Daily Briefing
Palantir posts controversial manifesto; Russia claims false-flag attack attempt; Indonesia uncovers giant gas reserve

273 Articles •
Netanyahu Condemns Soldier Who Smashed Jesus Statue in Lebanon
Left 29%
Center 25%
Right 46%
What happened: An Israeli soldier was filmed using a sledgehammer to smash a statue of Jesus Christ in Debel, a Christian village in southern Lebanon, yesterday. The IDF confirmed the viral image is authentic after it garnered over 5 million views and opened a criminal investigation, promising disciplinary action and efforts to restore the statue.
Why it matters: The incident sparked international outrage and condemnation from Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu and Foreign Minister Saar, threatening Israel's diplomatic standing and reinforcing perceptions of religious discrimination. It adds to a documented pattern of Israeli forces desecrating Christian and Muslim sites, with at least 201 incidents of violence against Christians recorded between January 2024 and September 2025.
88% of sources are Original Reporting

187 Articles •
French Prosecutors Summon Musk Over X Deepfake Probe
Left 32%
Center 45%
R 23%
What happened: Elon Musk and former X CEO Linda Yaccarino have been summoned for voluntary interviews in Paris today as French prosecutors expand their investigation into X. The probe, which began in January 2025 over algorithm manipulation allegations, now includes suspected complicity in distributing child sexual abuse material, Holocaust denial, and fraudulent data extraction after X's AI chatbot Grok generated an estimated three million sexualized images—including 23,000 appearing to depict children—in just 11 days.
Why it matters: This case represents one of the most serious criminal investigations into a major social media platform, with potential implications for AI safety regulation worldwide. French prosecutors suspect the Grok deepfake controversy may have been deliberately orchestrated to boost X and xAI's value ahead of a planned June 2026 stock market listing, while the U.S. Justice Department has refused to assist the investigation, calling it an attempt to regulate free speech contrary to the First Amendment.
68% of sources are Original Reporting

345 Articles •
Chinese Robot Shatters Human Half Marathon Record
Left 32%
Center 49%
R 19%
What happened: Honor's humanoid robot Lightning won Beijing's robot half-marathon yesterday, completing the 21km course in 50 minutes 26 seconds—faster than the human world record of 57:20 set last month. The field expanded from 20 to over 100 robot teams, with about 40% navigating autonomously using BeiDou and 5G technology.
Why it matters: The dramatic improvement from last year's 2-hour 40-minute winning time signals rapid advancement in humanoid robotics that could soon impact daily life—from household tasks and elderly care to dangerous jobs like firefighting. China invested $10.8 billion in robotics in 2025 as part of its strategic push to dominate this frontier industry, though experts warn industrial commercialization still lags behind the racing capabilities.
66% of sources are Original Reporting

39 Articles •
Palantir Sparks Backlash with Manifesto Denouncing Inclusivity
Left 61%
11%
Right 28%
What happened: Palantir posted a 22-point summary of CEO Alexander Karp's book The Technological Republic on Saturday, arguing for defending the West, rebuilding democratic pillars, and shifting to AI-based deterrence. The document criticizes postwar pacifism in Germany and Japan and declares that Silicon Valley owes a moral debt to America.
Why it matters: The manifesto reveals the ideology behind a company whose revenue depends on defense, intelligence, immigration, and police contracts. Critics note this isn't just philosophy but corporate sales material, especially as congressional Democrats investigate Palantir's tools used in Trump administration deportations and the tech industry debates military AI applications.
95% of sources are Original Reporting

69 Articles •
Russia Arrests German Woman Over Alleged Bomb Plot
Left 37%
Center 36%
Right 27%
What happened: Russia's FSB detained a 57-year-old German woman in Pyatigorsk carrying an improvised explosive device with 1.5 kg of TNT in her backpack, along with a Central Asian man near a law enforcement facility. Authorities used electronic jamming to prevent remote detonation and sappers destroyed the device in a controlled explosion.
Why it matters: The FSB alleges Ukraine directed this plot as a false-flag operation, though neither Kyiv nor Berlin have responded and details remain unverified. Both suspects face life imprisonment on terrorism charges, and the incident could escalate diplomatic tensions between Russia, Germany, and Ukraine amid the ongoing four-year conflict.
77% of sources are Original Reporting

