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LARRY KUDLOW: Stop the hand-wringing, let Trump make a great deal for America

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LARRY KUDLOW: Trump gets an A-Plus for grace and courage

There’s vastly too much hand-wringing over President Trump’s diplomacy and potential dealmaking with Iran, and it’s coming from friends and foes alike. I think it has more to do with America’s crumbling political infrastructure, than it does regarding the merits of Mr. Trump’s efforts.

First of all, the so-called memorandum of understanding is a nonbinding political document which simply outlines topics to be covered in the months ahead for some kind of final deal. Some people are taking parts of this MOU completely out of context for their own political gain. Let’s step back for a moment.

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Over the past year, beginning with Operation Midnight Hammer and continuing through Epic Fury and Economic Fury, American and Israeli allied forces have completely decapitated the Iranian leadership, turned their nuclear capacity into rubble, totally buried their enriched uranium, destroyed their navy, destroyed their airforce, destroyed their radar, destroyed much of their missiles, and drones, and destroyed virtually their entire industrial base. Inflation could be running at more than 200 percent. Food and medicine for average civilians are not available. Currency is worthless. The economy essentially shuttered. In other words, Iran’s military and economic capabilities have been decimated. And people know this whether they criticize it or not.  General Jack Keane observed that we’re not even seeing Iranian fast boats anymore in the Strait of Hormuz.

Meanwhile, the New York Post’s Miranda Devine writes that Iranian women at Tehran are now going around on motorcycles wearing skirts and without hijabs covering their hair, a crime that used to result in fines, jail, and savage beatings. Yet the morality police may be dead. Another sign that the radical Islamist Republic is crumbling from the inside.

Because of Mr. Trump’s courageous actions, the only president in the last 50 years to go after Iran forcibly and successfully. Its leadership has been decapitated, their military capabilities have been virtually eliminated, and their nuclear operations have been shut down. All reduced to rubble.

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In short, their capacity for harm has essentially been eliminated for years to come with no boots on the ground. So, all this gives Mr. Trump the opening for diplomacy in the future. Why not try it? And that leads to at least a temporary suspension of the naval blockade to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and bring down oil prices to sustain the world economy.

It’s a risk worth taking. Indeed I don’t think there’s any risk at all. And not a single dime of money will reach Iran unless the final deal verifiably with inspectors ends their nuclear program and their enriched uranium. That’s the final deal, not some non-binding memo.

Even oil money will be put into an escrow account by the United States Treasury. And released only for buying the Iranian people food, farm, and medical help. Mr. Trump had this to say on the matter: “One of the things that we are doing also, and it came up last night, is money that’s being unfrozen is going to be used to buy food, and the food is going to be bought exclusively through the United States from our farmers. And corn, soybeans, all of the things they need are going to be bought from our farmers.”

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That is quintessentially a Trumpian approach in deal making. The absolute key point is that the president, as he has said time and again, is going to end Iran’s nuclear capacity, period, full stop, with verification and inspection. Mr. Trump calls it nuclear honesty. And if Iran doesn’t play ball, then… We will go back to military, bombing, and the economic embargoes, and give them even more damage if that’s what it’s going to have to take.

Right now, Mr. Trump is making the right decisions. Opinion polls more and more are showing a favorable attitude towards his diplomacy and deal-making. So I say, let us stop this hand-wringing and let Mr. Trump do what he does best. Which is make a great deal for America.

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Opinion: Scheme rewards the learning journey

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Opinion: Scheme rewards the learning journey

OPINION: A UK student loan scheme may work here if the right conditions are met.

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Engineering And Construction Costs In June Continue To Rise But Momentum Slows

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Engineering And Construction Costs In June Continue To Rise But Momentum Slows

Engineering And Construction Costs In June Continue To Rise But Momentum Slows

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Opinion: One wrong may make for a hard right

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Opinion: One wrong may make for a hard right

OPINION: Major internal economic changes are colliding with external forces in testing times for business and politics.

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Hydration tracking: Should you be tracking your water level?

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Harry Kane squirts water on his face during a hydration break in England's match against Croatia at the 2026 World Cup.

Flouris is a little sceptical of sweat-sensing.

Referring to various unnamed devices that analyse sweat, which he has evaluated in the lab, he says, “Most of these products that we’ve tested do not show the level of accuracy that you would expect.” The results of his experiments are as-yet unpublished.

