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David Peterson determined to go one game at a time as Mets struggles hit new low


David Peterson’s struggles on the mound hit another low point Wednesday night. Peterson tossed 3 ²/₃ innings in a 9-2 loss to the Cardinals and allowed six earned runs, including two homers to Nelson Velázquez and Jordan Walker. 

Perhaps the most pivotal moment of Peterson’s appearance was when he faced Masyn Winn in the third inning with two outs.

The count was 0-2, but Peterson threw three straight balls and wound up walking Winn. Velázquez’s two-run homer came on the next pitch. 

Peterson left the clubhouse Wednesday night before media entered despite being requested. He spoke to reporters Thursday morning before the afternoon finale against St. Louis. 

When asked what’s frustrating him the most to this point, Peterson mentioned getting ahead in counts and still struggling to get guys out. 

“Getting some quick outs, then getting into deep counts, end up walking a couple guys … they came back to bite me with a couple of misexecuted pitches on the home runs,” Peterson said. 


New York Mets pitcher David Peterson adjusts his hat after giving up a 2-run home run.
New York Mets pitcher David Peterson (23) gives up a 2-run home run to St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Nelson Velázquez (38) during the third inning when the New York Mets played the St. Louis Cardinals Wednesday, June 10, 2026 at Citi Field in Queens, NY. Robert Sabo for NY Post

Peterson, with the departures of several longtime Mets last offseason, is now the longest-tenured player on the team, having made his debut in 2020.

He’s seen the peaks and valleys of the past several Mets seasons — a 101-win season in 2022, an NLCS berth in 2024 and a historic collapse in 2025. 


New York Mets pitcher David Peterson pitches the baseball.
New York Mets pitcher David Peterson (23) pitches in the second inning when the New York Mets played the St. Louis Cardinals Wednesday, June 10, 2026 at Citi Field in Queens, NY. Robert Sabo for NY Post

“It takes a long time to have a good year. We’ve been in spots where we’ve been up in the standings, and kind of come back and spots where we’ve been in the basement and found a way out,” he said. “It’s not gonna all get made up at once. It’s not gonna happen overnight.” 

Peterson emphasized the importance of taking things one game at a time during this rocky stretch. Peterson, who has a 5.75 ERA on the year, is a free agent after this season.

He was asked whether he finds it difficult to isolate that fact from his recent struggles. 

“It’s not really any of my focus,” Peterson shared. “There’s nothing that I can do right now, there’s nothing I can control right now about that process and what’s gonna happen at the end of the year. 

“I think the best strategy for me is to focus one day at a time, focus on each time I take the ball, and being the best version of myself that I can be every time I do.”



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Aroldis Chapman wants Brian Cashman apology before any Yankees reunion



TORONTO — It is difficult to imagine the Yankees reacquiring a player who left them on such poor terms, or the Red Sox helping their rivals by dealing them what could be the best reliever on the trade market this summer. 

But just in case both scenarios were to happen, Aroldis Chapman has made it known he would first want an apology from Brian Cashman. 

“What happened, happened,” the Red Sox closer told ESPN Deportes. “If something like this were to happen, I believe someone from this organization should apologize first.” 

GM Brian Cashman speaking to the media at a press conference held at Yankee Stadium. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

When asked if that person was Cashman, Chapman said, “Yes.” 

Chapman, who has a 0.46 ERA and 13 saves for the Red Sox this year, last pitched for the Yankees in the third-to-last regular-season game of the 2022 season.

The lefty, who was no lock to make the postseason roster because he had struggled and lost his closer’s job earlier in the season, then blew off a mandatory workout ahead of the ALDS with what Aaron Boone said then was an unacceptable excuse. Cashman also fined Chapman for missing the workout. 

That same season, Chapman had missed nearly a month with a leg infection that stemmed from getting a tattoo, with Cashman saying there were “questions about whether he’s been in all in or not for a little while.” 

The 38-year-old Chapman had seemed to close the door on the Yankees last year anyway, saying on a podcast that if he were told he was being traded to New York, “I’d pack my things and go home. I’ll retire right on the spot if that happens. I’m not crazy. Never again.” 

