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Iran was able to enrich uranium in a “month problem,” the UN nuclear chief says

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Iran’s nuclear program was hit badly by the US bomb strike but has not faced “total damage” and the program could re-operate within months, the UN’s nuclear watchdog chief said on Sunday.

President Donald Trump has another view on the outcome of the strike at major locations of the nuclear program, telling Fox News “Sunday Morning Future” that “thousands of tons of rock in the room now.” The entire place was destroyed.”

However, the Washington Post reported on Sunday that the US intercepted communications among senior Iranian officials who have said the attacks were less devastating than expected. The post cites four people who are familiar with the classified information circulating within the US government. The Tehran Times then reported that “the core of Iran’s nuclear program continues to work.”

Rafael Mariano Grossi, head of the non-sponsored International Atomic Energy Agency, said his agency has not conducted a military assessment but uses “logic” when determining that Iran’s nuclear program could be put into operation quite quickly.

“They can have a few cascades of centrifuges that spin and produce enriched uranium within a few months. “But frankly, like I said, you can’t argue that everything is gone and nothing is there.”

Grossi said he hopes Iran will continue its nuclear program “no outlines yet” and hopefully expects it to become part of the negotiations. Again, Trump disagreed.

“It was wiped out so no one had seen it before, and it at least meant the end of their nuclear ambitions,” Trump said. “The last thing they want to do now is to think about the nucleus. They have to bring themselves back to their state and form.”

Grossi admitted that some of the already abundant uranium may have been destroyed by Iranian scientists as part of the attack. But some could have been moved, he said.

Trump once again had a different opinion, telling Fox News that moving uranium is “very difficult, very dangerous and very heavy.” Iran didn’t believe the US would actually try to bomb nuclear weapons, and “we didn’t know we were coming,” Trump said.

Grossi described Iran as a “very sophisticated country” from a nuclear technology perspective.

“We can’t discover this,” Grossi said. “You can’t reverse the knowledge you have or the abilities you have.”

It should serve as an incentive to reach an agreement, Grossi said. The contract should also include an inspection system that “can give to everyone… and can definitely turn the page” that guarantees we can do.

Iran will continue to be firm in the demand that it must begin its speech with an explicit recognition of its right to sovereignty to enrich uranium in its own soil, the Tehran Times reported.

Trump has asserted that Iran will not avoid nuclear weapons under his watch.

“Iran cannot have nuclear weapons,” he said when explaining why it bombed the site. “They’ve wanted this for years and they’ve been away from getting it for a few weeks.”

Trump ordered a strike at Iran’s nuclear facility – Operation Midnight Hammer – effectively participated in the war that began on June 13, when Israel began bombing Iran’s nuclear and military infrastructure. Israel said it will help the US coordinate and plan the strike.

Trump said all three sites were “completely gone.” The pentagonal evaluation is inconclusive, and Iran says the nuclear program rarely skips beats. Actual damages and impact on Iran’s programmes could become more clear in the coming days.

Is Tiktok banned? Trump says there are new group buyers

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Trump said the Tiktok buyers will be announced in two weeks, but said the sale requires permission from Chinese owners.

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President Donald Trump said his administration has identified a group of Tiktok buyers and their names will be made public in two weeks.

Trump announced to Maria Bartilomo in an interview about “Sunday Morning Futures” while talking about potential tariff transactions.

“We have a Tiktok buyer by the way,” Trump said in an interview released on June 29th. “I think it probably needs China’s approval.

He said the buyers were “a group of very wealthy people” without providing additional details.

Ten days ago, Trump signed a 90-day extension to prevent Tiktok’s sales and van laws from coming into effect after they were passed by Congress. Lawmakers say they are worried that the company may be using a mega-popular video platform to spy on Americans.

The latest delay was the third move for Trump to use executive orders to prevent the law from being enacted.

Congress approved a ban on the app if it was not sold to a non-Chinese company last year, and former President Joe Biden signed the law. The Supreme Court has since supported the constitutionality of the potential ban, but since taking office, Trump has directed the Justice Department not to enforce it. His executive order prevented the app from getting dark.

Zombie bacteria erupt from ancient flies trapped in amber

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Editor’s Note: This version of the story appeared in CNN’s Wonder Theory Science Newsletter. To get it in your inbox, Sign up for free here.



CNN

Some of the most interesting science fiction from the creepy real phenomenon. If appropriate, mutant parasites from the video game series The Last of Us.

The creators of the franchise, including the HBO show, got the idea from the kind of fungi that hijack ant’s brain and release deadly gusts of spores. (Both HBO and CNN belong to parent company Warner Bros Discovery.)

In “The Last of Us,” fungi can infect humans and cover tendrils in their skin. No one can stop the spread of the disease as each host ruptures with mushroom-like fruit to keep infecting others.

The actual fungal group Ophiocordyceps comes from a variety of insects, but the rest of the plot is pure science fiction.

This week, new discoveries shed light on how long mentally controlled parasites have been plaguing the insect world.

Pupa, an ants infected with parasitic bacteria, can be seen wrapped in mbers that were 99 million years ago.

A 99 million-year-old Amber flock has preserved one of the oldest examples of fungal parasites that trap zombie fungi that erupt from fly and hijack insect bodies before killing them. The fungus and their host would have lived with the scary dinosaurs.

Flies, like the second specimen of infected ants in their coco or pup stage, show the complexity of an ancient ecosystem, where fungal parasites can “prey” insects.

Both amber-covered specimens help scientists understand whether fungi are parasites that enter the fragile heads of today’s carpenter ants.

Axiom Space Mission 4, a private astronaut mission to the International Space Station, began Wednesday after extended delays due to years of leaks issued at research facilities in orbit.

It slowly escapes through a small crack in the tunnel connecting the Russian Zvezda module to the docking port of a spaceship carrying cargo and supplies.

The stable leak identified in 2019 has recently stopped, raising concerns that the entire space station is losing air.

solarorbiterfirstimagessunsouthpoleimage2.jpg

Unprecedented footage shows the Antarctic of Sun

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On European Space Agency and NASA missions, the Orbiter Sun spacecraft captured unprecedented footage of the Sun Antarctic.

The first space images from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory have arrived.

Images and videos captured with the largest camera ever built include details of more than 2,000 newly detected asteroids, millions of distant galaxies and stars, and a stellar nursery nebula resembling colorful cotton candy.

The first glimpse into Rubin’s capabilities – over 10 hours of testing observations – is just a preview of what the station will produce over the next decade. It’s a cinematic view of the universe and how it changes over time.

The drone footage shows a different group of orcas in the Salish Sea in the Northeast Pacific, doing something that has never been seen before in marine mammals.

Michael Weiss, research director at the Whale Research Center in Friday Harbor, Washington, discovered that southern resident killer whales remove bull kelp chains from the seabed and groom each other in an exercise called “Allokelping.”

These kelp, rubbed against each other for up to 15 minutes at a time, can serve two purposes: peeling dead skin and deepening social bonds.

Keep up with these fascinating stories:

– “Super Coral” is naturally resilient due to changes in the environment and could be key to saving Australia’s big barrier reef. Conservation scientists have already discovered that many of these hardy species are growing in hot, acidic habitats.

– The everyday ed construction of the Dutch river has discovered an incredibly preserved, almost 1,000-year-old sword, decorated with spiritual symbols.

– Fossils excavated in Colorado belong to a previously unknown dinosaur species regarding the size of Labrador retrievers whose long hind legs were constructed for speedy running.

– Scientists say they have identified the oldest rock on Earth in Quebec. The outcrop reveals details of unknown chapters in the history of our planet.

Like what you read? Ah, but there’s more. Sign up here To receive the next edition of Wonder Theory inbox, brought to you by CNN Space and Science Writers Ashley Strickland, Katie Hunt and Jackie Wattles. They find wonders on planets beyond our solar system and discover them from the ancient world.

Israeli strikes in Iranian prisons have killed more than 70 people, according to media affiliated with Iranian province.

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CNN

According to Iran’s judicial news outlet Mizan, the attack on Iran’s Iranian capital, Tehran, killed 71 people on Monday in an attack on Tehran’s capital.

“Martists include prison management staff, draft soldiers, prisoners, families of prisoners who were in prison for visits and legal follow-up, and neighbors who live near the prison,” Judicial spokesman Asghar Jahangir said in a statement released Sunday.

Fars, a news agency affiliated with the state, reported that “many damage” had been recorded in the surrounding area.

Israeli troops attacked the entrance to Iran’s infamous Evin prison on Monday, according to news from Israel’s defense minister and Iran’s state.

Security forces at the Evin Detention Center are known for their long record of human rights abuses, according to administration critics. Political activists, journalists and musicians are among those imprisoned in the facility.

It is unclear why Israel targeted the facility. Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz confirmed in a statement that Evin was targeted along with several other sites, including the flagship construction of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Basij headquarters (the paramilitary wing of the Irgency wing), along with several other sites without providing details.

The French foreign minister has condemned the strike against a prison that housed two French citizens.

“The strike for Tehran’s Evin prison has put two of our citizens, Cecil Kohler and Jacques Paris, in danger for the past three years. That’s unacceptable,” Jean Noel Barott said in a post in X after the attack.

The couple was stopped by authorities while on vacation in Iran in May 2022 and arrested on suspicion of espionage. That October, Iranian provincial television broadcast forced confessions from the pair, during which Kohler said he was an agent working for DGES, the French intelligence agency.

The ceasefire between Iran and Israel was announced late Monday after a 12-day strike that began when Israel attacked Iran earlier this month.

Half of the profits could be withheld

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Some Americans will begin paying less social security in July.

Don’t worry, it’s not because of an imminent shortage, but many may already be worried about it. But if the Social Security Administration has issued an overpayment in the past, the agency is now trying to get it back.

For example, if beneficiaries are unable to renew changes in income, and as a result, Social Security receives them in excess, overpayments can occur. Alternatively, the SSA could incorrectly calculate a person’s interests.

A report from the Social Security Agency’s Office of Inspectors in August 2024 shows that Social Security paid nearly $72 billion in inappropriate payments between 2015 and 2022.

Inappropriate payments accounted for less than 1% of almost $8.6 billion in benefits paid. As of September 2023, the agency had $23 billion of unrecovered overpayments, according to the report.

What are the changes to Social Security payments coming in July?

Some beneficiaries who have been overpaid may be able to cut their monthly Social Security benefits by half starting in late July.

In April, the SSA announced that it would withhold 50% of its benefits from recipients who have overpayments. This is a partial setback from the initial announcement of the SSA in March to withhold all the recipient’s benefits until the overpayment is collected.

