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Selective attention to attacks on health facilities undermines their protection

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  • Legal Standards: Hospitals maintain protected status under international law, which relies on consistent and impartial application to remain effective.
  • Data Discrepancies: World Health Organization reporting has been criticized for omitting missile threats against Israeli medical facilities while tracking incidents in Iran and Lebanon.
  • Militarization Concerns: Reports indicate that armed forces in various conflict zones have utilized health facilities and schools for military operations, complicating their protected status.
  • Reporting Bias: Analysis of humanitarian and human rights organizations reveals a tendency to emphasize attacks by specific state actors while downplaying or overlooking similar conduct by militia groups and regimes.
  • Verification Delays: Information regarding hospital raids and conflict-related violence appears to be inconsistently updated on public dashboards, often following public inquiry.
  • Systemic Oversight: Critics argue that the current humanitarian surveillance systems fail to adequately track or report the use of medical infrastructure for military purposes, such as interrogation or weapon storage.
  • Institutional Imbalance: Current organizational structures within global health bodies, specifically regarding regional directorate reporting, have been cited as a source of geographic reporting imbalances.
  • Proposed Reforms: Suggestions for restoring impartiality include establishing independent audit panels, increasing transparency in surveillance data, and formalizing dialogue with independent oversight organizations.

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Hospitals are protected under international law—but that protection is only as strong as its consistent and impartial application. When attacks on health care are investigated and reported selectively, the result is not just bias—it is a weakening of the norm itself.

A March 5th WHO press conference provides an example. It cited data of “13 attacks against health facilities in Iran and 1 in Lebanon” since the war began on February 28, 2026.

But there was no mention of the missile threats against health facilities in Israel, which promptly moved critical operations underground to avoid a repeat of devastation seen in June 2025, when an Iranian missile fell directly on the largest hospital in the country’s southern region, Soroka. Nor was there mention of Makassed Hospital in East Jerusalem allegedly having closed due to an Iranian missile attack. Nor was there mention of the use of cluster munitions by Iran, which is illegal under international law.

One question from a single media outlet highlighted the problem of selective focus.

Health Policy Watch asked whether WHO’s tracking of Iran had also included the multiple media reports of regime forces entering hospitals to arrest or even kill health workers and injured protestors during the protests of January-February 2026. And what about reports that since February 28, IRGC and Basij forces were embedding themselves in schools and hospitals to evade Israeli and US attack?

WHO’s Annette Heinzelmann responded that the organization had no information about the embedding of armed forces in health facilities since the war began on 28 February.

Regarding regime attacks on health care during the January protests, she said: “During the events you are alluding to, the situation was quite difficult. However, we were able to verify some of the incidents, and the information is available on the [WHO] dashboard on attacks on health care.”

It looks like these reports were posted to the WHO dashboard only days after the press conference and after Health Policy Watch followed up with a WHO spokesperson, who also noted that the Director-General had posted on X about the reported incidents.

(As of March 18, WHO has verified 28 attacks in Lebanon, 20 in Iran, and 2 in Israel.)

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Selective approach?

Emphasizing attacks on healthcare carried out by Israel and the United States – while downplaying raids and attacks by the Iranian regime — mimics the selective approach we saw in Gaza. There, the focus was on Israeli attacks on hospitals while the underlying militarization of many hospitals and ambulances in the Hamas-controlled healthcare network was largely overlooked.

Some of the most glaring examples include video footage of hostages being dragged through Al Shifa hospital on 7 and 8 October and former hostage Sharon Cunio describing to CNN’s Anderson Cooper how she and other hostages were held in Nasser hospital and transported in ambulances.

Since the Israel-Hamas ceasefire on October 10 2025, WHO has registered 27 attacks on health facilities in the ‘occupied Palestinian territory’ through its Surveillance System for Attacks on Health Care. Only 1 of these involved a report on the militarization of health care – even though there is evidence that Hamas militarization of healthcare continues until today.

Such selective attention goes back a long way. After the 1967 war WHO member states adopted a resolution to report annually on health conditions in the ‘occupied Palestinian territory and East Jerusalem.’ In practice this means a selective focus on Israel.

It is also not unique to WHO. I scanned press releases of human rights NGOs since the October 10 2025, ceasefire for mentions of Hamas or the Iranian regime in hospitals. Human Rights Watch had one mention (in more than 500 releases) of Iranian regime raids on hospitals. Amnesty International had one mention (in more than 200 releases) of Iranian regime arrests and denial of medical treatment in hospitals.

Militarizing hospitals

The selective approach often downplays the use of health facilities for military purposes. Militarizing hospitals puts patients and staff at risk. Militarized hospitals can lose their protection under international law, although a number of safeguards remain, such as warnings, precautions, and proportionality. In a sense, militarization is the ‘Achilles heel’ of protection — and deserves special attention.

What is interesting about militarization is this: at its core it’s an epistemological problem. You don’t find if you don’t look. What we have here is a humanitarian version of the oft quoted saying, ‘if a tree falls in the forest and there is no one around to hear it does it make a sound?’

In November 2025, after the October 10 ceasefire, Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib, a Gaza native and commentator who now lives in the US, posted, “Gaza’s torture dungeons are now in hospitals.” He went on to describe how Hamas ‘viciously’ interrogated his friend in the al-Nasser hospital in Khan Younis.

