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“Parasite” voted the best movie of the century by Hollywood Power Players

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People are talking, and the best movie released from January 1, 2000 has been decided.

And by people, we mean about 500 actors, directors, writers and other Hollywood power players surveyed by the New York Times about the 100 best films in the 21st century that won the top 20 on June 27th.

Pamela Anderson, Nicholas Sparks, Stephen King, Sim Liu, Sofia Coppola, Daniel Brooks, Brian Cox, Ava Duvernei, Molly Ringwald, Rachel Zegler and Mel Brooks were among others.

Oscar-winning director Coppola appears to have won the 2004 Pixar Classic (and fellow Oscar winner) “The Incredibles.” And Sparks aren’t just looking at nasty romances. He also enjoys dramas such as “Inception” and “Gladiator.”

What is the best movie released since 2000?

He was nothing more than Bong Joon Ho’s “parasitivity” that became the first non-English film to win the Best Photo Oscars in 2020, ranked Best Posture Film in NYT’s survey.

And it’s no wonder, as it scored a 99% “fresh” rating from nearly 500 film reviews on Rotten Tomatoes.

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Oscar 2020: “Parasite” regains 4 wins including the best pictures

Korean black comedy “Parasite” won four honors at Oscars, including Best Pictures for Bong Jung-ho and Best Director.

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In 2019, USA Today film critic Brian Lewitt was approaching offering the full mark of a social comment thriller (he ended up giving him three and a half stars). The Korean film “is cleverly paced with its release, never falling apart (even if it falls into bloody chaos), and is also characterized by outstanding acting performances,” he said in his review.

If everyone is wondering, director Bonn did not include his own films (recent “Mickey 17”, 2017’s “Okja” and 2013’s “Snowpiercer”) in his top nine rankings.

Top 20 movies since 2000

The top 20 films with the best voices are:

  • 20. “Wolf on Wall Street,” 2013
  • 19: “Zodiac”, 2007
  • 18: “And your mother too,” 2002
  • 17: “Brokeback Mountain,” 2005
  • 16: “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon”, 2000
  • 15: “The City of God”, 2003
  • 14: “Inglourious Bastterds”, 2009
  • 13: “Children’s Children,” 2006
  • 12: “Zone of Interest” 2023
  • 11: “Mad Max: Fury Road,” 2015
  • 10: “Social Networks”, 2010
  • 9: “Spirited Away”, 2002
  • 8: “Get Out” 2017
  • 7: “The Eternal Sun of a Beautiful Heart,” 2004
  • 6: “There is no country for the elderly” 2007
  • 5: “Moonlight”, 2016
  • 4: “The mood of love,” 2001
  • 3: “There is blood,” 2007
  • 2: “Mulholland Drive”, 2001
  • 1: “Parasites”, 2019

Have you burned the bridge or cleared the road?

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Everyone burned the bridge. Maybe you turned it down after something better has passed through, then accepting the job offer. Maybe you started dating your longtime crash right after breaking things with your ex. But if you didn’t burn the bridge, are you actually just “clear the road”?

We know, we know. It sounds a bit fetched. But the virus tyktok raising that question has over 500,000 views. And mental health experts understand why.

It’s a powerful question that reconstructs our thinking about the way out of life,” says Chase Cassie, a licensed clinical social worker. “It resonates because it not only leaves, but also makes room for growth, but also gives language to deliberately leaving.”

“Loss is inevitable”

Cassine compares phrases (or mantras, if you rely on them) with today’s quiet quitting, therapy stories, boundary setting culture. “It can encourage self-reflection and self-reflection, not just about the consequences (loss or exits), but also about the intentions and energy behind it. And you hold yourself on the departure and own your role. Was this exit driven by emotional clarity or emotional reactivity? Did you destroy something?

It could be something your doctor ordered to go from a difficult situation and own your agency. “What people sometimes label as ‘burning bridges’ is actually a necessary step in self-preservation and healing, especially for those who have been taught to stay in harmful situations due to fear of being considered obligations or difficulties (people).”

In general, burning bridges is considered hostile, especially in workplaces where competition and ego is becoming more difficult. And women in particular have social pressures that they should not burn bridges and not assert independence, putting other people’s feelings and needs above themselves,” says Alice Shepherd, clinical psychologist and owner of Miliel therapy. But that doesn’t have to be.

