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Former Brazilian President Bolsonaro Successfully Undergoes Surgery in Jail

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Bolsonaro’s operation addressed a painful double hernia; doctors anticipate five to seven days of hospitalisation.

Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who is serving a prison sentence for an attempted coup, underwent a “successful” surgery for an inguinal hernia, his wife has said.

The 70-year-old former leader left prison on Wednesday for the first time since late November to undergo the procedure on Thursday at the DF Star Hospital in Brasilia.

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“Successful surgery completed, without complications. Now we wait for him to wake up from anaesthesia,” his wife Michelle announced in an Instagram post.

Bolsonaro has been serving a 27-year term since November for an attempted coup. He was granted court permission to leave prison after federal police doctors confirmed that he needed the procedure.

Doctors say Bolsonaro’s double hernia causes him pain. The former leader, who was in power between 2019 and 2022, has gone through several other surgeries since he was stabbed in the abdomen during a campaign rally in 2018. He was also diagnosed with skin cancer recently.

Doctors for the far-right president from 2019 to 2022 anticipated that his hospitalisation would last between five and seven more days.

The surgery was to repair an inguinal hernia – a protrusion in the groin area due to a tear in the abdominal muscles.

“It is a complex surgery,” Dr Claudio Birolini said on Wednesday. “But it is a standardised … scheduled surgery, so we expect the procedure to be carried out without major complications.”

After the operation, doctors are to assess whether Bolsonaro can undergo an additional procedure: blockage of the phrenic nerve, which controls the diaphragm, for recurrent hiccups, Birolini said.

Brazil’s Supreme Court sentenced Bolsonaro to prison in September after he was found guilty of having led a scheme to prevent President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva from taking office and to retain power.

Bolsonaro has maintained his innocence, declaring he was a victim of political persecution.

He has been confined to a small room with a minibar, air conditioning and a television at the federal police headquarters in Brasilia.

Succession

Early on Thursday, his eldest son, Senator Flavio Bolsonaro, told reporters before the surgery that his father had written a letter confirming he had appointed him as the Liberal Party’s presidential candidate in next year’s election. Flavio announced on December 5 that he would challenge Lula, who is seeking a fourth nonconsecutive term, as the party’s candidate.

The senator read the letter to journalists, and his office released a reproduction of it to the media.

“He represents the continuation of the path of prosperity that I began well before becoming president, as I believe we must restore the responsibility of leading Brazil with justice, resolve and loyalty to the aspirations of the Brazilian people,” Bolsonaro said in the handwritten letter, dated Thursday.

Senator Flavio Bolsonaro, son of former President Jair Bolsonaro, in Brasilia, on December 17, 2025 [AFP]

According to Flavio, the letter sought to clarify any “doubt” about his father’s support for his presidential bid.

“Many people say they had not heard it from his own mouth or had not seen a letter signed by him. I believe this clears up any shadow of doubt,” he said after reading the letter.

The former president and several of his allies were convicted by a panel of Supreme Court justices for attempting to overthrow Brazil’s democratic system following his 2022 election defeat.

Logan Paul sells rare Pokémon card for $5.3 million at auction

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We’ve all heard the traditional advice that the best investments are those made in the stock market, saving in a 401(k), and buying a house. But younger generations have started touting nontraditional investments like buying a Birkin bag or other collectibles as a surefire way to bring in extra bucks. 

Influencer and WWE wrestler Logan Paul recently said going beyond normal investments can be worth it.

“If you’re young, there are ways to spend and invest your money in ways that might mean more to you than in a traditional conservative environment like the stock market,” he said on Fox Business’s “The Big Money Show” on Tuesday.

And Paul has certainly gone down the nontraditional path for investing: He recently put up a rare Pokémon card for auction that he bought in 2022 for $5.3 million. The former WWE United States Champion actually used to wear the card—which he says is “the rarest card in the world” and the “Holy Grail”—around his neck during competitions. The card is a PSA-graded 10 Pikachu Illustrator, and only a few dozen copies exist worldwide. But Paul’s card is the only one to receive a 10/10 grade from Professional Sports Authenticator (PSA). 

