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Friday, 9 May 2025
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  • GUNSChicago Economist Argues for Social Intervention on Gun Violence

    By Rita Oceguera for The Trace

    In his new book, University of Chicago’s Jens Ludwig makes the case for a pragmatic approach. Instead of waiting for the U.S. to solve gun violence by addressing its social problems, incarcerating people, and reducing the number of guns in circulation, he argues for a short-term solution: social intervention in places most affected by interpersonal violence.

    • Read more
  • FORENSICSStudy Opens the Door for Stronger Evidence in Bomb Handling Cases

    Scientists have for the first time provided insight into how bomb residue transfers to the hands of suspects, which could lead to stronger evidence in court.

    • Read more
  • VOCATIONAL TRAININGApprentices Needed: Construction Shortages Threaten American Growth

    By Doug Irving

    U.S. plans for new factories, new tech hubs—even new homes—are about to crash into one very inconvenient fact: Not enough people work in construction to turn those plans into actual, hammer-and-nail reality. Not even close.

    • Read more
  • VOCATIONAL TRAININGVocational Training Can Play a Greater Role in National Security

    By Mark Costello

    We talk a lot about resilience and preparedness. But these goals aren’t met solely through top-down directives or university research hubs. They rely on a skilled workforce—one that’s ready to respond across sectors, jurisdictions and threat types. That workforce is increasingly trained not in lecture theatres, but in registered training organizations.

    • Read more
  • PUBLIC HEALTHMass Layoffs, Sweeping Funding Cuts Threaten U.S. Public Health

    The first 100 days of the Trump administration saw more than 20,000 jobs in the public health field terminated and billions of dollars in funding axed. The proposed 2026 budged calls for additional cuts of $40 billion to HHS budget.

    • Read more
  • PUBLIC HEALTHTrump’s NIH Axed Research Grants Even After a Judge Blocked the Cuts, Internal Records Show

    By Annie Waldman

    Many of the canceled grants appear to have focused on subjects that the administration claims are unscientific or that the agency should no longer focus on under new priorities, such as gender identity, vaccine hesitancy and diversity, equity and inclusion.

    • Read more
  • CRITICAL MINERALSWhat Rare Earth Elements Are and Why They Matter

    By Mike Silver

    Rare 17 earth elements are critical to many industries—used in electric motors, medical imaging and diagnostics, oil and gas refining, and computer and phone screens. These elements have become a hot political issue, says an Earth Sciences professor.

    • Read more
  • INFRASTRUCTURE PROTECTIONMajor U.S. Cities Are Sinking

    By Kelly Izlar

    An analysis of 28 major U.S. cities revealed that all 28 are sinking, potentially affecting 34 million people, according to Virginia Tech research published in Nature Cities.

    • Read more
  • RESILIENCESpain’s Recent Power Outage: What Happened and Why It Matters

    By Chelsea Seeber

    On April 28, Spain experienced a widespread power outage that left millions without electricity for nearly a full 24 hours. While power has largely been restored, the cause of the failure is still under investigation.

    • Read more
  • OUR PICKSU.S. AI Leadership Needs Smarter Controls | Are We Ready for the Next One? | As the US Cuts Scientific Talent, Europe Launches an Initiative to Attract It, and more

    ·  As the US Cuts Scientific Talent, Europe Launches an Initiative to Attract It

    ·  Are We Ready for the Next One?

    ·  U.S. AI Leadership Needs Smarter Controls

    ·  US Customs and Border Protection Quietly Revokes Protections for Pregnant Women and Infants

    ·  Signal Clone Used by Mike Waltz Pauses Service After Reports It Got Hacked

    ·  Customs and Border Protection Confirms Its Use of Hacked Signal Clone TeleMessage

    ·  The Actual Math Behind DOGE’s Cuts 

    • Read more
  • WORLD ROUNDUPWhy This India-Pakistan Conflict Is Different | What Putin Wants—and How Europe Should Thwart Him | What Trump’s New Budget Says About U.S. Foreign Policy, and more

    ·  Why This India-Pakistan Conflict Is Different

    ·  The Threat of Inaction in Response to Violations of International Law: A Syrian Case Study

    ·  What Putin Wants—and How Europe Should Thwart Him

    ·  Nigeria Has More People without Electricity Than Any Other Country 

    ·  A Tale of Four Fighter Jets 

    ·  What Trump’s New Budget Says About U.S. Foreign Policy

    • Read more
  • LAW ENFORCEMENTThe DEA Once Touted Body Cameras for Their “Enhanced Transparency.” Now the Agency Is Abandoning Them.

    By Mario Ariza

    An internal email obtained by ProPublica said the agency made the change to be “consistent” with a Trump executive order. But at least two other federal law enforcement agencies are still requiring body cameras.

    • Read more
  • PUBLIC HEALTHMeasles Could Again Become Widespread as Cases Surge Worldwide

    By Rebecca Schein

    By intervening early in an outbreak with local health department support, measles outbreaks can be contained as long as 85% of the population is vaccinated against the disease. That, of course, requires ensured ongoing access to free and accessible childhood vaccinations and restoration of the public’s trust in measles vaccines.

    • Read more
  • The MMR Vaccine Doesn’t Contain ‘Aborted Fetus Debris’, as RFK Jr. Has Claimed. Here’s the Science

    • Read more
  • LIGHTNING STRIKESAI Model Predicts Lightning Wildfires with 90% Accuracy

    By Zachy Hennessey

    Israeli researchers use seven years of weather and satellite data to predict future wildfires caused by lightning strikes.

    • Read more
  • DISASTERSComing This Summer: Record-Breaking Heat and Plenty of Hurricanes

    By Matt Simon

    Forecasters are predicting higher temperatures across the U.S. and up to 10 hurricanes. Cutting federal programs could leave people even more vulnerable.

    • Read more
  • ENERGY SECURITYTexas May Put Restraints on New Big Businesses Hoping to Tap into the Energy Grid

    By Carlos Nogueras Ramos

    Texas will need a lot more energy in the future. According to ERCOT, the state’s energy demand may double in six years.

    • Read more
  • OUR PICKSSecurity Vendors Are Constantly Being Attacked | Watch Out for Physical Sabotage by Chinese Spies in the U.S. | The Pentagon Is Ignoring Its Own Strategy, and more

    ·  Watch Out for Physical Sabotage by Chinese Spies in the U.S.

    ·  NYPD Shared a Palestinian Protester’s Info with ICE. Now It’s Evidence in Her Deportation Case

    ·  Jewish Faculty Decry Republican Panel Members Ahead of Antisemitism Hearing

    ·  Trump Is Fighting Antisemitism the Wrong Way, a Jewish Group Argues

    ·  Security Vendors Are Constantly Being Attacked

    ·  How Congress Can Stop the Looming Crypto Disaster

    ·  The Pentagon Is Ignoring Its Own Strategy 

    ·  American Cities Are Criminalizing Homelessness. Will That Help?

    • Read more
  • WORLD ROUNDUPTrump’s Russia Strategy Is All Carrots, No Stick | Reshaping Turkish Politics | Israeli Attacks on Syria Risk Destabilizing Jordan, and more

    ·  Reshaping Turkish Politics: Erdogan’s Bet on a Kurdish Opposition?

    ·  What Is the Risk of a Conflict Spiral Between India and Pakistan?

    ·  Trump’s Russia Strategy Is All Carrots, No Stick 

    ·  Israeli Attacks on Syria Risk Destabilizing Jordan

    ·  Europeans Have Realized Their Error 

    ·  U.S. Pushes Nations Facing Tariffs to Approve Musk’s Starlink, Cables Show 

    • Read more
  • IRAN’S NUKESIranian Breakout Timelines Under JCPOA-Type Limits

    By David Albright

    The 2015 nuclear deal (JCPOA) made it impossible for Iran, if it withdrew from the deal, to produce enough weapon-grade uranium (WGU) for a nuclear weapon in less than 12 months. The U.S unilateral withdrawal from JCPOA in 2018 has changed the situation so fundamentally in favor of Iran and its nuclear weapons program, that new limits are needed, the most important of which is that Iran destroy centrifuges and related equipment, rather than store them. A focus on only limiting enriched uranium stocks will not provide sufficient breakout timelines.

    • Read more
  • HUMAN TRAFFICKINGStates Push to Combat Human Trafficking Amid Federal Funding Cuts

    By Amanda Hernández

    States are moving to strengthen protections against human trafficking, but some advocates warn that some programs might not have the resources to help survivors.

    • Read more
  • DEFENSE ACQUISITIONThe Battle for Pentagon Acquisition Policy: Tradition Versus New-and-Cheaper

    By Bill Sweetman

    The weapons that get bought in larger or smaller quantities, or are launched or cancelled, will indicate whether US President Donald Trump’s administration will strengthen long-range deterrent forces, order a retreat under his Golden Dome missile-defense system, or spend four years trying to blend incompatible visions of industrial and technological strategy.