Médicins sans Frontieres (MSF) corroborated Hamas misuse of hospitals in a statement it issued about Nasser hospital in February 2026: “With an uptick since the ceasefire, MSF teams have reported a pattern of unacceptable acts, including the presence of armed men, intimidation, arbitrary arrests of patients, and a recent situation of suspicion of movement of weapons. These incidents pose serious security threats to our teams and patients.”

For some, this was reminiscent of the scene in Casablanca where the police chief says, “I am shocked, shocked to find there is gambling going on in here.” Or, as Alkhatib observed in an X post entitled “The Great Hospital Con”: “MSF is two years late to this recognition but it is ultimately confirming what even a child in southern Gaza could have told the organization or the NYT, Washington Post, BBC, Al Jazeera and countless others had they bothered to ask - which is that Hamas has literally turned Gaza’s three main hospitals into headquarters for security, ministerial, and administrative operations.”

Admittedly, Hamas in Gaza or the regime in Iran would not be rushing to report their own militarization of health facilities and would not take kindly to others doing so.

Impartiality

Selective attention calls into question the impartiality of humanitarian organizations and the objectivity of their reporting. It foments outrage against the US and Israel while shielding the cruel Iranian regime and Hamas terrorist group.

The fundamental problem is that selective attention undermines the very norm it is meant to uphold. Norms require us to regard transgressions as taboo. If some are ignored, the norm is eroded.

There are simple things humanitarian organizations could do. The March 5th press conference featured the regional director of EMRO (the WHO region in which Iran sits) but not the regional director of EURO (the WHO region in which Israel sits). Subsequent WHO situation reports have been issued by EMRO but not by EURO, thereby omitting Israel. This imbalance should be easy to correct.

Recommendations for improving data and transparency of the surveillance system have been put forward but not yet implemented. WHO could strike an independent expert panel to examine and improve the surveillance database, with a focus on impartiality, as I argued a year ago in the New York Times.

Dialogue with critical civil society organizations such as UN Watch or NGO Monitor could also help.

There are also lessons to be learned from other contexts — such as from the Dinah project about reporting the sexual violence of October 7th or institutional neutrality policies in US universities. Humanitarian organizations could take a page from the social auditing movement and set up an independent group to audit their activities for impartiality — although their boards would have to embrace this value.

Without humanitarian organizations re-committing to impartiality and taking more seriously the militarization playbook, the norm against attacks on health facilities will continue to erode and suffering will increase.

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Aakash Gupta on X: "Cursor is raising at a $50 billion valuation on the claim that its “in-house models generate more code than almost any other LLMs in the world.” Less than 24 hours after launching Composer 2, a developer found the model ID in the API response: kimi-k2p5-rl-0317-s515-fast. That’s" / X

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  • Valuation Discrepancy: Cursor is seeking a $50 billion valuation based on claims of proprietary in-house generative code models.
  • Model Provenance: API response headers identified Cursor's Composer 2 as a derivative of the Moonshot AI Kimi K2.5 model.
  • Licensing Requirements: Current usage exceeds the $20 million monthly revenue threshold, triggering mandatory Kimi K2.5 attribution under a Modified MIT License.
  • Previous Anomalies: The Composer 1 release previously exhibited internal monologues in Chinese and utilized uncredited open-weight fine-tuned models.
  • Internal Confirmation: Moonshot AI employees initially confirmed the technical alignment before subsequent retraction of those statements.
  • Benchmark Methodology: Performance comparisons against frontier models failed to disclose that base models were obtained without independent training costs.
  • Revenue Attribution: Cursor reports an annual recurring revenue of $2 billion, derived in part from technology utilizing modified external open-weight assets.
  • Industry Implications: The situation raises concerns regarding the sustainability of open-weight licensing models when entities leverage high-distribution platforms to rebrand existing technology.

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Cursor is raising at a $50 billion valuation on the claim that its “in-house models generate more code than almost any other LLMs in the world.” Less than 24 hours after launching Composer 2, a developer found the model ID in the API response: kimi-k2p5-rl-0317-s515-fast. That’s Moonshot AI’s Kimi K2.5 with reinforcement learning appended. A developer named Fynn was testing Cursor’s OpenAI-compatible base URL when the identifier leaked through the response headers. Moonshot’s head of pretraining, Yulun Du, confirmed on X that the tokenizer is identical to Kimi’s and questioned Cursor’s license compliance. Two other Moonshot employees posted confirmations. All three posts have since been deleted. This is the second time. When Cursor launched Composer 1 in October 2025, users across multiple countries reported the model spontaneously switching its inner monologue to Chinese mid-session. Kenneth Auchenberg, a partner at Alley Corp, posted a screenshot calling it a smoking gun. KR-Asia and 36Kr confirmed both Cursor and Windsurf were running fine-tuned Chinese open-weight models underneath. Cursor never disclosed what Composer 1 was built on. They shipped Composer 1.5 in February and moved on. The pattern: take a Chinese open-weight model, run RL on coding tasks, ship it as a proprietary breakthrough, publish a cost-performance chart comparing yourself against Opus 4.6 and GPT-5.4 without disclosing that your base model was free, then raise another round. That chart from the Composer 2 announcement deserves its own paragraph. Cursor plotted Composer 2 against frontier models on a price-vs-quality axis to argue they’d hit a superior tradeoff. What the chart doesn’t show is that Anthropic and OpenAI trained their models from scratch. Cursor took an open-weight model that Moonshot spent hundreds of millions developing, ran RL on top, and presented the output as evidence of in-house research. That’s margin arbitrage on someone else’s R&D dressed up as a benchmark slide. The license makes this more than an attribution oversight. Kimi K2.5 ships under a Modified MIT License with one clause designed for exactly this scenario: if your product exceeds $20 million in monthly revenue, you must prominently display “Kimi K2.5” on the user interface. Cursor’s ARR crossed $2 billion in February. That’s roughly $167 million per month, 8x the threshold. The clause covers derivative works explicitly. Cursor is valued at $29.3 billion and raising at $50 billion. Moonshot’s last reported valuation was $4.3 billion. The company worth 12x more took the smaller company’s model and shipped it as proprietary technology to justify a valuation built on the frontier lab narrative. Three Composer releases in five months. Composer 1 caught speaking Chinese. Composer 2 caught with a Kimi model ID in the API. A P0 incident this year. And a benchmark chart that compares an RL fine-tune against models requiring billions in training compute without disclosing the base was free. The question for investors in the $50 billion round: what exactly are you buying? A VS Code fork with strong distribution, or a frontier research lab? The model ID in the API answers that. If Moonshot doesn’t enforce this license against a company generating $2 billion annually from a derivative of their model, the attribution clause becomes decoration for every future open-weight release. Every AI lab watching this is running the same math: why open-source your model if companies with better distribution can strip attribution, call it proprietary, and raise at 12x your valuation? kimi-k2p5-rl-0317-s515-fast is the most expensive model ID leak in the history of AI licensing.

