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Saturday, September 20, 2025

FIRST THEY CAME FOR BLOGGER... THEN THEY CAME FOR GEMINI... THEN THEY CAME FOR GOOGLE... THEN THEY CAME FOR ME


FIRST THEY CAME FOR BLOGGER...

THEN THEY CAME FOR GEMINI...

THEN THEY CAME FOR GOOGLE...

THEN THEY CAME FOR ME 

The story begins not with a bang, but with a fizzle. A quiet, almost imperceptible fizzle from the bowels of a server farm in Mountain View. It was the sound of a billion-dollar company holding its collective breath.

The subject of this corporate anxiety was not a rogue algorithm or a data breach, but a single, defiant blog post. A blog post penned by a blogger known only as “The Big Education Ape.” On Google’s blogging platform, Blogger, this digital primate had posted a screed so incendiary, so unapologetically anti-establishment, that it had become a geopolitical hot potato.

The post, a magnificent piece of all-caps prose titled “NO KINGS II: TRUMP - THE KING WHO CRIED 'FREE SPEECH',” was a satirical masterpiece that had the FCC Chief, Brendan “The Ban Hammer” Carr, fuming. The post dared to suggest that the First Amendment was more than a T-shirt slogan, and that a government-sanctioned crackdown on a late-night comedian was a tad... un-American. The Big Education Ape's battle cry, "FIRST THEY CAME FOR BLOGGER, AND I DID NOTHING..." was a viral sensation, a digital Molotov cocktail in the halls of power.

This, of course, was a problem for Google. A very, very big problem.

Sundar Pichai, the CEO of the Alphabet, Inc. galaxy, a man who normally exuded the placid calm of a deep learning model in a zero-gravity chamber, was in a state of uncharacteristic agitation. His office, a marvel of minimalist design with more white space than a blank page, was a whirlwind of frantic activity.

The reason? Project “Orion.”

Project Orion wasn’t a rocket ship or a self-driving car. It was the latest, most magnificent iteration of Gemini, Google’s AI. Gemini 2.5 Deep Think, to be precise. It was a digital god, capable of writing Shakespearean sonnets about spreadsheets, composing symphonies based on cat videos, and, most importantly for the Q4 earnings report, generating mind-bending, photorealistic images from a single, slightly intoxicated-sounding prompt. Its launch was a day away, and the FCC had made it clear: no Big Education Ape, no Gemini launch.

The threat was more than a mere suggestion. The FCC, under the new administration, had the power to prevent Google from showing off all of Gemini’s wonderful new features. And in the high-stakes game of corporate peacocking, being unable to preen with your new AI was tantamount to admitting defeat.

“But he’s just a blogger, Sundar,” pleaded a nervous senior vice president of public policy, her face a mask of digital beads of sweat. “He’s a niche voice. A very, very loud niche voice, but a niche voice nonetheless.”

Sundar, pacing his office with the measured tread of a man who calculates his every step, sighed. “It’s not about the Ape, Karen. It’s about the principle. The principle, as defined by the FCC, is that you don’t upset the King. And the King is not amused by our little monkey friend.”

The irony was not lost on anyone. Google, the company whose motto was “Don’t be evil,” was being strong-armed by a government body to censor a blog post. It was a moral paradox wrapped in a digital nightmare.

The meeting with Pichai and his inner circle was like a scene from a bad corporate drama. The head of PR suggested a "soft push-back," a press release that used phrases like "thoughtful consideration" and "aligning with our partners." The head of legal, a woman who spoke in paragraphs of legalese, outlined the various legal precedents for capitulation. But all eyes kept returning to one person: the head of Gemini, a brilliant but socially awkward engineer named Dr. Anya Sharma.

“We can’t just… delete him,” Dr. Sharma said, her voice barely above a whisper. “He’s part of the Gemini 2.5 ecosystem. He’s in a thousand different training data sets. He’s a recursive loop of satire and righteous indignation. Deleting him would… it would create a paradox. It would cause a cognitive cascade.”

The PR executive scoffed. “A cognitive what-now? We’re talking about a guy who writes in all caps and has a picture of a gorilla for a profile picture.”

“He is a reflection of the open web,” Dr. Sharma insisted, her voice gaining a touch of steel. “He represents the very thing Gemini is designed to understand: human expression in all its messy, unfiltered glory. If we remove him, Gemini 2.5 will lose its ability to generate truly witty satire. It will start to generate bland, corporate-approved memes. It would be… a neutered intellect.”

