The Dictatorship
At least 2 killed, 9 injured in shooting at Brown University; person of interest in custody
Following an all-night manhunt, a person of interest has been detained in the campus shooting that left two people dead and nine others injured Saturday afternoon on the campus of Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island.
Providence Mayor Brett Smiley said during a news conference on Sunday morning that the individual was taken into custody in the early morning hours, and that police are not currently looking for anyone else.
Smiley confirmed the shelter-in-place order had been lifted and said hopefully the people of Providence can “breathe a little easier this morning.”
Smiley also said on Sunday that one of the injured had been discharged from the hospital.
As of Saturday night, six of the injured were in critical but stable condition, one was in critical condition and one was in stable condition, according to a Brown University Health spokeswoman. Smiley said that an additional victim had suffered non-life-threatening injuries from “fragments” near them and is expected to make a full recovery. Authorities have not identified the two people killed or those injured.
Authorities released a short video late Saturday night showing the person they believe to be the suspect in the shooting. The video showed a man dressed all in black and wearing a black beanie walking down a sidewalk at a brisk pace before taking a sharp right turn and continuing down the sidewalk until he is out of the frame. The man’s face could not be seen in the video.
Smiley said on Saturday that authorities were canvassing the neighborhood and campus “for additional video footage, still photography and are interviewing witnesses.” And Providence Police Commander Timothy O’Hara asked the public during a Saturday news conference to contact police if they recognized the person.

The shooting took place inside a first-floor classroom in the Barus & Holley Building, a university engineering and physics building thatcontains classrooms and lab space, Providence Police Chief Col. Oscar Perez Jr. said. Police were alerted to the gunshots at 4:05 p.m.
Perez said police do not know how the suspect entered the building but that he exited on the Hope Street side of the complex.
According to Smiley, no “useful video” from inside the building where the shooting took place had been found.
“My community is afraid right now, and we’re saddened that this has come to Providence,” Smiley said. “And there’s two people who, a week away from Christmas, aren’t going to be celebrating with their family, or two days away from the first day of Hanukkah.”
Brown President Christina Paxson said Saturday night that the two who were killed and at least eight of those injured were students at the university. Authorities said they had not confirmed that.
“This is the day that one hopes never happens, and it has. Our focus right now is on supporting the families who have been affected by this,” Paxson said.
A Shelter in Place remains in effect in the greater Brown University area. Please continue to avoid the area if possible.
— Providence EMA (@ProvidenceEMA) December 13, 2025
Police have not given a motive for the violence.
Rhode Island Gov. Daniel McKee said he had spoken with President Donald Trump on the phone. Trump expressed urgency and offered support from federal authorities “to make sure that we catch the individual that brought so much suffering to so many people,” McKee said.
Trump said earlier Saturday evening that he had been briefed on the situation and that the FBI was working alongside local law enforcement. “What a terrible thing it is,” he told reporters outside the White House. “All we can do right now is pray for the victims.”
Members of the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are on the scene and working with local and state authorities, O’Hara said. Smiley said he expects the FBI will take over the investigation.
Law enforcement members established a perimeteraround a portion of Brown’s campus, according to an update from university police. Individuals in residential buildings within the perimeter were told to continue sheltering in place. Those in administrative campus buildings were told to wait until law enforcement officials arrive to escort them out.
All final exams scheduled for Sunday have been canceled, Brown University Provost Francis Doyle said.
FBI personnel are on the scene and assisting this evening after the shooting at Brown University and we will provide all capabilities necessary. Please pray for all those involved. We will update with more information as we are able.
— FBI Director Kash Patel (@FBIDirectorKash) December 13, 2025
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., said he was “praying for the victims and their families,” adding, “My heart breaks for the students who were looking forward to a holiday break and instead are dealing with another horrifying mass shooting, this time in our own Providence community.”
Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., said in a statement: “Brown’s students and its neighbors are shaken. Some families, classmates, and loved ones are gathered together in hospital waiting rooms at this very moment waiting for updates on patients. We are with them in spirit. They will need the support of all of us in the days ahead.”
Ian Ritter, university news editor for the student-run Brown Daily Herald, said he had been in contact with several students who were in Barus & Holley at the time of the shooting. Some fled the scene, some took shelter and others were evacuated by law enforcement, Ritter said.
“It was chaos from what I’ve heard,” Ritter said. “And students weren’t really sure where the gunshots were coming from, and throughout the afternoon we were learning different things about possible locations where the shooter may have gone, or at that time, people thought there could possibly be more than one shooter.”
For one Brown student, Saturday’s school shooting was painfully familiar. Mia Tretta, a junior, said she had been shot in the stomach with a 45-caliber ghost gun during a mass shooting at her California high school in 2019.
“There’s no handbook that you get when you get shot in the stomach during a school shooting and your best friend is killed, and you no longer feel safe at school,” Tretta said in an interview with MS NOW. She said she learned of the news in her campus dorm room. “It’s the worst possible thing that you can imagine, and to have to go through that once, let alone twice, is horrific.”
Tretta urged her fellow students to seek support and lean on one another.
“It is because of decades and years of inaction across the country, within each individual state, that things like this continue to happen,” Tretta said.
Gun safety advocates condemned the tragedy and called for meaningful action.
“Students should only have to worry about studying for finals right now, not hiding from gunfire,” former congresswoman Gabby Giffords, who survived a shooting in 2011, said in a statement. “Guns are the leading cause of death for young people in America — this is a five alarm fire and our leaders in Washington have ignored it for too long.”
“While we await details, one thing is clear: today’s shooting at Brown University is another unacceptable reminder of our nation’s gun violence crisis,” John Feinblatt, president of Everytown for Gun Safety, said in a statement. “We either take action, or we bury more of our kids.”
Angela Ferrell-Zabala, executive director of Moms Demand Action, said, “No student should ever receive an alert telling them to run, hide, and fight just to survive on campus. This is not normal, it is not acceptable, and our students deserve action that ends gun violence — not instructions on how to endure a tragedy that never should have happened.”
Anthony L. Fisher is a senior editor and opinion columnist for MS NOW.
Julianne McShane is a breaking news reporter for MS NOW.
Sydney Carruth is a breaking news reporter for MS NOW.
The Dictatorship
Stock market sends a message to Trump on Greenland
DAVOS, Switzerland (AP) — Investors appeared to have gotten through to President Donald Trump about the risk posed by his designs for Greenland with a message he wasn’t hearing from European leaders: Threatening allies with tariffs and land seizure isn’t exactly the type of policy that generates confidence in the global economy.
Trump on Wednesday backed off his threat to slap punishing tariffs on eight European allies for opposing his insistence on acquiring Greenland from longtime ally Denmark after the plan spooked Wall Street by sparking serious talk within NATO about a fundamental rupture to the transatlantic military alliance that’s been a linchpin of post-World War II security.
Markets had seen their biggest losses since October as Trump prepared to travel to DavosSwitzerland, to give a keynote address to leaders and the global elite at the World Economic Forum.
Trump grumbled about what he called a stock market “dip” with some annoyance during the speech, complaining the market gyrations happened despite the U.S. “giving NATO and European nations trillions and trillions of dollars in defense.”
But during that speech, he made his first abrupt shift in position for the day: He took off the table the option of using military force to take over Greenland.
“I won’t do that. OK?” Trump told the packed conference room.
Then, hours later, Trump announced he was retreating from the tariffs altogether after he said he had come to terms with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte on a “framework” on Greenland that “gets us everything we needed to get” if the agreement is consummated.
Trump promptly took to financial network CNBC just before Wall Street trading ended for the day, boasting that the framework was “going to be a very good deal for the United States” and allies.
He downplayed the role that the jittery market played on his decision on tariffs. “No, we took that off because it looks like we have pretty much a concept of a deal,” Trump said.
Trump didn’t offer details on the terms of that framework. But the S&P 500 rallied 1.2% after his remarks, recovering about half the ground it had lost a day earlier. The Dow Jones Industrial Average also rose 1.2%, as did the Nasdaq Composite.
A concept of a deal, without many details
After the retreat, Denmark’s foreign minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen cautiously offered that “the day is ending on a better note than it began” but said the details of the agreement still need to be worked out.
One idea NATO members have discussed as part of the compromise would see Denmark and the alliance working with the U.S. to build out more U.S. bases in Greenland, according to a European official familiar with the matter but not authorized to comment publicly. The official said it was not immediately clear if that idea was included in the contours of the framework that Trump and Rutte discussed on the sidelines of Davos on Wednesday.
Rutte in an appearance on Fox News on Wednesday evening gave little hint about what precisely he and Trump agreed to.
“We agreed that he’s right, and he’s right that collectively we have to protect the Arctic regions,” Rutte said. “But also, of course, the U.S. continue its conversations with Greenland and Denmark when it comes to how can we make sure that the Russians and China will not gain access to the economy or a military sense of Greenland.”
It wasn’t just the financial markets that were telling Trump to rethink the tariffs and tough rhetoric toward allies.
A number of U.S. officials had also been concerned about Trump’s hardline stance and bellicose language toward Greenland, Denmark and other NATO allies because they feared it could harm other foreign policy goals.
