"Lie from NPR News, I'm Lakshmi Singh.
President Trump is returning to the U.S. after completing his state visit to China.
“Chinese leader Xi Jinping touted Trump's trip as a historic and landmark visit.”
Trump was the last American President to travel to China and, for a long time, if it reports, that visit was almost nine years ago. President Xi says China and the U.S. have set a new vision for, quote, "a constructive relationship of strategic stability."
That refers to President Trump's narrative of great power competition since his first term,
according to Wu Xinboa, a leading American Studies scholar at Shanghai's Fudan University. He says President Xi and Trump are now setting a new direction, a wish. "Both want to have a stable, predictable and more cooperative relationship." He says China sees meetings between leaders as a way to set parameters for further discussions, which is why China has not confirmed any specific deals made yet.
Jennifer Pack and PR News Beijing "Well, the U.S. and China are competing to advance artificial intelligence. The Trump administration's approach to AI has long been to prioritize innovation, but
“in PR's deep-ish Iran says there are signs of a shift to AI safety."”
Trump and administration officials have been starting to talk more about AI safety for the first time.
This comes in part after AI Company Anthropics, sound of the alarm about its latest
model mythos, due to cybersecurity concerns. That sent off a wave of concern about the potential dangers around new AI models. In interviews, administration officials have started to use words they haven't used before, like safety. That was surprising to Kyle Chan, a fellow at the Brookings Institution.
"It's a dramatic reversal from just a year ago when you could hardly say the word safety in Trump circles." But it's not yet clear if the Trump White House is planning to change anything when it comes to AI regulations, even if they did, it would likely be small. Any actual regulations would have to come from Congress, Deepish Iveram and PR News."
Patience will still have access to the abortion film if a priest don't through telemedicine while a dispute over it plays out in the lower courts. Nearly four years after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the 1973 landmark ruling that legalized access to abortion, yesterday the Conservative Dominate Court decided to preserve telemedicine access to the abortion pill.
There's inpsilience in the Simmons stuff. They granted an emergency request from two drug makers to put a hold on an appeals court order that would have put new restrictions on access to Memphis, don't. Specifically, it would have required patients to go in-person to a clinic or a doctor's office to receive the medication.
So the justices have issued a stay pending appeal in the case. So telemedicine access can continue as it has been while this case plays out in the lower courts. That's in PR Salina Simmons stuff in reporting. You're listening to NPR News.
As the U.S. pursues an N2 its war with Iran, the FBI says it is offering a $200,000 reward for information leading to the capture and prosecution of a former Air Force counterintelligence specialist who, they say, has defected to Iran. In a statement, the agency says it's after Monica Elfrieda Whitt, the 47-year-old charged with sharing classified information with Tehran.
The FBI says the suspect was indicted by federal grand jury in 2019. Today, caps and end of an error at the Federal Reserve of this was Jerome Pal's last day as fed chair after eight years in the post. He succeeded by Kevin Worsh, who is confirmed this week by the Senate. Researchers say they have discovered a new dinosaur species in Thailand, NPR's James
Dubak says it's the largest dinosaur ever found in Southeast Asia. The dinosaur would have been about 90 feet long and weighed about 30 tons. It was a sore pod, a type of dinosaur that eats plants and has a long neck and tail. The researchers call it Nagatite named after a mythical serpent creature that's worshiped in Southeast Asia.
Nagatite lived between 100 to 120 million years ago.
It gives clues about how dinosaurs got even bigger later on. Here's a researcher Titi Woot, Saita Panic Sockel. Nagatite essentially represents that kind of on-round towards that kind of supervising. It is the 14th named dinosaur discovered in Thailand and experts are excited about the expanding fossil record from the region.
It can be hard to keep up with all the new movies on streaming services.
“How do you tell the good ones worth watching from the bad?”
Or the silly ones you can laugh along with or at? On NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour, we're recommending some fun movies you may have missed. Listen via the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.


