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Nothing says ‘business continuity’ like a dry wooden broom


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EPISODE 9 It’s 3:30 am and I’m at work, having been woken up by numerous outage notifications. The Boss – as useful as Jason Statham’s method acting coach – is also on site, presumably to offer moral support.

The Building Manager – who’s so old that his CV likely includes the construction of a vessel for the shipping of pairs of animals – is nowhere to be seen.

The PFY is also absent. His excuse will likely be that he “accidentally” put his phone into silent mode. Had any of the alerts been from his rack of Bitcoin mining machines, however, he’d have been in the office in a flash.

Security appears to be hard at work protecting the couches in the foyer of the building from being stolen.

The rest of the building is in darkness – save for the shining beacon that is Mission Control.

“What’s happened?” the Boss asks.

“Power outage,” I reply.

“Do we get someone in for that?”

“Only if we want to wait till 9am to call our electrical contractors, who’ll agree to turn up between 9 and 5 sometime in the next two weeks.”

“So what do we do?”

“We go to the basement!” I reply, “but first we need THE KEYS”.

“The keys?”

“No. THE KEYS.”

“What are THE KEYS?” he asks.

“THE KEYS are what ex-local government buildings like this have for access to places you’re not supposed to go. They’re for the rooms you ‘accidentally’ show people if you think they’re planning a hostile takeover of the company. You open the door and say something like ‘I’m pretty sure that’s not asbestos’ or ‘Why would we have needed all those leaky drums of 2,4,5-Trichlorophenoxyacetic acid ?'”

“Are the rooms dangerous?”

“Not if you keep the doors closed.”

“So what are you going to do?”

“I’ll open a couple of the doors.”

…Five minutes later in the basement…

“Oooh, there’s a clue,” I say to the Boss, pointing. “A Bakelite – or, to be specific, phenolic – label. Circa 1970s. There’s bound to be something horrible behind that door.”

>creak<

>slam<

“Moving on,” I say.

“What was behind the door?”

“Something horrible. We’re not talking ‘three-hour Richard Stallman monologue’ horrible, but it was pretty bad. Anyway, let’s try door number two.”

>creeeeeeak<

“Ah, now this is promising. Cables from the ceiling. Unless they’re snakes.”

“SNAKES!” the Boss gasps.

“Nah, just cables. And, look, ALL METAL service breakers – and not a speck of safety-oriented insulation to be seen!”

“What does that mean?”

“It means life was cheap back in the ’70s. Now, see those four massive breakers, all pointing to the Bakelite ON position, and one ABSOLUTELY MASSIVE breaker over there, in the OFF position?”

“Yes. Do we just turn it on?” the Boss asks.

“Only if you want to save your loved ones the cremation fees.”

“?”

“The smaller breakers are three-phase 1,000-amp units, but that big one’s a 5,000-amp unit. Designed for the days when offices were crammed with people and bar heaters.”

“So what do we do?” the Boss asks.

“We get a broom. A wooden broom. A DRY wooden broom. Then we turn OFF all the massive breakers, then turn ON the REALLY massive breaker.”

…Two minutes later…

“Is this safe?” the Boss asks nervously.

“Not even slightly,” I say, brandishing the broom.

>CLACK!<

>CLACK!<

>CLACK!<

>CLACK!<

“That wasn’t so bad,” the Boss sighs.

“We’re not to the good part yet. But maybe you want to move away a little bit.”

“How far?”

“The third floor would be wise, but the doorway will do.”

….

>CLUNK!<

“So we’re… OK then?” the Boss asks.

“In the words of Karen Carpenter, we’ve only just begun. Now we have to turn all of those smaller breakers on again, one of which will likely trip the massive breaker.”

“Is that a problem?”

“The really massive breaker’s over 50 years old, covered in rust, and has probably only ever tripped from a fault once. The miracle here is that it did so without exploding.”

“So?”

“So, sometimes you’ve just got to spin the potato,” I say, raising the broom again.

>CLACK!<

>CLACK!<

>CLACK!<

>CLACK!<

“It worked!” the Boss gasps happily, as light returns to the building.

“Yeeeessss,” I say, leading the Boss out of the room and shutting the door as quickly as I can.

“You… don’t seem happy?”

“No. There’s a fair chance that whatever tripped the big breaker will trip it again the next time whatever it is star-“

>FZZZZZ< >CLUNK<

“Oh,” the Boss says, disappointed. “Do we switch it back on again?”

“Did you hear that buzzing sound before the lights went out?”

“Uhhh, yes. What does that mean?”

“It means we need to (a) go upstairs, (b) turn off the power to a rack of very noisy machines, and (c) switch our phones to silent and pretend we’ve never been here…”



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US, Iran clash in Hormuz as war escalates: What happened, why it matters | US-Israel war on Iran News

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The United States and Iran have exchanged fire in the Strait of Hormuz, prompting fears that the already fragile ceasefire between the warring nations could collapse.

The flare-up in fighting on Thursday came as Washington awaits a response from Tehran to its latest proposals for an agreement to end the war, which began with joint US-Israeli air strikes on Iran on February 28.

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Here’s what we know about how significant the latest clashes are and what each side is trying to achieve.

What happened in the Gulf on Thursday?

US President Donald Trump said three US Navy destroyers were attacked as they moved through the Strait of Hormuz, a conduit through which one-fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) supplies are shipped during peacetime, but which Iran has all but closed since the conflict started. Last month, the US launched a naval blockade of Iranian ports in return.

