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One third of childless double income couples borrow money for their pets

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How far do you go to take care of your pet?

For some, the embrace, comfort and joy they bring is worthy of debt. This is especially true for “dink” couples (who have double income and have no children), according to a new Insurify study.

Approximately 68% of the parents of these pets say they made financial sacrifices to cover essentials for their furry friends. From getting a second job, stopping savings contributions to skipping medical care for themselves, the Dink couple is willing to come a long way for their pets.

Consider the 29-year-old Kenzie Mollock and Wiley Gallen, 29, of Texas, a miniature Schnauzer mix family, two and a half years old. They named her “hazelnut frappuccino whipped cream feet” or “hazel.”

Mollock is a teacher and Garren works in the US Army. They described their pay as “not huge,” but they always have room for Hazel’s budget.

“When I’m happy, she’s there. When I’m sad, she’s there,” Morlock said. “Even if my husband is at work and he is deployed, my dog is there, even if he isn’t here. And she’s happy to see me every time.”

How much does a Dink couple spend on their pets?

The Dink couple surveyed spends an average of $1,906 per year on their pets. A portion of the $23,000 parents spent last year raising their children, according to a report by SOFI.

The most common pet-related monthly expenses for these couples are food, snacks and toys. Veterinary care, medication, and groomers are other common monthly expenses.

However, an unexpected veterinary visit can quickly throw a wrench into the pet’s parent’s budget. The best veterinary bill surveyed is around $1,449, but 13% say they spent more than $3,000.

That may seem like a lot, but Dinkpett’s parents say they’re willing to use more. The surveyor said it would spend up to $5,004 on life-saving treatments and $2,835 a year to care for a pet’s chronic health condition.

That may not be enough. Kinship veterinarian Dr. Amy Fox said he works at several specialized veterinary hospitals where bills sometimes exceed $10,000 after their pet has experienced an accident or serious health condition.

“This allows pet parents to be in a difficult position if there is an unexpected emergency and it’s another very important reminder for pet insurance or setting up an emergency savings fund for their pet,” Fox told USA Today.

Whatever the cost, some pet owners are willing to find a way to pay.

“I don’t think there’s a cap or a limit, because you can slowly raise funds and pay them back,” Mollock said.

What kind of gorgeous pet items do people buy?

It can also be difficult to stick to the budget when your pet is giving you a puppy dog’s eye.

Only 11% of those surveyed said they would not splurge on their furry friends. About 20% said it’s rarely not essential, 43% said they sometimes splurge and 26% regularly ruin their pets.

Some of the most popular luxury items that Dink couples buy for their pets include vitamins and supplements, luxurious treats, gourmet foods and organic fresh produce. High-end toys, clothing and accessories are also common sprays.

Mollock and Garren buy Hazel salmon and rice-flavored dry food for dogs with sensitive skin and stomach, mites and flea medicines, as well as special bags that she can sit on when she runs or goes hiking. They also buy her concentrated toys.

“We usually get these puzzle boxes and it can be a little more expensive. She’s very smart and curious,” Mollock said. “If that’s the case, you’ll just buy the next one and the next one. She’s covered them all.”

What do Dink owners sacrifice for their pets?

Even if Dink couples don’t spend organic food or costumes on animals, pet-related expenses can dent your budget.

Thirty-two percent said they never made a financial sacrifice for their pets, while 34 percent said they spent extra time or did a second job to cover the costs, while 33 percent said they had acquired credit card or loan debt.

Polls also found that 29% stopped contributing their savings, 24% delayed payments on other bills, and 15% skipped personal health care.

“Relationships with cats and dogs have changed dramatically, and we have focused on animal welfare over the past decades,” Insurify data journalist Julia Talicin told USA Today. “Pet owners tend to be more likely to allow splurges for the welfare of their pets because they care for them on a personal level.”

Some sacrifices are difficult to measure, like the time spent training a dog to stop chewing food or chewing another shoe. And when puppies and kittens grow up, training isn’t always over.

As they get older, their personality changes and problems can arise. Another veterinarian in the family, Dr. Valli Parthasarathy, advises that owners are prepared for unnecessary behaviors that start at any age and work with veterinarians and experienced trainers.

Do pets replace children with Dink couples?

“Fur baby” is a welcome addition to families, but 39% of Dinkpet owners surveyed said they plan to have a child one day.

However, 17% said it would cost too much to raise a child, while 15% said they didn’t want to have children. About 29% said they prefer a lifestyle that allows for more freedom.

Of those surveyed, 22% said they needed to improve their financial situation before having children, while 5% cited medical or fertility issues as the reason for their lack of children.

For Mollock and Garren, having children is not a priority for now.

“We are still trying to find a path to life,” Gallen said. “We need to bring our kids into an environment where we understand more.”

In the meantime, he said Hazel was “a baby-like, caring thing.” “We’re thinking about her family.”

Reach Rachel Barber at rbarber@usatoday.com Follow her at x @rachelbarber_

This country has the best wines in the world for 2025

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CNN
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How’s your tuxedo looking? Our travel news roundup this week is an award show spectacular.

Read on to find out the winners of the world’s most liveable city, the best airline for 2025, the world’s best restaurant and the country with the finest wines.

Award-winning food and drink

Knives out, everybody, it’s foodie award season and only the very best will get their just deserts.

First, an aperitif before dinner. The winners of the Decanter World Wine Awards 2025 were revealed Wednesday and one country triumphed as the grape GOAT.

France took home 3,200 medals in total (1,000 more than its closest competitor) and 14 Best in Shows, which is surely worth celebrating with a glass of Champagne. (The famous sparkling wine won 27 honors alone.)

Italy won 2,204 awards and six Best in Shows, improving its position with 31 more top-tier honors than in 2024.

Spain fortuitously won 2,025 medals in 2025, including five Best in Shows. International wine-lovers should consider a trip to the Rioja region: Not only did it win three platinum medals and 21 gold, it’s the least visited area of Spain. It’s a great way to avoid the high-season crowds in Andalusia and Catalonia.

The rest of the top 10 medal-winning countries were (in descending order): Australia, Portugal, South Africa, Argentina, Croatia, Canada and Chile.

Canadian wine, you say? Yes, their ice wine can go for up to $250,000 a bottle.

The pisco sours will be flowing in Lima this weekend as the Peruvian capital celebrates two of its restaurants being named among the world’s top 10 on Thursday.

Maido, owned and run by chef Mitsuharu “Micha” Tsumura, was crowned the best on the planet on the 2025 list of the “World’s 50 Best Restaurants.” It serves Japanese-Peruvian fusion food known as Nikkei cuisine.

US restaurants were honored Monday night at the 2025 James Beard Awards, with a Boulder eatery being named Outstanding Restaurant and a Minneapolis spot making waves as Best New Restaurant.

To round things off, June 21 is World Martini Day (let’s hope you’ve recovered by now from National Martini Day on June 19).

Espresso martinis — vodka, espresso, coffee liqueur and sugar — aren’t technically true martinis, but they are, however, a lip-smacking delight.

Our partners at CNN Underscored, a product reviews and recommendations guide owned by CNN, have this guide to everything you need to make espresso martinis at home, according to top bartenders.

The upcoming nuptials of billionaire Jeff Bezos and journalist Lauren Sanchez are proving to be the final straw for many Venetians who are tired of their city being a tourist playground.

Protesters against the wedding this month have threatened that they’ll “block the canals,” but others in the city welcome the “cash influx” that the event will bring.

Rising waters and overtourism are killing Venice, critics say, a city where the 30 million tourists annually dwarf the local population of fewer than 50,000. “There’s not going to be another Venice,” said one local businessman. “Once you have helped change this place forever, it’s not coming back.”

There were anti-tourism protests across southern Europe last weekend, with Barcelona being the epicenter of the unrest, where water pistols are the weapon of choice for spraying unwelcome visitors. Cities are being “turned into theme parks,” complained a Spanish government minister last month, addressing the housing deficit exacerbated by the rise of Airbnb and vacation rentals.

Time to book that Rioja trip instead.

Northern border-hugging US states such as Vermont and New York have long enjoyed an annual surge of Canadian tourists, but travel has dipped amid international tensions.

Now US businesses are trying to woo their northern neighbors with “Canadians only” deals, with perks ranging from cheaper stays to free activities.

“We wanted to make a meaningful gesture that says, ‘We see you, we value you and we want you here,’” said one Vermonter.

With many Canadians boycotting the States, some American travelers are worried about the reception they might face in the land of the maple leaf. Canadian tourism boards have launched campaigns to reassure Americans of a warm welcome, but how do everyday Canadians feel? CNN Travel investigated.

North America is by no means the only place where escalating disputes are harming international travel.

The air map of the world is currently filling up with no-fly zones and airlines are scrambling to reroute amid increasing global conflict.

Nonstop flights between Hong Kong and London are now two hours longer, for example, and short-haul flights between Central Asia and the Persian Gulf are particularly affected.

Living the Dream Japan Preschool thumb_ 4.jpg

Now your toddler can have their own study exchange in Japan… you can come, too

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Three-year-old Australian girl Kinga might not speak Japanese, but she’s loving her time in southern Japan’s Wakayama Prefecture. Her family joined a preschool exchange that’s giving them a kid-first window into Japanese culture.

A viral video has prompted a mass cleanup of caves near China’s famed “Avatar” mountains.

The astounding footage shows a decade of garbage buildup.

An 80-year-old man drove down Rome’s Spanish Steps and got stuck.

He told police he’d taken a wrong turn.

And there are more international awards that people have been going crazy for.

The world’s best airline for 2025 was named by Skytrax.

Lastly, a European capital stole Vienna’s crown as the world’s most liveable city for 2025.

Have you heard that you won’t buy it in July? It can save you money.

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Recently, several friends invited Maggie Miller to take the kids to the trampoline park for a play date. Another friend invited her and her husband to dinner.

Miller wanted to go to both events but said no. She’s trying to save money.

Her family is taking part in the July purchase, a growing trend in social media that encourages consumers to buy only essentials and refrain from purchasing things they don’t need.

Those participating say it is a good challenge and a way to save. Financial experts say exercises of intentionally controlling your spending are good ones with several benefits.

What is the July purchase?

July purchases may have different rules based on who is doing it, but essentially the challenges allow you to continue spending on items you need, food, gas, bills you need to pay, household, unexpected medical expenses, etc. However, discretionary items, travel to shops, or additional online shopping is off limits, just like spending money on eating out.

Or at least that’s the goal. Some say they have managed to avoid purchasing extras, while others say they have a “slip-up.”

NO BUY July offers a purchase suspension

Miller, who lives in Gilbert, Arizona with her husband and two young children, did nothing a few weeks ago. But the July purchase didn’t come at the right time, she said.

“I said, ‘Yeah, it’s catchy. I like it. And there was a June we really spent,” Miller said. Their daughter’s birthday and birthday party was June too.

Joining No Buy in July is “a way to force yourself to ask, ‘Do you really need this?'” Miller told USA Today. “Looking back at the end of the month, I asked, “Where are your spending habits? Where are they triggered?”

