2025-10-07
11 分钟Hi, this is Andy. I've been a New York Times subscriber for years and years,
and I'm trying to get my teenagers interested in reading it.
If they were to have their own logins and we could share articles,
I think that would help get them interested.
It would also then allow us to discuss whether the dinner table or wherever.
Thank you very much.
Andy, we heard you.
Introducing the New York Times Family subscription.
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In the Oval Office yesterday,
President Trump said he would consider invoking the Insurrection Act to send active duty troops to U.S. cities.
He said it could be a way of getting around recent court rulings that have blocked his efforts to deploy the National Guard.
I don't care if it's a national guard, the army, the Marines, the Air Force.
I don't care who comes in as long as we're safe.
And that's the way most of the public feels.
The White House has battled with the courts and local leaders in recent weeks
as it continues its crackdown on heavily democratic cities.
And floating the Insurrection Act was a notable escalation.
It would give the president emergency powers and the authority to use the military to curb widespread unrest and directly support law enforcement.