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Artemis II toilet issue has been fixed. what happened?

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NASA said the crew of the Artemis II mission resolved an issue with the ship’s toilet system shortly after launching into space on April 1.

The astronauts worked with NASA’s mission control team in Houston to restore the Orion spacecraft’s toilet to “normal operation” after a problem occurred after launch, the agency announced.

NASA said in a blog post that before performing an engine maneuver known as an apogee ascent burn on April 1, the crew “reported flashing fault lights” related to the toilet system.

“The control team successfully evaluated the data and worked with the crew to troubleshoot and resolve the issue,” the agency said.

At a post-launch press conference, NASA Deputy Administrator Amit Kshatriya described the problem as a “problem with the toilet controller.”

The Artemis II crew of four embarked on a historic space mission aimed at returning astronauts to the moon’s surface for the first time since the Apollo program ended more than 50 years ago.

How does the Artemis II toilet work?

The Orion spacecraft toilet is known as the Universal Waste Management System.

The restrooms are equipped with separate rooms for privacy and ergonomic toilet seats. The toilet itself consists of a compact titanium vacuum-based toilet that uses suction to draw waste into separate containers for urine and feces.

In a video from the Canadian Space Agency, Artemis II mission specialist Jeremy Hansen said the system uses a hose to collect urine, which is ejected into space several times a day.

The feces is sucked into a bag at the bottom of the toilet bowl. Once the bag is capped, it will be pushed into a canister and returned to Earth with the crew, Hansen said.

“As a crew member, we’re pretty lucky to have a toilet with a door on this little spacecraft. It’s the only place you can go during the mission, and you can actually feel alone for a moment,” Hansen said in the video.

The crew of Artemis II was the first to install a toilet system on a spacecraft orbiting the moon. Modern space toilets were not available on the Apollo missions, so the crew used plastic bags to collect waste.

Contributors: Jennifer Borresen, Ramon Padilla, Shawn J. Sullivan

Melina Khan is USA TODAY’s national trends reporter. Contact her at melina.khan@usatoday.com.

President Trump’s order restricting mail-in voting sparks lawsuit between Democrats and ACLU

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A series of voting rights groups and Democratic Party officials have accused President Donald Trump of an unlawful power grab in two separate lawsuits aimed at blocking his new restrictions on mail-in voting.

The ACLU and other civil rights groups represent voting rights groups, including the League of Women Voters of America, in a lawsuit filed April 2 that claims President Trump’s order excludes “potentially millions of eligible U.S. citizens” from voting.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) filed the lawsuit on April 1, along with Democratic groups. They argue that changing the voting method “imminently threatens to disenfranchise lawful voters and clearly exceed the president’s lawful authority.”

The Justice Department and the White House did not respond to requests for comment.

President Trump signed an executive order on March 31 directing the U.S. Postal Service to develop “uniform standards” to prevent mail-in ballots from being sent to people who are not authorized to vote. The service would provide each state with a list of “registered” voters.

Voting rights groups and Democrats say Trump is violating the U.S. Constitution’s separation of powers by attempting to use powers that belong to either Congress or the states.

The Constitution provides that each state determines the time, place, and manner of holding elections for members of Congress, but also provides that Congress may pass laws changing these regulations, except for the location of Senate elections.

For years, President Trump has promoted baseless claims that Joe Biden actually won the 2020 presidential election, despite numerous audits and studies confirming that he actually won. Since retaking office as president in 2025, Trump has repeatedly sought to cast doubt on U.S. elections and pushed for control of the electoral process, which is primarily run by states.

Appearing on “The Dan Bongino Show” on Feb. 2, President Trump said Republicans should “nationalize” voting and “take over voting in at least as many 15 places.”

Mr. Trump has unsuccessfully pushed Congress for weeks to pass the SAVE America Act, which would require proof of citizenship to register to vote and a photo ID to vote, force states to turn over their voter rolls to the federal government and create a program to remove noncitizens from states.

Contributors: Zach Anderson, Joey Garrison, Zachary Charmelet – USA Today

Christina Plante, missing since 1994, found alive

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A woman who disappeared as a teenage girl from a small Arizona town has been found alive after being reported as missing 32 years ago, authorities said.

Christina Marie Plante, 13, “vanished without a trace” from Star Valley, about 90 miles northeast of Phoenix, the Gila County Sheriff’s Office said in a press release Wednesday, April 1.

The sheriff’s office said Plante, who went by the nickname “Tina,” was last seen on the afternoon of May 15, 1994, when she left her home to walk to the stables where her horses were kept.

“Her identity has been confirmed by law enforcement and her missing person status has been officially resolved,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement. “Out of respect for Christina’s privacy and well-being, no additional details will be released at this time.”

“Thorough underground search and interviews”

The agency wrote that law enforcement and volunteers conducted “an exhaustive (underground) search and interviews” and participated in “extensive search operations” at the time of the girl’s disappearance.

“For years, this case has remained unsolved and investigators periodically revisit evidence,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement.

The sheriff’s office said Plante was identified through new leads developed through “advanced technology, modern investigative techniques, and detailed case investigation.”

Where was Christina Marie Plante discovered?

It was not immediately clear where Plante was found, where he is now, or whether he was reunited with his family or loved ones.

Gila County Sheriff J. Adam Shepherd could not be reached for comment.

Natalie Neisa Alland is a senior reporter at USA TODAY. Contact her at nalund@usatoday.com and follow her at X @nataliealund. Jose R. Gonzalez is a reporter for The Arizona Republic, part of the USA TODAY Network.

McDonald’s adds $3 or less menu items, $4 breakfast menu

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McDonald’s customers will soon be able to benefit even more with new value menu items and meal benefits.

The new benefits include an entire menu item under $3, breakfast menu items starting at $4, and lunch and dinner menus starting at $5, McDonald’s announced in an April 2 news release. These will be available from the end of this month.

This fresh sale builds on the budget-friendly Mac Value Menu that McDonald’s launched in early 2025. Apart from this, McDonald’s also already offers an Extra Value Meal Menu with breakfast, lunch and dinner options.

Here’s what you need to know about McDonald’s new sale.

Check out new McDonald’s MacValue items, including menu items under $3

Here is an overview of the new MacValue products:

  • Menus under $3
  • $4 Breakfast Meal Discount
    • Sausage McMuffin or Sausage Biscuit with Hash Browns and Small McCafé Premium Roast Coffee
  • Lunch and dinner meals are a great deal for $5 or $6
    • McChicken Meal Deals are $5, McDouble Meal Deals are $6 – each comes with 4 McNuggets, small fries and a small soft drink

What’s in McDonald’s new $3 or less menu?

McDonald’s new $3 or less menu will feature at least 10 items available throughout the day, the chain said.

For breakfast, you can order a Sausage McMuffin, Sausage Biscuit, Sausage Burrito, Hash Browns, or Medium McCafé Premium Roast Coffee from our menu for under $3.

If you’re looking for lunch or dinner, the menu includes McChicken, McDouble, 4-piece Chicken McNuggets, small fries, and a medium soft drink.

Throughout the year, McDonald’s has announced that it will spotlight popular menu items that are selected at lower prices from menu items that cost less than $3. First, a Sausage McMuffin will cost $1.50 and a McDouble will cost $2.50.

When will McDonald’s new value menu be released?

McDonald’s expanded MacValue Menu will be available at participating restaurants nationwide starting April 21st.

Melina Khan is USA TODAY’s national trends reporter. Contact her at melina.khan@usatoday.com.

This story has been updated with additional information.

President Donald Trump’s relationship with Tiger Woods explained after drunk driving

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  • President Donald Trump commented on Tiger Woods’ recent DUI arrest in Florida.
  • President Trump is linked to Woods, as the golfer is dating Vanessa Trump, the president’s former daughter-in-law.
  • Vanessa Trump has been married to Donald Trump Jr. for 12 years and they have five children, including Kai Trump.

President Donald Trump told the New York Post that he spoke with Tiger Woods following the golfer’s rollover crash and DUI arrest.

