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An autopsy of American empire

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An autopsy of American empire

While Washington’s war with Iran drags on, month after month, without any end in sight, the world is witnessing the very real limits of US global power. As President Donald Trump lurches repeatedly from threats of devastation to promises of peace, it’s becoming increasingly clear that US military might is no longer capable of subduing even a mid-sized power like Iran, much less holding the rest of the world in its thrall.

Amid all the drama of air raidsdrone strikes, and naval blockades, there are deeper geopolitical forces at play that lend a lasting historical import to events in the Persian Gulf—dynamics best seen by comparing two newspaper editorials with revealing similarities despite the 80 years separating their publication.

Writing in 1942, during some of Britain’s darkest days in World War II, the editors of the venerable London Times looked far beyond the relentless German attacks on their forces in Egypt or the Nazi U-Boat sinkings of Royal Navy ships in the Atlantic to predict their empire’s future with an uncommon prescience.

With its contradictory motto of “Imperium et Libertas” (Empire and Liberty), the vast British Empire, which still covered a quarter of the globe, had already become what those editors called “a self-liquidating concern.”

Once the “temporary circumstances” that had allowed Britain’s ascent — naval dominance, industrial preeminence, and “the relative weakness of rival states” — faded, that empire’s “ultimate reliance on coercion” could no longer hold.

Ready for self-governance, Britain’s many colonies, the editors suggested, would soon begin breaking away and so eclipse the empire. And that prediction couldn’t have been more accurate. Within five years of that editorial’s publication, the British Empire had already started to break apart.

Writing in a May 2026 edition of The New York Times, contributing editor Christopher Caldwell made a strikingly similar prediction about the future of US global hegemony. Under the provocative headline “America Is Officially an Empire in Decline,” Caldwell noted some unsettling parallels between the fate of America today and Great Britain 80 years ago.

Back then, England was “deindustrializing, overcommitted, complacent,” and found itself “essentially bankrupt” by the end of World War II. Apart from its “ill-fated attempt” to seize the Suez Canal from Egypt in 1956, however, it managed to decolonize in a successful fashion by giving up “territories it could no longer afford.” As he points out, Britain even “wound up on reasonably good terms with its former colonial possessions.”

At the start of his second term as president in 2025, Donald Trump, Caldwell continued, “had a chance of pulling off something similar” by withdrawing “to a less expansive sphere of influence” and “refocusing American attention on the Western Hemisphere.” Caldwell considered that strategy potentially “workable” since “imperial systems, whatever you call them, last only as long as their means are adequate to their ends.”

Instead of keeping to that plan, however, Trump “has overextended the empire dangerously” by his intervention in Iran, which has now become nothing less than a “watershed in the decline of the American empire.”

To test the probability of Caldwell’s prediction coming true, we need to go beyond the immediacy of the Iran crisis to explore both the deeper causes of US global decline and its likely long-term consequences for both the United States and the rest of the world.

Explaining US imperial decline

Since most Americans came late (if at all) to the realization that their country was indeed an imperial power, and a stunningly powerful one at that, they have generally remained oblivious to its aging and the inevitable erosion of global power that accompanies such aging.

Ever since, in the late 18th century, English scholar Edward Gibbon published his monumental, multi-volume study, “The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire”, succeeding imperial rulers have tended to assume that their imperial realms would last, like ancient Rome’s, half a millennium or more. Adolf Hitler, with his dream of “the Thousand-Year Reich,” was hardly the only one to share such an illusion.

But the modern age, with its rapid economic and technological change, has only accelerated imperial decline. Britain’s sprawling global empire lasted just 90 years (1857-1947) and France’s African empire, covering a quarter of that continent, was about the same, while the Soviet empire in Eastern Europe barely lasted 40 years (1945-1989).

So, for the US global imperium to have survived for 80 years (1945-2026) should be considered the most anyone could realistically expect for a modern empire.

Since the US-led global order—exemplified by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and the World Trade Organization (WTO)—had indeed presided over 80 years of sustained global economic growth, there is a distinctly American twist to the British concept of the “self-liquidating concern.”

As the rest of the world enjoyed a rapid economic recovery from the ravages of World War II, America’s share of the global economy declined from an overwhelmingly dominant 50% in 1945 to less than half that figure today.

Using an index called PPP (Purchasing Power Parity) that measures the real value of economic growth, the IMF calculates that, in 2026, China is producing 20% of global economic output, the US just 15%, and the European Union (EU) 14%.

But the relative economic decline of the United States should by no means be the crucial measure of its failure. Quite the opposite, in fact. It should be considered a tribute to Washington’s success in leading the world economy to unprecedented prosperity. In those 80 years since the end of World War II, the US economy has grown fast, but many other nations have grown faster still.

An economic giant that could structure the global economy as it wished in 1945, the US must now negotiate the terms of trade with a host of peer rivals — whether economic powers like China; major players like India and Japan; or a growing number of regional blocs like the European Union, South America’s Mercosur, and Asia’s ASEAN.

Probe deeper for the forces now driving America’s decline and you’ll notice an underlying geopolitical dimension. As I explained in my new book, “Cold War on Five Continents“, the US achieved its global hegemony after World War II by maintaining an unwavering geostrategic dominance over the Eurasian land mass.

Through its military alliances at both axial ends of that vast continent—the multilateral North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in the West and five bilateral defense pacts with countries ranging from Japan to Australia in the east—the US imposed an “Iron Curtain” of 5,000 miles of anti-communist containment across Eurasia.

Using those axial ends as anchors, the US encircled the continent with three naval armadas, hundreds of military bases, and thousands of jet aircraft. With Moscow geopolitically isolated and Beijing still a developing power, Washington could simply sit back and wait for the Soviet Union’s increasingly stagnant socialist economy to collapse and its dozens of restive satellite states to break free—as they all did between 1989 and 1991.

In the 35 years since that great Cold War victory, Washington’s foreign policy elites have pursued policies that might all too accurately be branded “bipartisan mismanagement” of the US geopolitical position in Eurasia.

As home to 70% of the world’s population and an even greater share of its productivity, that continent remains the epicenter of global power (as it has been for the past 500 years). No nation can contend for world leadership without competing for geopolitical influence there.

From 2001 to 2021, both Democratic and Republican administrations oversaw long-term military occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq that cost thousands of American lives, millions of civilian deaths, and trillions of dollars in treasure.

While Washington was wasting an estimated $5.8 trillion on those pointless, profitless wars, China’s foreign currency reserves surged from just $200 billion in 2001 to a massive $4 trillion by 2014. Drawing on such unprecedented reserves, President Xi Jinping launched his trillion-dollar Belt and Road Initiative that quickly laid down a grid of railroads, roads, pipelines, and ports across Eurasia from the Baltic to the South China Sea.

By the time American troops finished their humiliating retreat from Afghanistan in August 2021, China had become the dominant power in Central Asia and the US position in Eurasia was starting to crumble.

In his second term, President Trump’s foreign policy has further weakened the US global position. At the western axial end of the Eurasian continent, he compromised NATO, the largest and longest-lasting alliance in modern military history, by pressing Denmark, a founding member of the alliance, to cede its sovereign territory of Greenland, creating a serious crisis and compelling the Europeans to begin acting autonomously when it came to both trade and defense issues.

