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Woman Arrested for Threatening to Kill President Trump Quietly Released by Obama Appointed Judge James Boasberg | The Gateway Pundit

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Judge James Boasberg / screen image

Less than two weeks ago, a woman named Nathalie Rose Jones traveled from New York to Washington, DC with the intent of killing President Trump.

US Attorney For DC Jeanine Pirro announced her arrest saying, “She was working to have [Trump] eliminated. She’s now in custody, she will be prosecuted to the fullest extent to the law.”

Now this woman has been quietly released by Obama appointed Judge James Boasberg. That would be the same Judge Boasberg who has repeatedly interfered in efforts to deport illegal alien criminals.

The New York Post reports:

NYC woman busted for threatening to kill President Trump quietly released by Obama-appointed judge

A New York City woman locked up for making deranged social media posts threatening to kill President Trump was quietly released by an Obama-appointed judge last week.

Chief US District Judge James Boasberg released Nathalie Rose Jones, a 50-year-old Big Apple resident, under electronic monitoring on Aug. 27 and ordered she see a psychiatrist once back home, court documents revealed.

The surprise release comes just days after US Magistrate Judge Moxila Upadhyaya denied Jones bond over the persistent threats on Trump’s life she issued over social media earlier this month…

Officials were aware of concerning posts starting on Aug. 2 and Jones herself told Secret Service agents in an Aug. 15 interview that she would “carry out the mission of killing” Trump with a “bladed object” if she was given the chance.

Many of her social media posts tagged federal agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the Department of Homeland Security.

Just amazing.

This calls for an investigation. There is absolutely no way this would have been permitted if the threat was made against Obama or any other president, for that matter.




This story originally appeared on TheGateWayPundit

Common drug millions of Brits take ‘increases dementia risk by 33%’

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Long-term use of a certain type of acid reflux medication could increase the risk of dementia by a third, according to research. Scientists discovered that individuals who take proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) for over four-and-a-half years were 33 per cent more likely to develop the debilitating health condition.

Acid reflux occurs when stomach acid flows back into the oesophagus, typically after eating or while lying down. Those suffering from acid reflux may experience heartburn and ulcers, and frequent bouts can lead to gastroesophageal reflux disease (GORD), which can result in oesophageal cancer.

GORD is a widespread issue, with up to 40 per cent of the UK population regularly experiencing heartburn. PPIs work by reducing stomach acid, targeting the enzymes in the stomach lining responsible for its production.

However, this medication has previously been linked to an increased risk of stroke, fractures, and kidney disease.

The American research team, whose findings were published in the journal Neurology, emphasised that their study does not prove that acid reflux drugs cause dementia, but rather shows a correlation, reports Surrey Live

The study’s author, vascular neurologist Professor Kamakshi Lakshminarayan, stated: “Proton pump inhibitors are a useful tool to help control acid reflux, however long-term use has been linked in previous studies to a higher risk of stroke, bone fractures and chronic kidney disease. Still, some people take these drugs regularly, so we examined if they are linked to a higher risk of dementia.

“While we did not find a link with short-term use, we did find a higher risk of dementia associated with long-term use of these drugs.”

The research looked at more than 5,700 individuals, aged 45 and above, who showed no signs of dementia at the study’s commencement. The participants had an average age of 75.

The research team established whether the participants consumed acid reflux medication by examining their prescriptions during study appointments and through annual telephone consultations.

Among the participants, 1,490 (26 percent) had consumed the medications.

They were subsequently categorised into four groups depending on whether they had consumed the medications and the duration: individuals who didn’t consume the medications; those who consumed the medications for up to 2.8 years; those who consumed them for 2.8 to 4.4 years; and individuals who consumed them for more than 4.4 years.

The participants were subsequently monitored for an average of approximately 5.5 years. During this period, 585 (10 percent) developed dementia.

Among the 4,222 individuals who did not consume the medications, 415 people developed dementia, representing 19 cases per 1,000 person-years.

Person-years signify both the number of individuals in the research and the duration each person participates in the study.

Among the 497 individuals who consumed the medications for more than 4.4 years, 58 people developed dementia, representing 24 cases per 1,000 person years.

After accounting for factors such as age, sex and race, as well as health-related issues such as high blood pressure and diabetes, the researchers determined that people who had been taking acid reflux medications for more than 4.4 years had a 33 percent higher risk of developing dementia than people who never took the drugs.

Researchers did not discover a higher risk of dementia for people who took the drugs for fewer than 4.4 years.

Prof Lakshminarayan, of the University of Minnesota School of Public Health, said: “More research is needed to confirm our findings and explore reasons for the possible link between long-term proton pump inhibitor use and a higher risk of dementia.

“While there are various ways to treat acid reflux, such as taking antacids, maintaining a healthy weight, and avoiding late meals and certain foods, different approaches may not work for everyone.”

She added: “It is important that people taking these medications speak with their doctor before making any changes, to discuss the best treatment for them, and because stopping these drugs abruptly may result in worse symptoms.”



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

Belgium announces it will recognise Palestinian state | World News

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The Belgian government has said it will officially recognise the State of Palestine at the UN General Assembly this month.

The country’s foreign minister, Maxime Prevot, announced it will join the UK, France, Canada, and Australia in recognising a Palestinian state.

Belgium will also introduce “firm sanctions” against the Israeli government, he said, including a ban on imports from West Bank settlements and possible judicial prosecutions.

The Israeli foreign ministry and its Belgian embassy have not yet commented on the announcement.

However, its foreign ministry previously said the UK’s plan to recognise Palestine “constitutes a reward for Hamas”.

Read more: What does recognising a Palestinian state mean?

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13:53

Would a two-state solution work?

Sir Keir Starmer announced in July that the UK would recognise a Palestinian state unless Israel meets certain conditions, those being:

• Israel takes substantive steps to end the “appalling situation in Gaza

• Israel agrees to a ceasefire

• Israel commits to a long-term sustainable peace – reviving the prospect of a two-state solution

• Israel must allow the UN to restart the supply of aid

• There must be no annexations in the West Bank

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PM on recognising Palestine as a state

In response, the Israeli foreign ministry said: “The shift in the British government’s position at this time, following the French move and internal political pressures, constitutes a reward for Hamas and harms efforts to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza and a framework for the release of hostages.”

The UN General Assembly session in New York will begin on 9 September. Ireland, Spain, and Norway all officially recognised a Palestinian state last year.

Out of the 193 United Nations member states, 147 already recognise Palestine as a state as of March 2025.

Earlier this month, Israeli minister Bezalel Smotrich announced plans to build a new settlement in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, which he said would “bury” the idea of a Palestinian state.

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Israeli minister’s plan to ‘bury idea of Palestinian state’

It comes after US secretary of state Marco Rubio revoked the visas of 81 delegates from the Palestinian Authority (PA) and Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) – blocking them from attending the general assembly.

Under a 1947 UN agreement, the US is generally required to allow access for foreign diplomats to the UN in New York.

But Washington has said it can deny visas for security, extremism and foreign policy reasons.

Read more from Sky News:
Israel is accused of allowing famine to fester in Gaza
‘Stop killing journalists’: Media groups unite against Israeli attacks
Greta Thunberg sets sail for Gaza on second aid flotilla

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The number of Palestinians killed in Gaza is now more than 63,000, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry. Its figures do not differentiate between civilians and combatants.

It added that nine more people, including three children, died of malnutrition and starvation over Monday, raising deaths from such causes to at least 348, including 127 children.

The war in Gaza was triggered when Hamas militants stormed into southern Israel on 7 October 2023, killing around 1,200 people and taking 250 others hostage.



This story originally appeared on Skynews

Utah has a target to build more starter homes : NPR

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A new Nilson Homes development in Plain City, Utah, includes smaller starter homes side by side with larger market-rate ones.

Jennifer Ludden/NPR


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Jennifer Ludden/NPR

PLAIN CITY, Utah — Miranda and Cole Potokar, who are 23 and 24, have talked a lot with friends about their terrible timing in the housing market.

