Daily Briefing
Expensive drone goes missing; proto-mammals laid eggs; AIPAC backlash among Dems

20 Articles •
Study: Wildlife Trade Raises Human Disease Risk
Left 50%
Center 42%
8%
The findings: A new study published this week in Science found that traded wild mammals are 1.5 times more likely to share pathogens with humans than non-traded species, with 41% of traded mammals sharing at least one disease-causing organism compared to just 6.4% of non-traded animals. Researchers analyzed 40 years of legal and illegal trade data alongside host-pathogen records, discovering that each decade a species spends in trade adds roughly one additional shared pathogen.
Why it matters: The global wildlife trade, worth billions annually, creates multiple contact points where pathogens can jump from animals to humans—from harvesting and transport to live markets and pet ownership. Risk is highest with illegally traded animals and live markets, where the 2003 U.S. mpox outbreak from imported African rodents and the COVID-19 pandemic's likely market origins demonstrate how exotic pet demand and poor market conditions can trigger outbreaks affecting millions.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

24 Articles •
US Navy Triton Drone Disappears Over Persian Gulf After Emergency Descent
Center 40%
Right 60%
What happened: A US Navy MQ-4C Triton drone vanished today over the Strait of Hormuz after declaring an in-flight emergency and rapidly descending from 52,000 feet to below 10,000 feet within minutes. The $200 million surveillance aircraft had completed a three-hour mission and was returning to its Italian base when it issued emergency codes 7400 and 7700, turned slightly toward Iran, then disappeared from tracking systems.
Why it matters: The loss threatens US surveillance capabilities over a vital energy chokepoint through which 20% of global oil and gas passes, occurring just two days after a US-Iran ceasefire agreement. The incident raises immediate questions about whether the drone crashed due to technical failure or was shot down in contested waters, potentially escalating tensions in one of the world's most militarized maritime corridors.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Left Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

95 Articles •
Nigerian General Killed in Overnight Militant Attack
Left 32%
Center 48%
R 20%
What happened: ISWAP militants attacked the 29 Task Force Brigade headquarters in Benisheikh, Borno State, around 12:30 a.m. yesterday, killing Brigadier General Oseni Braimah and several soldiers. While the military says troops repelled the assault with superior firepower, intelligence sources report the base was overrun and vehicles torched before clearance operations began.
Why it matters: This marks the highest-ranking Nigerian military officer killed since 2021 and signals an escalation in jihadist violence, with at least 90 people killed across northern Nigeria this week. The U.S. has authorized voluntary departure of non-emergency embassy staff and expanded its do-not-travel list to include multiple Nigerian states, though the government maintains the country remains stable and open.
69% of sources are Original Reporting

389 Articles •
Russia and Ukraine Announce Easter Ceasefire This Weekend
Left 37%
Center 43%
R 20%
What happened: Russian President Vladimir Putin declared a 32-hour ceasefire starting Saturday at 4 p.m. through Sunday for Orthodox Easter, ordering troops to halt combat while remaining ready to counter provocations. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who had proposed an Easter truce through U.S. mediators earlier this week, said Ukraine will act accordingly and is ready for reciprocal steps.
Why it matters: Past holiday truces have failed, with last year's Easter ceasefire violated nearly 3,000 times according to Ukraine, killing at least three people. Peace talks remain stalled as U.S. attention shifts to Iran, and the four-year war has caused hundreds of thousands of casualties with Russia occupying roughly 19% of Ukraine, making any pause unlikely to change the broader conflict.
67% of sources are Original Reporting

23 Articles •
Ancient Fossil Reveals Mammal Ancestors Laid Eggs
Left 27%
Center 66%
7%
The discovery: Scientists confirmed the first therapsid egg ever found, a 252-million-year-old Lystrosaurus embryo discovered in South Africa's Karoo Basin in 2008. Using synchrotron X-ray scans, researchers identified an unfused lower jaw proving the embryo died before hatching, filling a 150-year gap in understanding mammal ancestor reproduction.
Why it matters: This finding explains how species adapt to extreme environmental collapse, offering insights into modern climate resilience. Lystrosaurus survived Earth's worst mass extinction by laying large, yolk-rich soft-shelled eggs that produced self-sufficient young, a strategy that helped them thrive when 90 percent of species perished.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
87% of sources are Original Reporting

56 Articles •
DNC Rejects Resolution Condemning AIPAC Spending in Primaries
Left 33%
Center 38%
Right 29%
What happened: The Democratic National Committee's resolutions panel rejected a proposal Thursday condemning AIPAC's involvement in Democratic primaries, instead passing a broader resolution against dark money. The vote came after AIPAC-linked groups spent $22 million in Illinois congressional primaries last month, with resolutions on Palestinian statehood and conditioning Israel aid referred to a working group.
Why it matters: The decision highlights a growing divide between Democratic leadership and voters, with 80 percent of Democrats now viewing Israel unfavorably, up from 53 percent in 2022. Party officials concluded after 2024 that support for Israel cost Democrats votes, yet leaders continue deflecting action on the issue to working groups that have produced no concrete results since last August.
61% of sources are High Factuality

