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July 13 0000 UTC Brief

In the Middle East

The United States carried out fresh strikes against Iranian targets for a second straight night on Sunday, saying the aim was to weaken Iran’s military. World leaders are calling for de-escalation as the exchange threatens to widen further, which is exactly the kind of stability that long-running air campaigns are known for delivering.

In weather and public health

A major heat dome is spreading from the interior West into the Upper Midwest and is expected to push east later this week. Separately, an early estimate suggests more than 2,700 people in the UK may have died from heat-related causes during the severe heatwaves in May and June. The figure is not final, but it points to a serious public health toll.

In the UK

The Home Office says it will spend more than £250 million over three years to increase security for Jewish communities in England and Wales. The plan would add more than 500 officers around neighborhoods, schools, synagogues, and community centres, and strengthen counter-terrorism efforts after a series of antisemitic incidents.

Public health doctors are also warning that badly handled workplace disciplinary hearings are costing the UK economy £28.5 billion a year, while pushing staff toward burnout. And homelessness in England could rise by 25% by 2030, unless ministers move toward a more aggressive housing-first approach.

In business and technology

California pulled in more than $335 billion in venture capital this year, far ahead of New York and Texas, with nearly 90% of the money going to AI firms. Los Angeles-area startups alone drew nearly $8 billion across 207 deals, which is a useful reminder that Silicon Valley has not yet accepted retirement.

Anthropic has admitted an erroneous £12.2 million billing demand after a South Korean Claude user said repeated charge attempts blocked his main credit card. The company said the mistake was real, eventually, after several failed charges and four days of support delay.

In U.S. politics

The death of Sen. Lindsey Graham at 71 has renewed debate over the age and stamina of Congress, and it also complicates several Republican policy efforts. Graham was a key Trump ally and Senate dealmaker, with a hand in aid packages, tax fights, and the party’s broader legislative machinery.

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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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