A Vermont dairy farm was raided. The mixed messages from Washington since then have increased fears

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  • A Vermont dairy farm was raided. The mixed messages from Washington since then have increased fears</p>

<p>HOLLY RAMER and AMANDA SWINHART July 7, 2025 at 6:05 AM</p>

<p>In this photo provided by migrant farmworker José Molina-Aguilar, he works milking cows on a Vermont dairy farm on Friday, June 20, 2025. (Courtesy José Molina-Aguilar via AP)</p>

<p>MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — After six 12-hour shifts milking cows, José Molina-Aguilar's lone day off was hardly relaxing.</p>

<p>On April 21, he and seven co-workers were arrested on a Vermont dairy farm in what advocates say was one of the state's largest-ever immigration raids.</p>

<p>"I saw through the window of the house that immigration were already there, inside the farm, and that's when they detained us," he said in a recent interview. "I was in the process of asylum, and even with that, they didn't respect the document that I was still holding in my hands."</p>

<p>Four of the workers were swiftly deported to Mexico. Molina-Aguilar, released after a month in a Texas detention center with his asylum case still pending, is now working at a different farm and speaking out.</p>

<p>"We must fight as a community so that we can all have, and keep fighting for, the rights that we have in this country," he said.</p>

<p>The owner of the targeted farm declined to comment. But Brett Stokes, a lawyer representing the detained workers, said the raid sent shock waves through the entire Northeast agriculture industry.</p>

<p>"These strong-arm tactics that we're seeing and these increases in enforcement, whether legal or not, all play a role in stoking fear in the community," said Stokes, director of the Center for Justice Reform Clinic at Vermont Law and Graduate School.</p>

<p>That fear remains given the mixed messages coming from the White House. President Donald Trump, who campaigned on a promise to deport millions of immigrants working in the U.S. illegally, last month paused arrests at farms, restaurants and hotels. But less than a week later, the assistant secretary of the Department of Homeland Security said worksite enforcement would continue.</p>

<p>Such uncertainty is causing problems in big states like California, where farms produce more than three-quarters of the country's fruit and more than a third of its vegetables. But it's also affecting small states like Vermont, where dairy is as much a part of the state's identity as its famous maple syrup.</p>

<p>Nearly two-thirds of all milk production in New England comes from Vermont, where more than half the state's farmland is dedicated to dairy and dairy crops. There are roughly 113,000 cows and 7,500 goats spread across 480 farms, according to the Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food and Markets, which pegs the industry's annual economic impact at $5.4 billion.</p>

<p>That impact has more than doubled in the last decade, with widespread help from immigrant labor. More than 90% of the farms surveyed for the agency's recent report employed migrant workers.</p>

<p>Among them is Wuendy Bernardo, who has lived on a Vermont dairy farm for more than a decade and has an active application to stop her deportation on humanitarian grounds: Bernardo is the primary caregiver for her five children and her two orphaned younger sisters, according to a 2023 letter signed by dozens of state lawmakers.</p>

<p>Hundreds of Bernardo's supporters showed up for her most recent check-in with immigration officials.</p>

<p>"It's really difficult because every time I come here, I don't know if I'll be going back to my family or not," she said after being told to return in a month.</p>

<p>Like Molina-Aguilar, Rossy Alfaro also worked 12-hour days with one day off per week on a Vermont farm. Now an advocate with Migrant Justice, she said the dairy industry would collapse without immigrant workers.</p>

<p>"It would all go down," she said. "There are many people working long hours, without complaining, without being able to say, 'I don't want to work.' They just do the job."</p>

<p>___</p>

<p>Ramer reported from Concord, N.H.</p>

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A Vermont dairy farm was raided. The mixed messages from Washington since then have increased fears

<p>- A Vermont dairy farm was raided. The mixed messages from Washington since then have increased fears</p> ...