“Three World Class American Destroyers just transited, very successfully, out of the Strait of Hormuz, under fire. There was no damage done to the three Destroyers, but great damage done to the Iranian attackers,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

Trump later told reporters that the ceasefire, which began in early April between the US and Iran, was still in effect and sought to play down the exchange.

“They trifled with us today. We blew them away,” Trump said in Washington.

But Iran’s top joint military command accused the US of violating the ceasefire by targeting an Iranian oil tanker and another ship. It also said the US carried out air attacks on civilian areas on Qeshm Island, a strategic point at the entrance to the Strait of Hormuz believed to house much of Iran’s naval force, and nearby coastal areas in Bandar Khamir and Sirik in southern Iran. Iranian air defences were also triggered over western Tehran. The military said it had responded to these incidents by striking US military vessels east of the strait and south of the port of Chabahar.

A spokesperson for Iran’s Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, the operational base of Iran’s Armed Forces, claimed the Iranian strikes inflicted “significant damage”, contrasting with the US Central Command claim that none of its assets had been hit.

Iran’s Press TV later reported that, following several hours of fire, “the situation on Iranian islands and coastal cities by the Strait of Hormuz is back to normal now”.

It remains unclear which side started Thursday’s clashes but the two sides have occasionally exchanged gunfire since the ceasefire took effect on April 8, with Iran hitting targets in Gulf countries, including the United Arab Emirates.

On Friday, the UAE Ministry of Defence said that “the audible blasts reported throughout the nation stem from active operations to intercept and engage incoming missiles and drones coming from Iran”. Since the war began, Iran has frequently targeted US military assets and infrastructure in neighbouring Gulf countries, with the UAE taking the largest share of hits.

Earlier this week, the UAE said Iranian missiles had been fired at the port in its Fujairah emirate, where an oil refinery caught fire.

How significant are the latest clashes?

A ceasefire between the US and Iran has been in place since April 8. While a naval standoff has been playing out in the Gulf with Tehran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz and Washington’s blockade of Iranian ports, Thursday’s clashes appeared to mark a sharp escalation for the first time since the truce.

Former US diplomat and security specialist Donald Jensen characterised the latest naval clash in the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday as a “controlled escalation” rather than “mere skirmishes”, arguing that both nations are “trying to show their resolve” while attempting to “settle on a framework on some key issues”, referring to the diplomatic efforts to reach an agreement.

Jensen told Al Jazeera that while a resolution is likely between the two, “it’s not going to be the kind of comprehensive agreement that either side wants”, but will instead be “much more limited to focus on the passage through the strait primarily”.

He also cautioned that broader diplomatic goals, “especially regarding the nuclear programme in Iran, will have to be put aside for the time being” as the international priority shifts towards getting “the global economy back working”.

Reporting from Washington, DC, Al Jazeera’s Kimberly Halkett said US Central Command in Tampa, Florida, has insisted that Washington’s action in the strait on Thursday was a self-defence measure and noted that this statement is consistent with what US officials have been saying all week, as there has been an escalation in the Strait of Hormuz.

“Secretary of State Marco Rubio this week said that the United States will be acting in self-defence, and the US president essentially said the same thing in a Truth Social post in just the last couple of hours,” Halkett said.

“Like CENTCOM, he said the US has been very successful in the strait. They blame Iran for having to defend US interests, and what’s most interesting is there’s a real difference of opinion whether or not there is damage to US vessels,” she added.

Trita Parsi, executive vice president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, a US foreign policy think tank, told Al Jazeera that Iran is likely to perceive the latest attacks by the US as an effort to create in the Gulf “what Israel has created in Gaza, in the West Bank and in Lebanon, in which a ceasefire is essentially unilateral”.

Parsi noted: “If the US decides to shoot, then that is not, in and of itself, a violation of the ceasefire.”

“This situation may be more complex; there’s conflicting stories as to whether the Iranians started shooting first or not. But the idea that something like this could be done … is very difficult for the Iranians to accept,” he said.

“Whether there is a chance to go back to a ceasefire and make sure that this doesn’t escalate any further is a different story … both of them probably have an interest in making sure that this does not get out of control,” he added.

INTERACTIVE - Strait of Hormuz - March 2, 2026-1772714221
(Al Jazeera)

So, what does this mean for the ceasefire?

US President Donald Trump insists the ceasefire with Iran is still in effect, despite Thursday’s exchange of fire in the Strait of Hormuz. Trump has also threatened more strikes if Iran does not sign a truce quickly, however.

On Thursday, Iran said it was reviewing the latest US peace proposal.

Reporting from Tehran, Al Jazeera’s Resul Serdar Atas said the Iranians are accusing Israel and the US of violating the ceasefire, however.

“The spokesperson of the Iranian Foreign Ministry said his side is still reviewing the US proposal. There were reports that the response to the proposal was expected to be sent to Pakistani mediators yesterday,” he said.

“This has not been confirmed, but Iranian officials are saying they’re still reviewing it. So despite this back and forth and these military confrontations, the diplomatic and mediation efforts seem to be still under way, and both sides are still interested in diplomatically engaging with each other,” he added.

Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project at the International Crisis Group, told Al Jazeera: “The US is trying to loosen Iran’s chokehold upon the Strait of Hormuz while Iran remains determined to push back.

