Skip to main content
See every side of every news story
Daily Briefing
Ex-CIA official arrested with $40M in Gold bars; China dissident crosses yellow sea; Israel takes out another Hamas commander
114 Articles •
Ex-CIA Official Arrested Over $40M in Stolen Gold Bars
L 24%
Center 48%
Right 28%
What happened: David Rush, a former senior CIA officer with top secret clearance, was arrested May 19 after FBI agents found 303 gold bars worth over $40 million, $2 million in cash, and 35 luxury watches at his Virginia home. Between November and March, Rush requested and received tens of millions in gold bars and foreign currency for alleged work-related expenses, but the CIA could not locate most assets in official storage, prompting an internal investigation and FBI referral.
Why it matters: The case raises urgent questions about vetting and monitoring systems for intelligence personnel with access to classified information. Rush allegedly falsified academic credentials and military service records for nearly two decades while advancing through senior government positions, exposing potential gaps in continuous background checks designed to prevent such misconduct and protect national security.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
66% of sources are Original Reporting
Seal Check SVG Icon
67% of sources are High Factuality
60 Articles •
Report: Trump Administration Deported 13K to Mexico
Left 39%
Center 49%
12%
What happened: Between January 2025 and March 2026, the Trump administration deported nearly 13,000 third-country nationals to Mexico under an undisclosed agreement, with Cubans comprising the largest group at 4,353 deportees. Most deportees are older adults who lived in the U.S. for decades, were detained at routine ICE check-ins or workplaces, and were removed without court hearings or personal belongings.
Why it matters: Deportees are stranded in southern Mexican cities without shelter, medical care, or documentation, facing violence from criminal organizations and a slow asylum process with no clear path to legal status. Many are elderly with chronic health conditions who built lives in the U.S. over decades, now left in legal limbo unable to return home or move forward.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
60% of sources are Original Reporting
36 Articles •
Brazilian Amazon Deforestation Falls to Lowest Level Since 2019
Left 29%
Center 28%
Right 43%
The numbers: Brazil lost 985,000 hectares of native vegetation in 2025, down 20.6 percent from 2024, with Amazon deforestation dropping 23.5 percent to its lowest level since 2019. Between August 2025 and March 2026, deforested area fell 36 percent to 1,460 square kilometers, driven by tougher enforcement under President Lula.
What to watch: Despite Amazon improvements, wildfires increased by one-third in early 2026 and the Cerrado savanna accounted for over half of Brazil's vegetation loss, with agriculture driving 99 percent of clearing. Political tensions persist as Congress threatens protections and Lula faces October elections amid criticism over oil exploration support.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
86% of sources are Original Reporting
316 Articles •
Hamas Confirms New Military Chief Killed in Israeli Strike
Left 29%
Center 35%
Right 36%
What happened: Israel killed Mohammed Odeh, Hamas's newly appointed military chief, in a Tuesday night airstrike on Gaza City that also killed his wife, son, and at least three other civilians. The strike came just over a week after Israel killed Odeh's predecessor, Izz al-Din al-Haddad, on May 15.
Why it matters: The killing further depletes Hamas's senior command structure but underscores the fragility of the October ceasefire, with over 900 Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes since the truce began. The attack on a residential building during Eid al-Adha preparations highlights ongoing civilian casualties despite the ceasefire agreement.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
73% of sources are Original Reporting
68 Articles •
Chinese Dissident Reaches South Korea After Perilous Sea Escape
Left 28%
Center 50%
R 22%
What happened: Dong Guangping, a 68-year-old Chinese dissident and former police officer, was found by South Korean authorities on Monday night after spending over 30 hours at sea in a 3.3-meter rubber boat with a small motor. He was detained on suspicion of immigration violations, but a court rejected prosecutors' request to hold him, leaving his fate uncertain between immigration detention or a refugee claim.
