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World

AI Summary

  • Global markets are currently experiencing significant volatility with major economic releases and central bank meetings from notable institutions, including the European Central Bank and the Bank of England, influencing investor sentiment.
  • The political landscape in Latin America is shifting sharply to the right, as seen with the election of ultra-conservative José Antonio Kast in Chile, who has pledged strict measures against immigration and crime.
  • In the tech industry, iRobot has filed for bankruptcy, leading to concerns about the future of the home robotics market as its assets will be acquired by a Chinese competitor, reflecting broader patterns of competition and consolidation.
  • A tragic series of violent events, including a mass shooting at a Hanukkah celebration in Sydney and a shooting incident at Brown University, have raised urgent discussions surrounding public safety and gun control in Western nations.
  • The EU is tightening trade regulations by implementing anti-subsidy measures targeting Chinese goods, signaling ongoing tensions in international trade and efforts to protect local markets from perceived unfair competition.

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ZeroHedge

  • Key Events This Very Busy Week: Jobs, Payrolls, CPI. Retail Sales And Central Banks Galore an hour ago by Tyler Durden

    Key Events This Very Busy Week: Jobs, Payrolls, CPI. Retail Sales And Central Banks Galore With just days left in 2025, it's an extremely busy week for global markets, with a dense calendar of economic releases and major central bank decisions, including from the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan, which as DB's Jim Reid writes, all have a chance to be Scrooges or Santas in their meetings this week. Alongside these announcements, the data flow will be heavy: the US will finally publish delayed employment and inflation reports, while flash PMIs for December and

  • Hammer Drops On Clintons: Appear For Epstein Depositions Or Face Contempt Of Congress an hour ago by Tyler Durden

    Hammer Drops On Clintons: Appear For Epstein Depositions Or Face Contempt Of Congress Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news, House Oversight Chairman James Comer is done playing games with Bill and Hillary Clinton, warning them that their endless delays in the Epstein probe will lead straight to contempt charges if they don’t comply. With subpoenas issued months ago and the Clintons dodging every step, Comer’s latest ultimatum ramps up the pressure on the deep state darlings, exposing their ties to the convicted pedophile’s network amid calls for full transparency. As we reported last month, the Clintons outright refused to honor subpoenas demanding depositions on

  • Rob Reiner And Wife Allegedly Killed By Their 'Troubled' Son, Report Says an hour ago by Tyler Durden

    Rob Reiner And Wife Allegedly Killed By Their 'Troubled' Son, Report Says Legendary Hollywood director Rob Reiner and his wife, producer Michele Singer Reiner, were found dead in their Los Angeles home on Sunday afternoon. > RIP Rob Reiner. No one deserves what happened to him! I'm sure he wanted me dead, but I am grateful to him anyway, for these gifts: > > 1984 – This Is Spinal Tap > 1985 – The Sure Thing > 1986 – Stand by Me > 1987 – The Princess Bride > 1989 – When Harry Met Sally… > 1990 – Misery > 1992 – A… pic.twitter.com/1nwVQ0mcZR > > — Peachy Keenan (@KeenanPeachy)

  • Chile Turns Hard To The Right: Tough-On-Crime, Anti-Immigration Candidate Easily Wins Presidency 2 hours ago by Tyler Durden

    Chile Turns Hard To The Right: Tough-On-Crime, Anti-Immigration Candidate Easily Wins Presidency In an election where the decisive themes echoed mounting concerns in the Americas and Europe, a conservative who's vowed to crack down on illegal immigration and crime trounced his Communist opponent in Sunday's presidential election in Chile. The result confirms a major political current that now has many Latin American countries embracing right-wing politics.  Jose Antonio Kast has promised to build physical barriers on the country's northern frontier (Esteban Felix - AP via El Pais) With 98% of the votes counted, 57-year-old José Antonio Kast was coasting to a 58%-to-42% clobbering

  • Here's How Markets Have Performed Since The Start Of America's MAGA Experiment 2 hours ago by Tyler Durden

    Here's How Markets Have Performed Since The Start Of America's MAGA Experiment By Eric Peters, CIO of One River Asset Management MAGA: I remember 2017 well. It brought me to one knee. Trump had won the election in late 2016. The world braced itself for the chaos that was to come. Of course, we should all have known better. That’s not how markets work. Only rarely does an Artificial Superintelligence give investors extraordinary profits without inflicting ungodly pain. When it does give unearned gifts, it is to tempt us to foolishly bet on the obvious in some future market cycle. No ASI