Miller shares that he will not pay July experience on his Instagram account, MoneySavingMotherhood. She started an account about a year ago and said she is sharing real tips on budgeting and saving money as a mother working with her family.

A simple mom has a win or loss

Miller said it was because she was frugal and not “always spending all the time.” But there was a moment like when her girlfriend texted Miller and the kids to ask if they wanted to go to the trampoline park, Something that’s become a little difficult. At 115 degrees in Arizona, Miller said the idea of fun activities in air conditioners is fascinating. She said it would be difficult to refuse dinner invitations as well.

“It’s hard to say no, but I think it’s a good exercise to practice,” she said.

In an Instagram post in the second week of the challenge, Miller outlined her expenses.

  • Regular invoice: $291.88 (subscriptions such as streaming services included $21.65, but it makes no sense to cancel and restart the mirror for a month).
  • Unexpected costs: $696.74 (it cost $500 after a garage door broken and cost $96.74 for palm trees and a new sprinkler).
  • Other household expenses: $72.46 (this included buying household staples like laundry detergent and sunscreen to get great deals on Amazon Prime Days, but she refrained from purchasing additional items).
  • No need: $60.14 (Miller said this was theoretically “smashed down” by her going to a thrift store and buying some dresses. “It was totally unnecessary,” she said.

Be kind to yourself. “Confusion” is fine

Miller said he would consider recycling trips and buy “disruption,” but she said she would not give up not buying in July and would encourage others to do the same if they encounter a set-up.

Miller said it was still okay to forgive herself and continue.

She has an Instagram page about her modest living and budget, but “I’m just as sensitive as dealing with myself to something,” she said. “Miller vows not to seduce himself by going near the thrift store for the rest of his challenge.

“I know that’s my pitfall,” she said.

No Buy Jury Concept’s favorite financial planner

Kelly Renner, a certified financial planner in Augusta, Georgia, hadn’t heard of her not buying in July, but she loves the concept and encourages her clients to do similar exercises from time to time.

“If you pay attention to spending, you spend less. It’s a good reset to try, even those who follow the budget and probably fell,” Renner told USA Today. She also challenges spouses to challenge each other and see who can save the most during the challenge.

The fraud in the spending challenge is “If life events occur outside their control, it can be more mentally defeated. But as long as they can overcome and try again, it’s still a victory over failure.”

“We’ll take this concept a step further and challenge people to make it a permanent trend. You’ll be amazed by the remaining extra money at the end of the month,” said Birshafranquil, a certified financial planner in New Canaan, Connecticut.

Shafransky told USA Today if people are going to follow the No Buy July Concept, “When they appear in August, you need to continue disciplinary action and feel the urge to buy everything you suppressed. It’s like eating a very strict diet.

I encourage others not to buy July

Naomiservis, of North Kingstown, Rhode Island, already considers himself frugal. There she said that when she heard about it, she didn’t fully accept shopping in July.

“I hate shopping in the store, so I keep everything down and don’t buy things online,” Celis said. “It’s a really great concept and I hope more people will adopt it.”

Serviss regularly uses local No Buy Facebook groups to provide and get items. She got items like bookshelves and guitar holders.

In July, Selvis skips her once a month at a 50% off discount for certain age groups.

Celis said she told her friends and family to join without buying in July.

Retailers are struck by consumer vigilance

Craig Rowley, senior client partner retailer at global HR consulting firm Korn Ferry, is increasingly curbing spending as consumers worry about inflation, tariffs and retailers being hit.

Rowley, who heads the company’s consulting retail operations, said he doesn’t know how to plan his business because of a lot of uncertainty. He also said that retailers have completed their purchases for the spring 2026 season and that they don’t know how this Christmas season will bring tariff and inflation pressures.

“Retail is a function of consumer trust. When people are happy and doing well, they’ll spend their money. They’re going to put in credit cards,” Laurie told USA Today. “They’re going to buy what they want, not just what they need. When they’re nervous and uncomfortable, they’ll see what happens. They’ll sit on their wallets.”

Rowley said there are other similar concepts like Frugal February, where consumers are closing their budgets after spending holidays in July. All social movements, including shoppers boycotting certain retailers for the rollback of diversity, equity and inclusive efforts, are hurting retail sales, Laurie said.

He hasn’t heard his clients talk specifically about not buying in July, but “they’re even more concerned about the fact that it’s a late year.”

Rowley believes July will be a tough month for retailers as consumers are struggling with spending less and financially struggling, but retailers are hoping to return to school sales and purchasing in August.

Betty Lin-Fisher is a consumer reporter for USA Today. Contact her at blinfisher @usatoday.com or follow her on X, Facebook, or Instagram @Blinfisher, @Blinfisher.bsky.social.. Sign up for our free daily money newsletter. This includes Friday’s Consumer News.

Education Layoffs, Emmy Nominations, MLB Rays Sale

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Reduction of High Court OKS Education

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on July 14 that the Trump administration could move forward by firing more than 1,300 education workers. Staff who are responsible for protecting students and teachers from discrimination, supporting the university’s financial aid office, and assisting in compiling data on national schools, were fired in March. But the green light of the Supreme Court was accompanied by a warning. Justice did not control the merits of the case. They allowed agents to carry out layoffs while the legal challenge progressed.

The Queen has been linked to the President

The new book aims to show that Queen Elizabeth II of England was not a woman in a colorful hat. The queen whose 70 years of rule made her the longest ruler in the country met 13 presidents over her lifetime, more than any other American or foreign head of state. “The Queen and Her President” will be published by Harpercollins on April 14th, a few days before the 100th anniversary of the Queen’s birth. Written by Susan Page, Washington Bureau Chief of USA Today. It documents her transformation from a shy and unsettling princess to a powerful and persuasive leader, and provides an honest assessment of the American commander.

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How much does it cost to attend a wedding as a guest in 2025?

From gifts to travel, here are what wedding guests spend in the 2025 season

I say it’s a higher cost

When wedding seasons are full-fledged and invitations piled up, celebrating friends and family can quickly become a budgeting issue. A study by Knot, a wedding resource website, found that between travel, accommodation, accommodation, gifts and attire, they spent an average of $610 to attend a wedding in 2024. Of course, the amount of money a guest spends depends on whether they need to travel or not. On average, guests spend $270 for local weddings, $840 for out-of-town weddings, and $1,680 for those who need the flights they need to arrive at the venue. The average wedding gift cost $150 in 2024, which is $10 cheaper than the previous year.

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Selena Gomez, “Yellow Jacket” and Diego Luna were nominated for Emmy Awards

USA TODAY TV CRITIC Kelly Lawler’s 2025 Emmy-nominated Snub list includes Selena Gomez and the first show they missed since 2012.

“Retirement” leads Emmy’s nomination

Emmy’s nominations can be found here! Apple TV+ drama “Severance” led the mention with an impressive 27 nod, 24. HBO Max’s “The Studio” and HBO’s “The White Lotus” were followed by 23 honors and third place, while HBO’s “The Penguin” won 16 nominations. “Studio” tied the records set in 2024 with “Bear” for most nominations in the comedy series. Harrison Ford, 83, won his first Emmy nod in his role as Ornery Sherapist in Apple TV’s “Shrinking” (seven nominations).

Rays may be sold for $1.7 billion

Stuart Sternberg, principal owner of the Tampa Bay Rays, has agreed, in principle, to sell developer Patrick Zarapski to a group led by Jacksonville, Florida for around $1.7 billion. The agreement comes just four months after the Rays left the contract to build a new stadium in St. Petersburg, Florida, near Tropicana Field, where they were longtime home. The deal is expected to close in September, an unnamed source told Athletic that the club remains in the Tampa Bay Area.

– Edited by Michael B. Smith, Copy Editor

Trump’s night with unofficial Greenland envoy

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Special Report: Greenlander’s Jorgen Boassen is a man on a mission to help Greenland take advantage of its untapped resources and economic potential. He is known as President Donald Trump’s “Son of Greenland.”

Nuuk, Greenland – First of all, Jorgen Boassen wanted to meet for Gin and Tonic. immediately. At his house. “Can I pick up some tonics and lime along the way?” he said, urgently in his voice.

Bossen then wanted to hot foot into a spongy sports hall for a Thai boxing match where the DJ was playing a remixed version of the 1980s global hit “Smooth Operator.”

A few hours and rounds – not a type of boxing – Boassen appeared at the largest hotel in Nuuk. There he waved a few hands, heard the lounge singers running through some jazz standards, and shook some hostile stares.

Former Brick Layer. Political influencer. Become a mining consultant. A man on a mission to help exploit Greenland’s undeveloped resources and economic potential. Traitors, some say – especially the man who smacked him in the face at a Nookdive bar in late April. Boassen, 51, says he is the version of all these. Most of them are the result of defending President Donald Trump in the dark place where he tends to end with rolled eyes, or in Boassen’s case, blackened with unusual support for the US president who vowed to take over Greenland “in some way.” Boassen is Greenland’s de facto representative of Maga.

“This is about the fight for the people of Greenland,” Boassen said one evening in June, sitting on the sofa in a cozy home in Greenland’s capital.

“It’s not because I hate Denmark. It’s about the power of Denmark in Greenland.”

Boassen almost stopped wearing them due to Trump’s rebound in Greenland, but he still wears a maga hat and a t-shirt depicting an American flag decorated with something like “American Badas.” He has been a Trump fan since 2019, when the US president first began talking about getting Greenland.

Trump says the US needs to “acquire Greenland” for national security reasons. It is located in a strategic location in the Arctic Circle. The melting of ice is increasing new routes and military activity in the Arctic. It also has a wealth of products such as oil, gold and rare earth minerals, which are essential for the production of smartphones and other advanced technologies.

Boassen is part of a very small but small Greenlander who appreciates Trump’s interest, polls show.

However, his support for Trump has not always been easy.

Boassen is bullied and laughed at, and faces death threats on social media. He has publicly declared he has almost a spiritual connection to Trump. He disagrees with every word he says. Bossen hopes that Greenland will become an independent country, but he hopes to have a close security and economic alliance with the United States.

Greenland son obsessed with Trump

Born in Qaqortoq, a town in southern Greenland, Boassen was raised by a single mother. Money is tough. Their home was modest. The fever was lacking. That world is far from what he now seeks to live as an Arctic political player with the ears of those in Trump’s inner circle.

“Trump is someone who can save us, but it’s hard to support him when we don’t know what his plans are,” he said.

Boassen is not a social media influencer. However, he owes some of his early influences on social media. He was discovered on Facebook by Thomas Duns, an American advisor to the Treasury Secretary for International Affairs, during Trump’s first term. DANS was also a member of the US Arctic Research Committee. Now he is promoting closer US Greenland bonds.

“I learned about Jorgen from a friend in the Greenland community,” Dance said. “He was called “Trump’s Greenland Son.” I said, “I need to meet this guy.” ”

Dans eventually tapped Boassen to serve as Greenland Director of American Daybreak, a nonprofit organization that works to educate and advance Trump’s first American foreign policy, particularly in the Arctic.

