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Texas flood deaths. Saturday Flood Watch: Updated

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The search crew continued their tough job of recovering missing people as more flash floods threaten Texas Hill Country.

More than a week after the flooded Guadalupe River sent floods ripping up Texas homes and youth camps, optimism to rescue dozens of people still missing from Hill Country on Saturday has steadily declined as deaths continued to rise.

Hundreds of rescuers, many of them volunteers, have scrutinized miles of destruction due to signs of missing. But they have not rescued any living people since July 4th, the day of the flood, said Carr County officials, which had the most violent hit. Approximately 160 people are missing in the county alone.

As of the morning of July 12, the death toll had risen to at least 129, with authorities in Kerr and Travis County reporting more bodies had recovered. Kerr County tolls have risen to at least 103 people, according to the county’s Joint Information Center. In Travis County, tolls have risen from eight to nine, spokesman Hector Nieto confirmed with USA Today. Officials previously said at least 27 campers and counselors, Camp Mystic counselor and beloved All Girls Christian Camp, is among the dead.

“I’ve never seen anything like this and I’ve seen a lot of bad things,” President Donald Trump said he and first lady Melania Trump investigated the damage on Friday. “It’s hard to believe in devastation.”

Texas officials, including the governor, have pledged that the crew will not stop searching until all missing persons have been explained. Dozens of people remained missing in Hill County, with the majority being lost from Kerr County. Experts say the number of people reported missing after a disaster is often bulging.

Approximately 170 people are believed to be missing, including 161 missing in Kerr County. Other counties have reported several missing parts, including one of Burnet County: Volunteer Fire Chief Michael Phillips.

Phillips was last seen a week ago as he had responded to a rescue call before he and his car were swept away into the raging seas. The vehicle was located, but Phillips was not inside.

“The specialist team and equipment will continue to be deployed in search areas and will continue to work until dusk in difficulties or efforts to find him,” the Burnett County Sheriff’s Office said Saturday.

The hard-hit Texas Hill Country will have a flood clock until the evening of July 13th, according to the office of the National Weather Service, which serves Austin and San Antonio.

There could be 1-3 inches of rain, nearly 6 inches of isolation in the area, and the X-Post on the morning of July 12th could cause dangerous lowland flash floods, including rivers, streams and other low-water intersections.

Officials said the clock includes the southern Edwards Plateau, which includes Carr County, along 35 interstate corridors between Austin and San Antonio. The clock is valid until 7pm on July 13th.

More than 19 million people were under flood monitoring in Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico on July 12, according to the National Weather Service.

The Weather Services Office, serving Austin and San Antonio, warned of possible local heavy rain and flash floods in the hard hit area of Texas Hill Country until July 13th.

“Local heavy rain on already saturated ground can cause flash floods this weekend,” the Kerr County Sheriff’s Office said in a Facebook post.

– Dinna Boyles Pulver

From the Arkansan Black Hawk Helicopter to the Wisconsin K-9 team, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott thanked the state for helping in response to the flooding of Hill Country.

Efforts following the fatal flood required numerous resources to help people search for missing people.

“Our ongoing recovery operations are being supported by the support of other states,” Abbott posted on X on July 12th.

Abbott also thanked us for providing resources for California, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Virginia. Support also included rapid water bodies and drones to assist Texas officials.

The family of Camp Mystic counselor Katherine Ferzzo, who remained among the missing people last week, said her body was found Friday.

Ferzzo recently graduated from Memorial High School in Houston and headed to the University of Texas at Austin in the fall. She had planned to become a special education teacher, the family said in a statement Saturday.

“We are extremely grateful to all the search and rescue specialists and volunteers who are working hard in their efforts to find victims of this tragedy, and we would especially like to thank the Texas Rangers,” the family said in a statement provided by spokesman Page Donnell.

Dozens of Camp Mystic children and staff were among the deaths, authorities said. The nearly one-century camp in Hunt, Texas is one of several along the Guadalupe River and saw some of the worst floods on July 4th. Hannah and Rebecca Lawrence, 14; Chloe Childress Counselor, 19;

“Katherine has a fierce, loving spirit and we are certain she did everything she could to save the girl’s life in her shed,” her family said in a previous statement.

Kerrville officials said Saturday that the overwhelming response from community members, both near and far, was probably too generous. The Kerrville Police Station said that so many people brought food for its staff, some of which went into waste. All needs, including food, are caring for, the police department said.

The police department also asked local law enforcement officers to stop not appearing without seeking assistance as they coordinate with the agency to assign officers to specific tasks.

On Friday, the city of Kerrville asked volunteers to stop supporting them as their most urgent needs are being handled by first responders and families in the flood-affected community.

“Your generosity and support means more than words can express,” the city said. “Don’t lose your mind – you need your help. As days and weeks unfold, there are many opportunities to help our neighbors. We promise to share updates as certain volunteer needs arise.”

More than ten months after Hurricane Helen created the floods that tore western North Carolina last year, the remains of Lisa Gindinova’s three-year-old cousin Yefeni Segen and grandmother Tatiana Novitonia have yet to be found. The two are tackling the fact that the floods wipe out and the family may never be seen again.

“It’s not the real thing,” Gindinova told USA Today.

Texas families are beginning to face the same unforgettable realization after the flash flood of a deadly hill country as volunteers continue to scrutinise the area for their disappearance.

Just like the North Carolina floods last year, Texas floods left piles of debris. A pile of crushed trailers and cars, stacks of down Cypress trees, and hardened mud walls make recovery difficult. The amount of shards and destruction left the tough tasks slow and taxed.

Troy Tillman, 34, a sheriff detective from just outside Lubbock, Texas, explained that he had found a Ford F-250 pickup. If such a three-ton truck is buried, what else can Tillman be buried at his feet?

read more.

– Rick Jervis and Christopher Cann

Volunteers were hoping to help with recovery on Saturday

Kerr County said it expects a number of “voluntary volunteers” to support Saturday’s recovery efforts. Volunteers are an important part of the search and rescue days since the flood, and authorities are sometimes asking them to stay volunteering, allowing qualified personnel to do some of the tough work.

Volunteers will be asked to register for the recovery of the Texas Community and check in at Tiby Antler Stadium in Kerrville before participating in the safety briefing.

Authorities continue to address issues of responsibility

Texas officials are faced with unforgiving questions about what could have been done to prevent high deaths and short warning times in the Hill Country flood. In Kerr County, Sheriff Larry Lasa said it focuses on the top priorities of finding missing people and identifying each victim found, rather than dodging questions.

Trump on Friday rejected concerns about whether communities along the Guadalupe River were properly prepared for disasters.

“I think everyone did an incredible job under that situation,” Trump said. “Only a very evil person will ask such a question.”

Earlier in the week, Gov. Greg Abbott said that “condemnation” was “a choice of the loser’s words.”

Are there more floods along the way?

As cleaning and recovery continues in Texas Hill Country, a new threat of flash floods is set for the weekend, predictors said. The scattered showers are expected to develop Saturday afternoons and evenings in southern Texas, including some of the already flooded areas. Heavy rain can quickly escape wet ground, predictors said.

In Kerrville, there is about a 35% chance of rain coming through Sunday morning, the weather department that serves Austin and San Antonio said.

“The expected total of torrential rainfall and already sensitive, wet advance conditions could be scattered across a large number of potential examples of flash floods,” the National Weather Service said.

Abbott stimulated emergency response resources in Texas’ emergency management department on Friday in response to forecasts.

More than 13.5 million people were monitoring the flood clock on Saturday morning from the National Weather Service in countries in Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico.

How many people have died in the floods in Texas?

County officials say the following are the breakdowns in flood deaths in Texas:

  • Carr County: 103
  • Travis County: 9
  • Kendall County: 8
  • Burnet County: 5
  • Williamson County: 3
  • Tom Green County: 1

Contributors: Christopher Kang, Joey Garrison, Burt Janssen, Carissa Waddick, Michael Loria, USA Today. Reuters

Hartford Bakery recalls artisan bread sold in 12 states

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According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Hartford Bakery voluntarily recalls one of the artisan breads, as its products may contain undeclared hazelnuts.

From a wealth of attention, the company, Published with headquarters in West Hartford, Connecticut Remember “Lewis Bakeshop Artisan Style 1/2 Loaf” on July 10th, according to the FDA. The company warns that “people with nut allergies or severe sensitivity to hazelnuts run the risk of serious or life-threatening allergic reactions when they consume bread.”.

