An ADP report providing a reading on the strength of the job market comes out today. Meanwhile, another measure shows the labor market treading water: job churn. Do we have the confidence to leave and take a different job? Amid continued economic uncertainty, many workers seem to be staying put, and employers seem hesitant to let workers go. Also on the show: the financial burden of deployment for military families.
CBS News Roundup - 07/02/2025 | World News Roundup
President Trump's budget bill goes back to the House after Senate changes. Back to work for jurors in the Sean Diddy Combs case. Massive fireworks blast. CBS News Correspondent Steve Kathan has today's World News Roundup.
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Reset with Sasha-Ann Simons - Lifeguard Charged After Allegedly Shooting Teens Outside Park District Pool
Marketplace All-in-One - A fresh deal on the future of critical minerals
From the BBC World Service: Australia, India, Japan, and the U.S. have launched a new push to secure supplies of critical minerals, especially the "rare earths" used in many tech products. Pride events in both the U.S. and the United Kingdom have been hit by falling corporate sponsorship. What effect will this have on events? Plus, the Australian airline Qantas says it's investigating a data breach, although it insists flights won’t be impacted.
Audio Mises Wire - A Free Market Would Preclude Today’s Headlines
Our media, higher education, and, of course, governments tell us that our social and economic problems are due to capitalism. Yet, what we see are governments bringing us inflation, chaos, and the horror of war. It's time we abandon the fiction that governments "serve the people."
Original article: https://mises.org/mises-wire/free-market-would-preclude-todays-headlines
Chapo Trap House - Movie Mindset Bonus – Interview With Director Ari Aster
WSJ Minute Briefing - President Trump Threatens 35% Tariffs on Japan
Plus: Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” faces a contentious vote in the House. And Paramount agrees to pay $16 million to settle Trump lawsuit over ‘60 Minutes’ interview. Luke Vargas hosts.
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WSJ What’s News - House GOP Threaten to Sink Trump Megabill
A.M. Edition for July 2. A day after its passage in the Senate, House Republicans are lining up to oppose the president’s “big, beautiful bill,” with fiscal conservatives and centrists leading the charge. Plus, Trump threatens Japan with tariffs as high as 35% ahead of a looming deadline to complete trade talks. And the U.S. stops delivery of key weapons for Ukraine as Moscow keeps up punishing air attacks. WSJ foreign correspondent Ian Lovett discusses the state of play as the war enters its fourth summer and what a pullback in foreign support might mean for Ukraine. Luke Vargas hosts.
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Marketplace All-in-One - News on social media is now mainstream
What once was taboo has now gone mainstream. As television and print audiences have dwindled over recent years, social media is now the No. 1 place for Americans to get their news updates.
Detailed in the report from the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at the University of Oxford, Americans across the political spectrum are using social media for news consumptions over traditional avenues. However, conservative influencers have seen the largest audiences and most engagement.
Marketplace’s Nova Safo spoke with Nic Newman, a co-author of the report, to talk about the state of news consumption in the U.S.
“Overview and key findings of the 2025 Digital News Report” — from the Reuters Institute and the University of Oxford
Up First from NPR - Tax And Spending Bill, Medicaid Concerns, Gun Tracing Fund
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Today's episode of Up First was edited by Kelsey Snell, Carrie Fiebel, Gigi Douban, Janaya Williams and Alice Woelfle. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Nia Dumas and Christopher Thomas. We get engineering support from Zo van Ginhoven. And our technical director is Zac Coleman.
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