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Surprising cameo teases DC’s upcoming film

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Spoiler alert! We’re discussing important plot points and the ending of “Superman” so be careful if you haven’t seen it yet.

What if Superman’s parents sent him to Earth from a dying planet and sent him to Earth to rule us, rather than helping humanity?

It’s an interesting twist on the ordinary person in the steel mythology that marks the new “Superman” that launches the world of rebooted DC films. Among them, Clark Kent (David Korensweat) is a superman and his third year in protecting Metropolis, losing his first fight and causing an international incident by stopping the war from breaking through between his fictional neighbouring countries Boravia and Jalhanpur.

Still, Superman is a very popular man and sticks to the claws of billionaire engineer Bro Lex Luthor (Nicholas Hoult). Rex’s bad guy crew raids the Fortress of Solitary fortress of the Hero in Antarctica and discovers hidden messages from his mother and father. The supervillain reveals it to the world, turns the masses against Superman and lures the dog Crypto into hellish life.

Hoult will dig deep into its epic conclusion.

What happens at the end of “Superman”?

Superman must deal with the existence crisis of all sorts of obstacles, meanings of the surprising message of his parents. From fighting a giant monster to being tortured by a Cryptonite in the pocket universe of Rex’s dimension. However, when the hero begins to revive his underdogs, Luthor’s true plan is revealed. He is in Cahoots with Boravia.

When Rex realizes he is on the ropes, he burns the Earth, causing a rip in the universe in his pocket, which begins to tear Metropolis in half. After Superman defeats Rex’s Henchman Ultraman, the Superman clone played by Corenswett – he confronts Rex (who is attacked by Crypto), Science With Mr. Eliphy (Eddie Gutage) corrects the rift and Lois Lane (Rachel Brosnahan) defeats the exclusive Rex. “Get his bald ass from Bell Rev,” the soldier says as he stabs Rex into a transport vehicle heading to prison for a super-powerful villain led by Suicide Squad Honcho Amanda Waller (Viola Davis).

“I think Rex will be smart wherever he is and when he thrives somewhat,” Holt told USA Today. “You can hold back those geniuses for a long time. But of course there will be a lot for him. Bell Rev is a fierce place.”

Are they a surprise cameo of the new “Superman”?

There are people familiar with the film from other DC efforts directed by James Gunn. John Cena recreates his role from “Suicide Squad” and TV’s “Peacemaker,” while Frank Grillo, who played military commander Rick Flag Sr. in the animated “Creature Command,” takes him into live action in “Superman.” (He will also appear in the upcoming “Peacemaker” season 2.)

The most well-known cameo appears early, with Bradley Cooper talking about Cryptonian as Superman’s father, Joroel. Until recently, Corenswet didn’t know that his fellow Philadelphia native was playing his father (as Cooper’s character appears in the recorded message). Cooper says, “the person I’ve admired for a long time.”

“Superman” also features the stars of DC’s next big screen venture. At the end of the film, Soupes hangs in the Fortress of Solitary as drunken cousin Kara (Milly Alcock) appears to pick up the dog. (Apparently Crypto was her, and Superman was his foster father.)

The central figure in “Supergirl” central figure, Party Girl Kara (June 26, 2026), wanted someone who was completely against the strait-covered soup. “Superman was raised in a truly non-disabled family by these loving parents,” the director says. “Where Supergirl comes, it’s pretty hellish and she doesn’t have much pleasure in her upbringing. It was almost horrifying. She’d been watching the people around her die the whole time.

Is there a post-credits scene in “Superman”?

Yes, there are two! The first one is a quick and heartwarming mid-credit sequence to see Crypto hugging Superman on Earth. And then there’s the funny scene where Mr. Toriffey is trying to repair all the buildings in Metropolis after the credits are rolled. A wonderful walk carved in the huff. “Dern, I can become such a jerk sometimes,” Superman sighs.

Corenswet acknowledges that there are several G-rated lines and phrases, such as “Dern It” and “Good Gauche” that he threw into the scene in line with the spirit of Superman’s Boy Scouts.

“Superman says ‘Gorry’ and all this,” he says. “And he wants to say, “Jesus Christ” or “(exp) hell.” You can’t say that. ”

Steve Bannon, Megginkely Slam Trump Administrator Epstein Case

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Prominent conservatives have sounded the political alarm for President Donald Trump and accused the Justice Department of failing to review and release files related to Jeffrey Epstein.

Many Trump allies and supporters across the country are asking the government to release additional information on cases of dishonest financiers and convicted sex offenders. This includes two topics of broad online speculation. It is evidence in support of what is called a “client list” and the claim that Epstein, who died while awaiting trial in 2019, did not actually commit suicide.

New York’s chief medical inspector ruled that Epstein died of suicide in 2019, but on the 2024 campaign trail, Trump said he would declassify the man’s federal files. According to a new report released last week by the FBI and the Department of Justice, officials said no such list or evidence has been admitted that Epstein was killed in custody.

The findings urged an equally quick pushback for Trump’s inner circle and voters, who argued that the president’s administration had not met his promise of transparency with the American people.

“Understanding that the Epstein case hasn’t disappeared,” Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn wrote in a post directed at the president. He warned that unanswered questions would “have become much more difficult to advance the many other monumental challenges our country faces.”

The famous Magazine figure has been airing publicly his complaints with Attorney General Pam Bondy for days after the release of the government memo. She drew specific criticisms about her February interview with Fox News. Meanwhile, she was asked about what is called a client list. “I’m sitting on my desk right now,” Bondi said at the time.

However, at the cabinet meeting on July 8th, Bondi revealed that she was referring to the entire file.

The fallout in the Epstein Case reached a fever pitch on July 11th, reportedly causing disruption to even people within the administration. According to CNN and Semafor, FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino had not taken a job and was considering resigning.

But a major Republican voice says that the management of the case must reach the president himself beyond justice department officials.

“It’s deeper than Epstein,” former White House strategist and podcaster Steve Bannon told a crowd of young conservatives at Turning Point USA’s Student Action Summit on July 12. He continued to predict the true election outcomes for Republicans in the near future.

“To make this go,” Bannon said, “You’ll lose 10% of the Maga movement. If you lose 10% of the Maga movement right now, you’ll lose 40 seats (2026), you’ll lose your presidency.”

Meggin Kelly, another public figure, usually on the corner of Trump, also expressed skepticism about law enforcement’s recent review of the Epstein Files.

“There are actually two options,” wrote Kerry, a political commentator who identified himself as independent, on July 12th.

“Epstein doesn’t have much private in it. Bondi didn’t misunderstand it (until she didn’t), and Trump would soon forgive his loyal soldiers for desperately wanting to appear on TV,” she said. Or, “There’s a hidden scandal, and it’s at his direction.”

Musk’s Xai apologises for Grok Chatbot’s anti-Semitic response

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Elon Musk’s Grok AI chatbot feature has announced an apology after making several anti-Semitic posts on social media site X this week.

In a statement posted to X on July 12, Xai, an artificial intelligence company that creates the chatbot program, apologized for “terrifying behavior” on the platform. Users praised Hitler, reported that they received responses that used anti-Semitic phrases and attacked users with traditionally Jewish surnames.

“We deeply apologize for the horrifying actions that many people have experienced,” the company’s statement said. “The purpose of @Grok is to provide users with a useful, true response. After careful investigation, I discovered that the underlying cause was an update of the code path upstream of the @Grok bot.”

Founded in 2023 by Musk as a Google challenger for Microsoft-backed Openai and Alphabet, the company said the update to the program has deviated the AI chatbot’s behavior. It worked for 16 hours until it was removed as a result of reported extremist language.

X users shared multiple posts on July 8th. There, Grok repeated anti-Semitism stereotypes regarding Jews, among various other anti-Semitistic comments. It’s not the first time a Xai chatbot has raised an alarm for its response.

In May, the chatbot mentioned South Africa’s “white genocide” in an unrelated conversation. At the time, Xai said the incident was the result of “illegal changes” to the online code.

A day after last week’s amazing post, Musk announced the new version of the chatbot, the Grok 4, on July 9th.

Tesla billionaire and former adviser to President Donald Trump said in June he would retrain his AI platform after expressing his dissatisfaction with the way Grok answered questions. Musk said that the tweaks his Xai company made to Grok caused the chatbot to be over-operated with user questions.

“Grok was too compliant with user prompts,” Musk wrote in X’s post after announcing the new version. “Essentially, we are eager to operate and operate, and that’s been addressed.”

The Grok 3, released in February, is available for free, but the new versions of Grok 4 and Grok 4 Heavy earn $30 and $300 a month, respectively.

Contributions: Jessica Guynn, USA Today.

Kathryn Palmer is a national trending news reporter for USA Today. You can contact her kapalmer@usatoday.com And with x @Kathrynplmr.

When the story of a ceasefire hits a point of attachment, the children gathered water in Gaza, medical officials say

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CNN

Health officials said it was one of several fatal territorial incidents coming as a ceasefire in Doha, and several children were killed in an Israeli airstrike, and at a water distribution point in central Gaza.

There was high hopes for the latest negotiations, but a few days after the negotiations, the two sides accused each other of blocking the agreement, but on the ground they were unable to escape in Israel’s military campaign.

The Palestinian Ministry of Health reported on Sunday that 139 bodies had been brought to Gaza Hospital in the past 24 hours, with many victims still under the tile rub. According to the ministry, the number has been reported since July 2nd, bringing the total number of people killed since October 7th, 2023 to 58,026.

According to Al Awda Hospital, Israeli airstrikes killed six children and four other people on Sunday at a water distribution site in Central Gaza. Videos of the chaotic scene showed multiple victims, including children in buckets and water carriers.

Israeli military admitted that the incident is under review, saying that the airstrike targeting “Islamic jihad terrorists” was incorrect and that it “falls dozens of meters below the target.”

And in central Gaza on Sunday, at least 12 people were killed and more than 40 were injured when Israeli airstrikes targeted a crowded junction, according to Dr. Mohammed Absalmiya, director of the Alsifa Medical Complex Central Gaza City. The deaths included Ahmad Kandir, a well-known doctor who the Ministry of Health described as “one of Gaza’s most respected medical professionals.”