Aroldis Chapman picked up a save in the Red Sox’s win over the Yankees on June 5, 2026 at the Stadium. AP Photo/Adam Hunger

Whether Jasson Domínguez is activated off the injured list Friday or needs a few more rehab games this weekend, the Yankees have an interesting decision coming. 

Assuming none of the current position players are dealing with hidden injuries, the Yankees have three options to make room for Domínguez on the active roster: optioning Spencer Jones, Anthony Volpe or Max Schuemann back to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. 

Domínguez, the switch-hitting outfielder who played his fourth rehab game Wednesday while coming back from a mild AC joint sprain in his left shoulder, could serve as an important piece for the Yankees, especially while Aaron Judge is sidelined with a stress fracture in his first rib.

Jasson Domínguez warms up before the Yankees’ loss to the Rangers on May 7, 2026 at the Stadium. MLB Photos via Getty Images

Before Domínguez got hurt, he was better as a right-handed hitter than he was last season, giving him value in the lefty-heavy Yankees lineup (and outfield). 

The lefty-hitting Jones has looked better so far in his second big league stint — including hitting his first home run Tuesday — but only one of his 12 starts has come against a left-hander. If the Yankees want to keep Ben Rice or Paul Goldschmidt at DH almost every day, that would seemingly limit Jones’ chances for playing time with Domínguez back in the fold. 

Volpe, the subject of most of the fan angst these days, has gotten some run at shortstop with José Caballero being needed in right field, though Caballero would likely become less of a factor there once Domínguez returns (whether the Yankees shift Cody Bellinger to right field or decide they are comfortable trying Domínguez there).

Yankees infielder Jose Caballero hits an RBI single during the second inning of the Yankees’ win over the Royals on May 25, 2026 in Kansas City. AP Photo/Charlie Riedel

So with Volpe in the midst of a 2-for-24 stretch, does that open the door for Caballero to reclaim more starts at shortstop and make Volpe expendable? 

Schuemann has done well in a utility role since coming up in late April, seemingly making an impact whenever he plays.

But he also may become repetitive if Caballero returns to a true super-utility role now. 


After pitching in one rehab game Wednesday night, Angel Chivilli was activated off the injured list and optioned to SWB. The hard-throwing reliever had been on the IL since April 25 with right shoulder discomfort.



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Late college hoop voice would have predicted Spurs going ice-cold



I’m feeling a great sense of entitlement today.

I’ve been legislatively designated a “non-gestating parent” and received a “save-the-date” card for Travis and Taylor’s wedding. Anyone know where they’re registered? Think they could use a toaster oven?

Anyway, this column is dedicated to the memory of Al McGuire, who, as an NBC college basketball analyst, showed up not knowing any of the players, but he sure knew the game — and the human condition.

At the half of games in which a team held a large lead and a lopsided shooting percentage, such as the Spurs did Wednesday, McGuire would warn that the game is far from over because the team shooting 60 to 70 percent could not and would not sustain such success. That team would have to come back to earth, perhaps with a thud.



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Men in viral Karmelo Anthony courthouse confrontations arrested at murder trial


A man at the center of a viral confrontation outside Karmelo Anthony’s murder trial was arrested outside the courthouse where Anthony was found guilty of murder earlier this week, one of at least two arrests that were made as tensions flared during the racially-charged case.

Both individuals were taken into custody shortly after Anthony’s sentence was announced on Tuesday, the Collin County Sheriff’s Office confirmed to Fox News Digital. 

The individual involved in the viral clash, identified as Jerome Winston Parker, was arrested on an outstanding warrant for alleged unlawful carrying of a weapon, according to the Collin County Sheriff’s Office.

Police said the charge stems from an alleged incident that took place in the parking lot of the courthouse during “activities related to trial proceedings” three days earlier on June 6.

Parker was subsequently arrested Tuesday and remains in custody on a $1,000 bond.

On Tuesday, he was seen in a face-to-face confrontation with an Austin Metcalf supporter, arguing in support of Anthony in a heated clash outside the courthouse.

In the other arrest, video recorded by FOX 4 shows a man wearing a pink tie and suspenders being arrested outside the courthouse in connection with an alleged assault, according to witnesses. 

