Live from NPR news in Washington, on Ryland Barton, Congress has passed a res...
to end the Iran war, its non-binding, but shows the growing concerns even among Republicans
“about the war and Trump's interim deal to end it.”
Meanwhile, the U.S. and Iran are in dispute over whether Iran agreed to allow UN inspections of its nuclear sites and Pakistan's Prime Minister says that Iran's ballistic missile program is not part of the deal that his country mediated between Iran and the U.S. as NPR's D.A. Hadid reports. Pakistani Prime Minister Shabbah Sharif spoke as he hosted the Iranian President Masood Pazakshian.
Pakistan mediated a memorandum of understanding between the U.S. and Iran, that's kicked off negotiations on the terms of a permanent peace deal. It's also triggered disquiet because the understanding appears to strengthen Iran by lifting sanctions and promising hundreds of billions in aid. Sharif added, "It did not include Iran's ballistic missile program."
"It was never on the table."
Asheri spoke, Secretary of State Marco Rubio landed in the Gulf for a two-day visit. He told media he expects to discuss Iran's missile program with regional leaders. D.A. Hadid, NPR news, is on a bad.
“A federal appeals court has cleared the way for the Trump administration to expand a fast-track”
deportation process for people who are in the U.S. illegally, it's a major win for President Trump as NPR's Vanessa Romo reports. For more than a decade, expedited removal had only been used in cases where migrants were detained within 100 miles of the southern border, or if they'd been in the country for less than two years.
In all other cases, unauthorized migrants were granted the same to process rights that applied to anyone in the country, regardless of citizenship status. But in a two-to-one decision, the DC Circuit Court of Appeals says that ICE can rapidly deport any migrant who can't prove they've lived in the U.S. for two years or more, meaning they're not owed any immigration hearing processes, even if they're seeking asylum.
An expedited removal order cannot normally be appealed, and in most cases, comes with a five-year ban on reentry. The ACLU Immigrants Rights Project calls fast-track deportations, quote, "an unfair and error-prone system. Vanessa Romo and PR news."
“The next stocks have had a rough ride lately as investors are questioning whether AI can”
live up to its hype.
The tech-heavy NASDAQ fell for a second day in a row today, and PR's John Roach has more
on what's going on. It's what they call a risk-off moment when it comes to AI in the stock market. It's kind of a fancy way of saying investors are getting jittery about AI spending. There has been a massive investment boom, well over a trillion dollars has been poured into AI in recent years, to buy chips, to build AI data centers, to higher top talent, and while
more and more people are using AI, the jury is just still out as to whether or not all that investment is going to pay off. And PR's John Roach reporting. This is NPR News from Washington. The Justice Department has withdrawn subpoenas that sought to compel reporters at the Washington
Posts and the Wall Street Journal to testify before a grand jury. The Post says one of its reporters received a subpoena as part of a broader crackdown on media leaks in January. The FBI searched to post reporters home and seized devices. Europe is the planet's fastest-warning continent, and PR's Julia Simon reports deadly
heat waves like the current one are only getting worse and more frequent. It's climate-week and London, and this week temperatures will sort more than 100 degrees Fahrenheit. UN Secretary General Antonio Gutérez told the attendees the heat is a warning sign. London isn't just calling it "skooking."
He like this isn't just an inconvenience. It's a disaster, like a hurricane. Past heat waves in Europe have caused thousands of deaths, global health officials say the heat wave in 2003 killed more than 70,000 people. This heat wave has already claimed lives, like the two-year-olds and four-year-olds,
that died in their overheated car in France this week. The primary driver of climate change is the burning of fossil fuels. Oil, gas, and coal, Julia Simon, and PR News. The U.S. government is opposing a plan to auction more than 100 artifacts, recovered from the wreckage of the Titanic in the north Atlantic.
The Georgia-based company RMS Titanic incorporated has exclusive salvage rights to the wreck, and has extracted dishware gold coins and pieces of the ship's hole. It wants to sell some of those artifacts for the first time, but the U.S. government argues an auction would violate existing agreements. I'm Ryan Barton, your listening to NPR News from Washington.
This is our glass. On this American life, when they're being like, "It's a good mystery," sometimes about really big things, but most times, the little mysteries are the best. Our lost and found is currently filled with pants.
I don't know what I've never seen this happen.
This is true. Mysteries of every size each week, this American life, wherever you get your podcasts.