Hartford Bakery said it has removed all products linked to six affected production lots. The recalled bread was distributed by retailers in Alabama, Georgia, Georgia, Georgia, Georgia, Indiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Mississippi, Ohio, Tennessee and Wisconsin, according to the FDA.

The FDA said there were no major reports of injuries or illnesses related to the recalled bread.

“Hartford Bakery knows one customer who has experienced digestive discomfort after consumption,” reads Recall. “Hartford Bakery also received consumer complaints from people who saw the nuts before consuming the product.”

What do recalled artisan bread look like?

The recalled bread contains a flexible plastic bag marked with the following information:

  • Lot codes T10 174010206, T10 174010306, T10 174010406, T10 1740206, T10 174020306 and T10 174020406 are located on the front panel of the package.
  • Net weight: 12 oz (340 grams), located at the bottom of the UPC 24126018152 package.
  • The expiration date for July 13th, 2025 is on the front panel of the package.

How were undeclared allergens discovered?

Hartford Bakery began a recall after discovering that around 883 breads from six production lots contained visible hazelnuts and was distributed in the “Lewis Bake Shop Artisan Style 1/2 Loaf” package.

The package says “may contain tree nuts,” but not “contain hazelnuts.” A company investigation revealed that packaging errors have not been declared an allergen.

Jonathan Limehouse covers USA Today’s broken and trending news. Contact him at jlimehouse@gannett.com.

Man convicted of murder of Meredith Kercher, who is on trial for sexual assault

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CNN

Rudy Gade, the only person explicitly convicted of the brutal 2007 murder of British student Meredith Kercher in Perugia, Italy, returns to court this fall in the face of charges of sexual assault and violence against his ex-girlfriend.

Guede, a 38-year-old Ivory Coast who has lived in Italy since he was five years old, was sentenced to 30 years in prison for Kercher’s murder in October 2008.

This case sparked a media frenzy, giving birth to over two dozen books and three films.

According to investigator Rita Ciaroni, investigator magistrate Rita Ciaroni, who ordered Gade at a preliminary hearing on Friday at Vitero, more than 100,000 photos, thousands of chats and voice messages between Guede and the unknown victim are one of the evidence to consider in the trial.

Italian media said the two began dating while Gode was still in prison, ending their relationship in 2023 when a woman charged him.

Amanda Knox, an American student who was Kelcher’s roommate at the time of her murder and Knox’s then Italian Rafaelle Solecito, was convicted in parallel on allegations of roles in Kelcher’s murder in 2009, but was completely exempted by the Italian Supreme Court in 2015.

A reproduction of the photograph, not previously until November 6, 2007, shows Meredith Kercher, a British Exchange student in Perugia.

Knox is still there In 2007, former nightclub boss Patrick Lumumba was found guilty of slander after accusing Katcha of murder.

Guede’s new indictment and trial stems from sexual assault, abuse, stalker charges in 2023, and accusations by Guede, a 25-year-old woman, from Viterbo, after Guede was first addressed to release her job from prison and was subsequently released. His first hearing will take place on Viterbo on November 4th.

His lawyer, Carlo Mezzetti, told CNN that his client is innocent and fears that he will not be subject to a fair trial given his previous beliefs.

American views on immigration reached a high point amid Trump crackdowns

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Americans’ views on immigration this year have undergone a major positive shaking this year amid President Donald Trump’s ongoing crackdown, according to the new Galluppoling.

The share of Americans who thought immigration should fall by 55% reached a five-year high in 2024. This year it fell to 30%, with the survey released on July 11th showing that the positive views of immigrants reached a record 79%.

The Trump administration has stepped up its promise to carry out a widespread deportation in June, raiding restaurants, farms and hardware stores, and sending masked immigration agents to touch on widespread protests. He has announced a new “Wannial Catraz” detention facility for immigrants in the Florida Everglades. The administration faces legal challenges at every turn, and has brought it several times on the brink of clashes with judges who have placed barriers to the scale of crackdowns and tactics.

During former President Joe Biden’s administration, American views on immigration took a dip amid reports of a surge in migration and chaos at the southern border.

However, even among Republicans this year, views on immigration have risen significantly – 64% of Republicans now believe immigration is a 25-point jump from June 2024.

According to polls, Trump’s immigration policy is extremely unpopular, with only 35% disapproving of handling the issue.

Despite being Venezuelan, the Trump administration faced a fierce pushback against immigration policy when it deported hundreds of men to brutal Salvador prisons in March. In a continuing legal battle, the judge was forced to return Kilmer Abrego Garcia, a Maryland man from El Salvador who could remain in the United States.

Since then, the Supreme Court has given the Trump administration a green light to deport people to countries where they are not born.

Kate Middleton sits with Billy Jean King of Wimbledon

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Princess Kate served when she returned to Wimbledon.

In a chic white ensemble, Kate attended the Women’s Singles Final match at the Wimbledon Championship at the All-England Lawn Tennis and Crockett Club in London on Saturday, July 12th. The Princess of Wales was sitting next to the great Billy Junking of American tennis and received an emotional welcome from the crowd.

In the X-Video shared in the tennis tournament, the tennis royals appeared happy to watch the much-anticipated match while Kate shook hands with King on arrival and received a standing ovation.

“Centre Court has risen and we are warmly welcome to Wales, our patron Princess HRH,” reads the Wimbledon post. In the clip, Kate turned her head in a white top with a belt and pockets paired with a cream pleated skirt, nodding to the princess’ favorite monochrome wardrobe.

“I’m so happy to be back at @wimbledon!”

Her Wimbledon appearance comes after she said earlier this month that she continued her cancer treatment last year, wearing a “brave face” and detailed her ordeal as a life-changing experience.

“You put some kind of brave face and put stoicism through treatment. The treatment is done, like, ‘I can crack and get back to normal,’ but in reality the rest of the stages are really, really difficult,” Kate said on Wednesday, July 2nd, when he visited Colchester Hospital in Essex in southeastern England.

Prince William’s 43-year-old wife was originally along the British throne, but she announced that she would be undergoing chemotherapy a few weeks after his father-in-law Charles III announced his own cancer diagnosis last March. In January, she announced that her cancer was in remission after she appeared in the hospital where she was treated.

As they slowly reappeared in royal life, Princess of Wales made a rare appearance in the men’s singles final at Wimbledon last year.

The princess was wearing a purple Saffiya dress with a bodice of a flesh, decorated with gold jewels and carrying a tanned bag. She also wore a purple and green striped bow of her signature, the official colour of All England Club, where she is a patron. Pitstop marked one of her only public appearances in 2024.

“I’m so happy to be back at @wimbledon!” Kate shared on Instagram. “There’s nothing like a championship.”

Contributions: Staff and Wire Report, Brendan Morow

The USPS stamp prices will be effective on July 13th

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With stamp prices rising again, this is your last chance to get your 73 cent eternal stamp.

The US Postal Service (USPS) will raise first-class eternal stamp prices and other products on Sunday, July 13th.

“The rise in prices of services, which are dominant and competitive in the postal service market, will take effect this weekend,” Johnson said.

According to a May news release, the federal agency, the federal agency that oversees postal services, was considering accepting a five-cent spike on the stamp. The price increase was approved by the committee, according to Johnson.

“The Postal Service continues to take a reasonable and realistic approach to pricing, including careful implementation by new and existing pricing authorities, and letter prices remain significantly lower than other comparable foreign posts,” Johnson previously told USA Today.

Why are stamp costs rising?

In an April news release, USPS said the price additions “remained among the world’s most affordable ones” and “is necessary to achieve the financial stability required of the organization’s 10-year plan that the organization offers for America.”

The change is expected to raise the mailing service’s product prices by 7.4%, USPS wrote in the release.

When will stamp prices rise?

The USPS stamp price will rise on July 13th, 2025.

How much does the eternal stamp cost?

The price of Forever Stamps will rise from 73 cents to 78 cents, the USPS said.

What other USPS products prices are rising?

