Wednesday, July 1, 2026
Supreme Court Justices Reject Trumpâs Effort to End Birthright Citizenship (NYT) The Supreme Court rejected President Trumpâs attempt to end birthright citizenship, and the justices reaffirmed the long-held principle that nearly all children who are born on U.S. soil are American citizens. Mr. Trumpâs executive order had aimed to prevent babies born to undocumented immigrants and temporary foreign residents from automatically becoming Americans. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., writing for the majority, explained that Mr. Trumpâs executive order violated the 14th Amendment of the Constitution. âCitizenship, then and now, was the right to have rightsâto freely participate in our political community,â Chief Justice Roberts wrote. âThe framers of the 14th Amendment extended that promise to âevery free-born person in this land.ââ He added: âWe keep that promise today.â The 6-3 decision capped a more than decade-long effort by Mr. Trump to use the issue as a political tool.
The Force Hollowing Out the Economy (NYT) We are witnessing one of the largest peacetime mobilizations of capital in modern American history. Topping $1 trillion annually by next year, the artificial intelligence buildout is expected to rival or surpass previous technological booms at their peaksârail, electrification and the internet revolution. Many economists believe that at a time of rising inflation, a weakening job market and global unrest, this boom is keeping the U.S. economy afloat. Look more closely, however, and the picture changes. A.I. is vacuuming up so much of our land, talent, semiconductor chips, building materialsâand, above all, so much of our money, that it is beginning to crowd out the rest of the economy. In other words, A.I. isnât merely compensating for the weakness in the rest of the economy. It is, at least in part, causing it. Researchers, economists and other market analysts are ringing the same alarm. They are particularly worried that the deluge of investment, much of which is plowed into data centers, is beginning to starve the rest of the economy of the money it needs (to say nothing of the talent and physical materials).
âNo Oneâs Coming to Save Us but Usâ: Gen Z Runs for Office (NYT) Melat Kiros was fresh out of Notre Dame Law School in 2023 when she was fired by her New York law firm after publishing a lengthy letter sharply criticizing Israelâs government, raising questions about its historical legitimacy and challenging the firmâs response to law students engaging in pro-Palestinian activism. In Tuesdayâs Democratic primary in Colorado, under the banner of the Democratic Socialists of America, Ms. Kiros, 29, is again challenging the establishment. This time, she hopes to defeat Representative Diana DeGette, 68, a liberal Democrat who was elected to her Denver-area seat a year before Ms. Kiros was born. The showdown is the latest between the mainstream Democratic Party and its ascendant, youthful left wing, but Ms. Kiros represents more than the D.S.A. She is one of several Gen Z candidates this year fueled by the generational frustrations of their pandemic-marred youth, social media-fueled isolation, artificial intelligence and the war in Gaza. âWeâre seeing just how broken the system is, and weâre seeing that no oneâs coming to save us but us,â Ms. Kiros said.
Efforts to Rescue Venezuela Quake Victims Grow More Desperate (NYT) Rescuers on Monday pulled a 21-year-old man out of the rubble of a collapsed building in La Guaira, the hardest-hit state in earthquake-shattered Venezuela, where he had been trapped for 106 hours. The rescue operation lasted 43 hours, President Delcy RodrĂguez said on social media, where she shared video of workers hoisting the man, Aaron Levi Cantillo, onto a stretcher. Onlookers erupted in cheers. The possibility of finding more survivors continued to fuel rescuers digging through collapsed buildings in northern Venezuela on Monday, even as the search was growing increasingly desperate with every passing hour. The death toll from Wednesdayâs 7.2- and 7.5-magnitude quakes rose to 1,719 people, with more than 5,000 injured and 15,800 displaced, the Venezuelan government said on Monday. But the official numbers are probably a vast undercount. Doctors have said that in La Guaira officials have been processing about 750 bodies each day.
Peruâs Presidential Vote Gives the Right in Latin America Another Win (NYT) After three failed presidential campaigns, years of legal troubles and over a decade as a polarizing opposition leader, Keiko Fujimori has finally won the nationâs highest office by becoming Peruâs first woman elected president. Her victory brings the political movement founded by her late father back to power a quarter century after the collapse of his authoritarian government. According to a final vote count published by the electoral authorities on Monday, Ms. Fujimori, 51, defeated her leftist opponent, Roberto SĂĄnchez, by 49,641 votes, ending one of the closest elections in the countryâs history. When Ms. Fujimori takes office on July 28, she will join a growing bloc of conservative Latin American leaders, reinforcing a rightward shift across the region and potentially bolstering President Trumpâs efforts to expand U.S. influence in the hemisphere.
6 Are Killed During a Rare Mass Shooting in Germany (NYT) A 45-year-old man killed six adults and wounded several others in a shooting attack at a child welfare facility in northern Germany on Monday, in what the local authorities described as a dispute over the custody of the manâs daughter. The daytime assault in the small city of Stade, roughly 30 miles west of Hamburg, killed six employees of the facility and a neighboring youth center, and it shocked a country where strict gun laws have made mass shootings a rarity.
