NEWS 23

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☐ ☆ ✇ Mehr News Agency

Handala says senior Mossad official killed in car bombing

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Vorschau ansehen TEHRAN, Jun. 04 (MNA) – The hacker group “Handala” has said in its latest message that a senior Mossad official was killed following the explosion of a bomb planted in his personal vehicle.

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Iran, Russia advance largest joint atomic project: envoy

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Vorschau ansehen TEHRAN, Jun. 04 (MNA) – Iran’s ambassador to Russia has announced the implementation of the largest nuclear cooperation project between Tehran and Moscow.

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Iran's Bushehr nuclear plant hits record 80 billion kWh

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Vorschau ansehen TEHRAN, Jun. 04 (MNA) – Iran’s Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant has generated 80 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity, marking a milestone in the country’s civilian nuclear energy program.

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☐ ☆ ✇ Times of Israel

Smotrich instructs ministry to build task force to help tech firms with shekel surge

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Amid wave of mass layoffs, Finance Ministry officials meet with tech reps, insist that government won't directly intervene to stabilize currency and instead look to limit damage

The post Smotrich instructs ministry to build task force to help tech firms with shekel surge appeared first on The Times of Israel.

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☐ ☆ ✇ Times of Israel

Motorola Solutions buys Israeli drone defense startup D-Fend for $1.5 billion

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Raanana-based firm uses radio waves to commandeer UAVs instead of jamming or intercepting them; system deployed in over 30 countries; described as largest-ever Israeli defense tech exit

The post Motorola Solutions buys Israeli drone defense startup D-Fend for $1.5 billion appeared first on The Times of Israel.

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☐ ☆ ✇ Mehr News Agency

Handala mocks FBI director, former Mossad chief

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Vorschau ansehen TEHRAN, May 31 (MNA) – The cyber group “Handala”has released hacked images of FBI Director Kash Patel and Yossi Cohen, a person close to Netanyahu and former Mossad chief.

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☐ ☆ ✇ Mehr News Agency

Tehran, Moscow eye broadening academic cooperation

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Vorschau ansehen TEHRAN, May 30 (MNA) – Officials from Iran and the Russian Federation have emphasized enhancing academic cooperation and boosting humanitarian relations.

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☐ ☆ ✇ Fox News

Funerals, beauty queens and bombs: The Ukrainian city that won’t let Putin win

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LVIV, Ukraine — As Kyiv takes a massive hit from Russia, another city seeks to carry on amid war. Four years into Russia’s war, the western Ukrainian city of Lviv is trying to master something impossible: how to live normally while surrounded by death.

At 11:30 a.m., the city stops.

Cars freeze in the middle of the street. Pedestrians pause on sidewalks. In the center of town, underneath the tall clock tower that rises above city hall, people bow their heads in silence as another military funeral convoy passes through the streets.

"It happens one to five times a day," a local resident says quietly.

The war feels far from Lviv, until suddenly it doesn’t.

UKRAINE’S BATTLEFIELD IS TRANSFORMING THE FUTURE OF NATO

The city of roughly one million people sits near the Polish border, hundreds of miles from the brutal front lines in eastern Ukraine. But Russian drones and missiles still hit here. Air raid sirens interrupt coffee dates and children’s soccer games. Funeral processions cut through wedding traffic. Entire neighborhoods live between moments of beauty and grief.

"We lost approximately 2,000 citizens of Lviv," Mayor Andriy Sadovyi told Fox News Digital during an interview at city hall. "It is a very huge price which we pay to our independence, to our democracy."

Sadovyi has led the city for nearly two decades, except for a brief presidential run. Inside his office overlooking the historic center, he proudly points to the terrace where he has hosted world leaders and celebrities, including actor Tom Cruise. At one point, a large well-fed cat jumps onto his desk.

"This is my deputy," Sadovyi jokes. The cat, he explains proudly, has become something of a city mascot. "He’s tough like a Ukrainian."

But beneath the humor is exhaustion. Sadovyi says he realized at the beginning of the war that Lviv had a special responsibility. It was close enough to Europe to remain functioning, but close enough to war to understand what was at stake.

His answer was what he calls the "Unbroken" project: a sprawling rehabilitation and innovation effort aimed at helping Ukraine survive physically and psychologically.

The city built rehabilitation centers for wounded soldiers and civilians arriving from across the country, treating amputees, burn victims and trauma patients. Sadovyi says the municipality also dedicated 20% of its budget to supporting defense technology companies developing military solutions for the war effort.

"Every family in this city was affected by war," he says. "We need to be strong. We need to survive. I’m building what is needed for that."

'A NEW KIND OF WAR': INSIDE UKRAINE'S HIDDEN FACTORIES MASS-PRODUCING COMBAT DRONES

Yet survival in Lviv is not only about weapons or hospitals. It is also about convincing people not to give up on life itself.

"People are afraid to come here," Sadovyi says. "But we need them to come."

One of the city’s newest projects reflects that mentality. Part school, part shooting range, part patriotic training center, it was designed to prepare civilians for a country where war has become everyday reality.

Inside one classroom, dozens of teenage girls sit listening to instructors explain emergency survival skills. Upstairs, at the indoor shooting range, instructor Vitaliy proudly shows off rows of American-made weapons including AR-15 style rifles and pistols.

"It’s not as big as ranges in the United States," he says apologetically.

On the wall hangs a shredded image of Soviet founder Vladimir Lenin, riddled with bullet holes from target practice.

Vitaliy laughs when asked about Russian President Vladimir Putin posters.

"We ran out," he jokes. "They’re too popular. We can’t keep them."

On the terrace outside, two wounded veterans practice archery.

One sits in a wheelchair after losing both legs in the war. Another leans on a cane. Both have become competitive athletes through rehabilitation programs.

NATO ALLY POLAND WARNS RUSSIA, BELARUS PUSHING ILLEGAL MIGRANTS TOWARD ALLIANCE — AND THE US

One proudly explains he won a silver medal during a national contest. The other recently took gold and is now preparing for an international championship. Neither wants to talk much about what happened to them during combat.

Their therapy now is sport.

Down the road, another funeral begins. A military convoy carrying the body of a 32-year-old soldier drives slowly through the city center until it arrives at the cemetery.

The city’s military cemetery filled so quickly that officials recently had to open a new burial ground just weeks ago. Already, rows of fresh graves stretch across the hillside, above them blue-and-yellow flags and photographs of young men and women smiling back from before the war.

The grieving brother at the funeral says the fallen soldier never had time to start his own family.

Around him, families kneel beside the earth.

And still, life continues.

Children go to school. Mothers rush to work. Cafés remain packed. Street musicians perform in the old town square.

That same evening, inside the Lviv Theater of Opera and Ballet, hundreds gather for the "Miss Lviv" beauty pageant.

Young women dressed in glittering gowns pose beneath bright stage lights while music echoes through the theater. The audience is overwhelmingly female. Many of the men still in the city work in defense industries or hold exemptions from military service.

POLAND SEEKS ANSWERS AFTER PENTAGON SCRAPS PLANNED US ARMORED BRIGADE ROTATION

The contrast feels surreal only hours after attending a military burial.

But for many residents, events like these are an act of resistance.

"We are trying to keep life going," the reigning Miss Lviv says backstage before crowning the next winner. "I want the war to stop."

One of her friends explains why gatherings like this matter.

"These are difficult times," she says. "Doing normal things like this gives us a reason to dress up and enjoy ourselves."

Nobody here believes anymore that peace can come in 24 hours. But many still hope that President Trump and the U.S. can help bring the war to an end.

By the time evening arrives, air raid sirens once again cut through the city.

At outdoor cafés, people barely react at first.

'WRITTEN IN OUR DNA': POLISH PILOTS WHO REMEMBER SOVIET RULE PREPARE FOR AMERICA'S MOST LETHAL FIGHTER JET

Parents continue watching children play near fountains. Young couples finish drinks on restaurant terraces. Residents wait to hear whether the threat is "only" drones or actual missiles before deciding whether to move toward one of the hundreds of shelters spread throughout the city.

That frustration increasingly extends beyond the battlefield itself. Speaking to Fox News Digital while the latest wave of Russian strikes battered Ukrainian cities overnight, Ukraine’s Ambassador to the United Nations Andriy Melnyk warned that the war was becoming even more dangerous for civilians.

Melnyk, a native of Lviv, described the massive Russian assault between Saturday and Sunday as "the worst and the most devastating Russian attack on the capital since the beginning of the large-scale invasion."

Even members of his own family in Kyiv, he said, are now considering temporarily leaving the city because "it becomes unbearable to stay."

In Lviv, residents repeatedly ask to remind the world that the war is still intensifying, not fading into the background. Melnyk called on the United States and European allies to take "bold actions" to pressure Russian President Vladimir Putin and urged Western countries to provide additional air defense systems capable of intercepting ballistic missiles and drones targeting civilians.

He also criticized the United Nations for failing to stop the war, arguing that Russia’s veto power had left the Security Council effectively paralyzed.