“We would make jokes like, ‘What was I doing in third grade? I should have been buying a house instead of learning, you know, multiplication!’ ” says Miranda.

The young couple came of age in northern Utah as housing prices across much of the country marched upward steadily, then sharply. Utah is now one of the priciest markets. That’s fueled by growing demand from family sizes that are bigger than those elsewhere in the U.S., plus more people moving to the state.

Miranda and Cole Potokar lived in her grandparents’ basement for two years to avoid high rents and save up for a down payment.

Marisa Peñaloza/NPR


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Marisa Peñaloza/NPR

After getting married two years ago, the Potokars decided to live in Miranda’s grandparents’ basement to save up for a down payment. But when they started looking around a year or so ago, they were shocked. Even older places had sky-high prices, and things sold so fast.

“Wake up the next morning, it was gone,” Cole says, snapping his fingers. “The market would just be so aggressive.”

So they decided to give up for a while.

The median age of first-time U.S. homebuyers is now 38, a record high

People like the Potokars are exactly who Utah Gov. Spencer Cox had in mind when he set out an ambitious goal about a year and half ago: building 35,000 lower-cost starter homes in five years.

“The American dream of homeownership is slowly but surely slipping away from far too many, out of reach of our children and grandchildren,” the Republican governor told dozens of mayors at a housing summit in May.

Median U.S. home prices are at a record high, up nearly 50% over the past five years. In Utah, they’re even more than the national average, over half a million dollars.

The underlying driver is a massive shortage of homes. Add to that high inflation and interest rates, and mortgages are out of reach for many. The median age of U.S. homebuyers has hit a record high of 38, up from 31 a decade before.

To encourage developers to build more places that people can afford, Utah lawmakers last year approved low-interest construction loans for starter homes. This year, they expanded the program to include starter condos. Those incentives follow a string of other laws in recent years meant to encourage all kinds of denser, less expensive housing.

But so far, builders have been slow to sign on. At the May summit, Gov. Cox told mayors that only about 5,100 starter homes had been built or begun.

“We’re on our way, but we desperately need to do more. And we need to move faster,” he said.

Utah has not made bolder changes housing experts say are needed

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox speaks

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox speaks to reporters March 7 in Salt Lake City. He has made affordable housing a signature issue, saying the state’s skyrocketing prices are “the single greatest threat to the prosperity of our state.”

Hannah Schoenbaum/AP


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Hannah Schoenbaum/AP

Cox has made affordable housing a signature issue and brings it up repeatedly at appearances around the state.

He’s appealed to builders to help fill this important gap in the market, even if, he says, “you may be able to make more money doing something else.” He’s implored local leaders to approve starter home projects, despite heated pushback they might face from residents worried about changes in their neighborhood. And to Utahns generally, Cox has urged them to think about where future generations will be able to live, asking, “Are we going to be the selfish generation?”

“He’s sort of saying, ‘We all need to chip in here.’ But I haven’t seen concrete steps that would really move the needle right now,” says Andra Ghent, a finance professor at the University of Utah.

She and other housing experts say the best way to create smaller, affordable homes is to change zoning laws and allow smaller lot sizes. A growing number of states – including Texas, most recently – have stepped in and done that, making the controversial decision to preempt local laws. Utah’s governor proposed it, but lawmakers said no.

“A lot of municipalities throughout the state have minimum lot sizes of a quarter-acre,” Ghent says. “That’s enormous as a lot size. … If developers are stuck with that minimum lot size, they’re going to build luxury homes.”

Giving first-time homebuyers a chance in Utah

Jed Nilson stands in front of a starter home at his company’s new development in Plain City, Utah.

Marisa Peñaloza/NPR


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Marisa Peñaloza/NPR

The lack of sweeping zoning change hasn’t stopped one developer north of Salt Lake City from taking up the governor’s challenge.

