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Democracy Now!
- "The Future Is Peace": Maoz Inon & Aziz Abu Sarah on Israelis and Palestinians Working Together
Maoz Inon’s parents were killed in the October 7 attacks in 2023. Aziz Abu Sarah’s brother died after being tortured in an Israeli prison. The two have closely worked together calling for peace in Israel and Palestine over the past two years. They just released a book titled The Future Is Peace: A Shared Journey Across the Holy Land. “I grew up angry. I grew up believing peace is impossible. But at some point, I realized — when I was 18 — that Maoz and I are not on the opposite side. To bring justice, to bring peace, to bring equality and dignity to all of us, we have to work together,” says Abu Sarah. “We need enough people that realize that we have the agency to change the future, to create the future we deserve to live […]
- Reps. Swalwell & Gonzales Resign over Alleged Sexual Misconduct; Will Congress Take More Action?
Democratic Congressmember Eric Swalwell of California and Republican Tony Gonzales of Texas resigned Tuesday. Both of them faced potential expulsion votes after they were accused of sexual misconduct involving former staffers. Swalwell’s resignation came just days after CNN and the San Francisco Chronicle reported multiple allegations against him, including twice raping a former staffer. Swalwell denied the allegations. He dropped out of the California gubernatorial race on Sunday. Gonzales had been facing calls to resign since February, when the San Antonio Express-News revealed he had an affair with a staffer who later took her own life, and also sent explicit text messages to another staffer. “Congress itself shouldn’t see these […]
- "Scorched-Earth Campaign": Israel Uses "Gaza Playbook" to Turn Southern Lebanon into Rubble
Israeli forces continue to bombard towns in southern Lebanon today, according to Lebanese state media. Several people were killed in a strike on the coastal town of Ansariya. According to Lebanon’s Health Ministry, Israeli attacks have killed over 2,100 people, wounding nearly 7,000. Over 1 million Lebanese have been displaced, and 40,000 homes have been destroyed or heavily damaged. We go to Beirut, where we’re joined by investigative journalist Lylla Younes. Her family’s village in the southern border municipality of Bint Jbeil was bombed yesterday. “It’s not just real estate that is lost when these homes are destroyed. It’s not just a house. Our grandparents built these structures,” says Younes. “What the world should […]
- Israel's War & Demands "Could Throw Lebanon Back into a Civil War": Ex-Israeli Negotiator Daniel Levy
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio hosted the first direct talks between Israel and Lebanon in decades on Tuesday in Washington. Hezbollah, which was not a party to the talks, made clear it will not abide by any agreement that results from their negotiations. Israel’s demand that Hezbollah be disarmed is “anything but reasonable,” says Daniel Levy, former Israeli peace negotiator under Prime Ministers Ehud Barak and Yitzhak Rabin. “What [Israel] is doing here is trying to put something that sounds reasonable on the table, but with the intention of embarrassing and humiliating the Lebanese government,” which Levy says does not have the capacity to disarm Hezbollah.
- Headlines for April 15, 2026
U.S. Naval Blockade of Iranian Ports Enters Third Day, Lebanon and Israel Hold First Direct Talks in More Than Three Decades, Israeli Forces Kill at Least 11 Palestinians in Gaza, Journalist Ahmed Shihab-Eldin Held in Kuwaiti Prison for Six Weeks, Italy Suspends Defense Cooperation Agreement with Israel, GOP Rep. Gonzales and Democratic Rep. Swalwell Resign from Congress as Another Woman Accuses Swalwell of Raping Her, DOJ Moves to Overturn Convictions for Members of Far-Right Groups in Connection to the Jan. 6 Insurrection, Appeals Court Judge to End Probe of Trump Admin Deportation Flights to El Salvador, Trump Administration Plans to Build Second Border Wall in Arizona, NAACP Sues Elon Musk’s xAI for Polluting Black Neighborhoods
Fair Observer
- When Sorrows Come in Battalions: War, AI and the Feedback Loop That Will Eat Itself — Part 2
In the first part of this conversation, I engaged DeepSeek on a question raised by an article in the newsletter A Free Lunch on the topic of “model collapse,” the feedback loop that causes AI models to lose nuance, diversity and “atypical” reasoning, leading to a silent but cumulative degradation of the technology’s cognitive quality.… Continue reading When Sorrows Come in Battalions: War, AI and the Feedback Loop That Will Eat Itself — Part 2 The post When Sorrows Come in Battalions: War, AI and the Feedback Loop That Will Eat Itself — Part 2 appeared first on Fair Observer.
- The Good, the Bad and the Ambiguous: Challenging Simplistic Narratives of Power and Morality in Conflict
We in the West — and especially those in the New World who ignore history — blindly believe in the simplistic notion that good always triumphs over evil. Childhood fairytales and comics, and adulthood Hollywood have taught us that; think of everyone from Snow White to Batman to Clint Eastwood’s nameless hero in iconic spaghetti… Continue reading The Good, the Bad and the Ambiguous: Challenging Simplistic Narratives of Power and Morality in Conflict The post The Good, the Bad and the Ambiguous: Challenging Simplistic Narratives of Power and Morality in Conflict appeared first on Fair Observer.
- Contested Body Counts, Visibility and the (Necro)Politics of America’s War in Iran
Over the Easter weekend, news of a missing American aircrew member dominated headlines after a US fighter jet was shot down over Iran on Good Friday. Just hours earlier, Novara Media reported that the US was “hiding the true extent” of its military casualties in the Iran war, presenting this as a problem of transparency.… Continue reading Contested Body Counts, Visibility and the (Necro)Politics of America’s War in Iran The post Contested Body Counts, Visibility and the (Necro)Politics of America’s War in Iran appeared first on Fair Observer.
Anthropocene
- Tracking traffic pollution in real time could transform city climate policy
Using traffic cameras and phone data, researchers created a real-time emissions map—giving cities a powerful new tool to cut pollution faster and smarter.
- The Future of the Grid Could Be Parked in Your Driveway
A growing fleet of electric vehicles could unlock a cheaper, cleaner alternative to fossil-fuel power plants—without building new infrastructure.
Black Agenda Report
The Guardian
The Marshall Project
- New Videos Show ‘Absolutely Egregious Care’ in 2025 Cuyahoga County Jail Death
Ohio reopens review of Jennifer Wade’s death after county officials failed to provide body cam footage.
Aeon
- You’ve lived this life before
The mystical insight came to Nietzsche like a lightning flash: time eternally recurs – and life must be lived accordingly- by Mark HigginsRead on Aeon
Unicorn Riot
- ALPRs and Minneapolis’ Growing Discriminatory Surveillance Dragnet
Automatic License Plate Readers (ALPRs), an extremely invasive form of public surveillance, have been around for decades, but lately they have been becoming more prevalent. The post ALPRs and Minneapolis’ Growing Discriminatory Surveillance Dragnet appeared first on UNICORN RIOT.
The Conversation
- Strait of Hormuz: Why the US and Iran are sailing in very different legal waters
Tehran and Washington look to different rules to govern their conduct in the key choke point.
- The Islamabad talks were doomed to failure – and Hormuz blockade has thrown another obstacle to any Iran-US deal
A lack of trust, failure to agree to the grounds on which discussion is taking place and Israel’s de facto veto provide insurmountable barriers.
- AI companions can give constant support – but distort ideas about what a relationship really is
AI bots promise limitless companionship – but limits are what makes human relationships meaningful, a philosopher argues.
- A justice department opinion arguing the Presidential Records Act is unconstitutional could revert the nation to a time when presidents freely burned their papers
Presidential records are the public’s property. The Justice Department wants to change that and revert to a time when presidents could do what they wanted with their papers, including burning them.
- How debate about gender identity could undermine global efforts to protect victims of violence
The US and some voices at the UN are calling for a narrow interpretation of gender to align with sex assigned at birth. That could leave vulnerable groups at risk.
Inter Press Service
- The Five Enablers of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Every powerful actor in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict professes to seek peace. The US and EU repeat the two-state mantra, the Arab states invoke Palestinian rights, AIPAC proclaims its defense of Israel’s security, and Israeli opposition parties promise “responsible” leadership and stability. Yet each, in its own way, has enabled and entrenched a destructive status quo—shielding
- Denmark’s Warning
When Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen addressed her supporters on election night on 24 March, she chose her words carefully. Losing four percentage points after almost seven years in power, she suggested, wasn’t so bad given there’s been a pandemic, a war in Europe and a confrontation with Donald Trump over Greenland. The reality was
- The Day the General Assembly Moved to Geneva– to Provide a Platform to a PLO Leader…
The United Nations faces two crucial elections later this year: the election of a new Secretary General, with no confirmed date for polling, and the election of a new President (PGA), scheduled for June 2, for the upcoming 81st session of the General Assembly. In accordance with established geographical rotation, the president for the next
Sludge
- AI Super PACs Are Unleashing Millions to Tilt Primaries in Their Favor
So far, the industry groups have won nearly all the races they’ve thrown their money at, helping to advance allies who could help shape AI legislation in the next Congress.
Yale Environment 360
- Israeli Strikes Are Destroying Farmland in Southern Lebanon
Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon have devastated orchards and fields. Lebanese officials say that one-fifth of the country's farmland has been damaged in the course of the war.Read more on E360 →
Inside Climate News
- Dam Useless: Barriers Prevent a Migratory Fish from Reproducing
The Bronx River was once a curvy waterway that ran through vast forests and flowed into networks of tidal marshland. For centuries, river herring have swum up the waterway from the East River and the Long Island Sound to lay their eggs. But the river they traverse looks far different now. The waterway has been
- California’s Climate Leaders Talk Clean Energy Growing Pains and the War on Iran
SACRAMENTO—Not long into Ellie Cohen’s opening remarks at the California Climate Policy Summit this week, the crowd erupted in boos—at her request. The CEO of the Santa Rosa-based Climate Center had been noting widening climate threats and thanked the state and Gov. Gavin Newsom for lawsuits against the Trump administration, then shifted her tone. Taking
Amnesty International
Grist
- Hurricane Helene ravaged farmers’ topsoil. They’re still fighting to build it back.
"We're dirt farmers. Our primary job is to tend the dirt. That's the basis of everything."
- Trump and the Illinois governor keep feuding over an invasive fish
After accusing Illinois of being an "unreliable partner," the Trump administration is handing control of a billion-dollar carp barrier to Michigan.
- Many companies want clean energy. Georgia Power will soon let them build it.
Supporters hope the move will serve as a model for other places balancing surging energy demand and climate goals.
Truthout
Labor Notes
- Virginia Public Workers Make Headway on Bargaining Rights
After a years-long campaign by unions, Virginia’s General Assembly passed legislation to extend collective bargaining rights to nearly half a million state, county, and municipal government employees. Union recognition has been denied Virginia’s public employees since 1946 when the state legislature passed a joint resolution against public sector bargaining to defeat a Black hospital workers’ organizing drive at the University of Virginia. A 1977 state Supreme Court ruling affirmed the ban, which was later codified by legislation in 1993.
The World – PRI
- Nigerians inducted into Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
Today, the induction of Fela Kuti and Sade Adu into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame marks the first time Nigerians are honored by the Hall’s voters. If rock ’n’ roll came from the blues and the blues came from work songs of enslaved Africans, then today can be seen as the boomerang making a complete circle. Host Marco Werman has more.
- In the Iran war, governments control what we see
In the US-Israel war on Iran, governments have clamped down on what information gets out. Iran has shut down the internet and the Gulf monarchies have arrested individuals who posted videos of the damage following strikes. In Israel, the military has control over what’s reported and in Lebanon, journalists are being targeted and killed. And while all this is taking place, authorities are […]
- Iran war dampens Thailand's biggest party
It's supposed to be the most joyful time of the year in Thailand. Songkran, or Thai Buddhist New Year, is a time for merrymaking and washing away negativity — literally, by splashing strangers on the street with water guns and pouring water over elders' hands in a show of respect. Lots of tourists fly in to join Thais for giant water fights; Thais flock to their home provinces to seek blessings […]
19th News
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