The Source - Texas to ban mailing abortion pills
The Source - District 6 Councilmember Ric Galvan on the city budget and Project Marvel
PBS News Hour - Science - How researchers restored a thriving habitat for Atlantic puffins in Maine
Marketplace All-in-One - The price of limiting trade with China
China's exports to the U.S. are down a third year over year. That’s a significant drop, reflective of President Trump’s punishing tariff agenda. Although China’s overall export growth has slowed, it still rose 4.5% in August — thanks, in part, to strategic redirection to new markets. In this episode, what the U.S. stands to lose by cutting off China as a trade partner. Plus: Luxury brands remain mostly insulated from economic uncertainty and fintech firm Robinhood prepares to join the S&P 500.
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The Gist - Christine Wenc: The Onion’s Straight Face Made It Funnier
Christine Wenc joins to discuss Funny Because It’s True: How The Onion Created Modern American News Satire, recalling its Wisconsin roots, AP-style discipline, and newsroom battles over absurd details. She traces the paper’s arc from gas-station rent money to online cult influence, and the tension between preachiness and bite. Plus, the Ambazonian separatist movement run from Minneapolis, and a court ruling upholding E. Jean Carroll’s $83 million judgment against Donald Trump. Come See Mike Pesca at Open Debate
Produced by Corey Wara
Production Coordinator Ashley Khan
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The Journal. - The Hyundai Plant Raided By Immigration Authorities
At a Hyundai electric vehicle factory complex in Georgia, agents from the Department of Homeland Security detained about 475 people, including hundreds of South Korean nationals. It was the biggest single site raid in the history of the department. WSJ’s Sharon Terlep went to the factory complex and explains how two of Trump’s key policies—cracking down on illegal immigration and rebuilding U.S. manufacturing—have unexpectedly collided. Jessica Mendoza hosts.
Further Listening:
- "I'm Thinking I'm 100% Legal." Then ICE Raided His Company.
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Stuff They Don't Want You To Know - Strange News: China Throws a Party — and Not Everyone is Invited
Fan of the show Uncle Xi just threw a big party to commemorate the end of World War II. In this week's strange news segment, the guys explore the FOMO of the world's second-strangest science fair.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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The French PM resigned after his government lost a parliamentary vote of confidence he had called for; Also in the programme security fears in Israel after Jerusalem shootings; and Gen Z protests against a social media ban in Nepal turn deadly.
(Image: French protesters holding banner with ‘bye Bayrou’. Credit: Reuters)
Consider This from NPR - Hackers are after your water. How this town defends against them.
Chris Hugues has what he calls an interesting job.
He’s an assistant operator at a wastewater treatment plant in Cavendish, Vermont.
On a recent August afternoon he gave NPR’s Jenna McLaughlin a tour of the plant.
Hughes loves his work, in all its technical, mathematical, chemical, and yes, dirty, glory.
But lately, Hughes has had to worry about a new hazard: cyberattacks.
The threat of someone cutting water off for Americans is real.
Chinese hackers recently spent nearly a year inside a Massachusetts utility company that provides power and water.
And last October, hackers targeted American Water, the largest wastewater utility company in the country.
Water is an appealing target for hackers. People like Chris Hughes are working to make sure a cyber-attack doesn’t stop the flow.
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Email us at considerthis@npr.org.
This episode was produced by Alejandra Marquez Janse.
It was edited by Courtney Dorning and Andrew Sussman.
Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.
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