"Law," from NPR News, I'm Lakshmi, saying.
President Trump tells a financial time that when it comes to a peace deal between the U.S.
“and Iran, he calls the shots "not Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu."”
On social media, Trump wrote Israel, "Any Ron are looking for any media, it's ceasefire." This, more than three months after the U.S. and Israel initiated hostilities with Iran, Israel and Iran renewed fighting, and even though Trump has publicly urged both to stop, today and Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman accuses the U.S. of helping Israel.
Over the weekend, Iran and Israel tradedirstrikes again for the first time, since an
April ceasefire opening a new chapter in the war. Again, a spokesman, for Iran's Foreign Ministry, said that the United States is "responsible for the consequences of any escalation in the Middle East." Dury Beskehrin has elated from Istanbul. "Explosions were heard in multiple cities across Iran this morning.
Israel says it targeted military facilities and a petrochemical complex in the southern city of Masha'r. "A young man in Iran who asked to remain anonymous due to the risk of arrest for speaking
“to foreign media," said the repeated cycles of war have made it meaningless to talk about”
fear or hope. He says many people around him feel rebellious and nihilistic. "The bodyhammer OCS could go ye." They wish for the destruction of everything he says, just to free themselves from this chain of repetitions and the empty words.
For I'm Karen News, I'm Gerry Beskehrin, in Istanbul." Red flags about immigration and customs enforcement's ability to protect taxpayer information are raised in the Treasury Inspector General's new report, since ICE and the internal revenue service agreed last year to share taxpayer data the report finds errors, stemming from inconsistent formatting in ICE's data and the IRS's matching criteria.
Second case of a parasitic fly known as the New World Screwworm is confirmed at a Texas
Ranch in USDA says there are two others elsewhere in the state bringing the total so far to four in San Antonio, Texas Public Radio's Jerry Clayton reports ranchers are demanding the agriculture department take aggressive measures and fasts. On Christian Bedenhardt's family's ranch about two hours south of San Antonio, he says they're hoping for swift action from the U.S. government to produce more sterile flies,
which trick the wild insects into wasting their one-chanted reproduction. "We need these quarantine zones, and we need funding as fast as possible, and we kind of need all the above strategies right now, just given what seems to be at a lay and getting production and volumes online." Agriculture Commissioners said Miller last week criticized the U.S.D.A. for what he called
a slow bureaucratic and incomplete response to the threat. This is Governor Greg Abbott announced last week he's expanding a statewide disaster declaration. "I'm Jerry Clayton and San Antonio." This is NPR News.
The Southern Philippines is reeling from a magnitude 7.8 earthquake, local authorities say it killed at least 35 people and injured more than 200 others. President Trump may be greeted by booze from Nick's fans tonight when he becomes a
first-sitting president to attend an NBA finals game from police commissioner Jessica
Titus message to fans politics may have nothing to do with it because of that visit and in coordination with the United States Secret Service there will unfortunately be no watch party outside of Madison Square Garden for game three of the finals, but watch parties will be held at other locations including nearby Pride Park. One of the most beloved World Cup collectors' items isn't a trading card or a jersey.
It's stickers produced by the Italian Company Panini. Collecting them is a decades-old tradition in Europe and Latin America and it's catching on in the U.S. here's NPR's Juliana Kim. Over the past few weeks, many soccer fans have been focused on completing a World Cup themed sticker album that requires nearly 1,000 pieces which are sold in blind packs of seven.
Interest in the sticker trace in the U.S. has been picking up over the past decade. And this year is the biggest demand yet that's according to soccer journalist Clemente Lise. Because this World Cup is being hosted in part by the U.S.
“Kang and Mexico, I think this summer, a lot of first-time people are going to get into”
the stickers. Panini America told NPR that retailers in the U.S. reported being sold out of sticker packets within a week of the release. Juliana Kim and Piano's, this is NPR. Hundreds of thousands of people came to the U.S. as small children as the only home they've
ever known. And although they weren't citizens, many got special protections to keep living and working here. Now, though, they find themselves in legal limbo as the Trump administration tightens the screws on immigrants.
This is NPR's Coast Witch Podcast in the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.


