- The US actually abstained
in a UN Security Council vote on a resolution calling for a ceasefire
in Gaza for the duration of Ramadan. Since no other permanent member
exercised their veto power either, the resolution passed; naturally, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threw a huge hissy fit. But it makes it seem like Israel's recent conduct is too much even for the Americans; whether this is for principled reasons (i.e. seeing the ongoing devastation of Gaza as beyond the pale) or pragmatic ones (i.e. seeing Israel becoming a foreign policy liability for the US) is for the reader to decide.
- An appeals court in New York State has given Donald Trump a huge break, lowering the amount he must post as bond in the civil fraud case to $175 million and giving him another 10 days to come up with the money. Meanwhile Trump Media and Technology Group, the parent company of Truth Social, is going public tomorrow, potentially providing Trump with a huge cash injection just when he needs it. It's almost as if the rich are governed by different rules than you or I.
- Four Tajik citizens have been arrested for the concert hall attack outside Moscow. The Russians are doubling down on their claim that the suspects were trying to escape to Ukraine through a "window" prepared for them on the Ukrainian side; how the Ukrainians are supposed to have done this in a war zone where much of their border territory is occupied by Russian troops and local allies has not been explained. Given that the suspects had reportedly undergone some in-depth interrogation, we might not be able to rely on what they might have said about Ukrainian involvement (or their own involvement, for that matter). As to the potential impact on Putin, well, potentially not much.
- Houston's approach to managing homelessness, which they call "The Way Home", has won much praise as one of the most successful in North America. Both Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew and Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham are taking notes; hopefully this can be implemented here, since we have a very serious problem here.
- Elon Musk's defamation suit against the Center for Countering Digital Hate, who critically examined X/Twitter's moderation policies with regard to hate speech, has been dismissed by a federal court.
- Churches, and American Baptist churches in particular, sometimes get a bad rap (not without cause). Gethsemani Baptist Church in San Luis, though, has made it their mission to feed anyone, without question. Sounds like the kind of thing Jesus would approve of, right? Perhaps, but apparently it isn't something that the City of San Luis approves of; the church is suing the city for harassing them by what they say are misuse of zoning laws.
- American TV actor Forrie J. Smith apparently got kicked off a plane after refusing to sit next to someone who was wearing a mask. Exactly how someone else exercising their freedom to wear a mask is supposed to harm him is anybody's guess; perhaps it's more that it's a perverse form of "virtue signalling" on his part (for those who think that refusing to wear a mask is a virtue, at least).
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