It was America’s dawn that in March attempted to arrange a visit to Greenland by Usha Vans, wife of US Vice President J.D. Vance, for Greenland’s National Thread Dog Race. However, after reports of planned protests by Greenland activists, the visit was revised to a short stop by Vance at a remote US military front post base on the island.

Greenlandic’s eavesdropper

Boassen has an impressive build. He was a boxing enthusiast and was used to train boxers. He sharply cleans his hair to one side. Like more than 90% of the 57,000 Greenlanders, he identifies him as Inuit, an indigenous person living in the Arctic. But Bossen’s father is from Denmark and said he describes his bright skin tone and blue eyes.

Greenland was colonized by Denmark from the 18th century. That era ended in 1953, when Greenland became an autonomous territory.

Boassen is also a fast speaker to make publicity a court.

He has not eschewed the relative fame that his relationship with President Trump brought him to Greenland. Most days he demands journalists from around the world from journalists who want to see and talk about Trump’s unofficial local “Greenland envoy.” More than a few journalists have gone to his house.

“He is a natural leader with a deep love for Greenland and its people, coupled with his bold, crowd-pleasing personality and expert communication skills,” he said of Boassen. “He is also a true fighter as a former boxer and as a modern Inuit man formed in the great Arctic traditions of his people.”

“We’re different from Denmark.”

During my night with the USA Today reporter this summer, Boassen’s calls continued. He called DANS and placed him on his speakerphone. He wanted to prove that there were fellow Greenland travelers when it came to supporting Trump, so he video summoned a friend from High North in Greenland, not far from the Pitaffic space station Vance visited. Bossen is considering whether he wants to grant Danish filmmakers access to his life story for the documentary.

Bosen’s wife didn’t want to participate in the interview, but as her husband spoke, she sometimes sighed deeply, giving him a side eye he knew. If his comments were too closely wandering into their personal lives, she sometimes tried to steal him from the other side of the couch.

“Even if Danes have been here for 300 years, we’re different from Denmark,” Boassen said.

Boassen insisted on sharing his selection of “Greatest Hits” stored in YouTube video clips saved on his TV. When Donald Trump Jr. visited Greenland in January, he was at the arrival door at the airport in Nuke. It was born after Boassen put on a canvas for a former president on the streets of Pittsburgh for weeks during the US presidential election in November 2024. Bossen went to an election night party in Palm Beach, Florida, near Trump’s Mar Arago residence. He attended Trump’s inauguration and was present along with opposition lawmaker Knofenker, a member of Greenland’s nationalist Narerak Party. It seeks Greenland’s independence, but it wants closer ties with the US.

On his mobile phone, Boassen has American musician Kidlock, MMA fighter Conor McGregor, Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson, political commentator Benshapiro, and others.

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Trump pledges to “get Greenland” when direct flights begin from us

Direct flights from the US have begun as Trump vows to “acquire Greenland.” What kind of reception do Americans get?

“He has a very good feeling about how ordinary people in Greenland feel about issues affecting their daily lives,” said Fenker, a lawmaker who is Bossen’s best friend.

At his house, sipping gin and tonic, drinking beer and coffee, Bossen said, “I’m Che Guevara from Greenland.” It was a reference to Argentine physicians and revolutionaries who fought for social change in Latin America before being killed in the Bolivian jungle with the help of the CIA.

Of course, the trait was stretchy and partly joking, which Boassen admitted, but it still speaks how seriously he takes his dream of seeing Greenland, which has become independent in one day.

Romanian magazines

A few weeks ago, Boassen was in Romania with Dan. Bossen said he was invited to observe the Romanian elections by far-right candidate George Simion in the country’s election. Simion has a great belief in Trump’s Magai deology, Boassen said. (Simion lost his vote and later claimed it was due to foreign interference.)

When Bossen’s wife vented the opportunity, she grabbed the TV remote and switched the channel to a rerun of the music festival. Some of my favourite bands were playing, including Green Day, American Punk Rocker and British alternative rock bands. She also came to a boxing match. unwillingly.

On a walk from their home to the sports hall, Boassen said he was trying to form more partnerships with Greenland officials to help Trump’s White House, but it has been difficult recently to attract the attention of the US administration as he is immersed in other crises in the wars of Ukraine, Iran and Israeli Hamas. He said he is confident his phone was being stolen by Danish authorities. He admitted that he has not made a living from his work with America’s Dawn. People often ask if Trump is worried that he is “using him” in a way that he doesn’t appreciate, in a way that is not in Greenland’s best interest.

“I don’t know,” Bossen answered the question.

“But I would rather have Trump as President of the United States now than Kamala Harris,” he said. “Anyway, bricklaying didn’t make a lot of money for me. It’s too honest. No one would hire me because I support Trump.”

Kim Hjelmgaard is an international correspondent for USA Today. Follow him on Bluesky, Instagram and LinkedIn.

Forced from Bhutan, deported by the US: These uninhabited Himalayas are on a unique frontier

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Beldangi refugee camp in Nepal
CNN

More than 20 refugees from Bhutan were left in unique legal spheres after being deported from the United States to the small Himalayan state they once fled.

The refugees are Lhotshampa, a Nepali-speaking ethnic minority who was exiled from Bhutan in the 1990s. Decades later in refugee camps in eastern Nepal, more than 100,000 people have legally resettled in the US, Australia, Canada and other countries under the UN-LED program launched in 2007.

Until recently, US Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) data shows that the US had not deported one person to Bhutan for many years.

However, since March, more than a few Lhotshampas have been deported from the US back to Bhutan, but the country still refuses to take them, according to several dispatchers, supporters and the Nepal government. Many have returned to the same Nepali refugee camp where they dreamed of a better life abroad as children.

Ramesh Sanyasi, 24, was born in a refugee camp and moved to the United States at the age of 10 with her parents and sister. Sanyashi lives in Pennsylvania, a hub for refugees from Bhutan, and worked in an Amazon warehouse until last year when he said he was arrested for borrowing a friend’s car while outings for night.

Sanyasi was found guilty of misuse of a motor vehicle and handing false IDs to law enforcement agencies, court records show. After spending eight months in prison this April, Sanyasi said he took a one-way flight to New Delhi, India and Paro in Bhutan.

When he arrived in Bhutan, the local government took him and two other refugees to the border with India, where he paid someone a man and took him to the town of Panitanki, located on the border between India and Nepal, giving Decortees 30,000 Indian rupees (about $350) each.

Sanyasi said he and the other deportees paid someone to smuggle across the Mechi River into Nepal.

“Life here is tough. I live without ID documents. It makes everything challenging. I don’t have a proper ID and I can’t even withdraw money sent from my relatives,” Sanyasi told CNN in an interview with the Beldangi refugee camp where he is currently staying.

“My days are spent vaguely, with no clear purpose or direction,” Sanyasi said. “For now, I’m surviving with money sent from the US, but when it goes away, I don’t know what will happen.” His sister, mother and father are all still in the US.

Sanyasi and other deportees have not been documented and have come to the United States legally. Most, if not all, were convicted of crimes of varying severity, but many served full sentences before being deported. Under US law, non-citizens may lose their visa if they are convicted of a particular crime.

Ramesh Sanyasi, 24, was born in a refugee camp in Nepal and resettled in the United States at the age of 10 with his family.

They currently have no documents from either the US, Bhutan or Nepal.

Gopal Krishna Siwakoti, chairman of the Nepal-based International Institute for Human Rights and Environmental Development, estimates that 30 people have been deported from the US to Bhutan so far, but at least 12 are awaiting deportation.

All refugees deported to Bhutan were exiled to India upon their arrival, Siwakoti said. Most of them are heading to Nepal, but some are still in India. Many people are hiding, he said.

Four US deporters have been ordered to be arrested and deported by the second country after being temporarily detained by the Nepal government for illegally crossing the border. However, Tikaram Dakal, director of Nepal’s immigration department, told CNN there was no place to deport these people.

“We have a dilemma. The US is unlikely to accept them, and it’s not easy to deport them to Bhutan.”

Bhutan is a small Buddhist kingdom of around 800,000 between India and Tibet in the Himalayas, and although it is often respected for its sustainable approach to tourism and national happiness indexes, it has a bleak history of repression against ethnic minorities.

In the late 1970s, the Bhutan government began cracking down on ethnic Nepali people who migrated to southern Bhutan in the 19th century, introducing a set of discriminatory policies designed to eliminate Lhotshampa.

Since 1989, the government has promoted the country’s “Bhutanization” by enforcing the dress code and banning Nepali, and has actively cracked down on those who resisted. Faced with abuse, threats and coercion, Lhotshampa fled.

For a long time, it was the foundation of us and international law, and it was international law that would not send anyone to a country that could face persecution. However, the administration of US President Donald Trump has increasingly deported people to people with significant human rights records, such as Libya and South Sudan.

“It was a “mistake among the US government” to return Lott Shampas to Bhutan, as these people do not have a country.”

“The attributes of these people, their existence and ownership of the state have been formally and legally amortized by the Royal Government of Bhutan,” Siwakoti said. “They’ve become completely stateless.”

Denied by Bhutan, several US deporters are now returning to the refugee camp where they lived as children.
The Nepal government says it cannot accept US deportees, but they have no other place to go.

Bhutan refused to accept Lhotshampa refugees. However, countries that have historically been barely accepted by US exiles during Trump’s presidency are now opening their doors under pressure from sanctions and tariffs.

Bhutan was originally included in a draft of the “red” list prepared by diplomats and security officials in 11 countries, published by the New York Times in March.

However, when the final list of 19 countries was released in June, targeting full or partial travel bans, Bhutan was not included.

The first deported flight from the US to Bhutan was at the end of March.

Siwakoti said he believes Bhutan has accepted the exiles to appease the United States, but he has no intention of letting them stay.

The ICE and the Department of Homeland Security did not respond to questions from CNN.

A US State Department spokesman said he would not discuss diplomatic communications with other governments.

“The foreign governments will make decisions regarding the status of foreign immigrants removed from the United States in accordance with their respective national laws and international obligations,” the spokesman said.

CNN was unable to contact Bhutan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs for comments. The Bhutan Consulate in New York did not respond to an email request from CNN.

Dakal, a Nepal government official, said Nepal could not accept refugees and is currently in discussions with the US government to come up with a solution.

The camp in Beldangi looks different from when Ashush Sabdi last lived 10 years ago. There is electricity. His father’s bamboo shed is now reinforced with metal. And the running water comes from the faucet, not from the well. Dogs, cows and chickens roam dusty roads.

Subedy never imagined he would return here in the same place where he and his family had evacuated years ago. Subedi was convicted of a felony sex crime in Ohio in 2022 and was sentenced to two years in prison before being deported to Bhutan in March, according to court records.

Ashush Subedi has now been deported from the second country after Nepal said he and the other deportations could not remain.
Subedi and other refugees are not permitted to leave the Beldangi refugee camp.

He is one of the deportees arrested by Nepali authorities, but was eventually released from custody after Soubedi’s father filed a habeas-protective petition with Nepal’s Supreme Court.

Without travel documents, it is unlikely that he and others will be expelled from Nepal anytime soon. In the meantime, the government has not allowed them to leave the refugee camps.

“We live in the darkness that is not on a clear path,” Subedi told CNN. “The lack of documentation and limited movement makes it nearly impossible to rebuild our lives. We feel trapped with limited options and constant anxiety.”

Subedy said he hopes to return to the United States, where his wife and three-year-old daughter still live.

“Sent back to Bhutan is not an option for us. That would probably mean imprisonment,” he said.

Ashish Subedi last lived in a refugee camp 10 years ago, so he has noticed some changes. His father's hut now has electricity and running water.

Back in the US, the recent deportation sent shockwaves through the Bhutan refugee community.

Tilak Nirula, a refugee and community leader in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, said Bhutan refugees embraced and built their roots there.

“We’re forcibly kicked out of Bhutan and we don’t have a country to call our home, so we call it this country, the US, our home,” he said.

Nirula said he and other advocates hope that those committing crimes face justice, but he argues that deportation is not the answer.

“If someone is involved in any kind of criminal activity, we have a legitimate process,” he said.

“Segregation of family is not the solution.”

COMPLY makes CEOs on leave.

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The official investigation of the tech company comes days after being caught up in camera at a cold play concert. We have not confirmed that the CEO or other employees are participating in the event.

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The New York tech company has placed its CEO on vacation during an internal investigation in a viral video on social media showing a couple caught up in a Jumbotron in a hug at a Cold Play concert.

The astronomer issued two statements on social media platform X on July 18th. CEO Andy Byron has been on vacation and said the company is conducting an investigation. The company’s statements also featured on the LinkedIn page did not provide specific reasons for taking those actions.

“Astronomers are committed to the values and culture that have guided us since our founding. Our leaders are expected to set standards in both behavior and accountability,” one of the statements said.

One company’s statement referenced the videos and stories associated with it by pointing out the misinformation. The company said the woman named on social media in connection with the video was “not attending the event, and no other employees were involved in the video.” The company also made a note of a fake statement claiming it came from the CEO – “Andy Byron has not issued a statement, otherwise it reports everything is wrong.”

The video shows a man and a woman quickly letting go of each other when a “kiss cam” appears on a giant screen at a concert in Foxborough, Massachusetts. “Um, what? They’re either cheating or very shy,” joked Coldplay singer Chris Martin.

Over 76.5 million people have watched a video of the July 16 incident at Gillette Stadium.

Astronomers said they will share details in the coming days. Pete DeJoy, co-founder of the company, said, “I’m serving as interim CEO given Andy Byron was on leave,” according to a company statement.

Large media accounts such as Pop Crave and Pop Base have spread the incident to millions of followers of X, while social media posts report that the astronomer CEO is the man in the video. USA Today has not confirmed the identities of the male and female in the video and has reached out to the company for comment.

Contributed by: Alyssa Goldberg

Trump DOJ asks the court to release records of the Epstein Grand Jury

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The Justice Department’s motion to release the transcript of the July 18 Epstein Ju Court came after Trump’s request to Attorney General Pam Bondy.

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The Justice Department has called on Manhattan Federal Court to release a large ju court transcript related to Jeffrey Epstein’s federal sex trafficking case after increasing pressure to increase transparency regarding shameful financiers and convicted sex offenders.

The July 18 move to compile personal identification information before the release of records follows a request by President Donald Trump to say he made it to Attorney General Pam Bondy amid ongoing controversy.

“Based on the outrageous amount of publicity given to Jeffrey Epstein, I asked Attorney General Pam Bondi to generate all relevant large ju court testimony subject to court approval,” Trump posted on the 17th of the Truth Social.

Bondi responded on the same day in a post on X, saying that the Justice Department is “ready to move through court tomorrow and seal the transcript of the Great Jue Court.”

A July 18 request from Bondi and Associate Attorney General Todd Blanche promises that the DOJ will make “appropriate editing” to protect both victim-related and personally identifiable information – if the court allows the records to be made public.

That warning is a shame for the public who are seeking the government to release the names of potential Epstein clients who may have joined him in a sex trafficking ring. Several members of Trump’s own administration have instigated the flames of these plots for years, including FBI director Kash Patel, who told right-wing media figure Glenn Beck in 2023 that President Joe Biden’s FBI director had direct control of Epstein’s “The Black Book.”

However, in a memo released on July 7, the Justice Department and the FBI said reviews of government records regarding Epstein were unable to list client lists and further disclosures were not justified. The department is now pushing for greater transparency, but was standing beside other decisions in the memo in its request to the court.

“The Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation continue to adhere to the conclusions reached the memorandum, but transparency for the American people is paramount to this administration,” the submission said.

Bondi and Blanche also asked for the large ju judge to be sealed in the federal criminal case of Epstein’s associate Gisleine Maxwell. Maxwell is currently sentenced to 20 years in prison, pleading Epstein to a 2021 conviction for trafficking a minor.

This story has been updated with additional information.

Mega Million Wins on 7/18/25: 100 million dollar jackpot

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Due to the painting on Friday, July 18th, the Mega Millions jackpot rose to $100 million, as it did not match all the winners of the painting on Tuesday, July 15th.

If someone matches all six numbers on Friday, they have a one-time cash payment option of $44.3 million.

There were four Mega Million winners this year, but the recent victory on June 27th won Virginia with a $348 million jackpot. Prior to that, on April 18, Ohio players took home a $112 million jackpot, while Illinois Lucky Lottery ticket holders took home a $344 million jackpot on March 25, and on January 17, the Mega Millions Jackpot hit for $113 million.

Here are the wins from Mega Millions drawings on Friday, July 18th, 2025:

Mega Millions win count on 7/18/25

The number of victory for Friday, July 18th will be posted here if drawn. The drawing is set at 11pm ET.

To win a lottery number is as follows: Jack Pocket, the official digital lottery delivery company of the USA Today Network.

Did everyone win the huge millions?

Mega Million winners announced by lottery officials will be posted here.

To view a list of past winners, Visit the Mega Millions website.

How to play Mega Million

To play Mega Million you will need to purchase a ticket. This can be done in a variety of places, including local convenience stores, gas stations, and even grocery stores. In some states, you can purchase millions of Mega tickets online.

Once you have your ticket, you will need to select six numbers. Five of these are white balls with numbers 1 to 70. Gold Megaballs range from 1 to 24.

You can ask for a “quick pick” or “easy pick” especially if you feel unlucky or don’t want to go through the hassle of picking. These options allow the computer to generate numbers at random.

Mega millions of tickets include built-in multipliers, increasing prizes other than jackpots by 2, 3, 4, 5, or 10 times. Previously, players had to pay extra dollars to add “Megaplier.”

Where can I buy the lottery ticket?

Tickets can be purchased directly at gas stations, convenience stores and grocery stores. Some airport terminals may also sell lottery tickets.

You can also order tickets online Jack Pocket, the official digital lottery delivery company of the USA Today Networkthese US and territories include Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Maine, Maine, Maine, Maine, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Washington, DC, and West Virginia. The Jackpocket app lets you select lottery games and numbers, order, look at tickets, and collect all your winnings using your mobile phone or home computer.

Jack Pocket is the official digital lottery delivery company of the USA Today Network. Gannett may earn revenue from viewer referrals to Jackpocket Services. Must be over 18 in AZ, 21+, and 19+ in NE. It is not affiliated with the state lottery. Gambling issues? Call 1-877-8-Hope-Ny or Text Hopeny (467369) (NY). 1-800-327-5050 (MA); 1-877-mylimit (or); 1-800-981-0023 (PR); 1-800-Gambler (all other). visit jacketpocket.com/tos In perfect conditions.

Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA Today. Contact him at fernando.cervantes @gannett.com and follow him at x @fern_cerv_.

Jeffries meets with Mamdani, but has no support yet

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Both Jeffries and Mamdani gave slippery nods about the meeting as Top House Democrats have not yet supported the mayoral candidate.

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NEW YORK – Zoran Mamdani, the Democratic candidate for New York City mayor, is still working to gain support from party leaders a few weeks after turmoiling Big Apple politics.

On July 18, the 33-year-old state legislator and a democratic socialist met with Hakeem Jeffries, the house leader of the Brooklyn Democrats, Mamdani’s campaign announced. They spoke for an hour in East New York, New York, in Jeffreys’ Congressional District.

Both gave a warm nod to the meeting as Jeffries, a top house Democrat, has yet to support mayoral candidates following Mamdani’s upset victory in the Democratic primary in June. Staff described the conversation as “candid” and “constructive” and focused on dealing with affordable prices in famous, expensive cities.

“Their hour-long conversation was open and constructive, focusing on the costs of the living crisis facing New Yorkers in 2026 and the importance of Democrats regaining the House,” said Jeffrey Lerner, a spokesman for Mamdani’s campaign, in a statement. “As a next step, both agreed to immediately reconvene with additional members of the New York City Delegation, along with key community leaders.”

Mamdani’s upset at the Primary on June 24th sent a shockwave amid New York’s democratic establishment against former governor Andrew Cuomo. Like Jeffries, Brooklyn native Gov. Kathy Hochul and Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer are not supporting Mamdani.

“Leader Jeffries and Congressman Mamdani discussed a variety of other important issues, including public safety, rising anti-Semitism, gentrification and the importance of reclaiming the House in 2026,” Jefferies spokesman Justin Chelmoll said.

Mamdani’s meeting with Jeffries on July 18th – In an undisclosed office space, Mamdani came two days after he went to Washington in the capital.

Turning to the November general election, Cuomo chose to run independently as a jockey in search of a centralized lane against Mayor Eric Adams, who was trying to defeat Mamdani. All will face Republican candidate, mayor Curtis Swawa.

Eduardo Quebus is based in New York City. Contact him by email at emcuevas1@usatoday.com or by signalling emcuevas.01.

3-point competition, skills challenge results

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The WNBA’s biggest star has descended to Indianapolis for the 2025 WNBA All-Star Game. However, before reaching Saturday’s big game, the All-Star 3-Point Contest and Skill Challenge Champion will be crowned.

Alicia Grey of the Atlanta Dream aims to defend both titles on Friday after becoming the first player in WNBA history to win both the 3-point contest and the skill challenge in the same season last year. Despite her performance last year, Gray said she doesn’t feel like she’s a favorite.

“I’m just chilling for the real thing,” she said Wednesday. “I’m just having fun.”

Clark was tapped to take part in a three-point contest alongside Gray, Sabrinaionesque, Sonia Citron and Kelsey Plum, but Clark injured her right gro caliber in Tuesday’s Fever victory over the Connecticut sun and ultimately chose to sit down an All-Star activity to rest her body. She will be replaced by Fever’s teammate Lexi Hull in Friday’s three-point competition and replaced by Washington Mystics guard Britney Sykes in Saturday’s All-Star Game.

