Sunday, July 5, 2026
A Nation Unites for a Day of Grand 250th Celebrations (NYT) Two hundred and fifty years after men from 13 disparate colonies made the fateful decision to adopt the Declaration of Independence, a country whose size and diversity they could have scarcely imagined will strive to set aside its divisions on Saturday and throw itself a massive sea-to-sea celebration of liberty and happiness. Hoover, Ala., will dish up free apple pie and ice cream and try to set a Guinness record by opening the most cans of Coke simultaneously. Mount Morris, Ill., is breaking out extra bouncy houses and juicing up the finale of its annual fireworks show. Los Angeles and Philadelphia will throw star-studded concerts. New York City and Washington will have military jets streaking overhead and fireworks shows for the ages crackling over their skylines. All across the United States on Saturday, millions of Americans will take part in festivals, parades and cookouts that together form a portrait of the country in all its messy, star-spangled complexity.
Trump Accounts launch July 4, giving newborns $1,000 (AP) On Saturday, President Donald Trumpâs administration plans to launch Trump Accounts, tying the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence to an effort to boost financial independence for American kids. Under the program, parents can open special investment accounts for any child born during Trumpâs second term and automatically receive $1,000 from the government. Accounts can be opened for older childrenâas long as they donât turn 18 before the end of the calendar yearâbut they will not receive the $1,000. The accounts are set to open for deposits July 4, which is also the day the Treasury Department plans to transfer the $1,000 bonus. That moneyâand anything else deposited by employers, philanthropies and relativesâis invested in the stock market by private firms. Children canât access the money until they turn 18, and then only for specific purposes, like paying for a home or school.
A California farmer is giving away tons of nectarines that heâs not allowed to sell (AP) Thousands of visitors have flocked to Cesar Moraâs farm in central California this week to gather free nectarines. Heâs giving his harvest away rather than watching it rot as heâs locked in a legal battle with a company that claims exclusive rights over the variety of white nectarine he grows. Heâs shared more than 100,000 pounds (45,359 kilograms) since Monday. âIt was really just a thought of not wasting a perfectly good product,â Mora said. âIt does make a grower feel good, being able to share my fruit with people and see their immediate reaction that they love it. Itâs a little bit of good in this tough situation that Iâve been dealing with.â The legal dispute highlights the tension that can emerge between farmers and the plant breeders and large industrial food marketers that create new varieties of plants and obtain the exclusive rights to sell them.
Trump Says Itâs âRidiculousâ for U.S. to Maintain Current NATO Support as Rift Widens Ahead of Summit (TIME) President Donald Trump said it is âridiculousâ for the United States to maintain its current level of support for NATO âwhen the relationship is not reciprocal.â Referring to the alliance as a âone-sided pathâ late Thursday, Trump doubled down on his long-argued criticism of allied nationsâ defense spending ahead of next weekâs planned NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey. The President had earlier complained that the U.S. âspends more money on NATO than any other country, by far, to protect them, without getting any benefit.â NATO defense spending has long been a contentious issue for Trump who has, since his first term, accused European allies of not investing enough in their own militaries and relying too heavily on U.S. contributions and protections. Tensions between Trump and the NATO alliance have exacerbated this year amid the fallout of the Iran war. The U.S. President has repeatedly lambasted European countries for failing to get actively involved in the Iran war. He revived those criticisms on Thursday, arguing: âThey were not there for us.â
As World Cup fever grips Brazil, scrutiny mounts over its sports betting industry (AP) When World Cup season descends upon soccer-mad Brazil, green and yellow banners decorate restaurants, bars and apartment buildings, streets are painted with flags and soccer balls, and discussions of the beloved national teamâs games are ubiquitous. But this year, another topic has taken center stage: the prevalence of ads for bets on the games, even as the country grapples with a surge in gambling which leaves some with crippling debt and has led to the number of people seeking care for addiction more than doubling in the past five years, according to Brazilâs health ministry. Since the FIFA World Cup began, the percentage of Brazilians placing bets has more than tripled, rising from 11% in May before the tournament kicked off to around 35% at the end of June, said Brazilian fintech company Klavi in a study based on a sample of 1.2 million people. Brazil has become the third-biggest market in the world for sports betting, following the U.S. and the U.K., a report by data analysis company Comscore said in 2023.
Brutal heatwave in France is killing 2,000 people per week (Fortune) Deaths surged by nearly a third in France during the hottest week of a record heat wave last month, the countryâs public health authority said Friday, reporting at least 2,000 more deaths than in the previous week when temperatures were already climbing and filling emergency wards with heat victims. The new and still incomplete figures from Public Health France doubled its first preliminary estimate of at least 1,000 additional deaths that it gave last Sunday. That earlier estimate covered just three of the hottest days of extreme, deadly heat. In Paris, funeral service directors have said theyâve struggled to find places to store bodies before burial or cremation, with some mortuaries saying they were full and having to turn bodies away.