Previously, agents had withheld only 10% of the recipient’s profits to recover from overpayment. SSA reduced its recovery rate to that level in 2023 after negative media coverage about the agency’s collection process. “Innocent people can get seriously hurt,” then Social Security Director Martin O’Malley said according to Detroit Free Press, part of the USA Today Network.

According to KFF and Cox Media Group, SSA attempted to collect overpayments from around 2 million people in the fiscal year ended September 2023.

If Social Security overpays you, how will you pay it back?

Under the new policy, the SSA has said it will begin issuing overpayment notices on April 25, 2025 and will begin withholding 50% of recipient benefits after about 90 days (or about July 24th, July 24th) until the overpayment is repaid.

You can repay credit cards, online bill payments, or check overpayments. For more information on repayment of overpayment benefits, please visit the SSA website.

You can also use the form on the SSA website to request a waiver to avoid repaying your overpayment if you think it’s not your fault or if you can’t afford to repay it (or thinks it’s unfair for other reasons).

Mike Snyder is a reporter for the trending team at USA Today. You can follow him in the thread, send BlueSky, X with X and send him an email Bliss & @mikegsnider.bsky.social & @mikesnider &msnider@usatoday.com

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Two tropical systems could hit Mexico. Will we take a hit?

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Two tropical suppression that gains strength on Mexican coasts will be named Storms on Sunday, one could become a “significant hurricane” by Wednesday, the National Hurricane Center warned.

Neither storm has had a major impact on the US, but parts of Mexico could face landslides, 10 inches of rain and strong winds, predictors said.

Tropical Depression 2, which formed in the Atlantic Basin, ran winds of about 30 mph early Sunday mornings, potentially reaching the 39 mph required to become a tropical storm valley.

“There are areas where there can be 10 inches of rain, whether or not you reach tropical storm conditions,” Accuweather’s lead hurricane expert Alex Dasilva told USA Today. “The main issues are heavy rain and landslides. Some areas, such as Acapulco, are still recovering from Hulkane Eric.”

Hurricane Eric, which was actually a storm in the Pacific Basin, landed in Mexico’s South Pacific on June 19th as a Category 3 storm. The storm has led to devastating winds, heavy rains and widespread flooding in the states of Oaxaca and Guerrero. Homes, roads and infrastructure were destroyed or damaged, leaving thousands of people with shelters, food, water and electricity.

Tropical Depression 6-e, a Pacific Basin storm, has also gained strength, and was expected to become a tropical storm flossy on Sunday.

“To become a flossy is hanging from the west side of Mexico in a very advantageous environment for strengthening,” Dasilva said. “Unlike the storms on the east, Flossy can intensify rapidly and we expect it to become a hurricane on Tuesday.”

Dasilva said Flossy could close out as a Category 2 storm on Tuesday or Wednesday, but is expected to remain offshore. Still, it is expected to be close enough to bring harmful winds to the Mexican coast.

Hurricane Centres across the country list storms in both basins, but are drawn from separate lists. Pacific Hurricane Season actually began on May 15th, while Atlantic Season began on June 1st.

Both basins are robbing the storm’s names before the average, Dasilva said. If Tropical Depression 2 reaches a tropical storm condition, the second-name storm in the basin is more than two weeks earlier. On average, the second is named on July 16th.

“Flossy will be the sixth-name storm in the Pacific. The sixth-name storm averages on August 3rd. So we’re two months ahead. This was a very hot start to the season.”

Later in the week, forecasters have been looking at obstacles off the southeast coast of the United States since around July 4th.

“The next thing on the watch could happen from July 4th to 7th,” Dasilva said.

He said the cold fronts in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico are expected to stall. He said storms often form from a stagnant, cold front. Dasilva doesn’t expect a hurricane, but the weather front could cause heavy rain to North Florida. But the threat remains apart for a few days, he said, which could only lead to a rift.

How do hurricanes form?

Hurricanes originate in the tropical regions above warm waters. Thunderstorm clusters can develop across the ocean when water temperatures exceed 80 degrees Fahrenheit. If conditions are correct, clusters are swirling into tropical waves and storms known as tropical depression.

Tropical depression becomes a named tropical storm when its sustained wind speed reaches 39 mph. When the wind reaches 74 mph, the storm officially becomes a hurricane.

Costco warehouse that will take longer for executive members

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Costco executive members will have new times in their warehouses starting June 30th.

The retail warehouse giant told members in an email on June 11 that the location would be an hour earlier than the rest, and that the location would open exclusively for higher-level members.

The company also said the warehouse will be open for extra hours on Saturdays for all members and will close on the first Saturday at 7pm, with the longest hours being July 5th.

Costco also added new benefits to its $130 membership tier with the same announcement.

This is a new shopping time at the Costco warehouse for executive members.

Costco’s Early Executive Membership Shopping Time

  • Monday to Friday: 9am to 10am
  • Saturday: 9:30am
  • Sunday: 9am to 10am

Benefits of Costco Executive Membership

Costco executive members have already received the benefits of Gold Star membership, including warehouse access, Costco fuel access and free household cards.

Executive members also receive a 2% annual compensation for eligible purchases and receive a discount on Costco services.

Costco has announced in an email that executive members will receive a $10 credit per month for $150 orders through the company’s “same-day” service or Instacart.

Trump says we are “not going to stand” for Netanyahu’s corruption trial

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In a social media post, Trump said Israel’s corruption charges against Netanyahu should be dropped.

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President Donald Trump assaulted Israeli prosecutors about the corruption trial facing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying the US, who has given Israeli assistance, “cannot stand this.”

Netanyahu was charged in Israel in 2019 with bribery, fraud and trust violations. The trial, which began in 2020, includes three criminal cases. He is scheduled to return for mutual review on Monday after several delays in the Covid-19 pandemic, Israel’s war with Hamas and other regional conflicts.

“How can an Israeli Prime Minister be forced to sit in court all day long in nothing (cigars, bugs dolls, etc.)? It’s a political witch hunt that resembles the witch hunt I was forced to endure,” Trump told a post on the True Society on June 28th.

Netanyahu thanked Trump for his X post, previously known as Twitter.

“Together, we’ll make the Middle East great again!” he said.

Yair Lapid, a leading Israeli opposition leader, criticised Trump’s statement, saying “we should not intervene in the legal process of an independent state.”

Trump said the trial complicates negotiations with both Iran and Hamas. Israel launched its air force on June 13th, and after tensions broke out between Middle Eastern countries, the US targeted several nuclear sites in Iran. Hamas attacked Israel from Gaza on October 7, 2023 and is still hostages, but Israel unleashed the strike on the strip for nearly two years.

Trump also said the ongoing trial would “change” the “winning” by bombing Iran, which the US agreed to a ceasefire after bombing several nuclear enrichment facilities.

“It was the United States that saved Israel, and now it would be the United States that saved Vivi Netanyahu,” Trump said in another post earlier this week. “This tragedy of justice cannot be permitted! ”

UN Nuclear Watchdog Chief says Iran can once again enhance uranium with “month problems”

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CNN

The head of the UN nuclear watchdog said the US strike against Iran did not result in complete damage to the nuclear program, claiming that Tehran could resume rich uranium “in a few months” and that President Donald Trump has traveled decades back to the US Tehran’s ambitions.

Rafael Grossi’s comments appear to support an early assessment from the Pentagon’s Defense Intelligence Agency, first reported by CNN, suggesting that last week’s US strike at major Iranian nuclear sites did not destroy core elements of the nuclear program.

Although the final military and intelligence report assessments have yet to come, Trump has repeatedly claimed that he has “completely and completely wiped out” Tehran’s nuclear program.

The 12-day conflict between Israel and Iran began earlier this month when Israel launched an unprecedented attack aimed at preventing the development of nuclear bombs. Iran claims that the nuclear program is a peaceful purpose.

The United States then struck three important Iranian nuclear sites before the ceasefire began. The extent of damage to Tehran’s nuclear program has been heavily debated ever since.

US military authorities have recently provided some new information on their strike programmes, but have not provided new evidence of their effectiveness against Iran’s nuclear programme.

Following this week’s classified briefing, Republican lawmakers acknowledged that the US strike may not rule out all of Iran’s nuclear material, but argued that this is not part of the military mission.

Grossi, director of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), when asked about the various assessments, said he “faces the people with Margaret Brennan.” “This hourglass approach in weapons of mass destruction is not a good idea.”

“The ability they have is there. They can have a few cascades of centrifuges that spin and produce concentrated uranium in a few months. But frankly, as I said, he can’t argue that everything won’t go away and there’s nothing there,” he told Brennan.

“It’s obviously serious damage, but it’s not total damage,” Grossi said. “Iran has the capacity, industrial and technical capabilities. So, if they want, they can start this again.”

Grossi also told CBS News that the IAEA resisted the pressure to say whether Iran has nuclear weapons or has weapons before the strike.

Satellite images show damage at the Fordau enrichment facility in Iran after the US attack on June 22nd.

“We didn’t see a program that was aiming that direction (of nuclear weapons), but at the same time they didn’t answer any very important pending questions.”

CNN asked the White House to comment on Grossi’s claims.

Grossi emphasized the need for the IAEA to be granted access to Iran to assess nuclear activity. He said Iran had been disclosing information to the agency until the recent Israeli and US strikes, but “there were some things they didn’t make clear to us.”

“In this sensitive area of ​​the number of centrifuges and the amount of material, we had the perfect view,” he said. “What I was worried about was that there were other things that were not obvious. For example, we found traces of uranium in some parts of Iran. It was not a normally declared facility, and we had been seeking it for years.

In the initial pentagonal evaluation, Tehran may have left the site some of the enriched uranium before being attacked, but Trump insisted that nothing was going.

“When they announce that they are about to take protective measures, it’s logical to assume that this could be a part of it (transfer of material).

Meanwhile, Tehran has moved towards withdrawing from international surveillance over its nuclear program.

Iran’s parliament has suspended the bill with the UN nuclear watchdog group, and Foreign Minister Abbas Araguchi also said signatories could reconsider membership in the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) which bans the development of nuclear weapons.

Did you pass last night? What is included?

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After hours of discussion, you could vote for something that can be revised.

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  • The Senate began hours of discussion on Trump’s legislative priorities on June 28th.
  • Trump’s former adviser Elon Musk denounced the bill as “political suicide” before Senate debate began.
  • The Senate is aiming to send the bill back to the House for approval. Trump asked Congress to complete the bill by July 4th.

