting this morning. In an accompanying statement the central bank sounded cautious about the outlook and reiterated that returning inflation sustainably to target remains the highest priority, thus failing to give clarity on when the next rate cut might arrive. Attention now turns to the next two-day meeting on 19-20 May, where markets expect a second cut after February’s 25bps cut, which was the first reduction since late 2020.

Coming back to China, manufacturing activity grew more than expected to a four-month high as the Caixin manufacturing PMI hit 51.2 in March (v/s 50.6 expected) due to a sustained rise in new orders. It follows the prior month’s reading of 50.8. The Caixin data comes after the official PMI over the weekend, which showed the manufacturing sector grew a bit more than expected in March.

To the day ahead now, and US data releases include the ISM manufacturing for March, and the JOLTS report for February. Elsewhere, we’ll get the global manufacturing PMIs for April, the Euro Area flash CPI print for March, and the Euro Area unemployment rate for February. Central bank speakers include ECB President Lagarde, and the ECB’s Vujcic, Cipollone and Lane, along with the Fed’s Barkin and the BoE’s Greene. And in the political sphere, there are two special elections taking place for the US House of Representatives in Florida.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 08:26

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Ukraine Has Secret Nuclear Doomsday Plan, According To Former Zelensky Advisor
Ukraine Has Secret Nuclear Doomsday Plan, According To Former Zelensky Advisor

Via Remix News,

Ukraine has a secret last-ditch “scorched earth” plan to render its entire territory uninhabitable in the event of a Russian victory in the war – and perhaps the rest of Europe with it.



This is according to Oleksiy Arestovych, a former adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

In an interview with a Ukrainian journalist that he gave last month, Arestovych claimed that Ukraine’s current head of military intelligence, Kirill Budanov, has floated a plan to blow up all of Ukraine’s nuclear power plants, and possibly some of Russia’s as well, if all other defensive measures fail.


🇺🇸🇺🇦🚨‼️ IMPORTANT: “(The Americans) perceive us as a monkey with a grenade!”
(The Americans) know about our plans to blow up all the nuclear power plants, if Ukraine loses.
They are not taking away our property, but want to control the things that are dangerously to humanity.”… pic.twitter.com/uFK673JZxq
— Lord Bebo (@MyLordBebo) March 22, 2025
Ukraine currently operates four nuclear power plants with a total of 15 reactors. One of them, the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Station, is the largest plant in Europe and has been under Russian occupation since March 2022. Russia, for its part, has 37 reactors divided among 11 power plants.

If all or even some of these reactors were attacked and destroyed simultaneously, the destructive impact would be beyond calculation. The Chernobyl nuclear accident that occurred in Ukraine in 1986, and which remains the worst disaster involving nuclear energy in history, killed dozens and led to long-term health problems for thousands of others. It also led to the evacuation of tens of thousands of people and rendered the surrounding area permanently uninhabitable, spreading radioactivity over a large area and even into Western Europe.


What would happen if Russia targeted a nuclear plant in Ukraine? https://t.co/qcJkAc23X7
— Remix News & Views (@RMXnews) June 7, 2023
Moreover, the Chernobyl disaster required the combined resources of the Soviet Union, as well as the assistance it received from other countries, to contain it. In a scenario where several nuclear plants were destroyed simultaneously, it would likely exceed the ability of any nation to bring it under control. The resulting casualties and damage to the environment would therefore be many times worse than what happened in 1986.

Nor would this catastrophe be limited to Ukraine and Russia: Harmful radioactivity would undoubtedly be carried by the atmosphere and spread over the rest of Europe as well.

Arestovych raised the alleged plan in the context of U.S. President Donald Trump’s suggestion that Ukraine’s nuclear reactors should be brought under American control. The White House reported that the president had proposed the idea to Zelensky in a phone call they had last month, arguing that this would offer the “best protection” for the country’s nuclear energy infrastructure.

While some accused the American president of wanting to seize control of Ukraine’s energy resources for his own country’s benefit, Arestovych asserted that the real reason was that Washington knows about Budanov’s apocalyptic plan. He said that the Trump administration sees the Ukrainian government as “apes with a grenade” and wants to “take these dangerous toys out of our control.”

“They know about our plans to blow up all the nuclear power plants if Ukraine starts losing,” Arestovych said. “Budanov was running around with this [idea] a year and a half ago. Blow up everything, the Russian plants we can reach as well as our own, so that nobody gets them.”


Zelensky’s time is nearly up, says a former close advisor to Zelensky, but elections could also result in chaos and a collapse of Ukraine. https://t.co/aXV9Vz290a
— Remix News & Views (@RMXnews) March 19, 2025
The rationale behind this doomsday scenario, the former adviser claimed, is “we all bite the dust, but so will they.” He referred to Zelensky and his senior staff as “a group of deranged people.”

Arestovych further stated that American efforts to gain control over Ukraine’s nuclear facilities actually date back to the Biden administration, when such plans were proposed under the guise of scientific research. The U.S. Republicans, he says, prefer a more direct approach.

Arestovych also alluded to the efforts of Ukrainian banker Oleh Gorokhovsky to raise funds for a nuclear weapons program for the country following Trump’s explosive clash with Zelensky in the Oval Office last month. His fundraiser brought in more than half a million euros.

Originally a military officer, Arestovych predicted in a video interview that he gave in 2019 that Russia would attack Ukraine between 2020 and 2022, and that the resulting war would be used as a pretext for Ukraine joining NATO. He was appointed as a government advisor on national security and defense in 2020.


Arestovych, then the advisor of Zelensky, argued in 2019 that Russia would have to invade Ukraine (with 99.9% certainty) to prevent NATO expansion, and this would be an opportunity to collectively defeat Russia: "Our price for joining NATO is a big war with Russia" pic.twitter.com/mMqPWBtzGJ
— Glenn Diesen (@Glenn_Diesen) March 14, 2025
Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Arestovych gave daily briefings at the president’s office. In January 2023, he claimed that what the Ukrainian government said was a deliberate Russian attack on a residential complex was in fact the result of an error by Ukraine’s own air defense forces. This angered many and he resigned from his position the same month.

Arestovych has continued to comment publicly on the war and has been critical of Zelensky’s handling of it. He eventually left Ukraine out of fear of being arrested. He still has a significant social media following, and has said that he will run for president of Ukraine when the next elections are held.


Zelensky exposed: Former advisor reveals how Ukrainian president thinks he is omnipotent.https://t.co/iWffHnK2bZ
— Remix News & Views (@RMXnews) October 24, 2023
Several attacks have already been launched against both Ukrainian and Russian nuclear reactors since the current war began, although fortunately no significant damage has been caused so far. Each side has accused the other of being behind these assaults.

Read more here...

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 08:40

Atlas Obscura
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Lytham St Annes Spitfire Memorial in Lytham, England

The Hill
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House Democrat: Trump not 'imagining a democratic election for his third term'
Rep. Dan Goldman (D-N.Y.) compared President Trump's suggestion he could run for a third term to Russian President Vladimir Putin, currently in his fifth term, saying Trump is not "imagining a democratic election." “I don't think, by the way, that he's imagining a democratic election for his third term. He is trying to be Vladimir...

The Hill
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My MAHA involvement 'not a political issue': Dr. Phil McGraw
McGraw said his concerns transcend political divisions: "There aren't any Democrat children. There aren't any Republican children."

The Hill
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Trump is whitewashing US history and embracing 'alternative facts' 
It’s impossible for the Smithsonian to truthfully tell the American story without mentioning racism, sexism and other forms of discrimination, bigotry and flaws. 

Sky News Home
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Cast of Beatles films revealed
Paul Mescal and Barry Keoghan will play Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr in the upcoming Beatles films - with a Stranger Things star also portraying one of the Fab Four.

ZDNet News
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How to talk to your family and friends about online security - before it's too late
Your friends and family members are just waiting to be exploited by online attackers. They need your help.

Deutsche Welle
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Middle East updates: Israeli strike on Beirut kills 4
Israel's strike on Beirut was its second attack on the Lebanese capital since a ceasefire with Hezbollah in November. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said all violations of sovereignty must be prevented. DW has more.

Russia Today News
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NATO will ‘survive’ Trump – top EU diplomat

BBC UK News
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Scottish tourist dies after Rome holiday explosion
Grant Paterson was on a break in Rome when the B&B in the city's Monteverde area collapsed on 24 March.

Mail Online
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This Morning star slammed over 'deeply hurtful' April Fool's joke amid fake pregnancy announcement as followers brand her 'embarrassing'
The This Morning star shared the 'news' with her fans on Instagram on April 1, alluding to a pregnancy announcement by cradling a bump under her jumper.

Sky News Home
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Why are Birmingham bin workers striking and how long will it last?
Piles of black rubbish bags are filling the pavements of Birmingham, as the city deals with an ongoing bin strike.

The Guardian (UK)
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Donald Trump is eyeing up a third term – and no one is opposing him | Arwa Mahdawi
So many people and organisations are capitulating to the US president, from Silicon Valley to the Democrats, legal firms and elite universities. How realistic is the prospect of Trump 3.0?Hell is empty and all the devils are in Washington DC. And, what with devils being immortal and all, it looks as if they might stay there indefinitely. Now, before I seamlessly segue from fun devil facts into talking about Donald Trump threatening to run for a third term, the current political climate compels me to make a few things clear. I recently had to submit my US green card for renewal (impeccable timing!) so I’d like to explain to any United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) officers reviewing my file that the first line of this piece was just riffing on Shakespeare. I’m absolutely not comparing Trump, the greatest man to walk this Earth, to Satan. Nor am I suggesting evil people seem to live long lives.On the contrary, I am thrilled that our 78-year-old president has suggested he is looking into “methods” that will allow him to serve this wonderful country longer. And it’s a shame my enthusiasm isn’t universally shared. I mean, to quote JD Vance (who is up there next to Shakespeare in the words department), have any Trump detractors SAID THANK YOU ONCE? Trump could be relaxing with his billions; he could be playing golf every day. Instead, the poor man only gets to play golf every few days – costing taxpayers millions of dollars – and has to spend most of his time sorting out the US. The economy doesn’t just crash itself, you know? So thank you, Mr President. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Icelandic town and Blue Lagoon spa evacuated after volcanic eruption
Those who have not already left Grindavík warned nearby eruption could be much bigger than 10 since 2021Europe live – latest updatesThe Icelandic town of Grindavík and the nearby tourist attraction the Blue Lagoon have been evacuated after the area was hit by another volcanic eruption.The eruption is the 11th since 2021, when the Reykjanes peninsula, a region south-west of Reykjavík, started its new eruption period. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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UK business secretary denies free speech issue featured in US tariff talks
Source reportedly says ‘no free trade without free speech’ after US bureau holds meeting with anti-abortion campaignerUK politics live – latest updatesThe business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, has denied that the issue of free speech has featured in tariff negotiations with the US after reports a deal could be jeopardised by the outcome of a criminal case in Dorset.The Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (DRL), an office within the US Department of State, has met the anti-abortion campaigner Livia Tossici-Bolt, who was prosecuted for an alleged breach of a buffer zone outside a Bournemouth abortion clinic. The verdict is due on Friday following a trial at Poole magistrates court. Continue reading...

BBC World News
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Putin begins biggest Russian military call-up in years
Russia calls up 160,000 men aged 18-30 as it moves to expand the size of its military.

Deutsche Welle
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Can US agriculture withstand a trade war with China?
US soybean farmers are facing uncertainty as Donald Trump's trade policies spark fears of market volatility. Can they navigate the risks of tariffs and lost exports?

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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What you can do about the seven bills going up this week
Several bills are going up at the start of April - but there are some things you can do about it.

The Guardian (UK)
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Nadia Nadim and the pursuit of happiness in women’s football
We look at the 37-year-old’s acrimonious exit from Milan and why being happy is key to allowing players to play wellNadia Nadim was not holding back. Having left Milan for the Swedish side Hammarby she hit out at the Italian club’s Dutch manager, Suzanne Bakker, in a forthright interview with Aftonbladet’s Amanda Zaza.“It was a shock to be introduced to her,” said the Afghanistan-born Denmark international, with the two clearly disagreeing on how things should be done. “I can honestly say that the training sessions at the refugee camps were better.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Help! Why are none of the new Beatles cast from Liverpool? | Peter Bradshaw
So Sam Mendes has cast his Beatles tetralogy, but none are from Merseyside. Don’t worry, I’ve just invented the Beatles Cinematic Universe Sam Mendes has announced the cast for his colossal four-film Beatles extravaganza: Harris Dickinson as John, Paul Mescal as Paul, Barry Keoghan as Ringo and Joseph Quinn as George – and to tumultuous acclaim he brought his Fab Four on stage at the CinemaCon event in Las Vegas, a now well-established affair in the film world, incidentally, satirised in a forthcoming episode of Seth Rogen’s TV comedy The Studio.I’m sorry to say, however, that Sam has almost entirely ignored the casting suggestions that I made in February last year. For what this is worth, I went with Leo Woodall as Paul, Finn Wolfhard as George, Harry Melling as Ringo and Barry Keoghan as John (though Barry got Ringo in the end). But I like to think that Sam Mendes and his producer Pippa Harris were thinking on more or less the same lines as me. Interestingly, there are no American actors doing Brit accents – just the kind of well-trained British or Irish actors who can fabricate perfect American accents for American roles elsewhere. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Democratic senator Cory Booker holding marathon speech to highlight ‘recklessness’ of Trump policies – US politics live
New Jersey Democrat began talking on Monday night to highlight ‘a nation in crisis’ and is still going Wisconsin and Florida voters head to polls in test of Trump’s popularityUS voters are headed to the polls on Tuesday in Wisconsin and Florida in elections that some see as a test of Donald Trump’s popularity and the political clout of his billionaire ally Elon Musk.The most closely watched contest is a battle for a seat on Wisconsin’s seven-member supreme court. Conservatives are trying to flip ideological control of the court, which currently has a 4-3 liberal majority. The contest, which features liberal judge Susan Crawford facing off against conservative Brad Schimel, will have huge consequences in the state. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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King honours Alan Titchmarsh and Olympic star in first public engagement since short hospital stay
The King has made his first public engagement since a brief stay in hospital last week, honouring TV gardener Alan Titchmarsh and British athlete Katarina Johnson-Thompson, during an investiture at Windsor Castle.

Techdirt
Open 
Jon Stewart And Ezra Klein Help GOP Paint Infrastructure Bill Broadband Grants As A Useless Boondoggle
We’ve long noted how the 2021 infrastructure bill included $42.5 billion for broadband dubbed the Broadband, Equity, Access And Deployment (BEAD) program. Managed by the NTIA and individual states, we’ve also noted how this money has taken a long time to get to the states for some good reasons. Namely they wanted to avoid the […]

BBC UK News
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Man who stalked Shirley Ballas for six years sentenced
The sentencing judge says Kyle Shaw made a "menacing threat" against Shirley Ballas and her family.

Sky News Home
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Seven-figure settlement agreed in Celtic Boys Club abuse cases
Twenty-two legal claims of historical abuse at Celtic Boys Club have been settled for a seven-figure sum, a law firm has announced.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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King Charles makes Alan Titchmarsh CBE in return to public duties
The King carries out his first public engagement since experiencing side effects from his cancer treatment last Thursday.

BBC UK News
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Victims will be able to attend offenders' parole hearings
The scheme, piloted in Greater Manchester, is being rolled out across England and Wales.

Mail Online
Open 
Iceland volcano eruption looks set to be 'much larger' than previous events, officials warn: Lava bears down on homes as island is hit by 200 earthquakes and civilians are evacuated
The Icelandic Civil Defence warned that the eruption on the Sundhnuksgigar Crater Row could continue to swell given the huge amount of magma built up

Mail Online
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The questions that Virginia Giuffre faces from Prince Andrew allies over claim she has 'four days left to live' - after police said crash was 'minor'
Prince Andrew's sexual abuse accuser Virginia Giuffre posted a photo of her bruised face lying on a hospital bed on Instagram and said doctors told her she is going to die due to kidney failure after a crash.

Chatham House
Open 
Yemen: What has a decade of military intervention achieved?
Yemen: What has a decade of military intervention achieved?
10
April 2025 — 2:00PM TO 3:00PM
Anonymous (not verified)
1 April 2025

Online
Experts examine the impact of a decade of regional and international military intervention in Yemen and implications for the country’s future.
The recent US airstrikes on Yemen signal a dramatic shift in the ongoing conflict. In March 2015, the Saudi Arabia and UAE-led Arab Coalition, with Western military and intelligence support, launched a major military campaign, Decisive Storm. The campaign aimed at pushing back the Iran-backed Houthi after they seized Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, in September 2014.Despite the fragile truce that emerged parallel to the formation of Yemen’s Presidential Council in April 2022, the conflict has only deepened. Regional and international actors are increasingly involved. The country also faces one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises. The Houthis’ crackdown on aid workers, diplomats, and activists in mid-2024 has led donors to reconsider their support for Yemen. This has been exacerbated by the Trump administration’s decision to shut down USAID—one of Yemen’s largest humanitarian contributors.Moreover, the Houthis’ missile and drone attacks on Israel after October 7th, along with their role in global trade disruptions, have taken the international community off-guard, with significant costs and consequences.Speakers in this webinar will address the following key questions:What is the current situation in Yemen, and what prospects exist for the resumption of a UN-led peace process?What are the current policies and priorities of Saudi Arabia, Iran, and other regional actors in Yemen?What is the long-term strategy of the US and the UK regarding Yemen?What role does Yemen, and specifically the Houthis, play in current regional conflicts, such as the situation in Gaza?How does the US designation of the Houthis as an FTO affect the peace process and humanitarian efforts in Yemen?

Mac Rumours
Open 
Delta Emulator Gains Online Multiplayer for Nintendo DS Games
The popular iOS game emulator Delta has received a major update that adds online multiplayer functionality for Nintendo DS games. Version 1.7 of the app now allows players to compete against each other in classic DS titles like Mario Kart DS, Bomberman, and Animal Crossing.





Nintendo officially shut down the original DS online services back in 2014, so Delta relies on alternative Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection servers maintained by the community. The way it works is very straightforward – simply select your preferred server within the emulator settings. No complex DNS or network configuration is required. A list of supported games can be found on Wikipedia.



Beyond online multiplayer, version 1.7 also introduces several other notable improvements. Nintendo 64 emulation has been enhanced, with new options to upscale resolution and use custom texture packs for improved visuals. A quick screenshot feature has also been added, alongside various bug fixes and performance optimizations.



Delta is regarded as one of the most polished game emulators available on iOS, supporting multiple Nintendo platforms including NES, SNES, N64, Game Boy, Game Boy Advance, and Nintendo DS. The app offers robust controller support, save states, cheats, game backups, and cloud syncing.



For players looking to try these new features, Delta 1.7 is currently available through AltStore PAL for users in the European Union, with a global App Store release expected soon. The emulator remains free to download.This article, 'Delta Emulator Gains Online Multiplayer for Nintendo DS Games' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

TechRadar News
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Samsung Galaxy S25's best AI feature could be coming to your older Galaxy phone soon

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Labour's populist pantomime over sentencing rules plays into the hands of the right | Janey Starling
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Poor Prince Harry: what to do when someone close to you publicly trashes an institution you love? | Marina Hyde
As claims pile up about the charity he founded, he’s learning that smiling and biting your lip can be quite painful. Hear, hear, as the Windsors might sayStraight faces, please, as we try to look charitably at the toxic row engulfing Prince Harry’s charity. Are you up to speed with this everyday story of giving folk? I’m in such a muddle with it all that I can’t remember if I’m allowed to say that purely from my observations of her telly interviews, Sentebale chair Sophie Chandauka does seem like a right old loose cannon.But I’m getting ahead of myself, so let’s do a quick recap. Sentebale is a charity to help children and young people with HIV and Aids in Lesotho and Botswana, and was set up almost two decades ago by Prince Harry and Prince Seeiso of Lesotho, in honour of their mothers. Its current chair is Chandauka, a Zimbabwean lawyer, and something about her stewardship of the charity has provoked its entire board of trustees to judge that their relationship has broken down irretrievably. Accordingly, they have all resigned. Chandauka in turn has said that the charity was riddled with “poor governance, weak executive management, abuse of power, bullying, harassment, misogyny [and] misogynoir”, and accused Prince Harry of “harassment and bullying at scale”.Marina Hyde is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

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Germany's Stern Magazine Calls For Conscription Of Young People To Take Up Arms "To Defend Diversity" In Pro-War Propaganda Piece
Germany's Stern Magazine Calls For Conscription Of Young People To Take Up Arms "To Defend Diversity" In Pro-War Propaganda Piece

Via Remix News,

Stern Magazine is calling for mass conscription of German youths to join the army, including to ensure the defense of “freedom and diversity.” The reaction to the article has been harsh to say the least, with hundreds of negative comments directed at Stern.



The article, entitled “Others no longer defend us? Then we must do it ourselves!” claims that “the USA no longer wants to protect Germany. This brings a bitter realization: Our unbearable complacency must end.”

The solution? Start drafting German youth to fight the future wars. The author, Tilman Gerwien, a German male noticeable well past the age of someone who might typically be drafted, says that the days of a “dollhouse-like Bullerbü” are over and “we have to grow up.” He details the left’s traditional stance against conscription, which saw German youths demanding American troops leave Germany, was “not only a matter of conscience, but also a lifestyle.” He noted that at demonstrations against NATO, “people hopped around in peace-loving spirits, chanting ‘Out of NATO, into fun!'” All of this has to end, according to Gerwien.

There is no way to know if Gerwien was ever a part of these previous protests or ever shared those sentiments at one time, but it is notable that he is now old enough to not have to face the draft himself. Lucky him.


Does Germany want another war?
German man who lived through WWII fears anti-Russian rhetoric from Friedrich Merz.
"Since Hitler, no one has ever agitated against Russia as much as he did, That reminded me of when I was 9 years old..... What’s happening here is a disaster." pic.twitter.com/LGrx2fRhJx
— Remix News & Views (@RMXnews) March 24, 2025
He is a part of the trend of the German establishment left suddenly becoming gung-ho in recent years, especially since Putin invaded Ukraine. The old Green Party ideals of removing NATO from Europe and pursuing an anti-war agenda have been jettisoned. In this sense, much of the establishment left has become outright hawkish. With Trump now in office, the hawkishness from this German establishment has now gone into overdrive, with the Greens joining forces with the CDU to promote a defense-oriented Germany.

Will Germans fight for the “New Germany?”

Of course, the “New Germany” does not exactly have people lining up to fight for it, and that is a real problem for the establishment. Much of the conservative youth no longer see a Germany they would lay down their lives for, and in fact, the “New Germany” openly despises these AfD-voting youths, and maybe even sending them to the front would solve this “problem.”

Meanwhile, the left-wing youth is coddled and mostly pacifist. This “Spiegel/Stern left” may like the idea of soldiers going off to fight on their behalf, but they don’t actually want to do the fighting themselves. The old notions of “honor” and “heroes” have been widely mocked and denigrated by the German elite, which Stern acknowledges,

So, who will fight?

Well, in the end, there doesn’t have to be a “reason” for conscription. Youths in Germany, just as in Ukraine, will be forced to the front for the likes of Stern’s editorial staff when push comes to shove, but it’s a nice thought for these journalists that these youths will at least think they have something worth dying for.

So, what should they die for? Stern addresses this problem, as the very atomized and multicultural society it promotes reduces the will for Germans to die face down in some trench at the frontline.

The magazine writes, “Taking all of this into account, Germany faces a tremendous challenge. We must dare to embrace more ‘heroism’ – and less hedonism. More communal commitment and less responsibility-avoiding individualism. And be careful not to lose sight of what we want to defend: freedom and diversity. If the pendulum swings too far toward individualization, we become defenseless. If the focus is too strongly on defense, the ghosts of the past are awakened, keyword ‘national community.’ It’s important to find the balance.”

See, Stern doesn’t want right-wing people who love their country fighting a patriotic war at the front. This could lead to people voting for the AfD, and then… Hitler will come back. This is the logic of Der Spiegel, Stern, and many others.

They instead want iPhone-wielding hipsters who love diversity dying in the trenches. These iPhone-wielding youths should be at the front to defend guys like Gerwien so they can go to Vietnamese restaurants, attend book readings from African authors, and enjoy art installations from Brazilian LGBT activists.

German youth should die for all the above, not for the “German people,” or the “German flag,” or “hearth and home” or any of that other fascist nonsense that typically united nations and led men to lay down their lives for each other and their families.

Stern also appears relatively sure this youth will indeed be dying as well, saying they “will have to take up arms at some point.”

“At the very latest, when conscription comes into effect, ‘they’ (the Bundeswehr) will be all of us – even if only because our children and grandchildren will have to take up arms at some point,” writes Stern. “This raises the question: What are we prepared to fight for and, when push comes to shove, to die for? The fact that we are being asked to answer for the first time in decades is the true ‘turning point.'”

However, as Stern writes, German youths are not just fighting for diversity, but also for “freedom.” 

Notably, if you have any problem with “German freedom,” such as Germany’s harsh free speech laws, then your freedom should be curtailed with a visit from the police, as is increasingly the case in Germany.

Of course, freedom and democracy are tied together, and German youths should be fighting at the front to defend a government increasingly intent on banning the second most popular party in the country, the AfD, which just hit a new polling high this week at 23.5 percent. But freedom also means banning political parties, and we must all fight for the right to ban political parties whose opinions we do not agree with, especially if that party is opposed to the war in Ukraine, which all German youth (future soldiers fighting for diversity) should support..

It all sounds very confusing, but “freedom and diversity” certainly sound good as long as we don’t look at the details.

It is also worth noting that despite Germans being called to “defend diversity,” the cover of Stern is remarkably lacking in diversity. It’s two White people, a boy and girl.


German media makes propaganda push urging young people to fight in wars.
"Would you fight for Germany?" asks Stern in an article supporting conscription.
Our advice: The @sternde editorial staff should volunteer for duty in Ukraine now before the war comes to Germany. pic.twitter.com/F6ONkT2tok
— Remix News & Views (@RMXnews) March 25, 2025
Considering Germany’s youth are becoming more and more diverse, one would think that it would have been the perfect opportunity to feature a Black or Arab person. Go to any clothing store in Germany or any other Western country, and the classic motif of the Black male paired with the White female is ubiquitous. However, as those on the right often point out, when the threat of real wars start, the White males suddenly start appearing more and more frequently in the recruiting ads of the armed forces.

Laughably, the Stern call to action quotes military historian Sönke Neitzel, who told the magazine in support of conscription: “What are we waiting for?” “That 100 percent of the population is in favor of it?” He claims people won’t like it, but it simply has to happen.

Well, maybe they could at least wait until there is 20 percent of the population supporting such measures? A new Forsa poll shows that only 17 percent of Germans are willing to take up arms and die for their country. In short, Stern’s vision of an army of conscripts ready to die for Germany sounds a bit like Hitler at the end of the war, who was completely separated from reality and moving armies around on the map that did not exist.

Of those 17 percent, how many of them are older people or women who actually would not take up arms or even be forced to take up arms should the call to war come?

As Remix News reported in the past, the Ukrainian army has had something the German army did not, which was a patriotic, hardcore, right-wing element that was willing to “die for Ukraine.” Not all of these soldiers were neo-Nazis, but many certainly were. A huge number of these soldiers are already dead, and the war may be coming to an end. Ironically, Ukraine may end up more like Germany in the end with the death of these soldiers, as calls by Ukrainian business leaders to accept the mass importation of migrants to replace the soldiers lost are becoming more of a mainstream idea.

Germany’s push for conscription will continue, with hundreds of billions being directed into weapons purchases. The only problem is that Germans are not going to want to fly these fighter jets or drive these tanks.


Die #Zeitenwende entscheidet sich nicht bloß an neuen Milliarden für die #Bundeswehr. Sondern vor allem daran, ob wir bereit sind zu tun, was uns fremd geworden ist: kämpfen. Unsere aktuelle Titelgeschichte lest ihr hier: https://t.co/TwwzNWW0AA pic.twitter.com/Ragr35s9hq
— stern (@sternde) March 19, 2025
As the X comments note, Germans do not seem especially enthusiastic. One user writes: “Why should you fight for a country that you can’t even be proud of?”

Another responds: “You’ve failed with your miserable war training and war mentality. Only 17% of Germans want to defend Germany with weapons in hand, according to the latest Forsa survey. You won’t have my children, you miserable indoctrinators and arms industry lobbyists!”

Another asks how old the boy on the cover of the magazine is: “Shouldn’t the question be: Would you give your child? How old is the boy on the cover? 17? Man, man, man… This is on the level of ‘Jesus would have been vaccinated.'”

Some do not even want people to buy Stern, period.

“No—don’t fight! And don’t buy that stupid state propaganda magazine either,” wrote another.

Read more here...

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 06:30

ZeroHedge News
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Canadians Leaf USA Out Of Travel Plans To Protest Trump
Canadians Leaf USA Out Of Travel Plans To Protest Trump

Pissed off Canadians are skipping trips to the United States over President Donald Trump's trade policies and 'disrespect' - after Trump's repeated calls to annex the northern neighbor as America's 51st state, CNBC reports.
Canadians hold an “Elbows Up” protest against U.S. tariffs and other policies by U.S. President Donald Trump, at Nathan Phillips Square in Toronto, Ontario, Canada March 22, 2025.

When reached by the outlet for comment, a White House spokesperson said that "everybody wants to come to President Trump’s America," adding that Canadians "will no longer have to endure the inconveniences of international travel when Canada becomes our 51st state," while "Europeans are eager to enjoy the Golden Age of America if they so choose to."

The boycott on travel comes amid a $50 billion travel deficit in the United States - just weeks after former Canadian PM Justin Trudeau encouraged Canadians to "choose Canada," and suggested "changing your summer vacation plans to stay here in Canada and explore the many national and provincial parks, historical sites and tourist destinations our great country has to offer."

According to the US Travel Association, there is "a question of America’s welcomeness, a slowing U.S. economy and recent safety concerns.

"These challenges are real and demand decisive action," they continued, adding that it is "actively working with the White House and Congress to advance policies that drive economic expansion and keep the U.S. competitive on the global stage."

Worldwide Trend

Meanwhile, it's more than just Canada, as Statista reports. According to Ceylan Yeğinsu of the New York Times, travelers around the world are being put off by the Trump administration’s recent actions, including its new policies and rhetoric. Where the research firm Tourism Economics had initially predicted international travel to the U.S. to grow by 9 percent this year, it recently downgraded its forecast to a 5 percent contraction.

Some Europeans are among those rethinking their trips to the United States in protest against Trump. According to National Travel and Tourism Office data, there was an 8.5 percent decrease in the number of German travelers arriving to the U.S. between February 2025 and February 2024, a 5.6 percent decline in French travelers and a 3.9 percent decline among other countries in Western Europe. The United Kingdom and Italy show a different trend, however, with a 6.9 percent and 0.1 percent increase, respectively, between February 2024 and 2025.



Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 06:55

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A New Mexico judge has decided to block the release of public records showing the bodies of Gene Hackman and his wife Betsy Arakawa.

The Hill
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New drug cuts down genetically inherited heart disease risk factor
An experimental drug decreases the genetically inherited heart disease risk by 94%.

The Hill
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Trump’s ‘External Revenue Service’ can’t replace the IRS  
President Trump's proposal to replace the IRS with an External Revenue Service to collect tariffs and duties from foreign countries to enrich American citizens is not feasible as the IRS has never accounted for more than 2% of total federal revenue from tariffs.

The Hill
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Trump: Le Pen's ban on seeking office in France 'very big deal'
President Trump weighed in on French far-right leader Marine Le Pen being barred from seeking office for five years after being convicted of embezzlement, telling reporters that it is a “very big deal” and that it sounds “like this country.”  "That big deal, that's a very big deal. I know all about it. And a...

The Hill
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Social Security isn't the third rail of American politics any more 
Team Trump seems to have concluded that Social Security is no longer the “third rail of American politics” — that they can touch it and live to tell the tale. It will be up to voters to prove them wrong.    

BBC UK News
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Stalker 'believed Strictly judge was his aunt'
The sentencing judge says Kyle Shaw made a "menacing threat" against Shirley Ballas and her family.

Mail Online
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Iconic Orient Express gave me incurable cancer: Vintage carriage restorer in line for almost £500,000 in damages over exposure to deadly asbestos while working on luxury sleeper train
A vintage railway engineer who restored carriages for the Orient Express has successfully sued his employer over claims he contracted incurable cancer after being exposed to asbestos.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Haaland out for up to seven weeks with ankle injury
Manchester City striker Erling Haaland is out for up to seven weeks with an ankle injury suffered in Sunday's FA Cup quarter-final win at Bournemouth, says manager Pep Guardiola.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Strictly judge Shirley Ballas's stalker given suspended jail sentence
The sentencing judge says Kyle Shaw made a "menacing threat" against Shirley Ballas and her family.

Cabinet Office
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Guidance: Single Network Analytics Platform (SNAP) Privacy Notice. Cabinet Office.
Guidance: Single Network Analytics Platform (SNAP) Privacy Notice. Cabinet Office.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Three dead after bus and car catch fire in crash near Heathrow
Emergency services found a bus and car alight on Monday evening and three people died at the scene.

ZDNet News
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Why multi-factor authentication is absolutely essential in 2025
Want to avoid having your online accounts hacked? Two-factor authentication is a crucial security measure that requires an extra step for signing in to high-value services. Here's how to set up 2FA and which accounts to focus on.

ZDNet News
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4 ways you can start using gen AI to its full potential
Used as a co-thinker, generative AI becomes a thought partner - engaging in conversation, suggesting new perspectives, and challenging assumptions or ideas.

ZDNet News
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I tested TCL's affordable Mini LED TV, and it made me forget about the OLED flagships
TCL's 2025 flagship panel proves a QD-Mini LED can be as affordable as it is a pleasure to watch.

ZDNet News
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The toughest phone I've tested packs a ridiculously long battery (and it's $180 off)
Doogee's Fire 6 Max is a beast of a smartphone with a built-in thermal camera, night vision, and powerful flashlight. But its 20,800 mAh battery takes the cake.

ZDNet News
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I've tried lots of AI image generators, and Nvidia and MIT's is the one to beat for speed
This image generator can create an image from a text prompt as quickly as it takes you to say Mississippi.

ZDNet News
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I found the ultimate accessory kit for tinkerers, and it comes with 180 modifications
This set by Jakemy has everything you need to effortlessly repair computers, smartphones, tablets, eyeglasses, and more. And it's on sale.

ZDNet News
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I tested a subscription-free video doorbell that rivals Ring - and it's better in some ways
For no monthly fees, the Eufy Security E340 dual-camera video doorbell protects deliveries from porch pirates.

ZDNet News
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This Hisense 85-inch TV is still over $1,100 off on Amazon - and I highly recommend it
You can snag the latest Hisense U8 Series model at more than a grand off during the post-event days of Amazon's Big Spring Sale.

Mail Online
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Drivers 'being ripped off by 14p a litre at the pumps', watchdog says
In its latest analysis, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said forecourt margins 'remain high compared to historic levels'.

Mail Online
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Sienna Miller, 42, smiles alongside her lookalike daughter Marlowe, 12, and boyfriend Oli Green, 28, as they attend bridal fashion event
Supporting her fashion designer sister, Sienna looked as chic as ever in a denim ensemble.

Mail Online
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My boob job saved my life - having E-cup implants revealed the deadliest form of breast cancer
While the lump was just 17mm-around the size of a grape-Tayla believes her breast implant, which gave her an E cup bust, pushed it forward, making it more prominent.

Mail Online
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More than 200 cruise ship passengers are struck down by norovirus outbreak on board vessel returning to UK
At least 224 passengers and 17 crew members have fallen ill on board Cunard Line's Queen Mary 2, which is expected to dock in Southampton on Sunday.

Mail Online
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Chloe Ferry finally confirms split from her on-off boyfriend Johnny Wilbo following their turbulent relationship as she jets off on a solo trip to Ibiza
The Geordie Shore star, 29, has been linked to Johnny since 2021 but they have had a rollercoaster romance over the years.

Mail Online
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I discovered the truth about my agonising back pain and SHRINKING after doctors misdiagnosed me. The real cause affects thousands of women
Jane Kent was hit by such excruciating back pain it became almost impossible to pick up her baby or even turn over in bed.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Torpedo bats: a destroyer of worlds or baseball’s long-awaited savior?
The quandary over the Yankees’ new technology is solvable, but first MLB must take it on the chin and usher in a temporary banIn its brief moment of fame, the torpedo bat has made quite the impression in MLB. Over the weekend, the New York Yankees used the bat, designed by an MIT-educated professor, as an instrument of destruction against the hapless Milwaukee Brewers. Since then, I’ve heard about the bats so often that they’ve been showing up in my dreams. And that makes sense, because prior to this weekend, even in a bandbox like Yankee Stadium, even for a franchise that’s featured the likes of Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig and Mickey Mantle, such home run power could only have been cooked up in the sweetest slumbers of their fanbase. Such a display of muscle was less video game and more cartoon, as in the famed 1946 Bugs Bunny clip that saw the Gas-House Gorillas rack up 46 straight runs against the genteel Tea Totallers.In case you missed it, the Yankees, minus the 68 home runs of the now departed Juan Soto and the injured Giancarlo Stanton, provided a franchise record nine home runs in one game, 15 home runs across three games and 36 total runs against the Brewers. We’re talking about a Yankees team that coughed up five errors on Saturday and still won by 11 runs. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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A tower topped with a pangolin! The Oxford university building inspired by Tolkien … and the pandemic
A chubby, rhubarb and custard-coloured tower bedecked with anteaters and moles make a fun neighbour to the city’s dreaming spires. It’s left some locals lost for wordsA carved stone pangolin clings to the top of the tower, its scaly tail curled into the crevice of a cornice, as if holding on for dear life. It crowns an arresting arrival to Oxford, the city of dreaming spires, the anteater taking its place on this skyline of slender steeples and gurning gargoyles, up there at the summit of the newest – and strangest – spire of them all.“I was thinking, ‘How do you mark Covid in a building?’” says David Kohn, architect of this curious addition to the campus of New College. “We were developing the designs in the middle of the pandemic, when pangolins had been in the limelight for all the wrong reasons.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Special elections to give voters’ verdicts on Trump’s chaotic first months – US politics live
Votes in several states on Tuesday could offer a glimmer of hope to DemocratsWisconsin and Florida voters head to polls in test of Trump’s popularityUS voters are headed to the polls on Tuesday in Wisconsin and Florida in elections that some see as a test of Donald Trump’s popularity and the political clout of his billionaire ally Elon Musk.The most closely watched contest is a battle for a seat on Wisconsin’s seven-member supreme court. Conservatives are trying to flip ideological control of the court, which currently has a 4-3 liberal majority. The contest, which features liberal judge Susan Crawford facing off against conservative Brad Schimel, will have huge consequences in the state. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Asylum system risks ‘damaging social cohesion’, Glasgow city council warns
Council says cost running into tens of millions, as homeless refugees granted asylum across UK come to city for supportThe asylum system risks “damaging social cohesion” with homeless refugees putting “unprecedented pressure” on Glasgow services, the city council has warned.Glasgow city council, the largest asylum dispersal area outside London, had welcomed asylum seekers for decades, said the city convener for homelessness, Allan Casey. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Strictly judge Shirley Ballas's stalker given suspended jail sentence
Kyle Shaw is sentenced at Liverpool Crown Court to 20 months in prison, suspended for 20 months.

BBC Technology News
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Screen time in bed linked to worse sleep, study finds
The research found a correlation between looking at a screen in bed and reporting insomnia and sleep loss.

BBC World News
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Iceland volcano erupts after Blue Lagoon evacuated
The Blue Lagoon and the town of Grindavik were ordered to evacuate after earthquakes hit the area.

Deutsche Welle
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Germany: Withdrawal of citizenship due to 'antisemitism'?
"Terror supporters, antisemites and extremists" could have German citizenship revoked — if they hold a second nationality, according to planning documents. Critics of the move say it will lead to unequal treatment.

Deutsche Welle
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Germany interior minister defends record on migration
Germany's interior minister says she sees the migration policy of the outgoing coalition government as a success. Nancy Faeser said deportations were up and asylum claims down.

Mail Online
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Inside £15,000-a-night Caribbean hotel where Spencer Matthews and Vogue Williams are holidaying amid 'rift' rumours - and there's a good reason they're not paying
It's a discreet celebrity bolthole with white-sand beaches, crystal-clear sea and amazing coral reefs on tap. So it's no wonder Spencer and Vogue have chosen this hotel for their escape...

Mail Online
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How much does the best-paid council fat cat earn in YOUR area? Find out with our map as search tool lists all 3,906 employees pocketing more than £100,000
Despite hitting families with inflation-busting tax hikes, and more kicking in today, at least 262 local authority chiefs were handed more than £200,000 in pay, pensions, pay-offs and bonuses.

Mail Online
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Prince Harry ignores Sentebale 'bullying' storm as he plugs Travalyst initiative from his £12m Montecito mansion
The Duke of Sussex set up Travalyst in 2019 with the stated aim of helping travellers cut their carbon emissions, prevent over-tourism and develop local economies.

Mail Online
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AMANDA PLATELL: Harry accusations are a cataclysmic catastrophe for the Sussexes. It's left me with an almost unsayable thought...
Prince Harry once described Sentebale, the charity he set up in memory of his mother Princess Diana, as his lifelong mission. So his sudden decision to quit created shockwaves.

Mail Online
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Tesco app and website is DOWN: Hundreds of customers unable to order groceries online as supermarket suffers 'technical issue'
The supermarket said its IT teams were working to fix the issue, which began just before 10am on Tuesday morning.

The Guardian (UK)
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Settlements agreed over claims of historical sexual abuse at Celtic Boys Club
Celtic Plc settles around 70% of cases in class actionLaw firm expects further settlements in coming weeksA seven-figure payout has been agreed for a lawsuit over claims of historical sexual abuse at Celtic Boys Club, a law firm has said.Thompsons Solicitors is acting for about 30 former Celtic Boys Club players and said about 70% of the cases had been settled by Celtic Plc. The firm expects further settlements in the coming weeks. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Welcome to the Baller League, the future of football – whether you like it or not | Jonathan Liew
The series in London is one of a range of smaller-sided ventures challenging the traditional model of the gameThe first ever goal in the UK version of the Baller League is scored by the influencer PK Humble, just in case you ever find yourself taking part in a pub quiz in 2045. Humble – a midfielder for Hashtag United and star of the recent YouTube series Inside – takes the ball out of defence, advances it at a frankly embarrassingly leaden pace and side-foots it past a goalkeeper who should really do better.Welcome to the future of football. It’s faster, better and more exciting than the real thing. Albeit not faster in a strictly physical sense, or better in a strictly technical sense, or more exciting in the sense that you actually need to care about who wins. But it is, nonetheless, all of these things. Why? Because we said so. And don’t just take our word for it. Maya Jama says so too. Slow, lingering camera shot of Maya Jama. Now, what was the question again? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Special elections to give voters’ verdicts on Trump’s chaotic first months – US politics live
Votes in several states on Tuesday could offer a glimmer of hope to DemocratsWisconsin and Florida voters head to polls in test of Trump’s popularityA Cornell University student who participated in pro-Palestinian protests and was asked to surrender by United States immigration officials has said he is leaving the US, citing fear of detention and threats to his personal safety.Momodou Taal, a doctoral candidate in Africana studies and dual citizen of the UK and the Gambia, has participated in pro-Palestinian protests against Israel’s war in Gaza after the October 2023 Hamas attack. His attorneys said last month that he was asked to turn himself in and that his student visa was being revoked. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Asylum system risks ‘damaging social cohesion’, Glasgow city council warns
Council says cost running into tens of millions, as homeless refugees granted asylum elsewhere in UK come to city for supportThe asylum system risks “damaging social cohesion” with homeless refugees putting “unprecedented pressure” on Glasgow services, the city council has warned.Glasgow city council, the largest asylum dispersal area outside London, had welcomed asylum seekers for decades, said the city convener for homelessness, Allan Casey. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Palestinian teenager dies in Israeli jail after being held six months without charge
Family of Walid Ahmad, 17, say his health had deteriorated while Palestinian officials say he was denied medical careA 17-year-old boy from the West Bank who was held without charge for six months in an Israeli prison died after he collapsed in unclear circumstances, Palestinian officials have said.According to his family, Walid Ahmad was “a healthy high schooler” at the time of his arrest last September for allegedly throwing stones at Israeli soldiers. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
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What you can do about the seven bills going up this week
Several bills are going up at the start of what some commentators have dubbed "awful April".

Mail Online
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Duchess of Rutland, 61, reveals shock cancer diagnosis - and warns the disease 'doesn't care who you are'
Born Emma Watkins and raised on a farm in France, the Duchess lives in the 356-room Belvoir Castle in Leicestershire with her ex-husband David Manners, the 11th Duke of Rutland.

Mail Online
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This Morning star shares insensitive April Fool's joke as she posts fake pregnancy announcement
The This Morning star shared the 'news' with her fans on Instagram on April 1, alluding to a pregnancy announcement by cradling a bump under her jumper.

Mail Online
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'Emotional' Russian-born tennis star reveals she 'didn't have much choice' but to switch nationalities to Australia after coming out as gay
The 27-year-old had been competing as a neutral athlete but it was revealed earlier in the week that she had secured Australian residency and would now represent the country.

CNET News
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The Bondsman: How to Watch Blumhouse's New Southern-Fried Horror Comedy
Kevin Bacon hunting demons? Sign us up.