Woods had lived on Jupiter Island, Florida since 2007 when he was involved in the March 27 accident. Woods was arrested and charged with DUI with criminal damage to property and refusing to submit to a lawful search by a local sheriff. He pleaded not guilty.

Officers observed Woods moving “lethargic and slow” and had difficulty following breathalyzer instructions, according to the arrest report. He scored zero on a breathalyzer test, but officers found two pills in Woods’ pocket that were determined to be hydrocodone, an opioid used to treat severe chronic pain, the report said.

“As you know, he tested negative for alcohol, and he’s under a lot of physical pressure with various ailments, including his back and his legs,” Trump said in a March 31 telephone interview with the New York Post.

Why is Trump commenting about Woods? Not only does the president love golf, he also has an affair with Woods’ girlfriend.

Tiger Woods is dating President Trump’s ex-daughter-in-law

In March 2025, reports emerged suggesting that Woods was dating Vanessa Trump, President Trump’s former daughter-in-law. In a subsequent Instagram post, Woods confirmed his relationship with Vanessa Trump via social media.

“Love is in the air and life is better with you by my side! We look forward to the journey of life together. We ask that everyone close to our hearts respect our privacy at this time,” Woods wrote in an Instagram post with a photo of Vanessa Trump.

President Trump responded positively to the news, saying, “I wish them both happiness.”

Who is Vanessa Trump?

Vanessa Trump is Donald Trump Jr.’s ex-wife.

On November 12, 2005, Donald Trump Jr. married former model Vanessa Kay Trump, formerly known as Vanessa Kay Pergolizzi. Donald Trump introduced Donald Trump Jr. to Vanessa at a 2003 fashion show. The couple wed in front of about 370 guests at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago mansion in Palm Beach, and the ceremony was reportedly officiated by Donald Trump’s sister, Judge Marianne Trump Barry. Donald Trump Jr. and Vanessa Trump were 27 years old when they married in December 2005, just weeks before they turned 28.

Vanessa and Donald Trump Jr. had five children, Kai Trump, Donald Trump III, Tristan Trump, Spencer Trump, and Chloe Trump, but they divorced in 2018 after 12 years of marriage.

Kai Trump called Tiger Woods his favorite golfer

Kai Trump, 18, is the eldest granddaughter of President Donald Trump and the daughter of Donald Trump Jr. and Vanessa Trump. Like Woods and her grandfather, she is also an avid golfer.

In February 2025, Kai Trump announced her first major sponsorship deal, making her the highest-paid player in high school girls golf.

Kai Trump attends the same Palm Beach County school as Woods’ son Charlie Woods. She committed to the University of Miami in fall 2026, and Charlie Woods enrolled at Florida State University in fall 2027.

On Logan Paul’s podcast earlier this year, Kai Trump said Woods is his favorite golfer.

Contributors: Elizabeth Flores, Andres Soto, Tim Schmidt, Will Greenlee, Laurie K. Blandford, Tom D’Angelo, Valentina Palm, america today

Kinsey Crowley is a Trump Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Please contact KCrowley@usatodayco.com. follow her X (Twitter), thread, blue sky and TikTok.

This is the first photo of Earth taken during Artemis II’s moon launch

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Here’s a look at the first photos shared from the Artemis II mission and what’s next for the astronauts aboard the Orion crew capsule.

NASA’s latest update on the Artemis II moon mission shows a breathtaking view of Earth as the Orion capsule carrying four astronauts orbits tens of thousands of miles above the Earth.

Atop NASA’s powerful Space Launch System rocket and beyond Earth’s atmosphere, the three Americans and one Canadian selected for the mission are preparing to head to the moon. The mission, the second in the space agency’s multibillion-dollar Artemis program, is the first to send humans near the moon in more than 50 years.

What is the main purpose? NASA is aiming to build a permanent lunar base ahead of the first manned mission to Mars, with plans to land on the moon as early as 2028.

In the process, the crew, including NASA astronauts Reed Wiseman, Christina Koch and Victor Glover, and Canadian Space Agency Jeremy Hansen, will make history by traveling farther from Earth than any human before. The mission will make Glover the first black man to venture near the moon, Koch the first woman and Hansen the first Canadian.

Here’s a look at the first photos shared from the Artemis II mission and what’s next for the astronauts aboard Orion.

NASA shares first Artemis II image of Earth

NASA shared a view of Earth from the Orion spacecraft, taken while Artemis II astronauts aboard the Orion spacecraft orbited the Earth in high Earth orbit.

The image appears to show the bottom of Orion’s service module, which houses the main engines and auxiliary thrusters. The service module is located below the crew module housing the astronauts and is responsible for propelling and maneuvering the spacecraft in space, as well as power generated from the solar array.

Where is Artemis II now?

NASA’s Artemis II mission launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, on Wednesday, April 1 at 6:35 pm ET. The agency’s towering 322-foot Space Launch System rocket provided the initial explosive power to propel the Orion spacecraft carrying astronauts.

Following launch, a complex series of steps took place within the first few hours of the mission to prepare the Artemis II crew to begin a 10-day journey around the moon in the Orion capsule.

As of the morning of April 2, astronauts were orbiting Earth at a height of about 46,000 miles, or about 184 times the height of the International Space Station.

NASA prepares Artemis II for the moon

The astronauts were awakened around 7 a.m. ET the morning after launch to watch Orion rise to perigee (an astronomical term for the point at which an object is closest to Earth during a continuous orbit).

Orion ignited its service module engines for 43 seconds to raise its orbit and correct its orbit as it continued to orbit Earth. The spacecraft is currently in stable high-Earth orbit and is scheduled to head to the moon sometime on Thursday, April 2nd.

Once their mission is complete, the astronauts will go back to sleep around 9 a.m. and will wake up within five hours to begin completing their first checklist for a full day in space, NASA said.

Next up, a maneuver known as a menstrual ejection burn, will take astronauts beyond Earth’s orbit on a four-day journey to the moon for the first time since the end of the Apollo era in 1972.

Artemis II flight path

The diagram below from NASA provides a visual representation of what Artemis II’s flight path will look like.

Artemis II Tracker

Want to follow astronauts along Artemis II’s journey to the moon? NASA has an Artemis II tracker available online and in a mobile app that lets users see where Orion is, how fast it’s moving, and how far the spacecraft is from both Earth and the moon.

The mobile version for smartphones also includes an augmented reality feature that allows users to move their phone to see where Orion is in relation to Earth.

When will Artemis II reach the moon?

If all goes as planned, Artemis II will reach the moon and make its historic lunar flight on Monday, April 6th.

Astronauts aboard Orion, which plummets off the far side of the moon, are expected to travel the furthest distance from Earth ever reached by humans, surpassing the record of 248,655 miles set in 1970 during the infamous Apollo 13 mission. Astronauts will fly by the moon 6,000 miles above the surface and get a glimpse of the entire celestial disk, a sight not seen even by the Apollo astronauts.

How long will the Artemis II mission last? When they land on Earth

Once the lunar rendezvous is complete, the astronauts will make a four-day journey to Earth, using Earth’s gravity to naturally pull Orion toward Earth without the need for propulsion or large amounts of fuel.

As Orion breaks through Earth’s atmosphere, its protective heat shield is removed to provide a place for the parachute to deploy and slow the craft.

The capsule will then likely splash down in the Pacific Ocean near California on Friday, April 10, after which five orange airbags will inflate around the top of the spacecraft, flipping the capsule into an upright position. After landing, the crew will leave the vehicle and board the recovery vessel within approximately two hours.

Eric Lagatta is a Space Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Please contact elagatta@usatodayco.com.

Liquid IV launches Grillo’s Pickle flavor based on April Fool’s joke

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A company realized that they needed to be careful about what they posted on social media on April Fool’s Day, as their customers might request that they actually post on April Fool’s Day.

Liquid IV announced Grillo’s Pickle-flavored hydration multiplier on March 2, turning a joke made on social media last year into reality.

