Dozens shot dead and injured near Gaza aid hub, health ministry and doctors sayNew Foto - Dozens shot dead and injured near Gaza aid hub, health ministry and doctors say

Dozens of Palestinians were shot dead by the Israeli military near an aid distribution site in Gaza on Sunday according to Palestinian officials and eyewitnesses, with Israel's military denying that its troops fired "within or near" the aid site. The Palestinian health ministry, hospital officials and a half-dozen eyewitnesses said the Israeli military was responsible for the gunfire. Palestinian officials said 31 Palestinians had been killed. The Israeli military said its forces "did not fire at civilians while they were near or within" the aid site, but an Israeli military source acknowledged that Israeli forces fired toward individuals about 1 kilometer (1093 yards) away, before the aid site opened. The incident is the latest in which Palestinians have been killed while attempting to receive aid from the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a controversial US-backed mechanism to distribute aid to the embattled and hungry enclave after a months-long Israeli blockade. The GHF has been criticized by the United Nations and others, who warn it risks further displacing Palestinians and endangering civilians and last week. Previous distributions of aid at its sites have been marred by chaos and violence. Multiple eyewitnesses told CNN they were fired upon at what is known as the "Al-Alam" roundabout approximately 800 meters (874 yards) from the site run by the GHF in southern Gaza. The health ministry said that more than 200 casualties had reached hospitals, including dozens with serious injuries. It added that all those killed had been shot in the head or chest. The International Committee of the Red Cross said that it received "an influx of 179 cases, including women and children" at its nearby field hospital, including 21 who were declared dead upon arrival. Other dead and wounded were taken to Nasser Hospital. "This is the highest number of weapon-wounded in a single incident since the establishment of the field hospital over a year ago," the Red Cross said in a statement. Thousands of Palestinians were headed toward the aid distribution site in Rafah in the pre-dawn hours of Sunday, hoping to be among the first in line to obtain aid ahead of the site's opening, a paramedic from the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS), the only medical professionals present in the area at the time, told CNN. One medical official told CNN that it was impossible to identify who was shooting "but those areas of the distribution are all under Israeli army responsibility in regards to security. Whether they shoot or others who are working for them, it is still their responsibility." CNN cannot independently verify who was responsible for the shooting. Israel prevents international media from entering Gaza. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said allegations that Israeli soldiers fired on Gazans near or within the aid distribution site were "false reports." It added: "Findings from an initial inquiry indicate that the IDF did not fire at civilians while they were near or within the humanitarian aid distribution site and that reports to this effect are false." An Israeli military source said IDF forces did fire warning shots towards suspects approaching their position approximately a kilometer (1,100 yards) away from the aid distribution site in an incident that happened several hours before the site opened. In a post on X, Philippe Lazzarini – executive director of UNRWA, the main United Nations agency in the Palestinian territories – said "aid distribution has become a death trap. Mass casualties including scores of injured & killed among starving civilians due to gunshots this morning. This is according to reports from international medics on ground." Dr. Ahmed Abu Sweid, an Australian working at the Nasser medical complex, said the victims brought in from the area of the aid hub had gunshot and shrapnel wounds. Some had gunshot wounds to the head and thorax, he said. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which runs the site, insisted: "There was no gunfire in the (distribution) center and also not in the surrounding area." "All aid was distributed today without incident. We have heard that these fake reports have been actively fomented by Hamas. They are untrue and fabricated." Later Sunday, the foundation released surveillance video showing hundreds of people running towards the distribution point at dawn. One 4-minute video, which was without sound, showed no violence or injuries but there were what appeared to be two bursts of tracer fire nearby. Other GHF videos released later showed hundreds of people carrying away boxes of food. Witnesses told CNN of chaotic scenes as people were trampled amid what they said was random gunfire. One man said: "It's not a humanitarian point — it's a death trap." CNN video showed thousands of people streaming away from the site. Some were carrying plastic bags and empty cardboard boxes, but none appeared to have received any aid. One man, Ghassan Eid Al-Aghan, told CNN: "We couldn't even reach the place where the aid was being handed out." "The situation there is terrifying. Heavy gunfire. I won't risk my life to go. Things can't go on like this," he added. Mohammad Qdeih said people had been told the gates would open at 5:30 a.m. local time, but then there was intense gunfire. "The amount of aid the Americans bring is tiny," Qdieh said. "Whoever manages to push forward might get something. Those who can't get nothing." "They're sniping everyone — women, children, innocent civilians who have nothing to do with anything," Qdieh said. Basel Abu Alwan said he had arrived at the site on Saturday night. Instructions had been given via a drone telling people to come back at 6 a.m., he said. "No distribution happens. People move forward and fall. Gunfire is sprayed randomly at everyone," he said. "Whoever can grab something does. If not, they may get trampled," he added. Many of the civilians told CNN that they had left wherever they were staying around midnight to make the long trek to the distribution site – but most left empty-handed. Abdul Majid Al-Zayti said that he had walked for seven hours to reach the site. "Many people didn't get anything. The large crowds that came from Gaza City and other areas got nothing," he said. "I couldn't get any aid. I'm an old man. I have hungry children. No-one in this world wants to help them." One man who declined to give his name said that the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation "place four or five wooden boards with aid on them and open the gates for people to storm and fight over it." Near the same Al-Alam junction on Monday morning, three Palestinians were shot dead and dozens wounded as they made their way to the aid distribution point, according to the Ministry of Health, which said Israeli forces opened fire as they approached the location. The IDF said that Israeli forces fired warning shots "towards several suspects who advanced toward the troops" in Rafah. The GHF was set up amid Israeli accusations that Hamas is stealing aid in Gaza and profiting from sales, though Israel hasn't presented any evidence publicly. UN aid groups, such as UNRWA, typically check identification and rely on a database of registered families when distributing aid. But the GHF isnot screening Palestinians at aid distribution sites, despite Israeli officials saying that additional security measures were a core reason for the creation of the new program. United Nations aid agencies have criticized the GHF's aid mechanism, saying it violates humanitarian principles and raises the risks for Palestinians. Criticism has been mountingagainst both Israeland the GHF afterchaos broke out last weekwhen tens of thousands of starving Palestinians arrived at two new food distribution sites. According to Palestinian Ministry of Health figures, 11 people had been killed and dozens injured since the aid distribution sites opened last week – before Sunday's casualties. In a statement issued Sunday, the GHF said it would "continue scaling, with plans to build additional sites across Gaza, including in the northern region, in the weeks ahead." The statement added that it had provided more than 4.7 million meals in six days, including delivering 16 truckloads of food on Sunday morning, providing over 887,000 meals. The interim executive director of GHF, John Acree, acknowledged Sunday that "the flow of humanitarian relief into Gaza remains far below what's needed. The demand is overwhelming — and growing by the day." He added that GHF was "currently the only organization able to deliver food in a secure manner, but we are still operating under immense constraints and at the mercy of factors beyond our control." This story has been updated with additional developments. CNN's Eugenia Yosef, Manveena Suri and Sophie Tanno contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Dozens shot dead and injured near Gaza aid hub, health ministry and doctors say

