Daily Briefing
Magnetar observed; GOP repositioning around deportation; foreign hackers got to Epstein Files in '23

44 Articles •
Iran, Lebanon Seek Expanded UNESCO Protections as Strikes Damage Heritage Sites
Left 52%
Center 26%
R 22%
What happened: UNESCO confirmed damage to at least four Iranian World Heritage sites from US-Israeli strikes that began February 28, including Tehran's Golestan Palace, Isfahan's Chehel Sotoun Palace and Masjed-e Jameh mosque, and structures near Khorramabad's ancient caves. Shattered glass, broken tiles, cracked frescoes and damaged wooden panels were documented through videos and photos released in early March.
Why it matters: These sites represent thousands of years of human history and cultural identity, protected under international law as part of UNESCO's World Heritage list alongside landmarks like the Great Wall and Taj Mahal. Despite UNESCO providing coordinates to avoid damage and sites being marked with protective Blue Shield symbols, the strikes have destroyed irreplaceable artifacts that belong to all humanity, not just Iran.
66% of sources are High Factuality

28 Articles •
Astronomers Witness Birth of a Magnetar for the First Time
L 18%
Center 76%
6%
What happened: Astronomers observed supernova SN 2024afav, located a billion light-years away, which displayed an unprecedented accelerating 'chirp' pattern in its brightness over 200 days of monitoring. Analysis confirms this marks the first observed birth of a magnetar—a rapidly spinning, ultra-magnetic neutron star—proving magnetars power some of the universe's brightest stellar explosions.
Why it matters: This discovery opens a new way to test Einstein's general relativity under extreme conditions and establishes magnetars as confirmed power sources for superluminous supernovae. The upcoming Vera C. Rubin Observatory will soon detect dozens more of these 'chirping' supernovae, dramatically advancing our understanding of stellar death and related phenomena like fast radio bursts.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
96% of sources are Original Reporting

49 Articles •
Foreign Hacker Breached FBI's Epstein Files in 2023, Reuters Reports
L 24%
Center 35%
Right 41%
What happened: A foreign hacker accessed FBI files tied to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation after breaching a server at the bureau's New York Field Office on February 12, 2023. The intruder combed through certain Epstein-related files before the breach was discovered the next day when Special Agent Aaron Spivack found a warning text file on his computer.
Why it matters: The breach exposed highly sensitive files from one of the most high-profile criminal investigations in recent history, raising concerns about foreign intelligence interest in documents that have already triggered international investigations and resignations. It remains unclear which specific files were accessed, whether any data was downloaded, or if victims' privacy was compromised.
69% of sources are Original Reporting

45 Articles •
Trial Begins in Miami for Alleged Assassins of Haitian President
Left 51%
Center 38%
11%
What happened: Four South Florida men are on trial in Miami federal court for conspiring to kidnap or kill Haitian President Jovenel Moïse, who was assassinated on July 7, 2021, by about two dozen foreign mercenaries at his home near Port-au-Prince. Prosecutors allege the defendants planned and financed the plot from South Florida, extending $175,000 in credit and recruiting Colombian soldiers, while defense attorneys claim their clients believed they were assisting in a lawful arrest.
Why it matters: The assassination plunged Haiti into unprecedented turmoil with no elected president since Moïse's death, while gang violence and death threats have stalled investigations in Haiti. The trial, which began this week with testimony from Moïse's wounded widow Martine, could result in life sentences for the defendants and carries significant implications for Haiti's political stability and international accountability.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
71% of sources are High Factuality

