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00:00An Afghan national living in Texas is facing federal charges after allegedly threatening
00:07to carry out a suicide attack using a car or a truck bomb. So how did the feds find him? Well,
00:13it wasn't by espionage or even good old-fashioned detective work. The guy posted a video about his
00:19plans on social media sites. Sites, plural. Mohamed Dahoud Alokhazai posted both on TikTok
00:26and Facebook that American, quote, infidels must perish and promised to use the sort of
00:33yellow cooking oil that he said was favored by the Taliban to turn his vehicle into an explosive
00:39device. Attorney General Pam Bondi said that the suspect came into the country during the Biden
00:43administration and, quote, explicitly stated that he came here in order to kill American citizens.
00:50And speaking of Afghan nationals who immigrated to the U.S., we also have a development in the case
00:55against Ramonella Lackenwall, who was accused of attacking two National Guard members in Washington,
01:00D.C. last week. Charging documents claim that he was heard shouting Allahu Akbar as he was firing his
01:06gun in the shooting that left one dead and a second critically injured. Billionaire philanthropists
01:12Michael and Susan Dell have made a historic charitable commitment of $6.25 billion as seed money for
01:21Trump accounts. Those are savings accounts for American children created by the big, beautiful bill.
01:26The goal is to help kids pay for their education or buy a home after they turn 18. Here's the
01:31president on Tuesday. The Dells are announcing today that they are giving 25 million American children
01:39$250 each to save and to invest in their personal Trump account. Invest America says it's the largest
01:46single donation made to U.S. children ever. The new program was originally part of President Trump's
01:52big, beautiful bill, and that promised accounts for U.S. citizens born between 2025 and 2028,
01:59seeded with a federal grant of $1,000. The Dells' donation will expand the program to include
02:04children 10 and under born before 2025, and it will cover 25 million children who live in zip codes where
02:10the median income is under $150,000. And the program could still expand further, as the president
02:16suggested he might chip in some of his own personal wealth and said some of his other wealthy friends
02:21were interested in helping out too. The accounts will launch on July 4th of next year. Now to a New
02:27York Post exclusive. Official logs show President Trump is clocking some long days at the Oval Office and has
02:33not, as the New York Times reported last week, cut back on his workload due to signs of fatigue.
02:39Their words, not mine. The previously unpublished documents span the same 10 weekdays last month that
02:45the Times story cited. They show that the president worked roughly 50 hours each week, not counting any
02:50official duties on the weekend or the unsolicited phone calls he's known to take. Releasing this
02:55information is pretty unprecedented, but the White House is trying to combat the narrative that the
03:0179-year-old commander-in-chief is showing his age. On November 12th, for example, the president had 32
03:07different meetings with a wide variety of staffers, lawmakers, and businessmen. 32 seems like a touch
03:13high even for a president, but there's a reason. This particular day was the day Congress voted to
03:19end the 43-day government shutdown. The president began his day with a staff meeting at 10.30 in the
03:24morning and ended it with a 10.40 p.m. meeting with a corporate executive. The Times report, which if you
03:30hadn't guessed, enraged the president, was based off readily available public schedules, which leave out
03:36a lot of presidential duties. White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt joined the president in
03:41refuting that Times report earlier this week. Are you kidding me? You all see him almost every single
03:46day. He is the most accessible president in history. He is taking meetings around the clock.
03:51For more on these stories and everything else you could possibly want to know, check out the New York
03:56Post in print or online. And don't forget, like and subscribe to the New York Postcast wherever you
04:01get your podcasts and on YouTube. I promise you'll be glad you did.
04:36And seeing you.
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