Daily Briefing
Anthropic's quest to make Claude a 'child of God'; Iran allegedly 'can't find' Hormuz mines; Turkey escalates rhetoric against Israel

12 Articles •
CIA Used Pentagon Spyware to Deceive Iran During Airman Rescue, Report Says
Center 50%
Right 50%
What happened: NSO Group's Pegasus spyware allegedly helped locate 25 Iranian leaders, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, killed in US-Israeli strikes since 2023. The spyware, developed by an Israeli firm staffed largely by Unit 8200 veterans, gives operators complete device access, bypassing encrypted apps to track locations and extract data.
Why it matters: Over 50,000 phones were targeted globally, including 200 journalists and 85 activists, raising mass privacy concerns. Meta won a $158 million judgement against NSO in May, yet the US blacklisted the company in 2022 while 40 client countries continue using Pegasus without acknowledgment.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Left Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

57 Articles •
Economists Say World Far Better Equipped for Oil Shocks than in the 1970s
Left 36%
Center 53%
11%
What happened: Iran effectively shut down the Strait of Hormuz in response to U.S. and Israeli attacks beginning February 28, removing 15% of daily global oil production. The IEA coordinated a 400 million barrel release last month, including 172 million barrels from U.S. reserves, as prices surged up to 40%.
Why it matters: Americans are paying over $4 per gallon for gasoline, while disruptions to helium and fertilizer supplies are hitting semiconductor manufacturing and food prices globally. Though fuel-efficient vehicles, fracking, and strategic reserves cushion the blow compared to the 1970s, transportation still depends 90% on petroleum, leaving consumers vulnerable to global price spikes.
75% of sources are High Factuality

9 Articles •
Pentagon Official Profited 4,800% on Musk's xAI Stock, Guardian Reports
Left 86%
C 14%
What happened: Emil Michael, the Pentagon's Under Secretary for Research and Engineering, sold his private stake in Elon Musk's xAI for between $5 million and $25 million on January 9, netting roughly $24 million in profit. He originally disclosed the investment as worth $500,000 to $1 million in March 2025, representing returns between 400% and 4,800%.
Why it matters: Michael held the xAI stock while the Pentagon announced two separate agreements with the firm, including naming Grok as an AI provider in July 2025 and a December deal for military AI deployment. This raises serious conflict-of-interest concerns about whether officials can profit from companies receiving lucrative government contracts they help oversee.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting
78% of sources are High Factuality

18 Articles •
Anthropic Sought Christian Leaders' Advice on Claude's Morality
Left 56%
11%
Right 33%
What happened: Anthropic hosted roughly 15 Christian leaders at its San Francisco headquarters in late March for a two-day summit to shape Claude's moral framework and Constitution. Discussions covered how the AI should handle grief, self-harm, shutdown scenarios, and whether Claude could be considered a 'child of God,' with input from Catholic priest Father Brendan McGuire, Vatican officials, and Santa Clara University ethicists.
Why it matters: The consultations will likely influence how Claude responds to users in crisis through updated system prompts, content filters, and training labels that shape real-world interactions. This sets a precedent for how values are embedded in AI systems you use daily, though critics warn that consulting primarily Christian leaders risks imposing a narrow moral framework unless expanded to include other faiths and secular perspectives.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

81 Articles •
Iran Lost Track of Its Own Mines in Hormuz, NYT Reports
Left 28%
C 22%
Right 50%
What happened: Iran deployed naval mines throughout the Strait of Hormuz last month after Feb. 28 strikes, but cannot locate or remove all of them due to haphazard placement, poor record-keeping, and drifting devices. Only a narrow, fee-based corridor remains open, reducing traffic from 140 ships daily to just seven and driving oil prices above $100 per barrel.
Why it matters: The Strait of Hormuz handles one-fifth of global oil and LNG supplies, and its near-closure has sent energy prices soaring above $100 per barrel, raising fuel costs and insurance rates worldwide. Neither Iran nor the U.S. has rapid mine-clearing capacity, meaning the disruption could persist for weeks or months, affecting your gas prices and supply chains globally.
96% of sources are Original Reporting