CNET News
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Best Smartwatch for 2025
From the Apple Watch Series 10 to models from Google and Garmin, we’ve tested the best smartwatches for every wrist, phone and budget. Here are our top picks.

CNET News
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Best Internet Deals for April 2025
Save money and switch to an internet plan with a perk. Here are the internet bargains we're loving right now.

CNET News
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I'm Sticking With Netflix and Max in April, and You Probably Should, Too
Ditto for Disney Plus because of Andor and Peacock for WrestleMania.

CNET News
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13 Sci-Fi Shows on Apple TV Plus You Should Absolutely Watch Right Now
The streamer is chock-full of genre excellence.

CNET News
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HP Pavilion Plus 14 (2025) Review: Affordable OLED Laptop With a Fatal Flaw
Parts of the HP Pavilion Plus 14 are great. But there's one poor-quality feature that totally ruins the experience -- at any price.

Mail Online
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Terrifying moment cruise is plunged into darkness over safety fears
The frightening ordeal took place on the Queen Anne cruise ship as it traveled through the Sulu sea, an area notorious for pirates, on its voyage from Darwin to Manila.

Mail Online
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Tesco app and website is DOWN: Hundreds of customers unable to order groceries online as supermarket suffers 'technical issue'
The supermarket said its IT teams were working to fix the issue, which began on just before 10am on Tuesday morning.

Chatham House
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US-Russia rapprochement: What is the end game?
US-Russia rapprochement: What is the end game?
10
April 2025 — 6:00PM TO 7:00PM
Anonymous (not verified)
27 March 2025

Chatham House and Online
Experts examine the implications of US-Russia relations for European Security and the war on Ukraine.
Experts examine the implications of US-Russia relations for European Security and the war on Ukraine.

The second Trump administration has made ending the war in Ukraine and normalization of relations with Russia a top priority. US dialogue with Russian officials has, at a minimum, opened a path to a potential ceasefire and peace deal.However, Ukrainian and other European concerns over the terms for peace imposed on Kyiv suggest peace - and relations beyond - will not be as easy as the Cold War-era superpowers might like.Doubts over the post-conflict relationships between Russia, the US and the West in the medium to long term look to be well-founded considering the different world-views and conceptions of security in particular. Can a ‘Trump and Putin’ peace have durability…and even validity? Has the idea of a ‘just peace’ been abandoned? If so, with what consequencesThis discussion will cover:What safeguards are needed to ensure that war does not return?To what extent is Europe likely to re-engage economically and diplomatically with Russia after any conclusion to the war?How will Europe compensate for the loss of the American security guarantees?How much, if anything at all, can Russia concede? And Ukraine?By registering for this event, attendees agree to our code of conduct, ensuring a respectful, inclusive, and welcoming space for diverse perspectives and debate.

Andrews and Arnold Status
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[Minor] DNS: Reverse DNS lookup failures

Nature
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How to get rid of toxic ‘forever chemical’ pollution

Mac Rumours
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How to Turn Off Apple Mail Categories
In iOS 18.2, Apple introduced a major change to iPhone's Mail app with a new Categories feature, which has now been rolled out to iPad and Mac with iPadOS 18.4 and macOS Sequoia 15.4. Categories automatically sorts your emails into four distinct sections: Primary, Transactions, Updates, and Promotions. However, while this organizational system aims to help manage email overload, not everyone will prefer the new layout.





Mail Categories attempts to intelligently organize your incoming emails into different sections. Important emails are shown in a "Primary" category, with orders, newsletters, social notifications, and deals organized into three other sections.



The "Transactions" section includes receipts, orders, and deliveries, and aims to make it easy to find orders that you've placed and shipping information for those orders. Meanwhile, the "Updates" section includes newsletters, alerts for things like doctor's appointments and correspondence, and other subscription emails. Lastly, Apple's "Promotions" category includes special offers and deal emails.



Note that even if an email would normally fall into Transactions, Updates, or Promotions, it will also appear in your Primary inbox if it contains time-critical information. On devices that support Apple Intelligence, the system goes a step further by highlighting priority emails that require action or have deadlines.



Mail Categories: Why You Might Want to Revert

The new Categories view, while helpful for some, might not suit your email management style. Perhaps you prefer seeing all emails in chronological order, or have your own organization system. Or maybe you just want fast access to all your emails without switching between categories. On iPhone and iPad, you can swipe left across the categories to switch to an "All Mail" view (the same option can be found on Mac to the right of the category buttons) but what if you want to remove the categories completely?



How to Return to List View in Apple Mail

Categories is the default view after updating to the new software. Fortunately, Apple makes it simple to switch back to the traditional list view. Here's how it's done:



Open the Mail app on your iPhone, iPad, or Mac.

On iPhone/iPad, tap the More button (three dots) in the upper right corner of your inbox. On Mac, you can find the More button at the top of the inbox view.



On iPhone/iPad, select List View from the pop-up menu. On Mac, click Show Mail Categories to uncheck it.





Once you switch to List View, your inbox will return to showing all emails in chronological order, just as it did before. The change takes effect immediately. While categorization is not perfect, it's likely something that Apple will improve over time. You can always switch back to Categories view using the same menu if you want to try it again later.



Note: If you're using an iPhone/iPad that supports Apple Intelligence, you'll see an additional option in the More menu for priority messages. This option won't appear on devices without Apple Intelligence support. The More menu also has an "About Categories" section where you can see how your messages have been categorized over the course of the last week, but there is no option to tell the Mail app if you believe an email has been put into the wrong category.This article, 'How to Turn Off Apple Mail Categories' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

TechRadar News
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Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse finally has a release date, and I can't believe I have to wait so long to find out how Miles Morales' story ends

TechRadar News
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Digital backups come out on top amongst TechRadar readers this World Backup day

TechRadar News
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Copilot+ PCs with AMD or Intel CPUs are finally getting some key AI features in Windows 11 – although I’m starting to doubt Recall will ever happen

TechRadar News
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Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge leaks reveal a likely release date – 5 reasons it could be worth waiting for

TechRadar News
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VMware Workstation users report major issues following Broadcom mass redirect

TechRadar News
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The business case for AI in network operations

TechRadar News
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UK government introduces new Cyber Security Bill to keep critical infrastructure safe

TechRadar News
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Android 16 could steal a thief-thwarting security feature from iPhones

TechRadar News
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Low code and no code tools are safe from AI threat

TechRadar News
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Could Nintendo Switch 2 get a Final Fantasy 9 remake? Fans are hoping so as the game's 25th anniversary website goes live

TechRadar News
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Got a Ryzen 9000 CPU in your gaming PC? You might need to watch out for this chip-killing bug

TechRadar News
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Samsung Galaxy Watch owners complain of strange forced-reset issue

TechRadar News
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Alexa Plus has started rolling out to users, but it’s missing these 5 useful features

Digital Trends
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New teaser hints at upcoming Asus and Xbox collaboration
Asus has released a teaser on its social media platform hinting at potential partnership with Xbox

Digital Trends
Open 
Google might be making Gemini more child-friendly
It looks like Google is working on a version of Gemini for kids to help them with their homework.

Digital Trends
Open 
Lenovo’s new gaming tablet could bring a boost to battery life and performance
Lenovo's latest Legion gaming tablet is still very new, but it looks like a new-and-improved version might already be in the works.

Digital Trends
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OnePlus 13T officially confirmed by OnePlus, but it’s a bit of a joke
OnePlus has confirmed that it is preparing the launch the OnePlus 13T, a new compact flagship phone. The new model looks to reintroduce the T line of OnePlus phones, something we haven’t seen since 2022 with the OnePlus 10T. But before we get to the phone, let’s talk about how OnePlus confirmed it, because it […]

The Verge
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April Fools’ 2025: Palworld and PUBG are getting dating sims
The developers of Palworld and PUBG: Battlegrounds have announced details of dating simulators set in the universes of their respective games. The Palworld dating sim, technically called Pal♡world! ~More Than Just Pals~, was actually announced ahead of April Fools’ Day last year. But yesterday, developer Pocketpair released a second trailer for the game and published […]

The Verge
Open 
How to calculate your home battery needs for the next blackout
Buying a giant battery for the next blackout or off-grid adventure can be daunting, especially when hundreds or even thousands of dollars are on the line. Get it wrong and you’ve either spent too much money for something you’ll never use or discover that you didn’t buy enough capacity to keep your most important devices […]

Mail Online
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Baba Vanga has just had terrifying 2025 prediction come true
The late Bulgarian psychic Baba Vanga prophesied that 2025 would bring shattering earthquake sand that the Europe would be rocked by a devastating war.

Mail Online
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Jude Law's rarely-seen daughter who is set to become a star: Actor's child with WAG and The Voice contestant makes her TV debut... and she looks just like her daddy!
Jude Law's three eldest children have already followed his footsteps into acting, but it seems one of his younger brood could also be set for stardom.

Mail Online
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Antiques dealer who asked female employee why she wants to work is ordered to pay her £55,000 compensation
Antiques dealer John Wellington has been ordered to pay £55,000 to female sales assistant Audrey Pereira after he quizzed her when she started working at his jewellery shop in Windsor.

Mail Online
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King Charles laughs and jokes with his good friend Alan Titchmarsh as he returns to public duties handing out honours after hospital stay
King Charles hosted an investiture ceremony at Windsor Castle this mooring where he recognised leading figures and community stalwarts for their efforts including his friend Alan Titchmarsh.

The Guardian (UK)
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One Australian’s dramatic rescue from a flood in one of the driest places on Earth
As floodwater flows past towns and cattle and sheep stations – normally isolated by desert – many now sit as islands amid a muddy seaMany are those rescued from Munga-Thirri-Simpson Desert – in what is normally the dust bowl of outback Queensland – who have sunk wheels in a sand dune, busted tyres upon gibber rock or even been bogged in the mud left by a sudden downpour. But Tony Woolford is among a far more exclusive club.In fact, the 66-year-old South Australian may well be the first person ever plucked by helicopter in this, one of the driest places on Earth, from flood waters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Middle East crisis live: Israel issues evacuation order for parts of northern Gaza
IDF says residents should evacuate Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahiya and the neighbourhoods of Sheikh Zayed, al-Manshiya and Tal al-ZaatarAt least 50,399 Palestinian people have been killed and 114,583 injured in Israeli attacks on Gaza since 7 October 2023, the Gaza health ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.At least 42 bodies and 183 injured people have been received by hospitals in Gaza over the last day, according to the territory’s health ministry, which said that at least 1,042 Palestinian people have been killed by Israeli forces since Israel broke the ceasefire with Hamas on 18 March. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Special elections to give voters’ verdicts on Trump’s chaotic first months – US politics live
Votes in several states on Tuesday could offer a glimmer of hope to DemocratsWisconsin and Florida voters head to polls in test of Trump’s popularityThe reproductive health provider Planned Parenthood said the Trump administration would cut federal family planning funding as of Tuesday, affecting birth control, cancer screenings and other services for low-income people.Planned Parenthood said that nine of its affiliates received notice that funding would be withheld under a program known as Title X, which has supported healthcare services for the poor since 1970. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Asylum system risks ‘damaging social cohesion’, Glasgow city council warns
City council says current cost running into tens of millions ‘with no end in sight’The asylum system risks “damaging social cohesion” with homeless refugees putting “unprecedented pressure” on Glasgow services, the city council has warned.Glasgow city council, the largest asylum dispersal area outside London, has welcomed asylum seekers for decades, said city convener for homelessness, Allan Casey. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Palestinian teenager dies in Israeli detention in West Bank
Walid Ahmad’s family says his health had deteriorated and officials say he collapsed in unclear circumstances A 17-year-old boy from the West Bank who was held without charge for six months in an Israeli prison died after he collapsed in unclear circumstances, Palestinian officials have said.According to his family, Walid Ahmad was “a healthy high schooler” at the time of his arrest last September for allegedly throwing stones at Israeli soldiers. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Gary Glitter bankrupt after failing to pay victim damages
The convicted sex offender was ordered to pay a woman he abused when she was 12 more than £500,000.

BBC World News
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Outrage in Somalia after man says he married missing eight-year-old
Her family had not seen her for six months before she was found with a man claiming to be her husband.

Gizmodo
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What to Know about the ‘Qudit’—and How It Could Change Quantum Computing
The rabbit hole of quantum gets weirder the deeper you go—but also has plenty of promise.

Gizmodo
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Forget Black Friday, This 15″ HP Laptop With 512GB of Storage Is Dirt Cheap (Now 40% Off)
Save 40% on an HP laptop with 8 GB of memory and 512 GB of hard drive storage space.

Deutsche Welle
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How a Bulgarian cleaning lady became a Russian spy
Many people believed that Tsvetanka D., a Bulgarian national living in Vienna, was leading a very normal life. Nothing could have been further from the truth: this former cleaning lady was in fact a Russian spy.

BBC UK News
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Girl claims victory in trouser pockets battle
"They didn't have real pockets; they just had fake ones," Georgia explains.

Mail Online
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I blamed long hours and caffeine for my symptoms. Then a doctor's sudden panic confirmed I'd missed deadly warning signs... and left it too late
Less than ten minutes after my CAT scan, my room in the ER was filled with a team of medical staff. Each of them had grave, somber looks on their faces. 'What's happened?' I asked.

Mail Online
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Experts reveal the best Dubai property bargains, with hidden gems starting at just £300k
Dubai's recent increase in popularity among British expats is due to several factors, including climate, education and entertainment. Here is a list of the best Dubai properties on the market.

Mail Online
Open 
Expert reveals the secrets of fake food: From brown bread and 'sourfaux' to honey - is YOUR food actually healthy?
It's reputed to improve gut health, be easier to digest and be better for the waistline, which is why so many are prepared to pay more than £4 for a sourdough loaf. But could that costly bread be a con?

Mail Online
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Inside ICE Air: Flight Attendants on Deportation Planes Say Disaster Is “Only a Matter of Time”
by McKenzie Funk




ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.











The deportation flight was in the air over Mexico when chaos erupted in the back of the plane, the flight attendant recalled. A little girl had collapsed. She had a high fever and was taking ragged, frantic breaths.

The flight attendant, a young woman who went by the nickname Lala, said she grabbed the plane’s emergency oxygen bottle and rushed past rows of migrants chained at the wrists and ankles to reach the girl and her parents.

By then, Lala was accustomed to the hard realities of working charter flights for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. She’d learned to obey instructions not to look the passengers in the eyes, not to greet them or ask about their well-being. But until the girl collapsed, Lala had managed to escape an emergency.

Lala worked for Global Crossing Airlines, the dominant player in the loose network of deportation contractors known as ICE Air. GlobalX, as the charter company is also called, is lately in the news. Two weeks ago, it helped the Trump administration fly hundreds of Venezuelans to El Salvador despite a federal court order blocking the deportations, triggering a showdown that experts fear could become a full-blown constitutional crisis.

In interviews with ProPublica, Lala and six other current and former GlobalX flight attendants provided a window into a part of the deportation process that is rarely seen and little understood. For migrants who have spent months or years trying to reach this country and live here, it is the last act, the final bit of America they may experience.











An ICE detainee waves from inside a bus that transported passengers to the airport before departing from Seattle’s Boeing Field on a GlobalX deportation flight in February.

(Emily Schultz)









All but one of the flight attendants requested anonymity or asked that only a nickname be used, fearing retribution or black marks as they looked for new jobs in an insular industry.

Because ICE, GlobalX and other charter carriers did not respond to questions after being provided with detailed lists of this story’s findings, the flight attendants’ individual accounts are hard to verify. But their stories are consistent with one another. They are also generally consistent with what has been said about ICE Air in legal filings, news accounts, academic research and publicly released copies of the ICE Air Operations Handbook.

That morning over Mexico, Lala said, the girl’s oxygen saturation level was 70% — perilously low compared with a healthy person’s 95% or higher. Her temperature was 102.3 degrees. The flight had a nurse on contract who worked alongside its security guards. But beyond giving the girl Tylenol, the nurse left the situation in Lala’s hands, she recalled.



Lala broke the rule about talking to detainees. The parents told Lala their daughter had a history of asthma. The mom, who Lala said had epilepsy, seemed on the verge of her own medical crisis.

Lala placed the oxygen mask on the girl’s face. The nurse removed her socks to keep her from further overheating. Lala counted down the minutes, praying for the girl to keep breathing.


The stories shared by ICE Air flight attendants paint a different picture of deportations from the one presented to the public, especially under President Donald Trump. On social media, the White House has depicted a military operation carried out with ruthless efficiency, using Air Force C-17s, ICE agents in tactical vests and soldiers in camo.

The reality is that 85% of the administration’s “removal” flights — 254 flights as of March 21, according to the advocacy group Witness at the Border — have been on charter planes. Military flights have now all but ceased. While there are ICE officers and hired security guards on the charters, the crew members on board are civilians, ordinary people swept up in something most didn’t knowingly sign up for.

When the flight attendants joined GlobalX, it was a startup with big plans. It sold investors and new hires alike on a vision of VIP clients, including musicians and sports teams, and luxury destinations, especially in the Caribbean. “You can’t beat the eXperience,” read a company tagline.











A GlobalX post on Facebook recruiting flight attendants in March. Alexandria, Louisiana, is a hub for ICE Air.

(Screenshot by ProPublica. Redacted by ProPublica.)









But as the airline grew, more and more of its planes were filled with migrants in chains. Some flight attendants were livid about it.

Last year, an anonymous GlobalX employee sent an all-caps, all-staff screed that ricocheted around the startup. “WHERE IS THE COMPANY GOING?” the email asked. “YOU SIGNED A 5 YEAR CONTRACT WITH ICE? ... WHAT HAPPENED TO THIS BECOMING A PRESTIGE CHARTER AIRLINE?”

One flight attendant said he kept waiting for the sports teams his new bosses had talked about as he flew deportation routes. “You know, the NFL charters, the NBA charters, whatever the hockey one is …” he said.

A second said his planes’ air conditioning kept breaking — an experience consistent with at least two publicly reported onboard incidents — and their lavatories kept breaking, something another flight attendant reported as well. But the planes kept flying. “They made us flush with water bottles,” he said.

But the flight attendants were most concerned about their inability to treat their passengers humanely — and to keep them safe. (In 2021, an ICE spokesperson told the publication Capital & Main that the agency “follows best practices when it comes to the security, safety and welfare of the individuals returned to their countries of origin.”)

They worried about what would happen in an emergency. Could they really get over a hundred chained passengers off the plane in time?

“They never taught us anything regarding the immigration flights,” one said. “They didn’t tell us these people were going to be shackled, wrists to fucking ankles.”

“We have never gotten a clear answer on what we do in an ICE Air evacuation,” another said. “They will not give us an answer.”

“It’s only a matter of time,” a third said, before a deportation flight ends in disaster.


Lala didn’t think she had a chance at a flight attendant job. She hadn’t, in truth, remembered applying to GlobalX until a recruiter called to say the startup was coming to her city. “But I guess I did apply through LinkedIn?” she said. She’d been working an office job — long hours, little flexibility — and was looking for something new.

The job interviews were held at a resort hotel. The room was packed with dozens of aspirants when Lala showed up. After the first round, only about 20 were asked to stay. She couldn’t believe she was one of them. After the second round came a job offer: $26 an hour plus a daily expense allowance. Soon Lala got a uniform: a blue cardigan, a white polo shirt and an eye-catching scarf in cyan and light green.

For part of her Federal Aviation Administration-mandated four-week training, her class stayed in a motel with a pool at the edge of Miami International Airport. Just across the street, on the fourth floor of a concrete-clad office building ringed by palm trees, was GlobalX’s headquarters.

“In the beginning, we were told that because it’s a charter, it’s only gonna be elites, celebrities,” Lala said. “Everybody was really excited.”

But flying was not going to be all glitz. The real reason for having flight attendants is safety. GlobalX was certified by the FAA as a Part 121 scheduled air carrier, the same as United or Delta, and it and its crew members were subject to the same strict standards.

“We’re there to evacuate you,” one recruit told ProPublica. “Yes, we make good drinks, but we evacuate you.”

Lala’s class practiced water landings in the pool at the nearby Pan Am Flight Academy. They practiced door drills — yelling out commands, shoving open heavy exit doors — in a replica Airbus A320 cabin. They learned CPR and how to put out fires. They took written and physical tests, and if they didn’t score at least 90%, they had to retake them.

They were reminded, over and over, that their job was a vocation, one with a professional code: No matter who the passengers were, flight attendants were in charge of the cabin, responsible for safety in the air.

Lala’s official “airman” certificate arrived from the FAA a few weeks after training was done. She was cleared to fly, ready to see the world.

But what she would see wasn’t what she signed up for. The company was growing beyond glamorous charters. GlobalX was moving into the deportation business.

Her bosses delivered the news casually, she recalled: “It was like, ‘Oh yeah, we got a government contract.’”


The new graduates were offered a single posting: Harlingen, Texas. Deportation flights were five days a week, sometimes late into the night. Lala went to Guatemala, Honduras, Colombia and, for refueling, Panama.

A standard flight had more than a dozen private security guards — contractors working for the firm Akima — along with a single ICE officer, two nurses, and a hundred or more detainees. (Akima did not respond to a request for comment.) The guards were in charge of delivering food and water to the detainees and taking them to the lavatories. This left the flight attendants, whose presence was required by the FAA, with little to do.

“Arm and disarm doors, that was our duty,” Lala said.

The flights had their own set of rules, which the crew members said they learned from a company policy manual or from chief flight attendants. Don’t talk to the detainees. Don’t feed them. Don’t make eye contact. Don’t walk down the aisles without a guard escorting you. Don’t sit in aisle seats, where detainees could get close to you. Don’t wear your company-issued scarf because of “safety concerns that a detainee might grab it and use it against us,” Lala said.

“You don’t do nothing,” said a member of another GlobalX class. “Just sit down in your seats and be quiet.” If a detainee looked at him, he was supposed to look out the window.











A chained detainee boards a GlobalX flight at Seattle’s Boeing Field in February.

(Emily Schultz)









A rare public statement from the company about life aboard ICE Air came in a 2023 earnings call with GlobalX founder and then-CEO Ed Wegel, when he discussed the company’s work for federal agencies like ICE. GlobalX employees “essentially don’t do much on the airplane,” Wegel said. “Our flight attendants are there in case of an emergency. The passengers are monitored by guards that are placed on board the airplane by one of those agencies.”

Fielding a question about how GlobalX ensures passengers are treated humanely, Wegel continued: “There have been threats made to our crew members, and they’re especially trained to deal with those. But we haven’t seen any mistreatment at all.”

Flight attendants said they had little to do but sit in their jumpseats after delivering the preflight safety briefing in English to the mostly Spanish-speaking passengers. Above 10,000 feet, the two in the rear usually moved to passenger rows near the cockpit, then sat again. Some did crosswords. Others took photos out the window. On a deportation to Guatemala, one saw his first erupting volcano.

Lala had been scared before her first deportation flight, worried that violence might break out. But fear soon gave way to discomfort at how detainees were treated. “Not being able to serve them, not being able to look at them, I didn’t think that was right,” she said.

Some flight attendants, drawn to the profession because they liked taking care of people, couldn’t help but break protocol with passengers. “If they said ‘hola’ or something,” one said, “I’d say ‘hola’ back. We’re not jerks.”

Another recalled taking a planeload of children and their escorts on a domestic transfer from the southern border to an airport in New York. He tried to slip snacks to the kids. “Even the chaperones were like, ‘Don’t give them any food,’” he said. “And I’m like, ‘Where is your humanity?’” (A second flight attendant said that children on a New York flight were fed by their escorts.)

While flight attendants were allowed to interact with the guards, the dynamic was uncomfortable. It came down to a question of who was in charge — and which agency, ICE or the FAA, ultimately held sway. (The FAA declined to comment on this story and directed questions to ICE.)

The guards often asked flight attendants to heat up the food they brought from home. They asked for drinks, for ice. “They treated us like we were their maids,” said Akilah Sisk, a former flight attendant from Texas.

“In their eyes, the detainees are not the passengers,” another flight attendant said. “The passengers are the guards. And we’re there for the guards.”

Some guards thumbed their noses at the FAA safety rules that flight attendants were supposed to enforce while airborne, multiple flight attendants recalled. “One reported me because I asked him to sit down in the last 10 minutes,” Sisk said. “But you’re still on a freaking plane. You gotta listen to our words.”

Flight attendants said that if they told guards to fasten seatbelts during takeoff or stow carry-ons under a seat, they risked getting reported to their bosses at GlobalX, who they said wanted to keep ICE happy. The guards would complain to the in-flight supervisor, Sisk said, and eventually it would get back to the flight attendant.

“We’d get an email from somebody in management: ‘Why are you guys causing problems?’” another flight attendant recalled. “They were more worried about losing the contract than about anything else.”


Nothing bothered flight attendants more than the fact that most of their passengers were in chains. What would happen if a flight had to be evacuated?

Most of the migrants crowding the back seats of ICE Air’s planes have not been, historically, convicted criminals. ICE makes restraints mandatory nonetheless. “Detainees transported by ICE Air aircraft will be fully restrained by the use of handcuffs, waist chains, and leg irons,“ reads an unredacted version of the 2015 ICE Air Operations Handbook, which was obtained by the Center for Constitutional Rights, a legal advocacy group.

The handbook allows for other equipment “in special circumstances, i.e., spit masks, mittens, leg braces, cargo straps, humane restraint blanket, etc.” Multiple lawsuits on behalf of African asylum-seekers concern the use of one such item, known as the Wrap, a cross between a straight jacket and a sleeping bag. A flight attendant said detainees restrained in the device are strapped upright in their seats or, if less compliant, lengthwise across a row of seats. Getting “burritoed, I call it,” the person said.

The Department of Homeland Security’s Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties investigated the asylum-seekers’ complaints and found ICE lacked “sufficient policies” on the Wrap, but how the immigration agency addressed the finding is not publicly known. ICE responded to one lawsuit by saying detainees were not abused; it said another should be dismissed, in part because it was filed in the wrong place. The cases are pending.

Use of the Wrap continues. A video from Seattle’s Boeing Field taken in February shows officers and guards carrying a wrapped migrant into the cabin of a deportation plane.













A choppy video feed shows ICE officers and guards carrying a migrant in a full-body restraint into a GlobalX deportation plane at Seattle’s Boeing Field in February.

(Obtained by ProPublica via a public records request)




Watch video ➜






Neither the ICE Air handbook, nor FAA regulations, nor flight attendant training in Miami explained how to empty a plane full of people whose movements were, by design, so severely hampered. Shackled detainees didn’t even qualify as “able-bodied” enough to sit in exit rows.

To flight attendants, the restraints seemed at odds with the FAA’s “90-second rule,” a decades-old manufacturing standard that says an aircraft must be built for full evacuation in 90 seconds even with half the exits blocked.

Lala and others said no one told them how to evacuate passengers in chains. “Honestly, I don’t know what we would do,” she said.

The flight attendants are not alone in voicing concerns.

In an interview with ProPublica, Bobby Laurie, an airline safety expert and former flight attendant, called the arrangement on ICE Air flights “disturbing.”

“Part of flight attendant training is locating those passengers who can help you in an evacuation,” Laurie told ProPublica. That would have to be the guards. “But if they have to help you,” who is helping the detainees, Laurie wondered.

According to formal ICE Air incident reports reviewed by Capital & Main, the deportation network had at least six accidents requiring evacuations between 2014 and 2019. In at least two cases, both on a carrier called World Atlantic, the evacuations were led not by flight attendants but by untrained guards. Both took longer than 90 seconds, though not by much: two-and-a-half minutes for the first, “less than 2 minutes” for the next. But in a third case, it took seven minutes for 115 shackled detainees to escape a smoke-filled jet.

In one of the World Atlantic incidents, part of the landing gear broke, a wing caught fire and the smell of burning rubber seeped in, according to investigative records obtained by the University of Washington Center for Human Rights. In an email to ICE Air officials, an agency employee aboard the plane later wrote that flight attendants made no emergency announcements for passengers. The flight attendants simply got themselves out.

The ICE officer, guards and nurse were “confused on what to do and in which direction to exit during distress,” the officer wrote. He said that other than the flight crew, “no one has received any training on emergency evacuation situations.”

The University of Washington’s collection does not include findings or recommendations from ICE based on what happened, and ICE did not say what they were when asked by ProPublica. The National Transportation Safety Board said that after the accident, World Atlantic launched a campaign to reinspect landing gear, gave employees and contractors further training, and revised its procedures for inspections. The airline did not respond to questions from ProPublica.












An ICE Air flight was evacuated in Alexandria, Louisiana, in April 2018 after a piece of the landing gear failed upon touchdown. All detainees were helped off the plane by guards, according to emails to ICE officials from an agency employee who was on board.

(Courtesy of the University of Washington Center for Human Rights)








Other reports obtained by the University of Washington mention fuel spills, loss of cabin air pressure and a “large altercation” on ICE Air after 2019 but no more evacuations, at least as of June 2022. More recent incidents that have been mentioned in the press include an engine fire last summer on World Atlantic and a failed GlobalX air conditioning unit that sent 11 detainees to the hospital with “heat-related injuries.”

The rare guidance some flight attendants said they received on carrying out ICE Air evacuations came during briefings from pilots. What they heard, they said, was chilling and went against their training.

“Just get up and leave,” one recalled a GlobalX pilot telling him. “That’s it. … Save your life first.”

He understood the instructions to mean that evacuating detainees was not a priority, or even the flight attendants’ responsibility. The detainees were in other people’s hands, or in no one’s.

When asked if they got similar guidance from pilots, three flight attendants said they did not, and one did not answer. Two more, like the first, said pilots gave them instructions that they took to mean they shouldn’t help detainees after opening the exit doors.

“That was the normal briefing,” said a flight attendant from Lala’s class. “‘If a fire occurs in the cabin, if we land on water, don’t check on the immigrants. Just make sure that you and the guards and the people that work for the government get off.’”

“It was as if the detainees’ lives were worthless,” said the other.


The day the girl collapsed on Lala’s flight, the pilot turned the plane around and they crossed back into the United States.

The flight landed in Arizona. Paramedics rushed on board and connected the girl to their own oxygen bottle. They began shuttling her off the plane. Her parents tried to join. But the guards stopped the father.

Shocked, Lala approached the ICE officer in charge. “This is not OK!” she yelled. The mom had seizures. The family needed to stay together.

But the officer said it was impossible. Only one parent could go to the hospital. The other, as Lala understood it, “was going to get deported.”





Most of the flight attendants who spoke with ProPublica are now gone from GlobalX. Some left because they found other jobs. Some left even though they hadn’t. Some left because the charter company, as it focused more and more on deportations, shut down the hub in their city.

Lala eventually left because of the little girl and her family, because she couldn’t do the deportation flights anymore. Her GlobalX uniform hung in her closet for a time, a reminder of her career as a flight attendant. Recently, she said, she threw it away.

She never learned whether the little girl lived or died. Lala just watched her mom follow her off
the plane, then watched the dad return to his seat.

“I cried after that,” she said. She bought her own ticket home.

Mail Online
Open 
Remorseless killer, 53, behind bars for bludgeoning man to death with a frying pan moans about 'inhumane' treatment during Covid as he launches £10k legal battle
Stephen Kidd, 53, (pictured) was jailed in 2009 for his part in the brutal murder of 60-year-old Darren Presley, who was attacked with knives and a frying pan at a flat in Blackpool a year earlier.

Mail Online
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Stalker, 37, who made Strictly Come Dancing star Shirley Ballas' life hell during six-year harassment ordeal is spared jail
Kyle Shaw, 37, from Wirral, was told by his own mother that his father was the former dancer and choreographer's brother David Rich, who killed himself aged 44 in December 2003.

Mail Online
Open 
Jack Fincham reveals 'new job working with DOGS' - weeks after avoiding jail over his cane corso's attack on a runner
Jack Fincham is reportedly training to be a dog trainer, weeks after avoiding jail over his pet pooch's attack on a runner.

Mail Online
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Meghan's marketing team make ANOTHER embarrassing mistake in promo for the 'pivotal moment' her  factory-made jam is released - as she urges fans to tuck love notes into the pacakging to make a 'time capsule'
The Duchess of Sussex told potential buyers in her latest As Ever newsletter that she hopes the lifestyle products can 'mimic the magic of Montecito in a way you can recreate at home'.

Sky News Home
Open 
Paul Mescal and Barry Keoghan revealed in line-up for Beatles films
Paul Mescal and Barry Keoghan will play Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr in the upcoming Beatles films - with a Stranger Things star also portraying one of the Fab Four.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
Open 
Kasatkina 'didn't have much choice' over Australia switch
Daria Kasatkina says she feels "emotional" after switching allegiance from Russia to Australia but "didn't have much choice".

Ian Visits
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London’s Cold War tunnels take important step towards opening to the public
The plans to open up the large network of Cold War tunnels under Holborn have taken a technical but important step forward to being opened to the public.Read more ›

The Hill
Open 
Trump steps up efforts to exert control over DC
President Trump is growing more aggressive in his posture towards Washington, D.C, threatening to exert more control over the local affairs of the nation's capital. The president signed an executive order (EO) to work to make Washington “safe and beautiful” last week, and conservatives in the House are pushing for Congress to have more power...

The Hill
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Colleges watch nervously as Columbia scrambles to appease Trump
Universities could soon face two tough options: bow to the Trump administration or fight back. The federal government has yet to restore $400 million in frozen funding to Columbia even after the Ivy League school agreed to change its disciplinary policies and put some departments under academic receivership, as the administration demanded. The concessions are...

The Hill
Open 
Trump faces test in Florida
President Trump's appeal will face a test Tuesday in the Florida special election to replace his national security adviser Mike Waltz in Florida’s 6th Congressional District. Trump and Waltz each won the district by over 30 points in November but Republican candidate Randy Fine has lagged behind in fundraising and some polling in the special...

The Hill
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What to watch in Wisconsin's Supreme Court race, special Florida elections
Voters in Wisconsin and Florida are set to decide on several key statewide and congressional races that are shaping up to be the first critical bellwethers of the national mood since the 2024 election. In the Badger State, voters will be weighing in on a high-stakes race between liberal candidate Susan Crawford and conservative candidate...

The Hill
Open 
How Elise Stefanik lost a House race she wasn’t even running in 
The reason Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) is cooling her heels in the House instead of heading to the United Nations to give them hell at Turtle Bay is that Republicans have gotten a case of the nerves. Depending on what happens in a few elections being held Tuesday, their condition is about to get a...

The Hill
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Senate parliamentarian could make or break Trump agenda
Senate Republicans are facing crunch time on a long-overdue budget resolution, which has divided their conference over the possibility of cutting Medicaid and adding language to increase the debt ceiling by as much as $5 trillion. Whether they move on the bill this week could depend largely on a key ruling from Senate parliamentarian Elizabeth...

The Hill
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RFK Jr. sends 'worrisome signal' with vaccine chief's ouster
Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. won't acknowledge the scientific consensus that childhood vaccines do not cause autism.   That skepticism over seemingly settled science appeared to come to a head over the weekend when the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) top vaccine official was forced out and issued a fiery public...

The Hill
Open 
Vulnerable Republicans step up appeals to Trump amid primary threats
Vulnerable GOP senators are taking steps to appeal to President Trump as they stare down the possible threat of primary challengers next year. A handful of these senators have faced criticism from the right wing accusing them of not being sufficiently supportive of Trump and his agenda. Since Trump took office in January, however, some...

The Hill
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Democratic senators call for investigation into assisted living facilities in Medicaid
Senate Democrats are calling on the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to conduct a new review of how oversight is conducted over assisted living facilities that participate in Medicaid following a 2018 report that uncovered a stark lack of transparency and reporting across states. Democratic Sens. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.), Kirsten Gillibrand (N.Y.) and Ron Wyden (Ore.) wrote...

The Hill
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Trump federal worker firings threatens to destabilize DC economy
President Trump’s widespread firing of federal workers threatens to destabilize a Washington economy closely intertwined with the fate of government employees. More than 80 percent of the nation’s federal employees are located outside Washington, but the concentration of workers in the capital means President Trump and Elon Musk's plans are sure to have an outsize...

The Hill
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Morning Report — Trump, GOP stress tests take center stage 
In today’s issue: It’s a big week by Washington’s yardstick. Will President Trump’s new tariffs, scheduled to take effect Wednesday, weaken U.S. growth? Will Wisconsin and Florida election results today reveal voters’ current outlook? And can Republicans in Congress demonstrate a united budget strategy within days? TARIFFS: Amid spring blossoms in the White House Rose...

Deutsche Welle
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Ukraine updates: German top diplomat arrives in Kyiv
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock has said the US should not allow itself to be misled by the Kremlin. At the same time, Beijing has reaffirmed its friendship with Moscow. DW has the latest.

Mail Online
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Scientists develop photos from 50-year-old Nessie camera trap - and finally reveal the truth about the Loch Ness Monster
A camera trap, lowered to the bottom of the Loch more than 50 years ago, has been discovered by scientists. An engineer was able to develop the film, which was still in a good condition.

Mail Online
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Is the mystery British 'hero of Amsterdam' a spy? The five signs he has a military background
A British tourist hailed a hero for sprinting after a knifeman who stabbed five people in Amsterdam 'almost certainly has a military background', an expert told MailOnline.

Mail Online
Open 
Behind the scenes look at Maura Higgins' boozy brunch party with Margot Robbie as star lets her hair down on return to London after Danny Jones 'drunken kiss' scandal
Maura Higgins has let her hair down and brushed off the 'drunken kiss' scandal as she returned to London.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Wisconsin and Florida voters head to polls in test of Trump’s popularity
Conservatives bid to overturn liberal majority on Wisconsin supreme court while Florida votes to replace Mike Waltz US voters are headed to the polls on Tuesday in Wisconsin and Florida in elections that some see as a test of Donald Trump’s popularity and the political clout of his billionaire ally Elon Musk.The most closely watched contest is a battle for a seat on Wisconsin’s seven-member supreme court. Conservatives are trying to flip ideological control of the court, which currently has a 4-3 liberal majority. The contest, which features liberal judge Susan Crawford facing off against conservative Brad Schimel, will have huge consequences in the state. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Israel issues evacuation order for parts of northern Gaza
IDF says residents should evacuate Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahiya and the neighbourhoods of Sheikh Zayed, al-Manshiya and Tal al-ZaatarHere are some of the latest images sent to us over the newswires from Dahiyeh, the southern suburbs of Beirut where airstrikes have hit what Israel claims to be Hezbollah targets:We reported in the opening post that officials had said three people were killed in an Israeli airstrike on Beirut in the middle of the night. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Nadia Nadim and the pursuit of happiness in women’s football
We look at the 37-year-old’s acrimonious exit from Milan and the importance of players being happy to play wellNadia Nadim was not holding back. Having left Milan for the Swedish side Hammarby she hit out at the Italian club’s Dutch manager, Suzanne Bakker, in a forthright interview with Aftonbladet’s Amanda Zaza.“It was a shock to be introduced to her,” said the Afghanistan-born Denmark international, with the two clearly disagreeing on how things should be done. “I can honestly say that the training sessions at the refugee camps were better.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Special elections to give voters’ verdicts on Trump’s chaotic first months – US politics live
Votes in several states on Tuesday could offer a glimmer of hope to DemocratsWisconsin and Florida voters head to polls in test of Trump’s popularityAs Donald Trump prepared to unveil a swathe of reciprocal tariffs, global markets braced and some Republican senators voiced their opposition to a strategy that critics warn risks a global trade war, provoking retaliation by major trading partners such as China, Canada and the European Union.The US president said on Monday he would be “very kind” to trading partners when he unveils further tariffs this week, potentially as early as Tuesday night. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK business secretary denies free speech issue featured in US tariff talks
Source reportedly says ‘no free trade without free speech’ after US bureau holds meeting with anti-abortion campaignerUK politics live – latest updatesThe business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, has denied that the issue of free speech has featured in tariff negotiations with the US after reports a deal could be jeopardised by the outcome of a criminal case in Dorset.The Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (DRL), an office within the US Department of State, has met anti-abortion campaigner Livia Tossici-Bolt, who was prosecuted for an alleged breach of a buffer zone outside a Bournemouth abortion clinic. The verdict is due on Friday following a trial at Poole magistrates court. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
Open 
What are Donald Trump's tariffs, what is 'liberation day' and how does it all affect the UK?
If there is a word that has dominated Donald Trump's second term, it's tariffs. 

ZDNet News
Open 
Will using a VPN help protect you from malware or ransomware?
There are many good reasons to use a VPN, especially when traveling. But be sure you know exactly where that protection starts and stops.

ZDNet News
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Why delaying software updates is a terrible idea
One missed update turned my website into a hacker's playground and another locked me out of my own business tools. Here's why skipping software updates isn't worth the risk.

ZDNet News
Open 
I switched to a high-end dumbphone for a week, and it put E Ink (and my iPhone) to shame
The Light Phone's third iteration swaps the E Ink display for a sharp AMOLED screen and adds a color camera, all while staying true to its minimalist philosophy.

ZDNet News
Open 
The plan to decentralize TikTok
As the sale deadline looms, Project Liberty wants to buy TikTok and give users their data back. ZDNET spoke with the initiative's president, Tomicah Tillemann, about the future of the social media app.

Mail Online
Open 
Why your muscles could be streaked with fat like bacon without you knowing - even if you're slim. It could threaten your heart health... but here's how to reverse it
We all know to worry about fat around our waists or clogging our arteries. But now there is a new place to potentially be concerned about - secret stashes of fat accumulating in your muscles.

Mail Online
Open 
Asking a woman why she wants to work is sex harassment, tribunal rules - as Catholic antiques dealer, 40, is ordered to pay £55,000 to female sales assistant
Antiques dealer John Wellington has been ordered to pay £55,000 to female sales assistant Audrey Pereira after he quizzed her when she started working at his jewellery shop in Windsor.

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan Markle footage shows Duchess in 'control mode' at the polo - two years before awkward clip with Sentebale boss which is at the heart of Prince Harry's charity feud
Meghan Markle was filmed at the centre of more chaos at a different polo event where she got stuck under a trophy at the Santa Barbara Polo Club in California in May 2022.

Mail Online
Open 
Behind the scenes look at Maura Higgins' boozy brunch party with Margot Robbie as star lets her hair down as she returns to London after Danny Jones 'drunken kiss' scandal
Maura Higgins has let her hair down and brushed off the 'drunken kiss' scandal as she returned to London.

Mail Online
Open 
Jack Fincham is 'studying to be a dog trainer' - weeks after avoiding jail over his cane corso's attack on a runner
Jack Fincham is reportedly training to be a dog trainer, weeks after avoiding jail over his pet pooch's attack on a runner.

Mail Online
Open 
The most important woman in Tommy Fury's life who is never seen in public - as boxer shares rare snap
While the world is focused on his high-profile relationship with Molly-Mae Hague , there's another woman who takes up a huge place in Tommy Fury 's heart.

Mail Online
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Man, 57, dies and woman and boy are left seriously injured after 'beserk' attack at home in Brighton - as man, 19, is arrested
Emergency services rushed to the 'tragic incident' of a teenager attacking multiple people inside a house in a 'beserk' rampage early this morning.

Mail Online
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Boss of Prince Harry's Sentebale charity shuts down social media as she's trolled by 'Sussex Squad' after accusing duke of 'harassment and bullying'
Dr Sophie Chandauka, who has accused Prince Harry of 'harassment', has deleted her Twitter account in the face of 'online bullying' including racism, MailOnline can reveal.

Mail Online
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Victims will be allowed to attend parole hearings for first time as part of national rollout to boost confidence in justice system
The reform comes into force in England and Wales today as part of a national rollout aimed at boosting confidence in the justice system.

Mail Online
Open 
Meghan's marketing team make ANOTHER embarrassing mistake as her factory-made jam is released alongside some very strange claims about her ready-made crepe mix
The Duchess of Sussex told potential buyers in her latest As Ever newsletter that she hopes the lifestyle products can 'mimic the magic of Montecito in a way you can recreate at home'.

Mail Online
Open 
Stalker, 37, who made Strictly Come Dancing star Shirley Ballas' life hell during six-year harassment ordeal is spared jail
Kyle Shaw, 37, from Wirral, was told by his own mother that his father was the former dancer and choreographer's brother David Rich, who killed himself aged 20 in December 2003.

Sky News Home
Open 
Gary Glitter made bankrupt after failing to pay compensation to victim
Gary Glitter has been made bankrupt after failing to pay more than £500,000 in damages to a woman he abused when she was 12 years old.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Average person will be 40% poorer if world warms by 4C, new research shows
Experts say previous economic models underestimated impact of global heating – as well as likely ‘cascading supply chain disruptions’Economic models have systematically underestimated how global heating will affect people’s wealth, according to a new study that finds 4C warming will make the average person 40% poorer – an almost four-fold increase on some estimates.The study by Australian scientists suggests average per person GDP across the globe will be reduced by 16% even if warming is kept to 2C above pre-industrial levels. This is a much greater reduction than previous estimates, which found the reduction would be 1.4%. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘The ice is not freezing as it should’: supply roads to Canada’s Indigenous communities under threat from climate crisis
Northern Ontario is seeing a ‘shorter window’ on only overland routes for vital deliveries to remote First NationsAt first there was no answer on the satellite phone. But on the third call, Donald Meeseetawageesic heard his sister’s voice. “We need somebody to come and tow us out,” he told her.It was a warmer-than-normal night in early March and Meeseetawageesic, the elected band councillor for Eabametoong First Nation, was stranded in a 4x4 truck on the dark winter road leading to his community. The tyres were stuck in the deep snow and the temperature outside was below freezing. Help was about 60km (37 miles) away. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Special elections to give voters’ verdicts on Trump’s chaotic first months – US politics live
Votes in several states on Tuesday could offer a glimmer of hope to DemocratsWisconsin and Florida voters head to polls in test of Trump’s popularityWhite House aides have drafted a proposal to impose tariffs of about 20% on most imports to the United States, the Washington Post reported on Tuesday.President Donald Trump’s team is mulling using trillions of dollars in new import revenue for a tax dividend or refund, the report said, citing sources. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK business secretary denies free speech issue featured in US tariff talks
Daily Telegraph quoted unnamed US source as warning ‘no free trade without free speech’UK politics live – latest updatesThe business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, has denied that the issue of free speech has directly featured in tariff negotiations with the US after reports a deal could be jeopardised by the outcome of a criminal case in Dorset.The Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (DRL), an office within the US Department of State, has met anti-abortion campaigner Livia Tossici-Bolt, who was prosecuted for an alleged breach of a buffer zone outside a Bournemouth abortion clinic. Following a trial at Poole magistrates court, the verdict is due on Friday. Continue reading...

Slashdot
Open 
Alan Turing Institute Plans Revamp in Face of Criticism and Technological Change
Britain's flagship AI agency will slash the number of projects it backs and prioritize work on defense, environment and health as it seeks to respond to technological advances and criticism of its record. From a report: The Alan Turing Institute -- named after the pioneering British computer scientist -- will shut or offload almost a quarter of its 101 current initiatives and is considering job cuts as part of a change programme that led scores of staff to write a letter expressing their loss of confidence in the leadership in December.

Jean Innes, appointed chief executive in July 2023, argued that huge advances in AI meant the Turing needed to modernise after being founded as a national data science institute by David Cameron's government a decade ago this month. "The Turing has chalked up some really great achievements," Innes said in an interview. "[But we need] a big strategic shift to a much more focused agenda on a small number of problems that have an impact in the real world." A review last year by UK Research and Innovation, the government funding body, found "a clear need for the governance and leadership structure of the Institute to evolve." It called for a move away from the dominance of universities to a structure more representative of AI in UK.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Kasatkina switches allegiance from Russia to Australia
Daria Kasatkina says she feels "emotional" after switching allegiance from Russia to Australia but "didn't have much choice".

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Earthquake-hit Mandalay was the 'city of gold'. Now it reeks of death
Residents in Mandalay, Myanmar's second-largest city, speak of despair and sleepless nights since last week's earthquake.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Is Syria's new technocratic cabinet as inclusive as it could be?
Syria swore in several ministers over the weekend, with analysts saying time would tell how effective they will be. Others noted that many are technocrats, often better qualified than their international counterparts.

Mail Online
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Celtic's seven-figure payout for historic Boys Club abuse
A seven-figure payout has been agreed for a lawsuit over claims of historical sexual abuse at Celtic Boys Club, a law firm has said.

Mail Online
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Amanda Abbington is all smiles after performing in her first play since Strictly Come Dancing scandal
The actress, 51, is currently starring in a production entitled (This Is Not A) Happy Room at The King's Head Theatre in north London.

BBC World News
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Is Zelensky mulling summer election in Ukraine?
Rumours are swirling that Ukraine may soon hold elections. Would that ever work during a war?

CNET News
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Worried About a Recession? A CD Can Help Protect Your Money. Today's CD Rates, April 1, 2025
APYs tend to fall in a recession, but your rate is fixed when you open a CD.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Mandalay was the 'city of gold' - now it reeks of death
Residents in Mandalay, Myanmar's second-largest city, speak of despair and sleepless nights since last week's earthquake.

BBC UK News
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Why is my energy bill £19,000 more than firms in London?
Small businesses in north Wales believe it's "unfair" to have the highest energy charges in the UK.

Mail Online
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What a difference a week of gravity makes! NASA's astronauts stun the world with their noticeably healthier appearance - just days after returning to Earth
Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams have stunned the world with their rapid recovery - after just two weeks back in Earth's gravity.

Mail Online
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Volcano erupts on Iceland: Tourists evacuated from popular holiday spot as 'red alert' is issued
Astonishing footage seen on afarTV monitoring cameras showed a long curtain of lava fountains spanning up to 2km long as the volcano erupted this morning.

Mail Online
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Premier League star's wife reveals she passed out at a club during wild hen night as she spills on what REALLY happened behind the scenes of Married to The Game season two
The WAG, 26, had married the footballer in both religious and legal ceremonies in 2022, but last year they exchanged their vows once again in a lavish celebration in Lake Como, Italy.

Mail Online
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Scientists pinpoint eating plan that works better than calorie counting - dieters shed weight faster
Slimmers undertaking the low maintenance diet shed more weight than those on a daily calorie restricted diet, the study found.

Mail Online
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Lorraine fans rage 'how stupid do they think we are?!' as 'painful and cringeworthy' April Fool's Day prank seriously backfires
During Tuesday's instalment of the ITV show, Scottish TV show host Lorraine Kelly , 65, took her love and dedication to her granddaughter Billie to the next level.

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
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#9254 Routing & Core Network - Wholesale Radius issues (New)
Our engineers are investigating and further updates will be posted here when available.

Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 11:21

Update: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 13:30

Edited: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 11:26

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Maintenance: None

Nature
Open 
Big cuts to US AIDS prevention feared as NIH axes HIV research grants

Nature
Open 
Action needed to mitigate effects of slashing USAID

Nature
Open 
The global scientific community must keep studying LGBT+ health

Nature
Open 
China has already taken steps to reduce retractions of papers from its hospitals

Nature
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Minerals will shape future geopolitical order

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Iceland evacuates Blue Lagoon amid volcano eruption
Lava has begun flowing from a volcano near Iceland's capital, after authorities began evacuating nearby communities. The meteorological office said an eruption is underway after previously warning of the threat.

BBC UK News
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The seven bills going up this week - and what you can do
Several bills are going up at the start of what some commentators have dubbed "awful April".

Mail Online
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Most new electric cars to be hit with £2,125 'luxury' tax under VED rules from today
Changes to car tax will see all new EVs priced over £40,000 stung with an 'expensive car supplement' costing £425 annually for five years.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: Israel issues evacuation order for parts of northern Gaza
IDF says residents should evacuate Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahiya and the neighbourhoods of Sheikh Zayed, al-Manshiya and Tal al-ZaatarWe reported in the opening post that officials had said three people were killed in an Israeli airstrike on Beirut in the middle of the night.The death toll has been increased, with Lebanon’s health ministry reporting that four people were killed in the airstrike, including one woman. At least seven others were reported to have been injured. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mother’s Day has restored my hope in 2025 – but my kids had nothing to do with it | Zoe Williams
I’ve blown hot and cold on the virtue of Mothering Sunday, but I’m convinced it serves as a meteorological bellwetherI like to uphold my children’s privacy and respect their wishes, the foremost of which is: “Please respect our privacy by not writing about us.” So, let’s imagine I spent Mother’s Day with my nieces, except there were four of them and one of them was a boy.It cannot have escaped the notice of anyone in south London that Sunday was a beautiful day; the last time the sun happened to coincide with the celebration of the matriarch was, I believe, 2020, on the eve of lockdown. I concluded, as any right-thinking person would, that we were in for a beautiful spring, rolling from one T-shirt to another across days of blue skies and weirdly warm pavements. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Special elections to give voters’ verdicts on Trump’s chaotic first months – US politics live
Votes in several states on Tuesday could offer a glimmer of hope to DemocratsWisconsin and Florida voters head to polls in test of Trump’s popularityDonald Trump’s executive order seeking to overhaul the nation’s elections faced its first legal challenges Monday as the Democratic National Committee and a pair of nonprofits filed two separate lawsuits calling it unconstitutional.The Campaign Legal Center and the State Democracy Defenders Fund brought the first lawsuit Monday afternoon. The DNC, the Democratic Governors Association, and Senate and House Democratic leaders followed soon after with a complaint of their own. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Palestinian teenager dies in Israeli detention in West Bank
Walid Ahmad’s family says his health had deteriorated and officials say he collapsed in unclear circumstances A 17-year-old boy from the West Bank who was held without charge for six months in an Israeli prison has died after he collapsed in unclear circumstances, Palestinian officials have said.According to his family, Walid Ahmad was “a healthy high schooler” at the time of his arrest last September for allegedly throwing stones at Israeli soldiers. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK housebuilders ‘very bad’ at building houses, says wildlife charity CEO
Land speculation to blame for lack of progress amid Labour drive to build 1.5m new homes, says Wildlife Trusts headUK politics live – latest updatesBusiness live – latest updatesHousebuilders in the UK are failing to supply much-needed new homes not because of restrictive planning laws, but because they are “very bad” at building houses, the head of one of the UK’s biggest nature charities has warned.“There’s planning permission today for a million new houses,” said Craig Bennett, chief executive of the Wildlife Trusts. “So why aren’t they being built? Why is it that volume housebuilders in this country are actually very bad at building houses, even when they’ve got planning permission?” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK business secretary denies free speech issue featured in US tariff talks
Daily Telegraph quoted unnamed US source as warning ‘no free trade without free speech’UK politics live – latest updatesThe business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, has denied that the issue of free speech has directly featured in tariff negotiations with the US after reports a deal could be jeopardised by the outcome of a criminal case in Dorset.The Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (DRL), an office within the US Department of State, has met anti-abortion campaigner Livia Tossici-Bolt, who was prosecuted for an alleged breach of a buffer zone outside a Bournemouth abortion clinic. Following a trial in Poole, the verdict is due on Friday. Continue reading...

TechRadar News
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Missing in action! Apple watchOS 11.4 mysteriously absent from latest software drop

TechRadar News
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Leaked Pixel 10 Pro Fold renders suggest this is one foldable you can skip

TechRadar News
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Take-Two won't reveal the GTA 6 release date until we're 'relatively' close to launch: 'We want to maintain the anticipation and the excitement'

TechRadar News
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iOS 18.4: 5 reasons to update now, including new Photos tools and Ambient Music

TechRadar News
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EA games are finally coming to Amazon Luna and I can't wait to play The Sims 4 on my phone

TechRadar News
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Nintendo Switch 2 Joy-Con mouse functionality hinted at again in Nintendo Today teaser

TechRadar News
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Remember the Shark fan that spits on you to keep you cool? Now it has a portable sibling for on-the-go misting

TechRadar News
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CinemaCon 2025 live – all the latest new movie announcements, from 2 Spider-Man movies to Zelda, The Beatles and more coming!

TechRadar News
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Amazon launches AI agent which can take control of a web browser

Digital Trends
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Memory prices are about to rise. Here’s why you should care
Micron has just announced that it's raising its prices. You might be surprised by how many different products might be affected by this change.

Digital Trends
Open 
Marvel’s Spider-Man 4 finally has an official name
At CinemaCon, Marvel and Tom Holland share the name of Spider-Man 4, which calls back to a similar time in the life of Peter Parker.

The Verge
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It’s the moment of truth for Zuckerberg’s Trump bet
Mark Zuckerberg — having spent months cozying up to President Donald Trump — will now be looking to reap the benefits as European tech regulators bear down on Meta. The EU is expected to impose fines against the social media giant any day now, having preliminarily ruled in July 2024 that Facebook and Instagram’s “pay […]

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Haiti gangs storm town and release 500 inmates from jail
Gangs control most of the capital but the attack seems to suggest they are expanding to other towns.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
What you need to know about the bills going up this week
Several bills are going up at the start of what some commentators have dubbed "awful April".

Mail Online
Open 
Strictly star Toyah Willcox reveals why she was strip-searched in Sweden
Singer Toyah Willcox reflects on memories of her earliest holidays, her dream touring destinations, her most exotic gig and her favourite hotel.

Mail Online
Open 
Man, 36, is charged over Network Rail 'cyber attack' at 19 railway stations after passengers logging onto public wi-fi were shown 'terror messages'
Around 20 railway stations were targeted during the incident which happened just after 5pm on September 25 which saw the web page of the wifi with an 'Islamophobic' message.

Mail Online
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Two-bedroom house goes up for sale for just £150,000 - but there's a massive surprise in the master room
The stylish terrace, which is 'situated in an ideal location' in Stalybridge, Greater Manchester, has been put up for sale through Kingtons Estate Agents.

Mail Online
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Inside the bitter feud between OnlyFans' biggest stars Anna Paul and Mikaela Testa
Australian OnlyFans star Mikaela made a series of shocking claims against Anna, including that she has made mean-spirited comments about her fan's appearances and exploited them for money.

Sky News Home
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Three people die in crash between car and bus near Heathrow
Three people have died after a crash between a car and a bus near Heathrow Airport late last night - with both vehicles catching fire.

BBC World News
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Could Ukraine be about to hold an election?
Rumours are swirling that Ukraine may soon hold elections. Would that ever work during a war?

Mail Online
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Gold Coast couple who raped a teenage girl after a party at their sprawling property are sentenced
Christopher Luke Hili and Lee Kathleen Hili have learned their fate after the Gold Coast couple were found guilty of raping a teenage girl at their home.

Mail Online
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Most new electric cars to be hit with £2,125 'luxury' tax under new VED rules from today
Changes to car tax will see all new EVs priced over £40,000 stung with an 'expensive car supplement' costing £425 annually for five years.

Mail Online
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Three dead after bus and car crash near Heathrow Airport
Three people have died in a horror crash between a car and a bus near Heathrow Airport that saw both vehicles engulfed in flames.

The Guardian (UK)
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Sylvanian Families: The Movie review – bunny goes looking for gift in danger-free kids story
Set in the bucolically bland world of the toy franchise, the adventures of Freya the rabbit stay well away from any kind of jeopardyIn the very first scene of this film, a woman (well, a female bunny rabbit), broom in hand, sings happily as she sweeps the kitchen floor. Welcome to the wholesome 1950s nostalgia of the Sylvanian Families brand. And while other adaptations of toy franchises whack the audience over the head with irony, skateboards and smart alec gags, this film based on the fuzzy woodland creatures stays firmly on-message. It’s very sweet, slightly dull, and such a throwback that if you stumbled across it on a streaming platform you’d be forgiven for thinking it was made in the 1970s.It’s set in the bucolically blissful land of Sylvania (though one character pronounces it “Syl-van-ia” so perhaps we’ve all been saying it wrong for years), where bunny Freya is on a mission. It’s her mum’s birthday and Freya wants to give her the perfect present. Each of the film’s chapters takes Freya on a little adventure: first she gets carried off in an autumnal gust while picking flowers to decorate a hat, then she attempts to make her mum a trumpet. The basic animation struggles to get across the highs and low of Freya’s odyssey – it’s such a faithful adaptation the characters look identical to the figures with black bead eyes, and blank faces. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Mother’s Day has restored my hope in 2025 – but my kids had nothing to do with it
I’ve blown hot and cold on the virtue of Mothering Sunday, but I’m convinced it serves as a meteorological bellwetherI like to uphold my children’s privacy and respect their wishes, the foremost of which is: “Please respect our privacy by not writing about us.” So, let’s imagine I spent Mother’s Day with my nieces, except there were four of them and one of them was a boy.It cannot have escaped the notice of anyone in south London that Sunday was a beautiful day; the last time the sun happened to coincide with the celebration of the matriarch was, I believe, 2020, on the eve of lockdown. I concluded, as any right-thinking person would, that we were in for a beautiful spring, rolling from one T-shirt to another across days of blue skies and weirdly warm pavements. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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David Squires on … Harry Redknapp’s FA Cup quarter-final review
Our cartoonist on the headline-grabbing former manager’s views on the weekend’s last-eight tiesBuy a copy of David’s cartoons in our Print ShopDavid’s new book, Chaos in the Box: buy it now Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Special elections to give voters’ verdicts on Trump’s chaotic first months – US politics live
Votes in several states on Tuesday could offer a glimmer of hope to DemocratsFilm director Oliver Stone will testify at a US House of Representatives hearing on Tuesday that is considering thousands of pages of documents related to the 1963 assassination of John F Kennedy released this month at the direction of President Donald Trump.Representative Anna Paulina Luna, chair of the Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets, said that lawmakers will hear from witnesses about the value of the documents. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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UK business secretary denies free speech issue featured in US tariff talks
Daily Telegraph quoted unnamed US source as warning ‘no free trade without free speech’UK politics live – latest updatesThe business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, has denied that the issue of free speech has directly featured in tariff negotiations with the US following reports a deal could be jeopardised by the outcome of a criminal case held at a magistrates court in Dorset.The Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, & Labour (DRL), an office within the US Department of State, has met anti-abortion campaigner Livia Tossici-Bolt, who has been prosecuted for an alleged breach of a buffer zone outside a Bournemouth abortion clinic. Following a trial in Poole, the verdict is due on Friday. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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In pictures: Sporting photos of the week
A selection of some of the most striking sports photographs taken around the world over the past seven days.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Connor turns down GB spot after being asked to pay
Distance runner Ben Connor says he is declining his selection by Great Britain for the European Road Running Championships after being asked to pay to compete.

The Register
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Asda's tech separation from Walmart nears £1B as delays mount
Lenders told of £175 million project top-up for 2025, four years after buyout The UK's third-largest supermarket has seen the expected costs of its tech divorce from former US owner Walmart rise to nearly £1 billion ($1.3 billion) after news broke that the project is now expected to run into calendar Q3 of year four, overshooting its original three-year timeline.…

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RISC OS Open plots great escape from 32-bit purgatory
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Maura Higgins lets her hair down and celebrates with Margot Robbie as she returns to London after Danny Jones 'drunken kiss' scandal
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Mail Online
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Chemical castration for paedophiles is proposed under new bill in Cyprus
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Mail Online
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Most new electric cars to be hit with £2,125 'luxury' tax under new VED rules from today
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Sky News Home
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'Liberation day' is coming - and there's one number to keep in mind
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Immigration Advice Authority appoints new Non-Executive Directors
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UK Government News
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UK seafood makes a splash in Vietnam in major export boost
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UK Government News
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Child Benefit boost for millions of families
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Government to introduce legislation to block new sentencing guidelines
The government will introduce new legislation to stop Sentencing Council's guidelines coming into effect

Wired Top Stories
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Yuval Noah Harari: ‘How Do We Share the Planet With This New Superintelligence?’
The academic and author discusses what to expect from the singularity, the need for AI self-correcting mechanisms, and what hope there is for superintelligence safeguarding democracy.

Mail Online
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Coldstream Guard told female soldier 'shh, go back to sleep' as he raped her while they were on deployment with the British Army, court martial hears
Lance Corporal Jordan Morris and the woman were on deployment with the British Army to Kenya when the alleged incident took place.

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Geri Halliwell officially changes her name on Instagram - a year on from her husband's highly-publicised sexting scandal
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Mail Online
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'Significant increase' in voyeurs taking indecent images of female athletes at swimming competitions, report warns amid rise in mixed-sex changing rooms
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Mail Online
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Meghan's marketing team make ANOTHER embarrassing mistake as her factory-made jam is released with some very strange claims about ready-made crepe mix
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Mail Online
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Three dead after bus and car crash near Heathrow Airport
Three people have died in a horror crash between a car and a bus near Heathrow Airport.

Sky News Home
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Mescal and Keoghan revealed in line-up for Beatles films
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Three people die in crash between car and bus near Heathrow
Three people have died after a crash between a car and a bus near Heathrow Airport late last night. - with both vehicles catching fire.

Propublica
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The Art Institute of Chicago Returned a Sculpture to Nepal But Obscured Its Connection to a Wealthy Donor
by Steve Mills




ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up for Dispatches, a newsletter that spotlights wrongdoing around the country, to receive our stories in your inbox every week.











The Art Institute of Chicago announced recently that it had returned to Nepal a sculpture that had been in its collection for at least a quarter century. Conspicuously left out of the press release: that the sculpture had been a gift from a wealthy Chicago donor.

That omission obscured a simmering controversy about whether Chicago philanthropists Marilynn Alsdorf and her husband, James, both of whom are dead, improperly built their collection of hundreds of South Asian works and why the Art Institute, which houses some of that collection in its Alsdorf Galleries, has been reluctant to return those works to countries with compelling claims for them.

The 12th-century sculpture the museum returned to Nepal is called “Buddha Sheltered by the Serpent King Muchalinda” and is about 17.5 inches tall. The Art Institute said it was stolen from the Kathmandu Valley, although it’s unclear when the theft occurred or how or when the Alsdorfs acquired the piece.

It was among more than a dozen pieces identified by ProPublica and Crain’s Chicago Business in 2023 as having claims on them by other countries, including Nepal. At one time, each piece had belonged to the Alsdorfs, the investigation found.

The Art Institute devotes a page online to works that have been removed from its collection, a process museums call deaccessioning. But unlike other pages on its site about artwork or pieces on display, pages for deaccessioned items don’t include ownership information and, in this case, the listing doesn’t mention the Alsdorfs.

Melissa Kerin, the director of the Mudd Center for Ethics at Washington and Lee University in Virginia and a professor of art history who specializes in South Asian and Tibetan art and architecture, said the Art Institute is trying to have it both ways with the Buddha’s repatriation. It is seeking credit for having a provenance division and returning the Buddha, she said, but is not disclosing the involvement of its own donors.

“It looks proactive. They’re getting rid of a problematic object,” said Kerin. “But people will never know the full details of it. They are face-saving the Alsdorfs and their relationship with them and with all donors. They have a lot to lose.”





The Alsdorfs, who lived in Chicago, were influential in the city’s art world, donating more than $20 million to the Art Institute over the course of their lives. James Alsdorf, the son of a Dutch diplomat and the owner of a business that manufactured glass coffee-making equipment, was chair of the museum’s board from 1975 to 1978. He died in 1990.

Marilynn Alsdorf was a trustee of the museum and president of its Woman’s Board. She exhibited her and her husband’s collection at the museum in 1997, and the Alsdorf Galleries opened in 2008. She died in 2019.

Controversy has surrounded the Alsdorfs’ vast collection for decades. In the 1970s, the Thai government sought the return of a stone carving, and, after a protest outside the museum, it was given back.

In 2002, a California man sued Marilynn Alsdorf to recover a Picasso painting called “Femme en Blanc,” or “Lady in White,” that he alleged had belonged to his grandmother before it was looted by the Nazis during World War II. Marilynn Alsdorf eventually paid the man $6.5 million in exchange for keeping the painting. She said she did nothing wrong in obtaining it.

Alsdorf’s son, Jeffrey, is listed in tax forms as the president of the Alsdorf Foundation, which gave the Art Institute a $40,000 educational grant or contribution as recently as 2023. Asked about the repatriation of the Buddha, he said, “I hope the deal goes through and everyone is happy with it.” Then he hung up on the reporter.

An official at the Embassy of Nepal in Washington said the deal had gone through and that she was present at a ceremony where the Buddha was handed over to Nepali officials. Several museum representatives took part in the ceremony and spoke about continuing to work with the Nepali officials.

The Art Institute spokesperson said in a statement that the museum is “committed to prioritizing provenance research across departments, which includes our Arts of Asia collection.” Over the last five years, the statement continued, the museum has created positions dedicated primarily to issues of provenance, including the role of executive director of provenance. The museum has previously said that many of the pieces the Alsdorfs donated were accepted and vetted under standards in place at the time.

The spokesperson said in the statement that the museum has returned two pieces in the past year from its permanent collection to their countries of origin and, over the past several years, has returned additional works that were on loan. The spokesperson didn’t provide details on those repatriations.

The Buddha, according to the statement, had been a “research priority” for the museum for several years. After obtaining new information about the sculpture, the Art Institute reached out to the government of Nepal in 2024 to begin the process of returning it to the country.

The museum appeared to draw a distinction between the return of the Buddha and the request from Nepal for the Taleju necklace’s return, saying: “The provenance of this object is separate from and not comparable to other objects in our collection.”

The spokesperson said in the statement that the museum had sent a letter to the government of Nepal in May 2022 asking for additional information about the necklace but that it was still waiting for a reply. Nonetheless, the museum said it has an “ongoing dialogue” with Nepali officials and will continue working with them. The embassy official did not respond to ProPublica’s questions about the necklace or the museum’s request for additional information.

Adhikari, of the Nepal Heritage Recovery Campaign, said the Art Institute was intentionally making the process difficult for Nepal.

“I believe the burden of proof should be on the Art Institute of Chicago to prove that it belongs to them,” he said of the Taleju necklace. “This is a violation of our cultural rights.”

Erin Thompson, a professor of art crime at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, said the Art Institute’s policy about objects it returns — the Buddha, for example — can make it harder for researchers to track an object’s provenance. It can also cast doubt on other objects in a collection.

“You don’t erase that history to save somebody a little embarrassment,” she said.



The Art Institute declined a request for an interview, but in response to written questions, a spokesperson said that it had followed a museum-wide policy on disclosing the history and ownership of deaccessioned objects. Once an object is no longer in the museum’s collections, it does not include the item’s provenance on its website — a practice some art historians criticize.

The investigation by the news organizations focused on an ornate piece called the Taleju necklace, an inscribed gilt-copper work embellished with semiprecious stones and intricate designs. A 17th-century Nepali king offered the necklace to the Hindu goddess Taleju.

Officials with the government in Nepal as well as activists have centered much of their attention on the necklace, which they believe was stolen during a period of political upheaval in the country. It remains prominently featured in the Alsdorf Galleries even though some say it is offensive to display such a sacred work in public.

Activists said that their frustration with the Art Institute applies to other pieces as well.

“It’s not only about the necklace,” said Sanjay Adhikari, a lawyer and secretary of the Nepal Heritage Recovery Campaign, an organization that seeks the return of a number of pieces taken from the country. “It’s about many other cultural properties out there. There’s a big frustration with the Art Institute of Chicago.”

ZeroHedge News
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Denmark Squandered Defenses Arming Ukraine, With Little Left To Defend Greenland
Denmark Squandered Defenses Arming Ukraine, With Little Left To Defend Greenland

Denmark has taken pride in being among the top four military donors to Ukraine over the past more than three years of war. The tiny Scandinavian country has consistently touted its huge financial contribution to the fight against Russia. 

"The information from NATO underlines that military support for Ukraine is an absolute priority for the government. In my view, this is a clear expression of Denmark's support for Ukraine as long as it is needed. And it is a support that we in Denmark can be proud of," Danish Defense Minister Troels Lund Poulsen recently said.

But now Denmark has found itself embroiled in the unusual Greenland controversy, which escalated when President Trump said he has refused to take "military force off the table" in discussions on a potential US acquisition of Greenland.
Bohdanahowitzers - part of the Danish-funded artillery. Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark.

Trump talking annexation of what is still a territory of Denmark - which itself is a NATO ally of the United States - is deeply awkward to say the least.

"Many accusations and many allegations have been made. And of course we are open to criticism,” Danish Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen said in the wake of Vice President JD Vance's provocative visit to Greenland. "But let me be completely honest: we do not appreciate the tone in which it is being delivered. This is not how you speak to your close allies. And I still consider Denmark and the United States to be close allies."

Russian sources are now highlighting the fact that Denmark has "gambled its security away to arm another country 1,000 km away" amid the ongoing spat over Greenland's fate with the US.

For example Sputnik has pointed out that "While it has a population of just 6 millino and a $428 billion GDP, Denmark has consistently led the Western alliance in the proxy war against Russia in Ukraine, with its arms deliveries the FOURTH LARGEST after the US, Germany and the UK, totaling $8.2 billion, and non-military aid adding up to $1.15 billion."

The Russian state media outlet featured the following list:


Denmark has cleared out its arms caches of up to 100% of certain weapons to arm Kiev, including:

19 F-16s (over 60% of Denmark’s fleet)
All 19 (100%) of its CAESAR howitzers
At least 30 of 195 Leopard 1A5 and 14 of 107 of Leopard 2A4 tanks
Over 50 of 125 M113 APCs
500 Stinger MANPADs, 2,700 LAW anti-tank weapons
Harpoon coastal defense systems, Marder IFVs, engineering equipment, radars, drones, small arms, and soldiers’ gear, from uniforms to field hospitals, living containers and first aid.


The publication then concludes, "Who knew that blowing your defense capabilities on a proxy war against Russia could come with serious risks?"

Danish support for Ukraine broken down by year, via the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark:



Indeed, in this ongoing major diplomatic spat with the Trump administration, which also involves disagreement over who can provide and sustain better Arctic defense, Denmark now has less military muscle to back up its claims to being able to properly secure Arctic regions like Greenland.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 04:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
British Toddler Expelled From Nursery For Being 'Transphobic'
British Toddler Expelled From Nursery For Being 'Transphobic'

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Department for Education data in the UK has revealed that a toddler under the age of four was kicked out of a nursery after being accused of being “transphobic.”



Yes, really.

The Telegraph reports that the child was removed during the 2022-23 academic year for “abuse against sexual orientation and gender identity.”


A toddler was suspended from nursery after being accused of being transphobic or homophobic, The Telegraph can revealhttps://t.co/qBRYoYuvWd
— The Telegraph (@Telegraph) March 31, 2025
The statistics also indicate that a further 94 pupils at primary institutions were suspended or permanently excluded for ‘transphobia or homophobia’ in the same year.

Ten of the other pupils were under seven years of age.


I’m lost for words.
A TODDLER has been expelled from a nursery because they were “transphobic or homophobic”.
Something is deeply, deeply wrong with our country. pic.twitter.com/nZ7thMI56Y
— Alex Armstrong (@alexharmstrong) March 31, 2025
Helen Joyce, director of advocacy at Sex Matters, commented, “Every once in a while, the extremes of gender ideology throw up a story that seems too crazy to believe, and a toddler being suspended from nursery for so-called ‘transphobia’ or homophobia is one such example.”

“Teachers and school leaders involved in this insanity should be ashamed of themselves for projecting adult concepts and beliefs on to such young children,” Joyce added.


"Children shouldn't be taught any nonsense about gender identities…"@HJoyceGender on the toddler suspended from nursery for "transphobia" with @TalkTV pic.twitter.com/9TilQL1Q2c
— Sex Matters (@SexMattersOrg) March 31, 2025
Lord Toby Young, director of the Free Speech Union, further remarked “I would have thought that if your ideology is so rigid it justifies you punishing toddlers for not complying with it, that’s a powerful argument for discarding it in favour of something less dogmatic.”

Absolute clown world.


This is totalitarian insanity. If you think small children should be punished for being able to recognise sex, you are a dangerous zealot who should be nowhere near kids or in any position of authority over them. https://t.co/IZI0sP58ss
— J.K. Rowling (@jk_rowling) March 31, 2025

The poor child probably just asked why a boy had a girls name or why a girl was wearing boys clothes, which is what children do, they're curious about things as they should be.
— IanG 🎗️ (@IanGee2023) March 31, 2025

When transgender ideology is held above the care of toddlers, it's a clear sign that something is profoundly broken in Western society.
— The Higher Self (@Higherself2024) March 31, 2025

A real headline in 2025.
To be fair, transphobic toddlers are the most hateful. pic.twitter.com/iahQ4UvZaa
— Josh Howie (@joshxhowie) March 30, 2025

I feel so sorry for children being essentially forced to say what is not true 😭 it actually does break my heart
— Tessieroyalsevensamurai 🇬🇧🇮🇪 (@TessaOutlook) March 31, 2025
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Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 05:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Weapons Spending Around The World, And Why The German Stock Market Jumped The Gun
Weapons Spending Around The World, And Why The German Stock Market Jumped The Gun

One massive impact the Trump administration has already had, DB's Jim Reid writes in his latest Chart of the Day note,
is to upend decades of German fiscal conservatism (although one can debate whether Zelensky's meltdown in the White House at the end of February was staged precisely to provoke Trump's response, so that the outgoing German government can ram through the massive, €1 trillion spending package before the AfD would block it for good). 

However their tariff actions are also further denting one of Germany’s key sectors, namely autos. This morning we launched an additional paper in our new Deutsche Bank Research Institute looking at how Germany could encourage resources to move between Autos and Defence as the former scales back and the latter rapidly grows. See it here.

Today’s Chart of the Day from Reid shows how far Germany lags many of its peers in terms of defense spending so there is plenty of scope for change.



At the same time, auto factories have chronic overcapacity, with many operating at just a quarter of capacity and urgently looking to reduce their workforce. Production is down by almost a third from its peak in 2011, as much of it has shifted abroad and as buyers pick cheaper alternatives to German cars.

Retooling auto factories is easier said than done though, so it will take several years, even after orders are received. And the clusters of auto and defense factories are in different parts of the country, limiting the ability to simply update machinery and swap workers from one line to another.

The good news, according to Reid, is that with the right incentives and reforms there can be some transition between the two. 

The bad news is that the German (and European_ market has already priced in much if not all the upside from the massive, €1 trillion spending binge, when in reality it will take years for the money to flow through to where it can be used productively and end up as revenue and profits across the private sector, which means that European stocks - and the euro - are in for a very rude awakening in the near-term.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 05:45

Ian Visits
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Free plants from Hyde Park for local charities
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Deutsche Welle
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China holds large-scale military drills around Taiwan
Beijing called the drills a "severe warning and forceful containment against Taiwan independence." Taiwan deployed warships in response.

BBC UK News
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Mail Online
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Pro-life campaigner, 64, whose silent protest outside abortion clinic sparked free speech row says she is 'grateful' for US intervention
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Mail Online
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The woman who mended Pierce Brosnan's broken heart: How Keely Shaye Smith, 61, won over bereaved Bond actor after his wife's tragic death - as fans swoon over their 30-year love story
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Mail Online
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The most important woman in Tommy Fury's life who is never seen in public - as boxer shares rare snap
While the world is focused on his high-profile relationship with Molly-Mae Hague , there's another woman who takes up a huge place in Tommy Fury 's heart - his mother Chantal.

Mail Online
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Iconic Emmerdale character quits the village in heart-stopping scenes a whopping 30 years on from their soap debut
The key character has been at the centre of a series of significant storylines during his on-and-off run on the programme but departed once again in Monday's episode.

Sky News Home
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Woman rescued 91 hours after Myanmar quake
A woman has been rescued from an earthquake-shattered building in Myanmar, 91 hours after becoming encased in rubble.

The Guardian (UK)
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Special elections to give voters’ verdicts on Trump’s chaotic first months – US politics live
Votes in several states on Tuesday could offer a glimmer of hope to DemocratsGood morning and welcome to the US politics live blog. I’m Tom Ambrose and I will be bringing you all the latest news lines over the next few hours.We start with news that several elections today will be a crucial test of the popularity of the chaotic and extremist first two months of Donald Trump’s second term and the clout of his close ally, Elon Musk, the world’s richest man who has been tasked with radically reforming the US federal government.Trump said Wednesday will be “Liberation Day” when he announces reciprocal tariffs on nearly all US trading partners. Global stock markets were a sea of red on Monday and investors fled to gold amid recession fears.The Trump administration has announced a review of federal contracts and grants at Harvard University over allegations of antisemitism.Senate majority leader John Thune said he believes Donald Trump is “probably messing with you” with his remarks on Sunday that there are “methods” by which he could run for a third term.A coalition of civil rights groups filed a lawsuit on Monday seeking to block portions of Donald Trump’s executive order that would require voters to prove their citizenship in order to vote.Trump took aim at ticket scalping in a new executive order signed today, which directs the Department of Justice and the FTC to crack down on ticket resellers who price-gouge.Tens of millions of dollars is being withheld for Planned Parenthood chapters across the US in an attempt by the Trump administration to force the clinics to change their operations.A federal judge has put the Trump administration plans to deport hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan immigrants on pause, ruling Monday that protections struck down by officials should be reinstated while lawsuits continue. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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New Zealand Rugby and Ineos settle sponsorship contract dispute
NZR had launched legal action over missed paymentDetails of settlement to remain confidentialThe Manchester United co-owner Ineos and New Zealand Rugby have announced a settlement has been reached in their sponsorship contract dispute.In February NZR, the federation responsible for the All Blacks team, said it had launched legal action against Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s Ineos after accusing the chemicals firm of failing to pay the first 2025 instalment of a six-year deal. Ineos at the time said it had looked to “adjust” its sponsorship, with it having to implement “cost-saving measures” due the impact of “high energy costs and extreme carbon taxes” on its European businesses. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The Breakdown | Marcus Smith’s duel with Sam Prendergast could define Lions hopes
When the two fly-halves meet at Croke Park, the result could weigh heavily on Andy Farrell’s selectionSometimes players like to pretend they barely contemplate their direct opponent. That way they can neatly sidestep all external comparisons and inner doubts and concentrate on their own jobs. It is a team game, after all, and it never pays to waste time fretting about things over which you have limited control.Every now and again, though, the “game within a game” duel narrative is unavoidable. Even if Leinster’s pack give a well-stuffed armchair ride to their young fly-half Sam Prendergast on Saturday his Harlequins opposite number, Marcus Smith, will still be expected to make some sort of impact. If not, his chances of being among the chosen few to tour with the British & Irish Lions this summer will recede and Prendergast’s will be suitably enhanced. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Today Labour brings in higher wages, because we know we must put money back in working people’s pockets | Rachel Reeves
Our opponents dismiss this move, but we have a core belief: people deserve a decent day’s pay for a decent day’s workA few months ago I visited a school in my constituency and took part in a question-and-answer session with young pupils. One girl raised her hand and asked me: “Why is everything in the shops so expensive?”In just eight words she had encapsulated the mood of the country. She had cut through to the core question that people had on their minds when they went to the polls on 4 July last year. If the question wasn’t “why is everything so expensive?”, it was “why are our pay packets not going as far as they used to?”.Rachel Reeves is the chancellor of the exchequer Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Le Pen ban is ‘political and partisan’, says French far-right party’s president
Jordan Bardella declares ‘total loyalty’ to Marine Le Pen after court finds her and RN officials guilty of embezzlementEurope live – latest updatesThe president of France’s far-right National Rally (RN) party has described a court’s decision to ban Marine Le Pen from public office for five years, wrecking her hopes of becoming president in 2027, as “disproportionate, political and partisan”.Jordan Bardella said the punishment for Le Pen’s conviction for embezzling European parliament funds would deprive millions of French voters of their democratic right to put her in the Elysée Palace. Continue reading...

ZDNet News
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I clicked on four sneaky online scams on purpose - to show you how they work
What happens when you get fooled by an online scam that lands in your email or text messages? I'll show you. Caution: Don't try this at home.

ZDNet News
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Why no small business is too small for hackers - and 8 security best practices for SMBs
Don't fall victim to the 'small target illusion.' Learn how cybercriminals exploit SMBs so you can fix your security gaps before it's too late.

ZDNet News
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Help! I clicked on a phishing link - now what?
Phishing scams are getting brutally effective, and even technically sophisticated people can get fooled. Here's how to limit the damage right away, and what to do next.

Russia Today News
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Trump rules out Ukraine joining NATO in exchange for rare earths

BBC UK News
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Three die in west London crash between car and bus
Emergency services found a bus and car alight on Monday evening and three people died at the scene.

Mail Online
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Brit, 81, dies while snorkelling off Indonesia
The pensioner, 81, was found floating lifeless just 15ft from the coast of Gili Trawangan island in West Nusa Tenggara province, Indonesia.

Mail Online
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Kemi Badenoch warns UK should NOT retaliate if Trump brings in tariffs as Tory leader says Britain must 'stick closely to the US' and seek a trade deal
The Conservative Party leader warned that import levies 'just make everyone poorer' and demanded Labour ministers work flat out on a 'comprehensive' trade deal.

Mail Online
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High street fashion brand crashes into liquidation after shutting 35 stores - as staff are told they won't get paid
The liquidation process of a high street fashion brand has been started by advisers from insolvency firm Moorfields following a creditors' meeting on Friday afternoon.

Mail Online
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Meghan's PR team make ANOTHER embarrassing mistake as her factory-made jam is released with some very strange claims about ready-made crepe mix
The Duchess of Sussex told potential buyers in her latest As Ever newsletter that she hopes the lifestyle products can 'mimic the magic of Montecito in a way you can recreate at home'.

Deutsche Welle
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Le Pen conviction politically motivated, party chief claims
National Rally president Jordan Bardella has said the fraud conviction against Marine Le Pen is part of an effort to attack their far-right party. But a top prosecutor has rejected the claims.

Deutsche Welle
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Iceland evacuates Blue Lagoon amid volcano threat
Magma flows have begun at a volcano near Iceland's capital, causing authorities to evacuate nearby communities. The meteorological office says an imminent eruption is likely.

BBC UK News
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Three people die in crash in west London
Emergency services found a bus and car alight on Monday evening and three people died at the scene.

Mail Online
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A look back at Pierce Brosnan's heartbreaking personal life after actor tragically lost both his first wife and daughter to ovarian cancer as he confesses: 'No one can escape life's pain'
He's one of the biggest stars to come out of Ireland after his time as James Bond sent him into dizzying heights of fame. 

Mail Online
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How to beat Rachel Reeves' savage bill hikes TODAY: From council tax to cars, utilities and housing
April Fools' Day kicks off with a shock to our finances that's not funny - a massive 'Billmageddon' tax raid on our finances that will cost each household at least £1,000 extra a year.

The Guardian (UK)
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Scraps review – posh frocks and meal deals in a class comedy
Wardrobe theatre, BristolDaisy Kennedy and Mia Macleod tussle with capitalism, class cliches and the cost of living in this smart two-handerMeet Daisy and Mia. One is working class, the other middle class. One is proud of that, the other embarrassed. Between them they like pints, artisan coffee, ballet and meal deals. A folk song about labour will be performed by one while the other will do a French-inspired mime. Which of them feels skint and which is considered carefree?If you’ve begun making assumptions then that’s what Scraps is here to question. Daisy Kennedy and Mia Macleod’s two-hander is a merry-go-round of sketches tussling with class cliches and the cost of living crisis. It’s also about the cost of making a play about these complex issues. The title sums up the ragtag nature of its clowning, dance breaks and DIY multimedia. But it also reflects the fights that break out between the pair and suggests the measly leftovers their generation have been handed by the capitalist machine. Home ownership, job security and what you can buy with an hour’s work at minimum wage are all on the agenda here.At Wardrobe theatre, Bristol, until 2 April Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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An unexplained death, ‘abuse and slavery’: Indonesian fishers reveal life on long haul vessels
The death of a crew member on a Chinese-owned trawler in the Indian Ocean illustrates the lack of accountability in the seafood industry, say advocatesRicky* was one of the first to see his crewmate’s dead body. It was 2023 and he was six months into a stint at sea, working on a longline tuna boat in the Indian Ocean for $480 a month. The crew were mostly Indonesian, like Ricky, or Chinese, like the captain and owners of the boat.In the days leading up to Ricky’s crewmate’s death, the 29-year-old Indonesian, referred to as YK, had been increasingly depressed onboard, repeatedly asking to be sent home. The captain had refused, says Ricky, who says he saw YK attack the captain. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Woke’ criticism of Doctor Who proves show on right track, says its newest star
Varada Sethu joining series as Doctor’s latest companion, marking first time Tardis team is wholly people of colourCriticisms that Doctor Who has become too “woke” prove the series is doing the right thing by being inclusive, its new star Varada Sethu has said.Sethu plays the Doctor’s latest travelling companion, Belinda Chandra, in new episodes airing this month. With Ncuti Gatwa returning as the Doctor, the pairing marks the first time a Tardis team will comprise solely people of colour. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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New Zealand Rugby and Ineos settle sponsorship contract dispute
NZR had launched legal action over missed paymentDetails of settlement to remain confidentialThe Manchester United co-owner Ineos and New Zealand Rugby have announced a settlement has been reached in their sponsorship contract dispute.In February NZR, the federation responsible for the All Blacks team, said it had launched legal action against Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s Ineos after accusing the chemicals firm of failing to pay the first 2025 instalment of a six-year deal. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘We feel the pain but there is also joy’: the healing power of diasporic connection
The Legacies of Enslavement programme aims to atone for the Guardian’s past while highlighting the lasting impact of transatlantic slaveryIllustrations by Ngadi SmartSalvador, Bahia, Brazil. In capoeira – an art form whose origins were carried across the Black Atlantic by enslaved people, but which developed and grew into a cultural form of resistance in Brazil – we sometimes wish each other axé (pronounced “ah-shay”). In doing so, we would be bestowing on our interlocutor life force, vitality or just positive energy in the capoeira roda (circle where capoeira is played) or in life.The term is also used in Candomblé and Umbanda, syncretic afro-Brazilian religions with African roots. For me it also symbolises the ability to harness ancestral knowledge and energy to enrich the jogo (game of capoeira), embodying and paying tribute to those who kept the art form alive. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Middle East crisis live: Israel issues evacuation order for parts of northern Gaza
IDF says residents should evacuate Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahiya and the neighbourhoods of Sheikh Zayed, al-Manshiya and Tal al-ZaatarGaza’s Government Media Office has issued a statement following the reported killing of Palestinian journalist Mohammed Saleh al-Bardawil by Israeli forces in Khan Younis at dawn (see post at 08.47 for more details).The media office, which now says 209 journalists have been killed during the war, wrote in a post on Telegram:The Government Media Office condemns in the strongest terms the targeting, killing, and assassination of Palestinian journalists by the “Israeli” occupation. We call on the International Federation of Journalists, the Federation of Arab Journalists, and all journalistic bodies in all countries of the world to condemn these systematic crimes against Palestinian journalists and media professionals in the Gaza Strip. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Wisconsin court election poses key test for Musk as kingmaker
The priciest judicial contest in US history will indicate voter sentiment towards President Trump's billionaire ally.