At the eastern end of Eurasia, Trump’s intervention in Iran and the blocking of key oil supplies to Asia, thanks to the closing of the Strait of Hormuz, weakened longstanding bilateral alliances with Australia, Japan, the Philippines, and South Korea.

The thousands of missiles the US has fired at Iran have also reduced its ability to defend the island of Taiwan and forced Washington to begin withdrawing stocks of missiles from South Korea—exposing both the limits of its military power and Asia’s lowered priority.

As The New York Times editorial board put it after Donald Trump’s recent Beijing summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping (where the US president showed a “worrisome lack of interest” in Taiwan), “America’s inability to defeat Iran’s much smaller military has raised questions about whether it could help defend Taiwan from a mainland invasion.”

If China ultimately takes that island, the US defensive perimeter in the Pacific would be pushed back from the “first island chain” (Japan-Taiwan-the Philippines) to the “second island chain” (Japan-Guam)—inflicting a major geopolitical blow on the US by crippling its capacity to aid its Asian allies.

More broadly, the Trump administration’s plans, as stated in its recent National Security Strategy, for “a readjustment of our global military presence” by shifting forces into the Western Hemisphere would be tantamount, if fully implemented, to a unilateral surrender in what foreign policy experts have come to call “the new Cold War” with Beijing and Moscow.

Imperial energy

Probe deeper still for the causes of the ongoing all-American imperial decline and you’ll come to the most fundamental but generally least noted factor in the rise and fall of every world empire for the past 500 years: energy innovation.

In the 16th century, Spain and Portugal maximized the caloric output of the human body by developing the slave plantation, whose phenomenal profitability allowed a uniquely cruel form of commercial agriculture to spread from West Africa along the coast of Brazil to the Caribbean and then, of course, to the American South.

A century later, the Dutch mastered wind power, using windmills to saw uniform planks to build efficient sailing ships that won them a commercial empire stretching from the Spice Islands of Indonesia to the island of Manhattan. In the 19th century, Britain’s industrial revolution developed coal-fired steam engines for factories, trains, and ships that facilitated its conquest of colonies covering a quarter of the globe.

After 1945, America’s ascent to global hegemony would be synonymous with the rise of petroleum, quickly supplanting coal as the world’s primary form of energy and leading to repeated US interventions in the Middle East for the past 70 years.

In recent years, however, Beijing has launched a revolution in green energy from the sun and wind whose accelerating pace, driven by its sheer economic efficiency, has the potential to transform much of the global economy, while simultaneously making China the world’s preeminent economic power.

With surprising speed, solar-powered electrical generation has become 41% less expensive (and wind 53% cheaper) than the least expensive form of fossil fuel. In addition, engineering innovations in battery design for both driving and electrical storage are likely to make the cost of carbon-fueled power prohibitively expensive within a decade or less.

Under the Biden administration, Washington invested a trillion dollars to fund America’s baby steps toward a green-energy future. However, as soon as Trump returned to the White House in January 2025, he began working to smother that infant initiative in its cradle beneath a sheaf of executive orders—canceling coastal wind farms, voiding the tax credit for electric vehicles (EVs), and opening vast stretches of US offshore waters for yet more oil and natural gas drilling.

Meanwhile, China increased its total power generation by 16% in 2025, with solar and wind energy accounting for half of its total capacity. And just as China already produces 80% of the global supply of solar panels, so its recent innovations in EV battery design have allowed it to rack up 70% of global electric vehicle production.

While China’s auto industry surged in the last five years to capture 24% of global car production in 2025 (and is projected to reach 35% in just four more years), Detroit’s share has fallen to only 16%, driven in part by its costly retreat from EV production since Trump’s return to office.

Given rapid advances in battery range, charge time, and temperature range, it’s only a matter of years before the low-cost cars rolling out of China’s vast robotic factories supplant legacy brands and come to dominate the global auto market.

With the Detroit vehicle industry, America’s largest manufacturing sector, now struggling to survive (along with other industries wedded to overpriced carbon-generated fuel), the future of much of US manufacturing looks increasingly dim.

The consequences of America’s decline

Yes, the world of a Pax Americana in the previous century (though imperial America never could fully avoid wars) is gone. And a world without active US international leadership will not necessarily be a better place.

Without a single superpower or set of superpowers to backstop otherwise toothless resolutions from the United Nations, international relations in a post-American world order will likely be both more complex and possibly more conflict-ridden as well.

In the new multipolar world likely to emerge in the next decade (if not sooner), even major countries like the United States and China will undoubtedly find themselves exercising their asymmetric power ever closer to home.

While some global areas will suffer from localized rivalries—Beijing versus Tokyo in East Asia, Ankara versus Cairo and Riyadh in the Middle East—regional associations like ASEAN, Mercosur, and the European Union are likely to play an increasingly important role in forging diplomatic consensus and mediating local conflicts.

Instead of the bipolar rivalry of the old Cold War era or American-led interventions in places like AfghanistanPanama, or Kuwait during the more recent decades of its unipolar power, in the future regional rivals will likely wage bitter local wars in hot spots around the globe over boundaries, the control of minerals, water rights, or climate-change refugees.

To take but one example, Ethiopia, an arid, landlocked, overcrowded nation of 140 million people in East Africa, faces potential conflicts with Egypt over the Nile’s headwaters, with Eritrea over port access, and with Somalia over the fate of the breakaway state of Somaliland.

Though their scope might be narrow, regional wars can potentially cause massive human carnage, as shown by the Second Congo War (1998-2003) that ravaged eastern Congo, as neighboring states like Rwanda and warlord armies like the murderous M-23 militia battled over mineral rights, killing an estimated 5.4 million people.

That made it the world’s bloodiest (if least noticed) armed conflict since World War II. Even today, more than 20 years later, warlord armies are still battling for control of the eastern Congo, capturing cities and displacing more than a million refugees.

On the wider world stage, the international institutions that the US created at the peak of its power in the 1940s (the UN, the IMF, and the WTO) might survive. However, the liberal international principles that once inspired Washington’s world order—human rights, humanitarian aid, respect for refugees, women’s rights, and immutable national sovereignty—are likely to fade, even as aspirational ideals. (They already are, of course, in Donald Trump’s America.)

And that will undoubtedly prove to be a genuine loss. After all, even under our current world order, a combination of Western foreign aid, Chinese economic growth, and World Bank loans led to a significant reduction in the percentage of the world’s population living under “extreme poverty” (less than $2.00 a day) from 44% in 1981 to just 9% in 2019.

Now, of course, while leading the West in shifting funds from foreign aid to military defense, the second Trump administration has already abolished the US Agency for International Development (USAID), cutting food and medication aid globally that could cause an extra 14 million deaths by 2030.

Such humanitarian efforts and their supporting principles are already giving way to a far more transactional world order, exemplified by China’s current foreign policy, grounded in mutual self-interest and largely devoid of ethical concerns.

One of the major achievements of Washington’s old order, the avoidance of a world war among the superpowers for more than eight decades, could face increasing strain in the coming years.

Instead of pooling scarce resources to cope with the challenge of climate change, the planet’s leading nations are continuing to raise their military budgets, producing a 13% increase in spending on nuclear weapons in 2023 alone.