WASHINGTON – The Senate begins a marathon debate on President Donald Trump’s legislative priorities as Republicans try to lead needles with a narrow majority for tax cuts, Medicaid reform and border patrol funding.

The debate comes after the dramatic 51-49 votes were held for more than three and a half hours on June 28th, negotiated with Senator leaders Vice President Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance, but was held on June 28th.

The victory meant that the bill cleared key hurdles for the success of Trump’s domestic agenda on tax cuts and border security. Trump urged Congress to complete the measures by July 4th.

After the vote, minority leader Chuck Schumer, D-New York forced the Senate clerk to read the entire 940-page bill, rather than customizing the chore.

An argument that could last 20 hours before voting for dozens of revisions and what would be expected in a process called “voting,” which can be hours longer.

John Thune, the leader of the R-South Dakota majority, said it is unclear whether enough Republicans will send back home in support of the final version of their bill. Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky and Tom Tillis of North Carolina were the only Republican votes against the debate on the written bill.

“We know,” Tune said.

This is what has happened so far:

Trump took to his true social platform to criticize GOP lawmakers Tillis and Paul for opposing moving forward with his major tax bills.

“A lot of people have wanted to run the primary against ‘Senator Tom’ Tillis. I will be meeting them over the next few weeks to find people who will adequately represent the greats of North Carolina and, importantly, the United States of America,” Trump said.

Trump told longtime Kentucky GOP lawmaker Paul, “Did Land Paul vote “no” again tonight? What’s wrong with this guy? ”

– Marina Pitovsky

Want to read Trump’s bill yourself? You can find 1,000 pages of documentation here.

Our savanna kucha breaks down what we actually are in and how it affects Americans from coast to coast.

– Marina Pitovsky

Medicaid, which provides health insurance to over 71 million low-income Americans, has been a regular issue for both rooms working on the law.

After the House of Representatives saved at least $625 billion and approved a major change to a program that could potentially lose 7.6 million Americans over the next decade, the Senate called for even deeper cuts.

Senator Elizabeth McDonough has settled a handful of changes from the Senate bill, including banning non-citizen compensation and banning funds to maintain gender. Upper Chamber Act maintains an increase in new work requirements and eligibility checks.

The Senate plan will force competent adults to qualify for benefits so that they can work 80 hours a month until age 65, but includes exemptions for parents of children under the age of 14 or children with disabilities.

– Savannah Kucha

The Senate proposed a $6,000 “bonus deduction” for people over the age of 65, but the eligibility would be $75,000 for a single filer and $150,000 for couples.

The deduction is available from 2025 to 2028, supplementing but not replacing the existing additional standard deductions already available to seniors. In 2025, one filer over the age of 65 can claim an additional $2,000, but married couples can file jointly to add $1,600 for each spouse over the age of 65, in addition to the standard deduction available to all taxpayers.

The House has agreed to a $4,000 bonus deduction with similar eligibility parameters and duration.

– Medra Lee

The Trump administration “strongly supports” the Senate version of the bill on June 28th in the White House management and the office of budget statements. The statement is not intended to support the Senate version over the House version of the particular provision, but is intended to signal Trump to sign it if approved by Congress. The two-page statement highlighted provisions regarding tax cuts, border security, energy and defense.

“President Trump has pledged to keep his promises and failing to pass this bill would be the ultimate betrayal,” the statement said.

-Bart Jansen

You may have seen the Senate decision to launch a massive Trump-backed law debate labelled “procedural votes.” But what does that mean?

Not all votes in the House and Senate mean that Congress will sign the bill and send it to the president’s desk. Lawmakers may simply vote to begin the process of considering the law, or vote for amendments, rules of discussion, etc.

Following USA Today’s live coverage as they track the Senate’s path to the final vote.

– Marina Pitovsky

Republicans are calling for Senate members to be fired after they decide that they need to spell out the troubles of the president and his party when several Medicaid clauses are removed from Trump’s tax, spending and policy bills and are about to be signed by the July 4th Self-Issues.

Elizabeth McDonough, a key rule expert at the Chamber of Commerce, opposed the inclusion of a provision that the GOP wanted to put in a bill aimed at reducing Medicaid spending by demanding work from healthy adults and denying access to non-citizens.

That didn’t work with the deficit Hawks trying to secure for Trump for his biggest legislative victory in his second term.

For now, it appears that McDonough’s work is safe. Thune told reporters that the GOP had no plans to overturn lawmakers, and that needless to say they would fire her.

– Suddiksha Kochi

Why did Tillis and Paul refuse to support Trump’s bill? Paul, who played golf with Trump that afternoon, opposed the bill’s spending levels. Tillis has expressed concern about the state’s tens of millions of dollars in Medicaid cuts.

Trump threatened to find a major Republican opponent in Tillis in 2026.

Sen. R-Wisconsin, Sen. Ron Johnson, initially voted no to start debate. However, he flipped the vote at the last moment to force Vice President JD Vance to break what he had at hand.

Mike Lee of Utah, Cynthia Ramis of Wyoming and Rick Scott of Florida voted for the last time, each saying yes after a few hours of talks with leadership. Along the way, Lee rescinded the controversial provision that Sen. R-Montana threatened to oppose the law.

-Bart Jansen

Billionaire Elon Musk, a former Trump adviser on government spending cuts, fired another set of attacks on the president’s legislative package because it could kill millions of jobs.

Musk quieted his harsh criticism of Trump and his law the week after he left the government on May 30th. But he again condemned the bill as the Senate prepared to discuss it.

“The latest Senate bill will destroy millions of jobs in America and cause enormous strategic harm to our country!” Musk said on social media on June 28th. “It’s very insane and destructive. It’s seriously damaging future industries while giving handouts to past industries.”

Musk added another post warning the election risk GOP if he votes for Trump-backed laws that don’t vote for Republicans well.

-Bart Jansen

The biggest provisions in the law will extend expired tax cuts, create some new ones, and dramatically increase spending on border security.

The core of the law will extend Trump’s tax cuts in 2017, which is due to expire at the end of the year. Republicans said the defeat of the measure would lead to a $4 trillion increase in taxes over the next decade.

The new tax credits Trump has campaigned for will apply until 2028 to tips for employees such as waiters. The Senate concluded the deduction at $25,000, weakening the break for individuals earning more than $150,000.

For border security, the bill would increase approximately $150 billion in funding for the Department of Homeland Security. The bill approves $45 billion for the new detention center as Trump has increased arrests and increased $27 billion in a massive deportation campaign.

The important provisions would increase the amount the country could borrow $5 trillion. The country’s debt is already nearing $37 trillion, with Treasury Secretary Scott Bescent warning that current restrictions on borrowing will be reached in August. Kentucky’s Rand Paul, who has pending the Republican bill, said he would not vote for the bill unless the debt limit receives separate votes. But Republican leaders want to keep the unpopular votes throughout the packaging.

-Bart Jansen

American Students reveal the tragic story of the escaped Israel-Iran war

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They visited a new country, left excitedly to connect with Jewish identities and gain first-hand knowledge about one of the world’s most renowned regions. They left behind memories of air raid sirens and bomb shelters.

After Israel received a shocking attack on Iran earlier this month, young Americans on their study abroad program and their birth trip to Israel have forced the United States to make a disastrous escape as both countries traded missiles and American troops entered the conflict directly and bombed three Iranian nuclear sites.

The thousands of escapes included 17 high school students from Arizona, who leaned into a bomb shelter before boarding a cruise ship into Cyprus on the Mediterranean island. A Florida State University student studying geopolitics in the Middle East fled to Israel’s mountainous regions and traveled to Jordan.

“It was fear I’ve never felt before,” Aidan Fishkind, who was in Israel for two months’ birthrights and internship programme, told USA Today. “There was a missile land two miles away from the hostel.”

A calm conflict under a delicate ceasefire came during Israel’s busiest tourist season.

The group safely evacuated around 2,800 young people in the country, according to the Israel Foundation, a nonprofit sponsoring youth visiting Israel. Many of them are on luxury cruise ships. According to its website, the nonprofit has cancelled its program, scheduled for until July 10th.

Meanwhile, the Spiral War also sought Iranian Americans to find a safe place to await Iranian bombing. Hundreds of Americans fled the country last week, according to the State Department’s Interior Cable, seen by Reuters.

“I was scared for my life.”

Fishkind, in Detroit, Michigan, arrived in Israel on June 3 and interned in the marketing department at Jaffa Institute, a Tel Aviv-based nonprofit. But a little after his first week, the war broke out, leaving him and his fellow students scrambled for safety.

He recalls the first night after Israel launched an attack on Iran’s nuclear site, and Iran responds with a barrage of missiles. He and his group of Detroit-area students received phone alerts about incoming rocket fires and ran into rooms and stairs atriums known as “safe zones.”

All night he heard a deep destiny that shook the building. He wondered whether the Rumble would be the sound of Israeli air defense systems intercepting rockets or the Iranian missiles landing in the city. It was both, he will learn later.

“I was scared of my life,” he said.

In Detroit, his mother, Jennifer Fishkind, brought him multiple flights home. However, each flight was cancelled as Israeli officials closed the country’s airspace.

“You’re just feeling helpless thousands of miles away,” she said. “We told him, ‘You’re fine. You’re fine.’ ”

The next day, Fishkind and his group set out to the Dead Sea area south. This was considered much safer than Tel Aviv. There, Fishkind stayed at the hotel and met scores from other students across the US and Canada. Almost a week later, he boarded a cruise ship into Cyprus.

Once he reached the island he immediately took a flight to Rome and eventually took him to Detroit.

Fishkind, who prepares for his junior year at Elon University in North Carolina, said going home is a adjustment. He said the memories of the siren and the night he was evacuated from the missiles would take some time to deal with it.

“As I got home and lay in bed, I kept thinking, ‘Did that actually happened?’ ”

Tallahassee students share memories of sirens and bunkers

Madeline King traveled to Israel with a group of over 20 students at Florida State University as part of a mission trip to investigate and study the Israel-Gaza conflict. It was organized by Hillel of FSU, the university’s largest Jewish campus organization.

The group was scheduled to leave Israel on Saturday, June 14th and return to Florida, the day after Israeli forces attacked Iran’s nuclear program. Anxiety left them temporarily in Tel Aviv, where they were targeted by Iranian missiles.

“We’ll hear the sirens all night…and we’ll find ourselves descending into the bunker every time,” King told Tallahassee Democrats, part of the USA Today Network.

Like Fishkind, her group headed to the Dead Sea area near the west bank of the Jordan River. They then travelled to Jordan, where they boarded the flight boundary to Cyprus.