Deutsche Welle
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April Fool's Day: Why the press is now avoiding pranks
While the media once pulled spectacular pranks on April 1, they now have to tread carefully with fake news. A look at some funny journalistic fiction over the years.

BBC UK News
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Three people die in crash near Heathrow Airport
Emergency services found a bus and car alight on Monday evening and three people died at the scene.

Mail Online
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Revealed: The conversational mistake you should avoid if you want people to enjoy talking to you
A new study has revealed the error that makes you come across as insincere.

Mail Online
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Defiant Greenland leader warns Trump the territory will 'never be a part of America' days after US President refused to rule out seizing it with military force
Jens-Frederik Nielsen said he wanted a 'strong relationship' with the US but that his nation would 'never be for sale' in light of Donald Trump's pledge to take over Greenland.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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How the housing crisis is driving up council tax
The cost of temporary accommodation is adding further pressure to council budgets.

CNET News
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Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for April 1, #1382
There's an unusual letter in today's Wordle answer, No. 1,382 for April 1.

CNET News
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Today's All-Symbol NYT Connections Answer Feels Like an April Fool's Joke
April...Fool? Here's the answer to April Fool's tricky Connections puzzle for April 1, #660.

CNET News
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Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for April 1, #394
No April Fool's Day joke! Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle No. 394 for April 1.

CNET News
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Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for April 1, #190
No April Fool's joke. Here are the hints and answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, No. 190, for April 1.

Deutsche Welle
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Le Pen conviction politically motivated, party chief claims
National Rally president Jordan Bardella has said the fraud conviction against Marine Le Pen is part of an effort to attack their far-right party. Le Pen was seen as a strong contender in the 2027 presidential election.

Russia Today News
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China announces military exercise near Taiwan

Mail Online
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Royal fans spot awkward typo in Meghan Markle's newsletter as she finally launches her As Ever products
In her latest newsletter, the Duchess of Sussex, 43, said she hopes buyers will be able to 'mimic the magic of Montecito in a way you can recreate at home'.

Mail Online
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I'm not going anywhere! Ukrainian waitress, 38, gifted £650K home by 'recluse', 82, says she WON'T be moving out despite his family winning inheritance court fight to get it back
Mariia Romanyshyn, 38, has broken her silence to defend herself after she lost a bitter court battle with the family of lifelong bachelor Richard Joy over his Harrow property.

Mail Online
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Antiques Roadshow's Fiona Bruce squeals 'this never happens!' as BBC audience member intervenes during £10,000 vase valuation in show first
During the show, Fiona played a game with pottery expert Will where she had to guess which Poole vase was the lowest value, and which was the highest.

Mail Online
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Outrage grows over Marine Le Pen's blocked presidential run: Trump and European allies offer support as 'tyrannical judges' are accused of 'depriving millions of people of their representation'
Le Pen has pledged to fight the court-imposed prohibition that appeared to exclude her goal of seeking and potentially winning the French presidency in 2027.

Mail Online
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The Western tourists locked up by US border guards: Travellers describe spending weeks in 'insane, psychological, social experiment' detention centres under Trump immigration crackdown
Canadian actress Jasmine Mooney described ICE detention as spending weeks in an 'insane psychological, social experiment'.

Sky News Home
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Police reach decision over Old Firm derby water bottle incident
Police will take no action against Rangers star Vaclav Cerny over his antics during his team's winning goal celebrations against Celtic in last month's Glasgow derby at Parkhead.

Sky News Home
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Three people die in crash between car and bus near Heathrow
Three people have died in a crash between a car and a bus near Heathrow Airport.

Autosport F1
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Hirakawa replaces Doohan at Alpine for Japanese GP FP1 outing
Ryo Hirakawa will drive Jack Doohan’s Alpine in opening practice for this weekend’s 2025 Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka.The Toyota World Endurance Championship champion has joined Alpine as a reserve driver for the season after fulfilling the same role at McLaren last year.Hirakawa made his F1 weekend debut at the 2024 Abu Dhabi GP replacing Oscar Piastri in a McLaren ...Keep reading

Mac Rumours
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Apple Announces 'Find My' Network Availability in South Korea
Apple today announced 'Find My' network availability in South Korea. The launch brings the full range of Apple's location-based ‌Find My‌ services to South Korean customers for the first time, enabling them to keep track of devices, belongings, and loved ones.





With the ‌Find My‌ network enabled, users will be able to to locate their iPhones, iPads, Macs, and other Apple devices, as well as AirTag-connected personal items and third-party ‌Find My‌ compatible trackers, while maintaining strong privacy protections.



One of the main features of the ‌Find My‌ network is its ability to pinpoint lost devices on a map, providing users with step-by-step directions to retrieve their misplaced items. The app also allows users to trigger a sound on their lost Apple devices, making it easier to locate them when in close proximity.



‌Find My‌ also lets users stay connected with friends and family by opting to share their location with specific contacts. This can be useful when meeting up in crowded areas, particularly for owners of iPhone 15 and later models who can take advantage of the Precision Finding capability to navigate directly to their friends' exact locations.



The original "‌Find My‌ iPhone" app was launched in 2009 alongside ‌iPhone‌ OS 3. "‌Find My‌ Mac" was added to OS X 10.7 Lion in 2011, while "‌Find My‌ Friends" was released in October 2011. With the release of iOS 13 and macOS 10.15 Catalina, the functionality of ‌Find My‌ ‌iPhone‌, ‌Find My‌ Mac, and ‌Find My‌ Friends was unified into the app we know today as ‌Find My‌.Tags: Find My, South KoreaThis article, 'Apple Announces 'Find My' Network Availability in South Korea' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Deutsche Welle
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Eritrea's conflicts also being fought out in Germany
Security authorities suspect the Brigade N'Hamedu is behind recent violent attacks on Eritrean festivals in Germany. Eritrean opposition groups have said the festivals are used as propaganda by an oppressive regime.

Deutsche Welle
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France far-right chief says Le Pen verdict blocks party
National Rally president Jordan Bardella has said the embezzlement conviction against Marine Le Pen is part of an effort to attack their party. Le Pen was seen as a strong contender in the 2027 presidential election.

Mail Online
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Amanda Abbington is all smiles as after performing in her first play since Strictly Come Dancing scandal
The actress, 51, is currently starring in a production entitled (This Is Not A) Happy Room at The King's Head Theatre in north London.

The Guardian (UK)
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Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti to stand trial accused of €1m tax fraud
Charged with not declaring earnings from image rightsItalian ‘not worried’ and has ‘total confidence in justice’The Real Madrid coach, Carlo Ancelotti, will appear in court on Wednesday to stand trial on charges of defrauding Spain’s tax office of more than €1m (£836,857) in undeclared earnings from image rights in 2014 and 2015.Prosecutors, who are seeking a jail term of four years and nine months, allege that the 65-year-old former Chelsea and Everton manager used shell companies outside Spain to create “opacity vis-a-vis the Spanish treasury … concealing the real beneficiary of the income from the exploitation of his image rights”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Today Labour brings in higher wages, because we know we must put money back in working people’s pockets | Rachel Reeves
Our opponents dismiss this move, but we have a core belief: people deserve a decent day’s pay for a decent day’s workA few months ago I visited a school in my constituency and took part in a question-and-answer session with young pupils. One girl raised her hand and asked me: “Why is everything in the shops so expensive?”
In just eight words she had encapsulated the mood of the country. She had cut through to the core question that people had on their minds when they went to the polls on 4 July last year. If the question wasn’t “why is everything so expensive?”, it was “why are our pay packets not going as far as they used to?”.
The Covid pandemic and war in Ukraine might have pushed up prices, but it was the pure negligence of the Conservatives that squeezed the country’s household finances. They played fast and loose with spending, frittering hard-earned taxpayer money on political gimmicks such as their failed Rwanda scheme. Their carelessness came at a cost, most acutely felt by the lowest paid in the country. It was a dereliction of duty that resulted in their legacy being summed up in one statistic: that people were worse off by the end of the government than they were at the beginning.
The biggest failure of all was that working people, doing the jobs that keep the country going – in shops, care homes, cafes, as couriers – weren’t earning enough to make ends meet. The system had failed, and something had to change.
Last summer, the country made clear that it wanted a government that was on the side of working people. With it, we had made a promise that we would deliver a genuine living wage. It was the last Labour government that introduced the national minimum wage. It was one of our most transformational policies. A policy that was true to our core: recognising the dignity in secure work – a decent day’s pay for a decent day’s work, opposed, unsurprisingly, by the Conservatives.
In October I stood up to deliver the first Labour budget in 14 years, and made a promise to put more money in working people’s pockets. Today we deliver on that promise by increasing the national minimum and living wage, a pay rise that will go straight into the pockets of up to three million workers across the country. That’s a pay rise worth an extra £1,400 per year for an eligible full-time worker, and a significant boost that will ease the strain on household finances and finally make work pay. A boost for those in work and those looking for work. A boost for productivity and for an economy as a whole. And a boost – and a pay rise – that is once again dismissed by our opponents.
I am in no doubt that there is more to do. That too many people are still struggling with the cost of living or in insecure work. That’s why we’re going further and faster, rolling out breakfast clubs in every primary school to save families £450 per year. It is why we are strengthening the rights of people at work through our employment rights bill. And it is why we are investing in the industries of the future – from life sciences to green energy – to create high-skilled, well-paid jobs in every corner of the country.
Today marks a milestone on our most important mission: to get more money in working people’s pockets. This is a changed Labour party showing that we can change Britain. Security at work and renewal for our country, that was our promise and we are getting on with delivering it.Rachel Reeves is the chancellor of the exchequer Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Myanmar junta accused of blocking aid for earthquake victims as airstrikes continue
Doctors helping with aftermath of disaster and UN special rapporteur say aid is disappearing or being blocked in areas controlled by resistance groupsAftermath of the Myanmar earthquake – a visual guideMyanmar’s military is facing criticism over continued airstrikes and claims it is blocking aid to earthquake survivors, as international agencies urged “unfettered access” to humanitarian aid in the conflict-riven nation.The 7.7-magnitude earthquake that hit central Myanmar on Friday has caused widespread destruction, killing more than 2,700 people and leaving affected areas in dire need of basic necessities such as food and water. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Le Pen ban is ‘political and partisan’, says French far-right party’s president
Jordan Bardella declares ‘total loyalty’ to Le Pen after court finds her and RN officials guilty of embezzlementEurope live – latest updatesThe president of France’s far-right National Rally (RN) party has described a court’s decision to ban Marine Le Pen from public office for five years, wrecking her hopes of becoming president in 2027, as “disproportionate, political and partisan”.Jordan Bardella said the punishment for Le Pen’s conviction for embezzling European Parliament funds would deprive millions of French voters of their democratic right to put her in the Elysée Palace. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Starmer dismisses claims he’s been ‘played’ by Trump, and says future trade deal could lessen impact of tariffs – UK politics live
Starmer said that a future trade deal with the US might lead to the UK getting some exemptions from the tariffsRichard Hughes, chair of the Office for Budget Responsibility, is giving evidence to the Treasury committee. There is a live feed here.Hughes started by telling the committee that he wrote to the chancellor earlier this year to say that, when his five-year term ends later this year, he would like to have a second term in office.We are of course negotiating an economic deal which will, I hope … mitigate the tariffs.The US is our closest ally. Our defence, our security, our intelligence are bound up in a way that no two other countries are.So it’s obviously in our national interest to have a close working relationship with the US, which we’ve had for decades, and I want to ensure we have for decades to come.We are obviously working with the sectors most impacted at pace on that.Nobody wants to see a trade war but I have to act in the national interests. Continue reading...

Mirror F1
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Max Verstappen completes U-turn after accusation from Red Bull chief Helmut Marko
Red Bull star Max Verstappen performed a U-turn on his performance during the Chinese Grand Prix after the world champion saw difficulty during his opening spell on the medium tyre in Shanghai

TechRadar News
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Why paying the ransom is not the answer

TechRadar News
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Spider-Man 4's official title has been revealed – and it has ties to a controversial time in the Marvel hero's 80-year-plus comic book history

Digital Trends
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New teaser hints at upcoming Asus and Xbox collaboration
Asus has released a teaser on its social media platform hinting at potential partnership with Xbox

Digital Trends
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You’re locked out from using a top feature in latest Galaxy S24 software
One of the top Samsung One UI 7 features, called the Now Bar, is locked away inside the latest beta version of the software.

Digital Trends
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Apple’s AI Doctor could transform your health, here’s why
Apple has been one of the most transformative companies of our lifetime. Products like the , the , and the have established or transformed entire segments of the technology market, but the company’s biggest impact could be in health. Smartwatches and fitness trackers existed long before the first , but Apple’s foray into the health […]

Digital Trends
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The delay is over — you can now generate images with ChatGPT for free
After a five-day delay, the new image generation feature for ChatGPT has now rolled out to free users.

BBC World News
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Four killed in Israeli strike on Beirut, Lebanon says, despite ceasefire
The Israeli military said it targeted a Hezbollah operative in the southern suburbs of Lebanon's capital.

The Verge
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ChatGPT’s improved image generation is now available for free
ChatGPT’s latest image generator — which has gone viral for its ability to generate uncanny recreations of Studio Ghibli art — is now available for everyone, after OpenAI initially delayed the rollout beyond its paid tiers following heavy demand. CEO Sam Altman announced on X that the image generation update has “now rolled out to […]

Russia Today News
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ICC a tool of the West – expert

Mail Online
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'Biblical disaster' flooding hits top Greek holiday islands as roads turn into raging rivers and cars are swept away after 'extreme' rainstorm
Dark skies loomed overhead and heavy rain quickly turned the streets into torrents, with footage showing cars being swept away in the deluge.

Mail Online
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Western tourists locked up by US border guards describe spending weeks in 'insane, psychological, social experiment' detention centres under Trump immigration crackdown
Canadian actress Jasmine Mooney described ICE detention as spending weeks in an 'insane psychological, social experiment'.

Sky News Home
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'Nobody knows what to do with me' — what happened when Chloe asked for help
Chloe Leighton is crammed into the disabled toilet of a busy pub, pleading on the phone with her social worker to find her a place to stay for the night.

Deutsche Welle
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Eritrea's conflicts are also being fought out in Germany
Security authorities suspect the Brigade N'Hamedu is behind recent violent attacks on Eritrean festivals in Germany. Eritrean opposition groups have said the festivals are used as propaganda by an oppressive regime.

Deutsche Welle
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EU prepares 'strong plan' to hit back at Trump tariffs
EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc has a solid strategy for retaliation if the US imposes sweeping tariffs on it. However, she has stressed that a "negotiated solution" to avoid a trade war is preferable.

Mail Online
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Mystery as British husband vanishes during Benidorm stag do: Family fly out to find him three days after he disappeared following airport incident
Jason Taylor, 36, failed to board his flight back to Birmingham from Alicante Airport on Saturday morning, sparking concern among friends and family.

Mail Online
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Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves dodge pain of energy and water hikes thanks to 'cap' on bills at Downing Street flats... as they enjoy Westminster's low council tax
Keir Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves only pay a taxable benefit on running costs at the grace-and-favour apartments in Downing Street .

Mail Online
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My Mum, Your Dad couple SPLIT after finding love on Davina McCall's axed ITV dating show
A couple who fell in love after appearing on Davina McCall's My Mum, Your Dad, have split, MailOnline can reveal.

Mail Online
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The real reason Brooklyn Beckham was absent from father David's 50th birthday party in Florida as he celebrated with his family
David and his wife Victoria, 50, were joined by their other children as they partied together in celebration of the milestone occasion.

Mail Online
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Marine Le Pen's National Rally blasts 'tyrannical judges' and authorities for 'doing everything to prevent us coming to power' as Trump and European allies condemn her presidential ban
Le Pen has pledged to fight the court-imposed prohibition that appeared to exclude her goal of seeking and potentially winning the French presidency in 2027.

The Guardian (UK)
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Is my Scottish accent really the problem – or is it just your English ears? | Catriona Stewart
Football manager Gary Caldwell thinks he sounds too ‘aggressive’. But as a fellow Scot, I know the answer isn’t to ‘Englify’ ourselvesThe worst job I had was in a bank in Sydney, dealing with a life insurance policy called Lite Life Direct. It was tedious, repetitive and oddly stressful, and involved a lot of time on the phone. What made the situation particularly frustrating was that almost no one could understand my Scottish accent.“Lite Life Direct,” I would say, three, sometimes four times down the line to no avail. Then I would cave: “Loight Loif Direct.” With my faux-Australian pronunciation, suddenly me and the caller would be simpatico.Catriona Stewart is a Glasgow-based journalist and broadcaster specialising in politics and home affairs Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘I feel as though I’ve been in chains’: the bittersweet life of lovers rock legend Mari’ Pierre
The British-Guyanese singer topped the reggae chart with 1978’s Walk Away, but despite work with Robert Plant and others, she’s rarely returned to the studio. This interview might change that…In December 1978, Marie Pierre was at No 1 in the UK reggae chart with the lovers rock classic Walk Away, a beautiful tearstained lament on a troubled relationship. Her 1979 debut album Love Affair, powered by another enduring scene song in Choose Me, remained one of Trojan’s best-selling albums well into the 1980s; Pierre, with her crystalline multi-octave voice, seemed destined to follow her contemporary, Silly Games singer Janet Kay, into mainstream pop-reggae success.But in the 46 years since, Pierre has never released another album. A career that promised so much has – despite TV work and successful backing singing gigs with Robert Plant, Donna Summer and Chaka Khan – been one of frustration and thwarted ambition. Misfortune, mistrust and mistreatment, personal and professional, have sidelined her. “I feel as though I’ve been in chains,” she says on a video call. “I’ve been anchored for no good reason.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Please leave feedback’: how constant online reviews are changing our brains – and our lives
We live under mutual surveillance, asked to leave public ratings for every purchase, meal, taxi ride or hair appointment. What is it doing to us?‘Alexlilly1999* has left you feedback!” pings the Vinted notification. My stomach flips as the app loads and I open my review: “Quite good.” A gut punch. I sit in shock, scrutinising the words in front of me. “Good” is a bit uninspired but “quite” feels both passive-aggressive and viciously spiteful: quite good. Alexlilly1999 has also given me just four stars. It’s a lukewarm write-up considering the dress I sold them was good quality, a brilliant price and shipped quickly. I glare at the review. And then another notification pops up: do I want to leave feedback for the buyer? Well, yes, actually, I do.It’s likely we’ve all, at some stage, been asked to leave feedback online. Called your electricity provider with a query? Please answer a few quick questions about the service you received. Had something delivered by a courier? Please rate your experience. Often, the promise of prizes – from £200 worth of high street vouchers, to spa trips and luxury hampers – is dangled in exchange for our appraisals. We’re asked to judge the people who serve us coffee; drive us in taxis; cut our hair; extract our teeth. A friend of a friend was recently asked to leave feedback for an interview process just moments after the company had rejected them for the role. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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From acid house to ancient rites: Jeremy Deller’s enormous, collaborative, unsellable art
The artist Jeremy Deller can’t really draw or paint. Instead of making things, he makes things happen. And later this year, he is planning to unleash a bacchanalian festival that will be his most daring public artwork yetOn a frosty bright-blue day in February 2024, Jeremy Deller was in Dundee, examining severed heads. “How can anyone not be fascinated by a head?” he said. Deller is an elfin figure, 5ft 5 on a good day, a low-key, unintimidating presence. The only giveaway to his identity as an artist was his slightly dandyish clothing: a KLF T-shirt, a checked neckerchief, lemon-yellow socks and a purple Missoni sweater, which he hurriedly explained, lest he come across as too fancy, he had bought on sale. When he won the Turner prize in 2004 he looked like a dapper schoolboy. Twenty years on, the only indication he was nearing 60 was the way he kept alternating a pair of reading glasses with his sunglasses, toggling them between nose and forehead.Deller, carrying himself more like a journalist than most people’s idea of an artist, was questioning Dr Tobias Houlton, a forensic anthropologist from the University of Dundee, about the art and science of building 3D or digital impressions of a face from skeletal remains. On a trip to the university the previous summer, Deller had been fascinated by a re-creation of the head of Charles Edward Stuart, the “Young Pretender” who claimed the British throne in 1745. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Snakes, ‘border madness’ and solo trips: five Nigerian female travellers on their top tips and trickiest moments
Whether it’s driving solo from London to Lagos, a month on a motorbike, or vanlife in east Africa, these influencers are sharing their adventures – and helping others to negotiate the difficulties of a ‘weak’ passportJoy Ebaide was riding her motorbike along a deserted dirt road in rural Tanzania when a black mamba, Africa’s deadliest snake, lunged at her. “It was about two inches away from me, and that’s an experience I’ll never forget,” she says.Encountering a highly venomous snake was a heart-stopping moment, but it did not put her off travelling. If anything, it made her more determined, and left her feeling that “impossible is nothing”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Middle East crisis live: Israel issues evacuation order for parts of northern Gaza
IDF says residents should evacuate Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahiya and the neighbourhoods of Sheikh Zayed, al-Manshiya and Tal al-ZaatarThe IDF has issued a forced evacuation order to residents in parts of northern Gaza: Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahiya and the neighbourhoods of Sheikh Zayed, al-Manshiya and Tal al-Zaatar.Avichay Adraee, an Arabic language spokesperson for the Israeli army, said it is a “final” warning before the “raid”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Starmer dismisses claims he’s been ‘played’ by Trump, and says future trade deal could lessen impact of tariffs – UK politics live
Starmer said that a future trade deal with the US might lead to the UK getting some exemptions from the tariffsKeir Starmer has dismissed claims that he has been “played” by President Trump over tariffs.In an interview with Sky News this morning, echoing what Jonathan Reynolds said in his morning interview round (see 8.58am), Starmer said that a future trade deal with the US might lead to the UK getting some exemptions from the tariffs coming tomorrow. He said:We are of course negotiating an economic deal which will, I hope … mitigate the tariffs.The US is our closest ally. Our defence, our security, our intelligence are bound up in a way that no two other countries are.So it’s obviously in our national interest to have a close working relationship with the US, which we’ve had for decades, and I want to ensure we have for decades to come.We are obviously working with the sectors most impacted at pace on that.Nobody wants to see a trade war but I have to act in the national interests.We’re going to have very difficult local elections. These local elections are not going to be fun for the Conservative party, because the last time we fought them was in 2021 with Boris Johnson, when there was a vaccine bounce just after Covid. So we are going to have a tough time. Continue reading...

Deutsche Welle
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Malaysia: More than 100 hurt in major gas pipeline fire
A fire caused by a large leak in a gas pipeline near Kuala Lumpur has injured scores of people, officials said. Several people had to be rescued when their homes were set ablaze.

Mail Online
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Urgent health warning to travellers over rise in antibiotic-resistant 'super-gonorrhoea' - as government issues advice on safe sex during 'casual encounters' in Asia
The new health advice comes following a troubling rise in cases of the STI which have increased from two per year in 2021 to two per month in 2024.

The Register
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GCHQ intern took top secret spy tool home, now faces prison
Not exactly Snowden levels of skill A student at Britain's top eavesdropping government agency has pleaded guilty to taking sensitive information home on the first day of his trial.…

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
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#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (Update)
We have arranged an engineer to head to site.

Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 03:38

Update: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 13:30

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Cycling UK
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How do we create better cycle routes for women?
Half as many women cycle as men, and too many women are missing out on the benefits that cycling brings. Cycling UK’s Campaigns Manager Sophie Gordon explains why we need to rebalance the scale, and how we must rethink the way we design places and routes

UK Government News
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Temporary closure queen scallops
Queen scallop fishing in ICES sub areas 6a and 7a will be closed from 1 April to 30 June 2025 to protect spawning stocks.

UK Government News
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New guidance to help check property details
The VOA has new guidance for customers who want to check the details we hold about their business property.

UK Government News
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Lawrence Tallon begins role as new MHRA CEO
Lawrence Tallon today (1 April 2025) begins his role as Chief Executive Officer of the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).

UK Government News
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Workers in Northern Ireland set for pay rise with new National Minimum Wage rates
The new rates come into effect from today (Tuesday, 1 April)

UK Government News
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Government ushers in new era for UK infrastructure delivery
Government delivers on manifesto commitment to reduce red tape – merging existing bodies to get a grip on delays to infrastructure delivery.

UK Government News
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Recruitment for Synergy Workstream Leads
Workstream Lead vacancy working on the Synergy Programme.

UK Government News
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MAIB safety digest 1/2025 published
Read our latest collection of lessons learned from marine accidents.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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How much has the minimum wage gone up?
Three and a half million low-paid workers saw their wages increase on 1 April.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Millions see bills increase as Citizens Advice warns single parents could be worst hit
A series of household bills, including water, energy and council tax, increase on Tuesday.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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What you need to know about the bills going up this week
A number of bill rises will come into force at the start of what some commentators have described as "awful April".

The Hill
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Almost 40 percent of Americans report facing extreme weather: Survey
Nearly 40 percent of Americans experienced extreme weather last year — and those who did were more likely to be concerned about climate change, according to new polling. Gallup found that 37 percent of Americans experienced extreme weather over the past two years, up from 33 percent in prior surveys. The polling was conducted in...

Russia Today News
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Le Pen blasts ‘political’ sentencing

Mail Online
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Coronation Street star leaves soap in ANOTHER blow to fans - and 'will leave a trail of destruction in their wake'
A Coronation Street star will film their final scenes this summer - marking the latest in a long line of exits.

Mail Online
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Bride branded 'self-centered and narcissistic' over 'tacky' wedding welcome sign for her guests
A bride was called 'self-centered and narcissistic' after her wedding welcome sign went viral online. Taking to Reddit , one of the wedding guests shared a snap of the controversial sign

Mail Online
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Marine Le Pen's National Rally accuses 'tyrannical judges' and authorities of 'doing everything to prevent us coming to power' as Europe's hard-right rallies behind her following presidential election ban
Le Pen has pledged to fight the court-imposed prohibition that appeared to exclude her goal of seeking and potentially winning the French presidency in 2027.

The Guardian (UK)
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UK in ‘best possible position’ to negotiate future exemptions from Trump tariffs, business secretary says – UK politics live
Jonathan Reynolds says ‘we have engaged with the US on the potential for a deal’Q: Nigel Farage says you are lazy, and that you only work hard for a few hours in the afternoon.Badenoch asks how he would know. She says he has never met her. He throws abuse at politicians to get attention, she says.We’re going to have very difficult local elections. These local elections are not going to be fun for the Conservative party, because the last time we fought them was in 2021 with Boris Johnson, when there was a vaccine bounce just after Covid. So we are going to have a tough time.I pay attention, but I’m not going to watch every single thing that everybody’s watching on Netflix. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump and Musk back Le Pen as NR’s Bardella says verdict should ‘outrage’ France – Europe live
US president calls embezzlement sentence ‘a very big deal’ as her party’s president says there will be protests this weekendA large majority of western Europeans support retaliatory tariffs against the US, a survey has shown, if Donald Trump introduces sweeping import duties for major trading partners as expected this week.The US president appears likely to unleash a range of tariffs, varying from country to country, on Wednesday, which he has called Liberation Day. He also said last week that a 25% levy on cars shipped to the US would come into force the next day. Continue reading...

Russia Today News
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Tehran responds to Trump threat

Russia Today News
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The West is breaking up, here is what Russia and China must do

Mail Online
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Top doctor warns you're putting underwear on WRONG! There way most people do it risks 'crotch rot' infection
A simple change to your morning routine could prevent a nasty groin fungal infection, experts have revealed.

Mail Online
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Revealed: Kyle Walker's astonishingly brutal seven-word 'Messi' put-down to Chelsea flop team-mate Joao Felix on exit from AC Milan's dressing room
Kyle Walker's advice seemingly fell on deaf ears, with Felix hooked off just 10 minutes into the second half as under-pressure manager Sergio Conceicao looked to change things up.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Driest March for more than 60 years in England and Wales
March was one of the driest and sunniest on record for some parts of the UK.

Deutsche Welle
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How Brexit continues to affect tourism
The United Kingdom's exit from the EU has had a major impact on the tourism industry. New regulations mean travelers to the UK may face even more difficulties.

Mail Online
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Should I buy state pension top-ups before the 5 April deadline? STEVE WEBB explains
I was going to pay to fill gaps in my state pension which costs a few hundred pounds, but I checked my forecast for 2030 when it is due and I have the maximum forecast.

Mail Online
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The 'Mona Lisa of pigeons' is among five racing birds valued £625,000 stolen by gang - as the sport is rocked by 'explosion' of thefts
Champion pigeon racer Tom Van Gaver was shocked when he walked into one of his aviaries last November to find part of the door had been smashed from the inside.

Mail Online
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Major food chain shuts down 2,000 stores because of rat and cockroach contamination
A major food chain has closed its 2,000 stores for cleaning after a rat and a bug were found in its food.

Mail Online
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Thousands now confirmed dead in Myanmar earthquake but woman, 63, is found alive after 91 hours in rubble - as new footage emerges of apartment block collapse in Thailand 
Myanmar's military-run government has reported 2,065 people killed, more than 3,900 injured and 270 missing, but most of the reports so far have come from Mandalay and the capital Naypyitaw

Mail Online
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Frankie Bridge is caught out leading the April Fools jokes with a very X-rated post while Ant and Dec tease new career move
The stars celebrated April Fool's in typically silly style on Tuesday morning.

Mail Online
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Car accident that has left Jeffrey Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre with 'only four days left to live' was just a 'minor crash', say Australian police
Virginia Giuffre announced on Monday that she had just four days left to live after her car collided with a school bus.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Stars set to play Beatles in major series of films revealed
Paul Mescal and Barry Keoghan are among the stars who will play The Beatles in Sam Mendes' biopics.

BBC World News
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Three killed in Israeli strike on Beirut - Lebanon health ministry
The Israeli military said it targeted a Hezbollah operative in the southern suburbs of Lebanon's capital.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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New Doctor Who star: 'I don't want to be a cautionary tale'
Doctor Who's new companion Varada Sethu feels getting into the acting industry can be tough for South Asians.

The Guardian (UK)
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Middle East crisis live: three dead and others injured after Israeli airstrike on Beirut, says Lebanon
Attack on Lebanon’s capital comes despite shaky four-month ceasefire between Israel and HezbollahSo why did Benjamin Netanyahu withdraw his selection of former navy commander vice admiral Eli Sharvit as the next head of the Shin Bet security service – and so quickly?On Monday, hours after Sharvit’s appointment was announced, reports began surfacing that he had been among tens of thousands of Israelis who took to the streets in 2023 to oppose the Netanyahu government’s controversial attempts to reform the judiciary. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Average person will be 40% poorer if world warms by 4C, new research shows
Experts say previous economic models underestimated impact of global heating – as well as likely ‘cascading supply chain disruptions’Economic models have systematically underestimated how global heating will affect people’s wealth, according to a new study that finds 4C warming will make the average person 40% poorer – an almost four-fold increase on some estimates.The study, by Australian scientists, says average global GDP per person will be reduced by 16% even if warming is kept to 2C higher, . This is much higher than previous estimates of a drop of about 1.4%. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Torpedo bats: a destroyer of worlds or baseball’s long-awaited savior?
The quandary over the Yankees’ new technology is solvable, but first MLB must take it on the chin and usher in a temporary banIn its brief moment of fame, the torpedo bat has made quite the impression in MLB. Over the weekend, the New York Yankees used the bat, designed by an MIT-educated professor, as an instrument of destruction against the hapless Milwaukee Brewers. Since then, I’ve heard about the bats so often that they’ve been showing up in my dreams. And that makes sense, because prior to this weekend, even in a bandbox like Yankee Stadium, even for a franchise that’s featured the likes of Babe Ruth, Lou Gheirig and Mickey Mantle, such home run power could only have been cooked up in the sweetest slumbers of their fanbase. Such a display of muscle was less video game and more cartoon, as in the famed 1946 Bugs Bunny clip that saw the Gas-House Gorillas rack up 46 straight runs against the genteel Tea Totallers.In case you missed it, the Yankees, minus the 68 home runs of the now departed Juan Soto and the injured Giancarlo Stanton, provided a franchise record nine home runs in one game, 15 home runs across three games and 36 total runs against the Brewers. We’re talking about a Yankees team that coughed up five errors on Saturday and still won by 11 runs. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Welcome to the Baller League, the future of football – whether you like it or not | Jonathan Liew
The series in London is one of a range of seven-a-side ventures challenging the traditional model of the gameThe first ever goal in the UK version of the Baller League is scored by the influencer PK Humble, just in case you ever find yourself taking part in a pub quiz in 2045. Humble – a midfielder for Hashtag United and star of the recent YouTube series Inside – takes the ball out of defence, advances it at a frankly embarrassingly leaden pace and side-foots it past a goalkeeper who should really do better.Welcome to the future of football. It’s faster, better and more exciting than the real thing. Albeit not faster in a strictly physical sense, or better in a strictly technical sense, or more exciting in the sense that you actually need to care about who wins. But it is, nonetheless, all of these things. Why? Because we said so. And don’t just take our word for it. Maya Jama says so too. Slow, lingering camera shot of Maya Jama. Now, what was the question again? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
RHS develops ‘robust lawn’ that works for people, pollinators and pets
Full of clovers and dandelions, with a hard-wearing rye grass, the approach is environmentally friendly and usableIs there a perfect formula for a hard-wearing flower lawn that is good for pollinators, dogs and people?The immaculately mown green has fallen out of favour in recent years owing to its lack of support for biodiversity. But there have also been complaints about the tall wildflower meadows that grow during “no mow May” and are less usable for humans and pets. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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UK in ‘best possible position’ to negotiate future exemptions from Trump tariffs, business secretary says – UK politics live
Jonathan Reynolds says ‘we have engaged with the US on the potential for a deal’Q: Do you agree with Jordan Bardella’s claim that the conviction of Marine Le Pen for embezzlement in France means democracy has been executed?Badenoch says she does not agree with that. She says she respects the rule of law. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Settlement agreed in Celtic Boys Club abuse cases
More than 20 former players involved in a class action have received a seven-figure sum.

Sky News Home
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Starmer says US-UK trade talks 'well advanced' and rejects 'knee-jerk' response to Trump tariffs
Sir Keir Starmer has said US-UK trade talks are "well advanced" ahead of tariffs expected to be imposed by Donald Trump on the UK this week - but rejected a "knee-jerk" response.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Le Pen's right-wing European allies condemn court verdict as threat to democracy
European rightwingers have voiced support for the French far-right politician after she was banned from running for public office.

Mail Online
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How to fund your children through university: From student loans to how much you REALLY need to save
Do you dream of one day sending your child off to university, but shudder at the thought of them leaving tens of thousands of pounds in debt just as they start out in life?

Mail Online
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Albanian dinghy migrants boast of flat-screen TVs and hotel luxury in Britain in latest TikTok video advertising £3,000 safe passage to the UK
Videos posted on TikTok show Albanian migrants bragging about making it to the UK after paying £3,000 to cross the Channel. The caption advertises the route as '100 per cent guaranteed'.

The Guardian (UK)
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Middle East crisis live: three dead and others injured after Israeli airstrike on Beirut, says Lebanon
Attack on Lebanon’s capital comes despite shaky four-month ceasefire between Israel and HezbollahAs we mentioned in the opening post, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has backtracked on his decision to appoint vice admiral Eli Sharvit as the next head of the Shin Bet, some 24 hours after making the surprise announcement.Netanyahu’s office said that following some “further thought” he had told Sharvit that he will now consider other candidates to replace the (former) head of Israel’s security service Ronen Bar, whose firing is due to take effect pending a court review. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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UK in ‘best possible position’ to negotiate future exemptions from Trump tariffs, business secretary says – UK politics live
Jonathan Reynolds says ‘we have engaged with the US on the potential for a deal’Good morning. So much for the “unprecedented” state visit invite. The real spring statement, the one that is likely to have most impact on the UK tomorrow, is coming tomorrow, when President Trump announces global tariffs, and the government expects that the UK will not get an exemption. As Nick Robinson put it to Jonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, in the opening question of his Today programme interview this morning: “Sucking up to Donald Trump didn’t work, did it?”On the Today programme, and in his other interviews this morning, Reynolds’s response was essentially: Not yet. He argued that the UK still has a good chance of winning tariff exemptions, but just not tomorrow. Or that the sucking up might still pay off – not that Reynolds put it quite like that.We have engaged with the US on the potential for a deal, because that is in the UK’s national interest, and actually would be mutually beneficial to the US and the UK …Only the president will himself know exactly how the US is going to take tomorrow. And you’re right to say it might not be possible for any country in the world to be exempted from the initial announcements. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump and Musk back Le Pen as NR’s Bardella says verdict should ‘outrage’ France – Europe live
US president calls embezzlement sentence ‘a very big deal’ as her party’s president says there will be protests this weekendBy the way, given how heavy the news cycle tends to be these days, we need to grasp every opportunity to look for something positive, so let’s celebrate the April Fools’ Day today.Send me your best April Fools’ Day stories from across Europe for a post later this afternoon – I’m on [email protected]. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
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New Doctor Who star is on a quest to inspire South Asian women
Doctor Who's new companion Varada Sethu feels getting into the acting industry can be tough for South Asians.

TechRadar News
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What is the release date and launch time for Daredevil: Born Again episode 7 on Disney+?

TechRadar News
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Palo Alto firewall hack: network security policy management is no longer optional

Deutsche Welle
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Eritrea's conflicts are also being fought out in Germany
German security authorities suspect that the Brigade N'Hamedu is behind recent violent attacks on Eritrean festivals. Eritrean opposition groups say that the festivals are used as propaganda by an oppressive regime.

Mail Online
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European travellers entering the UK will have to buy a new ETA electronic permit from Wednesday in huge shake up of travel rules
Visitors from some 30 European countries, including all the members of the EU with the exception of Ireland, will need to carry the electronic permit to enter Britain.

Mail Online
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Inside the lavish life of a WAG in Saudi Arabia: Taylor Ward - wife of Riyad Mahrez - shows off huge plush home on new series of Married To The Game
'I actually love Saudi now,' Ward said. 'I have people coming out to visit me all the time. My friends fly out from the UK, and my mum and dad live in Dubai, so they come over.'

Mail Online
Open 
Machine Gun Kelly is forced to address confusion over his and Megan Fox's baby name after baffling fans with birth announcement
Machine Gun Kelly has been forced to address the confusion over the name of his and Megan Fox 's new baby.

Sky News Home
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The important number the world needs to consider ahead of Trump's 'liberation day'
Here is a number to lodge in your brain in the coming weeks and months: 48%.

Mail Online
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The White Lotus star 'favourite' to play James Bond after huge series success - as Amazon announces BIG change to franchise
The series followed the guests and employees of the fictional White Lotus resort chain, whose interactions are affected by their various psychosocial dysfunctions.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
One Australian’s dramatic rescue from a flood in of one of the driest places on Earth
As floodwater flows past towns and cattle and sheep stations – normally isolated by desert – many now sit as islands amid a muddy seaMany are those rescued from Munga-Thirri-Simpson Desert – in what is normally the dust bowl of outback Queensland – who have sunk wheels in a sand dune, busted tyres upon gibber rock or even been bogged in the mud left by a sudden downpour. But Tony Woolford is among a far more exclusive club.In fact, the 66-year-old South Australian may well be the first person ever plucked by helicopter in this, one of the driest places on Earth, from flood waters. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Share a tip on a special place to eat or drink on the UK coast
Tell us about your favourite coastal place to eat and drink – the best tip wins £200 towards a Coolstays breakEating fish and chips by the beach, slurping ice-cream close to the waves, sipping cocktails as the sun sets over the sea … a foodie treat always adds to a trip to the seaside. Whether it’s a cool bar right on the beach, a favourite coastal chippie or a great cafe, we’d love to hear about your tasty beside-the-sea discoveries in the UK. Tell us where it is and why you love it for the chance to win a £200 holiday voucher.If you have a relevant photo, do send it in – but it’s your words that will be judged for the competition. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
The Most Precious of Cargoes review – postmodern Holocaust fairytale is dreamy curiosity
Michel Hazanavicius’s sentimental tale about a baby found in the woods features sweet little cartoon birds and rabbits as well as the real horror of Nazi death campsDirected by Michel Hazanavicius, this postmodern Holocaust fairytale premiered at Cannes last year, and turns out to be a dreamy animated curiosity which is certainly different to the icy realist rigour of other films which have appeared there on the same theme, such as Jonathan Glazer’s The Zone of Interest or László Nemes’s Son of Saul. It is adapted from a novella by author and screenwriter Jean-Claude Grumberg (who collaborated with Truffaut on The Last Metro), whose own father was murdered in the Nazi death camps.The late Jean-Louis Trintignant has his final credit as the narrator, introducing us to scenes that could, at first glance, be from the Brothers Grimm. We see a dense central European forest … through which a second world war Nazi train is seen speeding through, carrying terrified Jews to Auschwitz. One man, with a wife, young child and a baby makes a desperate decision to throw his baby out on to the snowy hillside in the hope that someone finds it – and someone does. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
People displaced by Uganda oil pipeline ‘received inadequate compensation’
Many of the people displaced by Eacop project were inadequately rehoused or compensated, report saysPeople displaced from their homes alongside the site of an oil pipeline under construction in Uganda have complained of being inadequately rehoused or compensated.When completed, the East African crude oil pipeline (Eacop) will transport oil from the Tilenga and Kingfisher oilfields in western Uganda to the port of Tanga in Tanzania. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Average person will be 40% poorer if world warms by 4C, new research shows
Experts say previous economic models underestimated impact of global heating – as well as likely ‘cascading supply chain disruptions’Economic models have systematically underestimated how global heating will affect people’s wealth, according to a new study that finds 4C warming will make the average person 40% poorer – an almost four-fold increase on some estimates.The study, by Australian scientists, says average global GDP per person will be reduced by 16% even if warming is kept to 2C higher, , much higher than previous estimates of a drop of about 1.4%. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK in ‘best possible position’ to negotiate future exemptions from Trump tariffs, business secretary says – UK politics live
Jonathan Reynolds says ‘we have engaged with the US on the potential for a deal’Good morning. So much for the “unprecedented” state visit invite. The real spring statement, the one that is likely to have most impact on the UK tomorrow, is coming tomorrow, when President Trump announces global tariffs, and the government expects that the UK will not get an exemption. As Nick Robinson put it to Jonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, in the opening question of his Today programme interview this morning: “Sucking up to Donald Trump didn’t work, did it?”On the Today programme, and in his other interviews this morning, Reynolds’s response was essentially: Not yet. He argued that the UK still has a good chance of winning tariff exemptions, but just not tomorrow. Or that the sucking up might still pay off – not that Reynolds put it quite like that.We have engaged with the US on the potential for a deal, because that is in the UK’s national interest, and actually would be mutually beneficial to the US and the UK …Only the president will himself know exactly how the US is going to take tomorrow. And you’re right to say it might not be possible for every for any country in the world to be exempted from the initial announcements. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trump and Musk back Le Pen as NR’s Bardella says verdict should ‘outrage’ France – Europe live
US president calls embezzlement sentence ‘a very big deal’ as her party’s president says there will be protests this weekendOver in Strasbourg, European Council president António Costa has been giving his verdict on the recent EU summit on Ukraine and defence.He said the decisions taken constituted “a turning point in moving forward towards a strong and more sovereign Europe,” as he insisted that leaders “now need to continue to move with a sense of urgency to complete this work, and if necessary, take further decisions to ensure a just and lasting peace in Ukraine.”. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Fab four stars revealed for major Beatles films
Paul Mescal and Barry Keoghan are among the stars who will play The Beatles in Sam Mendes' biopics.

The Register
Open 
Arm reckons it'll own 50% of the datacenter by year's end
Optimistic much? Arm expects to see its architecture account for half of the datacenter CPU market by the end of this year, up from 15 percent in 2024, all thanks to the AI boom.…

Cycling UK
Open 
The family cargo bike
Cutting car use is easier with electric assistance. Five cyclists describe their experiences of switching to an e-cargo bike for everyday journeys

UK Government News
Open 
New cyber laws to safeguard UK economy and secure long-term growth
The government sets out the scope and ambition of the Cyber Security and Resilience Bill for the first time today.

UK Government News
Open 
Payslip boost for millions as new minimum wage rates take effect
Over 3 million eligible workers set for a pay rise of up to £1,400 a year as new National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage rates take effect.

UK Government News
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Victim Observers – National roll-out on 1 April 2025
As of today, victim observation of oral hearings will be rolled out across all regions of England and Wales.

Computer Weekly
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Inside Amazon’s robot-powered warehouse

Mail Online
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Taylor Ward reveals the real reason she decided to have a breast reduction ahead of her lavish third wedding to Riyad Mahrez
The influencer, 26, gave birth to her first child with husband Riyad Mahrez in July 2023, after tying the knot with the ex-Manchester City star the previous year.

ZeroHedge News
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Spain's Vox Party Spokesperson Faces Hate-Crime Probe After Calling Out Link Between Immigration & Crime
Spain's Vox Party Spokesperson Faces Hate-Crime Probe After Calling Out Link Between Immigration & Crime

Authored by Thomas Brooke via Remix News,

A Spanish conservative lawmaker is facing a hate crime investigation after a press conference in which he highlighted the link between mass immigration and rising crime rates — a connection supported by official data but often ignored by Spain’s far-left administration.



José Antonio Fúster, national spokesman for the populist Vox party and member of the Madrid Assembly, addressed the media on July 29 last year, where he read out the forenames of several dozen individuals arrested during violent incidents in Barcelona that weekend.