Sweat sensors, Flouris suggests, work best when worn during long bouts of physical activity – such as a marathon. But they struggle when the exertion is more varied and intermittent. Think a footballer switching from walking to suddenly running very quickly.

In response, Ghaffari says he and his colleagues have published peer-reviewed papers, external on the accuracy of Epicore Biosystems’ gadgets.

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He acknowledges that analysing sweat loss over short intervals up to 20 minutes long “can be challenging” but says his company’s products appear effective for 30-minute, or longer, workouts.

Perhaps the most common hydration-focused products available are the smart water bottles that remind you to take a sip throughout the day.

“We try to make it fun,” says Cem Bakiş, head of business development at WaterH, which has a glowing ring that blinks in order to prompt its owner to take a drink. “You can add friends, you can earn points.”

Some smart water bottles work by estimating the weight of liquid in them, and how that changes over time as the drink inside is consumed. But WaterH takes a different approach.

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Sensors detect when the water bottle is tipped at an angle, and also the flow rate of fluid as it leaves the vessel. The water bottle will immediately recognise when you’ve had a sufficient quantity of liquid, stresses Bakiş.

I point out that, while some reviews online are positive, other comments criticise the accuracy of these measurements. This is often an issue with how the device is calibrated, and easily rectified, responds Bakiş.

If you don’t want to take instructions in hydration from a water bottle, though, you always have the option of asking your toilet how things are going.

Vivoo makes a urine-analysing gizmo that sits on the rim of a toilet bowl, promising to help you understand your hydration “like never before”.

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The device uses optical sensors to work out your “urine specific gravity” – a measure of urine’s density compared to clean water. The denser it is, the more dehydrated you are, generally. Small print on Vivoo’s website emphasises that its products are not intended to provide medical diagnoses.

Urine-based measurements are used to evaluate hydration in scientific studies, says Flouris. Though he notes that there can be some delay between a person entering a dehydrated state, and this becoming detectable in their urine.

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Forrestdale lead-acid battery recycling plant opens

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Forrestdale lead-acid battery recycling plant opens

Scrap metal dealer Paul Owens has opened a new $12 million recycling plant focused on traditional lead-acid batteries in Perth’s southern suburbs.

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Dollar hits 13-month high as rate-hike bets, stock rout boost demand

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Dollar hits 13-month high as rate-hike bets, stock rout boost demand


Dollar hits 13-month high as rate-hike bets, stock rout boost demand

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Thanks to SpaceX, Index Funds Won’t Track Each Other as Closely. One Pro’s Advice.

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Thanks to SpaceX, Index Funds Won’t Track Each Other as Closely. One Pro’s Advice.

In the pre-SpaceX days, it didn’t really matter which major index benchmark an investor chose, whether it was constructed by Standard & Poor’s, the Center for Research in Security Prices (CRSP), or FTSE Russell. They all returned essentially the same amount.

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Getty Images Jumps Following OpenAI Partnership

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Connor Hart hedcut

Shares of Getty Images more than doubled after the company disclosed a display agreement with OpenAI. The stock jumped 104%, to $1.23 a share Monday. Through Friday’s close, Getty Images shares had lost more than half of their value since the beginning of the year.

Under the partnership agreement, Getty said its licensed content libraries will appear across OpenAI search and discovery experiences within ChatGPT, enabling the use of Getty’s content within the artificial-intelligence platform.

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NYT Connections #1109 Answers for June 24, 2026 Revealed

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Nancy Guthrie

Wednesday’s edition of The New York Times’ popular word-grouping game served up a grid built around classic rock bands, wedding traditions, and a clever color-themed character category that lured solvers toward an early, incorrect grouping before the actual answer revealed itself.

How the Game Works

Connections by The New York Times is a unique daily word game that fans can enjoy online for free. The puzzle challenges players to sort a given set of 16 words into groups of four. Each group features a hidden theme that connects the four words that belong in it. Players get only four guesses to find out how the words are connected and categorize them accordingly. The game also provides a “one away…” pop-up as a hint whenever a player chooses three out of the four correct words in a group. The four groups, Yellow, Green, Blue, and Purple, are divided according to the level of their difficulty, with Yellow being the easiest to sort and Purple featuring the trickiest theme to figure out.

Wednesday’s Four Categories

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The themes and answers for the June 24, 2026, NYT Connections puzzle were as follows:

Yellow Group: Prog Bands — GENESIS, KING CRIMSON, PINK FLOYD, RUSH.

