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State Department scrubs X; potential nuclear risks as Russia strikes; Japan elections go to Takaichi
64 Articles •
Iran Sentences Nobel Laureate Narges Mohammadi to 7 More Years
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What happened: Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi, 53, has been on hunger strike for three days while held in solitary confinement in Mashhad since her December 12 arrest at a memorial ceremony. She is demanding phone access to her family, legal representation, and visitors after her last call on December 14.
Why it matters: Mohammadi's detention highlights Iran's ongoing crackdown on dissent, with over 50,000 arrests since 2022 protests. Her family fears authorities are silencing the internationally recognized activist, who faces 36 years in prison and has serious medical conditions including heart problems that make her detention life-threatening.
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31 Articles •
Hong Kong's Jimmy Lai Gets 20 Years in Prison for National Security Crimes
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What happened: Jimmy Lai, 78-year-old founder of now-defunct Apple Daily, was sentenced to 20 years in prison today after December conviction under Hong Kong's national security law for conspiring to collude with foreign forces and publishing seditious material. Eighteen years will run consecutively with a separate fraud sentence; he has been detained since 2020.
Why it matters: The verdict marks a major blow to press freedom in Hong Kong, with international groups condemning the sentence as chilling journalism and dissent. The case demonstrates broad application of national security law to media activities, potentially criminalizing legitimate critiques and international engagement by journalists and academics.
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14 Articles •
Bone Found in Spain May Be First Evidence of Hannibal's Elephants
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The discovery: Archaeologists unearthed a baseball-sized, 2,200-year-old elephant carpal bone at Colina de los Quemados near Córdoba, Spain, in 2019. Radiocarbon dating and military artifacts including stone projectiles, heavy arrowheads, and Carthaginian coins link the bone to a Second Punic War battle, potentially providing the first direct skeletal evidence of Carthaginian war elephants.
Why it matters: This rare find transforms centuries of artistic and written accounts of Hannibal's legendary war elephants into tangible archaeological proof. The discovery represents one of the scarce instances of direct physical evidence for war elephants in Classical Antiquity across Western Europe, potentially reshaping our understanding of Carthaginian military operations during the Punic Wars.
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15 Articles •
Chang'e-6 Samples Confirm Uniform Impact Rates Across Moon
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What happened: Chinese scientists analyzed Chang'e-6 samples returned in June 2024 from the Moon's far side and discovered unusually heavy potassium isotopes linked to the ancient South Pole-Aitken Basin impact. The team also mapped crater densities across both lunar hemispheres, confirming uniform impact rates and creating the first globally unified lunar chronology spanning 4.25 billion years.
Why it matters: The revised chronology provides a more accurate method for dating lunar and planetary surfaces throughout the solar system, correcting decades of reliance on near-side samples alone. The findings reveal how massive impacts can alter a planet's deep interior chemistry and volcanic activity, helping explain why the Moon's far side shows less volcanic history than its near side.
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25 Articles •
IAEA Warns of Nuclear Risk After Russian Strikes Halt Ukraine Plants
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What happened: Russian attacks on Ukraine's power grid over the past weekend forced nuclear reactors to automatically shut down or reduce output, cut off-site power at Chornobyl for an hour, and triggered emergency diesel generators. IAEA teams are now inspecting 10 critical substations during a two-week mission to assess damage and strengthen grid resilience.
Why it matters: Ukraine's nuclear plants generate about half the country's electricity, and repeated grid attacks create serious nuclear safety risks for all of Europe. The Rivne plant sits just 135 kilometers from EU and NATO borders, while millions of Ukrainians face power outages and heating loss in freezing temperatures.
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100 Articles •
Venezuela Assembly Leader Sets Amnesty Bill, Prisoners Release Deadlines
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The latest: Venezuela's National Assembly unanimously approved the Amnesty Bill for Democratic Coexistence in its first reading last week, covering political crimes from January 1999 to January 30, 2026. Assembly President Jorge Rodríguez announced all political prisoners will be released the same day the law passes its second reading, scheduled for this Tuesday and no later than Friday, February 13.
What it means: Hundreds of Venezuelans detained for political activities since 1999 could be freed within days, ending years of separation for families who protested outside Helicoide prison yesterday. The law excludes those convicted of crimes against humanity, war crimes, intentional homicide, drug trafficking, and corruption, and will halt ongoing investigations and court proceedings for covered offenses.
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20 Articles •
US Debt Nears WWII Levels Amid $38 Trillion Crisis
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What happened: The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget warned this week that U.S. national debt has hit 100% of GDP, with interest costs surging to roughly $1 trillion last year—consuming 18% of federal revenue. The nonpartisan group outlined six potential crisis scenarios including financial collapse, spiraling inflation, forced austerity, currency devaluation, catastrophic default, or gradual economic decline unless policymakers enact deficit reduction measures.
Why it matters: Any of these crises could substantially reduce American living standards, with Congressional Budget Office models suggesting real income per person could be 8% lower by 2050. A financial crisis could trigger bank failures and spike unemployment, while inflation from debt monetization would erode savings and purchasing power, making everyday goods more expensive for households nationwide.
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240 Articles •
Japan's Takaichi Wins Landslide in Snap Election, Exit Polls Show
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What happened: Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's Liberal Democratic Party won a commanding majority in yesterday's snap election, with exit polls projecting 274-328 seats in the 465-seat Lower House. The LDP alone secured 244 seats, surpassing the 233 needed for a majority, while the opposition alliance sank to half their pre-election share of 167 seats.
Why it matters: The two-thirds majority enables Takaichi to push major policy shifts including lifting weapons export bans, increasing defense spending in response to U.S. pressure, and implementing stricter immigration controls by December. Japan faces persistent inflation at 2.1%, real wage declines for 11 consecutive months, and a weakening yen approaching 160 against the dollar, making economic and security policy changes directly relevant to household budgets and civil liberties.
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State Department Scrubs Pre-2025 Social Media Posts from Public View
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What happened: The State Department is deleting all posts made before Jan. 20, 2025, from its official X accounts, including embassy and ambassador accounts, by Feb. 20. The posts will be archived internally but removed from public view, requiring Freedom of Information Act requests for access.
Why it matters: Years of diplomatic records—including embassy livestreams, vaccine donations, and holiday greetings—will disappear from easy public access, limiting transparency and complicating journalism and research. Unlike past transitions, no public archive will exist, forcing you to file slow FOIA requests to view historical government communications.
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