“Sabar, Omar, Nassim, Abdelkader, Salah, Salah, Younes, Karim, Jamil, Amir, Ali, Oussama, Hassan… I can go on. Do you notice any patterns? Do you notice anything?” Fúster asked.

“We do, and this is what we have been denouncing for a long time, that the open-door policy of the Popular Party and the PSOE has direct consequences on the security of Spaniards,” he added.


Though the list he read had the surnames redacted and had already circulated online via party channels, his public use of it has led the National Police to file a report for alleged incitement to hatred. Fúster, protected by parliamentary immunity as a sitting deputy, expressed disbelief upon receiving the notification last week and doubled down on his comments.


“We’re constantly told that immigration and crime have no link,” Fúster said, as cited by Spanish digital newspaper The Objective. 

“But they’re not fooling anyone. The criminals that Spaniards endure in their neighborhoods have names — and we all know them.”


Vox maintains that spurious criminal complaints are part of a wider effort to silence those who raise valid security concerns. The party highlighted charges against MP Rocío de Meer last year for writing, “The future of this country is dark,” in response to the birth of a child named Ayoub in a rural Spanish village, and Jordi de la Fuente, another Vox figure, who is awaiting trial over a 2019 protest targeting an asylum center.


José Antonio Fúster: “El listado de los 50 primeros detenidos durante la noche del sábado en Barcelona: Sabar, Omar, Nassim, Abdelkader, Salah, Salah, Younes, Karim, Jamil, Amir, Alí, Oussama, Hassan… puedo seguir. ¿Notan ustedes algún patrón?”.
Según algunos denunciar la… pic.twitter.com/0cARZATX1w
— Sr.Liberal (@SrLiberal) March 30, 2025
The party continues to call for reform of Article 510 of the Penal Code, which defines hate crimes, arguing it has been weaponized to censor uncomfortable conversations. In a recent interview, Vox leader Santiago Abascal remarked, “What they call ‘hate speech’ is often just speech they hate. We’re simply describing reality, and it’s backed by the government’s own data.”

Some of that government data was reported on by Remix News last month after an information request by La Gaceta online newspaper found a growing trend in violent crimes involving foreign nationals.

Between 2013 and 2023, for example, homicides involving foreign suspects soared by 69 percent compared to a 28 percent increase in total cases.

Similarly, the Spanish Interior Ministry’s own crime stats for 2023 revealed that the top 10 Spanish cities with the highest rates of violent robberies and intimidation were all located in Catalonia, with foreigners vastly overrepresented.

The data showed that there are 8,505 inmates in Catalan prisons and that 50.48 percent of them are foreigners.

When focusing on specific violent offenses like rape, 91 percent of those convicted in Catalonia are foreigners. When it comes to sexual assault and rape combined, 64.2 percent of all prisoners are foreigners.

Fúster received plenty of support from party colleagues following the news of the criminal complaint.

“Sabar, Omar, Nassim, Abdelkader, Salah, Salah, Younes, Karim, Jamil, Amir, Ali, Oussama, Hassan… they were the ones arrested. And yes, we could go on because it was a list of the first 50 arrested during a single night in Barcelona,” said Vox secretary general Ignacio Garriga.

“Let them denounce us all, we will continue to tell the truth regardless of who it may be,” he added.

“Let’s not forget that the surnames of the criminals who have condemned us to this are others: Sánchez, Bolaños, Marlaska, Montero, Díaz… and their bipartisan allies,” wrote party leader Santiago Abascal on X.

Read more here...

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 02:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
British Council Institutes Harsher Criminal Sentencing, But Only For White Men
British Council Institutes Harsher Criminal Sentencing, But Only For White Men

The Sentencing Council of England And Wales, a non-departmental public body (faceless bureaucracy) which determines the guidelines for court punishments of convicted offenders, has recently made controversial changes and ignited a firestorm among the native British populace. 

The council has announced that special exceptions in sentencing will be made for ethnic minority offenders (the majority of violent crime in Britain) and religious minority offenders, as well as female offenders.  In other words, everyone except white males will enjoy reduced sentencing, creating a two tier justice system that targets white men for harsher treatment.



Conservative shadow justice minister Robert Jenrick has called the guidance "two-tier justice" and "blatant bias" against Christians and straight white men, as he said it would make "a custodial sentence less likely for those from an ethnic minority, cultural minority, and/or faith minority community".

Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood claim they oppose the policy change and will take action to pass legislation against it.  However, such a process could take many months and both Starmer and Mahmood have expressed favoritism for migrants and Muslim groups in the past.  Their "opposition" could be purely theatrical and few Brits believe that they will actually make an effort to block the Sentencing Council's two-tier system. 


"White men are going to be treated a lot tougher by judges from Tuesday, compared to other groups.”
The absolute state of the UK. pic.twitter.com/XKbQ9uOqGu
— iamyesyouareno (@iamyesyouareno) March 28, 2025
The legal development arrives on the heels of multiple government programs enforcing mass censorship of the British public.  Keir Starmer has expressed consistent hostility toward native Brits who oppose open immigration policies.  Numerous citizens have been fined and arrested for posting critical opinions on social media.  Some have been arrested simply for displaying British flags in the sight of migrants.  Others have been arrested for complaining online about local government officials.


UNBELIEVABLE.
6 British police officers arrested this dad in front of his children and threw him in a cell because he critisized the school leadership.
Soviet Britain.pic.twitter.com/p1NQDXafEt
— PeterSweden (@PeterSweden7) March 29, 2025
The country has been spiraling into far-left authoritarianism and there doesn't seem to be a viable counter movement to correct the problem.  Mass immigration has been the most divisive crux, with rising violent crime over the past decade and cultural replacement becoming a legitimate concern.  Some areas of Britain including London are essentially unrecognizable compared to a decade ago.  


Tourist shocked by what he sees in London. pic.twitter.com/pH8kRm3gJB
— RadioGenoa (@RadioGenoa) March 30, 2025
The use of unfair sentencing standards for white offenders is another clear attempt to silence native British citizens that speak out against the ongoing woke multicultural takeover of the country.  It is also an attempt to normalize far-left ideological prejudice against white people within the judicial system.  This was always the intended end game of the woke movement.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 02:45

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Toothless EU Re-Export Ban On Russian LNG Kicks In
Toothless EU Re-Export Ban On Russian LNG Kicks In

Authored by Julianne Geiger via OilPrice.com,

The EU’s ban on re-exporting Russian LNG is now officially in effect. It essentially halts ship-to-ship transfers at EU ports meant for third-country buyers and the optics are attractive--it's another cut into Moscow’s energy revenue stream. Whether that translates into pain for Russia is another story.



The re-export ban, passed back in June 2024, only targets Russian LNG cargoes passing through EU ports en route to Asia and other markets. These trans-shipments made up a paltry 2.7 million tons last year—under 10% of Russia’s 34.7 million-ton LNG export total. 

Gas analysts say much of that could be redirected to European buyers, who continue to quietly increase their own purchases from Russia despite loud political promises.

In fact, EU imports of Russian natural gas rose 18% in 2024, according to Reuters who cited Ember, and February 2025 data shows no signs of slowing - averaging 74.3 million cubic meters per day, up 11% from the month before. 

So while the EU wants to “wean off” Russian gas by 2027, for now, the addiction is alive and well.

The real twist is logistical. 

Icebreaker vessels from Novatek’s Yamal LNG can’t access Arctic terminals during the November–June freeze, so they offload at EU terminals like Zeebrugge and Montoir for re-export. About 47 such transfers occurred in 2024, according to ICIS, mostly under long-term contracts with players like Shell, TotalEnergies, and Gunvor.

The new ban forces Moscow to get creative, likely leaning more on Murmansk, Kaliningrad, or even Mediterranean alternatives. It won’t strangle Russian LNG, but it will raise costs and complicate things for Novatek and its partners—perhaps a death by a thousand logistical cuts.

The EU gets a symbolic win, Russia loses a convenient logistics channel, but the gas will keep flowing.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 04/01/2025 - 03:30

Ian Visits
Open 
The UK’s first purpose built flyover – the story of the Silvertown Viaduct
When the Silvertown Tunnel opens next week, not many people using the roundabout on the north side will notice they're driving past a first in road history.Read more ›

Cabinet Office
Open 
Guidance: PPN 019: Requirements to publish on Contracts Finder. Cabinet Office.
Guidance: PPN 019: Requirements to publish on Contracts Finder. Cabinet Office.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Malaysia: Scores reported hurt in gas pipeline fire
A fire caused by a large leak in a gas pipeline near Kuala Lumpur has injured dozens of people, officials said. Several people had to be rescued when their homes were set ablaze.

Russia Today News
Open 
China calls for ‘fair and binding’ Ukraine peace deal

BBC UK News
Open 
Settlement agreed in Celtic Boys Club abuse cases
Former players had launched a US-style class action against the club for damages.

BBC UK News
Open 
Girl celebrates winning trouser pockets battle
"They didn't have real pockets; they just had fake ones," Georgia explains.

Mail Online
Open 
Lionel Messi leads ex-Barcelona boys at David Beckham's 50th birthday celebrations - as Inter Miami WAGs strike a pose alongside Victoria at swanky party
Lionel Messi and his Inter Miami team-mates were seen enjoying the festivities at David Beckham's early birthday celebrations on Monday.

Mail Online
Open 
Mother killed in her own home is pictured for the first time after her son appears in court charged with her murder
'Beautiful' mother Rachel Dixon, 49, who was tragically killed in her own home in Clacton, Essex, has been pictured for the first time. Her son, Oliver Grange, appeared at court charged with her murder.

Mail Online
Open 
Keir Starmer 'won't hit back' at looming Trump tariffs as he vows a 'calm response' - after US president 'snubbed invite to sign trade deal in the UK'
Keir Starmer is gathering Cabinet on the eve of the Donald Trump's so-called 'Liberation Day' - when he has vowed to impose huge levies on imports from around the world.

Mail Online
Open 
Volcano erupts on Iceland: Tourists evacuated from popular holiday spot as 'red alert' is issued
The Reykjanes Peninsula was devastated by a series of major eruptions between December 2023 and December 2024, following intense quakes (Pictured May 2024)

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
People displaced by Uganda oil pipeline ‘received inadequate compensation’
Report claims many of 13,000 people displaced by Eacop project say they were inadequately rehoused or compensatedPeople displaced from their homes alongside the site of an oil pipeline under construction in Uganda have complained of being inadequately rehoused or compensated.When completed, the East African crude oil pipeline (Eacop) will transport oil from the Tilenga and Kingfisher oilfields in western Uganda to the port of Tanga in Tanzania. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: three dead and others injured after Israeli airstrike on Beirut, says Lebanon
Attack on Lebanon’s capital comes despite shaky four-month ceasefire between Israel and HezbollahWe are seeing reports that Mohammed Saleh al-Bardawil, a Palestinian journalist, and his wife and three children were killed at dawn on Tuesday in an Israeli airstrike on their home Khan Younis, southern Gaza.These reports – which we have not yet independently verified - are from Al Jazeera and a correspondent from the Palestinian news agency Wafa.Palestinians held funerals on Monday for 15 medics and emergency responders killed by Israeli troops in southern Gaza, after their bodies and mangled ambulances were found in a mass grave. The Palestinian Red Crescent says the slain workers and their vehicles were clearly marked as medical and humanitarian personnel and accused Israeli troops of killing them “in cold blood.”Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said Tuesday he has reversed his decision, announced a day earlier, to appoint former navy chief Vice Admiral Eli Sharvit as the new head of the Shin Bet security agency. The move was controversial as the supreme court had blocked moves to oust the incumbent chief, Ronen Bar.A 17-year-old from the West Bank who was held in an Israeli prison for six months without being charged died after collapsing in unclear circumstances, becoming the first Palestinian teen to die in Israeli detention, officials said. Walid Ahmad was a healthy high schooler before his arrest in September for allegedly throwing stones at soldiers, his family said.Yemen’s Houthi rebels claimed on Tuesday that they shot down another American MQ-9 Reaper drone, even as the US kept up its campaign of intense airstrikes targeting the group. The reported shootdown over Yemen’s contested Marib governate came as airstrikes hit around Sanaa, the country’s rebel-held capital, and Saada, a stronghold for the Houthis. US President Donald Trump issued a new warning to both the Houthis and their main benefactor, Iran, describing the group as having “been decimated” by the campaign of strikes that began March 15. Continue reading...

BBC UK News
Open 
'RAAC in our roof has robbed us of our retirement'
A Dundee couple's future plans are on hold after the cheap version of concrete was found in their home

BBC UK News
Open 
UK has best chance to overturn tariffs, says Reynolds
Tne trade secretary says the UK will be hit by tariffs on Wednesday but can negotiate an exemption.

Mail Online
Open 
Tense moment Karoline Leavitt goes nuclear on reporter who questioned Trump's deportations: 'Shame on you'
Karoline Leavitt clashed with a reporter during a White House briefing on Monday as she fiercely defended the administration's mass deportation policy.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
UK has best chance of deal to overturn Trump tariffs, says minister
Tne trade secretary says the UK will be hit by tariffs on Wednesday but can negotiate an exemption.

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
United 737 Hits Kite On Final For DCA
Airport police briefly took away a man's kite after reports that it was hit by a United Airlines Boeing 737 on short final for Washington Reagan Airport on Saturday

FlightAware Squawks
Open 
Bookings on U.S.-bound routes down about 10% amid tariff backlash: Air Canada
Bookings on cross-border routes are down significantly across the industry amid Canadians' new-found aversion to U.S. destinations, Air Canada says.

Mail Online
Open 
Millions of mobile phone and broadband users facing bill hike today - find out how much YOURS will increase with our handy calculator
Big providers such as BT, Virgin, TalkTalk, EE and Three raise prices every year - with customers able to check the increase in a new tool from money-saving tool Nous.co.

Mail Online
Open 
Albanian dinghy migrants boast of flatscreen TVs and hotel luxury in Britain in latest TikTok video advertising £3,000 safe passage to the UK
Videos posted on TikTok show Albanian migrants bragging about making it to the UK after paying £3,000 to cross the Channel. The caption advertises the route as '100 per cent guaranteed'.

Mail Online
Open 
Moment half-naked hero chases sex offender through the streets after hearing him attacking a woman outside his house
A shirtless man who was wearing just one shoe chased down sex offender Dewan Gazi who had assaulted a woman outside his house in Greater Manchester.

Mail Online
Open 
Ukraine reports rare night of NO 'mass drone strikes' on civilians after Trump said he was 'pi**ed off' with Putin and threatened sanctions
Ukraine did claim to have shot down two Kh-59/69 cruise missiles launched by Russia overnight to attack southeastern Ukraine.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Middle East crisis live: three dead and others injured after Israeli airstrike on Beirut, says Lebanon
Attack on Lebanon’s capital comes despite shaky four-month ceasefire between Israel and HezbollahAt least three people have been killed and seven injured in an Israeli airstrike on Beirut’s southern suburbs early on Tuesday, the Lebanese health ministry said, further testing a shaky four-month ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah.The Israeli military said in a statement that it attacked a Hezbollah militant “who had recently directed Hamas operatives and assisted them”.Palestinians held funerals on Monday for 15 medics and emergency responders killed by Israeli troops in southern Gaza, after their bodies and mangled ambulances were found in a mass grave. The Palestinian Red Crescent says the slain workers and their vehicles were clearly marked as medical and humanitarian personnel and accused Israeli troops of killing them “in cold blood.”Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said Tuesday he has reversed his decision, announced a day earlier, to appoint former navy chief Vice Admiral Eli Sharvit as the new head of the Shin Bet security agency. The move was controversial as the supreme court had blocked moves to oust the incumbent chief, Ronen Bar.A 17-year-old from the West Bank who was held in an Israeli prison for six months without being charged died after collapsing in unclear circumstances, becoming the first Palestinian teen to die in Israeli detention, officials said. Walid Ahmad was a healthy high schooler before his arrest in September for allegedly throwing stones at soldiers, his family said.Yemen’s Houthi rebels claimed on Tuesday that they shot down another American MQ-9 Reaper drone, even as the US kept up its campaign of intense airstrikes targeting the group. The reported shootdown over Yemen’s contested Marib governate came as airstrikes hit around Sanaa, the country’s rebel-held capital, and Saada, a stronghold for the Houthis. US President Donald Trump issued a new warning to both the Houthis and their main benefactor, Iran, describing the group as having “been decimated” by the campaign of strikes that began March 15. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump and Musk back Le Pen as NR’s Bardella says verdict should ‘outrage’ France – Europe live
US president calls embezzlement sentence ‘a very big deal’ as her party’s president says there will be protests this weekendItalian prime minister Giorgia Meloni has just weighed in on Marine Le Pen saying in a social media post that “no one who truly believes in democracy can rejoice over a sentence that strikes the leader of a major party down, depriving millions of citizens of their representation.”She said something similar to the Il Messaggero newspaper last night, caveating that by adding she didn’t know the details of the case.updates on Ukraine;the European Parliament’s plenary session in Strasbourg, which includes debates on the recent EU summit, Ukraine and US tariffs, and could see some news on Radio Free Europe;The EU is set to present its strategy on tackling hybrid threats to the bloc;Poland, Sweden and Britain are set to launch a new air policing operation as part of Nato; Continue reading...

Russia Today News
Open 
Putin will ‘follow through’ on Ukraine deal – Trump

BBC UK News
Open 
Missing girl was seen paddling in River Thames
Residents near the scene in east London say she was playing in the water during a day off from school.

Mail Online
Open 
Ukraine reports NO drone strikes for first time since October after Trump said he was 'pi**ed off' with Putin and threatened sanctions
Ukraine did claim to have shot down two Kh-59/69 cruise missiles launched by Russia overnight to attack southeastern Ukraine.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Missing girl, 11, was last seen paddling in River Thames
Residents near the scene in east London say she was playing in the water during a day off from school.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
UK has best chance to overturn tariffs, says Reynolds
Jonathan Reynolds says the UK will be hit by tariffs on Wednesday but can reach a deal to get an exemption.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Le Pen to appeal ban from running for public office, condemning 'political decision'
The far-right National Rally leader's sentence jeopardises her chances of running for president in 2027.

F1 Technical
Open 
Red Bull reveal special livery for the Japanese Grand Prix
Red Bull will pay tribute to Honda with special livery for this weekend's Japanese Grand Prix which has been inspired by Honda’s RA272 first victory in the sport.

Mail Online
Open 
The Beatles biopic cast is confirmed as stars assemble on stage for first time ahead of director Sam Mendes' epic four film project
The cast for Sam Mendes' upcoming Beatles biopics have been announced, with four huge names set to take on the roles of the Fab Four.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Niger’s junta withdraws from Lake Chad anti-Islamist force
Coalition of former allies Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria fought armed insurgents including Boko HaramNiger’s ruling junta has quit a regional force fighting armed Islamist groups in west Africa’s Lake Chad area, cementing an acrimonious split from former allies in the region.The decision to exit the Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) was announced in a bulletin on state television over the weekend. The move “reflects a stated intent to reinforce security for oil sites”, the bulletin stated, without providing further details. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
UK house prices stagnant in March as London struggles
Capital records lowest annual price growth in the country as Northern Ireland races ahead, Nationwide findsBusiness live – latest updatesUK house prices stagnated last month as London clocked up the lowest price growth in the country, while thousands of Britons raced to complete purchases before the end of a stamp duty holiday.The average price of a home was unchanged at £271,316 in March, compared with February’s 0.4% monthly rise, according to Nationwide building society. Continue reading...

Mac Rumours
Open 
iOS 18.4, iPadOS 18.4, and macOS Sequoia 15.4 Address 50+ Vulnerabilities
The iOS 18.4, iPadOS 18.4, and macOS Sequoia 15.4 updates that Apple released today include a long list of fixes for security vulnerabilities, though none of the issues addressed were known to have been actively exploited.





iOS 18.4 and iPadOS 18.4 fix 60 vulnerabilities, including an issue that could allow sensitive keychain data to be accessible from an iOS backup, a problem where password autofill filled a password even after a failed authentication, and a bug that could allow hidden photos to be viewed without authentication.



Apple has a full list of iOS 18.4 and iPadOS 18.4 fixes in its security support document. There's a separate security support document for macOS Sequoia 15.4, and the ‌macOS Sequoia‌ 15.4 update addresses over 120 vulnerabilities with everything from AirDrop and the App Store to the Dock and Kernel.



Because iOS 18.4, iPadOS 18.4, and ‌macOS Sequoia‌ 15.4 fix so many vulnerabilities, it is a good idea to update as soon as possible even if there were no known instances of these security holes being used in the wild.Related Roundups: iOS 18, iPadOS 18, macOS SequoiaRelated Forums: iOS 18, iPadOS 18, macOS SequoiaThis article, 'iOS 18.4, iPadOS 18.4, and macOS Sequoia 15.4 Address 50+ Vulnerabilities' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Digital Trends
Open 
Move over RGB, Coolify’s Holo Fans bring floating holograms to your PC
We’ve seen plenty of innovation when it comes to PC case fan aesthetics, but a company named Coolify seems to have raised the bar. Their latest ‘Holo Fans’ bring animated holograms to desktop setups, adding a striking visual element that goes far beyond simple LED effects. Unlike conventional RGB fans, which rely on LED lighting […]

Digital Trends
Open 
OpenAI is ready to embrace an open weight AI model strategy
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has announced the company will release an 'open-weight' AI model, a strategic shift to compete with models like DeepSeek's R1 and Meta's Llama.

The Verge
Open 
Palworld and PUBG are getting dating sims
The developers of Palworld and PUBG: Battlegrounds have announced details of dating simulators set in the universes of their respective games. The Palworld dating sim, technically called Pal♡world! ~More Than Just Pals~, was actually announced ahead of April Fools’ Day last year. But yesterday, developer Pocketpair released a second trailer for the game and published […]

Mail Online
Open 
Shoppers fume at PrettyLittleThing over delayed refunds - just weeks after label is criticised for 'boring' rebrand
The online fashion house, which operates out of a warehouse in Manchester , has been in hot water as of late - including heavy criticism of their dramatic new rebrand which some have called 'ugly'.

Mail Online
Open 
The Beatles biopic cast is confirmed as stars assemble on stage for first time ahead of epic four film project
The cast for Sam Mendes' upcoming Beatles biopics have been announced, with four huge names set to take on the roles of the Fab Four.

BBC World News
Open 
US says law applies to 'all parties' in Gaza after Israel kills medics
The deaths of 15 people including paramedics in a convoy have been blamed on Israel's military.

BBC Top Stories (International)
Open 
Kasatkina 'had no choice' over Australia switch
Daria Kasatkina says she feels "emotional" after switching allegiance from Russia to Australia but "didn't have much choice".

Mail Online
Open 
Is 'April Bills Day' just the start? Brits are hit with hikes to council tax, energy, water, NICs and vehicle duty... amid fears burden will have to rise AGAIN due to Trump tariffs
Brits face an 'Awful April' of domestic tax rises and bill increases hammering family finances starting today - with fears Donald Trump 's tariffs will soon push the burden even higher.

Mail Online
Open 
Don't write Marine Le Pen off yet - this fiasco could be a gift for the National Rally, writes JONATHAN MILLER
Before her sentence was announced, a furious Marine Le Pen stormed out of the courtroom after being found guilty of embezzling EU funds, dashing her political ambition

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Ukraine updates: German top diplomat arrives in Kyiv
Germany's Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock has said the US should not allow itself to be misled by the Kremlin. At the same time, Beijing reaffirmed its friendship with Moscow. DW has the latest.

Mail Online
Open 
Joe Rogan splits with Trump on mass deportations to 'Hell on Earth' prison after making 'horrific' discovery
Rogan's condemnation of the decision amid reports innocent civilians were wrongly mixed up with criminals could be the biggest blow to the administration yet.

Mail Online
Open 
REVEALED: The hidden meanings in White Lotus: From the books the characters read to a creepy recurring number and even the role of MONKEYS, the subtle clues that suggest the killer's identity...
With just one episode left, White Lotus fans are on tenterhooks, desperate to discover the identity of the body seen floating in a pool in the first scene of what has been perhaps the darkest season yet.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Sexting an old friend was exciting – but now I can’t face sleeping with my husband
The virtual sex life I enjoyed with someone else only made me realise what was missing at home. How can I make my marriage work again?I have been with my husband for 10 years and have previously never so much as looked in the direction of another man. We had a regular sex life but when an old school friend got back in touch, we began messaging each other and it quickly turned into sexting. The nudes and explicit, erotic messages I sent were completely out of character for me. We discussed plans to meet up for one night of selfish, illicit fun – free of spouses, children and responsibilities – but when I asked for clarity on where I stood, he said that we shouldn’t message any more. I was heartbroken. Now I don’t want to have sex with my husband because it is not exciting enough. What can I do to get my marriage back on track?Virtual sex can be risky and painful, and this experience has been very challenging for you. When sexting, it is important to remember that it belongs in the fantasy realm. There is never any guarantee that there will be a “real” aspect, and it is best not to assume that there is any meaningful relationship whatsoever. But your desire to have exciting sex of some kind is understandable. Perhaps you need to let your husband know that. You may have the best results if you present some options. First, imagine and fantasise about what would be thrilling for you to enjoy with your husband, then find a relaxed moment to broach the subject and see if he might be receptive to it, and if there is something special that would turn him on. Our partners are not responsible for our pleasure – we are. We have to create our own erotic universes, whether in private fantasy or in reality. True intimacy, and the opportunity for great eroticism, occurs when both people can share those universes.Pamela Stephenson Connolly is a US-based psychotherapist who specialises in treating sexual disorders.If you would like advice from Pamela on sexual matters, send us a brief description of your concerns to [email protected] (please don’t send attachments). Each week, Pamela chooses one problem to answer, which will be published online. She regrets that she cannot enter into personal correspondence. Submissions are subject to our terms and conditions. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘The boat owners treat us as slaves’: crews report abuse and death on long-haul vessels
The unexplained death of a fisher on a Chinese-owned trawler in the Indian Ocean illustrates the lack of accountability in the seafood industry, say advocatesRicky* was one of the first to see his crewmate’s dead body. It was 2023 and he was six months into a stint at sea, working on a longline tuna boat in the Indian Ocean for $480 a month. The crew were mostly Indonesian, like Ricky, or Chinese, like the captain and owners of the boat.In the days leading up to Ricky’s crewmate’s death, the 29-year-old Indonesian, referred to as YK, had been increasingly depressed onboard, repeatedly asking to be sent home. The captain had refused, says Ricky, who says he saw YK attack the captain. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Mikel Arteta excited by ‘big summer’ after Andrea Berta’s arrival at Arsenal
Striker believed to be main transfer objective Arsenal hope to extend Saka and Saliba contracts Mikel Arteta is looking forward to “a big summer” working with Arsenal’s new sporting director, Andrea Berta, as the club attempt to strengthen their squad to sustain another Premier League title push next season.Arsenal go into Tuesday night’s meeting with Fulham trailing the leaders, Liverpool, by 12 points with nine games to play and look destined to finish as runners up for a third straight campaign. But after the arrival of Berta – the former Atlético Madrid sporting director who has replaced Edu – Arsenal are expected to step up their search for additions, with a striker believed to be the main objective. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Welcome to the future of football, where the ability to entertain is king | Jonathan Liew
The Baller League is one of a series of seven-a-side ventures aiming to challenge the traditional model of the gameThe first ever goal in the UK version of the Baller League is scored by the influencer PK Humble, just in case you ever find yourself taking part in a pub quiz in 2045. Humble – a midfielder for Hashtag United and star of the recent YouTube series Inside – takes the ball out of defence, advances it at a frankly embarrassingly leaden pace and side-foots it past a goalkeeper who should really do better.Welcome to the future of football. It’s faster, better and more exciting than the real thing. Albeit not faster in a strictly physical sense, or better in a strictly technical sense, or more exciting in the sense that you actually need to care about who wins. But it is, nonetheless, all of these things. Why? Because we said so. And don’t just take our word for it. Maya Jama says so too. Slow, lingering camera shot of Maya Jama. Now, what was the question again? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
And the award for zero self-awareness goes to second-home owners raging about higher taxes | Gaby Hinsliff
Why the anger? Doubling council tax on holiday homes in England is a sensible, revenue-raising policy for communities in serious needShould you have the world’s tiniest violin to hand, prepare to play it. This week, English councils gain the power to double council tax on second homes, and the holiday-cottage-owning classes are fuming. “Nothing but a racket,” thundered the Daily Telegraph, dismissing a supposedly “vindictive” raid on weekenders that was (gasp) “socialist” to boot.Its Sunday sister paper further tugged on readers’ heartstrings with tales of homeowners who had inherited a second place somewhere lovely from their parents, and bridled at being asked to pay a few thousand pounds more a year to keep it in the family. In the Times, a retired barrister who felt forced to give up the seaside pad she had bought in her mother’s native St Davids complained of the tax “destroying generations of community-building”, as though houses sitting empty all winter were the one thing really guaranteed to bring a thriving community together. To which one can only say: people, learn to read a room(s). You’ve certainly got enough of them. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘I can’t cope with it any more’: newsrooms scramble to retain audiences amid the big switch-off
In an international survey last year, 39% of respondents said they selectively avoid news to some degreeWhen Deborah Turness, the head of BBC News, informed her staff recently that she was shaking up how they worked as part of a drive to combat “the growing trend of news avoidance”, she had in mind the likes of Dave Ayres, a handyman from Leeds.“I used to have the news on the TV every morning for an hour or so as I got the children ready for school and completed my household tasks,” he said. “Now it has literally been switched off and unplugged. I can’t cope with it any more. It’s just too much and there’s nothing I can do about it.” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Will bills continue to rise and what does it mean for Labour?
February’s dip in inflation was only a blip – the pain for consumers and the UK economy is poised to continueMillions of Britons brace for across-the-board bill risesBill rises Britons face, from council tax to energy and cars‘It’s relentless’: Britons react to April bill risesThe painful jump in household bills from Tuesday will push the UK’s poorest households further into poverty. The increase will also provide a further jolt to Labour ministers still reeling from a spring statement that prompted finger-jabbing accusations that their policies are Tory-lite.The “squeezed middle”, put in the spotlight by energy secretary Ed Miliband when he was Labour leader, will also find that a recovery from the post-pandemic inflation shock has juddered to a halt. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘Awful April’: bill rises Britons face, from council tax to energy and cars
How the wave of increases will hit your household finances – and what you can do about itMillions of Britons brace for across-the-board bill risesWill bills continue to rise and what does it mean for Labour?‘It’s relentless’: Britons react to April bill risesMillions of households face sharp rises in everything from council tax to water from Tuesday, in what has been labelled “Awful April”.The exact amount extra that consumers will pay will depend on where they live and their personal circumstances. Despite some respite – including an increase in the minimum wage and a modest rise in most benefits – budgets are expected be squeezed. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘It’s relentless’: Britons react to April bill rises amid Labour’s benefit cuts
Increases in council tax, energy and water come less than week after Rachel Reeves revealed raft of cuts to welfareBill rises Britons face, from council tax to energy and carsWill bills continue to rise and what does it mean for Labour?‘It’s relentless’: Britons react to April bill risesMillions of households are braced for higher costs from this week, as energy, water and council tax bills are poised to rise, raising fears of a deepening cost of living crisis.The regulator Ofgem has said the energy price cap will rise by £111 from April to £1,849-a-year for a typical dual-fuel household in Great Britain. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Outlets seek fresh strategies as UK poll shows ‘news avoidance’ on the rise
Negative content and distrust among reasons given by audiences as industry works on how to keep them engagedNewsrooms around the world are deploying “ethics boxes”, story summaries and bite-size explainers to tackle the growing trend of “news avoidance”, as an increase in content and distrust in the media cause more people to tune out.Less than half (47%) of those asked about their news consumption said they viewed television news programmes regularly or had done so in the last week, according to a new Opinium poll. The figure fell to 29% for radio news and 26% for news websites. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Millions of Britons brace for across-the-board bill rises in ‘awful April’
Ministers urged to act as energy, water, car tax, TV licences and a string of other increases squeeze householdsBill rises Britons face, from council tax to energy and carsWill bills continue to rise and what does it mean for Labour?‘It’s relentless’: Britons react to April bill risesMillions of households are bracing themselves for a raft of price increases across a range of bills – from energy and water to car tax and the TV licence – that take effect on Tuesday.With so many costs rising at once – prompting some to label this month “awful April” – the government is facing fresh calls to take action to limit the impact of some of the increases. The Liberal Democrats claimed ministers needed to “get a grip” on energy bills. Continue reading...

The Register
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Microsoft is redesigning the Windows BSoD to get you back to work ‘as fast as possible’
How about making sure OS crashes less, stops hassling us to use Edge? That would improve productivity, too Microsoft has quietly revealed it’s redesigning the Blue Screen of Death, the notification that Windows presents after it crashes so badly a reboot is the only way out.…

The Register
Open 
Genetic data repo OpenSNP to self-destruct before authoritarians weaponize it
Blame the 23andMe implosion, rise in far-right govt OpenSNP, a fourteen-year-old open source repository for genetic records, will shut down and delete all its data at the end of April.…

BBC World News
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'My mum in India was willing to lose everything to support my trans identity'
A transgender woman who became the first to legally marry in India's Tamil Nadu state speaks of her mother's unwavering support.

Border Force
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Transparency data: Small boat activity in the English Channel. Border Force.
Transparency data: Small boat activity in the English Channel. Border Force.

Mail Online
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Wife makes sexual abuse claims against doctor husband accused of trying to kill her on Hawaii hiking trail
Arielle Konig, 36, has made a bombshell sexual abuse claim against her husband, Gerhardt Konig, 46, in her application for a restraining order after he allegedly tried to push her off a Hawaiian hiking trail.

Mail Online
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Trump administration delays plans to ban foreign nationals traveling to the US from 43 countries
The Trump administration made major decision over plans to ban foreign nationals from 40 countries announced on the president's first day in office.

Mail Online
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Medication taken by one in seven people in the UK massively increases risk of sudden cardiac death, study suggests - doctors in shock
Danish experts found patients taking the commonly prescribed medications for between one to five years had a 50 per cent higher risk of dying from an unexpected heart issue.

The Guardian (UK)
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A lot of mums are angry at Chappell Roan. I just want her to come over and listen to me whinge | Molly Glassey
Whether you’re a parent or not, you should be able to talk candidly about how tough it is having kidsA few weeks ago I told my friend – a good friend – that I was considering having a third kid. The colour washed from her face, and before her filter could kick in she said: “Please don’t.” She corrected herself. “You don’t really want to, do you?” I realised she thought I was unhappy. She thought I regretted it all. She was wrong on both accounts, but I didn’t blame her for coming to such a stark conclusion.That friend was not Chappell Roan. But the pop star is being pelted with the internet equivalent of soiled nappies for saying “all [her] friends who have kids are in hell” and “she doesn’t know anyone who’s happy with children at her age”. Continue reading...

Mail Online
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The striking similarities between Queen Rania and Princess Beatrice (they even wore the same dress to Buckingham Palace!)
They are two royal women with a shared interest in both the environment and fashion.

Mail Online
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Father stumped by maths problem in son's homework that 'makes no sense'- but can YOU solve this equation meant for a 9-year-old?
The parent, believed to be from the US, revealed that while his son is usually 'gifted' at maths, they were both baffled by an equation that he felt was too 'advanced' for a nine-year-old.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Four golds and a baby boy - but what next for Azu?
After becoming an indoor 60m European and world champion, Welsh sprinter Jeremiah Azu turns his attention to the outdoor season.

Mail Online
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We fled war-torn Lebanon for Britain in search of a better life, but our daughter was gunned down in a botched drive-by shooting in Blackburn
Aya Hachem, 19, who dreamed of becoming a solicitor, had fled from violence in her native Lebanon as a child to settle with her family in Blackburn, Lancashire - but was shot dead in 2020.

Mail Online
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The Beatles biopic cast is confirmed as stars assemble on stage for first time ahead of epic four film project
The Beatles cast for Sam Mendes' upcoming biopics about the iconic British rock band has been revealed. 

Mail Online
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King Charles to attend first public engagement today since his short hospital stay as he hosts investitures, which include good friend Alan Titchmarsh
The King will make TV gardener Alan Titchmarsh a CBE for services to horticulture and charity during an investiture ceremony at Windsor Castle today.

Mail Online
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Is the mystery British 'hero of Amsterdam' a spy? The five signs he has a military background
A British tourist hailed a hero for sprinting after a knifeman after he stabbed five people in Amsterdam 'almost certainly has a military background', an expert told MailOnline.

Slashdot
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Anthropic Will Begin Sweeping Offices For Hidden Devices
Anthropic said it will start sweeping physical offices for hidden devices as part of a ramped-up security effort as the AI race intensifies. From a report: The company, backed by Amazon and Google, published safety and security updates in a blog post on Monday, and said it also plans to establish an executive risk council and build an in-house security team. Anthropic closed its latest funding round earlier this month at a $61.5 billion valuation, which makes it one of the highest-valued AI startups.

In addition to high-growth startups, tech giants including Google, Amazon and Microsoft are racing to announce new products and features. Competition is also coming from China, a risk that became more evident earlier this year when DeepSeek's AI model went viral in the U.S. Anthropic said in the post that it will introduce "physical" safety processes, such as technical surveillance countermeasures -- or the process of finding and identifying surveillance devices that are used to spy on organizations. The sweeps will be conducted "using advanced detection equipment and techniques" and will look for "intruders."





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Deutsche Welle
Open 
China holds large-scale military drills around Taiwan
Beijing called the drills a "severe warning and forceful containment against Taiwan independence." It also called Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te a "parasite courting ultimate destruction "

Mail Online
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Revealed: The mystery woman pictured with Tom Brady at David Beckham's birthday bash
The NFL legend attended soccer icon David Beckham 's star-studded 50th birthday bash at the Cipriani Downtown Miami in Florida on Sunday where he was spotted with the gorgeous brunette.

Mail Online
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Meghan Trainor finally admits to using weight-loss drug after 'smoke show' makeover
The 31-year-old Grammy winner has shed a substantial amount of weight over the past year

Mail Online
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Moaning federal workers make disgusting discoveries as they return to office after Trump ended WFH
Thousands of federal workers who were forced to return to their offices after President Donald Trump ended work from home options have made some disgusting discoveries.

Mail Online
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Fox reporter's hilarious Biden joke leaves Donald Trump and Kid Rock in stitches
Kid Rock joined Trump in the Oval Office for a bold, star-spangled event promoting a crackdown on ticket scalping. Fox News' Peter Doocy delivered a one-liner with perfect comedic timing.

Mail Online
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'Growling' Hollywood action hero looks unrecognizable as he steps out in New York
The 45-year-old action star was seen out in Manhattan's Soho neighborhood after a meal at the popular Italian restaurant Il Buco.

Mail Online
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Jorginho's fiancee Cat Harding makes very rare comments about her and Jude Law's daughter Ada as she gives insight into her 'challenging' blended family
Singer Cat, 34, is engaged to Arsenal star Jorginho and they share a son Jax, four, while she also has a daughter called Ada, nine, with her ex-partner Jude Law.

Mail Online
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China sends armed forces to surround Taiwan: Beijing deploys army, navy and air forces to simulate blockade - as the island launches its own military response
As many as 19 warships surrounded the self-ruled island in a space of just 24 hours, including the Shandong aircraft carrier group, Taiwan's defence ministry said.

Sky News Home
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UK set to be hotter than Greece and Spain
Parts of the UK could be hotter than cities in Greece and Spain this week, as the country continues to bathe in spring sunshine.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘The ultimate circular economy’: how coral holobionts conjure magnificence from nothing
These creatures evolved over millenia to create nature’s finest circular economy, but are now struggling to surviveThere’s no preparing for a first encounter with a thriving coral reef: your attention ricochets between dramas of colour, form and movement. A blaze of fire coral, darting clown fish, crimson sponge, electric blue ray … a turtle! Your heart soars, your head spins. Nowhere else will you encounter such density and diversity of life.Corals are the architects of all this splendour. Their immobile forms suggest plants, but they’re animals – solar-powered ones. Each is a colony of thousands, sometimes millions, of tiny coral polyps, each resembling a slimmed-down sea anemone, just millimetres tall.Between 24 March and 2 April, we will be profiling a shortlist of 10 of the invertebrates chosen by readers and selected by our wildlife writers from more than 2,500 nominations. The voting for our 2025 invertebrate of the year will run from midday on Wednesday 2 April until midday on Friday 4 April, and the winner will be announced on Monday 7 April. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Manchester City send Erling Haaland to specialist over worrying ankle injury
Striker sustained problem in FA Cup win at BournemouthCity expect Haaland to be fit again before end of seasonManchester City expect Erling ­Haaland to play again this season despite their top scorer sustaining a potentially serious ankle injury in Sunday’s FA Cup win at Bournemouth that requires “specialist consultation” to determine the extent of his layoff.Haaland was forced off after 61 minutes at the Vitality Stadium, being replaced by Omar Marmoush. While the Egyptian scored the winner that took City into a semi-final against Nottingham Forest, Haaland’s availability for the tie, to be played on either 26 or 27 April, is in the balance. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Chelsea report £128.4m profit after selling women’s side to themselves
Club turn last year’s pre-tax loss into pre-tax profitMove scrutinised over rules around fair market valueChelsea appear to have complied with the Premier League’s profitability and sustainability rules (PSR) through player sales by selling the women’s team to the club’s parent company. Chelsea announced they had turned last year’s pre-tax loss of £90.1m into a pre-tax profit of £128.4m for the financial year ending 30 June 2024.The results were filed at Companies House by Chelsea FC Holdings Limited and represent a significant shift after heavy losses under the ownership of Clearlake Capital and Todd Boehly in previous years. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Myanmar junta accused of blocking aid for earthquake victims as airstrikes continue
Doctors helping with aftermath of disaster and UN special rapporteur say aid is disappearing or being blocked in areas controlled by resistance groupsAftermath of the Myanmar earthquake – a visual guideMyanmar’s military is facing criticism over continued airstrikes and claims it is blocking aid to earthquake survivors, as international agencies urged “unfettered access” to humanitarian aid in the conflict-riven nation.The 7.7-magnitude earthquake that hit central Myanmar on Friday has caused widespread destruction, killing more than 2,000 people and leaving affected areas in dire need of basic necessities such as food and water. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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The Premier League is back - when can title & relegation be decided?
The Premier League is back after two weeks off - here's a reminder of how things stand at both ends of the table... and when the title and relegation can be decided.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Missing girl, 11, was last seen paddling in River Thames
Residents near the scene say the child was playing in the water during a day off from school.

BBC World News
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Cars carried away as flash flooding hits Greek island
Heavy rain on the Greek island of Paros saw cars and debris swept through the streets.

Mail Online
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Mysterious police twist over Jeffrey Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre saying she only has 'four days to live' - after she was injured in bus crash
Virginia Giuffre announced on Monday that she had just four days left to live after her car collided with a school bus.

Mail Online
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Two-tier justice row erupts as police are told to treat black and white suspects differently and that 'racial equity' does not mean 'treating everyone the same'
A report by policing chiefs declared that their commitment to 'racial equity' did not mean 'treating everyone the same or being colour blind'.

BBC UK News
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Talent leaving Wales for England due to scheme, unis say
Critics say the Seren scheme focuses too much on Oxbridge and takes money and talent away from Wales.

Mail Online
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Inside the Queen's Christmas Day speech that marked a 'turning point' for Prince Harry - after he spotted the subtle clue that revealed what she really thought of him...
Since symbolism is one of the Royal Family's key roles, experts knew it was no simple oversight Harry and Meghan's picture was not in the background
of the Queen's 2019 Christmas broadcast

Mail Online
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Revealed: The world's best nudist beaches where sunbathers are free to get an all-over tan... is there one near YOUR favourite holiday destination?
It might not be everyone's cup of tea but naturism is popular in many countries around the globe. Find the locations of some of the world's best nudist beaches in this travel map...

Mail Online
Open 
Eamonn Holmes suffers yet another setback after the reason for his split from Ruth Langsford is 'revealed'
The GB News presenter, 65, shared back in December that he was heading on tour with his fellow presenter Paul Coyte.

Mail Online
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I was in an all-girl shoplifting gang called 'The Spice Girls' and stole £19,000 worth of designer items, but it wasn't my fault...here's why
Melissa Grant, 55, was part of a professional female shoplifting gang who would raid exclusive shops in London's West End and grab huge quantities of expensive clothes and lingerie.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Trump news at a glance: Doge access to federal payroll and Trump’s third term comment spark alarm
Fears access could create cybersecurity attack risk; Trump talk of third term met with scorn. Here’s your roundup of key US politics stories from 31 March 2025Members of Elon Musk’s so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge) reportedly gained access to a payroll system over the weekend that processes salaries for about 276,000 federal employees across various government agencies, despite warnings from senior staff about the potential risks.Senior career officials at the interior department reportedly issued a memo last week highlighting the unusual nature of the request to gain access to the Federal Personnel and Payroll System and the associated risks with granting it, the New York Times reported. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Amorim insists Fernandes not leaving Manchester United amid Madrid reports
Manager says captain is crucial to challenge for titlesHarry Maguire and Leny Yoro fit for Forest tripRuben Amorim has said Bruno ­Fernandes is “not going anywhere” this summer after Manchester ­United’s captain was linked with a move to Real Madrid.Fernandes has again been United’s standout player this season, scoring 16 goals in 44 matches, including seven in the past seven games. In 277 United appearances Fernandes has 95 goals and 81 assists. Continue reading...