The company said in a blog post that its “DMs, comments, and inboxes were flooded” with requests from fans to create a pickle-flavored drink powder. Comments on Liquid IV’s 2025 joke post showed strong support for bringing this flavor to market.

“The passion of our community created this idea, and the talent of our innovation team made it a reality,” Sai Chaluvadi, Liquid IV’s chief research and development officer, said in a blog post.

A page for the product was launched on the Liquid IV website on April 1st, sparking concerns that the joke would be repeated. However, USA TODAY confirmed the product’s authenticity ahead of the official announcement.

“You may have thought we pulled an April Fool’s prank yesterday, but this thirst quencher is no joke,” the company said in a blog post.

According to Liquid IV, the pickle flavor is an exclusive online product, starting at $14.99 for a pack of 10. Hydration Multiplier is a drink powder that the company claims provides “three times the electrolytes of leading sports drinks” and “eight vitamins and nutrients.”

Coral Springs Deputy Mayor Nancy Metayer Bowen dies, husband arrested

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The deputy mayor of a Florida city was found dead in her home on April 1, and authorities announced that her husband had been arrested and charged with murder.

Police said Nancy Metayer Bowen’s body was discovered at her Coral Springs home around 10 a.m. after a welfare check. Bowen’s husband, Stephen Bowen, 40, was arrested on suspicion of premeditated murder and tampering with or fabricating physical evidence.

Police have not released the circumstances of Nancy Metayer Bowen’s death, according to Florida lawmakers. Her death came months after her brother died by suicide and days before she announced her candidacy for Congress, a Florida lawmaker said.

Coral Springs Police Chief Brad Mock said at a news conference that there is no ongoing threat to the public.

Nancy Metayer Bowen, 38, is the first black and Haitian-American woman to serve on the City Commission.

“Throughout her years in public service, she led with integrity, compassion and an unwavering sense of purpose,” her family said in a statement. “She believed in bringing people together, listening to those she served, and working tirelessly to create positive change in the community. To us, she was a source of strength, wisdom, and love, and someone who always put others before herself.”

Who is Coral Springs Deputy Mayor Nancy Metayer Bowen?

Nancy Metayer Bowen, a Florida A&M University graduate, was first elected vice mayor in 2020 and is up for re-election in 2024.

Nancy Metayer Bowen also holds a master’s degree in health sciences from Johns Hopkins University. She is an environmental scientist and former member of the Broward County Soil and Water Conservation District and was appointed to the Florida League of Cities’ 2025-26 Federal Action Strike Team.

Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-Fla.) posted on social media that Nancy Metayer Bowen is “about to announce” her candidacy for Congress.

“Nancy was one of the nicest people I’ve ever worked with,” Moskowitz wrote. “She was always fighting for her community, always asking for support. She had a future like that. This is terrible.”

Moskowitz also mentioned Nancy Metayer Bowen’s brother, who passed away in December 2025. Donovan Joshua Lee Metayer passed away at the age of 26 after a long battle with his mental health. He was a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, when a mass shooting at the school in 2018 killed 17 people.

In a Facebook post on the Coral Springs Government Page, Nancy Metayer Bowen was remembered not only as a public servant but also as a “light in our community.”

“Her leadership was based on compassion, strength and unwavering dedication to others,” the post said. “Her impact on Coral Springs is immeasurable, and her loss leaves a void in our hearts. We ask our community to keep her family, loved ones, and all those who are grieving in your thoughts and prayers. During this difficult time, we come together as one city. Even in this darkness, we will carry her light.”

The root of this mom’s problem is a fungal disease. Doctors blamed it on fatigue.

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Kate Ames was pregnant with her third child in 2018 and was exhausted. Already the mother of a 5-year-old and a 2-year-old, her friends and family said the fatigue was normal. “You’re a mother, so of course you feel sick and are tired all the time.”

Ames, who lives in Arizona, remembers thinking, “I never thought being a mother would feel like this.”

As her fatigue and depression increased, she went to an obstetrician and gynecologist. They also told her it was normal and suggested treatment.

“I feel like I’ve been sent to different doctors for different reasons,” said Ames, 35. She became increasingly suspicious that something was wrong. “There’s going to be a lot of different things coming up.”

Years later, her relief turned to anger when doctors and air quality experts discovered that her symptoms were caused by undetected mold in her home. Why didn’t they listen to her in the first place?

Ames is one of thousands of women who have felt ignored by medical professionals. There is a long history of women’s pain being ignored by doctors, misclassified as menstrual pain, or rooted in psychological distress. Some women have died as a result of this oversight.

In the 2024 KFF Women’s Health Survey, one in five women said their health care provider ignored their direct requests or questions in the past two years, and nearly one in five women said they did not trust their health care provider to tell them the truth. An additional 13% said their health care provider had suggested they were personally responsible for the health problems they were experiencing.

Ellen Rudolph, co-founder and CEO of Well Theory, a virtual care platform for women with autoimmune diseases, said women are often victims of medical gaslighting. Rudolph became ill in his mid-20s and said mold was one of the triggers for his autoimmune disease. She was referred to a psychiatrist for some of her symptoms, but said the wording from her doctor made her question whether the symptoms she was experiencing, including fatigue, digestive issues and brain fog, were real.

“This is not the doctor’s fault. I don’t think the way our health care system is set up allows doctors to be successful,” Rudolph said, adding that a shortage of doctors is forcing patients to see patients too quickly. “We don’t have enough time or expertise to look into these more complex conditions and illnesses.”

What is mold disease? And how common is it?

Ames said her symptoms continued to expand and worsen after giving birth. She developed a skin rash, digestive problems, and pain in her legs and joints. Persistent ear pain made the area near her eardrum feel “like someone was digging in there with an ice pick.” Eventually, she went to the doctor for an eye infection and was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease. Although medication for his autoimmune disease made him feel a little better, Ames continued to feel unwell.

“I was kind of miserable,” she said.

She had heard about mold poisoning but didn’t think it was the cause of her discomfort. In 2024, she jokingly suggested to her doctor that all of her symptoms might be due to an unknown source of mold in her home. Her doctor didn’t laugh. “Well, maybe,” said the doctor. Doctors persuaded Ames to undergo tests.

Results showed high levels of mycotoxins in her body. Ames later had his home inspected, which confirmed that there was mold in the house. There were enough levels of mold in the air that experts told the Ames family to leave the house immediately.

Ames was shocked. How could it have been mold since she was the only one in her family with symptoms?

Naturopathic doctor Marjorie Peek says it’s actually common for people living in the same home to have varying degrees of reaction when exposed to mold. People have different natural detox abilities based on the toxins already present in their bodies and genetic factors, she said. According to the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, mold reactions vary depending on the type of mold, the amount of mold, and the person exposed.

Peek said mold illnesses, which include chronic illnesses related to toxins and bacteria found in mold, are more widespread than mold poisoning, where people can experience severe reactions such as blindness. She said people with chronic symptoms should be tested for mycotoxins.

Although there is limited data on how common mold is in homes, the Indoor Air Quality Scientific Research Resource Bank estimates that 47% of homes in the United States have mold or moisture. Ames encourages people with unexplained symptoms to get tested and look around their home for mold sources.

“It shouldn’t take you six years to realize that your home is slowly killing you,” she says.

“We deserve better.”

Ames said the family left the house immediately after the inspection and lived with relatives for two months while the house was repaired.

The main source of mold in their home was hidden under the second bathroom and in a small space. “There is 100% no visible water damage for us,” Ames said. The repairs cost just under $13,000, some of which was covered by insurance, she said. According to home services marketplace Angi, the average cost of mold remediation is about $2,300.

Ames said it took about three months for her symptoms to begin to subside after living in a mold-free environment. She said she was no longer in pain and her brain fog and rash were gone. Her ears are still sensitive, but she said her lingering symptoms are mild overall.

Ames said she often thinks about the people around her who have told her they are very tired because they have young children. It still bothers her, and she’s angry that other women’s symptoms are routinely ignored and chalked away as the woes of motherhood. “That’s not accurate. I think we deserve better,” she said.

“I don’t think people would feel that way if they were healthy,” Ames said. “You don’t feel hopeless.”

Madeline Mitchell’s role covering women and the care economy for USA TODAY is supported by a partnership with Pivotal and Journalism Funding Partners. Funders do not provide editorial input.

Contact Madeline at: memitchell@usatoday.com and @maddiemitch_ With X.

Earthquake struck near San Francisco Thursday morning

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A magnitude 4.6 earthquake struck California’s Bay Area early Thursday morning, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

The quake was centered in the town of Boulder Creek in California’s Santa Cruz Mountains and struck at 1:41 a.m. local time at a depth of 10.9 kilometers (6.8 miles). Residents in the area reported mild to moderate shaking, with residents as far north as Berkeley and San Francisco and as far south as Soledad reporting feeling the shaking as well, according to the USGS.

It was initially reported as a magnitude 5.1 earthquake, but was later revised down to magnitude 4.6. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, various faults run through the Santa Cruz area, and it was not immediately clear which fault caused the quake.

No injuries or deaths were reported from the quake, but the USGS said there was a 56% chance of a magnitude 3.0 or greater aftershock within the next seven days, and a 12% chance of a magnitude 4.0 or greater.

Gabe Hauari is USA TODAY’s national trends news reporter. You can follow him at X @gabehauari Or email Gdhauari@gannett.com.

Will banks, post offices, UPS, and FedEx be open or closed on Good Friday 2026?

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Easter is this Sunday. So Friday, April 3rd is Good Friday.

Good Friday is the day on which the Christian faith commemorates the crucifixion and death of Jesus Christ. According to Britannica, “Since the early days of Christianity, Good Friday has been observed as a day of mourning, repentance, and fasting.”

Easter falls on Sunday, April 5th this year, celebrates the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, and follows the 40-day period known as Lent. According to the History Channel, Easter is one of many “moving holidays” during the liturgical year, so the day the holiday is celebrated changes from year to year. Other examples of “moving holidays” include Ash Wednesday and Palm Sunday.

Here’s what you need to know about banking, postal and shipping operations for Good Friday 2026.

Is the post office open on Good Friday? Will my mail be delivered?

U.S. Postal Service facilities will operate normally on Friday, April 3, according to the USPS website. That means USPS facilities will be available for retail transactions and mail will be delivered as usual.

Are banks open on Good Friday?

Good Friday is not a federal holiday, so bank branches will primarily be open.

We recommend checking with your local branch for specific business hours.

Is UPS open on Good Friday? Will my package be delivered?

UPS pickup and delivery services are available and UPS Store locations will open Friday, according to the company’s website.

Is FedEx open on Good Friday? Will my package be delivered?

FedEx pickup and delivery services are available and FedEx offices will be open Friday, according to the company’s website.

Gabe Hauari is USA TODAY’s national trends news reporter. You can follow him at X @gabehauari Or email Gdhauari@gannett.com.

When will Artemis II reach the moon? Track astronauts on NASA missions

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Here’s what you need to know about where the Artemis II astronauts are now and when they’re expected to arrive near the moon.

The Artemis II astronauts may have embarked on a historic lunar mission, but they’re not fully headed toward the moon yet.

In fact, the four-person crew likely just woke up from some much-needed sleep the morning after they finally touched down from Florida’s Kennedy Space Center on their long-awaited mission. The Orion capsule carrying the Artemis II crew will remain in orbit around Earth for much of Thursday, April 2, until preparations begin to send the ship to the moon.

A crew of four, including NASA astronauts Reed Wiseman, Christina Koch and Victor Glover, and Jeremy Hansen of the Canadian Space Agency, will now embark on the farthest space adventure in human history. The mission will make Glover the first black man to venture near the moon, Koch the first woman and Hansen the first Canadian.

Artemis II, considered primarily a test mission, could be a major step toward NASA’s goal of returning astronauts to the moon for the first time since the Apollo program ended in 1972. The mission, expected to last about 10 days, will be a key demonstration that NASA’s Orion crew capsule can handle a human-capped lunar mission before an attempted landing as early as 2028.

Here’s what you need to know about where the Artemis II astronauts are now and when they’re expected to arrive near the moon.

Where is Artemis 2 now?

Artemis II astronauts are still orbiting Earth in NASA’s Orion space capsule at a height approximately 184 times higher than the International Space Station.

The crew was scheduled to wake up around 7 a.m. ET on Thursday, April 2, after getting about two hours of sleep, according to the latest mission blog update from NASA.

Next, the astronauts will prepare to raise Orion’s perigee. Perigee is an astronomical term that refers to the point at which an object is closest to Earth in a continuous orbit. This maneuver will send the Orion spacecraft on a four-day journey to the moon, known as the menstrual ejection burn.

Once their mission is complete, the astronauts will resume sleeping around 9:40 a.m., NASA said.

Artemis II flight path

The diagram below from NASA provides a visual representation of what Artemis II’s flight path will look like.

Artemis II Tracker

Want to follow astronauts along Artemis II’s journey to the moon? NASA has an Artemis II tracker available online and in a mobile app that lets users see where Orion is, how fast it’s moving, and how far the spacecraft is from both Earth and the moon.

The mobile version for smartphones also includes an augmented reality feature that allows users to move their phone to see where Orion is in relation to Earth.

When and where was Artemis II launched?

NASA’s Artemis II mission launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, on Wednesday, April 1 at 6:35 pm ET.

The agency’s towering 322-foot Space Launch System rocket provided the initial explosive power to propel the Orion spacecraft carrying astronauts. Launching with 8.8 million pounds of thrust, the Space Launch System is considered the most powerful rocket ever launched by NASA, about 17 percent more powerful than the iconic Apollo-era retired Saturn V.

Following launch, a complex series of steps took place within the first few hours of the mission to prepare the Artemis II crew to begin a 10-day journey around the moon in the Orion capsule.

This included having both the SLS rocket’s core stage and upper stage installed separately and at different times from Orion, which deployed a solar array to draw power from the sun while reaching high Earth orbit at an altitude of approximately 46,000 miles.

When will Artemis II reach the moon?

If all goes as planned, Artemis II will reach the moon and make its historic lunar flight on Monday, April 6th.

Astronauts aboard Orion, which plummets off the far side of the moon, are expected to travel the furthest distance from Earth ever reached by humans, surpassing the record of 248,655 miles set in 1970 during the infamous Apollo 13 mission. Astronauts will fly by the moon 6,000 miles above the surface and get a glimpse of the entire celestial disk, a sight not seen even by the Apollo astronauts.

How long will the Artemis II mission last? When they land on Earth

Once the lunar rendezvous is complete, the astronauts will make a four-day journey to Earth, using Earth’s gravity to naturally pull Orion toward Earth without the need for propulsion or large amounts of fuel.

As Orion breaks through Earth’s atmosphere, its protective heat shield is removed to provide a place for the parachute to deploy and slow the craft.

The capsule will then likely splash down in the Pacific Ocean near California on Friday, April 10, after which five orange airbags will inflate around the top of the spacecraft, flipping the capsule into an upright position. After landing, the crew will leave the vehicle and board the recovery vessel within approximately two hours.

Eric Lagatta is a Space Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Please contact elagatta@usatodayco.com.

Want a free burrito on National Burrito Day?Here’s how you can get it.

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Burrito lovers, rejoice that this day is just for you and we have some great deals to celebrate.

National Burrito Day is Thursday, April 2, and restaurants are offering discounts to celebrate burrito lovers.

A burrito can be as simple as adding beans, lettuce, and chicken and wrapping it tightly in a tortilla, or as complex as a giant 5-pound burrito wrapped in a tortilla filled with steak, chicken, guacamole, beans, and whatever else you see fit. Either way, you’ll have a whole day to celebrate this iconic Mexican dish.

Here’s what you need to know about burritos and the deals they’re offering on National Burrito Day.

What is a burrito?

A burrito is a Mexican dish typically stuffed with beans, rice, cheese, salsa, vegetables, and your choice of meat such as chicken, steak, or pork.

