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Iran tensions ripple from Hormuz oil jitters to weak support for strikes as Pentagon’s “lawful” AI ethics spin grows, Trump stays vague, UCL post sparks backlash, and Austin shooting suspect is identified
UCL Islamic society sparks backlash with post mourning Iran’s Supreme Leader
A Muslim student group at University College London, the Ahlul-Bayt Islamic Society, posted condolences and a prayer after the reported death of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, calling it a “martyrdom” and an “unimaginable loss.” The group insists it is lawful speech protected by academic freedom, not incitement or an endorsement of violence, but a line urging Shia in the West to “remain aware and ready” lit the fuse for public outrage and demands that the university respond.
Pentagon wants the AI, companies want the PR, ethics get “lawful uses” as a consolation prize
As U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran raised the temperature, the Defense Department pushed for access to Anthropic’s AI while clashing with the company’s restrictions on things like domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons. President Donald Trump then ordered federal agencies to stop using Anthropic’s tech, calling it a supply-chain risk, while OpenAI promptly secured a Pentagon deal allowing “all lawful uses” with no special ethical red lines. The broader trend is clear and a little grotesque, military AI governance is drifting from guardrails toward the minimalist religion of “if it’s legal, it’s fine,” as Washington also moves to curb state-level AI regulation and more tech leaders cozy up to federal power.
Oil markets flinch at Iran conflict risk, because the Strait of Hormuz still runs the world’s mood swings
With Israel and the United States striking targets in Iran, crude prices are rising on fear of supply disruption, especially if shipping through the Strait of Hormuz is threatened, since it carries roughly 20 percent of traded oil. Even without major outages, the episode highlights how oil dependence turns regional conflict into global inflation and economic whiplash, echoing everything from the 1970s embargo to more recent sanctions and cutoffs. Countries are accelerating renewables and electrified transport to shrink exposure to chokepoints, although that shift brings fresh vulnerabilities like critical mineral dependence, concentrated manufacturing, and grid cyber risks, while still improving resilience via decentralized generation and lower fuel-import needs, particularly for highly import-dependent countries such as Australia.
Austin shooting suspect identified, investigators probe motive
Reports identify the suspect in a deadly shooting outside Buford’s Backyard Beer Garden near the University of Texas at Austin as Ndiaga Diagne, 53, originally from Senegal. Sources say he entered the U.S. on a tourist visa in 2000, became a lawful permanent resident in 2006 through marriage, and was naturalized in 2013, with multiple prior arrests in New York City, some sealed, and at least one arrest in Texas. Authorities say he opened fire early Sunday, killing two people and injuring 14 before police shot and killed him, and the FBI is investigating possible motives, including whether geopolitical events or extremist ideology played a role.
Poll finds little appetite for strikes on Iran
A Reuters/Ipsos poll released Sunday found limited public support for U.S. military action against Iran, with 27 percent approving of the strikes. The survey referenced “Operation Epic Fury,” launched early Saturday in coordination with Israel.
Trump keeps Iran talk brief, because accountability is the real forbidden zone
Donald Trump has promoted possible U.S. military action against Iran while keeping public engagement minimal, devoting only a few minutes to the issue in his State of the Union and leaning on social media and Mar-a-Lago videos instead. He has not made public appearances since a rally in Corpus Christi, a low-profile approach that preserves flexibility and helps avoid the classic “you break it, you own it” problem, which politicians treat like garlic at a vampire convention.
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