“Both sides would either have to make painful concessions or leave the main areas of disagreement vague if they are to finalise a framework understanding,” he added.



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FBI’s lack of progress on Israeli killing of journalist ‘troubling’: CPJ | Media News

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The CPJ says the ‘lack of concrete progress’ in the FBI investigation represents a failure by the US government.

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has demanded a “public progress update” from United States authorities on the FBI probe into the Israeli military’s killing of Palestinian-American Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, 51, who was shot dead in the occupied West Bank in 2022.

In an open letter to the Department of Justice (DOJ) and FBI chief Kash Patel, the CPJ said on Thursday evening that “the effectively stagnant status of this case is inconsistent with ensuring the security of US citizens anywhere in the world.”

It said the “lack of concrete progress” represents a failure by the US government to respond to the “killing of one of its citizens by a foreign military”.

It noted that there had been no formal interviews with witnesses, “despite the willingness of multiple witnesses to cooperate”, and no signs of FBI activity to gather evidence in Israel or Palestine.

Longtime TV correspondent for Al Jazeera Arabic, Abu Akleh, was covering Israeli army raids in the West Bank city of Jenin when she was killed by Israeli forces on May 11, 2022. She was wearing a clearly marked press vest when she was shot dead.

Veteran Al Jazeera TV journalist Shireen Abu Akleh reporting from Jerusalem on May 22, 2021
Shireen Abu Akleh shows her reporting from Jerusalem on May 22, 2021 [AFP]

Israel initially accused Palestinian fighters of her death, but the Israeli military later released a statement saying “it is not possible to unequivocally determine the source of the gunfire which hit” Abu Akleh. It added that there was a “high possibility” that she was hit by Israeli gunfire.

Many independent investigations conducted by CNN, The Associated Press news agency, and The Washington Post concluded that Abu Akleh was deliberately targeted, the CPJ letter noted.

‘Justice remains elusive’

The CPJ asked for a public update on the status of the investigation, a commitment to a timeline for the investigation, and the public release of its findings. It also said the investigation needs to be “impartial and independent, free from political considerations”.

Abu Akleh’s family said in a statement on Thursday, “despite the passage of time, justice remains elusive,” adding that the lack of justice “sends a dangerous message that journalists can be targeted without consequence”.

Abu Akleh’s death became a symbol of the wider Palestinian struggle. Murals of her have adorned the cities of the occupied territory as people remember her for her fearless reporting.

Since her killing, Israel has killed 258 journalists and media workers, the CPJ reported. Israel has acknowledged killing a number of journalists, alleging they had links to armed groups, accusations their employers deny and the CPJ calls “deadly smears”.

“The prevailing culture of complete impunity enjoyed by Israel is a direct factor in the continued targeting of journalists without deterrence,” said Sara Qudah, CPJ’s regional director. “Without an independent investigation and real accountability, such attacks will only continue to escalate, emboldening those who seek to silence the truth through violence.”



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Inequality causing 100,000 extra deaths a year from heat and cold in Europe | Climate crisis

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Economic inequality adds more than 100,000 deaths to the vast toll from heat and cold in Europe each year, research has found.

Cutting the level of inequality to that of Europe’s most equal region, as measured by the Gini index, would reduce temperature-related mortality by as much as 30%, equating to 109,866 people, the study found.

The findings come after the EU’s Copernicus monitoring project ranked last month as the third-hottest April on record globally, with some countries such as Spain recording their hottest April on record. The return of the natural heating phenomenon El Niño – which may shape up to be unusually strong – has raised fears of a brutal European summer in 2026.

The researchers found high death tolls from heat and cold were associated with several indicators of hardship, such as poverty and the inability to heat a home.

Cutting severe material and social deprivation across the continent to the level of central Switzerland, the least deprived region, would result in 59,000 fewer heat and cold deaths, according to the study. Increasing it to the level of south-east Romania, the most deprived region, would result in 101,000 more temperature-related deaths.

The research is the first to quantify the effect of socio-economic troubles on the lives lost during Europe’s bone-chillingly cold winters and scorchingly hot summers. The researchers said it added weight to calls to target short-term relief to vulnerable groups and, in the longer-term, reduce structural inequality in Europe.

“It’s a two for one,” said Blanca Paniello-Castillo, a biomedical scientist at the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal) and lead author of the study. “If the equity perspective would be more included in policies – European, national, local, whatever – we would be hitting two goals at the same time.”

Heat and cold stress the body, leaving it more susceptible to disease and less able to fight it off. Mortality rises sharply when temperatures deviate from a comfortable range, particularly among people who are old or ill.

The analysis, which looked at daily mortality data for 654 regions in Europe between 2000 and 2019, estimated “attributable deaths” by modelling the health burden if all regions had the best and worst values they found for each economic indicator.

They also found richer regions suffered fewer cold deaths – likely due to insulated homes, better healthcare and less energy poverty – but more deaths during heat. They suggested this may be the result of the urban heat island effect, with cities enjoying greater wealth but suffering from higher temperatures due to asphalt and a lack of green space.

They consistently found high temperature-related mortality was associated with indicators such as the Gini index, which measures inequality in a population’s income distribution, difficulties in keeping the home warm, and material and social deprivation. They did not explicitly include penetration of air conditioning as a variable.

