Skip to main content
See every side of every news story
Daily Briefing
Abe's assassin gets his sentence; Vast moves to replace ISS; Wildfire links to autism in children
237 Articles •
House Committee Votes to Hold Bill and Hillary Clinton in Contempt
L 22%
Center 51%
Right 27%
What happened: The Republican-controlled House Oversight Committee approved contempt resolutions yesterday against Bill and Hillary Clinton for refusing to comply with a subpoena demanding testimony about their ties to Jeffrey Epstein. Chairman James Comer rejected a Tuesday offer for Bill Clinton to be interviewed in New York, insisting on a transcribed deposition after five months of negotiations.
Why it matters: This marks the first time contempt proceedings target a former president, potentially setting precedent for compelling ex-presidential testimony. If the full House approves and the DOJ prosecutes, the Clintons could face substantial fines or even incarceration, though passage requires a majority vote that Republicans increasingly struggle to achieve.
Seal Check SVG Icon
72% of sources are High Factuality
39 Articles •
400 Millionaires Urge Higher Taxes on Ultra-Wealthy
Left 63%
Center 25%
12%
What happened: Nearly 400 millionaires and billionaires from 24 countries signed an open letter this week urging World Economic Forum leaders in Davos to impose higher taxes on the ultra-wealthy. High-profile signatories include Mark Ruffalo, Abigail Disney, and Brian Eno, with accompanying polling of 3,900 millionaires showing 77% believe the extremely wealthy buy political influence and 65% support higher taxes on top earners.
Why it matters: The richest 1% now own three times more wealth than the world's total public wealth combined, a gap that has grown from $36 trillion in 1975 to $435 trillion in 2024. This concentration of wealth threatens democracy by allowing the ultra-rich to buy political influence, erode public services like hospitals and schools, and prevent action on inequality and climate issues that affect everyday people's ability to afford basic necessities.
Blindspot LogoBlindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
Shield Badge SVG Icon
97% of sources are Original Reporting
24 Articles •
Ukraine Minister Fedorov Aims for 50,000 Russian Casualties Monthly
Left 100%
What happened: Defense Minister Fedorov set a goal to inflict 50,000 Russian casualties each month, establishing an explicit operational target for Ukraine's forces.
What it means: The target signals intent to sustain high‑intensity operations and could shape military planning, civilian risk levels, and debates over international support.
Blindspot LogoBlindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
Shield Badge SVG Icon
100% of sources are Original Reporting
16 Articles •
Vast's Haven-1 Enters Final Assembly Ahead of 2027 Launch
Left 25%
Center 50%
Right 25%
The details: California startup Vast is building Haven-1, the first commercial space station designed to host up to four astronauts for missions lasting 10 days to a month. The compact 45-cubic-meter orbital habitat will launch on SpaceX's Falcon 9 with crew transport via Crew Dragon, though the previously announced mid-2026 target is no longer achievable and launch is now set for early 2027.
Why it matters: Haven-1 serves as a demonstration platform for Vast's larger Haven-2 station and could accelerate commercial access to space for researchers, private astronauts, and companies conducting biotechnology and pharmaceutical experiments. The schedule slip adds uncertainty to NASA's timeline for replacing the International Space Station, which faces decommissioning in less than five years, creating pressure on multiple private competitors vying for NASA contracts.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
100% of sources are Original Reporting
32 Articles •
Study Links Wildfire Smoke in Pregnancy to Autism Risk
Left 43%
Center 50%
 
The findings: A study of children born in Southern California from 2006 to 2014 found that pregnant women exposed to wildfire smoke in their third trimester faced 11% higher autism risk with just one to five smoke days, rising to 23% with more than 10 smoke days. The research, published this week in Environmental Science & Technology, is the first to examine prenatal wildfire smoke exposure and autism.
What it means: With wildfires burning for an average of 52 days in the western U.S. (up from six days in the 1980s) and one in 31 children diagnosed with autism by age nine, pregnant women in wildfire-prone areas face growing exposure risks. Fine particles in wildfire smoke can lodge deep in lungs, enter the bloodstream, and cause inflammation during critical fetal brain development in late pregnancy.
Blindspot LogoBlindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
Shield Badge SVG Icon
75% of sources are Original Reporting
92 Articles •
Canada Models Guerrilla Warfare Response to Hypothetical US Invasion
Left 29%
Center 31%
Right 40%
What happened: The Canadian Armed Forces developed a theoretical model responding to a hypothetical US invasion, the first such planning in a century. Military planners envision US forces could overcome Canadian positions within two days to a week, prompting Canada to adopt insurgency tactics including ambushes, sabotage, and drone warfare similar to those used against Soviet and US forces in Afghanistan.
Why it matters: This unprecedented planning reflects deteriorating US-Canada relations amid President Trump's repeated references to Canada as the '51st state' and threats toward Greenland. The scenario would shatter NATO alliances, potentially drawing Britain and France to Canada's defense, while forcing Canada to expand homeland defense capabilities and potentially arm civilian irregular fighters to impose mass casualties on occupying forces.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
91% of sources are Original Reporting
7 Articles •
Far-Red Light Triggers Protein that Disarms Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria
Center 100%
The discovery: University of Chicago researchers identified a small light-activated protein called DimA that triggers a cascade suppressing biofilm formation and virulence in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an antibiotic-resistant bacterium causing dangerous hospital infections. Graduate student Dimitrios Manias led the study published yesterday in Nature Communications, building on the team's 2019 discovery that far-red light prevents biofilm formation.
Why it matters: This breakthrough could lead to new strategies for preventing biofilms and treating difficult Pseudomonas infections in hospitalized patients, especially those with weakened immune systems or lung diseases. Because the photo-sensing system exists in other bacterial species and several light-activated genes were discovered, the findings may have broader applications beyond this single pathogen.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
86% of sources are Original Reporting
47 Articles •
New Zealand Prime Minister Calls for Nov. 7 Election
Left 31%
Center 50%
R 19%
What happened: Prime Minister Christopher Luxon announced Wednesday that New Zealand's general election will be held on Saturday, November 7, launching a 10-month campaign. The election pits Luxon's National-led coalition against Labour's Chris Hipkins in what polls suggest will be a tight race, with minor parties likely holding the balance of power.
Why it matters: The election outcome will determine economic policy as New Zealand battles a post-pandemic recession with unemployment at a nine-year high of 5.3 percent and three contractions in the last six quarters. Voters face rising living costs, housing affordability issues, and record emigration to Australia, making the economy the central concern for most New Zealanders.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
64% of sources are Original Reporting
Seal Check SVG Icon
72% of sources are High Factuality
174 Articles •
Mexico Sends 37 Cartel Members to US Custody
Left 34%
Center 38%
Right 28%
What happened: Mexico transferred 37 alleged cartel members to U.S. custody on January 20-21, flying them on seven military aircraft to six American cities including Washington, Houston, and New York. This marks the third major transfer in the past year, bringing the total to 92 high-impact criminals sent during President Sheinbaum's administration.
Why it matters: The transfers aim to reduce cartel violence in Mexico by removing high-level criminals, but occur amid heightened U.S.-Mexico tensions as President Trump threatens military action against cartels. The U.S. secured a commitment not to seek the death penalty, while Mexican officials emphasize cooperation under bilateral agreements respecting national sovereignty.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
61% of sources are Original Reporting
News
Feed Dots Icon
For You
Search Icon
Search
Blindspot LogoBlindspotLocal