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Donald Trump threatens to target Iran’s energy infrastructure, including the country’s desalination plants. / The Associated Press
Iran’s internet blackout rolls into its third week, adding an additional layer of psychological stress. / DW
Related: “It is not only humiliating, but it is also forcing businesses to close down and inflation to grow.” / Al Jazeera
Meanwhile, Ukraine negotiates air defense agreements with Saudi Arabia and Qatar. / Breaking Defense
Thomson Reuters is found to provide personal data for ICE tools, including the Palantir system that targets neighborhoods. / 404 Media
Explaining why the Homeland Security fiasco is a perfect metaphor for this Congress, where “zombie shutdowns” can drag on for weeks. / Wake Up to Politics
Unrelated: A psychological study about incompetence suggests Pete Hegseth, America’s self-proclaimed “secretary of war,” is setting up the military for disaster. / Bloomberg [$]
One reason players in the Women’s National Basketball Association just got a nearly 400% raise? They had help from the first woman to win a solo Nobel Prize in economics. / The Wall Street Journal [$]
If you enjoy these headlines, please join us as a Sustaining Member to support what we do and unlock access to paywalled links.
Interviews with people in Los Angeles who used to work in Hollywood, now doing survival jobs until (maybe) the industry comes back. / LA Material
Unrelated: The founder of Craigslist says it’s easy to give away your wealth, no matter what any greedy billionaires claim. / The New York Times [$]
Explaining why some accents in the United States persist while others expire. / Vox [$]
If you don’t like your Gmail username, now you can change it. / Android Authority
The US is banning imports of foreign-made routers, but you can turn almost any computer into one if you’ve got the notion. / Ars Technica, Nick Bailey
Today is the championship match in the 2026 Tournament of Books, presented by Field Notes! And this year it’s a nail-biter. / The Tournament of Books, Field Notes
And now a brief chat with Sustaining Member Jennifer B.!
Jennifer, hey, it’s Rosecrans, remind me again how you found us? I was drawn to TMN by the Tournament of Books. Looking at the history of the ToB, I believe I started following the tournament in 2019. In 2020, I provided commentary for Such a Fun Age during Camp ToB. And last year, our dog was a ToB sponsor.
We love to hear it! What keeps you coming back? I enjoy the creative and expansive views reflected in the books for ToB each year, many of which I might not have found otherwise. The bracket books almost always become my TBR list for the year. I feel like the content is always fresh and pushing new boundaries of thought and exploration. Not only is the format of the ToB creative and fun, but you guys keep coming up with ways to add features and change up the judge/reader interaction and commentary. I am a NCAA March Madness fan, but I always seem to be better rewarded by the ToB with my book pick advancing farther than my college hoops team.
Yeah, well, as a Carolina fan, that was definitely my experience this year. Final question: Any particular reason why you decided to renew your support today? It is amazing what TMN and the ToB do with a small staff, and I want to keep this news and entertainment outlet going and available for all. While news today seems to be shrinking in its quality and availability without subscription, TMN is always here (like public radio). I am proud each year to renew my membership to make sure that continues to be true. And the swag is great!
In the members area, unlocked links from Bloomberg, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and Vox ↓

Facts Only

Donald Trump threatens to target Iran’s energy infrastructure, including desalination plants (The Associated Press)
Iran’s internet blackout rolls into its third week (DW)
Related: “It is not only humiliating, but it is also forcing businesses to close down and inflation to grow.” (Al Jazeera)
Ukraine negotiates air defense agreements with Saudi Arabia and Qatar (Breaking Defense)
Thomson Reuters is found to provide personal data for ICE tools, including the Palantir system that targets neighborhoods (404 Media)
Explaining why the Homeland Security fiasco is a perfect metaphor for this Congress, where “zombie shutdowns” can drag on for weeks. (Wake Up to Politics)
Unrelated: A psychological study about incompetence suggests Pete Hegseth, America’s self-proclaimed “secretary of war,” is setting up the military for disaster. (Bloomberg [$])
One reason players in the Women’s National Basketball Association just got a nearly 400% raise? They had help from the first woman to win a solo Nobel Prize in economics. (The Wall Street Journal [$])
Interviews with people in Los Angeles who used to work in Hollywood, now doing survival jobs until (maybe) the industry comes back. (LA Material)
Unrelated: The founder of Craigslist says it’s easy to give away your wealth, no matter what any greedy billionaires claim. (The New York Times [$])
Explaining why some accents in the United States persist while others expire. (Vox [$])
If you don’t like your Gmail username, now you can change it. (Android Authority)
The US is banning imports of foreign-made routers, but you can turn almost any computer into one if you've got the notion. (Ars Technica, Nick Bailey)
Today is the championship match in the 2026 Tournament of Books, presented by Field Notes! And this year it’s a nail-biter. (The Tournament of Books, Field Notes)

