Jay Keller.
• Editor & journalist on the Gazette copy desk.
• Formerly: Washington Post, AP, US News, CPR.
• grammarian; politics, rhetoric, forensic analysis, news.
• Rugby | Literature | Science
• Colorado
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Gates-Epstein inquiry highlights structural immunity of elite networks. By confining testimony to a closed room, process minimizes political fallout, allowing Gates to deploy the naïveté defense. This sanitization process ensures the intersection of extreme wealth and exploitation remains abstract.
Amnesty accuses Israel of ethnic cleansing in the West Bank. The report details allegations of the Israeli government's systemic campaign of displacement, citing property seizures and evictions as flagrant violations of international law.
Thai woman is in custody after an American diplomat stationed at the U.S. Embassy in Yangon is found dead. The State Department confirms the death, and local authorities investigate the circumstances surrounding the incident in Myanmar’s largest city.
Tensions on Ann Arbor campus boil over into federal court. Eight pro-Palestinian activists face charges of conspiracy to intimidate Michigan university leadership, a move that transforms campus unrest into a legal litmus test for free speech, academic safety and protest in modern politics.
Engineers detail the Cheyenne Mountain facility’s reliance on 1,319 steel springs for shock absorption. The underground command center remains operational, using this 1960s mechanical suspension to protect critical electronics from nuclear impact
Global conflicts reach historic levels as the surge signals collapse of post-Cold War security architecture. Return to widespread, high-intensity conflict suggests deterrence models fail, replaced by a multi-polar landscape where regional actors feel empowered to pursue objectives through force.
A savage knife attack in Belfast ignites two nights of anti-migrant rioting, leaving 12 police officers injured and two dozen residents homeless. Authorities detain a 30-year-old Sudanese asylum seeker on charges of attempted murder while condemning the ensuing violence.
Washington’s economic dashboard paints a picture of stability, but on the ground, the math falls apart. As the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively shuttered, the War Tax ripples through Midwest, forcing farmers to quit nitrogen-heavy corn and locking in permanent premium on American kitchen table.
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Inside Colorado's Cheyenne Mountain, fifteen freestanding buildings rest on 1,319 thousand-pound steel springs, an engineering bet that flexible suspension would let a Cold War command center sway through a nuclear shock instead of snapping apart.
The White House's South Lawn has hosted many sports over the decades but never a UFC fight like the one President Donald Trump is organizing for his 80th birthday.
apnews.com
A knife attack in Belfast, Northern Ireland, has sparked violent riots fueled by anti-migrant rhetoric.
The U.S. State Department says an American diplomat assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Yangon, the biggest city in Myanmar, has been found dead.
apnews.com
Bill Gates says he made an error in judgment by ever meeting with Jeffrey Epstein as the Microsoft co-founder faces questions behind closed doors from lawmakers about his relationship with the disgraced financier.
This aerial photo shows displaced Gazans walking toward Gaza City on Jan. 27, 2025, after crossing the Netzarim corridor from the southern Gaza Strip.
AFP via Getty Images
As the Federal Reserve projects inflation stability, a paralyzed agricultural supply chain forces American consumers to fund a geopolitical conflict at the checkout counter.