16 Articles •
Eni Discovers Five Trillion Cubic Feet of Gas Offshore Indonesia
Left 25%
Center 75%
The discovery: Eni's Geliga-1 well in the Ganal block offshore East Kalimantan found approximately 5 trillion cubic feet of gas and 300 million barrels of condensate in roughly 2,000 meters of water. The operator holds 82% interest with Sinopec at 18%, and production is targeted for 2028 using nearby infrastructure including the Bontang LNG plant.
Why it matters: The discovery could boost Eni's Indonesian gas production nearly threefold to 2,000 million standard cubic feet per day by 2028 from around 700 currently. Combined with the adjacent Gula field, it may add 1 billion cubic feet per day and 80,000 barrels of condensate daily, potentially establishing a third production hub and extending the Bontang LNG plant's operational life.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
81% of sources are Original Reporting

70 Articles •
Kelp DAO Loses $292 Million in Largest DeFi Hack of 2026
L 13%
Center 75%
12%
What happened: An attacker drained 116,500 rsETH worth roughly $292 million from Kelp DAO's LayerZero-powered bridge last Saturday at 17:35 UTC, representing about 18% of the token's circulating supply. LayerZero attributes the sophisticated exploit to North Korea's Lazarus Group, which tricked the cross-chain messaging system into releasing the funds to an attacker-controlled address.
Why it matters: The stolen rsETH was used as collateral to borrow roughly $195 million on Aave, creating bad debt that sent AAVE down 10%. Major withdrawals slashed total value locked from $26.39 billion to $17.94 billion in two days, while holders on 20+ layer-2 networks face uncertainty about whether their tokens retain backing, potentially forcing widespread redemptions.
99% of sources are Original Reporting

25 Articles •
Israel Reopens West Bank Settlement Evacuated in 2005
Left 35%
Center 25%
Right 40%
What happened: Israeli ministers attended a ceremony yesterday reopening Sa-Nur settlement in the northern West Bank, nearly 21 years after its 2005 evacuation. Sixteen families moved into prefabricated homes, with authorities approving 126 housing units as part of the government's reversal of the 2005 disengagement policy.
Why it matters: The reopening defies a 2024 International Court of Justice ruling declaring Israeli occupation unlawful and comes amid record settler violence—305 incidents in one month alone. The move intensifies efforts to prevent a Palestinian state and could further entrench Israeli control over the West Bank, home to three million Palestinians.
96% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
Palantir posts controversial manifesto; Russia claims false-flag attack attempt; Indonesia uncovers giant gas reserve


273 Articles •
Netanyahu Condemns Soldier Who Smashed Jesus Statue in Lebanon
Left 29%
Center 25%
Right 46%
What happened: An Israeli soldier was filmed using a sledgehammer to smash a statue of Jesus Christ in Debel, a Christian village in southern Lebanon, yesterday. The IDF confirmed the viral image is authentic after it garnered over 5 million views and opened a criminal investigation, promising disciplinary action and efforts to restore the statue.
Why it matters: The incident sparked international outrage and condemnation from Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu and Foreign Minister Saar, threatening Israel's diplomatic standing and reinforcing perceptions of religious discrimination. It adds to a documented pattern of Israeli forces desecrating Christian and Muslim sites, with at least 201 incidents of violence against Christians recorded between January 2024 and September 2025.
88% of sources are Original Reporting

187 Articles •
French Prosecutors Summon Musk Over X Deepfake Probe
Left 32%
Center 45%
R 23%
What happened: Elon Musk and former X CEO Linda Yaccarino have been summoned for voluntary interviews in Paris today as French prosecutors expand their investigation into X. The probe, which began in January 2025 over algorithm manipulation allegations, now includes suspected complicity in distributing child sexual abuse material, Holocaust denial, and fraudulent data extraction after X's AI chatbot Grok generated an estimated three million sexualized images—including 23,000 appearing to depict children—in just 11 days.
Why it matters: This case represents one of the most serious criminal investigations into a major social media platform, with potential implications for AI safety regulation worldwide. French prosecutors suspect the Grok deepfake controversy may have been deliberately orchestrated to boost X and xAI's value ahead of a planned June 2026 stock market listing, while the U.S. Justice Department has refused to assist the investigation, calling it an attempt to regulate free speech contrary to the First Amendment.
68% of sources are Original Reporting

