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Tue, 10 Feb 2026 10:45:00 +0000 Do People Trust The Media Or Government More?
Do People Trust The Media Or Government More?
Trust in institutions shapes how societies function—from whether people follow public health guidance to whether they believe election results. Yet confidence in governments and the medi
Read more.....
Do People Trust The Media Or Government More?
Trust in institutions shapes how societies function—from whether people follow public health guidance to whether they believe election results. Yet confidence in governments and the media has diverged sharply across countries.
This visualization, via Visual Capitalist's Niccolo Conte, shows whether people trust the media or the government more, based on responses from nearly 34,000 people across dozens of countries.
The data comes from the 2026 Edelman Trust Barometer . Respondents were asked whether they trust the government and the media to “do what is right.”
High Government Trust in the Middle East and Asia
Countries such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE, China, and Singapore show higher trust in government than in media.
Saudi Arabia tops the list, with an 89% government trust score compared to 66% for media—a 23-point gap.
Country
Government Trust Score
Media Trust Score
Media or Govt
???? Saudi Arabia
89
66
Govt
???? UAE
86
74
Govt
???? China
86
81
Govt
???? Singapore
76
60
Govt
???? India
75
65
Govt
???? Malaysia
72
65
Govt
???? Indonesia
68
76
Media
???? Sweden
59
46
Govt
???? Nigeria
59
70
Media
???? Thailand
57
67
Media
???? Netherlands
57
58
Media
???? Australia
53
45
Govt
???? Canada
52
51
Govt
???? South Korea
50
40
Govt
???? Kenya
47
70
Media
???? Argentina
47
44
Govt
???? Brazil
45
52
Media
???? Mexico
43
57
Media
???? Ireland
43
43
Equal
???? Germany
42
46
Media
???? Italy
41
49
Media
???? United States
39
44
Media
???? Japan
37
33
Govt
???? United Kingdom
36
39
Media
???? Spain
35
43
Media
???? Colombia
34
45
Media
???? South Africa
33
50
Media
???? France
30
40
Media
Media Trusted More in Many Western Democracies
In much of Europe and the Americas, trust tilts toward the media rather than the government.
Countries like France, Spain, the U.S., and the UK all show higher media trust scores, even though overall trust levels are relatively low .
France stands out at the bottom of the ranking, with just 30% trusting the government versus 40% trusting the media.
Large Trust Gaps Signal Institutional Tension
Kenya shows the largest pro-media gap, with media trusted by 70% compared to just 47% for government.
Conversely, Sweden, Japan, and South Korea lean more toward government trust, though with lower absolute scores than high-trust countries in Asia or the Middle East. Ireland is the lone country where trust in media and government is equal.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Trump Trade Shake-Up: Which Countries Are Winning Vs. Losing? on Voronoi , the new app from Visual Capitalist.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 05:45 Close
Tue, 10 Feb 2026 10:00:00 +0000 "Today, We Are Preparing For War": French Defense Chief Says Europe Has Until 2030, Cites Russia As Biggest Threat
"Today, We Are Preparing For War": French Defense Chief Says Europe Has Until 2030, Cites Russia As Biggest Threat
"Today, We Are Preparing For War": French Defense Chief Says Europe Has Until 2030, Cites Russia As Biggest Threat
Via Remix News,
France and Europe have four years to prepare for war, said Fabien Mandon, chief of the defense staff of the French Armed Forces, who cited Russia as Europe’s biggest threat.
His speech at a major naval conference outlined that France, as well as its allies, must take into account that this war will break out in the near future and that the French military must be ready by 2030.
“Today, we are preparing for war,” he said, according to BreakingDefense .
During his speech at the naval conference, Mandon stated that France is not prepared for war and the country had “an insufficient number of ships and armaments.”
He stated the nation needs “more missiles with greater range and lethality.”
Mandon recently made headlines for stating that Europeans and the French must be ready to lose children in a war, stating:
“You have to accept that you will lose your children,” which is necessary to defeat Russia during a November speech at the National Congress of French Mayors.
His words caused national shock, while the representatives of the parliamentary parties protested sharply in connection with his comment.
As in November, he named Russia as the main source of the threat of war.
Read more here...
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 05:00 Close
Tue, 10 Feb 2026 09:15:00 +0000 Mapping The Global Cost Of Living In 2026
Mapping The Global Cost Of Living In 2026
How does the cost of living vary across countries in 2026?
To find out, this graphic, vi
Read more.....
Mapping The Global Cost Of Living In 2026
How does the cost of living vary across countries in 2026?