Usama Bilal, an epidemiologist at Drexel University’s Dornsife School of Public Health, who was not involved in the research, said the study was of high quality and used robust methods, though it may have been difficult to separate poverty from other climatic aspects. “The main limitations I see relate to the level of measurement of social variables, and the fact that in Europe – and many other places – there is a correlation between warmer climates and poverty, excluding Eastern Europe.”

Cold is currently a far greater threat to human health than heat, though scientists project that relationship will flip as global heating pushes temperatures higher. Last month, scientists found temperatures in Europe have risen by 0.56C per decade since the mid-1990s – faster than any other continent on the planet – due to the blanket of fossil fuel pollution covering the Earth.

The findings come after of a warning by the EU’s scientific advisors that the continent was failing to properly adapt to climatic shifts.

Malcolm Mistry, an epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, who was not involved in the study, said the findings should help shape climate adaptation policy, and that the results may be conservative.

“For instance, though the authors understandably restricted their study to pre-Covid-19 pandemic years, fuel poverty rates – an important determinant identified in the study, in particular, rose quite sharply across many European countries after 2021-22,” he said. “The estimated burden presented here may well be conservative by current standards.”



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Trump declares the Iran war over but the harder fight may have just begun


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On May 1, President Donald Trump sent letters to congressional leaders declaring that hostilities with Iran “have terminated.” The statement was legally timed. The ceasefire imposed on April 7 has held — no exchange of fire between U.S. and Iranian forces since that date. Trump’s letter cited that record to sidestep the War Powers Resolution’s 60-day clock, which would have required congressional authorization or withdrawal of forces by May 1 — Day 62 of the conflict.

The legal argument is thin. The constitutional argument is weaker. But the deeper problem is strategic: declaring the war “terminated” and ending it are not the same thing.

As of this writing, the U.S. Navy is blockading Iranian ports. Project Freedom — Trump’s initiative to guide hundreds of stranded commercial vessels out of the Strait of Hormuz — launched Monday, May 4, with guided-missile destroyers, more than one hundred land- and sea-based aircraft, and 15,000 service members.

Iran’s military launched drones and small boats at U.S. ships on the first day of the mission. The IRGC declared that any vessel transiting the strait must coordinate with Tehran first. A nation at peace does not deploy 15,000 troops to force merchant ships through a contested waterway.

TRUMP AIMS TO RESET WAR POWERS CLOCK WITH CONTROVERSIAL BID TO BYPASS CONGRESS

Cargo ships in the sea in the Strait of Hormuz

Cargo ships in the Gulf, near the Strait of Hormuz, as seen from northern Ras al-Khaimah, near the border with Oman’s Musandam governance, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in United Arab Emirates, March 11, 2026. (Reuters)

This is not the end of a war. It is the beginning of a more dangerous phase.

A legal end — not a strategic one

Trump told reporters May 1 he would not seek congressional authorization because “nobody’s ever asked for it before.” History doesn’t support that. The letter itself is the tell — it concedes “the threat posed by Iran to the United States and our armed forces remains significant.” The administration declared victory and warned of danger in the same paragraph.

WHY TRUMP’S WAR SPEECH FAILED: DECLARING VICTORY BUT STILL BOMBING IRAN BACK TO THE ‘STONE AGES’

Wars end when the political objective is secured. That is the standard Clausewitz set, and it is the standard I applied throughout this conflict — from the night Operation Epic Fury began on February 28 to last week’s legal maneuver. As I argued at the one-month mark, the administration still had no coherent political end state. Nothing since has changed that assessment.

Our military did its job 

There is no ambiguity about what U.S. forces accomplished. Iran’s navy was gutted, its air defenses wrecked, its missile production disrupted. American men and women executed with precision and discipline under fire. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the U.S.-Israeli campaign had struck more than 15,000 targets across Iran since the war began.

Military success does not automatically produce strategic success. That lesson is written in blood from Vietnam to Afghanistan. I have made this argument repeatedly in these pages. The campaign’s tactical success does not resolve what comes next.

HEGSETH DECLARES ‘DECISIVE MILITARY VICTORY’ OVER IRAN

The problem we didn’t solve

Iran’s regime is intact and its leadership survived.

Its nuclear capability was set back — not eliminated. Before strikes began, Iran held roughly 440 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60% — short of the 90% purity required for weapons-grade, but sufficient starting stock for an estimated ten devices if further enriched.

ROBERT MAGINNIS: DON’T BE MISLED—IRAN ISN’T DAYS AWAY FROM A NUCLEAR BOMB

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) lost all verification access on February 28 and cannot confirm the current location or status of that stockpile. Fordow, the hardened underground enrichment facility, appears to have sustained damage but was not destroyed.

The distinction is critical: enriched uranium is not a weapon. A deliverable device requires warhead design, miniaturization and delivery system integration — capabilities whose status no inspector can now verify.

A nation at peace does not deploy 15,000 troops to force merchant ships through a contested waterway.

Iran’s grip on the Strait of Hormuz—the transit point for 20% of the world’s crude oil — is very real, and the regime has not relinquished control. It demands that vessels coordinate with the IRGC and pay tolls.

INSIDE IRAN’S MILITARY: MISSILES, MILITIAS AND A FORCE BUILT FOR SURVIVAL

On Monday, May 4, Iranian forces reportedly harassed U.S. naval assets and targeted a tanker affiliated with the UAE’s state oil company in what the Emirates called “acts of piracy.” A regime extorting international shipping from waters it does not legally own is not a defeated adversary. It is a regime recalibrating for the next phase.

