"Live from NPR news in Washington, I'm Ryland Barton.
Iran's top diplomat says that the tentative deal to end the war with the U.S. would
require Israel to withdraw from Lebanon. A condition Israel has already rejected. Meanwhile President Trump is in the French Alps at the G7 leaders summit, and he's expressing frustration with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, as NPR's Frank Ordonia's reports.
"His main complaint is that Netanyahu just can't stop dropping bombs on Hezbollah and Lebanon. And he criticized some of the specific Israeli retaliation strikes saying they went too far." "I've had a great relationship with BBB, but now BB has to be more responsible with respect to Lebanon."
Now Trump seemed to be sending a message directly to Netanyahu when he also said, "Israel would not exist right now if not for him?
This is not necessarily new.
I mean, we've been reporting on the friction between the two leaders over the course
“of the war for Netwile now, but it will be another important thing to watch for in the”
coming weeks, does fighting in Lebanon stop as it will likely play a major role in whether this deal is a success." NPR's Franco Ordonia's reporting, "The war with Iran has also made motor oil more expensive as NPR's Camilla Dominozki explains even a deal to end the war won't solve the supply crunch."
The base oil that goes into synthetic motor oils is manufactured from crude oil and natural gas through sophisticated processes at highly specialized plants. The biggest such facility in the world and Qatar was damaged early in the war and restoring full production is expected to take over a year. The U.S. was its biggest customer.
That's pushing up prices. And it comes after tariffs had already made car maintenance more expensive. Nathan Matheson is a mechanic and pools will Maryland." We see about a 25-30% reduction in our profit margins because of the increase costs.
“He says he's been a bazaar being higher motor oil costs for now, Camilla Dominozki and”
PR news. They're now more than 4,000 national guard troops deployed to Washington D.C., federal officials announced a summer surge in law enforcement ahead of America's 250th birthday celebrations in the city, doubling the military presences and PR's count law and store reports. Count twelve hundred troops from dozens of states have been added to President Trump's
Washington D.C. National Guard deployment in recent weeks and hundreds more are expected by July 4. Trump deployed the guard in August of last year as part of an effort to fight crime and beautify the city. Crime was already trending down before Trump got into office and the National Guard has
no arresting power. Troops, many of whom are armed, are mainly performing patrols around the city, making their presence known in residential areas, parks, and metro stops. According to an estimate by the nonpartisan congressional budget office, the current
deployment in D.C. costs around $2.4 million a day.
Kat Lanzorf, M.P.R. News, Washington. Stocks closed mixed today. This is N.P.R. News. Limited tracking data shows that the B-52 involved in a deadly crash during a test flight in Air Force Base in California made a sharp right and then nearly completed a 180 degree
turn before plunging to the ground in nearly a mile a minute yesterday. All eight people aboard were killed in the crash of the Boeing B-52 Strato Fortress. It's not yet clear what caused the crash. The Pew Research Center is confirming what many parents already know navigating work and family is hard, and P.R.'s Andrea Shew reports.
The survey sought to capture how parents, with jobs, are managing to balance family and work responsibilities. The majority of working moms said they feel they can't give a hundred percent to either, a smaller but still sizable share of dads agreed, often the parents find themselves dealing with children's matters while at work and vice versa.
“Pucing a researcher Rachel Minkin says it's an important issue to study, as the share”
of families with both parents working full-time has grown significantly. 31% were both working full-time in 1975 and now it's 52%. The parent surveyed said more flexibility in their work hours would help as would paid sick leave and help paying for child care. Andrea Shew and P.R. News advanced sonar is dividing the world of fishing.
The technology allows anglers to see underwater and real time, including their lures and fish. Those who embrace the technology say it helps them understand fish better, but others raise concerns about overfishing and worry about it diminishing the serene fishing experience forward-facing sonar costs about $2,500 for a full set up on about this is NPR News.
Each story you hear on planet money starts with a question. What happens if we refund tariffs? Why are grocery so expensive? An NPR we stand for your right to be curious, because the forces shaping our world can be hard to see.
Follow NPR's planet money wherever you get your podcasts and start seeing how the economy