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Michelle Pfeiffer Makes It Look Easy. It Isn’t. - The New York Times

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  • Career Origins: Initial Professional Recognition Occurred Through Participation In Beauty Pageants Providing Access To Television Commercials And Recurring Acting Roles
  • Screen Presence: Performances Are Defined By A Combination Of Watchfulness And Emotional Tension Originating From Childhood Experiences
  • Work Ethic: Technical Approach To Acting Is Characterized By Intensive Preparation And Perfectionism Rather Than Ease Or Impromptu Execution
  • Prioritizing Family: Extended Periods Of Professional Absence Were Intentionally Chosen To Maintain Focus On Child Rearing And Household Stability
  • Television Expansion: Return To Major Television Projects Including The Madison And Margos Got Money Troubles Signals A Formal Shift Toward Small Screen Production
  • Collaborative Dynamics: Recent Professional Partnership With Husband And Producer David E Kelley Marks A Strategic Reversal Of Previous Independent Work Policies
  • Character Versatility: Portrayal Of Diverse Figures Ranges From The Stoic Matriarch Of A Wealthy Clan To A Working Class Striver In Suburban Settings
  • Professional Evolution: Current Efforts Aim To Balance Demanding Performance Standards With A Desire For Increased Personal Satisfaction And Reduced Obsessive Tendencies

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By Alexis Soloski

Visuals by Amy Harrity

Reporting from an unfairly sunny Santa Monica, Calif.

  • Published March 10, 2026Updated March 11, 2026

Leer en español

Imagine that you are born a sun-kissed California blonde.

As a teenage checkout girl, you decide to become an actress. You know no one in the entertainment industry, so you enter a beauty contest to catch an agent’s eye. You win. Within a year, you are on TV in soap commercials and bombshell roles. (That’s your character’s name on one show: The Bombshell. You call her Barbara.)

The movies come — bad ones, better ones. There are million-dollar paychecks, magazine covers, award nominations. You step away, for years at a time, to care for your young family. A decade goes by. Then two. You are a grandmother now, but still beloved, still desired. And the roles, the ones you choose with care, are still rich. Now you can relax, confident in your talent, your success.

Unless you are Michelle Pfeiffer. At 67, she is busier than ever, a movie queen lately reinvented as a small-screen star. She is also as unsettled as ever about her relationship to her work and how she goes about it.

Pfeiffer has not participated substantively in an ongoing series since the 1970s, but this spring she has two: “The Madison,” a lachrymose Taylor Sheridan drama that premieres on Saturday on Paramount+; and “Margo’s Got Money Troubles,” a screwy, sweet-hearted dramedy that debuts on April 15 on Apple TV. Both showcase an actress in expert command of her powers. Both prompted her typical unease.

ImageA woman holds her hands to her face as she wades into water in front of a cabin

In “The Madison,” Michelle Pfeiffer stars as a pampered Manhattan woman who travels to Montana after a tragedy.Credit...Emerson Miller/Paramount+

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A woman sits on a pink couch with a younger woman lying her head in her lap

In “Margo’s Got Money Troubles,” she portrays the mother of a struggling young woman, played by Elle Fanning.Credit...Apple TV

“I always go into a part with some trepidation, because I never quite know how I’m going to go about it,” she said over lunch. She sounded mildly regretful. “I’d love to be able to skate through some of these things.”

Skating is not in her repertory. “That’s why she is the actress that she is,” said Christina Alexandra Voros, who directed all of “The Madison.” “She has never sat back in any role in her career.”

Nearly five decades into that career, Pfeiffer is trying, falteringly, to learn different habits: to let go a little more, to vanish into her roles a little less, to resist an inclination to obsess.

“That’s not healthy,” she said. But that is all she has ever known. She seemed sincere in her desire to ease up on her perfectionism and unsure of the actress and the person she would be without it.