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
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#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (New)
Customers in the Crossgates (MYCSG) area are experiencing a total loss of service. Our engineers are investigating.
Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 03:38

Update: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 12:00

Edited: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 07:19

Status: Outage

Maintenance: None

Autosport F1
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Red Bull pays tribute to Honda with special Japanese GP livery
Red Bull has unveiled a special livery for Formula 1’s upcoming Japanese Grand Prix, paying tribute to its engine partner Honda.The Suzuka race will be Honda’s last home event with the Milton Keynes-based outfit before the latter collaborates with Ford from 2026 onwards.A white livery will adorn the RB21, inspired by the Honda RA272 which Richie Ginther drove to Honda’s maiden F1 win ...Keep reading

BBC Top Stories (US)
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In pictures: Scottish nature photo awards 2024
Images taken in Shetland, Orkney, Highlands and Edinburgh were among the winners.

BBC Top Stories (US)
Open 
Missing girl was seen paddling in River Thames
Residents near the scene say the child was playing in the water during a day off from school.

Digital Trends
Open 
World’s largest ‘space window’ has just launched to orbit again
SpaceX’s cupola is in orbit again. The company first used the dome-shaped window on its Crew Dragon spacecraft for the Inspiration4 mission in 2021. And now a cupola-equipped Crew Dragon has just launched from the Kennedy Space Center, carrying four private astronauts to a polar orbit on the Fram2 mission. The glass dome — at […]

The Verge
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Finally, an e-bike that charges off USB-C
Ampler made one of the first modern e-bikes I ever tested, and now it’s selling the first commercial electric bikes — the Nova and Nova Pro — I’m aware of that can be charged over a USB-C port integrated right into the frame. Hell, that same jack will even charge your gadgets in a pinch, but not […]

Deutsche Welle
Open 
Germany's development aid on the chopping block?
CDU/CSU and SPD politicians negotiating Germany's new government are under pressure to deliver for their voters while saving money. As a result, development aid could be an area to suffer.

Mail Online
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Gaunt, dazed and hollow-eyed Justin Bieber films disturbing livestream triggering Hailey Bieber drama
Justin Bieber continued to spark fan fears with a disturbing livestream video over the weekend.  

Mail Online
Open 
Beatles biopic cast confirmed as stars assemble on stage for first time ahead of epic four film project
The Beatles cast for Sam Mendes' upcoming biopics about the iconic British rock band has been revealed. 

Mail Online
Open 
I bought someone's lost suitcase from Heathrow airport for £130 - here's everything I found inside...
TikTok creator Carmie Sellitto (@touchdalight) shared his experience after bought someone's lost luggage. Find out exactly what was inside...

Mail Online
Open 
Disturbing phrases you never want to hear airline staff saying if you're on a flight
Travel experts at Wander have revealed seven discreet codes commonly used by cabin crews and airport staff to communicate emergencies and medical incidents without alarming flyers.

Mail Online
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Flight attendant leaves hotel guests 'freaked out' after warning that toothbrushes should be stored in the SAFE - as she gives top travel safety tips
Barbiebac La Azafata, 32, from Spain, is a former flight attendant who has 'freaked out' hotel guests after issuing an urgent warning of where to store toothbrushes.

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Matadors and madness: the poses of a visionary – in pictures
She dressed up as a bullfighter, sat in a window with two magpies and flew colossal flags of warning. We go inside a fascinating new exhibition of photographs by multimedia artist Rose Finn-Kelcey Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘The ultimate circular economy’: how coral holabiots conjure magnificence from nothing
These creatures evolved over millenia to create nature’s finest circular economy, but are now struggling to surviveThere’s no preparing for a first encounter with a thriving coral reef: your attention ricochets between dramas of colour, form and movement. A blaze of fire coral, darting clown fish, crimson sponge, electric blue ray … a turtle! Your heart soars, your head spins. Nowhere else will you encounter such density and diversity of life.Corals are the architects of all this splendour. Their immobile forms suggest plants, but they’re animals – solar-powered ones. Each is a colony of thousands, sometimes millions, of tiny coral polyps, each resembling a slimmed-down sea anemone, just millimetres tall.Between 24 March and 2 April, we will be profiling a shortlist of 10 of the invertebrates chosen by readers and selected by our wildlife writers from more than 2,500 nominations. The voting for our 2025 invertebrate of the year will run from midday on Wednesday 2 April until midday on Friday 4 April, and the winner will be announced on Monday 7 April. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Story of a Murder by Hallie Rubenhold review – engrossing retelling of ‘the crime of the century’
This account of Dr Crippen’s notorious Edwardian-era killing shifts the focus to the women at the centre of the sordid taleOn the evening of 31 January 1910, two couples dined together at a house in Hilldrop Crescent, on the borders of Holloway, London. The hosts, Dr Crippen and his wife, Belle Elmore, had been entertaining their friends, Clara and Paul Martinetti, until the small hours. After some difficulty fetching a cab, the visitors headed home around 1.30am. It was the last time they, or anyone else, would see Elmore alive. When her colleagues at the Music Hall Ladies’ Guild made inquiries about their friend – she was treasurer of the organisation – Crippen told them she had gone off to America to deal with a family crisis. Some weeks later they were informed she had died of double pneumonia in Los Angeles.Thus was sparked an international murder case, one of the most notorious in Britain, later called “the crime of the century”. But Hallie Rubenhold’s engrossing account begins a generation earlier when Hawley Harvey Crippen, a homeopathic doctor, met and married a nurse, Charlotte Bell, in New York. The couple moved west to San Diego, had a son, moved again. In the US of the 1880s, with its burgeoning railroads, you could always change towns, disappear, shed your mistakes along with your creditors, your given name, your dependents. This was the shifty Crippen way, and when Charlotte died of a stroke, aged 33, he was on the move and marrying again. His second wife, a Brooklynite born Kunigunde Mackamotzki, changed her name more than once, eventually settling on Belle Elmore, and after crisscrossing the US the couple emigrated to London, he to peddle his quack remedies for the Drouet Institute, she to pursue a career as an opera singer. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Charlotte Higgins on The Archers: it’s all kicking off in Ambridge
The disastrous sewage dump continues, leading residents to protest by dressing up as giant bog rolls … and staging a 10-hour campanological marathon. Only in BorsetshireA miasma hangs over Ambridge; an enchantment of sorts. Its inhabitants seem bizarrely foggy about events in the outside world. For example, the word Palestine cannot be spoken in the village. The Malik family have been saying a few prayers during iftar, among which “Let it stop soon,” is the nearest anyone has come to mentioning The Situation. They have now moved back to their house on the recently sewage-engulfed Beechwood estate – departing their temporary accommodation at the Ambridge Hall B&B perhaps just before the well-meaning joining-in-with-Ramadan by Lynda Snell (MBE) got oppressive. The Snells, on the other hand, are missing the Maliks so much that Constanza upped and died (she’s a llama).Ah, the sewage. Aside from its olfactory effects, the longer-term consequences continue. No one wants to eat cheese or yoghurt artisanally produced amid human excrement, remarkably, so Helen Archer’s organic dairy business is in trouble. The plan is to make one of Clarrie Grundy or Susan Carter redundant, a typically humane move from the Bridge Farm Archers. The threatened job loss has only strengthened Emma Grundy’s resolve to campaign against the evils of Borchester Water. She and Pat Archer turned up at a demo dressed as giant bog rolls, and soon, a plan for a bellringing protest at St Stephen’s church was hatched. Alan Franks, at his trendy vicar best, loved the idea, and a 10-hour campanological marathon, plus an outburst of citizen handbell ringing, was devised. Not everyone was delighted. Martyn Gibson, twirling his moustache and swirling his evil capitalist’s cloak, swept into the church on the verge of an apoplexy. The bells rang out, nonetheless. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
Black Cab review – Nick Frost on outstanding form in creepy taxi-driving Brit horror
Though the narrative goes the long way round, there are plenty of strong performances and good ideas to keep this journey interestingAlthough this British horror flick gets a little muddy in strictly narrative terms with its tricky shifts in viewpoint, it’s rich enough in ideas and strong performances as well as running a blessedly crisp 88 minutes, that any flaws are easily forgiven. The story starts with Anne (Synnove Karlsen, outstanding in a demanding yet slightly underwritten role) waking from a frightening dream and going to join her boyfriend Patrick (Luke Norris) for dinner with another couple, Ryan (George Bukhari) and Jessica (Tessa Parr). The snappy banter between the foursome, which instantly and economically establishes that Patrick is an outright asshole who doesn’t deserve quiet, circumspect Anne, suddenly chills when it’s revealed the two are engaged. Jessica, for one, doesn’t approve, for reasons only revealed later.Nevertheless, Anne and Patrick depart in the titular vehicle, driven by excessively chatty Ian (Nick Frost, also on exceptional form, and credited with contributing additional material to the script). En route, even more awkward revelations tumble out. From here on in, the film is essentially a two-and-a-half-hander, the story carried by Anne and Ian’s conversation, mostly conducted amid glances in the rear-view mirror as Ian drives, especially after Patrick loses consciousness.Black Cab is on digital platforms from 7 April. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
10 of the best wild fishing spots in the UK
From spinning off the coast of East Sussex to camping a rod’s length from a Scottish loch, the author of a new guide to wild angling chooses beautiful spots to fish affordablyWinchester, HampshireGrayling are prolific along the stretch of the River Itchen between Wharf Mill and City Mill, and offer the best chance of a catch. To be able to fish the River Itchen for free is a gift; this is the same river that Frederic Halford and GEM Skues fished more than 100 years ago, starting fly-fishing as we know it today. Shrimp and caddis patterns work best for fly fishing here. It’s rare to see rising trout in these town waters except during the mayfly season so time your fishing trip appropriately if it’s trout you’re after. The mayfly season is not exact but it tends to run between late May and early June here. winchester.gov.uk Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
‘You have the experience of a sick person but it’s not yours’: Leeds art installation explores being a carer
Work by Sarah Roberts addresses the impact of being a young carer on childhood and the strange feeling of being ‘sick-adjacent’The leaflets next to the gallery door offering support for carers and for bereavement are an indication of the shattering power of Sarah Roberts’ new work.Walking into Roberts’ latest installation, Sick (A Note from 40 Sandilands Road and Other Stories), viewers are hit with a disconcerting green, a colour that is supposed to be calming and healing but will resonate differently for those with experience caring for an ill or disabled family member, such as Roberts. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
Open 
How to use AI to get a job interview and nail it – along with the salary you deserve
Supercharge your search and beat the screening, sharpen your speaking skills and boost your negotiating positionThe fear that artificial intelligence (AI) will replace millions of jobs is widespread. But equally, in today’s tough job market, not using AI wisely as part of your search could mean you miss out. It’s a tricky balancing act to harness the technology’s power without losing the human touch. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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New Zealand Rugby and Ineos settle contract dispute
New Zealand Rugby and Ineos reach a settlement agreement following their dispute over a sponsorship contract.

BBC Formula One
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What would be a good season for Tsunoda at Red Bull?
BBC Sport F1 correspondent Andrew Benson answers your questions before the Japanese Grand Prix in Suzuka.

The Register
Open 
Microsoft is redesigning the Windows BSoD to get you back to work ‘as fast as possible’
How about making sure Windows crashes less, and stops hassling us to use Edge? That would improve productivity, too Microsoft has quietly revealed it’s redesigning the Blue Screen of Death, the notification that Windows presents after it crashes so badly a reboot is the only way out.…

BBC World News
Open 
Five Israeli men acquitted of rape charge in Cyprus
The woman told police she was sexually assaulted and raped by the five men in September 2023.

Sky News Home
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China calls Taiwan president 'parasite' and launches military drills around island
China's military has said it's begun joint army, navy and rocket force exercises around Taiwan.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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The Papers: 'Le Pen rails against ban' and 'Trump's tariffs to hit UK'
A mixture of headlines dominate the front pages of UK papers on Tuesday.

Wired Top Stories
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Adidas Promo Codes & Deals: 20% Off
Save up to 20% with our Adidas coupon and join the adiClub to enjoy great benefits, like 15% off, plus other member-exclusive deals.

Wired Top Stories
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Dyson Promo Codes: 20% Off | April 2025
Get 20% off with a Dyson coupon code, plus save up to $170 on vacuums, Airwraps, and more.

Wired Top Stories
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Blue Apron Coupons: $80 Off + Free Shipping | April 2025
New customers can get $100 off the first five weeks of their subscription, free shipping, and more with our featured Blue Apron coupons for April 2025.

Wired Top Stories
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Samsung Promo Codes: $50 Off | April 2025
Save with the latest Samsung coupons, including 30% off phones, an extra $50 off your order, and $250 off trade-in offers on the latest tech.

Wired Top Stories
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Peacock Promo Code and Coupons: 16% Off April 2025
Watch your favorite TV shows for less this April and save on a subscription with the latest Peacock coupons from WIRED.

Wired Top Stories
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20% Wayfair Coupon & Promo Codes | April 2025
Save with Wayfair promo codes and coupons for 10% off, up to 80% off furniture, and more on WIRED.

Border Force
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Guidance: Report suspicious behaviour on the coast or at sea: Project Kraken. Border Force.
Guidance: Report suspicious behaviour on the coast or at sea: Project Kraken. Border Force.

The Hill
Open 
FCC chair threatens ABC's broadcast license over Disney DEI practices
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chair Brendan Carr suggested in an interview Monday that ABC’s broadcast license could be at risk as the federal regulatory agency probes Disney, ABC’s parent company, over its alleged efforts to promote diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) through its hiring practices. “If the evidence does in fact play out and shows...

The Guardian (UK)
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TV tonight: Stacey Solomon and Joe Swash invite you to Pickle Cottage
The celebrity duo reveal the realities of raising five children, two dogs and four ducks. Plus: Bradley Walsh signs off on his Egyptian travelogue. Here’s what to watch this evening8pm, BBC One
Pickle Cottage opens its doors for the newest celebrity fly-on-the-wall series. Golden couple Stacey Solomon and Joe Swash let the cameras in to their home for six months, as they raise their five children, two dogs and four ducks. The duo are easy to like – especially when the besotted Joe recalls the day they met (“I haven’t been able to shake him since,” says Stacey) – in what can be described only as soft TV. It starts with them celebrating their wedding anniversary. Hollie Richardson Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Malaysia fire: huge blaze erupts near Kuala Lumpur as gas pipeline explodes
Inferno spread to nearby homes, trapping residents, while full extent of damage still being assessedA colossal fire has erupted in a Malaysian suburb outside Kuala Lumpur due to a burst gas pipeline, prompting evacuations of nearby homes.The inferno near a gas station in Putra Heights in central Selangor state on Tuesday was visible for kilometres. National oil company Petronas said the fire broke out at one of its gas pipeline at 8.10am. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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China launches large-scale military drills around Taiwan and calls its president a 'parasite'
China's military has said it's begun joint army, navy and rocket force exercises around Taiwan.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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US says international law applies to 'all parties' in Gaza
The deaths of 15 people including paramedics in a convoy have been blamed on Israel's military.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Millions see April bills rise as Citizens Advice warns single parents could be worst hit
A series of household bills, including water, energy and council tax, increase on Tuesday.

Deutsche Welle
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Middle East updates: Israeli strike on Beirut kills 3
Israel's strike on Beirut was its second attack on the Lebanese capital since a ceasefire with Hezbollah in November. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said all violations of sovereignty must be prevented. DW has more.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Epstein accuser Virginia Guiffre says she is in hospital after 'serious' car accident
A spokesperson tells the BBC Ms Giuffre "greatly appreciates the support and well wishes people are sending".

Deutsche Welle
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Malaysia: Dozens hurt in gas pipeline fire
A fire caused by a large leak in a gas pipeline near Kuala Lumpur has injured at least 30 people, officials said. Several people had to be rescued when their homes were set ablaze.

Sky News Home
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How Myanmar quake left some areas almost completely destroyed
Even with thousands dead and entire neighbourhoods levelled, the ruling military junta in Myanmar maintains its long-term ban on international journalists entering the country.

The Guardian (UK)
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The best theatre to stream this month: Macbeth, Life of Pi, Playhouse Creatures and more
David Tennant and Cush Jumbo in Shakespeare’s tragedy, a puppet-powered transformation for Yann Martel’s novel and Anna Chancellor in a Restoration-era comedy are among this month’s highlightsPerformances at Covent Garden’s 251-seat Donmar Warehouse have an inbuilt intimacy. Max Webster’s 2023 production of Shakespeare’s breakneck tragedy went a step further, as audiences wore headphones to experience Gareth Fry’s richly eerie binaural soundscape and savour the powerhouse pairing of David Tennant and Cush Jumbo. This film, captured in 5.1 cinema surround sound, amps up that atmosphere with some flesh-crawling closeups. On Marquee TV. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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India trains thousands of medics to promote vaccine in huge push to end cervical cancer
Vast scheme aims to counter disinformation and increase awareness in country where low HPV vaccine take-up means many die from the preventable diseaseTens of thousands of doctors across India are being trained to promote the HPV vaccine, in a push to eliminate cervical cancer in the country.They will check with mothers attending medical appointments that they intend to vaccinate their daughters, and visit schools and community centres armed with facts and slideshows to counter vaccine disinformation. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Trumpism is sinking democratic values. It’s Starmer’s job to steer the UK back to safety | Polly Toynbee
US tariffs hit this week just as other costs start to bite in Britain. To meet these challenges, Labour will finally have to changeThe prime minister may pretend to “like and respect” Donald Trump, but elsewhere in parliament anti-Americanism is running hot. In a Lords debate on obesity last week, Labour’s Lord Brooke suggested imposing 25% tariffs on “American products which are causing us difficulties – Coca-Cola, Pepsi, KFC, McDonald’s”. The government replied that the US is an “indispensable ally”. That craven attitude may be politic today – right until it fails tomorrow.The outlook for Britain and other countries is bleak. Wednesday is “liberation day”, when Trump’s tariffs will hit a range of goods likely to send global economies tumbling. There is near-zero expectation that Britain’s genuflections will save us from the same punishment as the rest. As for Trump demanding no VAT on US imports to the UK, that’s extorting with menaces a benefit denied to our own producers. Even if kissing the boot did appease, how cheap do we sell national dignity?Polly Toynbee is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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RHS develops ‘robust lawn’ that works for people, pollinators and pets
Full of clovers and dandelions, with a hard-wearing rye grass, the approach is environmentally friendly and usableIs there a perfect formula for a hard-wearing flower lawn that is good for pollinators, dogs and people?The immaculately mowed green has fallen out of favour in recent years owing to its lack of support for biodiversity. But there have also been complaints about the tall wildflower meadows that grow during “no mow May” and are less usable for humans and pets. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Chester zoo unveils £28m ‘Africa’ facility – complete with chilly giraffes
Nine-hectare site home to 57 species including rhino, zebras and ostriches in UK’s biggest such development“Although we are trying to replicate Uganda and Kenya we are actually in Cheshire so the weather is slightly different,” admits Chester zoo boss, Jamie Christon, on a fresh and very grey Monday morning.But ignore the chilliness and screw your eyes and you could well be transported to a sweeping African savannah where, one day, there will be giraffes, zebras, antelopes and ostriches roaming majestically side by side. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Large majority of Europeans support retaliatory tariffs against US, poll finds
Survey shows between 56% and 79% across seven countries in favour if Trump introduces ‘Liberation Day’ leviesA large majority of western Europeans support retaliatory tariffs against the US, a survey has shown, if Donald Trump introduces sweeping import duties for major trading partners as expected this week.The US president appears likely to unleash a range of tariffs, varying from country to country, on Wednesday, which he has called Liberation Day. He also said last week that a 25% levy on cars shipped to the US would come into force the next day. Continue reading...

Zen Service Alerts (Overview)
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#9252 Broadband (xDSL) - Partial Exchange Outage - MRMAC (Macclesfield) (Update)
Our suppliers engineers are investigating and further updates will be posted here when available.

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BBC Top Stories (US)
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'You can't have all the success he's had without a genius of a brain'
Gary Lineker, Alan Shearer and Micah Richards discuss Carlo Ancelotti's long reign as king of the Champions League and the reasons behind his success.

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Virginia Giuffre says she is in hospital after 'serious' car accident
A spokesperson tells the BBC Ms Giuffre "greatly appreciates the support and well wishes people are sending".

Digital Trends
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Screen usage in bed raises insomnia risks worse than you know
Staring at a screen in bed raises the risk of insomnia by up to 59%, but it’s not solely because we are addicted to a doomscrolling cycle on social media.

Planet PostgreSQL
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Laurenz Albe: Swiss Database Synergy Day 2025: Oracle and PostgreSQL User Groups Unite
Since I sang the praise of the 2024 Swiss PGDay, my people asked me to report from yet another small conference: the Swiss Database Synergy Day 2025, organized by the Swiss Oracle and PostgreSQL user groups.



A joint event with Oracle and PostgreSQL? You must be kidding!



It may indeed be surprising to hear of such an event. But then, PostgreSQL people have held talks at the yearly conference of the German Oracle User Group. The Austrian Oracle User Group held an event dedicated to the interplay of Oracle and PostgreSQL. Furthermore, previous editions of the Austrian PGDay were co-sponsored by an Oracle support company. And this list only covers events in my part of the world.



In addition, there is this nice reminder that the Polish Oracle User Group has sent my boss after he had talked there a while ago:







Still, there is a difference between PostgreSQL people talking at an Oracle conference and a joint event. I can understand why PostgreSQL people are interested in Oracle conferences: after all, a lot of our business comes from Oracle users who have fallen out of love with their database. But what motivates the Oracle users? Are they just curious and open-minded? Do they think the future belongs to PostgreSQL? Or is it just their way of showing dissatisfaction with Oracle?



Then there is the ambivalent word “synergy” in “Database Synergy Day”. Fundamentally, “synergy” is something positive, but in today's business speak it usually refers to fusioning two companies or departments. Rather than increasing productivity, that means that the two entities spend a year fighting for dominance until one of them ends up on top. All the while, the productivity is near zero. I sincerely hope that I am not about to witness that kind of synergy...



Well, I'm going to find out.



The speakers' dinner



It is customary to invite the speakers to a dinner as a “thank you” for their (unpaid) effort. This conference is no exception. As I said in my article on the Swiss PGDay 2024, a PostgreSQL feels a bit like a family reunion. That feeling is strongest during the speakers' dinner, where you meet all the “usual suspects”.



But this time, it would be different. Not only is my co-worker Pavlo missing (and a conference without Pavlo feels weird) but there would be all these Oracle people. Would they be different? Would they be fun? Well, they turned out to be nice guys. At first glance, perhaps a bit less anarchic than some of the PostgreSQL crowd, but that may just be my biased eye. Anyway, a few beers lubricated the tongues, and there was pleasant conversation everywhere. That is promising!



The location of the Database Synergy Day



The event took place at la Mobilière in Bern, Switzerland. There was a small crowd of somewhat less than a hundred people present. Nice and cozy, where you can meet almost everybody and the noise level remains reasonable! (Fun fact: the name of the insurance company that hosted the event is actually “die Mobiliar”, which is the German version of “la Mobilière”. But the company's marketing people are afraid that English speakers would understand the name as “die, Mobi-liar”, which might disaffect them. Hence they insist on the French version.)



Bern is a very beautiful town (I am reluctant to use the word “city” here). Walking through the center, even a European jaded by frequent exposure to ancient architecture gets a distinctly medieval feeling. You can imagine a busy market day in Market Street, while somewhere nearby a poor soul is chained to the pillory. All that is crammed onto a peninsula surrounded by a serpentine of the Aare river. To me, Bern is the most beautiful Swiss town (sorry, Zürich), although the competition is fierce.







The Database Synergy Day itself



The keynote speech by Alain Fuhrer from the IT department of the Swiss Federal Police was already promising. He presented the fate of their project to move from Oracle to PostgreSQL, the difficulties they encountered, and why they eventually revised their strategy to let both database systems coexist. Honest, credible, naming good and bad aspects as they encountered them, without heaping blame on anybody.



The keynote opened a day of talks, some about Oracle, some about PostgreSQL, and some about both. The atmosphere was relaxed and respectful, and I didn't ever get a feeling of competition or contest. As usual, there were more and less interesting talks (in my personal opinion), and some were really enlightening. I find it very valuable to see the database world and PostgreSQL through the eyes of somebody with a different background and experience! And I like to get a reminder of what an Oracle DBA misses when she encounters PostgreSQL for the first time.



My own talk at the Database Synergy Day



My own talk took place in a room that seemed destined for talking about PostgreSQL. On the rear wall, an art installation showed these PostgreSQL-blue letters:







Still, my talk was not only about PostgreSQL, as I explored the subtle differences between the transaction systems in PostgreSQL and Oracle (my article has part of what I talked about). My biggest worry was that the Oracle savants present would point out all kinds of mistakes in my presentation. But either they were kind enough to spare me or I was sufficiently vague not to say anything clearly wrong. At any rate, the audience received the talk graciously.



Another art installation in the room reflects how I feel right before giving a talk:







The Database Synergy Day ended with a social gathering with snacks and beer (“Apéro” in Swiss German), where the attendants could renew old family ties and forge new ones.



Conclusion



In a great talk about writing blogs by Claire Giordano I learned that you should never use non-descriptive headings like “Conclusion”.
The post Swiss Database Synergy Day 2025: Oracle and PostgreSQL User Groups Unite appeared first on CYBERTEC PostgreSQL | Services & Support.

Sky News Home
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Household bills rise for millions from today - how you can beat the hikes
Many household bills are rising from today - ranging from energy prices and council tax to mobile phone contracts and broadband.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Ingebrigtsen's father just 'overly protective' as he denies abuse
Norwegian athletics coach Gjert Ingebrigtsen tells a court he "loves" his children and was just an "overly protective" father as he denies abuse allegations.

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Chelsea report £128m profit after selling women's team
Chelsea report a £128.4m profit in their latest financial results for the year ending June 2024, having sold their women's team to a parent company.

Gizmodo
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Oh Jeez, Rick and Morty Will Return in May
Adult Swim announced the season 8 premiere date as part of its annual April Fools' Day broadcast special.

The Guardian (UK)
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OpenAI raises up to $40bn in record-breaking deal with SoftBank
Japanese investment group says it wants to realise ‘artificial super intelligence’ – smarter than people – in biggest capital raising ever for a start-upOpenAI said it had raised $40bn in a funding round that valued the ChatGPT maker at $300bn – the biggest capital-raising session ever for a startup.It comes in a partnership with the Japanese investment group SoftBank and “enables us to push the frontiers of AI research even further,” OpenAI announced, adding it would “pave the way toward AGI (artificial general intelligence)” for which “massive computing power is essential”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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China launches surprise military drills around Taiwan
Taiwan says it has detected nearly 20 vessels off its coast as Beijing orders large scale sea and air exercises and calls leaders in Taipei ‘parasites’China has launched large-scale military drills around Taiwan, accusing its leaders of being “separatists” and “parasites” who were pushing the democratically run island into war.The drills, accompanied by a propaganda campaign, were launched without warning on Tuesday morning. China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) said they were a “stern warning” to Taiwan’s democratically elected government over what Beijing claims is separatist activity. Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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'Je suis Marine': European rightwingers react to Le Pen ban
European rightwingers react to the French far-right politician being banned from running for public office.

Boing Boing
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Sotheby's auctions artifacts from Lynch's Dune and other SF oddities
Sotheby's is auctioning some striking props from David Lynch's cursed but cult favorite 1984 film of Dune, among other artifacts of screen science fiction and fantasy. Pictured above is an early version of the hunter-seeker drone that nearly kills Paul and the Atreides' houskeeper. — Read the rest
The post Sotheby's auctions artifacts from Lynch's Dune and other SF oddities appeared first on Boing Boing.

The Guardian (UK)
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Pro-Palestinian British Cornell student says he will leave US citing fear of detention
Momodou Taal, who had been asked to surrender by immigration officials, says he has ‘lost faith’ that favourable court ruling would protect himA Cornell University student who participated in pro-Palestinian protests and was asked to surrender by United States immigration officials has said he is leaving the US, citing fear of detention and threats to his personal safety.Momodou Taal, a doctoral candidate in Africana studies and dual citizen of the UK and the Gambia, has participated in pro-Palestinian protests against Israel’s war in Gaza after the October 2023 Hamas attack. His attorneys said last month that he was asked to turn himself in and that his student visa was being revoked. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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OpenAI raises up to US$40bn in deal with SoftBank
Japanese investment group says it wants to realise ‘artificial super intelligence’ – smarter than people – in partnership with ChatGPT makerOpenAI said it had raised US$40bn in a funding round that valued the ChatGPT maker at $300bn – the biggest capital-raising session ever for a startup.It comes in a partnership with the Japanese investment group SoftBank and “enables us to push the frontiers of AI research even further,” OpenAI announced, adding it would “pave the way toward AGI (artificial general intelligence)” for which “massive computing power is essential”. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Andrew Tate is back in Romania. How we handle him will reveal what kind of country we really are | Andrei Popoviciu
We could have a fair, independent process, as justice demands – or buckle under pressure from the US. Frankly, it could go either wayA turquoise Koenigsegg Jesko, the world’s fastest car and worth about £2.3m, zipped through central Bucharest at nearly 100mph on Monday 24 March. At the wheel, the self-proclaimed “misogynist” influencer Andrew Tate, exuding an air of invincibility as he sped past the imposing Palace of the Parliament.To the surprise of many Romanians – and to their horror, frankly – Andrew and his brother, Tristan, collectively known as the Tate brothers, had returned to Romania from the US as part of their legal obligations in the investigation against them on serious charges of rape, money laundering and human trafficking. The two also face separate charges of rape and human trafficking in the UK. The two men deny any wrongdoing. Their return made front pages around the world – but this is so much more than a big news story for people here. It is a true test of our political and judicial system at a tense time in our history. Will officials bow down to pressure from the new US administration? What will their handling of the case say about the country we are now? Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Border wars: Syria’s new authorities grapple with Lebanese smugglers
Attempts to seal porous borders through which guns, drugs and fuel flowed in Assad times are turning local tensions deadlyHidden trails snake through the mountains in Lebanon’s eastern Bekaa valley, the furrowed earthen paths veering off before entirely disappearing into the mountainside scrub. “That’s Syria,” said Haidar, a smuggler using a pseudonym, tracing with his finger the contours of a route that if followed for about half a mile would cross the borders of Syria and Lebanon with authorities being none the wiser.In the remote Lebanese village of Qasr, borders are just a suggestion. The town sits a stone’s throw from Syria and save for three soldiers manning an army checkpoint at the entry to the village, the presence of the Lebanese state is minimal. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The wrestler with nine lives: how Saraya survived alcohol, abuse, injury and a leaked sex tape
At 18, Saraya-Jade Bevis had a rags-to-riches signing that took her from Norwich to the largest wrestling promotion in the world. A few years later, she hit rock bottom. Here is how she started overIt’s hard to know where to start with champion wrestler Saraya-Jade Bevis. Do we start in the same place as her memoir, at rock bottom aged 25 when a sex tape of Bevis taking part in a threesome was leaked and went viral? At that time, Bevis was suspended from wrestling, addicted to alcohol and, she says, snorting so much cocaine that her nose was spraying out blood.Or do we start with her childhood in Norwich, raised by a family of wrestlers, ex-cons and alcoholics, living in a council house where, she says, the rent was always due and dinner might be mashed potato sandwiches. The childhood sexual abuse that she had kept hidden for most of her life? Her rags-to-riches signing at 18 to WWE, the largest wrestling promotion in the world? Her new life in the US, when she was enjoying success as champion wrestler Paige, but feeling lonely, homesick, vulnerable? She met some very bad men. She partied too hard. She fractured her neck. She spent five years in recovery before returning to the ring. Her memoir is called Hell in Boots: Clawing My Way Through Nine Lives for good reason. “There’s actually a lot I had to leave out as I couldn’t fit it all in,” Bevis says of the book. “How am I only 32?” Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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From acid house to ancient rites: Jeremy Deller’s enormous, collaborative, unsellable art
As his most ambitious project comes together, the artist plans to unleash a bacchanalian festival that will be his most daring public artwork yetOn a frosty bright-blue day in February 2024, Jeremy Deller was in Dundee, examining severed heads. “How can anyone not be fascinated by a head?” he said. Deller is an elfin figure, 5ft 5 on a good day, a low-key, unintimidating presence. The only giveaway to his identity as an artist was his slightly dandyish clothing: a KLF T-shirt, a checked neckerchief, lemon-yellow socks and a purple Missoni sweater, which he hurriedly explained, lest he come across as too fancy, he had bought on sale. When he won the Turner prize in 2004 he looked like a dapper schoolboy. Twenty years on, the only indication he was nearing 60 was the way he kept alternating a pair of reading glasses with his sunglasses, toggling them between nose and forehead.Deller, carrying himself more like a journalist than most people’s idea of an artist, was questioning Dr Tobias Houlton, a forensic anthropologist from the University of Dundee, about the art and science of building 3D or digital impressions of a face from skeletal remains. On a trip to the university the previous summer, Deller had been fascinated by a re-creation of the head of Charles Edward Stuart, the “Young Pretender” who claimed the British throne in 1745. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘It’s beyond description’: Bodies pile up in mass graves as Myanmar grapples with quake toll
In Sagaing, the epicentre of the quake, the stench is becoming unbearable as a country wracked by civil war bears the burden of burying thousands killed in Friday’s disasterDays after a powerful 7.7-magnitude earthquake ripped through central Myanmar, upending buildings, pagodas and thousands of lives, the grim reality of the disaster is setting in.At a cemetery in Sagaing, a city in central Myanmar that lies at the epicentre of the quake, the bodies are starting to pile up. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘I cried like a little boy’: pigeon fanciers in Belgium relive agony of stolen prized birds
Suspected criminal gangs are leaving pigeon racers bereft after a spate of thefts in aviaries across the countryWhen champion pigeon racer Tom Van Gaver walked into one of his lofts one morning last November, he immediately knew something was wrong. Part of the door had been smashed from the inside. He soon realised it was no accident: thieves had broken into his aviary in Moortsele in Flanders and stolen five birds, including Finn, one of his most renowned breeders. Father and grandfather to many champions, Finn was “the Mona Lisa of the pigeon world”, Van Gaver said.The five birds, he estimates, were worth €750,000 (£625,000), but like da Vinci’s masterpiece, it is hard to tell, because he had no plans to sell. He had ordered a retirement loft so his oldest birds could live out their days under more sun. Instead, CCTV footage shows one of the thieves snatching Finn and bundling the delicate jade-necked dark bird into a plastic bag. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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The Beatles: actors playing the Fab Four in Sam Mendes’ biopics announced
All four Beatles biopics, focusing on each member of the band, will be released in cinemas in April 2028The cast of Sam Mendes’ four upcoming Beatles biopics has been officially announced, with Harris Dickinson playing John Lennon, Paul Mescal playing Paul McCartney, Barry Keoghan playing Ringo Starr and Joseph Quinn playing George Harrison.Mendes, the Oscar-winning director of films including American Beauty, 1917 and Skyfall, made a surprise appearance on stage with his Fab Four at CinemaCon, an annual industry event for Hollywood, in Las Vegas on Monday night. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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‘It’s relentless’: Britons react to April bill rises amid Labour’s benefit cuts
Increases in council tax, energy and water come less than week after Rachel Reeves revealed raft of cuts to welfareBill rises Britons face, from council tax to energy and carsWill bills continue to rise and what does it mean for Labour?Millions of households are braced for higher costs from this week, as energy, water and council tax bills are poised to rise, raising fears of a deepening cost of living crisis.The regulator Ofgem has said the energy price cap will rise by £111 from April to £1,849-a-year for a typical dual-fuel household in Great Britain. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Millions of Britons brace for across-the-board bill rises in ‘awful April’
Ministers urged to act as energy, water, car tax, TV licences and a string of other increases squeeze householdsBill rises Britons face, from council tax to energy and carsWill bills continue to rise and what does it mean for Labour?Millions of households are bracing themselves for a raft of price increases across a range of bills – from energy and water to car tax and the TV licence – that take effect on Tuesday.With so many costs rising at once – prompting some to label this month “awful April” – the government is facing fresh calls to take action to limit the impact of some of the increases. The Liberal Democrats claimed ministers needed to “get a grip” on energy bills. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Only 2.5% of private rentals in England affordable on housing benefit, study finds
Exclusive: Charities say freeze to housing benefit will push more people into rent arrears and homelessnessOnly 2.5% of private rented homes in England were affordable for people on housing benefit last year, with charities warning that more people will be pushed into rent arrears and homelessness as a freeze on the benefit takes effect.From Tuesday, housing benefit rates will be locked at current rates until 2026, affecting 5.7m households on low income which rely on it to cover rent. Continue reading...

CNET News
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April Fool's Day's NYT Mini Crossword Clues and Answers ARE IN ALL CAPS
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 1. Or should we say, HERE ARE THE ANSWERS!

The Guardian (UK)
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Keto: what’s the science behind the diet? – podcast
While other diet fads come and go, the ultra low carbohydrate Keto diet seems to endure. But as scientists begin to understand how the diet works, more is also being discovered about its risks. To find out more, Madeleine Finlay speaks to Javier Gonzalez, professor in the department of health at the University of Bath, with a special interest in personal nutrition. He explains how the diet works, what it could be doing to our bodies and what could really be behind the weight loss people experience while on itSupport the Guardian: theguardian.com/sciencepod Continue reading...

Russia Today News
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Israeli jets strike Beirut (VIDEOS)

Zen Service Alerts (Network)
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#9253 Broadband (xDSL) - Exchange Outage - Crossgates (MYCSG) (New)
Our engineers are investigating. Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

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Deutsche Welle
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First German woman in space on historic SpaceX polar orbit mission
Rabea Rogge has become the first German woman to go into space. She did so aboard a SpaceX rocket flying directly over Earth's polar regions for the first time.

ZeroHedge News
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Here's The Salary You Need To Live The "American Dream" In The 50 Largest U.S. Cities
Here's The Salary You Need To Live The "American Dream" In The 50 Largest U.S. Cities

You'll never guess what state has the highest income requirements in the U.S. -- and hint: it's not New York, California or Florida.

New data from GoBankingRates shows that earning at least $102,000 a year is needed to live comfortably and achieve the American dream in the 50 largest U.S. cities.

The study calculated this figure by analyzing average mortgage, grocery, and childcare costs, then doubling the total to reflect income needed for a comfortable lifestyle.

Washington, D.C. tops the list as the most expensive city to achieve the American dream, requiring an annual income of $189,306 a year to live comfortably, according to GoBankingRates.com. 

High child care costs—topping $51,000 annually—and a hefty $4,165 monthly mortgage help drive D.C.’s cost of living to nearly $95,000 a year.

Other high-cost metros include Boston ($175,628), New York ($173,006), San Francisco ($172,340), and San Jose ($167,958), each needing at least $167,000 for a comfortable lifestyle.

California dominates the list with nine cities in the top 50. In places like San Francisco, San Jose, Oakland, L.A., and San Diego, residents must earn at least $143,000 a year.

The GoBankingRates.com study shows that California dominates the upper tier of this list, with nine cities in the top 20. From Oakland to Bakersfield, residents need anywhere from $143,000 to nearly $168,000 annually to live the American dream.

Los Angeles, Long Beach, and San Diego also feature prominently, driven by inflated housing markets and uniform child care costs that hover around $35,000 a year.

Meanwhile, cities like Philadelphia, Phoenix, and Chicago offer relatively lower thresholds—about $132,000—to maintain a comfortable lifestyle, though still far from affordable for many Americans.


Even in these more “accessible” metros, the cost of groceries, child care, and housing adds up quickly, raising serious questions about whether the American dream remains attainable—or merely aspirational—in today’s urban landscape.

In the second half of the list, cities like Phoenix, Chicago, and Mesa still demand a steep income—just above $130,000—for families to live comfortably and achieve what’s commonly understood as the American Dream. While their overall costs are lower than coastal metros, expenses such as child care and housing remain substantial.

For example, in Phoenix, child care alone costs nearly $28,000 per year, with mortgage payments averaging over $2,400 a month.

As the list continues, more affordable cities begin to emerge. In places like Columbus, Miami, and Tucson, required household incomes drop closer to the $120,000 range.

But affordability is relative: Miami’s housing costs are high for its region, with monthly mortgage payments topping $3,800—among the highest outside of the top ten cities. In contrast, cities like Detroit and Jacksonville offer lower barriers, with required incomes under $120,000. Detroit stands out in particular, with a startlingly low average mortgage cost of just $421 per month.

Texas cities like Austin, Dallas, Houston, and Arlington cluster between $115,000 and $118,000 in required income. While Texas boasts relatively low mortgage and tax burdens, rising child care costs and growing population pressures are driving overall expenses upward. In Austin, for instance, housing costs are notably higher than in its peer cities, pushing up the overall cost of living.

At the bottom of the list, cities such as San Antonio, Raleigh, El Paso, and Louisville show the most accessible paths to the American Dream, requiring incomes around $100,000 to $110,000. Louisville is the most affordable among the 50 largest cities, with a household needing just $103,754 annually. 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 22:10

ZeroHedge News
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US Must Be Ready For A 2027 Chinese Invasion Of Taiwan; Rep. Perry
US Must Be Ready For A 2027 Chinese Invasion Of Taiwan; Rep. Perry

Authored by Lily Zhou via The Epoch Times,

The United States must act as if the Chinese regime’s ambition to annex Taiwan by 2027 is a “realistic potential,” Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.) said late last week.



It follows a recent remark by the commander of U.S. Strategic Command, Gen. Anthony J. Cotton, at an annual defense conference that Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s goal to invade Taiwan in 2027 has driven the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP’s) investment “in land, sea, and air based nuclear delivery platforms, and infrastructure necessary to support a major buildup of their nuclear forces.”

Meanwhile, rumors of escalated purges within the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) in the past weeks have raised questions on how the CCP’s internal power struggle will impact the regime’s decision-making on Taiwan.

Speaking to The Epoch Times, Perry said taking Taiwan by 2027 has always been the CCP’s goal, and the world “needs to take that seriously” rather than assuming the CCP will be unable or unwilling to carry out the plan.

“We have to proceed in everything that we do and say, in every decision we make, as though that’s a realistic potential,” he said.

Perry, a member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and a retired Army brigadier general, is among the 28 lawmakers who backed a resolution in February calling for normalized diplomatic relations between the United States and Taiwan.

“We ought to signal very loudly that we do not accept China’s narrative and China’s coercion to try and get—slowly—the rest of the world to just accept that China is going to take over Taiwan,” he said, adding that the United States should “publicly” recognize “the diplomatic efforts and the sovereignty of Taiwan.”

Taiwan’s official name, the Republic of China, was the name of mainland China between 1912 and 1949, before the Kuomintang government lost the civil war to the CCP and was forced to retreat to Taiwan.

The CCP has never ruled Taiwan, but it aims to “unify” with the island, by peaceful means or by force. The regime has sabotaged Taiwan’s diplomatic relations and blocked its participation in international organizations. It insists the world should follow its “One China” principle, which claims that the communist regime is the only legitimate government on both sides of the Taiwan Strait.

Washington holds an alternative “One China” policy that acknowledges but doesn’t endorse the CCP’s position.

Since Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te took office last year, the Chinese regime has stepped up its rhetoric against so-called Taiwan separatists, and declared that “diehard” support of Taiwan independence can be punishable by death.

It has also ramped up military and patrol activities in the Taiwan Strait in recent years, sending PLA or coast guard aircraft and ships to the Strait nearly on a daily basis.

In 2023, then-CIA Director William Burns cited U.S. intelligence, saying Xi had ordered the PLA to be ready for invading Taiwan by 2027.

In an email interview with The Epoch Times, retired U.S. Army Reserve Colonel Lawrence Sellin said Beijing has so far “pursued a ‘salami-slice strategy’ using a series of many small actions to produce a much larger result.”

The regime appears to be reluctant to launch an attack or a blockade because such actions “would cause an immediate strong reaction from the United States and regional powers opposed to China’s unlawful expansionism, possibly provoking a major war,” he said, adding, “but that could change.”

Last year, Yuan Hongbing, a former law professor at China’s prestigious Peking University, who has connections in the CCP’s upper echelon, said party leaders were advised to establish a strategy to “solve the Taiwan issue by 2027” in a report penned by top PLA experts.

According to Yuan, the report described the goal as a “political guarantee” for the CCP’s 21st National Congress, which is set for 2027, to go smoothly, suggesting CCP elites have banked the party’s legitimacy on absorbing the self-ruled island.

Meanwhile, the recent disappearance of the PLA’s third in command, second-ranked vice chairman of the CCP’s Central Military Commission, Gen. He Weidong, has led to speculations on whether Xi is losing grip on power, and whether a coup would accelerate or hamper the CCP’s plan to invade Taiwan.

On how the United States should react, Perry said anything that hampers the CCP’s oppression of the Chinese people and slows the spread of communism around the world is “a good thing,” but the United States can’t “just sit back and hope that that occurs organically.”

Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 23:25

Border Force
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Promotional material: Project Kraken: promotional posters. Border Force.
Promotional material: Project Kraken: promotional posters. Border Force.

The Hill
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House panel recesses as GOP leaders weigh blocking proxy voting for new parents
The House Rules Committee went into recess on Monday night without taking action that would tee up a way for House Republican leaders to block Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) from forcing a vote on allowing new parents to vote by proxy. The panel is scheduled to reconvene at 8 a.m. on Tuesday, when it will unveil...

The Hill
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Elon Musk says he sent MAGA influencer Ashley St. Clair $2.5 million, open to paternity test
Tech billionaire Elon Musk and conservative influencer Ashley St. Clair publicly feuded on X on Monday after she accused the world’s richest man of withdrawing childcare support and refusing to take a paternity test. Musk defended himself against those claims, saying he has given St. Clair more than $2 million and is open to a...

