Category: Uncategorized

  • SpaceX rocket being tested in Texas explodes, but no injuries reported

    SpaceX rocket being tested in Texas explodes, but no injuries reported



    A SpaceX rocket being tested in Texas exploded Wednesday night, sending a dramatic fireball high into the sky.

    The company said the Starship “experienced a major anomaly” at about 11 p.m. while on the test stand preparing for the tenth flight test at Starbase, SpaceX’s launch site at the southern tip of Texas.

    “A safety clear area around the site was maintained throughout the operation and all personnel are safe and accounted for,” SpaceX said in a statement on the social platform X.

    CEO Elon Musk ‘s SpaceX said there were no hazards to nearby communities. It asked people not to try to approach the site.

    The company said it is working with local officials to respond to the explosion.



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  • Israel says it targeted Iran’s Arak nuclear reactor, reports ‘direct hit’ on hospital by Iranian missile

    Israel says it targeted Iran’s Arak nuclear reactor, reports ‘direct hit’ on hospital by Iranian missile



    Israeli President Isaac Herzog and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned an Iranian missile strike on a hospital in southern Israel.

    Soroka Medical Center, which is in the city of Be’er Sheva, serves the entire Negev desert region, “caring for Israelis of all faiths and our neighbors the Palestinians who come especially to be treated there,” Herzog said in a post on X.

    “I send strength and support to the medical teams, to the patients, and to the residents of Be’er Sheva and all cities attacked across Israel this morning,” he said. “In moments like these, we are reminded of what’s truly at stake, and the values we are defending.”

    In a post on Telegram, Netanyahu said, “We will exact the full price from the tyrants in Tehran.”

    Sharren Haskel, Israel’s deputy minister of foreign affairs, called the hospital strike “deliberate” and “criminal.”

    “The world must speak out,” Haskel said in a post on X.



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  • Tulsi Gabbard sidelined in Trump administration discussions on Israel and Iran

    Tulsi Gabbard sidelined in Trump administration discussions on Israel and Iran



    WASHINGTON — National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard, an outspoken critic of past U.S. military interventions abroad, appears to have fallen out of favor with President Donald Trump as he weighs military action against Iran, according to multiple senior administration officials with knowledge of the matter.

    Gabbard allies insist that, while there is some White House tension, some of the public blowback is overstated, and none interviewed by NBC News expect her to leave the administration as a result of the president’s Iran policy, even if that includes direct U.S. involvement.

    Gabbard’s politically perilous position burst into the open this week when Trump brushed her back over her testimony to Congress in March. At that time, she said the U.S. intelligence community did not believe Iran was building a nuclear weapon — a comment at odds with Trump’s recent public statement about the threat posed by Iran’s potential nuclear program.

    “I don’t care what she said. I think they were very close to having one,” Trump told reporters Tuesday on Air Force One.

    A person with knowledge of the matter said the U.S. intelligence community’s view has not changed since Gabbard’s testimony in March.

    But the idea that a president would openly refute his director of national intelligence immediately spurred questions about whether she is now iced out of decision-making on the issue.

    It also reflects a rift that is playing out publicly in Trump’s MAGA coalition, with some supporters advocating standing by Israel in whatever military action it takes against Iran and others saying intervention would go against the “America First” philosophy. Trump’s criticism of U.S. involvement in past conflicts — and his campaign promise to be a “peacemaker” in his second term — brought in unusual bedfellows, such as Gabbard, who had been a Democratic congresswoman.

    Multiple senior administration officials said Gabbard has been sidelined in internal administration discussions about the conflict between Israel and Iran. Even two of her allies who spoke to NBC News acknowledged that her standing took a hit when she posted a video on June 10 after a trip to Hiroshima, Japan. The video, which featured the simulated destruction of American cities and Gabbard warning about the dangers of nuclear war, annoyed the White House team, the officials said.

    Gabbard did not attend a meeting of top officials June 8 at Camp David, the presidential retreat in Maryland, to discuss tensions between Israel and Iran, which raised fresh questions about her status in the administration. A White House official told NBC News that Gabbard was not present only because she had to take part in scheduled training as a member of the National Guard.

    Gabbard’s past positions on Iran, coupled with her recent comments and Trump’s responses to them, have forced top administration officials into a difficult position. Gabbard has seemingly been at odds with the administration line, but not to the point where they feel the need to abandon her.