Zelenskyy condemns âhorrific attacksâ as Russian strikes kill 12 and wound 40 in Ukraine (AP) Russian missiles and drones killed at least 12 civilians and injured 40 others in Ukraine on Monday in what President Volodymyr Zelenskyy described as âhorrific attacks.â Since Russia launched its all-out invasion of its neighbor more than four years ago, its forces have conducted bombing in an effort to destroy Ukraineâs infrastructure and sap morale. More than 16,000 Ukrainian civilians have been killed, according to the U.N. A Russian missile targeting infrastructure struck the central city of Dnipro, killing six people and wounding 29, Dnipropetrovsk regional head Oleksandr Hanzha said. Russian drones also hit a passenger minibus in the southern city of Zaporizhzhia, killing three and wounding six, including a child, Zelenskyy said on social media.
Ukraineâs expensive attacks on Russia (Foreign Policy) Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine is beginning to have serious ramifications domestically within Russia, as new Ukrainian tech that can destroy Russian infrastructure even in Moscow has led to economic and psychological ramifications, capped off by a mid-June attack that disabled the largest oil refinery in the capital through 2027. Ukraineâs efforts have reduced refining capacity by an estimated 700,000 barrels per day, and over half of Russiaâs regions are rationing fuel. This has caused other issues: high inflation, a labor shortage for the first time in modern history, inevitable government spending cuts and residential construction down 40 percent in Q1. Itâs all warning signs for economic trouble that has rattled many among Russiaâs elite. Complicating matters further is that ending the war might not actually solve this problem, as the economic shock of cutting all the government money that had been pouring into defense industries might cause an even larger problem.
Iran says this. The US says that. (AP) The United States and Iran have less than 60 days to negotiate a permanent end to the war, but they still seem to be at odds over the interim deal they reached this month. Itâs not even clear when the two sides will meet again. âThe situation is sensitive and complex,â a senior Iranian negotiator, Kazem Gharibabadi, posted Monday on X. Talks are just one of the pressing questions. Others include the Strait of Hormuz, which the U.S. says is open while Iran insists on a measure of control. The issue led both sides to carry out days of military strikes that appeared on Monday to have ended.
Israeli troops push into a town in Syria (AP) As Israeli troops and vehicles entered the town of Abdin in southern Syria, residents blocked the roads with rocks, and some young men and boys threw stones to push back the military patrol. Tensions in this part of the country created by a buffer zone occupied by Israeli forces have flared into violence in recent days, leaving residents anxious that more escalation is coming. Residents of Abdin, located near a U.N.-patrolled buffer zone now controlled by Israeli troops, tried to resist against a military incursion Sunday. Residents said Israeli troops fired warnings shots at walls and between the angry protesters, before firing artillery rounds at the village. No one was harmed in the exchange, but most residents fled, and most were still too afraid to return on Monday. Many fear that there will now be more intense incursions and raids following the skirmish. âThey come into the village regularly, every few days,â said resident Mohammad al-Hassan, standing not far from a group of children looking at an exploded shell. âThey come in armored 4x4 vehicles, they roam around the village and search some houses, they knock on doors and if people donât answer the door they break it down and enter the houses. Women and children start screaming, itâs a terrifying thing, them coming here.â
Anti-immigration sentiment in South Africa reaches a fever pitch (The Week) South Africa is a melting pot of culture, with âZimbabweans trained as doctors but driving Ubers, Ethiopians running bustling restaurants and Congolese selling colorful wax print fabrics,â said NPR. âAll of them are now under threatâ as a result of continued pressure from anti-migrant groups. For several months, âanti-immigrant protesters, many brandishing sticks, have been marching through the streets.â Many of them chant âMabahambe,â a Zulu phrase meaning âthey must go.â The protests have also âsparked attacks against foreignersâ throughout South Africa, said The Associated Press. As the violence and attacks continue, several of the most notable anti-immigration groups have âset what they are calling a June 30 deadline for people in the country illegally to leave and the government to take actionâ against undocumented migrants. The flash point of xenophobia is largely because of the countryâs large number of immigrants. As âone of Africaâs richer countries, South Africa has long attracted migrants from elsewhere in Africa seeking a better life,â said the AP.
Older Adults Turn to Home Sharing (NYT) Shirley Jennett, a retired nurse, loves her spacious ranch-style house in Denver, with its big backyard and gazebo. âI want to stay here,â she vowed. âAnd die here.â She might pull that off. In relatively good health, Ms. Jennett still drives to lunch with friends, does her own housekeeping and grocery shopping, and plows through a book a day. But her children worry about her living alone at 89, especially after she has had a couple of falls. Enter her new housemate, Susan Beese. Ms. Beese could no longer afford her nearby one-bedroom apartment as the rent topped $1,500 a month, so she moved out. Now Ms. Beese, who is 79, pays Ms. Jennett $800 monthly for a bright two-bedroom space, with a bath and a kitchen, on the lower level of her house. As part of the agreement the housemates worked out, she helps plant and water Ms. Jennettâs garden, takes out the trash and cooks occasional meals. âItâs been a lifesaver,â Ms. Beese said. Home sharing âis a really efficient way to create affordable housing and to support older people who want to age in place,â the administrator of one nonprofit said.














