new video loaded: Israeli Strike Kills Several People at a Gaza Encampment
By Axel Boada
December 4, 2025
new video loaded: Israeli Strike Kills Several People at a Gaza Encampment
By Axel Boada
December 4, 2025

Symbotic prices public offering of 10 million shares at $55 each
The United States Supreme Court has ruled that the southern state of Texas may proceed with using a controversial map of congressional districts designed to favour Republicans in the 2026 midterm elections.
Thursday’s decision was split along ideological lines, with the court’s six conservative justices giving the new map the go-ahead and the three liberal ones joining together in dissent.
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The ruling lifts a lower court’s order from November that had blocked Texas from using the new congressional map. The lower court had found that Texas had “racially gerrymandered” the districts, in violation of the US Constitution.
But Texas quickly filed an emergency appeal to the Supreme Court, urging quick action to overturn the hold.
After all, it argued, campaigning for the midterm races in November 2026 is already under way, and candidates need to understand where their constituents lie.
In a brief, unsigned order, the conservative majority found that Texas was likely to prevail “on the merits of its claims”.
It also cited court precedent that “lower courts should ordinarily not alter the election rules on the eve of an election”. Doing otherwise, the order said, would cause “irreparable harm” to the state.
The map in question has set off a nationwide scramble to redesign congressional districts ahead of the all-important midterm races.
Thursday’s Supreme Court ruling is likely to drive further attempts to redraw maps in favour of one party or another.
The controversy started in June, when reports emerged that President Donald Trump was pushing Texas state legislators to adopt a new congressional map, one that would help Republicans scoop up an extra five seats in the US House of Representatives.
Texas is considered one of the largest Republican strongholds in the country, given its large population. Currently, the state has a whopping 38 seats in the House, 25 of which are occupied by Republicans.
But the Republican majority overall in the House is narrow: The party holds only 220 of the 435 total seats.
Democrats are therefore seeking to flip the chamber in the 2026 midterms, when every congressional district holds a new election. Strategists on the left see Trump’s wilting poll numbers as an opening to make gains.
Just this week, the research firm Gallup found that the Republican president’s approval rating had dropped five points to 36 percent, marking the lowest point of his second term.
But Trump and his allies have pushed back. One of their strategies has been to promote partisan redistricting, a process sometimes called gerrymandering.
The trend started with the Texas effort. Despite being outnumbered in the state legislature, Democrats tried to stop the process, even leaving the state entirely to avoid voting on the new congressional map.
But ultimately, they were forced to return. And in August, the Texas state legislature passed the new districts.
That triggered a kind of redistricting arms race across the country, with Republicans and Democrats in other states seeking to redraw their maps to angle for more congressional seats.
In September, Republicans in Missouri passed a new gerrymandered map, and in October, North Carolina followed suit. Both states are expected to earn Republicans one additional House seat apiece.
Then, in November, voters in California approved a ballot initiative championed by Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom that would suspend the state’s independent election commission and replace its work with a new partisan map.
That effort was designed explicitly to neutralise any gains by Texas Republicans: The new California map is intended to nab Democrats five additional House seats.
But partisan redistricting has long been controversial in the US, with voting rights advocates warning that it disenfranchises minority communities.
Gerrymandering, however, is not strictly illegal.
Normally, states draw new congressional districts once every decade to reflect demographic changes in the US census. After all, the number of representatives each state has is a reflection of its overall population, and as the number of residents grows or shrinks, the number of districts must change accordingly.
In many states, it is up to the legislature to draw those new congressional maps, and the decisions are often partisan affairs.
While the Supreme Court has acknowledged that partisan gerrymandering can threaten democracy, it has ruled that federal courts cannot determine if legislatures have gone too far in redrawing their maps.
There is, however, one exception: Gerrymandering on the basis of race is off-limits. The US Constitution and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 both contain protections to ensure voters are not divided and disenfranchised based on their race.
