Latest Episode
July 8 0000 UTC Brief
In international security
The U.S. says it carried out new strikes on Iran after Iranian attacks on ships in the Strait of Hormuz. Central Command called the strikes a response to what happened at sea, where the stakes are never exactly low and the margin for error is thinner than Washington would like to admit.
Separately, a leaked European intelligence brief says Russia is sliding toward a banking crisis as war debts mount and bad loans pile up. The report says more than 500,000 people were declared bankrupt in 2025, leaving lenders increasingly exposed.
In Washington
Questions are building around a May settlement between Trump’s Justice Department and the IRS, with scrutiny now centering on whether it limited audits involving Trump and a wider circle of Trump-linked businesses and crypto ventures. The main issue is straightforward, if inconvenient, which is who got protected, and how.
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has formally shut down in Washington, and the political cleanup has already begun. Critics are calling for a federal investigation, while the whole experiment is being described as chaotic and damaging, which is one way to put it.
In business and travel
The Postal Service is raising the price of a Forever stamp to 82 cents on Sunday, up from 78 cents. It is a small increase, which is the sort of sentence Americans hear a lot right before they reach for another bill they did not ask for.
Holiday packages to Dubai and Egypt are reportedly cheaper this summer, even as European prices rise. Travel nerves have slowed bookings, helping keep prices down for some non-European destinations.
In defence and infrastructure
Aurelius Systems and American Rheinmetall say they are pairing a laser counter-drone system with unmanned ground vehicles, aiming to protect autonomous supply missions in contested areas without conventional interceptors. The companies say testing at T-REX 26-2 was successful, though they have not given a deployment timeline.
Navantia UK is promoting Belfast as a possible site for Britain’s new amphibious transport ships under a £2.4 billion programme. The government has promised the ships will be built in UK yards, but has not named the builders yet, which is a classic way to keep everyone busy guessing.
In state politics
Delaware Governor Matt Meyer vetoed $35 million in bond money that lawmakers had set aside to start expanding Legislative Hall. Meyer said he could not justify the spending while residents are under strain, and legislative leaders promptly called the move irresponsible and dangerous.
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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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