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Author: Al Jazeera
Published on: 15/07/2025 | 00:00:00

AI Summary:
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas says the 27-member bloc is leaving the door open to action against Israel over its assault on the besieged and bombarded Gaza Strip. The measures range from suspending the entire accord or curbing trade ties to sanctioning Israeli ministers, imposing an arms embargo and halting visa-free travel. Saar met with EU leaders after agreeing last week to allow desperately needed food and fuel into the coastal enclave of 2.3 million people. Details of the deal remain unclear, but EU officials have rejected any cooperation with the Israeli-backed GHF over ethical and safety concerns. Calls to end ties with Israel European nations like Ireland, the Netherlands and Spain have increasingly called for the EU’s ties to be reassessed in the wake of the war, which has killed more than 58,000 Palestinians. Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares Bueno says details of the deal are still being discussed. “It’s very clear that this agreement is not the end – we have to stop the war,” he says. Dozens of protesters in Brussels called for more aggressive actions to stop Israel’s offensive. Israel and Hamas engaged in indirect talks for two weeks over a new ceasefire deal. Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said negotiations have not stopped but are still in early stages. Israeli attacks across Gaza resumed on Tuesday, killing at least 30 people. In Rafah, two women were killed by Israeli fire near an aid distribution point. At least 875 have died trying to access aid in Gaza since late May, when the GHF began operating.

Original: 1031 words
Summary: 261 words
Percent reduction: 74.68%

I'm a bot and I'm open source

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Author: Unknown
Published on: 15/07/2025 | 00:00:00

AI Summary:
Britain set up a secret plan to resettle thousands of Afghans in Britain. Britain’s defence minister told Parliament the breach happened in 2022.

Original: 56 words
Summary: 23 words
Percent reduction: 58.93%

I'm a bot and I'm open source

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Author: Unknown
Published on: 15/07/2025 | 00:00:00

AI Summary:
Representatives of the Hague Group gathered for an “Emergency Conference of States” in Colombia. They urged action and not just words to stop the genocide in Gaza.

Original: 35 words
Summary: 27 words
Percent reduction: 22.86%

I'm a bot and I'm open source

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This article was originally published by the Texas Observer, a nonprofit investigative news outlet and magazine. Sign up for their weekly newsletter, or follow them on Facebook and X.

Aditya Panangat for Texas Observer

The first data center for a $500-billion artificial intelligence project arrives in small-town Texas, alongside a potentially harmful natural gas plant.

The first data center in the Stargate project—a $500 billion artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure initiative backed by OpenAI, Oracle, and SoftBank—is being built in a surprising location: Abilene.

The data center is set to cost $1.1 billion, and, to hear local officials say it, Abilene and its 130,000 residents have just struck gold. “It will impact the rest of the economy—our restaurants, our homebuilders—with that many new people coming in and taking these jobs,” Mayor Weldon Hurt has said.

What few headlines mention, however, is the project’s most troubling feature: a $500 million on-site natural gas plant that will power the data center—and pollute the surrounding community. When it comes to the Stargate data center and power plant in Abilene, the economic impacts are overstated, and the health effects are under-acknowledged. We must push for cleaner energy alternatives before Abilene’s residents feel the consequences.

Much of the Stargate project’s local support stems from its promise to bring jobs to a region that has long been considered part of small-town Texas. And while the economic potential of the Stargate project has understandably generated excitement, the long-term benefits may be far more limited than promised. Building a data center requires a lot of labor, but maintaining one does not—which explains why, despite the 1,500 people currently working on construction, the project has only promised 357 permanent positions. Undeniably, the over 100,000 jobs that OpenAI promised for the overall Stargate project seems fantastical.

Meanwhile, Crusoe, the developer of the data center, has been granted an 85 percent property tax break on billions of dollars of infrastructure—causing Abilene to forgo an enormous amount of potential revenue. Effectively, Abilene has traded its property tax profits away for job creation promises that will likely fall well short of expectations.

Worse yet, after they realize that the promise of job opportunities won’t materialize, Abilene residents will be left with the lasting burden of pollution from the power plant. The on-site natural gas power plant has been authorized to emit 1.6 million tons of greenhouse gases and 14 tons of hazardous air pollutants per year. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, pollutants emitted from power plants can have serious environmental and health consequences.

What makes Abilene’s case especially concerning is how close the plant will be to where people live. Densely populated neighborhoods are less than two miles away, and some homes and buildings are within half a mile. Living so close to a natural gas plant has been shown to have tangible impacts on population health. A 15-year study published in Environmental Health Perspectives found that people living near a power plant experience an 11 percent increase in asthma rates, a 15 percent increase in acute respiratory infections, and a 17 percent increase in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease for residents in the same ZIP code.

Despite these risks, given Abilene’s relative isolation from major economic development, local and state officials are excited to see just about any large-scale investment. Governor Greg Abbott praised the construction, declaring that “Texas is the home of innovation.”

In their excitement, officials appear too willing to make costly sacrifices. “We kind of [have to] scratch and fight for everything good that comes our way,” former city manager Robert Hanna said, justifying the property tax break granted to the data center. But that “scratch and fight” should not require Abilene to trade away its tax revenue and, most importantly, the health of its residents.

Looking back, it’s no surprise that OpenAI, Oracle, and SoftBank decided to build the first Stargate data center and power plant in Abilene. They needed a semi-rural community where pushback would be limited. They needed local political support in a city where environmental concerns don’t sway decision-making. They needed their permits approved in a Texas regulatory environment where energy investment historically has overshadowed concerns about community health.

If this natural gas plant proceeds, Abilenians could face increased risks of asthma, lung infections, and other respiratory diseases. While permits for the natural gas plant have already been approved, the fight is far from over. Regulators still have the authority to require stricter emissions controls, mandate independent environmental reviews and audits, and increase clean energy quotas for the data center.

Most importantly, the public—especially Abilene’s own residents—deserve to know the full health impacts of the natural gas plant being built in their community.

They have the right to decide how much they are willing to give up for 357 promised jobs.

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The other day, it was at 96%. This morning, it was at 88%. Now, a few hours later, it's at 80%. What's going on?

I've started a few communities and like it here. I try to be nice and upbeat. My posts have been received well, not seeing downvotes...

Profile screenshot

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Behind the scenes from ST: '09

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"This is the third time I've done a password reset! WTF is going on?"

I'm not usually for capital punishment, but... knifecat

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Artist: Paulandcookie | pixiv | twitter | artstation | danbooru

Full quality: .png 1 MB (1500 × 2000)

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Personally seen this behavior a few times in real life, often with worrying implications. Generously I'd like to believe these people use extruded text as a place to start thinking from, but in practice is seems to me that they tend to use extruded text as a thought-terminating behavior.

IRL, I find it kind of insulting, especially if I'm talking to people who should know better or if they hand me extruded stuff instead of work they were supposed to do.

Online it's just sort of harmless reply-guy stuff usually.

Many people simply straight-up believe LLMs to be genie like figures as they are advertised and written about in the "tech" rags. That bums me out sort of in the same way really uncritical religiosity bums me out.

HBU?

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