Jed Nilson sits on the porch of a brand new house while construction trucks rumble by his latest project in Plain City. He heads Nilson Homes, founded by his dad in 1977. But he started out as a realtor 26 years ago when he was in college.

“And other kids going to college would come buy brand new homes from me,” he says, laughing. “Cause they had a job and they went to college and they could afford a home.”

Today, Nilson finds it troubling that even couples who both have a college degree and careers can’t afford to buy one. “That’s not sustainable,” he says.

Nilson has long been on a mission to find different products or methods that cut costs but not quality. In fact, his ultimate mission is eventually to create a home that’s once again affordable on a single income.

When the governor announced his starter-home target, Nilson says, many developers were skeptical. But he saw an opportunity. With the state’s help, he cut a deal with Weber County that let him add more houses to this Plain City development and put them on smaller plots that normally would be left open.

Nilson walks down the street to show off the first 12 starter homes that are finished. They sit right next to larger market-rate ones, a colorful mix of farmhouse, craftsman and mountain modern.

There’s a long waitlist for starter homes in Nilson’s development, which he says is “outrageously unusual.”

Jennifer Ludden/NPR


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Jennifer Ludden/NPR

“We intentionally wanted to show that we could put these starter homes in the entrance of a thousand-home community because they’re beautiful architecture,” he says.

And how much are they in this pricey market? Gov. Cox talks about wanting starter homes for less than $400,000. Nilson sells his three bedroom model for just under that, and a smaller two-bedroom for about $370,000.

Nilson knows that still might not sound affordable to some, but a different state program to help first-time buyers sets a cap of $450,000. “I mean, five years ago $450,000 was a high-priced home in this area, and now we’re calling that a starter home,” he says.

For his Plain City homes, priority is given to first time buyers, teachers, first responders and active military service members. The homes also must be owner-occupied for a decade. The company has a long waitlist that Nilson says is “outrageously unusual.”

Miranda and Cole Potokar in the living room of their new house. Home prices were so out of reach that the couple had stopped looking until they heard about starter homes being built nearby.

Marisa Peñaloza/NPR


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Marisa Peñaloza/NPR

This past spring, first-time buyers Miranda and Cole Potokar were among the first to move in.

“This is our little dining nook, which is massive,” Miranda says, as the couple gives a tour of their two-story 1,400 square foot home.

“One thing that really attracted us to this house was, like, the windows,” Cole says. There are big ones that let in lots of light. There’s also space for him to work at home, and a third bedroom so they can start having children here.

They love to go on morning walks and say they’ve met some neighbors their own age. The Potokars say they feel extremely lucky.

“This is like a base not only for like our family, but also … to set us up for the future,” Cole says. “And in so many ways that, like, we don’t even know.”

Nilson has 260 more starter homes in the pipeline here and hopes his experience will spur more developers to step up.

“Maybe I’ll make less money per home, but I get to build more homes. And I’m going to fix a societal problem,” he says. “I mean, a society can’t function when there’s no room at the bottom for people to get started on their upward mobility.”



This story originally appeared on NPR

Web3’s Speed Is No Longer Optional. It’s the Path to Adoption.

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Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

After Bitcoin launched in 2009, it became clear to proponents that it would have a difficult time ever becoming “electronic cash.” It was too slow and decentralized. Instead, the consensus was reached that its purpose should fit its architecture. The pivot was important: Bitcoin aimed to be a decentralized store of value — a digital vault. It wasn’t built for speed, and as a store of value, it would never need to be fast.

Ten-minute block times were acceptable because they didn’t need to be used for daily payments, let alone real-time gaming or algorithmic trading. It wouldn’t have to compete with Visa or PayPal; it simply had to serve as a hedge against macroeconomic and geopolitical risks, like its gold and rare metal counterparts.

As such, its limited throughput was reframed as a feature rather than a flaw, a security trade-off that prioritized immutability and decentralization over instant convenience.

In many ways, Bitcoin became a philosophical statement about the trade-offs inherent in trustless systems, teaching the industry that decentralization has costs, but those costs define its unique value proposition.