2025 WNBA All-Star Roster: Kate Linklark chooses Fever Teammate

There’s everything you need to know about the 2025 WNBA All-Star Festival.

Natasha Cloud (34.1 seconds) and Erica Wheeler (36.5 seconds) advanced to the second and final rounds of the 2025 WNBA Skills Challenge after recording the top two in the first round.

“I think the biggest thing is patient. Honestly, I feel there’s a home court advantage,” said Wheeler, who played for Indiana Fever from 2016 to 2019 and 2023 to 2024 before joining the storm this season. “I feel (support) and thank you for supporting me, even with the Seattle storm.”

Cloud said that she “become yourself. I’ll try to end this with confidence.”

Wheeler finished slightly later than her first round in 37.5 seconds. Her shot didn’t fall like her first run on the obstacle course, but at least she did the final layup on her first attempt.

The WNBA Skill Challenge features a timing obstacle course consisting of three bounce passes, speed dribbling, chest passes, three-point shots from the top of the arc, an elbow jumper, three corners, outlet passes, and final shots from anywhere on the court. To make it even more challenging, the WNBA is throwing the wrench into the object by placing the 2025 Kia Sorento hybrid on the court. The top two of the first round advances to the final round.

Courtney Williams of Minnesota Links was first awake and finished in 42 seconds.

Natasha Cloud of New York Liberty completed the course in 34.1 seconds.

Seattle Storm Skyler Diggins was officially eliminated after 44.3 seconds. Seattle Storm Erica Wheeler ran through the obstacle course in 36.5 seconds. If she hadn’t sucked her final layup on her first attempt, she could have finished even faster. Atlanta Dream defending champion Alisha Gray hangs on a chest pass and is eliminated in 39.4 seconds.

How to watch the WNBA All-Star 3 Points and Skill Challenge

All-Star Weekend will officially kick off ESPN’s 8pm TIPS with a 3-point competition and skill challenge.

  • date: Friday, July 18th
  • position: Gainbridge Field House (Indianapolis)
  • time8pm and
  • tv set: ESPN
  • Streaming: fubo, sling

When is the WNBA 3-point competition? List, format

The 3-point competition involves two timing rounds in which money balls (2 points) and starry balls (3 points). This year, players can also place special “All Money Ball” racks. In this rack, all the balls correspond to two points and are everywhere in five shooting locations. The top two of the first round will be played head-on in the final round. Here’s the complete list of competitors:

  • Washington Mystic Guard Sonia Citron
  • Indiana Feverguard Lexie Hull (subsequent to Kate Linklark)
  • Atlanta Dream Guard Arisha Grey
  • New York Liberty Guard’s Salinayonesque
  • Los Angeles Sparks Guard Kelsey Plum

How many All-Stars do WNBA players win?

It’s always fun to win extra money. The winner of the Skills Challenge will win $55,000, which fits the NBA, while the three-point competition winner will leave on a $60,000 check.

“I’m coming back to my bag for them,” tweeted Alisha Gray.

How many starry balls do you have in the WNBA All-Star 3 Points Contest?

Two “Starry Bowls” will be played on Friday. The two pedestals each holding a single “starry sky ball” are set deeper beyond the arc from the “starry sky range.” Each “starry sky” is worth three points.

Sabrina Ionescu holds a 3-point contest record

Sabrina Ionescu currently holds a 3-point competition record in the WNBA or NBA. She set a record for the 2023 All-Star Weekend in Las Vegas after finishing with a total of 40 points. The Ionescu was almost perfect in the final run, knocking down 25 of his 27 three-point shots.

Ionescu competed in the first ever NBA vs WNBA 3-Point Challenge at the 2024 NBA All-Star Weekend in Indianapolis. Ionescu went first and rose to a score of 26. Curry won with 29 points. He shared a friendly embrace with Ionescu before being awarded the Championship Belt. (Ionescu coincided with the scores Damian Lillard tallied to win the 3-point contest in the middle of the night.)

“I was able to have this crossover and understand the respect I was able to receive from many NBA guys,” Ionescu said at the time. “We’re trying to show a lot of young kids there, a lot of people who don’t believe in or may not have seen the sports of women who can get out there and do shows. So it was really exciting to finally be able to do this. Like Steph said, it happened completely.”

WNBA 3 Points Contest Winner, Yearly

Ionescu and Gray are competing to become the second WNBA player to win the three-point competition multiple times, joining Allie Quigley. Here is a list of each winner of the 3-point contest.

  • 2024: Alicia Grey, Atlanta Dream (Phoenix)
  • 2023: Sabrina Ionescu, New York Liberty (Las Vegas)
  • 2022: Ally Quigley, Chicago Sky (Chicago)
  • 2021: Ally Quigley, Chicago Sky (Las Vegas)
  • 2019: Shekinna Stricklen, Connecticut Sun (Las Vegas)
  • 2018: Ally Quigley, Chicago Sky (Minnesota)
  • 2017: Ally Quigley, Chicago Sky (Seattle)
  • 2010: Katie Douglas, Indiana Fever (Connecticut)
  • 2009: Becky Hamon, San Antonio Silver Stars (Connecticut)
  • 2007: Laurie Kane, Washington Mystics (Washington DC)
  • 2006: Dawn Staley, Houston Comets (New York)

WNBA 3 Point Leader

New York Liberty’s Leonie Fevich is currently leading the league by a 3-point percentage, knocking down 22 of 44 innings in 14 games this season before shooting 50% over the arc.

Rhyne Howard currently leads the league with Made Threes (56) this season, followed by Kelsey Plum (53), Kayla McBride (52), Allisha Gray (51) and Sabrina Ionescu (50). Howard was sidelined from All-Star activity due to a left knee injury, but Plum, Gray and Ionescu will all be competing in a three-point competition, along with Sonia Citron (35) and Lexi Hull (29).

Skill Challenge Format and Competitors

The WNBA Skill Challenge features a timing obstacle course consisting of bounce passes, chest passes, three-point shots from the top of the arc, elbow jumpers, three corners, outlet passes, speed dribbling and final shots from anywhere on the court. To make it even more challenging, the WNBA is throwing the wrench into the object by placing the 2025 Kia Sorento hybrid on the court. The top two of the first round advances to the final round. This year’s participants are:

  • New York Liberty Guard Natasha Cloud
  • Seattle Storm Guard Skylar Diggins
  • Atlanta Dream Guard Arisha Grey
  • Seattle Storm Guard Erica Wheeler
  • Minnesota Links Guard Courtney Williams

Kate Linklark injury update: Clark ruled out WNBA All-Star Game

no. Clark will not take part in the 3-point competition or All-Star Game due to a gro caliber injury.

“I’m incredibly sad and disappointed to hear that I won’t be able to participate in a three-point contest or an All-Star Game. I have to rest my body,” Clark said. “I’m still at Gainbridge Field House for all the action and I look forward to ensuring Sandy (Liberty Coach Brondello) gets a coach for the team.”

The WNBA All-Star Roster Rookie Trio Follows Kate Linklerk, who follows in the footsteps of Angel Reese

Indiana Feverguard’s Kate Rinklerk and Chicago Sky Forward Angel Reese were quick to make an impact when they joined the league, earning an All-Star nod during their first season as professionals. It is possible that Clark and Reese have set new benchmarks for freshman players. It’s not easy to walk in their footsteps. However, the 2025 class was not as gross. We met at three WNBA All-Stars this season: Bueckers, Washington Mystics Guard Sonia Citron and Forward Kiki Iriafen. The trio will play their first All-Star Game in Indianapolis on July 19th.

This new player harvest appears to be plagued by the pressure to produce. They thrive on it. Read Meghan Hall’s complete story here.

Opinion: The WNBA should take lessons from US soccer and pay players before they get ugly

Indianapolis – Friendly advice for WNBA leaders when negotiating with players on new contracts:

Don’t make the same mistake in 2019 by underestimating the player’s resolve. Whether it’s negotiations or public opinion courts, it won’t work for you.

The players and the WNBA held their first in-person meetings on Thursday during the months of All-Star Weekend. To say that it was lacking in substance is an understatement. “Not good opportunity,” “disrespectful,” and “frustration” were the words players used to describe it.

However, it served one purpose. 40 players appeared, and the biggest gathering outside of Veterans and Rookies, Megastars, Roleplayers and Wubble sent an unmistakable message to the league about their commitment. Here you’re ready for the full column of Nancy Armor.

Team Kate Linklark: WNBA All-Star Game Registration

Clark didn’t appear to have many of the strategies heading into Tuesday’s WNBA All-Star Draft. “I go to the vibe. I choose what comes to mind. I just enjoy. My team is fun. But Clark had a game plan to choose a teammate. She now helps coach the team after being excluded (right gro caliber).

starter

  • Indiana Fever, Center, Aliya Boston
  • Sabrina Ionescu, Guard, New York Liberty
  • A’ja Wilson, Forward, Las Vegas Ace
  • Breona Jones, Forward, Atlanta Dream
    • Replaced Phoenix Mercury Forward Satu Sabury
  • Britney Sykes, the Guard of Washington
    • Indiana Fever Guard Kate Linklerk’s replacement

spare

  • Kelsey Mitchell, Guard, Indiana Fever
  • Gabby Williams, Forward, Seattle Storm
  • Sonia Citron, Guard, Washington Mystics
  • Kiki Iliafen, Forward, Washington Mystics
  • Jackie Young, Guard, Las Vegas ace
  • Kayla Thornton, Forward, Golden State Valkyries

Team Napheesa Collier: WNBA All-Star Game Registration

Napheesa Collier had a clear cutting strategy heading into the draft Filmed for current and former teammates. “I felt like I was trying to take some of my (unparalleled) owl girls here and take some of my (uconn) husky girls here, so today there’s an agenda,” Collier said.

starter

  • Brenna Stewart, Forward, New York Liberty
  • Alisha Gray, Guard, Atlanta Dream
  • Nneka ogwumike, Forward Seattle Storm
  • Page Booker, Guard, Dallas Wings

spare

  • Minnesota Lynx, Guard Courtney Williams
  • Skylar Diggins, Guard, Seattle Storm
  • Angel Reese, Forward, Chicago Sky
  • Alyssa Thomas, Forward, Phoenix Mercury
  • Kelsey Plum, Guard, Los Angeles Sparks
  • Kayla McBride, Guard, Minnesota Links
    • Replaced with Atlanta Dream Guard Rhyne Howard

The USA Today app will bring you to the heart of the news – Fast. Downloads for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, EnewSpaper and more.

Israel and Syria agree to a ceasefire, US ambassador Turkey says

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CNN

Syria and Israel have agreed to a ceasefire, the US ambassador for Turkish Tom Barracks said on Friday.

The deal was “embraced” by Türkiye, Jordan and other neighboring countries, the ambassador serving as US envoy for Syria said in a post in X.

“We will call on druzes, Bedouins and Sunnis to put arms and together with other minorities we will build a new Syrian identity of peace and prosperity with our neighbors,” Barrack said.

