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NPR News Now

NPR News: 12-18-2025 3PM EST

18 Dec 2025

Transcription

Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?

0.031 - 17.348 Unknown

Support for NPR and the following message come from the estate of Joan B. Kroc, whose bequest serves as an enduring investment in the future of public radio and seeks to help NPR produce programming that meets the highest standards of public service in journalism and cultural expression.

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18.526 - 21.27 Janine Herbst

Live from NPR News, I'm Janine Herbst.

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Chapter 2: What executive order did President Trump sign regarding marijuana?

21.831 - 38.695 Janine Herbst

President Trump has signed an executive order to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous drug. NPR's Franco Ordonez reports the order effectively eases federal restrictions on its use, reclassifying marijuana from a Schedule 1 drug to a Schedule 3 drug.

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38.776 - 47.695 Franco Ordonez

Speaking in the Oval Office, President Trump said that change would allow more research on medical uses and added that many friends have urged him to make the change.

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47.915 - 63.002 Donald Trump

I promised to be the president of common sense and that is exactly what we're doing. This is really something having to do with common sense. And it's something having to do with the fact that so many people that I respect Ask me to do it. People that are having problems, big problems.

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Chapter 3: How is the Trump administration addressing gender-affirming care for minors?

63.142 - 76.886 Franco Ordonez

The shift represents one of the most significant federal changes to marijuana policy in decades. While it does not fully legalize the drug, the executive order equates the dangers of marijuana on par with more common prescription drugs.

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Chapter 4: What recent developments occurred in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?

77.547 - 80.933 Franco Ordonez

Franco, Ordonez, NPR News, the White House.

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81.706 - 102.668 Janine Herbst

The Trump administration plans to withhold funding from hospitals that get Medicaid or Medicare funding if they provide gender-affirming care to those under the age of 18 with hormones and surgery. The majority of hospitals get that funding, so the reach on the proposed plan is wide. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says the care hurts children.

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102.648 - 113.602 Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

So-called gender-affirming care has inflicted lasting physical and psychological damage on vulnerable young people. This is not medicine. It is malpractice.

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115.405 - 140.317 Janine Herbst

27 states already banned gender-affirming care for transgender youth, meaning if these rules go into effect, pediatric gender-affirming care would be nearly impossible to get in the other states. The Israeli military struck a residential area in Gaza yesterday, wounding at least 11 Palestinians. That's according to local health officials. The residential area was just over the ceasefire line.

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140.918 - 143.083 Janine Herbst

And Fierce Hadil Al-Shalchi has more.

Chapter 5: What are the implications of the New York trial involving a health insurance CEO's murder?

143.435 - 165.302 Hadil Al-Shalchi

Palestinian first responders say the mortar exploded in the air and shrapnel hit the central Gaza city neighborhood of Al-Samir. Mahmoud Bassal is the spokesman for the Gaza civil defense. If it had exploded on the ground, Bassal said, it would have been a catastrophe. The Israeli military said that the mortar fired had, quote, deviated from its target.

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165.783 - 187.65 Hadil Al-Shalchi

It said it was investigating the incident, which they said occurred in the area of the yellow line that divides the Israeli-held portions of Gaza, from the rest of the territory. The ceasefire deal between Hamas and Israel was brokered in October. Israeli attacks since the deal have killed over 390 Palestinians, according to Gaza health officials. Hadil Al-Shalchi, NPR News, Tel Aviv.

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188.431 - 209.288 Janine Herbst

On Wall Street, the Dow is up 99 points, the Nasdaq up 296, the S&P 500 up 53. You're listening to NPR News from Washington. Defense attorneys for the man accused of killing a health insurance CEO on a Manhattan street last year argue that much of the evidence in his case needs to be thrown out.

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209.869 - 219.848 Janine Herbst

As Walter Withman of member station WNYC reports, a New York judge will now rule on what can and can't be included at Luigi Mangione's trial.

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220.148 - 230.109 Walter Wuthman

Defense attorneys argue that police did not read Mangione his Miranda rights and did not have a proper warrant when they interrogated him and searched his backpack at a Pennsylvania McDonald's last December.

Chapter 6: How did the federal government respond to the deadly air collision incident?

231.071 - 235.44 Walter Wuthman

Attorney Karen Friedman-Ignifilo says prosecutors are now trying to cover their tracks.

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235.42 - 243.396 Karen Friedman-Ignifilo

We want to thank everyone for coming and for sitting through a three-week mini-trial that should have been a half a day.

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243.617 - 256.062 Walter Wuthman

Prosecutors say police did nothing wrong, and the evidence links Mangione to the shooting. The judge is expected to issue a decision in May. He has not yet set a trial date. For NPR News, I'm Walter Wuthman in New York City.

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257.138 - 265.813 Janine Herbst

The federal government has admitted liability in a deadly air collision outside Washington, D.C. in January that killed 67 people.

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266.353 - 282.741 Janine Herbst

In a 209-page document filed in a federal lawsuit brought by the family of one of the victims, the Justice Department says the accident between an Army Black Hawk helicopter and a passenger plane could have been avoided if the helicopter had been able to see and avoid the jet.

282.721 - 296.848 Janine Herbst

The Justice Department says an air traffic controller didn't properly alert both pilots that the aircraft were on a collision course. I'm Janine Herbst, and you're listening to NPR News from Washington.

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