The Headlines - Trump’s ‘Law and Order’ Crackdown on D.C., and Silicon Valley Embraces the Pentagon
Episode Date: August 12, 2025Plus, a quiet crisis for America’s jurors. On Today’s Episode:Trump Takes Control of D.C. Police, Citing ‘Bloodthirsty Criminals.’ But Crime Is Down, by Katie RogersThe Militarization of Sili...con Valley, by Sheera FrenkelTrump Extends China Tariff Truce by Three Months, by Alan RappeportTrump, Seeking Friendlier Economic Data, Names New Statistics Chief, by Tony Romm, Ben Casselman and Lydia DePillisAfter a Grisly Trial, Jurors Are Left With Mental Scars and Few Resources, by Liz KriegerSpace Rock That Punched Through Roof Almost Struck Resident, by Adeel HassanTune in every weekday morning. To get our full audio journalism and storytelling experience, download the New York Times Audio app — available to Times news subscribers on iOS — and sign up for our weekly newsletter.Tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Tuesday, August 12th.
Here's what we're covering.
Are you worried this is going to be a complete disaster?
I'm going to work every day to make sure it's not a complete disaster.
Let me put it that way.
In Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser says she's going to be closely watching how President Trump
promised crackdown on the city will play out. Trump announced yesterday that he's seizing federal
control of the city's police force and sending hundreds of National Guard troops to fight what
he called totally out-of-control crime. And while this action today is unsettling and unprecedented,
I can't say that given some of the rhetoric of the past, that we're totally surprised.
This is Liberation Day in D.C. and we're going to take our country.
capital back. We're taking it back.
At a press conference yesterday, Trump painted a picture of D.C. as an urban hellscape and said he
was invoking a 1970s law that gives the president the power to take over the district's
police department for up to 30 days.
Our capital city has been overtaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving
mobs of wild youth, drugged out maniacs and homeless people, and we're not going to let it happen
anymore. We're not going to take it.
Trump's apocalyptic description of D.C., though, ignored the fact that violent crime there
has dropped sharply since the pandemic and is now at a 30-year low. And as of earlier this year,
the level of homelessness has also declined. Details of the president's plans for D.C.
were still being worked out as he made his announcement. And it's not clear, for example,
where National Guard troops will be deployed, or what will happen to the homeless people
Trump vowed to clear out.
We have other cities that are very bad. New York has a problem.
And then you have, of course, Baltimore and Oakland.
We don't even mention that anymore. They're so far gone.
The president also suggested that he could turn his attention to other Democrat-led cities next.
Earlier this summer, Trump deployed nearly 5,000 National Guard troops, along with active-duty Marines, to L.A., after protests erupted over immigration raids there.
Political scientists and military experts the Times interviewed said the deployments Trump has ordered
to show how he's increasingly drawing the country's armed forces into partisan political issues.
One expert told the Times that Trump seized the military as a, quote,
one-size-fits-all solution as he tries to accomplish his domestic political priorities.
Meanwhile, the Times has been looking at a time.
at how the Pentagon, under President Trump, has been strengthening its ties to Silicon Valley.
The U.S. Army has created a new unit, Detachment 201, that it says will, quote, fuse cutting-edge
tech expertise with military innovation.
And that has to support and depend, the Constitution in the United States, against all that.
And this summer, four current and former executives at Meta, OpenAI, and the Data Giant Palantir, were sworn in.
at a ceremony to serve in the unit.
So help me do it.
For years, a close partnership
between the military and Silicon Valley
was really out of the question.
They put language into their terms,
which specified that they would not do work with the military.
So you really saw across Silicon Valley
a turning away from the defense establishment.
Shearrenkel covers the tech industry for the times.
She says now the tech world
has instead plunged headfirst into
the military industrial complex. Open AI is making anti-dron tech. Meta is making virtual reality
glasses to train soldiers for battle. And companies like Google, which used to have specific
policies banning the use of its AI and weapons, have dropped those. There isn't one specific
reason that these companies are now rushing towards a defense tech, but a few different factors
are involved. The wars in Ukraine and Gaza, which relied heavily on new to
like AI-backed military systems and drones
have shown that new defense technology
will be crucial for any modernized military.
