Daily Briefing
Australia journalism strike over AI; Vatican gives guidance on animal implants

32 Articles •
Iran Drafts Law to Formalize Tolls on Strait of Hormuz
L 21%
Center 36%
Right 43%
What's happening: Iran's Parliament is drafting legislation to formalize charging vessels up to $2.8 million for 'safe passage' through the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway carrying 20% of global oil daily. The bill is expected to be finalized next week as the Middle East war enters its fourth week, with only two vessels crossing on March 24 compared to the usual 150-160 daily transits.
Why it matters: The strait's near-closure has already driven Brent crude oil above $114 per barrel this week, with analysts warning of potential spikes to $200. Over 3,200 vessels remain stranded in Gulf waters, and Iran's proposal to demand payment in yuan threatens the U.S. petrodollar's dominance while disrupting global logistics and fuel supplies.
91% of sources are Original Reporting

27 Articles •
UK Authorizes Military Seizure of Russian Shadow Fleet Tankers
Left 33%
Center 45%
R 22%
What happened: Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer authorized UK Armed Forces and law enforcement to board, detain, and potentially seize sanctioned Russian-linked tankers transiting UK waters, with criminal proceedings possible against owners, operators and crews. The UK has sanctioned 544 shadow fleet vessels that transport an estimated 75% of Russia's crude oil exports to evade Western restrictions.
Why it matters: The operations aim to choke off revenues funding Russia's war in Ukraine and address environmental risks from aging, poorly regulated tankers prone to spills and mechanical failures. Boarding teams from the Special Boat Service and Royal Marines have completed training and first interdictions are expected soon, potentially altering shipping routes and raising costs.
89% of sources are Original Reporting

37 Articles •
CDC Flags New COVID Variant BA.3.2 Across 25 US States
Left 39%
Center 44%
R 17%
The details: BA.3.2 (nicknamed 'Cicada') carries roughly 70–75 spike mutations and was first seen in South Africa in November 2024, with U.S. detection in June 2025. The CDC reported last week it appears in wastewater and clinical samples across 25 states and 23 countries, though it represents a small share of recent sequenced U.S. cases.
Why it matters: Early lab data show BA.3.2 may partially evade antibodies from prior infection and current vaccines, possibly prompting booster updates. It has not raised severity so far, but wastewater increases suggest wider underdetected spread; older adults and immunocompromised people remain most at risk.
81% of sources are Original Reporting

19 Articles •
Conscientious Objector Filings Surge as 82nd Airborne Heads to Iran, Non-Profit Claims
Left 74%
C 13%
R 13%
The surge: Conscientious objector filings have increased 1,000% in March as thousands of US troops deploy to the Middle East for operations against Iran. The Center on Conscience & War processed more applications in two weeks following February 28 than it typically sees annually, with clients including fighter pilots and a major-level officer.
Why it matters: Service members cite moral opposition to the February 28 Minab school strike that killed at least 168 people, including 110 schoolgirls, as their breaking point. The surge in objector filings could affect military readiness and troop morale as 13 US troops have been killed and 232 wounded, with public polling showing 55% of Americans oppose sending troops to Iran.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
95% of sources are Original Reporting

16 Articles •
Taiwan Warns China Exploiting US Middle East War to Pressure Island
Left 30%
Center 40%
Right 30%
What happened: China resumed large-scale air force incursions near Taiwan starting March 14-15 after an unusual lull, with officials warning Beijing is exploiting US military redeployment to the Middle East. Chinese state media is highlighting alleged US weapons weaknesses and deploying AI-generated propaganda claiming Taiwan faces energy crises to undermine public confidence.
Why it matters: Taiwan has proposed $40 billion in extra defense spending as a prolonged Middle East conflict could drain US resources and shift strategic attention away from the Indo-Pacific. Beijing is using cognitive warfare tactics including AI-generated content and infrastructure incentives to erode Taiwanese public confidence in energy security and defense preparedness.
88% of sources are Original Reporting

85 Articles •
Ancient DNA Pushes Dog Domestication Back 5,000 Years
Left 32%
Center 45%
R 23%
The discovery: Two new genetic studies published today in Nature confirm dogs lived alongside humans as early as 15,800 years ago in Turkey, pushing back confirmed domestication by 5,000 years. Researchers analyzed over 200 ancient canine remains across Europe and southwest Asia, finding dogs were already widespread across western Eurasia by 14,200 years ago during the Paleolithic period, thousands of years before agriculture emerged.
Why it matters: These Paleolithic dogs are direct ancestors of many modern breeds including boxers and salukis, meaning your pet may trace half its ancestry back over 15,000 years. The findings show dogs were deeply integrated into hunter-gatherer societies long before farming, with evidence humans fed them fish, buried puppies alongside people, and treated them with the same care and symbolic importance as family members.

