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Fri, Jul 3, 2026, 7:16 PM EDT

World

AI Summary

  • A report indicates that a China-linked socialist NGO has successfully obstructed over $23.6 billion in data center construction projects.
  • The passing of Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has led to a significant international gathering in Tehran, with leaders from China, Russia, and groups like Hezbollah and Hamas paying their respects.
  • The United States is preparing for its 250th anniversary amidst significant heatwaves, raising concerns about public safety and the feasibility of planned celebrations.
  • Multiple international incidents, including an assassination attempt on Donald Trump and a parcel bombing in Monaco linked to a Ukrainian woman, highlight ongoing geopolitical tensions and security challenges.
  • Europe is grappling with extreme heatwaves, leading to resistance against air conditioning due to climate policies, while nations like Ukraine are pursuing hyper-innovation in humanoid robot soldiers.

ZeroHedge

  • China-Linked Socialist NGO Derailed $23.6 Billion In Data Center Buildouts: Report an hour ago by Tyler Durden

    China-Linked Socialist NGO Derailed $23.6 Billion In Data Center Buildouts: Report Our note on Thursday titled " World's Largest Data Center Project On Verge Of Collapse After Blackstone Unexpectedly Pulls Out " detailed Blackstone dialing back its presence from Northern Virginia's data-center alley, raising questions about whether the AI infrastructure buildout, colliding with local resistance movements, has begun to hit hard limits. Just days after agreeing to sell stakes in three Virginia data centers to Digital Realty Trust for $3.5 billion, Blackstone's QTS Realty Trust is reportedly abandoning plans for its portion of the massive Prince William Digital Gateway project.

  • Backlash After Columbus, Ohio Announces It Will Raise Flag Of Somalia At City Hall 2 hours ago by Tyler Durden

    Backlash After Columbus, Ohio Announces It Will Raise Flag Of Somalia At City Hall Via American Greatness, The city of Columbus faced criticism from conservatives after a now-deleted social media post stated that City Hall would raise the Somali flag in recognition of Somali Independence Day. The post, published Wednesday by the Columbus Recreation and Parks Department on X, read: “Happy Somali Independence Day! As we celebrate the unification of the Trust Territory of Somaliland and the State of Somaliland into the Somali Republic in 1960, City Hall will be raising the flag of Somalia.” The message quickly drew criticism

  • Independence Week 2 hours ago by Tyler Durden

    Independence Week By Bas van Geffen, Senior Macro Strategist at Rabobank It was a reassuring week for those who are concerned about central bank independence. At the ECB’s annual conference in Sintra, moderator Sarah Eisen channeled a bit of her inner Beyoncé, asking a panel of central bank heads “To all you [bankers], who are independent, throw your hands up at me.” All four policymakers, including Fed Chairman Warsh, confirmed the importance of central bank independence: “The Fed acted independently before the Supreme Court ruling, and the Fed will continue to do so after the ruling.” The Supreme Court kept

  • Massive Security Presence For Khamenei’s 'Multi-City' Funeral Amid Hezbollah, Hamas, Taliban, China, Russia Paying Respects 3 hours ago by Tyler Durden

    Massive Security Presence For Khamenei’s 'Multi-City' Funeral Amid Hezbollah, Hamas, Taliban, China, Russia Paying Respects Via The Cradle Intensive preparations and security measures took place on Friday for late Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei’s massive funeral , as foreign officials and delegations began arriving in the country from dozens of nations to pay their respects. The heightened security measures, including airspace restrictions and mass deployment of security forces , began this week and extended into Friday. via AFP The event is being described as a "multi-city" funeral that will span several parts of Iran, including Tehran, Qom, and Mashhad. According

  • US Believed Israel Tried To Assassinate Iran's Top Negotiators As Ghalibaf's Plane Made Emergency Landing 4 hours ago by Tyler Durden

    US Believed Israel Tried To Assassinate Iran's Top Negotiators As Ghalibaf's Plane Made Emergency Landing The New York Times has issued a new report citing unnamed US officials who believe that Israel came close to assassinating Iran's top negotiators Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. According to the report, a concrete Israeli threat against Ghalibaf and the FM emerged while they were traveling back to Iran from Islamabad following talks with US Vice President JD Vance on April 12 . Source: Mehr news Prior to that point, during active fighting, Israel had worked its way through killing much