To find out, this graphic, via Visual Capitalist's Dorothy Neufeld, visualizes Numbeo’s Global Cost of Living Index, which measures the price of everyday expenses, including rent, relative to New York City (baseline of 100).
If a country has an index score of 80, prices are 20% lower than in New York. Scores above 100 indicate higher everyday costs.
While inflation has eased in many regions, the cost of living remains a major global challenge. Across 28 countries, home prices have risen more than 50% since 2020, and grocery costs have risen sharply in countries such as Mexico, Germany, and Malaysia, continuing to strain household budgets worldwide.
Global Cost of Living by Country
Below, we show the cost of living index for 155 countries or territories in 2026, highlighting stark differences in everyday costs around the world.
Bermuda has the highest cost of living worldwide, a British Overseas Territory synonymous with high-end real estate, luxury tourism, and offshore wealth.
Rank Country Cost of Living Index 2026
1 ???? Bermuda 123.5
2 ???? Cayman Islands 97.9
3 ???? Switzerland 84.3
4 ???? U.S. Virgin Islands 82.5
5 ???? Singapore 81.2
6 ???? Bahamas 77.1
7 ???? Iceland 75.9
8 ???? Jersey 72.5
9 ???? Hong Kong 69.8
10 ???? Solomon Islands 65.4
11 ???? Guernsey 65.3
12 ???? Luxembourg 65.2
13 ???? Gibraltar 63.9
14 ???? Norway 59.4
15 ???? Ireland 58.7
16 ???? Israel 58
17 ???? Netherlands 57.9
18 ???? Denmark 56.6
19 ???? United States 56.3
20 ???? Isle Of Man 55.7
21 ???? Australia 52.7
22 ???? United Kingdom 51.9
23 ???? Austria 50.7
24 ???? Grenada 49.4
25 ???? Germany 49
26 ???? Canada 48.9
27 ???? Belgium 48.6
28 ???? United Arab Emirates 48.2
29 ???? Finland 48
30 ???? Seychelles 48
31 ???? Sweden 47.8
32 ???? France 47.5
33 ???? Macao (China) 46.3
34 ???? Qatar 45.8
35 ???? Andorra 45.2
36 ???? New Zealand 45
37 ???? Cyprus 44.6
38 ???? Puerto Rico 44.3
39 ???? Malta 44.1
40 ???? Italy 43.1
41 ???? Democratic Republic of the Congo 42.4
42 ???? South Korea 41.3
43 ???? Estonia 40.5
44 ???? Papua New Guinea 39.2
45 ???? Slovenia 39.1
46 ???? Spain 39
47 ???? Guyana 39
48 ???? Jamaica 38.7
49 ???? Czech Republic 38.6
50 ???? Costa Rica 38.3
51 ???? Portugal 38.3
52 ???? Maldives 38.1
53 ???? Uruguay 37.3
54 ???? Croatia 37.1
55 ???? Greece 36
56 ???? Bahrain 35.9
57 ???? Panama 35.6
58 ???? Senegal 35.5
59 ???? Lithuania 35.3
60 ???? Trinidad And Tobago 35.2
61 ???? Slovakia 35.2
62 ???? Ivory Coast 34.5
63 ???? Angola 34.5
64 ???? Poland 34.4
65 ???? Latvia 34.3
66 ???? Taiwan 33.9
67 ???? Brunei 33.6
68 ???? Kuwait 33.3
69 ???? Japan 32.8
70 ???? Hungary 32.3
71 ???? Yemen 32
72 ???? Belize 32
73 ???? Albania 31.7
74 ???? Mexico 31.5
75 ???? Ethiopia 31.3
76 ???? Cameroon 31.1
77 ???? Montenegro 31
78 ???? Palestine 30.9
79 ???? Saudi Arabia 30.4
80 ???? Oman 30
81 ???? Cape Verde 29.6
82 ???? Serbia 29.5
83 ???? Lebanon 29.5
84 ???? Armenia 29.5
85 ???? Guatemala 29.5
86 ???? El Salvador 29.4
87 ???? Cuba 28.3
88 ???? Argentina 28.3
89 ???? Suriname 28.2
90 ???? Bulgaria 28
91 ???? Romania 27.8
92 ???? Turkey 27.6
93 ???? Dominican Republic 27.4
94 ???? Thailand 27.2
95 ???? Chile 26.8
96 ???? Fiji 26.7
97 ???? South Africa 26.4
98 ???? Namibia 26.4
99 ???? Moldova 26.4
100 ???? Mauritius 26.1
101 ???? Myanmar 26
102 ???? Mozambique 25.9
103 ???? Honduras 25.7
104 ???? Russia 25.7
105 ???? Nigeria 25.5
106 ???? Jordan 25.3
107 ???? Mongolia 25.1
108 ???? Bosnia And Herzegovina 25
109 ???? Zimbabwe 24.2
110 ???? Venezuela 24
111 ???? Georgia 24
112 ???? Cambodia 23.7
113 ???? Ghana 23.7
114 ???? Peru 23.6
115 ???? North Macedonia 23.2
116 ???? Malaysia 22.9
117 ???? Nicaragua 22.5
118 ???? Colombia 22.4
119 ???? Sri Lanka 22
