Tag Archives: july 2025

THE NEW YORK TIMES – FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 2025

Netanyahu, Aiming to Capture Gaza City, Risks Ending in Familiar Deadlock

Time and again, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has pledged to defeat Hamas by force. The decision to capture Gaza City repeats a strategy that has failed in the past.

Trump Escalates a Fight Over How to Measure Merit in American Education

President Trump’s demand for college admissions data enters a debate over how grades and test scores should be weighed against less quantitative measures.

Can Russia’s Economy Withstand Trump’s Pressure?

The Russian economy was slowing even before President Trump’s latest threats. But the Kremlin has enough money to keep fighting in Ukraine.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2025

As Trump’s Tariffs Reorder World Trade, Hardest-Hit Countries Rush to Respond

Few major trading partners have been spared the import taxes, which have already disrupted supply chains and are expected to drive up prices for Americans.

What Putin Wants From a Meeting With Trump

President Vladimir Putin of Russia sees direct talks with President Trump as essential to achieving his ultimate aims in Ukraine.

Trumps Seeks New Census to Exclude Illegal Migrants

The census, which is mandated by the Constitution, is next due in 2030. President Trump tried a similar move during his first term, but was unsuccessful.

Trump’s Deals With Top Colleges May Give Rich Applicants a Bigger Edge

Demanded by President Trump, the public release of data on test scores and race could wind up making wealth even more influential in admissions.

TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT – AUGUST 8, 2025 PREVIEW

TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT: The latest issue features ‘Tech Bro Utopia’ – Why Bacon’s New Atlantis is Peter Thiel’s favorite book; The monarch who built Britain; Charles and the carbuncles; The miseries of Victor Hugo’s daughter…

THE NEW YORK TIMES – WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2025

Kennedy Cancels Nearly $500 Million in mRNA Vaccine Contracts

The vaccines, first used for Covid-19, can be developed quickly and altered as a virus changes. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been critical of the technology.

Rebuilding Faces, Lives and a Sense of Self in Ukraine

Surgeons have made significant strides in tending to the war’s wounded, particularly through the use of 3-D printing.

War Shattered His Face. Technology Helped Reconstruct It.

Truce Quiets Syrian City Torn by Sectarian Clashes

The fighting has stopped in Sweida, three weeks after a deadly eruption of violence. But the area remains tense as clashes continue beyond the city.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2025

Trump Says He Will Hit India With New Tariffs Within 24 Hours

President Trump has ratcheted up pressure over India’s purchases of Russian oil. India has said its treatment is “unjustified and unreasonable.”

Republicans Suddenly Distrust Jobs Data After Trump Fires Statistics Chief

Trump’s Deal-Making With Other Elite Schools Unsettles Harvard Negotiations

The university was open to President Trump’s demand of $500 million, but a $50 million settlement with Brown has prompted new debates in Cambridge, Mass.

As Vouchers Threaten Public Schools, Some Up Their Marketing Game

A decline in the number of children and rise in the number of choices has caused some public schools to try new strategies to recruit students.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2025

Netanyahu Squanders His Moment to Halt the War

After securing a victory over Iran, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel is pushing for an “all or nothing” deal with Hamas without offering compromises.

A Weakened Hezbollah Resists Pressure to Give Up Its Weapons

The Lebanese militant group has lost much of its power but is balking at demands to surrender whatever is left of its once formidable arsenal.

What’s It Like to Deal With Brutal U.S. Tariffs? Ask Malaysia.

The solar industry profited from Chinese investment. Now it’s becoming a case study of what happens when the U.S. closes its markets.

Texas Democrats Leave State to Block G.O.P. From Redrawing Political Map

Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, threatened to remove lawmakers who walked out if they did not return by Monday.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2025

Trump’s Efforts to Control Information Echo an Authoritarian Playbook

President Trump fired the official who compiled jobs data, underscoring his tendency to suppress facts he doesn’t like and promote his version of reality.