Paul said he plans to auction the card in early 2026 and estimates it will sell for between $7 million and $12 million, which would bank him about $2 million to $7 million. He also argued collectibles like Pokémon cards have “outperformed” the stock market during the last two decades. 

“If you have the money, don’t be afraid to take a risk, especially if you’re young,” Paul said. 

Are collectibles really a good investment?

According to global wealth management firm AES, collectibles like wine, manuscripts, vintage cars, rare pieces of art, and more can produce a “reasonable” return for investors, but they often don’t come with the same long-term gains of investing in stocks. 

Between 1900 and 2012, collectibles produced a nominal annual return of 6.4% and a real return of 2.4%, according to the AES report.

“Although the return is reasonable, it’s far lower than the long-term rewards of investing in the equity market,” AES CEO Sam Instone wrote. But, “that’s not to say these collectible items are not for certain investors.”

Still, Gen Z men have become obsessed with investing in these collectibles, which some argue will beat Nvidia stock and the S&P 500. And they could have a point: Pokémon cards have seen the largest long-term increase in value among all card categories. They’re up 3,261% in the past 20 years, according to data provided to Fortune’s Preston Fore from Card Ladder. Even a one-year investment is up 46%, which is higher than Nvidia’s 35% jump and the S&P 500’s 17% year-to-date increase. 

“The trading card hobby has entered a new era, driven by technology, innovation, community, and a great balance of modern creativity–with new sets, storylines and characters–alongside good old nostalgia,” Adam Ireland, VP and GM of global collectibles at eBay, previously told Fortune. He also said eBay users searched for “Pokemon” nearly 14,000 times per hour in 2024.

Other collectibles like the Hermes Birkin bag have caught the attention of young investors, who have argued buying one can be more valuable than investing in gold. But recent reports have shown these rare handbags don’t have the same return-on-investment they once did. The average resale premium for Birkin and Kelly bags—a metric that compares the auction price to its retail cost—has fallen from 2.2 times its original value in 2022 to 1.4 times as of November, according to Bernstein Research’s Secondhand Pricing Tracker. To put that in perspective, a Birkin bag originally bought for $10,000 and resold in 2022 would have cost more than $22,000, but a bag originally retailing for the same price and resold today would be worth just $14,000.

Overall, although investing in collectibles can end in a big payday, they can also be a very risky investment because of liquidity risks, concentration risks, costs and upkeep, the potential for a bubble, and tax treatment, according to an analysis by The Economic Times.

“It’s also true that some people generate income regularly buying and selling collectibles,” according to Consumers Credit Union. “However, fortunes are determined by the whims of buyers along with the rising and falling popularity of particular items. While the stock market may have a down year, over time it trends to higher value.”

Santa Claus on water skis and large cuts of meat

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Getty Images Workers sell off cuts of meat during the traditional Christmas Eve auction at Smithfield meat market in London, UK on 24 December 2025.Getty Images

Workers sell off cuts of meat during the traditional Christmas Eve auction at Smithfield meat market in London, UK

From skiing Santas in the US and Mass with Pope Leo XIV at the Vatican, to giant cuts of meat being thrown into crowds in London, Christmas celebrations have been held around the world.

Worshippers in Ukraine, China and Pakistan gathered for Christmas Eve services at their local churches.

While most Christians mark Christmas on 25 December, many Orthodox Christians do not celebrate until 7 January.

Here are some of the best images of the holiday cheer around the world.

Reuters Pope Leo XIV gestures as he delivers the traditional Christmas Day Urbi et Orbi speech to the city and the world from the main balcony of St Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, 25 DecemberReuters

Pope Leo XIV delivers the traditional Christmas Day Urbi et Orbi speech to the city and the world from the main balcony of St Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican

Getty Images Two women take a photo in front of the Christmas tree in Nativity Square in Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank.Getty Images

Two women take a photo in front of the Christmas tree in Nativity Square in Bethlehem, held to be the birthplace of Jesus Christ, in the occupied West Bank

Getty Images A woman lights a candle with her son during an Christmas Eve service in Kyiv, Ukraine on 24 December 2025.Getty Images

