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Monday, September 1, 2025

https://www.marketscreener.com/news/trump-calls-on-pharmaceutical-companies-to-justify-success-of-covid-drugs-ce7c50d2de8afe20

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/us-freezes-visas-palestinian-passport-holders-amid-mounting-national-security-threats

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c5y3110edzgo

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-09-01/china-led-bloc-agrees-to-set-up-development-bank-in-win-for-xi

Russia Gears Up For New Nuclear Missile Test

 by RFE/RL Staff via OilPrice.com,

  • Significant activity on Russia's Novaya Zemlya archipelago indicates an impending test of the nuclear-powered Burevestnik cruise missile, known as Skyfall by NATO.

  • The Burevestnik, a complex system designed to carry a nuclear warhead and evade missile defenses, has a history of development failures, including a deadly explosion in 2019.

  • The timing of the potential test, along with high-level Russian military and nuclear official visits, suggests the missile is nearing operational deployment, driven by Russia's desire for prestige and defense against US missile shields.

It's been a busy few weeks up on the windswept Russian archipelago of Novaya Zemlya: people, earthmoving trucks, shipping containers, temporary housing, heavy-lift aircraft, helicopters, cargo ships.

The activity shows up in satellite imagery, aircraft hazard notifications, ship transponder trackers, and open-source intelligence reporting at a time when long Arctic days and good weather mean favorable conditions for building projects at the Pankovo test range and nearby air base.

The betting money for close watchers of Russian weapons development is on another test of a trouble-plagued, nuclear-powered cruise missile called the Burevestnik.

"The operational sites for this system are almost complete. This is going to be an operational system pretty soon here," said Decker Eveleth, a researcher at the suburban Washington-based Center for Naval Analyses, who examined satellite imagery of the sites in July and August. "This may have been the final check before operational testing and evaluation."

"They're clearly pretty far long," he said.

"I wouldn't be surprised if the test has already happened," said Pavel Podvig, a Geneva-based arms control researcher and expert on Russia's nuclear forces.

The missile, dubbed Skyfall by NATO, has been under development for more than a decade now. It's one of several new systems Russian designers have focused on as the Kremlin pours money into weapons development as part of a not fully recognized arms race -- mainly against the United States.

Others include the Sarmat international continental ballistic missile, a nuclear-powered, nuclear-tipped torpedo called Poseidon, and a hypersonic missile called Avangard.

Russian President Vladimir Putin talked up many of the weapons elaborate public ceremonies in 2018 and 2019. Two of the new weapons, the Kinzhal and Tsirkon missiles, have been used in Ukraine. The Sarmat has also been tested, though last year it suffered a major mishap.

The Burevestnik has drawn particular attention from arms control and intelligence experts, partly because of the technology but also its past failures.

The missile is powered essentially by a small nuclear reactor built into the engine, theoretically enabling it to stay aloft for days.

It "would carry a nuclear warhead; circle the globe at low altitude, avoid missile defenses, and dodge terrain; and drop the warhead at a difficult-to-predict location," according to a 2019 report by the Washington-based Nuclear Threat Initiative.

U.S. intelligence reports say the missile has been tested at least a dozen times, including in 2017 and 2019.

Death At Nyonoksa

Among the places Russia has tested the Burevestnik is the White Sea, west of the city of Arkhangelsk, near the port of Severodvinsk.

In August 2019, while trying to raise a Burevestnik from the seabed near the town of Nyonoksa, an explosion occurred that spewed radiation over a wide area, including Severodvinsk. The blast also killed at least five Russian nuclear specialists from the state-owned nuclear company Rosatom, which is believed to have spearheaded the Burevestnik's development.

The explosion, US officials later concluded, "was the result of a nuclear reaction that occurred during the recovery of a Russian nuclear-powered cruise missile."

Two years earlier, another missile, also believed to be a Burevestnik, crashed somewhere in the Barents Sea, west of Novaya Zemlya, according to US intelligence officials.

"They've been developing this system for well over a decade. And it hasn't really gone very well for a long time," Eveleth said. "People died…and they didn't give up. They kept going for it…. They kept going for it for 15 years. And they are really dedicated to it."

Constant Phoenix, Nuke Sniffing

The activity at Pankovo in late July was highlighted in part by Eveleth and Jeffrey Lewis of Middlebury's Institute of International Studies in Monterey, California. Burevestnik testing was moved out of the White Sea following the Nyonoksa accident and resumed in 2021 on Novaya Zemlya, which is more remote.

In early August, Russian authorities also released a NOTAM, according to the Barents Observer newspaper, which first reported the advisory. NOTAMs are internally recognized advisories for aircraft -- a warning for pilots and ship captains, in this case, to avoid a wide area west of Novaya Zemlya.

Meanwhile, an unusually large number of fighter jets, cargo jets, and helicopters appeared parked at the Rogachevo air base on the southwestern coast of Novaya Zemlya. The aircraft appeared to include an A-50, an airborne radar and warning system experts say is rarely seen so far north; and Il-76 SKIPs, jets designed to gather electronic signals and missile telemetry data.

Open-source aircraft trackers also noted a US Air Force WC-135 jet in the airspace north of the Kola Peninsula and west of Novaya Zemlya. Known as Constant Phoenix, the jet is designed to gather samples of airborne particles to detect specific radioactive isotopes released from nuclear weapons tests.

The most recent satellite imagery, Eveleth said, suggests Russian workers have now packed up equipment on Novaya Zemlya, indicating, he said, that a test had been conducted.

'Why Is This Such a Big Deal?'

The timing for a test was also auspicious from the point of view of Russian messaging, Lewis said in a podcast released August 20, coming around the time that Putin met US President Donald Trump for a summit in Alaska.