Until Trump Fired Her, She Was an Economist With Bipartisan Support

Erika McEntarfer led the agency that produced data on jobs and inflation. President Trump accused her of “rigging” the numbers, without offering evidence.

Trump’s Tariffs Are Making Money. That May Make Them Hard to Quit.

The tariffs imposed by President Trump are a substantial new source of revenue for the federal government, and the budget may start to depend on them.

No Passports, No Study Abroad: China Limits Public Employees’ Travel

Even low-level government employees like elementary school teachers and nurses have been ordered to hand in their passports, to enforce “discipline.”

Some Chinese in U.S. Weigh Painful Question: Stay or Flee Under Trump?

THE NEW YORK TIMES – SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 2025

Lashing Out Over Russia and Jobs Data, Trump Displays His Volatile Side

President Trump had been on a winning streak. But when faced with facts and foes that wouldn’t bend to his will, he responded with disproportionate intensity.

Trump, Claiming Weak Jobs Numbers Were ‘Rigged,’ Fires Labor Official

After a Lag, Consumers Begin to Feel the Pinch of Tariffs

There are growing signs that President Trump’s levies are filtering through to consumer prices, as companies exhaust options for keeping them stable.

Mike Huckabee, Israel’s Passionate Defender as Gaza War Drives Allies Away

Mr. Huckabee, a Baptist minister, is the first evangelical to serve as American ambassador to Israel. Christian conservatives and Israel’s government are pleased.

American Victims of Hamas and Hezbollah Attacks Sue U.N. Agency

THE NEW YORK TIMES – FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 2025

Employers Slow Hiring in July, Adding 73,000 Jobs

Chart showing job gains over the last 13 months. In July, the economy gained 73,000 jobs.

The U.S. labor market showed signs of weakening as job gains for the previous two months were also revised lower.


How Did Hunger Get So Much Worse in Gaza?

Less food is going into Gaza now than in most other times in the war. Many people have malnutrition, and Gazan health officials say scores have died.

Trump, Term-Limited, Amasses $200 Million War Chest for Political Ambitions

The money, raised by President Trump’s super PAC, is meant to beat Democrats. But some Republicans worry it could be used to beat Republicans, too.

Corruption Scandal Puts Mexico’s President on Defense

Claudia Sheinbaum, battling U.S. accusations that the cartels have gripped her government, is facing a scandal in which two former officials are on the run.

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – AUGUST 1, 2025 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features ‘The Peace Broker’ – How Qatar Became the Capital of Diplomacy’

As this week’s issue of the Guardian Weekly went to press, a UN-backed monitor said famine was now unfolding in Gaza. That statement came less than 24 hours after Donald Trump acknowledged for the first time that there was “real starvation” and told Israel to allow “every ounce of food” into Gaza. This week’s big story, led by on-the-ground reporting by Gaza-based journalist Malak A Tantash, focuses on the limited pause in fighting by Israel to allow aid deliveries.

Spotlight | Russia’s kamikaze attacks
Luke Harding reports from the frontline in Dnipropetrovsk as once-safe Ukrainian villages are abandoned and the last inhabitants leave their animals and vegetable gardens behind

Environment | Nature fakes
Photographer and author of The Anthropocene Illusion, Zed Nelson reflects on the how humans seek to recreate versions of the environments and creatures they have destroyed to satisfy their cravings to be in nature

Science | Life of plastics
The journey of a single thread is traced by Phoebe Weston and Tess McClure, from garment to field and onwards, to illustrate how ubiquitous microplastic pollution has become

Opinion | Queens of England
As we celebrate the Lionesses’ historic win, isn’t it time English football fans stopped chasing glory through their men’s teams when the women are the ones delivering, asks Ava Vidal

Culture | In the cradle of country music
As the Grand Ole Opry turns 100, Jewly Hight visits the Nashville institution to find out how it has kept reinventing itself while honouring tradition over the decades