That man was later identified as Sholdon Daniels, a Republican nominee for Congress in Texas’ 30th Congressional District, who posted a video to X shortly before the alleged incident in which he was wearing the same outfit.


Jerome Winston Parker in a mugshot photo.
Jerome Winston Parker, who appeared on video in a viral confrontation outside Karmelo Anthony’s murder trial, was arrested. Collin County Sheriff’s Office

According to Daniels’ campaign website, he is a veteran and attorney.

Daniels was subsequently taken into custody and charged with public intoxication, according to jail records obtained by Fox News Digital.

He remains in jail on a $500 bond. 

Social media posts made to Daniels’ X account show him condemning Anthony’s actions, while pointing to race as playing a key factor in the controversial murder trial. 

“I practice law in Collin County, Texas,” Daniels said in one X post.

“Karmelo Anthony will be convicted and sentenced to life in prison. As he should. He murdered that boy because he was raised to hate white people and to view himself as a victim in every situation. It’s a culture thing.”

The arrests were made amid tense gatherings outside the courthouse as it was announced that a jury had found Anthony guilty of murdering Metcalf at a high school track meet in 2025


Sholdon Daniels smiling in a mugshot.
Another viral video recorded by FOX 4 showed Sholdon Daniels, Republican nominee for Congress in Texas’ 30th Congressional District, later being arrested and charged for public intoxication. Collin County Sheriff’s Office

Video taken by Fox News Digital showed several skirmishes breaking out as Anthony was handed a sentence of 35 years behind bars for Metcalf’s killing.

Throughout the trial, prosecutors revealed Anthony stabbed Metcalf to death after Metcalf asked him to leave a Memorial High School team tent. 

Anthony’s defense insisted their client acted in self-defense.

However, a Texas jury convicted Anthony of murder.

Fox News Digital reached out to Daniels’s campaign and Parker for comment.



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Philippines protests China’s sanctions against its defense chief as ‘an unfriendly act’


MANILA, Philippines — The Philippine government said Friday that China’s imposition of sanctions, including an entry ban, against Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jr. was “an unfriendly act” that could further strain relations, while he vowed to continue defending Manila’s interest against Beijing’s aggression.

The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing announced Thursday that Teodoro and his family have been banned from entering China, including Hong Kong and Macao, over what it described as “irresponsible remarks” he has made that undermined Beijing’s interests.

The Chinese government also prohibited individuals and groups in China from having any transaction with Teodoro and his family “to uphold China’s sovereignty, security and development interests.”

Teodoro, who was appointed defense chief by Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in June 2023, has been one of the most vocal critics of China’s actions in the disputed South China Sea and against Taiwan.

The Department of Foreign Affairs in Manila said imposing sanctions was China’s prerogative but that the Philippines viewed it “as an unfriendly act that further complicates the bilateral relations.”

“Such measures do not contribute to building mutual trust, managing differences responsibly or creating the conditions necessary for constructive engagement between our two countries,” the foreign affairs department said.

Teodoro said he would continue to carry out his duties for the Philippines. He also said in the statement that China’s sanctions underscored “what they do to those who speak the truth against their deception.”

China has imposed sanctions on a former Philippine senator last year, as well as against U.S. and European officials in the past, for actions that Beijing deemed go against its interests and actions, including on human rights.

The former Philippine senator, Francis Tolentino, was the author of two bills that reaffirmed the extent of the Philippines’ maritime territories and right to resources, including in the South China Sea. China claims the disputed waterway almost in its entirety.

Marcos eventually signed the two bills into law.

Last year, Teodoro called China’s expansive claims in the South China Sea “the biggest fiction and lie” and singled out Chinese President Xi Jinping and his supporters within the Chinese Communist Party for what he called Beijing’s aggressive and illegal policies.

“It’s caused by Xi Jinping and his abusive ways … that would possibly destroy his leadership of his party in China and the goodwill that was nurtured by his predecessors,” Teodoro told reporters.