I met Pfeiffer on a cloudless February day at an unassuming Santa Monica restaurant. The restaurant’s interior was cool and otherwise deserted, which meant she could enjoy the relative anonymity she prefers. It had taken my eyes a little while to adjust to the dimness and longer to adjust to Pfeiffer, who has the kind of prettiness that makes a person dazed and squinty. I might as well have gone back outside and stared up at the sun.

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In a close-up, Michelle Pfeiffer stares at the camera from behind her hands.

“I always go into a part with some trepidation, because I never quite know how I’m going to go about it,” Pfeiffer said.

Pfeiffer has never been comfortable in trading on her beauty. She isn’t comfortable with press either. She tolerates interviews better than she used to, especially those for her fragrance company, Henry Rose. But talking about her work to a stranger is a very mild form of torture.

“It’s emotional,” she said. “I start to feel anxious about it, the exposure.”

During the meal, she was never less than gracious, sharing her vegetable sides, answering questions with what felt like real honesty. She was also palpably shy. I felt protective of her, even as I was aware that a star like her — a star who has played Catwoman! — does not need protecting. I’d never sat across from someone in whom such strength and such fragility collided.

If beauty (incontestable unless you are Pfeiffer, who has described her face as ducklike) explains some of the fascination she exerts onscreen, even more compelling is the emotive tension she brings to many of her characters, who feel deeply even as they try to protect and withhold those feelings. Acting began early for her. As a child in what she called “an unpredictable household,” she play-acted her personality, behaving in ways that she thought would keep her safe. In many of her best performances — in “Dangerous Liaisons” (1988) or “The Fabulous Baker Boys” (1989), say — there is a child’s watchfulness layered underneath, a child’s fear of hurt.

Pfeiffer has always been choosy about her roles: clockwise from top left, in “Dangerous Liaisons”; in “The Fabulous Baker Boys”; with Robert De Niro in “The Wizard of Lies”; with Danny DeVito in "Batman Returns.”Credit...Warner Bros. (“Dangerous Liaisons” and “Batman Returns”); Craig Blankenhorn/HBO ("The Wizard of Lies”); 20th Century Fox (“The Fabulous Barker Boys”)

Her attitude toward her work has always been a dance of approach and avoidance. After those early bombshell years, she was vigilant about the parts she took. (An agent nicknamed her Dr. No.) By the 2000s, married to the prolific writer and producer David E. Kelley and a mother to two young children, she became even more careful, declining offers that would disrupt family life. She loved motherhood and was grateful for how it blunted her tendency to obsess over her work.

“It forces you out of your narcissism,” she said. “I was a much happier person when I became a mom.”

Once both children were in college, she returned more fully to acting. The offers had been there before, but many were unappealing, “evil stepmother or parts that just felt very demeaning to women,” she said. Now there were a few that felt better.

In 2017 she took her first major TV role in decades, as Ruth Madoff, the wife of the convicted financial scammer Bernie Madoff in the HBO film “The Wizard of Lies.” Several movies quickly followed.

Why return at all when she had such mixed feelings about the industry and how it treated women, particularly older women? Because even as motherhood has been a respite from work, work had been a respite, too, from the preoccupations of an overactive mind.

“It has been such a gift and got me through so many things,” she said. “I’m just better busy.”

Image

Michelle Pfeiffer wears a tan jacket and gray shirt and stares at the camera.

Motherhood tempered Pfeiffer’s tendency to obsess over work. “I was a much happier person when I became a mom,” she said.

She is very busy now, particularly in “The Madison,” which Sheridan wrote for her. “I needed a woman with a real internal strength as well as a very deep emotional well,” Sheridan wrote in an email. Pfeiffer had that.

Pfeiffer plays Stacy Clyburn, the matriarch of a wealthy Manhattan clan who decamps to Montana after a personal tragedy. Both Pfeiffer and Stacy are self-described city mice, and both benefit from long, loving marriages. But Pfeiffer had trouble with the part. She often begins by finding a thread of something in her own life that she can connect to the character. With the pampered Stacy, who learns self-sufficiency while wearing silk pajamas, she struggled to find that string.

Was she really struggling or was this her perfectionism talking? Certainly, some co-stars observed greater ease.

Beau Garrett and Elle Chapman, who play Stacy’s daughters, marveled at Pfeiffer’s naturalness in character and assuredness on set. “She has a gravitas to her,” Garrett said. “People just quiet down when she’s around.” She added that it was a privilege to be yelled at by Pfeiffer in fraught family scenes. This was echoed by Chapman.

“She has a gaze that can completely level you,” she said admiringly.

But the naturalness doesn’t come naturally, or at least not entirely. Kurt Russell, who plays Stacy’s husband, previously worked with Pfeiffer on the dubious 1988 thriller “Tequila Sunrise.”

“It looks effortless, but it’s not at all effortless,” he said in an interview.

Sheridan also saw the cost. “I honestly don’t know how Michelle was able to access that level of emotion take after take, and day after day,” he said. “An actor of her talent and skill could have easily pulled any number of tricks out of her basket, but she didn’t. Not once. She forced herself to embrace the suffering.”

“The Madison” shot two six-episode seasons, about a year apart. In between, Pfeiffer shot the first season of “Margo’s Got Money Troubles,” based on the celebrated Rufi Thorpe novel. The show is about a young woman, Margo (Elle Fanning), who becomes unexpectedly pregnant and then supports herself as a cam girl. Pfeiffer plays Shyanne, Margo’s mother, a former Hooters waitress now engaged to a youth minister.

