- South Korea's Ministry of National Defense is giving medals to 11 soldiers who refused unlawful orders when President Yoon Suk Yeol attempted to declare martial law last year. This has not been without controversy; some soldiers and online commenters fear that rewarding disobedience and encouraging soldiers to think for themselves will erode military discipline and even harm national security. I'd wager that most of those complaints come from Yoon's rightwing supporters.
- The control tower at the airport in the Los Angeles suburb of Burbank was unstaffed Monday evening, after all the controllers scheduled for that shift called in sick. Of course, when controllers are being expected to work despite not getting paid due to the government shutdown, stuff like this is bound to happen. ATC operations for the airport were being handled out of San Diego.
- The home of South Carolina judge Diane Goodstein was destroyed by fire on Saturday; she was not home at the time of the fire but her husband, son, and one other relative were seriously injured. While arson has not been confirmed as the cause of the fire, Goodstein had received death threats in recent weeks after ruling against the federal Department of Justice last month. The DOJ had requested detailed personal information of over three million registered voters, ostensibly to prevent voter fraud; Goodstein had ruled that this violated privacy rights.
- California governor Gavin Newsom has signed into law a bill that allows drivers in ridesharing companies like Uber and Lyft to unionize. To placate the companies he also signed a measure that significantly cuts their insurance requirements.
- Newly appointed French prime minister Sébastien Lecornu, a member of President Emmanuel Macron's centrist Renaissance party, has resigned mere hours after being appointed, after concluding that he would be unable to win the confidence of the country's parliament. Left leaning parliamentarians are calling for Macron to appoint one of their number as prime minister; National Rally leader Marine Le Pen is calling for snap parliamentary elections and for Macron's resignation. Jean-Luc Mélenchon's far-left La France Insoumise party is making the same demand as Le Pen.
- The Trump regime has cancelled nearly $8 billion in clean energy projects. This in itself is par for the course; one thing that stands out though is that all of the states affected voted for Kamala Harris in the 2024 election. Presumably the regime is aware that the projects are creating badly needed jobs in red states, and they're leery of angering those states until they've tightened their grip on power. It's reminiscent of mid-20th century Quebec premier Maurice Duplessis, who paved roads right up to the boundaries of constituencies that voted for his party while leaving them unpaved in places that voted for the opposition.
- An executive order from Trump earlier this year has targeted 100 million acres of forest for logging. This order was followed by a memo from agriculture secretary Brooke Rollins that specifically identifies the Wayne National Forest, Ohio's only national forest, as a site for lumber production. Over 80% of the forest has deemed suitable for logging, which could mean the end of the forest as we know it.
- A 17 year old boy has been charged with two counts of first degree murder after allegedly running over two teenage girls in New Jersey, one of whom he had been accused of stalking. Not mentioned in the CBS article are allegations that the accused, Vincent Battiloro, was a Charlie Kirk fan and may have been partially motivated by that victim's mocking of Kirk. I guess the folks at CBS don't want to open that can of worms.
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