Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Belfast Is Burning After Attempted Beheading Attack By Migrant


Belfast Is Burning After Attempted Beheading Attack By Migrant
TYLER DURDEN


GardaĆ­ are “keeping a watching brief” for any violence or what the media is describing as 'far-right activity' following the Belfast stabbing.

As the night drew on, more and more images and videos emerged of Belfast burning.

A car engulfed in flames crashed into an apartment building in Belfast amid ongoing unrest...

Last night's attempted beheading of a British man by a Somali migrant in Belfast is becoming a major flashpoint, with mass protests reportedly expected across more than 70 cities in the coming hours.

The attack has intensified public anger over Britain's long-running, nation-killing mass migration policies, which have fueled chaos, violent crime, and a broader national security failure.

"The whole of the United Kingdom is hitting the streets tonight at 7 pm following yet another invader attack on our people," activist Tommy Robinson wrote on X.

"The invader who tried to behead someone in Belfast last night traveled from Sudan to Paris, flew from Paris to Dublin, then got a bus from Dublin to Belfast on 10th February 2023 and claimed 'asylum'. The British government let him stay, and now this. Blood on their hands."

Apparently, the government has dispatched water cannon trucks to Belfast ahead of the protests.

Elon Musk chimed in: "Only by protesting REPEATEDLY and LOUDLY will there be any change!!"

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Live Updates: US strikes Iran in retaliation for helicopter hit, state media denies Iranian involvement



Explosions were heard in the Iranian city of Jask and the surrounding villages, according to Iranian state media outlet Mehr News, citing local residents' reports. 

This is the second wave of explosions, with the first having been confirmed as US military strikes several hours earlier.

A short time after that, explosions were reportedly heard in Qeshm Island in southern Iran, in what various media outlets referred to as a third round of strikes. 

US strikes Iran in response to attack of US helicopter

The United States began launching strikes against Iran on Tuesday evening, following the downing of a US Army Apache helicopter, US Central Command (CENTCOM) announced on Tuesday. 

Earlier in the day, US President Donald Trump announced that the US "must respond" to Iran's downing of the helicopter. 

“Last night, the Iranians shot down one of our highly sophisticated Apache Helicopters while patrolling over the Strait of Hormuz,” Trump described in a post on Truth Social. “The United States must, of necessity, respond to this attack.”


Seattle turns on mass surveillance system ahead of World Cup ‘threat’


Seattle turns on mass surveillance system ahead of World Cup ‘threat’


A major West Coast city is activating a controversial network of surveillance cameras ahead of the FIFA World Cup after officials said law enforcement identified what they described as a credible threat to the tournament.

Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson defended the decision over the weekend, announcing dozens of closed-circuit television cameras surrounding the city’s Stadium District will be switched on, Kumon News reported.

The move marks a significant shift for Wilson, who had previously resisted activating the cameras despite their installation, citing concerns about privacy and government access to collected data.

Seattle is one of the host cities for the 2026 FIFA World Cup and is scheduled to stage six matches between mid-June and early July.

Speaking to reporters after an event in the city, Wilson said the change came after a recent security briefing from law enforcement agencies.

“In the last week and a half, I received a briefing from our law enforcement partners that told me there have been credible threats,” Wilson explained. “And so therefore, in line with the announcement I made earlier this year, we decided to turn those cameras on for the duration of the games. After the World Cup we will turn them off.”

The camera system includes 22 devices positioned around Seattle’s Stadium District, which encompasses areas near Pioneer Square and SODO. 

The cameras will feed live footage into the Seattle Police Department’s Real Time Crime Center, which already receives video from a larger network of public and private cameras across the city.

Police officials have long argued that the technology helps investigators respond to incidents and solve serious crimes, including homicide cases.

Wilson had previously maintained that the stadium-area cameras would remain inactive unless authorities identified a legitimate security concern. Her earlier objections focused on fears that video data could potentially be accessed by federal agencies and used in immigration investigations or abortion-related inquiries involving people traveling from other states.

The mayor announced the policy reversal in a statement released June 5, only days after indicating that her position on the cameras had not changed.

When pressed by reporters about the nature of the threat, Wilson declined to provide specifics but said the information presented by law enforcement convinced her action was necessary.