Teodoro has led efforts to deepen Manila’s defense and security engagements with the United States, the longtime treaty ally of the Philippines, including by broadening annual combat exercises with American forces that now include joint naval patrols and drills in the South China Sea.

He has also led efforts to forge visiting forces agreements with friendly countries including Japan, France, Canada and New Zealand which he said would help increase deterrence against China’s assertiveness.



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The special streetlight vote in LA that you haven’t heard about



Everyone is talking about the June 2 primary election in California, especially the results in LA. But there was another election on June 2 that you might not have heard of, as you needed to own property to vote in it.

The election, known as a Proposition 218 Ballot Process, will determine whether LA property owners will pay a special tax assessment to raise money to replace broken streetlights with solar-powered ones.

Special ballots were mailed in April, and were due June 2. The vote count is ongoing, and results will be announced on June 26.

The issue has arisen because of rampant copper wire theft, which is disabling streetlights across the city.

The election, known as a Proposition 218 Ballot Process, will determine whether LA property owners will pay a special tax assessment to raise money to replace broken streetlights with solar-powered ones.
Special ballots were mailed in April, and were due June 2. The vote count is ongoing, and results will be announced on June 26. Ritchie Varga

Keeping the streets lit in America’s second-largest city is no easy task under normal circumstances. With upward of 223,000 streetlights, including an underground network of 9,000 miles of conduit and 27,000 miles of copper wire, the city of Los Angeles’s streetlight network illuminates the city’s roads and neighborhoods for its millions of residents.

Unfortunately, copper wire theft has risen to substantial levels, as a result of soft-on-crime policies and an overstretched police force that has plagued the City of Angels for years.

Instead of addressing the root of the problem, Mayor Bass and most of the LA City Council backed a Prop. 218 tax to raise $125 million to replace and update streetlights. Many of the new ones would be solar-powered. 

Updating public infrastructure is not bad; however, the current approach does not address the underlying problem of high rates of copper theft, which creates a strong incentive for people to commit the crime in the first place.

The tax would also raise property owners’ fees by up to 120% in an already extremely expensive place to live, given that Angelenos pay over 55% more than the national average for energy.

Updating public infrastructure is not bad; however, the current approach does not address the underlying problem of high rates of copper theft, which creates a strong incentive for people to commit the crime in the first place.

In 2023 alone, there were 6,842 reported cases of metal theft, leading to the creation of the LAPD’s “Heavy Metal Task Force,” which was tasked with combating the problem.

Unfortunately, in classic LA fashion, even though it was formed with good intentions and initially yielded promising results, it was disbanded by the omniscient leaders of the city in July of 2025 due to budget problems.

When copper wire thieves are caught, they have a high rate of reoffending. This high rate is driven by laughably low enforcement, low penalties, and the difficulty of catching offenders before they commit multiple crimes, given how easy it is to steal copper wire from streetlights.


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Under California Penal Code § 487j, those who steal copper wire valued at more than $950 commit grand theft, which can be punished as either a misdemeanor or a felony, depending on the value of the stolen copper and the number of prior offenses the person has committed. 

However, with a local justice system operating more as a revolving door than anything else, even with a maximum penalty of a $10,000 fine and up to three years in state prison, many are likely to commit copper wire theft repeatedly before being stopped. And they are likely to do so again upon release from prison — if they are imprisoned at all. 

When a copper wire thief steals a few hundred dollars’ worth of copper, he or she causes thousands of dollars in damage. Each streetlight can cost up to $2,000 each to fix, costing taxpayers up to $20 million a year. 

Updating public infrastructure is not bad; however, the current approach does not address the underlying problem of high rates of copper theft, which creates a strong incentive for people to commit the crime in the first place.

When presented with a solution — a hardened cover for each streetlight at the cost of $300 each — the city of Los Angeles decided to ignore the practical and financially responsible choice and moved forward with pushing to convert thousands of streetlights to solar at upward of $6,000 per unit.

The solar decision was also political, designed to conform to the city’s LA100 Plan to achieve 100% carbon free power by 2035. But it won’t actually solve the underlying problem of theft.

Criminals have already demonstrated a willingness to scale streetlight poles to steal not only valuable core components, but the entire solar panel itself, which renders the streetlight useless.

Even solar panels that survive have inconsistent output due to weather conditions. They also require battery replacement every three to five years, costing an additional $150 to $1,000 per replacement.

June 26 is the day of the city’s final consideration, after the ballots have been counted, to determine whether the assessment passes.

The city of Los Angeles should take this time to develop real solutions to end its revolving-door-like criminal justice system, rather than converting 60,000 streetlights to solar power, which doesn’t solve the underlying problem of rampant crime. 

Caleb Jasso is a senior policy advisor at the Institute for Energy Research and a native of California.





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A very online Israeli army spokesman is the face of war for millions of Arabs


TEL AVIV, Israel — For more than two years, hundreds of thousands of people in Gaza and Lebanon have lived in dread of Avichay Adraee’s next social media post.

Israel’s Arabic-language military spokesman has been the animated face of its campaigns and the main source of warnings ahead of strikes and major offensives. That has made him one of the most recognizable Israelis in the Arab world and a focus of fury as well as some fascination.

In social media videos shared to his 2.5 million followers across platforms, the colonel appears in military fatigues, gesticulating as he delivers official statements and mocks Israel’s enemies, often using satire or pop culture references, all in fluent Arabic.

In the wars sparked by Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack, his social media accounts have carried warnings for civilians to leave — sometimes at a moment’s notice — areas shaded in red on maps of Gaza and Lebanon. Millions have paid heed, with hundreds of thousands seeking refuge in squalid tent camps.

Adraee, who is retiring this year, takes pride in his work. Asked to respond to the fact that many associate him with death and displacement, he said he has helped Arabs to better understand Israel’s military operations.

“Because of these evacuation orders, many millions were saved,” he told The Associated Press. “There’s no other army in the world that acts this way.”

Israel’s offensive in Gaza killed tens of thousands of Palestinians and displaced most of the population of some 2 million, often multiple times, before a fragile ceasefire took hold in October. Its latest war with the Iran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon has killed some 3,500 people and displaced over 1.2 million.

Both campaigns have drawn allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity, which Israel has adamantly denied, often through spokespeople like Adraee.

The grim warnings also have made him something of a celebrity. In Lebanon, a look-alike delivery driver posts satirical videos and pranks unsuspecting residents, showing the fear Adraee inspires.

“Avichay Adraee is the face of evil, to me and to the people of Gaza,” said Ayman Ahmad, a resident of Khan Younis in southern Gaza who has been displaced twice during the war. Few people in Gaza had heard of Adraee before the war, he said, but now everyone closely monitors his social media accounts.

“Once we see a new post from him, we know that a disaster is about to happen,” he said.

Adraee, 43, grew up in the mixed Jewish and Arab city of Haifa in northern Israel.

His father’s family is part of the Jewish community that lived in the area for generations before Israel’s establishment in 1948. His mother’s family came to Israel from Iraq, among hundreds of thousands of Jews from centuries-old communities across the Middle East who emigrated to Israel to escape violence and persecution.

Adraee said he loved watching Egyptian soap operas on Israeli television as a kid and that studying Arabic was “love at first sight.” He picked up some Arabic at home before studying the language in school and during a stint in military intelligence.

“My ability to speak and absorb Arabic is connected to my roots,” he said. “My grandmother and father were very proud when they saw me on TV speaking in Arabic.”

Adraee became the military’s first Arabic-language spokesperson in 2005, doing interviews with TV outlets, including regular appearances on the increasingly influential Al Jazeera.

He said 2011 marked a turning point with the rise of social media, which was used to great effect during the Arab Spring uprisings that year.

“People know me, we’ve been through so many wars,” he said. “But the revolution of social networks in 2011 allowed us to lean on the persona of Avichay.”

Adraee wants his videos to go viral, leaning on the casual nature of social media to get his message across.

The military’s claim to have found Hamas infrastructure under a luxury hotel in Gaza made little impact, but Adraee said his satirical video of a Hamas leader leaving a Trip Advisor review for the tunnels was widely shared. He has sent birthday messages to singers and holiday greetings to Arab influencers, even exchanging public messages with Lebanese journalists who work for Hezbollah-linked outlets.

