Source: NBC News
“OpenAI CEO Sam Altman unveiled a reworked agreement with the Pentagon Monday night governing the Defense Department’s use of its AI services, which he says provides stronger guarantees that the military won’t use OpenAI’s systems for domestic surveillance. The new agreement states that ‘the AI system shall not be intentionally used for domestic surveillance of U.S. persons and nationals,’ according to a post on OpenAI’s website. OpenAI had faced some backlash as news of an initial agreement between the leading AI company and the Pentagon emerged on Friday. Many observers claimed the original language shared on OpenAI’s website provided ample loopholes for the government to surveil Americans. The move comes after weeks of intense debates between rival AI company Anthropic and the Pentagon over how the military can use advanced AI systems.” (03/03/26)
https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/openai-alters-deal-pentagon-critics-sound-alarm-surveillance-rcna261357
Source: Liberal Currents
“Trent and Caitlin check in with journalist Gillian Brockell after the release of her article on ‘ICE Air.’ They discuss the recent mass layoffs at the Washington Post, the abhorrent treatment of deportees, the justifications used to mistreat humans, and the importance of empathy and being a human.” (03/03/26)
https://www.liberalcurrents.com/the-wapo-defenestration-and-ice-flight-brutality-half-the-answer-68-with-gillian-brockell/
Source: The Daily Economy
by David Hebert
“The Court limited one statutory pathway while leaving others intact. The opinion strengthens the major questions doctrine and clarifies how far emergency powers can stretch.” (03/03/26)
https://thedailyeconomy.org/article/six-takeaways-from-the-supreme-courts-tariff-ruling/
Source: Caitlin Johnstone, Rogue Journalist
by Caitlin Johnstone
“War is the worst thing in the world. Westerners talk about it like it’s a fucking video game, like ‘hurr durr, we just go in there and achieve our objectives and win,’ when really war means shredding human bodies to bits. Children burning to death in front of their parents. People holding their own guts in their hands as their life slowly slips away. People getting trapped under rubble and dying excruciatingly slow deaths of suffocation or dehydration. People picking up pieces of their beloved family members. Westerners are able to hold this compartmentalized video game mentality about war because war isn’t something that happens to us. We’ve never had bombs dropped on our neighborhoods. We’ve never had the experience of seeing a severed hand on the ground after an explosion and trying to figure out who it belonged to.” (03/03/26)
https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2026/03/03/if-westerners-could-wrap-their-minds-around-what-war-really-is/
Source: The Verge
“Google is moving its Chrome browser to a two-week release cycle, instead of the current four, or the six-week cycle that existed for the decade before that. The change starts in September. ‘Building on our history of adapting our release process to match the demands of a modern web, Chrome is moving to a two-week release cycle,’ the company said in a blog post. The goal is to give users and developers faster access to performance improvements, fixes, and new capabilities. The smaller scope of the releases should also simplify debugging. The change applies to desktop, Android, and iOS, and begins with the stable release of Chrome 153 on September 8th. Beta releases will also move up to a two-week cycle.” (03/03/26)
https://archive.is/SSedR
Source: Future of Freedom Foundation
“Another War of Aggression.” (03/03/26)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K6_ZLCGJ_R8
Source: Cobden Centre
by Joshua Mawhorter
“This first experiment with government-issued bills of credit presents a natural historical test case for Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), particularly its claims about chartalism and the state’s role in originating money. This took place in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1690. Given that the US is MMT’s favorite example of a ‘monetary sovereign,’ the first issuance of government paper money in the Western world ought to be significant. Given the claims of MMT and the relatively recent, extant history of colonial America, there is surprisingly little MMT writing that addresses the Massachusetts case (though my research was, of course, limited).” (03/03/26)
https://www.cobdencentre.org/2026/03/massachusetts-1690-the-first-western-fiat-experiment/
Source: Law & Liberty
by David Elder
“On January 18, former CNN anchor Don Lemon joined a group of protesters as they interrupted a church service in Minneapolis, where the pastor is reportedly an ICE official. Lemon and other protesters were charged with conspiracy against the rights of religious freedom. Immediately, pundits and commentators argued that Lemon’s arrest was an attack on the First Amendment and independent journalism. Yet as the Becket Fund’s Eric Rassbach correctly observed, neither protestors nor the media have First Amendment protection where they ‘invade someone else’s private space to report on the news or proclaim their message.'” (03/03/26)
https://lawliberty.org/the-lemon-test/
Source: Washington Monthly
by Bill Scher
“Iran’s theocratic dictatorship is murderous and illegitimate and should not last for one more second. Donald Trump’s war on Iran’s theocratic dictatorship is murderous and illegitimate and should not last for one more second. A parallel is not moral equivalence, which is why it’s tricky to articulate all the ways Trump’s war is disastrous. That thousands of Iranians have been killed by their government under Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s reign means his death is no cause for tears. But because Trump’s stated objectives are cynical and insincere, his war lacks any legal basis, and his expectations are ignorant of everything history teaches about war’s consequences, we should be disturbed by what follows this initial assault and targeted assassination.” (03/03/26)
https://washingtonmonthly.com/2026/03/03/all-the-ways-trumps-war-on-iran-is-disastrous/
Source: CBC News [Canadian state media]
“U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem is standing by her remarks calling the acts of two American citizens [murdered] by federal immigration officers in Minneapolis ‘domestic terrorism.’ Noem, who is overseeing U.S. President Donald Trump’s immigration [terrorist campaign], was pressed about her statements by Democrats and some Republicans during a Senate judiciary committee hearing on Tuesday.” (03/03/26)
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/kristi-noem-minneapolis-ice-deaths-domestic-terrorism-9.7113018