“The act of leaving is courageous and deserves praise and support,” she adds. “So, unless you leave your job in a very professional way, stop worrying about burning the bridge. Take your own chances.

Plus, you need to let go of these moments in your life. Please stay close to your discomfort. “Loss is inevitable,” says Laura Pettiford, a licensed marriage and family therapist. “And we can choose to focus specifically on the loss, or we can see that it may not have been before the loss. Being able to change our perspective is very useful when we get through difficult times. But that doesn’t mean denialing the real pain associated with the loss.”

“Not all situations are that black and white.”

Remember, there is not always a “burn bridge” or “clear path” binary. Also, remember that it doesn’t necessarily imply good or bad things.

“Not all situations are that black and white,” says Cornejo. “Some bridges need to burn. Others probably didn’t, but they didn’t tell us anything. And sometimes we don’t know if we’d cleaned up the road long after.”

Cassine says people can celebrate making them romantic and cutting people off or justifying their own negative behavior. “So not every bridge that burns is worthy of a badge of honor, and not every clear path is a consequence. But the real point is this: people can end things with intention and clarity instead of confusion and drama.”

Trump’s aggressive immigration crackdown is to hurt ice agents

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The new tactics are filled with public resistance and despair from suspects facing ice detention and deportation.

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Mask agent. A terrifying suspect. Emotions run high as the screaming crowd is pushed in and handed over the phone camera.

Amid the surge in immigration enforcement across the country, federal agents are hospitalized with wounds as they make increasingly public and dangerous arrests of people they believe they are undocumented.

White House officials say assaults against agents increased by 500% as President Donald Trump’s massive deportation campaign.

Executives say bold tactics are needed to fight back what is called “invasions” of immigrants. However, policing experts say that the offensive approach is causing unnecessary, dangerous encounters.

In a recent case in Nebraska, a female ice agent was thrown to the ground and choked by a member of the accused Tren de Aragua gang who previously said he was a Venezuelan soldier, according to court documents. The suspect escaped and was later captured with the help of local police.

Bystander video captured the suspect on the ground on crowded streets and caught the suspected agent chasing the farm. One widely circulated video showed an agent grabbing a US citizen by his neck in a Walmart parking lot, resisting taking it. Federal prosecutors charged the man with assault after he allegedly punched an agent.

“Just this week, an ice officer was dragged 50 yards in the car while arresting an illegal alien sex offender,” Homeland Security Advisor Tricia McLaughlin told USA Today. “Every day, ice men and women risk their lives to protect and protect the lives of American citizens.”

Trump, Those who have pledged to expel one million immigrants this year, He ordered US immigration and customs enforcement agents to “do it with all forces to achieve the very important goal of providing the single largest deportation program in history.”

In a social media post on June 15th, he said: “Every day, the brave men and women of the ice are under threat from violence, harassment and even radical Democratic politicians, but nothing prevents us from carrying out our mission and fulfilling our mandate to Americans.”

Art del Quet, vice-president of the National Border Patrol Council, said the union’s 16,000 members welcome Trump’s tough new approach to immigration enforcement.

Detainees are fighting back more and more, he said, they know they have no escape: “That’s why you’re watching an attack on the agent.”

“It’s not about public safety anymore.”

However, there is an increasing number of pushbacks from the public. Recent immigration in the Los Angeles area has sparked widespread protests and small riots downtown as people threw rocks at law enforcement, set patrol vehicles on fire, and federal agents responded with tear gas and pepper spray.

In some cases, federal agents are trying to film games with crowds and stop or stop what they think is enthusiastic detention, especially if masked agents refuse to identify themselves.

Police experts say ice agents exacerbate tensions with practices that many American police departments have largely dismissed.

There is little objection to detaining violent criminals, but masked agents cause panic to get down into the car parks of their home warehouses and arrest a car park or food vendor that has mostly no criminal history.

“The aggressive police tactics employed by the federal government are causing problems,” said longtime police superintendent Diane Goldstein, who is currently leading the law enforcement litigation partnership.

“Their direction and their leadership put them directly in a horrifying situation,” she said.

