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Secret Israeli base in Iraq; $100B Data Center in Utah; One Nation has break through in NSW
76 Articles •
Israel Built Secret Base in Iraq During Iran War, WSJ Reports
L 18%
Center 35%
Right 47%
What happened: Israel established a covert military outpost in Iraq's western desert near the Saudi border shortly before late-February strikes on Iran, housing special forces and search-and-rescue teams. When Iraqi troops investigated after a shepherd reported unusual activity in early March, Israeli aircraft struck them, killing one soldier and preventing discovery of the site.
Why it matters: The revelation exposes Israeli operational reach more than 1,600 kilometers from its territory and raises serious sovereignty concerns for Iraq, which has lodged a UN complaint and launched parliamentary investigations. The incident strains Baghdad's delicate balance between Washington and Tehran, potentially affecting regional diplomatic relations and coalition operations in Iraq.
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97% of sources are Original Reporting
40 Articles •
Viral Campaign to Revive Spirit Airlines Draws $337M in Pledges and Union Backing
L 17%
Center 48%
Right 35%
What happened: Hunter Peterson, a 22-year-old voice actor, launched a crowdfunding campaign days after Spirit Airlines shut down on May 2, collecting $337 million in nonbinding pledges from over 370,000 people through letsbuyspirit.com. The campaign proposes a Green Bay Packers-style cooperative ownership model with a minimum $45 pledge, though no actual money has been collected yet.
Why it matters: Spirit's shutdown eliminates the documented 'Spirit Effect' that lowered fares by double-digit percentages on routes it served, meaning travelers will likely pay more as the four largest U.S. airlines now control 80% of domestic capacity. The campaign faces significant regulatory, SEC, and bankruptcy hurdles, with experts noting Spirit accumulated $8.1 billion in debt by August 2025.
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75% of sources are Original Reporting
62 Articles •
Utah Residents Push Referendum Against Massive AI Data Center
Left 33%
Center 45%
R 22%
What happened: Box Elder County residents applied for a November referendum to overturn Monday's approval of a $100 billion, 40,000-acre AI data center backed by investor Kevin O'Leary. The project would consume nine gigawatts of energy—more than double Utah's current statewide usage—and create approximately 2,000 permanent jobs over a 10-year buildout.
Why it matters: Residents fear the massive energy facility could strain the already-struggling Great Salt Lake watershed, increase utility costs, and generate excessive heat and emissions in their rural community. The referendum needs more than 5,000 signatures to appear on the ballot, giving voters direct say over the project's future.
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84% of sources are Original Reporting
66 Articles •
Australian Far-Right One Nation Wins First Federal Lower House Seat in Farrer By-Election
Left 41%
Center 26%
Right 33%
What happened: David Farley won the Farrer by-election for One Nation with 59% of the two-candidate vote, securing the party's first federal lower house seat since its 1997 founding. The rural NSW seat, held by the Coalition for 77 years, saw the Liberal primary vote collapse from 43% to just 12%, while One Nation surged to 42%.
Why it matters: The result signals a potential realignment in conservative politics as voters abandon major parties for populist alternatives amid concerns over immigration, housing affordability, and rising costs. With One Nation now polling at 22% nationally—just behind the Coalition—the upset intensifies pressure on Liberal leader Angus Taylor and may reshape conservative strategy ahead of the 2028 federal election.
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76% of sources are Original Reporting
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61% of sources are High Factuality
36 Articles •
Bahrain Arrests 41 Alleged IRGC Operatives Amid Regional Tensions
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Center 33%
Right 48%
What happened: Bahrain arrested 41 people this week it alleges are linked to Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps, accusing them of espionage, sharing sensitive location data and coordinates of vital sites via encrypted channels, and collecting funds for Iran. The arrests follow earlier detentions in March and come amid ongoing investigations and legal proceedings.
Why it matters: The crackdown reflects heightened Gulf security concerns following the recent US-Israel war with Iran that disrupted the Strait of Hormuz, a vital global energy route. Bahrain, home to the US Fifth Fleet, was targeted by Iranian strikes and has revoked citizenship of 69 people accused of pro-Iran sympathies, signaling intensified regional counterintelligence efforts.
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89% of sources are Original Reporting
41 Articles •
Refinery Blast Near New Orleans Deepens US Fuel Crisis
L 24%
Center 45%
Right 31%
What happened: A powerful explosion at Chalmette Refinery in St. Bernard Parish on Friday afternoon just before 1 p.m. triggered a major fire that sent thick black smoke into the sky, felt as far as New Orleans neighborhoods. First responders contained the blaze within 10 minutes, with no injuries reported among the facility's 500 employees and 200 contractors, though the cause remains under investigation.
Why it matters: The refinery processes 189,000 barrels daily—about 1% of U.S. oil consumption—at a time when national gasoline inventories are already at their lowest seasonal levels since 2014. Any production disruption could worsen tight fuel supplies and potentially push gas prices higher for consumers already paying $4.48 per gallon, though officials report no off-site air quality impacts so far.
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68% of sources are Original Reporting
65 Articles •
Avalanches Strike Evertest's Khumbu Icefall as Record Crowd Awaits Summit Window
Left 41%
Center 32%
Right 27%
What happened: Nepal issued a record 492 permits for Everest this spring, collecting $7.1 million, but a massive unstable serac in the Khumbu Icefall has forced icefall doctors to dig an alternate route that passes beneath the cracked ice block. Elite Sherpa teams opened the route on April 29 with warnings that the serac could collapse at any time.
Why it matters: About 410 foreign climbers and an equal number of Nepali guides are now at base camp preparing to summit through the dangerous Khumbu Icefall, where a similar falling serac triggered a 2014 avalanche that killed 16 guides. China's closure of the north route has pushed all climbers to Nepal's south side, increasing overcrowding risks that contributed to at least four deaths in 2019.
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