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FBI Raid, Little League, and Australia's Area 51

The Little League World Series enters its homestretch this weekend. Find this story and more in today's digest.

 

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Good morning. It's Saturday, Aug. 23, and in this weekend edition, we're covering a federal probe into a former Trump adviser, youth baseball championships, and much more. First time reading? Join over 4.5 million intellectually curious readers. Sign up here.

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One Big Headline
 

FBI Raids Ex-Trump Adviser

The FBI yesterday executed a court-authorized search of the Maryland home and Washington, DC, office of John Bolton, a first-term Trump administration national security adviser turned critic of the president. The raid was reportedly part of an investigation into whether Bolton mishandled classified information. Bolton has not been arrested or charged with any crimes as of this writing.

 

After his time as President Donald Trump’s national security adviser from April 2018 to September 2019, Bolton wrote a memoir critical of Trump's administration. The Justice Department under Trump unsuccessfully opened a lawsuit and criminal investigation to block the book’s 2020 release on the grounds that the book contained classified material. Regarding yesterday's raid, Trump told reporters he had no prior knowledge of the operation.

 

Meanwhile, yesterday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth authorized some National Guardsmen patrolling Washington, DC, to begin carrying firearms this weekend. Trump suggested his administration may take similar measures in other major cities, including Chicago and New York.

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Quick Hits
 

Federal Reserve may soon cut interest rates.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaled possible interest rate cuts in a speech yesterday at the central bank's annual meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Powell cited a recent slowdown in monthly job growth as a reason for potential rate cuts. The Federal Reserve will meet next in September; it has kept rates unchanged for five consecutive meetings since December. US stock markets closed higher (S&P 500 +1.5%, Dow +1.9%, Nasdaq +1.9%).

 

Intel to give US government nearly 10% stake.

Approximately $8.9B in federal grants awarded but not yet paid to Intel under the 2022 CHIPS Act and the Pentagons's Secure Enclave program will be converted to equity. Under the deal, the government will become Intel's largest shareholder but will not take a board seat or have decision-making rights. The government could get another 5% stake if Intel's ownership of its contract manufacturing business drops below 51%. The chipmaker's shares closed up 5.5% on the news.

 

DOJ releases recent Ghislaine Maxwell interviews.

The Justice Department yesterday released interviews conducted last month between Maxwell—convicted of aiding Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking operation—and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. Maxwell said she never saw President Donald Trump engage in inappropriate behavior, former President Bill Clinton never visited Epstein's private island, and she did not believe Epstein died by suicide, among other claims. See developing takeaways from the 329-page transcript here.

 

Little League World Series enters homestretch.

The final four teams compete in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania, today for a spot in tomorrow's championship game (3 pm ET, ABC). Nevada and Connecticut face off in the US bracket final at 3:30 pm ET today after Chinese Taipei takes on Aruba in the international bracket final at 12:30 pm ET. All players are between the ages of 10 and 12, and the games typically have six innings, as opposed to Major League Baseball's nine. Learn more about the league's rules here.

 

Canada to drop retaliatory tariffs on many US goods.

Prime Minister Mark Carney announced yesterday Canada will remove 25% counter-tariffs on US products covered under the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement by Sept. 1. The move matches American policy, which exempts Canada's USMCA-compliant goods from US tariffs, and came after the nation's leaders spoke by phone Thursday. Canada's 25% levies on US autos, steel, and aluminum will hold. 

 

UN-backed body confirms famine in Gaza.

After 22 months of war, over half a million people in the Gaza City region are experiencing famine, according to the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification. The global authority on hunger yesterday raised its food insecurity assessment in the area to its highest level. The initiative expects famine to hit the southern Gaza Strip within weeks if Israel does not end restrictions on humanitarian aid deliveries.

 

Judge orders wind-down of Alligator Alcatraz

A US district judge ordered Florida and the federal government to stop sending immigrants to a detention center in the Everglades, known as “Alligator Alcatraz,” and to dismantle much of the center within 60 days (read previous write-up). The judge sided with environmentalists and the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians, who argued the facility was built without proper environmental reviews. Florida filed notice of its intent to appeal.

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Humankind
 

Woman seeking grandchildren becomes "Nana J" to two twin boys. (More)

 

Bride and groom, who met while working at a senior living center, invite the residents to their wedding. (More

 

Stepfather with no biological children learns his stepdaughter named her newborn after him. (More, w/video)

 

Eleven-year-old girl gets heart transplant after over 200 days in the hospital. (More

 

Citywide search reunites a blind Chicago man with his service and emotional support dog, Bam Bam. (More)

In partnership with Med-X

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Their all-natural pesticides have outperformed chemical brands in independent lab tests in some use cases, providing safer solutions without sacrificing results. Their products are already available through e-commerce giants like Walmart, Amazon, and Kroger, and they plan to expand internationally.

 

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Humankind(ness)
 

Today, we're sharing a story from reader Roni P. in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.

 

"While vacationing at Point Pleasant Beach, my daughter, grandson, and I stopped at Salty’s Inlet Ice Cream. We had never been there before but it looked inviting with nice outdoor seating. We were eating our ice cream, which was delicious, and the sky became quite dark and the wind started blowing. The owner came out to close the umbrellas and asked if we needed help to our car with the stroller. When we said we walked, he insisted his wife drive us home." 

 

What act(s) of kindness did you experience this week? Tell us here.

Etcetera
 

Bookkeeping

> 55: Most rollercoasters ridden in one week, achieved by this adrenaline junkie.

> 29 minutes, 3 seconds: How long a Croatian freediver held his breath underwater, beating the last world record by nearly five minutes and about doubling the time managed by bottlenose dolphins.

 

Browse 

Twin giant panda cubs, Leni and Lotti, celebrate their first birthday.  

> Photos show 2,000-year-old artifacts from sunken Egyptian city.

> Ketchup was once prescribed as a remedy for diarrhea.

The cost of five years of daycare today.

The rise of the "coolcation."

... and destinations where tourists outnumber locals.

 

Listen 

Why parents are opting out of public schools.

> Australia has its own Area 51

 

Watch 

Can saunas make you live longer?   

Professional chefs blind taste test 27 salsas.

... and why seedless fruits are a disaster in the making.

 

Long Read 

How everything we do is authenticated, stored, and scored

America is setting its mouth on fire.

> These 14 empty nesters are reimagining their lives.

 

Most Clicked This Week: The controversial rise of grandma showers.

 

Historybook: Actor River Phoenix born (1970); Salad Bowl strike begins; largest farmworker strike in US history (1970); Kobe Bryant born (1978); 12-time Olympic swimming medalist Natalie Coughlin born (1982); India becomes fourth country to successfully land on the moon (2023).  

"Without goals, training has no direction."

- Natalie Coughlin

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*Disclosure: This is a paid advertisement for Med-X’s Regulation A+ Offering. Please read the offering circular at https://invest.medx-rx.com/

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