President Trump goes SCORCHED EARTH on Tucker Carlson, Megyn Kelly, Candace Owens, and Alex Jones: “They have one thing in common, Low IQs.”

Daily Wire

@realDailyWire

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“Donald Trump is now leader of the free world. He is a dangerous and corrupt gangster…” Call of King’s visit to Washington before it is too late. Ed Davey

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Axios: Newoil order

New oil order
 
Illustration of a pump jack holding a planet Earth.
Illustration: Rebecca Zisser / Axios
 
The energy shock from the Iran war may drive long-lasting change in how the global multitrillion-dollar oil market operates — turning a relatively open and smoothly functioning system into something weaponized and fractured, Axios Markets author Emily Peck writes.

Why it matters: Such a reordering would mean, at a minimum, higher energy prices and inflation. In the long term, it could shake the foundations of the dollar-based global economy and, with it, U.S. power. The latest: Iran still has the Strait of Hormuz effectively locked down.

The price of oil is now about 50% higher than before the war began.


A bar chart that compares major global oil supply disruptions by the share of world supply removed. The Iran war in 2026 is highest at 16%. The 1990 Iraq invasion of Kuwait and the 1973 oil embargo each reached 8%, while the 2011 Libya war and 2022 Ukraine invasion were 2%.Data: Baringa. Chart: Amy Harder/Axios

Flashback: Such shocks in the past have led to permanent changes in the global economy. There’s little reason to think this one would be different.

The pandemic drove a push among countries to reshore manufacturing.

The Ukraine war forced European countries to reduce dependence on Russian natural gas.

The 1970s oil crisis got Americans to actually drive small cars.

Between the lines: Wars can also shift global power. The Suez Crisis of 1956 — another disruption in a key Middle East waterway — is seen as the moment when the U.K. lost its standing as a global superpower.

Some war critics argue this could be America’s “Suez moment.” (N.Y. Times gift link)
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Neuroscience News: How the Brain Maps What vs. Where When Reality Shifts

Flexibility, not fixed architecture, is the core principle of how the brain organizes memory. Credit: Neuroscience News

How the Brain Maps What vs. Where When Reality Shifts

FeaturedNeuroscience

·April 11, 2026

Summary: The hippocampus is often called the “GPS of the brain,” but a new study reveals it is much more than a simple map. The research shows that the hippocampus acts like a dynamic dial that shifts its activity based on whether our expectations match reality. When everything is as expected, brain activity flows smoothly across the structure.

However, when something changes, the hippocampus physically partitions itself: the front (anterior) handles “What” (conceptual changes), while the back (posterior) handles “Where” (spatial changes). This discovery proves that the brain uses a flexible architecture to reconcile meaning and location in real-time.

Key Facts

  • The expectation Dial: When a sequence of events matches a person’s memory, hippocampal activity moves in a continuous, smooth wave from front to back.
  • The “What” Region (Anterior): If a person expects to see one object (a dog) but sees another (a cat), the front of the hippocampus lights up. This area is connected to systems for abstract and conceptual processing.
  • The “Where” Region (Posterior): If an object appears in the wrong location, the back of the hippocampus takes over. This area is linked to visual and spatial processing networks.
  • The Reconciliation Center: When both the object and the location change, activity centers in the middle of the hippocampus, suggesting this central zone merges spatial and conceptual data.
  • Beyond the GPS: While the 2014 Nobel Prize highlighted “place cells” for navigation, this study suggests the hippocampus is equally focused on semantic meaning, the “why” and “what” of our environment.

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Source: University of Chicago

The hippocampus is a crucial part of the brain that plays a role in memory and learning, especially in remembering directions and locations.

New research from the University of Chicago shows how this small, curved structure reorganizes its activity depending on whether a situation matches people’s memories and expectations.

In a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers used functional MRI scanning to track the brain activity of study participants as they watched images of a sequence of objects at different locations.

When the images matched what the participants expected, activity in the hippocampus shifted smoothly from the front to the back, like a continuous dial. When the images differed from the patterns the subjects had learned, however, the researchers saw that hippocampal activity split into specialized regions:

  • If the “what” of the image changed—for example, the participant expected to see a picture of a dog but instead saw a cat—the activity took place in the anterior, or front, part of the hippocampus.
  • If the “where” of the image changed—the picture of the dog was on the left side instead of the right—activity centered in the posterior, or back, part of the hippocampus.

“Real memories involve more than just objects or locations. They are bound to concepts and meaning. How the hippocampus handles both space and meaning at the same time has been one of the central unsolved questions in memory neuroscience,” said James Kragel, PhD, a Research Assistant Professor in the Department of Neurology at UChicago and senior author of the study.

“This resolves a long-standing debate about hippocampal organization and suggests that flexibility, not fixed architecture, is a core principle of how the brain organizes memory, spanning both spatial and semantic information.”

The GPS of the brain

Sometimes called “the GPS of the brain,” the hippocampus is most well-known for its role in remembering places and locations. In 2014, the Nobel Prize in Medicine was awarded for the discovery of so-called place cells and grid cells in the brain that track location and map out space.

A lot of research on the hippocampus to date has focused on these spatial aspects; other MRI studies in rodents and humans suggest that the hippocampus processes big-picture information in the anterior region, and more precise details in the posterior.

But just as important as spatial information is what’s in those locations. Our experience of a room is distinctly different if all the furniture is in the same place, but the couch in the corner is now bright red instead of blue, as we remembered. Kragel and his teammates wanted to go further to understand the overlap of how spatial and conceptual information are represented at the same time.