    • Read more

More headlines

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  • Trump 2026 Budget Plan Boosts Defense, Homeland Security
  • Another cybersecurity False Claims Act settlement
  • Trump wants $1 trillion for Pentagon
  • DOD to deploy counter-drone capabilities at US-Mexico border as cartels surveil troops
  • Trump’s use of Alien Enemies Act for swift deportations is illegal, Trump-appointed judge rules
  • Dems muted on border wall opposition at Homeland megabill markup
  • DOGE Cuts Off Funds to Congressionally Mandated National Security Centers
  • The FBI and other agencies are using polygraphs to find leakers. But do they work?
  • US judge limits Trump's ability to swiftly deport migrants held at Guantanamo Bay
  • Homeland Security won’t say how it calculated immigration arrest numbers
  • S. Korea says DeepSeek transferred data to Chinese company without consent
  • White House proposes sanctions, directs DHS to investigate immigration attorneys
  • Dozens of DHS staffers, including top FEMA officials, given lie detector tests over alleged leaks
  • White House budget proposal could beam NASA science back decades
  • Cyber congressman demands answers before CISA gets cut down to size
  • US to sign Pall Mall pact aimed at countering spyware abuses
  • Researchers warn about ‘Goffee’ spilling onto Russian flash drives
  • Hackers using AI-produced audio to impersonate tax preparers, IRS
  • The Supreme Court’s Mixed Signals on Trump’s Deportations to El Salvador
  • Trump orders investigation of two first-term administration aides who criticized him
  • Trump’s Homeland Security Ramps Up Surveillance of Legal Immigrants
  • Federal officials arrived, denied entry at L.A. schools amid immigration enforcement fears
  • DHS says it will weigh antisemitic content in immigration applications
  • DHS Issues Waiver to Expedite New Border Wall Construction in California
  • Trump gutted key research programs studying violence. Experts say it will come at a heavy cost
  • Visas being revoked for UC Berkeley, Stanford international students with ties to political activism
  • Trump Admin Exempts Trump’s Ads Thanking Himself From DOGE Review
  • Department of Homeland Security revokes 4 U-M student visas; at least 1 flees US
  • DOGE expected to take aim at DHS with staffing cuts, including at US Secret Service
  • Time to Invest in Cybersecurity for U.S. Sealift Forces, Report Says
  • President Trump Extends National Emergency With Respect to Significant Cyber Threats for Another Year
  • Justice Department Announces Anticipated Distribution of at Least $2B to Victims of State Sponsored Terrorism in 2026
  • How Behavioral Threat Assessment and Management Teams Make American Communities Safer
  • Congress appropriated some FEMA money to house and aid migrants. Trump officials want it used to detain them
  • Trump’s southern border military mission cost over $300 million in first 6 weeks
  • Noem’s vow to “eliminate” FEMA raises alarms
  • Kristi Noem's Expenses Raise Eyebrows Among Republicans in Her Home State
  • More than half a million Latin American, Haitian migrants given deadline to self deport
  • DHS suspends green card processing for refugees, asylees
  • New Jersey mom sues Homeland Security, TSA for 'threat-tagging' over Facebook post

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The long view

  • CYBERESPIONAGEEconomic Cyberespionage: A Persistent and Invisible Threat

    By Gatra Priyandita and Bart Hogeveen

    Economic cyber-espionage, state-sponsored theft of sensitive business information via cyber means for commercial gain, is an invisible yet persistent threat to national economies.

    • Read more
  • CYBERSECURITYResearchers Calculate Cyberattack Risk for All 50 States

    By John Tucker

    Local governments are common victims of cyberattack, with economic damage often extending to the state and federal levels. Scholars aggregate threats to thousands of county governments to draw conclusions.

    • Read more
  • ARGUMENT: REINING IN DHS I&A How DHS Laid the Groundwork for More Intelligence Abuse

    I&A, the lead intelligence unit of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) —long plagued by politicized targeting, permissive rules, and a toxic culture —has undergone a transformation over the last two years. Spencer Reynolds writes that this effort falls short. “Ultimately, Congress must rein in I&A,” he adds.

    • Read more
  • NUCLEAR POWERNuclear Has Changed. Will the U.S. Change with It?