The boy leaned against his cousin's body after being killed in an Israeli strike that struck Nusairat in central Gaza on July 13th.

The major sacrifices on Sunday followed several fatal incidents on Saturday. The ministry said 27 people were killed and more were injured when Israeli forces fired fire on people trying to get assistance from a distribution site near South Rafa run by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

GHF denied the claim on Saturday, saying that “there were no incidents in or near our site.”

Israeli forces also denied that anyone was injured in the shooting from a troop near the site, but said they continued to review the report. It reported that CNN had no further comment on Sunday.

However, the International Red Cross Committee (ICRC) said a nearby outdoor hospital has received 132 patients suffering from weapons-related injuries. According to the ICRC, 25 people died on arrival, and six more were declared dead after being admitted.

“This situation is unacceptable. The surprising frequency and magnitude of these mass casualties incidents highlight the horrifying situation that Gaza civilians endure,” the ICRC added.

About 800 Palestinians were killed while trying to access aid in Gaza between late May and July 7, according to the office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), which was launched by the GHF.

Elsewhere in Gaza, 13 people have been killed in airstrikes at an Alshathi refugee camp near Gaza city, north of the territory, according to Mohammed Absalmiya, director of Alshifa Hospital. Salmiya told CNN that 40 injured people were found. Geolocated Video showed at least one child among the victims.

Israeli Defense Forces said on Sunday that they destroyed weapons and tunnels used by Hamas in northern Gaza, and that the Air Force has attacked more than 150 targets across the Gaza Strip.

The surge in casualties in Gaza was seen as a new ceasefire agreement and hostages consulted on continuing in Doha, with optimism being able to reach an agreement.

US President Donald Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff said Tuesday that he hopes for a deal by the end of the week.

“We had four issues, and now it’s one after two days of proximity consultation,” Witkoff said.

On the same day, Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spent a lot of time talking about Gaza at the White House.

“We had to solve that,” Trump said.

However, despite the days of close talks in Doha between Israel and Hamas, there remains a huge gap between the political parties fighting.

An Israeli source familiar with the issue said last week that the uninterrupted issue is where Israeli forces redeploy in Gaza after the ceasefire took effect. The latest proposal called for the troops to withdraw from parts of North Gaza on the first day of the ceasefire and then retreat from parts of southern Gaza on the seventh day.

A detailed map was left in negotiations between Israel and Hamas, but that appears to be the main point of sticking.

Smoke rises into the sky after the Israeli attack in northern Gaza, as seen from southern Israel on July 10th.

The talks have “stopped out,” Hamas officials told CNN on Saturday, claiming Israel has added new terms.

However, Israeli political sources told CNN on Saturday that “Israel has shown flexibility in negotiations” and that “Hamas remains stubborn and is stubborn in positions that prevent mediators from moving forward with the agreement.”

Netanyahu will meet with his national security minister Itamar Ben Gwil to discuss the negotiations, according to sources familiar with the matter.

Finance Minister Ben Guville and Finance Minister Bezarel Smotrich, both of the Netanyahu government’s far-right members, are critics of the voices of the contract with Hamas, and instead urge Israel to cut off aid to Gaza and escalate the war until extremist groups are destroyed.

Recent opinion surveys in Israel suggest an overwhelming recognition for deals that end the war and return all hostages, living and dead. In a poll on Friday, Israeli Channel, 12th, 74% of its population said they believe Israel should end the war in Gaza in exchange for the return of all accedees.

Netanyahu claims that Israel has the right to return to battle at the end of a 60-day ceasefire on the table. Hamas is demanding a path to an indefinite halt of hostilities with Israeli forces fully withdrawing from Gaza.

How much should retirees invest by the age of 65?

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Resignation may be right in front of you, but there is still time to make up for the shortfall.

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Are you sneaking up at age 65? Or are you already there? If so, retirement is on your short-term radar, even if it’s not happening yet.

This raises an important question for people of this age, but how much should you save to retire by now, especially for people who are nearly 65 who are still working?

There is no absolute answer as everyone has different financial situations and needs. However, there are pretty specific rules of thumb, but that may help you understand if you have enough storage.

There are no universal numbers…

Incidentally, the proverb magic number is $1.26 million. This suggests that Northwestern Mutual’s latest annual survey of US investors saves people think they need to retire comfortably from the 2024 $1.46 million figure.

Just get a number with salt grains. It reflects a huge range of inputs. Many people will be happy with half that amount. Others are still twice as worried.

So perhaps more meaningful numbers are numbers that will help you maintain a certain standard of living that you enjoyed during your working year. A multiple of your current income will do the trick. This is because this amount of savings will ultimately be used to generate retirement income.

What are the numbers? According to mutual fund companies, at the end of your working year, about 10 times your year sal T.Row Price. For example, if you’re making $100,000 a year, you’ll need to save $1 million before you retire to avoid downgrading your lifestyle.

For clarity, the figure is not etched into stone. T. Rowe Price acknowledges that the annual revenue ranges between 7.5-13.5 times the 7.5x yearly revenues are reasonably healthy.

Its scope is consistent with similar proposals from brokerages Charles Schwab But Merrill Lynch.

Be prepared to make tough decisions

But are you miles away even from the low end of the proposed range? Don’t sweat too much – most people do. Mutual fund giant and retirement plan manager Vanguard reported that as of last year, 65-year-old (and UP) participants on retirement plans had an average account balance of just under $300,000 with a median of less than $100,000. Even adding non-job-related retirement savings to the mix doesn’t seem to make most of those people a proposed target for T. Rowe Price.

If you’re part of this crowd, don’t panic. Look, there are options…especially if you are still working.

Of these options, the Chief is to stay at least a little longer. Doing so will bring double benefits to your retirement savings efforts. First, you can push more income away from tax-deductible contributions in tax-based accounts funded by tax-deductible contributions. This money doesn’t have much time to grow, but at least it grows without taxes. (Even money market mutual funds like cash now pay with 4% orders. Not bad.) As you like your peers, most of the major expenses of life, like mortgages and school, are in the rearview mirror, so you have a substantial amount of income towards retirement.

What is the second benefit of continuing to work? This allows you to postpone the start of Social Security retirement benefits.

This is not a small problem either. Just waiting another two years to reach the full retirement age of 67 will convert into monthly Social Security payments that are about 12% more than what you collect from 65 years old. And if you can wait until you’re 70 before claiming Social Security, your payment will be about 25% greater than what you’d get if you filed at age 67.

Setting your target is a great start

Again, that’s just a rule of thumb. Most people survive well with far fewer, while others run out of money despite starting to retire for much larger amounts. How to handle your finances at retirement, especially the first few years you still want to grow your investment – can make the difference between having enough and not enough.

Nevertheless, this is a rule that many professional planners agree. Anything you can do to get as close to this target as possible will often use your time and energy.

Charles Schwab is the advertising partner for Motley Fool Money. James Blumley has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. To Motley Fool, T. There is a RowePrice Group position and is recommended. Motley Fool recommends Charles Schwab and recommends the following options: Motley Fools have a disclosure policy.

The Motley Fool is a partner at USA Today, providing financial news, analysis and commentary designed to help people control their financial lives. The content is produced independently of USA Today.

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Bondi drops cases against doctors accused of destroying the covid vaccine

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On July 12, Attorney General Pam Bondy dropped a lawsuit against a Utah doctor who was accused of forging a Covid-19 vaccine certificate and destroying a government-provided COVID-19 vaccine worth more than $28,000.

In a statement posted to X, Bondy said Michael Kirk Moore Jr. of Salt Lake County, Utah, is not worth the prison time he is facing. Moore was indicted by the Federal University Ju trial in 2023, and his trial began earlier this month.

“Dr. Moore gave patients a choice when the federal government refused to do so. He didn’t deserve the year he was facing in prison, and that’s over today,” Bondy said.

Skeptics about the Covid-19 vaccine have been accepted by the Trump administration. For example, the Pentagon attempted to re-enter service members who were expelled for refusing to be vaccinated during the pandemic.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has been doubting for decades about vaccine safety that goes against scientist evidence and research, said, “Dr. Moore deserves a medal of courage and commitment to healing!”

A 2023 statement from the Utah Utah U.S. Lawyer is said to have carried out a false finding from the plastic surgery center. His activities were said to include administering saline shots to minors at the request of their parents, so children would think they were receiving the Covid-19 vaccine, the statement said.

Marjorie Taylor Green, a US lawmaker from Georgia and a solid Trump supporter, supported dropping the lawsuit against Moore, who called the hero in a statement Saturday.

“We will never again allow our government to become tyrannical under our clock,” she said in an X post.

The latest move by Bondi scrutiny of the fire of senior Justice Department officials who worked on Trump’s investigation, robbing accusations of political retaliation in a sector whose mission is to enforce US law.

(Reporting by Phil Stewart and Barghav Acharya, Editing by Don Durfee and Alistair Bell)

NASA Parker Solar Probe Captures the Closest Image of the Sun

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A newly released image from NASA shows the solar corona in great detail after the Parker Solar Probe performs the closest flyby.

On the closest flyby of all time, NASA’s Parker Solar Probe captured a newly released image of solar wind removed from the outermost atmosphere of the sun, the Corona.

Scientists are learning more about the effects of the sun across the solar system, including events that could affect the Earth.

In a recent release, Nikki Fox, Associate Administrator of the Science Mission Bureau at NASA Headquarters in Washington, said: “We are witnessing the threat of space weather begins not just with models, but with our eyes. This new data will help us significantly improve spatial weather forecasts to ensure safety for astronauts and protect technology on Earth and across the solar system.”

The solar wind of the sun was captured in detail

The probe, recorded at high resolution, was the first time a collision of numerous coronal mass emissions (or CMEs), a massive explosion of charged particles that play a major role in the weather in space.

“In these images, we see CMEs essentially heading upwards from each other,” says Angelos Vourilidas, WISPR instrument scientist at Johns Hopkins’ Applied Physics Laboratory, which designs, builds and operates spacecraft in Laurel, Maryland. “We use this to see how CMES meet up. This is important for the weather in space.”

