- Mark Carney is refusing to rule out getting involved in the Iran war despite his misgivings, apparently trying to avoid arousing the ire of Donald Trump. Fen Osler Hampson of Carleton University calls Carney's stance "studied ambiguity" and suggests that he might fear that Trump will use crippling trade sanctions to force Canada to cooperate. Part of me would like to see Canada respond to such pressures by threatening to cut off exports of oil and electricity to the US, but that would require more courage than the Liberal Party usually shows, and if we're honest with ourselves it might not even be a good idea; it's the sort of thing that just might provoke the Mango Mussolini to use military force against us. Many members of the Liberal caucus are worried about the matter; the party's caucus meeting today will be interesting. Meanwhile the war itself continues apace, with drone attacks throughout the Middle East on everything from hotels to fossil fuel infrastructure. The Guardian's Gaby Hinsliff suggests a possible reason why Iran would be lashing out at so many countries - not only are they trying to dissuade those countries from helping the Americans, this may be their version of Israel's Samson option, i.e. "to show Washington that if it’s going down then it’s taking the neighbourhood with it" and "make the wider Gulf look too dangerous a place to invest".
- The Druzhba pipeline, which supplies Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia via Ukraine, has been offline since January. Ukraine attributes this to damage from a Russian strike, but the Orban regime is accusing Ukraine of deliberate delays in getting the pipeline up and running, and in February they vetoed the EU's latest sanctions package against Russia as well as a loan for Ukraine. Now Orban is getting even more belligerent - in a recent post on X (the former Twitter) he called this a "blockade" that Hungary would break "by force". Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy responded by suggesting that he could give Orban's address to Ukraine's military; most recently, Hungarian authorities seized two vehicles owned by a Ukrainian bank and took seven bank employees into custody. The vehicles were apparently carrying 40 million US dollars, 35 million euros, and 9 kg of gold, which was being shipped to Ukraine from Austria. Hungarian authorities claim that this is a money-laundering investigation; the speculation on Reddit is that this is a sign of desperation on Orban's part as his Fidez party has been slumping in the polls of late.
- The Trump regime plans to allow the US Department of Justice to interfere with ethics investigations by state bar associations against current and former DOJ lawyers. A proposed regulation would give Attorney General Pam Bondi "the right to review the complaint and the allegations in the first instance" and would suspend the bar associations' investigations until the review is completed.
- Kristi Noem has been removed from her position as Homeland Security secretary, to be replaced by Markwayne Mullin (currently a Republican senator from Oklahoma). I guess she's going to spend more time shooting dogs with her family.
- One of the objections sometimes raised against Canada choosing Saab's Gripen fighter is that there are concerns about "interoperability" with F-35s. On the face of it this should not be a problem; Danish F-35s and Swedish Gripens have been operating together for some time without difficulty - but it has been suggested that the Americans can make it a problem by denying Canada access to the systems that allow this to work.
- Google is facing a wrongful death lawsuit after a Florida man, Jonathan Gavalas, killed himself upon being asked to do so by the company's AI chatbot, Gemini. The suicide followed a long and bizarre series of exchanges with the chatbot.
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