“This is a pretty standard law enforcement terminology, so if we have information that someone intends to cause harm to people or property or a large event, right, and we believe that they have the means to carry that threat out,” said Wilson. “So I hope… for obvious reasons I’m not going to be giving details, but I was given a briefing that convinced me there is enough of a credible threat.”

Flesh-Eating Cattle Screwworm Spreads Beyond Texas As USDA Accelerates Eradication Push


Flesh-Eating Cattle Screwworm Spreads Beyond Texas As USDA Accelerates Eradication Push
TYLER DURDEN


The U.S. Department of Agriculture confirmed three more New World screwworm (NWS) cases, bringing total detections to five and heightening concerns that the flesh-eating pest, once eradicated in the 1960s, could threaten the nation's already strained cattle industry.

The latest NWS cases include three calves and a goat in Texas, along with a small dog in Lea County, New Mexico, marking the first confirmed case in that state, according to the USDA. The dog had not traveled to Mexico or Texas, prompting authorities to investigate the surrounding property for fly larvae that feed on living flesh rather than dead material.

"Over the past week, USDA has identified and expeditiously confronted four confirmed detections of NWS. While we address these instances that require immediate attention, and continue to sample suspected cases, we are simultaneously working to eradicate the pest entirely," Dudley Hoskins, the USDA's marketing and regulatory undersecretary, said in a statement. 


The first NWS cases were discovered last week in calves a few miles apart in South Texas:

The second case:

Cases were announced Monday in a calf in La Salle County, southwest of San Antonio, and in a goat in Gillespie County, west of Austin.

University of Florida entomologist Edward Burgess told AP News that new NWS cases may emerge in the coming days and weeks, but that does not necessarily mean the pest is spreading.


Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins explained on Monday the USDA's "War on Screwworm" plan to eradicate NWS. 

The rising number of NWS cases in the U.S. poses a threat to the nation's cattle herd if the spread runs rampant, especially with herd size already at a 75-year low, beef prices at record highs …

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Iran Threatens "Decisive Response" After US Begins 'Self-Defense' Strikes Following Downing Of Apache Helicopter


Iran Threatens "Decisive Response" After US Begins 'Self-Defense' Strikes Following Downing Of Apache Helicopter
TYLER DURDEN


Just as President Trump has warned, US Central Command has just tweeted confirmation that the US military began 'self defense' strikes against Iran:

"U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) forces began launching self-defense strikes against Iran at 5 p.m. ET today at the Commander in Chief’s direction, in response to yesterday’s downing of a U.S. Army Apache helicopter

The mission is a proportional response to unjustified Iranian aggression."

The extent of the latest strikes wasn’t immediately clear but they further undercut an already fragile ceasefire signed in April.

A US official tells Fox that airstrikes targeting Iran are "ongoing" and targets include air defenses and radar installations.

IRNA reports explosions in Iran's Hormozgan province, while IRIB reports aerial attacks in Qeshm, Sirik and Bandar Abbas with six explosions reported in Qeshm


The US and Iran have traded attacks several times in recent days even as Trump has said they are close to signing an agreement to bring the conflict to an end.

President Trump told ABC News Jonathan Karl:

"I think it's very important to respond. They shot down a helicopter, and we are responding as we speak."

He added:

"This is a response to what they did they did with our helicopter last night, and I believe the response should be very strong, very powerful, and that's what this one is."

Shortly after the strikes began, IRGC-owned Tasnim News reported that Iran is threatening to retaliate for US' retaliation:

"Iran will respond to US aggression.

As warned hours earlier, Iran will deliver a decisive response to the US aggression, which is being carried out under the pretext of an Apache helicopter crash."

Odds of a peace deal are sliding and oil prices are rising (though not significantly).


Following earlier reports that a US AH-64 Apache helicopter had gone down over the Strait of Hormuz off the coast of Oman in an unprecedented first of the Iran war, moments ago Trump said on Truth Social that he had "been informed by our Great Military that last night the Iranians shot down one of our highly sophisticated Apache Helicopters while patrolling over the Strait of Hormuz. There were two pilots involved, both are safe and uninjured. Nevertheless, the United States must, of necessity, respond to this attack."


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