To keep pace with China and Russia in a great power rivalry that is clearly in danger of becoming a new Cold War, the US began revamping its nuclear triad in 2010 at a projected cost of $1.7 trillion over the next 30 years.

And mindful that nuclear-armed North Korea remains safe while Iran has been ravaged, even medium-sized states will undoubtedly be seeking the security of nuclear arms, potentially producing a dangerous proliferation of such world-ending weaponry.

Weighing all the changes likely to accompany Washington’s Trump-era retreat from global leadership, I suspect that, surprisingly enough, the world may have good reason to regret the passing of Washington’s world order in the years to come.

Maybe it was growing up on US Army bases where patriotism was pervasive; maybe it was the way I hero-worshipped my dad when he came back from fighting communism in the Korean War; or perhaps it was saluting the US flag every day in Mrs. Stabler’s 6th-grade class.

Whether my view comes from those personal wellsprings or from my professional training as an historian of empires, I’m pretty sure that, within the narrow limits imperialism allows, America’s imperial era did give the world at least some chance for progress.

Despite its many excesses and a frequent failure to honor its own principles, imperial America did offer this planet more chances for change than the great powers that preceded it and possibly the ones likely to succeed it as well. For all those reasons, I say, “Requiescat in pace (rest in peace), Pax Americana, you will be missed.”

Alfred W. McCoy is professor of history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is the author of “In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power.” Previous books include: “Torture and Impunity: The U.S. Doctrine of Coercive Interrogation” (University of Wisconsin, 2012), “A Question of Torture: CIA Interrogation, from the Cold War to the War on Terror (American Empire Project)”, “Policing America’s Empire: The United States, the Philippines, and the Rise of the Surveillance State”, and “The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade.”

This article was first published on Tom Dispatch and republished under Common Dreams’ Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) license.

Hamas delegation arrives in Egypt for talks on advancing Gaza ceasefire

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Hamas delegation arrives in Egypt for talks on advancing Gaza ceasefire

A senior delegation from the Palestinian resistance group, Hamas, arrived Friday evening in Cairo for talks with Egyptian officials on completing the implementation of the first phase of the ceasefire agreement in the Gaza Strip, and establishing mechanisms for entering the second phase, Anadolu reports.

In a statement, Hamas said the delegation is led by Khalil al-Hayya, the movement’s leader in Gaza and head of its negotiating team.

“A new round of negotiations is scheduled to begin Saturday and will last for several days,” the statement said.

It said the talks are set to focus on completing the implementation of the ceasefire, including remaining steps in the first phase and the mechanisms for entering its second phase.

The delegation will meet with “Egyptian officials and mediators to finalize the implementation of the first phase of the ceasefire agreement, halt the repeated Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip, and establish suitable mechanisms for entering the second phase of the agreement,” the statement said.

The movement indicated that the delegation will also meet with Palestinian factions and forces to present a unified national position on various issues and reach a consensus on how to address the challenges facing the Palestinian people.

READ: Israeli strike hits home in Zawaida, Gaza

Hamas noted that the delegation includes Zaher Jabarin, Hamas’ leader in the occupied West Bank, and political bureau members Husam Badran and Ghazi Hamad.

US President Donald Trump announced a 20-point plan in September outlining a ceasefire framework that includes the release of Israeli captives, Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza, the formation of a technocratic administration and the deployment of an international stabilization force, alongside a call for Hamas to disarm.

The first phase of the ceasefire agreement included a ceasefire and prisoner exchange between Israel and Palestinian factions. However, Palestinian sources say Israel has continued to violate the agreement on a near-daily basis.

Under the second phase, Israel is expected to carry out further withdrawals from the territory, while an international stabilization force would assume security responsibilities, including facilitating the delivery of humanitarian aid and reconstruction materials.

Israel’s genocide in Gaza since October 2023 has killed nearly 73,000 Palestinians and injured more than 173,000, most of them women and children, according to Palestinian figures.

Despite a ceasefire that took effect on Oct. 10, 2025, the Israeli army has killed at least 947 Palestinians and injured 2,935 in near-daily attacks, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

READ: Report: Mossad supplied Kurdish forces with weapons seized from Hamas and Hezbollah

OPINION – Endless War Is Not a Strategy

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OPINION – Endless War Is Not a Strategy


Israel must defend itself against Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran, but military strength alone cannot secure the future without a clear diplomatic and strategic plan for the day after

For nearly two years, Israel has been fighting on multiple fronts. Our soldiers continue to risk their lives. Families continue to mourn loved ones. Entire communities have lived under the constant threat of rockets, missiles, drones, and terrorism.

The State of Israel has demonstrated extraordinary resilience and military strength. Our soldiers, reservists, security services, and civilians have faced unprecedented challenges with courage and determination.

But courage cannot substitute for strategy.

Israel cannot afford to remain trapped in endless war. The people of Israel cannot. The Iranian people, who themselves suffer under a regime that prioritizes regional aggression over the well-being of its citizens, cannot.

The Middle East needs a future beyond permanent conflict. Yet any serious discussion about peace must begin with a simple and undeniable truth: Israel cannot be expected to accept insecurity as the price of stability.

For radical Muslims, there is no concept of permanent peace with non-Muslims. Instead, there is the concept of hudna, which refers to a temporary truce or suspension of hostilities rather than a lasting peace agreement.

Today, Israel faces threats on several fronts.

On the southern border, Hamas remains committed to Israel’s destruction. The atrocities of October 7 were not an isolated event. They were the result of an extremist ideology that openly celebrates terrorism and targets innocent civilians. No country in the world would agree to live alongside an armed organization that openly promises future massacres. Israel cannot be expected to do so either.

On the northern border, Hezbollah continues to pose a major threat. Backed, funded, and armed by Iran, Hezbollah has accumulated a massive arsenal of rockets and missiles aimed at Israeli cities and communities. For years, the residents of northern Israel have known no normalcy—living under the persistent threat of attack, with entire communities bearing a heavy and painful price.

Beyond these physical borders stands the central source of instability in the region: Iran.

Iran has deliberately constructed a network of armed proxies across the region—from Gaza to Lebanon, from Syria to Yemen. Rather than investing in the welfare of its own citizens, the regime channels billions into terrorism and military expansion. As long as Tehran believes it can achieve its ambitions through armed proxies and escalation, lasting stability in the region will remain out of reach.

But Israel is fighting another battle as well.

There is a growing international campaign that seeks to portray Israel as the aggressor while ignoring the realities it faces. Too often, international media outlets present images without context, repeat unverified claims, or create a false moral equivalence between a democratic state defending its citizens and terrorist organizations whose stated goal is its destruction.

This battle over truth matters.

When misinformation spreads, it fuels hostility toward Israel, strengthens extremist narratives, and contributes to rising antisemitism around the world. It undermines genuine diplomacy and makes it more difficult for the international community to understand the complex realities on the ground.

Israel faces a double burden: defending its citizens from rockets and missiles, while defending its very legitimacy from systematic distortion and disinformation. That is the reality—and it must be named.

The massacre of October 7 shattered many assumptions. It reminded Israelis that porous borders, weak deterrence, and wishful thinking can carry a devastating cost.

No responsible Israeli government, whether from the right, the center, or the left, can agree to a future in which Hamas remains in power, terrorist armies continue to threaten our borders, and Iran retains the ability to dictate events through its proxies.

These are not partisan positions.

