Biggest Move Yet Canada just dropped its largest aid package to Ukraine since the war started: $2 billion, no strings attached. Not a loan. Not a gesture. Real support. This marks a
D.C. just got more tense. For weeks, National Guard troops stood watch across the city without weapons. That changed. Now, they carry pistols and rifles. The shift came after the Pentagon gave
Waymo just won the first permit to test autonomous cars on New York City streets. It’s a milestone, but the limits are clear. These are tests, not taxi rides. A trained operator
Gaza City has tipped into famine. That word isn’t political—it’s technical. Three hard signals confirm it: too little food, widespread child malnutrition, and rising death rates. Put together, they describe a system
Nicolás Maduro just told the world he’s activating 4.5 million members of Venezuela’s Bolivarian militia. He’s calling it a defensive move against possible U.S. threats. That number—4.5 million—is huge, but let’s be
DeepSeek just rolled out version 3.1 of its language model. It’s faster. It’s supposed to be smarter. And, most importantly, it’s designed to work with Chinese-made chips. That sounds great on paper—especially
Israel has ordered 60,000 reservists to report for duty and extended service for 20,000 others. The military is preparing for a larger offensive in Gaza City. The plan—called Gideon’s Chariots—aims to surround
The U.S. just stopped giving out visitor visas to people from Gaza—no warning, no timeline for when it might change. The move, announced Saturday, August 16, 2025, blocks B-1 and B-2 visas,
The UN says Israel carried out a targeted strike that killed five Al Jazeera journalists in Gaza. It called the attack a clear breach of international law and a dangerous turn in
The U.S. is stepping back from Africa, and China’s sliding right in. This isn’t a small shift. It’s a global power change that could reshape mineral supplies, security ties, and U.S. pull
Follow