A woman lights a candle with her son during a Christmas Eve service in Kyiv, Ukraine

Getty Images Worshippers attend a Christmas Eve mass at the Church of the Saviour in Beijing, China on 24 December.Getty Images

Worshippers attend a Christmas Eve mass at the Church of the Saviour in Beijing, China

Getty Images Pakistani Christians attend midnight Christmas Mass at Central Brooks Memorial Church in Karachi, Pakistan on 24 December 2025.Getty Images

Christians attend midnight Mass at Central Brooks Memorial Church in Karachi, Pakistan

Getty Images A man decorates a Christmas tree during Christmas Eve celebrations in Islamabad, Pakistan on 24 December 2025.Getty Images

A man decorates a Christmas tree during Christmas Eve celebrations in Islamabad, Pakistan

Getty Images Girls stand alongside a Christmas nativity scene depicting the birth of Jesus during a Christmas mass at St Mary's Church in the village of Uswetakeiyawa, Sri Lanka on 25 December 2025. Getty Images

Girls stand alongside a Christmas nativity scene at St Mary’s Church in the village of Uswetakeiyawa, Sri Lanka

Reuters Women hold candles as they attend a Christmas Eve mass in Nairobi, Kenya on 25 December 2025.Reuters

Women hold candles as they attend a Christmas Eve mass in Nairobi, Kenya

Getty Images The Notre-Dame Cathedral is illuminated in bright colours ahead of midnight Christmas mass in Paris, France on 24 December 2025.Getty Images

The Chartres cathedral in France is illuminated in bright colours ahead of midnight Mass

Getty Images A skiing Santa delights crowds during an annual Waterskiing Santa event in Alexandria, Virginia in the US on 24 December 2025.Getty Images

A skiing Santa delights crowds during an annual Waterskiing Santa event in Alexandria, Virginia, in the US on Christmas Eve

Getty Images People wearing Santa costumes walk along the sand of Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia on 25 December 2025.Getty Images

People wearing Santa costumes walk along the sand of Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia

Getty Images Police officers deliver gifts on Christmas Eve in Lima, Peru on 24 December 2025Getty Images

Police officers dressed in festive gear deliver gifts on Christmas Eve in Lima, Peru

Getty Images Fishermen dressed as Santa and the Grinch on a boat in Valparaiso Bay, Chile on 24 December.Getty Images

Fishermen dressed as Santa and the Grinch on a boat in Valparaiso Bay, Chile

Getty Images Two men dressed as Santas take a selfie in the snow in Gulmarg in Indian-administered KashmirGetty Images

Two men dressed as Santas take a selfie in the snow in Gulmarg in Indian-administered Kashmir

Terry Rozier Attempts to Have Federal Betting Charges Dropped – Basketball Insiders

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Rozier’s Legal Push

Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier is fighting back in federal court this week by asking a judge to dismiss the sports betting and wire fraud charges that have kept him off the court this NBA season. Rozier’s lawyers filed a motion claiming that prosecutors overstepped by turning what they describe as a limited matter into a broad federal case. They argue the government is stretching the law beyond its proper scope and asked the judge to throw out the indictment entirely.

Rozier, 31, has pleaded not guilty to both the conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering charges. A judge released him on a $3 million bond after his arraignment in early December, but he has been on unpaid leave from the Heat since his indictment.

Basis of the Motion

The motion to dismiss centers on a U.S. Supreme Court ruling from 2023, United States v. Ciminelli, which limited the scope of the federal wire fraud statute. Rozier’s attorneys wrote that prosecutors cannot use a broad interpretation of the law to criminalize conduct that normally falls under state regulation or civil remedies. They contend that sportsbooks could resolve violations of their terms of use without federal involvement.

In their filing, Rozier’s lawyers wrote that the government has described the case as involving “insider betting and rigging professional basketball games,” but that the actual indictment focuses on bettors breaking specific sportsbooks’ terms of service.

