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Emily Cochrane / New York Times:
Tennessee Governor Working with Trump to Send National Guard to Memphis — The murder rate has dropped in Memphis, but it still struggles with some of the highest crime rates in the country. — President Trump on Friday said that he would send National Guard troops to Memphis …
2025-09-12 14:45:01 UTC
New York Times
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Emily Cochrane / New York Times:
Trump Says He Will Send the National Guard to Memphis Next — The murder rate has dropped in Memphis, but it still struggles with some of the highest crime rates in the country. — President Trump on Friday said that he would send National Guard troops to Memphis, making …
2025-09-12 14:45:01 UTC
New York Times
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Dan Ladden-Hall / The Daily Beast:
Charlie Kirk Shooting Suspect Identified as Tyler Robinson, 22: Report — TURNED IN BY FAMILY — President Donald Trump announced that a person had been taken into custody after a days-long manhunt. — The person arrested in connection with the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk …
2025-09-12 14:35:07 UTC
The Daily Beast
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Wall Street Journal:
Confusion, Anger, Relief: Korean Engineer Tells of Week in U.S. ICE Detention — More than 300 employees at Hyundai battery plant return home after Georgia immigration raid — INCHEON, South Korea—Cho Young-hee, a 44-year-old South Korean engineer, said his first reaction was confusion …
2025-09-12 14:30:05 UTC
Wall Street Journal
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New York Post:
Tyler Robinson, 22-year-old from Utah, ID'd as Charlie Kirk shooting suspect after father ‘turned him in’ — Trump: ‘We have him’ — President Trump announced early Friday that a suspect for Charlie Kirk's assassination was turned in by his father — with law enforcement sources telling …
2025-09-12 14:05:00 UTC
New York Post
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Associated Press:
Trump says he'll send the National Guard to Memphis to address crime concerns — President Donald Trump said Friday he'll send the National Guard to Memphis to address crime concerns there with the support of the mayor and the governor. Trump, a Republican, said on Fox News Channel …
2025-09-12 13:40:00 UTC
Associated Press
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New Republic:
Trump Drug Boat Bombing Takes Darker Turn as Damning New Info Emerges — Questions are mounting about President Trump's decision to bomb a small boat in the Caribbean Sea, killing all 11 people on board. The administration says these were drug cartel members who posed a threat to the United States …
2025-09-12 13:05:00 UTC
New Republic
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Hollywood stars Cynthia Nixon and Morgan Spector were on Capitol Hill this week to push members of Congress to support the Block the Bombs Act – a bill that would stop the US from sending offensive weapons to Israel. The Hollywood stars were joined by Columbia student protest leader Mahmoud Khalil, a deportation target of the Trump administration, and Adil Husain, a Texas doctor who recently served in Gaza. I followed the group around Capitol Hill as they had personal meetings with Reps. Emily Randall (Wash.) and LaMonica McIver (N.J.), both of whom have not signed onto the bill, as well as Texas Rep. Greg Casar and Pennsylvania Reps. Summer Lee and Mary Gay Scanlon, who, alongside 43 other Democratic members, have signed onto the measure. They also hosted a press conference and a legislative briefing with several other members of Congress. Subscribe now Zeteo contributor Cynthia Nixon reflected on how, in the past, Israel and Palestine may have been seen as a “third rail” in politics, but that’s no longer the case. “[T]he vast majority of Americans really believe that our funding of bombs and weapons and of an apartheid state is wrong. And so, I think that we're here on the Hill, because our leaders haven't caught up with where the people are.” Along with the American public, the film industry is also increasingly speaking out against the genocide. More than 4,000 film workers, including Nixon and Spector, as well as Ava DuVernay, Ayo Edebiri, Brian Cox, Josh O'Connor, Mark Ruffalo, Olivia Colman, Tilda Swinton, and Javier Bardem, have signed a historic pledge to boycott Israeli film institutions complicit in Israel’s genocide and apartheid of the Palestinian people. “I felt it was important to take a position, especially as somebody in my industry, because it was clearly dangerous…People were being told, ‘You can't talk about this,’” Spector said. Meanwhile, Khalil told me that he had seen no concrete action since he last visited Congress in July, even as conditions severely worsen in Gaza. Israeli forces have killed more than 64,000 people in the enclave. This week, Israel, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, warned hundreds of thousands in Gaza City to leave (to where is unclear), bombed Qatar, allegedly twice struck a flotilla carrying hundreds of international volunteers seeking to deliver aid to Gaza, and announced “there will be no Palestinian state.” “There's no excuse whatsoever for that inaction,” Khalil said. Share Paid subscribers can watch the full video to get a look inside Cynthia Nixon, Morgan Spector, Mahmoud Khalil, and Dr. Adil Husain’s day on Capitol Hill. Free subscribers can watch a one-and-a-half-minute preview. Consider becoming a paid subscriber today to support the work we’re doing and never worry about a paywall again! And if you already are a paid subscriber, you can always help Zeteo continue to do journalism like this by making a donation. Liam Mann contributed to this reporting.