In addition to Forever Stamp Price Jump, other USPS products prices are as follows:

  • Domestic postcards: 56 cents to 62 cents
  • Letters: 69 cents to 74 cents
  • Letter (1 oz): 73 cents to 78 cents
  • Additional ounces of single letter price: 28 cents to 29 cents
  • International Postcards: $1.65 to $1.70
  • International Letters (1 oz): $1.65 to $1.70

Contribution: Saleen Martin Martin from USA Today

Amanda Anishimova vows to return stronger after being “frozen” with nerves during Wimbledon’s final defeat

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London
CNN

It was charged that no one had hoped for the Wimbledon women’s final, and ended as a match that American upstar Amanda Anisimova wanted to forget.

The 23-year-old always knew she was against it. In her first Grand Slam Final, she faced a five-time major champion who appears to have reinvented her game with Grass.

But even the biggest IgaświąTek fans would not have predicted the 6-0, 6-0 thrashing at Centre Court on Saturday.

The demolition work took less than an hour. It was also the first time since 1911 that the Wimbledon women’s final won without losing a single game.

Everything went wrong for Anisimova, but everything got right for świąTek. Perfect storm with two very different outcomes for either player.

“I think I was a bit frozen with my nerves, and I was probably a little tired for the last two weeks,” the very calm Anishimoba told reporters at a post-final press conference.

“It was obviously a bit hard to digest, especially right after that, and not what I was hoping for the first Grand Slam Final.

“I’m sure I was a bit shocked too, but I told myself that I would definitely come out strong after this.”

Anishimoba showed resilience after the finals by completing her on-court interview.

Despite his fierce defeat in the final, we must not forget the incredible tournament that Anisimova had at SW19 this year.

No one really turned the world No. 12 for a title run in Grass.

However, as the big name dropped out of the female draw, Anishimoba continued to approach her maiden grand slam final.

After that, the semi-finals came against world number one Alina Sabalenka. If you ask Anishimova today, she might say she hoped the tournament was over after that amazing victory.

The Americans have shown all great things about her game with Sabalenka.

However, in reality, none of that form was on display in Saturday’s final. Her serve wanted, and 28 forced errors showed what she was in.

In a post-match comment, Anishimoba said he thought the way he struggled with fever during the semi-finals could lead to a drop in levels in the final.

She also said she felt exhausted during the warm-up but didn’t want to take anything away from her opponent’s “incredible” performance.

Shortly after the match, Anishimoba called out the courage to do an interview with her on-court in one way or another.

After shedding tears, she managed to speak eloquently about what must have felt like one of the most difficult moments of her career.

However, she explained that she simply “drained gas” in the final, but the love she showed her family and friends in the player’s box spoke volumes about the journey she took.

In 2023, Anishimova decided not to touch the racket for months while fighting what she described as burnout.

When she left tennis, it was about helping her own mental health, which she struggled after a few seasons on the professional tennis tour, Hamster Wheel.

When a hotel-to-hotel bouncing is not enough, each tennis match is like a psychological game of chess. No wonder teenage geniuses, like Anisimova, can get bored of it quickly.

During the break, Anishimova learned a lot about herself, spent time with her loved ones, and said that one of her new hobbies was art.

In 2024, she came back and proved people wrong.

After his semi-final victory at Wimbledon, Anishimova told reporters that people told him that after taking such a long break, they would never reach the pinnacle of tennis again.

She previously said it was a “special” feeling that shows how wrong the suspicious person was at SW19 this year.

“My fighting spirit has brought me to the finals today,” she said as the tournament ended.

“I wasn’t playing perfectly. There were games where I was struggling and I wasn’t making the most of my potential, but I think the most important thing is to stay focused, get past certain moments and focus, try to lift myself up and not be negative about myself.”

Anishimoba says he felt tired from the build-up up until Saturday's final.

No one needs to tell Anishimoba that there will be moments ahead in her career.

If anything, this tournament shows that her game is sufficient to reach the final of the Grand Slam.

But first, it’s more important. After showing so much support throughout the tournament, Anishimoba vowed to spend the necessary time with family and friends.

But whatever comes next in her career, she can get the feeling that it is driven by the feelings she felt on centre court in this year’s final.

“There are a lot of improvements,” she said. “If anything, I think it’s my experience with how to deal with nerves. It was my first Grand Slam final, at least I have that experience right now.”

A wildfire burns near the Grand Canyon. Here’s what you need to know

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An infuriated wildfire near North Rim in the Grand Canyon prompted evacuation, air quality concerns and closure of North Rim in the national park.

The White Sage fire began on July 9th when lightning struck during a thunderstorm, according to the Bureau of Land Management. Later on July 11, 10,973 acres were burned, with 0% included. The fire was located 15 miles southeast of Fredonia, Arizona, and was moving towards Lake Jacob, officials said.

The National Park Service said that authorities evacuated about 500 visitors from North Rim in the Grand Canyon on July 10th. The evacuation was extended on July 11th, with a vast block of land north of the Grand Canyon providing the following boundary: It is part of USA Today, according to the Utah border in the south, House Rock Valley Road/Buffalo Ranch Road in the east, Kaibab National Forest in the west and Arizona Replick. This region is in “GO” status. This means that all residents and visitors must leave immediately.

“All visitors have left the area and park employees and residents continue to evacuate,” Grand Canyon NP said.

Another fire burning on the north edge of the Grand Canyon, Dragon Bravo Fire, burned 1,500 acres and contained 0%. It began on July 4th as a result of another lightning strike, officials said. The evacuation order was also issued to residents of North Rim, near Dragon Bravo Fire.

“North Rim will remain closed to all visitors’ use until further notice to support fire operations and to ensure public safety of this fire and the nearby white sage fire,” the National Park Service said in a July 11 statement.

Smoke can be seen from the southern edge of the park, and the National Park Service urged visitors to monitor air quality conditions.

The extreme fire weather was helping the White Sage fire grow rapidly, officials said. The Tuesday was “a huge run” on the afternoon of July 10th. It helps to spread “unstable” winds and low humidity from 15-20 mph per hour. “As long as hot and refreshing local conditions remain, the risk of fire will rise,” according to a forecaster for the National Weather Service’s office in Flagstaff.

cOn Tribing: Austin Corona, Republic of Arizona

Judge orders Trump to stop indiscriminate ice attacks in California

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A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to stop immigration agents in Southern California “indiscriminately” arresting people based on racial profiling, and said it was likely that they broke the law to send agents’ “roving patrols.”

The decision was a victory for a group of immigration advocates and five people arrested by immigration agents who sued the Department of Homeland Security over what they called “general and systematic patterns” of brown-skinned people forced to detain and questioned in the Los Angeles area.

In a complaint filed on July 2, the group said the area was “under siege” by masked immigration agents who said they were flooding street corners, bus stops, parking lots, farm sites, day workers’ corners and other locations. They alleged that the agents were forced to detain and chose a target to question them simply because they had brown skin, spoke Spanish or English in accents, and worked as a Day worker, farm worker or other job.

Those arrested were denied access to lawyers and detained in facilities where some “pressed” to accept deportation, the lawsuit allegedly argued.

In her order, Judge Mame Fripon of the Central District of California wrote that the group is likely to succeed in proving that “the federal government is actually conducting roving patrols without reasonable doubt and denying access to lawyers.” Stopping the indiscriminate arrest was “a rather mild request,” she wrote.

Her order grants an emergency request and the lawsuit is underway.

“It doesn’t take federal judges to recognize that the looting bands of Goons that capture masked rifles are violating the rights of ordinary people across Southern California,” said Mohammad Tarja, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, who represents the group that filed the lawsuit.

“We hope that today’s ruling will be a step towards accountability for the terrible lawlessness of the federal government.”

Frimpong “is undermining the will of Americans,” DHS Deputy Chief Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement to USA Today. “The brave American men and women are eliminating killers, MS-13 gang members, pedophiles and rapists.”

Allegations that agents are arresting them based on their skin color are “disgusting and decisively wrong,” McLaughlin said. “DHS’s executive operations are highly targeted, with executives doing due diligence.”

The Trump administration has stepped up immigrant raids across California since June, focusing on a wide, illegal sweeping for anyone in the country, from people with criminal history.

The crackdown sparked ongoing protests, and Trump sent out the National Guard and Marines to suppress it.

Donald Trump threatens to revoke Rosie O’Donnell’s citizenship

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President Donald Trump has threatened to unleash his longtime foe Rosie O’Donnell and revoke the left-leaning comedian’s US citizenship.