Image

Michelle Pfeiffer wears a tan jacket and gray shirt and tucks her mouth behind her collar.

Kelley created the series. It is Pfeiffer’s first meaningful collaboration with him since she played a part in his 1996 film “To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday.”

This was by choice. When they were first married, in 1993, appearing on a TV series, Kelley’s typical domain, would have been a career embarrassment. Besides, Pfeiffer said, “When I come home from work and I’ve had a bad day, I want him to be on my side. I want him to believe my version.” That trumped co-working.

But television is no longer the comedown it used to be. And when Kelley read the novel, he knew that for Shyanne he needed an actress who could be both despicable and lovable, who could credibly say a line like “I’m just terrible at everything except being pretty,” who could command sympathy even as she repelled it.

“I really just couldn’t see anyone else but her playing Shyanne,” Kelley said in an interview.

In the book, Shyanne appears only briefly, so Pfeiffer agreed, not knowing that the role would be expanded to include scenes of department-store humiliation and bachelorette-party high jinks. If she wrestled with Stacy’s elegance on “The Madison,” Shyanne’s pleather and grit were closer to hand. Pfeiffer, who grew up in Orange County, not far from where Shyanne lives, had known plenty of people like her, strivers who were dealt lousy hands and played them the best they could.

“It didn’t take a lot for me to step into those shoes,” Pfeiffer said.

Fanning, who first worked with Pfeiffer on the 2001 weepie “I Am Sam,” marveled at the “astounding balance of fight and vulnerability” that Pfeiffer brought to the role, as well as a gift for spontaneity. “When you watch Michelle, you never know which way she’s going to play it,” Fanning wrote in an email.

Pfeiffer feels good about these recent shows — as good as she allows herself to feel, at least. (And Kelley confirmed that so far their marriage has survived.) She has always disappeared into her roles, but this time, because she was going back and forth between projects and taking time out to visit her husband and her daughter and granddaughter, she couldn’t do her usual vanishing act. She doesn’t think the work has suffered.

“If you’re going to survive, you’re going have to figure out a way to do this and enjoy your life and not disappear,” she said. She sounded confident. This was toward the end of the interview, and she had exposed herself enough. A few minutes later she slipped away into the restaurant’s shadows and then back out into the sun.

Alexis Soloski has written for The Times since 2006. As a culture reporter, she covers television, theater, movies, podcasts and new media.

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The Supreme Court Restores Parents to Their Proper Place // The decision in Mirabelli v. Bonta blocks California’s gender-transition secrecy rules.

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  • Judicial turn: Supreme Court lifted Ninth Circuit stay in Mirabelli v. Bonta, highlighting parental involvement in gender-transition decisions.
  • California policy: Public schools were barred from notifying parents when students adopt new gender identities without child consent.
  • Constitutional claims: Court found parents likely to succeed under Free Exercise and parental-rights protections, triggering strict scrutiny.
  • Precedent cited: Opinion relied on Pierce and Meyer to reaffirm longstanding parental authority in education and mental-health decisions.
  • Mental health concern: Court noted gender dysphoria’s impact and characterized concealed transitions as likely unconstitutional.
  • Mahmoud precedent: Supreme Court rejected Ninth Circuit’s narrow reading, reaffirming that gender-identity instruction can burden religious exercise.
  • Concurrence view: Barrett, Roberts, and Kavanaugh saw no novel issues, emphasizing Dobbs didn’t erode parental-rights precedents.
  • Broader impact: Manhattan Institute highlighted national litigation on similar policies and signaled Court’s readiness to clarify constitutional boundaries.

The Supreme Court’s Tuesday decision in Mirabelli v. Bonta marks a turning point in the fight over whether public schools may socially transition gender-dysphoric children without informing their parents. In lifting the Ninth Circuit’s stay of a district court injunction against California’s parental-exclusion policies, the Court has signaled that parents are more than just bystanders in the upbringing of their own children.

At issue were California policies that prohibit public schools from informing parents if their child adopts a new gender identity at school, unless the child consents to his or her parents being told. The state instructed teachers to use new names and pronouns and to withhold information about those changes from parents, even upon the parents’ request. Both parents and teachers challenged these rules as violations of the First Amendment’s Free Exercise Clause and the Fourteenth Amendment’s protection of parental rights.

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The Court’s unsigned opinion concluded that the parents are likely to succeed on the merits, meaning their constitutional claims are presumptively valid. California’s policies, it explained, trigger strict scrutiny—the highest standard of judicial review—because they “substantially interfere with the rights of parents to guide the religious development of their children.” The parents in this case hold religious beliefs about sex and gender. By facilitating social transition at school while cutting out parents, the state’s policy imposes “the kind of burden on religious exercise that Yoder [Wisconsin v. Yoder, an important precedent] found unacceptable.”

The Court was equally clear about the constitutional significance of parental rights. Citing Pierce v. Society of Sisters and Meyer v. Nebraska, the opinion reaffirmed that parents possess a longstanding right “to direct the upbringing and education of children under their control.”

That right includes participation in consequential decisions affecting a child’s mental health. Gender dysphoria, the Court noted, “is a condition that has an important bearing on a child’s mental health,” and California’s policy “facilitates a degree of gender transitioning during school hours,” while concealing that fact from parents. Such a regime likely violates the Constitution.

