Top World News
Cambodia aims to shut down online scam centers by end of April
Mar 11, 2026 - World 
Cambodia hopes to shut down all of the country's notorious online scam centers by the end of next month, the head of the Southeast Asian nation's effort to combat the cybercrime said Wednesday.
'Trump flipped out': Journalist claims president dropped a 'big reveal' to enemies
Mar 11, 2026 - World 
Donald Trump’s decision to attack Iran is causing him to finally understand that his actions have consequences beyond his control, and he is reacting poorly to that realization, a journalist said.During an appearance on MS NOW’s “Morning Joe,“ Financial Times editor and longtime columnist Ed Luce claimed the massive jump in oil prices after the Gulf of Hormuz was shut down caused the president to lose it–– which was good news for Iran’s leadership.Speaking with the hosts, he explained, “I mean, we saw it over the last couple of days when oil prices went up way above $100 [per barrel] to almost $120. Trump flipped out and then started reassuring the markets that he's going to pull out soon; the war's almost over and the oil price came back down.”“That was a big reveal, an unsurprising reveal,” he elaborated. “But that was the big reveal to the Iranians that they know his price point.”He continued, “They had confirmation of their suspicion that Trump thought this was going to be a quick one-and-done 12-day kind of war, and that now that it isn't, he's beginning to feel the pain. And I think we can bet pretty safely that Iran has a higher pain threshold than Donald Trump. So they now have the absolute key without needing naval capability or ballistic capability, let alone enriched uranium.” - YouTube youtu.be
Drone strike hits school and medical center in Sudan, killing 17, mostly schoolgirls
Mar 11, 2026 - World 
An explosive-laden drone blamed on Sudanese paramilitaries has struck a secondary school and a health care center in southern Sudan, killing at least 17 people, mostly schoolgirls, a hospital official and a medical group said
Trump's 'bro culture' fans want nothing to do with him: 'It's really starting to add up'
Mar 11, 2026 - World 
Donald Trump’s war on Iran has all of the appearances of being the final straw for the so-called “bro” influencers who helped propel him to his 2024 election victory and now are increasingly turning on him, MS NOW reports.That is according to the “Morning Joe” panel after watching a clip of massively popular podcaster Joe Rogan blasting the president for military adventurism and wondering why he is blowing up one of his central campaign promises.As Rogan told his listeners, “It just seems so insane based on what he ran on. I mean, this is why a lot of people feel betrayed, right? He ran on no more wars, end these stupid, senseless wars and then we have one that we can’t even really clearly define why we did it,” he added.According to MS NOW’s Joe Scarborough, Rogan’s turn against Trump is just the tip of the iceberg.“You know, it's so interesting, Willie [Geist], Joe Rogan, the scales fall from his eyes,” Scarborough observed. “You got Andrew Schultz, who was sort of, you know, MAGA-curious or was he a MAGA supporter? Whatever he was, he's not anymore; like he's firing on all cylinders against [Jeffrey] Epstein, against Iran. A lot of these guys, you know, that were supposed to be the avatars of the bro culture. They're going, yeah, no.”"It's really starting to add up,” Geist agreed. “I mean, Rogan, you start with criticism of the Trump administration on the Epstein files, then some pretty loud criticism on immigration policy, on ICE, on the actions ICE is taking and now on this war in Iran, saying none of this is the package that we saw in Donald Trump and voted for; this violates all of that.” "So at some point, it's not a one-off. At some point, the whole thing isn't what you voted for,” he pointed out. - YouTube youtu.be
Giant Baby Jesus statue visits Mexico City's Tepito neighborhood with message of peace
Mar 11, 2026 - World 
His face and body resemble those of a newborn. Yet the Baby Jesus statue towers 16 feet (5 meters) tall and travels across central Mexico spreading a message of peace.