“We want people to be exposed to the really important and serious messages, the information we’re trying to convince them of, but if you want them to remember you, you have to be more creative,” he said, adding that social media allowed him to “talk directly to the people, above the heads of the government.”

Fawaz Gerges, a professor of Middle East studies at the London School of Economics who was born in Lebanon, said Adraee’s posts are “dreaded and feared because they really carry life and death implications for hundreds of thousands of people.”

Still, “you have some people basically who are fascinated by his personality because he’s now almost an official influencer for Israel,” he said, adding that Israel’s military has spokespeople in several languages, but only Adraee is famous enough to be known by his first name.

Gerges said it’s part of a wider trend in which official spokespeople try to make their messages go viral.

The Hamas spokesman Abu Obeida was widely known for delivering fiery statements, sometimes cut with footage of attacks or Israeli hostages, before he was killed in an Israeli airstrike. Hamas and Hezbollah have released videos showing their attacks, cut with music and graphics.

Supporters of Iran’s government have released AI-generated music videos with Lego characters mocking U.S. President Donald Trump. The White House has released its own videos celebrating strikes on Iran, featuring video game screenshots and movie clips.

It’s not unusual for military spokespeople to have adversarial, if professional, relations with reporters. But Adraee has been accused of justifying the killing of some journalists.

The Committee to Protect Journalists says there is a “repeated pattern” in which Adraee “publicly labels Palestinian and Lebanese journalists as militants or terrorists — often without presenting verifiable evidence — before or after they are killed in Israeli strikes.”

After a strike in March killed three journalists in Lebanon, Adraee’s account published a photo of one of them, Ali Shoeib, in military fatigues. The image was later determined to be computer generated.

Adraee said it was a mistake not to label the photo as “illustrative,” but insisted Shoeib was a known Hezbollah operative who spied on Israeli positions while working as a reporter for a Hezbollah-linked outlet. Adraee presented no evidence he was involved in fighting. Israel says it does not target journalists.

At least 207 journalists have been killed in Gaza and 16 in Lebanon since 2023, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

After 20 years in the role, Adraee is retiring and will be replaced by Lt. Col. Ella Waweya, the military’s highest-ranking Muslim woman.

Last month, Adraee received one of the strangest messages of his long career.

A teenager in a Beirut suburb reached out on Instagram and told Adraee that her school was hiding weapons. Israel regularly bombs buildings it says are used by militants, so the message prompted panic, vehement denials by school officials and a search by the Lebanese military, which turned up nothing.

It was later revealed the girl was playing a joke with a friend and likely wanted to avoid going to class.

Adraee chalked up the whole situation as a win.

“The fact that the (Israeli military) spokesperson is someone you can write to on Instagram, that’s the whole story,” he said.

___

Associated Press writer Toqa Ezzidin in Cairo contributed.



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Chris Mason: Dissent fizzes again at the top of the Labour Party



The resignations of the defence secretary and armed forces minister pile the pressure further on the PM’s leadership.



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Ukraine war surpasses grim milestone — longer than WWI



The war in Ukraine has raged on longer than World War I as of Thursday – reaching 1,569 days of bloodshed, with no end in sight.

World War I veterans who endured the horrors of the trenches hoped it would end all wars, but more than 100 years later historians have increasingly compared it to the conflict that’s consumed Ukraine since Russia’s invasion in Feb. 2022.

Both wars began with aggressive advances from invaders.

The Ukraine War has officially surpassed the length of World War I as of June 11, 2026. Getty Images

Germany in 1914 charged towards Paris before being violently halted, and in 2022, Russia penetrated dangerously close to Kyiv — but both quickly descended into grinding stalemates.

“In many respects, this war in Ukraine is the one that most closely resembles World War I,” French military historian Michel Goya told the New York Times.

“In general, when the front freezes, you’re back to World War I,” he added.

And that’s exactly what the war in Ukraine has been like since it began, with the front lines sometimes changing by yards over the course of days – only to swing back the other way days later.