120 ???? Zambia 22
121 ???? Belarus 21.5
122 ???? China 21.5
123 ???? Kazakhstan 21.4
124 ???? Azerbaijan 21.3
125 ???? Morocco 21.1
126 ???? Botswana 21
127 ???? Ecuador 21
128 ???? Uzbekistan 20.6
129 ???? Brazil 20.5
130 ???? Kyrgyzstan 20.4
131 ???? Paraguay 20.3
132 ???? Philippines 20.2
133 ???? Tajikistan 19.8
134 ???? Uganda 19.6
135 ???? Kosovo (Disputed Territory) 19.5
136 ???? Kenya 19.5
137 ???? Rwanda 19.4
138 ???? Ukraine 19.2
139 ???? Vietnam 19.1
140 ???? Iraq 19
141 ???? Bolivia 19
142 ???? Tanzania 18.8
143 ???? Tunisia 18.5
144 ???? Indonesia 18.5
145 ???? Algeria 17.1
146 ???? Iran 16.2
147 ???? Syria 16.1
148 ???? Madagascar 15.8
149 ???? Bangladesh 13.8
150 ???? Nepal 13.8
151 ???? Egypt 13.8
152 ???? Afghanistan 12.7
153 ???? Pakistan 12.4
154 ???? India 12.4
155 ???? Libya 12.3
Many of the world’s most expensive places, in terms of cost of living, are islands and often tax shelters or financial centers. The U.S. Virgin Islands, Jersey, and Cayman Islands all make the top 10 in the cost of living index. High concentrations of wealth, combined with heavy reliance on imports, push up prices across these island economies.
Switzerland ranks third overall, with Zurich named the world’s most expensive city in 2026. Beyond a strong Swiss franc , high wages and elevated living standards significantly drive up costs.
Singapore has the highest cost of living in Asia, placing fifth worldwide. Limited land availability has fueled high real estate prices, while the country’s reliance on imports—around 90% of its food—adds further cost pressures.
The U.S. ranks 19th globally, with a cost of living index score of 56.3. By comparison, the global median index score in 2026 stands at 30.8.
To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the world’s most unaffordable housing markets.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 04:15 Close
Tue, 10 Feb 2026 08:30:00 +0000 Germany's "Recovery" Is Just Debt-Fueled Military Orders
Germany's "Recovery" Is Just Debt-Fueled Military Orders
Submitted by Thomas Kolbe
Friedrich Merz finally has a positive headline. In December, industrial orders surged. But behind the costly statistical recovery li
Read more.....
Germany's "Recovery" Is Just Debt-Fueled Military Orders
Submitted by Thomas Kolbe
Friedrich Merz finally has a positive headline. In December, industrial orders surged. But behind the costly statistical recovery lies nothing more than the buildup of a debt-financed defense sector.
It took some lead time, but the Chancellor now finally has a success story. For December 2025, Germany’s Federal Statistics Office reported a 7.6% month-on-month jump in industrial orders . November had already provided a first boost with a rise of over 5%—right in the midst of a severe economic crisis.
Industrial production , meanwhile, fell 1.9% in December, sliding back into negative territory—a fact largely lost in the media’s cheerleading. That the once-proud German automotive industry saw a 6.3% drop in orders also barely registered amid the general sigh of relief.
But once you dissect the data and strip out large orders, a very different picture emerges. The apparent surge in orders shrinks to a mere 0.9%.
What happened? Experience shows that this comes from “Other Vehicle Manufacturing,” which jumped roughly 9.5%. This category is dominated by defense equipment. In short: the federal government’s debt-financed special fund has found its way into German military production.
Or put differently: the government can now take a public victory lap after plunging citizens into massive debt to generate a short-term statistical effect in the super-election year 2026. Nobody wants to appear a total failure.