In a Truth Social Post on July 12th, Trump said, “I am seriously considering taking away her citizenship because of the fact that Rosie O’Donnell is not the greatest interest of our greatest nation.”

“She is a threat to humanity and if they want her, they should stay in the wonderful country of Ireland. God blesses America!” Trump wrote. An O’Donnell representative led USA Today to a client’s statement on Instagram, saying it “will say nothing else.”

In March, the co-host of the infamous former “view” revealed her recent move to Ireland, telling fans that the political situation after Trump’s election on January 15th had an impact on her migration.

“It was heartbreaking to see how it’s becoming political and difficult for me personally,” O’Donnell said. “As we all know, individuals are political,” he added.

The O’Donnell and Trump feud dates back to her days on ABC’s “The View.” She co-hosted from 2006 to 2007 and from 2014 to 2015 before being elected president again.

In a July 12 statement on Instagram, O’Donnell posted a photo of Trump, convicting pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, asking, “Are you rattling again? 18 years later, I still have no rent in your collapsed brain.”

Epstein, a convicted child sex offender and shameful multi-millionaire financier, passed away in 2019, and his death is the source of years of conspiracy theories and controversy.

“You call me a threat to humanity, but I’m all you fear. Big women are strange women. The truth-telling mother was Americans who came out of the country burned it,” O’Donnell said in her statement. “You build a wall – I build a life for autistic children in a country where decency is still present.”

She added: “You long for loyalty – I teach children to question power. You sell fear on the golf course – I make art about surviving trauma. In her open letter to Trump, O’Donnell wrote, “You are everything you’re wrong in America – and I’m everything you hate about being right in it.”

“You want to revoke my citizenship? Go ahead, King Joffrey should try it with Tangerine Spraytan. I am not yours.

In another long Tiktok video in the second half of March, Donel said she felt “healthy (and) I slept better without the stress or anxiety about what’s going on politically in the country,” and that she felt “not chosen by the US president.”

Contribution: Edward Segara

Economies are expected to approach stall speed as tariffs hurt consumers

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A cloud of uncertainty hovered into the US economy in the first half of 2025 threatens to unleash a thunderstorm that weakens growth in the second half as President Donald Trump’s higher tariffs clash with consumers and immigration crackdowns are shaking the job market.

Growth has already slowed, but on July 10, Trump increased the risk of more prominent pullbacks by announcing plans to raise tariff rates on many Canadian imports from 25% to 35%, imposing a 15% to 20% obligation in most other countries. On July 12, tariff threats rose again, with Trump announcing a 30% tariff on all imports from Mexico and the European Union.

In the spring, Trump announced a 90-day suspension on double-digit, double-digit mutual tariffs on China and many other countries, easing the fear of the recession and reversed the stock market sale. This week, White House officials extended their grace to August 1st to provide more time for negotiations.

Recently, however, Trump has ratcheted trade threats again, announcing plans for a tariff of 50% on imported copper, 50% on all freight from Brazil, and high rates from 14 countries that will not reach deals with the US by August 1. It’s already enabled.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell nearly 280 points on July 11th due to Trump’s latest tariff threat.

“The Barclays American economist Jonathan Miller has said:

Just 42% of small business CEOs are the lowest in record records up to 2003, according to a June survey by CEO networking group Vistage, and are expected to add to staff next year.

How close is the US to a recession?

Ey-Parthenon chief economist Gregory Daco has cut the chance of a recession this year from 50% to 35%, but said the chances of a recession would be above 50% if Trump returns to tariffs that it unfolded in early April.

Even without the harsh import fees Trump recently announced, economists have been predicting a marked slowdown in growth for the rest of the year.

“We carry far less economic momentum to soften market trends in the labour market, re-inflation and calm revenue (growth) more,” Dako said.

Will tariffs lead to inflation?

Forecasters are surprised that tariffs have not yet had a major impact on inflation. Daco said it was because manufacturers and retailers stocked foreign goods in February and March before the fees went into effect.

He also said companies are routing products through bonded warehouses that delay customs payments. US businesses and foreign exporters are absorbing a lot of expenses. Inflation reports such as the consumer price index do not increase tariff prices.

But all of these tactics can delay the inevitable for a very long time, Dako said.

“When stock buffers are thin, bonding warehouse timelines expire and cost absorption runs through the course, price pressures begin to surface more clearly until late 2025,” he wrote to his client in a note.

Before Trump escalated the trade dispute, many economists said the taxation had pushed the average US tariff rate from about 3% to 15%.

How does immigration have an impact on the economy?

Meanwhile, the surge in immigration that has strengthened the growth of U.S. labor supply and employment in the past few years, noted in a research note last week.

The Trump administration has ended provisions that temporarily protect immigrants, who lack permanent legal status from deportation for humanitarian reasons. JPMorgan Chase said this would likely result in about 1.8 million migrants, including around 1.1 million workers, to lose their legal status. The industries that are particularly affected are agriculture, construction and hospitality.

Already, net immigration has slowed to an annual rate, which is expected to reach 500,000 by the year, from around 3 million in the past few years. This is comparable to the 900,000 annual percentage before the pandemic. The slowdown is predicted to reduce job growth, but predictors thought it would take some time as many migrants who have arrived in the recent wave are still settling on work.

But the surge in deportation could quickly slow the American employment engine within months, Jpmorgan Chase said.

How is the economy now?

The economy shrunk at an annual rate of 0.5% in the first quarter, but the forecaster said it was mainly because floods of imports from stock accumulation had to be deducted from the production (because they are made abroad). Private domestic demand, a more prominent measure of health underlying the economy, has increased a solid 1.9%.

And the government estimates that the government will report 2% growth in the second quarter later this month, according to a survey by Wolters Kluwer Blue Economic Indicators.

However, these predictors predict that quarterly growth averages only 0.7% for the second half of the year, in line with Miller’s estimates. Gain DACO projects above 0.5%. It’s close to stall speed.

From the fourth quarter of 2024 to the fourth quarter of 2025, Miller estimates that the economy will grow to just 0.5%, 0.5%, compared to 2.5% the previous year.

This is the fault:

Consumer spending

Resilient households have supported the economy for the past few years, but the threat of rising prices caused by tariffs has curtailed Americans’ spending, said Dako and Miller. Currently, actual pass-throughs of fees to prices are likely to have a concrete impact on consumption, Daco said.

Consumers are particularly reducing discretionary purchases, including recreational services, travel and food.

Income has also been eased, with average annual wage growth falling from about 6% in early 2022 to 3.7% in June.

According to a Wolters Kluwer survey, consumer spending is expected to fall by 0.3% in May after adjusting for inflation and rise by just 0.7% in the second half of the year. Consumption accounts for 70% of economic activity.

Job Market

Average monthly employment growth slowed to 130,000 from 168,000 this year in 2024.

Companies are rapidly cutting jobs amid tariff-related uncertainty, but are reluctant to fire workers after severe pandemic-related labor shortages, Miller said. But Daco said more companies are eliminating workers through attrition and retirement, not just targeted layoffs.

Tracy Marlowe, CEO of Creative Noggin, a San Antonio, Texas-based marketing company, said sales were flat last year amidst election-related uncertainty. After the election, clients began demanding new campaigns, but again retreated in early 2025 amid Trump’s repeated, repeated tariffs.

Marlowe had planned to add full-time employees to its 20 staff later this year, but decided to refrain.

The client “just try to understand how to stay alive,” she said. “I’ll hire someone if they need it.”

It was easy to deal with the Great Recession and the COVID-19 slump, Marlowe said. Because she knew the roadmap for recovery. In contrast, the trade war was “a constantly changing roller coaster… it will be extremely difficult to predict what will happen next.”

The immigration crackdown is set to slow employment growth even further, Dako said.

Business Investment

Business capital expenditures skyrocketed in the first quarter as businesses have stock prior to tariffs. However, economists surveyed by Wolters Kluwer hope that spending will fall in the second, third and fourth quarters.

Companies already looming towards increasing spending amid uncertainty are likely to be even more latent as import costs absorb squeeze profits, Dako said.

housing

According to Oxford Economics, housing openings fell 9.8% in May, and single-family openings have fallen 16% since February.

“As higher interest rates and increased building materials costs due to tariffs, construction is less profitable,” Oxford said in a research note.