Neither party immediately commented on the reported transaction.

The ceasefire said Israel aims to protect the Arab religious minority Druze after Israel launched airstrikes in Syria on Wednesday. The clash between the pro-government forces and the Druze has killed many since the collapse of Syrian longtime dictator Bashar al-Assad.

Israel’s airstrikes on Damascus have targeted several government buildings, with authorities saying at least three people being killed. One video from a Syrian television channel showed that the Ministry of Defense building was broadcast and forced the anchor to cover.

Syrian President Ahmed Arshala said Syrian troops began withdrawing from Sweida on local time Wednesday night. There, clashes between the Druze militia and the Bedouin people erupted over the weekend, prompting government forces to intervene. The Alshara government has also announced a new ceasefire with the Druze faction.

In that same televised speech, Alshara accused Israel of splitting Syrian people and trying to turn Syria into a battlefield of chaos.

The US has recently made diplomatic pushes to resolve the conflict, expressing concern over rising tensions.

According to a readout of a call from the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio called Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan on Friday to discuss the issue.

Rubio previously said on Wednesday night that all parties in the conflict had agreed to “specific measures” to resolve the situation.

“This requires realising the commitments that all involved have made, and this is something we fully expect that they will do,” Rubio said in X.

Amos Yadrin, former general and chief of the Israeli Military Intelligence News, said on CNN’s “Overview with Jim Sait” on Friday that all players’ involvement, including Turkey, Israel and Jordan, was “meaningful.”

“The question is whether retaliation for the two communities will stop and how people on earth will behave,” Yadrin said.

This story has been updated with additional developments.

Katrina Samaan of CNN contributed to this report.

Trump isn’t good, very Epstein’s week: What do you know?

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Donald Trump’s Jeffrey Epstein’s headache continued this week in a new report on his relationship with Epstein and his continued call for transparency.

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  • Trump filed a slander lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal and its owner, Mediamoglurupertmurdoch.
  • The President denied the Wall Street Journal’s July 17 report. He said that Jeffrey Epstein wrote Skeb’s letter for Bose Day 50th.
  • Trump previously asked Attorney General Pam Bondy to seek court permission to testify from a major public ju court from Epstein’s investigation.

WASHINGTON – If the last 24-hour news cycle is any indication, President Donald Trump’s Jeffrey Epstein’s headache is not over yet.

The Wall Street Journal reported on the evening of July 17 that Trump had sent Epstein’s mysterious letter for his 50th birthday. Trump called the birthday letter “fake” and vowed to sue him on the Truth Social Post on July 17th.

Trump has long denied the cheating of his friendship with Epstein, reportedly ended more than a decade ago.

Still, within hours of publication of the news report, the president indicated that his administration would be attempting to release testimony related to Epstein’s sex trafficking case. This was still pending when it was discovered that Epstein had died in a prison cell in 2019.

It was partially troublesome for Trump after his Justice Department released the memo on July 7th. He said that Epstein’s further disclosures were not justified. However, it is not clear which parts of the government’s Epstein file are being addressed by its testimony.

Finally, it remains to be seen whether Trump’s base will be satisfied over the years, suggesting that the top officials of the administration have hidden government secrets in Epstein and that if Trump is re-elected, they will reveal them.

This is the latest in the Trump administration and Epstein:

Wall Street Journal Report: “We have something in common, Jeffrey.”

The Wall Street Journal Report describes the album in a letter that Epstein’s longtime girlfriend Gislain Maxwell (who sues Epstein for her 2021 conviction of trafficking minors) compiled in 2003 for Epstein’s 50th birthday.

The letter the Wall Street Journal is saying is from Trump, which he denies, and includes a type-writing dialogue between “Donald” and “Jeffrey” and later “Trump.” “Donald” says, “Jeffrey and Jeffrey have something in common” and “Donald.” The dialogue says “Trump” and “My mates are amazing. Happy birthday – and every day it could be another great secret.”

The dialogue is wrapped in the seemingly hand-drawn outlines of a naked woman, the journal reported. The letter mimics embarrassing the embarrassment of the letter, the newspaper said, with a pair of arcs showing a woman’s breasts and a wavy signature of “Donald.”

USA Today was unable to confirm the details or origin of the letter.

“These aren’t my words, they’re not the way I speak, and I don’t draw,” Trump posted on Truth Social on July 17th. On July 18, the president sued Dow Jones & Company, the Wall Street Journal publisher, and its owner, Rupert Murdoch, claiming that the story amounted to honorable lib and slander.

Trump’s friendship with Epstein burst around 2004. Trump hasn’t explained why, but the 2019 Washington Post story explains the power struggle that year between two men over the Oceanfront Palm Beach Mansion. In 2008, Epstein was convicted of a sex crime involving a minor.

Trump’s passive Epstein concession. Is that enough?

Even Republican allies are putting more pressure on the president than the Epsteinfile this week.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Louisiana, said in an interview with right-wing media personality Benny Johnson on July 15th that the government should “put everything there and let people decide.”

R-Kentucky MP Thomas Massie and R-Colorado MP Lauren Boebert co-hosted the law co-hosted earlier this week to announce the government’s Epstein Records.

Trump became tolerant at least to some extent – later July 17th, after a few hours after the Wall Street Journal report.

“Based on the outrageous amount of publicity given to Jeffrey Epstein, I asked Attorney General Pam Bondy to generate all relevant large ju court testimony, subject to court approval,” Trump posted to The Society of Truth.

The next day, Bondy’s deputy commander, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, made the request to the New York Federal Court.

It is clear that the president hopes that his Epstein-centric followers will move on now.

“If Epstein had a ‘smoking gun’, why did Demus, who controlled the ‘File’ for four years and was in charge of Garland and Comey, didn’t use it? Trump posted July 18 to The Truth Society, referring to former Attorney General Merrick Garland, who served under President Joe Biden, and former FBI director James Comey, whom Trump fired in 2017 following an investigation into the 2016 Trump campaign.

This story has been updated with additional information.

Look at the crocodile and post Tesla’s full self-driving (director) in the test

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Tesla Full Self-Driving (Counter) Brakes for pedestrians and crocodiles.

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  • Tesla’s fully automated driving (supervisor) capabilities, semi-autonomous driving systems, are being tested and discussed by drivers.
  • There are also videos showing systems that can successfully avoid collisions with animals and pedestrians, but other videos reveal malfunctions and near misses.
  • The system is under investigation by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration following reports of a crash.
  • Tesla claims the feature requires driver oversight and its safety is contested.

What would your initial reaction be if you saw a crocodile crossing the road while driving? Imagine this scenario while the car drives itself. Tesla’s fully autonomous (supervised) capabilities were tested when Tesla drivers hit a massive crocodile across the lane.

Full self-driving is a semi-autonomous driving function that allows users to stop, move and pilot without any interaction from the driver as long as they are careful. This feature isn’t wrong, but some Tesla owners have posted videos that cleverly avoid conflicts.

Tesla brakes for crocodiles during full self-driving (director) mode

Tesla’s FSD (surveillance) capabilities use cameras, radars, and ultrasound sensors to detect obstacles in their paths and protect both residents and pedestrians. Tesla uses X to ask the driver to post his experiences using the feature to avoid accidents on July 15th, and the video following in response to the post is amazing.

In the above clip, Tesla will stop when he crosses that path in FSD (Director) mode. Thankfully, the EV detected the gator and its resident was not injured either. This clip shows that even unique animals, such as crocodiles, are detectable via Tesla’s semi-autonomous driving mode.

The clip was far from the only video posted on request for Tesla’s dashcam footage. Another Tesla driver posted a clip that saw Tesla’s cybertruck stop completely, succumb to Jaywalking pedestrians and ignored the green light. Additionally, another video shows a hopping bunny rabbit EV outage using semi-automatic driving mode.

Tesla X’s posts featured over 800 comments, and Tesla Drivers posted hundreds of videos at the company’s request. Many of these videos show how secure FSD (director) is, while others showed major issues with this feature.

Not all Tesla drivers have a positive semi-automatic driving experience

Some Tesla drivers responded to Tesla’s X post with a video that caused unnecessary disaster with a video of the semi-autonomous driving capabilities of the EV. One clip shows Tesla backing up to vote while self-parking.

The video above shows a near miss as Tesla goes straight to a gated hofrene. According to NPR, the lawsuit against Tesla, which involves semi-autonomous driving skills, is set to go to trial in Florida. Elon Musk responded to criticism of the character that said at the Tesla quarter 2024 shareholders meeting, saying, “Only those who are skeptical are those who have never tried it.”

Is Tesla’s full self-driving (supervisor) function safe?

The owner’s manual for the Tesla Model 3 Electric Sedan states that “full self-driving (supervisor) is a practical feature.” This means that drivers should not allow EVs to drive without constant monitoring. The manual also states that it “can lead to property damage, serious injury or death” because it failed to follow all warnings and instructions.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1MFZ3PYTWX8

According to Reuters, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is investigating Tesla’s FSD software after four reports of the crash. So, Tesla’s FSD features are clearly not secure, but are under investigation, and some drivers have experienced crashes while using the feature.

Trump sues WSJ and owner Rupert Murdoch over Epstein’s story

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Trump sued the Wall Street Journal for a report on a letter that he labeled as “fake,” claiming the story was “false, malicious, and defamatory.”

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Donald Trump filed a lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal, its parent company, owner and two reporters, alleging honorable libble and slander for publishing an article about a future president writing an obscene letter to Jeffrey Epstein on his 50th birthday.

Trump filed a lawsuit in Miami federal court on July 18th, named plaintiffs Dow Jones & Company, News Corporation, owner Rupert Murdoch and reporters Kadilla Safdar and Joseph Palazzolo. No copies of the lawsuit are attached to the docket in the case.

In the story released on July 17, IST describes the letter from Trump as the journal wrote as part of a leather birthday book that includes dozens of other letters presented to Epstein in 2003. According to the Journal, Trump’s letter ends with “Happy Birthday – and Great Secrets of Everyday.”

According to the journal, Trump’s signature, written in the form of text within the hand-drawn outline of a naked woman, is “a wavy “Donald” under the waist, mimicking pubic hair.”

Shortly after the publication of the article, Trump called it “fake” in a social media post, stating that the story was “false, malicious, and defamatory.”

The Wall Street Journal did not immediately respond to a request from USA Today to comment on the lawsuit.

Trump also announced in another social media post after Journal Story publication that he had directed Attorney General Pam Bondy to produce more Epstein documents in the public cry of the record. In a motion filed July 18th in federal court in Manhattan, federal prosecutors made a motion to establish a transcript of a grand ju court in a criminal case against Epstein and his former associate Gith Lane Maxwell.

Last week, Trump assaulted reporters to ask questions about Epstein the day after the Justice Department and the FBI released a memo declaring dishonest investors who died in suicide in 2019, and investigators discovered there was no evidence that Epstein had not maintained a “client list.”

“Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein? This guy has been talked about for years,” Trump asked a reporter. “Are people still talking about this guy, this creep? That’s incredible. Do you want to waste your time?”

His relationship with Trump with Epstein, which he socially knew, drove him out since his first term. In 2019, Trump said he “falls out” with Epstein, which he described as a “palm beach fixture” in the mid-2000s.

The long-term fixed error in the medieval saga suggests that its hero fought wolves rather than elves

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CNN

Less known than some other beloved stories of heroes greater than life, such as Gilgamesh, Beowulf, and King Arthur.

The epic was once widely known in the Middle Ages and Renaissance England, but was extremely popular and was mentioned twice by Chaucer, but is largely forgotten today. Only a few phrases survive, and new research shows how one or two changes the entire story can change if the story is barely preserved.

Wade’s song was born in the 12th century, and its hero fought monsters – or once thought by scholars too. The only known text was discovered in a 13th century Latin sermon nearly 130 years ago. In the excerpt, the word “ylues” was originally translated as “elves.” This suggests that Wade’s long-lost saga was full of supernatural creatures.

Researchers at the University of Cambridge in the UK are challenging their interpretation. They suggested that the meaning of the word was broken by a transcription error in the scribe, which changed “W” to “Y”. Analysis shows that “elves” are actually “wolves,” and the term for dangerous men was all-talented. Another word in the excerpt, translated as “sprite,” should instead be “snake of the sea,” and further alienate the story from the supernatural realm, researchers reported on July 15 in a review of English studies.

This new reading corrects not only the phrases cited in the sermon, but also the entire song of Wade, centering on the hero in secular danger, rather than the mythical beast. Wade’s photographs overturn Beowulf, the legendary murderer of warrior-eating monster Grendel, as a literary twin, said Dr. Cebu Falk, a researcher and fellow at Garton University in Cambridge.

“He was like a hero in chivalry romance (a literary genre that celebrates knights, codes of honor, romantic love) like Irish Roncelot and Irish Gawain,” Falk told CNN in an email.

For hundreds of years, historians and literature experts have debated why Chaucer mentioned Wade’s song in his chivalry works. Recasting Wade as a Courtley hero, rather than a Monster Slayer, could help Chaucer write Wade’s appearance and reveal previously hidden meanings in those literary references.

Researchers Dr. James Wade (left) and Dr. Cebu Falk are studying sermons that refer to Wade's songs.

Dr. James Wade, an associate professor of English literature at Girton College, says it was the first study to analyze the song from Wade’s excerpt along with the entire Latin sermon cited it. (The surname “Wade” was relatively common in medieval England, but Wade couldn’t confirm the family connections that researchers had with the famous hero, but the link “is not impossible,” he told CNN via email.)

In fact, it was the context of the sermon that led researchers to the discovery that fragments of English had been misunderstood, Wade said.

The sermon was about humility, and some warned that it was “a powerful tyrant or other wolves” that “at all means.” There are other indications for animal traits that are disadvantageous to humans. As originally translated, the song in Wade’s excerpt reads: “Some are elves, some are water-dwelling sprites.

For centuries, scholars have struggled to understand why references to “elves” and “sprites” were included in sermons about humility. According to the new translation, the excerpt reads: “Some are wolves, some are adders. Some are water-dwelling ocean scents. No one is at all except Hildebrand.” Reinterpreting this in this way, the phrase quoted is more closely aligned with the overall message of the sermon, redefineing the genre of the story.

“We realized that by adopting that context and fragments, we can not only fully reinterpret Wade’s legend, but also reconstruct our understanding of how the story was told and told in a variety of cultural contexts, including religious contexts,” Wade said.

The long-standing difficulty in interpreting excerpts is that it is “not necessarily accurate or accurate science,” a study of handwritten documents, Dr. Stephanie Trigg, a well-known professor of English at the University of Melbourne, Australia, said, “especially by sending English texts without standardized spells and standardized spells.”

This type of indication to popular epics is very unusual, and since Trigg, who was not involved in the study, told CNN via email, it is also important to focus on the sermon.

“The authors are right to draw attention to the way sermons seem to cite medieval popular culture. This is not so common,” Trigg said. “It helps to disrupt the traditional views on medieval ritety.”

When the preacher used Wade’s song in his sermon, it was clear that he expected his audience to accept references as “memes as a recognizable element of popular culture,” Faulk said. “A deep study of this sermon gives us great insight into the resonances that such popular literature has across cultures.”

Researchers discovered a pop culture reference to Wade's song in a medieval sermon (pictured).

Romantic and wonderful

This new perspective on Wade’s story does not mean it is based solely on realism. There are no other known excerpts of Wade’s song, but references to Wade in text over the centuries provide great detail enough to please fans of JRR Tolkien’s epic “The Lord of the Rings.”

“In one romance text, it is said that (Wade) kills the dragon,” Falk said. “In Yorkshire, there is local folklore recorded by John Leland in the 1530s, stating that he is huge in height,” he added, other texts stated that Wade’s father was a giant and his mother was a mermaid.

In fact, the chivalrous romance of this era frequently incorporated elements of fantasy, Trigg said. In the chivalry literary tradition, “romance is often based on mythical creatures and supernatural,” she added, “the distinction between chivalry romance and mythology is “not necessarily strict in medieval literature.”

Still, a more intimate line up Wade’s songs with medieval romance dispels years of confusion over Jeffrey Chaucer’s allusion to Wade during scenes of the court’s plot in “The Tale of the Merchant” and “Troilus and Chrisade.”

“Chaucer, referring to warriors of “dark ages” like Beowulf at these moments, is strange and confused,” Faulk said. “The idea that Chaucer refers to a hero of medieval romance makes more sense.”

Wade’s songs have become obscure, but medieval sermons and Chaucer’s works hint at the idea that legend has been a staple of medieval English popular culture for centuries.

As its popularity faded, many of it disappeared forever.

“By the 18th century, none of the surviving texts were known, and no one seemed to know the story,” Wade said. “Part of the enduring appeal is the idea of something that once common knowledge suddenly “lost.” ”

Mindy Weisberger is a science writer and media producer who appeared in Live Science, Scientific American and How It Works Magazine. She is the author of Rise of the Zombie Bugs: The Suprising Parasitic Mind Control (Hopkins Press).

Things you need to know about Tesla’s rivals

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When EV Company reveals its Uber partnership, Mid ID stock shoots the moon. Robotaxis along the way.

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  • Uber has invested $300 million in electric car maker Lucid Motors.
  • Lucid, Autonomous Driving Company Nuro and Uber collaborate on the Robotaxi service.
  • Uber, Lucid and Nuro aim to capture market share in the multi-billion dollar Robotaxi services industry with 20,000 autonomous EVs.

Lucid Group Inc. (NASDAQ:LCID) stocks are coming to an end of trading week. The share price went above 34% in the last five trading days, from $2.29 per share at Monday’s opening to $3.08 per share at the time of reporting.

Stocks have been trading below $3.00 per share since late February, but rose 43% from Wednesday’s nearing $2.29 per share at 11:30pm on Thursday. So why are stocks making huge profits this week?

Lucid teams up with Uber and Nuro to create a Robotaxi service

Be careful of Waymo and Tesla. The town has a new Robotaxi service. Uber announced Thursday it was investing $300 million in electric car maker Lucid. The duo will partner with robotics company Nuro to create a Robotaxi service featuring Uber’s ride-sharing platform, Lucid’s Electric Vehicles, and Nuro’s autonomous driving technology.

Lucid’s recent stock action comes from the announcement of this partnership. Uber’s stock price did not rise in response to the news, unlike the big move from Lucid’s stock price.

The Rise of Robotaxi: Billion Dollar Bets

More than 1,500 self-driving cars are operated commercially in five American cities, according to Goldman Sachs. Based on Goldman Sachs Research, by 2030 there will be a whopping 35,000 self-driving cars operating in the United States. If these forecasts are accurate, self-driving cars could “generate $7 billion in annual revenue.”

According to CNBC, Waymo raised $5.6 billion in the fall of 2024 and expanded its Robotaxi service. Tesla recently launched its Robotaxi service in Austin, Texas in late June. Companies are betting billions of dollars on the emerging Robotaxi ride-share market.

Uber’s investment in Lucid and its partnership with Nuro is an effort to level the arena. The company aims to launch the Robotaxi program for self-driving cars by deploying 20,000 Melucid gravity SUVs equipped with Nuro’s advanced driving technology.

Is clear gravity a good electric vehicle?

The Lucid Gravity Electric SUV boasts an EPA estimated drive range of 450 miles. This is significantly higher than the maximum range of bestselling EVs like the Tesla Model Y (357 Mile). Lucid recently set a Guinness world record for driving range with the electric vehicle, the Lucid Air Grand Touring (749 miles).

The 2026 Lucid Gravity 7-seat electric SUV boasts “magical amounts of interior space” and “the fastest charging speed in America,” according to InsideEvs vehicle reviews. It can restore your total driving range in about 11 minutes and is compatible with the Tesla Supercharger network.

Nuro, the autonomous vehicle technology component of the Robotaxi Partnership, as of 2025, has “operated fully autonomous vehicles on the road for over four years,” said co-founder and CEO Jiajun Zhou. It operates in markets such as Texas, California, and Arizona. According to the CEO, the company recorded “over 1 million miles of autonomous driving without accidents.”

What does Congress mean to pass Trump’s spending cuts?

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During a drama-filled week in DC, Democrats accused Republicans of giving away Congress’ strength to Trump and curveballs involving Jeffrey Epstein.

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WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump has won a legislative victory with the help of Republican-controlled Congress. However, it’s not that they didn’t complain about the drama.

This week, House and Senate Republicans approved $9 billion worth of spending cuts targeting public broadcasting and foreign aid programs, and sent the bill to Trump’s desk for his signature.

In response to Trump’s demands, the cancellation of federal funds represents just a small portion of the nearly $200 billion slice of government efficiency that Elon Musk once led, claiming it was cut from the federal budget.

Still, institutions such as the World Health Organization and the U.S. International Development Organization will feel the impact of using federal grants to support global health initiatives and peacekeeping operations. The cuts are also a confession of potential deaths of local PBS and NPR stations across the country, relying heavily on government funds to maintain lighting and know the public.

For Trump, a legislative victory represents the transfer of unusual authority from one branch of the US government to another. Because Congress generally protects the power of constitutionally administered wallets rather than robbing the White House of leadership.

In addition to the plot, Republican leaders faced a major challenge in trying to advance the spending cut package Trump requested while dealing with an unrelated series of other topics that cast a shadow over everything on Capitol Hill.

There are three important takeaways from this unusual council scene.

I will hit the power of my wallet

Congress previously approved certain total spending that had just returned to the bill Trump signed into law in March.

The subsequent decision to cancel $9 billion (a relatively small amount in the $1.6 trillion federal budget range) is rare and rare. The last time the Congressional branch made such a move was in 1999 when Democratic President Bill Clinton was approaching the end of his second term.

