
Israeli hospital suffers 'direct hit' from Iran as Netanyahu vows revenge and more top headlines
1. Israeli hospital suffers 'direct hit' from Iran as Netanyahu vows revenge
2. SpaceX Starship explodes during preparation for flight test
3. Vindicated Karen Read's 'fantastic' legal team propelled after verdict comes in
TYRANTS ON NOTICE – Netanyahu promises Iran will pay 'full price' after missile strikes. Continue reading …
BALLOT BREACH – Potential illegal voting being investigated in major red state. Continue reading …
ON HIGH ALERT – Top economist warns America is heading toward economic disaster the Fed can't fix. Continue reading …
IN THE WILDERNESS – Frustrated Democratic lawmakers call out party's 'division' amid DNC turmoil. Continue reading …
DANGER ZONE – California police plead for help amid officer shortage. Continue reading …
--
POWER PLAY SHOWDOWN – Senate divided on who gets to declare war. Continue reading …
QUIET RIFFS GROW – Trump downplays signs of MAGA unrest over possible military strike on Iran. Continue reading …
BUDGET BATTLE – Top Trump ally predicts Senate will blow past 'big, beautiful bill' deadline. Continue reading …
SILENCED – Vance booted from liberal platform after sharing Justice Thomas transgender opinion. Continue reading …
BACKDOOR THREAT – Biden cybersecurity program probed over China concerns. Continue reading …
BORDER BETRAYAL – Dem shredded for calling to put 'every single' illegal immigrant on a quick path to citizenship. Continue reading …
'DEVASTATING LOSS' – Media melts down over Supreme Court decision on gender transition ban for kids. Continue reading …
CELEB OUTRAGE – Singer Bad Bunny condemns Trump-era ICE operations occurring in Puerto Rico. Continue reading …
HUGH HEWITT – Morning Glory: President Trump and the biggest decision of his life. Continue reading …
DR. REBECCA GRANT – Containing Iran means crushing their nuclear ambitions before it's too late. Continue reading …
--
BUSTED – Seven people charged in the largest jewelry heist in US history. Continue reading …
TAPPED OUT – Social Security trust funds now projected to run dry in 2034. Continue reading …
AMERICAN CULTURE QUIZ – Test yourself on famous fathers and starry skies. Take the quiz here …
ROOT CAUSE – Your DNA could be stopping you from losing weight. Continue reading …
LOOKS YUMMY – Toddler enjoys fruit snacks plus a surprise critter who showed up. See video …
BEN HALL – How Trump's decision about Iran could change the whole Middle East. See video …
BRITTANY HOPPER – Whoopi Goldberg didn't do her homework about the women in Iran. See video …
Tune in to the FOX NEWS RUNDOWN PODCAST for today's in-depth reporting on the news that impacts you. Check it out ...
What's it looking like in your neighborhood? Continue reading…
Thank you for making us your first choice in the morning! We'll see you in your inbox first thing Friday.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Associated Press
34 minutes ago
- Associated Press
New York police search for a suspect and a motive after 11 police vehicles are torched
NEW YORK (AP) — A man suspected of torching 11 New York City police vehicles in Brooklyn last week — the first of two such arson attacks in the last week — was previously arrested at pro-Palestinian protests and is wanted for damaging a statue at Columbia University last fall, police said. The NYPD on Wednesday released photos and a video of the suspect, a 21-year-old man from New Jersey, and asked the public for help finding him. He remained at large as of Thursday. Police are also investigating whether he is also responsible for attempting to set fire Wednesday to a police van in another part of Brooklyn. In the first attack, police said, a man climbed over a gate around 1 a.m. on June 12 and placed fire starters on the windshields, hoods and tires of multiple vehicles in a police parking lot about a block from a police station in Brooklyn's Bushwick neighborhood. The man then fled on foot, police said, citing surveillance video they said placed the 21-year-old suspect at the crime scene. None of the vehicles were occupied and no injuries were reported. On Wednesday, police said, a fire starter was found on a police van parked outside a diner in Brooklyn's Williamsburg section. NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said the device was similar but not the same brand as the ones used in Bushwick. After last week's fire, Mayor Eric Adams suggested that the suspect was connected to protests in Los Angeles, New York and elsewhere over the Trump administration's immigration enforcement agenda. Police, however, have not made that connection. The suspect has two pending criminal cases in the city, according to court records. On May 28, he was arrested in Manhattan and charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest for allegedly obstructing traffic and refusing to move. In May 2024, he was arrested in Queens and charged with assault and resisting arrest. He has pleaded not guilty in both cases. He has yet to be charged in the arson attack or the Columbia University vandalism last September. There, Kenny said, he disguised himself as a student and caused over $1,000 of damage to a campus statue.


Bloomberg
41 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Iran Flicks Its Internet ‘Kill Switch' as Cyber Attacks Mount
Iran imposed a nationwide internet and telephone blackout, telling civilians it's necessary to prevent Israeli cyber attacks as fears grow the US will join the ongoing conflict. The Ministry of Communications and Information Technology called the measure needed and temporary, 'given the abuse of the country's communication network by the aggressor enemy,' according to a statement cited by the semi-official Tasnim news agency.


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
The Supreme Court Fails to See Transgender Teens
Imagine you are a transgender teenager. Don't ask me how you know that you are transgender: That question is no more appropriate or relevant than asking people how they know that they are gay or Jewish or Black. Maybe you've always known. Maybe a classmate or a stranger said something that alerted you to it. Maybe you know the way teenagers often know things: As the world came into focus, this thing about yourself became clear as could be. In any case, you know. Like many teenagers, you spend an inordinate amount of time in front of the mirror. You regularly become obsessed with what you perceive as imperfections or, less often, advantages in your appearance. You adopt and abandon hairstyles, items of clothing and affectations. You will shed much of what you are experimenting with now, but some elements will stick. They will form the core of the person you are in the world. Speaking of the world: Moving through it is awkward, because you are a teenager. Being trans can make it more awkward still. Like when you are in a public place — including your school — and you need to use the bathroom. If you want to consider transitioning medically, you have to discuss the most intimate details of your life with doctors and involve your parents. I am asking you to imagine what it's like to be a transgender teenager because that is exactly what the majority of the Supreme Court justices refused to do when they ruled in United States v. Skrmetti on Wednesday, upholding a Tennessee law that bans gender-affirming care for minors. The plaintiffs in the case are three trans teenagers from Tennessee, their parents and a doctor, but there is scarcely a reference to them in the majority or concurring opinions. It's often the case that 'courts enact discrimination through abstraction,' Chase Strangio, a director of the American Civil Liberties Union's L.G.B.T.Q. and H.I.V. Rights Project, who argued the case before the Supreme Court, told me. In Plessy v. Ferguson, the 1896 case that upheld the legality of racial segregation; in Korematsu v. United States, which in 1944 affirmed the internment of Japanese Americans; in Bowers v. Hardwick, the 1986 case that upheld Georgia's sodomy laws; and in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, which three years ago took away the constitutional guarantee of abortion rights, the Supreme Court seemed blind to the existence of the people who would suffer most from the consequences of its decisions. In Skrmetti, the plaintiffs and the Biden administration said that the Tennessee law should be held to a higher level of scrutiny because it violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. If a state law creates conditions for treating people differently on the basis of sex, the state must prove that the law serves an important purpose that justifies such discrimination. If the differential treatment is based on race, the level of scrutiny is even higher. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.