345 Articles •
Chinese Robot Shatters Human Half Marathon Record
Left 32%
Center 49%
R 19%
What happened: Honor's humanoid robot Lightning won Beijing's robot half-marathon yesterday, completing the 21km course in 50 minutes 26 seconds—faster than the human world record of 57:20 set last month. The field expanded from 20 to over 100 robot teams, with about 40% navigating autonomously using BeiDou and 5G technology.
Why it matters: The dramatic improvement from last year's 2-hour 40-minute winning time signals rapid advancement in humanoid robotics that could soon impact daily life—from household tasks and elderly care to dangerous jobs like firefighting. China invested $10.8 billion in robotics in 2025 as part of its strategic push to dominate this frontier industry, though experts warn industrial commercialization still lags behind the racing capabilities.
66% of sources are Original Reporting

39 Articles •
Palantir Sparks Backlash with Manifesto Denouncing Inclusivity
Left 61%
11%
Right 28%
What happened: Palantir posted a 22-point summary of CEO Alexander Karp's book The Technological Republic on Saturday, arguing for defending the West, rebuilding democratic pillars, and shifting to AI-based deterrence. The document criticizes postwar pacifism in Germany and Japan and declares that Silicon Valley owes a moral debt to America.
Why it matters: The manifesto reveals the ideology behind a company whose revenue depends on defense, intelligence, immigration, and police contracts. Critics note this isn't just philosophy but corporate sales material, especially as congressional Democrats investigate Palantir's tools used in Trump administration deportations and the tech industry debates military AI applications.
95% of sources are Original Reporting

69 Articles •
Russia Arrests German Woman Over Alleged Bomb Plot
Left 37%
Center 36%
Right 27%
What happened: Russia's FSB detained a 57-year-old German woman in Pyatigorsk carrying an improvised explosive device with 1.5 kg of TNT in her backpack, along with a Central Asian man near a law enforcement facility. Authorities used electronic jamming to prevent remote detonation and sappers destroyed the device in a controlled explosion.
Why it matters: The FSB alleges Ukraine directed this plot as a false-flag operation, though neither Kyiv nor Berlin have responded and details remain unverified. Both suspects face life imprisonment on terrorism charges, and the incident could escalate diplomatic tensions between Russia, Germany, and Ukraine amid the ongoing four-year conflict.
77% of sources are Original Reporting

16 Articles •
Eni Discovers Five Trillion Cubic Feet of Gas Offshore Indonesia
Left 25%
Center 75%
The discovery: Eni's Geliga-1 well in the Ganal block offshore East Kalimantan found approximately 5 trillion cubic feet of gas and 300 million barrels of condensate in roughly 2,000 meters of water. The operator holds 82% interest with Sinopec at 18%, and production is targeted for 2028 using nearby infrastructure including the Bontang LNG plant.
Why it matters: The discovery could boost Eni's Indonesian gas production nearly threefold to 2,000 million standard cubic feet per day by 2028 from around 700 currently. Combined with the adjacent Gula field, it may add 1 billion cubic feet per day and 80,000 barrels of condensate daily, potentially establishing a third production hub and extending the Bontang LNG plant's operational life.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Right Sources
81% of sources are Original Reporting

70 Articles •
Kelp DAO Loses $292 Million in Largest DeFi Hack of 2026
L 13%
Center 75%
12%
What happened: An attacker drained 116,500 rsETH worth roughly $292 million from Kelp DAO's LayerZero-powered bridge last Saturday at 17:35 UTC, representing about 18% of the token's circulating supply. LayerZero attributes the sophisticated exploit to North Korea's Lazarus Group, which tricked the cross-chain messaging system into releasing the funds to an attacker-controlled address.
Why it matters: The stolen rsETH was used as collateral to borrow roughly $195 million on Aave, creating bad debt that sent AAVE down 10%. Major withdrawals slashed total value locked from $26.39 billion to $17.94 billion in two days, while holders on 20+ layer-2 networks face uncertainty about whether their tokens retain backing, potentially forcing widespread redemptions.
99% of sources are Original Reporting

25 Articles •
Israel Reopens West Bank Settlement Evacuated in 2005
Left 35%
Center 25%
Right 40%
What happened: Israeli ministers attended a ceremony yesterday reopening Sa-Nur settlement in the northern West Bank, nearly 21 years after its 2005 evacuation. Sixteen families moved into prefabricated homes, with authorities approving 126 housing units as part of the government's reversal of the 2005 disengagement policy.
Why it matters: The reopening defies a 2024 International Court of Justice ruling declaring Israeli occupation unlawful and comes amid record settler violence—305 incidents in one month alone. The move intensifies efforts to prevent a Palestinian state and could further entrench Israeli control over the West Bank, home to three million Palestinians.
96% of sources are Original Reporting