Dozens shot dead and injured near Gaza aid hub, health ministry and doctors say Dozens of Palestinians were shot dead by the Israeli militar...
Baltimore schools sued for failing to protect students from a predatory teacherNew Foto - Baltimore schools sued for failing to protect students from a predatory teacher

BALTIMORE (AP) — Three women are suing Baltimore's public school system, alleging they were sexually abused by a special education teacherdecades agowhile administrators failed to protect students from his predatory behavior. One of the plaintiffs was 14 when she alleges the teacher, whom the lawsuit names as Alvin Hunt, raped and impregnated her, according to the complaint. At a news conference Monday morning, attorneys for the women said school officials knew about the abuse and allowed it to continue. They said Hunt would lure students to his house under the pretense of after-school tutoring. The allegations contained in the lawsuits occurred in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Attempts to reach Hunt were unsuccessful. A message seeking comment was left for a spokesperson for Baltimore City Public Schools. The lawsuits add to a growing pile of child sexual abuse claims filed in Maryland since the state eliminated its statute of limitations for such cases. Lawmakers approved theChild Victims Actin 2023 with abuse findings against the Catholic Church in mind, but its impacts have extended well beyond religious institutions. Thestate's juvenile justice systemin particular is facing widespread reckoning after thousands of victims came forward. Pamela Coleman said she gave birth to Hunt's daughter after he drugged and raped her. Hunt offered the teen a ride home from school and gave her a cigarette laced with an illicit substance that caused her to lose consciousness, her complaint says. "My childhood and teen years was just ripped from me," Coleman said at the news conference. She said her mother reported the abuse and administrators transferred her to another school after learning she was pregnant. The AP doesn't typically identify victims of abuse unless they want to be named. Attorneys said Hunt, who was also a sports coach, never faced prosecution or accountability for his actions. Instead, he retired from the school system after a long career. He is not named as a defendant in the lawsuits, which were filed against the Baltimore City Board of School Commissioners. "This abuse was not just known, it was normalized," said attorney Janai Woodhouse with the Baltimore law firm Murphy, Falcon & Murphy. "This wasn't hidden. It was tolerated." She said theChild Victims Actallows abuse survivors the time they need to come forward, often decades later. Before its passage, victims couldn't sue after they turned 38. The three plaintiffs were young and vulnerable when they were abused by someone they trusted, their attorneys said. "You can imagine the amount of psychological trauma that was inflicted here. So it took some time," Woodhouse said. "But they gathered the courage to come to us and they're ready to seek justice now." According to the lawsuit filed on behalf of Collette Lee, she went to Hunt's house for tutoring with another special education student. He cornered her and tried to assault her, but she says she managed to escape. "I was able to run," she said during the news conference. "I've been running for a long time. I'm tired. I want justice." The lawsuits were filed Friday in state court. The plaintiffs are seeking punitive damages.

Baltimore schools sued for failing to protect students from a predatory teacher

Baltimore schools sued for failing to protect students from a predatory teacher BALTIMORE (AP) — Three women are suing Baltimore's publi...
Suspect in custody after 11 people stabbed at Oregon homeless shelterNew Foto - Suspect in custody after 11 people stabbed at Oregon homeless shelter

Police have arrested a man in connection witha stabbing at a mission in Salem, Oregonthat left 11 people injured on June 1. Salem Police responded to the stabbing incident at Union Gospel Mission of Salem north of downtown at about 7:15 p.m. on June 1. Almost a dozen people were taken to Salem Health hospital with various injuries,, and a male suspect, who was not identified, was arrested, police said. The mission is a faith-based organization on the front lines of the homelessness crisis. Upward of 150 homeless men seek refuge at the mission each night and have access to support services, including food, shelter, clothing, showers, case management and counseling. The building is across the street from Salem Police headquarters. Union Gospel Mission of Salem Executive Director Craig Smith said the incident originated inside the building near the front entrance, and an unknown number of staff and bystanders inside and outside the building were stabbed. "It's a really awful situation," Smith said. Because the attack did not happen in the shelter area, shelter residents did not have to be evacuated. Smith said the mission will continue serving the community in the morning. "Our staff and the guests and our New Life Fellowship guys...  they're all really shaken, as you can imagine," he said. Malik Law, who witnessed the incident, said he saw a man stab at least seven people. "Everybody was basically trying to move out of his way," Law said. "He started attacking them." Dan Mills, 62, who lives at the mission, said he was working at the front desk when the man came in. He said other workers were trying to get the man to leave because the building was closed when the incident began. "I just heard a scream," Mills said. "I was standing right at the front desk, I was probably no more than 10 feet away, and he stabbed one of the staff members." Mills said he had never seen the man before. Bobby Epperly, 48, who lives at the mission, said he was on the second floor of the building when he saw the man outside screaming at traffic and holding a knife. Epperly didn't realize some people had already been stabbed inside the building, he said, until he went downstairs and saw "blood everywhere." "It's like a horror movie," he said. The 57,000 square feet men's mission opened in July 2021 after leaving its longtime facility downtown next to the Marion Street Bridge. The mission includes space for sleeping, ranging from dorm-style shelters to transitional housing and apartment-style living for those moving through its recovery program. The mission also has showers available even for those not staying at the shelter, 24-hour bathroom access, community rooms, career training, a computer education center, GED program, on-site health clinic and access to mental health services. Smith, the executive director, commended the hard work of the staff and the quick response of Salem Police and emergency responders. "They came immediately and transported people," he said. "It was just a phenomenal and merciful movement of God that they were here." Smith asked for the community's prayers as they recover from the incident. This article originally appeared on Salem Statesman Journal:Suspect in stabbing at Oregon homeless shelter arrested