Related: America Needs a Bitcoin Reserve — Here’s Why

The blockchain space has evolved far beyond its origins, and no other chain can attempt to recreate Bitcoin’s narrative. In 2025, Web3 is no longer about theoretical use cases. It is powering actual economies, which rely on fast finality and battle-tested security. Tokenized assets, payments apps, decentralized finance, consumer loyalty, identity, gaming and increasingly AI systems all rely on the same foundation: scalable, low-latency infrastructure.

These real-world applications demand performance that was inconceivable in the early days of cryptocurrency. The promise of decentralized technology can no longer exist solely as a concept; it must operate at the speed, scale and reliability that modern users have come to expect.

But that foundation is nowhere near where it needs to be. Today’s blockchains are asked to perform like global-scale platforms, even as most still struggle with 1990s-era throughput. That mismatch is the biggest threat to Web3’s future, the distance between what’s demanded of a decentralized blockchain and what these protocols can actually offer.

Most chains today still process fewer than 100 transactions per second. Legacy networks like Visa can handle tens of thousands without breaking a sweat. High-frequency trading platforms operate with microsecond latency. And yet we expect developers, enterprises and users to build and transact on infrastructure that’s slower than dial-up.

Related: Why Gold and Bitcoin Are the Go-To Safe Havens in 2025

The public will not wait for us to catch up. They are used to seamless, real-time experiences. Anything less feels broken. This is not a matter of optimization. It is a question of survival. If we do not build for performance, we will not be taken seriously. Web3 cannot survive on nostalgia or theoretical ideals alone; it needs infrastructure capable of handling the realities of billions of users, each expecting instant results, frictionless interaction and financial security at all times.

What Web3 needs now is a clean break from legacy limitations. The next generation of chains must be built for speed from day one. This includes advanced sequencing architectures that allow networks to prioritize and order transactions efficiently. It also includes parallelized execution, which enables blockchains to process thousands of transactions simultaneously, rather than one after another, in a single line. On top of that, developers need predictable fee structures that make sense at scale. Micropayments don’t work when fees are higher than the transaction itself. Without these foundational changes, innovation will remain bottlenecked and adoption will stall.

None of this is optional anymore; If we want blockchain technology to serve billions of users, we need infrastructure that performs like global financial rails. That means sub-second latency. It means tens of thousands of transactions per second. It means costs that make sense for everyday use.

Some of this is already underway. Several high-throughput chains are being tested right now, and a few are in production. Polygon PoS is expected to cross 5,000 transactions per second this year. Within the next twelve to eighteen months, 100,000 TPS is within reach. At that point, Web3 can begin to seriously challenge legacy platforms.

Plus, with the power of ZK technology, we can now have institution-grade blockchains that can provide 10s of thousands of TPS with full control and compliance available to the corresponding institution. Zero-knowledge proofs allow for privacy-preserving verification and regulatory compliance simultaneously, making it possible for institutions to leverage public blockchains without compromising security or governance requirements.

Related: I Studied 233 Millionaires — These Are the 6 Habits That Made Them Rich

But we can’t afford to celebrate incremental improvements. Speed is not just a technical achievement. It is what unlocks the real-world applications we have been promising for over a decade. Without it, we stay stuck in the prototype phase.

The next generation of the internet won’t wait for us. It will move forward with or without blockchains at its core. If Web3 wants to be part of that future, it must start building like it.

Now.

After Bitcoin launched in 2009, it became clear to proponents that it would have a difficult time ever becoming “electronic cash.” It was too slow and decentralized. Instead, the consensus was reached that its purpose should fit its architecture. The pivot was important: Bitcoin aimed to be a decentralized store of value — a digital vault. It wasn’t built for speed, and as a store of value, it would never need to be fast.

Ten-minute block times were acceptable because they didn’t need to be used for daily payments, let alone real-time gaming or algorithmic trading. It wouldn’t have to compete with Visa or PayPal; it simply had to serve as a hedge against macroeconomic and geopolitical risks, like its gold and rare metal counterparts.

