Articles & Videos
Weâre in the Seven Circles of Release-the-Epstein-Files Hell
Hillary and Bill Clinton both agreed to a public deposition. So... where are the transcripts?
Zohran Flawless Trump Victory, 1st AI Mass Layoff, Anthropic DEFIES Hegseth
LIVE STILL NEED ICE OUT of Minnesota March | LIVE From Minneapolis
Public Health Agencies Struggle to Keep Up With Rising Tuberculosis Cases
Some tuberculosis program managers report double-digit increases, and the cost of antibiotics to treat it is rising.
Striking Nurses From Coast to Coast Stood Up to Corporate Forces and Won
Nurses in New York, California, and Hawaii claimed big contract victories after showing their power on the picket line.
Trump Sets Off Middle East Crisis With One Phone Call
Donald Trump ignited a standoff between the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia with a phone call. Trump contacted UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed last November regarding what he said was a request from Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to impose sanctions on the UAE. Trump said Salman made the request earlier that month, citing the UAEâs support for the Rapid Support Forces, a mercenary group fighting in Sudanâs civil war. After the call, The New York Times reports, tensions between the UAE and Saudi Arabia boiled over. Senior UAE officials felt betrayed by the Saudis, and by the next month, things had gotten so bad that Saudi Arabia bombed a shipment from the UAE to Yemen. According to the Saudis, that wasnât the request at allâthey wanted additional sanctions on the RSF to cut off its outside support, not sanctions on the UAE directly. They hoped that targeting the RSF in this manner would cause the UAE to back down and that the war in Sudan would end sooner. An official in the Trump administration also told the Times that MBS never asked Trump to sanction the UAE. But the damage was done, and now two key U.S. allies are not getting along with each other. The UAEâs leader is convinced that MBS asked Trump for direct sanctions against his country. According to Emirati officials, Trump told Zayed that his friends the Saudis were out to get him, but that the U.S. stands behind him. At best, Trump misunderstood Salmanâs request, and at worst, he bungled a very sensitive matter. In either case, two powerful Arab countries are at odds, and itâs not only playing out in Sudan but also in Yemen, where a shipment was bombed after a UAE-backed faction advanced close to the Saudi border. The Saudis accused the UAE of sending weapons to Yemen, which they denied, and then subsequently ended their support for the faction. The Saudis and UAE each have extensive business ties with Trump, his family, and other administration officials. One wonders if and how Trump plans to settle this rift. He said on February 16, âWe can get it settled very easily. âThatâs an easy one to settle.â Will he manage not to mess things up again?
Citing AI, Jack Dorsey Fired 40% of His Staff and Block Stock Popped. This Is Fine.
The anxiety around AI taking people's jobs is real and justified, even if most of the AI hype isn't. It's happening all around us.
APA Rewrites Antisemitism Guidelines to Protect Speech on Palestine
“The weaponization of antisemitismâŚcreates significant adverse consequences for Jews and non-Jews,” the APA wrote.