Latest Episode
July 9 0400 UTC Brief
In Washington
President Trump is pushing ahead on several fronts at once. He told Congress he plans to remove Syria’s long-running designation as a state sponsor of terrorism, and he said he will ask the Supreme Court to reconsider the ruling that blocked his effort to end birthright citizenship. The Court is unlikely to bite, but he does seem determined to keep handing it homework.
Separately, the Secret Service advised Trump not to fly the Qatari-gifted Air Force One, while he also falsely claimed that the “Islamic Republic of Japan” fired missiles at the USS Abraham Lincoln. That is not a real country, which feels like a useful detail for any commander-in-chief briefing.
In the Middle East and national security
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards say they struck U.S. military bases in Bahrain and Kuwait after fresh American attacks, and warned that further U.S. strikes would bring wider retaliation across the region. The IMF says the war is now weighing on the global economy, cutting its 2026 growth forecast to 3 percent even as AI-driven demand offers some offset.
In a separate warning sign for NATO, former U.S. official Jim Townsend said he is unsure America would send troops if an ally were attacked. That kind of uncertainty is not especially soothing, which is usually the point of alliances, in theory.
On the home front
ICE fatally shot Houston man Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, and his family is demanding an independent investigation. The agency says he “weaponized his vehicle,” while the family disputes that account and wants body camera footage, surveillance video, and witness statements released. Three eyewitnesses are reportedly in ICE custody, which raises its own obvious concerns.
In business and tech
Creative Artists Agency is criticizing Meta’s Muse AI tool, saying names, images, voices, likenesses, and creative work should not be used without clear documented consent. The agency objects to Meta’s opt-out model, arguing that permission should come first, a position that remains stubbornly popular outside of Silicon Valley.
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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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