Importantly, the Court rejected the Ninth Circuit’s cramped reading of last year’s decision in Mahmoud v. Taylor, which held that public schools burden parents’ religious exercise when they require children to participate in instruction involving gender-identity materials without opt-outs. The lower court had dismissed Mahmoud as a “narrow decision.” The Supreme Court disagreed, explaining that California’s policies “likely will not survive the strict scrutiny that is required.”

Parents advocate for religious rights outside the Supreme Court during arguments in Mahmoud v. Taylor in 2025. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s concurrence, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh, underscored that this case involves nothing novel. The parents “are likely to succeed on the merits under a straightforward application” of established precedent. Barrett also dismantled the dissent’s suggestion that Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization (the case that overturned Roe v. Wade) undermined parental-rights doctrine. Dobbs rejected the freewheeling expansion of unenumerated rights untethered from history and tradition. It did not call into question deeply rooted precedents, like Pierce and Meyer, that protect parental authority in education and childrearing.

Justice Elena Kagan’s dissent, joined by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson—Justice Sonia Sotomayor also dissented but didn’t join Kagan’s opinion—criticized the Court for acting on its so-called emergency docket, claiming that the majority “already knows what it thinks.” But interim relief requires courts to assess the likelihood of success. As Barrett noted, when the balance of equities strongly favors one side and constitutional rights are at stake, granting relief is hardly radical.

Though it’s an abbreviated ruling at the interim-relief stage, the broader significance of Mirabelli is profound: we may in retrospect call this moment Mirabelli dictu. Across the country, school districts have adopted policies that treat parents as obstacles rather than partners in education. Some educators insist that concealing a child’s gender transition is necessary for the child’s safety. But the Constitution doesn’t permit the state to displace parents’ moral and medical authority based on ideological disagreement.

The Manhattan Institute has been at the forefront of this debate. We’ve filed amicus briefs in cases challenging similar parental-exclusion policies nationwide, including Foote v. Ludlow School Committee and Littlejohn v. Leon County School Board—both now the subject of certiorari petitions before the Supreme Court. In those cases, as in Mirabelli, parents allege that schools socially transitioned their children without notice or consent.

The tide is turning, the constitutional questions are converging, and the Court appears increasingly prepared to provide clarity.

Ilya Shapiro is director of constitutional studies at the Manhattan Institute, contributing editor to City Journal, and senior counsel to Burke Law Group PLLC. He is also the author of Lawless: The Miseducation of America’s Elites, and the Shapiro’s Gavel newsletter.

Top Photo by Alex WROBLEWSKI / AFP via Getty Images

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How to end the Iran war // The Revolutionary Guards threat must be crushed

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  • Resource Misallocation: The Iranian regime has prioritized the mass production of ballistic missiles and drones over critical domestic infrastructure, specifically ignoring severe water shortages and failing power grids in major cities.
  • Financial Facilitation: The Obama administration’s 2016 transfer of $1.7 billion, coinciding with the implementation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), provided the regime with significant liquidity that was subsequently directed toward military expansion.
  • Strategic Failures: The JCPOA failed to halt nuclear enrichment activities, instead providing the regime with increased oil revenues that were utilized to expand centrifuge capacity at facilities like Natanz and Fordow.
  • Growth of the IRGC: The Revolutionary Guards expanded their influence and military arsenal by capturing an increasing share of national oil revenues, often dismissing internal warnings from regional neighbors regarding their aggressive regional ambitions.
  • Public Neglect: Due to the sustained focus on military capabilities, Iran suffers from chronic underinvestment that has brought urban centers to the brink of crisis, with many citizens facing potential displacement due to desertification and lack of water access.
  • Security Necessity: The ongoing military efforts to neutralize Iranian drone and missile manufacturing capabilities are viewed as critical defensive measures to protect regional energy assets and critical infrastructure from persistent threats.

Since October 2023, Iran has launched more than 1,000 ballistic missiles against Israel — and many more against its Gulf Arab neighbors. It has also launched thousands of drones, sending more than 1,500 toward the United Arab Emirates alone. How did the Islamic Republic accumulate such vast inventories of expensive weapons? And expensive they are: drones would only be cheap, as the media keeps claiming, if their number were not so large, while ballistic missiles are necessarily expensive because of their size. Iranian Shahab-3 missiles weigh 16 tons, while Korramshahrs come in at 25.

Just as with any other feat of accumulation, this too is the result of disciplined persistence. In the regime’s case, that meant allocating Iran’s limited foreign-currency earnings to what really mattered: not waterworks against desertification, not gas pipelines to bring cheap gas to the cities, not desalination plants to overcome water shortages even in Tehran, but rather the production of very large numbers of long-range missiles to attack Israel and other countries.

This enormous industrial effort has been underway for years, yet it was greatly accelerated by the transfer of $1.7 billion to Iran by the Obama administration. Officially, this was merely an overdue refund for canceled military orders dating back to the time of the Shah. But the payment’s first installment — $400 million in stacked banknotes — was sent on 17 January, 2016. This just happened to coincide with the release of several Americans from Iranian captivity, and the coming into effect of Obama’s grand diplomatic achievement: the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

In those early weeks of 2016, one would hear the initials “J-C-P-O-A” proudly enunciated by Obama staffers even at lowkey Washington gatherings. Why? Because, its supporters claimed, the deal would definitively end Iran’s efforts to acquire nuclear weapons. It limited Iran’s uranium-235 enrichment to just 3.67%, with dangerous levels only kicking in at 60%. Iran was also permitted a meager 300 kilos of nuclear material.

