Welcome to the Weekend Briefing. We recount the two days of terror in Minnesota sparked by Vance Boelter's shooting rampage. It's a very good read. This weekend's edition of the World News podcast traces Iran's evolution from monarchy to Islamic Republic – and what its future might look like. Our latest edition of City Memo takes us to Houston, where the kids practice the fine art of mutton busting. (Look it up.)
Victory for rights groups: A U.S. judge said the government made no attempt to rebut evidence provided by lawyers that the Columbia University graduate and pro-Palestinian activist was not a flight risk or a danger to the public. The Los Angeles Dodgers pledged $1 million for helping families of immigrants hit by detentions and deportations. The team also denied ICE access to their parking lots.
In other Trump news: The Supreme Court declined to speed up its consideration of whether to take up a challenge to Trump's tariffs before lower courts have ruled in the dispute. The NAACP said it would not invite Trump to its annual convention, the first time in its history that it has not asked a sitting president to attend. Trump Mobile pulled its smartphone coverage map after some users noted the presence of the words "Gulf of Mexico" instead of "Gulf of America."
'…that is ours': Vladimir Putin said he did not question Ukraine's independence, but indicated that Russia intends to hold the fifth of Ukraine that it controls. He also said he considered Russians and Ukrainians one people, and "in that sense the whole of Ukraine is ours."
Renewing allegiances: Ukrainians will be able to hold dual or multiple citizenship under a law passed in parliament that tries to ease a demographic crisis exacerbated by the war with Russia. The law also would make it easier for foreigners fighting for Ukraine to become citizens.
The forecast: Extreme rainfall and severe flooding, which meteorologists link to climate change, pose major challenges for China and its $2.8 trillion agriculture sector. Read more in our Sustainable Switch newsletter about environmental challenges in Chile, India and Mexico.
A punch in the solar plexus: Republican-led states captured 75% of the manufacturing investments spawned by President Biden's tax credits for solar and clean energy. Now, Trump's "big beautiful bill" could end them entirely. Read how investors are placing their bets now that the Senate and House have produced two versions of the legislation.
Do you want legs with that? Foxconn and Nvidia are discussing whether to use humanoid robots to make Nvidia AI servers, which would mark a milestone in the adoption of such robots in manufacturing. A Foxconn executive said one version comes with legs, while a cheaper version relies on wheels.
Special Report: More U.S. teenagers are using Wegovy. Proponents say it gives adolescents a chance at a healthier future and can ease the harm of teasing and social isolations. Others cite a lack of long-term safety data, nutritional harm and eating disorders. We spoke with children who are using the drug.
Salvage experts lifted Mike Lynch's sunken superyacht 10 months after it sank off the coast of Sicily, killing the tech tycoon, his daughter and five others.
Tribes from the Indian state of Nagaland held talks at a museum in Britain to secure the return of ancestral remains taken during the colonial era and put on display for decades.
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