Wednesday, April 22, 2026

NOAH HAWLEY WRITES: What I Learned About Billionaires at Jeff Bezos’s Private Retreat For the richest men on Earth, everything is free and nothing matters.

 

Who said that???...from Baltimore Morning Sun 1920

CDN media 

Top stories: CISA flags new SD-WAN flaw as actively exploited in attacks Cybersecurity Dive BleepingComputer

The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has given government agencies four days to secure their systems against another Catalyst SD-WAN Manager vulnerability it flagged as actively exploited in attacks.

CISA flags new SD-WAN flaw as actively exploited in attacks

 CISA Alert: Cisco Catalyst SD-WAN Flaws Actively Exploited
Top stories

Federal agencies ordered to patch until Friday

CISA Presses Agencies to Secure Cisco SD-WAN Systems After Security  Exploited - The420.in

On Monday, CISA added CVE-2026-20133 to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) Catalog, "based on evidence of active exploitation," and ordered Federal Civilian Executive Branch (FCEB) agencies to secure their networks until Friday, April 24.

"Please adhere to CISA's guidelines to assess exposure and mitigate risks associated with Cisco SD-WAN devices as outlined in CISA's Emergency Directive 26-03 and CISA's Hunt & Hardening Guidance for Cisco SD-WAN Devices," CISA said. "Adhere to the applicable BOD 22-01 guidance for cloud services or discontinue use of the product if mitigations are not available."

Cisco has yet to confirm the U.S. cybersecurity agency's report that the flaw is being exploited in attacks, with its security advisory still saying that its Product Security Incident Response Team (PSIRT) is "not aware of any public announcements or malicious use of the vulnerabilities that are described in CVE-2026-20133."

In February, Cisco also tagged a critical authentication bypass vulnerability (CVE-2026-20127) as exploited in zero-day attacks that were enabling threat actors to add malicious rogue peers to targeted networks since at least 2023.

More recently, in early March, the company released security updates to address two maximum-severity vulnerabilities in its Secure Firewall Management Center (FMC) software that can allow attackers to gain root access to the underlying operating system and execute arbitrary Java code with root privileges.

CISA orders feds to patch Fortinet flaw exploited in attacks by Friday: The  U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) ordered  federal agencies to secure FortiClient Enterprise Management Server (EMS)  instances against 

Over the last several years, CISA has tagged 91 Cisco vulnerabilities as exploited in the wild, six of which have been used by various ransomware operations.

BleepingComputer (@BleepinComputer) / Posts / X

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POLITICAL SCIENCE: Half of America sits in democratic limbo - that, is problematic because if the public isn't willing to hold its leaders accountable, then there's nothing to stop them from behaving in ways that undermine democracy.

"Not actively opposing undemocratic practices is different than actively supporting democracy," Hall said.

  1. Neutrality, the researchers noted, is especially concerning because it can be associated with authoritarianism, tolerance of norm violations, extremism, distrust and obscuring antidemocratic views.
  2. Another, equally critical point, Hall said, is that this neutrality exists at similar rates on both sides of the aisle, among Republicans and Democrats, as well as nonpartisans.
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Intro: According to a recent study from the University of Notre Dame, voters who are comfortable living in the middle — neither agreeing nor disagreeing when asked about substantive issues relevant to upholding democracy — might be the largest group to blame for democratic decline in the United States.

These "democratic neutrals" are what the study's co-authors consider some of the most dangerous voters in the current political environment.

Half of America sits in democratic limbo—and that silent middle may decide what breaks next 

https://scx2.b-cdn.net/gfx/news/hires/2026/american-flag-at-capit.jpg 

If you were to ask democracy scholars what they consider the greatest threat to American democracy, you might assume it is voters who support undemocratic practices or policies. But the real answer may surprise you: These ...

Researchers asked participants about their attitudes toward undemocratic practices. The questions included whether they agreed, disagreed or felt neutral when asked about their support for four examples of undemocratic practices: reducing outparty polling stations, ignoring outparty court decisions, remaining loyal to the party over the Constitution, and censoring partisan media.
 