Why it matters: Dong's case highlights the risks faced by Chinese dissidents and tests South Korea's asylum policies amid diplomatic tensions with Beijing. His wife and daughter already have asylum in Canada, and rights groups warn he faces grave persecution if returned to China, where he was previously imprisoned multiple times for his activism.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
66% of sources are Original Reporting
Seal Check SVG Icon
63% of sources are High Factuality
90 Articles •
Brazil Presidential Hopeful Flávio Bolsonaro Meets Trump, Other Top Officials in US Visit
Left 25%
Center 43%
Right 32%
What happened: Brazilian Senator Flávio Bolsonaro met with President Trump at the White House two days ago in an unscheduled Oval Office meeting. The visit came as the presidential candidate faces a damaging scandal over leaked messages showing he solicited $12 million from jailed banker Daniel Vorcaro to finance a film about his imprisoned father, former President Jair Bolsonaro.
Why it matters: The scandal has caused Bolsonaro to fall behind President Lula in recent polls, shifting from a near-tie to trailing 41.8% to 48.9% in runoff scenarios ahead of October's election. The meeting raises concerns about potential U.S. influence in Brazil's presidential race, echoing Trump's previous attempts to pressure Brazil over prosecutions of the elder Bolsonaro.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
74% of sources are Original Reporting
24 Articles •
37 Sets of Remains in One Jar Solve Laos Burial Mystery
L 20%
Center 67%
R 13%
The discovery: Archaeologists excavated a large stone jar at Site 75 in northern Laos and found densely packed remains of at least 37 people, deposited over roughly 270 years between AD 890 and 1160. The jar, measuring over two meters wide, contained disarticulated bones, skulls, teeth, glass beads from South Asia and Mesopotamia, iron tools, pottery, and a copper-alloy bell.
Why it matters: This is the first undisturbed jar found with intact human remains, finally confirming after nearly 100 years of debate that the Plain of Jars served as a vast ancient burial complex. The discovery reveals a sophisticated multigenerational mortuary practice and demonstrates that remote highland communities were connected through extensive trade networks reaching India and the Middle East.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
96% of sources are Original Reporting
33 Articles •
Apple, Google Urge Canada to Modify Surveillance Bill C-22
Left 35%
Center 34%
Right 31%
What happened: Apple and Google testified before Canada's Parliament this week, urging lawmakers to add judicial oversight and explicit encryption protections to Bill C-22, which would require tech companies to build capabilities enabling lawful data access and retain metadata for up to a year. The bill, introduced in March and currently in committee, allows ministers to issue secret orders compelling technical changes without prior court review, prompting warnings from tech firms, VPN providers, and US lawmakers that companies may exit Canada rather than comply.
Why it matters: If passed as drafted, the law could weaken end-to-end encryption on your devices and apps, force companies to store your location and transmission data for a year, and allow secret government orders to create security vulnerabilities without your knowledge. Major services including Signal, Meta, and multiple VPN providers have warned they would leave Canada, potentially limiting your access to secure communication tools and privacy-protecting services.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
73% of sources are Original Reporting
Seal Check SVG Icon
67% of sources are High Factuality
39 Articles •
UK Youth Unemployment Crisis Could Hit 1.25M by 2031
Left 25%
Center 45%
Right 30%
The numbers: Currently 1.01 million young people aged 16-24 are neither in education, employment nor training, up from 957,000 last quarter and the highest since 2013. Former Labour health secretary Alan Milburn warns this could reach 1.25 million (one in six) by 2031 unless urgent action is taken.
Why it matters: The crisis already costs the UK around £125 billion annually in lost output, tax revenue and higher health and welfare spending—more than England's entire education budget. Entry-level jobs have declined by 1.6 million, hospitality vacancies have halved in four years, and the government spends £25 on benefits for every £1 on employment support for young people.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
87% of sources are Original Reporting
News
Feed Dots Icon
For You
Search Icon
Search
Blindspot LogoBlindspotLocal