They recruited 28 participants who learned sequences of five images placed in different locations on a circular array. After they memorized the sequences, they got into an MRI machine and watched a replay of those same images—with some differences. The researchers varied the sequences, sometimes swapping an image in its expected location, moving an image to a different location, or both.

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Depending on how big the difference was from the expected images, the researchers saw different activity in the hippocampus. Seeing an image of a different object triggered more activity in the anterior region, while differences in location sparked more activity in the posterior region. Changes in both the object and its location generated activity in the central region, suggesting that it plays a role in reconciling both types of information.

Sorting and responding

Different regions of the hippocampus are connected to different networks of the brain for higher-level processing. The anterior region is connected to systems involved in abstract or conceptual processing, and the posterior region is connected to systems for visual and spatial processing.

This suggests that the patterns of activity the researchers saw in this study are a way for the hippocampus to sort out discrepancies and pass them along to more specialized parts of the brain for further processing.

“We need to encode and retrieve memories pretty quickly all the time, and we need to be able to switch between processing different types of information,” Kragel said.

“So, this type of organization where the hippocampus receives different kinds of inputs allows it to rapidly detect when information differs from our expectations and retrieve relevant memories to guide behavior.”

Funding: The study, “Spatial and semantic memory reorganize a hippocampal long-axis gradient,” was supported by the National Institutes of Health.

Additional authors include Anikka G. Jordan and Joel L. Voss, both from UChicago.

Key Questions Answered:

Q: Why does my brain have different “folders” for a dog and the spot where the dog sits?

A: It’s about processing speed and specialized networks. The front of your brain is better at “big picture” concepts and meaning, while the back is optimized for 3D space and visual precision. By splitting these tasks, the hippocampus can quickly tell the rest of your brain exactly what part of your memory needs to be updated without re-scanning the entire scene.

Q: What happens if this “dial” gets stuck?

A: If the hippocampus couldn’t shift between these regions, you might experience “reality discrimination” issues. You might recognize a friend (the “what”) but feel a deep sense of unease because your brain can’t reconcile that they are in your kitchen instead of their office (the “where”). This flexibility is key to feeling “grounded” in your surroundings.

Q: How does this help with “predicting” the future?

A: Your brain is a prediction machine. The smooth “front-to-back” flow of activity seen in the study is the sound of a brain whose predictions are coming true. When that flow breaks, it’s a “red alert” signal that tells your brain to stop coasting on autopilot and start encoding a new, unexpected memory.

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Editorial Notes:

  • This article was edited by a Neuroscience News editor.
  • Journal paper reviewed in full.
  • Additional context added by our staff.

About this neuroscience research news

Author: Cassandra Belek
Source: University of Chicago
Contact: Cassandra Belek – University of Chicago
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Closed access.
Spatial and semantic memory reorganize a hippocampal long-axis gradient” by Anikka G. Jordan, Joel L. Voss, and James E. Kragel. PNAS
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2525724123


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News Nation: What President Trump has to say about Pope Leo? Also, the accomplishments and life experience of Pope Leo IV

============

@adonispara

> Pope Leo XIV

> born chicago 1955

> nobody special. just a catholic kid from the suburbs

> played “mass” with his brothers at home as a kid

> studied math at uni. not even theology. math

> graduated then walked straight into a monastery same year

> ordained priest at 26

> rome called him

> flew over. got a full doctorate in canon law

> could’ve stayed in rome living comfortable

> went to peru instead

> first mission: chulucanas. semi-arid desert at the foot of the andes

> spent his first year doing disaster relief after el niño floods hit the regio

> went back to chicago briefly to finish his thesis

> then went straight back to peru

> settled in trujillo. stayed there for nearly a decade

> this was during peru’s civil war

> witnessed car bombs & military crackdowns (he stayed)

> learned spanish. founded a parish. trained future priests

> travelled by horse on difficult roads to reach isolated communities in the mountain valleys

> spoke out publicly against fujimori’s government (when other bishops stayed quiet)

> went back to chicago in 1999

> won election as head of the augustinian province on reputation alone

> 2001: elected to lead the entire worldwide augustinian order

> ran it for 12 years. based in rome. travelled every continent

> never gave interviews. never chased headlines

> 2023: francis called him to rome

> made him the man who decides who becomes a bishop anywhere on earth

> made cardinal september 2023 > two years later, francis died

> second day of the conclave. fourth ballot

> walked out onto the balcony of st peter’s basilica

> spoke for 10 minutes in flawless italian

> speaks 5 languages. holds 2 passports

> first american pope in 2,000 years of church history

> first augustinian pope ever

> two years earlier he was one of 5,400 bishops with zero global visibility

Every vatican insider said an american pope was impossible…

============

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Ian explains Can anyone dethrone the dollar?

https://www.gzeromedia.com/video/ian-explains/can-anyone-actually-dethrone-the-dollar

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Factory workers in India … AI cameras which will be taking their jobs

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FT: Donald Trump has revealed plans for his presidential library in central Miami … it will include a decommissioned Air Force One and a golden statute of Trump with his fist in the air…

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Times Radio: Peter Hitchens “Is it the case that what you want to see is the Israeli Army and the United States Army actually invade Iran?”

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John Simpson on X. Healing of the Sick but who is comparing himself to Jesus? …. Messianic and frightening or just AI generated.

Will Hutton

@williamnhutton

This image is so delusional it must be a fake that is AI generated. To rubbish the pope and post this simultaneously? If real, the US, the west and the world have a real problem on our hands.

John Simpson

@JohnSimpsonNews

4h

President Trump has posted this picture on social media of himself as Christ healing the sick. I’ve long given up saying how hard it is to think of any previous US president who behaved like Donald Trump, but comparing himself to Jesus puts him on another level altogether.

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