Daily Briefing
Billionaires hiding trillions untaxed, Burundi explosion, Korean lithium battery breakthrough

26 Articles •
U.S. Seeks Access to 3 More Greenland Bases, NYT Reports
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Center 26%
Right 42%
The details: The U.S. is negotiating with Denmark for access to three additional military bases in Greenland, including former American sites Narsarsuaq and Kangerlussuaq. Gen. Gregory Guillot confirmed last month that talks are progressing, marking the first U.S. expansion there in decades to counter threats from Russia and China in the Arctic.
Why it matters: The expansion would significantly strengthen U.S. military presence in the strategically vital Arctic region, hosting special operations and naval units at sites with deep-water ports and long runways. The U.S. is invoking a 1951 defense agreement rather than negotiating a new treaty, leaving Denmark with limited ability to block the request despite ongoing diplomatic tensions.
96% of sources are Original Reporting

13 Articles •
Intercept Says CENTCOM Understates U.S. Casualties in Iran War
Left 60%
Center 30%
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What happened: The Intercept alleges CENTCOM is providing outdated casualty figures from the month-old Iran war, excluding contractor injuries and over 200 sailors treated for smoke inhalation aboard USS Gerald R. Ford. Independent analysis finds at least 15 U.S. troops died and hundreds more were wounded across bases in Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Jordan, Qatar, Syria, and UAE since fighting began.
Why it matters: Critics warn the Pentagon's failure to harden bases against known drone and missile threats left troops vulnerable, with officials calling it a casualty cover-up that undermines public trust. The dispute over transparency comes as Trump faces pressure to end the war within weeks amid economic disruption from Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz and soaring fuel prices worldwide.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

58 Articles •
Burundi Depot Blasts Kill 13, Injure Dozens in Bujumbura
Left 36%
Center 43%
R 21%
What happened: Late Tuesday night, a short circuit sparked a fire at Burundi's main army ammunition depot in Musaga, Bujumbura, triggering hours of explosions that killed at least 13 people and injured 57 others. Projectiles traveled up to 10 kilometers into populated neighborhoods, destroying homes and forcing mass evacuations across the city of over one million residents.
Why it matters: Unexploded munitions scattered across residential areas pose ongoing danger to civilians, with authorities urging residents not to touch suspicious objects and to report them immediately. The disaster highlights infrastructure vulnerabilities in the world's poorest country by GDP per capita, where water shortages hampered firefighting efforts and power outages affected surrounding neighborhoods.

28 Articles •
South Africa Deploys 2,200 Soldiers for Yearlong Crime Operation
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Center 70%
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What happened: South Africa deployed 2,200 soldiers yesterday to assist police in tackling gang violence and illicit mining across five provinces through Operation Prosper, running until March 2027. The deployment targets crime hotspots in Western Cape, Gauteng, Eastern Cape, Free State, and North West, following at least 40 killings in Cape Town during March.
Why it matters: While the military presence may offer short-term relief in overwhelmed communities, experts warn troops lack policing skills needed for lasting solutions. Critics argue the deployment admits police failure and may erode community trust, requiring stronger social interventions and criminal justice reforms to address root causes of crime.
89% of sources are Original Reporting

21 Articles •
Super Rich Hide $3.55T in Offshore Tax Havens, Oxfam Claims
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Center 56%
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The numbers: Oxfam reports the richest 0.1% stashed $3.55 trillion in untaxed offshore wealth in 2024, exceeding France's GDP and the combined wealth of 4.1 billion people. The ultra-elite 0.01% alone control $1.77 trillion of this hidden fortune, despite reforms since the Panama Papers leak a decade ago.
Why it matters: This massive untaxed wealth represents lost revenue that could fund welfare, pensions, and health care, especially harming low-income countries excluded from information-sharing systems. Oxfam urges governments to implement wealth taxes, strengthen tax authorities, and create a global asset register to track the super-rich and recover billions in public funds.
95% of sources are Original Reporting

11 Articles •
Korean Researchers Achieve Lithium-Air Battery Breakthrough
Center 100%
The discovery: Korean researchers at KIST and IAE developed a catalyst that converts tungsten diselenide's inactive surface into a fully active catalytic plane by adding platinum atoms and creating selenium vacancies. The resulting lithium-air batteries achieved over 550 charge-discharge cycles, outperforming conventional catalysts like platinum on carbon and ruthenium oxide.
Why it matters: This technology could dramatically reduce battery costs while delivering faster charging, longer lifespan, and higher capacity for electric vehicles and energy storage systems. Beyond batteries, the catalyst design may improve fuel cells and water electrolysis, accelerating the shift to affordable next-generation clean energy solutions.
82% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Billionaires hiding trillions untaxed, Burundi explosion, Korean lithium battery breakthrough