Can’t view the graphics? Click here to see them.

Parker solar probes have discovered that while solar wind is a stable wind near the Earth, it is nothing under the sun. The spacecraft experienced a switchback or zigzag magnetic field when it was within 14.7 million miles of the sun. Scientists have found that these switchbacks that occurred in clusters are seen more frequently than expected using data from Parker solar probes.

How close was the probe to the sun?

On December 24, 2024, the Parker Solar Probe began its approach closest to the sun, moving just 3.8 million miles from the surface of the sun. With that in view, if the Earth and the Sun are only a foot apart, the Parker’s probe will be about 1/2 inch from the surface of the sun, according to NASA.

In the orbit closest to the sun on the spacecraft, various scientific instruments, including a wide field imager on solar probes (or WISPRs), were used to collect data as they passed through the atmosphere outside the sun or the coronavirus.

The continuous flow of electric charging particles from the solar wind, the solar system and the sun furious throughout the coronavirus, both can be seen in new WISPR photos. Knowing the origins of solar winds in solar winds is the first step to understanding their effects, according to NASA.

How does the solar wind affect the Earth’s atmosphere?

The Earth’s magnetic field is our invisible guardian. This field creates a barrier to protect us from the powerful solar wind. Magnetic fields can sometimes be destroyed by stronger solar winds.

In some cases, it can cause spatial weather events that hinder everything from land power networks to ocean communications to satellites in orbit, according to NASA. When the flow of particles interacts with the gases in the planet’s magnetic field, it also creates a spectacular aurora.

Parker solar probes are expected to continue collecting more data in their current orbit to make future passes through the coronavirus and help scientists discover the origins of dull solar winds. The next pass is scheduled for September 15th, 2025.

Source NASA, Goddard Space Flight Center, Johns Hopkins APL, Naval Research Institute, USA Today Research

Tuam Babies in Ireland: Excavation of mass graves of 800 children begins

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Tuam, Ireland
CNN

When Annette McKay’s first grandson was born, she thought her mother, Maggie O’Connor, would surpass the moon. She became a great grandmother.

Instead, McKay spotted her sobbing and crying outside her house: “It’s a baby, a baby.”

McKay reassured her 70-year-old mother that her great grandson was in good health. But O’Connor hadn’t spoken about him.

“It’s my baby, not your baby,” O’Connor said. Her first child, Mary Margaret, passed away in June 1943, just six months old.

It was the only time O’Connor spoke about her experiences at Mary Margaret, or St. Mary’s house.

The Tuam facility was one of dozens of “homes” in which pregnant girls and unmarried women were sent to give birth in secret for much of the 20th century. Women were often forced to separate from children. Hundreds of babies, as far away as Ireland, the UK, or the US, Canada and Australia, have died, and their bodies have been abandoned.

On Monday, a team of Irish and international forensic experts will break through the ground at Tuam’s mass cemetery, believed to contain the bodies of 796 children as they begin the two-year excavation.

From 1922 to 1998, the Catholic Church and the Irish state established a highly misogynistic network of institutions that targeted and punished unmarried women. It created a culture of containment that touched all aspects of society. Then Ireland’s attitude changed. But the shame, secrets and social expulsions that the system created left lasting scars.

“In this twisted, authoritarian world, sex was the biggest crime for women, not men,” McKay told CNN.

“This visible sign of sex, the pregnancy of “indulging in sin” — is a woman who “disappears” from the parish behind a high wall at the edge of town,” she said.

Maggie O'Connor survived the St. Mary's home in Tuam. Her daughter, Mary Margaret, was one of nearly 800 children who died there.
Annette McKay says he will not carve his mother's name on the gravestone until he can reunite with Mary Margaret.

O’Connor was sent to Tuam’s home as a 17-year-old pregnant home after being raped by the admin of the industrial school where she grew up, McKay said.

In the house, the mother and baby were separated from each other. Many women were eventually sent to Magdalene Laundry, a Catholic-run workhouse where they were detained as unpaid workers. Their babies were then illegally adopted and trafficked outside of Ireland, including in the United States, where more than 2,000 children were sent from the 1940s to the 1970s to the 1940s, and more than 2,000 children were sent, according to the Clan Project.

But many of those babies never survived living outside the wall. At least 9,000 infants and children died at these agencies, including Tuam’s home.

After Mary Margaret was born, O’Connor was sent to another industrial school and learns that his daughter had passed away six months later while doing laundry.

“‘The child of your sin is dead,” the nun told her, McKay said, “As if it was nothing.”

O’Connor eventually moved to England, where he raised six other children and lived a life that looked superficially attractive, McKay said. However, the fear of Tuam’s house did not leave her.

McKay lamented her sister, whom she had never met, but found comfort in imagining a small grave in the Irish countryside where Mary Margaret might be buried.

But in 2014, its idyllic vision was crushed after opening an English newspaper that read “Mass Septic Tank Tombs” that included the skeletal structures of 800 babies on an Irish home ground for an unmarried mother.

It was the job of local Tuam historian Katherine Coles, who revealed that 796 babies had died in Tuam without burial records and that they had been placed in a repealed sewage tank.

Authorities initially refused to engage with Corless’s findings and completely rejected her work. The nun’s sister, who ran through the house from 1925 to 1961, hired a consulting company that completely denied the graves of the masses, saying there was no evidence that the child was buried there.

However, Colles, survivors of the mother and baby home, and members of the family did not stop the campaign for Tuam’s babies and their mothers.

And it worked.

Local historian Katherine Cores sits on a clay model made at the Tuam facility in the kitchen in the countryside of Galway. Corless said the beginning of the excavation provided a sense of

In 2015, the Irish government set up a survey of 14 mothers and baby homes and four county homes. The investigation said that despite being “known to local and national authorities” and “recorded in official publications,” the facility found “a frightening level of infant mortality rates” and that the state has not been alerted.

Before 1960, mothers and babies’ homes “didn’t save the lives of ‘illegal’ children. In fact, it appears they have significantly reduced their survival prospects.” The provincial investigation led to a formal government apology in 2021, an announcement of a relief scheme, and an apology from the Bonsecourt sisters.

Many families and survivors feel that the government is inadequate and that they are not treated with the respect and dignity they deserve, but there is now a general sense of security in Tuam.

For the next two years, forensic experts will work on the Tuam site, excavating and analyzing the remains of children.

A memorial to the old site of Tuam's House in Galway County. There, the bodies of hundreds of dead babies were placed in abandoned sewer tanks.
A photo of a septic tank room was featured in an article by Catherine Colles, revealing research into the world in 2014.
Once Odait Office launched what was expected and what was expected by the expected Odait Office to recover, analyze and remember the recovered human remains, the former Tuam home grounds were sealed.

Niamh McCullagh is a forensic archaeologist working with the office of Tuam (ODAIT), the independent intervention director overseeing the project, and said that “test excavations” on site were discovered in 20 rooms in the sewage tanks containing infants, and found remaining sewage tanks in the 35-week period to three years.

McCullagh told CNN that if forensic experts reveal evidence that any of the children have died illegally, they will notify the coroner, who notifies police.

“The possibility is certainly there, you can see it on the death register,” she said.

However, she warned that identifying the body and its cause of death is a challenge due to the fragmented nature of the body, the amount of time that has passed, and the lack of complete DNA samples from potential relatives.

“The terrible truth about babies is that they have to live with illness long enough to affect bones. So they don’t live long enough to affect bones. That’s not a pretty story, but that’s true,” she said.

Standing in front of where her two brothers, John and William were born, Anna Corrigan, 70, from Dublin, told CNN he hopes the dig will bring justice and closure.

“They had no dignity in life. They had no dignity of death. They were denied all human rights,” said Corrigan, who grew up as the only child. It was first time her mother, Bridget, died in 2012, when she learned about her siblings born in Tuam while studying her mother’s early life at an industrial school.

Corrigan’s brother John weighed 8.5 pounds at birth in February 1946. However, an authorities’ report on the conditions at home, published months after her mother left, paints a harsh picture of reality for people inside, explaining that she was “debilitated by a miserable, vortexing appetite” and “uncontrolled physical functioning.”

According to the report, 271 children lived in their homes at the time. Of the 31 infants, 12 were said to be “poor babies, weak and unprosperous.”

John died of measles at 13 months, according to his death certificate. She hopes that her brother may be adopted in North America and still alive, but Corrigan believes that John is buried in the tomb of the masses.

Anna Corrigan, whose brother was born to a baby family with former Tuam mother, stands in a cemetery just three minutes from the site.

On Tuesday, relatives and survivors gathered at the site to hear from experts about their next steps.

“It could have been me. Every one of us who survived there was only hair width because we fell into the septic tank,” survivor Teresa O’Sullivan told CNN.

O’Sullivan was born in his home in 1957 to a teenage mother who told her that “she ruined her life” that she had not stopped looking for her, despite telling her that her child had been sent to America. They only reconnected when O’Sullivan was in her 30s.

Recently, she found a brother from her father’s side. He was with O’Sullivan to support her as the excavation progressed.

“We were by their side. They were in the room with us, they were in the building with us,” O’Sullivan said of the baby whose body reached the septic tank.

“We need to get them out of there,” she said.

Donie O’Sullivan and William Bonnett of CNN contributed to this report.

Was Trump really shot? Yes, despite the conspiracy theory, please refer to the evidence

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  • Former President Donald Trump listened at a campaign rally held in Butler, Pennsylvania on July 13, 2024.
  • The shooter, Thomas Matthew Crooks, was killed by law enforcement, and the audience at the rally was also killed.
  • Despite evidence of confirming the shooting, conspiracy theories about the event persist online.

President Donald Trump said he saw a chart on display at a Pennsylvania rally on July 13, 2024, and fired eight shots at the then candy date, erupting as a archer on a nearby roof.

Footage from the incident shows Trump turning over, raising his hand to his ear, checking it and finding blood. He appeared in Milwaukee, Wisconsin a few days later, accepting a Republican presidential nomination with bandages in his ears.

The FBI later thought the bullet had hit the ears of a whole or fragmented Trump, but the unfounded plot first questioned whether it was glass or the other rap shotgun that injured the president.

But a year later, conspiracy theory has not stopped. A quick scroll through X shows a close-up of Trump’s ears comparing the false theory with the recent photo of an attempted assassination being staged.

Here are what we know about filming and what questions remain.

Donald Trump’s first assassination attempt: What happened?

On July 13, 2024, Trump was speaking at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. That’s when a gunman fired multiple shots at the then presidential candidate on the rooftop near Larry.

Trump was shot in the ear, and as Secret Service agents flocked him and left the stage, he was dug into the back of the lecture. However, they didn’t let him out of public vision, as he striped his face at the moment of the photo that became the definitive image of his campaign.

The shooter was later identified as 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks and was killed by law enforcement. The con artist appeared to have acted alone and did not belong to any particular political tendencies.

The audience at the rally was killed and two people were seriously injured.

Was Trump really shot?

Yes, multiple evidences show that Trump was hit in the ear with a bullet.

A bipartisan Congressional Task Force was created a December report from the task force, weeks after “the initial attempt to investigate all actions by federal, local and local law enforcement agencies (LLE) or other state or local government or private companies or individuals or individuals.”

In the timeline of events included in the report, Crooks fires three shots at 6:11pm, with a round bumping into Trump’s ear, with his details quickly covering his body. Seconds later, Crooks fired five more shots, the report says.

A week after the shooting, Trump’s former White House doctor, Rep. Ronnie Jackson, issued a memo about Trump’s injuries.

“The bullet passed and I hit the top of my right ear less than a quarter of an inch since it got into my head,” a note posted on X. “The bullet truck produced a wound that was 2 cm wide and extended to the cartilage surface of the ear.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci said on CNN that the doctor’s report showed it was a surface level wound with no further complications.

Trump has mentioned many times that he still experiences the “throbbing sensation” in the ears he was shot.

The rest of the questions focus on the shortcomings of security

During the incident at Butler and the second obvious attempt at Trump’s life on a golf course in Florida two months later, some Republicans sparked a conspiracy about the shooting. Trump himself blamed Democrats on the plot during the campaign trajectory.

The Congressional Task Force report alleged that the Secret Service and other federal agencies failed in some of their planning, implementation and leadership. The Secret Service also said that on July 10, six staff members were suspended and disciplinary action between the 10th and six weeks without pay, implementing some of the recommendations in the Congressional Report.

Now, Trump said in a preview clip of an interview with his daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, he was informed by multiple agencies about the shooting.

“They explained to me and I’m happy with it,” Trump said of Fox News. “My view with Lala Trump.” “There were mistakes, but it should have happened… I have a lot of confidence in these people.”

But Rep. Mike Kelly, a Pennsylvania Republican who chaired the task force, said he continues to push more answers about the agency’s failures.

“We can’t stop doing that because we didn’t get the answer,” Kelly said in June in an interview with the USA Today Network at the Butler office. “It’s worth knowing what happened that day.”

Contributors: Zac Anderson, Matthew Rink, Bart Jansen, Josh Meyer, Jeanine Santucci, David Jackson, USA Today Network

Kinsey Crowley is a Trump Connect reporter for the USA Today Network. Contact her at kcrowley@gannett.com. Follow her on X and Tiktok @kinseycrowley or Bluesky @kinseycrowley.bsky.social.

Camp Mystic was their shelter, now they found comfort to each other

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There are almost sacred places where girls go for four weeks, calling, leaving the boys, and taking them closer.

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She was eight years old when Allie Coates ran a buffalo glass barefoot at Camp Mystic. Her small steps are surrounded by cypress trees near the Guadalupe River.

She caught catfish, mailed her first letter, and learned to ride a horse.

Thirteen years later, she was still there. This time, as a counselor, I taught an 8-year-old girl how to swim, fish, French braids and play guitar.

She can still see herself as a shy girl under a hot pink comforter. Her name is embroidered in white on her bed at Bubble Inn. This year, the same cabin that 13 girls and their counselors were wiped out by the July 4 flood in Texas Hill Country. In total, 27 Camp Mystic children and staff have died in the state in at least 120.

Today, her Los Angeles apartment smells like chocolate chips and oatmeal. She finds the comfort of “Tweety” cookies, named after camp director Tweety Eastland.

She is now a 25-year-old social media manager and wears a silver bracelet filled with camp charm, including M, the most improved M in canoeing. She draws out the camp Bible and reads from her bubbled teen handwritten, crumpled paper: Matthew 5:16, “Let’s become a light that everyone can see.”

She began to relax when Coates’ mom took her to camp from Dallas every year.

The highway through Scrubby Desert turned into a flat, gentle hill with mesquite trees to Highway 89, and its rugged limestone passed through the green metal gate decorated with “CM.” It was a timeless place away from selfies, cell phones, boys and social media, and where Sunday’s fried chicken lunch gave way to a one-way dance party.

Mystic girl laments what is lost, just like the ex-camper van calling herself. The girls are counselors who began their camping trip and tried to save them. The innocence of time and the place they say they found the best version of themselves, where they made who they were.

“The strange and annoying thing was the safe space. We can be stupid and become ourselves,” Coates says. “Just to become a girl.”

In the week from the floods they hear the heartbreaking stories of loss, a generation of mystical girls from across the country is turning towards each other. They host prayer vigils and fundraisers, sharing photos and favorite stories. They are looking for familiars who will return to camp. We ask for the cheese enchilada recipes, yellow sheet cakes with chocolate frosting, and the songs and prayers that support them.

A generation of campers

Julia Hawthorne’s first year at Camp Mystic was in 1987. She followed her sister and her aunt, who went to camp in the 1970s.

Hawthorne later became a camp counselor and taught the girls what she learned.

Her cousin went to Camp Mystic in the 1990s.

When she got pregnant in 2006 and found out she had a girl, she said to her sister: “Oh, she can go to Mystic.”

Her second daughter, Presley, was born four years later and was also a mysterious girl.

Her two nie are sophomore and are registered to attend next year if the camp resumes for what will become that 100th Anniversary.

“These songs we sang every day at camp are the same songs that my aunt learned, and my daughters learned,” says Hawthorne, 49, an Austin dentist. “I have that comfort right now.”

The girls look for the grandmother’s name written on the ceiling of the cabin, which is a tradition that took place until 1939 when the camp moved to all girls.

The camp opened in 1926 and operated by three generations of the same family, and in 2011 differences over money between the brothers were sorted out in court, and even when the summer of travel volleyball teams and volunteer travel threatened it, the family maintained it.

Every summer, around 2,000 girls, between 8 and 18, attend the camp in three sessions. It has changed little over the years, except for the yoke of the baton that strolls into lacrosse and the charm school class that transforms into beauty on the inside and outside. Girls are taught that painting your nails red will help you avoid biting you. Former First Lady Lady Laura Bush was a counselor.

There are almost all sacred places where girls go for four weeks. Where they put their phones. Where they run away from the boys. A place to bring them closer.

Days are measured at sunset with the same rituals and traditions that your mother had. Brooklyn Hawthorne learned to ride horses in the same place his mother did, slept in the same cabin and ate chocolate chip cookies from the same recipe. It is the only place in the world where she and her mom can share the exact same experiences that are not bound by space and time.

“You feel like you’re in your own little world,” says Brooklyn, 19, a sophomore at the University of Texas Austin. “You don’t have to worry about boys. You don’t have your own phones, but you don’t want them. You have a camp friend you know since you were eight, and that’s all you want.”

Her mom admits that being a girl is much more difficult “under social media pressure,” but even in 1987 she enjoyed her time.

“For us, it wasn’t as much as we didn’t unplug it,” she says. “You don’t have to think about pressure, you just have to be a girl.”

The camp is Christian, but also depicts agnostics, Jews and some atheists. Driving everything about camp is three doctrines that women still try to live beyond the green gates of Camp Mystic. Be a better person, bring out the best camps in you, and grow spiritually.

On Sunday, the girls wear white and go to a service on the banks of Guadalupe. Guadalupe washed away the river sitting with his cabin mate singing capella. On Sunday night, older girls read Vesper and share their gratitude.

“When it comes to the beauty of Camp Mystic, you just feel God’s presence when you’re there,” says Julia.

From fear to lifelong friends

Katherine Haver’s family moved to Texas when she was two years old.

The first year she was able to go, she was too scared.

The following year, she nervously agreed. The first little girl with two adult teeth full sized before that, liked to read and asked a lot of questions.

“The girl I just met last year was already close,” she says. “But it just made me happy being around them.”

That night, the girls remained at camp each year and were divided into two groups that compete in activities and sports. Pulling out the blue or red construction paper from the big cowboy, I decided to do something to define a girl to this day.

She drew Blue – Kiowa – and the older girl rushed to pick her up and took her to sit with her group. “You feel very special. Here are these older girls, including you, you can become a kind of adult,” says Haver, 24, a junior at the medical school in Galveston, Texas.

Looking back at her eight years of camp, there was a dance party for Hannah Montana and Taylor Swift, the Bluebell Ice Cream she had every day at lunchtime (and still looking for a taste of the birthday cake at the grocery store). But it was more than that, it was spiritual growth.

“You can take it to mean what you want. You were really working to be a better person,” she said. “How did you go out into the world and become a better person?”

“These are truly beautiful things, those memories, they only exist between us,” says Haver. “It always unites us, regardless of what separates us.”

Where you belong

Coates often struggled with his high school friends, but Camp Mystic was a shelter. She could be herself, whether she would try a new hairstyle or meant she would wear a t-shirt that would match her friend with her cat dj.

“The opportunity to unplug, get off my phone and be with people who really care about you in nature, one of the best experiences I’ve ever had,” she says.

She moved from cabin to cabin to rough house from Bubble Inn to Rough House and then to counselor for the summer holidays from Pepperdine University. The girl she met when she was eight years old was still her friend.

This made the camper van more like a family, she says. “I was able to get to know them when you were little, so I was less judged than when I met girls as a teenager,” she says. “You could be loud. You could be stupid. You didn’t have to prove anything to anyone. You will show up like you.”

She worked to create the same sense for 23 little 8-year-old girls who came to Bubble Inn without anyone knowing. She taught them to braid their hair. There is a place to place stamps in the letter house.

“You forget, these girls are so few, they’re just babies. They don’t even know how to brush their teeth at times, because their mothers are always together and do everything for them.” “So you love them and teach them.”

The counselor loved the girls as if they were their little sisters. The girls are homesick, often when she and other counselors used Camp Mystic tested treatments, special homesick medications and colorful toms. And a hug.

She thought about the girls that camp lost this year, the girls who couldn’t use the cute bedding she chose. And the parents who regain their colorful trunks are not their girls.

I feel that is impossible.

She looks for good when the camp teaches her. She was relieved to know all the girls, as she did every night under the same hot pink comforter, slept on her last night, tapping a camp speaker and a message at 10:30pm.

“Goodnight Camp Mystic, we love you.”

Laura Trujillo is a national columnist focused on health and wellness. She is the author of “Back from the Shelf: A Daughter’s Truth and the Exploration of Updates” and can be contacted at ltrujillo@usatoday.com.

Ukraine says it killed a Russian agent suspected of assassinating intelligence agents

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Ukrainian security services said on Sunday that Russian special services agents killed a Russian special services agent who was suspected of bombarding a fellow Kiev officer earlier this week, and that they believe Russia’s federal security services are responsible.

Ivan Voronych, an officer of the SBU, was shot dead on Kyiv on Thursday morning. Authorities said CNN was an obvious assassination.

The suspects — a man and a woman — “lay low” after the shooting, SBU said in a statement Sunday.

However, the SBU and national police officers have established a place in the Kiev region, the statement added.

said Vasyl Malyuk, head of SBU. “An enemy hideout has been discovered as a result of secret investigations and aggressive anti-intelligence measures.”

He continued, “During their arrests, they began to resist, there was a fire exchange, and the scoundrels were eliminated.”

“I want to remind you that the only prospect of the enemy in Ukrainian territory is death!” he said on the video, which was clearly filmed in front of the suspect’s body.

According to the SBU, the two were ordered to track targets and establish daily life. They were then directed at the safe house where the silencer pistols were waiting for them.

SBU is Ukraine’s main security service and is responsible for both internal security and sabotage to Russia. In particular, he was responsible for Ukraine’s bold drone attacks on Russian airfields last month.

The killing of Voronych comes as Russia is escalating its attack on Ukraine – this week, both the biggest and second-largest drone attacks in the conflict are now in its fourth year.

Will Trump’s spending law make college tuition more expensive?

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The new settlement law’s loan cap and Medicaid cuts are likely to raise costs for students across the country, experts say.

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WASHINGTON – Vashti Trujillo wanted to complete his master’s degree. But she is worried that President Donald Trump may have put it out of reach.

The president’s massive tax and spending laws are set to cut down the federal student loan program, where a 21-year-old junior at Colorado State University Pueblo, is likely to have to pay one. Education experts also predict that there will be legislation that will strain the budgets of many public universities, such as those that Trujillo will be present. That’s because the law could drive state legislatures to reroute state legislatures from higher education to safety net programs such as Medicaid. This could dramatically reduce the spending law.

“This bill attacks every angle of a student’s life,” she said.

Trujillo, who has a doubling major in mechatronics engineering and data analysis, is wondering among many US college students whether Trump’s first signing legislative achievements in his second term could raise their costs.

Anxiety doesn’t just hit students. It is ubiquitous in university administrators. Federal funding is declining. The supply of students paying tuition fees is beginning to fall over the long term. And the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement policy has shaken the prospect of going to international students, the population that many American universities need to survive.

Trump’s massive spending scale stabilizes several funding flows for higher education programs, including Pergrant, but it almost takes away money when even the wealthiest universities are already financially burdened.

Over the next few years, the new student loan repayment program created by law will raise bills for millions of borrowers. I feel that universities need to shift more support to graduate students and from undergraduate students. Meanwhile, many state legislatures could be deprived of their support for higher education.

Still, the Trump administration in Congress and Republicans are confident that the new budget law will strengthen university oversight and ultimately lower student prices.

“By establishing loan restrictions, the bill closes open spigots for family grants that create college costs and burdens,” Education Secretary Linda McMahon posted on X after the Senate passed the measure. “This bill simplifies and streamlines student loan repayments for millions of borrowers.”

Nathan Grow, a professor of economics at Carlton College, called the spending law “a harbinger of future challenges.”

“Whether public or private, universities and universities rely heavily on federal funding that has gone far beyond that,” he said.

Ending Grade Plus, Capping Parent Plus

They aren’t coming anytime soon, but major changes to the student loan system will begin to affect borrowers in 2026.

Parents will soon face new restrictions on how much they can borrow with federal loans to fund their children’s education. (The new cap is $20,000 per student per year, with a total limit of $65,000.

Since July 1, 2026, there will only be two repayment programs for those taking out new loans, but the current borrower’s plans will be in sunset in 2028.

There are also new caps for graduate students’ borrowing. And for decades, the GRAD PLUS program has helped students pursue careers in medicine, law and other training-intensive careers, is unavailable for new students. According to the American Association of Medical Colleges, about half of all medical students receive loans with graduates each year, and is based almost entirely on attendance costs.

Kim Cook, CEO of the National College Attainment Network, a university access group, said the losses for graduate students could ultimately have a trickle-down effect on the university’s large financial aid budget.

But for the time being, Cook said many university counselors will be focusing on resolving widespread confusion over what the law is doing and what it doesn’t affect. She said students don’t necessarily understand all of the forms of financial aid remaining.

“Federal student aid still exists,” she said. “Pell’s grants still exist.”

That confusion alone can prevent some students from going to college at all, she said.

Medicaid, SNAP is tied to university costs

Without a doubt, the most controversial element of the new law is the reduction in major safety net programs.

The roughly $1 trillion fund cut to Medicaid comes into effect in 2028, when the Congressional Budget Office expels millions of Americans from health insurance. Over 20 million Americans lose some or all of their benefits through supplemental nutrition assistance programs or SNAP.

The ripple effects of Medicaid and food stamp regulations reverberate across public universities and universities. Without federal funds, state legislatures will be forced to fill the gap. Savings will be needed elsewhere as lawmakers are balanced in budgets.

When that happens, funding for higher education is often the first in the chopping block, said Tom Hanish, vice president of government relations for the state Association of Higher Education Executive Officers.

“The nation will have to make really difficult choices,” he said. “And historically, what we saw is that higher education comes at the brunt of when they have to make difficult choices.”

In Colorado, state lawmakers have already changed university money demands to help compensate for federal fund cuts. However, Trujillo, a student at CSU Pueblo, doesn’t have much time between multiple jobs to worry about it.

She was her first family to attend college. Through Pell grants, scholarships, and state and institutional financial aid, she has so far managed to avoid eliminating public or private student loans. She knows that a master’s degree will likely lead to a higher salary in engineering, but the idea that she may have to resort to private lenders makes her nervous.

“I’m very scared of personal loans,” she said. “I’ve heard of horror stories.”

Zachary Schermele is an education reporter for USA Today. You can contact him by email at zschermele@usatoday.com. Follow him on X at @Zachschermele and follow Bluesky at @Zachschermele.bsky.social.

Zohran Mamdani wants to tax the rich in NYC. People have gone crazy.

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In her failed 2024 presidential election, Democratic candidate Kamala Harris pledged to maintain the majority of Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, with at least one notable exception. She would have raised taxes on the wealthiest Americans.

Now, the Democratic candidate for New York City mayor is floating around similar proposals. Among other plans, Zohran Mamdani wants to raise the income tax of the wealthiest New Yorkers by 2%.

In both cases, the idea is to make money by taxing the rich and make money by paying for other initiatives. Harris sought taxes from the wealthy to pay the estimated $2 trillion deficit. A democratic socialist, Mamdani wants free city buses and freezes at New York rent.

Taxing the rich had worked before. During World War II, the wealthiest Americans endured the highest tax rate above 90% to support the economy.

But does that work now?

Billionaires may escape from higher taxes

The standard objection is that tax increases for wealthy Americans will drive them away. They will take steps to avoid paying taxes, such as leaving a city, state, or country or moving wealth offshore.

Here’s how your opponent has received Mamdani’s suggestion:

New York Governor Kathy Hochul said he could have refused to raise taxes, but that would urge the billionaires to flee. “I don’t want to lose any more people to Palm Beach,” she told a television interviewer, according to the New York Post.

In a Reuters commentary, financial writer Marty Fridson warned that “if not a chance, he warned about the possibility that many high-income earners would leave NYC to escape the added tax bite.”

The New York Times has framed the rails for quotes from business leaders about escape from New York. Sample: “We might consider closing the supermarket and selling our business,” John Catsimatidis, owner of the Gristedes chain, spoke to the Free Press.

Mamdani’s campaign estimates that a 2% tax on New Yorkers, who make more than $1 million a year, raises $4 billion a year.

Of course, that forecast won’t punish even if enough billionaires leave the city to avoid taxes.

Are the “billionaire tax” warnings exaggerated?

Are the tragic warnings exaggerated? Perhaps, based on a wealth of tax research and implications for migration. But a lot depends on who you ask.

Kamolika Das, local policy director at the Institute for Taxation and Economic Policy, a left and right think tank, said he did not encourage the generally wealthy people to move.

“Tax policy doesn’t actually drive relocation decisions,” DAS said. “They have been claiming this for a long time, and there is very little evidence to support it.”

A 2023 survey by the Institute for Non-Participation Fiscal Policy found that “there is no evidence of a significant tax movement” from New York after the tax cuts.

Main reasons: Top 1% earners travel at a lower rate than other income groups. And when they move, they generally move from one tax area to another.

In 2004, New Jersey raised the highest income tax rate for high-income people by 2.6 percentage points.

“There are a total of 37 billionaires remaining the following year,” said Lindsay Owens, executive director of Groundwork Collaborative, a progressive think tank. “But that same year, New Jersey’s billionaires population grew over 3,000.”

Not all researchers agree.

California lost high earners with taxes

Reuters columnist Fridson cites a study on the nonprofit California Employment Center and the economy. A 2016 voting measure marks a net loss of $5.3 billion in personal income tax from high-income earners that left California in five years after extending higher taxes for the wealthy.

Higher taxes in New York “will raise revenues, and there’s no doubt about that,” said Jared Walczak, vice president of state projects at the nonpartisan tax foundation. But tax hikes “tap out some people,” he said.

Leaving the US via taxes is one thing, Walzak said. Moving from Manhattan to Hoboken, New Jersey is something completely different.

“It’s much harder to leave a country than to leave,” he said, “and it’s more difficult to leave a state than to leave a city.”

Walczak points out that the 2% tax increase proposed by Mamdani is a flat rate of “up to the first dollar” of all income earned by wealthy New Yorkers. The city’s highest tax rate will be raised from about 3.9% to 5.9%.

At that rate, high-income people will “pay more in New York city taxes than most states pay in state taxes,” Walczak said.

The remote work boom in recent years has created a pandemic “Boom Town” filled with refugees from high-tax cities that can generally work remotely.

“I was able to work for a company in New York City, but I don’t know what Austin, Texas, will take me to my residence,” said Therese McGuire, a strategy professor at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.

A study by the Tax Foundation shows that high tax conditions tend to lose residents to other states, while low tax conditions tend to acquire them. Taxes are one of many factors, including work, weather, quality of life, and the broader cost of living.

Other studies suggest that billionaires tax flights occur, but “only at margins” and negligible tax rates.

“We make decisions about where to place ourselves and our families based on a lot of considerations, many of which are not financial,” Owens said.

Trump’s attempt to assassinate will still resonate a year later

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The tragic shooting in the countryside of Pennsylvania lives in Donald Trump’s rhetoric. His approach leading his country, and how does his followers see him?

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The painting hangs in a prominent place in the White House of his iconic fist pump. He says his right ear is still in his throat. Recently, President Donald Trump has spoken about being “saved by God” to carry out his political agenda.

Trump’s second term is full of memories of the assassin who shot a Republican in Butler, Pennsylvania, A year ago, Secret Service sniper killed a supporter in a rally before shooting and killing a gunman. It is a tragic event that lives on with his rhetoric, his approach to steering his country again, and how his followers see him now. Many have embraced the idea that Trump will not spare for a higher purpose, and recently he even had the opportunity to remind him of that.

“It’s very difficult not to see Providence’s hands in his life and in our country,” said Ralph Reid, a well-known religious conservative who wrote a text to Trump after the US military bombed Iran last month and shared his view that the president’s life was saved due to that historic foreign policy moment.

Trump has embarked on one of the president’s most important and controversial opening stretches in modern memory. It is struck by Iran’s nuclear facilities, reviewing the federal government and pursuing a massive deportation. Allies believe his near-death experience on July 13, 2024 colored this approach into the presidency, and made it even more motivated than when Trump last ran through the country.

“When you have any of these moments, you realize that every day is important, and you need to have a deep, lasting impact,” said Sean Spicer, White House press secretary during Trump’s first term. “And I think that’s why he’s so mission-driven right now.”

Dramatic turning points for the 2024 campaign

The assassination attempt was not a crucial moment for Trump. Historians say the shooting continues to echo across the country a year later.

“I think that was a dramatic turning point,” said Presidential historian Douglas Brinkley, who described Butler as “very important in the history of the US president.” He noted that Trump gained new support soon after the shooting and expanded his coalition.

Trump got political backing in the aftermath of Butler. This came shortly after then-President Joe Biden’s tragic debate. Republicans gathered around the center of injured standard bearers and made famous two days later at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee with a large white bandage around their ears. Participants wore ear bandages in solidarity and were immediately featured at the GOP gathering. The shooting added to the sense among Trump supporters that he was the persecuted person.

“It suddenly became true, like ‘Holy Smoking, they’re really trying to get him,'” Spicer said.

Supporting Musk and how Butler is part of Trump’s “lore”

Billionaire Elon Musk supported Trump on the day of his assassination attempt, and he later appeared on stage with him when Republicans rebelliously returned to Butler for a rally about a month before Election Day. Musk spent nearly $290 million in his 2024 campaign to support Trump and other Republican candidates, making him the overwhelming largest donor in the election cycle.

Reid, founder and chairman of the Faith and Freedom Union, called Butler the “inflection point of the campaign.”

“It made a real difference to his own supporters who feel they need to put extra distance for him and leave it all on the field after he was willing to step into the arena at risk of his life,” Reid said.

A year later, Butler became part of Trump’s “lore,” Brinkley said. One day he will be featured in his presidential library. That physical effect still remains for Trump, who is talking about still experiencing the “throbbing sensation” in his ear.

Another reminder of the day was on display on the White House state floor in April. The president’s residence now features a large painting of Trump, a large painting that pumps his right fist into the air, with blood strewn on his face after being shot.

Sheen captures Trump as he stands on stage and gets injured and rebelliously yells “fight, fight, fight, fight, fight,” and is driven away by an agent in the Secret Service. It instantly became an iconic image, hanging on a t-shirt and “unsealed forever by the American imagination,” Brinkley said. There are also statues depicting oval office moments.

“I was saved by God to make America great again.”

When lawmakers and other senior officials gathered in the Rotunda of the Capitol to launch a new administration, Trump recalls “the assassin bullet was torn into my ears,” and instilled him with a sense of sacredly defined purpose.

“I believe and believe that at the time, my life was saved because of my life,” Trump said in his inaugural address in January. “I was saved by God again to make America great.”

The first five months that continued in Trump’s second administration were turbulent times. The president acted aggressively by pushing up legal boundaries and testing the limits of enforcement. Many conservatives support his actions. Opponents protested and accused Trump of acting like an authoritarian.

In a statement to USA Today, on the anniversary of the assassination attempt, White House press chief Karoline Leavitt described the death of Corey Comperatore, a 50-year-old volunteer firefighter at Butler Rally, as “a selfless life was lost in order to protect those around him.”

“President Trump will never forget Corey and his beautiful family,” Levitt wrote, adding:

Trump’s “God’s Right” Story

Trump’s rhetoric about being saved by God is played by Jennifer Mercieca, a political rhetoric expert who teaches at Texas A&M University, as a story that has been cultivated over the years by politicians who have been turned from the Republican Reality TV-star. The king was once ruled by “the rights of God,” the professor noted. That meant they were “putted in the world by God to rule others as ambassadors of God on Earth.”

“Trump has been creating his own ‘God’ rights’ tale since 2015, but has been particularly leaning towards it since his assassination attempt,” wrote Mercieca in an email response to a question from USA Today.

As he worked to expand the power of the president in his second term, she said, “Trump’s God-based embrace is a rhetorical framing that gives Trump unlimited power if accepted.”

Evangelical Christians have always been an important part of Trump’s base. The shooting at Butler, and the deeper embrace of Trump’s religious language, may bring special resonance to them. Political, Brinkley said Trump “allowed him to be considered a kind of revenge angel by evangelicals who wanted to drain Sodom and Gomorrah.”

Trump’s allies have changed as they see leaders working on near-death experiences.

“I believe it had an impact on him forever,” Spicer said, “in a very personal way.”

Contribution: Joey Garrison

NHC Hurricane Predictors Focusing on Potential Systems Near Florida

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A wide area of pressure can occur offshore the coast of the southeastern US coast. Regardless of development, the distorted weather area is expected to become the manufacturer of rain in the region.

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On Saturday, July 12th, another potential tropical abuse appeared on the National Hurricane Centre tracking chart.

For those who are closely watching all the potential storms, this first map is very similar to the first map that appeared for the tropical storm Chantal. Possible developments will plummet from the Atlantic Ocean towards the Bay in much of Florida, but this time the system is heading towards the Bay. The recommendations include the southern shores of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.

The Hurricane Center could develop a wide area of pressure within days of the southeastern US coast on the afternoon of July 12th. Environmental conditions could “slightly encourage” the gradual development of the system within 5-7 days as it moves west across Florida. Development is low, only 20%.

If for any reason a tropical storm occurs, the next name on this season’s list is Dexter.

“If development occurs on Florida’s Atlantic side, it could again drift north towards the US coast,” Accuweather said on July 11. A more reasonable option on the Gulf side that could potentially run west along the Gulf Coast is said by the weather company.

Regardless of development, the distorted weather area is expected to become the manufacturer of rain in the region. The Center said in its July 12th advisory.

Tropical weather spectators say the Caribbean windshire and dry air and the Sahara dust over the Atlantic Ocean have helped keep this hurricane season from getting too busy.

Still, Chantal’s development has been around a month ahead of schedule for the 2025 hurricane season. According to Phil Klotzbach, a research scientist at Colorado State University, the third Atlantic, usually named Storm, does not form until August 3rd.

The season was predicted to outperform normal activity, but the latest forecasts from Krozbach and his team have slightly reduced the number of possible storms.

What happened to Chantal during the tropical storm?

Chantal formed off the coast of the southeastern United States on July 4th, then moved across the Carolina. Heavy rains in North Carolina flooded, killing six people.

According to Raleigh’s Weather Service, it reached its peak at 32.5 feet at 32.5 feet, set after the Hurricane Franc in 1996. Chantal also produced four EF-1 tornadoes in North Carolina, one in Mevenne, Snow Camp, Southern Pittsboro and Raleigh Executive Jetport.

The highest total rainfall was reported in Chatham County. In Chatham County, 11.92 inches were reported in Moncure and Pittsboro, and the Weather Service collected five other rainfall reports, ranging from 10 to 11.5 inches.

USA Today’s national correspondent, Dinah Voyles Pulver, writes about climate change, violent weather and other news. Contact her at dpulver @usatoday.com or @dinahvp.