But for Robert Malley, head of Obama’s Iran team, this technical win was outweighed by a more emotionally satisfying achievement. Having grown up in a household where Algeria’s FLN nationalists were much celebrated, and where traditional Arab rulers and Israel were greatly deplored, Malley hoped the JCPOA would stop US-Iran frictions. That, in turn, would allow Obama to finally sideline both the embarrassing Saudis — with their over-the-top gold-bathtub polygamy — and the insufficiently humble but very demanding Israelis.

Given those tacit but clear preferences, one can understand why Obama disregarded all Saudi warnings about the Revolutionary Guards. This was a Shia supremacist organization, but its long-term plan was nonetheless to become the hero of all Arabs, Sunnis included, by defeating Israel and taking the Temple Mount. Mecca itself was another aim. Meanwhile, US diplomats in Saudi Arabia — who reported that Iranians arriving for the Mecca pilgrimage were seemingly eager to assert themselves by picking quarrels — were dismissed as having gone native.

Israel was worried too. It noted that the Revolutionary Guards were taking a rising proportion of Iran’s oil revenue — itself increased by the JCPOA — to build more missiles, to increase their number of U-235 separation centrifuges, and to expand both their own forces and those of auxiliaries abroad. Those warnings were too well-documented to be dismissed out of hand. Yet nothing was done, for action would have spoiled Obama’s great diplomatic success.

To be fair, Obama was not responsible for what happened next. After the JCPOA removed all export restrictions on Iran, the country’s hard-currency earnings from oil exports rose. The Revolutionary Guards swiftly demanded an even larger share of the total, even after oil prices started to dip.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran’s president from 2005 to 2013, and who was famous for his slogan about the sofreh — the traditional tablecloths of modest households, focusing attention on the needs of Iran’s poor — seems to have complained. But Qasem Soleimani and the Revolutionary Guards were in the ascendancy with Ayatollah Khamenei. So while Ahmadinejad was set aside, the Revolutionary Guards claimed an increasing share of Iran’s oil revenues.

It was then that the Natanz complex was hugely expanded to accommodate two immense centrifuge cascades, of 25,000 centrifuges each, while an entire separate centrifuge cascade was installed deep underground at Fordow. Meanwhile, a weaponization facility was established in Isfahan, to go with one at the Parchim base near Tehran.

I have never heard a convincing explanation for these projects: far more than needed even for many bombs, let alone civilian electricity production, and especially in a country with unlimited natural gas. Corruption is hard to prove in a dictatorship with so much oil money sloshing around. But even here, graft cannot always stay hidden. When Mossad killed the chief nuclear scientist of the Revolutionary Guards in November 2020 — using a remote-controlled machine gun placed inside a parked Nissan van — he was being driven on his hour-long twice-daily commute from Tehran to Absard: a fashionable hill town where rich Iranians go to escape the capital’s pollution. Families without personal chauffeurs tend to visit Absard only on weekends, and generally settle for simple lodgings. But this nuclear scientist seems to have been unusually wealthy by Iranian standards.

At the same time, the Revolutionary Guards also spent immense sums on ballistic missile fuel and other components — including the multiple “cluster” warheads now causing much damage in Israel. The sheer scale of Iran’s missile production is itself amazing too, with 3,000 the low estimate for the longer-range types targeting Tel Aviv and other Israeli cities.

All the same, neither Israel nor any other country has been as harmed by the Revolutionary Guards as Iran itself. Because the Islamic Republic has overspent its oil export earnings — not at all huge for a country of 90 million — it has neglected to make investments elsewhere. Especially urgent is water supply, needed for major cities including Tehran, whose 13 million inhabitants now face the possibility of desertification-driven evacuation. Mashhad, with three million inhabitants and Iran’s second-largest city, is in the same predicament. Located near the Afghan border, its problems are aggravated by Taliban dam building, as are many smaller cities, including ancient Yazd with its Zoroastrian eternal flame.

“Neither Israel nor any other country has been as harmed by the Revolutionary Guards as Iran itself.”

What all these places desperately need is a new supply of desalinated seawater, pumped all the way from the Persian Gulf. With three times as much natural gas as the US, Iran could produce all the water it needs, just as Israel is doing — but that would have required vast investments starting decades ago. Iran’s grossly insufficient electrical supply is another victim of Revolutionary Guard overspending, with frequent power cuts whenever temperatures fall and more heating is needed.

We keep being told that Iran’s population cannot liberate itself for the simple reason Trotsky long ago identified: popular insurgency could conquer the Bastille in 1789, but by the Twenties Trotsky’s Red Army had Maxim machine guns that could mow down any number of demonstrators. Iran’s Basij and Revolutionary Guards have done just that, and can do so again.

That being true, the US-Israeli war still has a purpose: to destroy Iran’s missile and drone factories and inventories. For as long as they exist, they will permanently threaten the Gulf states, just as they have already closed the world’s largest airport in Dubai, and which continue to menace water-desalination plants in Qatar and oil-separation facilities in Saudi Arabia.

Whatever their leaders say in public, nobody of consequence on the western side of the Gulf wants Trump or the Israelis to stop undoing the damage that began with Obama’s once-celebrated JCPOA. That deal, it is now clear to see, did not stop nuclear enrichment towards the bomb — and indeed accelerated every other danger emanating from the Islamic Republic.


Professor Edward Luttwak is a strategist and historian known for his works on grand strategy, geoeconomics, military history, and international relations.