Miami Heat Star Terry Rozier Faced $8M Tax Lien From IRS in 2023Miami Heat Star Terry Rozier Faced $8M Tax Lien From IRS in 2023

The Under-Scrutiny Game

The alleged incident dates to March 23, 2023, when Rozier was with the Charlotte Hornets. Prosecutors say he played just over nine minutes of a game against the New Orleans Pelicans, citing a foot injury, and then left. They claim he told a friend, Deniro “Niro” Laster, that he would exit early, and that information was shared or sold to others to place more than $250,000 in prop bets on Rozier’s limited performance.

Rozier’s lawyers point out that the indictment does not allege he ever placed a bet himself. They also assert he did not know his friend would sell or share the information with bettors, nor that using it would violate sportsbooks’ rules.

Impact on Rozier and the Heat

The charges have sidelined Rozier through much of the 2025–26 season, potentially affecting both his career and the Heat’s roster plans. He is currently on leave without pay, and his absence leaves a veteran guard spot open as Miami navigates the grind of the NBA schedule.

The judge has scheduled another hearing in March 2026. If the motion succeeds, it could end the federal case. If not, Rozier will proceed to challenge the charges in court. His legal team remains confident that federal prosecutors have not met the proper standard for pursuing such charges under the wire fraud statute.

Challenging Client

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Top Daily Health Tips We Gained from 2025 Science Discoveries

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We certainly saw some major health-related breakthroughs in 2025, including a universal cancer vaccine and human trials for the world’s first treatment to reverse spinal cord injuries. But the year was also filled with smaller findings that can still have a big impact on your day-to-day health.

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Category: Diet & Nutrition, Wellness and Healthy Living, Body and Mind

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Five killed in helicopter crash on Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania

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Two foreigners seeking medical evacuation are among those killed in the crash on Africa’s highest mountain.

Five people have been killed in a helicopter crash on Africa’s highest mountain, Mount Kilimanjaro, in Tanzania, authorities say.

The accident took place on Wednesday evening on one of the most popular tourist climbing routes in what police said was a rescue mission to pick up patients on the mountain.

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Two foreigners, who police said had been picked up in a medical evacuation, were among those killed.

A local doctor, a tour guide and the pilot were also killed in the crash.

Tanzanian media reports said Czech nationals as well as a Zimbabwean were on board the helicopter.

The accident happened between the mountain’s Barafu Camp and Kibo Summit at an altitude of more than 4,000 metres (13,100ft).

Kilimanjaro Regional Police Commander Simon Maigwa told journalists the aircraft belonged to the Kilimanjaro Aviation company, which has yet to comment on the accident.

The Tanzania Civil Aviation Authority on Thursday said investigations had started in line with international safety regulations “to determine the circumstances and probable cause” of the accident.

Aircraft accidents on Mount Kilimanjaro are rare. The last recorded incident was in November 2008 when four people died.

Kilimanjaro draws thousands of tourists every year. While the ascent is not technically difficult, altitude sickness is a problem for many climbers.

Progress in Ukraine peace talks is slow but steady, says Russia

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Russia sees slow but steady progress in Ukraine peace talks

Pope Leo calls for ‘courage’ to bring an end to Ukraine war in inaugural Christmas speech

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Pope Leo has urged Ukraine and Russia to find the “courage” to hold direct talks to end the war during his first Christmas remarks to crowds in St Peter’s square.

He called for an end to conflicts around the world during his Urbi et Orbi address, which is traditionally delivered by the pontiff on Christmas Day to worshippers gathered in Vatican City.

Speaking about Ukraine, the Pope said: “May the clamour of weapons cease, and may the parties involved, with the support and commitment of the international community, find the courage to engage in sincere, direct and respectful dialogue.”

His plea comes as US-led negotiations on a deal to end the fighting continues.

The US has sought to mediate between Kyiv and Moscow as it seeks to put together an agreement to end the fighting acceptable to both sides, but direct talks between the warring parties have not taken place during this latest round of diplomatic efforts.

Pope Leo also decried turmoil and conflict plaguing other parts of the world, including Thailand and Cambodia where deadly border clashes have flared up despite a ceasefire in July.

He asked that the South East Asian nations’ “ancient friendship” be restored and “to work towards reconciliation and peace”.