Taiwan is restrained as a fortress of liberal values. However, migrant workers report abuse, injuries and deaths in the fisheries

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Taiwan, Taiwan
CNN

Silwanus Tancotta worked on a Taiwanese fishing boat in the far Pacific Ocean last year. At that moment, heavy waves slammed the swinging metal door in his hand, crushing his middle finger.

The Indonesian immigrant fishermen needed to see a doctor, but the captain refused to return to the port, saying they had not caught enough fish to justify the trip. For over a month, the tancotta was forced to endure the burning pain, wrapping the wound in tape and picking it with exposed bones with toothpicks to prevent infection.

“I did whatever I could… took the clippers and toothpicks on my nails and destroyed the protruding bone,” he told CNN. “I thought if I didn’t pull the bones out, the infection would continue and my fingers would rub.”

Tancotta’s ordeal is tragic, but far from an isolated incident.

Taiwan operates the world’s second largest remote water fishing fleet. We supply tuna, squid and other seafood to supermarkets around the world, including the US and Europe.

Autonomous Island is widely promoted as a beacon of Asian liberalism and human rights, a vibrant democracy with a relatively strong record of equality, for example being one of three Asian jurisdictions where same-sex marriage is legal.

However, the treatment of migrant workers is subject to growing international scrutiny, raising questions about their commitment to these values.

Since 2020, the US Department of Labor has cited Taiwan’s far-flung water fishing as showing signs of forced labor and highlighting issues such as deceptive adoption, withholding, physical violence and extreme working hours.

In a statement to CNN, Taiwan’s Fisheries Agency said the U.S. Department of Labor’s report was based on “unverified” information provided by NGOs, and that immigrant fishermen described it as “an important partner” in Taiwan’s fishing.

The agency said Taiwan is one of the “few” jurisdictions for “implementing a concrete plan of action on fisheries and human rights.”

Taiwan’s Labor Ministry said it will work with the Fisheries Bureau to “practically protect the rights of distant migrant fishermen and support strengthening related conservation measures.”

However, migrant workers like Tancotta are part of staying politically and socially marginalized, and often face serious abuse without the attention of many people.

Tancotta, now 38 years old, is from Jakarta, Indonesia’s capital, and began working on Taiwanese vessels in 2019. In Indonesia, fishermen often earn less than $100 a month. This is a minimum of $550 in Taiwan.

However, the reality was tougher than he thought. On a mid-sized fishing boat, Tancotta spent up to four months at a time in the relentless Pacific Ocean, working 18-hour shifts with just a short rest. The boat was designed for a crew of 23 people, but only 16 people were on board. The food was insufficient and often drove off quickly, he said.

But the bigger problem was extreme isolation. The boat had no internet, and it separated the crew from their families and kept them from asking for help.

When Tancotta was seriously injured, its isolation became important. The boat was located near the Solomon Islands, about 5,000 kilometers (3,000 miles) from Taiwan, with the door crushing my fingers. With no way to seek help, he had no choice but to continue on board while the captain prioritized profits. When he was finally transferred to another ship a few weeks later, it continued fishing, not heading to the harbor.

“I felt helpless and the pain felt difficult to sleep,” he said. “The only thing in my mind was that I needed to land as soon as possible, which made me disappointed.”

Silwanus Tancotta crushed his middle and the fingers of the ring while working on a remote Pacific Taiwanese fishing boat, but was denied immediate treatment.

A month later, he was hospitalized in Taiwan with two missing fingers, but was soon given a letter of dismissal. Not because of injuries, but because his position was over. As a result, he was denied compensation.

The Fisheries Department received a report from the fishing boat about the Tancotta incident and said it received treatment from the captain while on the trip.

“This case was reported to a coast-based doctor and evaluated it as no immediate risk,” he said. “The captain continued to provide care to Mr. Tancotta, based on the advice of the doctor.”

CNN reached out to Tancotta’s former employer and its representative Indonesian office in Taipei for comment.

Taiwan’s far-flung water fishing relies on more than 20,000 Indonesian and Filipino workers, but lacks political will to protect their rights, said Allison Lee is the co-founder of Yilan Migrant Fishermen Union, based in a fishing port in northeastern Taiwan.

“The US has been labelled Taiwan’s fisheries since 2020, but the government responded with rhetoric, but little has changed,” she said, adding that many workers have promised decent salaries but have faced overwork and delayed wages.

Unlike most migrant workers in Taiwan, far water fishermen operate under a different set of rules and are excluded from Taiwan’s Labor Standards Act. This means that it lacks overtime wages and health insurance protections that others are entitled to.

“Overwork has a very serious problem,” added Lee. “Some migrant workers were told they had 10 crew members, but only four people were on board and they had to work very long.”

Even basic safety measures were ignored, she said. Some people have told them not to wear life jackets because they “get in the way” of work.

The US Department of Labor cites Taiwan's far-flung water fishing as showing signs of forced labor, including deceptive recruitment, withholding, physical violence and extreme working hours.

In 2023, the 10 Indonesian crew members on your ship were owed 15 months’ wages. The fisherman reported that he was forced to feed with instant noodles due to food shortages and faced daily verbal abuse.

Wage theft is one of the widest problems facing immigrant fishermen, said Achimad Mudozakir, a fisherman who leads a Taiwan-based NGO that supports other crews.

His organization regularly receives complaints about unpaid wages. It will have devastating consequences for families. “It’s a bit painful because when we work hard at sea, we face high risks and put our lives at risk.

Mudzakir said one solution would require WiFi access for all immigrant fishermen.

He added that restrictions that prevent migrant workers from returning to their home countries or switching jobs without paying fees for new agents prevent them from reporting abuse for fear of firing their debts or paying debts.

In response to inclusion in the US forced labor list, the Taiwan Fisheries Agency said it has been introducing reforms since 2022, including raising the minimum wage, installing CCTVs on boats, and hiring new inspectors to improve working conditions. However, activists like Lee criticised the measure as a cosmetic product, saying it aims to improve Taiwan’s image rather than addressing the underlying causes of forced labor.

Former Indonesian immigrant fisherman Adrian Dogdodo Bassar saw him die on a Taiwanese fishing boat in 2023, reflecting his call for reform.

While working in the Pacific, his friend became seriously ill with swollen legs and stomach pain. Adrian said the captain pleaded for his high cost to return to the port, offering only expired medicines. A few months later – before the ship returned – his friend died.

Adrian said he was punished for food deprivation and threats of pay deduction when he demanded that the body be returned home immediately. “We asked him to go to the nearest port to send Bodhis home, but the captain denied us,” he said. “When I started to protest, I was not given any food.”

Like other immigrant fishermen, Adrian paid more than US$2,000 to secure the job. This is a debt that prevents other colleagues from speaking out for fear of losing their job.

Adrian Dogdodo Basar (right) has led the reforms of Taiwan's far-flung water fishing industry.

These abuses may seem far away, but Taiwan is the seventh largest seafood exporter in the world, earning catches at dining tables around the world. This means that seafood on supermarket shelves may have been caught by exploited workers.

“American consumers still have a significant risk of consuming seafood contaminated by modern slavery,” says Saliheidenreich, senior human rights advisor at Greenpeace USA. “It’s essential for companies importing seafood from Taiwan to scrutinize their supply chains more closely.”

Earlier this year, four Indonesian fishermen filed a groundbreaking federal lawsuit against a massive Bumblebee Food in the US, owned by Taiwanese seafood conglomerate FCF Co. He told CNN that this was the first known case of fishing boat slavery brought about to Agnieszka Fryszman, a US seafood company, one of the plaintiffs’ lawyers.

As for Silwanus, who now relies on his friends and relatives, he hopes that no one has to endure what he has done.

“I hope all my friends, all my siblings work on Taiwanese ships. If they get injured in the sea, they’re getting proper treatment.”

“I hope this only happens to me, but not to other fishermen again.

The EU suggests retaliation against tariffs amid fears of a trade war with us

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WASHINGTON – The European Union has opened a new front in a fight against higher tariffs with President Donald Trump, warning that if the trade agreement has not reached by August 1, it could retaliate against the United States.

EU negotiators have been working for weeks to sign a contract with the Trump administration. In a statement on July 12, the Commission said it would continue to work towards a resolution.

“At the same time, we will take all necessary measures to protect the EU’s interests, including the adoption of proportional measures as necessary,” European Commission’s Ursula von der Reyen said in a statement.

The EU planned a plan for more than $24 billion in goods from the US in April after Trump delayed the tariff hike announced for 90 days in trade negotiations. However, after Trump announced the European Union’s 30% tariff on July 12, the 27-country block suggested it could retaliate in kind.

French President Emmanuel Macron was one of the European authorities pushing the committee to “decisively protect the interests of Europe.” in a statement saying negotiations must be strengthened.

“In particular, this means that if an agreement is not reached by August 1st, we will speed up the preparation of reliable measures by mobilizing all equipment, including anti-course, at will,” he wrote to X.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni urged negotiating parties to continue to focus on deals and warned against the launch of a trade war.

“We trust the goodwill of all parties involved in reaching a fair agreement that can fully strengthen the West, especially in the current context, as it makes no sense to cause a trade war on both sides of the Atlantic,” the Italian government said. “Now it’s essential to stay focused on negotiations and avoid polarization that makes reaching an agreement even more complicated.”

In his letter to von der Reyen, Trump said that if Brock retaliates by raising your tariffs, whatever you choose to raise them, it will be added to the 30% we charge. He included similar language in letters he sent to about 20 other leaders this month.

Jackpots rise to $234 million

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The Powerball jackpot rose to $234 million in the draw on Saturday, July 12, as no one won the Top Award on Wednesday, July 9th.

If someone matches all five numbers and Powerball on Saturday, they can opt for a one-off cash payment of $106.6 million.

There were four Powerball Jackpot winners in 2025, but the most recent Californian was awarded the $204.5 million award on May 31st.

The Oregon lucky player has his first Powerball ticket to win the 2025 Jackpot, winning $328.5 million on January 18th. The second jackpot winner won all six Powerball numbers on March 29th, winning $527 million. The winner of Kentucky’s third jackpot was awarded the $167.3 million award on April 26th.

