First thing: Trump warns "Nothing will stop me" at rally tagged Day 100 | U.S. News

Good morning.

"Nothing can stop him" at a rally in Michigan to celebrate his 100th day in the office, where he once again mentioned his aide in 2028 - despite our president being constitutionally banned from the third term.

In a tortuous speech at a campaign-style rally, Trump attacked the "communist radical left-wing judge" who sought to thwart his plans, criticized President Joe Biden and boasted about ending diversity, equity and inclusion "nonsense."

The event — a semi-filled sports and expo center in Warren near Detroit — also showed a video to the crowd, in which a section of Venezuelan immigrants were sent from the United States to the notorious prison in El Salvador.

Trump also defended his serious tariffs on automakers, despite the White House announcements that it would be hours before weakening them.

United States and Britain launch joint strike in Hoshis, Yemen

RAF Typhoon FGR4 fighter jets participated in a strike against Iran-backed Hushis in Yemen. Photo: Anadolu/Getty Images

According to the British Ministry of Defense, U.S. and British forces conducted a joint military operation in Yemen on Tuesday, which the department said the attack was an attack on Houthi military targets that built drones.

British Defense Minister John Healey said the action was in response to "Houtis' ongoing threat to freedom of navigation".

This is the first time the UK has participated in a fierce campaign against an Iran-backed group targeting merchant transport and Western warships, causing a sharp drop in trade flows in the region.

Trump's border draft pick accused of "covering" the "covering" suffered by someone beaten by American agents

Trump and Rodney Scott were on the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona in 2020. Photo by Carlos Baria/Reuters

Donald Trump's Choice Rodney Scott was charged by former senior official Rodney Scott for organizing a "coverup" over a man he was detained in an attempt to enter the U.S. from Mexico, according to a letter from The Guardian.

The Senate Finance Committee will consider Scott's nomination on Wednesday. But ahead of the hearing, James Wong, former deputy assistant commissioner of the CBP's Interior Office, wrote to the committee on how the former U.S. Border Patrol chief handled an investigation into the 2010 death of Anastasio Hernánandez-Rojas in San Diego in 2010.

Hernández-Rojas died after he was beaten and shocked by CBP agents who were ready to expel him.

In other news…

Tagarrog Prison is notorious for being used as a torture center for Ukrainian prisoners. Comprehensive: Alex Mellon of Guardian: AFP/Getty Images/Yandex Maps/slidstvo.info

Bureau of Daily Statistics: One in 5 states in the U.S. have a measles outbreak

Measles test marks in Texas. Photo: Sebastian Rocandio/Reuters

One in five states in the U.S. have a measles outbreak, defined as a disease that was previously eradicated in three or more cases. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed that the number of measles cases is 884 - triple the number of all cases in 2024. Texas is the center of the outbreak, with the latest count of 663 cases.

Don't miss this: White Afrikaners line up to accept Trump's asylum proposal

Demonstrators accuse South Africa of persecuting the Dutch, rally in February at the U.S. Embassy at Donald Trump in Pretoria. Photo: Pied / Reuters

Kyle, a three divorced father, attributes his survival of violent farm robbery in South Africa to divine intervention. He is one of thousands of South Africans who want to accept Trump’s proposed refugee status, evading crime and what they claim to be anti-white discrimination. Rachel Savage, the Southern African correspondent of the Guardian, told them why they were leaving - and experts explaining the background.

Climate Check: India and Pakistan are already stuffy in the "new normal" of heat wave

A volunteer squirted water on a passerby on an unusually hot day in Karachi, Pakistan to calm him down. Photo: Asif Hassan/AFP/Getty Images

It was only April, but the boiling temperatures had reached most parts of India and Pakistan. Scientists say that such a stuffy heat wave at the beginning of this year is becoming the "new normal" and that South Asia is particularly vulnerable to global heating. In Pakistan, the city of Shaheed Benazirabad in Sindh Province hit 122F (50C) in April.

One last thing: Kangaroos close Alabama interstate

Kangaroos on the Alabama Interstate. Comprehensive: Austin Price | Facebook

An escaped kangaroo closed a series of interstate highways in Alabama on Tuesday until state police and their owners managed to calm and capture the animal, named Sheila, and return her to her owner. "We see everything here," the Macon County sheriff said.

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