88 Articles •
Judge Says Pentagon's Anthropic Ban Looks Like Punishment
Left 34%
Center 46%
R 20%
What happened: Anthropic sued the Trump administration after the Pentagon designated it a supply chain risk on March 3, the first time a U.S. company received this label typically reserved for foreign adversaries. The dispute arose when Anthropic refused contract terms allowing unrestricted military use of its Claude AI, specifically rejecting mass surveillance of Americans and fully autonomous weapons.
Why it matters: The designation could cost Anthropic billions in lost business and bar major Pentagon contractors like Microsoft, Amazon, and Palantir from using Claude. A ruling expected within days will set precedent for how far the government can restrict AI vendors and could impact defense contracting industry-wide.
70% of sources are High Factuality

21 Articles •
30+ Bodies Exhumed from Kenya Mass Grave
Left 40%
Center 50%
10%
What happened: Homicide detectives exhumed 33 bodies—25 children and 8 adults—from a mass grave at Makaburini Cemetery in Kericho yesterday following reports of secret burials. Initial findings indicate 13 unclaimed bodies were transported from Nyamira County Referral Hospital on March 20, though the total count more than doubled during excavation.
Why it matters: The discovery raises urgent questions about how hospitals handle unclaimed bodies and whether proper legal procedures are followed. Senator Cherargei noted that 480 bodies remain unclaimed at Kenyatta National Hospital alone, half of them children, prompting calls for nationwide accountability and transparency in mortuary practices.
95% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Australia journalism strike over AI; Vatican gives guidance on animal implants


32 Articles •
Iran Drafts Law to Formalize Tolls on Strait of Hormuz
L 21%
Center 36%
Right 43%
What's happening: Iran's Parliament is drafting legislation to formalize charging vessels up to $2.8 million for 'safe passage' through the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway carrying 20% of global oil daily. The bill is expected to be finalized next week as the Middle East war enters its fourth week, with only two vessels crossing on March 24 compared to the usual 150-160 daily transits.
Why it matters: The strait's near-closure has already driven Brent crude oil above $114 per barrel this week, with analysts warning of potential spikes to $200. Over 3,200 vessels remain stranded in Gulf waters, and Iran's proposal to demand payment in yuan threatens the U.S. petrodollar's dominance while disrupting global logistics and fuel supplies.
91% of sources are Original Reporting

27 Articles •
UK Authorizes Military Seizure of Russian Shadow Fleet Tankers
Left 33%
Center 45%
R 22%
What happened: Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer authorized UK Armed Forces and law enforcement to board, detain, and potentially seize sanctioned Russian-linked tankers transiting UK waters, with criminal proceedings possible against owners, operators and crews. The UK has sanctioned 544 shadow fleet vessels that transport an estimated 75% of Russia's crude oil exports to evade Western restrictions.
Why it matters: The operations aim to choke off revenues funding Russia's war in Ukraine and address environmental risks from aging, poorly regulated tankers prone to spills and mechanical failures. Boarding teams from the Special Boat Service and Royal Marines have completed training and first interdictions are expected soon, potentially altering shipping routes and raising costs.
89% of sources are Original Reporting

37 Articles •
CDC Flags New COVID Variant BA.3.2 Across 25 US States
Left 39%
Center 44%
R 17%
The details: BA.3.2 (nicknamed 'Cicada') carries roughly 70–75 spike mutations and was first seen in South Africa in November 2024, with U.S. detection in June 2025. The CDC reported last week it appears in wastewater and clinical samples across 25 states and 23 countries, though it represents a small share of recent sequenced U.S. cases.
Why it matters: Early lab data show BA.3.2 may partially evade antibodies from prior infection and current vaccines, possibly prompting booster updates. It has not raised severity so far, but wastewater increases suggest wider underdetected spread; older adults and immunocompromised people remain most at risk.
81% of sources are Original Reporting