As such, its limited throughput was reframed as a feature rather than a flaw, a security trade-off that prioritized immutability and decentralization over instant convenience.

In many ways, Bitcoin became a philosophical statement about the trade-offs inherent in trustless systems, teaching the industry that decentralization has costs, but those costs define its unique value proposition.

The rest of this article is locked.

Join Entrepreneur+ today for access.



This story originally appeared on Entrepreneur

Federal Reserve should be independent but has ‘made a lot of mistakes,’ Bessent says

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Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Monday the Federal Reserve is and should be independent but said it had “made a lot of mistakes” and defended President Trump’s right to fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook over allegations of mortgage fraud.

Trump has criticized the Fed and its chair, Jerome Powell, for months for not lowering interest rates, and recently took aim at Powell over a costly renovation of the bank’s Washington headquarters.

“The Fed should be independent. The Fed is independent, but I, I also think that they’ve made a lot of mistakes,” Bessent told Reuters in an interview at a diner in suburban Washington.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent rejected the idea that markets were disturbed by the Trump administration’s actions. AP

Asked whether the administration’s efforts to remove Cook looked like an attempt to give Trump a chance to appoint a majority on the board of governors, Bessent said: “Well, or is it you’re having to do the Fed’s job for ’em?”

Independent central banks are widely seen as crucial to a stable global financial system.

Bessent said the makeup of the Fed board – with regional bank governors – meant the president could not “stack the board.”

Bessent rejected the idea that markets were disturbed by the Trump administration’s actions. “(The) S&P’s at a new high and bond yields are fine. So we haven’t seen anything yet,” he said.

Bessent said he believed that Cook should be removed or step down if the allegations against her are true, and noted that she had not denied them.

Cook and her supporters contend that the fraud allegations are a pretext to remove her so Trump could appoint an ally to the central bank who would promote his policy wishes. Cook is suing Trump and the Fed, saying Trump did not have the legal authority to remove her.

Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook is suing President Trump, saying he does not have the power to fire her. AP

Trump last week fired Cook, the first Black woman to serve on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, after the Trump-appointed head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, William Pulte, accused her of mortgage fraud. Pulte asked the Justice Department to investigate the claim. The department has not filed charges against her.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell has been criticized for months about the lack of interest rate cuts by the central bank and the costs of renovations at its headquarters. REUTERS

The Trump administration says Cook described separate properties in Michigan and Georgia as primary residences on mortgage applications in 2021, which could have given her preferential interest rates. Cook has said that even if the allegations were true, they would not be grounds for removal because the alleged conduct occurred before she was confirmed by the Senate and took office in 2022.

“I’ve been very surprised that the Fed has not done an independent review,” Bessent said. “She hasn’t said she didn’t do it. She’s just saying the president can’t fire her. There’s a big difference.”

Bessent said the Senate should act quickly to confirm Stephen Miran, chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, for a temporary post, replacing Adriana Kugler who resigned on Aug. 1.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Qatari patronage of his mom’s work is another piece of Zohran Mamdani’s privileged puzzle

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Yes, it matters that a Qatari royal has patronized the later career of Zohran Mamdani’s film-making mom, Mira Nair: It’s another piece in the vast, hypocritical puzzle of the Democratic Socialist’s privileged life.

Nair got her BA at Harvard; Mahmood Mamdani, his PhD. They raised Zohran on Riverside Drive in a high-end complex dedicated to Columbia faculty housing and sent him to pricey Bank Street School and later to also-pricey Bowdoin College.

She had fully established herself well before Sheikha Al-Mayassa bint Hamad Al-Thani, sister to Qatar’s ruling emir, began sponsoring her work.

Nair’s 1991 film “Mississippi Masala,” starring Denzel Washington, won three Venice Film Festival awards; her 2001 “Monsoon Wedding” earned the Golden Lion at Venice; her made-for-HBO 2002 “Hysterical Blindness” won a Golden Globe for Uma Thurman.