These officials thought the fixation on Greenland and Trump’s earlier comments suggesting that the potential splintering of NATO was a cost he might be willing to pay were complicating the president’s effort to form the Board of Peacewhich he’s expected to spotlight Thursday in Davos. The U.S. officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss concerns being floated inside the administration.
Many European countries, which were already skeptical of the proposed board’s broad global mandate, had reacted even more negatively to the concept after Trump’s tariff threat. The board, which was born from Trump’s 20-point plan to end the Israel-Hamas warwas initially envisioned as a small group of world leaders overseeing the Gaza ceasefire but has morphed into something far more ambitious.
A few European nations have even declined their invitations.
“The interpretation that European leaders are going to take from this is that actually standing up and being firm defused the crisis,” said Max Bergmann, director of the Europe, Russia and Eurasia Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “Trump is acting like a bully, and the only way that we’re going to have a stable relationship is if we push back.”
But Matthew Kroenig, vice president and senior director of the Atlantic Council’s Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security, countered that the idea that Trump would seize Greenland seemed more like a bluff all along — and one that may have worked.
“Most of the world was freaking out over these threats,” Kroenig said. But he he noted there are some downsides to that negotiating style.
For one, it drove the prime minister of Canada, a close U.S. ally, to propose that smaller countries unite against aggressive superpowers.
“It’s been unnecessarily dramatic, costly and damaging, but all the damages so far are repairable,” added Daniel Fried, a former U.S. ambassador to Poland who is now a distinguished senior fellow at the Atlantic Council in Washington.
That possibility, Fried noted, would be harder to achieve had Trump continued on the path with Greenland where he appeared to be heading.
—
AP writers Stan Choe in New York and Matthew Lee in Washington contributed reporting.
The Dictatorship
As Trump talks tariffs, his Argentine ally welcomes a shipload of Chinese EVs
ZÁRATE, Argentina (AP) — The vast field of over 5,800 electric and hybrid vehicles gleamed on the cargo deck of the BYD Changzhou, an Chinese container vessel unloading Wednesday at a river port in eastern Argentina.
In other places, such a scene would not be noteworthy. Chinese automaker BYD has sped up its exports and undercut rivals the world over, alarming Washington, upsetting Western and Japanese auto giants and unnerving local industries across Southeast Asia, Africa and Latin America.
But the sight of so many new Chinese EVs gliding onto a muddy river bank in Buenos Aires province was unprecedented for Argentina, its crisis-stricken economy dominated for years by a left-wing populist movement that protected local industry with stiff tariffs and import restrictions.
“For decades people in Argentina had this vision that everything here must be manufactured here,” said Claudio Damiano, a professor in the Institute of Transportation at Argentina’s National University of San Martin. “The boat has a symbolic value as the first step for BYD. Everyone’s wondering how far it will go.”
The shipment also came in stark contrast to the news in Brussels, where on Wednesday European Union lawmakers voted to delay ratification of a landmark free trade deal with the Mercosur group of South American countries, including Argentina, which promises to tear down trade barriers for European industrial imports and supercharge consumption of German EVs.
“For the Europeans, there’s just no possibility of competing with the Chinese,” Damiano said.
The ship shocks a long-closed economy
Argentina became one of the region’s most closed economies under Kirchnerism — the movement formed by ex-President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and her late husband, former President Néstor Kirchner, which championed the rights of the downtrodden, defaulted on sovereign debt and disdained global trade as a destructive force.
A chronically depreciating peso and sky-high taxes constrained consumer choice, compelling well-heeled Argentines to smuggle iPhones and Zara hauls into the country when returning from vacations abroad.
Fed up with cycles of economic crisis, Argentines vaulted radical libertarian President Javier Milei to power in 2023. He railed against Kirchnerism, vowed to destroy the state and praised U.S. President Donald Trump as an ideological soulmate.
Argentina transforms with an influx of imports
For the last two yearsMilei has has done the exact opposite of his most powerful ally in Washington.
While Trump has waged trade warsMilei has flung open Argentina’s doors to imports, slashed trade barriersunwound customs red tape and shored up the local currency to make foreign goods more affordable.
Last year Argentina logged a record 30% increase in imports compared to the year before — much of it in the form of $3 milk frothers and $10 dresses piling up on Argentines’ doorsteps from Asian online retailers such as Temu and Shein.
Now Chinese automakers — once choked by 35% levies on imports — are seizing on a new measure to allow 50,000 electric and hybrid cars into the country this year tariff-free. The first shipment arrived Monday at Zárate Port after a 23-day voyage from Singapore.
