Skip to main content
Black Friday Sale - Get 40% off Vantage
Daily Briefing
Trump Phones MIA; NZ Murder case gets global attention; US budget deficits swell in October
181 Articles •
Israeli Police Kill 2 Palestinians in Jenin Amid Probe
Left 39%
Center 37%
R 24%
What happened: Israeli forces shot and killed two Palestinian men, Yussef Ali Asa'sa, 37, and Al-Muntasir Abdullah, 26, in Jenin yesterday after a hours-long surrender procedure. Video footage from multiple sources shows the men exiting a building with hands raised, lifting shirts, and kneeling before being ordered back inside and shot at close range.
Why it matters: The incident has sparked international condemnation and accusations of war crimes, with Palestinian authorities calling it a "brutal field execution" while Israeli forces claim the men were wanted militants and have opened an investigation. This comes amid unprecedented West Bank violence with over 1,000 Palestinians killed since October 2023, 32,000 residents displaced from refugee camps, and an average of 47 Israeli raids daily on Palestinian communities.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
64% of sources are Original Reporting
113 Articles •
Nigeria Declares National Emergency Amid Kidnapping Crisis
Left 45%
Center 31%
R 24%
What happened: President Tinubu declared a nationwide security emergency two days ago after armed groups kidnapped over 300 students and dozens of others in recent attacks. He ordered recruitment of 50,000 new police officers, withdrawal of 100,000 VIP bodyguards for redeployment, and authorized forest rangers to conduct offensive operations against criminal gangs.
Why it matters: Nigeria's kidnapping crisis has become a structured profit-seeking industry with 4,722 people kidnapped and 762 killed in the past year alone. The emergency measures aim to protect schools, churches and remote communities, but will take months to implement while 265 children from last Friday's Catholic school abduction remain missing.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
72% of sources are Original Reporting
244 Articles •
Putin Addresses Ukraine Peace Plan
Left 26%
Center 52%
R 22%
The latest: Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday a U.S. peace plan could form the basis for negotiations but demanded Ukrainian forces withdraw from all territories Moscow claims, threatening military seizure otherwise. U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff is expected in Moscow early next week to discuss the revised 20-point draft after the original plan was criticized and trimmed over the weekend.
Why it matters: Russia controls one-fifth of Ukraine's territory and demands withdrawal from Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia regions—including areas it doesn't occupy—making territorial concessions the key stumbling block. European officials fear Putin is stalling to seize more land before any deal, while Ukraine secured $8.1 billion in IMF aid but faces a $153 billion budget shortfall through 2027.
63 Articles •
Quebec to Expand Province's Secularism Rules
Left 71%
C 18%
11%
What's new: Quebec tabled legislation yesterday expanding secularism rules to ban public prayer without permits, close prayer rooms in colleges and universities by September 2026, prohibit religious symbols for daycare and post-secondary workers, ban face coverings for students, and end exclusively halal or kosher menus at public institutions.
Why it matters: The bill directly affects students, staff and visitors at public institutions across Quebec, particularly impacting Muslim and Jewish communities through prayer room closures, dietary restrictions at facilities like Jewish General Hospital, and expanded bans on religious symbols. Critics say the measures target religious minorities and create division ahead of next year's provincial election.
Blindspot LogoBlindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
Seal Check SVG Icon
68% of sources are High Factuality
174 Articles •
General Sworn in as New Guinea-Bissau Leader
Left 37%
Center 33%
Right 30%
What happened: Army officers seized control of Guinea-Bissau this week, suspending the electoral process days after Sunday's presidential vote and installing General Horta Inta-A as transitional president for one year. Deposed President Umaro Sissoco Embaló fled to Senegal while the military detained officials including former Prime Minister Domingos Simoes Pereira, citing a plot involving politicians and drug lords to manipulate results.
Why it matters: The coup marks the ninth military takeover in West and Central Africa in five years, prompting ECOWAS to suspend Guinea-Bissau from all regional activities and deploy a mediation mission. The takeover in this cocaine trafficking hub between Latin America and Europe further destabilizes the region, with experts warning that weak institutions and drug money's influence on politics will likely persist regardless of leadership changes.
Shield Badge SVG Icon
65% of sources are Original Reporting
News
Feed Dots Icon
For You
Search Icon
Search
Blindspot LogoBlindspotLocal