That is how Thursday’s case – Greg Abbott v the League of United Latin American Citizens – ended up before the Supreme Court.
In November, in a two-to-one decision, the US District Court for Western Texas sided with plaintiffs who argued that the new Texas map was explicitly designed to dilute the power of Black and Latino voters in the state.
The court pointed to statements made by Trump administration officials and Texas Governor Greg Abbott, seeming to target congressional districts with non-white majorities.
But the Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that the district court had “failed to honor the presumption of legislative good faith”. It also described the statements referenced in the lower court’s decision as “ambiguous” and “circumstantial evidence”.
Right-wing Justice Samuel Alito went a step further, arguing that it was difficult to disentangle what was legal gerrymandering and what was race-based discrimination.
“Because of the correlation between race and partisan preference, litigants can easily use claims of racial gerrymandering for partisan ends,” Alito wrote.
If the motive behind the new Texas map was simply race-based, Alito asserted that it was up to the plaintiffs to show how a partisan map would differ from a race-based one.
Republican politicians quickly applauded Thursday’s ruling as vindication for their efforts.
“We won! Texas is officially – and legally – more red,” Governor Abbott wrote on his social media account.
“The Supreme Court restored the congressional redistricting maps passed by Texas that add 5 more Republican seats. The new maps better align our representation in D.C. with the values of Texas.”
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, meanwhile, highlighted his efforts in defending the Republican map.
“In the face of Democrats’ attempt to abuse the judicial system to steal the U.S. House, I have defended Texas’s fundamental right to draw a map that ensures we are represented by Republicans,” he said in a statement posted online.
“Texas is paving the way as we take our country back, district by district, state by state.”
But in a stinging dissent, Justice Elena Kagan questioned whether her colleagues on the Supreme Court had thoroughly considered the evidence.
She contrasted the lower court’s approach with what she described as the high court’s hasty one.
“The District Court conducted a nine-day hearing, involving the testimony of nearly two dozen witnesses and the introduction of thousands of exhibits. It sifted through the resulting factual record, spanning some 3,000 pages,” Kagan wrote.
“And after considering all the evidence, it held that the answer was clear. Texas largely divided its citizens along racial lines to create its new pro-Republican House map, in violation of the Constitution’s Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.”
The district court, Kagan pointed out, also explained its reasoning in a lengthy 160-page decision.
“Yet this Court reverses that judgment based on its perusal, over a holiday weekend, of a cold paper record,” she said. “We are a higher court than the District Court, but we are not a better one when it comes to making such a fact-based decision.”
Despite the legal setback, the plaintiffs in Thursday’s case and other advocates have pledged to continue their fight against Texas’s redistricting efforts.
“Voters are supposed to choose their politicians – not the other way around,” Texas state Representative James Talarico, a Democrat, said in a statement after Thursday’s ruling.
“No matter what Donald Trump or his hand-picked Supreme Court throw our way, we’re going to keep fighting.”
The Trump administration itself is in the midst of a court challenge against California’s partisan redistricting efforts. Those proceedings remain ongoing.
AT&T has promised the government that it will not pursue DEI. That’s according to a letter the company sent to Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Brendan Carr on Dec. 1.
The move, which follows in the footsteps of Verizon, T-Mobile, and Skydance, comes as AT&T seeks FCC approval for a $23 billion acquisition from broadband provider EchoStar. Carr has threatened prosecutions and opened investigations into companies over DEI, and praised others for abandoning their practices.
“We have closely followed the recent Executive Orders, Supreme Court rulings, and guidance issued by the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and have adjusted our employment and business practices,” the letter reads.
AT&T said in the letter that it does not, and will not, have a DEI team. DEI does not exist at AT&T, “not just in name but in substance,” and the company “does not and will not have any roles focused on DEI.”