60 Articles •
Oil Spill Shuts Down Port of Antwerp, Europe's No. 2 Cargo Hub
10%
Center 59%
Right 31%
What happened: An oil spill during a refueling operation at Antwerp-Bruges' Deurganck Dock late Thursday spread into the River Scheldt, forcing authorities to temporarily halt shipping access to Europe's second-largest port. Specialized cleanup teams deployed booms and skimmers while the source was contained and affected vessels secured.
Why it matters: The port handles 267 million tonnes of goods annually from the U.S., China and beyond, serving 20,000 seagoing and 50,000 inland vessels each year. Any prolonged closure could disrupt regional supply chains and impact goods delivery across Europe, while threatening ecologically sensitive tidal marshes and bird habitats along the Scheldt.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Left Sources

29 Articles •
Ocean Temperatures Hit Near-Record Highs in March, Signaling El Niño Shift
Left 35%
Center 40%
Right 25%
What happened: Global ocean surface temperatures reached 20.97°C last month, the second-highest March reading on record, according to Copernicus Climate Change Service. The data signals a likely shift toward El Niño conditions later this year, following the recent La Niña cycle.
Why it matters: Hotter seas fuel stronger storms, heavier rainfall, and coral bleaching while raising sea levels through thermal expansion. An emerging El Niño could make 2027 a record warm year, amplifying heat extremes and extreme weather events worldwide on top of long-term human-driven climate change.
93% of sources are Original Reporting
62% of sources are High Factuality

32 Articles •
Finland Opens World's First Permanent Nuclear Waste Repository
Left 59%
Center 33%
8%
The details: Finland's Onkalo facility, built over 400 meters underground in 1.9-billion-year-old bedrock since 2004, will store 6,500 tons of spent nuclear fuel in copper canisters surrounded by bentonite clay. Authorities are expected to grant an operating license within months, making it the world's first permanent underground nuclear waste repository.
Why it matters: With nearly 400,000 tons of spent nuclear fuel stored temporarily worldwide since the 1950s, Onkalo demonstrates a permanent disposal solution that could influence global nuclear waste management. Roughly 60 similar facilities would be needed to store all existing waste, though experts caution about uncertainties in long-term material performance over hundreds of thousands of years.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
75% of sources are High Factuality
Daily Briefing
Expensive drone goes missing; proto-mammals laid eggs; AIPAC backlash among Dems


20 Articles •
Study: Wildlife Trade Raises Human Disease Risk
Left 50%
Center 42%
8%
The findings: A new study published this week in Science found that traded wild mammals are 1.5 times more likely to share pathogens with humans than non-traded species, with 41% of traded mammals sharing at least one disease-causing organism compared to just 6.4% of non-traded animals. Researchers analyzed 40 years of legal and illegal trade data alongside host-pathogen records, discovering that each decade a species spends in trade adds roughly one additional shared pathogen.
Why it matters: The global wildlife trade, worth billions annually, creates multiple contact points where pathogens can jump from animals to humans—from harvesting and transport to live markets and pet ownership. Risk is highest with illegally traded animals and live markets, where the 2003 U.S. mpox outbreak from imported African rodents and the COVID-19 pandemic's likely market origins demonstrate how exotic pet demand and poor market conditions can trigger outbreaks affecting millions.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

24 Articles •
US Navy Triton Drone Disappears Over Persian Gulf After Emergency Descent
Center 40%
Right 60%
What happened: A US Navy MQ-4C Triton drone vanished today over the Strait of Hormuz after declaring an in-flight emergency and rapidly descending from 52,000 feet to below 10,000 feet within minutes. The $200 million surveillance aircraft had completed a three-hour mission and was returning to its Italian base when it issued emergency codes 7400 and 7700, turned slightly toward Iran, then disappeared from tracking systems.
Why it matters: The loss threatens US surveillance capabilities over a vital energy chokepoint through which 20% of global oil and gas passes, occurring just two days after a US-Iran ceasefire agreement. The incident raises immediate questions about whether the drone crashed due to technical failure or was shot down in contested waters, potentially escalating tensions in one of the world's most militarized maritime corridors.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Left Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

95 Articles •
Nigerian General Killed in Overnight Militant Attack
Left 32%
Center 48%
R 20%
What happened: ISWAP militants attacked the 29 Task Force Brigade headquarters in Benisheikh, Borno State, around 12:30 a.m. yesterday, killing Brigadier General Oseni Braimah and several soldiers. While the military says troops repelled the assault with superior firepower, intelligence sources report the base was overrun and vehicles torched before clearance operations began.
Why it matters: This marks the highest-ranking Nigerian military officer killed since 2021 and signals an escalation in jihadist violence, with at least 90 people killed across northern Nigeria this week. The U.S. has authorized voluntary departure of non-emergency embassy staff and expanded its do-not-travel list to include multiple Nigerian states, though the government maintains the country remains stable and open.
69% of sources are Original Reporting

