Daily Briefing
Meatpacking strike; Mojtaba allegedly traveled to Russia for surgery; Bibi refutes death claims in cafe video

56 Articles •
Kenya, Russia Agree to Stop Enlisting Kenyans for Ukraine War
Left 38%
Center 41%
R 21%
What happened: Kenya and Russia agreed this week that Kenyans will no longer be recruited through Russia's defense ministry to fight in Ukraine. Kenyan Foreign Minister Musalia Mudavadi announced the agreement Monday after talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Moscow, following intelligence reports that over 1,000 Kenyans had been recruited, often under false pretenses of civilian jobs.
Why it matters: The agreement could immediately stop the flow of Kenyans being lured abroad with promises of high-paying civilian work only to be pressed into combat. Kenya has already repatriated 27 citizens and shut down over 600 suspect recruitment agencies, while pushing for safe return and psychological rehabilitation for those still trapped in the conflict zone.
89% of sources are Original Reporting

8 Articles •
Study: 72% of UK Babies Get Daily Screen Time
Left 25%
Center 25%
Right 50%
The findings: Nearly three in four (72%) nine-month-old babies in England have daily screen time, averaging 41 minutes per day, with 2% exceeding three hours. The Education Policy Institute analyzed data from over 8,000 families in the Children of the 2020s cohort study.
Why it matters: Higher infant screen time is linked to fewer daily activities like outdoor trips, reading, and singing, with parents and teachers reporting concentration difficulties when children start school. Children with the highest screen time (around five hours daily) say significantly fewer words than those with minimal exposure.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

69 Articles •
China Resumes Military Flights Near Taiwan
Left 32%
Center 41%
Right 27%
What happened: Taiwan detected 26 Chinese military aircraft and seven naval vessels around the island over the weekend, with 16 planes entering its air defense identification zone. This marks the end of a nearly two-week lull in activity, the longest pause since at least 2023.
Why it matters: The unexplained pause and sudden resumption raises regional tensions ahead of President Trump's planned March 31 visit to China. Analysts suggest Beijing may be recalibrating pressure tactics, though China's navy remained active throughout the lull and the threat level to Taiwan persists.
61% of sources are Original Reporting

26 Articles •
Report: El Salvador May Have Committed Crimes Against Humanity
Left 35%
Center 47%
R 18%
What happened: A five-member international panel concluded last week there are reasonable grounds to believe El Salvador's government committed crimes against humanity—including mass arbitrary detentions, torture, enforced disappearances and killings—under the state of exception imposed since March 2022. Over 90,000 people have been detained, with 403 deaths in custody documented by August 2025 and 540 enforced disappearances reported by February 2025.
Why it matters: The findings meet the International Criminal Court's threshold for potential investigation and could trigger UN mechanisms, targeted sanctions and criminal prosecutions against Salvadoran officials. The report also warns that other regional leaders—including in Costa Rica, Argentina, Ecuador and Chile—are adopting similar iron-fist policies, potentially spreading mass human rights violations across Latin America.
85% of sources are Original Reporting

205 Articles •
Netanyahu Releases Multiple Videos Amid Rumors He Was Killed
L 24%
Center 25%
Right 51%
What happened: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu posted a video yesterday from a local cafe, deliberately showing both hands with five fingers each to debunk viral social media claims that he had died and that Thursday's press conference footage was AI-generated with six fingers. Reuters verified the cafe location and experts confirmed no AI manipulation, attributing the apparent extra digit to low resolution, lighting, hand angles, or natural palm contours.
Why it matters: This incident highlights how rapidly misinformation spreads during wartime, especially amid the ongoing Israel-Iran conflict that began February 28 when strikes killed Iran's former Supreme Leader. The false rumors—amplified by Iranian state media and viral social posts—underscore challenges in verifying official communications during active military operations, when public confusion can affect trust and security decisions during shelter orders and continued strikes.
92% of sources are Original Reporting

67 Articles •
Iran's New Leader Reportedly Flown to Russia for Surgery
Left 36%
C 19%
Right 45%
What happened: Mojtaba Khamenei, who became Iran's supreme leader after his father was killed in Feb. 28 airstrikes, was allegedly secretly transported to Moscow on March 12 for leg surgery after sustaining serious injuries. Russian President Vladimir Putin reportedly offered treatment during a phone call with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, with surgery taking place at a secure facility.
Why it matters: The unconfirmed reports create uncertainty about Iran's leadership during an active war that has killed over 1,300 people. Khamenei has not appeared publicly in 16 days since taking power, fueling speculation about his condition and ability to lead, while the U.S. has offered a $10 million reward for information on his whereabouts.
99% of sources are Original Reporting