The Trump administration has said
they want to invest heavily in new defense technology
and the new budget that was recently passed
earmarks over a trillion dollars,
much of it for new defense tech.
Silicon Valley has always been about chasing
what's new on the scene
and right now that's defense tech.
None of these companies
from the really big ones like meta,
and Google to the smallest startups want to be left behind.
Now, two more updates on the Trump administration.
President Trump is buying more time as his negotiators try and reach a deal with the country's
largest trading partner, China. He signed an executive order late last night,
extending a trade truce with the country. That'll keep tariffs on most Chinese goods
around 30%. That's still much higher than when he's.
took office, but nowhere near the eye-popping levels that he originally threatened.
Trump said the negotiations have been going, quote, quite nicely, though there are still a number
of sticking points, including the president's last-minute demand that China quadruple its purchase
of American soybeans. The talks are now set to continue for another 90 days until the new deadline
in early November. Also, President Trump has announced his new pick to run the Bureau of Labor
statistics, just weeks after he fired the previous commissioner when the agency published data
showing weak job growth. Trump called the report rigged. The firing set off a wave of criticism
from economists who warned that officials could now feel pressure only to release data that makes
the White House look good, and that could erode the agency's credibility. Trump's new nominee for
the position is E.J. Antony, who's currently chief economist at the Heritage Foundation, the conservative
think tank behind Project 2025 and other right-wing initiatives.
Announcing Antony's nomination, Trump wrote,
Our economy is booming, and E.J. will ensure that the numbers released are honest and accurate.
And Tony will need to be confirmed by the Senate.
Across the country, a handful of state and local governments are trying to help tackle a little-known
issue affecting Americans who show up for jury duty. People who are called up and sit for days or
weeks of a trial can often be exposed to deeply disturbing information. They're asked to listen
closely to testimony about horrific experiences and to scrutinize sometimes grisly photos and videos.
They also can't talk about what they're going through with anyone while the trial is ongoing,
not even their fellow jurors. One woman who was an alternate juror on a murder case in New York told
the times, quote, all I could do was go to the movies after the day ended, sit in a dark
theater, and cry. Over the course of trials, mental health experts say jurors can develop
secondary traumatic stress, also known as vicarious trauma. One study found that as many as 50%
of jurors who served on difficult cases experienced symptoms like anxiety, sleep issues,
or feeling emotionally drained. For some people, those symptoms lasted years. Jurors
in federal trials can qualify for free counseling,
but now lawmakers at the state and local levels
are trying to expand those kinds of services.
Philadelphia, for example,
recently rolled out a post-trial counseling program for jurors
that draws on the same techniques used to provide emotional support
to emergency medical workers after they've encountered a traumatic situation.
And finally.
It was fiery orange.
with the blue tail and just coming straight down.
Earlier this summer, people in the southern U.S. reported a mysterious fireball.
It lit up the sky over South Carolina, Tennessee, and Georgia.
Some witnesses say it felt like an earthquake.
Scientists scrambled to figure out what it was.
They ultimately determined it was a meteor.
And it turns out one Georgia resident got a really up-close look.
A fragment of the space rock about the size of a cherry tomato punched,
through the roof of his house south of Atlanta. A geologist at the University of Georgia,
who's been studying the sample since it was recovered, just announced the space rock that
hit the house appears to be older than the Earth itself. The debris apparently missed the
homeowner by about 14 feet. He told the geologist he's still finding specs of space dust around
his living room. And while that may have been a close call, there have been closer. In 1954, a nine-pound
meteorite went through the roof of a home in Alabama. It bounced off a large radio and struck a
woman, leaving her with bruises, but nothing worse than that. That's believed to be the only documented
collision on record of a meteor actually hitting a human. Those are the headlines. Today on the
daily, more on what President Trump's plans for D.C. could mean for other cities across the country.
You can find that in the Listen tab of the New York Times app or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow.