Live from NPR News on child Snyder, President Trump has backed off his threat...
a 20% fee on cargo passing through the straight-up for Moos, saying he will instead seek
investment deals with Gulf States.
“Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait primarily, and then others, I spoke to all of them.”
And they would love to invest more money in the United States at record amounts, and that would be very acceptable. And this way, there's no fee. I don't like the concept of a fee, but at the same time, it's not fair that we're protecting this straight for the entire world.
Trump spoke at the White House Tuesday alongside the visiting Iraqi Prime Minister, tensions are escalating. U.S. military says it is completed the latest wave of strikes in Iranian military targets Iran says it has again shut down the straight. President Trump's borders are at Tom Holman, says the administration's move to suspend
most traffic stops by immigration and customs enforcement is not a policy change. He told Fox News Tuesday that it's a temporary pause to conduct a short-term review after two fatal shootings within a week.
“The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, urging healthcare providers to test for”
a growing parasitic outbreak, impacting multiple states primarily on the east coast. And here's Allison Aubrey reports more than 30 states are reporting cases. The CDC has confirmed more than 1,600 cases and thousands more await confirmation across many states. The youngest person sickened with cyclists for it is two and the oldest is 95 more than 140 people have been hospitalized and antibiotics can treat this parasitic
infection. Here's the CDC's Gwen Bigger Staff. "This is much much higher than what we've seen last year or the year before." Investigators say cases in four states, Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia, and Kentucky appear to be connected and may share a common source prior outbreaks have been linked to lettuce and
other fresh produce, but so far, the source of this outbreak is not known. Allison Aubrey and PR news. "No federal judge has temporarily blocked the Trump administration from dying visas too or seeking to deport non-citizens working on, or studying online content moderation."
And Pirate Shannon Bond reports a judge says a policy likely violates a first amendment.
"The State Department has said the visa ban targets for nationals. It says are quote complicit in censoring Americans. In March, a group of independent tech researchers sued the administration saying the visa policy itself is an attempt to silence views the government doesn't like. In a new order, US District Judge James Bozberg says the plaintiff's arguments are likely
to succeed, so the policy will be put on hold while the lawsuit proceeds. The State Department didn't respond to a request for comment. The coalition of researchers who brought the lawsuit said it "welcome to the judge's decision." Shannon Bond and PR news.
The arrival of gender to have artificial intelligence has sparked fierce debates among adults about what it should and shouldn't be used for.
“But what's it like to grow up and learn in the age of AI?”
Reportedly gains, but that question to several teenagers across the country. 15-year-old Charles Antivan and Gates Milzohio says "Chatchy BT is like a friend." "And we've been able to have very meaningful, you know, intelligent discussions." But 16-year-old Dorian Prado of Fort Worth, Texas says he's very against AI.
"It makes it where thinking is optional, and that should never be the case, so it's making
a stomach because, again, we don't have to think as much." Other teens say AI is a useful tool to get help on schoolwork. For some, it's the tutor they couldn't otherwise afford. Even so, they're concerned about their and their peers becoming overly reliant on the technology.
And while some teens say they don't expect AI to replace human labor, others fear it will take away jobs from people. For NPR News, I'm Lee Gaines. New York is now the first state in the nation to impose a more aturium on large data centers at Fuel Artificial Intelligence, Governor Kathy Hockel announced some move to his day saying
it will be an impact for up to a year, while the state finalizes standards to address environmental and energy impact concerns. She also said she will pursue legislation to repeal sales tax exemptions for large data centers. The nation shares advancing in Wednesday trading South Korea's benchmark is leading the
way up by more than 6.8% lifted by tech shares. I'm trial Snyder, NPR News. Of all the protests in the summer of 2020, for a moment there, it was Utopia. One took a unique turn. This is the story of how violence came to occupy an anti-violence occupation in Seattle.
Listen to We Keep Us Safe, a new true crime series on the Embedded Podcast from NPR.