These are not matters of political preference.

They are matters of national survival.

Whether one supports Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu or opposes him is a legitimate democratic debate. Israelis hold deeply different views regarding his leadership, his decisions, and his responsibility for the failures that preceded October 7. Ultimately, those questions will be decided by the Israeli public through democratic elections.

But while political arguments continue, strategic realities do not wait.

Major discussions about the future of the Middle East are taking place right now. Regional arrangements, diplomatic initiatives, security understandings, and negotiations involving key regional actors are often conducted in capitals far from Jerusalem.

This is not a criticism of the United States.

America, like every sovereign nation, acts first and foremost in accordance with its own national interests. That is natural, legitimate, and expected. Every American administration, Republican or Democrat, is accountable to the American people before anyone else.

President Donald Trump entered office promising to end wars and reduce instability in the Middle East. Many people welcomed that aspiration. After decades of conflict, the desire to create a more stable region is understandable.

Yet a deal that leaves Israel vulnerable is not a path to stability. It is a path to the next war, but with an experienced and more powerful enemy.

The question is not whether America will pursue its own interests. The question is whether Israel is doing enough to ensure that its own vital interests are fully represented in the discussions that will shape the future of the region.

Too often, Israel appears to be reacting to developments rather than helping shape them.

A strong Israeli leadership must ensure that decisions affecting Israel’s future are not made without a significant Israeli voice at the table. The future of Gaza, the threat from Iran, security arrangements along our borders, and the broader regional architecture will directly affect the lives of Israeli citizens for generations.

At the same time, military success must eventually be translated into political and strategic achievements.

No nation can thrive in a state of permanent war.

The people of Israel deserve security and a future free from constant threat. The Iranian people deserve a government that invests in their prosperity instead of spending their future on regional aggression.

The Middle East does not need another generation raised amid fear, hatred, and violence.

Israel must remain strong. It must maintain its military superiority. It must never compromise on the security of its citizens.

But strength alone is not enough.

Israel needs security, but it also needs a strategy for the day after.

Because endless war is not a strategy.

Security, stability, and hope are.

The saga of the International Space Station air leak took a worrying turn Friday

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The saga of the International Space Station air leak took a worrying turn Friday

Five of the seven crew members on the International Space Station briefly sought refuge inside a SpaceX return capsule Friday morning as two Russian cosmonauts worked on an air leak on the other end of the complex.

NASA ordered US astronauts Jessica Meir and Jack Hathaway, French astronaut Sophie Adenot, and Russian cosmonaut Andrey Fedyaev into SpaceX’s Crew Dragon Freedom spacecraft around 9 am EST (14:00 UTC) on Friday. The foursome launched aboard the SpaceX crew capsule on the Crew-12 mission in February, and the ship serves as their lifeboat until the crew’s scheduled return to Earth in September.

NASA astronaut Chris Williams, who flew to the station in a Russian Soyuz ferry ship, joined the Crew-12 astronauts inside the Dragon spacecraft.

“All USOS (US Orbital Segment) crew members need to execute … Emergency Procedure 3.4: Crew Dragon, establish Safe Haven,” NASA mission control radioed to the station crew around 9 am. “If we need (you) to suit up, we will do that once we’re inside the Dragon.”

A short time later, a NASA spokesperson posted a statement on X attributing the shelter order to a repair on persistent air leaks on the Russian segment of the space station. For more than half a decade, engineers from Roscosmos and NASA have tracked the leak rate from a transfer tunnel on the back end of Russia’s Zvezda Service Module. The tunnel, known by the Russian acronym PrK, leads to a docking port for Progress resupply and refueling freighters.

Engineers believe the leaks are caused by microscopic cracks in the module’s structure. Russian cosmonauts have repeatedly inspected and attempted to seal the cracks, but a permanent fix has eluded them. After a few months of pressure stability inside the PrK earlier this year, Roscosmos confirmed in May that the air leaks had returned.

“Following new leaks, Roscosmos has elected to proceed with a more extensive repair operation on Friday, June 5,” NASA spokesperson Bethany Stevens wrote on X. “Out of an abundance of caution, NASA has directed all four of the agency’s SpaceX Crew-12 members and NASA astronaut Chris Williams to assume an elevated safety posture in the Dragon spacecraft while the repair is underway.”

Back to normal

After about 90 minutes, the communications officer at mission control in Houston told the crew that they could reopen hatches and reenter the space station. The specific repair task that caused NASA to issue the shelter order was off. “Our Russian colleagues have elected to perform measurements only today. So, with that, we are comfortable backing out of the safe haven config,” mission control told the crew.

“We don’t have help from our counterparts?” Crew-12 commander Jessica Meir asked mission control. “Affirm,” mission control replied.

Those counterparts—Russian cosmonauts Sergey Kud-Sverchkov and Sergei Mikayevwere working at the leak area on the opposite end of the station, some 200 feet away from the Crew Dragon.

Stevens soon posted an update on X, writing that Roscosmos had “paused” the “structural repair efforts” inside the PrK to take more measurements and assess data. “We look forward to working with Roscosmos on a collaborative approach to address the leaks,” Stevens added.

Ars asked two NASA spokespersons for details on the proposed leak repair and why the agency decided that the repair was risky enough to order the US crew members into the Crew Dragon lifeboat. They did not provide answers to these questions as of the time of this publication, but we will add any information we receive to this story.

NASA astronauts Jack Hathaway and Jessica Meir inside the International Space Station’s Kibo laboratory module.

NASA astronauts Jack Hathaway and Jessica Meir inside the International Space Station’s Kibo laboratory module. Credit: NASA

Roscosmos, Russia’s space agency, typically keeps the PrK sealed off from the rest of the space station to isolate the leak from the crew’s living quarters and workstations. This allows the transfer tunnel to be maintained at a lower pressure than the rest of the station. When cosmonauts need to access the area, such as for inspections, repairs, or transferring cargo to or from a docked Progress supply vessel, they pressurize the PrK to match the pressure inside the rest of the station. This allows the cosmonauts to open up the PrK to complete their work.

A statement posted by Roscosmos on its Telegram channel suggests this is what was happening early Friday. “Specialists from the Russian ISS segment’s main operations control team detected a leak in the chamber” during pressurization of the PrK.

“Upon inspecting the transfer chamber, cosmonauts identified two potential air leak sites,” Roscosmos said. “The first site was promptly sealed by applying an initial layer of the two-component sealant compound Germetall-1. The second site is located on the conical section of the transfer chamber; preparations to seal it are currently underway.”

Russian and NASA officials also did not say what compelled Roscosmos to plan an immediate repair after discovering the two potential leak sites on Friday. They also did not say when cosmonauts might try again to patch the leak, or if any future repair effort might again force the US crew members to take shelter.

Roscosmos said there is “no threat to crew safety or onboard systems,” and the pressure inside the station “remains stable and is being maintained at the nominal level.”

EU launches major tech push to break US and China dependence

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EU launches major tech push to break US and China dependence


The European Commission has presented a sweeping tech sovereignty package to boost homegrown technologies and reduce dependency on American and Chinese companies. Whether it will make a meaningful difference — and how the two superpowers will react — remain open questions.

“We live in a world where geopolitics and technology are inseparable. Those who champion technological innovation will shape the future, and we must ensure that Europe plays a leading role in this,” European Commission Executive Vice President Henna Virkkunen said.