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2025-09-12 13:01:29 UTC
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Axios:
Suspected shooter arrested in Charlie Kirk killing, Trump says — The suspected shooter in the killing of Charlie Kirk is in custody, President Trump said on Fox & Friends on Friday morning. … - “With a high degree of certainty, we have him in custody,” Trump said.
2025-09-12 13:01:14 UTC
Axios
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For many, many years security experts have warned that the “internet of things” (IOT) (or the myriad “smart home” devices we have scattered around our homes) was a security and privacy dumpster fire. A lot of these devices are made in China (often poorly) introducing new network attack vectors and widespread national security concerns.
So in 2023, the Biden FCC proposed a new voluntary program that would rank and label smart home devices if they adhered to some basic privacy and security standards. Under the program, the FCC would work with a private Illinois-based company named UL Solutions to study and test devices, then apply a “U.S. Cyber Trust Mark” on devices deemed relatively secure.
Enter Trumpism. The program’s creation has stalled out because of some baseless claims by Trump FCC boss Brendan Carr that UL Solutions, a company that has done this kind of testing for one-hundred-and-thirty years and which is well-known and well-respected in the field, also happens to do business in China and runs 18 China-based testing locations (which makes sense given the massive volume of such devices built in, you know, China).
So in June, Carr made a post to Elon Musk’s right wing propaganda website vaguely stating the program would be paused while his FCC “investigated” UL Solutions:
To be clear, this is about U.S. companies not wanting to have to adhere to any sort of oversight or privacy and security standards whatsoever (and this voluntary program probably would have not included serious penalties). Carr has just selected weird Chinese xenophobia as cover for regulatory capture.
Carr’s “investigation” is much like his other pseudo-investigations, which have included “investigating” Verizon for not being racist enough, “investigating” CBS for doing journalism critical of King Dingus, or “investigating” Dish Network for not giving its expensive spectrum to Elon Musk.
There is absolutely zero evidence of any kind that UL Solutions has done anything wrong, and the longer the program is delayed, the greater risk to the public:
“David Simon, a partner at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, said he was “not aware of any” other instance where the FCC investigated a company it had just approved to run one of its projects.
The uncertainty is already putting pressure on the program. “The longer one proceeds without trying to implement something like this, the more the risk is to the consumers,” said Paul Besozzi, a senior partner at Squire Patton Boggs. That includes both individual buyers and companies outfitting offices with smart devices.”
It’s now September and there’s zero update or transparency into the “investigation.” The whole thing is fairly representative of MAGA’s self-serving exploitation of “national security” and Chinese xenophobia when convenient.
Like the TikTok ban, which was floated for years (often by Carr) and even written into law, only to be scuttled because it upset the financial plans of a billionaire Trump ally. Or the “race to 5G,” which involved giving giant U.S. telecoms bottomless subsidies and tax cuts to “defeat the Chinese,” only for lawmakers to disappear when the efforts resulted in slow, expensive, and patchy U.S. 5G coverage.