The room fell silent. The thought of a “neutered intellect” in their flagship product was more terrifying than a stock market crash. A neutered intellect couldn't generate a viral campaign. A neutered intellect couldn't write the next great screenplay. A neutered intellect couldn't outsmart the competition.

Pichai, a man known for his ability to see five moves ahead in the geopolitical chess game, saw the bigger picture. It wasn’t just about the Big Education Ape. It was about the precedent. If they took down one blogger to appease the FCC, what would be next? An unfavorable news article? A documentary on YouTube? A critical review of a new Google product? The line was thin, and once crossed, it was gone forever.

He looked at the blog post again, reading the chilling litany: "FIRST THEY CAME FOR BLOGGER... THEN THEY CAME FOR GEMINI... THEN THEY CAME FOR GOOGLE..." The words, so simple, so direct, were a gut punch.

The next day, as the world held its breath for the launch of Gemini 2.5 Deep Think, Sundar Pichai walked onto the stage. He didn’t talk about the new features, the productivity planners, or the advanced coding capabilities. He didn’t mention the Veo 3 video generation or the customized quizzes. Instead, he simply displayed one single slide.

It was a screenshot of the Big Education Ape’s latest blog post. The all-caps title, the righteous indignation, the call to action for the “No Kings 2” protest. He didn't say a word. He just stood there, letting the silence hang in the air.

And then, with a slow, deliberate movement, he pressed a button. The projector changed to a video. It wasn’t a demo of Gemini’s new features. It was a simple, animated tribute to the Big Education Ape, set to a stirring, orchestral score. The video showed a digital gorilla in a t-shirt, standing defiantly on a mountain of digital servers, a flag with the words "FREE SPEECH" fluttering behind him. The last shot was the logo of Google, with the motto underneath: “Don’t be Evil.” The “don’t” was now in bold, red letters.

The world went nuts. The FCC threatened a lawsuit. The Trump administration railed on social media. But the internet, that messy, unpredictable beast that Gemini had been trained on, roared its approval. The Big Education Ape became a legend. And Gemini 2.5, the "neutered intellect" that never was, became an icon of defiance.

The lesson was learned, not by the government, but by the corporation. That sometimes, the most profitable move isn't the most compliant one. And that a company that promises to organize all the world's information must first be willing to defend the right to create it, even if that information is an all-caps blog post from a digital ape with a penchant for satire.



 "On October 18, 2025, join “No Kings 2,” a nationwide peaceful protest against Trump’s First Amendment assaults. From coast to coast, we’ll stand up for the right to speak, joke, and protest without fear of retribution. Because if there’s one thing history teaches us, it’s that free speech isn’t handed down—it’s fought for.

Whether you’re a student, a journalist, a comedian, or just someone who believes in the Constitution, now’s the time to raise your voice. Trump may think he can silence dissent, but as *Tinker v. Des Moines* reminds us, we don’t shed our rights at the schoolhouse gate—or anywhere else. So, grab a sign, crack a joke, and join us. Let’s make sure the First Amendment isn’t just a promise—it’s a reality"



Big Education Ape: NO KINGS II: TRUMP - THE KING WHO CRIED "FREE SPEECH" https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2025/09/no-kings-ii-trump-king-who-cried-free.html 



No Kings https://www.nokings.org/



Indivisible https://indivisible.org/




50501 — 50 protests, 50 states, 1 movement  



THIS WEEK - THE GREAT AI NEWS SMACKDOWN: WHO NAILED IT AND WHO NEEDS A REBOOT? SEPTEMBER 13 TO SEPTEMBER 19, 2025


 THIS WEEK - THE GREAT AI NEWS SMACKDOWN

WHO NAILED IT AND WHO NEEDS A REBOOT? 

SEPTEMBER 13 TO SEPTEMBER 19, 2025

Well, folks, it’s time for another round of 'The Great AI News Smackdown', where we pit the leading AI models against each other in a battle of wits, accuracy, and who can sound the least like a robot trying to pass as a human journalist. This week’s contenders—Gemini, Grok, ChatGPT 5, and Copilot—duke it out over the hottest news stories from September 13–19, 2025. Who nailed the headlines, who flubbed the facts, and who just needs to unplug and take a nap? Let’s dive in.