There, King and hundreds of others took part in flights to Florida in projects coordinated with the state’s Office of Emergency Management. Florida officials said last week that more than 1,400 state residents had evacuated Israel by planes and passenger ferries.

Tear-like reunion

A group of 17 high school students from Arizona arrived in Israel on June 4th, learning about Jewish religious traditions and Israeli culture and history, travelling the country for a week.

Like their fellow American students, the group quickly discovers that they cannot leave by plane as they originally intended.

Brett Kurland, one of Arizona students, said, according to Arizona Republic in the US: “We’re a parent of one of our Arizona students.”

With the help of Arizona Senators Reuben Gallego and Mark Kelly, students managed to board a luxury cruise ship departing for Cyprus. After an 18-hour voyage, they arrived on the island and then returned to the United States.

Many families were waiting for students at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport on June 25th. Some families stood worried about the signs of homemade food, while others had flowers and balloons. When students emerged from the jet bridge, the family cheered at a tearful reunion and accepted their loved ones.

A similar scene took place at international airports all over the United States.

In Michigan, Jennifer Fishkind and a group of parents took in the children as they got off a plane at Detroit’s Metropolitan Wayne County Airport.

“After all, you’re just waiting to get your arm around them,” Fishkind said. “That was the best feeling.”

British police evaluate footage of Glastonbury’s conduct over anti-Israel chant

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CNN

British police say they are reviewing comments made on stage by rappunk duo Bob Billan and hip-hop trioy cap at this year’s Glastonbury Festival.

Rapper Bobby Villain appeared on the festival’s third largest Westholz stage on Saturday, yelling “Free and Free Palestine” before leading the crowd to lead a chant against the Israeli army.

The video showed the rapper screaming at the microphone. “Importantly, have you ever heard of this?

The artist also performed in front of a screen that read, “The United Nations calls it genocide, the BBC calls it ‘conflict’.”

The British Israeli Embassy said it was “deeply disturbed” at the festival by what was called “inflammatory and hateful” rhetoric.

When chants such as “Death to IDF” were spoken in front of tens of thousands of festival attendees, he said that “stimulating serious concerns about the normalization of extremist language and the glory of violence.”

“We are calling on organizers, artists and public leaders of the Glastonbury Festival in the UK to condemn this rhetoric and rejection of all forms of hatred,” he added.

The Glastonbury Festival said in a statement “applauseful” with Vylan’s comments.

“Their chants are crossing so many lines and we are an urgent reminder to everyone involved in the production of the festival that Glastonbury has no place for anti-Semitism, hate speech or incitement to violence,” the organizers said.

Knecap's Móglaí Bap and Mo Chara will perform during sets at Glastonbury on Saturday.

Prior to the five-day music festival, all eyes were in the Irish hip-hop trio knee-related. Band member Liam O’Hanna was charged with a terrorist crime last month after an investigation by London Metropolitan Police.

The charges he denied were linked to a London gig in November 2024, and he allegedly posted the flag of Hezbollah, a prohibited terrorist organization prohibited by British law. Before the festival at Worthy Farm, British Prime Minister Kielstarmer said he did not think the group would be “not appropriate” to perform.

Knecap was a critic of the voices of Israel’s war in Gaza, but said he had never supported Hamas or Hezbollah before.

During the set, Mo Chara told the crowd that recent events were “stressing” but nothing compared to what the Palestinians are experiencing.

Kneecap rapper Naoise o Caireallain, held under the stage name Móglaíbap, returned to Starmer’s comments on Saturday’s set.

Referring to future court dates for his bandmates, O Caireallain also said he would “will riot outside the court.”

Police in Somerset, where the festival was held, said the unit was “aware of comments made by the act,” and that “the video evidence will be assessed by officers to determine whether a crime that requires a criminal investigation has been committed.”

British health secretary Wes Streeting denounced the performance as “terrifying” in an interview with Sky News on Sunday morning.

He said the BBC and Glastonbury, who will broadcast the set live, “we have questions that will answer.”

A BBC spokesperson said some of the comments made during Vylan’s performance were “deeply offensive,” adding that there are no plans to make performance available on demand through the iPlayer streaming platform.

Is America ready for a revival of manufacturing?

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Winton Machine, an Atlanta-based manufacturer, is eager to hire. So far, there are few takers.

CEO and co-founder Lisa Winton has been looking for a sales representative since March. The work of the mechanics has been open even longer, with fewer than 12 applications in the past year, and no one has had the skillset needed for the job.

Winton has done what he can to attract workers, including forming a relationship with the local technical college, providing applicants with flexible time and rehiring retirees. Still, maintaining her staffing was a challenge.

Promoting more domestic manufacturing through Winton’s concerns, through customs duties, will only exacerbate the problem.

“If more factories move into the area, who are they competing with? They are competing with other factories,” she said. “All of the different kinds of jobs available, whether it’s a mechanic, maintenance or assembly — they have to come from somewhere.”

President Donald Trump has said it ranges from baseline tariffs of 10% for trading partners to 50% for steel imports., “Ra roars” in work and in factories.

“The final game is to produce here. The countries that want to produce here don’t pay tariffs. That’s the ultimate solution,” Trump’s top trade advisor Peter Navarro told ABC News in early April.

It’s not clear that America is preparing for that shift.

Depending on the industry, building a new manufacturing facility can take up to 10 years, and experts say the country’s infrastructure is not ready to handle additional plants. Meanwhile, labor shortages in manufacturing could mean new factories are struggling to play their role.

“If the Trump administration’s vision brings manufacturing back to America, not just some sectors, but in a large number — if that vision is not realistic, if that vision is not realistic.”

Why does it take time to build a factory?

The number of companies shifting production to the US due to tariffs is not clear. Those re-shore are facing a long process.

“Most companies do not decide to build or lightly plant onshore or new factories,” said Erin McLaughlin, senior economist at the Conference Committee, a nonprofit business research group. “This is for most companies that have strategy years ago.”

First, companies need to know where to build. According to McLaughlin, the location should be close to a transport corridor, excellent water supply and a stable electric grid.

After that, the company must purchase the land, obtain appropriate permits and inspections, design the factory, purchase equipment, and select the construction team.

Only then can they begin construction. McLaughlin said the process usually takes three to 10 years.

According to Jeff Bischoff, Chief Sales Officer at Lexington, Kentucky Designer Builder Gray, Timeline can challenge the timeline with growing competition for sites with access to a stable electrical grid.

“Power generation is not catching up right now, depending on demand,” Bischoff said. “All utilities are trying their best to chase it and go beyond that. But it’s a process that lasts a few years.”

Trump acknowledges the need for infrastructure changes and believes it will take him about two years to gain his vision for manufacturing and operations.

“We need to build something called a factory. We need to build energy. We need to do a lot,” Trump said on April 7th.

However, McLaughlin believes that the two-year turnaround to strengthen the US manufacturing sector could be optimistic. Even if the executive order speeds up federal approval, factories still need to worry about state and local permits, she said.

According to labor market analytics firm Lightcast, about 20% of US foreign-born manufacturing workers, there could be more complications as the Trump administration continues to crack down on immigration. The even higher share (approximately 30%) is foreign-borns under construction.

“We don’t want to rely too much on one trading partner for certain matters,” McLaughlin said. But “I don’t think the US is ready.

Why manufacturers struggle to hire

Trump’s push for more factories comes after a dramatic decline in manufacturing employment. After accounting for about 22% of non-farm employment in 1979, manufacturing operations constitute only 8% today.

According to Robert Lawrence, a Harvard professor of international trade and investment and author of Curve: Curve: Manufacturing Can Still Provide Inclusive Growth, even if tariffs could eliminate the entire US trade deficit, they would only hang out about 10% of the share of employment.

“Even in the most successful forms, this is barely noticeable,” Lawrence said.

Other experts warn that even that level of growth can exacerbate the employment challenges faced by manufacturers today.

For years, manufacturers have struggled to fill jobs during the post-pandemic construction boom, as supply chain issues encouraged more manufacturers to build facilities closer to their homes.

Deloitte’s 2024 report found that the number of US manufacturers rose by more than 11% between the first quarter of 2019 and the second quarter of 2023. Despite growth, manufacturing jobs have remained essentially flat since 2019, discounting dips from the pandemic era.

It is partly due to automation. Today, factories have fewer workers. However, a first quarter survey by the National Association of Manufacturers found that almost half of manufacturers say attracting and retaining talent is a major challenge. Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that as of April there were 381,000 manufacturing jobs.

By 2033, manufacturing could potentially have 1.9 million jobs for 1.9 million jobs due to the gap between skills and applicants.

“There’s absolutely no one ready to do these jobs,” said Rachel Sederberg, senior economist at Lightcast. “That will be a very important issue if more and more manufacturers return to the US.”

One problem is that manufacturers are aging from the workforce. According to a recent report from LightCast, more than a third of US manufacturing employees are over 55 years old and are approaching retirement.

And attracting new talent to fill these positions was not easy.

As factories turn to more automation, manufacturers say they are struggling to find talent with the right skill set to manage more advanced technologies.

“Not all manufacturing jobs today require a degree, but all manufacturing operations today require skills,” said Carolyn Lee, executive director of the Institute of Manufacturing, a nonprofit focused on workforce development and education within the industry.

Lee said that by acquiring these skills, he will become one of the most in demand today, from one to two days to apprenticeship programs for education and maintenance technicians for up to four years.

There are signs of renewed interest in trade work. Registration with public two-year institutions focusing on vocational programs increased 14% year-on-year in 2024, surpassing 3% growth in four-year public schools, according to a report by Wells Fargo on May 12th.

However, Lightcast has discovered that there are still not enough students to learn relevant skills to meet job demands. For example, Texas in 2023 had just 400 mechanics programs completions in Texas in 2023, compared to around 16,000 related jobs in the state.

Research suggests that manufacturing’s reputation as dirty and dangerous has reduced the industry’s appeal to young Americans, particularly during periods of low unemployment.

Deloitte’s report is a “another set of expectations” between millennials and generations of Z workers, many of whom were forced to go to college instead of working in trade, making it difficult for manufacturers to attract and retain workers.

“The consensus among American manufacturers is that this generation of Americans don’t want these jobs anymore,” says Northwestern Qian.

Fear of lower wages may be alienating workers.

Manufacturing today is well paid, and some studies show that there tends to be better payments than other sectors that don’t require a university degree. However, as of 2018, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average hourly revenue for manufacturing employees is short of the average revenue for the entire employee.

What kind of work will more manufacturers produce?

There is a reason why many American companies rely on factories overseas. Operating in the US tends to be more expensive.