    “Tulsi is a veteran, a patriot, a loyal supporter of Pres Trump and a critical part of the coalition he built in 2024,” Vice President JD Vance said in a statement Tuesday. “She’s an essential member of our nat sec team, & we’re grateful for her tireless work to keep America safe from foreign threats.”

    Other Republicans, though, have taken shots at her recent Iran comments.

    “She obviously needs to change her meds,” Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., told Jewish Insider last week.

    Gabbard has long used her public platform to oppose U.S. military action against Iran and has been working behind the scenes to try to find a diplomatic solution, two of the administration officials said.

    In one case, Gabbard sought to enlist the help of European allies who have communication channels with Tehran, an official said.

    That stands, at times, in direct conflict with Trump’s public comments about the now open fight between Israel and Iran, a fight he himself has acknowledged might now require U.S. intervention.

    “I may do it. I may not do it. I mean, nobody knows what I’m going to do,” Trump told reporters Wednesday.

    Gabbard allies who spoke to NBC News acknowledge that the video was not received well by White House officials but said reported rifts between her and Trump on the issue have been overstated.

    “I have heard that also,” a Gabbard ally said of the tension spurred by the Hiroshima video. “But I don’t think it reached the level of the president himself. I am told the matter has been ‘resolved.’”

    The Gabbard ally downplayed any idea that she would resign over the public Trump rebuke or whether the United States got directly involved in the Iran-Israel conflict.

    “The online claim that she will resign if the president decides to take direct action in Iran are false,” the person said.

    The video, however, did circulate widely among White House aides, and it left many wondering why she was taking such a public position as tensions escalate and Trump appears ready to get further involved.

    “I think she is generally in OK standing,” a Republican operative familiar with administration thinking said. “In situations like this, folks with more traditional Republican and neocon views are going to use the opportunity to minimize her influence.”

    Asked about the recent video on Hiroshima, Gabbard’s deputy chief of staff, Alexa Henning, said: “Acknowledging the past is critical to inform the future. President Trump has repeatedly stated in the past that he recognizes the immeasurable suffering, and annihilation can be caused by nuclear war, which is why he has been unequivocal that we all need to do everything possible to work towards peace.”

    As a Democratic congresswoman, presidential candidate and supporter of Trump’s 2024 campaign, Gabbard portrayed herself as a fierce opponent of what she sees as America’s misguided military interventions overseas, including the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and U.S. assistance for rebels in Libya and Syria.

    In last year’s electoral campaign, Gabbard accused the Biden administration of bringing the United States “closer to the brink of nuclear war than we ever have been before.”

    During Trump’s first term in office, Gabbard strongly criticized his handling of Iran and his decision to pull the United States out of a 2015 nuclear agreement that imposed limits on Tehran’s nuclear work in return for an easing of sanctions.

    If Trump decides to order military strikes on Iran amid talk by Israel that military pressure might cause the Tehran regime to collapse, Gabbard would find herself in an awkward political position. She has vowed to ensure America no longer engages in “regime change” wars.

    Gabbard’s being warmly welcomed into Trump’s MAGA political base during the last presidential election was seen at the time as an injection of ideological diversity.

    A Trump administration official acknowledged that the heterodox views that made her a welcome addition to the MAGA movement now mark her as an outsider in an administration appearing to coalesce around a policy antithetical to those views.

    “If you adopt a Chihuahua, you should not be surprised that you have a Chihuahua,” the person said.



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  • 2 men get life sentences in New Mexico shooting death of 11-year-old that prompted gun ban

    2 men get life sentences in New Mexico shooting death of 11-year-old that prompted gun ban


    ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Two men were sentenced Wednesday to lifelong terms in prison in the shooting death of an 11-year-old boy outside an Albuquerque baseball stadium in 2023 that prompted the New Mexico governor to issue a controversial gun ban, the district attorney’s office in Albuquerque said.

    Investigators say a truck carrying a mother and three young children was mistaken for another vehicle in the shooting as vehicles were leaving the stadium. Gunfire killed 11-year-old Froylan Villegas and paralyzed cousin Tatiana Villegas, while Foylan’s mother and baby brother were unharmed.

    A jury in February convicted Jose Romero and Nathen Garley, both in their early 20s, of first-degree murder, tampering with evidence, shooting at or from a vehicle and other charges in the death of Villegas.

    2 arrested in NM shooting of 11yr old.
    11-year-old Froylan Villegas, who was killed in the shooting. @ABQPoliceChief / X

    The men were sentenced to life in prison plus 46 years, ensuring they will stay under Corrections Department custody permanently, prosecutors said.