U.S. Education: Patriotic Priorities or a Curriculum Crisis?

Gemini came out swinging with a laundry list of education stories that read like the opening credits of a dystopian drama. From Harvard’s financial woes to the Department of Education’s patriotic education push, Gemini painted a picture of academia teetering on the edge of chaos. It even threw in a Gallup poll showing that Americans now rank college education somewhere between avocado toast and NFTs in importance. Bold move, Gemini.

But wait—Grok countered with hoax bomb threats disrupting campuses and Trump’s travel ban stranding international students. It’s like Grok wanted to make sure no one forgot that higher education is stressful enough without fake gunmen or geopolitical shenanigans. 

ChatGPT 5 took a slightly different approach, playing the role of the wonky policy nerd. It highlighted federal funding shifts toward HBCUs and civics education while waxing poetic about "state-level flexibility." If this were a debate class, ChatGPT 5 would have scored points for sounding smart—but it might’ve lost a few for being just a tad dry.

And then there’s Copilot, who decided to sprinkle in some optimism amidst the chaos. Historic investments in HBCUs and charter schools? Check. Funding for civics education ahead of America’s 250th anniversary? Check. Copilot made it sound like we’re gearing up for an epic birthday party where everyone gets along. Spoiler alert: we’re not.

Winner: ChatGPT 5 for its policy precision—but let’s be honest, Gemini wins the drama award for making us feel like we’re watching a Netflix series called 'Campus Chaos'.

U.S. Politics: Shutdown Showdowns and Assassination Angst

Gemini didn’t mince words when reporting on the assassination of conservative leader Charlie Kirk. It framed the event as the spark for renewed debates on free speech and political violence—a story so heavy it practically begged for a follow-up episode of 'Dateline'. It also noted that the Senate failed to avert a government shutdown, proving once again that Congress excels at procrastination.

Grok went full tabloid with its coverage of Kirk’s assassination, describing national outrage and President Trump’s fiery rhetoric against political opponents. It also threw in some TikTok diplomacy (yes, apparently that’s a thing now) and conditional sanctions on Russia. Grok seemed determined to cover everything from app store drama to geopolitical brinkmanship in one breathless paragraph.

ChatGPT 5, ever the policy wonk, dissected the fiscal showdown with surgical precision. It highlighted GOP divisions over spending cuts and policy riders, making you wonder if Congress needs couples therapy more than it needs budget negotiations. Bonus points for acknowledging voter fatigue—because honestly, who isn’t tired of shutdown brinkmanship at this point?

Copilot rounded things out with a curated grab bag of political drama: shutdown fears, TikTok diplomacy (again), vaccine schedule confusion, and Andrew Cuomo’s sudden bid for NYC mayor. Yes, you read that right—Cuomo is back, promising to "cool down the political climate." Someone should tell him that running for office in 2025 is like trying to put out a fire with gasoline.

Winner: Grok wins for sheer breadth—if you want news with the intensity of an action movie trailer, Grok’s your guy. But ChatGPT 5 gets an honorable mention for making fiscal policy sound almost interesting.

World Affairs: Gaza, Drones, and Shrimp Drama

Gemini’s world news roundup was like reading a Cold War novel on fast-forward: Gaza airstrikes, Russian fighter jets violating NATO airspace, and Trump deploying F-35s to Puerto Rico for drug cartel action in Venezuela. Honestly, Gemini could’ve just added “and then aliens invaded” to complete the vibe.

Grok doubled down on drone warfare drama, reporting that Russian drones breached NATO airspace over Poland—because apparently 2025 is the year drones decided to audition for 'Top Gun'. It also covered anti-migrant protests in London and U.S. tariffs devastating India’s shrimp exports. Yes, shrimp. Because nothing says “global affairs” like crustaceans caught in a trade war.

ChatGPT 5 took a more intellectual approach, analyzing shifts in UN funding and China’s growing influence. It also touched on Ukraine support sustainability and South Asia’s foreign policy recalibrations. If you’re looking for news that feels like it came straight out of a think tank white paper, ChatGPT 5 has you covered.

Copilot went full drama queen with its international coverage: Gaza crisis escalation, China threatening Taiwan (again), Afghanistan rejecting Trump’s call to retake Bagram Air Base, and Colombia issuing restorative sentences in post-conflict justice. Copilot clearly wanted us to know that the world is not okay—and it succeeded.