What is celebrated as an economic turnaround is in reality a statistical masking of the transition from market-based order to a debt-fueled administrative economy.
The military buildup is basically the last gasp of a policy that, in stubborn Keynesian mode, keeps trying to replace the gaps in Germany’s industrial economy with a “managed economy.” This strategy ties up resources and personnel, diverting exactly the capital needed for real investment under better conditions.
Goods are produced that no one demands on the market. A few pockets get richer. It’s classic client politics in the Berlin–Brussels style. Nothing new in the West, really.
The Real Situation
The real state of the German economy is shown in construction. The HCOB Germany Construction PMI, a monthly leading indicator, fell in January to 44.7 points. Values below 50 signal contraction.
After a brief uptick in December to 50.3, mostly due to energy network investments, the German construction sector plunged back into recession in January—mirroring the entire Eurozone.
For four years now, this central economic sector has been essentially frozen. Investments are held back; new projects, especially commercial ones, are nowhere to be found. The sector remains in prolonged stagnation.
Excessive energy costs, Kafkaesque regulation from Brussels and Berlin, and stifling interventions like rent caps are the recipe for a recession set in stone.
Expect billion-euro programs for subsidized public housing soon, purely to create a statistical illusion of recovery.
System-Compatible Criticism
The federal government can finally breathe. Expensive for taxpayers, but apparently worth it politically. Applying Keynesianism to the defense industry is among the dumbest of political moves. Driving a nation deeper into debt to produce goods that either rust or are used destructively is maximal political nihilism—bordering on madness.
The fact that the state-friendly media celebrates this “recovery” implies two things: complete media submission to government goals, and statistical validation to continue reshaping German society into a green, militarized command economy.
Silence from German business leadership confirms that politics has morally inoculated this strategy. The perpetuated narrative of an imminent Russian invasion now legitimizes the defense buildup.
Similarly, under the Green Deal, years of effort have embedded the fairy tale of saving the world via CO2 reduction deep in public consciousness, with most voters still supporting the course. Criticism now appears climate-hostile, irresponsible, and anti-scientific.
Compliance is no longer enforced through coercion, but through reshaping business rationality. Every new regulation or CO2 levy creates companies that survive only within the state’s subsidy architecture.
Result: media-friendly, calibrated language dominates discussions of “bureaucracy relief.” It is system-compatible fine-tuning, subtly orchestrated by Brussels. No one risks reputational loss in this highly repressive media environment.
Business has learned to couch criticism to avoid upsetting the Kaiser while remaining eligible for support. We see conditioned obsequiousness leading us steadily toward a new socialism.
* * *
About the author: Thomas Kolbe, a German graduate economist, has worked for over 25 years as a journalist and media producer for clients from various industries and business associations. As a publicist, he focuses on economic processes and observes geopolitical events from the perspective of the capital markets. His publications follow a philosophy that focuses on the individual and their right to self-determination.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 03:30 Close
Tue, 10 Feb 2026 07:45:00 +0000 France Has The Most Paid Vacation Days In Europe
France Has The Most Paid Vacation Days In Europe
Europe is widely known for its generous work-life balance policies, and paid time off is a major part of that reputation.
Across the continent, employees are
Read more.....
France Has The Most Paid Vacation Days In Europe
Europe is widely known for its generous work-life balance policies, and paid time off is a major part of that reputation.
Across the continent, employees are legally entitled to a combination of paid vacation days and public holidays, with totals varying widely by country.
This map, via Visual Capitalist's Niccolo Conte, shows the minimum total number of paid leave days in Europe in 2025.
The data for this visualization comes from World Population Review .
Europe’s Most Generous Leave Policies
Several countries stand out for offering more than 40 days of paid leave annually. Andorra tops the ranking with 45 days, including 31 paid vacation days and 14 paid public holidays.
Countries such as France, Luxembourg, Malta, and Russia also provide more than 40 days of total paid leave.
Country Minimum Paid Leave
???? Andorra 45
???? Russia 42.5
???? France 42
???? Luxembourg 42
???? Malta 41
???? Albania 40
???? Georgia 39
???? Estonia 39
???? Austria 38
???? Iceland 38
???? Denmark 37.5
???? Ukraine 37
???? Romania 37
???? Spain 36
???? Poland 36
???? Finland 36
???? Armenia 36
???? Norway 35
???? Bosnia and Herzegovina 35
???? Sweden 34
???? Slovakia 34
???? Lithuania 34
???? Cyprus 34
???? Czechia 33
???? Hungary 33
???? Belarus 33
???? Croatia 33
???? Slovenia 33
???? Italy 32
???? Bulgaria 32
???? Latvia 32
???? North Macedonia 32
???? Portugal 31
???? Serbia 31
???? Germany 30
???? Belgium 30
???? Ireland 30
???? UK 29
???? Greece 29
???? Netherlands 28
???? Switzerland 27
???? Turkey 26.5
???? Montenegro 21
???? Moldova 20
???? Jersey 19
???? San Marino 10
The regional average sits at 33 days, and many countries fall close to this level. Nations such as Czechia, Hungary, Croatia, Slovenia, and Belarus offer between 32 and 34 days of paid leave per year.