    In the aftermath of the shooting and others that killed children, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham declared a public health emergency over gun violence, temporarily suspending the right to carry guns in some parks and playgrounds in the greater Albuquerque area. The decision touched off protests and legal challenges by advocates for gun rights.

    District Attorney Sam Bregman, a Democratic candidate for governor in 2026, said in a statement that the shootings “shook our entire community” and praised his staff for pursuing accountability.



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  • U.S. Steel ceases trading on the NYSE as Japan’s Nippon finalizes takeover

    U.S. Steel ceases trading on the NYSE as Japan’s Nippon finalizes takeover



    U.S. Steel shares stopped trading on the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday after Japan’s Nippon Steel completed its acquisition of the iconic American industrial name.

    President Donald Trump has insisted for weeks that the companies would form a “partnership” in which U.S. Steel would remain American-owned.

    But the New York Stock Exchange notified the Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday that U.S. Steel’s shares would be removed from listing, after the company became a wholly owned subsidiary of Nippon Steel North America.

    U.S. Steel shares stopped trading at 8:30 a.m. ET on Wednesday after Nippon completed its acquisition, according to a notice from the NYSE. The delisting will be effective on June 30, NYSE said.

    Trump opposed Nippon’s bid to acquire U.S. Steel in the runup to the 2024 presidential election, but he changed his stance after he took office, ordering a new review of the deal in April. Former President Joe Biden had blocked Nippon’s acquisition in January, citing national security concerns.

    Trump announced a “partnership” between U.S. and Nippon in a May 23 post on his social media platform Truth Social, causing confusion among investors and union members about whether the structure of the original deal had changed somehow.

    U.S. Steel and Nippon started adopting the president’s “partnership” language, though they never backed off from the terms of the original December 2023 merger agreement in their filings with SEC. U.S. Steel will continue to operate under its name.

    Golden share

    Trump did compel U.S. Steel and Nippon to sign a national security agreement with the U.S. government as a condition for him clearing the deal.

    The U.S. president will wield a “golden share” under the terms of the agreement. U.S. Steel said Wednesday that the golden share gives the president veto power over the following decisions:

    • Changing U.S. Steel’s name or moving its headquarters from Pittsburgh
    • Moving U.S. Steel outside the U.S.
    • Moving production or jobs outside the U.S.
    • Some decisions regarding the closure or idling of U.S. Steel’s domestic manufacturing facilities, trade, labor, and sourcing outside the U.S.
    • Reductions in capital investments under the national security agreement
    • Material acquisitions of competing businesses in the U.S.

    A majority of U.S. Steel’s board members and its CEO will be U.S. citizens, according to the terms of the national security agreement. Nippon also agreed that U.S. Steel will remain incorporated in the U.S.

    Nippon will invest $11 billion in U.S. Steel by 2028, including $1 billion in initial spending on a greenfield project that will be completed after 2028, according to the agreement.



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  • Trump and India’s Modi split over U.S. role in Pakistan ceasefire

    Trump and India’s Modi split over U.S. role in Pakistan ceasefire



    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi used his first conversation with President Donald Trump since the early May conflict between India and Pakistan to express his frustration with Trump’s repeated claims that he played a significant role in brokering a ceasefire between the two nuclear-armed countries.

    “Prime Minister Modi firmly stated that India does not and will never accept mediation. There is complete political consensus in India on this matter,” Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri said in a statement.

    During a Tuesday phone call between the two leaders, Modi “clearly conveyed” to Trump that the U.S. played no role in the mediation between India and Pakistan and denied any discussion of a trade deal, Misri said.

    The 35-minute call was initiated by Trump, he added.

    The White House did not provide a separate readout of the call.

    The two leaders last spoke in early May, after an April terror attack by Islamist militants in the Indian-controlled region of Kashmir killed 26 civilians.

    India responded with a tit-for-tat bombing in Pakistan, resulting in a four-day conflict that threatened to explode into a broader war fueled by decades of tensions between the two countries.

    Trump has repeatedly claimed that the U.S. played a significant role in the eventual de-escalation of tensions between Islamabad and New Delhi.

    “I stopped the war between Pakistan and India,” Trump said outside the White House on Wednesday, where he called Modi “a fantastic man.”