Another man was shot dead by an occupied West Bank Israeli settler, the Ministry of Health says

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CNN

Israeli settlers have killed a 20-year-old Palestinian-American man on the West Bank as settler violence against Palestinians is rising in occupied territory.

Sayfollah Musallet, 20, “has been marched after being badly beaten all over his body by settlers in the town of Singil north of Ramallah,” the health ministry said in a statement Friday.

The city of Singer said Musalou died after a “wild attack” carried out by settlers as part of a “daily attack” on local residents. It alleged that Israeli forces attacked the area at the same time as the settlers attacked, obstructing the work of paramedics and volunteers.

A family friend of the deceased man added to CNN that he was with Musalou and took him to the hospital in Lamara, adding that the young man was an American citizen born in Tampa, Florida.

The Israeli military said “we know of reports on many Palestinian civilians and injured Palestinians as a result of the conflict, and they are attracting attention from Isa (Israel security agencies) and Israeli police.”

Musallet’s family is calling for the US State Department to lead an investigation into the case.

“We were devastated by our beloved Seyphora Musallet (known as Saif) brutally beaten by an Israeli settler, and he was devastatingly defending his family’s land from the settlers who were trying to steal it,” the family said in a statement.

“We demand justice.”

In a statement to CNN, the US State Department said it was aware of reports of American deaths on the West Bank without providing names.

“We respect the privacy of our families and loved ones during these difficult times and have no further comments,” a department spokesperson said.

Musallet runs the business in Tampa and has been on the West Bank since June 4th to visit family and friends, a family statement said.

The Palestinian health ministry said a second Palestinian was killed in the attack in Singel, the Palestinian Health Ministry said. He added that 10 other people were injured in the same attack.

In a social media post Friday, the municipality said settlers also attacked the ambulance while paramedics worked near Singel.

The video accompanying the post CNN geolocated in the outskirts of Singel allows you to see the ambulance on a broken windshield and a rear window.

CNN contacted Israeli military and police about the incident.

Singil Municipality says the ambulance was attacked by settlers outside Singil on Friday

The West Bank ambulance attacked by settlers on Friday was reported by Sinjel Municipality.

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Following the attack, the Palestinian Foreign Ministry criticized what was called Israel’s growing reconciliation project in the occupied territories and called for urgent action to hold perpetrators of settler violence accountable.

Israel recently expanded its military operations in the West Bank, ousting tens of thousands of Palestinians, and destroying the entire community as it targets what it says is extremists operating on its territory.

Several American citizens have been killed in the West Bank over the past few years, according to Palestinian officials and witnesses.

Israeli soldiers also shot and killed a 26-year-old woman in September 2024 during a protest against Israeli settlement.

CNN’s Ibrahim Derman, Anoa Abeka Mensa and Eve Brennan contributed to this report.

Schumer demands RFK Jr. Decide a state of emergency regarding spikes in measles cases

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Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer has called for Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to declare a rush to a measles case accusing him of causing the measles incident, dismantling public health and accusing him of promoting the outbreak by undermining confidence in the vaccine.

“Under your guidance as a secretary, you have weakened the vaccine, destroyed public health funds, and dismantled core federal protections to keep Americans safe,” Schumer wrote in a letter on July 11th.

“You’ve walked our country to the largest measles outbreak in the country in 33 years,” he added.

Measles cases have not been specifically vaccinated

A quarter of a century after measles was eradicated in the United States, cases have skyrocketed this year, reaching 1,288 confirmed cases in 39 states, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Three people have passed away this year. Officials say almost nine have spread across 10 cases in New Mexico and Texas, the Mennonite community site that became the first hub of the outbreak earlier this year.

Most cases – 65% – are in people over the age of 19, and the majority – 92% – have not been vaccinated.

The outbreak has changed attention and fierce criticism from health experts to Kennedy’s vaccine skepticism and unfounded claims that the vaccine is dangerous and ineffective. Kennedy says that the measles vaccine, a claim challenged by scientists, will weaken over time, saying, “We cannot simply rely on vaccines.”

He also downplays the outbreak of measles and says instead they should focus more on chronic diseases such as diabetes and autism.

In May, Kennedy instructed the CDC to find a new “scientific process” for treating measles and other diseases with drugs and vitamins. Vaccines are still recommended as the best way to prevent illness, but some people may “choose not to get the vaccine.”

Last month, Kennedy fired all 17 members of the vaccine advisory, replenishing vaccine skeptics who announced their top priorities and replenishing vaccine recommendations for children.

The dramatic cuts to Kennedy’s departmental program and the cuts to thousands of workers in the department have sparked vigilance from public health experts and outrage from Democrats. Kennedy said in April that he would plunder 10,000 health and benefits employees as part of the Trump administration’s efforts to reduce the federal workforce.

Since then, the department has faced countless legal challenges from top healthcare providers surrounding Kennedy dropping the Covid vaccine from a list of recommended shots for children and pregnant women.

Schumer is the newest Democrat in Capitol Hill since he grew up Kennedy from the recent Kennedy over the measles outbreak.

“We have a record number of measles cases in America,” Sen. Patty Murray, D-WA Sen., wrote to X, accusing Kennedy of filling the vaccine panel with “no-net-vaccine skeptics.”

“Where is the hearing on this crisis?”

According to the CDC, the measles vaccine is 97% effective at preventing illness when administered in the recommended two doses.

Since the start of the Covid pandemic, measles vaccinations have fallen across the country when vaccine skepticism has skyrocketed and supported by online conspiracy and mistrust of public health agencies.

Melania Trump wears a charm bracelet in honor of flood victims in Texas

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Melania Trump wore a talented and charming bracelet from her family in the wake of the Texas flood.

On July 11, the First Lady shared how she and President Donald Trump were devastated across the Texas Hill Country and received accessories she wore on her left wrist during a roundtable meeting with local officials.

“We met with some amazing family. We prayed with them. We held our hands,” said the First Lady. “They shared their stories and I met a beautiful young woman who gave this special bracelet from camp in honor of all the little girls who lost their lives.

“I promise them. I pray for them, and I give them my strength and love,” she added.

In a statement shared with the media, Trump’s official office confirmed that he was given a charm bracelet by the Hotz tribe to honor the victims of the flood at Camp Mystic, a non-denominational all-girls summer camp on 700 acres.

The floods have claimed the lives of more than 120 people since heavy rain overwhelmed the Guadalupe River and drove homes and summer camps early on July 4th.

The President and First Lady arrived at Luckland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas, and investigated the devastating flood damage that tore the Texas Hill country before travelling to Kerrville, Texas.

Earlier that day, Trump was photographed hugging her husband as he left the White House in a khaki jacket and a solid military green.

To arrive, Trump pushed in the waves that had been flowing freely before under his black baseball cap. Over the past few months, Trump has created a selective public appearance that reflects her private, understated nature.

But in a major moment, she appeared with the President at many engagements, including his second inauguration, the July 4th event, the White House Easter Egg Roll, the multi-million dollar festival of the administration celebrating the 250th anniversary of the US military, and a parade.

Contributors: Bert Janssen, Joey Garrison

Why the combined twin Carmen, Lupita and wedding questions stop

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As the combined twins, Carmen and Lupita Andrade are used to intrusive and inappropriate comments. After all, the 25-year-old sister spoke about receiving unnecessary questions on Tiktok and YouTube, which have amassed over 18,000 and 255,000 followers, respectively.

So, with the news of Carmen’s wedding circulating last October, it’s not a shock that the sisters are once again getting endless comments from people on the internet.

“We all know that we all wonder the same thing here…” One person wrote on Instagram, commenting on today’s post, sharing today’s post. “I don’t understand my heart…” Another person wrote. “I was able to ask questions in my head (now) and write and produce six seasons of TV shows.”

Andredo’s sisters have made it clear that they are answering people’s questions, at least for now. Carmen was honest with Bio on Instagram.

Carmen and Lupita are not just twins who dealt with unnecessary attention. Last year, Brittany and Abigail Hensel – twins who appeared in the series “Abby & Brittany” in 2012 – received a similar commentary when the report report held a private wedding in 2021.

Disability and media research experts said that the growing attraction around chicken personal relationships at the time USA Today is illuminating much about how people deal with and talk about people with unusual bodies. The same applies to Andrade’s sisters.

The truth is that, like everyone else, the combined twins deserve to live a normal life and not cause any debate when they do.

“We see something unusual. It’s exciting. It’s not normal. It’s not something that many people are very unprepared to speak very well,” says Elizabeth Elsesser, an associate professor of media studies at the University of Virginia and author of the book “The Politics of Media, Disability, and Participation.” Ellcessor offers many comments and media coverage of events like this as “surprising”, but it helps people remember that they “always get married.”

Why are people so fascinated by Carmen Andredo’s wedding?

Carmen and Lupita Andrade shared details about Carmen’s wedding at the end of a YouTube video posted in late May. In it, the twins reveal that Carmen married boyfriend Daniel about seven months ago in a small ceremony, along with only local families. In today’s article, published on July 10th, Carmen shared a share that eloped in October. Today, Carmen and Daniel report that they met in 2020 on the dating app hinge.

Not all the attention the twins received in the wake of this news is negative. They have also received many supportive comments. “I love how people are happy,” one person wrote on Instagram. “At this point, love is love. No judgement,” another wrote.

On the one hand, it is expected that the attraction around the combined twins will be expected. Alice Dregor, historian and bioethicist and author of One of us: Joined Twins and an Ordinary Future, previously told USA Today. After all, combined twins are rare and people are often fascinated by the lives of people in unusual circumstances.

“People have always been fascinated by the combined twins because they clearly represent a challenge to the way we think about individuality,” Dreger said. “We usually think that personality is about someone who exists on one vast skin. And for coupled twins like Abigail and Brittany, they are clearly two of one vast skin.”

However, this appeal is problematic as it gives way to exploitation and violations of the privacy of others. For example, Hensel’s twins maintain a relatively low public profile outside of the TV appearance, giving the impression that they are not interested in sharing every detail of their life with the world. Andrede’s twins are open to answer some questions on social media, but in their own terms – and they have revealed that they find constant questions from the public.

What does health and wellness mean to you: Sign up for USA’s Today Keeping It Together Newsletter

Ellcessor explained that romantic relationships between twins are particularly inappropriate, as the romantic relationships of combined twins often stem from “pr haughty sexual interest.” Therefore, it makes sense that combined twins tend to “not be interested in answering follow-up questions” on this topic.

“This is not anyone else’s business,” Elsesser added.

How should we talk about Carmen and Lupita Andrade?

Ellcessor added that it is essential for discussion about the private lives of combined twins. You can lead the twins to speculation and not to the other person’s condition.

“The best advice is to prioritize their voices and their wishes,” she said. “What do they want to share? What do they want us to know?”

It is also important to remember to treat people with unusual bodies as humans rather than as abnormal.

And if they choose not to open their lives to debate, it is important to respect that.

“The experience of having a different body depends on the culture around you,” Dreger said. “In fact, I think most combined twins throughout history are, for this very reason, that means they can live a peaceful life without constant interference.”

Huge 13-inch shoes in an ancient Roman fort near Hadrian’s wall

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CNN

Ancient Roman mysteries are underway on the gentle hills of northern England.

Archaeologists have unearthed unusually large shoe stashes in ruins of a first-century military fort along the walls of Hadrian, a 73-mile (117 km) stone wall that protected the area around the northwest of the Roman Empire from foreign invaders. The discovery raises new questions about the lives and origins of the fort inhabitants.

The giant leather sole was discovered at Magna Fort in May among 34 pieces of footwear, including work boots and baby-sized shoes, which helps to paint the 4,000 men, women and children who once lived on an English site just south of the Scottish border.

The length of the eight shoes is over 11.8 inches (30 centimeters). This is size 13.5 or more for men in the US, based on Nike size chart. It raises suspicion that a strangely taller unit may have protected this particular fortress on the edge of the Empire, greater than average than today’s standard.

In contrast, a news release on the discovery shows that the average ancient shoes found in nearby Roman forts were close to size 8 for American men.

“When the first big shoes started to come out of the ground, we were looking for a lot of explanations like their winter shoes or people were wearing extra socks,” recalls senior archaeologist Rachel Flame, who leads the excavation. “But it seems like these were just people with really big feet, just like we found a lot of them and different styles.”

As the dig continues at Magna Fort, Frame said he hopes further investigation will answer those who wear these huge shoes accurately. The site’s past basic sketches are just beginning to come together.

When Fort Magna was in use, archaeologists suspect that several different Roman troops and their families moved to the site every few years after it was built around AD 85.

The inscriptions on the fort walls and altar speak to the villages of Hamian Archers from the current Syrian, Croatian and Serbian mountain soldiers and Dutch Batavians, but the time each group stays remains unknown.

Presumably following orders from the Romans, the troops would often depart the fort towards faraway areas and quickly throw away shoes, clothing and other belongings in the surrounding trench ditches, the framing explained.

Additionally, new residents who need more space have built larger structures on top of the existing fort, packing tiled rubs and clay between the walls, trapping belongings left by the previous tenants, Frame said.

“As archaeologists, we love trash,” said Dr. Elizabeth Green, an associate professor of classical science at the University of Western Ontario. “You get those habitats in places where things have just been left and perhaps forgotten, and it tells us more about space.” Green has studied thousands of shoes collected from nearby Fort Vindlanda Roman, the best-studied Roman fort along the walls of Hadrian.

Recently discovered Magna shoes share some similarities with people in the Vindlanda Fort Collection, Green said that although they were not involved in the Magna excavation process.

One, she explained, the soles of the shoes at both sites are made of a thick layer of cowhide leather that is held together with iron hob nails. Although only two shoes were found in Magna, the top part is still unharmed, the style of Fort Vindlanda shoes includes closed military and openwork boots, as well as sneakers-like shoes that reach just below the ankle.

Green said the leather backs of Magna shoes likely survived on the ground for thousands of years thanks to ancient sunburn techniques, which used crushed nutrients to create water and heat-resistant coatings. Testing is still underway to confirm this hypothesis.

Only two of the 34 shoes found at Magna Fort have attached tops.

According to Green, the length of the large Magna shoe suggests that the original owner may have been very tall. At Vindolanda, only 16 of the 3,704 shoes collected were measured above 11.8 inches (30 cm).

According to Rob Collins, a professor of frontier archaeology at Newcastle University in England, the ancient Roman military manual often described the ideal recruits as only five feet, eight inches, or five feet, or nine inches tall. However, the soldiers stationed around Hadrian’s walls came from all over the widespread empire, and he said, which brought a wide range of physical properties to their settlements.

Still, it remains unclear why Magna might have needed an army of towering height.

To connect the shoe owner’s identity, researchers look at Magna’s shoes for signs of wear, Frame said. The impression of the foot left on the shoes can be used to model the foot of the original wearer.

However, linking shoes to real human bodies can prove difficult. For one thing, Romans near Hadrian’s walls generally used to cremate the dead using gravestones, Collins said. The bones remaining around the settlement may be from enemy, illegal or accidental burials.

So far, some of the bones discovered on Magna’s site were too soft to gain insight, Frame said, but the team continues to search for new burial spots. The pottery and other artifacts around the site could also help date and match known residents’ timelines, she said.

However, researchers are worried that time may run out.

The excavation of Magna Fort began in 2023.

The 2,000-year-old leather found on both Vindolanda and Magna sites is preserved by anaerobic or hypoxic conditions, Frame said.

However, the 34 shoes found at Fort Magna are in worse condition than shoes recovered from Vindolanda decades ago. The problem frame is attributed to changing climates.

“The greater the climate change, the more heat waves, droughts, or months’ worth of rain in one weekend type (OF) scenario, the more it affects underground soil conditions and introduces more oxygen into these environments,” explained Flame.

In oxygen-rich soils, microorganisms thrive and contribute to decay, and acidic pH levels erode natural materials like leather.

Frame said rapid weather changes will only make excavations of Magna more urgent.

“I’m not saying I’m not excited about shiny objects or precious treasures, but for me, archaeology is about the stories of everyone else. “These personal objects really brought real humans back to photography.”

Trump will slap 30% tariffs in Mexico and the EU starting August 1st

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President Donald Trump slapped 30% tariffs on all imports from Mexico and the European Union from August 1, writing a letter to the leader posted on his true social account on July 12.

“Mexico has helped me secure the border, but what Mexico has done isn’t enough,” Trump wrote to Mexican President Claudia Sinbaum. “Unfortunately, our relationship was far from each other,” he wrote in another letter to President Ursula von der Leyen of the European Commission.