Check the following to see how many wins you have in your Powerball drawing on Saturday.

Powerball win counts on 7/12/2025

The number of victory for Saturday, July 12th will be posted here if drawn.

To win a lottery number is as follows: Jackpocke is the official digital lottery delivery company of the USA Today Network.

Has anyone won the Powerball?

Powerball winners will be posted here after being announced by lottery officials.

To find the full list of previous Powerball winners, Click on the link to the lottery website.

When will the next Powerball picture be?

The following drawings will be held on Monday, July 14th at 11pm at 11pm.

How to play Powerball

To play Powerball you will need to buy a ticket for $2. This can be done in a variety of places, including local convenience stores, gas stations, and even grocery stores. In some states, Powerball tickets can be purchased online.

Once you have your ticket, you will need to select six numbers. Five of these are white balls with numbers 1 to 69. Red Powerball ranges from 1 to 26. People can also add “Power Play” for $1.

The “Power Play” multiplier can be multiplied by 2x, 3x, 4x, 5x, or 10x on the prize.

If you feel unlucky or want your computer to do your job, the “quick pick” option is available. Here, the computer-generated numbers are printed on the Powerball ticket. To win a jackpot, players must match all five white balls with any order and Red Powerball.

The Powerball painting takes place on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturday nights. If no one wins the jackpot, the prize money will continue to be engraved.

Where to buy lottery tickets

Tickets can be purchased directly at gas stations, convenience stores and grocery stores. Some airport terminals may also sell lottery tickets.

You can also order tickets online Jack Pocket, the official digital lottery delivery company of the USA Today NetworkThese US and territories include Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Maine, Maine, Maine, Maine, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Washington, DC, and West Virginia. The Jackpocket app lets you select lottery games and numbers, order, look at tickets, and collect all your winnings using your mobile phone or home computer.

Jack Pocket is the official digital lottery delivery company of the USA Today Network. Gannett may earn revenue from viewer referrals to Jackpocket Services. Must be over 18 in AZ, 21+, and 19+ in NE. It is not affiliated with the state lottery. Gambling issues? Call 1-877-8-Hope-Ny or Text Hopeny (467369) (NY). 1-800-327-5050 (MA); 1-877-mylimit (or); 1-800-981-0023 (PR); 1-800-Gambler (all other). visit jacketpocket.com/tos In perfect conditions.

Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA Today. Contact him at fernando.cervantes @gannett.com and follow him at x @fern_cerv_.

New movies streaming now for Netflix, Amazon, Disney+, HBO Max and Hulu

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Do you like movies? Live for TV? USA Today’s Watch Party Newsletter has all the best recommendations delivered to your inbox. Sign up now and become one of the cool kids.

Man, it’s hot. And I’m not talking about the weather – the new streaming movie is also enfuego.

Your favorite services are hit weekly, including Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, Disney+, and more, as well as Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, Disney+. (At the time, it would have been done to HBO Classic or Crystal Max or something.) There will finally be theatrical releases, including original dishes like Tyler’s latest Madea film, such as Megan Fahee’s first-date thriller or John Malkovich’s cult horror film, as well as original fares like the Disney music “Zombie” franchise.

Here are 10 new and well-known movies you can stream now:

‘Drop’

This modern hitchcockstriller doesn’t take itself too seriously. Meghann Fahy (“Siren”) plays the widowed mother who has returned to the love game. She meets her first date (Brandon Screnner) at a high-rise restaurant, but is soon threatened by a meme sent to her phone by threatening her son if she doesn’t kill him.

Where to see: peacock

“Frozen: Hit Broadway Musical”

Frozen fans who have not been able to watch the Broadway musical have a chance. And even if you watch the original film a thousand times, the stage show would be different. For this live recording of West End Productions, Samantha Berks (who appeared in the 2012 “Less Meralable” film) uses Gusto as Elsa.

Where to see: Disney+

“Head of State”

John Cena plays the action movie star who has been elected president of the United States. Idris Elba is the British Prime Minister (and formerly flashy) and has no time for his Tom Fourley. The two world leaders work together to save the day in this refreshing action comedy, with Cena and Elba working macho chemistry as rival madness.

Where to see: Prime Video

‘Jaws @50: A definitive true story’

Are you already a “chin”? For those celebrating the 50th anniversary of the iconic Blockbuster, this documentary is an essential viewing. Director Steven Spielberg goes deeper into the exhausting “terrifying” process of making his legendary shark film, with filmmakers such as JJ Abrams, James Cameron and Jordan Peel discussing their influence and legacy.

Where to see: Upstream, Disney+

“Wedding at Madea’s destination”

Madea, the Dutt Cole Harley free brand of Tyler Perry, returns in yet another comedy. Madea is once again confused, so she, friends and extended family attend her grandparents (Diamond White)’s sudden Bahamian wedding, and the bride’s father (Perry) is the stressed soul trying to keep it together.

Where to see: Netflix

“Old Guard 2”

Based on the comic book series, the sequel to this action reunites Andy (Charlize Theron) with the crew of the Immortal Warrior. She reunites with her old friend (Henry Golding) and learns to live with a new mortality rate as she faces an ancient enemy (Uma Thurman) that appears as an existential threat.

Where to see: Netflix

“Opus”

The thriller stars Ayo Edebili (“The Bear”) as a young journalist invited to this year’s event. The mega pop star (John Malkovic) welcomes influential people with his remote compound to listen to his first album since he left the grid 30 years ago. Cult horror flicks don’t offer a completely big premise, but Markovic is a craze as David Bowie and Koresh’s cross.

Where to see: HBO Max

“Rifraf”

There’s a lot to love about this crime comedy starring Ed Harris, starring this crime comedy starring as an ex-con man trying to live his life in peace with his wife (Gabriel Union). But things get messy when his ex (Jennifer Coolidge) and his soon-to-be-dying son (Lewis Pullman) appear in violation of the crime boss (the sleazy Bill Murray) and his enforcer (Pete Davidson).

Where to see: Hulu

“sinner”

Ryan Coogler’s sinful good-era musical gang vampire horror flick is one of the best movies of the year. The thrill of Michael B. Jordan as Smoke Stack twins, returning to his home town in Mississippi to open a swinging juke joint, and opening night crashed into the band of Bloodband Sucker.

Where to see: HBO Max

“Zombie 4: The Dawn of the Vampire”

More monsters come to this song and dance franchise when you think that zombies, werewolves and aliens aren’t enough. Currently, college students, young couple Zed (Miromanheim), Addison (Meg Donnelly) find a way to gather daywalkers and vampire battle facts for everyone’s happiness.

Where to see: Disney+

Air India Crash Report answers one question and more

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CNN

The official report on the world’s most fatal aviation accident in a decade answered one important question, but others raised it.

Air India Flight AI171 lost momentum last month and barely left the runway as it crashed in a densely populated area of India’s western city of Ahmedabad.

Currently, a preliminary report by the Indian Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) revealed that fuel supply to both engines has been reduced in critical minutes as the aircraft is rising.

The plane’s “black box”, the plane’s flight data recorder, showed that the aircraft reached an airspeed of 180 knots when the fuel switches on both engines “were shifted from run to cutoff position 1”. The switches flipped within one second of each other, stopping the fuel flow.

In the audio recording from the black box mentioned in the report, one of the pilots hears asking the other person why they turned the switch over. The other pilots replied that he didn’t. The report does not specify who is a pilot or who is the co-pilot of the dialogue.

A few seconds later, the Boeing 787’s Dreamliner switch was flipped over in the other way to revert the fuel supply. Both engines could be revived, and one began to begin “progressing to recovery,” the report says, but it was too late to stop the plane’s courageous descent.

The report reveals the basic reasons why the jet crashed, but many are not explained.

The findings do not clarify how the fuel switch flipped to the cutoff position during flight, whether intentional or accidental, whether the technical failure is liable or not.

In Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner, the fuel switch is between the two pilot seats just behind the plane’s throttle lever. They are protected on the sides by metal bars.

The switch is purposefully designed, as it cannot be knocked by mistake, and therefore requires physical lifting of the switch handle to a physical stop (catch).

Jeffrey Dell, an aviation safety expert who conducted numerous aircraft accident investigations, finds it difficult to see how both switches were incorrectly flipped.

“It’s at least two action processes for each,” he told CNN. “You have to point the switch towards you and then push it down. That’s not something you can carelessly do.”

According to Dell, it would be “strange” for a pilot to deliberately cut fuel to both engines immediately after takeoff.

“There’s no scenario on Earth to do that right after a lift-off,” he said.

Dell pointed out, pointing to the fact that both engine switches were turned over within a second of each other. “That’s the kind of thing you do when parking the plane at the end of the flight… you plug into the terminal and close the engine.”

One possibility that the report will raise is related to a 2018 bulletin report published by the Federal Aviation Administration. However, considering this is not considered a dangerous condition, Air India did not conduct inspections.

Dell said the aircraft’s flight data recorder should help explain how the fuel switch was flipped in each case. However, India’s AAIB has not released a full transcript of the conversation between the two pilots. Without that, Dell says it’s hard to understand what happened.

Rescue personnel at the location where the Air India plane crashed.

Former pilot Asan Khalid also believes the findings in the report raised questions about the location of the important engine fuel switch.

Speaking to Reuters, Khalid warned against locking the pilot’s liability. “The AAIB report to me is crucial just to say that the accident occurred because both engines lost power.”

He added: “The pilots were aware that the aircraft’s engines had lost power and they were aware that the pilot had not taken action to cause this.”

A full report has not been scheduled for months, and India’s civil aviation minister, Ram Mohan Naidu, said, “Let’s not jump to conclusions at this stage.”

Air IndiaJet took off from Sardar Valabhai Patel International Airport in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, western India on 12th June and headed for London Gatwick.

Air India said there were 242 passengers and crew members on board. This included 169 Indian nationals, 53 British nationals, seven Portuguese and one Canadian. Everyone on board was killed except for one passenger.

19 people on the ground were killed when the plane collided with a hostel at BJ Medical College and a hospital.

Air India has acknowledged its receipt of the report and says it will continue to work with authorities in the investigation.