One is the high labor costs. The average mechanical operator salary is nearly $45,000 in the US, compared to $15,000 in the US and under $5,000 in Vietnam, according to the Reshoring Institute, a nonprofit supporting expanded US manufacturing.

It is also expected that companies will increase production costs for many domestic manufacturers as they will need to pay more for inputs shipped from other countries.

This could potentially reduce costs for manufacturers towards increasing automation.

“If you’re a factory worker and you need to pay an average of $36 per hour benefits, you tend to hire a very small number and instead buy automated equipment and robots.”

Winton of Winton Machine said it already saw an increase in demand for automation from companies designing and producing factory automation for manufacturers in HVAC, aerospace, construction and other industries.

Winton hopes to see jobs created if manufacturing promotes tariffs. She believes automation will allow for less high quality positions, as opposed to a significant influx of physical labor.

Already, manufacturing relies on more university-educated workers. According to the USA Today analysis of the Census Bureau’s US Community Survey Data, nearly 32% of private manufacturing workers had at least a bachelor’s degree in 2023, up from 22% in 2006.

“To build all the parts and pieces, we need to build engineers and engineers to design to build this factory automation,” Winton said. “I think we have people. Do you have a skill set? That’s the question.”

Why some companies are struggling to re-land under Trump’s tariffs

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Gearmotion, a New York-based manufacturer, buys most of its parts from US suppliers, with around 4% of the input imported from other countries.

That’s a small percentage, but with 10% basic tariffs in effect from early April, president and CEO Dean Burrows said his company, which specializes in custom cuts and ground gear, needs to pass these price increases to its customers. That’s not because they’re not trying to find new suppliers.

“We couldn’t find any US sources that we could make our products, so we searched globally,” Burrows said.

According to an April White House press release, tariffs are intended to correct that.

But it took years to revive US manufacturing bases, and economists suspect that President Donald Trump’s tariffs are enough to bring it back to its former glory. Meanwhile, many US manufacturers relying on imports may be more likely to pass customs costs to consumers than to line up their supply chains on the re-shore.

A 2022 report from the Department of Commerce shows that nearly a third of intermediate inputs from US manufacturers are imported from other countries.

“In the short term, it’s going to hurt manufacturers. It’s going to hurt factory owners. It’s going to hurt workers,” said Nancy Chian, professor of economics at Kellogg School of Management in Northwestern. “And that means that in addition to the pain workers feel when they go to the store, they also need to pay more for the imported (items).”

The reason for shifting to suppliers is not necessarily an easy solution

Trump’s tariffs aim to position the United States as a “global superpower in manufacturing” by portraying new factories and making manufacturing investments.

“The president said early and frequently that the best way to avoid tariffs is just to come here and produce,” Trump’s top trade adviser Peter Navarro told CNBC in early April. “We’re going to go to a place where America makes things again.”

However, moving your supply chain to the US costs.

Nearly two-thirds of the 380 surveyed companies said construction of a new domestic supply chain would at least double current costs, according to a CNBC survey in April. 61% said it would be more cost-effective to move to a country with low tension.

“If the US continues to focus on China, it will be successful in moving production some degree of from China, but that won’t bring much back to the US,” Qian said. “There are many other countries that can be manufactured at a lower cost than the US.”

Even if tariffs boost US manufacturing, it will take years for new factories to go into operation. It could leave US companies looking for domestic suppliers struggling in the meantime.

Take 000Skin is a beauty company launched by Hanna Chan earlier this year. 000Skin is based in New York, but Chang sources containers for Chinese skincare products and says its manufacturing capacity is unparalleled.

“I don’t think people don’t know how much work and infrastructure it takes even to make plastic jars,” Chan said.

However, the rising costs of imports from tariffs threw her for the loop. Chang says he is looking for alternative US suppliers, but has yet to find an option that matches the quality and price of what the Chinese manufacturers can offer. She is thinking about shifting to Mexican producers, but said it’s difficult to find people willing to work with small businesses.

“I’m probably just continuing to see a partner based in China,” Chang said.

Courtney Rivenbark considered working with US manufacturers when it created apparel and jewellery brand Coco Clem in 2018.

Due to the high production costs, she distanced her and eventually pivoted into a partnership with a Chinese factory, which she said she was in line with ethical and environmental goals.

“China is very advanced in machinery, equipment and technology,” Livenberk said. “The entire supply chain exists in China. Knit, Yard, Zagotz (Global Organic Textile Standard) Certified Organic Cotton Thread.”

After Trump announced new tariffs earlier this year, Revenberk said he compared Chinese pricing with US manufacturers. She said it would take three times more to make the same sweater in the US, and that local manufacturers didn’t have the skills to create specific plus-sized clothing.

“If the infrastructure was here, I’ll move (production to the US),” Revenberk said. But “it’s very expensive. …I’m not very interested in moving outside China due to the possibility of a short-term policy change.”

How many factories and jobs are coming to the US?

That’s not that tariffs have put pressure on some companies to increase their investment in the US. Whether these moves will lead to a dramatic influx of manufacturing jobs is another question.

CRA-Z-ART – A New Jersey-based manufacturer that produces toys, activities and school supplies – announced plans in March to expand production space from 50% to 1.5 million square feet to combat tariff costs.

CRA-Z-ART chair Lawrence Rosen said it’s too early to say how many jobs the move will generate, but the company is trying to use automation “when possible” to directly reduce labor costs.

“I need to control the fate of a 102-year-old company by controlling the future and not relying on global tariffs when things can change every day,” Lawrence said. “Made in the US, we save on cargo and save on automation. … Automation allows us to produce many products at similar costs, compared to increased costs even at 10% tariffs on cargo.”

The White House website argues that Trump’s policies have spurred trillions of dollars in new manufacturing investments “that drives job growth, innovation and opportunities across every corner of the country.”

Many of these investments were under work before Trump took office.

For example, the $5 billion investment from automaker Stellantis includes plans to reopen its idling plant in Belvidere, Illinois. The transaction was first announced in 2023, which created the truck.

A spokesman for another company listed on the website, Siemens Healthineers, a German health technology company, told USA Today that some of the initiatives included in the $150 million investment in new companies have been ongoing for “a year or more,” but the project has been accelerated to address growing economic and geopolitical uncertainty.

Michael Strain, director of economic policy research at the conservative think tank American Enterprise Institute, doesn’t expect many reruns linked to tariffs.

“It’s an investment of over 10 years for businesses to set up factories in the US,” Strain said. “If tariff rates change weekly, how can businesses know if it will make a profit?”

Some data suggest that domestic manufacturing has actually been hit by tariffs, and trade policy uncertainty has encouraged some companies to tighten their wallet strings.

According to a survey by the Supply Institute, economic activity in the manufacturing sector was contracted three times in a row in May, reaching its lowest level since November, reaching its lowest level in both power contracts. Meanwhile, the Ministry of Labor said that despite an overall increase in employment, manufacturing lost around 8,000 jobs between April and May.

Susan Helper, an economics professor at Case Western Reserve University in Ohio who served as a White House staffer for both the Obama and Biden administrations, believes tariffs could be a useful tool, but the uncertainty surrounding trade policy is a “real problem.”

“I think all that companies are doing is not just investing everywhere, they’re just waiting to see how things shake up,” she said.

Why did a mentally incompetent immigrant detainee suddenly lose his lawyer?

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Detainees with mental disabilities facing deportation will be offered fair hearings by law, but have been hampered by a national program to provide lawyers.

The message came via video calls from a prison where a lawyer and her client were locked up in immigration detention. In the room without the windows of Echo, she said: “Sorry, I can’t become your lawyer anymore.”

Sophie Woodruff had to tell him twice. Her clients could hear what she was saying, but he didn’t understand them.

Grevil Paz Cartagena is mentally ill and legally incompetent. He has been in custody for nearly 600 days. Woodruff was the only person a 31-year-old Honduras immigrant could speak to. That was apart from the voice in his head.

She had promised not to abandon him, but the Trump administration quietly cancelled its $12 million annual contract on April 25th. Since 2013, he has paid private lawyers to represent detainees who are mentally or cognitively incompetent and unable to represent themselves.

These attorneys filed a federal lawsuit in May, challenging the sudden change. In an April memo reviewed by USA Today, DOJ contractors revoked a reference to “national” protections for non-citizens who are detained with serious mental disorders.

The law assumes that detainees with severe disabilities will still be given a fair hearing where they can present evidence and cross-examine witnesses. But now they are caught up in the administration’s enthusiasm to strengthen the withdrawal under the auspices of saving taxpayers.

That means 289 immigrants, like Pascartagena, faced with removal across the country, suddenly drift away. Newly detained immigrants deemed incompetent are not given to lawyers.

In a legal twist, hundreds of other mentally incompetent detainees in three states – Arizona, California and Washington – are still being offered lawyers by previous court rulings. The rest is left to dodge for themselves.

“So you’re still going to be there in court?” The still-configured Paz Cartagena asked Woodruff before hanging the video call.

Now, Woodruff, who has officially withdrawn from the lawsuit, says she is struggling to leave her entirely.

“Personally, it’s devastating,” Woodruff said. “I can’t make this clearer. If they deport him, he will die, and it is in my spirit.”

The immigration lawyer said he faces an impossible choice for USA Today. He continued to cut down relationships with the most vulnerable clients who have either protected or vowed to protect them.

Six attorneys who enrolled in the program spoke about the sudden end of fundraising. They facilitated interviews behind the detention centre doors with detainees with a variety of mental health challenges.

With the help of intermediaries and supporters, everyone except one of the detainees decided to remain anonymous for fear of affecting their case. Only Paz Cartagena is identified by name.

The Justice Department, which administers the program, refused to answer questions about its past or future, citing pending lawsuits challenging cuts.

National and local staff at the immigration court in the Pascaltagena case said the immigration judge was prohibited from talking about it.

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The US Supreme Court raises restrictions on deportation to “third countries”

The U.S. Supreme Court cleared the road on Monday to resume deporting immigrants to their country without providing the opportunity to show the harm they may face, giving him another victory in his aggressive, massive deportation.

Depression in detention

During detention, Pascartagena’s anxiety waxes and fades. Sleepless nights will torment him. If that’s bad, he slams his head against the wall of Cinderblock until the concussion begins. The pain numbs him.

“The voice tries to convince me to hurt myself,” he said in Spanish.

He is awake to the facility’s morning staff at 9am. He says he feels lost and relies solely on the voices that talk to him.

That was until Woodruff jumped into town on April 8th.