The Guardian

  • Ghanaian students at UK universities face deportation amid funding crisis a day ago by Richard Adams and Eromo Egbejule
    International students, Ghana, Students, Universities, Higher education, Education, Africa, UK news, Keir Starmer, Politics, World news

    Group asks Keir Starmer for help to persuade Ghanaian government to pay backlog of tuition fees and living allowances Students from Ghana at UK universities say they are in danger of being deported after being stranded by their own government without promised scholarships or tuition fee payments. The group representing more than 100 doctoral students has petitioned Downing Street and Keir Starmer asking for help to persuade the Ghanaian government to pay the backlog of tuition fees and living allowances running into millions of pounds. Continue reading...

  • Little Foot hominin fossil may be new species of human ancestor a day ago by Donna Lu
    Evolution, Archaeology, Australia news, South Africa, Africa

    Australian researchers think the skeleton found in South Africa is not the same species as two found in the same South Africa cave system Little Foot, one of the world’s most complete hominin fossils, may be a new species of human ancestor, according to research that raises questions about our evolutionary past. Publicly unveiled in 2017, Little Foot is the most complete Australopithecus skeleton ever found. The foot bones that lend the fossil its name were first discovered in South Africa 1994, leading to a painstaking excavation over 20 years in the Sterkfontein cave system. Continue reading...

  • Drone strike on UN facility in war-torn Sudan leaves six peacekeepers dead 2 days ago by Associated Press
    Sudan, South Sudan, Africa, World news, United Nations, António Guterres, Middle East and north Africa, Darfur

    UN secretary general António Guterres says ‘unjustifiable’ attack on base in city of Kadugli ‘could be war crime’ A drone strike has hit a United Nations peacekeeping logistics base in war-torn Sudan, killing six peacekeepers, the UN secretary general António Guterres has said. Eight other peacekeepers were wounded in the strike on Saturday in the city of Kadugli in the central region of Kordofan. All the victims are Bangladeshi nationals, serving in the UN interim security force for Abyei (Unisfa). Continue reading...

  • US scolds Rwanda for breaking peace deal as M23 rebels seize key Congo city 3 days ago by Associated Press
    Rwanda, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Burundi, Africa, World news, United Nations, Critical minerals

    Mike Waltz warns ‘spoilers’ will be held to account as rebel fighters escalate offensive in South Kivu province The US has accused Rwanda of violating a US-brokered peace agreement by backing a deadly new rebel offensive in the mineral-rich eastern Congo, and warned action will be taken against “spoilers”. The remarks by the US ambassador to the UN, Mike Waltz, came as more than 400 civilians have been killed since the Rwanda-backed M23 rebels escalated their offensive in eastern Congo’s South Kivu province, according to officials who also say Rwandan special forces were in the strategic city of Uvira. Continue reading...

  • US ends temporary legal status for Ethiopians amid Trump crackdown 3 days ago by Reuters
    Trump administration, Ethiopia, US immigration, US politics, US news, Africa, World news, Kristi Noem

    Kristi Noem says Ethiopia ‘no longer meets conditions’ for US to provide work authorization and legal protection The US is ending temporary legal status for citizens of Ethiopia in the United States, according to a government notice on Friday, as the Trump administration continues its crackdown on legal and illegal immigration. “After reviewing country conditions and consulting with appropriate US government agencies, the secretary determined that Ethiopia no longer continues to meet the conditions for the designation for Temporary Protected Status,” homeland security secretary Kristi Noem said in a notice posted in the Federal Register. Continue reading...


South China Morning Post

  • UN says aid cuts causing millions of refugees ‘unnecessary pain’ 36 minutes ago by Agence France-Presse

    A wave of “drastic, irresponsible” aid cuts this year has inflicted unnecessary pain on refugees, who are being vilified while their suffering is exploited by traffickers and politicians, the United Nations said on Monday. Outgoing UN refugees chief Filippo Grandi said this year had been a perfect storm of successive crises for the world’s forcibly displaced people, who were estimated to number 117.3 million people in mid-2025. He condemned the “unending atrocities” committed in Sudan, Ukraine,...

