Two former US Presidents framed the killing of Alex Pretti as a defining moment. Clinton called the scenes “horrible” and wrote that this is one of those rare moments “where the decisions we make and the actions we take will shape our history for years to come.” The Obamas called it a “heartbreaking tragedy” and “a wake-up call to every American” that core national values are under assault.

President Clinton posted his on his verified Twitter/X account. President Obama used his official Medium account.

I traced back to the original sources as the information scattered across social media can’t always be verified. NBC News also commented on the statements.


The words the New York Times used

There is a sentence in Sunday’s New York Times editorial that deserves to be read slowly, then read again.

“Ms. Noem and Mr. Bovino are lying in defiance of obvious truths. They are lying in the manner of authoritarian regimes that require people to accept lies as a demonstration of power.”

That is the Editorial Board of the New York Times (not an op-ed columnist, not an outside contributor, but the institutional voice of the paper itself) stating plainly that the Secretary of Homeland Security and a senior Border Patrol official are lying. And not merely lying, but lying in a specific way: the way authoritarian governments lie.

This matters. It matters because major American newspapers have spent years tying themselves in knots to avoid the word “lie.” They have preferred “misstated,” “claimed without evidence,” “falsely asserted.” The conventions of objectivity have often meant treating obvious falsehoods as matters of contested interpretation. On Sunday, the Times abandoned that convention entirely.

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Victoria Devine in The Age, states Australia’s insurance system is under unprecedented strain as climate-driven disasters and rising risk assessments push premiums ever higher, leaving more homeowners exposed and coverage increasingly unaffordable.

‘Everybody’s at each other’s throats’: James Cameron says he has left the US permanently Avatar director, who moved to New Zealand after the Covid pandemic says he will soon be a citizen of a country where people ‘are, for the most part, sane’ - The Guardian

Europe drives to digital sovereignty, over US dependence. Europe is confronting a strategic vulnerability after decades of reliance on US-based internet infrastructure, cloud services and platforms. The Conversation explains why that dependency now looks dangerous, and how moves toward European-controlled alternatives could reshape the digital balance of power.


AI Dictation: Finally a computer that really listens

Dictation used to mean cleaning up your own mess. You spoke, the software transcribed faithfully (every “um,” every false start) and you spent as long editing as you would have typing from scratch. That changed when AI entered the equation.

I have spent a few days reviewing the dictation tools available in Australia in 2026. What surprised me: after forty years of thinking through my fingers, from typewriter to mainframe to personal computer, I may finally have a viable second mode.

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The $10.42/hour collapse of human-written code

Writing software code is no longer a scarce or expensive activity. In fact, at scale, it now costs less than a fast food worker’s hourly wage. That sounds implausible until you separate coding from engineering and look at what autonomous AI systems are already doing today.

A technique called the Ralph Wiggum Loop is quietly reshaping how software gets made. Named after the persistent, never-give-up character from The Simpsons, it runs an AI coding agent in a simple loop, feeding it the same core prompt repeatedly until the job is done. No coffee breaks. No sleep. No complaints about the brief.

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Australia Day and the history we weren't taught

I could only read one chapter a day. That’s not hyperbole or literary flourish. It’s what Dark Emu demanded of me. Each chapter so thoroughly upended what I thought I knew about this continent that I needed time to sit with the disorientation before continuing.

As Australia Day arrives again, it seems worth sharing why.

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No one is safe

For years, the politics of US immigration enforcement rested on an implicit bargain: this is about them, not us. The raids, the detention centres, the armed agents: these were tools pointed at a specific population. If you were a citizen, if you were white, if you were armed and law-abiding, you weren’t affected.

Minneapolis has shattered that bargain in the space of three weeks.

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The Cold Civil War comes to Minneapolis

From twelve thousand kilometres away, I’m watching the United States tear up its founding document in real time.

The country is in a Cold Civil War. It’s fought on two fronts: online, where narratives are deployed within minutes of a killing to pre-empt sympathy for the dead; and on the streets, where federal agents operate as an occupying force in American cities.

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Heat and the modern path to classic cinema

Tom Hiddleston introduced me to Heat before Pacino or De Niro did.

His impression on Graham Norton, hamming up the famous diner scene for laughs, somehow captured the weight of the original. I watched it, laughed, and filed it away.

Months later, past midnight on Netflix, I finally saw what he was channelling.

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The revolution will be webcast

Another fatal shooting of a citizen in Minneapolis. Senator Amy Klobuchar has identified the man killed as Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old Minneapolis man, US citizen and nurse. This footage from BBC shows the moments leading up to shooting. Note the presence of many citizens video recording all of these actions. Over 90% of Americans now own smartphones. Citizen surveillance has never been higher. Will it matter when the Trump Regime simply denies reality, despite overwhelming evidence?

Warning: this video contains distressing scenes

BBC: Video shows moments around fatal shooting in Minneapolis

The Alex Pretti murder has seen at least two witnesses - one with video evidence - lodge affidavits with District Court of Minnesota. - Tincher v. Noem (0:25-cv-04669)

The Guardian has more details of these sworn witness accounts that contradict Trump Regime’s propaganda.