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Common condition raises your risk of dementia by 66%

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
But there's reason to be optimistic about the findings.
Emma Glassman-Hughes

Bride covered in black paint in shocking ‘revenge’ attack by her new sister-in-law

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
"This was meant to be a special day for Gemma Monk and her family. Courtesy of your conduct, it turned into a nightmare."
Anthony Blair

LIV Golf CEO admits tour only funded through this season in new ‘reality’

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
LIV Golf's demise may not be imminent, but the Saudi-backed rebel golf league seems to be on borrowed time.
Michael Blinn

Kamikaze Drone Maker Raises $320 Million In U.S. IPO As 'War Unicorns' Rise

Zero Rss
1 month 3 weeks ago
Kamikaze Drone Maker Raises $320 Million In U.S. IPO As 'War Unicorns' Rise

The rise of "war unicorns" will be an impressive development to watch over the next several years, as we've diligently laid out for readers for months, well before the U.S.-Iran conflict, how a massive government push and in capital markets would begin to prioritize the next generation of defense-tech firms rather than big, bloated legacy defense contractors.

Aevex, a military drone maker backed by Madison Dearborn Partners, is the latest example of capital markets getting excited about war unicorns, with the company selling 16 million shares at $20 each in an IPO, with shares expected to begin trading on Friday. The deal was reportedly oversubscribed multiple times, according to Bloomberg sources.

Aevex is a direct public-market play on low-cost kamikaze drones, with a sizable portion of last year's revenue linked to Ukraine. It has two unmanned systems programs, Phoenix Ghost and EUCOM AOR Deep Strike, that have delivered or committed to deliver more than 9,300 units, representing about $1.2 billion in contract value through the end of this year.

The war unicorn is positioned to benefit from the Department of War's massive shift toward startups that can produce advanced weapons at a fraction of the cost and on a faster timeline than the large primes, such as Lockheed and Boeing. There is also a major shift within the DoW toward low-cost advanced weapons systems, such as drones and AI kill chains.

Aevex sees demand for unmanned systems expanding to $11 billion in the U.S. and $26 billion globally by 2030.

Bloomberg noted that Aevex posted a net loss of $16.9 million on $432.9 million in revenue in 2025, compared with net income of $78.5 million on $392.2 million in revenue a year earlier.

Aevex's public debut is only the beginning of war unicorns tapping public markets. We've outlined how the DoW's procurement process has been reset to favor startups. The DoW is also setting up a 30-person investment banking team called the "Economic Defense Unit" to deploy $200 billion in private equity over three years to fund these unicorns.

Follow the money: President Trump's war economy is being spun up ...

  • War Economy Returns: From Trucks To Tanks, Pentagon Looks To Automakers To Rebuild America's Arsenal

What comes next, particularly in the U.S. market, is a rapid push to harden the airspace over critical infrastructure, data centers, and other high-value assets, because there is an alarming gap in the low-cost air defense layer against FPVs. Lessons from conflict areas across Eurasia are being learned at hyperspeed. 

Tyler Durden Fri, 04/17/2026 - 11:20
Tyler Durden

Pirates fans caught in awkward moment on broadcast

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
Jake Magnum’s final at-bat in the 10th inning of the Pirates’ afternoon game Thursday featured an awkward exchange in the background.
Andrew Crane

Lori Loughlin and daughter Olivia Jade go glam in sequins and lace at LACMA gala

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
The "Full House" alum sparkled at the David Geffen Galleries gala.
mliss1578

Lori Loughlin and daughter Olivia Jade go glam in sequins and lace at LACMA gala

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
The "Full House" alum sparkled at the David Geffen Galleries gala.
Hilary George

Ford recalls over 1M F-150 pickup trucks over crash risks linked to gearshift defect

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
The automaker is aware of two injuries and one accident possibly related to the issue.
Associated Press

House passes 10-day renewal of government’s foreign spy powers

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
WASHINGTON — The House of Representatives unanimously approved a 10-day renewal of the federal government’s foreign spying authority in the early hours of Friday, after more than a dozen privacy-minded Republicans voted to kill a measure extending the powers for years. Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) would expire April 30 under...
Josh Christenson

Trump issues sharply worded notice to Israel: ‘Enough is enough!’

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
Trump had stern words for Israel as he made clear the US is in the driver's seat for the 10-day cease-fire between the Jewish home state and Lebanon.
Chris Nesi

"Mr. Biden Lives Abroad": Hunter Leaves Country As Former Lawyers Seek Millions

Zero Rss
1 month 3 weeks ago
"Mr. Biden Lives Abroad": Hunter Leaves Country As Former Lawyers Seek Millions

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

“Mr. Biden lives abroad.”