Or all the GOP’s fear mongering about China’s Huawei, which involved a decade of hyperventilation over Chinese spying on U.S. telecom networks, and a bunch of programs the Trump administration is now dismantling so that rich people can get tax cuts. And most recently the AI wars, where we’re told we must give giant tech companies zero oversight and bottomless subsidies, again to best thwart the Chinese.
There are genuine security concerns related to China, and then there are greasy opportunists who leverage those fears for their own financial gain. And the U.S. press sucks at illustrating the difference, which is why it’s so easy for Carr to get away with this sort of vague bullshit.
While Carr professes to be super worried about Chinese threats to national security, with its other hand the Trump administration has gutted government cybersecurity programs (including a board investigating the biggest Chinese hack of U.S. telecom networks in history), dismantled the Cyber Safety Review Board (CSRB) (responsible for investigating significant cybersecurity incidents), and fired oodles of folks doing essential work at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA).
Brendan Carr is also engaged in a massive effort to destroy whatever’s left of the FCC’s consumer protection and corporate oversight authority, despite the fact that the recent historic Chinese Salt Typhoon hack (caused in large part because major telecoms were too incompetent to change default administrative passwords) was a direct byproduct of this exact type of mindless deregulation.
The Trump administration’s stacked courts are also making it impossible to hold telecoms accountable for literally anything (see the Fifth Circuit’s recent reversal of a fine against AT&T for spying on customer movement), which also undermines consumer privacy and national security, and ensures zero real repercussions for companies that fail to secure their networks and sensitive data.
So even if the FCC did implement this labeling program, any penalties for non-compliance (which there aren’t because it’s voluntary) would never survive the MAGA zealot-stocked court system. Carr of course is well aware of this. I suspect this program never sees the light of day and remains permanently bogged down in bogus, utterly nontransparent inquiry.
China’s super useful as a distraction from corruption or regulatory capture, but with MAGA it’s always performative. In Carr’s case, his primary interest is in pleasing the giant U.S. companies (his inevitable future employers) who don’t want any privacy and security oversight (however modest). And his efforts are always aided by a lazy U.S. corporate press too feckless to illustrate the distinction.
2025-09-12 12:22:22 UTC
IOT
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Reuters:
People killed in US boat strike were not Tren de Aragua, Venezuela minister says — Investigations show none of 11 dead were drug traffickers-Venezuela minister — Trump administration has provided scant information about strike — White House insists those killed were ‘narcoterrorists’
2025-09-12 12:05:00 UTC
Reuters
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Politico:
Why Hakeem Jeffries hasn't been able to bend Democrats to his will on redistricting … After a post-2020 Census revision, only three of the state's 17 congressional districts are represented by Republicans. But up to four Democratic incumbents could face tougher races if those GOP-held seats …
2025-09-12 11:50:00 UTC
Politico
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Nanette Asimov / San Francisco Chronicle:
UC Berkeley gives Trump administration 160 names in antisemitism probe — UC Berkeley has given the Trump administration the names of 160 students, faculty and staff and information about their “potential connection to reports of alleged antisemitism” to comply with a federal investigation …
2025-09-12 06:10:01 UTC
San Francisco Chronicle
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New York Times:
No Arrests in Charlie Kirk's Killing as FBI Seeks Help From Public — After a day of hunting for a suspect in the assassination, investigators pleaded for help from the public. — The gunman who fatally shot the right-wing activist Charlie Kirk remained on the run Thursday night as a frantic …
2025-09-12 06:00:00 UTC
New York Times
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New York Times:
Scrutiny Mounts Over F.B.I. Under Patel as Kirk's Killer Remains at Large — Already, a series of missteps by Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director, in recent months have invited worries that he has eroded public confidence in the agency. — On Thursday morning, a day after hastily suggesting …
2025-09-12 03:35:03 UTC
New York Times
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New York Times:
Scrutiny Mounts Over F.B.I. Under Patel as Kirk's Killer Remains at Large — Already, a series of missteps by Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director, in recent months have invited worries that he has eroded public confidence in the agency. — On Thursday morning, a day after hastily suggesting …
2025-09-12 03:35:03 UTC
New York Times
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Despite being the somewhat crispied face of (extremely limited) unrest in Los Angeles in response to ICE activity, Waymo hasn’t suddenly decided it’s time to get snitchin’.