'Attack on rural America': Kentucky governor hits Medicaid cuts in Trump's megabill

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  • 'Attack on rural America': Kentucky governor hits Medicaid cuts in Trump's megabill</p>

<p>Riley Beggin, USA TODAY July 6, 2025 at 10:42 AM</p>

<p>Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear argued the Medicaid cuts in President Donald Trump's sweeping tax policy bill will have a "devastating" impact on rural communities.</p>

<p>"It's the single worst piece of legislation I've seen in my lifetime, and it is a congressional Republican and presidential attack on rural America," the Democrat told CNN's Dana Bash in a July 6 interview on "State of the Union."</p>

<p>He said around 200,000 people in Kentucky are could lose their healthcare under the bill, which implements new work requirements for Medicaid and a raft of other restrictions that healthcare experts argue will trigger hospital closures in rural areas.</p>

<p>Lawmakers included a $50 billion fund in the legislation to prop up these hospitals, but experts say it won't be enough to make up for the $155 billion expected decline in federal Medicaid spending in rural areas.</p>

<p>Beshear, who is considered a potential presidential candidate for the party in 2028, said up to 35 rural hospitals in Kentucky could be at risk of closing as a result of the bill.</p>

<p>"What that means is our economy takes a huge hit," he said.</p>

<p>"You lose 200 jobs from doctors and nurses and orderlies and all of a sudden the coffee shop does worse, the bank doesn't have as many folks coming in. This is going to hit rural America right in the face."</p>

<p>Still, Republicans have argued that the biggest expected cut to Medicaid – the implementation of work requirements for able-bodied adults – is popular among voters, and other changes such as more frequent eligibility checks are common sense options.</p>

<p>Democrats "unfortunately seem to think that poor people are stupid. I don't think poor people are stupid. I think they have agency, and I think to have them register twice a year for these benefits is not a burden," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also said on CNN on July 6.</p>

<p>"People who want to infantilize the poor and people who need these Medicaid benefits are alarmist."</p>

<p>Republicans in Congress passed the massive tax-cut and spending package on July 3. Trump signed it into law on July 4.</p>

<p>It was the key goal for Trump and Republican leadership in Congress, which captured a trifecta during the 2024 elections and has used that political muscle to force what they've dubbed their "One Big, Beautiful Bill" through both chambers at a rapid-fire pace.</p>

<p>The passage came despite deep reservations within their own party and unanimous opposition from Democrats who see it as a ticket to winning back congressional majorities in 2026.</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Beshear calls Trump's Medicaid cuts an 'attack on rural America'</p>

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'Attack on rural America': Kentucky governor hits Medicaid cuts in Trump's megabill

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Analysis-US SEC's guidance is first step toward rules governing crypto ETFs

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  • Analysis-US SEC's guidance is first step toward rules governing crypto ETFs</p>

<p>Suzanne McGeeJuly 7, 2025 at 6:07 AM</p>

<p>By Suzanne McGee</p>

<p>(Reuters) -New U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission guidance on disclosure requirements for exchange-traded products tied to cryptocurrencies marked the first step toward approval of dozens of applications for ETFs linked to everything from Solana and XRP to President Donald Trump's eponymous meme coin.</p>

<p>The guidance, issued last Tuesday, signaled a dramatic shift by Republican leadership in how the top U.S. markets regulator deals with the crypto sector. The SEC has launched a task force to draft new regulations, refocused its crypto enforcement team and paused or altogether walked away from high-profile enforcement cases that many thought the agency was winning.</p>

<p>The 12-page document is the first part of the new landscape for crypto funds that SEC staff members are designing. Asset managers also anticipate guidance from the SEC's division of trading and markets on ways to streamline the application process, said people familiar with the discussions. This should accelerate the pace for new product debuts.</p>

<p>"The SEC is moving forward on creating a framework for how they'd like to see all these crypto assets included in investment funds" to address the "explosion" in the number of ETFs now awaiting a regulatory verdict, said Sui Chung, CEO of crypto index provider CF Benchmarks.</p>

<p>Industry participants said they saw few surprises so far.</p>

<p>"The most interesting and important thing about this guidance is that it exists," said Matt Hougan, chief investment officer of Bitwise Asset Management, which has more than half a dozen crypto ETFs awaiting SEC approval.</p>