In Battlefield Visit, Putin Vows to Take More of Ukraine (NYT) President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, under pressure from increased Ukrainian strikes at home, appeared in fatigues in a rare frontline visit to a support post late Friday, where he touted battlefield progress and threatened to take more of Ukraine outside the Donbas region. Mr. Putinâs appearance was the latest indication that he was doubling down in the face of Ukraineâs expanding barrages. It appeared designed to show the Russian public that the heightened Ukrainian strikes in recent weeks would receive a response and wonât derail the Russian leaderâs battlefield aims. The visit took place two days after Mr. Putin launched one of the biggest attacks on Kyiv of the war, which left at least 30 people dead and was widely seen as a delayed response to a string of Ukrainian successes of late that have brought the war home for more Russians.
Ukrainian drones hit St. Petersburg oil terminal in latest long-range attack on Russia (AP) A Ukrainian drone attack struck an oil terminal in St. Petersburg on Saturday, Russian officials said, as Kyiv presses on with bombardment of Russiaâs oil infrastructure. Almost daily long-range attacks on Russian oil facilities have created a fuel crisis and heaped political pressure on the Kremlin as its all-out invasion of Ukraine stretches into its fifth year. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy described the attack as part of Ukraineâs âlong-range sanctionsâ against Russia. He said that Ukrainian forces also hit a military target on the island of Kronstadt, just off the coast of St. Petersburg.
Russia plotting attack on Poland to test Natoâs resolve, US claims (The Independent) The US has warned Warsaw that Russia is planning an armed âprovocationâ against Poland to test Natoâs resolve, according to reports. The assault could see Polandâs vital infrastructure targeted by missiles or drones, or even Russian soldiers crossing the border into Nato territory, Washington has said. Sources close to Polish president Karol Nawrocki told Polish outlet Onet that the aim of Moscowâs possible assault, which could be launched in a matter of months, would be to provoke tensions and pressure Ukraineâs Western allies to suspend their military and financial aid. Warsawâs security services have admitted that a conventional attack, such as a small ground incursion, which Moscow may allege is an accident, is possible. Other possibilities are a drone attack on infrastructure such as power stations or simulated air strikes forcing Poland to activate its air defence systems.
Iran begins dayslong funeral for the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, killed in war (AP) Hundreds of thousands of mourners began a dayslong funeral Saturday for Iranâs late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, beating their chests in sorrow before the glass case containing his flag-draped coffin in Tehran and calling for revenge against Israel and the United States. The funeral for Khamenei, who ruled Iran for decades before being killed at age 86 in a Feb. 28 airstrike in the opening moments of the Iran war, could provide a boost for the countryâs theocracy and its new supreme leader, his son Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei. That is particularly important as Iran tries to leverage its hold on the Strait of Hormuz in negotiations with the U.S. over a permanent end to the war and as concern still lingers that Israel could attack yet again.
Australian officials ask fans to respect the privacy of Neil, a trouble-making seal (NPR) Like plenty of local boys before him, Neil has come home to the stretch of Australian coast where he was born. Unlike most of them, he trails fame, fans and property damage in his wake. He is also a 1,000 kg (2,200 pound) elephant seal. In June, the bellowing and blubbery 5-year-old mammal hauled himself onto land for his twice-yearly tour of beachside towns in southern Tasmania state after months of feeding at sea. Thatâs posing problems now that he weighs as much as a small car and has a social media following more than double Tasmaniaâs human population. His rampage through local infrastructure has claimed bent traffic bollards, a sign warning the public about seals and a fence that did not survive Neilâs attempt to vault it. The rest of the time he lies placidly any place he likes, which is sometimes the middle of the road, bringing towns he visits to a standstill.
In Rwanda, July 4 Is Liberation Day From Genocide (NYT) As the United States celebrates 250 years of independence with fireworks, parades and pool parties, July 4 in Rwanda is a much more somber affair. On Saturday, the small Central African nation will commemorate Liberation Day, the moment 32 years ago that capped 100 days of terror. Beginning in April 1994, extremists from the countryâs ethnic Hutu majority killed hundreds of thousands of peopleâmost of them ethnic Tutsisâusing machetes, clubs and guns. The genocide raged until July 4 that year, when a Tutsi rebel group seized control of the nationâs capital from the Hutu-led government. Rwandaâs Liberation Day, an official national holiday, falls at the same time of year as the date the nation shrugged off Belgian colonial rule in 1962. Since 1994, the hilly nation of about 14 million people has grown economically, significantly reduced maternal mortality and poverty and improved education and health access.