“He was really alone and struggling,” when his current lawyer arrived from New Orleans to meet Pascaltagena, Aurora, Colorado.

The pair tied to a mutual love for tattoos and reggaeton music. They listen to the same top artists, Wisin & Yandel, Daddy Yankee and of course the bad bunny.

An hour later, the two hugged each other and parted ways.

“Thank you for coming. I can trust you and say you can help,” Pas Cartagena told her.

Woodruff helped him edit the asylum claim. Paz Cartagena has identified her as bisexual. He said he returned home and was raped by police officers before he moved to the US.

Returning to Honduras as a member of the LGBTQ community would mean exile, violence, or death. The US State Department warns that Honduras police and government will “incite, carry out, tolerate, or tolerate” such violence against LGBTQ individuals.

His mother and brothers have returned to Honduras. He has several relatives in the US, but they are not in touch.

In a recent phone interview with USA Today, Paz Cartagena spoke in the circle and was confused about his life timeline and what will happen next.

“Someone is here with me, in my head,” Pas Cartagena said. “The voice helps you write and write music.”

A few days later, in another interview, Pascartagena was clear and understood his confusion.

He recalls his break-in with local police in Colorado. He was doing recreational medicine and self-medicine, and was confused when a regular staff member approached him. It sparked a cascade of events that led to his detention.

Records show that he has not been convicted of a crime in the United States. However, the immigration officer said he was illegally in the country and was subject to deportation.

Mental health and Djibouti

The mental health of detainees often goes unnoticed through immigration lawsuits. It is usually up to an immigration judge or attorney to raise concerns and order an assessment.

But given the swift burn regime, those timelines may be compressed or sometimes nonexistent.

This was the case of NYO Myint, one of eight men sent on a dispute flight to South Sudan recently upheld by the US Supreme Court.

Instead of being tried and held in prison for sexual assault charges, Myint lived at the Lincoln Regional Center, a mental hospital, in court records obtained by the USA Today Show. The psychologist there evaluated him and determined that he was mentally incompetent on four separate occasions until November 2019. He entered a plea for the No Contest in 2020 and was sentenced to 12 years in prison. He was paroled in 2023, lost custody of the ice, and served part of time before it was eventually removed.

“I didn’t learn about his previous abilities issues,” Jonathan Ryan, Texas immigration lawyer at Myint, recently told USA Today. “I wish I had it.”

DOJ defends action in court

Hundreds of detainees face uncertainty, but the organisations that represented them have sued in federal courts to restore funds.

However, DOJ’s attorneys argue that the case is not about terminating the program, but about reducing contracts that are within the scope of government rights. They have not informed them of revamping the funds with other lawyers.

Representatives from the Immigration Review Office refused to answer questions regarding changes to the arrangement, known as the nationally qualifying representative program, citing the pending case.

The DOJ notes that despite alarms against ethical binding, many attorneys in the program say they will continue to provide services after cutting other funds.

This is the case of Yarima Gonzalez Crespo, an attorney at the Pennsylvania Immigration Resource Center.

“I tried this on my own,” a client from a Mexican grandmother said in a video interview from detention. “It was very difficult and the judge told me I couldn’t do this myself.”

The woman said she was a green card holder and had lived in the country since 1979. Subsequently, misdemeanor assault charges in 2020 overturned her life. Until she landed on an ice moving flight in 2024, she noticed the gravity of the situation.

“I couldn’t breathe, I was paralyzed and petrified,” she said. “I told them: ‘No, I can’t stay here, I have my legal paper, I just got out of prison, I did my time.’ I knew I would get sick again. ”

After eight months of detention, the judge recognized the woman’s rapidly deteriorating mental state and assigned expressions. The woman currently taking stable medication says she’s busy cleaning and scrubbing detention centers for $10 a week. She uses it to call her family – $2.50 for a 3-minute phone, $4 for a video.

The 10 grandmothers have maintained her cooking skills sharply during detention, and due to limited ingredients for tamares and virria tacos. The eldest son’s detainee with her black wrapped glasses and grey hair, she said others would call her mother.

“You have to make them with love, it’s not a special seasoning, it’s love,” she said.

Immigration judges question change

News of changes to the lawyers program were fooled by the administration with a confused mix of messages.

As of January 24th, no changes were made, but the emails later indicated that it was cut on April 3rd. Then, rapid reversal: ignore the cut. And finally, an official notice from Acting Director Eoir Sirce Owen: as of April 25th, funds have been cut to be “convenient.”

No other justifications for the change are provided.

Paul Schmidt, a former immigration judge and chairman of the Immigration Appeals Committee, called it another fight in “a total war on legitimate processes.”

“It’s disappointing when we adopted a system that was written to implement best practices, but now we’re back to the worst way to do this,” Schmidt said.

Retired immigration judge Dana Lee Marks said cuts in funding could backfire despite the administration’s purpose of streamlining and accelerating immigrant decisions.

“It’s a tragedy,” Marks said. “I’m cutting my nose to stare in the face. These are when it’s difficult for an immigration judge to know that he’ll move faster with a qualified representative.”

Marks said the judges will be left to roam immigration stories due to relevant legal elements, and the lack of lawyers will create more opportunities for error. It can lead to more attractiveness and slower judgments.

Another day in court

In the case of the young Cartagena of Hongjuran, he returns to himself to write songs and sketches art while waiting for his court date.

Guns N’ Rose by his favorite song, “November Rain,” plays in his head while fighting his depression and suicidal thoughts.

His former lawyer, Woodruff, has been in touch over the phone despite official withdrawal from the case. She is worried that his mental health has deteriorated.

“I don’t know what to tell the judge,” he said. “I don’t know what I should do.”

On June 30th, he sues his case alone in front of immigration judge Elizabeth McGrill.

It could be a confused, quiet Pascartagena story, or a sharp version he feels on a good day.

Nick Penzenstadler is a reporter for the USA Today research team, working on national projects. Tips or questions? You can contact him by email npenz@usatoday.com or by signalling 720-507-5273.

Russian summer attacks in Ukraine are overwhelming, but Kiev doesn’t celebrate

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For months, the speech in Kiev was a very long-awaited Russian attack aimed at increasing more in the eastern region of Ukraine. So far, it has been overwhelming, but the Russians have made some profits and have significantly strengthened the number of troops in some areas.

Russian President Vladimir Putin continues to pursue territorial interests as the ceasefire talks become the back seat. Last week he fixed that it was one of his important ways to justify an unprovoked invasion.

“I think there’s only one Russian and Ukrainian people,” he said. “In this sense, everything in Ukraine belongs to us.”

Still, Ukrainians have launched counterattacks in some regions, rapidly developing the domestic arms industry. And Russia’s wartime economy is facing stronger headwinds.

The Russian army is about to advance in several regions on the frontline of 1,200 kilometers (746 miles). Ukrainian commander Oleksandr Silsky said this week that there are 111,000 Russian troops in some parts of the frontline alone. According to Ukrainian general staff, this is comparable to the area’s roughly 70,000 Russian troops in December last year.

Silsky also claimed that Russia’s penetration in the northern region of Smee has ceased. The War Institute, a Washington-based think tank, says Ukrainian forces have regained Smie’s territory and the pace of Russia’s progress has slowed.

“We can say that the waves of attempts to “summer attacks” launched by the enemy from Russian territory are on fire,” Silsky argued.

Residents are walking along the streets near a building damaged by a Russian missile strike in Sammy, Ukraine, June 13, 2025, near a Russian attack on Ukraine.

But it’s a complicated picture. Recently, Russian infantry attacks have gained positions at the borders of the Donetsk and Dnipropetrovsk regions. The Russian Ministry of Defense claimed on Saturday that another village, Zirka, had been taken.

Deep State, an open source analyst in Ukraine, argued that Ukraine’s “defense continues to collapse rapidly, and the enemy is making great progress in constant attacks in the region.”

The Kremlin has long argued that the campaign will continue until it retains all of the Eastern Donetsk, Zapolizia and Herson regions. (It already accounts for everything except Luhansk slivers).

At the current speed of progress that took years. However, it appears that the conflict will likely continue to drag on from the end of the year to 2026, as the Trump administration is not so committed to pushing for negotiations for a ceasefire.

The three-dimensional battlefield is now an unlikely combination of inventive drone-driven special operations and very basic infantry attacks.

At one end of the spectrum, Ukraine’s bold attack in early June with Russian strategic bombers used drones operated from trucks deep in Russian territory.

Ukrainian security services reported another drone attack on Saturday, reporting that it had been held down had caused significant damage to Russian air bases in Crimea.

In contrast, Russian soldiers on foot and motorcycles are sometimes groups of fewer than dozens, pushed into abandoned houses in eastern Ukraine, with drones for covers, but no armor. This is an approach that forces changes in Ukrainian tactics. Ukrainian Defense Minister Rustem Umerov said last week that the defense was camouflaged to the terrain and became smaller to avoid detection.

While infantry protects or takes away territory, drones continue to play a greater role in shaping conflict. The Russians are overwhelming the air defense and stirring up cheap, mass-produced drones designed to allow some of the missiles to pass through. The Russians increasingly used this tactic to attack Ukrainian cities, particularly Kiev.

Ukrainian President Voldimia Zelensky said on Sunday, “There were 477 drones in our sky, with most of them Russian and Iranian Shahed and 60 missiles of various types, Russians targeting everything that sustains life.”

The Russians “we aim to use up to 500 (Iranian design) Shahedes per night and combine them with ballistic and cruise missiles to emit air defenses,” Umerov said.

On June 23, 2025, during Russian attacks on Ukraine in Kiev, Ukraine, women respond at the location of an apartment building hit during Russian drone and missile strikes.

Zelensky repeated pleas for more Patriot missile batteries and other Western systems. Last week, Trump said the US should “consider” due to the massive attack on Ukrainian cities.

Zelensky says Ukraine is ready to buy patriots directly or through a fund established by the U.S. Ukraine mineral trade.

Both sides are generating all types of drones at incredible speeds. Ukrainian security services produce nearly 200 Iranian-designed Shahed drones by Russia every day, with around 6,000 decoid drones plus about 6,000 stocks. Last week, Russians have used more than 23,000 small “Kamikaze” drones at the frontline, according to Ukrainian military general staff.

It’s a never-ending lace in design and production. Silsky recently said Russia has developed the advantage of fiber-optic controlled drones.

Drone warfare “is a constant intellectual struggle. The enemy regularly changed algorithms and Ukraine adapted tactics accordingly,” Weeloff said. “A solution that was highly effective at the beginning of the war lost it over time as the enemy changed its tactics.”

