Daily Briefing
Microrobots, Trump says CIA briefed him on Supreme Leader's sexuality, Tucker shows blacklisted Netanyahu doc

13 Articles •
Ukraine Says Russia Recruited 27,000 from 135 Countries
Left 75%
Center 25%
The numbers: Ukraine reports Russia has recruited 27,407 foreign fighters from at least 135 countries since February 2022, with recruitment accelerating from 3,808 in 2023 to nearly 14,000 last year. Most recruits come from Central Asian post-Soviet states like Uzbekistan and Tajikistan (11,157 total), while roughly 1,800 are African nationals from 36 countries, including 1,000 Kenyans and 81 Zimbabweans.
How it works: Recruiters use fake job offers on social media promising salaries up to $2,400 monthly for construction or security work, then seize passports upon arrival and coerce recruits into signing military contracts they don't understand. Russia also forces migrants without citizenship to choose between deportation or military service, expelling 157,000 foreigners in 2024 for migration violations while offering citizenship through Armed Forces contracts.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting
62% of sources are High Factuality

37 Articles •
Tennessee Grandmother Jailed Five Months After AI Misidentification
L 16%
Center 71%
R 13%
What happened: Angela Lipps, a 50-year-old Tennessee grandmother, spent over five months in jail after Clearview AI facial recognition software wrongly matched her to bank fraud crimes in Fargo, North Dakota. She was arrested July 14, 2025, extradited across 1,000 miles, and released Christmas Eve when bank records proved she was in Tennessee during the alleged crimes.
Why it matters: Lipps lost her home, car, income, and health insurance during her wrongful imprisonment, while police admitted errors but declined to apologize as investigation continues. Her case exposes how law enforcement's reliance on AI facial recognition without basic verification can devastate innocent lives, prompting policy reviews and potential civil rights litigation.
76% of sources are High Factuality

53 Articles •
Ukraine Apologizes After Drones Crash in Finland
Left 36%
Center 32%
Right 32%
What happened: Two Ukrainian drones crossed into southeastern Finland near Kouvola and Luumäki on Sunday morning, with one carrying an unexploded warhead that was destroyed in a controlled detonation late Sunday. Finnish Hornet fighters scrambled at 08:13 but did not fire due to collateral damage risks, and Ukraine apologized Monday, attributing the incident to likely Russian electronic interference.
Why it matters: The incident highlights security risks along Finland's 1,340-kilometer border with Russia, the EU and NATO's longest with Moscow, as Finland investigates the crashes as suspected territorial violation and aggravated endangerment. Local residents near Kouvola faced temporary evacuations during bomb disposal operations, while the episode underscores growing tensions as Ukraine intensifies long-range strikes near the Gulf of Finland.
98% of sources are Original Reporting

26 Articles •
China Deploys Over 200 Drone Fighters Near Taiwan
Left 64%
C 14%
R 22%
What happened: China has deployed over 200 obsolete J-6 fighter jets converted into attack drones at six airbases near the Taiwan Strait, according to a Mitchell Institute report published this week. The 1960s-era aircraft, stripped of cannons and fitted with automatic flight controls, are stationed at five bases in Fujian Province and one in Guangdong, positioned for mass launches within minutes of Taiwan.
Why it matters: These drones are designed to overwhelm Taiwan's air defenses in opening attacks, forcing the island to expend expensive interceptors on low-cost targets before higher-value strikes follow. Taiwan this week outlined plans to rapidly acquire counter-drone systems, while defense experts warn the converted jets function more like cruise missiles and require costly sophisticated missiles to intercept.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
69% of sources are Original Reporting

501 Articles •
12 Tons of KitKat Bars Stolen in Europe Heist
L 23%
Center 59%
R 18%
What happened: A truck carrying 413,793 KitKat bars from Nestlé's newly launched range vanished last week while traveling from central Italy to Poland. The 12-ton shipment and vehicle remain missing as of March 27, with investigations ongoing alongside authorities and logistics partners.
Why it matters: The theft comes just days before Easter Sunday on April 5, potentially causing shortages of the new KitKat range on store shelves. Each bar carries unique batch codes allowing Nestlé to trace stolen products if they surface through unofficial sales channels across Europe.