The burrito was first mentioned around 1895, Noe Alcala, executive chef of Lucia Mexican Grill at Virgin Hotels Las Vegas, told USA TODAY.

Alcala said it was originally “very simple,” consisting of ground meat wrapped in a tortilla, making it easy to transport.

“Back then it was a lot different than it is now,” Alcala said.

According to National Today, tortillas weren’t served in American restaurants until the 1930s. They eventually evolved into what we know today and can be found in food trucks, grocery stores, and restaurants across the country.

Alcala added that burritos, like sushi and pizza, were refined in America’s melting pot.

“The only thing left was flour tortillas and protein,” Alcala said. “The rest is pretty much what we decided here in the U.S.: This is what a burrito should be.”

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The correct way to wrap a burrito

It wraps up the perfect burrito with evenly packed deliciousness in every bite.

When is National Burrito Day?

National Burrito Day 2026 will be Thursday, April 2nd.

The annual celebration is held on the first Thursday in April, according to National Today.

Qdoba’s free main dish

Qdoba will offer rewards members a free entree with the purchase of an entree and drink, according to a news release emailed to USA TODAY.

This deal is available in Qdoba Rewards Wallet and can only be used on April 2nd. This deal can be redeemed in-store, on the app, or online. However, members with Rewards Gold status have until April 5 to redeem their deal.

To sign up to become a member, visit qdoba.com/rewards or download the QDOBA app.

Chipotle offers $2 million in prizes for National Burrito Day

Chipotle Mexican Grill is offering $0 delivery to customers who order through the Chipotle app, Chipotle.com and Chipotle.ca on National Burrito Day.

For National Burrito Day, Chipotle is bringing back the Burrito Vault game, allowing customers to play for a chance to win lifetime free burritos, BOGO deals, or double protein rewards from March 30 to April 1.

Del Taco free burrito

Del Taco offers Del Yeah! Rewards members who spend $3 will receive a free classic burrito on April 2, according to a news release emailed to USA TODAY.

This offer is valid on National Burrito Day only and can be redeemed in the Del Taco app or at deltaco.com.

dog house 3 dollar burrito

According to a news release emailed to USA TOD, Dog House will give House Rewards members the chance to redeem a House Burrito access pass for $3, valid in-store only.teeth.

100% of profits during National Burrito Day. Donations from access passes are No child is hungry “Supporting the fight against child hunger,” the release states.

Customers who take advantage of this deal will receive a BOGO offer on Dog Haus’ Bad-Ass Breakfast Burritos.Until April 30th.

bogo burrito

According to a news release emailed to USA TODAY, when customers order at Mo’s on National Burrito Day, they can get a buy one, get one free on a burrito, bowl or Mo’ Value meal.

Moe Rewards members will also be automatically entered for a chance to win free burritos for a year with every National Burrito Day purchase, up to 100 lucky customers.

$5 burritos at 7-Eleven, Speedway, and Stripes.

At participating 7-Eleven, Speedway, and Stripes locations, you can purchase a Chicken Fajita Burrito with chicken, sautéed vegetables, and seasonings wrapped in a tortilla for $5.

More National Burrito Day Deals

  • Tokaya – Tocaya Rewards members will receive free chips and guacamole with the purchase of a burrito at Tocaya on National Burrito Day.
  • huddle house – Rewards Members receive 50% off MVP Burrito Meals when you purchase an MVP Burrito Meal.
  • Tijuana Flats – Receive a free “Make It Wet” upgrade with any burrito purchase when customers use code SAUCED26. You can have your burrito topped with queso, red sauce, or verde.
  • Taco Cabana – This is my TC! Rewards members get 25% off your order when you buy a burrito.
  • hot head burrito – Rewards members can buy one burrito, get one free on April 2nd. This offer can only be redeemed online.
  • taco john’s – Rewards members can receive a free burrito on National Burrito Day with any purchase of $3 or more through the Taco John app.

Julia Gomez is USA TODAY’s trends reporter, covering popular toys, scientific research, natural disasters, holidays, and trending news. Connect with her on LinkedIn ×Instagram, TikTok: @juliamariegz or email jgomez@gannett.com..

Daily Briefing updates on Artemis II, Iran

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Welcome to the daily briefing. Start your morning by reading the book below.

nicole farato here. I just did a little Pilates. Thursday’s news includes updates on the Artemis II mission, excerpts from last night’s presidential address, and one mother’s journey to get her condition recognized.

Astronauts depart for the moon!

NASA’s Artemis II mission heads to the moon on Thursday, where the crew will conduct system checks in high Earth orbit, including tests on the Orion capsule’s life support, propulsion, navigation and communications systems to ensure the spacecraft is ready to fly deeper into space. And yes, they make sure the space toilet works.

It’s a historic moment. The Artemis II mission comes more than 50 years after humans last left Earth’s orbit. Although the four astronauts will not land on the moon, they will complete the necessary steps for future moonwalks.

“We’re going for all of humanity,” astronaut Jeremy Hansen said at 6:35 p.m. ET on April 1, seconds before blasting off from Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

For all you space geeks out there: Check out Artemis II’s cute mascot and track your missions with the online Artemis II tracker.

More news you need to know right now

supreme court

SCOTUS discusses President Trump’s birthright citizenship policy

Protesters rallied outside the Supreme Court on Wednesday as the justices debated a lower court’s rejection of President Trump’s argument that children of parents who are in the country illegally or temporarily are not entitled to citizenship. Although leading conservative justices did not immediately reject the case, they appeared skeptical of the administration’s claims of legality.

health and wellness

Doctors attributed her symptoms to motherhood. In fact, she was suffering from a fungal disease.

Kate Ames was pregnant with her third child in 2018 and was exhausted. Her gynecologist said this was normal maternal fatigue and suggested treatment. Years later, her relief turned to anger when doctors and air quality experts discovered that her symptoms were caused by undetected mold in her home. Why didn’t they listen to her in the first place?

before going

Have feedback about the daily briefing? Email Nicole at NFallert@usatoday.com.

Is the stock market open on Good Friday? See holiday schedule for 2026

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US stock markets will be closed on Friday, April 3rd.Comply with goodfridYes, it is the day when people of the Christian faith commemorate the crucifixion and death of Jesus Christ.

The Nasdaq Stock Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange will be closed on Friday and will reopen on Monday, April 6th. The U.S. bond market will close at noon Eastern time on Friday, according to the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.

After the Good Friday closure, Wall Street is expected to remain open until late May. The next scheduled stock market closure is Monday, May 25th, in observance of Memorial Day.

US stock market holiday schedule in 2026

The market will be closed on the following public holidays in 2026:

  • Good Friday: Friday, April 3rd
  • Memorial Day: Monday, May 25th
  • juneteenth: Friday June 19th
  • independence day: Friday, July 3rd
  • labor day: Monday, September 7th
  • Thanksgiving: Thursday, November 26th (market will also close at 1pm ET on November 25th)
  • Christmas: Friday, December 25th (market closes at 1pm ET on December 24th)

Gabe Hauari is USA TODAY’s national trends news reporter. You can follow him at X @gabehauari Or email Gdhauari@gannett.com.

How will the Supreme Court’s birthright citizenship case affect U.S. citizens?

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With President Donald Trump looking on, the U.S. Supreme Court on April 1 heard arguments on whether children born in the United States should be automatically granted U.S. citizenship. This is an important case that could overturn a precedent set 158 ​​years ago.

The court will decide whether President Trump’s executive order restricting birthright citizenship is constitutional in Trump v. Barbara. Trump, who signed the executive order shortly after taking office in January 2025, will attend the hearing, making him the first sitting president to attend oral arguments.

A verdict is expected to be handed down this summer.

This is the second time the Supreme Court has considered President Trump’s citizenship order. On June 27, 2025, the justices voted 6-3 to partially suspend a district court’s temporary restriction that blocked President Trump’s order from taking effect. The court said the district court likely overstepped its authority.

