
Army base in Georgia is on lockdown after report of an active shooter, spokesperson tells AP
Located about 40 miles (64 kilometers) southwest of Savannah, Fort Stewart is the largest Army post east of the Mississippi River. It's home to thousands of soldiers assigned to the Army's 3rd Infantry Division.

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Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
AI clip falsely shared as tsunami hitting Japan
An 8.8-magnitude earthquake that rocked Russia's Far East in late July triggered tsunami warnings in Japan and around the Pacific Ocean. But aerial footage of large waves supposedly hitting a Japanese island -- which racked up more than 39 million views on Facebook and TikTok -- is AI-generated. The video, which appears to be filmed from a plane and shows waves approaching a coastline, was shared on Facebook on July 30. "Tsunami in japan, prayer for japan," the overlaid text says with a hashtag #prayerforrussia. Millions of people were put on high alert in countries along the Pacific Ocean after the 8.8-magnitude earthquake off Russia's Kamchatka peninsula on July 30, 2025 (archived link). In Japan, where a massive quake and tsunami killed 15,000 people in 2011, almost two million people were ordered to higher ground, but the biggest wave was 1.3 metres (4.3 feet). Japan downgraded its tsunami alert to an advisory later on July 30, and waves of up to 0.7 metres were still being observed the day after. The same video of the purported waves was also shared by more than 170 Facebook pages with a misspelled caption the "first tunia (sic) to hit Hokkaido, Japan this afternoon", with many of the pages directing users to a website selling home items. The claim was also shared elsewhere on Facebook and TikTok, garnering a total of 39 million views combined. But the video is inauthentic. Using Google reverse image search, AFP found the clip had surfaced online on April 29, uploaded by a YouTube channel that states it shares AI-generated visuals in its bio (archived links here and here). "From 30,000 feet...I saw this," the video's caption said, including hashtags saying it was made with artificial intelligence. The channel also added an "altered or synthetic" label to the video, which, according to YouTube, discloses "altered or synthetically generated content that seems realistic" (archived link). AFP found visual anomalies throughout the clip. The white water unnaturally separates from the rest of the wave as it advances towards the shoreline. The plane from which the video was filmed also does not appear to be moving forward. The circulating video does not correspond to footage that Japanese broadcaster NHK released of tsunami waves that hit Japan's coastal areas on July 30 (archived link). NHK also reported waves between 50 to 80 centimetres (1.6 to 2.6 feet) were observed along the coast of Hokkaido. AFP has repeatedly fact-checked the deluge of AI-generated videos misrepresenting disasters, as well as images falsely linked to the earthquake in Russia.
Yahoo
21 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘No saving it': Fire destroys Oxbow Bridge, cutting off Arizona to California route
The Oxbow Bridge has been destroyed by fire, cutting off a key route that connects the rural Arizona community of Cibola in La Paz County to California. The bridge in western Arizona also served as a shortcut to Yuma before it collapsed into the Colorado River on Aug. 1. The route was now 'impassable," the Bureau of Land Management said in a social media post. The wooden structure had connected Levee Road to the west side of the Colorado River. It was destroyed by what officials called the 'Oxbow 2 Fire,' which burned about five acres near the Oxbow Recreation and Wildlife Area, according to the agency. Photos of the structure showed it engulfed in flames. It took less than two hours for the bridge to completely collapse, said Brad Robinson, a farmer in nearby Blythe, California, who witnessed the fire and called 911. 'You knew it was done. There was no saving it,' said Robinson, 48. The fire began in the brush nearby, Robinson said. Within 15 to 20 minutes, the flames spread to brush underneath the wooden bridge and set it ablaze, he added. 'Next thing you know, the whole entire bridge was burning,' Robinson said. 'You could just sit there and watch it keep jumping from span to span. It just kept running down the bridge until the point of where the whole bridge, every part of it that was wood, was completely engulfed.' The fire was under investigation, the Bureau of Land Management said. In the meantime, the Bureau of Reclamation used buoys to mark the submerged hazard in the water. 'Boaters are urged to avoid the area and exercise extreme caution due to floating debris and unmarked hazards downstream,' the agency said. Local nonprofit Friends of Cibola NWR also advised boaters to avoid the area in a Facebook post. Other agencies that responded to the fire included the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Imperial County Fire Department and local law enforcement. The Oxbow Bridge has burned down in the past, Robinson said. He offered a piece of advice for keeping wooden bridges intact. 'If they're going to have a wooden bridge, don't let the brush build up underneath it. If there had been no brush around that bridge, that bridge would have never burned,' Robinson said. Stephanie Murray covers national politics and the Trump administration for The Arizona Republic and Reach her via email at and on X, Bluesky, TikTok and Threads @stephanie_murr. This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Route from Arizona to California now impassable after bridge fire Solve the daily Crossword


Washington Post
a day ago
- Washington Post
Pizzeria owner sees people eat from dumpster, goes viral for free meal offer
Chris Kolstad had enough of people grabbing leftovers from the dumpster behind his pizza shop and eating them. He posted on Facebook telling them to stop. Just ask for a pizza, he said. No one should be eating from the garbage. 'Leave me a note,' Kolstad wrote on Facebook, 'and we will find a way to leave any extras or mistakes out back so you have something to eat without going through the trash.'