The ice tactics on display are dramatically diverging from the previous ice agents’ previous work, said Jason Hauser, a former official with the Department of Homeland Security’s Terrorism Bureau. Houser is an Afghan combat veteran who was the ICE chief staff during the Biden administration.

Previously, ICE agents prioritized serious criminal offenders for their arrest, Houser said. A team of agents can work days or weeks to minimize risk to the public and the agents themselves, carefully and at the right time to make arrests before investigating one subject.

ICE agents are trained to “think about prioritizing public safety, risks and removability,” he added.

The Department of Internal Justice training program emphasizes that whenever possible, particularly in the absence of an immediate threat to public safety, a focus should be on elimination of emissions and avoiding arrests in public areas.

“Now we have a political allocation: ‘Give me 3,000 arrests’ (per day).’ And all the gloves are off,” Hauser said. “It’s not about public safety anymore.”

Before Trump, the attack had declined.

According to Department of Homeland Security statistics, an increase in attacks on officers and agents this year will reverse the three-year trend of declining incidents.

Despite daily interactions with millions of daily people, ice, customs and border patrol agents were rarely attacked by work.

According to DHS data, the agency recorded 363 assault cases in 2024, down from 474 incidents in fiscal 2023 and 524 in fiscal 2022.

The U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, which includes both customs officials and patrol agents, has 45,000 law enforcement agencies, making it the nation’s largest law enforcement agency. Additionally, ICE has around 6,200 deportation agents on its staff.

White House officials declined to answer USA Today’s questions about the number underlying the 500% increase in assault, including the total number of injuries and their severity. It is also unknown how many additional federal agents have been reassigned to immigration enforcement so far.

Masked Agent Refusing to Identify Yourself

In Huntington Park, California, authorities took this week into custody a man who appears to be pretending to be ice agents. The situation they said was possible because actual ice agents refuse to properly identify themselves when actively restraining people.

Mayor Arturo Flores said the way the ice agents are acting does not present a “fair and legal image of government.” He said he can understand why people are angry and scared, especially knowing that there are potential vigilantes and spoofs active in the area.

In response to the accused’s arrest, Huntington Park leaders asked local police to verify the identity of the suspected ice agent operating in the city.

The suspect was found with multiple police radio, official federal documents, flashing lights and a 9mm handgun, according to city police.

“If people can’t trust who is enforcing the law, public safety will weaken us and fear will begin to take hold,” Flores said at a June 27 press conference. “What we’re saying is simple. If you’re acting with federal authorities, show it.

“Someone is going to pull a gun.”

It is a fundamental fact that it underlies the tension between the ice and the public. Ice has arrested a record number of people with no criminal history.

An analysis by the Libertarian Cato Institute shows that ICE arrests four times more people a week without criminal convictions or criminal charges than the government agency that took place at the same time in June 2017 when Trump was also president.

“This is a radical tactical change compared to Trump 1.0,” says David Beer, director of immigration studies, in a post in X.

An ICE official said it was responding to interference from the public.

They say advocacy groups are agents who try to make arrests, put agents in danger and allow them to escape the target. Federal agents testifying before a Senate committee on June 26th said bystanders filmed officers during a recent enforcement operation and posted photos online in threatening messages.

There have also been an increasing number of cases where people call local police stations to report that the presence of armed masked men was bundling community members into unmarked vehicles.

ICE officials often say that when hundreds of “sanctuaries” jurisdictions across the country hand over immigrants after being sentenced to criminal penalties, agents often reduce the need for dangerous public arrests.

But before Trump’s enforcement ramp-up, about 70% of people arrested on the ice were transferred directly from the prison system to ICE custody, according to immigrants’ nonprofit freedoms. Trump’s new approach has led agents to make more arrests in their communities in places like Home Depot.

According to Goldstein, pushes to fill quotas run towards raids and roundups, running towards roundups. She worries that the offensive tactics combined with masks will ultimately lead to a shootout. 28 states have a “stand on your ground” law that allows citizens to shoot if they are threatened.

“If you cover up someone who escaped to you, someone would pull out the gun and someone would get injured,” she said.

Trump’s homeland security leader does not appear to have plans to retreat.

“Federal law enforcement is facing an increasingly increasing number of attacks,” DHS wrote in X.