    Trump has also recently compared the current conflict between Israel and Iran to last month’s India-Pakistan conflict. Trump said Sunday that Israel and Iran should make a deal “just like I got India and Pakistan to make.”

    The strident tone of India’s statement Wednesday was most likely due in part to Trump’s decision to host Pakistan’s chief of Army Staff for lunch at the White House.

    Trump told reporters at the White House that the lunch was intended to “thank him for not going into the war” and to discuss a potential trade deal with the country.

    The president also touted apparent progress on a trade deal with India.

    Trump and Modi had been scheduled to meet in-person at the Group of Seven summit in Canada this week. But Trump left a day early, with the White House saying he cut the trip short due to tensions in the Middle East.



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  • Salt Lake City volunteer’s account of deadly shooting questioned after new video emerges

    Salt Lake City volunteer’s account of deadly shooting questioned after new video emerges


    A new picture of the Salt Lake City protester arrested in a deadly “No Kings” shooting is emerging, and it is different from the one safety volunteers at the event provided to officials.

    Arturo Gamboa, 24, never fired his weapon, but he was arrested on suspicion of murder Saturday. He had not been formally charged as of Wednesday evening, according to police records.

    His arrest stems from statements provided to law enforcement by two volunteer “peacekeepers,” who said they saw Gamboa raise an assault-style rifle and point it into a crowd of people.

    But a new video appears to show Gamboa pointing his rifle down toward the ground and moving away from three gunshots fired by a safety volunteer.

    One of the bullets killed a bystander, fashion designer Afa Ah Loo, 39, and the other grazed Gamboa, who was arrested at the scene.

    Utah is an “open-carry” state, meaning people can visibly carry firearms in public without permits, but police said Gamboa posed a “substantial danger to another individual or to the community.”

    Authorities have not released the names of the two volunteers, and the shooter has not been arrested or charged with a crime.

    The video, first obtained by KSTU-TV of Salt Lake City, calls into question the volunteers’ version of events in the moments before Gamboa and Ah Loo were shot, loved ones said.

    “He wouldn’t even hurt a fly,” Gamboa’s mother, Marianna Gamboa, said in her first interview since her son was arrested. “He’s got strong opinions, and he has a right to carry.”

    The Salt Lake County District Attorney’s Office said it will decide Thursday whether to charge Gamboa with a crime, extend his jail time or release him.

    Salt Lake City police declined to directly comment on the video. They said in a statement that investigators are still collecting and analyzing evidence.

    US Protests Salt Lake City.
    Demonstrators at the “No Kings” protest Saturday in Salt Lake City.Amanda Barrett / AP

    “This remains a complex investigation that will take time as detectives work to determine the full sequence of events,” Brent Weisberg, a police spokesman, said in an emailed statement. “We are continuing to gather the necessary information to support a referral to the Salt Lake County District Attorney’s Office.”

    The rally’s organizer, the Utah chapter of the 50501 Movement, said in a statement that the volunteer who shot Gamboa and Ah Loo is a military veteran “who believed there was an imminent threat to the protestors and took action.”

    The organization said the safety volunteers were selected because of their military, first-responder and “deescalation” experience.

    Volunteers told police this week they saw Gamboa pull out an AR-15-style rifle from a backpack and “begin manipulating it.” They shouted at Gamboa to drop his weapon, but he advanced on the crowd with his rifle raised, the volunteers said.

    In the video circulating online, Gamboa’s rifle appears to be pointing down as he jogs away from the gunfire.

    “Arturo is just a sweet kid,” said Konrad Keele, a longtime friend and mentor from the local music scene. “I’m broken-hearted that he has to sit in a jail cell until they figure this out.”

    Keele first met Gamboa when he was 16 years old and Keele operated punk venues in Salt Lake City. Gamboa always loved music and learned to play guitar, bass and drums, Keele said.

    Born to a Venezuelan father and a white mother, Gamboa became involved in the local activist community and was a regular at meetings and shows. Those who know him describe him as articulate, thoughtful and dedicated.

    “He’s never been violent,” Keele said. “I’ve never met anyone who knew Arturo and didn’t like him.”

    Keele is helping coordinate support efforts for Gamboa and his family. He is facilitating conversations with the public defender’s office should Gamboa need legal representation, and he planned to hold a community meeting Wednesday night to schedule jail visits. Keele has also booked three benefit concerts this summer to raise money for Gamboa’s legal fees.

    Jeanette Padilla Vega, president and CEO of the nonprofit Food Justice Coalition, said she first started seeing Gamboa at meetings and protests in 2020. She marched alongside him several times and heard him address large crowds. She was struck by his passion and poise, she said.

    “He’s extremely talented, extremely beloved by his friends, family in the community, so active,” Padilla Vega said. “To lose him like this, it just feels so incredibly horrific. The emotion is very raw for a lot of people.”

    Gamboa’s supporters have flooded social media demanding to know how event organizers vetted safety volunteers and whether there was any training before Saturday’s protest. Sarah Parker, a national coordinator for the 50501 Movement, has said all attendees, including safety volunteers, were asked not to bring weapons.



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  • Hurricane Erick strengthens to major storm as Mexico’s Pacific coast preps for its arrival

    Hurricane Erick strengthens to major storm as Mexico’s Pacific coast preps for its arrival


    ACAPULCO, Mexico — Hurricane Erick has intensified into a Category 3 major hurricane threatening approaching southern Mexico’s coast with destructive winds and heavy rain, the U.S. Hurricane Center said Wednesday evening.

    The Miami-based center warned Erick has maximum sustained winds of 120 mph after hours of rapid intensification, strengthening from a Category 1 storm earlier in the day.

    The cyclone is in the eastern Pacific about 55 miles south-southwest of Puerto Angel in Mexico. It’s also about 160 miles southeast of Punta Maldonado and moving northwest at 9 mph, the latest hurricane center advisory said.

    The storm’s projected path would take its center near the resort of Acapulco, which was devastated in October 2023 by Hurricane Otis, a Category 5 hurricane that rapidly intensified and caught many unprepared. At least 52 people died in Otis and 32 were missing, after the storm severely damaged almost all of the resort’s hotels.

    Mexico Tropical Weather storefront
    Workers board up a storefront as they prepare for the arrival of Hurricane Erick, in Acapulco, Mexico, on Wednesday.Fernando Llano / AP

    In Acapulco Wednesday, there was a strong presence of National Guard and police in the streets, but most visible were trucks from the national power company. Crews worked to clear drainage canals and brush.

    Some beaches were already closed, but tourists continued to sunbathe on others.

    On a beach in Acapulco, a line of people waited for the help of a backhoe to pull their boats out of the water.

    Adrián Acevedo Durantes, 52, hauls tourists around Acapulco’s picturesque coastline in boats. Two of his boats sank in Hurricane Otis and a third was badly damaged.

    “We’re taking precautions because with Otis we never expected one of that magnitude to come and now with climate change the water is warmer and the hurricanes are more powerful,” Acevedo said.

    This time the port administration ordered that no one ride out the storm aboard their boats. During Otis many lost their lives by staying on boats in the harbor, which had traditionally been how they ensured their safety during previous storms. He said knew some of those lost at sea.

    He acknowledged that it was sunny and the water calm Wednesday afternoon, making it hard to imagine a major storm was on the way, but said “with Otis it was calm all day, sunny, then at midnight there were two hours of strong winds and we saw what had happened the next day.”

    Francisco Casarubio, a 46-year-old choreographer, carried a carton of eggs as he did some last-minute shopping ahead of the storm. He planned to pick up rice, beans and some canned food as well.

    His home flooded and lost power in Otis and said he was taking Erick more seriously, but hadn’t had time to shop until Wednesday.

    Forecasters said Erick was expected to lash Mexico’s Pacific coast with heavy rain, strong winds and a fierce storm surge. Rains of up to 16 inches (40 centimeters) could fall across the Mexican states of Oaxaca and Guerrero, with lesser totals in Chiapas, Michoacan, Colima and Jalisco states, the center’s advisory said. The rainfall threatened flooding and mudslides, especially in areas with steep terrain.

    Down the coast in Puerto Escondido near the southern edge of Erick’s possible path, some fishermen began pulling their boats out of the water under a drizzling sky Wednesday.

    Even though the wind had yet to pick up at the Zicatela beach, red flags were up to warn people to stay out of the water. But some surfers ignored them as they continued to ride waves.

    Laura Velázquez, Mexico’s national civil defense coordinator, said Erick was forecast to bring “torrential” rains to Guerrero, Oaxaca and Chiapas in southern Mexico.

    The mountainous region along the coast is especially prone to mudslides, and there are numerous rivers that could jump their banks.

    Guerrero Gov. Evelyn Salgado said all schools were closed Wednesday and the state had alerted all of the fishing and tourism operators of the risk of the coming storm and recommended they prepare their boats. Acapulco’s port closed Tuesday evening. She said 582 shelters were prepared to receive people who might evacuate their homes.

    President Claudia Sheinbaum during her daily news briefing warned residents in the hurricane’s path to heed government instructions and wait out the storm in their homes or government shelters.



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  • Can it be made in the USA?

    Can it be made in the USA?



    President Donald Trump’s family business is taking preorders for a gold-colored smartphone, the T1.

    Trump Mobile, which launched Tuesday, says the device will be available in September, cost far less than Apple’s and Samsung’s smartphones — and be made in the United States, aligning with the president’s “America First” economic ethos.

    Industry experts and tech journalists instantly cast doubt on those claims. And if Carlsbad, California-based smartphone maker Purism is any example, it would take much more than two months for Trump Mobile to build an American-made smartphone from scratch. It would also likely be more expensive than the T1’s advertised price of $499.

    At $2,000, Purism’s Liberty Phone is more expensive than an iPhone 16 Pro. It has half the iPhone’s memory with roughly twice the thickness. You also can’t download many apps on it. According to Todd Weaver, who founded Purism in 2014, it’s the only U.S.-made smartphone on the market.

    But with “kill switches” to turn off its wi-fi, camera and microphone, the Liberty Phone is marketed as a secure option because it also carries its own operating system designed by Purism.

    It took a lot of time and effort to get to that point, Weaver told NBC News. Going from “I would like to make a phone, and I would like to make it in the U.S.” to actually achieving it took six years, he said.

    Purism’s assembly line consists of just four people screwing together phones by hand — a far cry from the shoulder-to-shoulder line of people and automated machinery often associated with mass production facilities in China.

    The “Made in the USA electronics” sticker that Purism slaps on the product is a declaration of confidence — since the Federal Trade Commission regulates claims of that sort.

    Yet even Purism’s built-in-America phone needs some foreign help. Ninety percent of the phone’s materials come from the United States, Canada or Europe. Among the components made elsewhere: a chassis from China, camera modules from China or South Korea, and a bluetooth module from India. Purism publishes this information online.

    For materials like a specific crystal necessary for the motherboard to operate, Purism says there are no options for U.S. sourcing, meaning there’s no choice but to buy from China.

    “There just isn’t a company yet providing that single crystal,” said Weaver.

    The Trump Organization didn’t respond to NBC News’ questions about how Trump Mobile’s T1 phone would be made.

    Another issue looming over the market: Trump’s ever-shifting trade policies. The president recently threatened a 25% tariff on all smartphone imports, taking aim at manufacturers like Apple and Samsung that make their phones abroad.

    “Again, when they build their plant here, there’s no tariff, so they’re going to be building plants here,” the president said last month.

    The percentage of the materials for Purism’s phone that come from overseas is small enough that tariffs from the Trump administration would not affect its $2,000 price. But the tariffs would affect a phone Purism does make in China, called the Librem 5. It’s currently priced at $800 but new import duties would take it closer to the Liberty phone’s $2,000 level.

    While tariffs are a “good incentive” for manufacturing in the U.S., Weaver said, the on-again-off-again approach from the administration makes it tough to plan.

    “It’s terrible,” Weaver said. “If you have no idea, and you can’t predict [the policy], it’s very hard for any company, for any business owner. From t-shirts, textiles, to high tech, it is very hard to make a long term business decision when you’re in a whipsaw.”



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  • Browns QB Shedeur Sanders cited for driving 101 in 60 mph zone

    Browns QB Shedeur Sanders cited for driving 101 in 60 mph zone



    Cleveland Browns rookie quarterback Shedeur Sanders was cited for speeding early on Tuesday, according to police records obtained by NBC News. The Strongsville, Ohio, Police Department said Sanders was driving his black Dodge pickup truck at 101 mph in a 60 mph zone before being stopped at 12:24 a.m.

    He must either pay a fine or contest the ticket in court on July 3.

    Sanders, a fifth-round pick out of Colorado, is in competition for the starting quarterback job in Cleveland with Kenny Pickett, Joe Flacco and fellow rookie Dillon Gabriel.

    In two seasons at Colorado he threw for 7,364 yards, 64 touchdowns with just 13 interceptions. A potential first-round pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, he slid down boards and was the sixth signal-caller taken.

    His fall on draft night even prompted President Donald Trump to call NFL owners “stupid” on social media for not selecting him higher.



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