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🌡 Temperature Check
Day 37. Trump threatened to destroy every power plant and bridge in Iran by 
tomorrow night. A reporter asked if that would be a war crime. Trump said: ‘No. 
Not at all.’ The UN said it would be. Legal experts said it would be. Iran 
rejected a 45-day ceasefire and wants a permanent end to the war instead. An 
F-15 was shot down over Iran on Friday. Its crew was rescued in a CIA operation 
involving ‘exquisite technologies no other intelligence service possesses.’ 
Artemis II flew around the far side of the moon today. Noise level: THE 
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES THREATENED A WAR CRIME ON NATIONAL TELEVISION 
AND WAS ASKED DIRECTLY. HE SAID NO.
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📌 The Big Story
‘Are You Concerned About Committing a War Crime?’ ‘No. Not at All.’
That exchange happened today, in a White House press conference, on camera, 
with a named reporter asking and the President of the United States answering. 
It was not a trick question. It was not taken out of context. A journalist 
asked Donald Trump whether threatening to destroy every bridge and power plant 
in Iran — civilian infrastructure that serves a civilian population — 
constituted a war crime under international law. Trump said no.
For the record, here is what the law actually says. The UN spokesperson said 
today: ‘Any attack on civilian infrastructure is a violation of international 
law and a very clear one.’ Legal experts told CNN that strikes on power 
facilities would ‘likely constitute a war crime.’ The International Committee 
of the Red Cross issued a statement saying threatening civilian infrastructure 
‘must not become the new norm in warfare.’ The US’s own military law — the Law 
of Armed Conflict — requires distinction between military and civilian targets 
and prohibits attacks on civilian infrastructure that are not military 
objectives.
Trump’s exact words about Iranian power plants: ‘Every bridge in Iran will be 
decimated by 12 o’clock tomorrow night, where every power plant in Iran will be 
out of business, burning, exploding and never to be used again.’ He also said: 
‘The entire country can be taken out in one night, and that night might be 
tomorrow night.’
Trump’s justification for why Iranians would accept this: ‘They’re willing to 
suffer in order to have freedom.’ There is currently no popular uprising in 
Iran. Citizens are sheltering from bombardment. Volunteers in Tehran are 
reportedly sewing Iranian flags to distribute for free — 5,000 per day — as a 
show of national unity against the strikes.
The ceasefire picture: Pakistan, Egypt, and Turkey submitted a 45-day ceasefire 
proposal to both sides Sunday. Iran rejected it Monday, saying a temporary 
ceasefire would only allow adversaries to ‘pause and prepare for the 
continuation of the conflict.’ Iran wants a permanent end to the war and has 
reportedly submitted its own counter-proposal. Trump called the 45-day proposal 
‘a significant step’ but said Iran’s response ‘is not good enough.’ The Tuesday 
8 PM ET deadline stands — for now. This is the fourth deadline Trump has set. 
The previous three were extended.
📡 Under the Radar
Three Stories Being Buried Right Now
1. The US Government Asked a Satellite Company to Stop Publishing Images of Iran
Planet Labs, one of the world’s leading commercial satellite imaging companies, 
announced Saturday that it would stop publishing images of Iran or the regional 
conflict zone following a request from the US government. Planet Labs provides 
high-resolution, near-real-time satellite imagery that journalists, 
researchers, human rights investigators, and the public use to independently 
verify what is happening on the ground in conflict zones. Removing that layer 
of public verification — at the specific request of the US military — is a 
direct attack on independent accountability during a war. The images that 
showed Iran’s nuclear facilities, civilian damage, and infrastructure strikes 
were coming partly from Planet Labs. That independent visual record is now 
subject to US government censorship. This story has received almost no coverage.
2. The White House Asked Congress for $1.5 Trillion in Defense Spending for 
FY2027 — With $73 Billion in Cuts to Health, Housing, and Education
While the war dominates, the White House submitted its FY2027 budget request 
Friday: roughly $1.5 trillion in defense spending, approximately 40% more than 
the current level. The offset: $73 billion in proposed cuts to health, housing, 
and education. This is not a hypothetical trade-off. It is the stated budget 
position of the administration. Every dollar of the war’s cost — the $200 
billion supplemental request, the $1.5 trillion baseline — is being financed in 
part by reducing the domestic programs that directly affect the people the 
president claims to represent. That budget is now in Congress. It will be voted 
on. Almost nobody is covering it against the backdrop of the war.
3. Artemis II Flew Around the Far Side of the Moon Today — and Almost Nobody 
Noticed
Four astronauts aboard Artemis II completed a lunar flyby today, including the 
first human view of the moon’s far side, which permanently faces away from 
Earth. Astronaut Christina Koch described seeing ‘a moon that is not the moon 
you see from Earth whatsoever.’ This is the farthest humans have traveled from 
Earth since Apollo 17 in 1972. It is a genuine milestone in human space 
exploration — and it received a paragraph in most outlets’ news digests because 
the same news cycle contains a president threatening to bomb a nation’s entire 
power grid. The juxtaposition says something about where we are: humans went 
around the moon today and it was the third story on every broadcast.