<p>"It suggests that the SEC acknowledges that crypto ETPs are becoming part of the mainstream and so it's trying to lay down rules of the road to save both issuers and SEC staff time and hassle."</p>

<p>The SEC guidance spells out that in order to be approved, issuers must clearly address, in "plain English", all factors that make crypto-based ETFs distinctive, such as custody arrangements and risks of the hyper-competitive landscape.</p>

<p>The next document, however, is likely to prove more significant. According to several people familiar with the ongoing discussions, who could not speak publicly due to the confidentiality of those proceedings, the SEC staff is seeking to create a new listing template to replace the current need for exchanges to submit a special form each time they want to list a new crypto product.</p>

<p>That form, known as a 19(b)4, asks for an exemption from current listing rules for the specific ETF. Eliminating that from the process could cut the time between filing and launch dates from as much as 240 days to only 75 days.</p>

<p>"The SEC is looking for a general rule it can apply to all listings, and currently is going back and forth on precise wording with the exchanges," said a senior executive at one issuer, who added he expected that exchanges will submit that kind of general filing within "days or weeks."</p>

<p>Officials at the Nasdaq Stock Market and Cboe declined to comment on these talks; the New York Stock Exchange did not respond to requests for comment. A spokesperson for the SEC also declined comment on the discussions.</p>

<p>While ETFs tied to the spot prices of everything from coins like XRP, Polkadot, Dogecoin and the Trump meme coin await an SEC verdict, issuers expect the next batch of crypto products will be tied to Solana, the world's sixth-largest cryptocurrency.</p>

<p>That likely will not happen until after the SEC has rolled out the second part of its guidance, pushing the launch date into early autumn, issuers said.</p>

<p>Some asset managers are not waiting.</p>

<p>Last week, REX Financial and Osprey Funds used a more indirect and complex approach to launch the first U.S. ETF to give investors exposure to Solana, the REX-Osprey Sol + Staking ETF. In contrast to the half-dozen spot Solana ETFs awaiting approval, it invests in a separate entity that in turn will own both Solana and a non-U.S. Solana fund.</p>

<p>That structure means REX can bypass the rules governing those commodity funds and leapfrog other issuers, as well as offering investors access to yield via the cryptocurrency "staking" mechanism.</p>

<p>In staking, cryptocurrency holders volunteer to take part in validating transactions on the blockchain, checking that the ledger all adds up. In return, validators either receive a share of the transaction fees or newly created cryptocurrencies.</p>

<p>"We do think the SEC is taking big steps forward in dealing with cryptocurrency, but it's still the SEC, and not everything has been codified yet," Greg King, CEO of REX Financial, told Reuters.</p>

<p>King acknowledged he is trying to get a head start on what is expected to be a fiercely competitive race for market share on new Solana products.</p>

<p>The new ETF pulled in $12 million of assets on its first day of trading on Wednesday, July 1, King said.</p>

<p>"We'll probably do a spot Solana ETP too, once those rules are in place," he added. "There's no either/or in this situation."</p>

<p>(Reporting by Suzanne McGee; additional reporting by Chris Prentice, Editing by Alden Bentley and David Gregorio)</p>

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Some countries will see tariffs 'boomerang' to April rates, treasury secretary says

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  • Some countries will see tariffs 'boomerang' to April rates, treasury secretary says</p>

<p>Megan Lebowitz July 6, 2025 at 12:01 PM</p>

<p>Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and President Donald Trump have both warned that countries will be slapped with steep tariff rates without deals. (Allison Robbert for The Washington Post via Getty Images file)</p>

<p>WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Sunday that the U.S. will revert to steep country-by-country tariff rates at the beginning of August, weeks after the tariff rate pause is set to expire.</p>

<p>"President Trump's going to be sending letters to some of our trading partners saying that if you don't move things along, then on Aug. 1, you will boomerang back to your April 2 tariff level," Bessent said in an interview on CNN's "State of the Union." "So I think we're going to see a lot of deals very quickly."</p>

<p>President Donald Trump had originally set a 90-day deadline — set to expire Wednesday — for countries to renegotiate the eye-watering tariff levels he laid out in his April 2 "Liberation Day" speech. He paused those rates a week later, while setting a new 90-day deadline to renegotiate them.</p>

