By Jason Ditz – Antiwar.com

Israeli drones have carried out another drone attack on UNIFIL peacekeepers in southern Lebanon this weekend, wounding one of the personnel when they dropped a grenade on their position near Kfar Kela. Continue reading “UNIFIL Peacekeeper Wounded in Israeli Drone Strike in Southern Lebanon”

By Dave DeCamp – Antiwar.com

Rescue workers in Gaza have recovered more than 200 bodies of Palestinians killed by the IDF from the rubble and from areas they were previously unable to access since the ceasefire went into effect on Friday, and Israeli troops pulled back from certain areas. Continue reading “More Than 200 Bodies Dug Out of the Gaza Rubble Since Ceasefire Went Into Effect”

By Ken Macon – Reclaim The Net

A stylized front-facing portrait of a person with short brown hair and glasses, wearing a yellow shirt and teal jacket, framed by a white facial-recognition box and red rectangle over a teal background of binary code and yellow data bars.

A federal judge has dismissed a legal challenge from the National Retail Federation (NRF) against a New York law requiring businesses to alert customers when personal data is used to determine prices. Continue reading “Judge Upholds NY Law Requiring Disclosure of Algorithmic Pricing”

By Chris Menahan – Information Liberation

Trump envoy Jared Kushner on Saturday in Tel Aviv praised Israelis for not “replicating the barbarism of the enemy” in their war on Gaza. Continue reading “Jared Kushner Praises Israelis For Not ‘Replicating the Barbarism of the Enemy’ in War On Gaza”

By VBL – Zerohedge

The London silver market is in rare disarray. A powerful short squeeze has driven benchmark prices above $50 an ounce, marking only the second time in history the metal has reached that level. For veterans, the surge recalls the infamous Hunt brothers’ attempt to corner silver in 1980.

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Continue reading “London Silver Squeezed: US Bars Sent to Cover Physical Shortfall”

By Hayden Cunningham – The Postmillennial

Massachusetts court rules Harvard can be sued over ex-morgue manager selling body parts

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that Harvard University can be sued by families who allege the school mishandled the bodies of their loved ones donated to its medical school, allowing body parts to be sold on the black market. Continue reading “Massachusetts court rules Harvard can be sued over ex-morgue manager selling body parts”