Search This Blog

Saturday, November 1, 2025

Harvard Medical School rocked by intentional explosion, surveillance spots 2 suspects fleeing

 An explosion rocked a Harvard Medical School building early Saturday morning, while Boston police have now released surveillance footage of the two suspects.

The unknown device exploded on the fourth floor of the Goldenson building on the Harvard Longwood Campus’s main quad shortly before 3 a.m., The Harvard Crimson reported citing authorities.

Two individuals were witnessed running out of the building at the time of the detonation, the outlet said, citing the Harvard University Police Department. 

An unidentified device exploded on the fourth floor of the Goldenson building on the Harvard Longwood Campus’s main quad shortly before 3 a.m.REUTERS

An officer with the university failed in an attempt to stop them, before entering the building to check on the alarm, The Boston Globe reported.

The Boston Police Department released surveillance images of the suspects on Saturday, NBC Boston reported.

Images showed two individuals wearing masks over their faces and hooded sweatshirts.

The Boston Fire Department determined the explosion was intentional and conducted a sweep of the building which found no additional devices, according to the Crimson.

Two individuals were seen running out of the building before the device went off.Boston PD
No one was injured in the overnight explosion at Harvard.Boston PD

No injuries were reported.

Sources familiar with the investigation told The Post the explosive device was not a bomb but declined to further detail the incident.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation is at the scene as part of the investigation, The Crimson reported.

The Boston Police Department and the FBI declined to comment. Meanwhile, Harvard University Police Department could not be reached for comment.

https://nypost.com/2025/11/01/us-news/explosion-rocks-harvard-medical-school-two-spotted-fleeing-at-time-of-detonation/

'AI Causing Grim New Twist on Dunning-Kruger Effect: Research'

People who are the worst at doing something also tend to severely overestimate how good they are at doing it, while those who are actually skilled tend to not realize their true talent.

This galling cognitive bias is called the Dunning-Kruger effect, as you’re probably familiar — and would you believe it if we told you that AI appears to make it even worse? 

Case in point, a new study published in the journal Computers in Human Behavior — and titled, memorably, “AI Makes You smarter But None the Wiser”) — showed that everyone was bad at estimating their own performance after being asked to complete a series of tasks using ChatGPT. And strikingly, it was the participants who were “AI literate” who were the worst offenders.

“When it comes to AI, the [Dunning-Kruger effect] vanishes,” study senior author Robin Welsch, a professor at Aalto University, said in a statement about the work. “In fact, what’s really surprising is that higher AI literacy brings more overconfidence.”

“We would expect people who are AI literate to not only be a bit better at interacting with AI systems, but also at judging their performance with those systems,” Welsch added, “but this was not the case.”

It’s an interesting detail that helps build on our still burgeoning understanding of all the ways that our AI habits are probably bad for our brains, from being linked with memory loss to atrophying our critical thinking skills. Perhaps it’s also a testament to the ego of the AI power user.

Notably, the findings comes amid heated debate around the dangerous “sycophancy” of AI models. Chatbots designed to both be helpful and engaging constantly ply users with flattery and go along with their demands. It’s an addictive combination that makes you feel smart or vindicated. And this sycophancy is thought to be one of the main driving factors behind widespread cases of what psychiatrists are calling “AI psychosis,” in which users suffer breaks with reality and spirals into delusional thinking after becoming obsessed with talking with a chatbot.

In the study, the researchers asked half of 500 participants to use ChatGPT to help solve 20 logical reasoning problems from the Law School Admission Test, and the other half to solve them without AI. Afterwards, each participant was asked to evaluate their own performance, with the promise of extra compensation if they did so accurately. They were also administered a questionnaire designed to gauge their AI literacy.

The researchers found that the group that used ChatGPT substantially improved their scores compared to the group that didn’t. But they also vastly overestimated their performance — and the effect was especially pronounced among the AI savvy, “suggesting that those with more technical knowledge of AI were more confident but less precise in judging their own performance,” the authors wrote.

When they examined how the participants used the chatbot, the team also discovered that the majority of them rarely asked ChatGPT more than one question per problem — with no further probing or double checking. According to Welsch, this is an example of what psychiatrists call cognitive offloading, a well documented trend in AI in which users outsource all their thinking to an AI tool.

“We looked at whether they truly reflected with the AI system and found that people just thought the AI would solve things for them,” Welsch said. “Usually there was just one single interaction to get the results, which means that users blindly trusted the system.”