Lower Leave Totals at Europe’s Edges
At the lower end of the spectrum, San Marino offers the fewest paid leave days at just 10, followed by Jersey, Moldova, and Montenegro, all of which fall well below the European average.
Meanwhile, countries like Germany, Belgium, and Ireland sit near the middle, offering around 30 days of total paid leave—still higher than many non-European economies.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out The Rise of Senior Populations by Region on Voronoi , the new app from Visual Capitalist.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 02:45 Close
Tue, 10 Feb 2026 07:00:00 +0000 On Washington's Reported Plans To Once Again Store Tactical Nukes In The UK
On Washington's Reported Plans To Once Again Store Tactical Nukes In The UK
On Washington's Reported Plans To Once Again Store Tactical Nukes In The UK
Authored by Andrew Korybko,
It’s possible that the US – whether under Trump 2.0 or whichever administration, including a possible Democrat one, comes afterwards – might agree to transfer its tactical nukes to Estonia in parallel with a possible British F-35A deployment to the latter’s base there.
The Daily Mail cited Pentagon funding proposals to report in late December that the US plans to once again store tactical nukes in the UK upon renovating Lakenheath Airbase. The project is expected to cost $264 million and be completed by 2031. They added that “The U.K. will receive its (12 F-35A) jets at the end of this decade and it will be the first time it has had an air-launched tactical nuclear weapon since 1998. While it will own the jets, the U.S. will retain ownership of the nuclear weapons they come with.”
Although they also wrote that “[this] represents confirmation that American nuclear weapons will return to Britain for the first time since President Barack Obama withdrew them 17 years ago”, that was assumed in June after two announcements . The Ministry of Defense revealed that London will purchase 12 F-35As from the US and join NATO’s dual-capable nuclear aircraft mission . The Defense Minister then confirmed in November that the US would retain control over the nuclear weapons involved.
What makes the Daily Mail’s report significant is that it was published amidst the ongoing Russian-US talks over Ukraine as Putin’s Special Envoy Kirill Dmitriev met with Trump’s Special Envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner in Miami that weekend to discuss this. The signal being sent was that any grand deal with Russia for reforming the European security architecture after their proxy war ends won’t result in the US hanging its NATO allies out to dry as proven by its planned nuclear deployment to the UK.
Some of its troops in Europe might be redeployed to the Western Hemisphere or the Asia-Pacific, which are respectively the new National Security Strategy ’s first and second priorities, but this isn’t akin to “selling Europe out” to Russia or agreeing to “a new Yalta”. The purpose would solely be to help alleviate some of Russia’s concerns for better managing their security dilemma all while reassuring NATO allies of its reliability through a continued presence on the mainland and the resumed nuclear one in the UK.
Readers should also remember that the US already stores nuclear weapons in Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Turkiye so once again storing them in the UK shouldn’t be seen as too provocative by Russia since it’s geographically more distant from its borders than all of the aforesaid NATO countries. Nevertheless, resuming the UK’s role in the US’ nuclear-sharing program comes with additional risks due to London’s military presence at Estonia’s Tapa Army Base, whose government wants to host its F-35As.
The Estonian Defense Minister first floated this in July , the strategic significance of which was analyzed here at the time, and then reaffirmed his interest in September . It’s therefore possible that the US – whether under Trump 2.0 or whichever administration, including a possible Democrat one, comes afterwards – might agree to transfer its tactical nukes to Estonia in parallel with a possible British F-35A deployment there. The UK would then function as the tip of the US’ nuclear spear against Russia.
