Today, I’m releasing never before seen intelligence revealing new evidence of past US government funding for more than 120 biolabs in over 30 countries, including Ukraine.
In support of President Trump‘s Executive Order to end federal funding of dangerous gain of function research around the world, and increase transparency and accountability, ODNI will continue working with partners across the Administration to identify where these labs are, what pathogens they contain, and what “research” is being conducted.
https://t.co/pLMD0krc69
China welcomes the memorandum of understanding (MoU) between the United States and Iran, and it appreciates Pakistan's mediation efforts: Chinese FM spokesperson https://t.co/WtJv4bSSNe
This is horrifying
Man is suing multiple law enforcement agencies over a wrongful arrest
Artificial intelligence was used and it falsely identified him as a suspect trying to lure a child to a restaurant
The AI even said he was a 93% match. This is so extremely dangerous to be using this for law enforcement
“Authorities were looking for a suspect who tried to lure a child at a restaurant in Jacksonville Beach, more than 300 miles away. To be accused of a heinous crime of that nature, I'm thinking I may not be coming back home. Investigators submitted surveillance images of the suspect into a facial recognition program, which revealed a 93% match of facial features to Dylan. But not only was Dylan incorrectly identified, he's never even been to Jacksonville Beach”
Ready for some horrifying news? This is being used nationwide. From what I’ve found all these states have documented false arrests with AI
Florida
Maryland
Michigan
Missouri
Louisiana
Nevada
New Jersey
New York
North Dakota
Arizona
Again, all these states have documented false arrests with AI
The key to saving the environment is not looking backward, it’s moving forward.
I realized this the first time I visited Italy twenty years ago. Everything was clean and green. The rivers sparkled. The lesson for me was obvious: the answer is not underdevelopment. The answer is progress.
When China was poor, the air was so polluted that people could barely see the blue sky. Today, blue skies have returned to their cities. Development does not only create wealth, it also provides the resources needed to restore and protect the environment.
Some environmentalists want us to preserve every aspect of our biodiversity, including the mosquitoes for example, so that researchers can fly in once every ten years from their universities (which build particle accelerators and billion-dollar laboratories with their pocket money), study our ecosystems, and count how many people died from dengue outbreaks.
They want to buy our air through carbon credits. If carbon credits were such a great deal, they would be selling them to us, not the other way around.
Cleaning every river, lake, and water source in El Salvador, and ensuring they remain clean and sparkling, would cost roughly $12 billion. Where is that money supposed to come from without economic development? Carbon credits?
The path forward for our country is the path of Japan and Singapore, not the path of the Congo.
@triffic_stuff_ They made that mistake first by expanding their definition of legal entry. That means the Korean British man and his family that come in 1960d has to leave as much as the Somali man and his nine wives that come last month.
RECAP:
After days of strikes, threats, and brinkmanship, the biggest story of the last few hours is that diplomacy appears to have taken center stage in the U.S.-Iran crisis.
Trump repeatedly claimed an Iran deal is close, said a signing could happen as soon as this weekend in Europe, and suggested Iran's leadership has effectively approved the framework. Tehran, however, pushed back hard, insisting no final agreement has been reached and warning that reports of a completed deal are premature.
Multiple reports indicate Qatar and Pakistan have been heavily involved behind the scenes, with negotiators reportedly narrowing differences over frozen assets, the Strait of Hormuz, and the framework for future nuclear talks.
Trump also confirmed that any agreement would include lifting the U.S. naval blockade, while suggesting planned strikes against Iran's critical Kharg Island oil terminal would be shelved if a deal is signed.
Markets reacted instantly. Oil prices fell below $87 per barrel while the S&P 500 surged more than 100 points as traders piled into the de-escalation narrative.
Meanwhile, Iran is reportedly strengthening defenses around Kharg Island, its most important oil export hub, signaling Tehran is still preparing for the possibility that diplomacy fails.
And in a reminder that the rest of the world has not stopped turning, reports emerged of a possible launch of Russia's Oreshnik intermediate-range ballistic missile from Kapustin Yar, as Moscow continues to showcase advanced missile capabilities amid the ongoing war in Ukraine.
One of the most underappreciated second-order effects of harder money is long-term affordability: when money holds its value more reliably, rents face less structural pressure to rise simply to preserve purchasing power.