The package seeks to boost Europe’s domestic tech sector, with a heavy focus on cloud infrastructure, AI services, open source and chips.

The EU imports most of its tech services and products from abroad. The digital market is dominated by US giants such as Google, Microsoft and Apple, and Chinese conglomerates such as Alibaba and TikTok-owner ByteDance.

In his landmark report on the languishing state of the European economy, former Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi argued that most of the recent divergence in GDP growth between the EU and the US could be explained by digital technologies.

Having missed the first wave of the digital economy — the internet-driven services boom — Draghi warned that Europe’s last chance to rejoin the international tech race was not to be missed, namely the transformative potential of artificial intelligence.

While growing dependency on foreign technologies had been widely known among European decision-makers for decades, US President Donald Trump’s assertive trade agenda and China’s willingness to weaponise such dependencies have provided fresh momentum.

Will Brussels’ move be enough to shift the dial, or is it too little too late? And what will be the economic cost of severing deeply entrenched dependencies if the EU draws the ire of Washington and Beijing?

What’s in the package?

The main target of the European Commission’s proposal is the cloud sector, which provides the physical infrastructure underpinning most digital services. Amazon, Microsoft and Google account for 80% of the European market, with EU-based providers relegated to the margins.

The draft law introduces four different levels of digital sovereignty that public authorities must consider when purchasing cloud services, depending on how sensitive the use case is.

The highest tier, covering sectors such as defence and healthcare, would effectively bar non-European companies from winning public contracts. The aim is to prevent a so-called “kill switch” scenario, the risk that a foreign government might simply cut off access to hospitals or fighter jets.

For MEP Axel Voss (EPP/Germany), the Commission’s approach is both bold and pragmatic. “Building genuine European cloud and AI sovereignty is overdue, and giving our providers a fair seat at the table in strategic public tenders is the right instinct,” he said.

Europe also needs to catch up on chips — the fundamental components at the heart of almost every electronic device. The most advanced chips, used to develop cutting-edge AI technologies, are designed in the US and produced in Taiwan or South Korea.

After the first Chips Act failed to significantly bring semiconductor factories back to Europe through state subsidies, the Commission is trying again — this time focusing on stimulating demand for European chips, on the assumption that supply will follow.

Certain key sectors, such as automotive, will also be required to diversify their chip suppliers in certain circumstances, as part of a broader effort to reduce reliance on Chinese-subsidised producers accused of flooding the market through dumping.

Will it be effective?

The guiding principle of the initiative is AI — the transformative technology that, much like the internet before it, is reshaping the digital economy. Cloud data centres and chips provide the essential infrastructure for the next generation of AI.

Yet the AI market is dominated by the likes of OpenAI, Anthropic and DeepSeek. A European preference in lucrative defence contracts could serve as a lifeline for Mistral AI, the only EU-based company at the cutting edge of the AI race.

The EU lags significantly behind in data centre construction needed to meet expected demand for AI services in the coming years, held back by a mix of slow permitting, high energy costs and a scarcity of available land.

“Europe cannot regulate its way out of technological dependency,” MEP Matthias Ecke (S&D/Germany) told reporters. “It must build its own capacity, overcoming one-sided dependencies and restoring a genuine choice for businesses and consumers alike.”

At the same time, the EU is set to join a US-led initiative, Pax Silica, to secure chip supply chains, in recognition that Europe cannot do without Nvidia chips in the short term.

That dependency could nonetheless prove self-perpetuating: regulators and rivals warn that Nvidia tends to build a closed ecosystem that is difficult to break away from.

Will there be a backlash?

The concept of technological sovereignty originated in French defence circles, rooted in the idea of developing an autonomous nuclear deterrent. The debate spilled over into digital technologies — given their dual-use potential — during Trump’s first term.

A stark wake-up call for EU policymakers came when, after the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the US administration sanctioned several ICC officials — cutting them off from American services woven into daily life, such as Visa, Amazon and Uber.

As Washington has grown more explicit about weaponising critical dependencies, concerns about retaliation against any treatment of US firms deemed unfair have mounted.

Commission insiders, however, consider the US front largely pacified by the EU-US Turnberry agreement, which broadly favours the American side, and say the tone behind the scenes in recent weeks has been far more constructive than the public outbursts suggest.

On the China front, the tech sovereignty debate is just one thread in a far broader tapestry of strained relations between Brussels and Beijing, with discussions around a potential trade war reaching a fever pitch in recent weeks.

Both Washington and Beijing have weaponised strategic dependencies in what analyst Mark Leonard has called the Age of Unpeace. Yet neither superpower can afford to lose access to Europe’s main strength: one of the world’s largest and most lucrative markets.

Where is Europe headed?

In the complex chip value chain, Europe still controls critical chokepoints, most notably through Dutch company ASML, which holds a near-monopoly on the industrial machinery essential to chip production.

The package also includes a strategy to leverage open-source technologies, which could help the EU overcome its fragmented tech landscape — one that has yet to produce a company capable of directly competing with Silicon Valley’s giants with an integrated offering.

Still, the lack of a scalable European single market and access to capital are frequently cited by European start-ups as the main reasons they move abroad — issues the Commission is attempting to address through the EU Inc. proposal and the capital markets union.

In short, the EU faces structural problems dragging its tech sector back. The sovereignty package addresses some of them while attempting to leverage Europe’s own strengths, conscious that complete autonomy in a globalised world is unrealistic.

For instance, Japan coined the concept of “strategic indispensability,” which emphasises controlling critical leverage points.

“The target is to achieve something visible by 2030,” Virkkunen said. “80% of technology is coming from outside Europe. We will not change that overnight.”

Source: Euronews

Trauma porn: buying and selling someone else’s scam-center hell

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Trauma porn: buying and selling someone else’s scam-center hell

In January 2026, the Chinese studio Jade Flame released a first-person interactive game on Steam called “Blood Money: Lethal Eden.” For US$8.99, you get to walk through the story of a trafficking victim trapped inside a scam compound in Southeast Asia. By May 2026, the game had a 93% positive rating on the platform.

Around the same time, Gavesh — a real person who survived one of those compounds in Myanmar — told a reporter: “This is not a game, this is our life.”

This is not a review of a video game. It’s a structural reading of the moment we’re in, for which Blood Money happens to be the cleanest clinical sample of recent years. It’s a look at how we learned to build not just games, but worlds where blood on a screen feels more real than the real thing — and how the hyperreal version of suffering ends up replacing the actual suffering.

The entertainment industry pulls off the perfect crime against reality and sells us our own moral collapse back at retail price.

Context: behind the simulation

Before we get to the architecture of this product, we need to register the scale of the real disaster. The scam compounds in Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos are not a fictional setting.

According to the report “A Wicked Problem”, published by the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights on February 20, 2026, at least 300,000 people are being held against their will in compounds like these across Southeast Asia. The criminal industry behind them is estimated to bring in $64 billion a year, $43.8 billion of which comes from the Mekong basin alone.

The victims of trafficking to these compounds are lured with promises of legitimate work. English speakers from any origin country are highly sought after as they open the door to scamming affluent victims globally. Thailand will often be given as the location, as Thailand sounds safer and more mainstream than Myanmar, Laos or Cambodia. Once the victims of trafficking arrive in Thailand, they are transferred across the border to their real destinations.