Green Group: Classic Wedding Gifts — CHINA, LUGGAGE, MONEY, TOASTER.

Blue Group: Red Characters — CLIFFORD, DEADPOOL, KOOL-AID MAN, MR. KRABS.

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Purple Group: Rhyming Compound Words — CHICK FLICK, HELTER SKELTER, HUMPTY DUMPTY, MUMBO JUMBO.

The Color Trap That Caught Solvers Off Guard

Puzzle number 1109 features some heavy misdirection, with several words seemingly fitting into different themes before revealing the true groupings. Watch out for the red herrings today. At first glance, words like Pink and Deadpool look like they could fit into a simple color theme, but committing to that group early will cost you lives.

The trap centers specifically on Pink Floyd’s inclusion in the yellow prog-rock category, since the word “Pink” on its own could plausibly suggest a color-based grouping alongside the actually correct blue category of red-colored fictional characters. One solver described falling into exactly that confusion while working through the grid: “Not being familiar with the work of Kool-Aid Man put me at a disadvantage today and was the reason for my single mistake. While I knew that Clifford of Big Red Dog fame, Deadpool and Mr. Krabs favored the color red.”

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Breaking Down the Categories

The yellow category gathered four influential progressive rock bands, bringing together Genesis, King Crimson, Pink Floyd, and Rush — a relatively straightforward grouping for fans of classic rock, though the inclusion of Pink Floyd specifically created the color-based misdirection that tripped up several solvers elsewhere in the grid.

The green category required players to think about traditional gift-giving customs, linking China, Luggage, Money, and Toaster as classic items associated with wedding registries and gift lists.

The blue category, despite its color-based misdirection trap, ultimately gathered four fictional characters who all happen to be red in appearance: Clifford the Big Red Dog, Deadpool, the Kool-Aid Man, and Mr. Krabs from SpongeBob SquarePants.

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The Purple Category’s Wordplay Challenge

As is typical for Connections puzzles, the purple category delivered the day’s most inventive twist, built around compound phrases that rhyme internally. The category brought together Chick Flick, Helter Skelter, Humpty Dumpty, and Mumbo Jumbo — four well-known rhyming compound terms that required solvers to think specifically about phrase structure rather than shared meaning or category.

Strategic Advice From Puzzle Outlets

Ahead of revealing the solution, several outlets offered general guidance for navigating Wednesday’s grid. We recommend looking closely at proper names and word structure first. Separating band names from characters and common terms will make the remaining words significantly easier to manage.

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Other strategists emphasized broader habits worth building into a daily Connections routine. Before submitting a set of words, you should always check whether they fit somewhere else too. If you hit a dead end, use the shuffle button at the bottom of the grid — placing the words in different positions can spark new connections and act as a mental refresh, helping new patterns emerge that may not have been obvious in the original layout.

A Moderate Difficulty Rating

Despite the color-based misdirection built into the puzzle, early tester feedback suggested Wednesday’s challenge landed closer to the middle of the difficulty spectrum overall. NYT’s early testers rated today’s Connection puzzle 2.5 out of 5, putting it in the medium difficulty level — a rating that aligns with the mixed reactions from solvers who successfully avoided the Pink Floyd trap versus those who fell for it.

The Game’s Continued Popularity

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Connections is one of the most popular online word games from The New York Times, closely trailing behind Wordle. The puzzle presents players with a 16-word, four-by-four grid that has helped cement the game’s status as a daily ritual for millions of solvers since its 2023 launch.

Where to Find More Puzzle Help

Besides Connections, other puzzles that fans can play on The New York Times Games collection include Wordle, Strands, Pips, the NYT Crosswords, and Sudoku, among others. Wednesday’s slate also included Wordle puzzle number 1831 and Strands puzzle number 843, giving puzzle enthusiasts a full menu of additional daily challenges beyond the standard Connections grid alone.

With Wednesday’s puzzle now solved by players who successfully navigated the Pink Floyd color trap and identified the rhyming compound words hidden in the purple category, attention turns to Thursday’s edition, puzzle number 1110, when a fresh sixteen-word grid and an entirely new set of hidden categories — and likely a fresh round of cleverly placed red herrings — will once again test the Connections community’s pattern-recognition skills before their four guesses run out.

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Rubio kicks off Middle East trip as allies seek answers on Iran

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Rubio kicks off Middle East trip as allies seek answers on Iran


Rubio kicks off Middle East trip as allies seek answers on Iran

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