To be clear, these plans remain in the realm of speculation for now, but they also can’t be ruled out. If a fellow MAGA ally such as Vice President JD Vance succeeds Trump, then this likely won’t happen unless in the far-fetched event of ties with Russia deteriorating for whatever reason, but a Democrat successor might flirt with this or actually go through with it precisely to provoke a crisis. Russia is accordingly expected to closely monitor this deployment due to its potentially outsized strategic significance.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 02/10/2026 - 02:00 Close
Tue, 10 Feb 2026 04:25:00 +0000 Israel Imposes 'De Facto Annexation' With Sweeping West Bank Policy Change
Israel Imposes 'De Facto Annexation' With Sweeping West Bank Policy Change
Israel Imposes 'De Facto Annexation' With Sweeping West Bank Policy Change
Via Middle East Eye
The Israeli government on Sunday approved sweeping changes to land registration and civil control in the occupied West Bank, a move Palestinians say breaches the Oslo Accords and advances de facto annexation .
Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and Defense Minister Israel Katz said the changes would "dramatically" alter West Bank policy, paving the way for expanded settlements and land seizure. In a joint statement, they said the measures would remove legal barriers on Israeli settlers and accelerate settlement development .
A drone view of the Ibrahimi Mosque, which Jews call the Tomb of the Patriarchs, in Hebron. via Reuters
Katz said the aim was to give settlers equal "legal and civil rights", while Smotrich said the move would "normalize life in the West Bank" and vowed to "continue to kill the idea of a Palestinian state."
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said the policy was designed to deepen annexation of the West Bank and violated agreements signed with Israel, including the Oslo Accords, according to the Wafa news agency.
Rawhi Fattouh, chairman of the Palestinian National Council, described the decisions as "racist and dangerous", accusing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government of imposing new colonial realities on the ground.
Several Palestinian factions, including Hamas and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, also condemned the move.
The Oslo Accords, signed in 1993 and 1995 between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), established limited Palestinian self-rule in parts of the West Bank and Gaza, dividing the West Bank into Areas A, B, and C as a temporary framework for a future Palestinian state - a goal that has never been realized.
Muayyad Shaaban, head of the Palestinian Commission Against the Wall and Settlements, said the Israeli decisions represent a dangerous escalation that undermines international law and adds to crimes against Palestinians.
The Palestinian National Initiative said the measures drive the final nail into the Oslo Accords and open the door to large-scale land seizures benefiting Israeli settlers.
The Yesha Council, which represents Israeli settlements, celebrated the decision, saying it "entrenches Israeli sovereignty on the ground."
Peace Now, an NGO monitoring settlement expansion, said Netanyahu has effectively chosen to “topple the Palestinian Authority” and "impose de facto annexation", warning the moves go far beyond Area C and break barriers to massive land theft across the West Bank.
What are the changes?
Under the new Israeli measures, the military would be able to enforce regulations on so-called unlicensed buildings in Areas A and B, citing heritage and archaeological sites , allowing for the confiscation of Palestinian land and demolition of structures.
The changes would also lift secrecy on West Bank land registries, enabling settlers to identify Palestinian landowners and purchase land directly. Exposing ownership records could make it easier for settlers to forge claims over Palestinian land , a tactic widely documented and likely to accelerate land seizures across the occupied territory.
The measures also ease the sale of Palestinian land to Israelis and overturn a Jordanian-era law prohibiting transfers to non-Palestinians.
Planning, licensing, and construction powers in Hebron would be transferred from the Palestinian municipality to the Israeli army, expanding control over building permits, development, resources, and security. An independent local authority will also be established for the Israeli settlement in Hebron.
The Hebron municipality condemned the move as “illegitimate and dangerous”. Under the 1997 Hebron Protocol, the city was divided into Hebron 1, under Palestinian control, and Hebron 2, under Israeli authority, covering southern and eastern sections.
The new policy also affects the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron, a site holy to Muslims, Jews, and Christians.
The Palestinian presidency warned that any violation of Islamic or Christian holy sites, including the mosque, is unacceptable. In January, Israel barred the mosque’s Palestinian directors and seized planning rights over part of the site, violating longstanding arrangements.
The policy comes amid rising settler attacks and access restrictions on Palestinian holy sites since October 2023, including Al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied East Jerusalem and Joseph’s Tomb in Nablus.
Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/09/2026 - 23:25 Close
Tue, 10 Feb 2026 04:00:00 +0000 Record 9.5 Billion Passenger-Trips Expected During China's Spring Festival
Record 9.5 Billion Passenger-Trips Expected During China's Spring Festival
A record 9.5 billion passenger trips are expected during this year’s Chinese New Year or Spring Festival travel surge, according to the Read more.....
Record 9.5 Billion Passenger-Trips Expected During China's Spring Festival
A record 9.5 billion passenger trips are expected during this year’s Chinese New Year or Spring Festival travel surge, according to the National Development and Reform Commission .
