Skip to main content
See every side of every news story
Daily Briefing
Microrobots, Trump says CIA briefed him on Supreme Leader's sexuality, Tucker shows blacklisted Netanyahu doc
47 Articles •
Photos Show US E-3 AWACS Destroyed by Iranian Strike on Saudi Base
L 22%
Center 35%
Right 43%
What happened: An Iranian missile and drone strike on Friday hit Saudi Arabia's Prince Sultan Air Base, damaging a US E-3 Sentry surveillance aircraft and multiple KC-135 refueling tankers while wounding at least 12 American service members. The E-3 Sentry, a critical airborne command-and-control platform with only 16 in the US fleet, suffered severe damage to its radar dome area.
Why it matters: The damaged E-3 creates significant gaps in US ability to track missiles, drones and aircraft across the Gulf region, forcing reliance on less capable systems. With over 300 US troops wounded in the monthlong conflict and oil prices jumping 40 percent above $100 per barrel, the escalating Iran war threatens prolonged regional instability and higher energy costs globally.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
100% of sources are Original Reporting
67 Articles •
Mexico Says 40,000 of 130,000 Missing May Be Alive
Left 28%
Center 59%
R 13%
The findings: Mexican authorities completed a year-long review of the national missing-persons registry and found evidence of legal activity suggesting 40,308 of roughly 130,000 registered missing people may be alive. Officials have located and reclassified 5,269 people as found, while 46,000 records lack basic information making searches impossible.
Why it matters: The findings could reshape thousands of family searches and investigations, but search groups and human rights organizations sharply criticize the government's framing, fearing it minimizes state responsibility and risks erasing legitimate cases. With 193 people reported missing this year in Mexico City alone and fewer than 10% of cases under investigation, families face ongoing uncertainty.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
72% of sources are Original Reporting
22 Articles •
Deployed Nuclear Warheads Surge to Nearly 10,000 Globally
Left 38%
Center 31%
Right 31%
The numbers: Nuclear weapons ready for immediate use rose to 9,745 in 2025, an increase of 141 warheads from 2024, with 4,012 deployed on missiles, submarines and bomber bases. The nine nuclear-armed states now possess 12,187 total warheads at the start of 2026, equivalent to 135,000 Hiroshima-sized bombs.
Why it matters: Nearly all nine nuclear-armed states are expanding arsenals amid escalating conflicts in Europe, Asia and the Middle East, while key arms-control treaties like New START have lapsed. This concentration of destructive power increases global risk at a time when 47 countries actively oppose disarmament efforts, despite 99 nations joining the nuclear weapons ban treaty.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
95% of sources are Original Reporting
443 Articles •
Iran-Backed Handala Hacks and Circulates FBI Director Patel's Emails
Left 27%
Center 47%
Right 26%
What happened: Iran-linked hackers operating as Handala Hack Team breached FBI Director Kash Patel's personal Gmail account and published personal photographs and over 300 emails dating from 2010 to 2019. The Justice Department confirmed yesterday that the compromise appears authentic, marking an escalation in cyber operations following U.S. seizure of Handala domains last week.
Why it matters: The breach is part of Iran's retaliatory cyber campaign targeting U.S. officials and companies following recent U.S.-Israeli strikes and domain seizures. Handala has also targeted medical device maker Stryker and Lockheed Martin employees, signaling an escalating pattern of cyber intimidation that could affect American businesses and government operations with potential for further leaks.
37 Articles •
Fossils of New Ancient Ape Species Discovered in Egypt
L 18%
Center 68%
R 14%
The discovery: Paleontologists uncovered jaw fragments and teeth of Masripithecus moghraensis at Wadi Moghra in northern Egypt, dating back 17 to 18 million years. This newly identified ape species appears to be the closest known relative to the common ancestor of all living apes, including humans, challenging the long-held view that modern apes originated exclusively in East Africa.
Why it matters: This discovery fundamentally changes where scientists believe your earliest ape ancestors came from, shifting the focus from East Africa to northern Africa and the Middle East. The finding fills a critical gap in understanding human evolution and will likely drive new fossil exploration across previously overlooked regions, potentially rewriting textbooks on where the human story began.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
65% of sources are Original Reporting
25 Articles •
US Land Mines Found Near Shiraz Kill Civilians in First Such Deployment in Decades
Left 28%
Center 36%
Right 36%
What happened: U.S.-made BLU-91/B anti-tank mines were discovered this week in Kafari village near Shiraz, Iran, killing several civilians including a 31-year-old father. The mines, dispensed by Gator cluster bombs dropped from aircraft, were found in backyards and streets about two miles from an Iranian missile base.
Why it matters: This marks the first U.S. deployment of scatterable anti-tank mines since 1991, raising concerns about weakened international norms against cluster munitions banned by 112 countries. The mines' self-destruct mechanisms often fail, leaving dangerous unexploded ordnance that can detonate when disturbed, posing long-term risks to civilians in the area.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
96% of sources are Original Reporting
27 Articles •
Italian Team Claims Buried Second Sphinx at Giza
L 18%
C 17%
Right 65%
The claim: Italian researcher Filippo Biondi announced this week that satellite radar scans detected a large subsurface anomaly beneath a 30-to-55-meter sand mound near the Great Sphinx, which his team interprets as a possible buried twin monument with near-perfect geometric alignment to existing pyramids. The team cites 80 percent confidence and points to the ancient Dream Stele, which appears to show two sphinx figures, as supporting evidence.
Why it matters: Prominent Egyptologists and geophysics experts emphasize that radar data alone cannot confirm buried monuments and that no excavation, peer-reviewed study, or official approval has validated the claim. The archaeological community stresses that any discovery at Giza must be verified through controlled excavation and rigorous scientific standards before acceptance, meaning this remains unconfirmed speculation rather than established fact.
Blindspot LogoBlindspot: Low Coverage from Left Sources
Shield Badge SVG Icon
96% of sources are Original Reporting
5 Articles •
Scandinavia's Largest Mound Built to Stop Landslides Not Bury Kings
Center 100%
What happened: A new study published in the European Journal of Archaeology reveals that Raknehaugen, Scandinavia's largest prehistoric mound at 15 meters high and 77 meters wide, was built around ad 551 as a communal response to a catastrophic landslide, not as an elite burial site. LiDAR analysis identified a 1 km² landslide scar near the mound in south-eastern Norway, 40 km north of Oslo, linked to the post-536 'Dust Veil' climatic crisis.
Why it matters: The study fundamentally reframes how archaeologists interpret Iron Age monumentality in Scandinavia, shifting focus from elite burial practices to landscape management and collective ritual responses to environmental catastrophe. It demonstrates how 6th-century societies used monumental construction to manage both the physical threat of unstable terrain and restore cosmological and social order after climatic disasters that caused crop failure, famine, and population decline.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
100% of sources are Original Reporting
Seal Check SVG Icon
60% of sources are High Factuality
News
Feed Dots Icon
For You
Search Icon
Search
Blindspot LogoBlindspotLocal