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Psilocybin yield potential results for cocaine addiction; Israeli strikes Lebanon killing 19; Alibaba pushes a domestic chip
51 Articles •
Pakistani Court Sentences TikToker to Death for Murdering Teen Influencer
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What happened: An Islamabad court sentenced Umar Hayat, 23, to death for murdering 17-year-old TikTok influencer Sana Yousaf in June 2025 after she repeatedly rejected his advances. The court found overwhelming evidence including a judicial confession, eyewitness testimony from Yousaf's mother and aunt, forensic fingerprints, and recovery of the murder weapon and victim's phone.
Why it matters: The case has reignited nationwide debate about women's safety and online harassment in Pakistan, where 346 women were killed in honor-related violence in 2024 alone. The verdict sends a strong message about consequences for gender-based violence, though the death sentence requires confirmation by the Islamabad High Court and can be appealed.
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84% of sources are Original Reporting
41 Articles •
Ukraine Claws Back Territory as Russian Losses Outpace Recruitment for Fifth Straight Month
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What happened: Ukraine's commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrskyi reported yesterday at NATO headquarters that Russia is losing more troops than it can replace for the fifth consecutive month. Since January 2026, Russia has lost over 141,500 personnel including more than 83,000 killed, while Ukraine's mass deployment of mid-range strike drones has weakened Russian air defenses and hit targets deep inside Russia, including near Moscow.
Why it matters: This marks a potential turning point in the war as Russia's manpower advantage erodes and Ukraine establishes a 10-15 kilometer kill zone along front lines where Russian forces face constant drone attacks. The shift undermines Putin's 2026 objective to seize eastern Ukraine and may influence diplomatic efforts, with Chinese President Xi reportedly telling President Trump that Putin might regret the invasion.
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90% of sources are Original Reporting
60 Articles •
Surgeon General Warns Excessive Screen Time Poses Serious Risks to Children
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The details: HHS released an advisory yesterday warning that excessive screen time harms children's sleep, school performance, physical activity and relationships. The guidance recommends no screens for children under 18 months, less than one hour daily for ages 18 months to six years, and two hours maximum for ages six to 18, noting teens currently average four or more hours daily.
What to do: Parents should implement the "5 Ds" framework: discuss healthy screen use with family, model good behaviors, delay screen time as long as possible, divert attention to physical activities, and disconnect regularly with screen-free family time. Healthcare providers will begin screening for screen use during annual checkups, while schools are encouraged to restrict cell phones and prioritize paper-based assignments.
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90% of sources are High Factuality
92 Articles •
LaGuardia Closes Runway After Sinkhole Discovery, Delaying Flights
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What happened: Port Authority crews discovered a sinkhole near Runway 4/22 during a routine morning inspection around 11 a.m. today, forcing immediate closure of one of LaGuardia's only two runways. Emergency construction teams with excavators and dump trucks are onsite conducting repairs while the FAA slows incoming flights, causing roughly 200 cancellations and 190 delays.
Why it matters: With only one runway operational and forecast thunderstorms today, travelers face average delays exceeding 90 minutes with 17% of flights canceled. The closure comes just days before Memorial Day weekend when over two million passengers are expected through New York airports, potentially causing ripple effects across the Northeast air traffic system.
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67% of sources are Original Reporting
11 Articles •
Kennedy Family Member Exits Two Trump Intelligence Roles
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What happened: Amaryllis Fox Kennedy, a former CIA officer and daughter-in-law of HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is stepping down from two of her three intelligence posts—deputy to DNI Tulsi Gabbard and OMB associate director overseeing classified budgets—while keeping her seat on the President's Intelligence Advisory Board.
Why it matters: Her departure marks another senior-level intelligence shakeup and follows National Counterterrorism Center director Joe Kent's March resignation, both reportedly linked to disagreements over Trump's Iran war, which has killed at least 1,700 civilians and involved over 13,000 U.S. airstrikes since late February.
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91% of sources are Original Reporting
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