36 Articles •
Report: White House Advises GOP to Avoid 'Mass Deportation' Rhetoric
Left 36%
C 16%
Right 48%
What happened: White House Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair privately told House Republicans at their Doral, Florida retreat earlier this week to stop emphasizing mass deportations and instead focus messaging on removing violent criminals. The guidance comes as polls show 58% of Americans believe Trump has gone too far on deportations, with ICE disapproval reaching its highest level at nearly 60%.
Why it matters: The messaging shift signals Republican concern that Democrats are successfully framing immigration policy as overly aggressive ahead of November's midterm elections. While 67% of voters favor allowing employed undocumented immigrants to stay legally, majorities of independents and Hispanic voters now oppose deportations and disapprove of ICE, potentially threatening GOP electoral prospects.
81% of sources are Original Reporting

92 Articles •
Senegal Doubles Prison Terms for Same-Sex Acts to 10 Years
Left 35%
Center 42%
R 23%
What happened: Yesterday, Senegal's parliament overwhelmingly approved legislation doubling maximum prison sentences for same-sex relations from five to 10 years, with fines up to $17,600. The bill, introduced last month by Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko and passed 135-0 with three abstentions, also criminalizes promoting or financing homosexuality and now awaits President Bassirou Diomaye Faye's signature.
Why it matters: The law follows a crackdown that saw at least 27 men arrested between February 9-24, with arrests often based on accusations and phone searches amid a flood of homophobic social media messages. Rights groups warn this measure is part of a broader regional trend tightening anti-LGBTQ laws across West Africa, potentially enabling greater persecution of sexual minorities and organizations supporting them.

66 Articles •
Iran Demands Reparations, Nuclear Rights as Ceasefire Conditions
Left 34%
Center 32%
Right 34%
The conditions: Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian set three preconditions on Wednesday to end the 12-day war: recognition of Iran's legitimate rights, payment of reparations, and firm international guarantees against future aggression. This marks the first time a senior Iranian leader has explicitly demanded reparations as a condition to end hostilities.
Why it matters: The war has disrupted global oil supplies through the Strait of Hormuz, causing crude prices to surge from $70 to $90 per barrel and prompting the International Energy Agency to release a record 400 million barrels from emergency reserves. India's Russian oil imports have jumped to 1.5 million barrels per day as alternative supply routes add two weeks to delivery times.
95% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Magnetar observed; GOP repositioning around deportation; foreign hackers got to Epstein Files in '23


44 Articles •
Iran, Lebanon Seek Expanded UNESCO Protections as Strikes Damage Heritage Sites
Left 52%
Center 26%
R 22%
What happened: UNESCO confirmed damage to at least four Iranian World Heritage sites from US-Israeli strikes that began February 28, including Tehran's Golestan Palace, Isfahan's Chehel Sotoun Palace and Masjed-e Jameh mosque, and structures near Khorramabad's ancient caves. Shattered glass, broken tiles, cracked frescoes and damaged wooden panels were documented through videos and photos released in early March.
Why it matters: These sites represent thousands of years of human history and cultural identity, protected under international law as part of UNESCO's World Heritage list alongside landmarks like the Great Wall and Taj Mahal. Despite UNESCO providing coordinates to avoid damage and sites being marked with protective Blue Shield symbols, the strikes have destroyed irreplaceable artifacts that belong to all humanity, not just Iran.
66% of sources are High Factuality

28 Articles •
Astronomers Witness Birth of a Magnetar for the First Time
L 18%
Center 76%
6%
What happened: Astronomers observed supernova SN 2024afav, located a billion light-years away, which displayed an unprecedented accelerating 'chirp' pattern in its brightness over 200 days of monitoring. Analysis confirms this marks the first observed birth of a magnetar—a rapidly spinning, ultra-magnetic neutron star—proving magnetars power some of the universe's brightest stellar explosions.
Why it matters: This discovery opens a new way to test Einstein's general relativity under extreme conditions and establishes magnetars as confirmed power sources for superluminous supernovae. The upcoming Vera C. Rubin Observatory will soon detect dozens more of these 'chirping' supernovae, dramatically advancing our understanding of stellar death and related phenomena like fast radio bursts.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
96% of sources are Original Reporting

