Good morning! Today is Friday, the fifth of June, 2026 and this is the Friday Edition of GEORGE.
GEORGE is how curious thinkers catch up on global stories that matter, each and every weekday morning. It’s your tool to stay ahead of the news with reporting and commentary on what you need to know today.
A man carrying a bomb was prevented from boarding a flight at Sacramento International Airport after his improvised device was detected while at the airport’s security checkpoint, and a preliminary National Transportation Safety Board report found that a United Airlines 767 pilot was flying too low and too slow when an accident occurred while landing at Newark Liberty International Airport. GEORGE has complete details on these two breaking news stories in @Today in Brief.
Meanwhile, hopes of a ceasefire between Israel and the Hizbullah terror group in Lebanon are fading. This and other news from the war in Iran have been covered extensively in the @The War Room section.
The 2026 World Cup, regarded as the most prestigious association football competition, as well as the most widely viewed and followed sporting event in the world, starts in the United States, Canada, and Mexico in six days. Our @Today in Brief editor takes a brief look at the history of the World Cup and which nation has won the most titles?
GEORGE’s upgraded @The War Room feature now covers multiple battles and conflicts across the globe. Today the reader will find multiple dispatches concerning Lebanon, Israel, and Iran, plus Mr. Trump’s “I don’t care it’s boring” statements.
Our @The Sketch editorial cartoon columnist shares his take the many utterances of Mr. Trump concerning the war in Iran.
In addition, GEORGE has other exclusive news in today’s edition so don’t touch that dial. Simply scroll down and read more GEORGE, starting with today’s editorial cartoon in @The Sketch. GEORGE will be back this weekend with a brand-new editorial cartoon, even more news, and stories you won’t find elsewhere.
Until then, remain curious!
Until then, remain curious!
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VOLUME VI… № 1,731
@THE LEDE (above)
@THE SKETCH (above) This whole Iran crisis is starting to get very boring.
IN THIS ISSUE
@INTERMEZZO I Street scene in Jamaica
@THE WAR ROOM
@INTERMEZZO II Urban treet scene in New York
@TODAY IN BRIEF
@INTERMEZZO III Wien Mitte Train Station
@WELBY ON HEALTH Are GLP-1 Drugs Reshaping the Brain?
@RECENT DISPATCHES OF NOTE
@ABOUT GEORGE
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What remains of a house in the Bronx in New York City located at the intersection of Gleason and St. Lawrence Streets
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U.S.-Israeli War in Iran
— Hopes of cease-fire in Lebanon are disappearing in the rear-view mirror as Israel and Hizbullah continue to fight. The U.S.-brokered agreement requires the terror group Hizbullah to stop firing first. The group was not, however, a party to the talks and has rejected the conditions of the agreement as being akin to a surrender.
— Earlier in the week, U.S. President Donald Trump announced a partial ceasefire between Israel and Hizbullah, later also announced by Lebanon. The U.S. president, after phone calls with both parties, announced that “Israel will not attack them, and they will not attack Israel.” Mr. Trump said that Mr. Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, had agreed to belay his earlier orders to attack Beirut’s southern suburbs No U.S. president had ever spoken with Hizbullah, with or without intermediaries. The group is designated as a terrorist organization by the United States. The partial ceasefire would amount to a limited de-escalation of a conflict that has resulted in the deaths of thousands of people, mostly on the Lebanon side of the border.
— Iran on Monday suspended negotiations with the United States in protest of Israel’s expanding military offensive in Lebanon, government-aligned media is reporting. A “violation on one front is a violation of the ceasefire on all fronts,” the country’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, posted on social media. The move could complicate current efforts to bring the three-month war to an end. “The Iranian negotiating team will suspend ‘talks and the exchange of texts through mediators,’” the semi-official news agency Tasnim reported. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said in a statement that Iran considers “the crossing of red lines in Lebanon and Gaza to mean direct war and the imposition of costs on its national security and the Islamic Resistance,” Tasnim said. In response, Iran will “undertake defensive operations through unconventional measures, opening new fronts and maintaining the Strait of Hormuz equation,” the IRGC said. Mr. Trump told NBC News he had not been informed of the decision ahead of time but that “I think it’s fine if they’re done talking,” adding that it was “an appropriate thing to say, because they’re better negotiators than they are fighters.”