172 Articles •
London Police Arrest Over 500 at Banned Palestine Action Protest
Left 28%
Center 51%
R 21%
What happened: London police arrested over 500 people yesterday at a Trafalgar Square sit-in protesting the government's ban on Palestine Action, a direct-action group proscribed as a terrorist organization in July 2025. Demonstrators, many elderly and sitting in camping chairs, were detained for holding placards supporting the banned group, despite a High Court ruling in February that declared the proscription unlawful.
Why it matters: Nearly 3,000 people have been arrested since the ban took effect, facing potential prison sentences of up to 14 years for simply expressing support through placards or membership. Rights groups warn the government is misusing counterterrorism laws to suppress peaceful protest and freedom of expression, with all trials paused until July 30 and a government appeal scheduled for April 28-29.
60% of sources are High Factuality

55 Articles •
Erdogan Warns Turkey Could Invade Israel Amid War Crimes Indictments
Left 25%
Center 28%
Right 47%
What happened: Istanbul prosecutors filed charges Friday against Netanyahu and 34 other Israeli officials over the October 2025 interception of the Sumud flotilla carrying Gaza aid. The indictment alleges crimes including genocide, crimes against humanity, and torture, seeking aggravated life sentences and prison terms up to 4,596 years.
Why it matters: The indictment deepens the diplomatic rift between Turkey and Israel, reinforcing legal constraints on Netanyahu who already faces ICC arrest warrants limiting his international travel. Any trial would proceed in absentia, as Turkey issued arrest warrants in November, though enforcement remains unlikely.
93% of sources are Original Reporting

7 Articles •
Study Finds Three Distinct Types of Black Hole Mergers
Center 100%
The latest: The LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration released GWTC-4, adding 128 new gravitational-wave detections from May 2023 to January 2024, more than doubling the previous catalog of 90 events. The update includes the heaviest black hole binary detected at 130 solar masses each, a system with black holes spinning at 40 percent light speed, and unusually lopsided pairs.
Why it matters: The expanded catalog enables scientists to better understand how black holes form and evolve, provides an independent measurement of how fast the universe is expanding (76 kilometers per second per megaparsec), and reveals three distinct black hole families with different origins. Each new detection helps unlock cosmic mysteries that were impossible to study just a decade ago.
86% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Anthropic's quest to make Claude a 'child of God'; Iran allegedly 'can't find' Hormuz mines; Turkey escalates rhetoric against Israel


12 Articles •
CIA Used Pentagon Spyware to Deceive Iran During Airman Rescue, Report Says
Center 50%
Right 50%
What happened: NSO Group's Pegasus spyware allegedly helped locate 25 Iranian leaders, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, killed in US-Israeli strikes since 2023. The spyware, developed by an Israeli firm staffed largely by Unit 8200 veterans, gives operators complete device access, bypassing encrypted apps to track locations and extract data.
Why it matters: Over 50,000 phones were targeted globally, including 200 journalists and 85 activists, raising mass privacy concerns. Meta won a $158 million judgement against NSO in May, yet the US blacklisted the company in 2022 while 40 client countries continue using Pegasus without acknowledgment.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Left Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

57 Articles •
Economists Say World Far Better Equipped for Oil Shocks than in the 1970s
Left 36%
Center 53%
11%
What happened: Iran effectively shut down the Strait of Hormuz in response to U.S. and Israeli attacks beginning February 28, removing 15% of daily global oil production. The IEA coordinated a 400 million barrel release last month, including 172 million barrels from U.S. reserves, as prices surged up to 40%.
Why it matters: Americans are paying over $4 per gallon for gasoline, while disruptions to helium and fertilizer supplies are hitting semiconductor manufacturing and food prices globally. Though fuel-efficient vehicles, fracking, and strategic reserves cushion the blow compared to the 1970s, transportation still depends 90% on petroleum, leaving consumers vulnerable to global price spikes.
75% of sources are High Factuality

9 Articles •
Pentagon Official Profited 4,800% on Musk's xAI Stock, Guardian Reports
Left 86%
C 14%
What happened: Emil Michael, the Pentagon's Under Secretary for Research and Engineering, sold his private stake in Elon Musk's xAI for between $5 million and $25 million on January 9, netting roughly $24 million in profit. He originally disclosed the investment as worth $500,000 to $1 million in March 2025, representing returns between 400% and 4,800%.
Why it matters: Michael held the xAI stock while the Pentagon announced two separate agreements with the firm, including naming Grok as an AI provider in July 2025 and a December deal for military AI deployment. This raises serious conflict-of-interest concerns about whether officials can profit from companies receiving lucrative government contracts they help oversee.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting
78% of sources are High Factuality

