BRITT BRITT

May 08 2026POLITICS

Korea Investigates Fire on Ship Near Hormuz Strait

South Korean authorities have begun looking into an explosion and blaze that hit a Korean‑run vessel in the waters near the Strait of Hormuz. The incident happened on Monday while the ship was anchored close to the United Arab Emirates, and it caused damage in the engine room. The crew of 24, which

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May 08 2026POLITICS

US Pushes UN Move on Iran, China and Russia Likely to Block

The United States is pushing a new United Nations resolution that would require Iran to stop attacks and remove mines from the Strait of Hormuz. The plan was drafted by Washington, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Qatar. The resolution calls for Iran to halt its military a

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May 08 2026POLITICS

China’s Anti-Corruption Drive Hits Airline Boss

Liu Shaoyong, once the chief of China Eastern Airlines, faces serious bribery accusations. Authorities say he used several high‑ranking roles to favor others and pocket money and gifts. The case includes his time leading the airline, not just earlier positions. Earlier this month, China’s t

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May 08 2026POLITICS

Paris Launches Probe into Elon Musk’s X Platform

Paris prosecutors have started a formal inquiry into the social media company X, owned by Elon Musk. The case centers on claims that the platform misused algorithms and shared false data. This step follows Musk’s refusal to attend a court summons on April 20, which has escalated the matter. The i

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May 08 2026CRIME

Villahermosa Fire Tragedy Leaves Five Dead During Music Festival

A huge blaze erupted at a fairground in Villahermosa, the southeastern Mexican city, early Thursday morning. The fire broke out while a concert drew thousands of fans. At least five people lost their lives, officials confirmed. The cause of the fire remains unclear as authorities work to control th

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May 08 2026SCIENCE

Readers Leave Their Mark on an Early Science Book

Researchers have taken a new look at a 17th‑century book about magnetism that first appeared in 1600. They didn’t just count how many copies survived; they also read the notes people wrote inside those books. By combining these two kinds of data, the team could see where readers stopped, highlighted

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May 08 2026OPINION

Violence in the Culture: A Quiet Shift

The U. S. has long carried out acts that cause severe harm, yet they rarely receive the label of cruelty in public discourse. An example is a missile strike that killed over a hundred children and adults in an Iranian school; initially the incident was downplayed, later dismissed as accidental. Such

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May 08 2026POLITICS

Police Feel the Chill When Laws Treat Crime Like a Ticket

The newest law in Maine shifts some low‑level offenses from the criminal court system to a civil fine. This change means that people who break the law may leave with only a receipt, no record, and little sense of punishment. The policy was passed by a slim margin in both chambers, showing how clos

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May 08 2026POLITICS

Armenia’s Election: A Test of Freedom Against Russian Pressure

In the weeks before June 7, Armenia’s parliamentary vote has become a frontline for a larger battle over its future direction. Russia’s top media voices have issued open calls for conflict, citing the need to “protect Russian interests” in Yerevan. These remarks echo the same rhetoric that jus

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May 08 2026ENTERTAINMENT

The Rough Roads of 20th Century Japan

Stranger Than Heaven steps away from the usual big‑action style of Yakuza games. It focuses on two young men, Makoto and Yu, who arrive in Japan in the early 1900s. Their lives are tied to crime and music, and the game follows them for fifty years. The story is tight. Instead of spanning m

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