🔍 Who Benefits?
Threatening Bridges and Power Plants at 8 PM on a Deadline
Trump has now set four deadlines for Iran. Each previous one was extended, 
softened, or reframed as a diplomatic opening. The pattern is: set a 
catastrophic threat, move markets, claim good faith negotiations are happening, 
extend the deadline, repeat. Each cycle buys time without requiring either 
military action or a real concession.
Today is different from the previous three cycles for one reason: Iran has now 
formally rejected the 45-day temporary ceasefire and submitted a 
counter-proposal demanding a permanent end. Iran is no longer playing for time 
— it is setting its own terms. That means tomorrow at 8 PM EST is a genuine 
decision point, not another negotiating posture. Either Trump strikes civilian 
infrastructure — which the UN, international law experts, and the Red Cross say 
would be a war crime — or he extends the deadline again and loses the 
credibility of every future ultimatum.
Verdict: ULTIMATUM AS LEVERAGE, BUT THE LEVERAGE IS EXPIRING — each extension 
has cost Trump credibility with Iran, with allies, and with markets. A fourth 
extension after a direct war crime threat made on national television creates a 
different political problem domestically. Watch what happens at 8 PM Tuesday. 
The answer tells you whether Trump’s threats are operational policy or 
negotiating theater.
📺 The Noise
What’s Loud vs. What Matters
LIKELY DISTRACTION | The F-15 Rescue — Genuinely Heroic, Also Perfectly Timed
The rescue of the F-15 crew is a real story. The weapons systems officer spent 
over 24 hours evading Iranian forces, climbed mountain terrain, hid in a cave, 
transmitted his location, and was extracted by a CIA operation involving 
deception technology ‘no other intelligence service possesses.’ That is 
genuinely remarkable and the airman’s bravery deserves recognition. But the 
press conference announcing it — led by Trump, Hegseth, and CIA Director 
Ratcliffe — also consumed the first 45 minutes of today’s news cycle on the day 
of a deadline that may lead to the bombing of civilian infrastructure. The 
timing of the announcement was not accidental. Heroism coverage is the best 
possible news environment for an administration about to face its hardest 
decision.
WATCH ANYWAY | 8 PM Tuesday — The Real Test
Everything in this war comes down to tomorrow night at 8 PM Eastern. Three 
scenarios: Trump strikes power plants and bridges — this war enters a new 
phase, oil spikes past $130, international condemnation becomes overwhelming, 
and the US president has executed what the UN explicitly called a violation of 
international law on a live deadline. Trump extends again — the credibility of 
every future threat is permanently compromised and Iran knows it can wait him 
out. A deal is announced — the details matter enormously, because a bad deal 
that gives Iran a face-saving exit while leaving the nuclear question 
unresolved may be worse than no deal at all. Watch 8 PM Tuesday with both eyes 
open.
📚 Your Homework
Find Geneva Convention Protocol I, Article 54, which prohibits attacks on 
objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population. Find Article 
56, which protects works and installations containing dangerous forces — 
including power plants. The United States is a signatory.
Then find Trump’s exact quote from today: ‘Every bridge in Iran will be 
decimated by 12 o’clock tomorrow night, where every power plant in Iran will be 
out of business, burning, exploding and never to be used again.’ Read both 
documents. Then read Trump’s answer when asked if he was concerned about war 
crimes: ‘No. Not at all.’
That is the complete record. It exists. It is documented. The question is 
whether any institution with the authority to act on it will.
⚖️ The Verdict
A president threatened to destroy a nation’s entire civilian power grid and 
bridge network. A reporter asked if that was a war crime. He said no.
The UN said it would be. The Red Cross said threatening it ‘must not become the 
new norm.’ Legal experts said strikes on power facilities would ‘likely 
constitute a war crime.’ The US’s own Law of Armed Conflict requires 
distinction between military and civilian targets. The US is a signatory to the 
Geneva Conventions.
Meanwhile: the government asked a satellite company to stop showing the public 
what is happening on the ground. The FY2027 budget cuts $73 billion from 
health, housing, and education to pay for a 40% increase in defense spending. 
The fourth deadline in this war expires in less than 24 hours. Humans flew 
around the far side of the moon today and it was the third story.
If a president announces his intention to destroy civilian infrastructure, a 
reporter asks if that’s a war crime, and the president says no — and nothing 
institutional happens as a result — what does that tell you about what the word 
‘accountability’ means right now?
The Noise Report | noisereportdaily.substack.com | Not left. Not right. Just 
the questions nobody’s asking.
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