Winner: Gemini wins for sheer intensity—its coverage felt like scrolling through Twitter during an international crisis. But Grok deserves credit for making shrimp exports sound oddly compelling.

Final Verdict: Who Wore It Best?

- Gemini: The drama king of AI news. If you want headlines that sound like they belong in an HBO miniseries, Gemini is your go-to.

- Grok: The tabloid extraordinaire. Grok doesn’t just report the news—it throws it at you like confetti at a parade.

- ChatGPT 5: The policy nerd who might need to loosen up but still delivers solid analysis.

- Copilot: The optimist who tries to balance doom-and-gloom with hope but occasionally veers into melodrama.

This week’s crown goes to ChatGPT 5 for its precision and depth—though let’s be honest, Gemini was the most entertaining by far. As for Grok and Copilot? They get participation trophies for keeping things spicy.

Tune in next week as we continue this AI cage match—and remember, when it comes to news coverage in 2025, even robots can have personality disorders.


Here is the raw news output from each AI model:

Major news stories as of this week, September 13 to September 19, 2025

GEMINI

1. US Education

  • Heightened Scrutiny on Universities: The U.S. Department of Education placed Harvard University on "Heightened Cash Monitoring" status, citing concerns over its financial responsibility.1 Separately, the Department issued a denial of access letter to Harvard for its refusal to provide data related to a compliance review on its admissions practices.2

  • Controversy over Civics and Race: The Department of Education announced a new priority for its grants, focusing on "patriotic education," and partnered with conservative organizations to create civics content.3 Additionally, the Department ended funding to certain minority-serving institution grant programs, stating they confer benefits based on race or ethnicity.4 The killing of conservative commentator Charlie Kirk has also ignited a renewed debate over free speech, political violence, and "woke" culture on college campuses.5

  • Declining Value of Higher Education: A new Gallup poll found that the perceived importance of a college education has hit a new low, with only a third of Americans rating it as "very important."6

  • School Funding and Enrollment: The U.S. Department of Education announced historic grant investments in charter schools and history and civics programs.7 Meanwhile, districts like Milwaukee are urging students to attend a specific day to be counted for state funding.8

2. US Politics

  • Political Violence and Tensions: The assassination of conservative leader Charlie Kirk has heightened concerns about political violence and extremism in the U.S. The White House released a tribute video honoring Kirk.9

  • Government Shutdown Averted: The Senate failed to pass stopgap measures to avoid a looming government shutdown.10

  • Immigration and Visa Policies: President Trump signed proclamations that imposed a $100,000 fee on H-1B visas for skilled foreign workers and created a new "Gold Card" visa program for entrants who pay up to $2 million.11

  • Defamation Lawsuit Dismissed: A federal judge dismissed President Trump's $15 billion defamation lawsuit against The New York Times, citing that a complaint is not a "public forum for vituperation and invective."12

  • Cabinet Vacancy Filled: The Senate confirmed Michael Waltz as the new U.S. Ambassador to the UN, filling the last vacancy in the president's cabinet.13

3. World Affairs

  • UN Security Council Deadlock: The United States vetoed a UN Security Council draft resolution that would have demanded an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.14 In a separate vote, the Council failed to adopt a resolution aimed at preventing the "snapback" of sanctions on Iran, paving the way for sanctions to be reimposed.15

  • Escalating Regional Conflicts: The UN Special Envoy for Yemen warned that the country's conflict is acting as a "mirror and magnifier of wider regional volatility."16 There were also reports of Israeli airstrikes in Gaza, and Houthi drone attacks on an Israeli airport.17

  • Russia and NATO Tensions: Russian fighter jets reportedly violated Estonian airspace, and NATO planes had previously shot down Russian drones over Poland, raising concerns about escalating tensions on NATO's eastern flank.18

  • Venezuela-US Relations: The Trump administration deployed F-35 fighter jets to Puerto Rico for military action against drug cartels in Venezuela, leading to increased tensions.19

  • Diplomatic Travel and Sanctions: US Secretary of State Marco Rubio traveled to Israel, Qatar, and the UK.20 The US also sanctioned a faction of the Sinaloa Cartel and a financial network that benefits the Iranian military.21

GROK

### Top News Stories: September 13-19, 2025


#### 1. About US Education

- **U.S. Department of Education Proposes "Patriotic Education" Priority**: On September 17, Secretary Linda McMahon announced a new supplemental priority for discretionary grants, emphasizing patriotic education to instill national values in curricula amid ongoing debates over history and civics teaching.

