Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston. President Trump says he's planning to cut off immigration from 19 poverty-stricken countries. His decision comes after two National Guard members were shot near the White House on Wednesday. NPR's Alana Wise reports the suspect has been identified as an Afghan national who is living in the United States.
Trump vowed on social media to quote, "...permanently pause migration,"
Chapter 2: What immigration policies did President Trump announce in November 2025?
from all countries he deemed third world. He specifically accused Somali immigrants in Minnesota of preying on Minnesota natives and described the state's governor, Tim Walz, with a slur against people with mental disabilities. The administration said people from 19 countries would face additional scrutiny. That includes people who hold green cards.
Trump ran for office on a promise to stop crime. including illegal immigration. The two service members who were shot in D.C., one of whom has died, were in the nation's capital at the president's order to help curb crime in the city. Prior to their deployment, violent crime in D.C. had hit a 30-year low. Alana Wise, NPR News, Washington.
The White House says it's reviewing the vetting process for Afghan refugees who entered the U.S. under the Biden administration.
Chapter 3: What details emerged about the shooting of National Guard members in D.C.?
Federal officials say the suspect in this week's shooting of two National Guard troops had previously served in a CIA-backed Afghan unit. Marine Corps veteran Elliot Ackerman says that unit required some of the most extensive screening.
Reporting says that he served there for about 10 years, and then he went through another round of vetting to come into this country. I think, you know, there's a worthy debate about the way CIRM Afghans came to this country and the chaos around the withdrawal in 2021. But this case is not a case where there was insufficient vetting.
More than 75,000 Afghans came to the U.S. under a resettlement program in 2021. At least 128 people are dead after a massive fire in a public housing complex in Hong Kong. Reporter Sharice Pham says more arrests have been made in a corruption probe linked to the fire.
This is one of the deadliest fires in Hong Kong's history. It took more than 40 hours to extinguish. Government officials said temperatures on some floors were still too hot for rescuers to enter, warning that the death toll could climb even higher. The apartment complex had been under renovation, and police said construction material at the site was not up to standard.
The fire alarms were also not working properly when the fire broke out, according to Hong Kong's director of fire services. Officials have launched a corruption probe into the renovation project, leading to the arrest of eight people on Friday. That's on top of three people from a construction company arrested on Thursday. For NPR News, I'm Cherise Pham in Hong Kong.
You're listening to NPR News from Washington. Today marks the 100th birthday of the Grand Ole Opry. The country music radio broadcast started in Nashville, Tennessee on November 28, 1925. NPR's Netta Ulibi reports it's still one of the longest-running radio broadcasts in U.S. history.
The Grand Ole Opry kicked off with an elderly fiddler named Uncle Jimmy Thompson, who recorded this a few years later. Over the years, the Grand Ole Opry would host powerhouse country performers, Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn, and Hank Williams, who debuted on the fabled Ryman Auditorium stage. Johnny Cash met his wife June Carter there.
Even after a move to the Grand Ole Opry house, it was a spiritual home to performers like Bill Monroe and his Bluegrass Boys, performing there in 1985, the same year the Grand Ole Opry started broadcasting shows on PBS. It remains a central tourist attraction for Nashville, a city the Opry helped to place on the musical map. Netta Ulibi, NPR News.
Airbus is ordering an immediate software fix for thousands of its A320 series jets after a recent incident raised safety concerns. The company says strong solar radiation can corrupt data used by flight control systems. Industry sources say the recall will affect about 6,000 planes, more than half of the global fleet.
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