6 Articles •
Researchers Build Laser That Controls Sound Particles for Jam-Proof Navigation
Center 100%
The breakthrough: Researchers at the University of Rochester and Rochester Institute of Technology have developed a squeezed phonon laser that controls quantized vibrations with unprecedented precision by reducing thermal noise. The team, led by Professor Nick Vamivakas, traps and levitates phonons using optical tweezers in a vacuum, then squeezes fluctuations to enable more accurate measurements than conventional photon lasers.
Why it matters: This technology could enable unjammable navigation systems that don't rely on satellites, advance quantum computing and sensing capabilities, and lead to faster, smaller, more energy-efficient microchips. The squeezed phonon laser may also improve ultrasonic medical imaging and enable non-invasive therapies, as sound waves travel more effectively through human tissue than light.
83% of sources are Original Reporting

14 Articles •
Turkey Thwarted Israeli Plan to Use Kurds as Proxy Force Against Iran
L 14%
Center 29%
Right 57%
What happened: Turkey intervened diplomatically and militarily to stop an alleged Israeli and U.S. plan to recruit about 10,000 Kurdish fighters as proxy ground forces against Iran following joint strikes in February. Turkish President Erdoğan raised the issue with President Trump in early March, while Turkish intelligence held high-level talks with Iraqi Kurdish leaders and warned of military action if Kurdish groups participated.
Why it matters: Turkish intelligence chief Ibrahim Kalın warned the conflict risks becoming a decades-long regional crisis between Turks, Kurds, Arabs, and Persians that could expand into a global confrontation. Turkey's intervention prevented Kurdish groups from joining the war, protecting regional stability and Turkey's ongoing reconciliation efforts with its Kurdish population.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Left Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Microrobots, Trump says CIA briefed him on Supreme Leader's sexuality, Tucker shows blacklisted Netanyahu doc


13 Articles •
Ukraine Says Russia Recruited 27,000 from 135 Countries
Left 75%
Center 25%
The numbers: Ukraine reports Russia has recruited 27,407 foreign fighters from at least 135 countries since February 2022, with recruitment accelerating from 3,808 in 2023 to nearly 14,000 last year. Most recruits come from Central Asian post-Soviet states like Uzbekistan and Tajikistan (11,157 total), while roughly 1,800 are African nationals from 36 countries, including 1,000 Kenyans and 81 Zimbabweans.
How it works: Recruiters use fake job offers on social media promising salaries up to $2,400 monthly for construction or security work, then seize passports upon arrival and coerce recruits into signing military contracts they don't understand. Russia also forces migrants without citizenship to choose between deportation or military service, expelling 157,000 foreigners in 2024 for migration violations while offering citizenship through Armed Forces contracts.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting
62% of sources are High Factuality

37 Articles •
Tennessee Grandmother Jailed Five Months After AI Misidentification
L 16%
Center 71%
R 13%
What happened: Angela Lipps, a 50-year-old Tennessee grandmother, spent over five months in jail after Clearview AI facial recognition software wrongly matched her to bank fraud crimes in Fargo, North Dakota. She was arrested July 14, 2025, extradited across 1,000 miles, and released Christmas Eve when bank records proved she was in Tennessee during the alleged crimes.
Why it matters: Lipps lost her home, car, income, and health insurance during her wrongful imprisonment, while police admitted errors but declined to apologize as investigation continues. Her case exposes how law enforcement's reliance on AI facial recognition without basic verification can devastate innocent lives, prompting policy reviews and potential civil rights litigation.
76% of sources are High Factuality