Project Freedom and Iran’s response

Project Freedom is necessary. Hundreds of commercial vessels are stranded in the Gulf, many running low on food, fuel and water. The International Maritime Organization estimates up to 20,000 seafarers are aboard those ships.

THE WAR HITS HOME: WHY FINANCIAL PAIN AND ECONOMIC UNCERTAINTY THREATEN TRUMP’S DRIVE TO TOPPLE IRAN’S REGIME

The operation tells you where Washington stands: the U.S. is deploying the equivalent of a small war to reopen a waterway that should never have been closed.

A container ship sitting at anchor in the Strait of Hormuz as a motorboat passes in the foreground.

A container ship sits at anchor as a small motorboat passes in the foreground in the Strait of Hormuz off Bandar Abbas, Iran, Saturday, May 2, 2026. (Amirhosein Khorgooi/ISNA via AP)

The war has changed shape

The first phase was kinetic — airstrikes, naval engagements, destroyed targets. The second is strategic — a contest over energy control, economic pressure, political endurance and time, measured in who outlasts whom.

FINISH THE JOB: WHY A HALF WAR WITH IRAN IS THE MOST DANGEROUS OUTCOME

Iran’s strategy is simple: survive. Tehran doesn’t need to defeat the United States — only to outlast Washington’s will. As I argued in April, if the regime endures, Iran wins. It signals that by testing maritime boundaries, resisting concessions and threatening escalation — not from strength, but from patience.

China and the larger contest

This conflict does not end in the Strait of Hormuz. China purchases approximately 90% of Iran’s oil exports and holds economic leverage over Tehran that Washington does not. As Trump prepares for talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping, that leverage becomes inseparable from broader great-power competition. Beijing can use it to stabilize the situation — or exploit American fatigue to deepen it. Washington should press hard now, before an open-ended ceasefire hardens into permanent ambiguity.

TRUMP DELAYS XI MEETING AS IRAN CONFLICT LETS US STRONG-ARM CHINA’S OIL SUPPLY

The domestic clock

Washington’s domestic calendar only sharpens the problem. With midterm elections less than six months away and slim Republican majorities in Congress, the administration faces mounting pressure at home. Gas prices have climbed from $2.98 a gallon before the war to $4.53 a gallon, with analysts warning of $5 a gallon if the strait does not reopen. Americans are watching those numbers. So are members of Congress who voted for no authorization and may be asked to defend that record in November.

The risk of misreading this moment

LIZ PEEK: DO DEMOCRATS HATE PRESIDENT TRUMP MORE THEN THEY LOVE AMERICA?

There will be pressure to declare success and move on. That would be a mistake. We imposed real costs on Iran and demonstrated military dominance. But the core problem — a revolutionary regime with nuclear ambitions and a stranglehold on global energy chokepoints — was checked, not changed.

The nuclear question — enrichment levels, stockpile location, and weaponization progress — remains open and unverifiable. Declaring those hostilities “terminated” does not make them so.

Conclusion

WINNING THE BATTLES, LOSING THE WAR? AMERICA MUST DEFINE THE ENDGAME IN IRAN

The Iran conflict has not concluded. It has evolved. Converting military success into lasting strategic gain requires three things Washington has not yet done.

First: a verifiable nuclear settlement — not a pause on enrichment but a monitored accounting of Iran’s stockpile and a permanent answer on weaponization. A ceasefire that leaves 440 kilograms of enriched uranium behind closed IAEA doors is not a strategic victory. It is a delayed crisis.

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Wars end when the political objective is secured. That is the standard Clausewitz set, and it is the standard I applied throughout this conflict — from the night Operation Epic Fury began on February 28 to last week’s legal maneuver.

Second: real pressure on China. Beijing absorbs Iranian oil and extends the regime’s endurance. Every barrel China buys is leverage Washington surrenders.

Third: a defined end state in political terms, not kinetic metrics. What condition must Iran meet? Our men and women in uniform deserve an answer. So does the country.

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Project Freedom’s first day told us everything about the second phase: Iran fired on our ships, denied the transit happened, and demanded the world route its commerce through IRGC checkpoints. The harder fight has already begun. This time, we need a plan to finish it.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM ROBERT MAGINNIS



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Lego throws its own Hail Mary


Offbeat

Movie-inspired set ticks the clever Technic box, but at a price

Lego has released a set to coincide with the Project Hail Mary movie, and it’s a clever bit of Technic-style engineering, even if the price is a little high.

Usually, we only look at Lego builds of real objects – think Concorde and the recent Artemis set. However, having enjoyed Andy Weir’s Project Hail Mary (the book more than the film), I was keen to see what Lego had done with its license.

The answer is: it’s good, but a bit pricey.

A Lego Technic spacecraft model displayed on a desk beside an instruction booklet and a small minifigure.

The completed Project Hail Mary set

The 830-piece set comprises a model of the eponymous spacecraft, a minifig-scale Ryland Grace, and Lego’s version of the Rocky character. It also, thankfully, does not have the stickers that have blighted recent Lego sets. This set is not cheap, though Lego has at least invested in some pre-printed components rather than making customers fiddle with sticky transfers that invariably end up looking awful.

Lego lists the set’s age as 18+, which I’d quibble with. It’s a lengthy (at least in terms of steps) but straightforward build. Budget around half a day to a full day for building it, depending on your skill level and how often little bits of Lego get flung around the room.

A pile of LEGO Technic pieces and a partly built black structure on a wooden tabletop.

Many fiddly pieces

Starting with the spacecraft, it’s worth emphasizing that this is essentially a Technic set. If Technic components aren’t your thing, this set isn’t for you. However, persevere, and it is difficult not to be impressed with the design work. As the spacecraft comes together, so the mechanism reveals itself. Turn a crank, and the crew modules slide out before the entire spacecraft rotates to simulate gravity. Turn the crank in the opposite direction to return the crew modules.

No, it’s not like the book, but it is like the film, which deviates from the book in several other places too. We’d be tempted to fit a motor to achieve smoother rotation.

The spacecraft is mounted on a stand that also includes a place for the Grace minifigure and the Rocky character. Both have pre-printed accessories, such as a tape measure, which will be familiar to those who have seen the film.

LEGO Technic spacecraft model on a stand with two minifigures on a wooden surface.

Almost complete…

It’s a fun build and an impressive bit of Technic design. The elephant in the room, however, is cost. At £99.99 in the UK, this is not cheap. Certainly not when compared to the Artemis Technic set, which retails for £54.99. Turn the crank there, and the SLS rises, boosters separate, and Orion heads off to the Moon. Yes, there are fewer pieces (and some stickers to deal with), but for our money, it’s a better value set. 

However, if you’re a fan of Weir’s book or the movie adaptation, there’s a lot to like here, and the Technic designer deserves an award for making the mechanics of the spacecraft work.

If only it were a little cheaper. ®



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UK identifies new suspected hantavirus case on remote island | Health News

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The UK confirms two British cases on board a cruise ship and a suspected infection on the Tristan da Cunha island.

Health authorities are monitoring a growing hantavirus outbreak linked to a cruise ship, with a new suspected case identified among a British national on the remote South Atlantic island of Tristan da Cunha.

The UK Health Security Agency confirmed on Friday two British cases connected to the outbreak on board the MV Hondius, and said it is assessing an additional suspected infection on Tristan da Cunha. Officials have not released further details about the new case.

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Three people – a Dutch couple and a German national – have died after contracting the virus during the voyage. Five infections have been confirmed so far, with several additional suspected cases under investigation.

The vessel is due to dock in the Spanish island of Tenerife in the coming days. British passengers who remain asymptomatic will be flown back to the United Kingdom and asked to isolate for 45 days as a precaution.

Seven British nationals disembarked earlier in St Helena, a British overseas territory in the South Atlantic Ocean. Authorities said two are already isolating in the UK’s mainland, four remain on the island, and one has been traced outside the country.

Global risk remains low

The World Health Organization said global risk remains low, even though the Andean strain identified in some cases can, in rare instances, spread between people.

“This is not coronavirus, this is a very different virus,” said Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO director of epidemic and pandemic management. “This is not the same situation we were in six years ago.”

Health officials have contacted passengers from at least 12 countries who left the ship earlier in April. Monitoring is under way across multiple regions, including the United States and Singapore, where returning travellers are being tracked or tested despite showing no symptoms.

Passengers who left the ship earlier, including travellers from at least 12 countries, have been contacted as part of tracing efforts.

‘It’s very much, we hope, under control’

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the US said it is closely monitoring developments and assessed the risk to the US public as extremely low.

US authorities have begun tracking individuals who were on the ship. Health departments in Georgia and Arizona are monitoring returning residents who remain asymptomatic, while other states, including California and Texas, have also identified passengers linked to the voyage.

Singapore has isolated and is testing two residents who were on board, while a French contact has also been identified without symptoms.

US President Donald Trump said he had been briefed on the outbreak and expressed confidence that it was being contained.

“It’s very much, we hope, under control,” Trump said. Asked if people in the US should be concerned about possible spread, he replied: “I hope not.”

Hantavirus is typically transmitted through contact with infected rodents, though rare cases of human-to-human transmission have been recorded.

Despite the deaths linked to the outbreak, health agencies have stressed that the situation remains contained, with no evidence of widespread transmission beyond those directly connected to the cruise.



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Seattle mayor waves ‘bye’ to millionaires as Starbucks flees to Nashville


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Seattle’s new socialist mayor, with the help of Washington state Democrats, are running the wealthy out of town and they’re laughing about it. Not because they’ll miss the tax revenue generated by the wealthy, but because the wealthy aren’t the only targets.

Earlier in May, Mayor Katie Wilson appeared at a Seattle University event and was asked whether she believed progressive taxes were an “easy” solution to the region’s fiscal problems. The question comes on the heels of Washington Democrats passing the state’s first-ever income tax, naively described as merely a “millionaire’s tax.”.

“I think the claims that millionaires are going to leave our state are like super overblown,” she told the cheering crowd with a laugh. “And the ones that leave, like, bye.”

SOCIALIST MAYOR’S BLUNT 1-WORD MESSAGE TO FLEEING MILLIONAIRES SPARKS OUTRAGE: ‘WE’RE DOOMED’

A sitting mayor of a major American city just waved goodbye to the taxpayers her city depends on, and the room thought it was funny.