<p>That deadline was set to expire Wednesday.</p>

<p>CNN host Dana Bash responded to Bessent on Sunday, saying, "There's basically a new deadline," prompting Bessent to push back.</p>

<p>"It's not a new deadline. We are saying this is when it's happening," Bessent said. "If you want to speed things up, have at it. If you want to go back to the old rate, that's your choice."</p>

<p>On Friday, Trump, too, referred to an Aug. 1 deadline, raising questions about whether the July 9 deadline still stands. A White House spokesperson did not provide a comment when asked to clarify whether the April 2 tariff rates would resume July 9 or Aug. 1.</p>

<p>The president has recently given shifting descriptions of how firm the July 9 deadline is, saying at the end of June, "We can extend it, we can shorten it," only to double down on it several days later, saying he was not thinking about extending it.</p>

<p>Shortly after midnight Friday, Trump referred to an Aug. 1 timeline, telling reporters that the April 2 tariff rates would resume at the start of August.</p>

<p>Asked whether the U.S. would be flexible with any countries about on the July 9 deadline, Trump said, "Not really."</p>

<p>"They'll start to pay on Aug. 1," he added. "The money will start to come into the United States on Aug. 1, OK, in pretty much all cases."</p>

<p>Trump said Friday that the administration would start sending letters to countries, adding, "I think by the 9th they'll be fully covered."</p>

<p>"They'll range in value from maybe 60% or 70% tariffs to 10% and 20% tariffs, but they're going to be starting to go out sometime tomorrow," Trump said overnight on Friday. "We've done the final form, and it's basically going to explain what the countries are going to be paying in tariffs."</p>

<p>Trump said in a Truth Social post late Sunday evening that tariff letters would be delivered starting at noon on Monday.</p>

<p>Bessent also said Sunday that "many of these countries never even contacted us."</p>

<p>Tariffs are paid by importers — which can pass on part or all of the costs to consumers — and not necessarily by entities in the goods' country of origin.</p>

<p>The White House had initially projected confidence that dozens of countries would try to make deals. White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said on NBC News' "Meet the Press" in April that "we've got 90 deals in 90 days possibly pending here." Late last month, Trump said, "Everybody wants to make a deal," and after he announced sweeping tariffs on April 2, he said countries were "calling us up, kissing my a--."</p>

<p>"They are," he said in April. "They are dying to make a deal. 'Please, please, sir, make a deal. I'll do anything.'"</p>

<p>The renewed uncertainty is likely to further upset markets, where stock futures went lower Friday after Trump mentioned the country letters. Stocks have returned to all-time highs in part due to the lull in tariff news.</p>

<p>So far, Trump has imposed higher import duties on autos and auto parts, steel and aluminum, and goods from China and Vietnam.</p>

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We didn't invite any kids to our 5-year-old's birthday. It was the best decision we ever made.

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  • We didn't invite any kids to our 5-year-old's birthday. It was the best decision we ever made.</p>

<p>Kalmar TheodoreJuly 2, 2025 at 5:00 PM</p>

<p>The author's family (not pictured) decided to spend a day at the beach instead of throwing a big birthday party for their 5-year-old.AscentXmedia/Getty Images -</p>

<p>Hosting a birthday party for kids can put a lot of pressure on parents.</p>

<p>We chose to skip the expense and effort this year, and spent a day at the beach with our daughter.</p>

<p>The low-key day allowed us to focus on connection and making memories.</p>

<p>When our child's fifth birthday came around, we found ourselves utterly exhausted not just from the day-to-day work of parenting, but from the pressure that seems to accompany birthday parties these days. Pinterest-perfect themes. Goodie bags with custom stickers. Bounce house rentals booked three months out. It had started to feel less like a celebration of our child's life and more like a tiny wedding, complete with logistics, financial stress, and a whole lot of performative joy.</p>

