Leak of Afghan Data in the UK: Whistleblower Reveals Ignored Warnings

The committee announced on Friday, November 28, 2025, that “Person A,” whose identity has not been disclosed, warned British officials after the data breach but was subsequently confronted with an emergency court order prohibiting him from speaking about or confirming the issue in any form.

Person A explained that in 2021, during the fall of Kabul, he participated in assisting former Afghan security personnel and their families, initially in administrative tasks and later in processing cases across a wide network of units.

He said the breach became evident when a family under his care came across sensitive information about themselves on Facebook anonymously.

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Gen Zers have taken on their governments. From around the world, they tell us why.

Gen Zers feel their future is slipping away from them.

They are playing the game of academic achievement, but where are the well-paying jobs they were promised? Meanwhile, as they work two jobs or wake up at 3 a.m. simply to get a good seat in overcrowded university classes, social media offers a steady stream of Instagram-perfect lives – the privileged living in luxury. So Gen Z has used the internet to fight back.

The revolution has come with plentiful brushstrokes of youth, from the use of a gaming platform to organize to the ubiquitous symbol of the movement – a Jolly Roger flag taken from a popular Japanese comic. Some protesters needed their parents’ permission to participate.

Yet what is perhaps most extraordinary about the Gen Z protests worldwide, experts say, is their unprecedented interconnection. A global generation has spawned a global movement.

David Clark of Binghamton University has studied protest movements for years. This is the first time he’s seen so many protests refer to one another. With hashtags, movements are creating chain reactions.

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The US Secretary of War accused the media of incitement

On Friday, the Washington Post newspaper, citing sources familiar with the situation, reported that Hegset ordered “everyone to be killed” during the US strikes on drug traffickers off the coast of Venezuela, and therefore, during the first strike on September 2, the commanders were ordered to launch a second strike to kill the survivors.

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‘Not a denial’: Experts say Trump’s Pentagon chief could be prosecuted for ‘war crimes’

“If the reports are true, then a war crime was committed,” Lieu posted to X. “Also, there is generally no statute of limitations for war crimes.”

“The United States Armed Forces and [United States Southern Command] are not your sicarios,” tweeted Adam Isacson, who is the director for defense oversight at the Washington Office on Latin America. “You can’t just order them to carry out illegal hits on noncombatants and kill survivors. Issue all the secret memos you want, granting immunity through legal contortions. These are still crimes, and won’t stand.”

Hegseth’s defense of the attack on alleged drug traffickers came on the same day that President Donald Trump announced he was pardoning former Honduras President Juan Orlando Hernández, who was serving a 45-year federal prison sentence for drug trafficking. Hernández was convicted of conspiring to traffic 400 tons of cocaine into the United States.

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6,000 Airbus Jets Grounded, Because Nobody Tested for the Sun

At usual cruising altitudes (35,000-40,000 feet), an aircraft operates with roughly 100 to 300 times the cosmic ray and solar particle flux we experience at ground level. The Earth’s atmosphere shields from this radiation, so commercial aviation loses a significant portion of protection.

During a solar flare, the sun ejects high-energy protons that travel at nearly the speed of light. When these particles (or the secondary neutrons created when they collide with atmospheric molecules) pass through a semiconductor, they can deposit enough electrical charge to flip a bit in memory or logic circuits (0 becomes a 1, or vice versa). This is a known phenomenon called the Single Event Upset (SEU).

The Airbus advisory traces the exact vulnerability to their ELAC B (Elevator Aileron Computer) hardware running software version L104, the upgrade from L103. Flight control computers process sensor inputs and compute control surface positions many times per second. When a bit flip corrupts a value mid-calculation, such as an elevator deflection command, the output can be wrong without any error-checks.

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Miss Universe owners face fraud and trafficking allegations

Arrest warrant issued for missing Thai mogul Anne Jakkaphong Jakrajutatip, as co-owner investigated in Mexico.

The Miss Universe competition has been overshadowed by legal drama as its owners face charges of fraud in Thailand and an investigation into drugs and weapons trafficking in Mexico just days after the latest pageant concluded.

The Miss Universe Pageant, which once belonged to United States President Donald Trump, has been owned by Thai mogul Anne Jakkaphong Jakrajutatip and her company, JKN Global, since 2022.