Katie Wilson speaking after being sworn in as mayor at City Hall in Seattle

Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson’s staff abruptly ended an interview with a local news reporter last week after he pressed her on rising gun violence and surveillance cameras in the city after a recent shooting. (David Ryder/Reuters)

Seattle’s new mayor, a self-described democratic socialist, is already doing her level best to prove every critic right about what happens when you hand a major American city to the ideological left.

Wilson ran on the kind of platform that left-wing media usually describes as “ambitious” — government-run grocery stores, progressive taxation, and open contempt for the business community. Now she’s governing accordingly. And her latest performance should tell you everything you need to know about the people currently running Pacific Northwest cities into the ground.

WASHINGTON STATE DEMOCRATS ACCIDENTALLY EMAIL THEIR ‘RADICAL’ TAX PLAN TO ENTIRE SENATE

Washington state just passed one of the most aggressive tax hikes in its history. Democrat Gov. Bob Ferguson signed the so-called “Millionaires Tax” into law on March 30 — a 9.9% levy on household income exceeding $1 million, effective 2028.

The tax is almost certainly unconstitutional — and was designed that way on purpose. Washington’s state constitution has prohibited a progressive income tax since 1933, when the state Supreme Court ruled in Culliton v. Chase that income is property, and property must be taxed uniformly and cannot exceed 1%.

But nearly 1,000 pages of public records obtained by The Center Square reveal the whole scheme: Senate Majority Leader Jamie Pedersen, the bill’s sponsor, wrote in an August email that, “I would like to force the Washington Supreme Court to reconsider its caselaw that considers income to be property.” He then sent a draft of the bill to Solicitor General Noah Purcell asking for “thoughts and comments about what will give us the best shot to have Culliton overruled.”

WASHINGTON BUSINESS OWNERS FEAR SOCIALIST ‘MILLIONAIRES TAX’ IS DRIVING BUSINESSES OUT — AND THEY’RE NEXT

Attorney General’s Office Senior Counsel Chuck Zalesky was even more direct, writing that “the overall legislative goals, it seems to me, are to have our Supreme Court overturn Culliton v. Chase.”

A recently leaked Zoom meeting shows a Democrat lawmaker seeming to admit what conservatives have been screaming about: the intent is to extend the income tax to all Washingtonians. Perhaps this is why she dismisses concerns about the wealthy leaving the city or state. The intent isn’t to rely on them for funding; it’s to hit all of us.

Nevertheless, the income tax is on top of a capital gains tax already on the books, a Business and Occupation tax that hits gross revenue whether you’re profitable or not, and Seattle’s nation-leading combined sales tax rate of 10.35%. Seattle recently implemented a 5% payroll tax on employer compensation exceeding $1 million per employee annually as part of a so-called “Social Housing” tax, and already has a payroll tax.

WHY STARBUCKS PICKED NASHVILLE OVER SEATTLE FOR EXPANSION, ACCORDING TO LOCAL BUSINESS REPORTER

Seattle’s new mayor, a self-described democratic socialist, is already doing her level best to prove every critic right about what happens when you hand a major American city to the ideological left.

The ink wasn’t dry before the departures started. Starbucks founder Howard Schultz announced he’s moving to Florida. Amazon’s Jeff Bezos already left for Florida back in 2023 after the capital gains tax kicked in. And Starbucks — the company that Wilson literally picketed and urged a boycott of after winning her election — announced it will invest $100 million and bring 2,000 new jobs to Nashville, Tennessee. Seattle could lose up to $750 million in tax revenue as a result.

That’s the company Wilson said you “should not” be buying from. Now it’s enriching Tennessee instead of Washington. Not bad for 100 days on the job.

She told the audience, “Being a progressive doesn’t necessarily mean that we keep layering on spending, and we never stop doing things.” Fine. But her actions say otherwise. She joined picket lines against Seattle’s most iconic employer. She cheered a state income tax that’s going to court. She waved “bye” to the millionaires whose tax dollars fund the very city services she claims to care about.

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What makes Wilson genuinely dangerous isn’t just the local damage she’ll do to Seattle — a city that’s been in slow-motion collapse for years under progressive mismanagement, which I write about extensively in my book “What’s Killing America: Inside the Radical Left’s Tragic Destruction of Our Cities.” It’s that she’s been compared favorably to Zohran Mamdani, New York City’s new socialist mayor, as if this is a model worth replicating. These two are being celebrated as the future of urban governance.

Starbucks strikers holding signs.

Starbucks employees and supporters strike in front of the former Starbucks Reserve Roastery that closed earlier in the year, Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)

Here’s the thing about waving “bye” to millionaires: the roads they funded don’t fix themselves. The shelters and social programs Wilson’s coalition demands don’t run on good intentions. The city budget doesn’t balance on smug applause lines at a college forum. But maybe Wilson knows that. Maybe that’s the whole point?

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Because when the millionaires are gone and the budget holes get bigger, the tax man doesn’t disappear — he just moves down the income ladder. That leaked Zoom call was a preview. The “millionaire’s tax” was always a foot in the door. The next bracket is yours.

