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- 🔵 Russia's Nuke Secrets Leaked
🔵 Russia's Nuke Secrets Leaked

A massive tranche of over 2 million documents found in a public database sheds light on Russia’s expansion and modernization of its highly sensitive nuclear weapons complex, the Danish investigative outlet Danwatch and Germany’s Der Spiegel reported Wednesday.
The files include detailed blueprints of the Strategic Missile Forces bases near the Orenburg region town of Yasny. The two bases are equipped with the Avangard hypersonic glide vehicle, one of Russia’s most advanced nuclear delivery systems.
“Until now, we have only been able to monitor these bases from above using satellite imagery,” Hans M. Kristensen, director of the Nuclear Information Project at the Federation of American Scientists, told Danwatch and Der Spiegel. “Now, with the help of these unique drawings, we can now for the first time get inside the buildings and all the way underground. It’s completely unprecedented.”


The Supreme Court ruled Friday that President Donald Trump can terminate the protected status of around 500,000 immigrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela while an appeal of the president’s order is still pending.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, in a scathing dissent joined by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, said the majority of the Supreme Court “has plainly botched” its assessment in granting a stay of a lower court ruling that had blocked the terminations ordered by Trump on his first day back in the White House.
Until that order, the group of immigrants who had left their home countries because of conflicts there, or unsafe living or working conditions, were allowed to remain in the United States for up to two years.

Federal authorities are investigating a clandestine effort to impersonate White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, according to people familiar with the matter, after an unknown individual reached out to prominent Republicans and business executives pretending to be her.
In recent weeks, senators, governors, top U.S. business executives and other well-known figures have received text messages and phone calls from a person who claimed to be the chief of staff, the people familiar with the messages said.
But the messages weren’t from Wiles—and the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the White House are trying to figure out who is behind the effort and what the goal is, according to some of the people. FBI officials have told the White House they don’t believe a foreign nation is involved, some of the people said.

Independent journalist Glenn Greenwald accused “maliciously political” actors of criminally leaking a sexually explicit video of him early Friday morning.
“Last night, videos were released online depicting behavior in my private life. Some were distorted and others were not. They were published without my knowledge or consent and its publication was therefore criminal,” Greenwald wrote in a Friday statement.
Greenwald indicated that he was close to finding out who leaked the video.


A U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) worker and five other individuals are accused in a massive food stamp fraud scheme.
The suspects in the case were identified as Michael Kehoe, Mohamad Nawafleh, Omar Alrawashdeh, Gamal Obaid, Emad Alrawashdeh, and Arlasa Davis, Fox Business reported on Friday.
The United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York detailed the case in a press release on Thursday, stating officials announced the suspects were charged in connection with a huge fraud and bribery scheme that generated more than $66 million in unauthorized transactions via the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) program.

Business Insider on Thursday announced that the company will be shrinking the size of its newsroom and making layoffs, impacting over a fifth of its staff.
“We are reducing the size of our organization, a move that will impact about 21% of our colleagues and touch every department,” Business Insider CEO Barbara Peng said in an internal memo obtained by Fox News Digital. “This will be a difficult day, and our first priority is to provide clarity and support to those colleagues whose roles are being eliminated.”
Peng announced 18 months ago a new strategy centered on being the leading outlet for journalism on innovation, tech and business.

It’s not a Toyota, Nissan, or a Honda, but this new mini EV is already a sensation. The mibot mini EV costs just ¥1 million ($7,000), or about half the price of Nissan’s Sakura, the top-selling EV in Japan.
Can the $7,000 mini EV jumpstart sales in Japan?
Japanese startup, KG Motors, is charging up Japan’s electric vehicle market with small, affordable “mobility robots.”
The company is preparing to launch a small, single-seat EV dubbed “mibot.” At just 2,490 mm (98″) long, the tiny electric car is about the size of a golf cart, but it’s perfect for getting around the city.


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