Another bit of evidence came on August 22 when Putin traveled to the central city of Sarov. Formerly a closed city known as Arzamas-16, Sarov has for decades been the heart of the Soviet and Russian nuclear programs: "the equivalent of Los Alamos," Podvig said, referring to the home of the US atomic weapons program.

Among the dignitaries greeting Putin on the tarmac at Sarov was the chairman of Russia's General Staff, General Valery Gerasimov, as well as Sergei Kiriyenko, who headed Rosatom until 2016, when he took a top post in the Kremlin.

"The combination of all these things -- the test activity, the apparent preparation for deployment, and this visit -- again this would be a good occasion for Putin, for the Sarov [engineers] to demonstrate that this is what we've done, we've fulfilled the assignment," Podvig said.

"Why is this such a big deal for them?" Eveleth said. "First, the sophistication and prestige of the Russian nuclear arsenal is very important" to Putin and his government.

"Second, they're worried about [US] missile defenses, they want to hedge against an effective missile shield and this system is technically capable of evading certain systems," he said.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/russia-gears-new-nuclear-missile-test

Opioids More Likely To Kill Than Car Crashes Or Suicide

The National Safety Council reports that Americans are more likely to die from an opioid overdose than a car crash or suicide.

As Statista';s Katharina Buchholz shows in the following chart, the likelihood of dying from opioid use in the U.S. increased from lifetime odds of one in 96 in 2017 to one in 57 in 2023 (down from one in 55 in 2022).

The same year, someone living in the U.S. only had one in 87 odds of dying of suicide and a one in 95 chance of dying in a car crash.

Infographic: Opioids More Likely to Kill Than Car Crashes or Suicide | Statista


Potent and deadly synthetic opioid fentanyl - which is often mixed with heroin without the knowledge of drug users - contributed to this dismal development together with the ongoing crisis of prescription pain killer misuse.

The U.S. experienced 105,000 overdose deaths in 2023, down from 2022 after a severe uptick during the coronavirus pandemic.

The most likely cause of death in the U.S. continues to be heart disease with lifetime odds of 1 in 6, followed by cancer and stroke.

Covid-19 lifetime odds were similar to those of stroke in previous years, but are no longer reported by the source.

Despite being a common fear, the chances of dying due to gun assault stand at only one in 238, but are still greater than drowning or choking to death, which have odds of around one in 1,000 and one in 2,500, respectively.

Dying in a dog attack remains highly unlikely with the chances of that happening at one in 44,499.

Dying in a hurricane or tornado or any other storm event is actually more likely at one in 39,192.

https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/opioids-more-likely-kill-car-crashes-or-suicide

Bill for building owners to test for Legionella stalled in NYC Council despite deadly outbreak

 A proposed New York City law that would require large building owners to regularly test for the presence of Legionella bacteria in their water systems — not just in cooling towers — has been stalled in the City Council for nearly two years while a recent Harlem outbreak has killed seven, The Post has learned.

The legislation, sponsored by Bronx Councilwoman Pierina Ana Sanchez, would require owners of large buildings that have multiple units or house people 65 and older to develop a water management and treatment system for Legionella or Legionnaires’ Disease.

“This most recent outbreak in Harlem [which sickened 114 people and killed 7] is a wake up call for New York. We need to do better to help protect the health of our citizens, especially the most vulnerable populations like the elderly and immunocompromised individuals,” said April McIver, executive director of The Plumbing Foundation.

A recovered victim of the outbreak, Nunzio Quinto (C), who worked for the Stanza contractor, shows marks on his arm that remain as a result of hospital treatment.Robert Miller

But the bill — Intro. 434 — has been sitting in the Health Committee since January 2024, without a hearing called or a vote taken.

“At a minimum, building water systems or water devices shall be inspected and tested at least as frequently as every six months. Each inspection shall include an evaluation of the general condition of the components of the building water system or water device,” the text of the bill, supported by at least 23 council members, states.

Building owners must hire a qualified third-party water sampler to collect and test the water.

The contractor would send water samples to a lab to test for the presence of Legionella bacteria.

If the sample is positive for the deadly bacteria, the building owner is required to take prompt corrective actions and notify tenants and visitors immediately.

The Health Department can also investigate any building without prior notice to enforce the Legionella prevention provisions.

Pierina Sanchez serves as the representative for New York City’s 14th Council District.New York City Council

Under the bill, building owners face penalties of at least $500 for the first violation, $1,000 for the second violation and $5,000 for each subsequent violation.

The law would take effect 180 days after it becomes law.

Sanchez’s office declined a request for comment on why her bill hasn’t moved.

Harlem Legionnaires’ outbreak was traced to the cooling towers at NYC Health + Hospitals/Harlem, 506 Lenox Ave., in Manhattan.Google Earth
Daniel McKeithan, 52, a Harlem resident and chef, first felt sick on June 19 when he headed to his daughter’s baby shower in Atlanta.Courtesy of Daniel Mckeithan

During a press briefing last Friday, First Deputy Mayor Randy Mastro said the Harlem outbreak showed the need for regulations even more stringent than New York’s current aggressive rules, which call for tests in cooling towers every 90 days.

“We’ve learned that acquiring parties to test on a 30-day cycle could be a very positive advance in the future,” he said.

But McKiver said, “The City’s laws do not address domestic/potable water systems, despite scientific
evidence that such systems are a major source of Legionella.”

She proposed amendments to strengthen the bill, which include more extensive instructions on water testing and monitoring that will be presented when there’s a hearing on the measure.

https://nypost.com/2025/09/01/us-news/bill-requiring-building-owners-to-test-for-legionella-stalled-in-nyc-council-despite-deadly-harlem-outbreak/