<p>So we did something that felt radical, even a little taboo: we didn't invite any kids. No classmates. No cousins. No carefully managed RSVP spreadsheet. Instead, we packed a cooler, baked a cake, grabbed a kite, and headed to the beach. It was just the three of us.</p>

<p>There were no crowds, no timelines, no pressure to socialize or small talk our way through another parental rite of passage. Just waves, sand, wind, and a very happy five-year-old chasing seagulls and licking chocolate frosting off her fingers.</p>

<p>It was the best birthday celebration any of us have ever had.</p>

<p>Our small celebration allowed us to connect</p>

<p>The shift was subtle but profound. Instead of orchestrating a timeline of activities and making sure everyone else's kid was fed, hydrated, and entertained, we got to be fully with our daughter. We swam. We laughed. We got sand in our sandwiches and didn't care. We sang "Happy Birthday" without the background noise of a dozen distracted toddlers. Our daughter wasn't missing out — she was soaking in undivided attention, connection, and the freedom to just be.</p>

<p>In hindsight, what surprised me most wasn't just how well our small gathering went, but how deeply it revealed the quiet stress so many of us have normalized. There's a kind of parenting performance that creeps in around birthdays. We feel it in the Instagram posts, the subtle comparisons, the urge to not let our kid be "the one" with the low-key celebration. We tell ourselves it's for them, but so often, it's about us. About proving something our love, our effort, our place in the parenting pack.</p>

<p>Instead of a big party, my daughter got our undivided attention for her birthday.Courtesy of Kalmar Theodore.Memories were made</p>

<p>Now I've realized that saying no to the spectacle is its own kind of love. What if scaling back isn't about depriving our kids, but about showing up more fully?</p>

<p>I know not everyone can take a beach day. I know there are kids who want the party, the crowd, the glitter tattoos and that's beautiful, too. But I think there's room in the conversation for stories like ours. For birthdays that are slow and sandy. For quiet decisions that go against the grain and end up feeling just right.</p>

<p>Weeks later, our daughter still brings up that day. "Remember my beach birthday?" she'll say, and her whole face lights up. She doesn't mention presents or party favors. She remembers the pelicans. The chocolate cake. Us.</p>

<p>I'm not here to spark a party backlash or say there's one right way to celebrate. But I do want to offer this: if the birthday pressure is getting to you, you're not alone. And opting out even just once might give you the space to opt in more fully to what matters. No goodie bags required.</p>

<p>on Business Insider</p>

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We didn't invite any kids to our 5-year-old's birthday. It was the best decision we ever made.

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Daily Briefing: Devastation at Camp Mystic

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  • Daily Briefing: Devastation at Camp Mystic</p>

<p>Nicole Fallert, USA TODAY July 7, 2025 at 5:11 AM</p>

<p>Good morning!🙋🏼‍♀️ I'm Nicole Fallert. I just wanna to be held like this golden retriever.</p>

<p>Quick look at Monday's news: -</p>

<p>Search and rescue efforts press onward in central Texas following a deadly flash flood.</p>

<p>Will tariff deals with foreign trade partners actually happen?</p>

<p>About 39 million Americans don't use AC.</p>

<p>Camp Mystic and a deadly Texas flash flood</p>

<p>Authorities continue a desperate search to find missing people after historic flash floods swept across central Texas — including 10 children from Camp Mystic, an all-girls camp.</p>

<p>The death toll rises as forecasters warn of more rain: State and local authorities said at least 81 people have died in flooding triggered by unrelenting rain Thursday night into Friday.</p>

<p>What happened at Camp Mystic? Anguished parents await updates on the children still missing from a 99-year-old nondenominational Christian summer camp caught in the deluge.</p>

<p>Warnings for the flooding came with little time to act. The hilly terrain and the trickiness of predicting flash floods made forecasting – and alerting communities along the Guadalupe River in real time – particularly challenging.</p>

<p>How bad was the flooding and is the weather expected to get worse? The gauge on the Guadalupe River near Kerrville surged from less than two feet to more than 34 feet in just over an hour on July 4. On Sunday, forecasters expected several more inches of rain and warned of additional flooding and a worsening of conditions on the ground.</p>