Suspect in custody after 11 people stabbed at Oregon homeless shelter

Suspect in custody after 11 people stabbed at Oregon homeless shelter Police have arrested a man in connection witha stabbing at a mission i...
'Wednesday,' 'The Bear' and all the TV shows you don't want to miss this summerNew Foto - 'Wednesday,' 'The Bear' and all the TV shows you don't want to miss this summer

USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change. Need something to cool you down this summer? How about an ice-cold shot ofWednesday Addams' death glare? The warmest months of the year are typically a time of outdoor fun and frothy beach reads, but spare an eye and an ear for TV this summer, considering all the major series debuting between June and August. This crop of new and returning TV series has everything to help you beat the heat, including sci-fi,MarvelandLena Dunhamcringe for a new generation. You could travel to the frigid vacuum of space via the"Alien"franchise or"Star Trek."You could break out into a cold sweat (instead of a hot one) at the sight of the harrowing final chapter of Netflix's"Squid Game."You'll shiver with embarrassment at Lena Dunham's new comedy"Too Much"or shiver with fear at the horrors of Nevermore Academy in Netflix's"Wednesday."No matter which of these shows you choose to enjoy on your comfy couch with the sweet relief of air-conditioning, you'll be entertained and removed from the risk of sunburn. What more could you ask for on a hot summer's day? Here are seven TV shows worth watching this summer: Disney+, (June 24; streaming Tuesdays) Teen genius Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne) was first introduced to Marvel fans in "Black Panther: Wakanda Forever" and now gets her own show as a new kind of Iron Man for a younger crowd."Ironheart" takes place in Chicago after the events of the film, where Riri's research for her iron suit brings her together with the oh-so-charming Parker Robbins (Anthony Ramos, "In the Heights"), who may have more nefarious intentions and powers than he initially admits. Produced by "Wakanda" director Ryan Coogler, the series also stars Lyric Ross and Alden Ehrenreich ("Solo: A Star Wars Story"). Hulu (June 25) In a different part of Chicago, we find our motley kitchen crew of everyone's favorite beef-sandwich-joint-turned-gourmet-dining-establishment inSeason 4 of FX's "The Bear."Season 3 had more than its fair share of road bumps, both for its characters and its critical reception, but producer Christopher Storer and the extremely talented cast have the opportunity to turn it all around again. The staff of the restaurant, including Jeremy Allen White's Carmy and Ayo Edebiri's Sydney, have only a limited amount of time to turn around the business before their money runs out. We might suggest a more peaceful working environment, but then how much fun would the show be without the chaos? Netflix (June 27) Did you finish the second season of Netflix's monster South Korean horror hit "Squid Game" last December with a strong sense that the story just stopped in the middle? The series broke records on the streaming platform when it debuted in 2021, and last year's second season was just as bloody and tragic as the first. It ended on a devastating cliffhanger in which (spoiler alert!) Seong Gi-hun (Lee Jung-jae) led a rebellion that was instantly quashed, and the evil Front Man (Lee Byung-hun) captured him just in time to kill his best friend Jung-bae (Lee Seo-hwan). And then the credits rolled.Fans are expecting resolutionof that moment, the return of the wealthy "VIP" spectators of the violent games and answers to the many questions about the whole dystopian setup. Netflix (July 10) Lena Dunham's latest comedy is, as the kids would say, high "cringe," but in the best way possible. Starring "Hacks" breakout Megan Stalter as a timid and messy TV producer on assignment in London, the comedy uses the best of Dunham's sardonic writing and Stalter's emotional comedic persona in a happy marriage of form and function. With appearances from comedic greats like Rita Wilson, Rhea Perlman and Dunham herself, the series has a cozy, familiar feeling even though it's set in a foreign country. Paramount+, (July 17; streaming Thursdays) The best and most fun of Paramount+'s "Star Trek" series is back for a rollicking third season that somehow has to top a second that included a musical episode. But we trust the crew of the USS Enterprise in this prequel featuring young versions of "Trek" favorites Spock (Ethan Peck), Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding), Chapel (Jess Bush) and Kirk (Paul Wesley). Season 3 sees the intrepid explorers donning retro costumes, grappling with the Gorn and even solving a murder mystery. Be on the lookout for more "Trek" Easter eggs and characters, including more of Scotty (Martin Quinn), first seen in the Season 2 finale. And get excited for more than just Season 3: "Strange" has already been renewed for a fourth installment. Netflix (in two parts: Aug. 6 and Sept. 3) Without a smile in sight, Wednesday Addams (Jenna Ortega) is all set to return to Nevermore Academy for another year of deadpan wit and solving supernatural mysteries. The blockbuster series, still the most popular English-language show of all time on the streamer, promises more of everything you loved about the first season, with bigger expectations, hype anda Lady Gaga cameo. What more could an Addams girl want? FX and Hulu (Aug. 12; streaming Tuesdays 8 ET/PT) It's alive, and it's on Earth this time. "Fargo" producer Noah Hawley takes his talents to the "Alien" universe in this creepy series, set on our own planet in the year 2120, in which mega-corporations have invented hybrid humanoid robots with human consciousness amid a race to discover a path to immortality. A group of these hybrids, led by Wendy (Sydney Chandler) makes a distinctly otherworldly discovery after crash landing in Earth's Prodigy City. The sleek and long-gestating series also stars the great Timothy Olyphant and counts original "Alien" director Ridley Scott among its producers. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Summer 2025 best TV shows: 'Wednesday' to 'Bear'