  • Russian court declares punk protest group Pussy Riot ‘extremist’ organisation an hour ago by Associated Press

    Punk group Pussy Riot was declared an “extremist organisation” by a Russian court on Monday. The ruling, by Moscow’s Tverskoy District Court, effectively outlaws the group from operating in Russia and puts anyone linked with the group at risk of criminal prosecution. The feminist protest group first catapulted to notoriety in 2012, when its members performed a provocative “punk prayer” against President Vladimir Putin from the pulpit of Russia’s largest cathedral. Today, members of the group...

  • 37 die in Morocco in torrential rain and flash floods 2 hours ago by Associated Press

    Floods triggered by torrential rains have killed at least 37 people in the Moroccan coastal city of Safi, the Interior Ministry said on Monday. Authorities said heavy rain and flash floods overnight inundated about 70 homes and businesses and swept away 10 vehicles. The Interior Ministry reported 14 people hospitalised. Climate change has made weather patterns more unpredictable in Morocco. North Africa has been plagued by several years of drought, hardening soils and making mountains, deserts...

  • China-led Asia-Pacific region lifts global aviation outlook as profits set to soar 4 hours ago by Zhu Wenqian

    The global air travel market has bounced back to pre-pandemic levels, with the industry upbeat about 2026 and the Asia-Pacific region expected to lead worldwide traffic growth, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) said on Monday. Load factors in Asia-Pacific were projected to hit an all-time regional high of 84.4 per cent next year, according to IATA, which represents some 370 airlines, accounting for more than 80 per cent of the world’s air traffic. Passenger demand was strong,...

  • India’s property market enters the big league but challenges remain 7 hours ago by Nicholas Spiro

    Numbers do not always tell the whole story. But they are revealing nonetheless. In 2013, direct investment transaction volumes in India’s commercial property sector stood at around US$1.3 billion. By contrast, in China (excluding Hong Kong), investment activity reached US$27 billion. In South Korea, transactions stood at US$12.2 billion, data from MSCI shows. The woefully low level of investment in India – a leading emerging market that at the time was already the world’s third-largest economy...


New York Times

  • Gunshots at Brown University, Then 12 Hours of Lockdown and Fear an hour ago by Mark Arsenault and Dana Goldstein
    Colleges and Universities, Brown University Shooting (Dec 13, 2025), Brown University, Providence (RI), School Shootings and Armed Attacks, Mass Shootings

    Students sheltered in place in classrooms and basements, waiting for the all clear.

  • A Massacre in Australia, and Rob Reiner Is Found Dead in ‘Apparent Homicide’ 2 hours ago by Will Jarvis and Ian Stewart
    Murders, Attempted Murders and Homicides, Colleges and Universities, Terrorism, School Shootings and Armed Attacks, Brown University, Australia, Bondi Beach (Sydney, Australia), Reiner, Rob

    Plus, the hunt for the gunman in a shooting at Brown University.

  • Rob Reiner, Actor Who Went on to Direct Classic Films, Dies at 78 7 hours ago by Julia Jacobs
    Television, Comedy and Humor, Movies, Actors and Actresses, Deaths (Obituaries), Reiner, Rob, Reiner, Carl, Los Angeles (Calif), Stand by Me (Movie), The Princess Bride (Movie), This Is Spinal Tap (Movie), A Few Good Men (Movie)

    Mr. Reiner, who was in “All in the Family,” directed films including “This Is Spinal Tap,” “When Harry Met Sally …,” “The Princess Bride” and “A Few Good Men.”

  • Michele Singer Reiner: A Photographer Who Changed Movie History 2 hours ago by Alex Marshall
    Reiner, Michele Singer, Movies, Photography, Reiner, Rob

    Falling in love with her inspired the director Rob Reiner to give “When Harry Met Sally…” a new ending. The Reiners went on to work together on movies and political causes.

  • What We Know About Rob Reiner and His Death 2 hours ago by Jin Yu Young
    Murders, Attempted Murders and Homicides, Reiner, Michele Singer, Reiner, Rob, Los Angeles (Calif), Movies, Television, Celebrities, Police Department (Los Angeles, Calif), California

    The director’s family said that he and his wife, Michele, had died on Sunday. The police said they had found two bodies at the Reiner home in Los Angeles.


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