While the company echoed language used by the Trump administration, including “merit-based” and “invidious DEI,” in its four-page letter, it doesn’t appear as though AT&T is announcing new changes, including the elimination of existing programs. Instead, it said programs “are and will continue to be open to all, consistent with Title VII [of the Civil Rights Act of 1964].”
“AT&T’s reversal isn’t a sudden transformation of values, but a strategic financial play to curry favor with this FCC/Administration,” Anna Gomez, the sole Democrat on the FCC, said on X in response to the letter. “Companies should remember that abandoning fairness and inclusion for short-term gain will be a stain to their reputation long into the future.”
AT&T rebranded its DEI programming in 2024 and made changes earlier this year, seemingly after pressure from conservative activist Robby Starbuck, including abandoning much of its support for the LGBTQ+ community and ending participation in external benchmarking indexes.
However, AT&T does still have some initiatives traditionally associated with DEI, such as employee resource groups (ERGs), which have existed at the company for over 50 years.
“Our letter reaffirms our longstanding practices of hiring and promoting based on merit, supporting an engaged workforce, and meeting our business objectives to serve customers nationwide,” Rebecca Acuña, a spokesperson for AT&T, told HR Brew in an emailed statement.
AT&T’s letter echoes promises that Verizon made to Carr in May, including that it would sunset most of its DEI programs, dissolve its DEI team, and suspend DEI training, HR Brew reported previously.
At the time, David Glasgow, executive director at New York University’s Meltzer Center for Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging, and co-author of the forthcoming book, How Equality Wins, predicted that the federal government would not allow companies to simply rebrand.
“The less optimistic view is that this administration is on an absolute tear on this topic, and will keep grinding away to root out anything that is about promoting fairness and equal opportunity in the workplace, unless it is just old-school discrimination law compliance,” Glasgow told HR Brew.
Glasgow said it’s unsurprising that companies would change course based on government directives. “Just the vague threat of an executive order tossing around the term ‘illegal DEI’ is making a lot of companies scared to continue with it. So unfortunately, I do think we’ll probably see more.”
This report was originally published by HR Brew.
A Virginia man has been arrested in connection with two pipe bombs placed outside the headquarters of the Republican and Democratic national committees on the eve of the 2021 Capitol riot.
US Attorney General Pam Bondi said Brian Cole Jr, 30, was arrested without incident early on Thursday morning. He is charged with use of an explosive device and attempted malicious destruction by means of explosive materials.
Officials did not specify a possible motive for the planting of the pipe bombs, which were safely deactivated without exploding.
It caps an exhaustive investigation in a case where an arrest had eluded law enforcement despite a $500,000 (£375,000) reward.
The FBI did not receive new information or a tip that cracked the case, officials said.
Both bombs were placed on the night of 5 January 2021 and were only discovered the following afternoon as supporters of Donald Trump stormed the US Capitol in the last days of his first presidency.
Kamala Harris, who was the US vice president-elect at the time, was evacuated from the Democratic National Committee headquarters shortly after the devices were found.
According to court documents, the suspect lives with his parents in Woodbridge, a suburb about 20 miles (32km) outside Washington.
He works for a bail bond company – such firms help people get out of jail by posting bail on their behalf in exchange for a non-refundable fee.
Investigators sifted through a mountain of evidence gathered over the years, including some three million lines of data.
Mr Cole allegedly bought multiple bomb-making components in 2019 and 2020, according to the court filing.
He purchased metal end caps, wires and steel wool at Home Depot and Lowes hardware stores, batteries at another retailer and timers at a Walmart in northern Virginia, an FBI affidavit states.
Investigators found mobile phone data that showed Mr Cole was near the locations of the pipe bombs when they were planted between 19:39 and 20:24 local time on 5 January 2021.
His car – a 2017 Nissan Sentra with a Virginia licence plate – was also seen by a licence plate reader less than half a mile (0.8km) from the location where the individual who placed the devices was first observed in the area.
US Attorney Jeanine Pirro told a news conference on Thursday that the Trump administration had made solving the case a priority.