Weekend Senate preparations for Trump’s mega-tax and policy bill

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Senate Republicans are on the verge of lawmakers from each other over a variety of provisions in the drastic law.

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s sweeping tax, spending and policy bill heads for a climate weekend showdown on the Senate floor after Republicans near Midnight announced a 940-page plan to call for Medicaid cuts, increased immigration and ending taxes on tips and overtime wages.

Senate majority leader John Tune works to lead Trump to a major legislative victory. Meanwhile, several of his Republicans have navigated conflicting concerns about how the bill will affect the federal deficit, the scope of health insurance for low-income people, and their own political popularity.

The South Dakota Senator told reporters when he left the U.S. Capitol that he hopes to begin debate on the marathon floor on June 28th, but admitted that he may not have yet put together the necessary support from within his GOP ranks to begin the process.

Tune and Trump face complications following Senate Elizabeth McDonough’s ruling about what the president and Republicans were and were not within the scope of the law that was called a “big and beautiful bill.” McDonough has discovered several Senate GOP provisions in the past few days that have violated, including attempts to eliminate non-citizen federal food aid, multiple measures to ease environmental regulations on federal judges’ ability to block government policies, and attempts to ease multiple measures.

In response to many of these rulings, Senate Budget Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham announced most of the new bill near midnight. “If you like higher taxes, open borders, weaker military forces and unidentified government spending, this bill is your nightmare,” said the South Carolina Republican, adding that the law “contains all of President Trump’s domestic economic priorities.”

Democrats are united against the Republican plan, with more than 2 million people likely losing their jobs on June 27th when Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer warned of “the biggest cuts in food funds to date.” He also highlighted the GOP rollback of the Clean Energy Initiative led by the Biden administration.

Thune’s next hurdle will round up enough support to meet the 51-year-old voice threshold in the second half of June 27th, with a large number of members of his Republican Conference expressing reservations and no Democrats informing him that he will gain support. At the Capitol building heading over the weekend, several Republicans said they had itching to challenge the argument.

“We will gradually move from thoughtful and rational deliberations to the Jackaceley hills,” Sen. John Kennedy, R-Lousiana, told reporters on June 27. “We’ve talked about the same thing over and over again.

For now, the timing of the first vote remains unknown, but the Senate is scheduled to take place at 2pm ET for a rare Saturday session on June 28th. If the Senate approves the law, it will need to be settled with the House of Representatives, which narrowly passed the first version in May.

Trump stayed on an ambitious timeline for Senate Republicans, completed his job and returned to the house in time to be on his desk to sign the law by July 4th.

But President and House Speaker Mike Johnson also acknowledges that their immediate ambitions may not be real in the deep internal GOP policy disputes and the complex Senate rules that have sent bills through legislative shredders.

2025 NHL Draft Winners, Losers: Decentralized Format Miss Mark

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There was a lot going on in the first round of the 2025 NHL Draft.

Matthew Schaefer responded emotionally to being ranked number one overall by New York Islanders, with celebrities unveiling their team picks, two goaltenders being selected in the first round, the son of Sean Hokoff and Jenny Potter, and previously there was a Canadience trade for the big islanders.

But the night felt strange overall. This was the first decentralized draft of the NHL outside of Covid years and did not look the same. The topic was raised during a pre-draft press conference for NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman, who said he would give it a chance. I hope they will regain their old path.

The winners and losers of the first round of the NHL Draft are:

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Matthew Schafer

The Ellie (Pa.) Otter defenseman had to overcome a lot of adversity to be selected first overall. He lost his mother (breast cancer) and Billett’s mother in the 2023-24 season, and in 2024 Ellie’s team owner. Schafer broke his collarbone at the World Junior Hockey Championship in December, missing out on the rest of the season.

However, NHL Central Scouting was seen enough to rank him first from his short season, and the islanders agreed. His islander’s jersey held a pink ribbon when he walked to the stage. He kissed the ribbon and released his emotions.

Noah Dobson’s islanders trade before the draft creates a room for Schafer to become an important part of the team’s blue line.

James Hagens

The winners of the Boston College Center and Team USA gold medals were on top picks early in the season. However, he fell to sixth place.