Starbucks figured out Washington wasn’t serious about keeping them. It took its 2,000 jobs and $100 million to Nashville. Seattle’s mayor thought that was funny. Seattle residents might want to think about whether they can truly afford to laugh along with her.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM JASON RANTZ



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Yemen fuel price hikes deepen hardship as transport costs rise | Oil and Gas News

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Mukalla, Yemen – When Abdullah Salem raised his fare by 100 Yemeni riyals ($0.06) on a routine afternoon trip from the eastern outskirts of Yemen’s port city of Mukalla to the city centre, passengers pushed back immediately. “They shouted at me,” the 55-year-old driver told Al Jazeera as he prepared for another trip. “I told them it’s not my decision; it’s the government who have hiked fuel prices.”

The Yemen Petroleum Company (YPC), controlled by the internationally recognised government, has announced a new round of fuel price hikes in areas under its administration, a move that analysts say could accelerate inflation and deepen economic hardship across the country.

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In a statement posted on social media on April 16, filled with praise for the government’s efforts to stabilise prices and ensure the flow of fuel, the company said it had raised the price of petrol and diesel to 1,475 Yemeni riyals ($0.98) per litre, up from 1,190 ($0.79), representing a sharp 24 percent increase.

It attributed the increase to regional tensions, including the Iran war, disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, and a surge in transport and insurance costs for shipments to Yemen.

In the same post, the YPC sought to ease public concern, saying the increase would be temporary and that prices would return to previous levels once regional hostilities subsided. “The company regrets having to raise prices and emphasises that the increase is temporary, contingent on the resolution of the Gulf crisis and a return to normal conditions,” it said.

The company has since defended the fuel hikes, even as global oil prices have occasionally decreased amid hope of a possible deal between the United States and Iran. The prices would still have to rise, the company said, because it imports already-refined fuel with prices that are tied to global product markets rather than the cost of crude oil. It added that fuel is priced in local currency upon arrival in Yemen, based on the US dollar exchange rate at the time of purchase, in addition to transport and storage costs.

Struggle to earn enough

But for millions of Yemenis like Abdullah Salem, who work long hours and still struggle to make ends meet, the latest fuel hikes are another blow.

Abdullah said that he spends his mornings transporting students from different parts of Mukalla to the city’s university, before driving routes for the general public in the afternoon. Even with the long hours, he barely earns enough to cover fuel costs and support his extended family, including his brother’s household, with whom he shares a home.

“We don’t save anything. Everything is expensive, food and other commodities,” he said.

To cope with the rising costs, Abdullah has increased monthly fares for students by 3,000 riyals ($2) and raised afternoon trip fares by 100 riyals ($0.06). While students have largely accepted the increase, many passengers on his afternoon routes have stopped using his service, opting instead to hitchhike.

Shoppers move through a busy market in Mukalla on a hot afternoon, as residents brace for rising prices of essential goods following fuel hikes of more than 20 percent approved by the Yemeni government
Shoppers move through a busy market in Mukalla on a hot afternoon, as residents brace for rising prices of essential goods after fuel hikes of more than 20 percent approved by the Yemeni government [Saeed Al Batati/Al Jazeera]

“We want the government to provide subsidised fuel,” Abdullah said. “People are very poor, and these price hikes will only push food prices higher.”

Despite no immediate reports of increases in food prices, economists say the latest fuel hikes are likely to push up costs across several sectors, including food. They also warn that the government could approve another round of fuel price increases if global oil prices continue to rise.

Mustafa Nasr, head of the Studies and Economic Media Center, said Yemen imports fuel from international markets, while some fuel produced from local oilfields is also sold on the domestic market.

“Economic activity is likely to be affected across the board, whether through rising prices of goods in the markets or potential shortages of petroleum products, with repercussions across multiple sectors,” Nasr told Al Jazeera. “Fragile economies like Yemen’s are particularly vulnerable to such external shocks, meaning the impact is likely to be felt more deeply and across all levels of society.”

Exhausted savings

Shortly after the latest fuel hikes took effect, residents across government-controlled areas, including Aden and Mukalla, reported increases in transportation fares.

Government officials appeared on state media meeting with representatives of transport unions, in what appeared to be a message aimed at reassuring the public that authorities would rein in unjustified fare increases. Unlike previous rounds of fuel hikes that triggered violent protests, there has been little reported unrest in government-controlled areas so far.

Um Fatemia, a university student who travels nearly an hour from home to campus in Mukalla, said her family has exhausted its savings and that her mother has even sold jewellery to help pay for her education.

“I live in a difficult situation, and no one has helped me,” she told Al Jazeera, asking to be identified by her nickname.

A fish vendor counts money at Mukalla’s fish market, where prices are expected to come under pressure as fishermen say they are spending more on fuel for fishing trips.
A vendor counts money at Mukalla’s fish market, where prices are expected to come under pressure as fishermen say they are spending more on fuel to take their boats out to sea [Saeed Al Batati/Al Jazeera]

She often falls behind on bus fares, sometimes settling the previous month’s fees halfway through the following month.

Although the latest fuel price hikes took effect in the second half of April, the bus driver told her and other students they would have to pay 49,000 Yemeni riyals ($32.60) by the end of the month, up from less than 45,000 Yemeni riyals ($30) the previous month.

“What surprised me most is that buses running on gas, whose price was not affected by the latest hike, also raised their fares, claiming they spend long hours queuing at gas stations,” she said. “My father is a teacher, and his salary is often delayed. Even when he is paid, it barely covers our household expenses, forcing my mother to sell her jewellery to help cover bus fares and other costs. My father is responsible for supporting the entire family.”



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