61% of Americans Said They Had to Cut Back on Groceries
More than three quarters of Americans, including 55 percent of Republicans, said President Trump’s policies have increased the cost of living in their community.
Coding was supposed to be a pathway to a high-paying job, but AI is pulling the rug out from young programmers.
More than three quarters of Americans, including 55 percent of Republicans, said President Trump’s policies have increased the cost of living in their community.
A Republican lawmaker cracked up laughing on camera as a CNN reporter spoke with her about the possible war in Cuba.Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar (R-Fla.) on Thursday spoke with CNN's Boris Sanchez after President Donald Trump's administration announced the indictment of former Cuban leader Raúl Castro this week. He is being charged with an alleged attack on two civilian planes in 1996. Trump was asked about the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz, which arrived with escort warships in the Caribbean on Wednesday. Reporters questioned whether his move was a warning to Cuba. "Not at all," Trump claimed. As Sanchez read that quote, the cameras showed Salazar, who began laughing at Trump's comment. "Yeah, not at all? Really?" she mocked with a chuckle. "I mean, that's what the president said," Sanchez replied."I know, but, you know, it makes — it's hilarious," she stumbled. "What — what's really happening here? Because why would you be sending one of the biggest aircraft carriers in the world to the Caribbean if you're not sending a very big, loud signal to the Castro family, boys." She then apologized for interrupting Sanchez with her laughter, saying she hadn't heard Trump's comments. "Yeah, the president said it wasn't meant to send a message at all. This carrier had been — the strike group had been sort of off the coast of Brazil doing exercises. Now it's moved to Cuba. There are questions about whether this is the setup for an effort to forcibly remove Raúl Castro from the island. Is that a move that you would support?" Sanchez asked her. She explained that she supports everything the president does but said that the elder Castro likely isn't running anything in the country and that it is the children and grandchildren who are calling the shots. The GOP lawmaker then pivoted to praise the president again, saying she loved what he was doing and that he was preventing another humanitarian crisis on the island.
A World Trade Center steel beam arrived at the Florida school where President Bush learned of the 9/11 attacks, marking the tour's seventh stop.
Allies of former President Biden failed to give Kamala Harris needed support before her 107-day sprint to Election Day 2024, according to a draft of the DNC's "autopsy" of Trump's victory.
The Islanders want salary-cap flexibility, they don’t want to move any of their top-tier prospects or key veterans and they want to level up into being a Cup contender.
Tuesday's primary elections delivered some notable results across the country. Here are five things we learned this week that are worth pondering as the midterms approach: The post 5 Things We Learned from This Week's Primary Elections appeared first on .
In a resurfaced Reddit post, Graham Platner, Maine’s leading Democratic Senate candidate, mocked a soldier who was shot four times during a confrontation with Taliban terrorists. Democrats will line up to vote for him anyway because this kind of rhetoric is tolerated, if not celebrated, on the modern Left. Apparently amused by footage of the […]
Former prosecutors who built criminal cases against the Jan. 6 Capitol rioters are sounding the alarm over a Trump administration fund that would compensate people convicted in the attack — including those found guilty of assaulting police officers.The administration has set aside $1.776 billion in taxpayer money for what it calls victims of government "weaponization," and former prosecutors and domestic extremism researchers say the dollar figure sends a dangerous signal to insurrectionists who rallied around the revolutionary year of 1776 as they worked to overturn the 2020 election, reported MS NOW."People were sending text messages about George Washington crossing the Delaware as they took a rebar from the inaugural stage and bashed police officers on the head," said a former Jan. 6 prosecutor who requested anonymity for fear of retaliation.The prospect of Oath Keepers and Proud Boys members receiving substantial payouts from the fund drew a stark warning from the former prosecutor. Think how much weaponry they could purchase with that," he said. "Think how much money they could use to recruit other people with the message: 'If you commit crimes in the name of Trump, you're going to be pardoned and enriched.'"Tim Heaphy, a former U.S. attorney who served as chief investigative counsel for the House Jan. 6 committee, called the fund's premise staggering. "It's an alternate universe that there would be any credible claim that they are entitled to damages," he said.Vice President JD Vance declined to rule out payments to rioters convicted of assaulting police officers, telling reporters the administration would examine "everything case by case," and acting Attorney General Todd Blanche stated that a "Truth and Justice Commission" — composed entirely of administration appointees with Blanche holding removal authority — will determine fund eligibility.Jacob Ware, a terrorism researcher at the Council on Foreign Relations, characterized the fund as signaling that "criminal behavior, criminal actions against our election system such as occurred on Jan. 6, will be compensated if done on behalf of the president," describing it as "antithetical to democracy."