But then her 2009 “Amelia” opened the first-ever Doha Tribeca Film Festival in Qatar’s capital, after which Al-Thani’s Doha Film Institute paid for Qataris to study at Nair’s Maisha Film Labs.

The institute then covered the entire $15 million budget for Nair’s “The Reluctant Fundamentalists” in 2012; a decade later, Al-Thani’s Qatar Creates and the state-owned Qatar Airways and Qatar Creates paid Nair for an extravagant stage adaptation of “Monsoon Wedding” as part of the 2022 World Cup festivities in the emirate.

A global creative woman winning support from a female, culturally inclined royal: Surely admirable?

Except that Qatar has a horrific human-rights record, including the deaths of thousands of laborers building the stadiums and so on for that World Cup, plus brutal treatment of the Bah’aii minority and the royal family’s backing for both Hamas and the Taliban.

Not to mention a gay-rights record as awful as that of Uganda — where his dad Mahmood, has spent much of his life and career, where Zohran was born and the site of the Mamdani family compound, where the mayoral candidate recently celebrated his wedding in a multi-day festival.

Yet the whole family condemns Israel as uniquely evil: His dad’s on record insisting, “Jews can have a homeland in historic Palestine, but not a state”; his mom pushed to ban Gal Gadot from the Oscars stage and boycotted the Haifa International Film Festival over Israels’ supposed religious discrimination — and of course Zohran has been down on the Jewish state since before he founded Student for Justice in Palestine at Bowdoin.

Zohran Mamdani has moved among international elites his entire life; bashing Israel is stylish for this set, along with a leftism deeply resentful of European colonialism yet strangely at ease with vast Third World inequalities and oppression.

No wonder he’s been such a prolific fundraiser in this race, despite his modest record of accomplishments on his own.

No wonder, too, his affinity for socialist leftism: It’s core to a world where his family came out on top, for all its endless failures to ever lift up the masses.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

How to make IT operations more efficient

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Productivity wins 

Leadership can be a lonely position, and the writers of CIO.com often share insights designed to lighten the load. A good example is a recent article on IT management practices that are certain to kill IT productivity

It is a popular piece, and it prompted our CIO readers to ask the obvious opposite question: how does a manager increase productivity? 

Smart Answers is here for such queries, distilling generations of human insights to give pithy advice. It proposes a blend of strategic approaches such as eliminating waste, simplifying workflows, and standardizing operating models, alongside automation and use of analytics to drive efficiency. And don’t sleep on upgrading equipment. Above all Smart Answers recommends continuous monitoring and regular adjustments of efficiency metrics are essential for sustained optimal performance. 

Find out: What are ways to improve IT operations efficiency? 

Trust: hard to win, easy to lose 

It is no easier in the CISO’s chair, of course. In fact, we learnt in the past week that 25% of CISOs are replaced after their organizations are victim to a ransomware attack. It’s not fair, but it is true.  

So how do you rebuild trust after a breach? Smart Answers knows.  

Transparency and clear communication are paramount. CISOs need to translate complex security details into understandable language for all employees and stakeholders, focusing on actionable business impacts. 

And then it is a case of building back better to restore trust. Stronger authentication controls, regenerated certificates, and a culture of continuous improvement. 

Find out: What are essential steps to rebuild trust after a cyberattack? 

Generative AI: believe the hype? 

It’s a law in publishing that whenever a headline is a question with a yes or no answer, the answer is no. Consider that when reading this recent article: Is the generative AI bubble about to burst? 

Readers of InfoWorld wanted deeper context and asked Smart Answers where generative AI is on the industry hype cycle. Despite its generative AI roots, Smart Answers recognizes that after the excitement of 2023, and last year’s experimentation, 2025 is something of a trough of disillusionment. So far so classic.  

The more positive view is that tangible business value is just around the corner. 

Find out: Where is generative AI’s position on the industry hype cycle? 

About Smart Answers 

Smart Answers is an AI-based chatbot tool designed to help you discover content, answer questions, and go deep on the topics that matter to you. Each week we send you the three most popular questions asked by our readers, and the answers Smart Answers provides. 