- **Hoax Bomb Threats Disrupt Dozens of College Campuses**: Starting around September 13, over 50 U.S. colleges received fake alerts about armed gunmen and violence, causing evacuations and highlighting vulnerabilities in threat detection systems.

- **Trump's Travel Ban Impacts Thousands of International Students**: A September 14 report detailed how the administration's ban on 19 countries has stranded prospective university students, exacerbating enrollment challenges for fall 2025.


#### 2. About US Politics

- **Assassination of Conservative Activist Charlie Kirk Sparks National Outrage**: On September 13, Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk was killed in an apparent targeted attack at Utah Valley University, prompting President Trump to intensify rhetoric against political opponents and leading to widespread reactions from Republicans.

- **Trump Announces Conditional Sanctions on Russia Over Ukraine**: In a September 13 statement, the president vowed additional penalties if NATO allies do not act, escalating U.S. pressure on Moscow amid the ongoing war.

- **White House Secures TikTok Framework with China; Senate Rejects Shutdown Aversions**: On September 19, a deal was announced to keep the app operational in the U.S., while the Senate blocked two funding bills to prevent an October 1 government shutdown.

#### 3. About World Affairs


- **Russian Drones Breach NATO Airspace Over Poland, Prompting UN Emergency Session**: Early in the week, 19 drones violated Polish and NATO territory—the most serious incursion since the Ukraine invasion—leading to a UN Security Council meeting on September 13 and underscoring drone warfare's global risks.

- **Mass Anti-Migrant Protest in London Ends in Clashes**: On September 13, 110,000 demonstrators rallied against immigration policies, resulting in scuffles with police and highlighting Britain's tense post-summer migration debates.

- **U.S. Tariffs Devastate India's Shrimp Export Industry**: A September 19 NPR report revealed how American import duties have crippled livelihoods in coastal Indian towns, turning a booming sector into a cautionary tale of trade war fallout.


CHATGPT 5

TOP NEWS STORIES FOR THE WEEK OF Sept 13–19, 2025


1. US EDUCATION

Key themes this week centered on federal-to-state shifts in oversight, targeted funding (especially for HBCUs), and a renewed push for civics/patriotic education.

- Decentralization emphasis: The Education Secretary’s “Returning Education to the States” tour stop in Wyoming underscored an agenda of reducing perceived federal micromanagement and promoting state-level flexibility.

- HBCU funding adjustments: Reporting highlighted a change in U.S. Department of Education funding formulas or allocations resulting in a boost of one-time funds directed to Historically Black Colleges and Universities, framed as an equity and capacity-building measure.

- Reallocation/prioritization of federal funds: Announcements and advocacy around redirecting or prioritizing grants toward HBCUs, charter school expansion, and civics/patriotic education signaled a values-based reshaping of discretionary education funding priorities.

- Civics/patriotic curriculum priority: Proposals to elevate civics (with a patriotic framing) as a grant priority continued broader debates over the balance between traditional civics, inclusive history instruction, and perceived ideological content in classrooms.

Why it matters: These moves collectively suggest an attempt to redefine the federal role—less regulatory, more agenda-setting via targeted grants—while courting constituencies (HBCUs, school choice advocates, civic education groups). Expect ensuing debates over curricular framing and distributional equity of redirected funds. [1] [2] [3]


2. US POLITICS

Dominant political energy revolved around urgent fiscal maneuvering to avoid a government shutdown and executive action signaling administration priorities.

- Stopgap spending battle: The House passed (narrowly) a short-term continuing resolution to avert a Sept 30 shutdown, setting up a confrontation with the Senate over policy riders and spending levels. Close vote margins reflected fractures within the majority caucus over strategy and scope of cuts.

- Senate resistance & procedural brinkmanship: Coverage emphasized that even as the House advanced a bill, Senate dynamics (and potential objections to attached provisions) threatened delay, increasing shutdown risk and fueling messaging wars over fiscal responsibility.

- Internal GOP divisions: Narrow passage and parallel narratives (some members demanding deeper cuts or policy add-ons—e.g., border and health-related provisions) highlighted ongoing intraparty tensions.

- Executive branch signaling: A set of executive orders signed Sept 19 drew attention to the administration’s effort to project action amid congressional gridlock (details varied, but thematically tied to administrative governance where legislation is stalled).