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This Level Of Corruption Requires Stupidity

There Is No World In Which This Isn’t Corrupt

It is almost comedic to imagine the narrative pretzels one must jump through in order to pretend that a coherent argument can be made here, that what we are witnessing is the application of a good faith effort in pursuit of justice. You would need to explain how installing your personal defense attorney as a federal prosecutor to indict your named enemies isn’t corrupt. There is no framework that makes this defensible. The appearance of impropriety isn’t subtle—it’s the entire structure. You would need to argue that violating the appointment statute is a “technical” issue rather than a constitutional constraint. But that requires treating the law as an obstacle to be gamed rather than a framework constraining power. Once you make that move, you’ve abandoned the rule of law entirely. You would need to justify why the prosecutor indicted within three days of taking office, presenting to a partial grand jury, mere days before the statute of limitations expired. The timeline screams vindictiveness. There’s no good-faith explanation for this haste—no sudden discovery of crucial evidence, no compelling prosecutorial necessity. Just Trump’s public demand followed immediately by prosecution.

You would need to explain why, after the judge ruled the appointment unlawful, the White House “stands with” Halligan and Bondi says the ruling “does not” affect her role. This isn’t defending a good-faith legal position—it’s doubling down on the violation itself.

None of these things can be defended coherently without abandoning basic principles: that the rule of law constrains power, that procedures matter, that appointment statutes exist for reasons, that the appearance of justice matters, that constitutional constraints aren’t “technical” obstacles. The corruption required destroying these frameworks. And destroying frameworks requires stupidity—not because the people involved lack intelligence, but because intelligent defense of the indefensible is impossible.

You cannot think clearly while maintaining that personal lawyers should prosecute personal enemies, that appointment statutes are technical trivialities, that three-day indictments after presidential demands aren’t vindictive, that partial grand jury presentations are proper procedure, that immunizing your target through illegal process is winning. The framework cannot cohere. So stupidity becomes the only option. Not chosen stupidity, but necessary stupidity—the epistemic collapse that corruption requires.

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How Global Power Shifts are Playing out in the Red Sea Region of the Mideast

The United States and China both have military facilities in Djibouti. Russia has sought access to Port Sudan. Gulf powers, notably Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, have expanded their presence across the Horn of Africa. They’ve done this by investing in ports, infrastructure and military cooperation especially in Sudan, Somalia and Ethiopia.

Turkey, Iran and Israel have also established political, economic and security ties. This links the Red Sea to the eastern Mediterranean and the Persian Gulf.

However, external powers are not the only drivers of change in the region.

Local actors, from Ethiopia to Sudan, Eritrea, Egypt and Somalia, are exploiting global rivalries to advance their strategic objectives. They are courting competing external powers by trading military access for security guarantees, or seeking investments.

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Māori face harsher sentences than NZ Europeans for similar drink-driving offences – with lasting consequences

What has been less clear is whether similar disparities occur within the courtroom. In our newly published study, we examined whether sentencing outcomes differ between Māori and New Zealand Europeans charged with nearly identical offences.

We focused on first-time drink-driving cases, using alcohol readings as an objective, standardised measure of offence severity. Our core question: do Māori face a higher likelihood of a community-based sentence, instead of the more common – and least severe – outcome of a fine?

The results suggest they do.

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100 years on, T.S. Eliot’s The Hollow Men is a poem for our populist moment

Populist poetics

This brings us to the opening stanza of The Hollow Men, where Eliot presents aspiring religio-nationalist torchbearers with an effigy of liberal secularism, ready for immolation.

We are the hollow men
We are the stuffed men
Leaning together
Headpiece filled with straw. Alas!
Our dried voices, when
We whisper together
Are quiet and meaningless
As wind in dry grass
Or rat’s feet over broken glass
In our dry cellar

Shape without form, shade without colour,
Paralysed force, gesture without motion;

Those who have crossed
With direct eyes, to death’s other Kingdom
Remember us – if at all – not as lost
Violent souls, but only
As the hollow men
The stuffed men.

The scene is reminiscent of the “desolate plain lying between Hell’s portal and the river Acheron” in Dante’s Divine Comedy. When Dante asks his guide why the souls here lament so bitterly, he is told that it is because they were, while on earth, neither spiritually alive nor spiritually dead, neither good nor evil.

As such, they are forbidden from entering Hell proper. They are damned to an eternity of ineffectual fence-sitting, so to speak. Eliot ratifies the assignation elsewhere, when he determines: “So far as we are human […] it is better, in a paradoxical way, to do evil than to do nothing: at least, we exist.”
[…]
The Hollow Men disregarded many of the liberal shibboleths of its time. In doing so, it communed with a populist, religio-nationalist mindset that was beginning to establish a foothold. One hundred years on, it is a poem that feels very much of our time.

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