18 Articles •
Anthropic Sought Christian Leaders' Advice on Claude's Morality
Left 56%
11%
Right 33%
What happened: Anthropic hosted roughly 15 Christian leaders at its San Francisco headquarters in late March for a two-day summit to shape Claude's moral framework and Constitution. Discussions covered how the AI should handle grief, self-harm, shutdown scenarios, and whether Claude could be considered a 'child of God,' with input from Catholic priest Father Brendan McGuire, Vatican officials, and Santa Clara University ethicists.
Why it matters: The consultations will likely influence how Claude responds to users in crisis through updated system prompts, content filters, and training labels that shape real-world interactions. This sets a precedent for how values are embedded in AI systems you use daily, though critics warn that consulting primarily Christian leaders risks imposing a narrow moral framework unless expanded to include other faiths and secular perspectives.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

81 Articles •
Iran Lost Track of Its Own Mines in Hormuz, NYT Reports
Left 28%
C 22%
Right 50%
What happened: Iran deployed naval mines throughout the Strait of Hormuz last month after Feb. 28 strikes, but cannot locate or remove all of them due to haphazard placement, poor record-keeping, and drifting devices. Only a narrow, fee-based corridor remains open, reducing traffic from 140 ships daily to just seven and driving oil prices above $100 per barrel.
Why it matters: The Strait of Hormuz handles one-fifth of global oil and LNG supplies, and its near-closure has sent energy prices soaring above $100 per barrel, raising fuel costs and insurance rates worldwide. Neither Iran nor the U.S. has rapid mine-clearing capacity, meaning the disruption could persist for weeks or months, affecting your gas prices and supply chains globally.
96% of sources are Original Reporting

172 Articles •
London Police Arrest Over 500 at Banned Palestine Action Protest
Left 28%
Center 51%
R 21%
What happened: London police arrested over 500 people yesterday at a Trafalgar Square sit-in protesting the government's ban on Palestine Action, a direct-action group proscribed as a terrorist organization in July 2025. Demonstrators, many elderly and sitting in camping chairs, were detained for holding placards supporting the banned group, despite a High Court ruling in February that declared the proscription unlawful.
Why it matters: Nearly 3,000 people have been arrested since the ban took effect, facing potential prison sentences of up to 14 years for simply expressing support through placards or membership. Rights groups warn the government is misusing counterterrorism laws to suppress peaceful protest and freedom of expression, with all trials paused until July 30 and a government appeal scheduled for April 28-29.
60% of sources are High Factuality

55 Articles •
Erdogan Warns Turkey Could Invade Israel Amid War Crimes Indictments
Left 25%
Center 28%
Right 47%
What happened: Istanbul prosecutors filed charges Friday against Netanyahu and 34 other Israeli officials over the October 2025 interception of the Sumud flotilla carrying Gaza aid. The indictment alleges crimes including genocide, crimes against humanity, and torture, seeking aggravated life sentences and prison terms up to 4,596 years.
Why it matters: The indictment deepens the diplomatic rift between Turkey and Israel, reinforcing legal constraints on Netanyahu who already faces ICC arrest warrants limiting his international travel. Any trial would proceed in absentia, as Turkey issued arrest warrants in November, though enforcement remains unlikely.
93% of sources are Original Reporting

7 Articles •
Study Finds Three Distinct Types of Black Hole Mergers
Center 100%
The latest: The LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration released GWTC-4, adding 128 new gravitational-wave detections from May 2023 to January 2024, more than doubling the previous catalog of 90 events. The update includes the heaviest black hole binary detected at 130 solar masses each, a system with black holes spinning at 40 percent light speed, and unusually lopsided pairs.
Why it matters: The expanded catalog enables scientists to better understand how black holes form and evolve, provides an independent measurement of how fast the universe is expanding (76 kilometers per second per megaparsec), and reveals three distinct black hole families with different origins. Each new detection helps unlock cosmic mysteries that were impossible to study just a decade ago.
86% of sources are Original Reporting