Recently, Trump has slapped at least 20% tariffs and plans to launch August 1 in more than 12 countries. It came after Trump said he would impose mutual tariffs on countries around the world waiting for a transaction, but later pushed back the day that would come into effect by the 90th.

This story will be updated.

What is a black hole? Scientists scramble to solve the mystery of the universe

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First of all, the good news: the black hole is not out to get us. But they have an immeasurable mystery.

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They are the boogies of science fiction, the paradox of science, and perhaps the key to understanding the universe.

Scientists have been rushing for decades to understand the mystical power of black holes, but so far they seem to have found more existential questions than answers.

Priyamvada Natarajan, theoretical astrophysicist at Yale University, knows that black holes are so heavy that their gravity creates a kind of divot in the geometry of the universe.

“Black holes are so concentrated that they have a slightly deeper hole in space/time. At the end of the puncture there is something called singularity that breaks all known laws of nature. There’s nothing we know at that point.”

Understanding what science knows about black holes includes mystical little red dots, galaxy formation, and spaghetification (an uncomfortable thought experiment on what happens to someone who is so unlucky that it’s sucked into a black hole).

First of all, the good news: the black hole is not out to get us. They are not looking for galaxies, suns, or planets that cry and devour them around the universe.

“They don’t just sneak up on you in dark alleys,” said Lloyd Knox, professor of physics and astronomy at the University of California, Davis.

But our understanding of the very basics of the universe has been transformed over the past decade, with new telescopes and sensors, as scientists see more black holes, at every stage of their lives.

“Our understanding of the role black holes play is that they are an important part of the formation of galaxies,” Natarajan said.

What universe’s secrets are revealed here:

New types of black holes and new proven theories

The original understanding of how black holes were formed was that when a large enough sun (about ten times more than ours) reached the end of its life, it could explode onto a supernova. The problem collapses and collapses, only a few miles away, and its gravity is strong enough that it cannot escape even lightly. This is what is called a star mass black hole.

However, over the past 20 years, new types of black holes have been seen, and astronomers are beginning to understand how they are formed. Called Super Massive Black Holes, they are discovered in the centres of almost every galaxy, 100,000 to 1 billion times the mass of our sun.

But how did they form?

“The original idea was that it grew after the small black holes were formed,” Natarajan said. “But there’s a timing crunch that explains the monsters you see in early universes. Did they have time to grow so much, even if they were gobbling star gas? That was an open question 20 years ago.”

In 2017, she theorized that these super-large black holes from the early beginnings of the universe would collapse directly onto themselves, skipping the star stage completely, moving straight from the gas to the giant black hole seeds, growing on the head start.

“And what do you guess? In 2023, James Webb Telescope found these objects,” she said. “This is to make predictions and make sure that it’s proven.”

Black holes don’t suck everything

Because they have such a massive gravity, black holes devour stellar gases and things that get too close to them. But it is not an infinite process in which the entire universe will end up being sucked into them.

People may worry that black holes are these giant vacuum cleaners that depict everything in front of them. “It’s not like the vortex is dragging everything,” Knox said.

Black holes are really similar to other mass concentrations, whether they are the sun or the planet. They have their own gravity pull, but that’s not infinite.

“If you’re far enough away, you just feel gravity and the way you feel it from the planet,” said Brenna Mockler, a post-doctoral fellow at the Carnegie Observatory at the Carnegie Science Facility in Pasadena, California.

If you fall into a black hole, you will be “spaghettoed”

All problems cause space/time dips or potholes, Natarajan said. Black holes are so heavy that their gravity creates a kind of divot in the geometry of the universe.

“The larger the mass, the larger the pothole,” she said. “At the end of the puncture there is something called singularity, in which all known laws of nature break down. There is nothing we know at that point.”

The lead of that punk is unknown.

“That’s an unresolved question,” Natarajan said. “We don’t think it will become another universe because we don’t know where we can go in our universe. But we don’t know.”

So what happens if a human falls into a black hole? Astrophysicists have that phrase – spaghettiization.

“If you first fall into a black hole to your head, the difference in gravity on your head and toes is very intense and you’ll be stretched and spaghettoed,” Natarajan said.

Our Sun will never become a black hole

Knox has no fear that our own sun will become a black hole. It’s not big enough.

“The lower mass star burns hydrogen to create helium and starts burning helium to carbon. And at some point it just pulls itself apart,” he said.

“Our sun will eventually expand and envelop the Earth and destroy it. But it’s five billion years from now, so we have time to prepare. But it won’t become a black hole.”

Unanswered Mystery – “Small Red Dot”

NASA’s extremely powerful James Webb Space Telescope launched its scientific mission in 2022, picking up something no one could explain almost immediately.

These objects, called “little red dots,” are perplexed by astronomers. They can be very dense and highly star-formed galaxies.

“Or maybe they’ll accumulate very significant black holes from very early universes,” said Mockler, the next professor at the University of California, Davis.

Search for Texas flood victims.

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Every day, hundreds of rescuers cross the banks of floodwaters looking for victims. But every time they pass each day, local officials say it’s difficult to remain optimistic.

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  • As the days go by, searching for flood victims in Texas becomes more and more difficult.
  • Moving to recovery is one of the most difficult decisions, said the search and rescue veteran.
  • “There’s no way to explain how to tell your family that you’ve finished your search,” said Chris Boyer, executive director of the Search and Rescue Association.

Carved time. The days have been transformed into long and painful weeks. It then goes through pain for months.

Still, Lysa Gindinova stuck to hope. Somewhere in the intertwined mountains of muddy mountains along the Toe River south of western North Carolina, hope was found that the remains of 13-year-old cousin Yevhenii Segen and grandmother Tatiana novitnia would be found.

The two were wiped out last year by floods created by Hurricane Helene. Rescue teams found the bodies of their aunt and uncle who were missing. But not Yevhenii and Novitnia.

Almost ten months later, there are no signs of them yet. And families who fled the fighting in Ukraine due to the calm mountains of North Carolina are wrestling with the fact that they may never see them again.

“It’s not the real thing,” Gindinova told USA Today.

Gindinova and her family are among countless US residents who are estimated to be dead but were never discovered months or years after natural disasters such as hurricanes, floods, landslides and earthquakes.

Texas families are beginning to face the same unforgettable realization after the flash flood of a deadly hill country as volunteers continue to scrutinise the area for their disappearance.

At least 120 bodies have been recovered since heavy rains transformed the Guadalupe River into a destructive rapids early on July 4th.

The devastating floods along Guadalupe have risen over 35 feet in several locations, pushing homes out of foundations and erasing campsites and RV parks like dynamite.

Authorities said on July 10 that more than 160 people were still missing, and that the number is decreasing with each day they wish to find survivors. County officials say they have not done “live rescues” since the flood day.

Just like the North Carolina floods last year, Texas floods left piles of debris. A pile of crushed trailers and cars, stacks of down Cypress trees, and hardened mud walls make recovery difficult.

Every day, hundreds of rescuers (many volunteers from the state and the country) cross the flood-hit riverbanks looking for casualties. However, the amount of debris and destruction slowed down the tough tasks and taxed them.

“There could be a casualty in that pile of fragments,” said Police Chief Kerrville. Jonathan Lamb spoke to reporters earlier this week, urging residents not to touch the wreckage mound before making a proper search. He said it is “increasingly difficult to be optimistic.”

“One of the most frightening experiences”

Chris Boyer, executive director of the Search and Rescue Association, said past disasters leave families who have been waiting months, decades, and even decades to recover their loved ones.

He pointed out Hurricane Helen. Hurricane Helene was not found at least five people, including Yefenni and Nobitonia. And 20 years after Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast in 2005 and killed more than 1,800 people, about 30 have yet to be identified, said Jason Melancon of the Orleans Parish Coroner’s Office.

For ground authorities, especially in more rural areas, it is a “very emotional decision” to decide whether to cancel search parties or shift them to full recovery mode, Boyer said.

“We will not explain how you are looking for their loved ones and how to tell families that they may never recover the ruins,” said Boyer, who led the crew recovered from an air disaster.

For the search and rescue organizers, he said, “It’s one of the most frightening experiences you have.”

“More violent”

Troy Tillman, 34, is an intense sheriff detective from just outside Lubbock, Texas.