'Wednesday,' 'The Bear' and all the TV shows you don't want to miss this summer

'Wednesday,' 'The Bear' and all the TV shows you don't want to miss this summer USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission ...
Last Surviving Member of The Monkees Asks For Fan SupportNew Foto - Last Surviving Member of The Monkees Asks For Fan Support

Last Surviving Member of The Monkees Asks For Fan Supportoriginally appeared onParade. The last surviving member of the hit 1960s groupThe Monkeesrecently made a plea to his fans for support for "a cause that's near and dear to [his] heart." Micky Dolenz, 80, sharedon Instagramand Facebook that fans can show their support both for the Monkees andthe Make-A-Wish Foundationby buying some of his Monkees merchandise. "Hi, friends - if you've been looking for a way to show your support (or just want a cool shirt or two), check out the official merch store at MickyDolenz.com," writes Dolenz. "We've got everything - music, t-shirts, even personally signed drum heads - perfect for fans, collectors, or just treating yourself. And here's the best part: a portion of every purchase goes to the Make-A-Wish Foundation, a cause that's near and dear to my heart. 💙 "Thanks for the love - and for helping make a difference. MickyDolenz #TheMonkees #MakeAWish #OfficialMerch #ShopForACause #StillMonkeeingAround." 🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 In the accompanying photos that show a young Dolenz interacting with children, the singer is holding a thank you card from the Make-A-Wish Foundation that reads, "You continue to help wish kids replace fear with confidence, sadness with joy and anxiety with hope. We deeply appreciate your generosity and are honored to recognize you as a committed supporter of Make-A-Wish." Fans in the comments are so excited about the opportunity and praise Dolenz for giving back. "I love you, Micky, you're the best for this ❤️," wrote one fan. Another added, "You're so amazing, Micky!" "This is the most wonderful photo of you I've ever seen. I am so happy that I got a chance to meet you a few years back. Micky, you're absolutely positively the best artist ever. I love you. ❤️," wrote a third fan. A fourth wrote, "Micky, I know you heard this thousands of times, but to me, yes, you are like an old friend. I can only wish the best in your amazing life." AtDolenz's official site, you can indeed purchase signed or unsigned photos, CDs, T-shirts and even Monkees logo drum heads. Dolenz isalso on Cameo, which is a video message service where people can buy personalized messages from their favorite celebrities. Dolenz is the last remaining member of the music group The Monkees, which took the world by storm in the late 1960s. Lead singerDavy Jonesdied in 2012,and bassistPeter Torkdied in 2019. In 2021, drummer Dolenz and guitaristMichael Nesmithwent on a farewell tour, and Nesmith tragically passed away from heart failure just weeks after the tour concluded. In a recent interviewwith The Observer-Reporter, Dolenz joked that he's just "glad to be above ground" at this point. "So far, so good," said the 1960s heartthrob. Last Surviving Member of The Monkees Asks For Fan Supportfirst appeared on Parade on Jun 2, 2025 This story was originally reported byParadeon Jun 2, 2025, where it first appeared.