75 Articles •
3,800 Workers Strike at Colorado Beef Plant
Left 27%
Center 63%
10%
What happened: About 3,800 workers at JBS's Greeley, Colorado beef plant walked off the job this morning after contract negotiations failed, marking the first U.S. slaughterhouse strike in 41 years. Workers voted 99% to authorize the strike after the company refused weekend negotiations and their contract expired at midnight.
Why it matters: The Greeley plant processes 5,000 to 6,000 cattle daily, representing roughly 5% of U.S. beef production capacity. While experts don't expect major grocery price spikes, the strike comes during a 75-year low in cattle inventory and could disrupt an already strained beef supply chain.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
77% of sources are High Factuality

110 Articles •
Vietnam Holds National Assembly Elections Under Communist Party Control
Left 29%
Center 41%
Right 30%
What happened: Nearly 79 million Vietnamese voters cast ballots yesterday to elect 500 National Assembly members from 864 candidates, 93% of whom are Communist Party members. Results will be announced on March 23, with the new assembly convening in early April to confirm state leaders including To Lam, who is expected to become both general secretary and president.
Why it matters: The new assembly will implement an ambitious five-year policy agenda targeting 10% annual economic growth with a private-sector focus, affecting Vietnam's role as a global manufacturing hub. However, the party's 97% seat control and vetting of all candidates means the assembly functions primarily to ratify decisions already made by Communist leadership.

18 Articles •
Oxford Study Identifies New Class of Molten Exoplanet
L 18%
Center 73%
9%
The discovery: Oxford-led researchers identified L 98-59 d, a planet 35 light-years away that's 1.6 times Earth's size with a global magma ocean thousands of kilometres deep storing vast sulphur reserves. The planet, discovered through JWST observations from 2024 and published today in Nature Astronomy, defies existing planetary categories with its unusually low density and hydrogen sulfide-rich atmosphere.
Why it matters: This discovery reveals a previously unknown class of exoplanet and expands understanding of planetary diversity beyond our solar system. The molten planet's physics also provides insights into Earth's own primordial magma ocean history, while upcoming ESA missions Ariel and PLATO will determine whether such sulphurous worlds are common throughout the galaxy.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting
61% of sources are High Factuality
Daily Briefing
Meatpacking strike; Mojtaba allegedly traveled to Russia for surgery; Bibi refutes death claims in cafe video


56 Articles •
Kenya, Russia Agree to Stop Enlisting Kenyans for Ukraine War
Left 38%
Center 41%
R 21%
What happened: Kenya and Russia agreed this week that Kenyans will no longer be recruited through Russia's defense ministry to fight in Ukraine. Kenyan Foreign Minister Musalia Mudavadi announced the agreement Monday after talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Moscow, following intelligence reports that over 1,000 Kenyans had been recruited, often under false pretenses of civilian jobs.
Why it matters: The agreement could immediately stop the flow of Kenyans being lured abroad with promises of high-paying civilian work only to be pressed into combat. Kenya has already repatriated 27 citizens and shut down over 600 suspect recruitment agencies, while pushing for safe return and psychological rehabilitation for those still trapped in the conflict zone.
89% of sources are Original Reporting

8 Articles •
Study: 72% of UK Babies Get Daily Screen Time
Left 25%
Center 25%
Right 50%
The findings: Nearly three in four (72%) nine-month-old babies in England have daily screen time, averaging 41 minutes per day, with 2% exceeding three hours. The Education Policy Institute analyzed data from over 8,000 families in the Children of the 2020s cohort study.
Why it matters: Higher infant screen time is linked to fewer daily activities like outdoor trips, reading, and singing, with parents and teachers reporting concentration difficulties when children start school. Children with the highest screen time (around five hours daily) say significantly fewer words than those with minimal exposure.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

69 Articles •
China Resumes Military Flights Near Taiwan
Left 32%
Center 41%
Right 27%
What happened: Taiwan detected 26 Chinese military aircraft and seven naval vessels around the island over the weekend, with 16 planes entering its air defense identification zone. This marks the end of a nearly two-week lull in activity, the longest pause since at least 2023.
Why it matters: The unexplained pause and sudden resumption raises regional tensions ahead of President Trump's planned March 31 visit to China. Analysts suggest Beijing may be recalibrating pressure tactics, though China's navy remained active throughout the lull and the threat level to Taiwan persists.
61% of sources are Original Reporting

26 Articles •
Report: El Salvador May Have Committed Crimes Against Humanity
Left 35%
Center 47%
R 18%
What happened: A five-member international panel concluded last week there are reasonable grounds to believe El Salvador's government committed crimes against humanity—including mass arbitrary detentions, torture, enforced disappearances and killings—under the state of exception imposed since March 2022. Over 90,000 people have been detained, with 403 deaths in custody documented by August 2025 and 540 enforced disappearances reported by February 2025.
Why it matters: The findings meet the International Criminal Court's threshold for potential investigation and could trigger UN mechanisms, targeted sanctions and criminal prosecutions against Salvadoran officials. The report also warns that other regional leaders—including in Costa Rica, Argentina, Ecuador and Chile—are adopting similar iron-fist policies, potentially spreading mass human rights violations across Latin America.
85% of sources are Original Reporting

205 Articles •
Netanyahu Releases Multiple Videos Amid Rumors He Was Killed
L 24%
Center 25%
Right 51%
What happened: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu posted a video yesterday from a local cafe, deliberately showing both hands with five fingers each to debunk viral social media claims that he had died and that Thursday's press conference footage was AI-generated with six fingers. Reuters verified the cafe location and experts confirmed no AI manipulation, attributing the apparent extra digit to low resolution, lighting, hand angles, or natural palm contours.
Why it matters: This incident highlights how rapidly misinformation spreads during wartime, especially amid the ongoing Israel-Iran conflict that began February 28 when strikes killed Iran's former Supreme Leader. The false rumors—amplified by Iranian state media and viral social posts—underscore challenges in verifying official communications during active military operations, when public confusion can affect trust and security decisions during shelter orders and continued strikes.
92% of sources are Original Reporting

67 Articles •
Iran's New Leader Reportedly Flown to Russia for Surgery
Left 36%
C 19%
Right 45%
What happened: Mojtaba Khamenei, who became Iran's supreme leader after his father was killed in Feb. 28 airstrikes, was allegedly secretly transported to Moscow on March 12 for leg surgery after sustaining serious injuries. Russian President Vladimir Putin reportedly offered treatment during a phone call with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, with surgery taking place at a secure facility.
Why it matters: The unconfirmed reports create uncertainty about Iran's leadership during an active war that has killed over 1,300 people. Khamenei has not appeared publicly in 16 days since taking power, fueling speculation about his condition and ability to lead, while the U.S. has offered a $10 million reward for information on his whereabouts.
99% of sources are Original Reporting

75 Articles •
3,800 Workers Strike at Colorado Beef Plant
Left 27%
Center 63%
10%
What happened: About 3,800 workers at JBS's Greeley, Colorado beef plant walked off the job this morning after contract negotiations failed, marking the first U.S. slaughterhouse strike in 41 years. Workers voted 99% to authorize the strike after the company refused weekend negotiations and their contract expired at midnight.
Why it matters: The Greeley plant processes 5,000 to 6,000 cattle daily, representing roughly 5% of U.S. beef production capacity. While experts don't expect major grocery price spikes, the strike comes during a 75-year low in cattle inventory and could disrupt an already strained beef supply chain.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
77% of sources are High Factuality

110 Articles •
Vietnam Holds National Assembly Elections Under Communist Party Control
Left 29%
Center 41%
Right 30%
What happened: Nearly 79 million Vietnamese voters cast ballots yesterday to elect 500 National Assembly members from 864 candidates, 93% of whom are Communist Party members. Results will be announced on March 23, with the new assembly convening in early April to confirm state leaders including To Lam, who is expected to become both general secretary and president.
Why it matters: The new assembly will implement an ambitious five-year policy agenda targeting 10% annual economic growth with a private-sector focus, affecting Vietnam's role as a global manufacturing hub. However, the party's 97% seat control and vetting of all candidates means the assembly functions primarily to ratify decisions already made by Communist leadership.

18 Articles •
Oxford Study Identifies New Class of Molten Exoplanet
L 18%
Center 73%
9%
The discovery: Oxford-led researchers identified L 98-59 d, a planet 35 light-years away that's 1.6 times Earth's size with a global magma ocean thousands of kilometres deep storing vast sulphur reserves. The planet, discovered through JWST observations from 2024 and published today in Nature Astronomy, defies existing planetary categories with its unusually low density and hydrogen sulfide-rich atmosphere.
Why it matters: This discovery reveals a previously unknown class of exoplanet and expands understanding of planetary diversity beyond our solar system. The molten planet's physics also provides insights into Earth's own primordial magma ocean history, while upcoming ESA missions Ariel and PLATO will determine whether such sulphurous worlds are common throughout the galaxy.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting
61% of sources are High Factuality