Whoops. Updating coverage: The Trump administration’s top “intelligence” officials were to face the House today—a day after embarrassing news that the president’s security team, including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, texted advance plans for military strikes on Yemen to a supposedly “secure” group chat that included the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg …
■ … who wrote in a first-person account (gift link): “I didn’t think it could be real. Then the bombs started falling.”

■ Politico veteran Garrett Graff says you gotta read that account: “I promise you the headline and whatever summary you’ve heard is way less weird, way less troubling, and way less eye-popping than the reality.”
■ Columnist Jeff Tiedrich has an ironic flashback: “Remember when that commie rat-bastard Hillary Clinton ran a private email server?”
■ Hegseth blames Goldberg: “Nobody was texting war plans.”
■ Goldberg fired back on CNN: “That’s a lie.”
■ Investigative journalist Ken Klippenstein appeals to The Atlantic: Publish the whole darned chat thread.
■ Wired: After the bombing began, those in the chat joined a $1-million-per-seat party at Mar-a-Lago.
■ CNN’s Zachary B. Wolf: “Trump intentionally hired amateurs for top jobs. This is their most dramatic blunder.”
■ As Jimmy Kimmel put it: “Our national security is being guarded by a bunch of doofs you wouldn’t trust to throw your cousin a surprise party.”
■ Jon Stewart on The Daily Show: “Back in my day, if you were a journalist who wanted leaked war documents, you had to work the sources, meet them in a dark garage, earn the trust. … Now? You just wait for the national security advisor to be distracted by The White Lotus while he’s setting up his ‘Bomb Yemen’ group chat.”
■ National security adviser Mike Waltz’s job was on the bubble for what Politico calls “one of the dumbest security breaches of recent times” …
■ … but Trump sounded forgiving on NBC this morning: “Waltz has learned a lesson, and he’s a good man.”
■ Humorist Andy Borowitz: “Americans Demand Breathalyzer Be Attached to Pete Hegseth’s Phone.”
■ Grudge Report proprietor Bess Kalb offers “Other Texts with Pete Hegseth.”
Returned to sender. After five years in a job he was given by Trump, U.S. Postmaster Louis DeJoy has quit.
■ The Washington Post says he refused to play footsie with the DOGE bros.
■ Post veteran Gene Weingarten has crafted a letter to the paper’s owner: “Dear Jeffrey Bezos …”
■ Ryan Cooper at The American Prospect: “A handful of rich guys will burn human society to the ground rather than pay a dime in tax.”
‘The Wisconsin Supreme Court race is a big deal.’ Public Notice on next Tuesday’s election: “An already high-profile race will be seen as a referendum on the current administration. A win is crucial … for the country as a whole.”
■ Illinoisans (outside Chicago) vote next week, too—and the Chicago Public Square guide to voter guides is here to help.
■ Looking ahead to 2026’s Democratic primary, progressive Gen-Z social media influencer Kat Abughazaleh is challenging Democratic Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky—even though Abughazaleh doesn’t live in the district and moved to Illinois only last year.
■ Rolling Stone: “That’s kind of the point: She is a normal person—with a rental lease she can’t break before it’s up, financial pressure bearing down on her, and prescription medication that she needs to function properly and that has been challenging to obtain since Elon Musk went after her employer, and she and many of her colleagues were laid off.”
Protect your digital privacy. As the Trump administration gets intrusive with travelers to and from the U.S., Wired offers “a few steps you can take to minimize the risk of Customs and Border Protection accessing your data.”
■ Law professor Joyce Vance: “If people have no opportunity to contest the legality of actions the government takes against them, if grotesque injustice is being layered on top of grotesque injustice by our government in our name, it becomes increasingly difficult to call ourselves a democracy.”
Who’s getting into your genes? The DNA of 15 million 23andMe customers is on the line as the company files for bankruptcy.
■ 23andMe’s board chair says it’s “committed to continuing to safeguard customer data,” but that pledge may not survive new owners.
So long. The Trump administration’s closing the federal Office of Long COVID Research and Practice.

■ Chicago Public Square five years ago today: “Cellphone location data shows Illinoisans are among those leading the nation in staying home.” (2020 cartoon: The late Keith J. Taylor.)
The archdiocese strikes back. Lawyers for Chicago’s Catholic Church tell the Tribune a conversation recorded on a prison line 12 years ago shows that a group of Chicago criminals conspired to bring false charges against one of the church’s most notorious child sexual abusers.
■ Key soundbite: “They’ve got everlasting money, bro.”
Ignorant new world. Popular Information: Texas lawmakers are out to make it a crime for school librarians and teachers to give students access to books that, like Brave New World, The Odyssey and Catcher in the Rye, contain sexually explicit content.
■ Education watchdog Jan Resseger: The endangered U.S. Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights has a new mission: Terminate civil rights.
■ A first-of-its-kind study finds kids with smartphones doing better than expected …
■ … as Platformer’s Casey Newton warns that chatbots could spark the next big mental health crisis.
■ Wired’s Jason Kehe says Angelina Jolie’s character in the 1995 movie Hackers was prophetic: “RISC architecture is gonna change everything.”
The best place to live in the U.S.? One ranking says it’s Naperville—again.
■ Further west: Illinois has officially returned 1,500 acres of stolen land in DeKalb County to the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation.
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■ Mike Braden made this edition better.
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