Last Surviving Member of The Monkees Asks For Fan Support

Last Surviving Member of The Monkees Asks For Fan Support Last Surviving Member of The Monkees Asks For Fan Supportoriginally appeared onPar...
The Real Life Tech Execs That Inspired Jesse Armstrong's 'Mountainhead'New Foto - The Real Life Tech Execs That Inspired Jesse Armstrong's 'Mountainhead'

Jesse Armstrong loves to pull fictional stories out of reality. His universally acclaimed TV showSuccession, for instance, wasinspiredby real-life media dynasties like theMurdochsand the Hearsts. Similarly, his newest filmMountainheadcenters upon characters that share key traits with the tech world's most powerful leaders:Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, and others. Mountainhead, which releases on HBO on May 31 at 8 p.m. ET, portrays four top tech executives who retreat to a Utah hideaway as the AI deepfake tools newly released by one of their companies wreak havoc across the world. As the believable deepfakes inflame hatred on social media and real-world violence, the comfortably-appointed quartet mulls a global governmental takeover, intergalactic conquest and immortality, before interpersonal conflict derails their plans. Armstrong tells TIME in a Zoom interview that he first became interested in writing a story about tech titans after reading books like Michael Lewis'Going Infinite(about Sam Bankman-Fried) and Ashlee Vance'sElon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future, as well as journalistic profiles of Peter Thiel, Marc Andreessen, and others. He then built the story around the interplay between four character archetypes—the father, the dynamo, the usurper, and the hanger-on—and conducted extensive research so that his fictional executives reflected real ones. His characters, he says, aren't one-to-one matches, but "Frankenstein monsters with limbs sewn together." These characters are deeply flawed and destructive, to say the least. Armstrong says he did not intend for the film to be a wholly negative depiction of tech leaders and AI development. "I do try to take myself out of it, but obviously my sense of what this tech does and could do infuses the piece. Maybe I do have some anxieties," he says. Armstrong contends that the film is more so channeling fears that AI leaders themselves have warned about. "If somebody who knows the technology better than anyone in the world thinks there's a 1/5th chance that it's going to wipe out humanity—and they're some of the optimists—I think that's legitimately quite unnerving," he says. Here's how each of the characters inMountainheadresembles real-world tech leaders. This article contains spoilers. Read More:With Mountainhead, the Creator of Succession Targets a Group That's Beyond Satire Venis is Armstrong's "dynamo": the richest man in the world, who has gained his wealth from his social media platform Traam and its 4 billion users. Venis is ambitious, juvenile, and self-centered, even questioning whether other people are as real as him and his friends. Venis' first obvious comp is Elon Musk, the richest man in the real world. Like Musk, Venis is obsessed withgoing to outer spaceand with using his enormous war chest to buildhyperscale data centersto create powerfulanti-woke AI systems. Venis also has a strange relationship with hischild, essentially using it as a prop to help him through his own emotional turmoil. Throughout the movie, others caution Venis to shut down his deepfake AI tools which have led to military conflict and the desecration of holy sites across the world. Venis rebuffs them and says that people just need to adapt to technological changes and focus on the cool art being made. This argument is similar to those made by Sam Altman, who hasarguedthat OpenAI needs to unveil ChatGPT and other cutting-edge tools as fast as possible in order to show the public the power of the technology. Like Mark Zuckerberg, Venis presides over a massively popular social media platform that some haveaccusedof ignoring harms in favor of growth. Just as Amnesty International accused Meta of having "substantially contributed" to human rights violations perpetrated against Myanmar's Rohingya ethnic group, Venis complains of the UN being "up his ass for starting a race war." The group's eldest member is Randall, an