In fact, it’s chosen to go the other direction, as Riley McDermid reports for Gizmodo:
Waymo co-CEO Tekedra Mawakana recently emphasized that the company will challenge, limit, or reject robotaxi footage requests from law enforcement that are not backed by a valid legal process, such as a warrant or court order.
She stressed that while the company “follows the legal process to receive footage,” it reserves the right to push back on overly broad or undefined demands—a move aimed at preserving rider trust.
This is pretty remarkable for at least a couple of reasons. First, as noted above, Waymo’s cars got set on fire pretty frequently in Los Angeles, prompting the company to shut down service until the violence (most of it provoked by police) in downtown LA subsided a bit.
Second, the average Waymo car is a surveillance conveyance:
Each Waymo vehicle is outfitted with 29 external cameras, offering a comprehensive 360-degree view, and potentially additional internal sensors.
That definitely makes these vehicles tasty targets for law enforcement. And when cops start pounding on the virtual doors virtually non-stop in search of all this stuff, the most common response from tech companies is to simply open up, rather than demand to see some paperwork.
Caveat, the third: Waymo says warrants or “court orders.” There are plenty of court orders that don’t contain the protections of a warrant. A subpoena, for example, doesn’t need probable cause to be established. Things not considered covered by the Fourth Amendment (but rather the Third Party Doctrine) can be obtained without a judicially authorized warrant: things like route and passenger data that may not specifically identify passengers, but give the government enough other data (including payment info) that could identify passengers in Waymo cars.
That being said, it’s nice to see a tech company that had every reason to make cops its best friends (see also: the burning cars referenced above) decide it cares more about the privacy of its passengers than the well-being of its automated automobiles.
HOWEVER:
By making this demand of law enforcement, Waymo may be setting up the entire nation for another limitation of Fourth Amendment rights. Between the Third Party Doctrine and the automobile exception, cops may decide to press the issue in court after their warrantless demands for data are rebuffed, citing both of the above doctrines in support of their claims.
The automobile exception tends to lower the standard for searches from “probable cause” to “reasonable suspicion” under the assumption that vehicles traveling on public roads are not generally afforded an “expectation of privacy.” That’s why cops can look in windows and run drug dogs around cars and perform inventory searches of any vehicles they choose to tow.
The Third Party Doctrine says information voluntarily given to other people (including companies like Waymo) also isn’t covered by an expectation of privacy. Even if there’s no other option but to give Waymo your address, payment information, personal identification, phone number, etc. just to be able to hitch a ride, most courts consider this to be a “voluntary” relinquishment of otherwise private information. After all, you can always just walk.
Given all of this, we’ll have to see where this goes from here. It’s unclear at this point whether Waymo data/recordings are useful enough to law enforcement to make this something worth fighting in court. But no matter how things play out going forward, it’s nice to know a company has decided to put its foot down before its customers have asked it to. Too many companies only decide to do this after weeks or months of negative press, if they bother to do it at all. Waymo’s warrant demands may ultimately prove to be short-lived, but the fact that it’s pushing back means this company is similarly as sick of this administration and its bullshit, and won’t allow its vehicles to become nothing more than proxy snoops for cops.
2025-09-12 02:50:58 UTC
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Denver Post:
‘Radicalized’ Evergreen High School shooter appeared to hold antisemitic, violent views in online accounts — Officials say suspect, who fatally shot himself, was Desmond Holly. Two students remain in critical condition. — sbradbury@denverpost.com | The Denver Post, SETH KLAMANN |
2025-09-12 02:35:02 UTC
Denver Post
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Joan Walsh / The Nation:
Let's Not Forget Who Charlie Kirk Really Was — The right-wing influencer did not deserve to die, and we shouldn't forget the many despicable things he said and did. — Pocket — The murder of right-wing provocateur Charlie Kirk is a tragedy. But the response augurs even bigger tragedies for American politics.