Those four words in a filing from Barry Coburn confirmed what had long been rumored about his client: Hunter Biden has left the country as his former lawyers and creditors seek millions in unpaid debts.

He added, “He cannot pay his current lawyers.”

As I wrote about years ago, Biden’s art grift would dry up as soon as he could no longer deliver influence and access to power. Reportedly unable to move art, Hunter has moved out of the reach of many creditors. He is rumored to be in South Africa, where his wife, Melissa Cohen, was born and raised.

Hunter is the Blanche DuBois of American politics. He has always relied on the kindness (and greed) of strangers when he could allegedly offer influence or access to his father, Joe Biden.

Hunter told a South African podcast in November that “We’re trying to be between Cape Town and the States, go back and forth.” He added, “I’ve fallen madly in love with Cape Town. You guys do not know how good you have it here. It’s the most beautiful city in the world.”

It just also happens to be roughly 9000 miles away from creditors in Delaware.

According to his former counsel at Winston & Strawn LLP, Hunter has not paid a “substantial portion” of the fees owed to his legal team.

Hunter told the podcast that he is facing “$17 million in debt … as it relates to my legal fees.”

His criminal defense did not ultimately protect him. He was found guilty of a variety of crimes, and his father then broke his repeated promise to the public and pardoned his own son in December 2024.

I have been a long-time critic of the Bidens, going back to when Joe Biden was still a senator. The family was long accused of influence peddling and corruption. Hunter Biden was hardly subtle in marketing his access and influence. He is now without a law license and any known means of support despite an enabling media that pushed his past books and art.

For those of us who have written about the Bidens for decades, the relocation to South Africa is about as surprising as having his father pop into dinners at Cafe Milano with foreign clients. Hunter Biden is the Enfant terrible created by his father and released upon the world.

I recently wrote that the Swalwell scandal reveals an ironic analogy to Hunter’s signature lifestyle.

Swalwell supported Hunter and was by his side as he defied a congressional subpoena. Like Hunter, he has controversial dealings, including using tens of thousands of campaign contributions for child care. He even had the campaign support of Hunter’s “sugar brother” Kevin Morris, who appears to have a proclivity for narcissistic, self-destructive personalities.

Swalwell could also face the same financial crunch as Hunter, as his campaign and congressional money run out. If so, there is always South Africa.

* * * You can support us with the purchase of a Rugged Multitool

Christmas is right around the corner... pic.twitter.com/TXc7STNYQW

— ZeroHedge Store (@ZeroHedgeStore) November 3, 2025 Tyler Durden Fri, 04/17/2026 - 11:00
Tyler Durden

Los Angeles’ affordability crisis exposes its liberal hypocrisy

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
Los Angeles is very good at branding itself as liberal, but only 51% of Angelenos are registered democrats.
Helen Zhao

Gwyneth Paltrow going back to her roots as star brings Goop Kitchen to NYC: ‘Feeding most of Manhattan’

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
Don’t expect to see Paltrow waiting tables, though – Goop Kitchen relies on “ghost kitchens” that only take orders for delivery.
Jennifer Gould

Polymarket promo code NYPMAX: Deposit $20, get $20 for Wild vs. Stars

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
Deposit $20 to get a $20 bonus with our promo code NYPMAX to skip the waitlist and make predictions on the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
Michael Leboff

‘Ugly’ but ‘beautiful’: LACMA finally unveils controversial new Geffen Galleries — was it worth the wait?

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
The 900-foot-long, curvy, two-story building was designed by Swiss minimalist, experiential architect Peter Zumthor — and the project was not without its challenges.
Linda Laban

New Movies on Streaming: ‘Reminders of Him,’ ‘The Chronology of Water,’ + More

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
These titles and dozens more are out on digital platforms now.
mliss1578

78-year-old innocent bystander dies yards from his NYC home after being hit by stray bullet

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
Video shared online showed a large police presence at the scene late on Thursday.
Joe Marino, Anthony Blair

House Votes To Extend Surveillance Powers Until April 30

Zero Rss
1 month 3 weeks ago
House Votes To Extend Surveillance Powers Until April 30

The US House of Representatives on Friday passed a bill extending Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) - which was notoriously abused so spy on the 2016 Trump campaign, and has been used for "backdoor searches" targeting Americans. Friday's vote - via unanimous consent after a longer five-year reauthorization pushed by Republicns failed to advance - extends Section 702 until April 30. 

The short-term measure now moves to the Senate, which faces a looming deadline: the current authorization expires April 20. The vote comes despite a well-documented history of FISA abuses spanning both individualized Title I warrants and the bulk warrantless collection under Section 702, as detailed in multiple Department of Justice Inspector General reports, declassified Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) opinions, and congressional oversight findings.