The Constitution gives Parliament the power of the wallet, the privilege and responsibility that its elected lawmakers will vigorously protect.

Democrats accused Republican colleagues of giving that power to the president in measures like recent spending cuts, and the passing tax, spending and policy bill was passed at the start of July, with Trump urging. They also see it as a victory issue on next year’s campaign trail.

“This is definitely going to frame the 2026 election,” D-Maryland Rep. Jamie Raskin told USA Today earlier this month. “They decided to enter the cave completely to the wishes of Donald Trump and the billionaire ranks.

Senator R-Missouri Eric Schmidt defended the move in an interview with Politico.

“The process of revival,” he said, referring to the lawsuit taken this week, “it actually takes into account the role of Congress, which the administrative department has identified as waste, fraud and abuse. That’s what we’re doing now.”

How Jeffrey Epstein fell into a debate

The completely unrelated argument threatened to derail the home’s process of approving spending cuts.

Lawmakers face a midnight deadline of July 18th and have confirmed that a rescue law passing through Congress will pass, so they will have to spend federal funds as required by the law. However, the move quickly became a challenge as Trump and his Magazine base began sparring reviews of the Department of Justice Epstein case files.

With the deadline approaching, major House committees have agreed to appease Republican members, at least for the time being, to appease Republicans without angering Trump.

House Republicans have written a non-binding resolution. This means that if Trump and his administration pass, he will not need his administration to comply with the release of files related to Epstein’s case. GOP leadership does not indicate when or when this resolution will go up for a vote on the home floor.

The upcoming battle of spending

Trump and the GOP can expect more headaches as Congress is working on additional spending debates by the end of the year.

Russell Vought, director of the Office of Management and Budget, suggested there may be further cuts in spending in the future.

There is still a lot of enthusiasm for these bills,” Vought said at the July 17 event. Speaking to reporters on July 18, White House Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair said some of the items in the White House tourist attractions include “not only are they not on the president’s agenda, but they’re meaningless, truly taxpayer waste.”

But even Republican senators who are already tired of this week’s process have warned that they hope to provide the White House with more details about future proposals.

“I hope this is a warm-up for what billions of dollars worth of relief should be,” Tom Tillis said on July 15th before the Senate vote. “I think we need to get that right.”

There is also the prospect of a government shutdown if Congress does not act in time to pass the annual spending bill before the September 30 deadline.

Both rooms have left for a break until August, and Republicans are less than six weeks to make it happen. It requires challenging work, given bipartisan support, a recent spending reduction process and partisan tensions only heightened by ongoing complaints.

Louisiana sees the risk of flash floods from former tropical disorders

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The former tropical disturbances monitored by hurricane predictors did not form tropical depression before reaching the Louisiana coast, but as they marched inland on July 18, it threatened heavy rains and flash floods, predictors said.

The system, previously known as the Invest 93L, is already causing thunderstorms and scattered showers southwest of New Orleans, the Storm Prediction Center says.

The floods have seen most of Louisiana’s southern half from July 19th until nap, according to the National Weather Service. The risk of excessive rainfall and flash flooding from the system is highest along the I-10/12 corridor and its south, the New Orleans Meteorological Bureau said. Flood concerns extend along the coastal plains from Houston, Texas to Pensacola, Florida, predictors said.

The downpour, which has a rainfall rate of 2 to 3 inches per hour, could lead to water ponds in low-lying, inadequate drainage areas, leading to flooding on some roads, the Meteorological Department said. Some structures can also be flooded in areas with the most heavy rainfall. The risk of rain continues through the weekend, but the threat of flash flooding over the weekend will depend on how much total rain falls between July 17th and 18th, the New Orleans Weather Service said.

“Even unorganized tropical storms can cause localized heavy rains that can lead to dangerous flash flood incidents,” Accuweather said.

According to the National Weather Service, flooded streets were reported at Destrehan, Luling, Luling, and New Sarpy in Laplace on July 17th. About an inch of water made it into some Ruling homes, a report from a spare local storm said. Videos posted on social media show that streets and yards are flooded in Ruling.

Atlantic hurricane season officially began on June 1st and continues until the end of November. Aggressive hurricane weather usually peaks between mid-August and mid-October.

How much rain could it be?

According to Accuweather Meteorologists, moisture from the weather system will bring rainbands to the Texas-Arkansas border, affecting the valleys in central Mississippi, potential flash floods this weekend.

Parts of southeast Louisiana have already had about 4 to 8 inches of rain in the last 48 hours, with an additional 1 to 3 inches possible until July 19th, Accuweather said.

According to Accuweather, there is recorded rainfall here for the past 48 hours.

  • 7.91 inch rain in Pierrepart, Louisiana
  • 6.21 inch rain in Little Woods, Louisiana
  • 5.94 inches of rain in Louisiana’s Desire Area
  • 4.70 inch rain in Laplace, Louisiana
  • 4.67 inch rain in Homa, Louisiana
  • 4.33 inches of rain at the University of Louisiana Lafayette University
  • 3.99 inch rain in Prairieville, Louisiana
  • 3.86 inch rain in Gonzalez, Louisiana
  • 3.74 inch rain in Thibodeau, Louisiana
  • 2.89 inch rain in Iota, Louisiana

Rip curentsThe threat along the Gulf Coast

The system brings heavy rain along the Gulf Coast, so dangerous rifts are also dangerous for swimmers heading to coastal state beaches.

The National Weather Service office in Mobile, Alabama, said on July 18 that the current risks of RIPs are high on some Alabama and Florida beaches but will improve over the weekend.

“The best idea… just leave the water,” the forecaster said.

RIP currents, a fast moving waterway that flows down from the coast, can drag swimmers into the ocean and tire them out as they try to tire them. At least 30 other people have died so far in 2025 in an incident related to the SURF zone, according to data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Prepare now for a potential hurricane

Experts say it’s important to be prepared for potential future hurricanes before the threat is imminent. Potentially delaying preparations for salvation can mean waiting until it’s too late. “Get disaster supply while the shelves are still in stock and flood insurance requires a 30-day waiting period, so get that insurance inspection early,” NOAA recommends.

  • Establish an evacuation plan: If you are at risk of a hurricane, you will need an evacuation plan. Now is the time to plan where you will go and how you will get there.
  • Assemble disaster supply: Whether you’re evacuating or evacuating, you’ll need supplies not only to get through the storm, but also for the potentially long aftermath.
  • Get an insurance inspection and document your property: Contact your insurance company or agent now to ask for an insurance inspection and make sure you have sufficient insurance to repair or replace your home or belongings. Remember that home insurance and tenant insurance don’t cover floods, so you’ll need a separate insurance for that. Flood insurance is available through your company, agent, or through your national flood insurance program. Flood insurance requires a 30-day waiting period, so take action now.
  • Create a family communication plan: NOAA said he took the time to write down your hurricane plan and share it with your family. Determine where family gatherings are to be located and include out-of-town locations in the event of evacuation.
  • It strengthens your home: Now is the time to improve your home’s ability to withstand the effects of a hurricane. Trim the wood; attach storm shutters, accordion shutters, and/or impact glass. Seal the wall opening.

Juul continues to sell Tobacco and Menthol e-cigarettes.

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Washington
AP

The Food and Drug Administration is offering relief to businesses that have struggled for years after Vaping brand Juul has been widely accused of keeping e-cigarettes in the market and triggering a teenage vaping trend.

FDA regulators said Thursday that Juul’s study showed that its e-cigarettes are too harmful to adult smokers who can benefit from switching to vaping completely.

The FDA decision applies to both tobacco and menthol-flavored versions of reusable products. Juul previously discontinued the taste of some fruit and candy that was favored by teens, but that helped promote its popularity.

Juul is one of two US companies that have been allowed to sell menthol-flavored steam, which many adults prefer tobacco flavor.

“This is an important milestone for the company and I think it created a scientifically sound case for the role that menthol can play in e-vapor,” Juul CEO KC Crosswaite told The Associated Press.

Parents, politicians and anti-paralytic groups are sure to oppose the FDA’s decision. For years they have argued that Juul products should be permanently banned due to their role in causing long-standing spikes of minor vaping.

“It’s a big step in the wrong direction to approve the sale of products that were responsible for this public health crisis in the first place,” Yoronda Richardson, CEO of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Children, said in a statement.

Juul was once valued at over $13 billion, and its small, sophisticated e-cigarettes have revolutionized the image and technology of the vaping industry. However, the company has since been forced to cut hundreds of jobs and pay billions to resolve lawsuits relating to its role in the rise of youth vaping.

The FDA ordered the company to remove the product from the market in June 2022. However, the agency then agreed to reversing the course abruptly a few days later and resumed scientific review of Juul’s application after the company returned to court.

Juul said regulators have overlooked thousands of pages of scientific data that are important in submissions.

Thursday’s announcement was not approved or approved, and the FDA reiterated that people who do not smoke should not use Juul or other e-cigarettes. FDA measurements show that smokers who switch completely to Juul can reduce exposure to fatal carcinogens and other chemicals found in traditional cigarettes.

The FDA decision applies to Juul’s original system. This is now about 10 years ago. Crosswaite said the company hopes to obtain permission for next-generation devices and is also considering applying for more flavors to the FDA.

“It’s very important for American adults who use tobacco to regulate their options,” Crossweight said.

In recent years, the FDA has allowed a small number of e-cigarettes to help adult smokers cut cigarettes. Juul’s major competitors Vuse and Njoy have each been given permission to stay in the FDA market previously. Njoy sells other menthol-flavored e-cigarettes that are approved by the FDA.

To meet FDA requirements, businesses need to demonstrate that their products will benefit public health. In reality, it means that adult smokers who use it are more likely to quit or reduce smoking.

Juul, the creator of two Stanford students, launched in 2015 and within two years it surged to the top of Vaping Market.

Juul quickly overtook the old brand with high nicotine, fruity flavor cartridges sold in mango, mint and cream broille. The company’s small, individual devices provided a more powerful, user-friendly alternative to older, bulky devices.

However, the company’s rise was driven by the use of minors, and e-cigarettes quickly became ubiquitous in American schools. In 2019, the company stopped all advertising and was pressured to eliminate most of its flavors, leaving only the tobacco and menthol flavor options.

By then, the company had already been the target of multiple investigations and litigation by federal, state and local officials and class action lawyers.

In 2022, the company paid $1.7 billion to resolve thousands of lawsuits filed by Juul users, school districts, city government and families of Native American tribes. The company separately agreed to pay $1.1 billion to resolve lawsuits and investigations from most U.S. states.

Juul is no longer a top-selling e-cigarette brand, but is now a Trails Vuse sold by tobacco giant Reynolds American, making camels and Newport cigarettes.

According to the latest federal figures, teens have left Juul amid a decline in vaping’s vap escalation. The FDA reported last year that teenage vaping fell to its first low in 10 years after tightening enforcement against illicit brands imported from China, such as ELF bars.

Unlike Juul, disposable e-cigarettes like the Elf Bar still taste like fruit and candy despite efforts by regulators to block them from using them.