The Guardian

  • ‘Give him any award, and he’ll come running’: Narendra Modi racks up honours on overseas trips a day ago by Hannah Ellis-Petersen in Delhi
    Narendra Modi, India, Seychelles, South and central Asia, World news, Israel, Africa, Middle East and north Africa

    Indian prime minister has a habit of collecting awards on his travels, some as their first and only recipient As Narendra Modi touched down in Seychelles over the weekend, the archipelago nation in the Indian Ocean swiftly bestowed one of its “highest” honours upon the Indian prime minister. Modi beamed as he accepted the Guardian of the Blue Horizon award from Patrick Herminie, the Seychelles president, complete with a trophy and certificate. Continue reading...

  • Côte d’Ivoire floods kill 59 as west Africa endures torrential rains 2 days ago by Eromo Egbejule in Abidjan
    Côte d’Ivoire, Flooding, Extreme weather, Climate crisis, Ghana, Nigeria, Africa, Environment

    Authorities say rainy season getting deadlier, with Ghana reporting 13 dead and floods hitting Benin, Togo and Nigeria Floods in Côte d’Ivoire have killed 59 people since May, the communication minister told a cabinet meeting in Abidjan. There are fears the toll could further rise as rescue teams continue to search for victims during the rainy season, which runs from May until July, the minister, Amadou Coulibaly, added. Continue reading...

  • Understanding Ebola’s wildlife origins is crucial to preventing next big outbreak 2 days ago by Dan Salkeld
    Environment, Ebola, Infectious diseases, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Africa, World news, Wildlife, Science

    If we don’t know the source, not only do humans remain at risk but wildlife can suffer needlessly via retaliation While virologists and public health departments were palpitating over the news of an Andes virus infectious disease outbreak on a cruise ship (13 cases, three deaths), in the Democratic Republic of the Congo the Bundibugyo virus, the root of the current Ebola outbreak (currently more than 1,250 cases and at least 362 deaths), was smouldering under the radar. Bundibugyo virus is a horrifying, highly fatal pathogen. Symptom onset is sudden and includes headaches, diarrhoea, malfunctioning kidneys and liver, and, less

  • Sudan’s RSF committed crimes against humanity in El Fasher, Amnesty says 2 days ago by Carlos Mureithi in Nairobi
    Sudan, Amnesty International, War crimes, Human rights, Africa, Middle East and north Africa, World news

    Report accuses paramilitary force of crimes including ethnic cleansing in systemic campaign against civilians The Sudanese paramilitary Rapid Support Forces committed crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing during its campaign to capture El Fasher, Amnesty International has alleged. Many of the crimes, including murder, torture, rape, enslavement and sexual slavery, were carried out as part of a widespread and systematic attack against civilians and amounted to crimes against humanity, the human rights organisation said in a report released on Wednesday. Continue reading...

  • ‘Witch-hunt’ in Niger as military regime rounds up LGBTQ+ population 3 days ago by Sarah Johnson
    Niger, Global development, LGBTQ+ rights, Africa, World news, Human rights, Aids and HIV, Society, Burkina Faso, Mali, Uganda

    Fears of resurgence of HIV/Aids amid loss of access to PrEP drugs as at least 40 people arrested in ‘toxic’ climate A “witch-hunt” is under way in Niger, where dozens of people have been arrested for homosexuality in the west African state following the introduction of a new penal code earlier this year. Up to 40 people have been arrested and 16 men, including high-ranking military officials, have been imprisoned across the country, according to local media. Continue reading...


South China Morning Post

  • Massive Russian bomb attack kills at least 4 in Ukraine’s Sumy 43 minutes ago by Reuters

    A massive Russian ⁠glide bomb strike on the centre of the northern Ukrainian city of Sumy killed at least four people, including a child, on Friday and injured 27, Regional Governor Oleh Hryhorov said. Other areas in Sumy region and in southeastern Ukraine, closer to ‌the front lines, also came under Russian attack, killing a total of six people. “At the epicentre of the strike – a high-rise apartment building, a shop and a street,” Hryhorov wrote on Telegram of the strike in Sumy. “There were a...

