
BREAKING: The FBI has warned police departments in California that Iran wants to retaliate for American attacks by launching offensive drones against the West Coast, according to an alert reviewed by @ABC News. Read more: abcnews.link/DEOBFK3
Nabil Shah
5.8K posts

@NabilShah1
MS @uchicago Applied Data Science | Applied Machine Learning Engineer | Veteran(combat medic @usarmy)

BREAKING: The FBI has warned police departments in California that Iran wants to retaliate for American attacks by launching offensive drones against the West Coast, according to an alert reviewed by @ABC News. Read more: abcnews.link/DEOBFK3





New: ProPublica is sharing eight handwritten letters from children who have been held at the detention center that 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos was recently released from. We'll let their words speak for themselves. propub.li/4a4V4nR

After the fall of Dhaka in 1971, the hope of a return to democracy were high in Pakistan. Power had shifted from General Yahya Khan to a civilian leader Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Yet ironically martial law continued. The arrest of political dissident Malik Ghulam Jilani, under emergency regulations, exposed how little things had changed. What followed this arrest became one of the most important constitutional battles in the country’s history. Challenged by Jilani’s 18-year-old daughter, Asma Jilani, the case reached the Supreme Court at a time when military rule still enjoyed legal protection under the Dosso judgment. In April 1972, the court overturned that precedent, declaring Yahya Khan a 'usurper', and ruling that no authority stood above the Constitution. The verdict dismantled the doctrine of “might is right” and reshaped Pakistan’s constitutional jurisprudence. Beyond its legal impact, the case marked the emergence of a powerful human rights discourse and set Asma Jahangir on a lifelong path of resistance to authoritarianism. 👉 On #AsmaJahangir's birthday, let's watch this exclusive documentary: Asma Jilani Vs Martial Law: The Making of a Human Rights Icon






@sharghzadeh Westerners ending slavery for conscientious reasons sounds too rosy. Maybe something more like the industrial revolution made producing things cheaper than through slavery makes more sense.


WATCH: “I WAS AN INTERPRETER IN AFGHANISTAN FOR 3 YEARS.” ICE grabs a man whose name they don’t even know at his immigration hearing, shackles him, expedites his removal. Q: Why would anyone ever help our military again? — Trump is endangering and weakening our military.


Musk: And eventually, all life on Earth will be destroyed by the sun. It's gradually expanding, we do at some point have to be multi-planetary civilization because Earth will be incinerated…





This is quite a statistic: The U.S. Navy has used more missiles for "air defense" since combat operations against the Houthi naval blockade in the Red Sea off the Yemeni coast began in October 2023 than it used in all years since Operation Desert Storm in the 1990s.

Saying the obvious but the way universities NEVER have this energy for the rapists they have frolicking through their campuses is so,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