The 40 day period between February 2 and March 13 is expected to see record highs in terms of passenger volumes for both rail trips (exceeding 540 million passengers) and civil aviation trips (exceeding 95 million passengers).
However, as Statista's Katharina Buchholz reports, despite rail and air travel for the Chinese New Year gaining popularity, travel by road is still the most popular mode of transport for the holiday .
You will find more infographics at Statista
Eighty percent, or 7.6 billion out of the projected 9.5 billion trips taken on the occasion, will be self-driving trips, according to Chinese authorities, with the rest taken up by other road transport.
The New Year falls on February 17 this year.
The year of the horse starts amidst a tough economic climate in China due to an ongoing property market crisis , low consumption and high youth unemployment.
Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/09/2026 - 23:00 Close
Tue, 10 Feb 2026 03:35:00 +0000 The Man Who Always Has Proof Tomorrow: Adam Schiff Cries Election Fraud Again
The Man Who Always Has Proof Tomorrow: Adam Schiff Cries Election Fraud Again
The Man Who Always Has Proof Tomorrow: Adam Schiff Cries Election Fraud Again
Authored by David Manney via PJ Media ,
The Warning That Never Changes
Remember Adam Schiff? The California Democratic senator returned to familiar ground, while sounding another dire warning about President Donald Trump and the upcoming midterm elections.
AP Photo/Patrick Semansky
Schiff insists Trump plans on subverting the midterms by suppressing votes and overturning results if Republicans lose .
VIDEO
Schiff said, “I think he fully intends to try to subvert the elections. He will do everything he can to suppress the vote. And if he loses the vote, and I think the Republicans do now expect they’ll get a real drubbing in the midterms. He’s prepared to try to take some kind of action to overturn the result, and we really shouldn’t question that. We saw him try to the point of insurrection to overturn the 2020 election. We see him now taking these extraordinary steps with an election that was five years ago. He’s basically telling us he intends to interfere in the upcoming election. He hasn’t brought prices down. There’s chaos and killing in American streets by ICE agents. The public has turned against him in every election we’ve had since his election.”
As if a vault of evidence sits ready to open, Schiff presents the claims with grave certainty.
Just not today.
Because the script is familiar and he shares it in a safe space, Schiff points backward, not forward, again leaning on 2020, repeating “insurrection,” while warning that future elections are in danger, prices remain high, chaos rules the streets, and federal law enforcement morphs into a roaming band of villains in Schiff’s telling.
He throws charges around with dramatic flair—I'm surprised he hasn't hurt his neck—yet none of those charges arrive with verifiable proof.
Fear as a Political Habit
As he's proven over the course of years, Schiff doesn't warn; he escalates, while claiming Trump fully intends to interfere in elections and urging a massive turnout to overwhelm imagined schemes. He talks of suppressed votes, seized machines, and intimidation at polling places, all framed as imminent threats, not tested facts.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.J.) is working the same script, promising Democrats will stop a stolen election before it happens.
Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), vice chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, is working to generate legitimacy by repeating claims about election interference already underway .
The left is using a consistent pattern: State the outcome first, and fill in the justification later.
Related: Trump Lays Out Why the SAVE Act Is Key for Midterm Elections
It doesn't matter that Democrats are selling fiction: none of the statements offer any confirmed actions, court findings, or official orders. Instead, their message relies on repetition and urgency; fear works better when people feel rushed.
A Record That Undermines the Message
Schiff's credibility isn't an overnight sensation; when he was chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, he repeatedly claimed to have evidence of Russian collusion. He kept referring to proof that was hiding in plain sight , with evidence visible to anyone willing to believe.
Of course, he forgot the pixie dust, so nothing he said actually took off.
Investigations closed over the years, while promised revelations never appeared. A special counsel report dismantled the narrative Schiff sold, and he was later censured for misleading statements tied to the Russia investigation.
Schiff's censure didn't erase the past; it highlighted it.
As if that wasn't enough, Schiff also promoted a dossier filled with unverified claims while reading it into the congressional record, blocked witnesses who might challenge his storyline, and later released summaries full of errors .
Each episode chipped away at trust, not because the public demanded perfection, but because Schiff demanded belief without delivery.
Leaks, Claims, and Lingering Doubt
Accusations followed Schiff around like a smell; allegations surfaced that classified information leaked during the Russia probe with Schiff's approval. A whistleblower later lost credibility, yet the episode added another layer of doubt. An inspector general's report found that Schiff's memo on surveillance contained several false statements . Republicans accused him of shaping the evidence rather than presenting it clearly.