There has been a crackdown on the compounds in Cambodia this year, and many of the trapped forced scammers have been freed or were able to escape. The Cambodian government and many foreign governments have done little to help these people get home, and large numbers of these ex-scammers are now sleeping on the streets of the capital Phnom Penh.

Charities which support the victims of compound cyberslavery in the region include Global Advance Projects and Blue Dragon.

In the compounds, people work 16-hour shifts under threat of violence, scamming strangers around the world. The UN Human Rights Office has documented torture, sexual violence, and what survivors call “water prisons” — used as punishment when targets aren’t met.

Developers turned this into raw material for a commercial product priced under nine US dollars.

Act 1. The design of emptiness: how the question ‘why?’ died

In the history of psychology there’s a famous study: the Stanford Prison Experiment, 1971. Philip Zimbardo put 24 students into a simulated prison and watched what happened to them. The experiment had to be shut down on the sixth day of a planned fourteen, because the simulation became too real and the ethical line had been crossed.

Fifty-five years separate Stanford 1971 from Blood Money 2026, but the basic setup is the same: you give a person a role inside a space of violence. The difference is that Jade Flame runs the same experiment on thousands of players with no oversight and no way to stop it. Part of the games industry has, deliberately, taken apart the ethical infrastructure that was supposed to be standard after Stanford.

As Norie Tsutsui — Japanese writer behind The Redesign Log, a former government official turned IT producer — points out, the problem with Blood Money is the complete absence of any ethical vision.

Designers of serious games used to ask themselves a basic question: what is this game actually putting into question? The Ace Attorney series interrogates the very idea of justice. Oreshika makes the player work through a cycle of inherited pain. In those projects, the ethical frame and the capacity for empathy were not decorations. They were the core of the design.

Blood Money asks nothing. The real suffering of 300,000 people was gutted of any ethical content, leaving only the pure mechanics of revenue extraction. Games like this are usually defended on the grounds that they “raise awareness.”

And in the peer-reviewed literature, there isn’t a single study showing that mass-market violent games increase players’ empathy toward victims. The dominant empirical findings, including recent longitudinal studies by Chinese researchers (Dou and Zhang, 2025; Teng et al., 2019), point the other way: interactive violence leads to desensitization, reduced empathic response, and increased moral disengagement.

What we’re looking at is a moment when the question “why are we making this hyperreality?” simply disappeared, replaced by functional consumption. “Awareness” became a commercial alibi — a retroactive defense against criticism. Former US federal prosecutor Tom O’Malley put it bluntly:

“I don’t think Grand Theft Auto raised awareness about auto theft and carjacking,” O’Malley said. “There’s no social redeeming value in these sick games. You’d have to be somewhat demented to play them.”

The GTA series has sold over 215 million copies, but no study has shown that its players ended up more informed about urban crime or car theft. What the procedural logic of the game rewards is exactly the behavior the surface narrative claims to condemn.

Act 2. The delightful catastrophe as the highest stage of the market

Why does the hyperreal version of pain and suffering keep pushing the real one out of the frame? The answer lives in Jean Baudrillard’s thinking. The actual reality of the scam compounds in Asia is too heavy, too dirty, too hard to grasp for the average consumer to look at directly. Real suffering demands empathy and responsibility.

Hyperreality, on the other hand, takes that humanitarian crisis, runs it through aesthetic filters, and serves it back as something you can actually consume. Following Baudrillard’s logic, that is the “delightful catastrophe” — the state in which horror gets objectified and turned into a routine marketing tool. Catastrophe becomes lovable, as long as there’s a screen between you and it.

The steam tags for Blood Money include “Drama,” “Casual,” “Life Sim” and “Visual Novel” — the same taxonomy used by dating sims. The main female characters are sexualized, and the choice architecture is built around the tagline: “Will you rule with beauty, or betray for life?” This is not documentary. This is trauma porn at its purest, where someone else’s pain becomes a flavor — a marketing hook to sell immersion.

Susan Sontag described the mechanism of all this beautifully in her book “Regarding the Pain of Others”: in our culture, shock has become a leading stimulus of consumption and a source of value. We’ve learned to build worlds where violence looks immaculate, because aestheticizing horror strips it of moral weight. Sontag warned us: when we feel sympathy in front of a screen, what we are really doing is announcing our own innocence — and our complete powerlessness.

Platforms like Steam (Valve) wash their hands of all this. They hand the ethical judgment to user filters and review scores, and only step in when payment systems (Visa, Mastercard) start applying pressure. The 93% positive rating for Blood Money is a measure of customer satisfaction, not of player awareness.

The market has figured out how to extract a profit margin out of someone else’s slavery — packaged, domesticated, sold as a clean digital experience. As Oak, another survivor, put it: “It feels like our pain is being commodified. Developers profit from a theme that, in reality, destroys lives.”

Act 3. The perfect crime: the final victory of consumer society

When the hyperreal has completely replaced the real, the diagnosis is hard to avoid: consumer society has won. Baudrillard called this stage the “perfect crime.”

The perfect crime is the murder of reality itself, where the body was never found, there is no obvious killer, no motive, and the forgery becomes more real than the original — what he calls integral reality. The team at Jade Flame, by turning torture into a product, didn’t just make something morally questionable.

They killed the reality of the suffering of 300,000 people and replaced it with a simulacrum that, as it turns out, some people enjoy. In a perfect crime, the perfection of the forgery is the criminal act itself. Baudrillard wrote that within this logic, humanity ends up being both the killer and the victim: the player voluntarily kills off their own humanity by going into the simulation, and becomes the victim of the same digital alienation.

Baudrillard pushed one more uncomfortable idea: virtualization, he said, is a suicide project — quiet, voluntary, but a slow erasure of the subject all the same. In 1971, at Stanford, participants broke under the pressure of their environment, and the breaking hurt. In 2026, thousands of players willingly pay so that a piece of code will lift the burden of being a living, feeling person off their shoulders.

Blood Money delivers exactly what modern society has been quietly wanting: a perfect refuge from being human. We’re so tired of the fractal era — the world of chaos, endless global crises, information overload, what Baudrillard called the state of being “after the orgy” — that we’re happy to hand our right to empathy and moral choice over to the algorithms.

A genuine awareness game (think This War of Mine, or Papers, Please) always puts the player in a position of weakness, punishes complicity in the system of violence, and refuses to give you a power fantasy. Blood Money does the opposite. It rewards the player with “perfect endings” and the illusion of control. This is the procedural logic of exploitation, in pure form.

Conclusion

We are entering a period where the line between someone else’s grief and our own entertainment has been erased. The industry has learned to build worlds whose technological polish is inversely proportional to their ethical content.

The problem with Jade Flame isn’t malice. It’s that they took the absence of a moral frame and scaled it up into a business model. To follow Norie Tsutsui’s point a bit further: in this kind of design, ethics starts to look like a tax. Stripping it out makes the product simpler, faster, and commercially more convenient.

Blood Money: Lethal Eden is not a glitch in the system. It is not an unfortunate anomaly. It is a mirror of a consumer society that has reached its final stage: feeding on someone else’s grief. The main product of this assembly line is not the lines of code or the visual novels about Chinese scam compounds.

