Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Yesterday — 5 December 2025Homeland Security Newswire

The President Should Not Have a License to Kill

5 December 2025 at 06:46
12/5/25
EXTRAJUDICIAL KILLING
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

Editor’s note: We published this article nearly three months ago, on 10 September 2025. The recent revelations about the killing, on 2 September, of two survivors who were clinging to a sinking shipwreck after their boat had been destroyed in the initial attack by U.S. forces, highlight the deeper problems with the Trump administration’s approach of using military force to deal with what is essentially a law-enforcement issue.

read more

Far-Right Extremists Have Been Organizing Online Since Before the Internet – and AI Is Their Next Frontier

5 December 2025 at 06:44
12/5/25
EXTREMISM
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

How can society police the global spread of online far-right extremism while still protecting free speech? That’s a question policymakers and watchdog organizations confronted as early as the 1980s and ’90s – and it hasn’t gone away.

read more

How Does Immigration Affect the U.S. Economy?

5 December 2025 at 06:42
12/5/25
IMMIGRATION
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

Immigration has historically driven U.S. growth and filled labor shortages in various sectors, but it has also remained one of the most politically divisive issues. In the modern era, successive administrations have agreed on the need to reform the asylum system and bolster border security, while differing sharply on how to manage immigration more broadly.

read more

The U.S. Got Out from Crippling Levels of Federal Debt Before, and It Can Do It Again

5 December 2025 at 06:40
12/5/24
NATIONAL DEBT
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

The total federal debt of the United States passed a new milestone on October 21, 2025, reaching $38 trillion for the first time, with $30.4 trillion in federal debt held by the public, which is equivalent to about 100 percent of our gross domestic product (GDP). This is the highest level it’s been relative to our GDP since 1946.

read more

Gun Dealers Are Major Source of Trafficked Firearms

5 December 2025 at 06:38
12/5/25
GUNS
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

Licensed gun dealers are a major source of firearms that end up illegally trafficked, according to a new analysis using federal data by the research arm of Everytown for Gun Safety, which advocates for stricter gun laws.

Gun trafficking involves diverting guns from legal commerce into the illegal market, often through straw purchases, unlicensed dealing or other methods that bypass background checks and federal recordkeeping requirements.

read more

A Few Bad Men | The Undermining of the C.D.C. | The Drive to Establish Domestic HALEU Supply Chains is a Gambit, and more

By: Staff
5 December 2025 at 06:32
12/5/25
OUR PICKS
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
0

Trump Is Taking 3 Steps Backward in the AI Race  (Arati Prabhakar and Asad Ramzanali, Politico)
The administration needs to shift focus away from providing chips and datacenters to the world’s richest companies.

read more

Before yesterdayHomeland Security Newswire

Australia Must Make the Most of the U.S. Critical-Minerals Pivot

4 December 2025 at 06:36
12/4/25
CRITICAL MINERALS
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

The signals from Washington on critical minerals are no longer ambiguous; they are decisive, strategic and aligned with Australia’s long-term interests. The issue is whether Canberra and industry can convert this momentum into concrete projects that deliver secure supply chains, new processing capacity, domestic industrial depth and worthwhile commercial returns. To do that, Australia must move at speed, locking in partnerships, prioritizing specific minerals, and supporting companies ready to diversify minerals markets.

read more

The New German War Machine | China’s Turn to National Security Lawfare | Some Cocaine-Smuggling Presidents Are More Innocent Than Others, and more

By: Staff
4 December 2025 at 06:31
12/4/25
WORLD ROUNDUP
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
0

The New German War Machine  (Isaac Stanley-Becker, The Atlantic)
After World War II, Germany embraced pacifism as a form of atonement. Now the country is arming itself again.

China’s Turn to National Security Lawfare  (Weijia Rao, Lawfare)
The U.S.-China rivalry is fueling a legal arms race.

read more

What’s the Best Way to Expand the U.S. Electricity Grid?

4 December 2025 at 06:34
12/4/25
POWER GRID
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

Growing energy demand means the U.S. will almost certainly have to expand its electricity grid in coming years. What’s the best way to do this? A new study by MIT researchers examines legislation introduced in Congress and identifies relative tradeoffs involving reliability, cost, and emissions, depending on the proposed approach.

read more

Labeling Dissent as Terrorism: New U.S. Domestic Terrorism Priorities Raise Constitutional Alarms

4 December 2025 at 11:24
12/4/25
DEMOCRACY WATCH
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

A largely overlooked directive issued by the Trump administration marks a major shift in U.S. counterterrorism policy, one that threatens bedrock free speech rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights.

read more

Electromagnetic Warfare: NATO's Blind Spot Could Decide the Next Conflict

4 December 2025 at 11:01
12/4/25
MILITARY TECHNOLOGY
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

The war in Ukraine has exposed a critical front long neglected by Western militaries: electromagnetic warfare (EW). Control over this invisible battlespace, where communications are jammed, drones blinded, and precision weapons thrown off course, can decide the outcome of a conflict. Russia has understood this sooner than NATO, using EW to isolate Ukrainian units, disrupt command networks, and neutralize Western systems. Ukraine has adapted with ingenuity, but it is learning in combat what NATO should have learned in training.

read more

More Industries Want Trump’s Help Hiring Immigrant Labor After Farms Get a Break

4 December 2025 at 10:33
12/4/25
IMMIGRATION
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

As food prices remain high, the Trump administration has made it easier for farmers to hire foreign guest workers and to pay them less. Now, other industries with large immigrant workforces also are asking for relief as they combat labor shortages and raids.

Visas for temporary foreign workers are a quick fix with bipartisan support in Congress. And Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins’ office told Stateline that “streamlining” visas for both agricultural and other jobs is a priority for the Trump administration.

read more

Pardoning Hernández—Where’s the Logic?

4 December 2025 at 10:23
12/4/25
THE AMERICAS
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

President Donald Trump continues to use his pardon powers in remarkable ways. Now he has pardoned former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández, who was sentenced to 45 years in prison for drug trafficking.

Cato asked me to write a statement on this development and here is what I wrote:

read more

Net Migration to the U.K. Has Dropped to Pre-Brexit Levels – Why It May Not Be Enough to Satisfy Voters

1 December 2025 at 06:42
12/1/25
MIGRATION
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

Net migration to the UK has fallen to levels last seen before Brexit. The latest ONS figures show net migration reached just over 200,000 in the year ending in June. This marks a 78% decline over the past two years, from a peak of more than 900,000.

read more

Lawmakers Call for Probe of How Firm Tied to Kristi Noem Got Piece of $220 Million DHS Ad Contracts

1 December 2025 at 06:38
12/1/25
DHS
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

In recent days, five U.S. senators and two representatives requested documents from the Department of Homeland Security and a formal investigation into how a firm closely tied to DHS Secretary Kristi Noem ended up receiving money from a $220 million, taxpayer-funded ad campaign.

read more

A West Texas County Wants to Better Prepare for Floods. Paying for It Will Be Tricky.

1 December 2025 at 06:36
12/1/25
FLOODS
Enable IntenseDebate Comments: 
Enable IntenseDebate Comments

When it rains here, West Texans brace for the worst. With nowhere to go, water collects across sidewalks, roads and highways — the flat, desert landscape becomes a wetland in the blink of an eye.

Local officials in Ector County, which includes Odessa, said the region’s drainage system is out of date. But paying for upgrades will be a tremendous challenge.

Population, housing and commercial development have spiked, and the infrastructure has not kept up. Its drainage system, installed in the 1970s, is not equipped to handle the growth, county officials said.

read more

❌
❌