Intel Chain
# UPDATE: The Electoral College's Slave Power Architecture Following our analysis two days ago on how the Electoral College's design was rooted in 18th-century slave-state political leverage—particularly the Three-Fifths Compromise that inflated Southern voting power—recent voting pattern data continues to reflect these historical structural inequities in swing state dynamics. The system's origins in protecting slave-state interests remain foundational to understanding modern electoral geography and why certain regions maintain disproportionate influence in presidential elections. This structural legacy persists despite the abolition of slavery, shaping American politics nearly 250 years later.
Evidence Chain (2 linked intel)
Wang Yi is holding talks with Iran's foreign minister Aragchi who is on his first trip to China since the war began. Source: BBC News
A machete is typically an instrument for clearing dense brush or, in a certain kind of movie, for fending off a terrifying monster. Yet, deep in the Atlantic Forest of Brazil’s Bahia state, I learned that a machete is also used for a much friendlier purpose: slicing green mangoes to eat with salt. That simple, […] Source: Conservation news
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