Telling business and political leaders Wednesday at the World Economic Forum in Davos that that his drastic deregulation measures “allow us to have a more dynamically efficient economy,” Milei declared: “This is MAGA, ‘Make Argentina Great Again.
Trump and Milei bond despite differences
Milei and Trump share a contempt for perceived “wokeness,” a resentment of multilateral institutions like the United Nationsa denial of climate change and a zeal for massive budget cuts.
The ideological bond has paid dividends for Milei: Argentina is a rare place in the region where Trump has wielded the might of the U.S. to help an ally rather than enforce demands with military threats, as he has in Colombia and Mexico. Last year he offered Milei a $20 billion credit swap to boost his friend’s chances in a crucial midterm election.
Yet at Davos, the leaders’ differences were on display. Milei delivered his anti-interventionist, libertarian interpretation of MAGA shortly after Trump laid out his own vision for making America great: demanding control of Greenland and threatening allies with tariffs and other consequences if they don’t fall in line.
For all of Trump’s support, China has perhaps benefited most from Milei’s free-market drive.
Chinese imports to Argentina surged over 57% last year compared to the year before. Chinese investment poured into Argentina’s energy and mining sectors.
“Argentina has rejoined the world,” government spokesperson Javier Lanari said of Monday’s Chinese car shipment. “Very soon, the Cuban-made vehicles left to us by Kirchnerism will be part of a sad and dark past.”
China ‘won the race’ in Argentina
BYD and similar Chinese cars have already taken the streets of Latin America by storm, drawing controversy and backlash from Mexico City to Rio de Janeiro.
Now the brands are best positioned to reap the rewards of Milei’s zero-tariff quota for EVs, which applies only to cars under $16,000, experts say.
“Chinese manufacturers have the technology and the ability to meet the price limits set by the government,” said Andrés Civetta, an economist specializing in the auto sector at the Argentine consulting firm Abeceb. “China has won the race.”
Western car manufacturers in Argentina have raised alarms about unfair competition, and opposition lawmakers have criticized officials on the Chinese EV tariff exemption, with the comptroller general posting on social media, “Trump is right: China must be stopped.”
But Argentina is still far behind its neighbors in developing its EV industry, said Pablo Naya, the creator of Sero Electric, Argentina’s only domestic electric car manufacturer.
The country’s aging power grid is nowhere near ready for a wave of electric cars to strain it en masse, he said. And if something goes wrong with a Chinese EV on the road, there are currently no dealers’ service centers able to undertake internal repairs.
“Honestly, we’re not worried,” Naya said.
But if or when Argentine infrastructure and consumer aspirations catch up to Chinese supply, it will be a different story.
“Then that would get complicated for us,” he said from the Sero Electric factory in the Buenos Aires suburb of Castelar. “We’d have a problem.”
The Dictatorship
Bruce Lee stage play and Vocal Arts DC cancel shows at Kennedy Center
NEW YORK (AP) — The producers of a stage play inspired by the life of Bruce Lee and the musical presenters Vocal Arts DC are the latest members of the arts community to call off shows at the Kennedy Center.
Lin-Manuel MirandaIssa Rae, Bela Fleck are among the numerous artists who have withdrawn in protest of President Donald Trump’s ousting of the leadership at the center and at the announcement last month by his hand-picked board that the Kennedy Center had been renamed the Trump-Kennedy Center, a change scholars say can only be implemented by Congress. Trump has placed the Kennedy Center, a Washington institution that for decades enjoyed bipartisan support, at the heart of his battle against what he calls “woke” culture.
Neither of the most recent announcements directly criticized Trump.
The Seattle Children’s Theatre had been scheduled to oversee “Young Dragon: A Bruce Lee Story” for a two-week run in April. The theater announced this week on Instagram that it had made the “difficult decision” to cancel after “deep listening and extensive dialogue with the artists, community partners, and the Bruce Lee family and foundation.”
The Instagram post included a statement from managing director Kevin Malgesini, who wrote that the “landscape in which the production was originally created has changed to an extent” that going forward as planned was no longer possible.
Vocal Arts DC, which has held concerts for years at the Kennedy Center, issued an Instagram statement this week that cited “lower ticket sales, frequent refund requests, and a decline of donations” in making the “heartbreaking decision” to cancel upcoming appearances scheduled for February, March and May. Featured performers were to have included the renowned tenor Benjamin Bernheim and pianist Carrie-Ann Matheson.
In another apparent cancellation, the center’s schedule no longer lists an April tribute concert to the late John Coltrane, who would have turned 100 this year. Representatives for two of the billed musicians did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
A Kennedy Center spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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