 
REFERENCE: 

The overlooked threat of democratic neutrality in the USA

Abstract
Despite increasing concerns about American democracy, recent studies find little public support for undemocratic practices. 
  • However, these studies ignore democratic neutrality—that is, expressing neither agreement nor disagreement with undemocratic practices. 
Here, integrating research on uncertainty, indifference, ambivalence, conditionality and socially desirable responding, we argue that democratic neutrality poses an overlooked threat to democracy. 
 
Reanalysing prominent survey data (N = 45,095) and conducting two original surveys (N = 3,039; including a candidate-choice experiment), we document democratic neutrality as 
(a) prevalent (half of Americans express neutrality towards one or more undemocratic practices), 
(b) reflecting substantively meaningful attitudes (versus inattention), 
(c) correlated with theoretically related constructs, 
(d) distinct from opposition to undemocratic practices, and 
(e) as consequential as outright support for undemocratic practices in shaping preferences for anti-democratic candidates. 
 
Our findings challenge optimistic empirical accounts of Americans’ attitudes towards democracy. Democratic neutrality may help explain, and be targeted to ameliorate, democratic backsliding.
 
Roughly 50% of participants checked the neutral category for at least one question. 
https://gifdb.com/images/high/animated-transparent-background-check-mark-lb1gygckicpca0fb.gif 
"Regardless of why Americans express neutrality, those who do so are just as likely to vote for authoritarian politicians as the relatively small number of Americans (less than one in five) who explicitly support undemocratic practices," Hall said. 
 
YARN | You went from sitting on the sidelines to getting in the game. | The  Simpsons (1989) - S20E16 Comedy | Video gifs by quotes | 7c690b81 | ç´—
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"The problem is the people sitting on the sidelines, not paying attention or prioritizing short-term issues over the long-term stability of this country," Hall said. "This will require a completely different approach with regard to persuasion strategy when you realize that's the group we—as proponents of American democracy—need to be focusing on. Promoting democracy is going to look a little different than we thought." 

Anatomy of a Fall (2023) 

What does that promotion look like then? Hall and his co-authors see the primaries for the approaching 2026 midterm elections as the next opportunity to encourage Americans to vote for candidates who will support and protect American democracy. Messaging will need to encourage voters to "vote against candidates who undermine American democracy—even (and especially) if they are candidates from their own party," emphasizing that staying neutral will no longer suffice.

"American politics have really been shaken in this last decade, particularly with regard to partisanship and polarization," Hall said.

"The elites have lost control of the throttle and the mass public is driving—and that's not necessarily a bad thing if the mass public values democracy. But if they don't value democracy, then we will spin out."

This research aligns with the University's Democracy Initiative, which aims to establish Notre Dame as a leader in the study of democracy both in the United States and worldwide, as a convenor for conversations about and actions to preserve democracy, and as a model for the formation of civically engaged citizens and public servants. The initiative also bridges research, education and policy work across multidisciplinary units.


Publication details 
Matthew E. K. Hall et al, The overlooked threat of democratic neutrality in the USA, Nature Human Behaviour (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41562-026-02430-7

Journal information: Nature Human Behaviour

Provided by University of Notre Dame
Media Mentions | News & Media | College of Science | University of Notre  Dame


Tuesday, April 21, 2026

VESSEL TRACKER STRAIT OF HORMUZ | Screenshot copy Reuters

Screenshot Copy  } Reuters

 

Ukraine’s Richest Man Bought Monaco Flat for Record $550 Million, . . .Can the US and Iran Agree to a Lasting Deal to End the War?,. . . Powell Says Longer-Term Inflation Expectations Remain In Check

       

BYD, Xiaomi and Zeekr Car Reviews Flood TikTok, YouTube in the US -  Bloomberg
     
   
 
 

 

 Keep an eye on this by Alexander Bublik on Dribbble