Developed in partnership with Miso.ai, Smart Answers draws only on editorial content from our network of trusted media brands—CIO, Computerworld, CSO, InfoWorld, and Network World—and was trained on questions that a savvy enterprise IT audience would ask. The result is a fast, efficient way for you to get more value from our content.



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

Google says reports of a major Gmail security issue are ‘entirely false’

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Google is officially debunking a series of reports that claimed Gmail has been hit with a “major” security issue in recent days. “We want to reassure our users that Gmail’s protections are strong and effective,” the company said in a somewhat unusual statement. “Several inaccurate claims surfaced recently that incorrectly stated that we issued a broad warning to all Gmail users about a major Gmail security issue. This is entirely false.”

Google doesn’t detail the erroneous claims in its post. But, as Forbes , it seems to be referring to several recent reports that stated the company issued an “emergency warning” to all of its 2.5 billion users in response to a phishing attack that targeted a Salesforce instance used by the company. That incident, however, was first reported by Google in and the company said in an August 8 update that it had finished notifying everyone affected.

It’s not clear why that report resurfaced now or how it was misconstrued into a supposed warning impacting all Gmail users, but Google is now trying to set the record straight. “While it’s always the case that phishers are looking for ways to infiltrate inboxes, our protections continue to block more than 99.9% of phishing and malware attempts from reaching users,” the company said. “It’s crucial that conversation in this space is accurate and factual.”

Google also notes that it encourages all users to set up “a secure password alternative,” such as for maximum protection.



This story originally appeared on Engadget

Who Was Graham Greene? 5 Things About the Late Actor – Hollywood Life

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Image Credit: Getty Images

Graham Greene, a Canadian First Nations actor who helped pave the way in Hollywood for Indigenous performers, died on September 1, 2025. He was 73 years old. The late Academy Award nominee and multi-talented artist died following a “long illness,” per Deadline, and his agent released a statement about his death.

“He was a great man of morals, ethics and character and will be eternally missed,” Greene’s agent, Michael Greene (who has no relation to the late actor) said. “You are finally free. Susan Smith is meeting you at the gates of heaven.”

Below, Hollywood Life is remembering Greene, his life and acting career.

Graham Greene Worked Odd Jobs Before Becoming an Actor

While growing up in Ontario, Canada, Greene worked multiple jobs before becoming an actor. He reportedly worked as a welder, draftsman, steel worker and audio technician for rock bands in Newfoundland and Labrador. Throughout the 1970s, Greene landed theatrical roles in Ontario and in England.

Eventually, Greene landed his first on-screen acting role in an episode of The Great Detective. He made his feature film debut in 1983’s Running Brave. 

Greene Was Nominated for an Oscar & a Grammy

Greene starred in Kevin Costner‘s 1990 film, Dances With Wolves, which earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. He later won a Grammy in 2000 for Best Spoken Word Album for Children.

Graham Greene’s Movies: His Famous Big Screen Roles

From the 1980s through the end of his life, Greene starred in countless movies. Among his most famous roles were Kicking Bird in Dances With Wolves, Walter Crow Horse in Thunderheart, Detective Joe Lambert in Die Hard with a Vengeance, Arlen Bitterbuck in The Green Mile, Harry Clearwater in The Twilight Saga: New Moon and Tribal Police Chief Ben Shoyo in Wind River.

Green’s most recent film performance was in 2025’s Sweet Summer Pow Wow. He will posthumously be featured in the upcoming movie Ice Fall.

Graham Greene’s TV Show Roles

In television, Greene got his start by appearing in episodes of famous shows, including L.A. Law and Murder, She Wrote. In recent years, he starred in Riverdale, 1883, The Last of Us, Echo and Tulsa King.

Graham Greene’s Cause of Death: His Illness Explained

Greene reportedly died from an illness, but the details of his ailment have not been disclosed by the time of publication. Deadline reported that his illness was “long” and that he died in a Toronto hospital on September 1, 2025.




This story originally appeared on Hollywoodlife