    By Christina Pazzanese

    Fueled by artificial intelligence, cloud service providers, and ambitious new climate regulations, U.S. demand for carbon-free electricity is on the rise. In response, analysts and lawmakers are taking a fresh look at a controversial energy source: nuclear power.

    • Read more
  • VIOLENT ATTACKSSouthport Attacks: Why the U.K. Needs a Unified Approach to All Violent Attacks on the Public

    By Barry Richards

    The conviction of Axel Rudakubana for the murder of three young girls in Southport has prompted many questions about how the UK handles violence without a clear ideological motive. This case has also shown up the confusion in this area, and made clear the need for a basic reframing of how we understand murderous violence against the public today.

    • Read more
  • SCHOOL VIOLENCEStrengthening School Violence Prevention

    By Brian A. Jackson, et al.

    Violence by K-12 students is disturbingly common. Ensuring that schools have effective ways to identify and prevent such incidents is becoming increasingly important. Expanding intervention options and supporting K-12 school efforts in Behavioral Threat Assessment and Management (BTAM) would help.

    • Read more
  • WATER SECURITY Water Is the Other U.S.-Mexico Border Crisis, and the Supply Crunch Is Getting Worse

    By Gabriel Eckstein and Rosario Sanchez

    The United States and Mexico are aware of the political and economic importance of the border region. But if water scarcity worsens, it could supplant other border priorities. The two countries should recognize that conditions are deteriorating and update the existing cross-border governance regime so that it reflects today’s new water realities.

    • Read more
  • GUNSSweden’s Deadliest Mass Shooting Highlights Global Reality of Gun Violence, Criminologist Says

    By Ian Thomsen

    “We in the United States don’t have a monopoly on mass shootings,” James Alan Fox says, “though we certainly have more than our share.”

    • Read more
  • DISINFORMATIONMis- and Disinformation Trends and Tactics to Watch in 2025

    Predicting how extremists may weaponize false narratives requires an understanding of the strategies that allow them to spread most effectively.

    • Read more
  • DEMOCRACY WATCHMemory-Holing Jan. 6: What Happens When You Try to Make History Vanish?

    By Alec MacGillis

    The Trump administration’s decision to delete a DOJ database of cases against Capitol riot defendants places those who seek to preserve the historical record in direct opposition to their own government.

    • Read more
  • CLIMATE-CHANGE CHALLENGESHuge Areas May Face Possibly Fatal Heat Waves if Warming Continues

    A new assessment warns that if Earth’s average temperature reaches 2 degrees C over the preindustrial average, widespread areas may become too hot during extreme heat events for many people to survive without artificial cooling.

    • Read more
  • CHINA WATCHCalls Grow for U.S. to Counter Chinese Control, Influence in Western Ports

    By Bing X

    Experts say Washington should consider buying back some ports, offer incentives to allies to decouple from China.

    • Read more
  • MASS ATTACKSEvidence-Based Solutions to Protect Against Mass Attacks

    By Richard H. Donohue and John S. Hollywood

    Mass attacks like the New Year’s Day incident in New Orleans stir public emotion and have tragic consequences. While the investigations into this case will take time, we know from our work that there are things law enforcement and the public can do to mitigate and perhaps stop mass casualty events.

    • Read more
  • NUCLEAR ENERGYExploring the New Nuclear Energy Landscape

    By Josh Blatt

    In the last few years, the U.S. has seen a resurgence of interest in nuclear energy and its potential for helping meet the nation’s growing demands for clean electricity and energy security. Meanwhile, nuclear energy technologies themselves have advanced, opening up new possibilities for their use.

    • Read more
  • WILRDFIRESTrump’s Cuts to Federal Wildfire Crews Could Have “Scary” Consequences

    By Alex Brown

    President Donald Trump’s moves to slash the federal workforce have gutted the ranks of wildland firefighters and support personnel, fire professionals warn, leaving communities to face deadly consequences when big blazes arrive this summer. States, tribes and fire chiefs are preparing for a fire season with minimal federal support.

    • Read more
  • EURO-ATLANTIC SECURITYTime to Reassess the Costs of Euro-Atlantic Security

    By Anna M. Dowd and Stephen J. Flanagan

    The undeniable truth is that security comes at a cost. If Europeans fail to invest more now to deter Russia and China, the alliance will face far greater expenses and risks. The problem is that Europeans, with few exceptions, fail to grasp the immense costs such a scenario would inflict on allied security.

    • Read more
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