<p>🤝 Here's how to help in the aftermath of the Texas flooding.</p>

<p>A view inside of a cabin at Camp Mystic.Kentucky governor hits Medicaid cuts in Trump's megabill'What that means is our economy takes a huge hit. You lose 200 jobs from doctors and nurses and orderlies and all of a sudden the coffee shop does worse, the bank doesn't have as many folks coming in. This is going to hit rural America right in the face.'</p>

<p>~ Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear argued in a Sunday interview the Medicaid cuts in President Donald Trump's sweeping tax policy bill will have a "devastating" impact on rural communities.</p>

<p>USA TODAY is covering Trump's 'big beautiful bill': -</p>

<p>Will Trump's bill come back to haunt Republicans?</p>

<p>Here are some of the most impactful parts of the bill for your finances and daily life.</p>

<p>States that spend on border security just got a $10 billion payday.</p>

<p>Many Americans assume Medicare will cover their long term care. That might not be true.</p>

<p>More news to know now -</p>

<p>Thousands of Haitian immigrants living in Ohio on Temporary Protected Status are making plans to leave the country.</p>

<p>New aerial photos of the "Alligator Alcatraz" immigration detention center show detainees in Miami.</p>

<p>Trump slammed Musk after the billionaire announced a new political party.</p>

<p>Measles cases hit a significant benchmark.</p>

<p>When do 2025 AP scores come out?</p>

<p>What's the weather today? Check your local forecast here.</p>

<p>A tariff deadline looms this week</p>

<p>The United States is close to clinching several trade deals ahead of a July 9 deadline when higher tariffs were due to kick in, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said, predicting several big announcements in coming days. Bessent told CNN's "State of the Union" that President Donald Trump would also send out letters to 100 smaller countries with whom the U.S. doesn't have much trade, notifying them that they would face higher tariff rates first set on April 2 and then suspended until July 9 by the start of next month. See where trade agreements stand now.</p>

<p>Can you turn the AC off?</p>

<p>Roughly 12% of Americans don't use AC, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. While many can't afford it or don't need it because they live in cooler climates, others choose to forgo air conditioning to lower their carbon footprint. Residential energy use, which includes cooling, heating and powering homes, accounts for roughly 20% of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S., experts say, and many Americans are switching their AC "off" to do better for the planet. Here's how giving up AC could break the "vicious cycle" of climate change.</p>

<p>Today's talkers -</p>

<p>Charlize Theron can't wait to turn 50.</p>

<p>Maybe don't try a coffee enema.</p>

<p>We're reaching for a comfort read.</p>

<p>Olivia Rodrigo and Gracie Abrams are having a "hard launch summer."</p>

<p>Here's why you should eat more cantaloupe this summer.</p>

<p>Why wait for Prime Day?</p>

<p>The 2025 Prime Day sale officially begins on Tuesday, July 8, but the early deals are already alive and well. If you're eager to get a head start on summer savings, you don't have to wait. Seriously, you can find our favorite mini chainsaw for less than $40, get an incredibly popular Dell laptop for 73% off and even save a few bucks on a funky sun hat with built-in fans. From smart home gadgets and kitchen appliances to travel gear and tech upgrades, these early deals are packed with value.</p>

<p>Photo of the day: Americans at the All England Club</p>

<p>The United States entered Wimbledon 2025 with its largest combined contingent of singles players since 1999. There are four Americans remaining in the Wimbledon draw, and none of them have won a major. Emma Navarro and Ben Shelton are each set to play Monday.</p>

<p>Fans celebrate getting a towel from U.S. player Ben Shelton at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club on Saturday in London, England.</p>

<p>Nicole Fallert is a newsletter writer at USA TODAY, sign up for the email here. Want to send Nicole a note? Shoot her an email at [email protected].</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Texas flood, Camp Mystic, Trump bill, tariff, heat, weather, Prime Day, Wimbledon: Daily Briefing</p>

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Daily Briefing: Devastation at Camp Mystic

<p>- Daily Briefing: Devastation at Camp Mystic</p> <p>Nicole Fallert, USA TODAY July 7, 2025 at 5...

 

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