The main product is not the game — it’s the state the player ends up in: a person being offered the amputation of their own capacity for compassion as a form of interactive experience.

And as long as we keep believing the commercial fairy tale that simulations like this “teach” us anything or “raise awareness,” Baudrillard’s perfect crime will keep going, unpunished, with the silent approval of the majority.

While we argue about the nature of simulacra and the limits of ethics, Gavesh — a real person, a survivor of the hell in Myanmar — says something that needs no academic footnote: “This is not a game, this is our life.

But the cold logic of hyperreality is that this truth no longer breaks anything. In the world after the orgy, the voice of the victim doesn’t stop the assembly line — it becomes its best advertising tagline. The perfect crime of Jade Flame works precisely because reality has been killed and its body is now on the shelf.

The world hears Gavesh and keeps buying anyway, because we’ve trained ourselves to consume someone else’s life like a tasteful digital delicacy, in full safety, in complete moral detachment. And as long as the illusion sells for $8.99, nobody needs reality at all.

References

UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. (2026). “A Wicked Problem”: Seeking Human Rights-Based Solutions to Trafficking into Cyber Scam Operations in South-East Asia. Geneva: OHCHR.

Democratic Voice of Burma. (2026, May). Scam centre survivors criticise Steam video games that closely depict real-life compounds. Republished from ABC News (Australia).

Dou, Y., & Zhang, M. (2025). Longitudinal associations between media violence exposure and aggressive behavior among Chinese adolescents: The mediating role of rumination and empathy. Current Psychology, 44(7), 6066–6078.

Baudrillard, J. (1996). The Perfect Crime (C. Turner, Trans.). London: Verso. (Original work published 1995)

This article first appeared on The Dark Side of Development Substack and is republished here with kind permission. Become a The Dark Side of Development subscriber here.

How a USB-connected speaker can infect a PC without ever being touched

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How a USB-connected speaker can infect a PC without ever being touched

Operating system makers take many steps to prevent their wares from accepting commands from remote devices. The safeguards, designed to thwart malicious attacks, typically require hackers to jump through all kinds of hoops to bypass the measures. But what if remote code execution were as simple as being within Bluetooth range of a speaker connected to the targeted device?

It turns out it can, at least when the speaker is a Sound Blaster Katana V2X sold by Singapore-based Creative Technologies. The speaker, which sells for $283, is widely acclaimed with numerous reviews showering praise on the sound and performance of it and its predecessor, the Sound Blaster V2.

A PC-pwning proxy

Researcher Rasmus Moorats stumbled on the hack by accident, after he purchased a Katana V2X, a soundbar that connects to PCs, Macs, and Linux devices over USB or Bluetooth. Moorats was curious if he could create a Linux tool that communicated with his speaker. He discovered he could do so through CTP, a proprietary mechanism he guesses is short for Creative Transport Protocol.

CTP allows devices connected via Bluetooth or USB to send commands to the speaker, such as changing LED colors and equalizer settings. CTP also allows the connected devices to receive responses from the speaker.

To Moorat’s surprise, his Bluetooth device was able to connect to the speaker, which was connected to a PC via USB, without any authentication. Not only that, but his Bluetooth device didn’t have to be paired first. Also surprising: One of the CTP commands, labeled “upload new firmware to device,” allowed him to replace the official firmware with his own custom one. The firmware reflashing didn’t use code signing or other measures to prevent the loading of unofficial code.

After successfully replacing the firmware with a replacement image that did nothing more than display the word “patched” on the speaker’s LED display, the researcher got to wondering what else a hacker might do. So he turned his attention to FreeRTOS, the open source operating system that ran the Katana V2X. It contained a set of HID functions for allowing the speaker to act as a human interface device, a classification that includes keyboards, mice, and webcams. The speaker implemented a limited HID that allowed for things like changing the volume and playing or pausing sound, but little else.

The researcher discovered that he could change the speaker’s USB descriptor set, which is essentially a report that informs devices about the capabilities of a USB- or Bluetooth-connected peripheral. He was able to augment the existing descriptor set with a second one that reported the speaker being a keyboard. Then he used code already included in the firmware to streamline the process of sending keypresses.

All of this gave Moorats an idea: What if he used his device to send commands to the speaker that used the HID to pass them along to the connected PC? After some trial and error, he found that he could. In a blog post published on Wednesday, he wrote:

Chaining it all together, I was able to totally remotely, over the air, upload a custom firmware to my speaker which I hadn’t paired with, which would reboot, flash the custom firmware, and after rebooting type in the command echo pwned and execute it.

Credit: Rasmus Moorats

In a real attack scenario, I would execute the keystrokes for opening powershell.exe or similar and paste an actually malicious one-liner into that, but as a proof of concept, this was more than enough for me. A real attacker would also likely disable the routine for updating the firmware in both normal and recovery mode, making it impossible to wipe the malicious firmware from the device or patch it in the future.

This is worsened by the fact that Bluetooth is always on for the speaker, even in sleep mode, with no apparent way to disable it.

Before the speaker and USB-connected device can interact, they must successfully complete a challenge-and-response authentication procedure. Since the devices perform this handshake automatically each time the software boots, this isn’t usually a problem for the hacker. In certain cases, however, such as when the Katana V2X app isn’t open on the connected device, it’s a requirement.

Nonetheless, the authentication is a simple enough hurdle to clear, because the correct response can be extracted from the app binary that ships with the speaker. Surprisingly, no such challenge and response is required for Bluetooth-connected devices.

Moorat reported his findings to Creative Technologies, but never received a response. He then brought in CERT Singapore to intervene. Eventually, the organization got a response from the company. It said company engineers didn’t regard the behavior as a vulnerability. The researcher tested the attack against a connected Windows machine.

It bears repeating that the hacks described can be carried out only when the attacker is within Bluetooth range of the speaker. That’s a significant requirement that limits attacks to neighbors, housemates, or people in offices that are adjacent to the speaker.

Still, the ability to turn a Bluetooth device into a PC-pwning proxy and remote bugging device doesn’t exactly evoke warm and fuzzy feelings. It also raises the question: What other Bluetooth devices open users to the same attacks?

North Carolina Democrats Propose Changes to Block GOP Power Transfers and Secrecy

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North Carolina Democrats Propose Changes to Block GOP Power Transfers and Secrecy

Democratic lawmakers in North Carolina introduced a trio of constitutional amendments this week aimed at protecting traditional powers of the state’s governor and reforming oversight of its court system.

The effort was prompted in part by ProPublica’s reporting, including an investigation that found that over nearly a decade, Republican lawmakers had pushed through law after law shrinking the powers of North Carolina’s governor, always a Democrat during that time.

At a press conference on Wednesday, the bills’ sponsors readily acknowledged that the initiatives are unlikely to pass, at least in the current legislative session: Republicans hold majorities in North Carolina’s House and Senate.

But in proposing the measures as changes to the state constitution, the group of eight Democrats said their goal was to make them less vulnerable to the persistent partisan warfare that has engulfed the narrowly divided swing state.

Republicans “won’t always be in the majority,” said Rep. Phil Rubin, the primary sponsor of one bill. “And when they’re not, they’re going to suddenly think these are great rules. So let’s do them now.”

Republican leaders in the House, Senate and court system did not respond to requests for comment on the bills.

