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Headlines
Middle East crisis: Israel warned Rafah offensive would be ‘catastrophic’
Live  
Middle East crisis: Israel warned Rafah offensive would be ‘catastrophic’
European chief diplomat Josep Borell says 1.4 million Palestinians in southern Gaza city are ‘without safe place to go, facing starvation’
Atlantic Ocean  
Circulation nearing ‘devastating’ tipping point, study finds
AI and misinformation  
What’s ahead for social media as the US election looms?
Florida  
Two people killed after small private jet plane crash-lands on highway
Ukraine  
Children among seven killed in Russian drone attack on Kharkiv
In focus
Biden’s fresh push to solve the Israel-Gaza conflict
Two-state solution  
Biden’s fresh push to solve the Israel-Gaza conflict
The US commitment to a Palestinian state alongside Israel had come to look like lip service. How serious is the latest effort?
‘Go Taylor’s Boyfriend’  
The Super Bowl gear for Swifties sweeping Etsy and TikTok
‘No one has explained this stupidity’  
The citizens fighting back in Madrid’s war on trees
 

Naomi Klein

Columnist, Guardian US

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There are the wars … and then there are the information wars. The hacked accounts. The doctored photos. The deepfakes. The battles over casualty figures and targets. The surging conspiracies.

In a time of raging information wars, the Guardian doesn’t treat news and information as a weapon of war. Instead, it treats it as a right that all people deserve.

These principles are why I urge you to support the Guardian. As climate breakdown intersects with surging authoritarianism and spiraling militarism, the need to protect and strengthen this unique international media organization feels more urgent than at any point in my lifetime.

So much of our media landscape is bisected by paywalls, but the Guardian has a different and, in my opinion, very special model. It isn’t owned by a corporation or by a billionaire, and it provides its journalism to anyone in the world who wants and needs it as a right.

There is only one reason the Guardian can do that: you – the commitment of supporters who fund its journalism. You make it possible to meet information wars with information rights.

As 2024 begins, please consider supporting the Guardian from just $1. Thank you.

 
Spotlight
Ten years after her son was beheaded, Diane Foley on why she met one of his killers
‘We all lost. That’s where hatred leads'  
Ten years after her son was beheaded, Diane Foley on why she met one of his killers
In 2014, terrorists decapitated US photojournalist James Foley. His mother talks about her doomed attempts to save him, her mission to help today’s hostages, and the meeting that helped her to heal
Meet generation stay-at-home  
‘You don’t need to pay to go clubbing: you can sit at home and watch it on your phone’
‘She gave me Lennon’s shirt to wear on stage’  
Moby, Peaches and more on their encounters with Yoko Ono
How to Steal a Presidential Election review  
Trump and the peril to come
Fighting the smartphone ‘invasion’  
The French village that voted to ban scrolling in public
Blind date  
‘First impressions? She doesn’t look like a serial killer, but if she was she’d be a fit one’
Opinion
Trump is too old and incited a coup. Biden is too old and mixes up names. America, how to choose?
Trump is too old and incited a coup. Biden is too old and mixes up names. America, how to choose?
Tucker Carlson’s Putin interview wasn’t journalism. It was sycophancy
Sports
Mr Irrelevant to Super Bowl QB  
The rise and rise of 49ers star Brock Purdy
The rise and rise of 49ers star Brock Purdy
Premier League  
Manchester City v Everton – live
Culture
Books  
‘Blood of our blood’: how Lincoln, the first Republican president, embraced immigration
‘Blood of our blood’: how Lincoln, the first Republican president, embraced immigration
Beyond Oscar Wilde  
The unsung literary heroes of the early gay rights movement
In case you missed it
How an Oregon law boosted a small food business and built community
Noodles of opportunity  
How an Oregon law boosted a small food business and built community
Investment in healthier, locally produced school foods gave author Lola Milholland a chance to give back to the school and Japanese American community that gave so much to her
Analysis  
President was in a fighting mood for surprise speech – but he didn’t win
‘It would be devastating’  
Inside Trump’s plan to destroy the EPA
Did Trump engage in insurrection?  
Court largely ignores question
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