The court did not rule on whether President Trump’s order itself was constitutional. However, during oral arguments on May 15, none of the justices expressed support for the administration’s argument that Trump’s order is consistent with the Civil Rights Clause of the 14th Amendment and previous Supreme Court decisions on the clause.

Since 1868, birthright citizenship makes anyone born in the United States a citizen, whether a child of a citizen, an alien legally residing in the United States, or an illegal immigrant.

Changes in birthright laws will affect a large portion of the U.S. population.

According to 2024 data from the U.S. Census, more than 25 million foreign-born U.S. residents were naturalized citizens.

How many people have obtained citizenship by birthright?

Eliminating birthright citizenship would result in an average of 255,000 children being born without citizenship each year in the United States, increasing the number of unauthorized immigrants living in the United States by 2.7 million by 2045 and 5.4 million by 2075, according to estimates from the Migration Policy Institute and the Pennsylvania Population Research Institute.

If you can’t see the graphic, click here to reload the page.

In 2022, the Pew Research Center found that approximately 4.4 million U.S.-born children under the age of 18 were living with illegal immigrant parents.

How many illegal immigrants live in the United States

The number of illegal immigrants in the United States has increased since the 1990s, reaching 12.2 million in 2007, according to Pew Research Center estimates.

Where do foreign-born people live in the United States?

In 2022, nearly a quarter of the foreign-born population of the United States lived in California. According to the Census Bureau, foreign-born people make up more than 20% of the total population of New Jersey, New York, California, and Florida.

Foreign-born residents refer to all people born outside the United States, including naturalized U.S. citizens. lawful permanent resident. Temporary immigrants such as international students. Humanitarian immigration such as refugees. and unauthorized immigration.

Nearly every state had an increase in foreign-born population in 2022 compared to 2010. Delaware, North Dakota, South Dakota, and West Virginia had the largest increases in foreign-born populations from 2010 to 2022, with each state increasing by more than 40%.

The foreign-born population of the United States has increased over the past 50 years. In 1970, 4.7% of the U.S. population was born outside the country. By 2022, 13.9% of the U.S. population will be foreign-born.

Where do foreign-born U.S. residents immigrate from?

More than half of foreign-born residents of the United States immigrated from Latin American countries, according to the Census Bureau. Nearly one-third of the population immigrated from Asia.

What is naturalization?

The Council on Foreign Relations describes naturalization as a process by which non-U.S. nationals can apply for citizenship after meeting certain requirements, such as passing a civics exam, demonstrating basic English proficiency, and continuing residence in the United States.

Which countries grant birthright citizenship?

According to a Pew Research Center analysis, 32 other countries around the world, most of them in the Western Hemisphere, have birthright citizenship laws that are substantially similar to those in the United States.

read more:

Countries in the Americas recognize citizenship by birthright. What happens if we cancel it?

Key takeaways from the historic Supreme Court debate on birthright citizenship

Note This article updates a previous report with new information.

Contributions by Lauren Villagran, Maureen Groppe, and Bert Jansen

SOURCE USA TODAY NETWORK REPORTS AND INVESTIGATIONS. Reuters; U.S. Census Bureau

President Trump’s banquet hall prepares for vote as judge orders construction halt

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Two days after a federal judge ordered a halt to President Donald Trump’s $400 million ballroom project, which must first be approved by Congress, the Federal Planning Agency is scheduled to take a final vote on the project’s site and construction plans.

The vote by the 12-member National Capital Planning Commission on April 2nd, chaired by Will Schaaf, White House chief of staff and former personal lawyer to President Trump, will be conducted in person and the public will be allowed to attend. This is in contrast to the March 5 public hearing, which was held online after the project received more than 35,000 written comments and 104 applicants to testify. Most comments were negative.

Even if the commission votes in favor of the ballroom, it cannot override the judge’s decision to halt construction on the project.

Still, Planning Commission spokesman Steven Staudigl said the vote advances the final stage of the review process.

A White House official, who can speak freely on condition of anonymity, told USA TODAY, “There is nothing in the injunction that prevents the Planning Commission from considering the aesthetic and architectural merits of the project.”

President Trump, who has long lamented the lack of a spacious banquet hall on the White House grounds to eliminate reliance on temporary tents during events such as state dinners, called the judge’s decision “wrong” in a post on Truth Social.

The project was announced by the White House in July, but became a highly controversial undertaking as the east wing was suddenly demolished to accommodate a 90,000 square foot ballroom.

Financing the project through private donations also caused controversy. The White House announced a list of 37 donors, including companies such as Amazon, Apple, Caterpillar, Coinbase, Google, Comcast, HP, Lockheed Martin, Meta, Microsoft, T-Mobile and Union Pacific Railroad, but did not disclose the amount donated. Some companies do business with the federal government.

The National Trust for Historic Preservation filed a lawsuit Dec. 12 asking the court to halt further construction until the plans pass Congressional approval and a legally required review process. The scale of the project would “dwarf the White House itself,” the preservation group said.

A March 31 ruling by U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon questioned the “complex financing plan” and noted that Congressional approval could maintain “power over state property and oversight over government spending.”

“The President of the United States is the custodian of the White House for the next generation of the First Family. But he is not the owner!” Leon wrote in a 35-page opinion.

The ruling halts all actions “including, but not limited to, further demolition, site preparation, landscaping, excavation, foundation work, and other construction and related works,” except those that are “absolutely necessary” to ensure the safety of the area.

The Trump administration immediately appealed.

Leon’s order will go into effect on April 14, two weeks after its issuance date. The White House team must file a compliance report with the court within 21 days of the order taking effect.

The ballroom plan is in the final stages of the design approval process, with the Fine Arts Commission expected to approve the design on February 27th and the National Capital Planning Commission on April 2nd. But even if NCPC approves the plan, Leon’s ruling prevents the project from moving forward.

When the White House first announced plans for the ballroom, President Trump told reporters that the addition “will be built on the east side and it’s going to be beautiful.”

“You’ll have a view of the Washington Monument. It won’t be in the way of the current building,” he says. “It’s close, but it doesn’t touch it, and it has complete respect for the existing building. I’m the biggest fan of that.”

But plans have changed.

The loss of the historic building drew criticism from former residents and the public, including former first ladies Hillary Clinton and Michelle Obama.

Clinton posted a photo of the demolished east wing facade with an X caption that read, “It’s not his house. It’s your house. And he’s destroying it.”

Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy is USA TODAY’s White House correspondent. You can follow her at X @SwapnaVenugopal.

Big Bend border wall faces bipartisan opposition in Texas

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Call it Texas Independence: Republicans and Democrats in the Big Bend say outsiders shouldn’t decide their future. They argue that a border wall would separate them from the rivers and land that define the region.

PRESIDIO, Texas – It’s a dark, starry night for Dennis Carrera. Mike Davidson has been rowing the Rio Grande for 49 years. For Bill Ivey, it’s the ghost town business he built with his father and now his son.

In a historically rebellious state, an unlikely coalition of Texans of diverse backgrounds and political opponents are banding together to fight President Donald Trump’s plan to spend billions on a border wall here in the state’s rugged Big Bend region.

River contractors have bombarded the state’s Republican Congressional delegation and Republican Gov. Greg Abbott with anti-wall postcards. A local photographer started a petition that gathered over 106,000 signatures. Protests are planned for April 4 at the Texas State Capitol and Big Bend National Park.

There are now significant signs that their efforts may be paying off.

The Department of Homeland Security has updated its online “smart wall” map to replace plans for physical barriers with “deterrent technology” at national and state parks in the region. Local officials, including the governor, said they had been informally assured that no wall would be built inside the park.

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Big Bend residents oppose border wall proposal

Residents oppose a proposed border wall near Big Bend, citing environmental and economic concerns.

Texans in the Big Bend say the region’s border wall threatens their land, lives and livelihoods. They don’t want distant government officials making decisions without their input. Physical barriers could put at risk the landscape, which attracts more than 500,000 tourists a year and drives the local economy.