— On Monday, after days of haggling with Iranian officials through intermediaries on a preliminary agreement, Mr. Trump declared the negotiations to end the war were starting “to get very boring.” “I don’t care if they’re over, honestly,” he told Eamon Javers of CNBC when asked about reports that the Iranians, angry at continued Israeli strikes in Lebanon and low-level conflict with the United States in the Persian Gulf, were threatening to stop negotiating. “I really don’t care. I couldn’t care less. If they’re over, they’re over.”
— In what amounts to a stunning rebuke to Mr. Trump, the U.S. House of Representatives passed legislation to force him to seek approval from Congress or withdraw U.S. forces. The House voted 215 to 208 in favor of the war powers resolution, a vote that was largely by party lines although four Republican legislators voted with the Democrats. The vote will send the resolution to the Senate, which just in May had advanced a similar resolution. The move marks a victory for House Democrats and the constitutional purists who point out that, under the War Powers Act of 1973, the current conflict is illegal without explicit congressional approval because it has lasted longer than 90 days.
— The War Powers Act of 1973 is a federal law designed to limit a U.S. president’s ability to initiate or escalate military actions abroad without congressional approval. Passed over President Richard Nixon’s veto, it reasserted Congress’ authority under Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution to declare war.
— U.S. officials have indicated that they are closing in on an arrangement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, although Mr. Trump has yet to sign off on the emerging framework, it is understood. The plan could result in an extension of the current cease fire and the need for more substantive negotiations for an end to the war.
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Russo-Ukrainian War
— A recent interview in the Austrian daily Die Presse has renewed debate over whether Vladimir Putin’s veil of immunity can ultimately be pierced under international law. Legal scholars interviewed by the paper argued that while a sitting head of state continues to enjoy broad protections before the domestic courts of other nations, such immunity is increasingly viewed as procedural rather than absolute, particularly in cases involving alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity. The International Criminal Court’s arrest warrant for Mr. Putin, along with ongoing discussion surrounding a proposed special tribunal on the crime of aggression against Ukraine, has further highlighted the growing tension between traditional doctrines of sovereign immunity and modern efforts to impose personal criminal accountability on national leaders. Experts noted that while political realities may render prosecution improbable so long as Mr. Putin remains in office, the prevailing legal view increasingly holds that office may delay accountability, but does not permanently foreclose it.
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Urban street scene, photographed with the mood.camera, a point-and-shoot camera that captures natural photos full of character, straight out of an iPhone,
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Jobs reports for May are out. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, a unit of the Department of Labor, said that the U.S. economy added 172,000 jobs last month, more than economists had expected. Meanwhile, the unemployment ratestayed at 4.3%. Updated figures from the BLS showed that March and April of this year saw the addition of 93,000 more jobs than previously had been reported.
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Russian satellites have been jamming GPS signals across Europe, according to multiple researchers at the University of Texas at Austin and at Stanford University. Scientists and U.S. military briefers have linked seconds-long, widespread interference incidents to Russia, revealing vulnerabilities in a technology that is now considered essential by tens of millions of people. The story was first reported in the New York Times. A research paper published on Thursday by Todd Humphreys, head of the Radionavigation Laboratory at the University of Texas at Austin, as well as separate research conducted by Richard Bowden and fellow navigation experts at the large Spanish technology firm GMV concluded that in at least three of the 75 instances they identified since 2019, the interference originated from Russian satellites, and they suspect that the same Russian network is implicated in the remainder of instances but the available data is not granular enough to pinpoint the culprit.
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Warning that artificial-intelligence models are nearing capability to improve without human intervention, AI-company Anthropic urged a global pause in the development of artificial-intelligence systems. “Taken far enough, and given enough compute, that trend points to an AI system capable of fully autonomously designing and developing its own successor,” the company wrote in a lengthy blog post published Thursday by co-founder Jack Clark and Anthropic Institute lead Marina Favaro, referencing recursive self-improvement. “We are not there yet, and recursive self-improvement is not inevitable. But it could come sooner than most institutions are prepared for,” it went on to say. “It would be good for the world to have the option to show or temporarily pause” AI work that could potentially be dangerous, the company said.. AI is advancing to the point where the technology can make human work thousands of times more efficient or even replace it, creating a new set of risks, they said.
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Six years ago, statues dedicated to Confederate generals, Founding Fathers, and European explorers disappeared from public view from town squares and other public places during protests against police violence and racism in the wake of George Floyd’s murder in 2020, and some are being freshened up and put back where they were. No less than the city of Columbus, Ohio, the state capital, took down a 22-foot (6.7-meter) -high 3-ton (2.72-metric ton) statue of its namesake from a high-profile spot in front of Columbus’ city hall that year. The statue – a 1955 gift from sister city Genoa – represented “patriarchy, oppression, and divisiveness.” The city also renamed Columbus Park “Warren Park,” removed the wooden replica of the Santa Maria that had been docked on the Scioto River near City Hall for decades, and the city renamed Columbus Day in favor of Indigenous Peoples‘ Day. The city, however, did not change its name. Neither did Columbus State University.
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The sunniest square meter of Sweden as determined by the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute and Swedish retailer Ikea, is in a field on a farm on the island of Gotland in the Baltic Sea. The SMHI and Ikea studied 20 years of solar data were able to identify the square meter with the most sunshine. The precise spot is marked by a permanent monument comprised of two granite IKEA armchairs and a plaque. Gotland, which has a population of 61,023, has been inhabited since the year 7200 BCE. Gotland, with a total area of 3,183.7 square kilometers (1,229 Square), is Sweden’s largest island, and it is the largest island fully encompassed by the Baltic Sea.
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A new Harvard Business School study examined the gap that swipe charges and higher prices has created. The researchers found that interchange fees result in the of ca. $30 billion every year from cash and debit users to credit card users. The net effect of this is a penalty for lower- and middle-income Americans, who may not be able to qualify for premium credit cards or are unable to afford the high annual fees those cards often carry. Separately, the Federal Reservein 2025 found that individuals in households that earn less than $25,000 per year used cash for 24% of their payments and that they were more than twice as likely to use cash as people in households earning more than $100,000. Older Americans were also more frequent cash payers, with people 55 and older paying with cash 19% of the time, versus 10% for people aged 25 to 54. The European Central Bank, in a separate but recent study, found that cash remains the most frequently used payment method for day-to-day point-of-sale transactions within the euro zone. This translates to ca. 52% to 55% of transactions. However, cards are rapidly catching up, making up about 34% to 37% of transactions by volume, and actually surpassing cash in total transaction value, with cards at 46% as compared to cash at 42%. Yet another U.S. Federal Reserve study found that, overall, cash is now used for about 14% of consumer payments, while cards dominate with around 65% of all transactions.
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A man whose hand baggage contained an explosive device powerful enough to cause damage to an aircraft was detained as he attempted to pass through a security checkpoint at Sacramento International Airport in California on 30 May of this year, federal prosecutors said. Kimani Osayande Jones, also known as Kimani Osayande Jackson, arrived at the checkpoint wearing a scarf that covered his face as well as latex gloves., and was carrying five mobile phones, one with a 15-minute time already set to go off, U.S. Attorney Eric Grant said in a statement. He was also carrying a torch lighter, a knife, and zip ties, The explosive device was the size of a roll of toilet paper. The powder and fuse “were determined to be viable and energetic,” Mr. Grant said. The device had “the potential to damage the aircraft and cause a possible loss of cabin pressure” when flying above 10,000’ (3 km) had the Mr. Jones been seated on a flight in a window seat.
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The 2026 World Cup will start on 11 June. It is the first FIFA World Cup to be hosted by three nations, and the first to include 48 teams, an expansion from 32 previously. Despite its 96-year history, there have only been 22 editions of the quadrennial event that missed two editions due to the Second World War. Brazil has won five World Cups, while Germany has won four World Cups, each at least 16 years apart, demonstrating the team’s ability to win in different eras. Italy has also won four times, while Argentina has three World Cup titles. France and Uruguay have each won two editions.