You’ve got to hand it to AI: it’s democratizing the Dunning-Kruger effect. What other tech can claim to do that?

https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/ai-dunning-kruger-effect

US, China discuss direct military channels, Hegseth says

 The US and China have agreed that the two countries should set up military-to-military channels to reduce conflict and deescalate any problems that arise in the future, US Defence Secretary Peter Hegseth said on Saturday, after meeting with his Chinese counterpart Dong Jun in Malaysia.

After President Donald Trump met with Chinese Chairman Xi Jinping in South Korea, "I had an equally positive meeting with my counterpart, China's Minister of National Defence Admiral Dong Jun in Malaysia," Hegseth said in a post on X.

Hegseth said US and Chinese officials would have more meetings about setting up the chann


https://www.nst.com.my/world/world/2025/11/1306649/us-china-discuss-direct-military-channels-hegseth-says

CENTCOM: Drone shows Hamas looting Gaza aid truck

 The United States Central Command (CENTCOM) said on Saturday that a US MQ‑9 drone captured a video of what it described as suspected Hamas operatives looting an aid truck in the southern Gaza Strip.

The incident reportedly occurred in the northern Khan Younis area, where the US‑led Civil‑Military Coordination Center (CMCC) observed "operatives attacked the driver and stole the aid and truck after moving the driver to the road's median."

CENTCOM's statement noted the convoy was traveling with international partners when the attack occurred. "Over the past week, international partners have delivered more than 600 trucks of commercial goods and aid into Gaza daily. This incident undermines these efforts," read the statement.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/CENTCOM:-Drone-shows-Hamas-looting-Gaza-aid-truck/65099604

Obama stumps in Virginia and New Jersey in weekend campaign push before Election Day

 Former President Barack Obama will headline rallies Saturday for Democrats running for governor in Virginia and New Jersey, corralling voters ahead of elections that may signal the national mood 10 months into Donald Trump’s second presidency and a year ahead of midterm elections that could reshape it.

Republicans in those states are stumping as well on the final weekend of campaigning before Tuesday's elections, but without the national star power.

And on the west coast, California advocates are making a final push ahead of a statewide referendum over whether to redraw the state's congressional map in Democrats' favor. The effort backed by Gov. Gavin Newsom is part of a national redistricting battle that began when Trump urged GOP-run states to help him keep a friendly House majority in 2026.

Obama, the Democrat whom Trump succeeded when he first assumed the presidency, will appear first Saturday with Virginia’s Democratic gubernatorial nominee Abigail Spanberger in Norfolk. Obama then travels to New Jersey for an evening rally with Democratic gubernatorial nominee Mikie Sherrill in Newark. Both events put the nation's first Black president in areas where Black voter turnout is key for Democratic victories.

Virginia Republican nominee Winsome Earle-Sears, the current lieutenant governor, and New Jersey Republican Jack Ciattarelli, a former state lawmaker, have busy itineraries, as well.

The Virginia contest ensures the election of the first woman to lead the Commonwealth since its 1776 founding. If elected, Earle-Sears would be the first Black woman elected governor of any state.

Democratic Virginia House Speaker Don Scott brushed off questions about whether Obama was needed to help turn out Black voters who are key to Democrats' coalition of voters, saying his popularity spans racial lines.

“Black folks and white folks are inspired by his leadership. They’re inspired by the way that he governed himself,” said Scott, Virginia's first Black state House speaker.

Obama’s campaign swing affirms how popular the 64-year-old remains among his party’s base more than eight years removed from the White House. Yet it underscores Democrats' lack of current top leaders and surrogates, with Republicans holding all levers of federal power and a cadre of Democratic governors and lawmakers vying for status as national figures.

And, Scott's protests aside, the visit highlights pressure on Democrats to maximize their diverse coalition after Trump chipped away in 2024 at Democrats' usual advantages among Black and Hispanic voters. Trump lost Virginia and New Jersey but narrowed the margins in both states from his 2020 loss to Democrat Joe Biden. Republicans believe New Jersey, especially, is ripe to continue that trend for Ciattarelli.

Trump endorsed Ciattarelli and has said — without naming Earle-Sears — that he backs the GOP candidate for Virginia governor. The president conducted a phone rally for Ciattarelli. He has not campaigned in person for either nominee, despite traveling multiple times in recent months to his golfing resort in New Jersey.

That reflects the tightrope Republicans must walk: Trump remains intensely popular among the most conservative voters but has a more precarious standing with the rest of the electorate.

