Monday, July 14, 2025

Reading archive 2025-07-14

Tariffs give the U.S.’s only native caffeinated plant a shot at stardom: Yaupon, a holly, may be little-known outside Indigenous groups, but that may soon change thanks to tea and coffee tariffs.

The CIA reveals more of its connections to Lee Harvey Oswald: New documents show an officer known only as Howard managed a Cuban group that interacted with Oswald in the months before the JFK assassination. - "He said a plausible theory was rogue CIA officers created the conspiracy to assassinate Kennedy, unknown to the agency, and that 'the CIA covered it up not because they were involved, but because they were trying to hide the secrets of that period.' He said many in the CIA were angry with Kennedy after he withdrew support for the agency’s Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1961 as well as for his gradual move toward peace with the Soviet Union after the Cuban missile crisis of 1962."

Putin took Trump for granted. He’s going to pay for his mistake.: After the president’s startling, welcome shift on Ukraine, there’s more to do.

Budget woes jeopardize plan for costly new D.C. Archives building: Supporters of new building discouraged as D.C. mayor’s spending plan envisions more affordable option to house Duke Ellington’s birth certificate, Frederick Douglass’s will and other pieces of history.

Two men sentenced in killing of D.C. girl, ending years of prosecutions: In all, eight men and one woman, most convicted of murder, have been sent to prison for the 2018 shooting of 10-year-old Makiyah Wilson, a crime that stunned the city.

Where D.C. Council Ward 8 candidates stand on key issues: The four candidates, all Democrats, were asked questions on issues such as the redevelopment of RFK Stadium, housing and policing in the ward.

A clinic blames its closing on Trump’s Medicaid cuts. Patients don’t buy it.: A clinic in rural Nebraska has become a political flash point after tying its looming closure to Trump’s law cutting Medicaid. - "Down the road on the town’s main street lined with American flags, Kerri Kemp said she didn’t like the Medicaid cuts either. The 47-year-old got Medicaid coverage after Nebraska voters chose to expand eligibility for the program in 2018, adopting an optional part of President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul. But it was hard to document all her work as a bartender, county worker and rancher, and recently she’d struggled to submit the paperwork. Now she is uninsured. 

"Work requirements could make it harder to qualify when they take effect in 2027, just after the 2026 midterms. But Kemp, a lifelong Republican and Trump supporter, doesn’t hold that against Trump and suggested he might change course. 'I really think he’s gonna do something,' she said." [ed. note: perfect, no notes]

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