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Mar 31 2026POLITICS

Ukraine’s Global Push: Turning War Lessons into Diplomatic Wins

Zelenskiy wrapped up a Middle East trip with a bold claim—his country just scored major security deals in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar. Not bad for a president whose country has been fighting off Iranian drones for years. The message was clear: Ukraine isn’t just surviving a war; it’s selling it

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Mar 31 2026POLITICS

Why a proposed Charlie Kirk highway in Arizona got shut down

Last week, Arizona’s governor vetoed a plan to name a major Phoenix highway after Charlie Kirk, a conservative activist killed in 2023. But the real debate wasn’t about the name—it was about who gets to decide what counts as “historic. ” Republicans argued the highway should honor Kirk’s impact on p

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Mar 31 2026HEALTH

Teens and Dementia: What Young People Actually Know

A new survey took a close look at how much 11 to 18-year-olds in England understand about dementia. The research team wanted to see whether knowing about the condition differs across groups like gender, family income, or where someone lives. They also tried to figure out which experiences—like havin

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Mar 31 2026SPORTS

Jaden Ivey's Exit: What the Bulls' Decision Says About Team Culture

The Chicago Bulls made a clear statement about their values when they decided to waive guard Jaden Ivey after he posted Instagram videos criticizing Pride Month and questioning why religious messages spark controversy. The team's move wasn't just about basketball—it reflected a broader expectation t

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Mar 30 2026RELIGION

War and Faith: A Call for Peace

Pope Leo XIV opened his first Palm Sunday sermon by warning that many leaders use religion to justify fighting. He spoke to the crowd in St. Peter’s Square about Christians who are trapped in wars in places like the Middle East and Ukraine. The pope called Jesus “King of Peace” and said that no one

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Mar 30 2026HEALTH

Birmingham Water Switches Off Fluoride, Residents Upset

The city of Birmingham found out that its tap water had stopped containing fluoride, a fact that was actually decided years earlier without the public’s knowledge. Some treatment plants began removing fluoride as early as 2023, and a third stopped in March 2024. The utility company, Central Alabama

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Mar 30 2026POLITICS

Spain blocks US war planes from its skies

Spain has decided to shut its airspace to U. S. military aircraft that are part of strikes against Iran. This move follows earlier statements that Spain would not allow its bases to be used for the conflict. The restriction means U. S. jets must fly around Spain on their way to targets in the Middle

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Mar 30 2026SCIENCE

Safe Water Still a Hard Fight in Rural Philippines

In many poor and middle‑income places, getting clean water is a daily battle. A recent study looked at four remote villages in Barbaza, Antique. The researchers collected 232 water samples from taps, bottles and wells. They tested each sample for temperature, pH, total dissolved solids (TDS

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Mar 30 2026CRYPTO

CoinFello Unveils AI‑Powered Chat for Easy DeFi Moves

CoinFello, a new tool that lets people talk to their crypto wallets like a friend, has opened its doors to everyone at the EthCC event in Cannes. The platform turns simple sentences into blockchain actions, so users can send coins, swap tokens, bridge across chains, or set up recurring trades withou

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Mar 30 2026TECHNOLOGY

'Drone Swarms: A New Kind of Battlefield Battle'

'A new chapter in war has opened, where tiny unmanned machines fly in packs like bees. In the clash between Russia and Ukraine, these drones now cause most of the injuries on both sides. The front line stretches far, and anyone caught in it risks being targeted by these flying robots. Experts say t

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