He arrived in Kerr County on July 6th to help search for missing persons. He’s done this before. Tillman was stranded at home after a flood in Bidor, Texas in 2017 in the wake of Hurricane Harvey, where more than 100 people were stuck at home and joined the mission in last year’s wildfires in the Texas Panhandle.

One of his first searches in Texas Hill Country revealed how different this disaster was. He and his crew faintly noticed at a rocky bank along Guadalupe, in the heart of Carville about 10 miles from Carville.

As they delved into the object, they realized it was a Ford F-250 pickup – completely submerged in mud and rocks.

If such a three-ton truck is buried, what else can Tillman be buried at his feet?

“(Hurricane) Harvey didn’t move people 10 miles from where they were,” he said. “This was more violent.”

On July 10th, Tillman and others were scrutinizing a series of riverbanks at a central point when they came across a field of crumpling RVs, cars and camper trailers that had stretched about 200 yards. They put radios in for heavy equipment, including excavators and skid steer loaders.

He planned to keep it until he was told to go home.

“If you find a child or someone’s mother or sister, that’s the family closure,” Tillman said.

Another volunteer looking for the shard was Jonathan McComb. He knows firsthand what a disaster of pain can bring.

McComb was on vacation with family and friends at his Riverside home in Wimberley, Texas, about 80 miles east of Kerr County over the 2015 anniversary weekend.

Macomb was the only surviving of nine people in his home.

The bodies of his wife, Laura, and son Andrew, 6, have been recovered. However, his four-year-old daughter, Leighton, was never seen again. Later that year, McComb joined Texsar, a search and rescue volunteer group that deploys disasters around Texas.

He arrived in Kerr County on July 4th, helping with searching for missing people and has been doing so every day ever since.

“We haven’t been able to recover our daughter for 10 years, but we know how it feels,” McComb told USA Today. “I want to do something that I can help.”

In a disaster, this is big and not everything was found

Boyer said in his decades of experience, flood survivors are almost always found within hours of the disaster, even if they swept miles from where they entered the water.

He said survivors were unaware of the massive flood of similar scale that was discovered after the first 24 hours. He noted that the forces of rushing water and large pieces of debris (cars, trees, mobile homes) were carried in raging rapids.

“If you get caught up in that, your chances of survival are very minimal,” Boller said.

So many people have gone missing, so not everyone will be found – at least not soon, Boyer said.

“In a disaster like this, there’s a high chance that no one will be found,” he said. “There are 50 feet of dead trees, rocks and silt walls, and people could be below. These areas may not be exposed again until the next major flood in 50 years.”

In Texas, state officials and scientists are trying to identify recovered bodies using rapid DNA testing, a commonly employed tool in the wake of natural disasters.

As of July 9, at least 15 adults and 13 children remain unidentified in Kerr County alone, Sheriff Larry Lasa said.

The Texas Rangers are responsible for collecting DNA from their families and the deaths and flying them to the University of North Texas near Dallas for analysis, Colonel Freeman Martin of the Texas Department of Public Safety said this week.

Advances in DNA technology have greatly improved the ability for authorities to identify casualties, Boyer said, as it made it easier for drones to stare closely at areas that are difficult to reach.

It takes much less material to find DNA matches, and rapid testing allows the lab to return results in days rather than weeks.

“Since Katrina, that technology has exploded and moved light years away,” he said.

New floods revive old memories

But to identify someone, you need your body first.

Mitch Hampton, a longtime river guide and volunteer in western North Carolina, spent weeks leading a search team in an inflatable raft down the Broad River in France, first leading the rescue of 11 people at flood heights and recovering three of the five bodies found in the county.

Four weeks later, he and his raft rescue team shifted their focus to the Southwest River and its neighboring tributaries of Yancey County, where for another two weeks they searched the riverbanks, stabbing a mountain of debris, searching for missing Ukrainian families.

They were never found.

Hampton said images of Texas’ disturbed disaster revived painful memories. In particular, one photo of the first responder next to a towering pile of shrapnel, his face buried in his hands – remembering the frustration of working 12 hours along the wide toe and south toe rivers of France, reminiscing about how often he seems to do nothing, how flood hair removal swallowed people, and how rescues cried out in his raft.

“It reminded me of the feeling of feeling helpless at the same time that I want to do something,” Hampton said. “My mind is torn apart to see what’s going on there. It’s hard to deal with.”

“I don’t think there’s a closure.”

It took Zindinova to find out that her aunt and uncles, Anastasia and Dmitry Segen, were found dead on the Southtu River. She traveled from New York to Micaville, North Carolina, to identify the remains.

Without saying anything about Segens’ son Yevhenii, Gindinova wanted her young cousin to be rescued. For several days she continued searching the riverbank herself, continuing in close contact with a group of volunteers scrutinizing the mountains.

However, after a while, the search party broke up. The call has stopped. Authorities said her Yevheni and her grandmother were probably gone forever.

A few months after the storm, Jindinova said she leaned against her faith and reread Job’s book for guidance. She found some comfort in the vibrant memories of her loved ones, including the way Yevhenii made small animals using 3D printers and the colorful cross stitching of her grandmother.

But the pain of their absence remains.

“I don’t think there’s a closure,” Jindinova said.

Once the body was recovered, the family cremated Segen and spread the ashes across the mountains of the blue ridge near the house.

If Yevhenii and Novitnia are discovered, they will receive the same ritual.

Follow Jervis and Cann on X: @mrrjervis, @chris__cann.

Trump’s customs letter is the best news this Southeast Asian administration has been in for a while

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CNN

For most world leaders, a tariff letter from US President Donald Trump means a big headache. However, one Southeast Asian general is turning a communicaion sent as a welcome recognition of the welcome, isolated and nullified Junta of the military regime he leads.

General Min Ang Fröning, the military head who seized power in Myanmar in 2021 after ousting a democratically elected government, said he was the one who had the “honor” to send Trump’s letter on Monday announcing a new tariff in the global light of national media reported on Friday.

The letter, stating that the US has been imposing a new 40% tariff rate on Myanmar’s exports to the United States from August 1, was received with a “honest thanks.”

The US and most Western countries do not recognize Junta as a legitimate government in Myanmar, also known as Burma.

The military power sparked a catastrophic civil war in its fifth year, with democratic fighters and ethnic rebels fighting the army across the country’s belt. The United Nations and other rights groups have condemned the military for crimes in order to fight to hold back the regime.

The US, UK and the European Union all sought to approve the military and limit contact with representatives on the world stage. Washington and most western capitals are diplomatic snubs that have long worn out by the dominant generals without stationing Myanmar’s fully-certified ambassadors.

However, this week’s letter was spun as “an encouraged invitation to continue participating in the US’s extraordinary economy.” Min Aung Frening said that if necessary, “it could be sent to the United States as quickly as possible to discuss with relevant authorities.”

CNN contacted the US Embassy in Myanmar to comment on how the letter was delivered and whether it would show a change in Washington’s attitude towards Junta.

Min Aung Hlaing also called for Washington to consider lifting and easing sanctions in Myanmar.

The general who led Myanmar’s army in 2017 had the opportunity to praise Trump when he said the US had committed genocide against a Rohingya minority.

He welcomed “strong leadership that guides the nation towards the prosperity of the nation with the spirit of true patriots and the continued efforts to promote peace on the global stage.”

Min Aung Hlaing also thanked the “regulation of broadcasting agencies and funds that have sometimes exacerbated existing conflicts.”

Both outlets have long been popular in Myanmar with independent reports, and are even more important following the junta crackdown on the free press.

Min Aung Frening tried to appeal to Trump’s longtime complaints. This is his long-lived claim of the massive election fraud in the 2020 election won by former President Joe Biden.

“Like the challenges the president encountered in the 2020 US election, Myanmar also experienced major election fraud and serious irregularities,” he was quoted as saying.

The election he was referring to in Myanmar was overwhelmingly won by Nobel Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy Party.

International observers of the time had concluded that elections were mostly free and fair, but the military soon began making unfounded claims of massive fraud. A few weeks later, it began a coup, ending a decade-long experiment with democracy, plunging Myanmar into chaos.

Suu Kyi has since built military custody, with critics serving a 27-year prison sentence following the trial of the closed door, and critics are designed to remove public leaders and long-time enemies from political life.