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A study by the Kinsey Institute at Indiana University conducted with DatingNews.com found that GLP-1 weight-loss drugs are changing how people date and connect. The findings were derived from a nationally representative survey of 2,000 single U.S. adults with participant ages ranging from 18 to 91, and GLP-1 users reported a wide range of physical, social, and psychological shifts they attributed to the drug. Eight percent reported having used a GLP-1 medication to assist with weight loss, and 59% reported one impact from the drug on their dating life including: 17% purchased new clothing to show off their body; 16% said they heard from exes or former partners who wanted to reconnect; 14% said they were getting more matches on dating apps and 13% felt more confident posting photos of themselves online. Industry trade publications have indicated that the influence of these weight-loss drugs on manufacturers of men’s and women’s intimates and sexy underwear has been substantial and includes a surge in demand for smaller sizes, a shift in undergarment silhouettes, undergarments that flatter the purchaser’s new shape, and an increased confidence by shoppers in their newly trim bodies.
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The National Transportation Safety Board released a preliminary report of the 3 May 2026 accident at Newark Liberty International Airport involving a United Airlines Boeing 767. The NTSB said that the captain of the flight was flying too slow and too low before landing last month at Newark Liberty International Airport. The government agency, which is responsible for investigating civil transportation accidents, said that the flight was “normal until the descent.” Investigators said that the flight crew planned to land on runway 4R but the landing was changed to a different runway, and then, the runway was changed again, this time to runway 29. The United Boeing 767, operating as Flight 169, with 221 passengers and 10 crewmembers on board, had departed Marco Polo Airport in Venice at 11:03 a.m. (11:03) local time. The captain was flying the aircraft while the first officer monitored the flight instruments during the gusty approach. The NTSB said: “As they descended, the airspeed began to decay, and the first officer recalled that he stated, ‘hey you are slow,’ followed moments later by, ‘you are still slow and a little low.’” Investigators said that the captain “heard a thump” just before touchdown, and the first officer felt a “mild jolt” as they neared the runway threshold. The jet crossed over the turnpike at 19’ (5.8 m) above the ground. After parking at the gate, the plane was found to have three punctures on the fuselage. One of the tires on the landing gear had “slash marks.”
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Susan Collins, a U.S. senator from the state of Maine, became the first senator in history to reach 10,000 consecutive votes cast without an absence when she cast a vote to support a bid to send an unsuccessful Democratic bid to send her party’s immigration bill back to committee. Senator Collins first entered the Senate in January 1997. She was more than slightly aware that her political idol and Senate predecessor from Maine, Margaret Chase Smith, had cast nearly 3,000 consecutive votes over 13 years before hip surgery ended her streak, and Senator Collins surprised the late senator’s record in November 2005.
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Britain’s Electronic Travel Authorisation system, known as ETA, has been down and prospective visitors from the United States, Canada, and most European countries are being denied boarding at airports, train terminals, and ship terminals. As of late Wednesday afternoon, the ETA app displayed a message saying, “Sorry, the system is busy,” and directed users to try again later. In a statement, the British Home Office, which administers the program, said that it was “aware that some customers are experiencing delays” and that technicians were working “round the clock” to resolve it. Since February of this year, most travelers to the United Kingdom have required an ETA, which is distinct from a visa and costs £20, or about $27. The ETA, for short-term visits under six months and valid for two years, is only for visa-exempt travelers, including those from the United States, Canada and most European countries.
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The United States will create a voluntary framework under which the federal government would vet soon-to-be-released artificial-intelligence models that are considered to be potentially dangerous, such as the highly capable, unreleased frontier AI model Claude Mythos, according to a new executive order signed on Tuesday by Mr. Trump. The move represents an attempt by the president to better address cybersecurity and national security threats posed by AI, something that goes against his earlier deregulatory stance. Still, given the voluntary nature of the framework, it shows that his administration remains reluctant to impose regulation on the tech industry. Under the new guidelines, AI companies would share their new AI models with the government roughly 30 days prior to a public release.
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George: How to Consume News in a World of Information Overload
George delivers news for curious thinkers in a world of shortened attention spans.
Decades of research on how readers consume information when faced with Information Overload – led by George co-founder Jonathan Spira, one of the foremost authorities on the subject – ensures that each article gets straight to the point with no fluff and no bias.
George presents important news and events of the day clearly and concisely in a format better suited to the modern reader’s limited time and focus, without forsaking the founders’ traditional commitment to fact-driven news, commentary, and dispatches – all prepared by curious thinkers, for curious thinkers.
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Jonathan Spira, Alexander Khusid, Tim Perry, Christian Stampfer, Kurt Stolz, Anna Breuer, and Paul Riegler contributed to this issue of George.
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