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Daily Briefing
Grooming gang leader to be released; Bukele runs for a third term; NPR retracts Alito retirement reporting
210 Articles •
Venezuela Earthquakes Leave Over 100 US Deportees Missing
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What happened: A deportation flight carrying 146 Venezuelans from Miami landed in La Guaira last week, just hours before magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 earthquakes struck on June 24. The deportees were being processed at Hotel Santuario La Llanada when the building collapsed, leaving more than 100 people missing and at least 25 confirmed dead.
Why it matters: The tragedy highlights risks of mass deportation policy, as vulnerable deportees had phones and documents confiscated and were placed in a government facility in an earthquake-prone zone. Families report Venezuelan authorities are blocking access to the collapse site and withholding information, while DHS says it bears no responsibility once deportees leave ICE custody.
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74% of sources are High Factuality
455 Articles •
Vatican Declares SSPX in Schism, Excommunicates All Its Clergy
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What happened: The Society of Saint Pius X consecrated four bishops yesterday in Écône, Switzerland, without papal approval, defying Pope Leo XIV's personal appeal. The Vatican responded by declaring the traditionalist group formally schismatic and excommunicating its bishops and priests, potentially affecting 600,000 followers worldwide.
Why it matters: If you attend SSPX Masses or receive sacraments from their priests, the Vatican now considers you potentially excommunicated and warns those sacraments may be invalid. The decree reverses years of Vatican outreach and could affect major SSPX communities like St. Marys, Kansas, home to the world's largest SSPX church.
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62% of sources are Original Reporting
90 Articles •
China Enforces Controversial Ethnic Unity Law Despite Global Outcry
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What happened: China's Ethnic Unity and Progress Promotion Law took effect yesterday, mandating Mandarin education from preschool through high school and criminalizing separatism, terrorism, and extremism. The law includes Article 63, allowing China to pursue legal action against individuals and organizations outside its borders who undermine ethnic unity, drawing immediate condemnation from the UN, Taiwan, and international lawmakers.
Why it matters: The law poses direct risks to travelers, overseas activists, journalists, and businesses through its extraterritorial reach, potentially enabling detention and prosecution in China or aligned countries. Taiwan warned its 23 million citizens face heightened threats, with 13 Taiwanese reported missing or detained in China last month alone, prompting urgent travel advisories against visiting China, Hong Kong, or Macau.
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87% of sources are Original Reporting
52 Articles •
France's National Assembly Approves Assisted Dying Bill
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What happened: France's National Assembly approved an assisted dying bill Tuesday by 295 to 232 votes, allowing terminally ill adults with incurable conditions to access lethal medication. The Senate will vote next week on July 7, with a final Assembly decision expected July 15.
The details: Eligible patients must be French citizens or residents over 18 with grave, incurable illnesses causing untreatable pain, confirmed by medical teams after a reflection period. Healthcare professionals can refuse participation under a conscience clause but must refer patients to willing providers.
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92% of sources are Original Reporting
64 Articles •
CSIS: Ukraine War Casualties Top 2 Million Since 2022
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The numbers: A CSIS study released this week reports over 2 million total casualties since Russia's February 2022 invasion, with approximately 1.4 million Russian troops killed or wounded (450,000 deaths) and 525,000-625,000 Ukrainian casualties (125,000-150,000 deaths). Russian monthly casualties in early 2026 exceeded 30,000, while Russia is losing eight soldiers for every one Ukrainian loss.
Why it matters: The massive human toll is straining Russia's economy and society, with military personnel spending jumping from $39 billion in 2024 to over $50 billion in 2025. Russia now offers $80,000 sign-up bonuses and $140,000 debt relief to attract recruits, while fuel shortages spread and Ukrainian drone strikes increasingly target Russian cities and infrastructure, bringing the war home to ordinary Russians.
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81% of sources are Original Reporting
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