49 Articles •
Foreign Hacker Breached FBI's Epstein Files in 2023, Reuters Reports
L 24%
Center 35%
Right 41%
What happened: A foreign hacker accessed FBI files tied to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation after breaching a server at the bureau's New York Field Office on February 12, 2023. The intruder combed through certain Epstein-related files before the breach was discovered the next day when Special Agent Aaron Spivack found a warning text file on his computer.
Why it matters: The breach exposed highly sensitive files from one of the most high-profile criminal investigations in recent history, raising concerns about foreign intelligence interest in documents that have already triggered international investigations and resignations. It remains unclear which specific files were accessed, whether any data was downloaded, or if victims' privacy was compromised.
69% of sources are Original Reporting

45 Articles •
Trial Begins in Miami for Alleged Assassins of Haitian President
Left 51%
Center 38%
11%
What happened: Four South Florida men are on trial in Miami federal court for conspiring to kidnap or kill Haitian President Jovenel Moïse, who was assassinated on July 7, 2021, by about two dozen foreign mercenaries at his home near Port-au-Prince. Prosecutors allege the defendants planned and financed the plot from South Florida, extending $175,000 in credit and recruiting Colombian soldiers, while defense attorneys claim their clients believed they were assisting in a lawful arrest.
Why it matters: The assassination plunged Haiti into unprecedented turmoil with no elected president since Moïse's death, while gang violence and death threats have stalled investigations in Haiti. The trial, which began this week with testimony from Moïse's wounded widow Martine, could result in life sentences for the defendants and carries significant implications for Haiti's political stability and international accountability.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
71% of sources are High Factuality

36 Articles •
Report: White House Advises GOP to Avoid 'Mass Deportation' Rhetoric
Left 36%
C 16%
Right 48%
What happened: White House Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair privately told House Republicans at their Doral, Florida retreat earlier this week to stop emphasizing mass deportations and instead focus messaging on removing violent criminals. The guidance comes as polls show 58% of Americans believe Trump has gone too far on deportations, with ICE disapproval reaching its highest level at nearly 60%.
Why it matters: The messaging shift signals Republican concern that Democrats are successfully framing immigration policy as overly aggressive ahead of November's midterm elections. While 67% of voters favor allowing employed undocumented immigrants to stay legally, majorities of independents and Hispanic voters now oppose deportations and disapprove of ICE, potentially threatening GOP electoral prospects.
81% of sources are Original Reporting

92 Articles •
Senegal Doubles Prison Terms for Same-Sex Acts to 10 Years
Left 35%
Center 42%
R 23%
What happened: Yesterday, Senegal's parliament overwhelmingly approved legislation doubling maximum prison sentences for same-sex relations from five to 10 years, with fines up to $17,600. The bill, introduced last month by Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko and passed 135-0 with three abstentions, also criminalizes promoting or financing homosexuality and now awaits President Bassirou Diomaye Faye's signature.
Why it matters: The law follows a crackdown that saw at least 27 men arrested between February 9-24, with arrests often based on accusations and phone searches amid a flood of homophobic social media messages. Rights groups warn this measure is part of a broader regional trend tightening anti-LGBTQ laws across West Africa, potentially enabling greater persecution of sexual minorities and organizations supporting them.

66 Articles •
Iran Demands Reparations, Nuclear Rights as Ceasefire Conditions
Left 34%
Center 32%
Right 34%
The conditions: Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian set three preconditions on Wednesday to end the 12-day war: recognition of Iran's legitimate rights, payment of reparations, and firm international guarantees against future aggression. This marks the first time a senior Iranian leader has explicitly demanded reparations as a condition to end hostilities.
Why it matters: The war has disrupted global oil supplies through the Strait of Hormuz, causing crude prices to surge from $70 to $90 per barrel and prompting the International Energy Agency to release a record 400 million barrels from emergency reserves. India's Russian oil imports have jumped to 1.5 million barrels per day as alternative supply routes add two weeks to delivery times.
95% of sources are Original Reporting