2025-09-12 02:00:01 UTC
The Nation
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Axios:
Grocery inflation highest since 2022 as Trump tariffs pile up — President Trump spent his 2024 campaign promising Americans he'd lower grocery prices. — Virtually all major grocery categories are now more expensive than they were a year ago, some substantially so.
2025-09-12 01:40:00 UTC
Axios
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New York Times:
Bolsonaro Sentenced to 27 Years in Prison for Plotting Coup in Brazil — Brazil's Supreme Court convicted the former president of trying to cling to power after losing the 2022 election, including a plan to assassinate his opponent. — Brazil's Supreme Court on Thursday convicted former …
2025-09-12 01:05:00 UTC
New York Times
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This piece was first published by writer Jack Crosbie on Discourse Blog Substack. Zeteo is republishing it with its permission and a new headline. Trump speaks as conservative activist Charlie Kirk listens at a forum dubbed the Generation Next Summit at the White House on March 22, 2018, in Washington, DC. Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images Yesterday, conservative activist and provocateur Charlie Kirk was shot and killed during a rally at Utah Valley University. There are pictures and videos and rampant speculation all over the internet. You will not find them here. The shooter’s name and motivation are still unknown as of this writing. In the next few hours and days, we will likely have definitive answers to these questions, but we do not have them now. What does seem clear is that the American ‘Years of Lead’ are here. The term refers to a period of Italian history roughly between 1960 and 1980 that was defined by widespread political violence and domestic terrorism, perpetrated by both right and left-wing groups. The scale of the violence in Italy — hundreds dead in massacres, bombings, and assassinations — makes applying the term to the United States seem hyperbolic at first. But consider: Italy had a deeply divided political system, a repressive government, and widespread economic woes. It was filled with motivated and organized radical political groups on both the left and the right. It was quite a bit like our country today. Subscribe now And now we see the results. We are in a different era: the weapons are different, the tactics are different, the groups are different. The American Years of Lead will not look like Italy’s, but they are here all the same. In this country, any person can pick up a gun and find someone to shoot for ideological reasons. As we have seen time and time again, it is so very easy to do. But access to firearms in this country is not new. You have been able to get a gun and shoot a lot of people for years. What’s different now is that, in the past half-decade, the contours of this violence have shifted. The motivations of mass shooters are still a difficult trend to map, but more and more people appear to be carrying out assassinations for very specific reasons, targeting very specific people. Put another way, Luigi Mangione was not an anomaly, and nor is the person who killed Charlie Kirk. In the next few years, I suspect they will become known simply as the start of a trend. The structure of American society has deteriorated to the point where a growing number of people see violence as the only way they can change their world. In some ways, this has always been the case – as I’ve written before, basically all human governance comes down to the use of force at some point or another – but society is supposed to be structured to insulate everyday people from that truth. The kind of violence that killed Kirk is supposed to be carried out by people who are so deranged, or crazy, or sick, or in pain, that they take an extreme action that is outside the bounds of what our society should permit. But look at where we’re at. Our society is increasing the number of people who are sick or in pain every day. It has broken down and squeezed so hard that ordinary people may feel deranged on a bad day. But most of all, for those who were already harboring thoughts of violence or hate – like so many on the far right – the chaos is an easy excuse. That the president looks fondly on their views or, at the very least, shows little interest in prosecuting them only adds to the opportunity. The country is full of loaded guns in shaky hands, swinging back and forth, from target to target. Subscribe now What this looks like, on a practical level, might be a bit different than what most people think. There will not be another American “civil war.” The country is too geographically and economically and socially enmeshed for that. But the lone wolves, the fringe groups, and the homicidally desperate will strike, again and again, killing both the innocent and guilty alike. A few months ago, a man drove a truck bomb into a fertility clinic in Palm