389 Articles •
Russia and Ukraine Announce Easter Ceasefire This Weekend
Left 37%
Center 43%
R 20%
What happened: Russian President Vladimir Putin declared a 32-hour ceasefire starting Saturday at 4 p.m. through Sunday for Orthodox Easter, ordering troops to halt combat while remaining ready to counter provocations. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who had proposed an Easter truce through U.S. mediators earlier this week, said Ukraine will act accordingly and is ready for reciprocal steps.
Why it matters: Past holiday truces have failed, with last year's Easter ceasefire violated nearly 3,000 times according to Ukraine, killing at least three people. Peace talks remain stalled as U.S. attention shifts to Iran, and the four-year war has caused hundreds of thousands of casualties with Russia occupying roughly 19% of Ukraine, making any pause unlikely to change the broader conflict.
67% of sources are Original Reporting

23 Articles •
Ancient Fossil Reveals Mammal Ancestors Laid Eggs
Left 27%
Center 66%
7%
The discovery: Scientists confirmed the first therapsid egg ever found, a 252-million-year-old Lystrosaurus embryo discovered in South Africa's Karoo Basin in 2008. Using synchrotron X-ray scans, researchers identified an unfused lower jaw proving the embryo died before hatching, filling a 150-year gap in understanding mammal ancestor reproduction.
Why it matters: This finding explains how species adapt to extreme environmental collapse, offering insights into modern climate resilience. Lystrosaurus survived Earth's worst mass extinction by laying large, yolk-rich soft-shelled eggs that produced self-sufficient young, a strategy that helped them thrive when 90 percent of species perished.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
87% of sources are Original Reporting

56 Articles •
DNC Rejects Resolution Condemning AIPAC Spending in Primaries
Left 33%
Center 38%
Right 29%
What happened: The Democratic National Committee's resolutions panel rejected a proposal Thursday condemning AIPAC's involvement in Democratic primaries, instead passing a broader resolution against dark money. The vote came after AIPAC-linked groups spent $22 million in Illinois congressional primaries last month, with resolutions on Palestinian statehood and conditioning Israel aid referred to a working group.
Why it matters: The decision highlights a growing divide between Democratic leadership and voters, with 80 percent of Democrats now viewing Israel unfavorably, up from 53 percent in 2022. Party officials concluded after 2024 that support for Israel cost Democrats votes, yet leaders continue deflecting action on the issue to working groups that have produced no concrete results since last August.
61% of sources are High Factuality

60 Articles •
Oil Spill Shuts Down Port of Antwerp, Europe's No. 2 Cargo Hub
10%
Center 59%
Right 31%
What happened: An oil spill during a refueling operation at Antwerp-Bruges' Deurganck Dock late Thursday spread into the River Scheldt, forcing authorities to temporarily halt shipping access to Europe's second-largest port. Specialized cleanup teams deployed booms and skimmers while the source was contained and affected vessels secured.
Why it matters: The port handles 267 million tonnes of goods annually from the U.S., China and beyond, serving 20,000 seagoing and 50,000 inland vessels each year. Any prolonged closure could disrupt regional supply chains and impact goods delivery across Europe, while threatening ecologically sensitive tidal marshes and bird habitats along the Scheldt.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Left Sources

29 Articles •
Ocean Temperatures Hit Near-Record Highs in March, Signaling El Niño Shift
Left 35%
Center 40%
Right 25%
What happened: Global ocean surface temperatures reached 20.97°C last month, the second-highest March reading on record, according to Copernicus Climate Change Service. The data signals a likely shift toward El Niño conditions later this year, following the recent La Niña cycle.
Why it matters: Hotter seas fuel stronger storms, heavier rainfall, and coral bleaching while raising sea levels through thermal expansion. An emerging El Niño could make 2027 a record warm year, amplifying heat extremes and extreme weather events worldwide on top of long-term human-driven climate change.
93% of sources are Original Reporting
62% of sources are High Factuality

32 Articles •
Finland Opens World's First Permanent Nuclear Waste Repository
Left 59%
Center 33%
8%
The details: Finland's Onkalo facility, built over 400 meters underground in 1.9-billion-year-old bedrock since 2004, will store 6,500 tons of spent nuclear fuel in copper canisters surrounded by bentonite clay. Authorities are expected to grant an operating license within months, making it the world's first permanent underground nuclear waste repository.
Why it matters: With nearly 400,000 tons of spent nuclear fuel stored temporarily worldwide since the 1950s, Onkalo demonstrates a permanent disposal solution that could influence global nuclear waste management. Roughly 60 similar facilities would be needed to store all existing waste, though experts caution about uncertainties in long-term material performance over hundreds of thousands of years.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
75% of sources are High Factuality