investor and technologist who resembles Marc Andreessen and Peter Thiel in his lofty philosophizing and quest for immortality. Like Andreessen, Randall is a staunch accelerationist who believes that U.S. companies need to develop AI as fast as possible in order to both prevent the Chinese from controlling the technology, and to ostensibly ignite a new American utopia in which productivity, happiness, and health flourish. Randall's power comes from the fact that he was Venis' first investor, just as Thiel was an early investor in Facebook. While Andreessen pensmanifestosabout technological advancement, Randall paints his mission in grandiose, historical terms, using anti-democratic, sci-fi-inflected language that resembles that of the philosopherCurtis Yarvin, who has been funded and promoted by Thiel over his career. Randall's justification of murder through utilitarian and Kantian lenses calls to mind Sam Bankman-Fried'sextensive philosophizing, which included adeclarationthat he would roll the dice on killing everyone on earth if there was a 51% chance he would create a second earth. Bankman-Fried's approach—in embracing risk and harm in order to reap massive rewards—led him to beconvictedof massive financial fraud. Randall is also obsessed with longevity just like Thiel, who hasrailedfor years against the "inevitability of death" andyearnsfor "super-duper medical treatments" that would render him immortal. Jeff is a technologist who often serves as the movie's conscience, slinging criticisms about the other characters. But he's also deeply embedded within their world, and he needs their resources, particularly Venis' access to computing power, to thrive. In the end, Jeff sells out his values for his own survival and well-being. AI skeptics have lobbed similar criticisms at the leaders of the main AI labs, including Altman—who started OpenAI as a nonprofit before attempting torestructurethe company—as well as DemisHassabisand Dario Amodei. Hassabis is the CEO of Google Deepmind and a winner of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry; a rare scientist surrounded by businessmen and technologists. In order to try to achieve his AI dreams of curing disease and halting global warning, Hassabis enlisted with Google, inking a contract in 2014 in which he prohibited Google from using his technology for military applications. But that clause has since disappeared, and the AI systems developed under Hassabis arebeing sold, via Google, to militaries like Israel's. Read More:Demis Hassabis Is Preparing for AI's Endgame Another parallel can be drawn between Jeff and Amodei, an AI researcher who defected from OpenAI after becoming worried that the company was cutting back its safety measures, and then formed his own company, Anthropic. Amodei has urged governments to create AI guardrails and haswarnedabout the potentially catastrophic effects of the AI industry's race dynamics. But some havecriticizedAnthropic for operating similarly to OpenAI, prioritizing scale in a way that exacerbates competitive pressures. Every quartet needs its Turtle or its Ringo; a clear fourth wheel to serve as a punching bag for the rest of the group's alpha males.Mountainhead's hanger-on is Souper, thus named because he has soup kitchen money compared to the rest (hundreds of millions as opposed to billions of dollars). In order to prove his worth, he's fixated on getting funding for a meditation startup that he hopes will eventually become an "everything app." No tech exec would want to be compared to Souper, who has a clear inferiority complex. But plenty of tech leaders have emphasized the importance of meditation and mindfulness—including Twitter co-founder and Square CEO Jack Dorsey, who often goes on meditation retreats. Armstrong, in his interview, declined to answer specific questions about his characters' inspirations, but conceded that some of the speculations were in the right ballpark. "For people who know the area well, it's a little bit of a fun house mirror in that you see something and are convinced that it's them," he says. "I think all of those people featured in my research. There's bits of Andreessen and David Sacks and some of those philosopher types. It's a good parlor game to choose your Frankenstein limbs." Contact usatletters@time.com.