Spanberger and Sherrill have tried to capitalize.

“Jack won’t say one bad word about the president,” Sherrill charged in a debate with Ciattarelli.

Ciattarelli countered that “no matter who sits in the White House, my job is to stand up for the 9.3 million citizens of the state, and I will.” He then played up his Trump ties. “It’s best to have a relationship with whoever occupies the White House,” he said.

Earle-Sears aligns herself with the president, and according to AdImpact data, Spanberger's biggest advertising investment has gone to spots that try to tie Earle-Sears to Trump.

The lieutenant governor will lead GOP turnout rallies Saturday in Republican-rich small towns, first in Abingdon in the southwest corner of Virginia, then in Purceville, in the state’s northernmost reaches near the Pennsylvania border.

Ciattarelli has stops in Woodbridge, Westfield and Fairfield, an itinerary that puts him in the exurbs of Newark, then across the state in a considerably less densely populated, more Republican swath.

Spanberger and Sherrill, both center-left Democrats who helped the party retake the U.S. House in the 2018 midterms during Trump's first term, have emphasized economic arguments.

They've pledged to tackle rising consumer costs and blasted Trump for failing to reduce prices as he promised in the 2024 campaign. In New Jersey, however, Ciattarelli has blamed Democrats for higher energy costs because outgoing Gov. Phil Murphy has been leading the state for two terms.

The Democratic candidates have blasted the Republicans' federal domestic policy and tax cut bill. In Virginia, Spanberger has highlighted Trump's Department of Government Efficiency and, to a lesser degree, the ongoing federal shutdown — both of which have a disproportionate impact in a state that has more than 300,000 federal employees, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Earle-Sears has tried to pin the shutdown on Spanberger, arguing the former congresswoman should use her leverage with Virginia's Democratic U.S. senators. Both senators have voted against the GOP's spending extension bill as Democrats demand Republicans address looming health care cuts.

Additionally, the contests could offer some clues as to whether social issues carry any less weight with voters than in previous elections. Spanberger and Sherrill herald their support for abortion rights, Spanberger doing so in the last Southern state to make the procedure widely accessible. Earle-Sears counters with a focus on transgender policies, trying to frame Spanberger as out of step with mainstream voters in the same way Trump used the issue against Democrat Kamala Harris in 2024.

While results in Virginia and New Jersey will be mere guideposts for the 2026 midterms, California stands to have the most immediate impact on the national landscape.

Voters there are deciding whether to override a nonpartisan redistricting commission and approve a new congressional map that is intended to send five more Democrats to Washington.

It's a direct counter to neutralize Texas' plan, already approved, that was drawn to tilt five seats in that state to the Republican column. And more states have followed suit, putting the national map itself in flux in an unprecedented mid-decade scramble years after the usual post-census redistricting process.

Republicans began the current Congress with just a 220-215 advantage in the House. That means just a few seats could determine whether Trump enjoys outright GOP control in Washington for the duration of his presidency or faces a new Democratic majority that, if patterned after his first term, blocks his agenda, opens an investigation of his administration and considers articles of impeachment.


https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/obama-rally-democrats-virginia-new-jersey-weekend-campaign-127082414

Sunday talkies: Newsom, Duffy, Bessent, Fetterman, Cuomo, Huang, Sherrill, Ciattarelli

 NewsNation’s “The Hill Sunday”: Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), Virginia House Speaker Don Scott (D), Virginia Lt. Gov. candidate John Reid (R), Rep. Ami Bera (D-Calif.)

NBC’s “Meet the Press”: California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D)

CBS News’s “Face the Nation”: Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey (D), Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas), United Services Automobile Association (USAA) president and CEO Juan Andrade

CNN’s “State of the Union”: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.), former New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio (D), Rep. Buddy Carter (R-Ga.), former Obama administration and Biden campaign advisor Ashley Allison, Republican campaign strategist Kristin Davison

Fox News’s “Fox News Sunday”: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.)

Fox News’s “Sunday Morning Futures”: White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Nvidia president and CEO Jensen Huang, New York City independent mayoral candidate and former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), lawyer Mike Davis

ABC’s “This Week”: Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), New Jersey Democratic gubernatorial nominee and Rep. Mikie Sherrill (D-N.J.), New Jersey Republican gubernatorial nominee and former state Rep. Jack Ciattarelli (R-N.J.)

https://thehill.com/video-clips/sunday-shows/5584953-sunday-preview-snap-benefits-threatened-shutdown/