19 Articles •
Conscientious Objector Filings Surge as 82nd Airborne Heads to Iran, Non-Profit Claims
Left 74%
C 13%
R 13%
The surge: Conscientious objector filings have increased 1,000% in March as thousands of US troops deploy to the Middle East for operations against Iran. The Center on Conscience & War processed more applications in two weeks following February 28 than it typically sees annually, with clients including fighter pilots and a major-level officer.
Why it matters: Service members cite moral opposition to the February 28 Minab school strike that killed at least 168 people, including 110 schoolgirls, as their breaking point. The surge in objector filings could affect military readiness and troop morale as 13 US troops have been killed and 232 wounded, with public polling showing 55% of Americans oppose sending troops to Iran.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
95% of sources are Original Reporting

16 Articles •
Taiwan Warns China Exploiting US Middle East War to Pressure Island
Left 30%
Center 40%
Right 30%
What happened: China resumed large-scale air force incursions near Taiwan starting March 14-15 after an unusual lull, with officials warning Beijing is exploiting US military redeployment to the Middle East. Chinese state media is highlighting alleged US weapons weaknesses and deploying AI-generated propaganda claiming Taiwan faces energy crises to undermine public confidence.
Why it matters: Taiwan has proposed $40 billion in extra defense spending as a prolonged Middle East conflict could drain US resources and shift strategic attention away from the Indo-Pacific. Beijing is using cognitive warfare tactics including AI-generated content and infrastructure incentives to erode Taiwanese public confidence in energy security and defense preparedness.
88% of sources are Original Reporting

85 Articles •
Ancient DNA Pushes Dog Domestication Back 5,000 Years
Left 32%
Center 45%
R 23%
The discovery: Two new genetic studies published today in Nature confirm dogs lived alongside humans as early as 15,800 years ago in Turkey, pushing back confirmed domestication by 5,000 years. Researchers analyzed over 200 ancient canine remains across Europe and southwest Asia, finding dogs were already widespread across western Eurasia by 14,200 years ago during the Paleolithic period, thousands of years before agriculture emerged.
Why it matters: These Paleolithic dogs are direct ancestors of many modern breeds including boxers and salukis, meaning your pet may trace half its ancestry back over 15,000 years. The findings show dogs were deeply integrated into hunter-gatherer societies long before farming, with evidence humans fed them fish, buried puppies alongside people, and treated them with the same care and symbolic importance as family members.

88 Articles •
Judge Says Pentagon's Anthropic Ban Looks Like Punishment
Left 34%
Center 46%
R 20%
What happened: Anthropic sued the Trump administration after the Pentagon designated it a supply chain risk on March 3, the first time a U.S. company received this label typically reserved for foreign adversaries. The dispute arose when Anthropic refused contract terms allowing unrestricted military use of its Claude AI, specifically rejecting mass surveillance of Americans and fully autonomous weapons.
Why it matters: The designation could cost Anthropic billions in lost business and bar major Pentagon contractors like Microsoft, Amazon, and Palantir from using Claude. A ruling expected within days will set precedent for how far the government can restrict AI vendors and could impact defense contracting industry-wide.
70% of sources are High Factuality

21 Articles •
30+ Bodies Exhumed from Kenya Mass Grave
Left 40%
Center 50%
10%
What happened: Homicide detectives exhumed 33 bodies—25 children and 8 adults—from a mass grave at Makaburini Cemetery in Kericho yesterday following reports of secret burials. Initial findings indicate 13 unclaimed bodies were transported from Nyamira County Referral Hospital on March 20, though the total count more than doubled during excavation.
Why it matters: The discovery raises urgent questions about how hospitals handle unclaimed bodies and whether proper legal procedures are followed. Senator Cherargei noted that 480 bodies remain unclaimed at Kenyatta National Hospital alone, half of them children, prompting calls for nationwide accountability and transparency in mortuary practices.
95% of sources are Original Reporting