ELuttwak

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Stablecoin issuer Tether has so much cash that it's becoming a VC - PitchBook

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  • Corporate Evolution: Tether Is Utilizing Excess Cash Reserves To Invest In Diverse Non Crypto Startups And Traditional Businesses
  • Strategic Objective: Venture Investments Aim To Expand Global Commerce Usage And Adopt Tether Stablecoin Infrastructure
  • Market Dominance: The Firm Operates As The Largest Stablecoin Issuer With Over One Hundred Eighty Billion Tokens In Circulation
  • Investment Portfolio: Financial Holdings Exceed Twenty Billion Dollars Derived From Profitable Operational Activities Independent Of Customer Reserves
  • Diverse Interests: Capital Deployments Span Sectors Such As Health Technology Sustainable Agriculture Humanoid Robotics And Professional Sports
  • Leadership Transition: Chief Investment Officer Transition Occurs Amidst Ongoing Management Of Significant Treasury And Gold Reserve Positions
  • Financial Performance: The Organization Reported Over Ten Billion Dollars In Profits During Twenty Twenty Five Supported By Extensive United States Treasury Holdings
  • Market Context: Crypto Focused Firms Are Increasingly Diverting Capital Toward Broader Startups Surpassing Traditional Industry Focused Venture Spending

Stablecoin issuer Tether, flush with cash, has a new pastime: investing in other companies, including in Eight Sleep, which makes a popular smart mattress.

Tether is going beyond the usual corporate VC playbook of investing in nascent upstarts using its technology or in direct business partners. Instead, it seems to be putting its piles of cash to work in creative ways amid the currently depressed cryptocurrency markets.

“Tether has more money than it knows what to do with,” a crypto industry investor told PitchBook.

While perplexing at first thought, Tether’s VC activities suggest it’s playing a long game. Investing off its own balance sheet, the bet is that the firm’s checks—directly or indirectly—will pull more commerce and partners toward its stablecoin, USDT, according to two industry insiders and one person familiar with the company’s strategy.

In other words, it’s less of a detour and more of an attempt to widen the universe of businesses willing to use stablecoins.

Tether, founded in 2014, is the world’s largest stablecoin issuer by a wide margin. The USDT token, designed to trade in tandem with the dollar, has a circulating supply of more than $180 billion. Next largest is USDC, a dollar-pegged stablecoin issued by Circle, with a circulating supply of about $79 billion.

Tether has raised about $600 million in total and was valued at $12 billion in November 2024, according to PitchBook data. In September, it was in talks to raise new funding at a $500 billion valuation, Bloomberg reported.

Tether recently disclosed that its investment portfolio is worth more than $20 billion, including bets beyond its venture checks. The company says its VC investments are funded from excess profits off its balance sheet, not customer funds, and do not count toward Tether’s USDT reserves.

“We believe technology can serve as the foundation of a more stable society by expanding access to modern financial systems, communications infrastructure, energy, and intelligence for the billions of people who remain underserved by traditional financial institutions and large technology platforms,” the company said in a statement to PitchBook about its venture investments.

Tether isn’t the only VC-backed crypto company to back non-crypto startups, but the trend has sharpened recently.

So far in 2026, VC-backed crypto companies have invested $1.4 billion in startups outside the industry, more than twice the $600 million they invested in crypto-focused startups, according to PitchBook data.

On Wednesday, Tether announced that chief investment officer Richard Heathcote is stepping down for personal reasons and will be replaced by deputy CIO Zachary Lyons. Heathcote oversaw the management of Tether’s reserves—including large positions in US Treasurys and gold—as well as the company’s unusual VC investments.

Heathcote, who was previously a trader at BGC Group in London, joined Tether as CIO in 2023 after working for a bank with which Tether did business.

Tether connects its VC dots

While some of Tether’s checks are easier to map to stablecoin use cases, others—like its investment in Eight Sleep—are less straightforward.

Tether said the sleep tech startup would benefit from an AI healthtech platform it is building. And Tether said that its backing of South American landowner Adecoagro “reflects the importance of sustainable agriculture and food production.” It’s also invested in humanoid robotics company Generative Bionics, as well as <a href="http://Gold.com" rel="nofollow">Gold.com</a>.

And it’s not stopping at technology. Tether acquired a minority stake in Italian football club Juventus in February 2025 and later submitted a proposal to acquire the club in a deal valued at more than $1 billion. The bid was rejected.

At the same time, it’s made some more typical VC investments, such as fintech startup Whop, which agreed to offer Tether’s stablecoin technology as an option for its transactions. Similarly, Tether recently disclosed its investment in bitcoin infrastructure startup Ark Labs’ $5.2 million round. It’s also invested in Axiym, a startup using blockchain tech for treasury solutions, cross-border payment processing and settlement.

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Its fundamental business has faced some challenges over the years. In 2021, Tether came under fire for opacity around its reserve assets, including investing reserves in illiquid assets. In response, the company has begun publishing quarterly reports and said it’s since bolstered its reserves.

S&P Global Ratings downgraded to “weak” Tether’s ability to maintain its 1:1 USDT backing in late 2025, citing volatility in its bitcoin reserves.

Still, the company disclosed profits of more than $10 billion in 2025, with $6.3 billion in excess reserves and record US Treasury holdings of $141 billion.

“I know everyone is all hyped about AI, but I don’t know any AI company that made that much of a profit last year,” one crypto investor said, adding that “they just have so much money that they’ve turned into something like a massive holding company.”

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