The Hill
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Cornell student targeted by Trump admin says he's leaving US
Cornell University student Momodou Taal, whose visa was revoked over his involvement in pro-Palestinian campus protests, said he left the United States voluntarily on Monday after a judge declined to intervene to block the Trump administration from taking steps to deport him. “Today I took the decision to leave the United States, free and with...

The Hill
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Amber Ruffin on being dropped from Correspondents' dinner: 'When people take away your rights ... you're supposed to call it out'
Amber Ruffin is speaking out publicly for the first time since being dropped as this year's White House Correspondents' Association (WHCA) dinner's entertainer, mocking the media and saying she would have been "terrifically mean" in her remarks. The 46-year-old "Have I Got News for You" personality made an appearance on "Late Night" on Monday, just days after...

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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UK-Gambian student targeted by Trump leaves the US
British citizen Momodou Taal had his visa revoked due to protest activities opposing Israel.

BBC World News
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University student targeted by Trump leaves the US
British citizen Momodou Taal had his visa revoked due to protest activities opposing Israel.

Sky News Home
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China launches large-scale military drills around Taiwan and calls its president a 'parasite'
China's military says it has begun joint army, navy and rocket force exercises around Taiwan.

Slashdot
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First Flight of Isar Aerospace's Spectrum Rocket Lasted Just 40 Seconds
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The first flight of Isar Aerospace's Spectrum rocket didn't last long on Sunday. The booster's nine engines switched off as the rocket cartwheeled upside-down and fell a short distance from its Arctic launch pad in Norway, punctuating the abbreviated test flight with a spectacular fiery crash into the sea. If officials at Isar Aerospace were able to pick the outcome of their first test flight, it wouldn't be this. However, the result has precedent. The first launch of SpaceX's Falcon 1 rocket in 2006 ended in similar fashion. "Today, we know twice as much about our launch system as yesterday before launch," Daniel Metzler, Isar's co-founder and CEO, wrote on X early Monday. "Can't beat flight testing. Ploughing through lots of data now."

Isar Aerospace, based in Germany, is the first in a crop of new European rocket companies to attempt an orbital launch. If all went according to plan, Isar's Spectrum rocket would have arced to the north from Andoya Spaceport in Norway and reached a polar orbit. But officials knew there was only a low chance of reaching orbit on the first flight. For this reason, Isar did not fly any customer payloads on the Spectrum rocket, designed to deliver up to 2,200 pounds (1,000 kilograms) of payload mass to low-Earth orbit. [...] Isar declared the launch a success in its public statements, but was it? [...] Metzler, Isar's chief executive, was asked last year what he would consider a successful inaugural flight of Spectrum. "For me, the first flight will be a success if we don't blow up the launch site," he said at the Handelsblatt innovation conference. "That would probably be the thing that would set us back the most in terms of technology and time."

This tempering of expectations sounds remarkably similar to statements made by Elon Musk about SpaceX's first flight of the Starship rocket in 2023. By this measure, Isar officials can be content with Sunday's result. The company is modeling its test strategy on SpaceX's iterative development cycle, where engineers test early, make fixes, and fly again. This is in stark contrast to the way Europe has traditionally developed rockets. The alternative to Isar's approach could be to "spend 15 years researching, doing simulations, and then getting it right the first time," Metzler said. With the first launch of Spectrum, Isar has tested the rocket. Now, it's time to make fixes and fly again. That, Isar's leaders argue, will be the real measure of success. "We're super happy," Metzler said in a press call after Sunday's flight. "It's a time for people to be proud of, and for Europe, frankly, also to be proud of." You can watch a replay of the live launch webcast on YouTube.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Techdirt
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Indiana Court: Finding Drugs On One Person Means Everyone On A Bus Can Be Searched
A whole new level of constitutional wtf-ness has emerged from the Indiana state Appeals Court. Here’s how John Wesley Hall sums it up on FourthAmendment.com: If you’re riding a bus and drugs are found on one, are all subject to search. The answer can’t be yes, but it is here. Exactly. The answer cannot be […]

BBC World News
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Republicans fear Florida election upset could threaten Trump's agenda
With a 218 to 213 majority in the House, Republicans cannot afford to lose winnable elections – let alone slam dunks.

Deutsche Welle
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First German woman in space on historic SpaceX polar orbit mission
Rabea Rogge became the first German woman to go into space aboard a SpaceX rocket flying directly over Earth's polar regions for the first time.

Sky News Home
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'They have to come up with another model': For many the BBC licence fee increase is a bad joke
For those who're on modest means, the cost of the licence fee going up by £5 on 1 April of all days is a bit of a bad joke.

Digital Trends
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Amazon’s next-gen Alexa+ assistant is here, with a few missing tricks
Amazon has finally started the rollout of Alexa+ as an early preview, but it is missing a few advanced features that might take a while.

Digital Trends
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Microsoft finally adds missing Copilot+ AI tools to Intel and AMD PCs
Microsoft is finally bringing the Captions, Cocreator, Restyle Image and Image Creator AI tools to Copilot+ machines powered by Intel and AMD processors.

Gizmodo
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Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse Is Back on the Calendar
The final film in the animated Spider-Man trilogy will be out in 2027.

Gizmodo
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Spider-Man 4 Is Called Spider-Man: Brand New Day
Tom Holland will star in the film, from director Destin Daniel Cretton, out July 31, 2026

Mail Online
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Promising young cowboy, 16, killed in freak accident after his family moved to Montana and opened ranch
A teen rodeo star who trained horses for professional cowboys has tragically died just months after his family relocated to build their ranch business.

Mail Online
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Sydney Sweeney SLAMMED over her 'inappropriate' choice of dress at Glen Powell's sister's wedding
The actress - who 'called off her wedding' to fiancé Jonathan Davino, 41 - turned heads in a baby blue dress from V. Chapman which featured a corset-style bodice and ruffled maxi skirt.

Mail Online
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Doctor Who's Ncuti Gatwa joins Brian May and his wife Anita Dobson at the star-studded season two premiere
The stars were out in force for the premiere of the second season of Doctor Who in London on Monday.

Mail Online
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Kristin Davis admits she was 'mortified' after being 'pressured into stripping' for Sex And The City topless scene
The 60-year-old actress, known for her role as Charlotte York in the hit HBO show, recalled filming the scene for the first episode of Season 5. And she has now described it as 'mortifying.'

Mail Online
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Screen legend who survived WWII to star in Oscar-winning movie and 80s TV phenomenon celebrates 98th birthday
He is a screen legend who starred in an Oscar-winning movie and a popular 80s TV show. Can you guess who he is?

Mail Online
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Trump reveals what caused Don Jr.'s divorce from Vanessa and how Tiger Woods broke news of relationship
The couple, who have been seeing each other since Thanksgiving, went public with their romance on March 23 after DailyMail.com exclusively broke the news.

Mail Online
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Myleene Klass, 46, flashes her underwear in a glitzy semi-sheer gown as she attends SIX The Musical Live! premiere
Myleene Klass was all smiles as she stepped out in London wearing a glitzy semi-sheer dress for the premiere of SIX The Musical Live! on Monday.

Mail Online
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Who is on Celebrity Big Brother 2025? Every rumoured star including Coronation Street legend, huge Love Island star and 90s pop icon - after 'diva star dramatically pulls out'
The much-anticipated new run is set to kick off next month, with names including Love Island's Chris Hughes, Olympian Daley Thompson and Jack P Shepherd among those rumoured.

Mail Online
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Meghan Markle ramps up As Ever publicity efforts with behind the scenes photos and another subscriber email - as her jams hit the market
Meghan Markle is ramping up publicity efforts for her lifestyle brand, As Ever - starting off the week by sharing emails and photos from behind-the-scenes with fans.

Mail Online
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Delta plane passenger details DISGUSTING encounter with fellow traveler
Laura Juntgen recently posted a 10-minute video explaining the shocking moment another passenger projectile vomited on her.

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Celebrity Big Brother hosts Will Best and AJ Odudu reveal who they REALLY wish to see enter the house
Celebrity Big Brother hosts Will Best and AJ Odudu have revealed who they would love to see enter the CBB house one day.

Mail Online
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King Frederik's act of kindness as he and Queen Mary return 'stronger than ever' as a couple following a rocky year
The King of Denmark displayed a sense of chivalry towards his wife on the first day of their state visit of France.

Mail Online
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Joshua Jackson reveals most hated Dawson's Creek storyline: 'I don't really think we needed to go there'
Joshua Jackson, who will always be Team Pacey for what it's worth, shared one storyline that he still doesn't like, 22 years after Dawson's Creek went off the air.

Mail Online
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Trump targets concert ticket scalping with Kid Rock at his side
President Donald Trump on Monday signed an executive order aimed at protecting fans from 'exploitative ticket scalping' and reforming the U.S. live entertainment ticketing industry.

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Why a figure of 48% is important in Trump trade war escalation
Here is a number to lodge in your brain in the coming weeks and months: 48%.

Deutsche Welle
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SpaceX launches private astronauts on polar orbit
Rabea Rogge became the first German woman to go into space aboard a SpaceX rocket flying directly over Earth's polar regions for the first time.

Mail Online
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MAUREEN CALLAHAN: Why it's suddenly time for 'lonely' Prince Harry to leave Meghan Markle in Montecito
Sources have revealed that Harry is 'lonelier than ever' in Montecito. Of course he is. Harry seems to have few friends, and no core support system of his own.

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How UFOs, aliens and virtual reality are inspiring Viktor Hovland's bid for Masters glory
EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW BY RIATH AL-SAMARRAI: To understand the undulations of Viktor Hovland's golf, it is probably necessary to start with the boundaries of his curiosity.

Mail Online
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Pierce Brosnan's wife Keely unveils incredible weight loss transformation at MobLand premiere
Pierce Brosnan enjoyed a date night with longtime wife Keely Shaye Smith on Monday night at the MobLand premiere in New York City.

BBC World News
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Florida special ballot takes voters' pulse as US mid-term elections loom
With a 218 to 213 majority in the House, Republicans cannot afford to lose winnable elections – let alone slam dunks.

The Register
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Generative AI app goes dark after child-like deepfakes found in open S3 bucket
Producing this stuff is bad enough, but d'ya really have to leave all of it on the web for anyone to find? Jeremiah Fowler, an Indiana Jones of insecure systems, says he found a trove of sexually explicit AI-generated images exposed to the public internet – all of which disappeared after he tipped off the team seemingly behind the highly questionable pictures.…

The Register
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Intel's latest CEO Lip Bu Tan: 'You deserve better'
OK, AMD it is, then. Or Nvidia, Arm, Qualcomm, RISC-V, MOS 6502 ... Intel's newly appointed CEO Lip-Bu Tan has used his first major speech to admit the x86 goliath needs to shape up, and sketched out plans to turn things around.…

BBC Top Stories (UK)
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Minister warns of risk from foreign donors
Democracy Minister Rushanara Ali is planning measures to protect against foreign political interference.

XKCD
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Orogeny

Mail Online
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Missing girl, 11, 'was playing at the River Thames with pals when she slipped and fell in' - as search and rescue teams scour London waterway
A major search operation was launched in Woolwich, London , after midday on Monday after the youngster vanished while she was said to have been down at the water with her friends.

Sky News Home
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Satellite images show extent of devastation in Myanmar
Even with thousands dead and entire neighbourhoods levelled, the ruling military junta in Myanmar maintains its long-term ban on international journalists entering the country.

ZeroHedge News
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US-China Nuclear Fusion Race: The Battle For Energy And Military Dominance
US-China Nuclear Fusion Race: The Battle For Energy And Military Dominance

Authored by Antonio Graceffo via The Epoch Times,

The United States and China are locked in a high-stakes race to build the world’s first grid-scale nuclear fusion power plant, a competition that could shape the future of energy in the 21st century—and potentially equip the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) with the most advanced weapons ever imagined.



A fusion reactor is a device designed to generate energy by replicating the same nuclear process that powers the sun—fusing light atomic nuclei, such as hydrogen, under extreme heat and pressure. Unlike nuclear fission, which splits atoms to release energy, fusion produces no greenhouse gases and generates far more power with minimal long-term radioactive waste.

The potential of fusion energy is revolutionary; it could provide virtually limitless, carbon-free power and reshape global energy markets. Fusion, often called the “holy grail” of clean energy, produces immense power without greenhouse gas emissions or long-term radioactive waste, potentially becoming a $1 trillion market by 2050.

The United States first harnessed fusion in the 1952 hydrogen bomb test, but controlling plasma for power generation has remained a challenge. While private U.S. investment in fusion startups has surged past $8 billion—backed by major companies like Amazon, Google, and Meta—China dominates in public funding and reactor construction. Beijing invests about $1.5 billion annually in fusion, more than any other nation, and nearly double U.S. federal spending, according to the U.S. Energy Department’s Office of Fusion Energy Sciences.

China has taken the lead in fusion-related patents, produces 10 times more Ph.D. graduates in fusion science, and is aggressively securing critical materials such as superconducting magnets, specialized metals, and semiconductors. China’s aggressive approach includes rapid reactor construction and experimental designs that may not be viable under U.S. regulations.

Satellite images from Planet Labs reveal China’s construction of a massive laser-fusion site in 2024. Set in the Mianyana mountains, in southwestern China, the facility features a containment dome twice the size of the U.S. National Ignition Facility. Experts suggest this could be a fusion-fission hybrid, a model more feasible under China’s state-controlled system.

The nation that first achieves commercial-scale fusion will control a critical pillar of the global economy. U.S. senators and fusion experts are calling for a $10 billion federal investment to maintain leadership, but with government downsizing under Trump’s second term, future funding remains uncertain. If China wins the fusion race, it could dominate the future energy market, much as it has with solar panels, electric vehicle batteries, and rare earth minerals.

Beyond economic implications, fusion energy development carries significant geopolitical and national security concerns. Control over fusion technology would give the CCP immense diplomatic leverage, allowing it to dictate terms to energy-dependent nations, just as it currently does with its near-monopoly on rare earth minerals.

A breakthrough in fusion could also power future military infrastructure, including naval vessels, space-based systems, and directed energy weapons. The ability to generate unlimited energy on-site would revolutionize military logistics, making bases, aircraft carriers, and even space stations self-sufficient without the need for vulnerable supply chains.

China’s development of fusion-fission hybrid reactors raises concerns about new nuclear capabilities, as these systems could blur the lines between civilian energy production and military applications. While fusion itself is not classified as weapons technology under existing treaties, hybrid reactors could circumvent non-proliferation agreements.

Beijing could integrate fusion technology into key military advancements where the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is already making significant progress, including pure fusion weapons, enhanced thermonuclear warheads, directed energy weapons, advanced naval propulsion, space-based systems, neutron bombs, electromagnetic pulse (EMP) weapons, hypersonic technology, and undersea warfare capabilities.

Fourth-generation nuclear weapons, including pure fusion weapons, represent a major shift in nuclear technology. Unlike traditional nuclear weapons that rely on fission or fission-triggered thermonuclear reactions, these advanced weapons use alternative nuclear processes that do not fall under existing arms control treaties, such as the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT).

Unlike conventional thermonuclear bombs that rely on an atomic explosion to ignite fusion, these weapons do not require a fission trigger. Instead, they could achieve controlled fusion through high-powered lasers or magnetic confinement, reducing radioactive fallout. This makes pure fusion weapons both militarily viable and politically acceptable, as they produce intense neutron radiation with minimal blast effects, enabling precise tactical strikes with limited collateral damage.

Additionally, these weapons boast higher energy efficiency, transferring more energy directly to the target and making them significantly more destructive for their size. Their ability to concentrate neutron radiation while minimizing traditional nuclear blast damage could revolutionize modern warfare. At the same time, China is working to dominate the fusion materials supply chain—controlling critical components for reactors, superconductors, and advanced energy weapons—giving the PLA a significant asymmetric advantage.

China’s lead in fusion has far-reaching implications beyond economics and energy security, presenting serious national defense risks. If the Chinese regime masters fusion technology first, it could leverage its energy dominance to reshape global politics while enhancing the PLA’s combat capabilities and challenging U.S. military dominance.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 20:55

ZeroHedge News
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Netanyahu Names New Israeli Spy Chief Despite Court Blocking Ronen Bar Dismissal
Netanyahu Names New Israeli Spy Chief Despite Court Blocking Ronen Bar Dismissal

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is pressing forward with replacing the fired head of Israeli Security Agency (Shin Bet) chief Ronen Bar, despite a temporary injunction against the dismissal issued by the country's supreme court.

Netanyahu has named retired Vice-Admiral Eli Sharvit, former head of the Israeli Navy, as the new security chief. The prime minister's office said Sharvit was chosen after "conducting in-depth interviews with seven worthy candidates."
Ronen Bar (right). via GPO

Adm. Sharvit served in the Israeli armed forces for 36 years, and had led "the maritime defense of the territorial waters and conducted complex operations against Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran."

Netanyahu's cabinet had approved the March 31 firing of Bar, citing "persistent personal and professional distrust" of him and his leadership over the security agency.

The dismissal of a Shin Bet was a first in Israel's history, and sparked massive street protests - given also a host of other controversial Netanyahu decisions related to resuming the Gaza war.

Critics say that Bar's firing is a politically motivated attempt to shield Netanyahu from investigation, given that Shin Bet and the police have been probing alleged unlawful ties between two of Netanyahu's aides and Qatar.

Attorney General Gali Baharav Miara is also in the crossfire, as Netanyahu is seeking her dismissal as well. She also has warned that the dismissal of the Shin Bet chief poses a conflict of interest.

Meanwhile Israeli media reports that pressure is also being put on Netanyahu from the AG's office. "Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara instructs the police to summon Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to give testimony in the ongoing investigation into his aides over their allegedly unlawful ties to Qatar," according to Channel 12.

"Netanyahu’s testimony would be given as someone with knowledge of the affair and not as a suspect at this stage," the report says.

As for Bar, he too has described his dismissal as ultimately motivated by Netanyahu’s "personal interests". In a letter he strongly suggested the problems which led to the security failures of Oct.7 originated from the top: "a policy of quiet had enabled Hamas to undergo massive military buildup" - he said of the lead-up to the terror attack on southern Israel. Netanyahu has in turn blamed Bar for massive security failures.
Eli Sharvit, a retired Israeli navy commander, named as new head of Shin Bet.

Bar added: "The dismissal of the head of the service at this time at the initiative of the Prime Minister sends a message to all those involved, a message that could put the optimal outcome of the investigation at risk. This is a direct danger to the security of the State of Israel."

His tenure was supposed to extend and end next year, and has been investigating Netanyahu’s close aides for alleged breaches of national security. In addition to the suspicious Qatar links and dealings, this includes allegations of selective leaks given to the media in order to improve the Netanyahu government's image.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 21:20

ZeroHedge News
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The Epidemic Beneath The Surface: Disconnection, Discomfort, & The Death Of Resilience
The Epidemic Beneath The Surface: Disconnection, Discomfort, & The Death Of Resilience

Authored by Mollie Elngelhart via The Epoch Times,

The phone rang the other morning. It was my ex-husband, letting me know that a longtime friend of ours—someone I had dated in my 20s—had died of a heart attack related to drug use. My heart sank, but sadly, I wasn’t surprised. I get these calls multiple times a year now. Two of my three best friends from high school have lost their younger brothers. Countless kids I went to school with are gone. The amount of senseless death—whether from illegal drugs or legal pharmaceuticals—is staggering. And it’s heartbreaking.



What has happened to our ability to sit in discomfort? What has happened to our stamina for life, especially life when it gets hard?

As an employer of more than 350 people over the past decade, I’ve seen a shift in the younger generation. Many don’t seem to know how to tolerate even mild discomfort. There’s a deep urge to escape anything that doesn’t feel good—whether through substances, screens, sugar, or distractions. And I can’t help but trace this trend back to childhood: when we hand kids a screen so we can finish dinner in peace, when we give them sugar to soothe a meltdown, when we teach them—without ever saying it out loud—that the goal is to feel good all the time.

We’ve created a culture that treats discomfort like a pathology. If something is hard, we assume it must be wrong. But that’s not how life works. 

Humanity has been uncomfortable for most of its existence. 

Pain, struggle, and uncertainty are baked into the human experience. Maybe it’s not discomfort that’s the problem—but our inability to face it.

And maybe—just maybe—that inability is linked to something deeper than parenting, media, or education.

As a regenerative farmer, I look at the world through the lens of soil and microbiology, and I can’t help but wonder: Is part of our spiritual and emotional fragility rooted in the literal lack of microbiology in our bodies?

One in three children born today in the United States never passes through the vaginal canal, missing the crucial exposure to the mother’s microbiome. Rates of breastfeeding continue to drop, leaving babies without the microbial foundation that nature designed. Add to that a diet made up of sterile, processed food from nutrient-depleted soils, and we have a recipe for a generation physically and emotionally disconnected from the natural systems that support resilience.

Healthy soil and a healthy gut share over 70 percent of the same DNA. That’s not a coincidence. We are meant to be part of that living system. And when we separate ourselves from it—through our food, our birth practices, our lifestyles—we suffer.

Cultures that still live closely connected to nature—who cook over fire, grow and harvest their own food, and sleep on dirt floors—don’t experience the epidemic of suicide and overdose we see in modern society. Do they experience hardship? Of course. But their drive to live is still intact. They have a rootedness that protects them from the kind of existential despair we’re drowning in here.

And there’s science to back this up. Studies have shown that working with your hands in the soil can be as effective—or even more effective—than SSRIs in treating depression. The microbes in soil literally activate serotonin production in the brain. So why aren’t we prioritizing reconnection with nature in our solutions? Why isn’t getting kids outside, getting their hands dirty, and building real, physical resilience a national conversation?

Yes, we should limit screen time. Yes, we should cut back on sugar. But more importantly, we need to stop teaching our children that discomfort is something to be avoided at all costs. It’s okay to be bored. It’s okay to be hot, or tired, or challenged. Just because something feels bad doesn’t mean it is bad. Most worthwhile things—motherhood, entrepreneurship, marriage, community, growth—will feel hard at some point. That’s not a flaw. That’s the path.

Are we raising a generation of escape artists, or are we raising people who can stay present through difficulty, learn from it, and grow?

Our society turns to drugs, food, porn, social media, and endless forms of distraction to escape the simple reality of being human. But what if we taught our children—and reminded ourselves—that emotions are not emergencies? That pain is a teacher? That we don’t have to be ping-pong balls to our thoughts and feelings, believing every one of them as truth?

We can learn to sit in discomfort and listen. Sometimes, discomfort is just life asking us to change, to grow, to stretch, or to sharpen a skill. And sometimes, it’s just part of being alive.

I believe our disconnection from nature, from hard work, and from each other is at the root of the mental health and drug overdose epidemic. I, for one, am tired of getting phone calls letting me know someone else has died from escapism.

So how do we stop the cycle?

We start by embracing discomfort—not running from it. We model presence instead of avoidance. 

We raise kids who know how to work hard, wait, be bored, get dirty, and stay with what’s real. 

We reconnect with nature, with food grown in healthy soil, with people we trust, with rituals that remind us who we are.

We stop outsourcing our resilience and reclaim the tools that make us human.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 21:45

The Hill
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Trump administration cutting some funds to Planned Parenthood
The Trump administration will withhold some federal funding from Planned Parenthood beginning Tuesday, potentially making it harder for Americans to access birth control, cancer screenings, and reproductive health care, the organization said in a press release.  Nine Planned Parenthood affiliates received notices late Monday about the Trump administration’s plans to withhold Title X funding starting...

Sky News Home
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Mother killed by drug-driver who was still on the road because of blood test delays
Motorists who fail roadside drug tests are being allowed to continue to drive for up to six months because of a backlog in testing confirmatory blood samples.

Slashdot
Open 
'There is No Vibe Engineering'
Software engineer Sergey Tselovalnikov weighs in on the new hype: The term caught on and Twitter quickly flooded with posts about how AI has radically transformed coding and will soon replace all software engineers. While AI undeniably impacts the way we write code, it hasn't fundamentally changed our role as engineers. Allow me to explain.

[...] Vibe coding is interacting with the codebase via prompts. As the implementation is hidden from the "vibe coder", all the engineering concerns will inevitably get ignored. Many of the concerns are hard to express in a prompt, and many of them are hard to verify by only inspecting the final artifact. Historically, all engineering practices have tried to shift all those concerns left -- to the earlier stages of development when they're cheap to address. Yet with vibe coding, they're shifted very far to the right -- when addressing them is expensive.

The question of whether an AI system can perform the complete engineering cycle and build and evolve software the same way a human can remains open. However, there are no signs of it being able to do so at this point, and if it one day happens, it won't have anything to do with vibe coding -- at least the way it's defined today.

[...] It is possible that there'll be a future where software is built from vibe-coded blocks, but the work of designing software able to evolve and scale doesn't go away. That's not vibe engineering -- that's just engineering, even if the coding part of it will look a bit different.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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'Perfect explosive mixture' was flagged years before fatal water plant blast
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British pro-lifer's protest in Bournemouth sparks row with Donald Trump - as US 'vows no free trade without free speech'
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Le Pen conviction ‘a very big deal’ – Trump

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Trump prepares to unveil reciprocal tariffs as markets brace amid trade war fears
President promises he will be ‘very kind’ but critics warn his strategy risks triggering chain reaction and global trade warAs Donald Trump prepared to unveil a swathe of reciprocal tariffs, global markets braced and some Republican senators voiced their opposition to a strategy that critics warn risks a global trade war, provoking retaliation by major trading partners such as China, Canada and the European Union.The US president said on Monday he would be “very kind” to trading partners when he unveils further tariffs this week, potentially as early as Tuesday night. Continue reading...

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Trial for victims to attend parole hearings rolled out across England and Wales
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#9252 Broadband (xDSL) - Partial Exchange Outage - MRMAC (Macclesfield) (New)
Our engineers are investigating and further updates will be posted here when available. Zen regret any inconvenience this may cause.

Start: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 02:20

Edited: Tue, 1st Apr 2025 02:21

Status: Partial

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When a litter of kittens was taken from their sick mom at birth, a cat rescuer kindly fostered five of them. But it was the rescuer's 3-month-old tabby cat, Poppy, who took on the mothering role, purring like a revved up scooter while cuddling two of them in her arms. — Read the rest
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Sen. Cory Booker gives marathon speech on Senate floor to protest Trump administration's actions
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Promising to lead a 'global crackdown' on illegal migrants, Sir Keir Starmer wrote in yesterday's Mail: 'Believe me, I get it.'

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Virginia Giuffre in hospital after 'serious' car accident
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Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan Says Company Will Spin Off Non-Core Units
Intel Chief Executive Officer Lip-Bu Tan said the chipmaker will spin off assets that aren't central to its mission and create new products including custom semiconductors to try to better align itself with customers. From a report: Intel needs to replace the engineering talent it has lost, improve its balance sheet and better attune manufacturing processes to meet the needs of potential customers, Tan said. Speaking at his first public appearance as CEO, at the Intel Vision conference Monday in Las Vegas, Tan didn't specify what parts of Intel he believes are no longer central to its future.

"We have a lot of hard work ahead," Tan said, addressing the company's customers in the audience. "There are areas where we've fallen short of your expectations." The veteran semiconductor executive is trying to restore the fortunes of a company that dominated an industry for decades, but now finds itself chasing rivals in most of the areas that define success in the field. A key question confronting its leadership is whether a turnaround is best served by the company remaining whole or splitting up its key product and manufacturing operations. Tan gave no indication that he will seek to divest either part of Intel. Instead, he highlighted the problems he needs to fix to get both units performing more successfully. Intel's chips for data center and AI-related work in particular are not good enough, he said. "We fell behind on innovation," the CEO said. "We have been too slow to adapt and meet your needs."





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I was cleared of stealing £19,000 worth of designer items because I have kleptomania and voices in my head told me to do it
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From preventing diabetic foot ulcers in Peru to teaching Pakistanis about their country's 'violent past', see ALL the 3,250 projects Britain's foreign aid funding is being spent on
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Iran's armed forces being urged to NOW strike the UK after making threats to target British forces 'to stop Trump's attack'
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iOS 19 Expected to Run on These iPhones
iOS 19 will not be available on the iPhone XR, ‌iPhone‌ XS, or the ‌iPhone‌ XS Max, according a private account on social media site X that has accurately provided information on device compatibility in the past.





The ‌iPhone‌ XR, ‌iPhone‌ XS, and ‌iPhone‌ XS Max all have an A12 Bionic chip, so it looks like ‌iOS 19‌ will discontinue support for that chip. All other iPhones that run iOS 18 are expected to support ‌iOS 19‌, with a full compatibility list below.



iPhone 16e

iPhone 16

‌iPhone 16‌ Plus

iPhone 16 Pro

‌iPhone 16 Pro‌ Max

iPhone 15

‌iPhone 15‌ Plus

‌iPhone 15‌ Pro

‌iPhone 15‌ Pro Max

‌iPhone‌ 14

‌iPhone‌ 14 Plus

‌iPhone‌ 14 Pro

‌iPhone‌ 14 Pro Max

‌iPhone‌ 13

‌iPhone‌ 13 mini

‌iPhone‌ 13 Pro

‌iPhone‌ 13 Pro Max

‌iPhone‌ 12

iPhone 12 mini

‌iPhone‌ 12 Pro

iPhone 12 Pro Max

‌iPhone‌ 11

‌iPhone‌ 11 Pro

iPhone 11 Pro Max

‌iPhone‌ SE (2nd generation or later)



While these iPhones will support ‌iOS 19‌, advanced features may be limited to newer iPhones with faster processors. Apple Intelligence in ‌iOS 18‌, for example, only runs on the ‌iPhone 15‌ Pro and the ‌iPhone 16‌ models.



As for iPadOS 19, it is expected to drop support for the seventh-generation low-cost iPad with A10 Fusion chip. It sounds like iPads that are equipped with the A12 Bionic such as the iPad mini 5 will be compatible with iPadOS 19.



The source that shared the information also provided details on the devices that would be compatible with ‌iOS 18‌ ahead of when ‌iOS 18‌ was unveiled.



Apple is planning to introduce ‌iOS 19‌ and iPadOS 19 at the Worldwide Developers Conference that is set to begin on Monday, June 9.Related Roundup: iOS 19This article, 'iOS 19 Expected to Run on These iPhones' first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

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Hegseth Circulated Secret Pentagon Memo On Preparing For War With China
Hegseth Circulated Secret Pentagon Memo On Preparing For War With China

Over the weekend The Washington Post revealed that Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth distributed a memo in mid-March which ordered the Pentagon to prioritize its war-planning focus on potential future conflict with China.

The memo, called the Interim National Defense Strategic Guidance "outlines, in broad and sometimes partisan detail, the execution of President Donald Trump’s vision to prepare for and win a potential war against Beijing and defend the United States from threats in the ‘near abroad,’ including Greenland and the Panama Canal."
Getty Images

It's nothing new that the Pentagon considers China a 'top pacing threat' - but it does confirm that the Trump administration would likely be willing to go to war in the event of a mainland invasion of the self-ruled island.

The memo interestingly presented a strategy of "assuming risk" in Europe and other parts of the world, to refocus efforts on top nuclear-armed rivals. 

The Pentagon’s force planning and new focus "will consider conflict only with Beijing when planning contingencies for a major power war" and leave the "threat from Moscow largely attended by European allies" - according to the report.

Hegseth wrote that China "is the Department’s sole pacing threat, and denial of a Chinese fait accompli seizure of Taiwan — while simultaneously defending the US homeland is the Department’s sole pacing scenario."

The memo urges NATO allies take on a "far greater" burden-sharing on defense, and puts Europe on notice in the event of greater threats from Russia:


Hegseth’s guidance acknowledges that the U.S. is unlikely to provide substantial, if any, support to Europe in the case of Russian military advances, noting that Washington intends to push NATO allies to take primary defense of the region. The U.S. will support Europe with nuclear deterrence of Russia, and NATO should only count on U.S. forces not required for homeland defense or China deterrence missions, the document says.

A significant increase in Europe sharing its defense burden, the document says, "will also ensure NATO can reliably deter or defeat Russian aggression even if deterrence fails and the United States is already engaged in, or must withhold forces to deter, a primary conflict in another region."


As for Taiwan specifically, it lays out ways the Pentagon intends to help its ally bolster defenses, short of outright entering any direct conflict.

WaPo and others have said the Heritage Foundation think tank is the driving force behind the strategic ideas presented in the memo.


Secret Pentagon strategy memo on China and homeland defense has Heritage Foundation fingerprintshttps://t.co/EeTzPhlzEl
— Littlewisehen (@littlewisehen) March 29, 2025
Hegseth's plans specify a "denial defense" of Taiwan - according to the memo - which will include "increasing the troop presence through submarines, bombers, unmanned ships, and specialty units from the Army and Marine Corps, as well as a greater focus on bombs that destroy reinforced and subterranean targets."

*  *  *

Top sellers at ZH Store last week:

IQ Biologix Colostrum (25% IgG from first milking of grassfed cows)
IQ Astaxanthin Ultimate Antioxidant (6,000x stronger than vitamin C)
ZeroHedge Multitool (Extremely solid, very sharp, comes with ZH Logo belt pouch)
Anza Red-Black Infinity Handle Knife (Made in the USA from carbon steel)


Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 18:50

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Going Bust: Hooters To Re-Jiggle After Filing Chapter 11 Bankruptcy In Founder-Led Buyout
Going Bust: Hooters To Re-Jiggle After Filing Chapter 11 Bankruptcy In Founder-Led Buyout

Update (1925ET): Well that didn't take long...

After months of speculation, Hooters has finally filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy - with a plan to bounce back that includes selling all of its company-owned restaurants to a franchise group backed by its original founders, while lenders will provide additional funds throughout the reorganization proceedings as it seeks to address its $376 million in debt.



The move comes after the chain failed to recover from the pandemic - doing $867 million in US sales in 2023 - just 1% more than the previous year, according to market research from Technomic reported by the WSJ.


The privately-owned company, which shares a private equity owner with recently-bankrupt TGI Fridays, intends to sell all corporate-owned locations to a buyer group comprised of two existing Hooters franchisees, who operate 30 high-performing Hooters locations in the U.S., mainly in Florida and Illinois.


The company currently directly owns and operates 151 locations, with another 154 operated by franchisees - mostly in the USA.

*  *  *

Breast sellers at ZH Store last week:

IQ Biologix Colostrum (25% IgG from first milking of grassfed cows)
IQ Astaxanthin Ultimate Antioxidant (6,000x stronger than vitamin C)
ZeroHedge Multitool (Extremely solid, very sharp, comes with ZH Logo belt pouch)
Anza Red-Black Infinity Handle Knife (Made in the USA from carbon steel)


*  *  *

With Hooters on the verge of bankruptcy, the legendary restaurant where you can eat mediocre food and check out tits (and pay in cash so your wife doesn't find out) is getting rid of Bikini Nights and skimpy outfits, and hopes that an improvement in the food will stave off doom.



Neil Kiefer, CEO of parent company HMC Hospitality Group, told Bloomberg he's calling the 'family friendly' changes "re-Hooterization."

"You go to some parts of the country and people say, ‘Oh, I could never go to Hooters, my wife would kill me," said Kiefer. "That’s depressing to us. We want to change that."

According to the report, Hooters also plans to use fresher ingredients in the kitchen and provide faster service.
In 2011, waitstaff sing happy birthday to a customer at a Hooters restaurant in Colonie, New York.Photographer: Albany Times Union/Hearst Newspa/Hearst Newspapers

The move comes after the chain has closed several locations across the country - with 40 shuttered last year, and the remaining 300 on the line. At its peak in 2008, there were 400 locations.

In 2021, the chain unveiled a new uniform featuring "wedgie" micro shorts - which resembled bikini bottoms, and which some waitresses called "porn."



According to industry analyst Aaron Allen, "For a business to be successful and sustainable, it helps to appeal to more than just men."

* * *

We've sold a TON of these lighter / flashlight combos...
Buy two for free shipping! (over $50)

Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back

The turnaround plan would likely see HMC and other Hooters franchisees take over most of the US locations that are currently owned and run by Hooters of America, which would likely see the closure of some locations, according to people familiar with the discussions. HOA is currently owned by Nord Bay Capital and TriArtisan Capital Advisors, LLC.


The end result is that HMC, should the plan go through, would help oversee the overall brand and advise franchisees on how to operate. The fix, according to Kiefer, boils down to three principles: good food, good service and regular reinvestment in the stores’ operations, something he says has been lacking at the eateries owned by HOA.

“There’s a noticeable difference,” Kiefer said. “The food’s different, the service is different — I hope to correct it all.”


In 2022, HOA's owners, among other things, added $50 million in subordinated debt, after issuing approximately $300 million in asset-backed bonds in 2014, which were packaged as 'whole-business securitizations,' pledging most of its assets, including franchise fees, as collateral. The current bankruptcy under consideration would see certain holders of its securitized debt team up with HMC to facilitate a change of control, according to the report. In this scenario, the debt holders would likely agree to restructure or roll their debt into securities with a longer maturity and the same or similar collateral pools.

RIP this:



Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 19:25

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Gabbard Hails Trump As 'President Of Peace' Despite Yemen Bombings
Gabbard Hails Trump As 'President Of Peace' Despite Yemen Bombings

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard on Saturday called President Trump the "president of peace" - declaring that his "ending bloodshed across the world and will deliver lasting peace in the Middle East."

"President Trump IS the President of Peace. He is ending bloodshed across the world and will deliver lasting peace in the Middle East," Gabbard wrote on X. "Where Joe Biden failed, President Trump will succeed." 

However, anti-war critics on both the Left and the Right have pointed to the now two week long US bombing raids in Yemen, as well as Trump's strong support for Israel as it resumes its anti-Hamas attacks in the Gaza Strip, which has resulted in huge numbers of civilian deaths.
Via Reuters

Gabbard made the comments in relation to a video post featuring Trump saying his administration was "engaged in relentless diplomacy to forge a lasting peace in the Middle East, building on the historic Abraham Accords."

Gabbard has appeared openly supportive of Trump’s daily bombing campaign in Yemen, in response to Houthi attacks on Red Sea shipping, and ballistic missiles fired on Israel. Her calling Trump a 'peace' president could be more in reference to his efforts to achieve peace in Ukraine, however. The Trump admin does also see the Abraham Accords as key to lasting peace between Israel and the Palestinians.

But it must be remembered that as a Democratic member of Congress, Gabbard opposed the first Trump administration’s intervention in Yemen. That was a time when the US was a close part of the UAE-Saudi coalition which sought to prevent the Houthi rebel advance over the Arabian peninsula country.

At the time, Gabbard in interviews and official statements called out the US-backed Saudi war against the Houthis as "genocidal". For example, she had said--


"It is absolutely outrageous that the United States has continued its support for years now for Saudi Arabia’s genocidal war in Yemen that has killed thousands and thousands of innocent Yemeni people and caused mass starvation," Gabbard said in a 2018 interview with The Real News.


She had not infrequently blasted the US campaign at the time as not authorized by Congress, highlighting that this made it illegal under the Constitution. Still, there are elements of the past two decades of the 'War on Terror' which she has defended - for example going after Islamic extremists and al-Qaeda in special operations.

In past appearances on major platforms like Joe Rogan's podcast, Gabbard had ripped the military-industrial complex for bombing "innocent people in countries like Yemen" - and without necessary Congressional debate or authorization.


If the main way our President creates a strong economy is to sell weapons to Saudis to bomb innocent people in countries like Yemen, then we need a new president. We need a commander-in-chief who knows the real cost of war & works for peace, not incite more death & destruction pic.twitter.com/SSySbcPiKo
— Tulsi Gabbard 🌺 (@TulsiGabbard) May 23, 2019
Congressional representatives Thomas Massie (R) and Ro Khanna (D) have been among the lone voices demanding that Trump seek authorization from Congress for the now daily Pentagon actions in Yemen.

"Trump promised to end endless wars—now he’s bombing Yemen without Congressional approval. I stood up when Biden did it, and I’ll stand up now," Khanna wrote on X.

Interestingly, it must be recalled that Khanna and Gabbard teamed up back in 2019 to pass a War Powers Resolution which sought to halt America's involvement in Yemen. Ironically this was defeated by President Trump's veto during his first administration.


President Trump IS the President of Peace. He is ending bloodshed across the world and will deliver lasting peace in the Middle East.
Where Joe Biden failed, President Trump will succeed. https://t.co/kcQalOyRLa
— DNI Tulsi Gabbard (@DNIGabbard) March 29, 2025
Trump wrote at the time, "This resolution is an unnecessary, dangerous attempt to weaken my constitutional authorities, endangering the lives of American citizens and brave service members, both today and in the future."

Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 19:40

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US Deports 17 Accused Terrorist Gang Members To El Salvador, Rubio Says
US Deports 17 Accused Terrorist Gang Members To El Salvador, Rubio Says

Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times,

U.S. officials transferred 17 accused Tren de Aragua and MS-13 terrorist gang members to El Salvador on Sunday evening, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed on Monday morning.



Both gangs were designated by the Department of State as foreign terrorist organizations in February, as the Trump administration attempts to target illegal immigrants with criminal records.

Describing it as a “successful counter-terrorism operation,” Rubio said the U.S. military transferred 17 individuals from Tren de Aragua, a Venezuelan-based gang, and MS-13, a Salvadoran gang, to the Central American country. U.S. officials worked alongside Salvadoran authorities to assist in the deportations, he added.


“These criminals will no longer terrorize our communities and citizens,” Rubio said. 

“Once again, we extend our gratitude to ... the government of El Salvador for their unparalleled partnership in making our countries safe against transnational crime and terrorism.”


Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele confirmed the U.S. action on social media platform X, writing that all those who were deported from the United States “are confirmed murderers and high-profile offenders, including six child rapists.”

In the social media post, Bukele included a video of what appears to be U.S. military officials handing over the individuals to Salvadoran custody before their heads were shaved and they were transferred to a prison.


U.S. Transfers 17 Dangerous Criminals to El Salvador Prison in Joint Operation
In a coordinated effort between U.S. and Salvadoran authorities, 17 high-profile criminals linked to the Tren de Aragua and MS-13 gangs have been transferred to a prison in El Salvador.
Salvadoran… pic.twitter.com/piTEPmrens
— Breaking News of the Day (@Breakingne66541) March 31, 2025
The Trump administration is currently challenging a federal judge’s order to prevent U.S. officials from using the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to implement deportations of alleged members of both gangs. 

Earlier in March, U.S. District Judge James Boasberg blocked the administration from using the law to implement the deportations and later sought details about why a deportation flight wasn’t turned around.

Last week, a U.S. appeals court declined to block Boasberg’s order that blocked the deportation of Venezuelan illegal immigrants to El Salvador, prompting the government to petition the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene.


“Here, the district court’s orders have rebuffed the President’s judgments as to how to protect the Nation against foreign terrorist organizations and risk debilitating effects for delicate foreign negotiations,” Acting Solicitor General Sarah Harris wrote in the court filing to the high court.


In the legal spat, attorneys from the American Civil Liberties Union initially filed their lawsuit on behalf of five Venezuelan illegal immigrants who were being held in Texas, hours after Trump invoked the Alien Enemies Act.

Aside from the appeals, the Trump administration has invoked a “state secrets privilege” and indicated it would not give Boasberg any additional information about the deportations. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump and some Republicans have called for Boasberg to be impeached and removed.

In a statement responding to those calls, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts said earlier this month that he believes “impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a judicial decision.”

Trump has made mass deportations and imposing stricter border controls a priority under his second term. In the early days of his administration, the president signed a number of executive orders and issued directives relating to the border and the removal of illegal immigrants, including ending the Biden-era CPB One app, declaring a national emergency at the southern U.S. border, and ending birthright citizenship for children of illegal immigrant parents.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 20:05

ZeroHedge News
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Houthi Ballistic Missile Launches On Israel Now Daily, Despite US Operation
Houthi Ballistic Missile Launches On Israel Now Daily, Despite US Operation

US aerial assaults on Yemen have been coming daily for two weeks now, but so have Houthi ballistic missile launches on Israel. Particularly the past week has seen constant direct launches on Israel.

Sunday has seen the eighth Houthi ballistic missile attack on Israel since March 18. This fresh launch, targeting central Israel, was reportedly intercepted by Israeli air defenses.



The Israel Defense Forces indicated the missile aimed at Israel was actually intercepted before crossing the country’s borders, as was the case with some prior missiles over the past days.

At least one woman was injured while trying to get to a bomb shelter, as alert sirens went off across central and southern Israel.

The Houthis have vowed to keep up their launces on Israel and warships in the Red Sea, after resuming the attacks in the wake of the Israel-Hamas ceasefire collapsing.

Houthi spokesman Yahya Saree in a Sunday statement said more attacks had been launched on the US aircraft carrier currently patrolling the Red Sea.

He said the group has "clashed with the USS Harry S. Truman three times in the preceding 24 hours, using missiles, drones, and naval forces."

Saree pledged that Ansarallah forces will keep "supporting the oppressed Palestinian people until the aggression against Gaza is stopped."

The Pentagon and US Central Command have largely kept silent on the details of these purported attacks on the carrier and US warships.

In prior instances the US has said such attacks didn't even come close to hitting any US naval assets. However, CENTCOM has not provided daily updates, only tending to emphasize the ongoing US strikes on targets inside Yemen.