The Real Life Tech Execs That Inspired Jesse Armstrong’s 'Mountainhead'

The Real Life Tech Execs That Inspired Jesse Armstrong's 'Mountainhead' Jesse Armstrong loves to pull fictional stories out of r...
Russia and Ukraine hold talks after drone strike hits Russian bombersNew Foto - Russia and Ukraine hold talks after drone strike hits Russian bombers

Ukraine's shockdrone attack on Russian military air bases, including some deep inside Russian territory, which President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said was secretly planned and coordinated from inside Russia over the past 18 months, seemed on Monday to have left the Kremlin speechless. Russia's state-run media cited the country's defense ministry as saying Monday that forces had struck Ukrainian drone production, launch and storage sites, and claiming to have shot down hundreds of Ukrainian-launched drones over the past 24 hours, but there was no direct public response from Russian authorities to the Ukrainian strike. While Ukraine haslaunched drones at Russia, including the capital Moscow, for months, as well as staging othercovert operations on Russian soil, the attack on Sunday was notable for its scope and scale. Ukraine claimed it had damaged or destroyed 41 Russian bomber aircraft at bases across the vast country. Ukrainian officials said the attack did not endanger any Russian civilians. It was also notable for its timing, a day before the two sides sat down face-to-face in Turkey for a second round of direct talks. Ukraine gains support as U.N. panel accuses Russia of war crimes The head of Ukraine's SBU intelligence agency said in a statement on Tuesday that Russia "thought that it could bomb Ukraine and endlessly kill Ukrainians with impunity. But that is not the case. We will respond to Russian terror and destroy the enemy everywhere — at sea, in the air, and on land." SBU chief Vasyl Maliuk claimed in the statement that Ukraine had hit aircraft at four Russian bases, inflicting more than $7 billion worth of damage on Russia's bomber fleet. The Ministry of Defense in Moscow said Monday that Russia's air defenses had intercepted a total of 316 Ukrainian drones in 24 hours, which encompasses the time of Ukraine's attack. The Russian ministry said 205 of those drones were hit outside the "special operation zone," a term the Kremlin uses to refer to land it has seized since launching its full-scaleinvasion of Ukrainein February 2022. Ukrainian authorities said that, before dawn on Monday, Russia launched two ballistic missiles and a series of drones at the northeast city of Kharkiv, just miles from the Russian border, wounding at least six people, including a child. Separately, Russia's military claimed more than 1,400 Ukrainian troops were killed in northern Ukraine over the preceding day. Russia and Ukraine hold 2nd round of talks in Turkey Despite the sharp escalation in the war making any breakthrough appear even less likely than it had before, Russian and Ukrainian delegations did sit down opposite each other Monday in Istanbul for the second round of negotiations in a bid for peace. Ukraine's representatives, led by Defense Minister Rustem Umerov, were expected to present a plan demanding a "full and unconditional ceasefire in the sky, on land and at sea as a necessary background and prerequisite for peace negotiations," the Reuters news agency said, citing a text of the Ukrainian proposal it had viewed. The proposed truce would last a minimum of 30 days, in line with calls made by the Trump administration previously. Ukraine was also expected to demand the unconditional return of all Ukrainian children and civilian hostages taken during the war, and that territorial gains made by Russia since February 2014, when Russia first invaded and illegally annexed the Crimean Peninsula, not be recognized by the international community. In return, Ukraine is open to the lifting of "some sanctions" imposed against Russia by the U.S. and its allies, "but in stages and only gradually, with a mechanism for resuming sanctions if necessary." The Ukrainians also want Russian sovereign assets frozen by Western nations to be used for reconstruction, or to remain frozen until reparations are paid. Moscow did not, going into the second round of talks on Monday, reveal any new conditions or terms for a hypothetical ceasefire. President Vladimir Putin's government has insisted for months that the only way to end the war is to address what it vaguely calls the conflict's "root causes." Russia insists the war, which Putin calls only a "special military operation," was caused by NATO's ambitions for further eastward expansion, and by Moscow's desire to defend Russian-speaking Ukrainians in the eastern part of the neighboring nation. Putin and his senior aides routinely dismiss pro-Europe, pro-NATO Zelenskyy as an illegitimate leader of Ukraine. The Russian president has refused to accept his Ukrainian counterpart's challenge to hold direct personal talks, face-to-face. Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said Monday as the talks got underway that discussions over such a Putin-Zelenskyy meeting "will be considered." But there was no confirmation from either Ukraine or Russia that such a high-level dialogue was imminent. Instead, reports from Turkey suggested the second round of talks had concluded in just over an hour. Zelenskyy, who did not attend the negotiations, told reporters during a visit Monday to Lithuania, however, that a new prisoner swap between the warring sides was being organized. He did not say how far the planning for a swap had gone, but a significantexchange late last monthof about 1,000 captured civilians and prisoners of war was the only tangible result of the first round of talks between Russia and Ukraine. President Trump has voiced frustration with both Zelenskyy and Putin for failing to agree to a truce. During last year's election campaign, Mr. Trump vowed repeatedly to broker an end of the war within hours of taking office. The U.S. president recently issued rare sharp criticism of Putin,calling him "absolutely crazy"for continuing to hammer Ukrainian cities with missiles as the U.S. and its partners push for a peace agreement. Mr. Trump wondered in a social media post during the last prisoner swap whether it, "could lead to something big?" Russian officials were quoted by the country's state-run media as saying the two sides agreed on Monday to hold a third round of talks, but no date was set. The officials acknowledged that future prisoner swaps had been a key point of discussion, but Ukrainian officials said Russia had rejected the call for a broader 30-day ceasefire. There was no immediate reaction from the White House to the second round of negotiations in Turkey on Monday, but the Trump administration did make it clear that Ukraine had given no advance warning of the Sunday drone attack ahead of those talks. The wonderfully weird world of artist Luigi Serafini Fans turn out for estate sale at home of Tom Petty Watch: Italy's Mount Etna volcano erupts, spewing hot ash and lava

Russia and Ukraine hold talks after drone strike hits Russian bombers

Russia and Ukraine hold talks after drone strike hits Russian bombers Ukraine's shockdrone attack on Russian military air bases, includi...

 

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