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Today — 11 December 2025Main stream

The First MAGA National Security Strategy

11 December 2025 at 06:42
12/11/25
DEMOCRACY WATCH
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It would be a mistake for allies or adversaries to read President Donald Trump’s National Security Strategy (NSS), released late at night on December 4, as a guide to Washington’s moves over the next three years. But it is significant for a different reason: the first MAGA national security strategy previews a new vision of the United States as an illiberal superpower.

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The UK Has It Wrong on Digital ID. Here’s Why.

11 December 2025 at 06:38
12/11/25
DIGITAL ID
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In late September, the United Kingdom’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced his government’s plans to introduce a new digital ID scheme in the country to take effect before the end of the Parliament (no later than August 2029).

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Protecting Next-Gen Reactors

11 December 2025 at 06:36
12/11/25
NUCLEAR SAFETY
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As the United States accelerates deployment of advanced and small modular reactors (A/SMRs), the nuclear energy sector is embracing a digital future. While digital systems provide operators with big benefits, they can also create vulnerabilities that enable criminals to access critical infrastructure.

To protect the next generation of reactors, cybersecurity has become a critical pillar of trust, safety and resilient operations.

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Yesterday — 10 December 2025Main stream

Afghan Terrorism Is a Small Threat in the United States

11 December 2025 at 06:46
10/12/25
TERRORISM
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Very little new information has been released since Rahmanullah Lakanwal murdered West Virginia National Guard member Sarah Beckstrom in Washington, DC, two weeks ago. He also shot and injured Andrew Wolfe, another National Guardsman, in the same attack. Prosecutors have since charged Lakanwal with murder, assault with intent to kill while armed, and possession of a firearm during a violent crime. Terrorism charges are absent because prosecutors do not yet know his motives. The FBI is conducting a terrorism investigation to discover those.

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Trump Administration’s Immigrant Detention Policy Broadly Rejected by Federal Judges

11 December 2025 at 06:44
12/10/25
IMMIGRTION
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In federal courtrooms across America, a pattern has emerged in cases in which immigrants are being rounded up and jailed without a hearing. That’s a departure from fundamental constitutional protections in the U.S. that provide the right to a hearing before indefinite imprisonment.

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Before yesterdayMain stream

Voting by Mail Faces Uncertain Moment Ahead of Midterm Elections

9 December 2025 at 06:46
12/9/25
ELECTION SECURITY
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Derrin Robinson has worked in Oregon elections for more than 30 years, long enough to remember when voters in the state cast their ballots at physical polling sites instead of by mail.

As the nonpartisan clerk of Harney County, a vast, rural expanse larger than Massachusetts, Robinson oversees elections with about 6,000 registered voters. Oregon has exclusively conducted elections by mail since 2000, a system he thinks works well, requires fewer staff and doesn’t force voters to travel through treacherous weather to reach a polling place.

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Bookshelf: War Lessons from Robert McNamara

9 December 2025 at 06:40
12/9/25
LESSONS OF THE VIETNAM FAILURE
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Robert McNamara was considered one of the brightest stars of his generation. He excelled at Harvard Business School, where he went on to teach, rose through the ranks of the Ford Motor Company to become chief executive, and was appointed secretary of defense by president John Kennedy at the age of 44. He capped his career serving for over a decade as president of the World Bank.

In charge of the Pentagon under presidents Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson from 1961 to 1968, McNamara was one of the key architects of the Vietnam war. However, the war also proved to be his personal undoing.

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Mass Killings Hit a 20-year Low, Northeastern Data Shows — but Public Perception Hasn’t Caught Up

8 December 2025 at 06:46
12/8/25
MASS SHOOTING
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As 2025 winds to a close, new data show a surprising trend: this year is on track to record the fewest mass killings in two decades. That is according to data collected by James Alan Fox, a Northeastern University criminologist and leading expert on mass murder. 

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Future of Geothermal in New Mexico

8 December 2025 at 12:21
12/8/25
ENERGY SECURITY
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New Mexico is known for bringing the heat with its famous green chiles, but a new report points to another source of heat that’s causing excitement. Project Innerspace’s report titled “Future of Geothermal in New Mexico” lays out the opportunities — and challenges — to harnessing the state’s geothermal resources as a reliable, sustained domestic source of energy.

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Aluminum in Vaccines: Separating RFK Jr.’s Claims from Scientific Evidence

8 December 2025 at 10:11
12/8/25
TARGETING SCIENCE
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The US health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr, believes that aluminum in vaccines can cause health issues, such as neurological disorders, allergies and autoimmune diseases. This contradicts scientific evidence from many studies that have confirmed the safety of vaccines and aluminum “adjuvants” – substances that boost vaccines’ effectiveness.

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CDC Advisers Drop Decades-Old Universal Hepatitis B Birth Dose Recommendation, Suggest Blood Testing After One Dose

8 December 2025 at 09:42
12/8/25
TARGETING SCIENCE
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On Friday morning, after contentious discussion, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) voted 8-3 to drop the recommendation for a universal birth hepatitis B vaccine dose and 6-4 to suggest that parents use serologic testing—which detects antibodies in the blood—to determine whether more than one dose of the three-dose series are needed.

Under the first recommendation, only infants born to mothers who test positive for hepatitis B would receive a birth dose, while parents of other babies would be advised to postpone the first dose for at least two months.

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The President Should Not Have a License to Kill

5 December 2025 at 06:46
12/5/25
EXTRAJUDICIAL KILLING
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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.

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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
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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.

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How Does Immigration Affect the U.S. Economy?

5 December 2025 at 06:42
12/5/25
IMMIGRATION
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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.

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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
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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.

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Gun Dealers Are Major Source of Trafficked Firearms

5 December 2025 at 06:38
12/5/25
GUNS
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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.

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

4 December 2025 at 06:36
12/4/25
CRITICAL MINERALS
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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.

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

4 December 2025 at 06:34
12/4/25
POWER GRID
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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.

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

4 December 2025 at 11:24
12/4/25
DEMOCRACY WATCH
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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.

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