Ukraine is stepping up the production of long-range drones it used to attack Russian infrastructure, such as airfields, refineries and transportation. Umerov said “tens of thousands” will be produced this year, in addition to more than 4 million battlefield drones.

Both sides continue to build a defence industry that will allow them to continue fighting, even if the scale of Russia’s production is far greater than that of Ukraine. The huge Russian military conglomerate Rostec produces an estimated 80% of the equipment used against Ukraine.

CEO Sergei Kemezov claimed this month in a meeting with Putin that Rostec’s production had 10 times higher since 2021, and that revenue last year rose to an eye-opening $46 billion.

Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) will be attending a meeting with Rostec CEO Sergei Kemezov, CEO of Moscow's Russian-owned defense corporation.

However, there are dark clouds on the horizon. Russia’s military budget is approximately 40% of total spending, more than 6% of GDP. It has shocked inflation, with Putin admitting last week that this year’s growth is “a lot more modest” to combat price rises. He even suggested that defence spending would decrease next year.

Maksim Reshetnikov, a senior Russian official who is Economic Development Minister, said, “Based on current business sentiment, it is to me that I am transitioning to a recession.”

Elvira Nabiurina, head of Russia’s central bank, opposed Reshetnikov, but warned that financial buffers like the National Reserve Fund are almost exhausted.

“We have to realize that many of these resources have been exhausted,” she told the St. Petersburg International Forum.

Putin himself acknowledged the risk, and although some experts predicted stagnation, he said “it should not be allowed under any circumstances.”

Russia’s long-term prognosis can be both economically and demographically gloomy, but in the short term it will fund an army of over half a million men near Ukraine or the border, allowing it to take away several kilometers here. Despite hundreds of thousands of casualties, the Russian army is able to create much greater power than Ukraine.

Putin said last week that his eyes are still very high in prizes.

Will tariffs revive work, factories? Future challenges.

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According to the Trump administration, tariffs are the solution to many problems in America.

More revenue. More work. Fairer trade transactions.

“I always say ‘customers’ is my most beautiful word in the dictionary,” Trump said at a rally shortly after taking office in January. “The tariffs will make us rich like hell. It will bring back the business in our country that left us.”

But economists aren’t convinced that tariffs will pan out to become a panacea, especially if the Trump administration appears to be treating them as a bargaining tool. Employment growth could lose its luster, they told USA Today, saying consumers are stuck at higher prices.

While targeted tariffs help certain industries stay competitive and support national security, “comprehensive tariffs to uniform trade deficits across countries are not a strong economic growth recipe,” says Erin McLaughlin, senior economist at the Conference Committee, a nonprofit business research group.

Will tariffs lead to more US factories?

Trump said the tariffs would cause factories to “fight back” against the US

“You see it already happening. We’re charging our domestic industrial bases,” Trump said on April 2.

Economists are particularly unsure, as the Trump administration has a random approach to trade policy. Already, the administration has adjusted tariffs on the UK and China, and says other transactions are ongoing.

“It takes time to build factories, hire and train workers. It takes years of investment to make money in manufacturing,” says Nancy Chian, professor of economics at Kellogg School of Management in Northwestern. “If demand appears to be changing, or if the economic environment appears to be very unstable, no one is going to do that.”

Experts say it’s especially true when they expect tariff rates to continue to fall, as did businesses in China. The current rate is 30% after reaching 145%.

“We’re looking forward to seeing you in the process of exploring the importance of our efforts to help you,” said Erin McLaughlin, senior economist at the Conference Committee, a non-profit business research group. “30% will see if it causes supervision. I don’t know. That may not be high enough.”

Even if companies decide to shift production from China, tariff rates will be higher than most countries – experts may say that moving production to a lower-reducing country is more affordable than moving production to the US

“They’re a part of the economics professor at Case Western Reserve University in Ohio, who served as White House staff in both the Obama and Biden administrations,” said Susan Helper, an economics professor at Case Western Reserve University in Ohio, who was a member of the White House. But “That doesn’t necessarily mean that (the manufacturer) will come to the US. Maybe they’ll go to Mexico, maybe Vietnam.”

Others say tariffs could hinder certain companies from expanding production in the US by increasing the costs of imports. A 2022 report from the Department of Commerce shows that nearly a third of intermediate inputs from US manufacturers are imported from other countries.

The data already suggests that some manufacturers are refraining from investing, and see how tariffs will unfold.

The country’s value of privately manufactured construction remained close to record levels, but fell by 0.6% per month in April and 0.9% in March, according to the Census Bureau. The National Manufacturers Association website says high interest rates, rising construction material prices and economic uncertainty will threaten growth in the coming months.

“We’re looking forward to seeing you in a new business,” said Jeff Bischoff, Chief Sales Officer at Lexington, Kentucky designer builder Gray. “Companies are just willing to make decisions about their major investments if they don’t know what their input costs will be.”

Other companies are canceling their expansion plans completely amid uncertainty. International recycling groups have stopped plans to build a $300 million recycling plant in Erie, Pennsylvania, according to Erie Times-News, part of the USA Today network.

Michael Strain, director of economic policy research at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank, hopes to reuse “some” that is linked to tariffs.

“In theory, there’s the feeling that you can make everything you need here. But that would have to revert a lot of the way you do business today. “It takes years, if not decades to achieve. And yet there are some things you can’t make here.”

Will more manufacturing create more jobs?

Even if manufacturers move production to the US, it is not clear that it will result in a large-scale influx of manufacturing.

Companies re-shore will face higher operating costs: labor is more expensive in the US than in other countries, and tariffs will extract the costs of imported inputs that are dependent on factories.

To cut costs, economists say they expect businesses to move more and more towards automation.

McLaughlin of the conference committee said he thinks it makes sense to line up some of the more technically sophisticated manufacturing on the ground.

Still, she’s not sure the director will produce a lot of work.

“Modern American factories are probably not what we all imagined, and perhaps not even what our administration would imagine,” she said. “They may not employ that many people because of robotics, advanced equipment use.”

Some worrying tariffs can actually encourage manufacturing employment by increasing the costs of doing business.

That’s how tariffs were deployed under the trade war during Trump’s first administration, according to one paper. Federal Reserve economists found that Trump’s first term tariffs increased employment in manufacturing protected by tariffs by 0.4%, but these profits were offset by jobs lost due to rising input costs (2%) and retaliatory tariffs (1.1%)..

“The University of Chicago has created a great opportunity to help people understand how they are doing,” said Rodrigo Adao, an associate professor of economics at the University of Chicago. “It brings a little question mark forward.”

A May 21 report from Wells Fargo Economists found a meaningful increase in factory work “will not be shown as unseen in the near future.”

The report says that meaningful employment growth is possible in the long term, but it will require at least $2.9 trillion in net new capital investment to add 6.7 million manufacturing jobs and bring the sector back to its historic peak.

“Even with current tariff policies stuck, the full rebound in manufacturing employment appears to be intensely baffling,” reads a report led by Sarah House, senior economist at Wells Fargo.

Lower deficits, higher costs

Trump in April confirmed that tariffs could collide with consumer wallets.

“Perhaps kids will have two dolls instead of 30 dolls. And maybe two dolls will cost them a few dollars than they normally do,” he said at the Cabinet meeting on April 30. “But we’re not talking about things we have to get out of the way. They have boats packed with things, many of which are not all of that, and things we don’t need.”

Trump’s comments came when tariffs on China were 145%. They then fell to 30% during a 90-day suspension, but even lower tariff rates mean prices will rise. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell on June 18 said he expects “a meaningful amount of inflation will arrive in the coming months.”

The latest inflation report showed that the impact of tariffs is more restrained than expected, but economists say higher prices are likely here by the summer. Major retailers like Walmart have already warned that they will raise prices soon to offset tariff costs.

A May survey from the New York Fed found that about three-quarters of businesses in total will pass on a cost-rising plan from tariff plans at least some of those higher costs, allowing them to pass on higher costs for their customers. More than half of manufacturers and service companies said they hiked prices within a month of experiencing rising costs.

“The tariff fees will have to be paid, and some of it will fall to the final consumer,” Powell said after a June Fed meeting. “That’s what companies say. That’s what data says. …So we know it’s coming.”

Tariffs will reduce the federal deficit by $2.8 trillion over the next decade, but will reduce economic output by 0.6% and reduce household purchasing power by increasing inflation by 0.4 percentage points in 2025 and 2026, according to a June report from Congress’s Budget and Budget Office.

Another June report from Yale Budget Lab found that tariffs were set to increase consumer prices by 1.5% in the short term.

According to the Budget Lab, consumers can expect shoes and apparel prices to rise by 33% and 28% in the short term, and 18% and 15% in the long term, respectively. Food prices are expected to rise 2.2% in the long term, while vehicle prices will rise 11.9%.

Other economic risks

The economists lowered the chances of a recession after China and the US agreed to lower tariff rates during the 90-day suspension on May 12, and agreed to expire in August.

Ryan Sweet, chief economist at Oxford Economics, said his estimates fell from 50% to 35% after the suspension was announced. Goldman Sachs soaked between 45% and 35% in May and 30% in June. JP Morgan puts the odds below 50%, but Barclays completely dismissed the risk of a recession.

Before Trump announced the sweeping fees on April 2, the risk is still rising compared to the odds of the recession. For example, JP Morgan put the odds for the recession at 20% in January. Goldman Sachs said 15% in December.

Looking forward to it, GDP growth is expected to be 0.6 percentage points lower in 2025 due to tariffs this year and retaliation from other countries, with the US economy expected to be 0.3% lower in the long term, according to Yale Budget Lab.

“In the short term, they will make life even more difficult for consumers, workers and manufacturers,” said Qian of Northwestern. In the long run, if tariff increases are held, “There are more manufacturing in the US, but they do cost a lot more. It’s hard to see how American manufacturers and American workers are losing.”

Who will work from home? Double standard fuel workplace tension

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More remote workers are being called back to private sector and federal government offices. However, new rules do not always apply to everyone.

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The mandate of returning to the office caused a fiery backlash when ride-sharing company Uber increased the number of days they had to show up directly to the three of them from the two days. At all-hand meetings and on online forums, Rank and Files were summoned to work while many corner offices sat empty.

Soon another Blouhaha erupted at JP Morgan Chase. After thousands of employees of the world’s largest bank were ordered back to their offices five days a week, Filippogoli began operating business affairs in Europe, the Middle East and Africa from New York, not from Dubai, Johannesburg or London. JPMorgan Chase did not comment.

If an employer cracks down on days per week a home-based worker will call it a double standard.

Salesforce’s Marc Benioff is one of the CEOs who self-identify as a remote worker. “I have always been my lifelong remote worker,” Benioff told MSNBC in 2023.

His employees often don’t have that luxury. In September they were told to return to the office at least three days a week. Benioff said the message was “mixing direct and remote together.” Salesforce did not respond to requests for comment.

“No matter how you feel about remote work, you have to laugh at the nerves of these types of people who are compensated millions of dollars a year.

“Like the executive toilet key.”

As the Covid-19 pandemic has shut down offices across the United States, many office workers have become obsessed with remote work. White-collar workforce skipped rush hour and was present at home, as only “essential” frontline workers needed to appear directly.

Prioritizing elusive goals such as quality of life, they moved in large numbers to more affordable locations such as Salt Lake City and Boise, Idaho. Their new schedules have made life easier, especially for parents of young children and disabled workers, but research has frequently shown that there are other benefits to pandemic-induced work arrangements. The employees who worked from home were happier and, if not more, productive.

Five years later, the number of companies from Amazon to Ford is increasing.

Flexibility is rapidly becoming an elite perk, with some top executives running businesses hundreds or even thousands of miles from their home offices due to the comfort of their home office.

Last year, Starbucks invited Brian Nicole out of Chipotle Mexico’s grill to become one of America’s highest-paid CEOs, claiming a $10 million cash signature bonus, a $75 million stock award and a $1.6 million annual salary. But none of his eye-opening perks attracted as much attention as the work from the house he cut.

Nicole didn’t raise his stakes if other corporate workers at the coffee chain’s Seattle headquarters were told to work in the office three days a week. Instead, he commutes 1,600 miles from Newport Beach, California, and becomes home to his company’s private jet and dime.

Starbucks, who designed the “Back to Starbucks” turnaround plan to rebound from long-term sales disruptions, said that while maintaining an office and home in Seattle, he prioritizes an aggressive schedule of visiting coffee houses, roasting plants, support centers and business partners around the world.

Still, that special treatment is bothering employees. The 2023 Wall Street Journal reports that Boeing’s chief financial officer, Brian West, the company’s second-highest executive, worked from a small office, about five minutes from his home in New Canaan, Connecticut, from his small office hundreds of miles from his headquarters in Arlington, Virginia. West maintains that arrangement even after many staff members are told to return to the office.

According to a securities application, Boeing provided $42,271 worth of flights on the company’s aircraft last year, with a total Western pay of around $6.2 million. Boeing declined to comment.

Management experts say there are far fewer places where key executives log in to work every day. After all, they often fall off their suitcases, jetting into far away offices and calling customers. But executives are allowed to confront remotely with messaging that business will benefit most when employees come in person, and to work remotely.

Like most popular workplace perks, flexibility is primarily a function of power and payment, according to Stanford University economics professor who studies remote work.

His research shows that high-income workers are more likely to make remote work arrangements than those at the bottom of the wage scale. Just 5% of workers make between $10,000 and $50,000 a year on live shows over 50 miles from the office, compared to 14% of those who earned more than $250,000.

“Before the pandemic, working from home was a predictor of low wages. We were joking about it. Does he work from home or is he shir at home?” Bloom said. “Now it’s like the key to an executive toilet. Being able to work from home is what people are succumbing.”

Some workers and CEOs will take office

A similar phenomenon is unfolding in the public sector. President Donald Trump made flashy headlines when he ordered federal workers to be returned to their offices full time. But Bloom said, Trump often prefers his Marlago estate in Florida to an oval office.

There’s not just a single president. A 2023 McKinsey survey found that the largest share of employees who prefer to work from home is highly hoping to earn more than $150,000 a year. They were also the group who were most likely to quit their job if they called back to the office every day.

Rank and File also feels strong about that. According to a recent Pew Research Center survey, three-quarters of employers who work from home work work remotely for at least some time. Almost half said that if their employers no longer allow flexibility, they are unlikely to stay.

Pavi Theva was placed in Texas as product manager when Amazon began implementing its new three-day in-person policy.

With no teammates in Austin’s office, she sat herself for 45 minutes to work. She regularly scrambled to find empty meeting rooms, allowing her to attend virtual meetings uninterrupted.

She said that time spent in the office was pointless. “We didn’t add value from a productivity perspective or collaboration perspective.”

After flagging several times for not bashing the office frequently, Theva quit in February 2024 and turned career coaching side hustle into a full-time gig. She never looked back.

“There’s zero commute,” she said. “It’s only 20 seconds from the bedroom to study at PJS.”

A report from the Census Bureau, which surveyed 150,000 companies from November 2024 to January 2025, concluded that remote workers like TheVA would remain here. On average, employees work from home at least one day a week, and businesses expect it to last until 2029. And some business leaders are leaning towards that trend.

In 2022, Airbnb established a “Live and Work Anywhere” remote work policy that allows employees to work from home as long as employees meet in person regularly. Before the pandemic, about 95% of Airbnb employees lived within 50 miles of their office, according to the online market for short-term vacation rentals. Today, that number is about 70%.

“If you want your team to work hard, don’t come to the office and give them crazy deadlines and check their progress every week,” CEO Brian Chesky said of the master of the Scale Rapid Response Podcast. “It’s not about you having them in the office, it’s a way to make them work harder. I don’t care where you are.”

Dropbox has doubled its flexibility with its “virtual first” remote work policy. CEO Drew Houston says it makes no sense to force employees to show up in the office and do the same job they do remotely.

Dropbox said in the past five years, about 70% of job seekers have cited remote work as a reason they are interested in working at file storage companies. Dropbox has also seen its lowest turnover and highest offer acceptance rates since it was completely remote.

“We can be far more stupid than bringing people back to the car three days a week or literally going back to the same Zoom meeting they were at home,” Houston told Fortune’s next leadership podcast. “There’s a better way to do this.”

Why Trump doesn’t name war in Iran?

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USA Today interviewed experts about what is happening in the world and how to explain it. This is what they said.

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President Donald Trump wants to call the recent round of battle between Iran and Israel a “12-day war,” but he may not be able to get his hopes.

That’s because journalists and historians are the ones who have given the usual wars, and government officials often don’t choose the title they put on them.

Despite Trump’s warning about it for more than a decade, it’s even less likely that the conflict was named World War II, telling Ukrainian leaders this year that he risked starting it.

“There is no official international or national naming agency,” says David Sibley, a military historian at Cornell University based in Washington, D.C., “I don’t agree to it by historians, countries, and sometimes even that.”

USA Today interviewed experts on international relations and military history to discuss what is happening in the world and how they should explain it. This is what they said.

’12-Day War’

Howard Stofer, a professor at New Haven University in Connecticut, said the recent battle between Iran and Israel represents a “historical turning point in the Middle East” comparable to the six-day war of 1967 or the Yom Kippur war of 1973.

Trump’s proposed title may be a way to evoke 1967. “The Israelis will use preemptive airstrikes to defeat the surrounding Arab countries,” Sibley said. Israel was politically strong and appeared in more lands.

“It certainly will evoke that in Israel and the Middle East,” Sibley said. “It would certainly be interesting to watch because it has something so appealing. I don’t know. It might stick.”

On June 26th and June 27th, Newswire Reuters used the phrase “12-day war” to describe sparring between the two countries at the beginning of the month, not as the official name of the war, capitalised “D” and “W.” USA Today uses this term in quotation marks.

Brion Greenwald, a professor at the National Defense College in Washington, DC, questioned whether the attacks between Iran and Israel were doing their best to war, or whether it was just a flare-up of the conflict that countries have served for decades.

He pointed to air strikes between Iran and Israel in March, ahead of the recent conflict that led the US to drop bombs on nuclear facilities. “Is it now 12 days longer because it shifts the start date to the left?” he asked.

Peter Singer, a political scientist and author who specializes in wars in the 21st century, said that if Trump wants to catch a name, he needs “better marketing.”

Who will name the war?

Even if the names of the president or military leader are caught, the names will catch and journalists and historians may change them over time.

“World War I was commonly referred to as a WWI until the media had to name their successors,” said former Senate historian Don Richie.. “Historists usually write much after the fact and follow common usage.”

Wayne Lee, a professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, points to President George H.W. Bush’s administration’s use of Operation Desert Shield and Operation Desert Storm to explain conflicts in the early 1990s. Most people call these conflicts the Gulf War, the first Gulf War, or the Persian Gulf War.

When President George W. Bush invaded Iraq in 2003, his administration called it the “Operation Iraq Freedom,” but most people call it the Iraq War.

“Sometimes, even the name of the war is not agreed,” Cornell’s Sibley said. “What we call the American civil war depends on where you are – “wars between nations,” “wars of Northern invasions, “that’s something like that.”

Is World War II happening?

When the US bombed Iran on June 21, Americans were worried that World War II had begun. Experts warn against declaring armed conflicts around the world.

“I would be really surprised if this transformed into something that looked like a world war of the past we had,” said Will Todman of the Center for Strategy and International Studies. “But that doesn’t mean that peace is likely around the world. …I just don’t think that, like World War I or World War II, they all connect.”

Russia has been at war with Ukraine for over three years, and sometimes threatens the use of nuclear weapons, but never lasts. Experts said tensions between North Korea and South Korea could escalate. Or they said that another nuclear power, China, could invade Taiwan.

“The military was fighting everywhere in the world,” Sibley said. “So, even in the Middle East conflict between the two alliances, I don’t know that it will rise to a level. I don’t know.

Sibley said nuclear weapons will act as deterrents to attack. However, he said that if two major powers exchanged nuclear weapons, it could justify the Monica of “World War II.”

Sibley said that countries are more likely to be more cautious about nuclear aggression and attacks, as they fear that they will use those weapons. However, he said that if two major powers exchanged nuclear weapons, it could justify the Monica of “World War II.”

“It was the assumption that World War II would be nuclear after 1945,” Sibley said. “And other than that, it’s hard to see something getting that label.”

The singer pointed to massive casualties from the World War, numbers the world has never seen in some of the recent conflicts.

“World War I killed 22 million people and 85 million people died in World War II,” he said. “Stop trying to make World War II happen.”

Powerball victory number 6/28/2025. Jackpots rise to $155 million

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The Powerball jackpot rose to $155 million on Saturday, June 28th, and raised it as no one won the Top Award on Wednesday, June 25th.

If someone matches all five numbers and Powerball on Saturday, they can opt for a one-off cash payment of $71 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 6/28/2025

Winners on Saturday, June 28th: 4-35-43-52-62 Powerball: 12

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, June 30th, between 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_.