🚨Sirens sounding across central Israel due to projectile fire from Yemen🚨 pic.twitter.com/AHMnLhz4bz
— Israel Defense Forces (@IDF) March 30, 2025
The White House has hailed the ongoing Yemen operations as successful, yet this is dubious given the Houthis have not relented in their own drone and missile launches, but have instead stepped up these attacks. There seems to be no clearly defined end-game, which is typically the case every time Washington gets bogged down in the Middle East.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 20:30

The Hill
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Stephen A. Smith on Trump third-term talk: I thought Republicans 'preached about the Constitution'
Media personality Stephen A. Smith blasted Republicans for entertaining the possibility of President Trump running for a third term in office. “Wait a minute, you’re a Republican voter out there. I thought your party was the party that preached about the Constitution. I thought your party was the party that said, ‘We’re not violating, we’re...

The Hill
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Sen. Lindsey Graham on third Trump term: 'Ask me in '27'
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) sidestepped a question Monday about whether President Trump could run for a third term in the White House. “Do you think Trump can run for a third term?” a reporter asked Graham on Monday. “Ask me in ’27,” Graham responded, before walking away. The exchange comes amid heightened debate about whether...

The Guardian (UK)
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Ukraine war briefing: EU ministers call out Kremlin for delaying ceasefire
Pin down Putin over peace talks, say foreign ministers, as Peskov talks of ‘drawn-out process’; Ukraine seeks changes to minerals deal. What we know on day 1,133 Continue reading...

BBC Top Stories (US)
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US says law applies to 'all parties' in Gaza
The deaths of 15 people including paramedics in a convoy have been blamed on Israel's military.

ZDNet News
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The 25+ best Amazon Spring Sale deals under $50
ZDNET found the best deals under $50 during Amazon's Big Spring Sale. But hurry — the deals end tonight.

ZDNet News
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The 140+ best Amazon Spring Sale tech deals live: Last chance to save
Amazon's Big Spring Sale ends in a few hours. Save on these handpicked deals on headphones, TVs, laptops, and more while the seasonal offers last.

Sky News Home
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Cost of living calculator: See how much your bills are going up
Households across the country face higher bills from 1 April. Use our calculator to find out how you'll be affected.

FlightAware Squawks
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Boeing Faces 'The Deadliest Corporate Crime' Trial As Judge Sets June Date In 737 MAX Fraud Case
Boeing is set for a pivotal moment in its ongoing legal battle, with a U.S. judge scheduling a criminal fraud trial for Jun. 23, highlighting the aerospace giant’s persistent challenges stemming from two fatal 737 MAX crashes that claimed 346 lives.

EFF
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EFF Urges Third Circuit to Join the Legal Chorus: No One Owns the Law
Two appeals courts have recently rejected efforts by private parties to use copyright to restrict access to the laws that most directly affect ordinary citizens: regulations that ensure our homes, workplaces, devices, and many other products, are safe and fit for purpose. Apparently hoping the third time will be the charm, a standards organization is asking the Third Circuit Court of Appeals to break ranks and hold that a private party that helps develop a law also gets to own that law. In an amicus brief filed with co-counsel Abigail Burton and Samuel Silver of Welsh & Recker, P.C., on behalf of multiple entities— including Watch Duty, iFixit, Public.Resource.Org, and multiple library associations—EFF urged the court to instead join the judicial consensus and recognize that no one owns the law.
EFF urged the court to join the judicial consensus and recognize that no one owns the law.
This case concerns UpCodes, a company that has created a database of building codes—like the National Electrical Code—that includes codes incorporated by reference into law. ASTM, a private organization that coordinated the development of some of those codes, insists that it retains copyright in them even after they have been adopted into law, and therefore has the right to control how the public accesses and shares them. Fortunately, neither the Constitution nor the Copyright Act support that theory. Faced with similar claims, some courts, including the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, have held that the codes lose copyright protection when they are incorporated into law. Others, like the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals in a case EFF defended on behalf of Public.Resource.Org, have held that, whether or not the legal status of the standards changes once they are incorporated into law, making them fully accessible and usable online is a lawful fair use. A federal court in Pennsylvania followed the latter path in this case, finding that UpCodes’ database was a protected fair use.
The Third Circuit should affirm the ruling, preferably on the alternative ground that standards incorporated into law are necessarily promoted to the public domain. The internet has democratized access to law, making it easier than ever for the public —from journalists to organizers to safety professionals to ordinary concerned citizens —to understand, comment on, and share the myriad regulations that bind us. That work is particularly essential where those regulations are crafted by private parties and made mandatory by regulators with limited public oversight and increasingly limited staffing. Copyright law should not be read to impede it.
The Supreme Court has explained that “every citizen is presumed to know the law, and it needs no argument to show that all should have free access” to it. Apparently, it needs some argument after all, but it is past time for the debate to end.

Related Cases: Freeing the Law with Public.Resource.Org

The Guardian (UK)
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‘Playing gods with the cradle of life’: French Polynesia’s president issues warning over deep-sea mining
Exclusive: Moetai Brotherson fears environmental risks of controversial practice and says independence from France must not be ‘rushed’Read more Pacific leaders: in their wordsFrench Polynesia’s president has issued a stark warning over the risks of deep-sea mining, saying it will be allowed in his territory “over my dead body” as he argues the potential for environmental damage outweighs any benefits.Moetai Brotherson’s comments to the Guardian come as countries in the Pacific and elsewhere grapple with whether to extract minerals from the sea floor. Deep-sea mining has not yet begun, but some companies and countries are exploring the practice, which could start in the coming years. Continue reading...

The Guardian (UK)
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Coyote vs Acme: $70m Looney Tunes film to be released after being canned by Warner Bros
Live-action animated film starring John Cena and Will Forte will hit cinemas in 2026, after it was controversially shelved in favour of a $30m tax write-downFor once, things are working out for Wile E Coyote.The film Coyote vs Acme, which stars John Cena and Will Forte acting alongside beloved Looney Tunes cartoon characters, will finally be released to the public, almost two years after the completed film was shelved by Warner Bros as part of a tax write-off. Continue reading...

Sky News Home
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Every household bill rising from today - and how you can beat the hikes
Many household bills are rising from today - ranging from energy prices and council tax to mobile phone contracts and broadband.

CNET News
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A Judge Rescued the CFPB From Being Dismantled. Is It Too Late for the Consumer Watchdog?
Look out for higher bank fees and fewer protections as regulations unwind, experts warn.

Russia Today News
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ICC is a tool of the West – expert

BBC Top Stories (US)
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My daughter was bitten by an XL bully. I met an owner to ask why you'd have one?
Matt's daughter was attacked by an XL bully - he agreed to meet an owner to find out why anyone would want one.

The Guardian (UK)
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Myanmar earthquake death toll tops 2,000, as health system ‘overwhelmed’
WHO warns there is urgent need for care capacity, while US agency says number of dead could eventually exceed 10,000Aftermath of the Myanmar earthquake – a visual guide The fallout from Myanmar’s earthquake has overwhelmed parts of the healthcare system, the World Health Organization has said, as the official death toll rose to more than 2,000, with many more missing.Rescue operations faced “significant obstacles including damaged roads, collapsed bridges, unstable communications and the complexities related to civil conflict”, the WHO said in an update. Continue reading...

The Verge
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OpenAI just raised another $40 billion round led by SoftBank
OpenAI has raised $40 billion in a new investment round led by SoftBank, vaulting the company to a $300 billion valuation. It’s the largest funding round for a private tech company in history, according to CNBC. OpenAI is set to receive $10 billion up front (SoftBank will invest $7.5 billion along with $2.5 billion “from […]

Digital Trends
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How to watch SpaceX launch private Fram2 mission tonight
SpaceX is gearing up to launch another privately funded space mission that's set to achieve several firsts.

Digital Trends
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Our absolute favorite budget folding phone is an extra $150 off today
The Motorola Razr 2024 is already a budget folding phone, but with this deal it is irresistible.

Digital Trends
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Need a new gaming laptop? Buy the MSI Crosshair 16 with RTX 4070 while it’s $200 off
The MSI Crosshair 16 gaming laptop with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 graphics card is on sale from Best Buy with a $200 discount that lowers its price to $1,200.

Gizmodo
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How Strawberry Shortcake Introduced Me to the Conundrum of Cartoons on DVD
Trying to find alternatives to 24/7 streaming channels has lead to a realization: just why is so much classic animation stuck on DVD?

BBC Top Stories (US)
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Roof ripped off home as severe storms and tornadoes hit central US
Several states have been hit with heavy rain, hail and damaging winds, with storms expected to continue in some areas through Thursday.

Mail Online
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Missing girl, 11, 'was playing at the River Thames with pals when she slipped and fell in' - as search and rescue teams scour London waterway
A major search operation is currently underway near Woolwich in London involving coastguard and specialist teams.

Mail Online
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Musk reveals eye-watering amount he is giving 'baby mama' influencer Ashley St. Clair in trashy public spat
It comes after DailyMail.com spoke to St. Clair, who sold her $100,000 Model S Tesla, outside her Manhattan apartment on Saturday.

Mail Online
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Amazon plan 'huge change of direction for next James Bond film' after character's 'sensational' death in last movie
Amazon bosses are reportedly planning to cast the youngest ever James Bond - and the new film will be set in the '50s and '60s.

Mail Online
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LAURA CRAIK: As novelty designer bags make a comeback… in the age of Ozempic, stars would rather carry their carbs than eat them!
LAURA CRAIK looks into a new trend where designer brands are turning commonplace items into designer must-haves by slapping a logo on them and charging a small fortune for the privilege.

Mail Online
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White Lotus star reveals the shocking storyline CUT from hit show after Trump's re-election
In the March 2nd episode, the Texan country club wife played by Leslie Bibb confessed to her childhood gal pals that she was an 'independent' who likely voted for Trump

The Register
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Oracle Cloud security SNAFU latest: IT giant accused of pedantry as evidence scrubbed
1990s incident response in 2025 Two Oracle data security breaches have been reported in the past week, and the database goliath not only remains reluctant to acknowledge the disasters publicly – it may be scrubbing the web of evidence, too.…

The Register
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Top cybersecurity boffin, wife vanish as FBI raids homes
Indiana Uni rm -rf online profiles while agents haul boxes of evidence A tenured computer security professor at Indiana University and his university-employed wife have not been seen publicly since federal agents raided their homes late last week.…

BBC Top Stories (US)
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The Papers: l 'Le Pen rails against ban' and 'Trump's tariffs to hit UK'
A mixture of headlines dominate the front pages of UK papers on Tuesday.

UK Government News
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Victims attend parole hearings to see offenders held to account
Victims can attend the parole hearings of their perpetrators from today (1 April) as part of the Government's Plan for Change.

UK Government News
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Ditch single-use vapes as ban deadline looms
Shops encouraged to sell all remaining stock before 1 June 2025 deadline

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Over £20 million to help drones and flying taxis take to UK skies
We want the UK to have an advanced aviation ecosystem where everyone can benefit from new technology while tackling emissions.

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New cyber laws to safeguard UK economy & secure long-term growth
The government sets out the scope and ambition of the Cyber Security and Resilience Bill for the first time today.

UK Government News
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Welsh workers set for pay rise with new National Minimum Wage
Up to 160,000 workers in Wales will receive a pay rise as the new National Living Wage and National Minimum Wage rates take effect. 

Computer Weekly
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Top 1,000 IT service providers in scope of UK cyber bill

ZeroHedge News
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Jeffrey Epstein Victim Says She's In Renal Failure, Has 'Four Days To Live'
Jeffrey Epstein Victim Says She's In Renal Failure, Has 'Four Days To Live'

Jeffrey Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre, 41, says she's got 'days to live' - writing on Instagram that she's in renal failure as a result of injuries sustained after a collision with a bus.
Virginia Giuffre via Instagram

"This year has been the worst start to a new year, but I won’t bore anyone with the details but I think it important to note that when a school bus driver comes at you driving 110km as we were slowing for a turn that no matter what your car is made of it might as well be a tin can," she wrote on Sunday.

"I’ve gone into kidney renal failure, they’ve given me four days to live, transferring me to a specialist hospital in urology. I’m ready to go, just not until I see my babies one last time, but you know what they say about wishes."

Her father, Sky Roberts, responded to her post: "Virginia my daughter, I love you and praying for you to get the correct treatment to live a long and healthy life. If there is anything in this world I can do to help you, please let me know. My spirit with you now and holding your hand."

According to Sky, a retired engineer living in Floriday, Virginia is "suffering."

Giuffre's representative, Dini von Meuffling, "Virginia has been in a serious accident and is receiving medical care in the hospital. She greatly appreciates the support and well wishes people are sending."

As one of the most prominent Epstein victims, Giuffre has been speaking out for years about her sexual abuse at the hands of Epstein and friends. In 2021, she filed a civil lawsuit in New York against Prince Andrew, who she accused of rape. She also said that Epstein's 'madam' Ghislaine Maxwell had trafficked her to London to have sex with Andrew when she was 17. She agreed to an out-of-court settlement with Andrew in 2022 - which is believed to be in the millions of dollars, while Andrew - who's denied all allegations, has been forced to step down from royal duties (since the rest of the royal family totally aren't longstanding uncaught pedophiles).
Prince Andrew, Virginia Giuffre, Ghislaine Maxwell

Maxwell is currently serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking following her 2021 conviction. Following the settlement, Giuffre retreated from public life and moved to Perth, Australia with her husband Robert and their three children - though recent reports suggest that she and her husband have become estranged.

*  *  *



Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 16:40

ZeroHedge News
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Anti-Trump Comedian Booted From Performing At White House Correspondent's Dinner
Anti-Trump Comedian Booted From Performing At White House Correspondent's Dinner

It goes without saying, but Donald Trump is no stranger to being ambushed.  Beyond his unfortunate record of dodging bullets, the people involved in organizing Trump's public appearances tend to set him up in captive situations for political embarrassment, either knowingly or unknowingly. 

It happened when Trump attended his inaugural prayer service which was somehow led by a female Bishop (automatic red flag) who publicly chastised Trump for his campaign policies.  It was later revealed that Episcopal Bishop Mariann Budde is an LGBT and immigration activist that received millions of dollars in funding for helping illegal migrants enter the US. 

Who made the choice to put Trump in a passive position with such a person?   

Apparently learning from previous vetting errors, the Trump Administration has become far more careful.  Far-left comedian and queer activist Amber Ruffin has been canceled from hosting the White House Correspondent's Dinner's traditional comedic interlude.  The annual gala is an opportunity for journalists and media personalities to mingle with the Washington DC elite outside of the press room.

White House Correspondents Association President Eugene Daniels, who until recently was a reporter for Politico and is set to join MSNBC as a senior Washington correspondent, organized the speakers but ultimately cancelled Ruffin's invitation.



"At this consequential moment for journalism, I want to ensure the focus is not on the politics of division but entirely on awarding our colleagues for their outstanding work and providing scholarship and mentorship to the next generation of journalists," Daniels said in an email announcement.

Ruffin is a little known figure in comedy, yet, she was somehow chosen as a host for the WHCD, a position usually reserved for the top comedians of the day.  Her humor is painfully woke and decidedly unfunny - Try finding a single legitimate laugh in this skit from her failed Peacock show. 



Traditionally, the WHCD hires a comedic host to roast the crowd (and the president).  However, in recent years the trend has shifted into a political struggle session in which Trump is specifically targeted for most of the ridicule.  Even when Trump was not in the White House, he became the primary focus of guest comedian ire.   

Amber Ruffin works for Late Night with Seth Meyers, and it was Seth Meyers (and others) that famously tried to humiliate Trump at a WHCD in 2011 over talk that he would run for president as a Republican; an action which many believe drove Trump's desire to campaign in 2016.



Trump has not attended any of WHCD events during his time in office and some critics argue that he "can't handle jokes" due to ego.  But keep in mind that roasters are supposed to go after both political sides, not simply bash the people they disagree with. 

In an appearance on the Daily Beast podcast, Ruffin said she was told by the WHCA that "you need to be equal, and make sure that you give it to both sides and blah, blah, blah. And I was like, 'There's no way I'm going to be freaking doing that, dude, under no circumstances.'"

In other words, leftists view these events as opportunities for activism and propaganda, not as the fun and relaxed affairs they used to represent. 

* * *

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Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 17:20

ZeroHedge News
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Trade Options Like Wall Street Professionals With These Two New Tools
Trade Options Like Wall Street Professionals With These Two New Tools

Trump's "Liberation Day" tariff deadline (April 2) is looming, with big implications for traders. This wildcard event could tip sector flows, shift hedging activity, and force institutions to adjust, fast. Yet this market catalyst comes with its own set of risks and opportunities. The difference comes down to how well you can see a setup before it happens. 

For those still trading based on valuation or headlines alone, that's like playing checkers on a chessboard. Successful traders have long known that there is much more behind market movements.

Just take a look at SPX, one of the most liquid market instruments in the world. What caused price to violently retract from intraday highs on March 19 and 20? And why did price suddenly become particularly stable on March 24 after a tumultuous prior two weeks? As our derivative expert friends from SpotGamma write, it’s clear that something else is behind this market — something we’ve been tracking for years: options flows.

So, as part of our ongoing partnership with SpotGamma, and ahead of SpotGamma's launch of their new and powerful tools - the Synthetic OI Lens and Compass Screener - both of which offer readers option-trading tools which until now were reserved only for Wall Street professionals, they present five options-driven trading insights to "weaponize" right now for those who want to stay sharp, trade with precision, and frontrun the herd.



1. Growth in Options Trading Isn’t Just a Fad. It’s the Market Now.

Next expiry options — better known as 0DTEs — aren’t just for a handful of meme stock speculators anymore. They make up more than 50% of all SPX options volume, up from just 17% in 2020. That means intraday flows are influencing price action more than ever.



And here’s the kicker: 88.5% of all options trading is happening on-exchange and retail. 

Translation? The pros are watching your moves. And if you don’t understand how your trades affect hedging flows, you’re the one getting played.

Trading Edge: Monitor 0DTE gamma positioning before the open. SpotGamma's HIRO and TRACE tools show where dealers are getting pinned, or forced to chase.

* * *

2. Fundamentals Light the Fuse, Options Flows Decide the Blast Radius

Netflix’s post-earnings jump in January? The market expected a 7% move. It ripped 14% higher, directly toward a $1,000 call wall SpotGamma flagged the day before.


“There are large positions up at $1,000… there is enough gamma that NFLX could move more than just 7%” – SpotGamma Founder Brent Kochuba, January 21, 2025




Why was this?

By reading the options market, it was clear that options flows could exacerbate any price movement — with no overhead resistance until the $1,000 strike for NFLX.

Trading Edge: Use SpotGamma’s Equity Hub to track support/resistance levels defined by options open interest — not lagging technicals. If there’s a wall of gamma, you’d better believe price will bounce or stall there.

* * *

3. Market Makers Are the Real Movers

Every option trade needs a hedge, and that hedge moves markets. If 100,000 calls are bought by traders for 0.50 delta contracts, the dealer has to buy 50,000 shares to stay neutral. This is why it’s a good idea to pay attention to monthly options expiration (OPEX). These market makers establish huge positions that often need to be unwound post-OPEX.

What does this mean? Pent-up volatility often is released – and by knowing where market makers are positioned, you can tell which names will be most impacted.

Just last week, we saw SPX reverse after hitting intraday highs on both March 19th and 20th – exactly where dealers had to sell to hedge. That Friday (March 21st) was OPEX, and these positions were closed out. This cleared significant overhead resistance and created room for a 1.7% rally in SPX on March 24th.

Trading Edge: SpotGamma's HIRO and TRACE tools visualize this in real-time. Learn to read delta and gamma pressure. If you see selling pressure building from dealer hedging, don’t go long into it blindly.



* * *

4. Correlations Are Breaking. So Where Are Trading Opportunity?

It used to be simple: VIX signaled fear, and traders paid attention when it jumped. But that era of tightly coupled movement is fading fast. Why? The predictable relationships that made sense in the past no longer hold true

Today, stocks are moving on their own terms. Sector-based trading is giving way to single-name volatility — and for traders who can spot the breakouts hiding under the surface, this is a major opportunity.

Why this matters for your trading? Volatility and direction are no longer synced across the board, and edge can be found in the names that are out of alignment. This makes it critical to check where your stock falls before you trade it to determine whether it is trading with the market or an outlier.

Trading Edge: When implied volatility is low, but sentiment or skew is shifting fast, it’s often a signal that the market is mispricing risk. And that’s where smart traders strike.

So how do you find these setups before they move?

* * *

5. You’re Not Fighting the Banks Anymore, They’re Coming to Us

For years, institutional desks had exclusive access to the kind of flow data that moves markets. That information edge is now at your fingertips.

SpotGamma's exciting new tools — the Synthetic Open Interest (OI) Lens and Compass — are leveling the playing field by exposing real positioning, market pressure, and hidden high-conviction setups ahead of each trading day.



Most open interest models assume dealers sell options and hedge passively. But in 2025’s flow-driven market, that’s not good enough.

The Synthetic OI Lens breaks the mold. It tracks actual order flow with enhanced data feeds and SpotGamma’s proprietary classification system, so you know if market makers are really getting long or short, and how market makers are likely to react.

In short, this lens shows whether pressure is building with or against your trade, so you’re not flying blind.

Trading Edge: Use Synthetic OI to spot when large long positions are building at key levels. That’s your cue to size up and ride the dealer flow.

Compass: Pinpoint High-Conviction Setups in Seconds



Compass is SpotGamma’s powerful new tool that maps directional skew vs. volatility across the entire market. You’ll instantly see where options are expensive or cheap and where directional sentiment resides — giving you a constant stream of high-probability setups.

Traders not only need the data, they need to be able to zero-in on opportunities amidst the noise. With Compass, you don’t need to flip through dozens of charts or data tables to access volatility and directional information. 

By adding your name to the chart, you can quickly see correlation between names and which stocks may be outliers, giving you critical information to inform your trades

Compass highlights names worth your attention with Guided Mode. Explorer Mode puts you in the driver’s seat to choose which stocks you want to watch.

Trading Tip: Scan for stocks in Compass’s low IV / high bullish skew quadrant. That combo often points to cheap upside trades before the crowd piles in.

See It in Action — Find Your Edge in Any Stock



So for those readers who want to find trades most traders miss, SpotGamma is offering a free webinar on April 2 (just in time for the day's market rollercoaster) that shows you how. Learn how to find trades others miss, using the Synthetic OI Lens and Compass.

SpotGamma will cover: 

How to uncover real support/resistance using actual positioning—not lagging charts
Where to find high-reward setups like bullish risk reversals
How to scan your entire watchlist for volatility shifts in seconds
So for those who want smarter entries, faster trade ideas, and the data edge institutions traditionally kept to themselve, this is one to watch.

Register here

Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 18:00

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Waste Of The Day: Lawless Spending In California City
Waste Of The Day: Lawless Spending In California City

Authored by Jeremy Portnoy via RealClearInvestigations,

Topline: The City of Bell, California faced several scandals in the 2010s, culminating in corruption convictions for City Administrator Robert Rizzo and six other officials.



The “Wastebook” reporting published by the late U.S. Senator Dr. Tom Coburn recounts a state audit that found $293,000 in possibly illegal spending by Rizzo and the city, but that was only the beginning. Rizzo and his colleagues were eventually charged with siphoning $5.5 million away from the city. That money would be worth $8.1 million today. 

Coburn, the legendary U.S. Senator from Oklahoma, earned the nickname "Dr. No" by stopping thousands of pork-barrel projects using the Senate rules. Projects that he couldn't stop, Coburn included in his oversight reports.   

Coburn's Wastebook 2010 included 100 examples of outrageous spending worth more than $11.5 billion, including the beginning of Bell’s years of controversy.

Key facts: California Controller John Chiang found that Rizzo spent $293,000 in federal grants without approval from Bell’s city council and without signing actual contracts.



The total included $100,000 from a federal oil recycling program that Rizzo gave to a local company owned by Bell’s director of planning services.

Later investigations found absurd salaries for Rizzo and other Bell employees. Rizzo was paying himself an annual salary and benefits package of $1.5 million. Prosecutors alleged that at one point, his total pay had reached $12 million. 

Four out of five city council members earned salaries above $100,000, even though the council met twice per year. The remaining councilman earned only $8,000.

At the time, a quarter of Bell’s population was living below the poverty line.

In 2014, Rizzo was sentenced to 10 to 12 years in prison and ordered to pay $8.8 million in restitution to the city. He got another 33 months in jail for federal tax fraud.

Summary: Today, Bell City Manager Michael Antwine II makes a salary of $205,000, while the poverty rate is still nearly 25%.

The #WasteOfTheDay is brought to you by the forensic auditors at OpenTheBooks.com

Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 18:25

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Hegseth Circulated Secret Pentagon Memo On Preparing For War With China
Hegseth Circulated Secret Pentagon Memo On Preparing For War With China

Over the weekend The Washington Post revealed that Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth distributed a memo in mid-March which ordered the Pentagon to prioritize its war-planning focus on potential future conflict with China.

The memo, called the Interim National Defense Strategic Guidance "outlines, in broad and sometimes partisan detail, the execution of President Donald Trump’s vision to prepare for and win a potential war against Beijing and defend the United States from threats in the ‘near abroad,’ including Greenland and the Panama Canal."
Getty Images

It's nothing new that the Pentagon considers China a 'top pacing threat' - but it does confirm that the Trump administration would likely be willing to go to war in the event of a mainland invasion of the self-ruled island.

The memo interestingly presented a strategy of "assuming risk" in Europe and other parts of the world, to refocus efforts on top nuclear-armed rivals. 

The Pentagon’s force planning and new focus "will consider conflict only with Beijing when planning contingencies for a major power war" and leave the "threat from Moscow largely attended by European allies" - according to the report.

Hegseth wrote that China "is the Department’s sole pacing threat, and denial of a Chinese fait accompli seizure of Taiwan — while simultaneously defending the US homeland is the Department’s sole pacing scenario."

The memo urges NATO allies take on a "far greater" burden-sharing on defense, and puts Europe on notice in the event of greater threats from Russia:


Hegseth’s guidance acknowledges that the U.S. is unlikely to provide substantial, if any, support to Europe in the case of Russian military advances, noting that Washington intends to push NATO allies to take primary defense of the region. The U.S. will support Europe with nuclear deterrence of Russia, and NATO should only count on U.S. forces not required for homeland defense or China deterrence missions, the document says.

A significant increase in Europe sharing its defense burden, the document says, "will also ensure NATO can reliably deter or defeat Russian aggression even if deterrence fails and the United States is already engaged in, or must withhold forces to deter, a primary conflict in another region."


As for Taiwan specifically, it lays out ways the Pentagon intends to help its ally bolster defenses, short of outright entering any direct conflict.

WaPo and others have said the Heritage Foundation think tank is the driving force behind the strategic ideas presented in the memo.


Secret Pentagon strategy memo on China and homeland defense has Heritage Foundation fingerprintshttps://t.co/EeTzPhlzEl
— Littlewisehen (@littlewisehen) March 29, 2025
Hegseth's plans specify a "denial defense" of Taiwan - according to the memo - which will include "increasing the troop presence through submarines, bombers, unmanned ships, and specialty units from the Army and Marine Corps, as well as a greater focus on bombs that destroy reinforced and subterranean targets."

Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 18:50

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Recycling Power: Rethinking Nuclear Waste
Recycling Power: Rethinking Nuclear Waste

Authored by Rick Perry via RealClear Politics (emphasis ours),

The oral arguments before the Supreme Court earlier this month is a reminder that our nation has a 66-year-old nuclear energy problem—and there is a ready and available solution in recycling used nuclear fuel.
Empty nuclear waste shipping containers sit in front of a waste isolation plant near Carlsbad, N.M., on March 6, 2014. AP Photo/Susan Montoya Bryan

The Problem

Nuclear energy produces nearly 20 percent of our electricity. The fuel used to run our reactor fleet loses its intensity over time. That used, but not yet depleted, fuel is called Used Nuclear Fuel (UNF). There are 90,000 metric tons of UNF currently stored at reactor sites across 39 states in America, including approximately 4,000 metric tons in my home State of Texas.

In 1982, the federal government was made responsible by an act of Congress for removal and disposal of UNF from reactor sites, and has collected over $20 billion from reactor owners to pay for disposal of UNF. To date, the government has not removed any significant quantity of UNF from any site anywhere in America, including Texas, nor is there a current plan to do so.

As Secretary of Energy under President Trump’s first term, it became clear that any plan to move tonnage of UNF required some practical consent of the receiving state and local community, even if legal consent was not required by the 1982 Act.

The consequence of not solving this problem results in a financial loss to America and leaves the UNF at the numerous reactor sites across America. There have been private efforts to establish UNF interim storage facilities in West Texas and New Mexico. Though there has been some local acceptance of an interim storage facility in Texas or New Mexico, there has also been significant opposition. Resistance to those private interim storage proposals led to the NRC v. Texas case currently before the Supreme Court.

The Solution

We should rethink our approach. There are options we should consider other than storage of UNF, either temporarily on an interim basis or permanently. Our country should explore taking an entirely different path to achieve our ultimate goal: the removal of UNF from reactor sites. Recycling UNF makes much more sense than permanent storage and creates an energy source that is needed and currently unused.

The technology for recycling was first developed in the United States and has been used in France, Japan, Russia, the Netherlands, Australia, Italy, China, Germany, Belgium and Switzerland. I have personally toured many of these reprocessing facilities in other countries during my term as Energy Secretary.

The United States should establish a recycling policy so that the 90,000 metric tons of UNF in the country can be recycled and fabricated into mixed oxide fuel (“MOX fuel”). The resulting MOX fuel can be used in nuclear reactors to create reliable and clean energy.

Through establishing a recycling policy, the following four problems would be solved, and create economic opportunities:

First, the United States can solve the national problem of moving UNF away from reactor sites as it is obligated to do. Second, the U.S. can restart the discontinued payment program of the nuclear utilities for the removal of the UNF so that the Treasury can be replenished at the rate of $2 billion annually. Third, the concern of interim or long-term storage of UNF near our population centers is also addressed. Finally, MOX fuel can replace the 20 percent of U.S. nuclear fuel currently purchased from Russia.

The adoption of such a policy will create jobs and much needed energy for the grid as demand for energy skyrockets. Today, MOX fuel is widely used in Europe and Japan in their nuclear reactor fleet. America is behind its industrial neighbors in the treatment of UNF and needs to catch up.

Sometimes the greatest problems have simple and already discovered solutions.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 19:15

ZeroHedge News
Open 
Going Bust: Hooters To Re-Jiggle After Filing Chapter 11 Bankruptcy In Founder-Led Buyout
Going Bust: Hooters To Re-Jiggle After Filing Chapter 11 Bankruptcy In Founder-Led Buyout

Update (1925ET): Well that didn't take long...

After months of speculation, Hooters has finally filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy - with a plan to bounce back that includes selling all of its company-owned restaurants to a franchise group backed by its original founders, while lenders will provide additional funds throughout the reorganization proceedings as it seeks to address its $376 million in debt.



The move comes after the chain failed to recover from the pandemic - doing $867 million in US sales in 2023 - just 1% more than the previous year, according to market research from Technomic reported by the WSJ.


The privately-owned company, which shares a private equity owner with recently-bankrupt TGI Fridays, intends to sell all corporate-owned locations to a buyer group comprised of two existing Hooters franchisees, who operate 30 high-performing Hooters locations in the U.S., mainly in Florida and Illinois.


The company currently directly owns and operates 151 locations, with another 154 operated by franchisees - mostly in the USA.

*  *  *

Top sellers at ZH Store last week:

IQ Biologix Colostrum (25% IgG from first milking of grassfed cows)
IQ Astaxanthin Ultimate Antioxidant (6,000x stronger than vitamin C)
ZeroHedge Multitool (Extremely solid, very sharp, comes with ZH Logo belt pouch)
Anza Red-Black Infinity Handle Knife (Made in the USA from carbon steel)


*  *  *

With Hooters on the verge of bankruptcy, the legendary restaurant where you can eat mediocre food and check out tits (and pay in cash so your wife doesn't find out) is getting rid of Bikini Nights and skimpy outfits, and hopes that an improvement in the food will stave off doom.



Neil Kiefer, CEO of parent company HMC Hospitality Group, told Bloomberg he's calling the 'family friendly' changes "re-Hooterization."

"You go to some parts of the country and people say, ‘Oh, I could never go to Hooters, my wife would kill me," said Kiefer. "That’s depressing to us. We want to change that."

According to the report, Hooters also plans to use fresher ingredients in the kitchen and provide faster service.
In 2011, waitstaff sing happy birthday to a customer at a Hooters restaurant in Colonie, New York.Photographer: Albany Times Union/Hearst Newspa/Hearst Newspapers

The move comes after the chain has closed several locations across the country - with 40 shuttered last year, and the remaining 300 on the line. At its peak in 2008, there were 400 locations.

In 2021, the chain unveiled a new uniform featuring "wedgie" micro shorts - which resembled bikini bottoms, and which some waitresses called "porn."



According to industry analyst Aaron Allen, "For a business to be successful and sustainable, it helps to appeal to more than just men."

* * *

We've sold a TON of these lighter / flashlight combos...
Buy two for free shipping! (over $50)

Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back

The turnaround plan would likely see HMC and other Hooters franchisees take over most of the US locations that are currently owned and run by Hooters of America, which would likely see the closure of some locations, according to people familiar with the discussions. HOA is currently owned by Nord Bay Capital and TriArtisan Capital Advisors, LLC.


The end result is that HMC, should the plan go through, would help oversee the overall brand and advise franchisees on how to operate. The fix, according to Kiefer, boils down to three principles: good food, good service and regular reinvestment in the stores’ operations, something he says has been lacking at the eateries owned by HOA.

“There’s a noticeable difference,” Kiefer said. “The food’s different, the service is different — I hope to correct it all.”


In 2022, HOA's owners, among other things, added $50 million in subordinated debt, after issuing approximately $300 million in asset-backed bonds in 2014, which were packaged as 'whole-business securitizations,' pledging most of its assets, including franchise fees, as collateral. The current bankruptcy under consideration would see certain holders of its securitized debt team up with HMC to facilitate a change of control, according to the report. In this scenario, the debt holders would likely agree to restructure or roll their debt into securities with a longer maturity and the same or similar collateral pools.

RIP this:



Tyler Durden
Mon, 03/31/2025 - 19:25

The Hill
Open 
The Memo: Trump’s third-term suggestion alarms some Democrats while others roll their eyes
President Trump is leaving the door open to the idea of seeking a third term — even though that door is apparently firmly closed by the Constitution. His suggestion is eliciting divergent reactions among Democrats and liberals. Some see the speculation over a third term as part of an ominous, autocratic push by the president....

The Hill
Open 
Trump welcomes idea of hypothetical run against Obama as he floats third term
President Trump on Monday welcomed the idea of a hypothetical election match-up with former President Obama in the event the two men were allowed to run for third terms, something that is prohibited by the Constitution. “I know it’s hypothetical right now, but if you're allowed for some reason to run for a third term,...

The Hill
Open 
Trump's economic test
Welcome to The Hill's Business & Economy newsletter {beacon} Business & Economy Business & Economy The Big Story  Trump faces crucial week on the economy President Trump is entering a critical week for the economy amid growing fears that his penchant for tariffs could stall growth and undercut progress on inflation. © AP Trump has...

The Hill
Open 
Experts raise alarms about eliminating FEMA
Click for more from The Hill. {beacon} Energy & Environment Energy & Environment   The Big Story Experts raise alarms about eliminating FEMA Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s vow to “eliminate” the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is raising alarm from experts on disaster assistance, who say it could leave communities at risk. © Alex...

The Hill
Open 
Trump signs executive order targeting ticket scalping, reselling
President Trump signed an executive order on Monday aimed to crack down on ticket scalping and resale practices, alongside rock star Kid Rock. The order will direct the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice to enforce laws, in collaboration with state attorneys general, to prevent entertainers and fans from being overcharged and price...

The Hill
Open 
Top vaccine official sends warning
Click in for more news from The Hill {beacon} Health Care Health Care   The Big Story Top FDA official's exit sends ripples through Washington Peter Marks, who led the Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER) for nearly 10 years, submitted his resignation letter Friday. © Greg Nash, The Hill...

The Hill
Open 
Trump to make Middle East trip to Saudi Arabia, Qatar
President Trump said Monday that he will travel to the Middle East in the coming weeks for what is slated to be the first foreign trip of his second term. Trump told reporters in the Oval Office he plans to travel to Saudi Arabia and Qatar, with a possible stop in the United Arab Emirates....

The Hill
Open 
Putin tests Trump's patience
Welcome to The Hill's Defense & NatSec newsletter {beacon} Defense &National Security Defense &National Security   The Big Story Putin tests limits of Trump’s patience in ceasefire talks President Trump is expressing increased frustration with Russian President Vladimir Putin, whose shifting demands in negotiations with Ukraine have drawn out ceasefire talks. © Getty Putin’s demands on...

The Hill
Open 
Trump says he expects Musk to eventually return to running companies
President Trump on Monday said he expects Elon Musk will eventually return to running his companies after his work overhauling the federal government. A reporter noted that Musk, the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, is a special government employee, which means he can only work for 130 days in his role. When asked if he...

The Hill
Open 
House Intel Democrats call for damage assessment on Signal chat
Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee on Monday requested an independent assessment into Trump administration officials' use of Signal to discuss an airstrike, asking that Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard initiate such a process and delegate it to another official.  The letter calls for a damage assessment of the fallout related to the chat,...

The Hill
Open 
Trump highlights Friedman, Grenell as possible UN ambassadors to replace Stefanik
President Trump on Monday said there are “maybe 30” people interested in serving as ambassador to the United Nations after he pulled Rep. Elise Stefanik’s (R-N.Y.) nomination. Trump cited David Friedman, who served as ambassador to Israel during Trump’s first term, and Richard Grenell, who served as ambassador to Germany and acting director of national...

The Hill
Open 
Stephen A. Smith on Trump third-term talk: I thought Republicans 'preached about the constitution'
Media personality Stephen A. Smith blasted Republicans for entertaining the possibility of President Trump running for a third term in office. “Wait a minute, you’re a Republican voter out there. I thought your party was the party that preached about the Constitution. I thought your party was the party that said, ‘We’re not violating, we’re...

The Hill
Open 
Sen. Lindsey Graham on third Trump term: 'Ask me in '27'
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) sidestepped a question on Monday about whether President Trump could run for a third term in the White House. “Do you think Trump can run for a third term?” a reporter asked Graham on Monday. “Ask me in ’27,” Graham responded, before walking away. The exchange comes amid heightened debate about...

Mail Online
Open 
Climbdown over two-tier justice as sentencing rule change is put on ice amid ministers' fight to block the policy
In a last-minute climbdown the Sentencing Council agreed to postpone the introduction of guidance which critics said would discriminate against white men.

ZDNet News
Open 
The Segway Max G2 electric scooter is $400 off during this anti-Amazon Spring Sale deal
The Segway Max G2 is a great, eco-friendly way to run errands, joyride through the park, or commute to work and school this spring and summer. And right now, you can save $400 on one at Best Buy.

ZDNet News
Open 
The 150+ best Amazon Spring Sale tech deals live: Last chance to save
Amazon's Big Spring Sale ends tonight. Save on these handpicked deals on headphones, TVs, laptops, and more while the deals last.

Mail Online
Open 
Hospitality bosses warn of 'eye-watering' £3.4billion hit to industry from Rachel Reeves' autumn Budget measures
Hospitality bosses yesterday warned the industry faces a £3.4billion hit over the next year - causing a 'chilling effect on investment and job creation'.

Mail Online
Open 
ROBERT JENRICK: What Britain's fair-minded people want is equality for all before the law, not equality in outcomes. The British public have been equal before the law for centuries, but Labour seems hell-bent on tearing that principle to shreds
ROBERT JENRICK: Lady Justice has long been depicted in a blindfold because justice must be immune to extraneous things such as race, sex and religion. That British principle is under threat.

Mail Online
Open 
Climbdown over two-tier justice as sentencing rule change is put on ice amid ministers' fight to block the policy
In a last-minute climbdown the Sentencing Council agreed to postpone the introduction of guidance which critics said would discriminate against white men.

Mail Online
Open 
Huge comedian quits comedy to pursue dream job as a teacher after split from wife - leaving fans in disbelief
In a video, he explained: I have a little bit of news. I've obviously been taking a little bit of a break from stand-up and it's really made me want to carry on taking a break from stand-up.'

Mail Online
Open 
Revealed: The number of council hall fat cats earning more than £100,000 as report reveals a record surge in six-figure pay packets
Despite hitting families with inflation-busting tax hikes, and more kicking in today, at least 262 local authority chiefs were handed more than £200,000 in pay, pensions, pay-offs and bonuses.

Mail Online
Open 
ALEX BRUMMER: If Donald Trump refuses to relent on his tariffs, we face a stock market cataclysm, global recession and a new inflationary spiral
Donald Trump avoided introducing his latest raft of tariffs today, on April 1, for fear he would be ridiculed for bringing in such radical measures on April Fool's Day, writes ALEX BRUMMER

Mail Online
Open 
Don't write Marine Le Pen off yet - this fiasco could be a gift for the National Gallery, writes JONATHAN MILLER
Before her sentence was announced, a furious Marine Le Pen stormed out of the courtroom after being found guilty of embezzling EU funds, dashing her political ambition

Mail Online
Open 
Jeremy Kyle reveals he collapsed into the arms of a doctor in tears and thought he was 'dead' during 'terrifying' testicular cancer battle
The presenter, 59, is set to make his return to ITV after six years on Tuesday night, as he appears on Kate Garraway's Life Stories.

Mail Online
Open 
RICHARD EDEN: Staggering amount left by King Charles's close friend in his will is revealed
Nat Rothschild upset his parents in the mid-1990s when he eloped with socialite Annabelle Neilson and embarked on a short-lived marriage. 

Mail Online
Open 
QUENTIN LETTS: With all these summits, Sir Keir is becoming Westminster's answer to Sherpa Tenzing
QUENTIN LETTS: Summits were once rare events at which the leaders of the USSR and USA frostily shook hands.

Mail Online
Open 
We've lived the dream Down Under for nearly a decade - now Australia wants to deport us to the UK for the cruellest of reasons
Jessica Mathers, 30, a project manager and DJ from Macclesfield, fears being sent back to the UK - despite settling in Australia in 2017 - due to medical care she needs.

EFF
Open 
EFF Urges Third Circuit to Join the Legal Chorus: No One Owns the Law
Two appeals courts have recently rejected efforts by private parties to use copyright to restrict access to the laws that most directly affect ordinary citizens: regulations that ensure our homes, workplaces, devices, and many other products, are safe and fit for purpose. Apparently hoping the third time will be the charm, a standards organization is asking the Third Circuit Court of Appeals to break ranks and hold that a private party that helps develop a law also gets to own that law. In an amicus brief filed with co-counsel Abigail Burton and Samuel Silver of Welsh & Recker, P.C., on behalf of multiple entities— including Watch Duty, iFixit, the American Library Association and Public Knowledge—EFF urged the court to instead join the judicial consensus and recognize that no one owns the law.
EFF urged the court to join the judicial consensus and recognize that no one owns the law.
This case concerns UpCodes, a company that has created a database of building codes—like the National Electrical Code—that includes codes incorporated by reference into law. ASTM, a private organization that coordinated the development of some of those codes, insists that it retains copyright in them even after they have been adopted into law, and therefore has the right to control how the public accesses and shares them. Fortunately, neither the Constitution nor the Copyright Act support that theory. Faced with similar claims, some courts, including the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, have held that the codes lose copyright protection when they are incorporated into law. Others, like the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals in a case EFF defended on behalf of Public.Resource.Org, have held that, whether or not the legal status of the standards changes once they are incorporated into law, making them fully accessible and usable online is a lawful fair use. A federal court in Pennsylvania followed the latter path in this case, finding that UpCodes’ database was a protected fair use.
The Third Circuit should affirm the ruling, preferably on the alternative ground that standards incorporated into law are necessarily promoted to the public domain. The internet has democratized access to law, making it easier than ever for the public —from journalists to organizers to safety professionals to ordinary concerned citizens —to understand, comment on, and share the myriad regulations that bind us. That work is particularly essential where those regulations are crafted by private parties and made mandatory by regulators with limited public oversight and increasingly limited staffing. Copyright law should not be read to impede it.
The Supreme Court has explained that “every citizen is presumed to know the law, and it needs no argument to show that all should have free access” to it. Apparently, it needs some argument after all, but it is past time for the debate to end.

Related Cases: Freeing the Law with Public.Resource.Org

Slashdot
Open 
UK's GCHQ Intern Transferred Top Secret Files To His Phone
Bruce66423 shares a report from the BBC: A former GCHQ intern has admitted risking national security by taking top secret data home with him on his mobile phone. Hasaan Arshad, 25, pleaded guilty to an offence under the Computer Misuse Act on what would have been the first day of his trial at the Old Bailey in London. The charge related to committing an unauthorised act which risked damaging national security.

Arshad, from Rochdale in Greater Manchester, is said to have transferred sensitive data from a secure computer to his phone, which he had taken into a top secret area of GCHQ on 24 August 2022. [...] The court heard that Arshad took his work mobile into a top secret GCHQ area and connected it to work station. He then transferred sensitive data from a secure, top secret computer to the phone before taking it home, it was claimed. Arshad then transferred the data from the phone to a hard drive connected to his personal home computer. "Seriously? What on earth was the UK's equivalent of the NSA doing allowing its hardware to carry out such a transfer?" questions Bruce66423.





Read more of this story at Slashdot.