Partisan interpretation wasn't required for any of those moments; records spoke clearly enough. Schiff argued the process, while outcomes contradicted his assurance.
The public noticed.
Why Fewer People Listen Now
Schiff acts like a neckless chicken who predicts catastrophe every time clouds gather. After enough false alarms, people stop checking the sky. His latest claims about Trump follow his script, just updated with new dates and familiar villains.
While Trump governs with visible policies and measurable results, Schiff governs with warnings. Elections belong to us, voters, not press conferences.
When accusations continually arrive without receipts, skepticism becomes common sense.
Like Wimpy promising a hamburger payment on Tuesday, Schiff keeps promising proof tomorrow, but tomorrow keeps missing deadlines.
Final Thoughts
The fact that ABC News rolled Schiff out tells me how desperate the left is to change the message. Very few Democrats speak with credibility, and that number is rapidly falling. With this in mind, is there any other reason Schiff is allowed in front of a microphone?
Wanting urgency, Schiff earns fatigue, with accusations echoing loudly inside partisan spaces. Yet, outside those walls, the echoes fade fast.
PJ Media VIP backs writers who challenge narratives built on repetition instead of facts. Join today for exclusive analysis, fewer ads, and direct support for independent commentary. Use this link to save 60% and help keep sharp voices in the fight.
Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/09/2026 - 22:35 Close
Tue, 10 Feb 2026 03:10:00 +0000 Israel Spends By Far The Most Per Capita On Defense
Israel Spends By Far The Most Per Capita On Defense
Global military spending is often measured in massive national budgets, where the United States and China Read more.....
Israel Spends By Far The Most Per Capita On Defense
Global military spending is often measured in massive national budgets, where the United States and China dominate the conversation.
But looking at defense spending on a per-person basis tells a very different story, one where smaller countries rise to the top.
This visualization, via Visual Capitalist's Bruno Venditti, ranks major countries by how much they spent on defense per citizen in 2024, revealing which nations invest the most in military power relative to their population - and how countries like the U.S. compare when spending is measured per person rather than in total dollars.
Data comes from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI ).
Why Israel Leads the World in Defense Spending Per Capita
Israel ranks first, spending nearly $5,000 per person on defense in 2024.
This figure reflects the country’s ongoing security challenges and mandatory military service.
Despite a total defense budget of $47 billion - small compared to global superpowers - the per-person cost is unmatched.
Below are the world’s 30 largest military spenders, ranked by defense spending per capita:
Rank
Country
Total Spend (2024)
Per Capita
1
???? Israel
$47B
$4,989
2
???? U.S.
$997B
$2,895
3
???? Singapore
$15B
$2,591
4
???? Saudi Arabia
$80B
$2,386
5
???? Norway
$10B
$1,880
6
???? Ukraine
$65B
$1,728
7
???? Denmark
$10B
$1,670
8
???? Kuwait
$8B
$1,596
9
???? Netherlands
$23B
$1,276
10
???? Australia
$34B
$1,272
11
???? Finland
$7B
$1,245
12
???? United Kingdom
$82B
$1,186
13
???? Sweden
$12B
$1,138
14
???? Germany
$88B
$1,044
15
???? Russia
$149B
$1,026
16
???? Poland
$38B
$982
17
???? France
$65B
$973
18
???? South Korea
$48B
$919
19
???? Canada
$29B
$742
20
???? Taiwan
$16B
$708
21
???? Italy
$38B
$639
22
???? Spain
$25B
$514
23
???? Algeria
$22B
$469
24
???? Japan
$55B
$446
25
???? Türkiye
$25B
$292
26
???? Colombia
$15B
$287
27
???? China
$314B
$221
28
???? Mexico
$17B
$128
29
???? Brazil
$21B
$99
30
???? Indonesia
$11B
$39
Several smaller or wealthy nations rank near the top of the list. Singapore spends over $2,500 per person, driven by its strategic location and emphasis on technological superiority. Norway and Denmark also appear in the top 10, supported by high incomes and growing commitments to NATO.
How Major Powers Compare
The U.S. ranks second overall, with nearly $2,900 spent per person, reflecting both its enormous military budget and large population.
China, by contrast, ranks much lower at $221 per capita despite spending more than $300 billion in total.
Meanwhile, European powers like Germany, France, and the U.K. cluster in the middle of the ranking, balancing defense commitments with larger populations.
If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Ranked: Countries With the Highest Cost of Violence on Voronoi , the new app from Visual Capitalist.
Tyler Durden
Mon, 02/09/2026 - 22:10 Close