Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Corva Coleman.
Early this morning, President Trump posted a fresh warning online to Iran.
He says, quote, Iran can't get their act together.
They don't know how to sign a non-nuclear deal.
They better get smart soon, exclamation point.
Trump then posted an AI photo of himself holding an assault-style rifle standing in front
of bombed and burning buildings in a desert.
This week, the White House said Trump and his national security team were reviewing a proposal from Iran.
The Associated Press reports it postpones nuclear talks for a later stage.
Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla are going to New York today.
They'll visit the 9-11 memorial and meet with first responders and relatives of those who were killed.
The king delivered an address to Congress yesterday and discussed sensitive topics.
NPR's Sam Greenglass reports Charles got a warm reception.
Anger toward King George III helped unite disparate colonies.
250 years later, King Charles III seemed to remind a polarized Congress,
at least briefly, what its members share among themselves.
The very principle on which your Congress was founded,
no taxation without representation, was at once a fundamental disagreement between us
and at the same time a shared democratic value.
Which you inherited from us.