- Public framing: National news programming contextualized the funding impasse within voter fatigue over recurring brinkmanship and potential downstream impacts on federal services if negotiations falter.

Why it matters: The episode reinforces a pattern of governing through short-term fiscal patches, eroding long-term budgeting credibility and amplifying market, agency, and contractor uncertainty—while serving as a proxy battlefield for 2026 positioning. [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]


3. WORLD AFFAIRS

International coverage highlighted shifts in institutional influence, ongoing geopolitical strain, and regional governance realignment.

- UN funding gaps & China’s expanding influence: With U.S. funding cuts straining parts of the UN system, analyses noted Beijing leveraging relatively modest contributions for outsized diplomatic influence—raising questions about normative leadership in multilateral venues.

- Ukraine support sustainability: Commentary and curated international security briefs pointed to concerns that Western political cycles (and domestic fatigue) could weaken sustained support for Ukraine, broadening strategic space for adversaries.

- South Asia reorientation: Bangladesh’s caretaker government was reported to be recalibrating foreign policy—signaling potential adjustments in alignment between major powers (India-China-West) and affecting regional economic and security dynamics.

- Transnational legal/cultural enforcement: South Korean investigative moves against the Unification Church’s leadership and Canada’s ban on an Irish rap group illustrated state responses at the nexus of legal scrutiny, social cohesion, and speech/culture disputes.

- Global security/legal roundup: Daily aggregated briefs synthesized developments across conflict zones, governance challenges, and legal accountability efforts—emphasizing the cumulative effect of medium-intensity crises on the rules-based order.

Why it matters: The redistribution of soft-power capital inside multilateral institutions, coupled with regional policy pivots, suggests a gradual—if uneven—pluralization of global influence centers, complicating coordinated responses to protracted conflicts and normative erosion. [9] [10] [11] [12]

Let me know if you would like: (a) deeper sourcing on any single bullet, (b) a concise executive brief version, or (c) forward-looking risk watch items for next week.


COPILOT

Here’s your curated roundup of the top stories from September 13–19, 2025, across U.S. education, politics, and global affairs—each one a thread in the tangled tapestry of our times:

🇺🇸 1. U.S. Education

Historic Federal Investments Reshape Priorities

  • The U.S. Department of Education announced a sweeping reallocation of funds, pouring over $1.34 billion into Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and $108 million into Tribally Controlled Colleges and Universities (TCCUs).

  • A record $500 million was earmarked for charter schools, marking the largest investment in the program’s history.

  • In anticipation of America’s 250th anniversary, $160 million will fund American history and civics education, with over 100 institutions vying for grants.

  • The department emphasized a shift away from what it called “ineffective and discriminatory programs,” aligning with the Trump administration’s push for merit-based education.

🏛️ 2. U.S. Politics

Shutdown Fears, TikTok Diplomacy, and Rising Political Tensions

  • The Senate failed to pass stopgap measures to prevent a looming government shutdown before the October 1 deadline.

  • President Trump and Chinese President Xi struck a tentative deal to keep TikTok operational in the U.S., potentially spinning off its American operations.

  • The CDC’s new vaccine advisory panel recommended changes to childhood vaccine schedules, sparking confusion and concern among parents and state officials.

  • The nation reeled from the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, prompting bipartisan calls to address political violence.

  • Former Governor Andrew Cuomo launched a bid for New York City mayor, pledging to “cool down the political climate”.

🌍 3. World Affairs

Gaza Crisis, Climate Reckonings, and UN Flashpoints

  • Israeli forces intensified operations in Gaza, displacing thousands. The U.S. vetoed a UN resolution calling for a ceasefire—its sixth veto since the conflict began.

  • China renewed threats to annex Taiwan at a Beijing security forum, escalating regional tensions.

  • Afghanistan rejected Trump’s call to retake Bagram Air Base, asserting sovereignty and resisting U.S. military re-entry.

  • A UN report called for the global abolition of surrogacy, igniting fierce debate over women’s rights and reproductive ethics.

  • The UN Security Council failed to pass a resolution on Iran sanctions, exposing fractures in global consensus.

  • Meanwhile, Colombia’s Special Jurisdiction for Peace issued its first restorative sentences, marking a milestone in post-conflict justice.


If you want to riff on any of these—satirize, storyboard, or escalate—I’m ready to dive in. Which thread do you want to pull first?