Daily Briefing
CIA's involvement in Nord Stream resurfaces; Teen psychosis linked to cannabis use; tomb full of gold uncovered in Panama

39 Articles •
Report: CIA Had Foreknowledge of Nord Stream Attacks
Left 42%
C 21%
Right 37%
What to know: A report alleges the CIA knew in advance about the Nord Stream pipeline attacks; the provided materials include no supporting facts, so the claim remains unverified.
What it means: If accurate, the allegation would have major geopolitical and legal implications; readers should await independent evidence and named sources before drawing conclusions.
97% of sources are Original Reporting

31 Articles •
Study: Teen Cannabis Use Linked to Double Psychosis Risk
L 22%
Center 64%
R 14%
The findings: A study of 463,396 adolescents aged 13 to 17 found that any past-year cannabis use doubled the risk of psychotic and bipolar disorders and increased depression risk by 33% and anxiety by 24%. Psychiatric diagnoses typically emerged within 1.7 to 2.3 years after cannabis use began.
Why it matters: Modern cannabis contains THC levels exceeding 20% in flower and up to 95% in concentrates, far higher than decades past, affecting still-developing adolescent brains. Cannabis use was more common in socioeconomically deprived neighborhoods, raising concerns that commercialization could worsen mental health disparities among vulnerable teens.

12 Articles •
WSJ: Wagner Mutiny Spurred Xi's Purge of China's Military
L 22%
Center 45%
Right 33%
What happened: Last month, Beijing placed Central Military Commission Vice Chairman Zhang Youxia and CMC member Liu Zhenli under investigation for alleged disciplinary violations. State media framed the actions as rooting out corruption, enforcing ideological discipline, and safeguarding the Communist Party's absolute control over the military.
Why it matters: The purges impact China's short-term military readiness and domestic politics, but analysts say they won't meaningfully alter Taiwan policy decisions. Xi Jinping's political calculations, not military readiness, will determine whether China uses force, driven primarily by his domestic political survival concerns.
92% of sources are Original Reporting
67% of sources are High Factuality

8 Articles •
New Battery Designs Tackle Fire Risk and Scarce Metals
Left 40%
Center 60%
What happened: Yesterday, Chinese researchers from Tianjin University and South China University of Technology published in Nature a working organic lithium-ion battery prototype using a polymer cathode (PBFDO) that delivers over 250 Wh/kg energy density. The 2.5 amp-hour pouch cells passed puncture tests, operated from -70°C to 80°C, and maintained capacity under bending, stretching, and compression.
Why it matters: This organic battery reduces dependence on scarce metals like cobalt and nickel while offering improved safety and flexibility for wearables and potentially automotive applications. The team is already planning pilot manufacturing with production-ready prototypes targeted for 2026-2027, aligning with industry roadmaps for safer, more sustainable battery chemistries.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

41 Articles •
Archaeologists Unearth 1,000-Year-Old Gold-Filled Tomb in Panama
Left 25%
Center 58%
R 17%
The discovery: Archaeologists uncovered a tomb dating to 800-1000 AD at El Caño Archaeological Park, 124 miles southwest of Panama City, containing human remains surrounded by gold bracelets, pectorals with bat and crocodile motifs, ear ornaments, and decorated ceramic vessels. The highest-status individual wore two of each gold item, indicating elite social rank in pre-Hispanic societies that used the burial site for 200 years.
Why it matters: The gold-rich burial reveals how power functioned through ideology and ritual in ancient Central American societies, with the deceased serving as intercessors between worlds. Panama's government says the find will illuminate social organization, political power, exchange networks, and pre-Hispanic culture for Panamanians and visitors interested in the country's origins.

6 Articles •
Bluetooth Landline Startup Hits $789K in Sales Riding Anti-Screen Wave
Center 67%
Right 33%
What happened: Stanford graduate Cat Goetze's Los Angeles startup Physical Phones sold over 7,500 Bluetooth-enabled retro landlines in 2025, generating $789,000 in revenue after going viral in July with $120,000 in first-three-day sales. The battery-powered devices pair with smartphones to let users take calls on vintage handsets priced at $90 to $110.
Why it matters: The phones offer a way to reduce screen time and digital distractions while staying connected, with Gen Z and Gen Alpha driving demand for nostalgic analog experiences they never lived through. Users can walk away from social media access and focus entirely on conversations using tactile vintage handsets that work with all smartphone calls and apps.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Left Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
CIA's involvement in Nord Stream resurfaces; Teen psychosis linked to cannabis use; tomb full of gold uncovered in Panama