26 Articles •
U.S. Seeks Access to 3 More Greenland Bases, NYT Reports
Left 32%
Center 26%
Right 42%
The details: The U.S. is negotiating with Denmark for access to three additional military bases in Greenland, including former American sites Narsarsuaq and Kangerlussuaq. Gen. Gregory Guillot confirmed last month that talks are progressing, marking the first U.S. expansion there in decades to counter threats from Russia and China in the Arctic.
Why it matters: The expansion would significantly strengthen U.S. military presence in the strategically vital Arctic region, hosting special operations and naval units at sites with deep-water ports and long runways. The U.S. is invoking a 1951 defense agreement rather than negotiating a new treaty, leaving Denmark with limited ability to block the request despite ongoing diplomatic tensions.
96% of sources are Original Reporting

13 Articles •
Intercept Says CENTCOM Understates U.S. Casualties in Iran War
Left 60%
Center 30%
10%
What happened: The Intercept alleges CENTCOM is providing outdated casualty figures from the month-old Iran war, excluding contractor injuries and over 200 sailors treated for smoke inhalation aboard USS Gerald R. Ford. Independent analysis finds at least 15 U.S. troops died and hundreds more were wounded across bases in Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Jordan, Qatar, Syria, and UAE since fighting began.
Why it matters: Critics warn the Pentagon's failure to harden bases against known drone and missile threats left troops vulnerable, with officials calling it a casualty cover-up that undermines public trust. The dispute over transparency comes as Trump faces pressure to end the war within weeks amid economic disruption from Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz and soaring fuel prices worldwide.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

58 Articles •
Burundi Depot Blasts Kill 13, Injure Dozens in Bujumbura
Left 36%
Center 43%
R 21%
What happened: Late Tuesday night, a short circuit sparked a fire at Burundi's main army ammunition depot in Musaga, Bujumbura, triggering hours of explosions that killed at least 13 people and injured 57 others. Projectiles traveled up to 10 kilometers into populated neighborhoods, destroying homes and forcing mass evacuations across the city of over one million residents.
Why it matters: Unexploded munitions scattered across residential areas pose ongoing danger to civilians, with authorities urging residents not to touch suspicious objects and to report them immediately. The disaster highlights infrastructure vulnerabilities in the world's poorest country by GDP per capita, where water shortages hampered firefighting efforts and power outages affected surrounding neighborhoods.

28 Articles •
South Africa Deploys 2,200 Soldiers for Yearlong Crime Operation
L 20%
Center 70%
10%
What happened: South Africa deployed 2,200 soldiers yesterday to assist police in tackling gang violence and illicit mining across five provinces through Operation Prosper, running until March 2027. The deployment targets crime hotspots in Western Cape, Gauteng, Eastern Cape, Free State, and North West, following at least 40 killings in Cape Town during March.
Why it matters: While the military presence may offer short-term relief in overwhelmed communities, experts warn troops lack policing skills needed for lasting solutions. Critics argue the deployment admits police failure and may erode community trust, requiring stronger social interventions and criminal justice reforms to address root causes of crime.
89% of sources are Original Reporting

21 Articles •
Super Rich Hide $3.55T in Offshore Tax Havens, Oxfam Claims
L 22%
Center 56%
R 22%
The numbers: Oxfam reports the richest 0.1% stashed $3.55 trillion in untaxed offshore wealth in 2024, exceeding France's GDP and the combined wealth of 4.1 billion people. The ultra-elite 0.01% alone control $1.77 trillion of this hidden fortune, despite reforms since the Panama Papers leak a decade ago.
Why it matters: This massive untaxed wealth represents lost revenue that could fund welfare, pensions, and health care, especially harming low-income countries excluded from information-sharing systems. Oxfam urges governments to implement wealth taxes, strengthen tax authorities, and create a global asset register to track the super-rich and recover billions in public funds.
95% of sources are Original Reporting

11 Articles •
Korean Researchers Achieve Lithium-Air Battery Breakthrough
Center 100%
The discovery: Korean researchers at KIST and IAE developed a catalyst that converts tungsten diselenide's inactive surface into a fully active catalytic plane by adding platinum atoms and creating selenium vacancies. The resulting lithium-air batteries achieved over 550 charge-discharge cycles, outperforming conventional catalysts like platinum on carbon and ruthenium oxide.
Why it matters: This technology could dramatically reduce battery costs while delivering faster charging, longer lifespan, and higher capacity for electric vehicles and energy storage systems. Beyond batteries, the catalyst design may improve fuel cells and water electrolysis, accelerating the shift to affordable next-generation clean energy solutions.
82% of sources are Original Reporting