Russia’s capture of Pokrovsk, for example, advanced by just 70 meters per day – slower than the advances during the bloody Battle of the Somme in 1916, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

The war has reached its 1,569th day of action as the bloodshed pours on. MAXYM MARUSENKO/EPA/Shutterstock

The battlefields across both wars even look alike – with the stalemate in Ukraine leading to the same kind of grinding trench warfare that carved up the French countryside in WWI.

Ukrainian and Russian troops have spent battles just hundreds of yards from each other, and following the exact type of tactics that dominated WWI – devastating artillery barrages of the enemy trench, and then desperate and often gruesome charges across the no-man’s land between.

Both wars have also upended the traditional warfare of the day with new technologies.

Historians have noted that the two conflicts are similar, as both were started by foreign invaders. Bettmann Archive

WWI was the first wide-scale conflict to employ easily maneuverable machine guns, chemical weapons and tanks, which decimated the traditional European battlefield where ranks of soldiers would face each other in open fields for volleys of rifle fire.

Similarly, the war in Ukraine is the first wide-scale conflict that has employed drone technology.

The tiny flying menaces –rigged with explosives or guns – have neutered the tank warfare tactics that dominated wars across the planet since WWII, forcing both sides to improvise and adapt from one battle to the next.

In 1914, Germany made its way towards Paris, France, while in 2022, Russia advanced towards Kyiv, Ukraine, before both wars ensued. MAXYM MARUSENKO/EPA/Shutterstock

“This is WWI, but with drones,” Ukrainian historian Yaroslav Hrytsak told the Times.

The casualties don’t compare between wars, but the scales of them are also far different.

WWI involved troops from across the planet, while the war in Ukraine has been largely limited to Ukrainian and Russian troops.

Somewhere between 9 and 11 million soldiers were killed in World War I, while about 500,000 have died in Ukraine.

The Ukraine war is showing no signs of stopping, with rounds of peace talks repeatedly leading nowhere and neither side showing any sign of yielding.

World War I lasted 1,568 days, ending on November 11, 1918 for four years and three and a half months.



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Santa Barbara offshore drilling fight intensifies amid new coastal restrictions



California’s offshore energy wars continued to heat up with week, with regulators threatening enforcement action against an oil company in the Santa Barbara Channel as coastal communities move to lock down new barriers against drilling and deep-sea mining.

Houston-based Sable Offshore is gearing up for a showdown with the California Coastal Commission, which alleges the company restarted portions of its pipeline network without obtaining a new state permit.

Sable disputes the claim, arguing its work is covered by coastal development permits originally issued in 1986.

Sable Offshore’s Las Flores Canyon (LFC) facility, in Goleta, CA. Andy Johnstone for CA Post

“Sable Offshore Corp. (“Sable”) through its subsidiary, Pacific Pipeline Company (“PPC”), continues to lawfully operate through its existing coastal development permits which were issued in 1986,” the company said in a statement to The California Post.

Coastal Commission Executive Director Kate Huckelbridge has warned alleged violations remain ongoing and said the agency could pursue cease-and-desist orders and additional penalties.

The battle comes as President Donald Trump pushes his revived “Drill, baby, drill” agenda from the White House, renewing efforts to boost domestic energy production.

President Donald Trump. AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

California’s coastal leaders are moving in the opposite direction.

In Santa Cruz, city leaders voted unanimously Tuesday to strengthen a decades-old ordinance aimed at blocking infrastructure tied to offshore oil drilling. The revised measure also targets facilities that could support deep-sea mining operations.

The move expands on a voter-approved 1985 law requiring public approval before zoning changes could allow onshore facilities connected to offshore drilling. More than two dozen California coastal jurisdictions have since adopted similar “Blue Wall” protections.

Sable Offshore’s Las Flores Canyon facility. Andy Johnstone for CA Post
California Governor Gavin Newsom. David Buchan for Ca Post

Supporters hailed the vote as a model for other coastal communities.

“This is what local control looks like and this is what leading with values looks like,” Vice Mayor Shebreh Kalantari-Johnson said.

The vote drew applause from activists, some of whom held signs opposing offshore drilling, while the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors approved similar changes just hours earlier. County voters will decide in November whether to make those restrictions permanent.



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