“It doesn’t take much to destroy a community, and if you put a wall in the Big Bend region… it would destroy the economy here,” said Ivey, a Republican and longtime Trump supporter.

“I think someone drew a line on a map of Washington, and they’ve never been here,” Ivey said. “All you have to do is come here and see it.”

The dark nights of Big Bend reveal distant galaxies. The green Rio Grande floats like a ribbon in the jaws of jagged canyons. Once a quaint ghost town, Terlingua serves as a springboard to the vast desert vistas of Big Bend National Park. The Presidio, with a population of 3,246, has historic Mexican, Spanish, and indigenous roots in the area.

“The fact that they’re trying to disrupt our peace, the fact that they’re trying to take away the only thing we have, which is the night sky, really makes me angry,” said Carrera, who lives in Presidio. The government already has a contract to build 272 miles of border wall in the Presidio.

In an emailed response to questions, U.S. Customs and Border Protection told USA TODAY that the combination of barriers, roads and technology adjacent to Big Bend National Park and Big Bend Ranch State Park is “still in the planning stages.”

CBP said it coordinates with federal and state agencies “throughout border security and technology implementation planning to achieve the Border Patrol’s operational priorities.”

The Big Bend region of Texas is one of the last areas along the border without some kind of fence or barrier. Locals say the mountains, remote desert and extreme weather are enough deterrents to prevent illegal crossings.

The Border Patrol’s own numbers bear that out. At 500 miles, the Big Bend sector is the largest of nine sectors on the Southwest border. Although it is almost a quarter of the distance between the United States and Mexico, the number of illegal border crossings is at an all-time low.

In late 2023, during President Joe Biden’s presidency, the El Paso area was recording more than 50,000 migrants per month, while the Big Bend area had about 1,500 migrant encounters. According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data, there were 3,096 immigration arrests in the Big Bend region in fiscal year 2025, or 1% of the 237,538 border arrests overall.

CBP said a contract has been awarded for a “major border wall system” in the eastern and western border areas of the Presidio that will run through farms and ranches to the edge of Big Bend Ranch State Park. CBP confirmed to USA TODAY that construction of a three-mile border barrier originally planned within the state park has been canceled.

“The Wonders of the Rio Grande”

In late March, the bilingual slogans “No Walls” and “No Al Muro” were plastered all over the Big Bend area, on trucker hats, road signs, bumper stickers and hand-embroidered beer koozies.

During his 2015 election campaign, Trump promised to build a “big, beautiful wall” along the nearly 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border. His first administration built 482 miles of physical barriers, but installed only 137 miles of new fencing, according to an analysis by border security researcher Adam Isakson.

Biden halted construction of the border wall. Trump restarted it. In the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed into law by President Trump last summer, Congress gave the Department of Homeland Security $46.5 billion to expedite border wall construction.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced by January that it intended to issue $11.4 billion in contracts in President Trump’s first year and award the remaining contracts by June 30. The goal is to construct 250 miles of new border barrier by September 30th.

Local alarm began to spread after the Big Bend Sentinel newspaper published a story about the president’s plans.

Terlingua outfitters handed out addressed postcards to tourists after canoe trips. At Benga, a restaurant and tourist hub, every table had a barrier postcard and a pen. Activists erected a makeshift iron fence in the restaurant’s parking lot and posted another slogan, “Stop the Steal,” on top of it. This is a play on the MAGA effort to overturn the 2020 election.

Erin Little, co-owner of Big Bend Boat and Hike, said she and other tour companies have mailed thousands of postcards to Abbott, Sens. John Cornyn and Ted Cruz, and Rep. Tony Gonzalez, whose district includes Big Bend.

Mr. Cornyn, Mr. Cruz and Mr. Gonzalez did not respond to USA TODAY’s requests for comment. Abbott spokesman Andrew Maharelis told USA TODAY that the governor “fully supports the use of all tools and strategies necessary to assist the Trump administration in deterring illegal immigrants who attempt to make the dangerous journey across our southern border.”

“Rugged and isolated areas like the Big Bend present a unique opportunity to deploy technology to assist border security,” Mahalelis said in an email, adding that U.S. Border Patrol Chief Mike Banks assured governors there are no physical barriers in state or national parks.

Still, tourists are pitching in to continue the fight alongside locals, Little said as he carried a plastic box of postcards.

“Great support,” she said.

One Texas mother who was near the top of the mountain said a wall won’t stop crime. It always finds a way. She wrote in cursive: “What the wall prevents is our daughters’ access to the wonders of the Rio Grande and the curiosity of future Texans to learn and grow from experiences on protected public lands.”

Wall by the river: “The final insult”

During the day, the road between Presidio and Terlingua through Big Bend Ranch State Park curves along the river and up and over steep hills.

A violent volcanic eruption approximately 30 million years ago (after the extinction of the dinosaurs) created the sheer rock faces and boulder fields that make the area’s topography so unique. The Rio Grande is a relatively recent arrival geologically, flowing into the Big Bend about 2 million years ago.

In late March, turtles sunbathe on the river’s edge. Gambel’s quail runs among the rocks. The scorching 100 degree sun in the afternoon keeps other wildlife away.

But at night, desert animals come down to the Rio Grande in search of water. The mule deer, with their keen ears, dart across the two-lane state highway. A company of pig-like javelina roams around. A black-tailed jackrabbit threads its way through a field of mesquite and flowering nopal cacti.

Davidson, a longtime river guide and born-and-raised Texan, began guiding tourists on the Rio Grande in the 1980s, when the river was swollen and flooded frequently.

“When I first came here, we had summer rains and bad flooding,” he said. “We like rivers. We like floods. The higher, the better.”

Over the years, he said, the river has been subjected to “small insults” that have added up to dramatically change its nature and ecosystem. He points to a warming climate and increased growing of expensive, water-intensive agricultural products in Mexico since the North American Free Trade Agreement in the 1990s.

The lanky 73-year-old paddled the river for five straight days in late March, guiding vacationing couples, families and college students, many on their first run on the Rio Grande.

“It would feel like the final insult to build a wall separating me from the river, which is part of my existence,” he said.

“Why do they want to make it?”

The world’s eighth-largest economy, a lone star state and former Republic of Texas with a history of fighting for independence, has a track record of overseeing the federal government. It is the largest state in the Lower 48 and the second most populous.

Asked if Big Bend residents could stop the wall from being built, Ivey said, “I’m old enough to remember when a group of Texans tried to secede from the Union.”

Border wall opponents plan to hold rallies at the Texas State Capitol in Austin on April 4th and in the Santa Elena Valley in Big Bend National Park the same day. They want Mr. Abbott and the state’s congressional delegation to take a stand.

In the Presidio, Luis Armendariz Spencer keeps a dusty copy of Texas Monthly in the back seat of his Chevrolet, which includes a cover story about a Texas gunman called “The Hell We Raised.” He owns farmland on the U.S.-Mexico border and believes there is no need for a border wall in the area.

“Why do they want to build it?” he asked. “To prevent Mexicans from coming to the United States to work? But they’re not coming anymore.”

Grassroots efforts to oppose border wall construction have had little success. But as opposition to Big Bend grows among Republicans, President Trump’s Department of Homeland Security is signaling it may be listening.

On March 5, the same day that President Trump fired former DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, the official color-coded “smart wall” map was updated online to show that Big Bend National Park would be equipped with unspecified “detection technology” rather than a 30-foot steel barrier.

On March 22, Big Bend Border Patrol Chief Lloyd Easterling told Presidio County Commissioner Deirdre Hissler that DHS has also decided to remove physical barriers at Big Bend Ranch State Park. Local residents are concerned about the departure of officials. A few days later, Easterling announced he was retiring from the Border Patrol.

On March 30th, the “Smart Wall” map was updated again to reflect that new stance. But residents say the new colors on the digital map are not enough to allay fears.

“When the map changed, did we celebrate? We celebrated,” she said. “But we remain on high alert.”