During an earlier Christmas Day sermon in St Peter’s Basilica, Pope Leo lamented conditions for homeless people the world over, and the damage caused by conflicts.

“Fragile is the flesh of defenceless populations, tried by so many wars, ongoing or concluded, leaving behind rubble and open wounds,” said the pope.

He said the story of the birth of Jesus showed that God had “pitched his fragile tent” among the people of the world. “How, then,” he asked, turning his attention to the conditions of Palestinians, “can we not think of the tents in Gaza, exposed for weeks to rain, wind and cold?”

Gaza has been devastated by Israeli bombardment in a two-year war, triggered by Hamas’s attack on Israel on 7 October 2023.

Winter storms have compounded the plight of the territory’s 2.1m population, nearly all of whom have been displaced and their homes damaged or destroyed.

Aid agencies have called for Israel to allow more tents and urgently needed supplies into Gaza.

Cogat, the Israeli military body which controls Gaza’s border crossings, has dismissed claims of deliberate aid restrictions, saying almost 310,000 tents and tarpaulins had been delivered since the start of the ceasefire in October.

Paypal senior VP declares shift from information era to ‘intelligence era’ in AI revolution, urges focus on tokens

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In the middle of the 20th century, the world entered the age of information, the shift of industry to information technology. The era began with the miniaturization of computers and culminated with the invention of the World Wide Web, which put the ability to access information at nearly everyone’s fingertips. Now, with the rise of AI, that age is over, according to some tech leaders, and a new age of technology has begun.

“We have transitioned from [an] information era to intelligence era,” Prakhar Mehrotra, PayPal senior vice president and global head of AI, said at the Fortune Brainstorm AI conference earlier this month.

This “intelligence era” is marked by industries transitioning away from the model of storing and retrieving data, Mehrotra told Fortune reporter Sharon Goldman. Instead, because of the capabilities of AI, data can be more spontaneously generated, with the ultimate goal of achieving autonomy in some parts of the workplace.

Companies are racing to apply AI—with its promises of increased productivity and output—to their respective workplaces, but their successes have been mixed. An August MIT study found 95% of enterprise AI workplace initiatives failed to reach rapid revenue acceleration.

“It’s going to be a journey…You have to go through this crawl, walk, and run,” Mehrotra said. “I think that adage has been true 10 years back, is also true in this era.”

The future of AI factories

Marc Hamilton, Nvidia’s vice president of solutions architecture and engineering who was interviewed alongside Mehrotra at the conference, said the future of building out AI in the workplace will be investing in AI factories, on a business’s premises or in the cloud. That’s because data needed to run companies will no longer be primarily retrieved by humans or computers, but rather generated by AI.

“When you go and say, ‘Generate a PowerPoint slide that says this,’ or ‘I’m working on this coding function, can you go in and generate code?’ It’s not retrieving it from the database, it’s taking a model and generating that data,” Hamilton said. 

Mehrotra noted in order for companies to effectively build out the computational power needed to create this data, there needs to be a new atomic unit prized by firms: tokens, or the fundamental component of text AI needs to understand and process a language. Tokens are both the snippet of information used to train data, as well as what is generated by AI after a model receives a prompt.

“Every company has to think about their data in terms of tokens, because then [they] can derive that intelligence from it,” Mehrotra said.

A measure of input and output, token generation has become a key metric for tech companies in particular. In May, Nvidia boasted that Microsoft, which uses Nvidia’s chips, generated more than 100 trillion tokens in the first quarter of this year, a five-fold year-over-year increase. These indications of output can help these AI companies sell themselves to investors and boost valuations, though data shows tokens’ correlation with demand and profits are weaker than tech companies would suggest. 

Mehrotra and Hamilton agreed that many companies today see the value of tokens in boosting AI capabilities, but are weighing how to best fit them into their needs, such as which tokens should be acquired or bought, what should be generated in-house, and for what purpose? Every company then has their own AI factory of sorts, both taking in tokens and outputting tokens that have value.

“I see it as just building that muscle,” Mehrotra said. “Like if all the employees start thinking in terms of tokens, in terms of generating process, then, yeah, it’s a different company.”

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com