53 Articles •
Ukraine Apologizes After Drones Crash in Finland
Left 36%
Center 32%
Right 32%
What happened: Two Ukrainian drones crossed into southeastern Finland near Kouvola and Luumäki on Sunday morning, with one carrying an unexploded warhead that was destroyed in a controlled detonation late Sunday. Finnish Hornet fighters scrambled at 08:13 but did not fire due to collateral damage risks, and Ukraine apologized Monday, attributing the incident to likely Russian electronic interference.
Why it matters: The incident highlights security risks along Finland's 1,340-kilometer border with Russia, the EU and NATO's longest with Moscow, as Finland investigates the crashes as suspected territorial violation and aggravated endangerment. Local residents near Kouvola faced temporary evacuations during bomb disposal operations, while the episode underscores growing tensions as Ukraine intensifies long-range strikes near the Gulf of Finland.
98% of sources are Original Reporting

26 Articles •
China Deploys Over 200 Drone Fighters Near Taiwan
Left 64%
C 14%
R 22%
What happened: China has deployed over 200 obsolete J-6 fighter jets converted into attack drones at six airbases near the Taiwan Strait, according to a Mitchell Institute report published this week. The 1960s-era aircraft, stripped of cannons and fitted with automatic flight controls, are stationed at five bases in Fujian Province and one in Guangdong, positioned for mass launches within minutes of Taiwan.
Why it matters: These drones are designed to overwhelm Taiwan's air defenses in opening attacks, forcing the island to expend expensive interceptors on low-cost targets before higher-value strikes follow. Taiwan this week outlined plans to rapidly acquire counter-drone systems, while defense experts warn the converted jets function more like cruise missiles and require costly sophisticated missiles to intercept.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
69% of sources are Original Reporting

501 Articles •
12 Tons of KitKat Bars Stolen in Europe Heist
L 23%
Center 59%
R 18%
What happened: A truck carrying 413,793 KitKat bars from Nestlé's newly launched range vanished last week while traveling from central Italy to Poland. The 12-ton shipment and vehicle remain missing as of March 27, with investigations ongoing alongside authorities and logistics partners.
Why it matters: The theft comes just days before Easter Sunday on April 5, potentially causing shortages of the new KitKat range on store shelves. Each bar carries unique batch codes allowing Nestlé to trace stolen products if they surface through unofficial sales channels across Europe.

6 Articles •
Researchers Build Laser That Controls Sound Particles for Jam-Proof Navigation
Center 100%
The breakthrough: Researchers at the University of Rochester and Rochester Institute of Technology have developed a squeezed phonon laser that controls quantized vibrations with unprecedented precision by reducing thermal noise. The team, led by Professor Nick Vamivakas, traps and levitates phonons using optical tweezers in a vacuum, then squeezes fluctuations to enable more accurate measurements than conventional photon lasers.
Why it matters: This technology could enable unjammable navigation systems that don't rely on satellites, advance quantum computing and sensing capabilities, and lead to faster, smaller, more energy-efficient microchips. The squeezed phonon laser may also improve ultrasonic medical imaging and enable non-invasive therapies, as sound waves travel more effectively through human tissue than light.
83% of sources are Original Reporting

14 Articles •
Turkey Thwarted Israeli Plan to Use Kurds as Proxy Force Against Iran
L 14%
Center 29%
Right 57%
What happened: Turkey intervened diplomatically and militarily to stop an alleged Israeli and U.S. plan to recruit about 10,000 Kurdish fighters as proxy ground forces against Iran following joint strikes in February. Turkish President Erdoğan raised the issue with President Trump in early March, while Turkish intelligence held high-level talks with Iraqi Kurdish leaders and warned of military action if Kurdish groups participated.
Why it matters: Turkish intelligence chief Ibrahim Kalın warned the conflict risks becoming a decades-long regional crisis between Turks, Kurds, Arabs, and Persians that could expand into a global confrontation. Turkey's intervention prevented Kurdish groups from joining the war, protecting regional stability and Turkey's ongoing reconciliation efforts with its Kurdish population.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Left Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting