Daily Briefing
AMOC faces major decline; Chinese censorship in UK museums; 'Kill Zone' in Lebanon

20 Articles •
Google Negotiates Deal to Deploy Gemini AI on Pentagon Classified Networks
Left 25%
Center 58%
R 17%
The details: Google is negotiating with the U.S. Department of Defense to deploy its Gemini AI models in classified environments for the first time, proposing contractual restrictions on mass domestic surveillance and autonomous lethal weapons. The discussions, reported today, would allow Pentagon use of Gemini for lawful classified applications including battlefield intelligence, sensor data processing, and strategic planning.
Why it matters: This marks a major reversal for Google, which withdrew from military AI work in 2018 after employee protests over Project Maven drone targeting. If finalized, the deal would position Google alongside Amazon and Microsoft in classified defense work, setting precedents for ethical governance of military AI and expanding Big Tech's role in national security infrastructure globally.
85% of sources are Original Reporting

35 Articles •
White House to Probe Reports of 10 Missing or Dead Scientists
Left 26%
Center 26%
Right 48%
What happened: Roughly 10 U.S. scientists and experts linked to classified nuclear and aerospace research have died or disappeared since 2023. Cases include retired Air Force Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, who vanished February 27 from his Albuquerque home, and government contractor Steven Garcia, last seen in August 2025.
Why it matters: All individuals reportedly had access to classified nuclear or aerospace material, raising national security concerns. Yesterday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt indicated the administration may review the cases, marking the first official acknowledgment after weeks of public speculation.
94% of sources are Original Reporting

29 Articles •
Israel's Army Chief Declares Southern Lebanon a 'Kill Zone'
L 20%
Center 40%
Right 40%
What happened: Israeli forces have demolished thousands of buildings across at least seven southern Lebanese border towns since early March, using mass remote detonations, air strikes and controlled explosives. BBC Verify confirmed over 1,400 buildings destroyed, including 460 in Aita al-Shaab and 400 in Taybeh, with entire village sections blown up simultaneously.
Why it matters: Over 1.2 million people have been displaced, including 820,000 from southern Lebanon, with more than 2,000 killed since the war began. Israel plans to occupy territory up to the Litani River and bar residents from returning, raising concerns of long-term displacement and potential war crimes.
90% of sources are Original Reporting

38 Articles •
Study Projects Atlantic Current System to Weaken 51% by 2100
Left 45%
Center 50%
What's happening: New modeling studies project the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), which includes the Gulf Stream, will weaken by more than 50% by 2100, with estimates ranging from 42% to 58% slowdown. The current is already at its weakest in 1,600 years due to Arctic warming and Greenland ice melt adding freshwater that reduces ocean salinity and slows the critical sinking process that drives the circulation.
Why it matters: A collapse would shift tropical rainfall belts disrupting food production for millions, plunge western Europe into extreme cold winters and droughts, raise Atlantic sea levels by 50-100 cm, and release deep-ocean carbon adding an extra 0.17-0.27°C of global warming. Current CO2 levels at 430 ppm already exceed the 350 ppm threshold beyond which models show the AMOC cannot recover, and scientists warn humanity's emissions could lock in irreversible collapse within the next 25-50 years.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
89% of sources are Original Reporting

8 Articles •
V&A Removed Catalogue Materials at Request of Chinese Censors
Center 100%
What happened: The Victoria and Albert Museum removed a historic 1930s map of British Empire trade routes and a photograph of Vladimir Lenin from exhibition catalogues after Chinese printer C&C Offset Printing said the images violated China's censorship laws. The changes affected catalogues for the Music Is Black exhibition opening this week and a 2021 Fabergé exhibition, causing production delays of about a week.
Why it matters: The incident raises questions about how UK taxpayer-funded museums outsource printing to China for lower costs, potentially compromising editorial independence. The V&A receives £56.2 million in government funding annually, yet foreign printers can exert leverage over published content, with staff noting it was too late to switch to European printers once paper was ordered.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

17 Articles •
Trump Grants Enbridge Multiple Cross-Border Pipeline Permits
Left 33%
Center 25%
Right 42%
What happened: President Trump issued nine presidential permits this week to Enbridge Inc., authorizing construction of new pipeline facilities in Burke County, North Dakota, and operation of existing cross-border pipelines in North Dakota and Michigan. One permit allows replacing a 12-inch line with a 24-inch line, adding 100,000 barrels per day capacity to the Flanagan South system flowing from Illinois to the Gulf Coast.
Why it matters: These permits enable increased oil transport capacity between Canada and the U.S., potentially affecting North American energy supplies and prices at the pump. The expanded pipeline infrastructure will move greater volumes of crude oil from the Midwest to Gulf Coast refineries, supporting the administration's energy dominance goals while securing critical cross-border energy flows.
82% of sources are Original Reporting

25 Articles •
Scientists Measure Black Hole Jet Power in Real Time
Left 38%
Center 48%
R 14%
What happened: Researchers measured the instantaneous power of jets from Cygnus X-1, a black hole 7,200 light-years away, by tracking how stellar winds from its companion star bend the jets. The jets carry energy equivalent to 10,000 suns and travel at half the speed of light, roughly 335 million mph.
Why it matters: This first-ever instantaneous measurement provides scientists with a calibration point to understand how black hole jets shape galaxies and cosmic structures. The technique can now be applied to millions of other black holes, improving models of how energy flows through the universe and influences galaxy evolution.
80% of sources are High Factuality

10 Articles •
Ozone Recovery Faces Seven Year Delay From Chemical Leaks
Center 100%
What happened: MIT-led research reveals that industrial chemicals permitted under the Montreal Protocol are leaking at 3.6 percent rates, seven times higher than the 0.5 percent previously assumed. These feedstock emissions, used to make plastics and nonstick coatings, could delay ozone layer recovery until 2073 instead of 2066.
Why it matters: Delayed ozone recovery means prolonged exposure to elevated ultraviolet radiation, increasing skin cancer risks for years longer than expected. However, the issue is already on the agenda at upcoming Montreal Protocol meetings, where countries will discuss tightening rules to reduce these industrial leaks.
80% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
AMOC faces major decline; Chinese censorship in UK museums; 'Kill Zone' in Lebanon


20 Articles •
Google Negotiates Deal to Deploy Gemini AI on Pentagon Classified Networks
Left 25%
Center 58%
R 17%
The details: Google is negotiating with the U.S. Department of Defense to deploy its Gemini AI models in classified environments for the first time, proposing contractual restrictions on mass domestic surveillance and autonomous lethal weapons. The discussions, reported today, would allow Pentagon use of Gemini for lawful classified applications including battlefield intelligence, sensor data processing, and strategic planning.
Why it matters: This marks a major reversal for Google, which withdrew from military AI work in 2018 after employee protests over Project Maven drone targeting. If finalized, the deal would position Google alongside Amazon and Microsoft in classified defense work, setting precedents for ethical governance of military AI and expanding Big Tech's role in national security infrastructure globally.
85% of sources are Original Reporting

35 Articles •
White House to Probe Reports of 10 Missing or Dead Scientists
Left 26%
Center 26%
Right 48%
What happened: Roughly 10 U.S. scientists and experts linked to classified nuclear and aerospace research have died or disappeared since 2023. Cases include retired Air Force Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, who vanished February 27 from his Albuquerque home, and government contractor Steven Garcia, last seen in August 2025.
Why it matters: All individuals reportedly had access to classified nuclear or aerospace material, raising national security concerns. Yesterday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt indicated the administration may review the cases, marking the first official acknowledgment after weeks of public speculation.
94% of sources are Original Reporting

29 Articles •
Israel's Army Chief Declares Southern Lebanon a 'Kill Zone'
L 20%
Center 40%
Right 40%
What happened: Israeli forces have demolished thousands of buildings across at least seven southern Lebanese border towns since early March, using mass remote detonations, air strikes and controlled explosives. BBC Verify confirmed over 1,400 buildings destroyed, including 460 in Aita al-Shaab and 400 in Taybeh, with entire village sections blown up simultaneously.
Why it matters: Over 1.2 million people have been displaced, including 820,000 from southern Lebanon, with more than 2,000 killed since the war began. Israel plans to occupy territory up to the Litani River and bar residents from returning, raising concerns of long-term displacement and potential war crimes.
90% of sources are Original Reporting

38 Articles •
Study Projects Atlantic Current System to Weaken 51% by 2100
Left 45%
Center 50%
What's happening: New modeling studies project the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), which includes the Gulf Stream, will weaken by more than 50% by 2100, with estimates ranging from 42% to 58% slowdown. The current is already at its weakest in 1,600 years due to Arctic warming and Greenland ice melt adding freshwater that reduces ocean salinity and slows the critical sinking process that drives the circulation.
Why it matters: A collapse would shift tropical rainfall belts disrupting food production for millions, plunge western Europe into extreme cold winters and droughts, raise Atlantic sea levels by 50-100 cm, and release deep-ocean carbon adding an extra 0.17-0.27°C of global warming. Current CO2 levels at 430 ppm already exceed the 350 ppm threshold beyond which models show the AMOC cannot recover, and scientists warn humanity's emissions could lock in irreversible collapse within the next 25-50 years.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
89% of sources are Original Reporting

8 Articles •
V&A Removed Catalogue Materials at Request of Chinese Censors
Center 100%
What happened: The Victoria and Albert Museum removed a historic 1930s map of British Empire trade routes and a photograph of Vladimir Lenin from exhibition catalogues after Chinese printer C&C Offset Printing said the images violated China's censorship laws. The changes affected catalogues for the Music Is Black exhibition opening this week and a 2021 Fabergé exhibition, causing production delays of about a week.
Why it matters: The incident raises questions about how UK taxpayer-funded museums outsource printing to China for lower costs, potentially compromising editorial independence. The V&A receives £56.2 million in government funding annually, yet foreign printers can exert leverage over published content, with staff noting it was too late to switch to European printers once paper was ordered.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

17 Articles •
Trump Grants Enbridge Multiple Cross-Border Pipeline Permits
Left 33%
Center 25%
Right 42%
What happened: President Trump issued nine presidential permits this week to Enbridge Inc., authorizing construction of new pipeline facilities in Burke County, North Dakota, and operation of existing cross-border pipelines in North Dakota and Michigan. One permit allows replacing a 12-inch line with a 24-inch line, adding 100,000 barrels per day capacity to the Flanagan South system flowing from Illinois to the Gulf Coast.
Why it matters: These permits enable increased oil transport capacity between Canada and the U.S., potentially affecting North American energy supplies and prices at the pump. The expanded pipeline infrastructure will move greater volumes of crude oil from the Midwest to Gulf Coast refineries, supporting the administration's energy dominance goals while securing critical cross-border energy flows.
82% of sources are Original Reporting

25 Articles •
Scientists Measure Black Hole Jet Power in Real Time
Left 38%
Center 48%
R 14%
What happened: Researchers measured the instantaneous power of jets from Cygnus X-1, a black hole 7,200 light-years away, by tracking how stellar winds from its companion star bend the jets. The jets carry energy equivalent to 10,000 suns and travel at half the speed of light, roughly 335 million mph.
Why it matters: This first-ever instantaneous measurement provides scientists with a calibration point to understand how black hole jets shape galaxies and cosmic structures. The technique can now be applied to millions of other black holes, improving models of how energy flows through the universe and influences galaxy evolution.
80% of sources are High Factuality

10 Articles •
Ozone Recovery Faces Seven Year Delay From Chemical Leaks
Center 100%
What happened: MIT-led research reveals that industrial chemicals permitted under the Montreal Protocol are leaking at 3.6 percent rates, seven times higher than the 0.5 percent previously assumed. These feedstock emissions, used to make plastics and nonstick coatings, could delay ozone layer recovery until 2073 instead of 2066.
Why it matters: Delayed ozone recovery means prolonged exposure to elevated ultraviolet radiation, increasing skin cancer risks for years longer than expected. However, the issue is already on the agenda at upcoming Montreal Protocol meetings, where countries will discuss tightening rules to reduce these industrial leaks.
80% of sources are Original Reporting