On the overnight train leaving Lviv, most passengers are women. Border guards spend long minutes questioning the few men onboard, making sure they are not trying to escape mandatory military service. 

The exhaustion is visible everywhere. Still, Sadovyi is full of hope.

"This city will have a great future," he says confidently.

He believes the world will eventually come to Lviv not only to rebuild, but to learn.

"To learn how to be unbroken," he says.

Because, he warns, what happened to Ukraine could happen elsewhere too.

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☐ ☆ ✇ The Expose

Climate change and biotechnology agendas merge, as promoted by Associated Press

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On 10 April, the Associated Press made the ridiculously false claim that “climate change” is outpacing evolution, putting 1 million species at risk of extinction. The claim was made to promote their […]

The post Climate change and biotechnology agendas merge, as promoted by Associated Press first appeared on The Expose.

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☐ ☆ ✇ The Expose

The biotechnology industry has no right to secrecy

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There is still secrecy regarding covid vaccine ingredients and contaminants, particularly those that have been genetically engineered.  And the harm these injections have caused and are causing is still being denied. But […]

The post The biotechnology industry has no right to secrecy first appeared on The Expose.

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☐ ☆ ✇ Truthstream Media

We’re Being DEHUMANIZED by This…

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Technology — in its roots, once a process of development that yielded tools to solve problems and assist mankind — has now virtually supplanted its creators, and assumed the roles of caretaker, manager, developer, and arbiter of truth.

Now people, with their multitude of enduring problems, are finding that the face of technology has been personified and given grandeur — imitatively human and playing at roles of authority and empowered to make operational determinations of increasing consequence.

Emulators are becoming judges and gatekeepers. This is no accident; this is no side effect. The product is working as intended.

By the next phase, all humans will be less human than ever, unless we find some way to push back and reassert our humanity.

Already, we are witnessing alarming cases where glorified algorithms — hardly accurate, reliable or neutral, nor endowed with any true or actual wisdom, understanding, or discernment — are restricting (or, if you insist, safeguarding) access to the necessities and routines of life as we know it.

Someone programmed it to be that way.

These personified tools are being misconstrued as superior and even superhuman, while living humans have been invalidated by the technology, humiliated and labeled as something less than human. A world of flesh and breath, turned inside out and upside down by codes and signals.

This Kafka-esque situational dynamic, and its associated army of automated agentic-pseudo-brains-in-command, have already been loosed into our world. Its parts are replicating, spreading, and growing into the roles we once held.

Answering increasingly to the mirrors that were crafted by human hands, ordinary people may soon find, at any given turn, a system that is compromised and infiltrated and thoroughly unaccountable to anyone, and inaccessible to many who stand to be locked out for reasons that would never satisfy anyone with a conscience.

One machine-entity told a woman that she didn’t have a human face; another that she wasn’t a ‘unique human’; another determined that a man was someone else, someone who was accused of a crime.

These imitative processes have already assimilated all the knowledge that humans have among themselves, or so we have been told; yet we are left with endless questions of significant gravity about the future yet unfolding now before us:

Who authorized this? (And since when?)

Why has anybody accepted it?

What are people falling for?

Does this system stand to benefit anyone, other than certain people who would gain personally, and other than by a system that seeks to operate beyond its own rightful (constitutional) restrictions?

How could it be stopped, or overridden, if need be?

Can it be stopped or shutdown at all?

How long until people could lose the power to check and correct its increasing power to define and determine the parameters of the world we inhabit?

We continue to be left with more questions than answers about what is really going on here and what all of this is ultimately for, but it might be the understatement of the year to say we find it highly doubtful our country is racing to spend billions upon unimaginable billions on infrastructure and systems jamming something that hallucinates (aka “lies”) into every facet of our society just so students can shut down their neural pathways using Chat-GPT to do their homework for them and guys can generate images of anime girls with five boobs to talk to because they’re lonely on a Thursday night.

A very grim picture of the future is quickly coming into view. It’s Kafka, but this is also Idiocracy.

When an adult stands there in physical reality and lets a computer system override their own brain and eyeballs about what is happening — what is happening in the reality taking place right in front of their faces — we have a serious problem.

This is so very hard to watch.

And insane. And stupid. So incredibly stupid.

Changing out one kind of stupid for an even more “efficient” brand of technologically driven computerized stupid is… ultimately still stupid at the end of what is becoming a very long day. It should go without saying that just because one version of that stupid is dressed up in more technology than the previous version, does not make it less stupid than before.

In many ways, it makes it even more stupid.

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