Executive Summary

In this article, multiple news outlets report on various international and domestic events. The Associated Press reports that Donald Trump has threatened to target Iran's energy infrastructure, including desalination plants. This comes as Iran experiences a third week of internet blackout, adding psychological stress according to DW. Al Jazeera highlights the impact of this internet shutdown on businesses. Meanwhile, Ukraine is negotiating air defense agreements with Saudi Arabia and Qatar, as reported by Breaking Defense. Thomson Reuters is found to provide personal data for ICE tools, including the Palantir system that targets neighborhoods, according to 400 Media. The Homeland Security fiasco is analyzed in Wake Up to Politics, while a psychological study about incompetence suggests Pete Hegseth, America’s self-proclaimed “secretary of war,” is setting up the military for disaster in Bloomberg [$]. A study on the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) players getting a nearly 400% raise is reported by The Wall Street Journal [$]. Interviews with people in Los Angeles who used to work in Hollywood, now doing survival jobs until (maybe) the industry comes back are featured in LA Material. The founder of Craigslist discusses giving away wealth in The New York Times [$]. Vox [$] explains why some accents in the United States persist while others expire. Gmail users can now change their usernames, according to Android Authority. The US is banning imports of foreign-made routers but you can turn almost any computer into one if you've got the notion, as reported by Ars Technica, Nick Bailey. Finally, the Tournament of Books championship match is presented in The Tournament of Books, Field Notes.

Full Take

This article presents a diverse range of international and domestic news, highlighting political tensions between the US and Iran, economic struggles in Iran, military agreements between Ukraine and Saudi Arabia/Qatar, ethical concerns regarding data sharing by Thomson Reuters with ICE, political analysis on Homeland Security and Pete Hegseth, a study on WNBA players' wage increase, personal accounts from Hollywood workers struggling during the pandemic, opinions on wealth distribution, research on language accents in the US, Gmail username changes, and a championship match in the Tournament of Books.
Patterns detected: ARC-0024 Ambiguity (The article does not explicitly state why Trump is threatening to target Iran's energy infrastructure or what motivations the parties involved have).
Root Cause: The news reflects a complex interplay of geopolitical tensions, economic instability, and technological advancements, shaped by historical patterns and ongoing political dynamics.
Implications: These events have potential wide-ranging impacts on global energy security, regional stability, business operations, immigration policy, military strategy, language diversity, personal privacy, and digital technology.
Bridge Questions: What are the underlying reasons for Trump's threats towards Iran? How does the internet blackout in Iran affect its population beyond economic consequences? How can businesses adapt to these challenging circumstances? What is the role of data sharing in ICE operations, and what ethical implications does it carry? How does Homeland Security's fiasco reflect on congressional politics and decision-making? Why did WNBA players receive a significant wage increase, and what impact will it have on women's sports? How do Hollywood workers navigate the industry during the pandemic, and what long-term effects might this have? What are the factors influencing language accents in the US, and how does this affect social cohesion? How can users protect their privacy with Gmail usernames, and what role should digital technology companies play in ensuring individual privacy?

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

This text shows signs of a human writer, with variation in sentence structure and the presence of personal anecdotes and unique writing style.

Signals Detected
low severity: variation in sentence length and hedging density
high severity: idiosyncratic emphasis and personal voice
low severity: lack of argumentative skeleton matching known template patterns
Human Indicators
uneven sentence structure
personal anecdotes
unique writing style
Fowl play — Arc Codex