39 Articles •
Report: CIA Had Foreknowledge of Nord Stream Attacks
Left 42%
C 21%
Right 37%
What to know: A report alleges the CIA knew in advance about the Nord Stream pipeline attacks; the provided materials include no supporting facts, so the claim remains unverified.
What it means: If accurate, the allegation would have major geopolitical and legal implications; readers should await independent evidence and named sources before drawing conclusions.
97% of sources are Original Reporting

31 Articles •
Study: Teen Cannabis Use Linked to Double Psychosis Risk
L 22%
Center 64%
R 14%
The findings: A study of 463,396 adolescents aged 13 to 17 found that any past-year cannabis use doubled the risk of psychotic and bipolar disorders and increased depression risk by 33% and anxiety by 24%. Psychiatric diagnoses typically emerged within 1.7 to 2.3 years after cannabis use began.
Why it matters: Modern cannabis contains THC levels exceeding 20% in flower and up to 95% in concentrates, far higher than decades past, affecting still-developing adolescent brains. Cannabis use was more common in socioeconomically deprived neighborhoods, raising concerns that commercialization could worsen mental health disparities among vulnerable teens.

12 Articles •
WSJ: Wagner Mutiny Spurred Xi's Purge of China's Military
L 22%
Center 45%
Right 33%
What happened: Last month, Beijing placed Central Military Commission Vice Chairman Zhang Youxia and CMC member Liu Zhenli under investigation for alleged disciplinary violations. State media framed the actions as rooting out corruption, enforcing ideological discipline, and safeguarding the Communist Party's absolute control over the military.
Why it matters: The purges impact China's short-term military readiness and domestic politics, but analysts say they won't meaningfully alter Taiwan policy decisions. Xi Jinping's political calculations, not military readiness, will determine whether China uses force, driven primarily by his domestic political survival concerns.
92% of sources are Original Reporting
67% of sources are High Factuality

8 Articles •
New Battery Designs Tackle Fire Risk and Scarce Metals
Left 40%
Center 60%
What happened: Yesterday, Chinese researchers from Tianjin University and South China University of Technology published in Nature a working organic lithium-ion battery prototype using a polymer cathode (PBFDO) that delivers over 250 Wh/kg energy density. The 2.5 amp-hour pouch cells passed puncture tests, operated from -70°C to 80°C, and maintained capacity under bending, stretching, and compression.
Why it matters: This organic battery reduces dependence on scarce metals like cobalt and nickel while offering improved safety and flexibility for wearables and potentially automotive applications. The team is already planning pilot manufacturing with production-ready prototypes targeted for 2026-2027, aligning with industry roadmaps for safer, more sustainable battery chemistries.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting

41 Articles •
Archaeologists Unearth 1,000-Year-Old Gold-Filled Tomb in Panama
Left 25%
Center 58%
R 17%
The discovery: Archaeologists uncovered a tomb dating to 800-1000 AD at El Caño Archaeological Park, 124 miles southwest of Panama City, containing human remains surrounded by gold bracelets, pectorals with bat and crocodile motifs, ear ornaments, and decorated ceramic vessels. The highest-status individual wore two of each gold item, indicating elite social rank in pre-Hispanic societies that used the burial site for 200 years.
Why it matters: The gold-rich burial reveals how power functioned through ideology and ritual in ancient Central American societies, with the deceased serving as intercessors between worlds. Panama's government says the find will illuminate social organization, political power, exchange networks, and pre-Hispanic culture for Panamanians and visitors interested in the country's origins.

6 Articles •
Bluetooth Landline Startup Hits $789K in Sales Riding Anti-Screen Wave
Center 67%
Right 33%
What happened: Stanford graduate Cat Goetze's Los Angeles startup Physical Phones sold over 7,500 Bluetooth-enabled retro landlines in 2025, generating $789,000 in revenue after going viral in July with $120,000 in first-three-day sales. The battery-powered devices pair with smartphones to let users take calls on vintage handsets priced at $90 to $110.
Why it matters: The phones offer a way to reduce screen time and digital distractions while staying connected, with Gen Z and Gen Alpha driving demand for nostalgic analog experiences they never lived through. Users can walk away from social media access and focus entirely on conversations using tactile vintage handsets that work with all smartphone calls and apps.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Left Sources
100% of sources are Original Reporting