Landowners received notices threatening eminent land, which is the federal government’s right to expropriate property for a fair payment for its own purposes. Hissler said the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and others will review the property ownership in Presidio County Court on April 20. Local residents have been sharing photos of survey markers appearing on state park grounds.

Contractors are surveying the area.

In Valentine, 95 miles north of the Presidio, the mayor received a request from a company called Frontier Development to set up a camp with 200 trailers to house out-of-town construction workers, city clerk Albert Miller said. The total population of the town is 73 people.

Before the committee could discuss it, the company withdrew its proposal after encountering opposition.

Carrera, who has returned to his hometown of Presidio after a decade in Dallas, worries about how the men’s camps, construction teams and floodlights will affect the quiet, dark night skies of the countryside he has drawn into.

In Dallas, “we had to plan for times when the moon would be visible,” she said. “I took a photo with my iPhone today, and you can see the Milky Way.”

“Being four minutes away from a sign that says ‘Night Sky Preserve’ feels very special,” she said. “If you do that, everything will be ruined, right?”

Lauren Villagran covers borders and immigration for USA TODAY. Contact her at lvillagran@usatoday.com or laurenvillagran.57 on Signal.

10 energy and shipping stocks to watch as Hormuz turmoil grows

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Downside risk for stocks in the current market environment can be mitigated by buying stocks that will do well due to the continued closure of the Channel and potential damage to energy infrastructure.

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With the conflict in the Persian Gulf still ongoing, it’s a good idea to purchase some protection in your portfolio in case the conflict becomes prolonged, or even relatively short-lived, causes lasting structural damage to pre-conflict economic activity.

With that in mind, here’s a whistleblower tour of 10 stocks that can help investors in the current environment.

3 oil stocks that could benefit if oil prices rise further

It’s hard not to think of Captain Obvious here, but a good place to start is with oil and gas exploration and production companies, especially those operating in the United States such as Devon Energy, which focuses on the Permian Basin. (NYSE:DVN) and Diamondback Energy (NASDAQ: FANG). These two companies are not only attractive as tactical tools to manage the risk of high oil prices. They also look very valuable based on pre-conflict oil prices.

The third is Chevron, a major integrated company. (NYSE:CVX). Upstream operations (exploration and production) have benefited from higher oil prices, while downstream operations (refining) have also benefited from widening crack spreads (the difference between crude oil prices and refined product prices) due to poor access to crude oil and refined product shortages for Asian refiners.

DVN Chart

petroleum product refiner

Speaking of crack spreads, the most widely followed is the 3-2-1 spread (the spread between the prices of three barrels of oil, two barrels of gasoline, and one barrel of diesel), which has grown from less than $20 at the beginning of the year to just over $54 today.

That’s good news for refiners like Valero Energy. (NYSE:VLO) and PBF energy (NYSE:PBF), They get their oil from the US regardless of price. The latter is more of a pure refiner (Valero also has renewable diesel and ethanol businesses), and PBF is outperforming the market. As long as crack spreads remain wide and high prices do not destroy demand for transportation products (such as gasoline), these stocks are likely to outperform.

Don’t forget liquefied natural gas (LNG)

According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), 34% of the world’s crude oil trade passes through the Strait of Hormuz, and 20% of the world’s LNG trade also passes through the Strait of Hormuz. Almost 90% of the LNG volume that passes through the strait goes to Asia, with the remainder going to Europe. And even if the strait opens, LNG may take longer to recover than oil, especially if Qatar’s Ras Laffan, the world’s largest LNG export facility, continues to suffer damage.

Three companies that can help fill the LNG supply shortage caused by the strait blockade. woodside energy group (New York Stock Exchange:WDS) is an Australian LNG producer (4.5% dividend yield, US listed) ideally placed to supply LNG to Asian markets.

cheniere energy (NYSE:LNG) Already the largest exporter of LNG in the United States, it is currently operating at maximum capacity and is in the process of expanding its export capacity over the next few years with new LNG trains expected to ramp up production soon.

The third LNG (and crude oil) operation is Norway’s Equinor (New York Stock Exchange: EQNR)is a major LNG exporter with assets offshore Norway. This will help fill the gap for European countries that previously supplied LNG through the Strait.

transport and fertilizer

Speaking of Norway and LNG, shipping company Flex LNG (NYSE: FLNG) The company is also well-positioned to benefit from rising LNG shipping rates and demand for a modern, fuel-efficient fleet. If LNG cannot reach Asia through the Straits, it will likely be transported much longer distances, which is good news for shipping companies, daily rates and fleet utilization.

Finally, it’s not just crude oil, LNG, and refined petroleum products that pass through the Strait. According to the United Nations, about a third of the world’s ocean fertilizer flows through the straits. Gas is the main ingredient in fertilizer, and the lack of gas and fertilizer passing through the Strait has forced U.S.-focused fertilizer producers like CF Industries to (NYSE:CF) Will benefit from Western manufacturing facilities and gas supplies from the US

Lee Samaha has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a position in and recommends Cheniere Energy and Chevron. The Motley Fool recommends Equinor Asa. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

The Motley Fool is a USA TODAY content partner providing financial news, analysis and commentary designed to help people take control of their financial lives. Its content is produced independently of USA TODAY.

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President Trump’s war: quick start and messy Iran withdrawal

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Thirty-three days into the war with Iran, President Donald Trump declared victory at hand. largely.

In a prime-time address from the White House, President Trump praised what he called a “swift, decisive and overwhelming victory on the battlefield.” The victory was so decisive that he suggested that a few more weeks of military offensives could end the war and “return them to their proper Stone Age.”

“We are on track to achieve all of America’s military goals very soon,” he said.

But he made it clear that he was prepared to leave the messy and problematic situation alone.

The 19-minute speech included no new details about the course of the war and only briefly mentioned the possibility of a negotiated settlement.

But he also did not mention the possibility of escalating the war by deploying the thousands of U.S. ground troops currently massed in the region. And he revised what he had described as the fundamental goal of gaining control of the highly enriched uranium currently buried on Iranian territory as a step he no longer considered necessary.

He said the sites are under “intensive satellite monitoring and control” and that any attempt by Iran to retake them could result in U.S. forces returning to the area. (Of course, that surveillance has been going on for years, long before the war began.)

The president is anxious to end the war and soon

He also said he would leave it to other countries to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, which is currently under Iranian control and is pushing up energy prices. Countries that are more dependent than the United States on oil shipped through this route should “belatedly muster up the courage” and “just take it, protect it, and use it for themselves,” he urged.

Moreover, he predicted that the strait would “open up on its own” once the war ended.

All of this shows that the president is anxious to end this war soon.

There was speculation before the speech that Trump would announce an end to the war or an escalation of the war. Both theories are based on contradictory comments he made about what the essential goal was.

In a social media post on Wednesday, the president said the United States would not consider a ceasefire until the Strait of Hormuz is open and free, vowing to “blast Iran into oblivion” until that happens.

But in an interview with Reuters also on Wednesday, he said the United States believed the war would end “quite quickly” and could return for “spot strikes” if necessary.

As it turns out, this speech was more like a Reuters interview than an X post.

Skeptical audiences and unpopular wars

Trump was addressing a skeptical American public.

A CNN poll conducted March 26-30 found that only a third of those surveyed supported the decision to launch an attack on Iran, and that support has eroded since the war began. Two-thirds of respondents in the Reuters/Ipsos poll said the United States should end the conflict quickly, even if all goals are not achieved. That included four out of 10 Republicans.

President Trump’s overall job approval rating has fallen to 36% in an Ipsos poll and 35% in a CNN poll, as Republicans worry that the Iran war is upsetting an already difficult political landscape ahead of November’s midterm congressional elections.

Meanwhile, the war continues.

Bombs were dropped on Tehran on Wednesday, sending plumes of smoke over the capital. Iranian missiles hit some locations in Israel where many Jews were celebrating the first night of Passover. Israel launched an attack on Lebanon and Iran launched a missile at the United Arab Emirates.

U.S. Central Command has updated the number of targets struck by U.S. forces in Iran during the war to 12,300. so far.