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Birth Rates Slide as Politics Muscles In; Louisiana Democrat Shocks in Special; Trump Slaps Iran-Linked Secondary Tariffs; Philadelphia Freeze and Rowhome Fire Spur Help; Teachers Union Power Grab Debated; Lead Exposure Plunged After 1970s Crackdowns

Birth Rates Keep Falling, and Now Politics Wants a Cut

Fertility is below replacement across much of Europe, Latin America, and East Asia, with the U.S. hovering around 1.8. The argument here is that in America, childbearing is getting tangled up with partisan identity, conservatives reportedly having more kids than progressives, while many left-leaning young women delay or skip marriage and children. If political preferences are inherited the way cable news habits are, the growing “partisan fertility gap,” plus population growth concentrating in Republican-leaning states, could slowly nudge U.S. politics toward greater conservatism.

Democrat Wins Louisiana House Special Election in Big Overperformance

Democrat Chasity Verret Martinez won Louisiana State House District 60, beating Republican Brad Daigle 62% to 38%. The win was framed as a 37-point improvement over the district’s 2024 presidential margin, the kind of swing that makes campaign consultants briefly believe in miracles before returning to their usual hobby of setting money on fire.

West Philadelphia Rowhome Fire Causes Severe Damage

A fire near 51st and Market in West Philadelphia around 9 p.m. Saturday severely damaged a rowhome, with some apparent damage to a neighboring home as well. Flames were out by the time crews arrived, and officials have not released a cause or reported injuries.

Trump Announces Secondary Tariffs Targeting Countries Trading With Iran

Trump ordered new secondary tariffs, potentially up to 25%, on imports from any country found to be directly or indirectly buying goods or services from Iran. The policy is set to take effect Saturday, with the rate determined by Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The move followed hours of U.S.–Iran talks in Muscat and came alongside new Iran-related sanctions targeting entities, individuals, and vessels tied to alleged illicit petroleum trade. Iran’s foreign minister said negotiations must be free of threats, noting deep distrust. The tariffs could hit China hardest, and also affect Russia, Germany, Turkey, and the UAE, because nothing says “diplomacy” like making everyone else hold the bill.

Deep Freeze Hits Philadelphia, Neighbors Step Up to Help

Dangerously cold temperatures emptied Philadelphia streets Saturday but also sparked acts of kindness. In Elkins Park, one resident organized neighbors to support people struggling to stay warm, a reminder that even when the weather is cruel, some humans remain impressively, stubbornly decent.

Op-Ed Criticizes AFT for Using Crises to Expand Influence in Schools

An opinion piece by Meghan Portfolio and Frank Ricci argues that Randi Weingarten and the American Federation of Teachers use perceived emergencies to expand union influence over school operations and governance. Citing a webinar on immigration enforcement and a rapid memorandum of understanding in Saint Paul Public Schools that enabled a virtual learning option, they claim crisis-driven agreements can bypass normal public oversight and school board involvement. They call for clearer bargaining limits, more transparency for MOUs, and stronger protection of school board authority and student outcomes.

Hair Sample Study Shows Lead Exposure Plummeted After 1970s Crackdowns

University of Utah researchers analyzed nearly a century of human hair samples and found lead levels fell about 100-fold after U.S. environmental actions in the 1970s, including the phase-out of leaded gasoline. Concentrations were high from roughly 1916 to 1969, then dropped sharply to about 10 ppm by 1990 and below 1 ppm by 2024, tracking with EPA-era regulations and industrial changes like smelter closures. Published in PNAS, the study is presented as evidence that pollution rules can deliver major public-health gains, even if some people treat “regulation” like it is a four-letter word.

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This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.

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