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Iran's tipping point; massive ICE leak; Eric Adams accused of a rug-pull
112 Articles •
Uganda Shuts Down Internet Ahead of Presidential Election
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What happened: Ugandan authorities ordered a complete internet shutdown yesterday at 6pm, two days before Thursday's presidential election where 81-year-old President Yoweri Museveni seeks a seventh term extending his 40-year rule. The Uganda Communications Commission directed mobile operators to suspend public internet access, social media, new SIM card sales, and data roaming, citing concerns about misinformation and electoral fraud.
Why it matters: The blackout raises serious concerns about election transparency and your ability to communicate, access information, or monitor results in real time. While essential services like hospitals, banks, and tax systems remain connected through strict whitelists, all social media, messaging apps, and VPNs are blocked, and violations of mobile money shutdowns have been reported despite official denials.
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71% of sources are Original Reporting
33 Articles •
Antarctica Ice Sanctuary Opens to Preserve Vanishing Glacier Records
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What happened: The Ice Memory Foundation inaugurated the world's first Antarctic ice sanctuary today at Concordia Station, storing Alpine glacier cores from Mont Blanc and Grand Combin in a purpose-built snow cave at -52°C. The 35-meter-long cave, dug 10 meters below the surface, will preserve irreplaceable climate records as mountain glaciers rapidly melt worldwide.
Why it matters: Glaciers have lost 273 billion tonnes of ice annually since 2000, erasing irreplaceable climate records and threatening water supplies, ecosystems, and human security. The sanctuary preserves these vanishing archives for future scientists to study past atmospheric conditions, volcanic events, and temperature changes that can inform climate action.
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61% of sources are High Factuality
69 Articles •
FDA Calls for Removal of Suicide Warnings from Weight-Loss Drugs
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What happened: Yesterday, the FDA asked drugmakers Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly to remove suicide-related warnings from GLP-1 weight-loss medications including Wegovy, Saxenda, and Zepbound. A comprehensive review of 91 clinical trials involving 107,910 patients found no increased risk of suicidal thoughts or behavior, ending concerns that began in mid-2023.
Why it matters: This change may reassure patients currently using or considering these medications, as earlier warnings created uncertainty despite limited evidence. Healthcare providers can now prescribe these blockbuster drugs with consistent messaging across all GLP-1 medications, though patients should continue reporting any side effects to FDA MedWatch.
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77% of sources are High Factuality
23 Articles •
Ancient Roman Home Opens Via Livestream Tours
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What's happening: The House of the Griffins, a 2,000-year-old aristocratic Roman home on Palatine Hill, opened yesterday with weekly livestream tours starting March 3. Visitors stay above ground while guides wearing head-mounted smartphones descend the steep underground staircase to broadcast restored frescoes and mosaics.
Why it matters: The livestream system protects delicate 2nd-1st century BC frescoes from humidity and carbon dioxide damage while granting public access to a previously researcher-only site. Tours require reservations, limit groups to a dozen people, and cost an additional ticket beyond standard Colosseum-Palatine Hill admission.
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74% of sources are High Factuality
58 Articles •
Analysts Divided on Whether Iran Protests Can Topple Regime
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What happened: Nationwide protests erupted in late December after Iran's currency lost half its value, spreading across every region and evolving into sustained demands for regime change. Over 600 demonstrators have been killed and more than 2,000 arrested as security forces respond with Internet blackouts and lethal force.
Why it matters: The average Iranian must now save 100 years to buy a modest apartment as inflation soared 48 percent last year and food prices jumped 72 percent. Water shortages have made parts of the country uninhabitable, with Tehran running dry and major rivers routinely empty, while youth unemployment hits 23 percent despite over 61 percent holding university degrees.
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91% of sources are Original Reporting
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60% of sources are High Factuality
20 Articles •
DHS Whistleblower Leaks Data on 4,500 Immigration Agents
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What happened: A Department of Homeland Security whistleblower provided ICE List with personal information of roughly 4,500 ICE and Border Patrol employees, including names, phone numbers, work emails, and résumé data. The leak followed the Jan. 7 fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good by ICE agent Jonathan Ross in Minneapolis and represents potentially the largest-ever DHS staff data breach.
Why it matters: The breach exposes approximately 4,500 federal agents to potential doxxing and safety risks at a time when ICE agents have already experienced an 8,000% increase in death threats and a 1,347% spike in assaults. The leak intensifies the national debate between demands for immigration enforcement accountability and concerns over protecting law enforcement personnel from public targeting.
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90% of sources are Original Reporting
7 Articles •
Microplastics Damage Brain Through Five Distinct Mechanisms
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The findings: Researchers from the University of Sydney and Auburn University identified five ways microplastics harm the brain: activating immune cells and inflammation, increasing oxidative stress, disrupting the blood-brain barrier, impairing mitochondrial energy production, and directly damaging neurons. Adults consume roughly 250 grams of microplastics yearly from sources including contaminated seafood, tea bags, plastic bottles, and household dust.
Why it matters: Microplastics accumulate in organs including the brain and may increase risks of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease by promoting beta-amyloid and tau protein buildup and damaging dopaminergic neurons. These particles enter your body through everyday exposure to plastic bottles, cutting boards, synthetic clothing, processed foods, and even household dust.
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