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3I/Atlas eruptions captured by Hubble; Deepfakes selling supplements; Chernobyl shield compromised
84 Articles •
UN Seeks $23 Billion Following 2025 Funding Shortfall
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What happened: The UN launched a sharply reduced 2026 humanitarian appeal seeking $23 billion to save 87 million lives, down from last year's $47 billion request, after receiving only $12 billion in 2025—the lowest funding in a decade. The appeal prioritizes Gaza ($4.1 billion), Sudan ($2.9 billion), and Syria ($2.8 billion) amid plunging donor support and record attacks on aid workers.
Why it matters: Major Western donors, led by the US cutting aid from $11 billion to $2.7 billion, have forced the UN to shut out tens of millions needing help despite record humanitarian crises affecting 240 million people globally. The funding gap has already caused 25 million fewer people to receive assistance this year, leading to surging hunger, collapsing health systems, and over 320 aid worker deaths.
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Thailand Launches Airstrikes Along Cambodia Border After Dawn Clashes
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What happened: Thailand deployed F-16 fighter jets to strike Cambodian military positions this morning after Cambodian fire killed one Thai soldier and wounded four others in border clashes. Both nations accuse each other of attacking first, with fighting erupting near centuries-old temples in disputed Preah Vihear and Oddar Meanchey provinces.
Why it matters: This marks the most serious escalation since a US-brokered ceasefire in July that ended five days of fighting which killed 48 people and displaced 300,000 civilians. Over 385,000 Thai civilians across four border districts are now being evacuated, with 35,000 already in temporary shelters, raising fears of broader regional instability.
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Moonquakes Threaten NASA's Plans for Permanent Lunar Bases
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What happened: Scientists found that repeated moonquakes near magnitude 3.0, not meteoroid impacts, caused boulder tracks and landslides at Apollo 17's Taurus-Littrow valley landing site. The seismic activity, linked to the Lee-Lincoln fault, has persisted over 90 million years and suggests the fault remains active today.
Why it matters: While short missions face minimal danger, longer lunar stays and taller lander designs like Starship face gradually increasing seismic risk from active faults. These findings could reshape how NASA plans Artemis missions and future lunar settlements, influencing site selection and structural designs.
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20 Articles •
Iran Executions Hit 37-Year High as Resistance Launches Attacks
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What happened: Iran has executed over 1,000 people in 2025, the highest yearly total in at least 15 years, following Israeli airstrikes in June that killed approximately 1,100 people including an attack on Evin prison. Authorities arrested 21,000 people by mid-August, including journalists, lawyers, and human rights defenders, and expedited trials through Revolutionary Courts for national security and drug-related offenses.
Why it matters: The crackdown disproportionately targets marginalized minorities including Afghans, Kurds, Arabs, and Baluchis, with Afghan executions tripling from 25 in 2023 to 80 in 2024. Detainees face solitary confinement, forced confessions, denial of medical care, and grossly unfair trials before Revolutionary Courts, while new legislation expands death penalty grounds for espionage and social media posts deemed false information.
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12 Articles •
Report: Disability Registrations Surge at Elite US Universities
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The numbers: At top U.S. universities, disability accommodation rates have surged dramatically: Stanford reports 38%, Amherst 34%, and Brown and Harvard each 20%, mostly for ADHD, anxiety, and depression. In contrast, community colleges report only 3-4% of students receiving accommodations.
Why it matters: Multiple factors drive this trend: 2013 DSM changes lowered ADHD diagnosis thresholds, social media broadly portrays conditions as identity markers, and permissive ADA documentation rules enable easy accommodation access. Risk-averse students may seek diagnoses to protect grades when college becomes challenging, raising concerns about overdiagnosis versus legitimate need.
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