Experts have long maintained that Republican power grabs have thwarted the will of North Carolina voters, removing the Democratic governor’s control or partial control over numerous boards, entities and executive prerogatives and leaving him the nation’s weakest. (Republican officials have defended the shifts, pointing out that voters also elected a GOP legislative majority.)

Rubin’s measure would bar the legislature from stripping away additional gubernatorial powers, as well as block majority leaders from what he called “government by ambush” — springing major legislation on the minority and public without notice.

“ProPublica’s reporting shows the perils of not having this law,” Rubin said. Voters should have “the opportunity to secure their constitution, demand absolute transparency in lawmaking and ensure that people, not backroom deals, have the final say.”

The two other constitutional amendments unveiled this week target aspects of the judicial system.

The first, authored by House Rep. Marcia Morey, would make disciplinary hearings and sanctions by the courts’ internal watchdog, the Judicial Standards Commission, public.

GOP rules currently cloak the commission’s work in secrecy. Behind closed doors, ProPublica revealed, the majority-Republican state Supreme Court quashed the commission’s recommendations that two Republican judges who’d admitted to committing egregious conduct violations be publicly reprimanded. (Spokespeople for the North Carolina Supreme Court and the Judicial Standards Commission declined to comment or respond to a detailed list of questions about the matter.)

Morey’s bill would also change who appoints the commission’s members, a step she called critical to preventing the “weaponization” of its work.

Currently, Republican legislative leaders and Paul Newby, the state’s conservative chief justice, appoint a majority of the commission’s members. As ProPublica has reported, in 2023 Newby encouraged the commission to investigate a Black Democratic justice who’d criticized his decision to effectively shut down a racial equity commission. (Newby, as well as spokespeople for the court and the Judicial Standards Commission, declined to comment for the story.)

Morey’s measure would divide commission appointments equally among the chief justice, the governor and the North Carolina State Bar. “Who makes decisions about discipline and who appoints the decision-makers,” she said, are critical to making the system “fair and effective.”

The second bill, sponsored by Rep. Deb Butler, would disqualify state Supreme Court justices from hearing cases in which family members are parties. Justice Phil Berger Jr. has caused controversy by ruling in multiple cases in which his father, the leader of the state Senate, is a defendant in his legislative capacity. (Berger referred recusal requests on these cases to the Republican majority on the Supreme Court, which ruled he could participate.)

Butler’s measure would also compel justices to disclose more information about large stock transactions, outside sources of income and sponsored travel. A ProPublica investigation found Newby didn’t disclose a trip to a luxurious Hawaiian resort, paid for by a conservative judicial education program. Newby and court spokespeople did not respond to requests for comment about his decision not to disclose the trip.

Butler described her bill as an effort to restore public trust. “People deserve complete confidence in the integrity of their court,” she said.

In the unlikely event that the bills pass, the public would then have the chance to vote on them in November. If not, the sponsors said, they’d revive them in the next session, by which time even some Republican strategists think that a blue wave may have flipped the North Carolina House.

“We’re committed to following through on these bills to ensure fairness and impartiality in our courts and legislature,” Morey said. “This should be the norm, not the partisan bias we have now.”

JonBenét Ramsey Housekeeper Dead at 82

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JonBenét Ramsey Housekeeper Dead at 82


A former Ramsey family housekeeper who was once pulled into the never-ending mystery surrounding JonBenét Ramsey’s murder has died.

Linda Hoffman-Pugh, who worked for John and Patsy Ramsey before the 6-year-old beauty queen was found dead in the family’s Boulder, Colorado, home, died on May 2 at age 82.

Her death closes another chapter in one of America’s most haunting unsolved murder cases.

Hoffman-Pugh was once looked at by investigators after JonBenét was found dead in the basement of her parents’ home on Dec. 26, 1996. She was later cleared by authorities and was never charged in connection with the killing.

But her name remained tangled in the case for years.

The former housekeeper later sued John and Patsy Ramsey after they raised questions about her in their book, The Death of Innocence: The Untold Story of JonBenét’s Murder and How Its Exploitation Compromised the Pursuit of Truth.

Her attorneys claimed at the time that the Ramseys made “deliberate false statements” that made Hoffman-Pugh look as if she may have been involved in the child’s murder.

A federal court dismissed the lawsuit, and the decision was later upheld on appeal.

Despite the legal battle, John Ramsey later defended Hoffman-Pugh and said his late wife Patsy did not believe the housekeeper would have harmed their daughter.

He previously said Patsy told him, “If Linda was involved, she would never hurt JonBenét.”

Hoffman-Pugh also publicly questioned why Patsy would have treated her warmly after JonBenét’s death if she really believed the housekeeper had anything to do with it.

In a 1999 interview with The Daily Camera, Hoffman-Pugh said, “Why would she think I’d do something like that and then invite me to the memorial service? Why would she hug me at the service?”

Her death comes as more and more people connected to the decades-old case have passed away.

Earlier this year, Dr. Henry Lee, the forensic expert who searched for DNA evidence during the early stages of the case, died at age 87.

Patsy Ramsey died of ovarian cancer in 2006, still not knowing who killed her daughter.

Retired detective Lou Smit, who was hired by John Ramsey and became convinced an intruder was responsible, died in 2010.

Detective Tom Haney Jr., who once questioned Patsy Ramsey during the investigation, died in 2025 at age 77.

A neighbor who claimed she heard a terrifying scream the night JonBenét was killed also died before the case was ever solved.

One source told RadarOnline that the deaths are making the already difficult case even harder.

“These people are dying, and justice is just fading away,” the source said. “With all these witnesses dying, they are going to have a tough time prosecuting this case if and when they make an arrest.”

JonBenét was just 6 years old when she was found murdered in the basement of her family’s home the day after Christmas.

Her death became one of the most infamous cold cases in American history.

Nearly 30 years later, no one has ever been convicted.

John Ramsey, now in his 80s, has continued to push for answers and has repeatedly criticized the Boulder Police Department for how the case was handled in the beginning.

He has accused investigators of focusing too quickly on the family instead of properly exploring other leads.

In a previous interview, John claimed police made up their minds “day one” that he and Patsy were somehow responsible.

He said the district attorney later told the family that investigators believed the Ramseys “didn’t act right” on the morning JonBenét was reported missing.

John has also pushed for advanced DNA testing and investigative genetic genealogy, the same kind of technology that helped crack other long-cold cases, including the Golden State Killer case.

He has said he would even help raise money to pay for the testing if needed.

“I am absolutely convinced that’s the gold standard today,” John previously told Fox News Digital. “So I’ve been pushing that pretty hard in terms of what I think ought to happen.”

He added, “To me, it’s a no-brainer that it would be done, but I don’t know how to make it happen. All I can do is ask.”

Kenny Beck, a former Alabama deputy sheriff and patrol officer turned detective, has since joined the effort to try to solve the case.

But with Hoffman-Pugh now gone, another person tied to the mystery has taken her secrets to the grave.

And for JonBenét Ramsey’s family, the central question remains just as chilling as it was in 1996.

Who killed the little girl in the basement?

Germany living on yesterday’s success

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Germany living on yesterday’s success

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Stagnation problem is worse than it looks for Berlin
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Japan’s yen defense runs up against financial limits
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Ukraine’s drone war fuels Russian calls for escalation
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