“It was like finding a needle in a haystack,” she said.
Investigators said both pipe bombs were manufactured using end caps, with Pirro adding there were 233,000 black-end caps of the type used in the plot.
“I want you to think about the act that the FBI had to go through the sale of every one of them,” she added.
The suspect’s shoes were believed to be Nike Air Max Speed Turfs.
The FBI discovered thousands of pairs of the shoes had been distributed through more than two dozen retailers.
FBI officials praised the perseverance of agents and said they never gave up on finding a suspect.
“We continued to churn through massive amounts of data”, said Darren Cox, deputy assistant director of the FBI Criminal Investigative Division.
Earlier this year, the FBI released CCTV footage of an individual with a backpack and light grey hooded sweater placing something near a bench outside the DNC building in Washington. The person was shown later walking to place the second bomb.
FBI Director Kash Patel told the news conference that “when you attack American citizens, when you attack our nation’s capital, you attack the very being of our way of life”.
“We will provide the safest country the nation has ever seen,” he added.
FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino said the case showed people are not able to “walk into our capital city”, plant devices and “walk off into the sunset”, adding that US law enforcement will “track you down to the end of the earth”.
The pipe bomb plot spawned countless conspiracy theories, including that US law enforcement might have been involved.
Before he took the job of FBI deputy director, Bongino floated the possibility last year that it was an “inside job” and a “massive cover-up.”
By Madeline Folsom on SwimSwam

Welcome to the first full finals session of the 2025 U.S. Open Championships. Tonight, we have a host of races with the top swimmers in the world racing each other as they try to end 2025 on a high note.
Schedule of Events
The meet will start with the 50 backstrokes. On the women’s side two of the best backstrokers in the world, Katharine Berkoff and Regan Smith, will be racing the 50 back with Berkoff, the American record holder in the event, leading the field with her top time from prelims coming in at 27.49
The men’s event will see 17-year-old Australian Henry Allan try to hold off some of the best backstrokers in the world in Hubert Kos and Shaine Casas.
The headline events of the session are the 400 freestyles, but for different reasons. On the women’s side, World Record holder Summer McIntosh earned the top spot by more than 11 seconds in prelims, swimming 4:00.68. Tonight, she will be chasing her own U.S. Open Meet record of 3:59.42, and Katie Ledecky‘s U.S. Open record of 3:56.82, but she will be in a field of her own.
The men’s race will be a different story. Leon Marchand is the best male swimmer in the world right now, and he comes in seeded 3rd behind training partners Luke Hobson and Carson Foster. Hobson swam the top time in prelims, touching in 3:47.56 to lead Foster’s 3:48.05 and Marchand’s 3:48.13. They will be joined by 16-year-old phenom Luka Mijatovic who sits less than two tenths back of Marchand at 3:48.30.
Where the women’s 400 freestyle will be a story of dominance, the men’s could be one of the closest races of the meet among some of the top swimmers in the world.
The 200 IM events see Kate Douglass and Hubert Kos as the top seeds. Douglass comes in nearly a second ahead of Canada’s Mary-Sophie Harvey and a little more than a second ahead of Alex Walsh. Kos, on the other hand, sits just two seconds ahead of Baylor Nelson, who is coming off the meet of his life at the Texas Hall of Fame Invite and half-a-second ahead of Indiana’s Owen McDonald, who also had a strong performance at midseasons.
The meet will end with the 50 breaststroke and 50 freestyle events. Ireland’s Mona McSharry is the top seed in the women’s 5- breaststroke, a tenth ahead of Ohio State’s Maria Ramos Najji from Spain. On the me’s side, South Africa’s Michael Houlie came in just five hundredths ahead of Van Mathias for the top spot.