  • Celebrities descend on Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s wedding at Madison Square Garden 2 hours ago by Associated Press

    Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s Madison Square Garden wedding has arrived, and guests in formalwear have headed into the arena amid high heat, humming buzz and tented secrecy in Midtown Manhattan. The long-anticipated union of sports and song has brought hype to new heights at a venue usually reserved for big games and bucket-list concerts. It was expected to begin at 5pm, with the close friends and family of the Kansas City Chiefs tight end and the pop superstar celebrating along with several...

  • The US has failed to understand China 2 hours ago by Andrew Sheng

    China is such a giant player in the global economy that understanding how the US-China contest of the century for international primacy will evolve has become crucial. Some Westerners, especially those in the United States, feel so threatened that they have resorted to protectionism, with global fragmentation and perhaps even preparations for a third world war already in the cards. Kishore Mahbubani’s book Has China Won? highlighted deep misunderstandings and structural tensions between China...

  • Fallout from Venezuela’s quakes turns political, as opposition leader Machado seeks return 2 hours ago by Associated Press

    The fallout from Venezuela’s powerful twin quakes has evolved into a major test for acting President Delcy Rodriguez, sending her scrambling to prevent the humanitarian disaster from becoming a political one as her mandate as interim leader expires on Friday. A day after Rodriguez angrily defended the competence of her government’s relief effort at her first news conference since the June 24 disaster, her main rival, exiled Venezuelan Nobel Peace Prize laureate Maria Corina Machado, issued her...

  • Europe has replaced most US cuts within Nato, top commander says 3 hours ago by Bloomberg

    European Nato allies have mostly replaced the assets that the US has cut from its rescue plans in case of a war in Europe, Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe John Stringer said in an interview. Stringer made the assurance ahead of the alliance’s summit in Ankara next week, at which allies will try to smooth over recent announcements by the US signalling that it is pivoting away from the continent. “European allies have definitely stepped up in terms of backfilling the adjustment in the US...


New York Times

  • How the Heat Is Upending Plans for America’s 250th Birthday 39 minutes ago by Adeel Hassan, John S.W. MacDonald and Amy Graff
    Weather, Heat and Heat Waves, Independence Day (US) (July 4), Washington (DC), Philadelphia (Pa), Pennsylvania, United States Semiquincentennial (2026), Parades, National Mall (Washington, DC), Reading (Pa)

    A parade in Philadelphia, one of the largest in its history, was canceled on Friday, and the Great American State Fair on the National Mall in Washington closed for several hours.

  • As Heat Suffocates Washington DC, Calls to Emergency Medical Services Climb 3 hours ago by Clarence Williams
    live-detached, Washington (DC), Emergency Medical Treatment, Heat and Heat Waves

    Near 100-degree temperatures were expected to continue as medical workers prepared for more heat-related illnesses during celebrations of the nation’s 250th anniversary.

  • Once the Centerpiece of Celebration, a Faded Declaration Recedes an hour ago by David E. Sanger
    United States Politics and Government, Declaration of Independence (US), National Archives and Records Administration

    Sunlight and abuse have taken a toll on the document, encased in bulletproof glass. But the Trump administration “hasn’t put much emphasis on it,” a former archivist notes.

  • Making a Cake for America’s 250th Birthday 4 hours ago by Kim Severson
    Cakes, Independence Day (US) (July 4), United States Semiquincentennial (2026), Pak, Grace, Bakeries and Baked Products

    In her quest to mark the nation’s 250th with a unifying dessert, Grace Pak had to navigate the pitfalls of a polarized Washington.

  • Burger vs. Bratwurst: A Climate Guide to Your July 4 Cookout 15 hours ago by Francesca Paris
    Greenhouse Gas Emissions, Hamburgers, Beef, Livestock, Independence Day (US) (July 4), Global Warming, Agriculture and Farming

    Beef is far worse for greenhouse gas emissions compared with other meat.


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