President Donald Trump had urged Republicans to support a clean extension, citing the law’s critical role in national security while personally recounting what he described as "the worst and most illegal abuse of FISA in our Nation’s History.” Trump referenced the FBI’s use of FISA during the Crossfire Hurricane investigation into his 2016 presidential campaign. At the same time, he stressed that the U.S. military "desperately needs” Section 702 to protect troops and diplomats, particularly amid ongoing operations against Iran’s nuclear program.

"With the ongoing successful Military activities against the Terrorist Iranian Regime, it is more important than ever that we remain vigilant, PROTECT our Homeland, Troops, and Diplomats stationed abroad,” Trump said. He added that generals he consulted called the authority "VITAL,” especially in the current geopolitical climate.

Heaven forbid he demand reforms and more oversight. 

Section 702 permits the government to collect communications of non-U.S. persons located outside the United States without a warrant. However, it inevitably captures "incidental” communications involving American citizens, who can then be searched in the database through so-called "backdoor” queries - often without a warrant or probable cause. Critics on both sides of the aisle have long warned that the program effectively enables warrantless domestic surveillance.

Long-Standing and Systemic Abuses

FISA was enacted in 1978 in direct response to revelations from the Church Committee about executive-branch spying on civil-rights leaders, anti-war activists, and political opponents. Yet official records show recurring compliance failures and misuse in the decades since.

The highest-profile case of targeted surveillance involved Carter Page, a former Trump campaign foreign-policy adviser. A December 2019 DOJ Inspector General report by Michael Horowitz identified 17 significant inaccuracies and omissions across four FISA warrant applications and renewals. These included heavy reliance on the unverified Steele dossier - funded by the Clinton campaign and DNC - without disclosing its political origins, lack of corroboration, or exculpatory evidence (such as Page’s prior reporting as a CIA source). The FBI also failed to correct the record with the FISC.

FBI attorney Kevin Clinesmith later pleaded guilty to altering an email to falsely claim Page was not a CIA source, helping secure a renewal. Special Counsel John Durham’s subsequent investigation further criticized the FBI’s predication and handling of the Russia probe. The DOJ later admitted in court filings that it lacked probable cause for at least some of the Page renewals. Recent 2026 disclosures by Sen. Chuck Grassley have raised similar questions about possible FISA surveillance of another Trump adviser, Walid Phares, involving the same FBI attorney.

These were not isolated. A 2002 FISC review found the FBI had included false or misleading statements in at least 75 FISA applications, leading to the barring of a senior counterterrorism official from ever appearing before the court. A 2020 IG audit of the FBI’s "Woods procedures” (accuracy-check protocols) examined 29 applications and found apparent errors or inadequately supported facts in every one of the 25 reviewed in detail.

Section 702 "Backdoor" Searches on U.S. Persons

The scale of abuse under the warrantless program has drawn even sharper criticism from the FISC itself, which has repeatedly described FBI compliance failures as "persistent and widespread.”

Between 2020 and early 2022, the FBI conducted more than 278,000 searches of Section 702 data that violated legal standards or internal policy. In 2021 alone, total U.S.-person queries reached approximately 3.4 million, with hundreds of thousands flagged as improper.

Declassified FISC opinions document concrete examples of misuse:

  • Queries on Black Lives Matter protesters, Jan. 6 arrestees, and participants in purely domestic criminal investigations (health-care fraud, gang violence, public corruption) with no foreign-intelligence nexus.
  • A batch query on 19,000 donors to a congressional campaign.
  • Searches targeting a U.S. Senator, a state senator, a state court judge, journalists, political commentators, and even FBI "Citizens Academy” participants.
  • Personal abuses, including agents querying data on romantic partners, family members, online-dating matches, or rental tenants.

FISC rulings from 2018 through 2023 repeatedly faulted the FBI’s minimization procedures, record-keeping, and "batch” querying practices. A 2025 DOJ OIG report acknowledged some improvement after the 2024 Reforming Intelligence and Securing America Act but warned that ongoing oversight remains essential.

Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.) offered an amendment April 15 that would have required the Justice Department to obtain a court order before querying Americans’ data, with narrow exceptions for urgent threats. "FISA 702 is too critical to allow it to expire, but the legitimate concerns about the possibility of abuse also demand that we consider additional reforms,” Himes stated. The amendment was not adopted.

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Tyler Durden Fri, 04/17/2026 - 10:40
Tyler Durden

Report of drone with ‘dangerous substances’ near London’s Israeli embassy sparks UK police probe

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
The Israeli embassy said in a statement that a suspected security incident was being investigated in an adjacent park.
Reuters

Humpback whale rescued after becoming stranded on Australian beach

NY Post
1 month 3 weeks ago
This is the moment a nine-meter humpback whale was rescued after becoming stranded on a beach in Australia.
SWNS

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