The women’s 50 free will see Kate Douglass and Gretchen Walsh battle for the top spot from lanes 4 and 5, and the men’s 50 free final is missing a number of the top swimmers in the world including Ilya Kharun, Caeleb Dressel, and Santo Condorelli, but features Serbia’s Andrej Barna as the top seed just ahead of Jack Alexy and Chris Giuliano.
Read the full story on SwimSwam: 2025 U.S. Open: Day 2 Finals Live Recap
Epidemic Sound has filed a second copyright infringement lawsuit against Facebook parent company Meta, alleging that the tech giant continues to infringe the music company’s catalog across Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp.
The new complaint, filed in the US District Court for the Northern District of California on Tuesday (December 2) and obtained by MBW, lists 1,000 representative works that Epidemic alleges Meta is infringing through its Audio Library and through tools including Original Audio and Reels Remix.
Stockholm-headquartered Epidemic, whose catalog includes over 50,000 works, noted in the filing that each of the 1,000 works listed in the new complaint were registered after Epidemic filed its first lawsuit against Meta in July 2022, which remains active before Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley in the same court. That case sought at least $142 million in damages.
The Swedish music company is seeking statutory damages of up to $150,000 per work infringed as part of the new lawsuit, meaning potential damages could reach $150 million based on the 1,000 works listed. Epidemic is also seeking a permanent injunction, attorneys’ fees, and costs.
According to the complaint, Meta has been offering Epidemic’s works through its Audio Library, which the filing describes as Meta’s curated collection of music tracks made available to billions of users to exploit in connection with content posted on Meta’s platforms.
The lawsuit states that Meta also created tools such as Original Audio and Reels Remix that “allow its users to steal Epidemic’s unlicensed music from another user’s posted video content and synchronize Epidemic’s music with their own subsequent videos, resulting in exponential infringements on Meta’s platform.”
The complaint alleges that Meta has included at least 500 of the 1,000 works in its Audio Library and has “stored, reproduced, made available, and distributed these Works to its users without a license.”
“Meta has not secured a license from Epidemic for the use of its copyrighted music on its platforms or paid Epidemic or its artists a penny for the infringing uses of its music at issue herein,” the complaint states.
The filing also alleges that Meta has repeatedly refused Epidemic’s requests for access to a tool called Rights Manager for Music, which the company describes as a copyright management tool that helps rights holders identify, protect and monitor unauthorized use of music content on Meta’s platforms.
“Despite having been on notice of its infringement of Epidemic’s works, despite having been sued in July 2022 by Epidemic for infringement, and despite that the fact that Meta was actively and repeatedly infringing the representative works in the First Suit’s complaint even during the pendency of the suit, Meta’s infringement continues.”
Complaint filed by Epidemic against Meta
According to the complaint, while Meta allowed Epidemic to access Rights Manager Pro for video content, it has “repeatedly refused Epidemic’s requests for access to its rights management tool specifically designed for owners of music content.”
“Meta has withheld this tool from Epidemic, despite repeated requests for such access, leaving Epidemic without proper recourse or the ability to deal with the rampant infringement of the Works on Meta’s platforms,” the complaint states.
The lawsuit alleges that Meta threatened to restrict or revoke Epidemic’s access to Rights Manager altogether.
Epidemic’s complaint emphasizes that Meta has been on notice of the infringement for years, including through the first lawsuit filed in July 2022.
“Despite having been on notice of its infringement of Epidemic’s works, despite having been sued in July 2022 by Epidemic for infringement, and despite that the fact that Meta was actively and repeatedly infringing the representative works in the First Suit’s complaint even during the pendency of the suit, Meta’s infringement continues,” the complaint states.Music Business Worldwide
new video loaded: Several Countries Boycott Eurovision 2026 Over Israel’s Participation
transcript
transcript
“So we’re big fans of Eurovision. And I think what Eurovision stands for isn’t politics. However, what’s happening, what Israel is doing, is not good. So I think whatever the countries decide to do, it’s up to them.”
By McKinnon de Kuyper
December 4, 2025
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