The Headlines - Trump’s New Trade Threats, and the Return of Land Mines
Episode Date: July 8, 2025Plus, your next job interview might be with A.I.On Today’s Episode:Trump Revives Trade War, Threatening Steep Aug. 1 Tariffs on Allies, by Ana Swanson and Tony RommTexas Flood Death Toll Tops 100 Wi...th More Rain to Fall, by Jesus Jiménez, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Rick Rojas and Soumya KarlamanglaLand Mines, a Cold War Horror, Could Return to Fortify Europe’s Borders, by Andrew HigginsWhy Are Protesters in Mexico City Angry at Remote Workers?, by Emiliano Rodríguez Mega, Paulina Villegas and Simon RomeroWelcome to Your Job Interview. Your Interviewer Is A.I., by Natallie RochaTune 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.
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today is Tuesday, July 8th.
Here's what we're covering.
President Trump is reframing his tariff plans and rolling out new threats of a trade war.
After shocking the global economy with tariffs in the 20, 30, 40 plus percent range back
in April, he put them on hold.
Trump said the pause would allow for negotiations to get the U.S. more favorable trade agreements,
and his administration promised they would use the 90 days to get 90 deals.
Those 90 days are up tomorrow with just two provisional deals in place.
And now Trump is pushing back his deadline
and taking aim at countries who haven't been negotiating
as quickly as he wants.
So we just send him a letter.
If you want to play ball, this is what you have to pay.
Yesterday, he told Japan and South Korea
that they'll face tariffs of 25% starting August 1st.
If they call up and they say,
we'd like to do something a different way, we're going
to be open to that. But essentially, that's the way it is right now.
The countries are significant trading partners for the U.S.
They're the number two and three sources of auto imports.
They also ship a lot of steel and electronics.
Markets dropped at the news of Trump's latest threats as investors reacted to the prospect
of more trade conflict.
Economists say the shifting deadlines and strong arm tactics are feeding the uncertainty
that's kept people on edge for months.
The frequent changes have led many businesses to put hiring and investment plans on hold
to see how things will shake out. I've said this a hundred times and I will say it again.
We need your prayers.
We need your prayers.
In Texas, search and rescue teams are still scouring the debris along the Guadalupe River,
looking for those swept away in the recent flash floods.
Officials say the death toll has now risen
to more than 100 people,
and have suggested that their efforts are transitioning
from saving lives to recovering bodies.
In the aftermath of the disaster,
state leaders are facing questions
about how prepared the region was for the intense rainfall.
Had we had sirens along this area, up and down,
that would have blown very loudly,
it's possible that that would have saved some of these lives.
In an interview with Fox News,
Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick said
even if the local government can't afford a flood warning system,
the state will step in to install one by next summer.
The county had previously rejected one because of the cost.
Texas already has a growing backlog of flood management projects, totaling more than $50
billion.
For more on the devastating flooding, listen to today's episode of The Daily, a conversation
with a former camper from Camp Mystic, the all-girls Christian camp on the banks of the Guadalupe, where at least 27 people died in the flooding.
Russia's ongoing war in Ukraine has now prompted multiple European countries to turn
back to a deadly weapon that much of the world had largely abandoned. Landmines. Poland,
Finland, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, which all border Russia, have pulled out of a treaty
banning the use of mines. And Ukraine, with a stockpile of 3 million mines, has pledged
to do the same. For decades, activists had waged a largely successful campaign against
the weapon, pushing world leaders to ban them
and to dig up tens of millions of landmines across the globe.
They said the weapons do more harm to innocent people
than to soldiers and tanks.
The Red Cross estimates that 80% of deaths from landmines
are civilians, many of them children.
While Lithuania's defense minister
acknowledged the suffering the weapons have caused, he
told the Times that they are useful to halt or slow military attacks.
For example, Russia, which never agreed to the treaty, used mines to blunt a major Ukrainian
offensive in 2023.
The head of one anti-landmine group said she was furious about the idea of bringing back
the weapon, saying it, quote, opens up a dangerous can of worms for everyone.
In Mexico City this week, protesters took to the streets to rail against the influx of remote
workers from other countries. Demonstrators chanted,
gringos go home,
and speak Spanish or die,
and damaged businesses in some of the neighborhoods
most popular with foreigners.
These neighborhoods in Mexico City
have drastically transformed in the past few years,
particularly as more so-called digital nomads,
many of them American, have come to live in the city
permanently or temporarily.
There's this joke among Mexicans
that if you go to these neighborhoods,
you have to show your American visa just in order to enter.
Emiliano Rodriguez-Mega covers Mexico for the Times.
He says that longtime residents
of some of those neighborhoods are frustrated by the changing identity of the city, where
in some cafes or on some corners, there's more English spoken than Spanish. And they've
focused on the recent wave of workers from the U.S. who are living large on big American
salaries, even as the cost of living for local families skyrockets. While the escalation of the protests is new,
this is just the latest expression of tensions
that have been brewing in Mexico over gentrification.
What some experts have told me
is that the problem has deeper roots.
The thing that we've seen is that real estate developers
in Mexico City have driven up rents,
displaced long-term residents, we've seen is that real estate developers in Mexico City have, you know, driven up rents,
displaced long-term residents, and also like altered the character of these neighborhoods
for decades. Gentrification has been a constant and this is happening as Mexican incomes have
declined somewhat. There was a recent study that saw that some gentrified neighborhoods experienced an eightfold increase in housing prices from 2000 to 2022. So that's a lot.
And finally.
So you've applied for the new safety fellow position. I'll spend the next 15 minutes
asking a few questions and answering anything you like to know.
Sitting down for a job interview has always meant preparing to face a whole bunch of questions.
Let's dive in. How do you typically prioritize tasks when you're under pressure?
You've had to think about how you want to present yourself. How are you going to pitch your work style?
Will the interviewer like you? Now you've got to wonder what AI thinks about you.
The Times recently got a demo of technology that some people are already running into
on their job hunts.
An AI interviewer.
People are finding themselves face-to-face, or face-to-faceless voice, with something
known as agentic AI, where AI chat agents carry out real-time
conversations and build on a person's responses. While some parts of job hunting have been
automated for a long time, like anyone who's tried to front-load keywords in their resume
to trick an algorithm knows, the shift to AI interviews crosses a new line. Several
people who've faced them told the Times they felt it was dehumanizing.
One called it quote, some horror movie type stuff.
Another just hung up on hers part way through.
But the companies rolling out the new screening technology
said they're basically just trying to keep up
with the AI tech that job applicants are using.
People can now use AI to churn out tailored resumes
and cover letters at lightning speed
and apply to a ton of openings with just a few clicks. Sorting through all of that to find
actually qualified candidates is a monumental task. If you're thinking, wait, so an AI interviewer
is now asking people questions about their potentially AI-generated resume, yes, that is
where we're at. Basically one step away from one chatbot turning
to another chatbot to ask, so where do you see yourself in five years?
Those are the headlines. I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow.