
‘South Park' makes fun of Trump over Epstein list, Paramount lawsuit
'Sermon on the Mount,' the Comedy Central show's first episode of its 27th season, repeatedly showed the 'South Park' version of Trump trying to cozy up in bed with Satan.
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Bloomberg
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- Bloomberg
Trump Holds Call With Zelenskiy as Truce Deadline to Putin Looms
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said he had a 'productive' phone call with Donald Trump as Russia ramped up its attacks, despite a deadline set by the US leader for Moscow to end its full-scale invasion. Zelenskiy raised Russia's increasingly intense attacks on Ukraine during the call, he said in a post on X on Tuesday, referring to a barrage last Thursday which killed 31 in the capital of Kyiv.


CNN
a minute ago
- CNN
FBI report: Violent crime fell in 2024, but assaults on officers reaches 10-year high
Violent crime decreased in the US in 2024, along with property crime, murder and robbery, while the number of reported assaults on officers reached a 10-year high, according to FBI data released Tuesday. According to the FBI's Reported Crimes in the Nation, a report that relies on local law enforcement submitting data to the FBI's federal system, violent crime decreased an estimated 4.5% compared to the previous year and property damage went down just over 8%. Murders, too, decreased by an estimated 14.9%, along with robbery, which went down nearly 9%. The statistics are at odds with comments President Donald Trump made throughout his campaign last year, arguing that crime was 'way up' and claiming that 'we've never seen crime like this before.' Reported assaults on officers, however, increased from over 83,000 in 2023 to 85,730 in 2024, marking a 10-year high of assaults on law enforcement officers. In 2015, that number was significantly lower, with 52,448 reported assaults. 'Between 2021 and 2024, we had 258 law enforcement officers feloniously killed in the line of duty,' a law enforcement official told reporters on a briefing call announcing the report, including 64 last year. The FBI is working on an in-depth behavioral analysis study to figure out why assaults on officers are increasing. 'It's going to be a longer study, because we are doing a real, in-depth behavioral analysis study of why these are occurring,' the official said. The FBI's crime report includes reporting from law enforcement agencies covering over 90% of the population in the US and will soon be available on a monthly basis, the official said during Tuesday's call. Hate crimes decreased slightly by 1.5%, according to the FBI's estimate for 2024 and motor vehicle theft dropped by a significant 19.5% when compared to 2023, though the rate remains higher than it was in the previous decade, from 2010 to 2021. Robbery, the report for 2024 says, was near its lowest rate in the last 20 years.


Time Magazine
a minute ago
- Time Magazine
Trump Says He 'Probably' Won't Run For President Again
President Donald Trump said he would 'probably' not run for president again after his second term in an interview with CNBC on Tuesday. The remark came in response to a question from the hosts of 'Squawk Box' about whether he would run for a third term, which the Constitution forbids, to which Trump replied: 'No. Probably not. I'd like to run. I have the best poll numbers I've ever had. You know why? Because people love the tariffs.' Trump was immediately fact-checked by host Joe Kernen, who pushed back that Trump has the best poll numbers among Republicans, not the general public. Trump responded that he had 'a lot of fake polls.' In late July, TIME reported that Trump's poll numbers had hit new lows, with a Gallup poll showing his approval ratings at 37% among U.S. adults. His support has dropped significantly among Independents, who cited the budget, Ukraine and foreign trade. His standing with Republicans had remained in the high 80s, though, steady throughout his second term. Trump's comments come after he has teased running for a third term throughout the first six months of his second. In some interviews, he has refused to rule out the possibility of running again, despite the 22nd Amendment of the U.S. Constitution only allowing presidents to serve two terms in office. 'A lot of people want me to do it,' Trump said in a March interview with NBC News. He added that 'there are methods which you could do it.' Many of Trump's supporters have been encouraged by the idea and have taken to chanting 'four more years' at his events. In April, the Trump Organization began selling 'Trump 2028' caps on its merchandising website, as well as t-shirts that say 'Trump 2028 (Rewrite the Rules),' In other interviews, however, Trump has denied he would seek a third term. In an April 22 interview with TIME, Trump said: 'I'd rather not discuss that now, but as you know, there are some loopholes that have been discussed that are well known. But I don't believe in loopholes.' In a May NBC interview, he added that he would rather look to other leaders in the party, including his Vice President J.D. Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The phone interview with CNBC covered Trump's tariffs, import taxes, Trump's decision to replace Fed Chair Jerome Powell, and the recent jobs report that led to Trump firing the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Threats of 250% pharma tariffs Trump said that in addition to his plans to roll out tariffs on semiconductors and chips—the announcement of which he said will come 'within the next week or so'—he also wants to eventually roll out a massive tariff on pharmaceuticals to boost domestic production. 'On pharmaceuticals, we'll be putting an initially small tariff on pharmaceuticals, but in one year, one and a half years, maximum, it's going to go to 150% and then it's going to go to 250% because we want pharmaceuticals made in our country,' Trump said, threatening the highest rate thus far on the product. This news comes after a May Executive Order from Trump that directed the U.S. Department of Health and Services, led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies to reduce drug prices, which he doubled down on in late July after he sent letters to 17 drugmakers calling on them to commit to steps to lower U.S. drug prices by Sept. 29. Leaders in the pharmaceutical industry have warned, though, that these large levies will drive up drug prices. NATO leaders 'do whatever I want' Trump told CNBC hosts that the leaders of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) 'do whatever I want.' Tensions have risen as NATO attempts to work towards a ceasefire in Russia and Ukraine, telling NBC in July that the U.S. would work through the organization to help give weapons to Ukraine. Read More: The Trump Era of Flattery Diplomacy is Here In the same interview, Trump threatened the European Union with 35% tariffs if it failed to live up to a pledge to invest some $600 billion in the U.S., and also threatened India with higher tariffs, citing their buying of Russian oil. India, he says, has 'not been a good trading partner.' Trump had criticized India's buying of Russian oil on Truth Social on Monday, claiming he would 'substantially' raise tariffs as a result. 'They're fueling the war machine. And if they're going to do that, then I'm not going to be happy,' Trump said of India in the CNBC interview Tuesday. Jobs report was 'rigged' Last week, Trump directed his Administration to fire Erika McEntarfer, head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, following a report that showed that the U.S. added fewer jobs in July than many economists had expected, which indicated to economists that job growth stalled in the aftermath of several of Trump's controversial economic policies, including his volatile tariff policies. 'It's a highly political situation. It's totally rigged. Smart people know it. People with common sense know it,' Trump told CNBC, though host Kernan pushed back, telling Trump that this was a 'big leap' to call the report 'rigged.' 'Critics are going to say, 'Hey, he's picking a guy or a gal that's going to give him the numbers that he wants.' So it undermines confidence in the system to some extent,' Kernan told the President. Still, Trump defended his move. 'She's a very nice woman, but when they say that nobody was involved, that it wasn't political, give me a break.'