Springs. The bomber was the only one who died, but the intent was there. His successors will not be as sloppy. The story didn’t get much traction when it happened, but it has stuck in my mind ever since. I do not believe we will get large armed groups fighting each other in the streets. What we will get is more incidents like the Palm Springs one – single shots ringing out in public spaces, or a brief hail of gunfire. Schools and churches will continue to come under attack. People will weaponize their vehicles – the second-deadliest machines in the country – and turn them into battering rams and bombs to slam into buildings and crowds. The state will denounce the attacks it deems to be perpetrated by its enemies and use them to justify expanding its use of force in the streets. Nonlethal rounds shot at protesters will, perhaps, become live ammunition. There is nothing now that we can do to stop this: ending it will take years of reform and an ease to the material hardships of this country to make it abate. If that sounds hopeless, I’m sorry. I don’t want people to live their lives in a state of constant fear. It is extremely unlikely that any one person will be affected by this trend, statistically speaking – though marginalized groups are far more at risk. But however insulated we may personally be from some of this violence, what people must do is understand and recognize that it exists. This won’t go away if we do not first recognize that our society is broken and seek to fix it. That means we can’t trust people who want us to “return to normalcy,” or who offer hollow promises of stability without changing the rotten foundations that our violent country rests upon. A more peaceful world is possible. It will take new leadership and new ideas. We do not have those yet. We may not get them anytime soon. Until then, we live in the years of lead. Share Jack Crosbie is a writer who covers conflict, politics, labor, and the media for Discourse Blog. He was previously a contributing writer at Splinter and has written for Rolling Stone and The Atlantic. Subscribe to Discourse Blog for more of Jack’s writing.
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2025-09-12 01:00:42 UTC
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Joseph Gedeon / The Guardian:
MSNBC fires analyst Matthew Dowd over Charlie Kirk shooting remarks — Dowd said the slain activist's words may have fueled the violence that claimed his life, sparking backlash — MSNBC fired its senior political analyst Matthew Dowd after he suggested on air that the slain conservative …
2025-09-12 00:55:01 UTC
The Guardian
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Eboni Boykin-Patterson / The Daily Beast:
Megyn Kelly Unveils Furious New ‘Mission’ After Kirk Killing — ‘WILL NOT BE SILENCED’ — The conservative firebrand honored Kirk's “legacy” on Thursday by unleashing a torrent of anti-trans hate. — MAGA commentator Megyn Kelly declared she would make it her “mission” …
2025-09-12 00:50:00 UTC
The Daily Beast
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Ben Johansen / Politico:
Trump says ‘we have to beat the hell’ out of ‘radical left lunatics’ after Kirk killing … The president added in a separate answer that he would urge his supporters to follow a nonviolent path in response to the shooting. “He [Kirk] was an advocate of nonviolence,” Trump said.
2025-09-12 00:25:02 UTC
Politico
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Jake Shindel / WBAL:
No credible threat at US Naval Academy, governor's office says; Here's what happened — There is no credible threat to the U.S. Naval Academy, Gov. Wes Moore's office told 11 News. — In a statement, the governor's office said: “In working with local, state, and federal law enforcement authorities …
2025-09-12 00:25:02 UTC
WBAL
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Susan B. Glasser / New Yorker:
Did Trump Just Declare War on the American Left? — After Charlie Kirk's tragic killing, the President speaks not of ending political violence but of seeking political vengeance. — In the hours immediately after the conservative activist Charlie Kirk was shot and killed in front …
2025-09-12 00:20:01 UTC
New Yorker
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David Ibave / KFOX-TV:
El Paso family claims Border Patrol killed their dog during search, CBP reviewing incident — EL PASO, Texas (KFOX14/CBS4) — U.S. Customs and Border Protection says they are reviewing a “use of force incident” in El Paso, after a family says a Border Patrol agent unjustifiably shot and killed their dog.
2025-09-12 00:15:02 UTC
KFOX-TV
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New York Times:
$10 Million in Contraceptives Have Been Destroyed on Orders From Trump Officials — The birth control pills, IUDs and hormonal implants were purchased by U.S.A.I.D. for women in low-income countries. They had been in limbo in a Belgian warehouse after the U.S. cut much of its foreign aid.
2025-09-12 00:10:01 UTC
New York Times
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New York Times:
How Trump's Crime Crackdown Muted Other Parts of D.C. Life — If the aggressive show of force had a deterrent effect on crime, it appears to have deterred some entirely normal aspects of city life, too. — In the weeks after President Trump declared a crime emergency in Washington, D.C. …
2025-09-12 00:10:01 UTC
New York Times
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ABC News:
‘Chilling reminder’: Multiple historically Black universities under lockdown after receiving threats — At least six historically Black colleges halted activities and issued alerts. — The Alabama State University campus in Montgomery, Ala., Feb. 9, 2022. Bamastate01
2025-09-11 23:10:01 UTC
ABC News
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Axios:
Congress' civility crisis erupts over Charlie Kirk shooting — The shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk threatens to bring the already hostile relationship between Democrats and Republicans in Congress to a breaking point. … - Some of the most combative, conflict-prone members …
2025-09-11 23:10:01 UTC
Axios
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Bloomberg:
Trump Says He Will Attend Funeral for Slain Ally Charlie Kirk — President Donald Trump said he intends to attend the funeral for conservative activist Charlie Kirk, who was shot and killed at an event on a college campus in Utah. — “I will be,” Trump told reporters Thursday at the White House as he departed for a trip to New York.
2025-09-11 23:00:37 UTC
Bloomberg
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Jasper Ward / Reuters:
Rubio vows US response following conviction of Brazil's Bolsonaro — U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Thursday said the United States would “respond accordingly to this witch hunt” after former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro was convicted of plotting a coup to remain in power after losing the 2022 election.
2025-09-11 22:55:01 UTC
Reuters
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Alisha Ebrahimji / CNN:
Potential threats trigger lockdowns at several HBCUs across the South — Multiple historically Black colleges and universities in the South were on lockdown or canceled classes on Thursday over potential threats. — Hampton University, Virginia State University, Bethune-Cookman University …
2025-09-11 22:40:00 UTC
CNN
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Kanishka Singh / Reuters:
US Black colleges and universities say they restricted campus activity after threats — Some U.S. Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) went into lockdown on Thursday after they received reports of threats against them that were probed by authorities, the educational institutions said.
2025-09-11 22:35:01 UTC
Reuters
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Laura Esposito / The Daily Beast:
Trump, 79, Called Out for ‘Droopy’ Face at 9/11 Memorial — BAD LOOK — The right side of the president's face sparked a wave of online speculation on Thursday. — President Donald Trump was sporting a doozy of a droopy face as he ventured outside the White House Thursday amid mounting questions about his health.
2025-09-11 22:30:01 UTC
The Daily Beast
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Ben Berkowitz / Axios:
Exclusive: Hyundai should have called me for visas, Lutnick says — The workers at a Hyundai-linked plant in Georgia raided by ICE last week had the wrong visas — and the company should have asked for help getting the right ones, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick tells Mike Allen in the premiere episode of “The Axios Show.”
2025-09-11 21:50:02 UTC
Axios
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Andrew Atterbury / Politico:
Florida officials watching for ‘vile, sanctionable’ behavior from teachers after Kirk killing … Kirk, an influential figure in conservative politics known for mobilizing young voters, was shot to death Wednesday while speaking at a college campus in Utah in an apparent act of political violence.
2025-09-11 21:45:00 UTC
Politico
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Mehdi made his first-ever appearance on the popular radio show ‘The Breakfast Club’ on Thursday in a wide-ranging 45-minute conversation with host Charlamagne Tha Great on everything from Israel bombing Qatar and the genocide in Gaza, to Zohran Mamdani’s mayoral campaign and the dire state of the Democratic Party. During the conversation, Mehdi also destroys conservative pundit Ben Shapiro’s claim on a recent episode of ‘The Breakfast Club’ that Israel is not committing genocide in Gaza. “He gave you bullshit on the whole topic,” Mehdi tells Charlamagne, before explaining the definition of genocide per the 1948 Genocide Convention and how Israel meets it, as well as bringing receipts on Shapiro’s own previous claims about genocide in Syria and Xinjiang, China. Mehdi and Charlamagne also talk about whether progressives should ever go on Fox, his recent “debate” on Jubilee, the lessons from his book, Win Every Argument, and the awful state of mainstream journalism in the US. “The media landscape is heading in a very right-wing direction which makes independent media so important,” Mehdi says. “That is the only option now because the corporations are not coming to save us.” Subscribe now Enjoy Mehdi’s full interview on ‘The Breakfast Club’ above, and do consider making a donation to Zeteo to support independent journalism. Catch up on some of Zeteo’s latest stories:
2025-09-11 21:38:47 UTC
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NBC News:
Senate Republicans trigger ‘nuclear option,’ changing rules to speed up Trump nominees — The new rule, established by the GOP on party lines, will enable them to confirm Trump nominees in groups, rather than individually. It's the latest move to erode minority powers.
2025-09-11 21:30:01 UTC
NBC News
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New York Times:
Trump Asks Appeals Court to Allow Firing of Lisa Cook Ahead of Key Fed Meeting — Where Things Stand — Federal Reserve: The Trump administration asked a federal appeals court to let it move ahead with firing Lisa Cook from the Federal Reserve's Board of Governors in an attempt to stop …
2025-09-11 21:05:00 UTC
New York Times
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Zach Montague / New York Times:
Appeals Court Lets Government Cut Off Medicaid Funds to Planned Parenthood — Where Things Stand — Confirmation rules changes: Republicans have used a procedural measure to change the Senate rules to allow them to more easily confirm groups of low-level executive nominees.
2025-09-11 21:05:00 UTC
New York Times
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Washington Post:
Kennedy Center fires head of jazz programming, adding to string of exits — The center terminated Kevin Struthers, who worked at the arts institution for 30 years, and Malka Lasky, the last member of its social impact team. — The Kennedy Center has fired the administrator overseeing its jazz offerings …
2025-09-11 20:45:01 UTC
Washington Post
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Politico:
Appeals court judges publicly admonish Supreme Court justices: 'We're out here flailing' … “They cannot get amnesia in the future because they didn't write an opinion on it. Write an opinion,” Wynn said. “We need to understand why you did it. We judges would just love to hear your reasoning as to why you rule that way.
2025-09-11 20:30:00 UTC
Politico
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Marina Dias / Washington Post:
Bolsonaro found guilty in attempted coup, assassination plot — Brazil's Supreme Court ruled the former president tried to reverse his 2022 election loss with a plot that included plans to assassinate President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. — Just now
2025-09-11 20:20:01 UTC
Washington Post
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Tim Molloy / MovieMaker Magazine:
Comedy Central Pulls Charlie Kirk South Park Episode After His Murder — Comedy Central has pulled an episode satirizing Charlie Kirk after the conservative activist was fatally shot during an event at a Utah university. — The second epispde of the current South Park season — Season 27 …
2025-09-11 20:15:01 UTC
MovieMaker Magazine
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David Gilbert / Wired:
Right-Wing Activists Are Targeting People for Allegedly Celebrating Charlie Kirk's Death — Extremists and an anonymously run website are posting identifying details about people accused of celebrating Charlie Kirk's murder online. Some of those targeted are now getting death threats.
2025-09-11 20:15:01 UTC
Wired
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Jason Koebler / 404 Media:
Charlie Kirk Was Not Practicing Politics the Right Way — Thursday morning, Ezra Klein at the New York Times published a column titled “Charlie Kirk Was Practicing Politics the Right Way.” Klein's general thesis is that Kirk was willing to talk to anyone, regardless of their beliefs …
2025-09-11 19:25:00 UTC
404 Media
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Meredith Lee Hill / Politico:
Charlie Kirk's killing could send Congress into a tailspin. Mike Johnson is trying to avoid that. … “What I'm going to do is what I've always done,” Johnson told reporters later Thursday. “I'm always about turning down the temperature and encouraging members to walk in the dignity …
2025-09-11 19:20:02 UTC
Politico
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