But that meant going to the Boston Bruins, near where he played this season. As a bonus, actor Adam Sandler announced the video pick. Hagens’ favorite move is “Happy Gilmore.”

The Bruins are light in the center and have promising pipelines.

Roger McQueen’s Disney Adventure

McQueen was drafted 10th overall by Anaheim Ducks, and his pick was announced by “The Mighty Ducks” film actors Joshua Jackson and Margaret Morrow. He and his family were then taken by a helicopter to Disneyland, where McQueen began posing near Lightning McQueen from the “car.”

Crowd reaction to Johnny Gaudreau’s widow

Celebrity pick announcers include Sandler, Wrestler Bailey, country music artists Jordan Davis, and Hockey Royalties (Lunny McDonald and Shea Weber). Chris Letan and his son Alex did an incredible job with the Penguin announcement.

But the most moving thing was that Johnny Gordrow’s widow Meredith unveiled the Columbus Blue Jacket pick. The crowd gave her a standing ovation and chanted “Johnny, Johnny” as she took the stage.

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format

Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said the vote to decentralize the draft was 26-6. This move saves teams travel days and gives them more time to plan free agents.

The other leagues hold distributed drafts, but what’s great about the NHL draft floor was activity. Is there a deal if someone gets a phone or walks towards another table? Instead, all 32 team draft rooms were displayed on the screen on stage. It’s not the same.

The league has established a draft house where Pick can speak remotely with executives of new teams. However, there were issues such as echo and delay. And for the Ottawa Senator, the sound didn’t work.

Lack of player trading

Two years ago, there were no deals in the first round. Last year, only draft picks were traded. This year, Dobson’s pre-draft trade led to conspiracy. Will General Manager Mathieu Darche try to package the newly acquired 16th and 17th picks and move them up? Will he follow Hagen, who is from Long Island? No, he used the picks from prospective customers Victor Ecklund and Kashaun Echyson. For the second year in a row, only picks were handled in the first round.

Kenholland’s draft strategy

Ken Holland, the general manager of the Neuros Angeles Kings, ran his first draft with the team and did it in front of home fans. However, he chose to move down seven spots in the first round, winning a second-round pick in the process.

Voting for GM of the Year

The award will be voted after the second round of the playoffs, and winners will be announced in the draft. Dallas star Jimnil won for the third year in a row. He bought Mikko Lantanen and Michael Granland during the season, but shouldn’t it be Panthers GM Bill Jeet’s turn? His acquisitions of Brad Marchand and Seth Jones played a major role with the Panthers, reaching the Stanley Cup final for the third consecutive year, repeating them as champions. Hoshi lost in the conference final for the third year in a row. Perhaps he will start next year with Zito re-signing playoff MVP Sam Bennett to a team-friendly contract.

Forecasters aren’t looking forward to stocks in 2025. Should I do it?

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It is said that Americans are wise to invest in the stock market. This is because the stocks bring about historic returns of around 10% per year.

But perhaps this year.

Many analysts predict that the S&P 500 index will be inherently flat in 2025 or will end with only a small profit.

In the roundup on June 25th, Yahoo Finance charts several strategists with year-end forecasts that will place the benchmark S&P index between 5,600 and 6,100. These numbers fall below or slightly above the approximately 5,900 S&P began its year.

Some forecasts are in a higher range, with predictors growing more bullish on American stocks in 2025. However, anyone who predicts double-digit returns this year is at risk of being branded as outliers.

How should armchair investors react if large investment companies expect the stock market to close where 2025 has more or less started? Is the investment environment changing below our feet?

First, let’s explore the reasons behind these dark predictions.

The stock opened high in 2025. It’s probably too expensive.

The stock market opened strong in 2025. The Broad S&P Index was nearing its record high following two years of noticeable growth.

That growth was enough to pay attention to the predictors in itself. The S&P surge means that the stock price is relatively high. Some stocks are at high prices. There are few bargains. Indexes may not have much room for growth.

“We are pleased to announce that we are committed to providing a wide range of services,” said Eric Thiel, Chief Investment Officer at Comerica Bank.

Comerica’s own predictions require the S&P 500 to finish at 6,400. This is heading towards the high end of prediction.

Wall Street prognosticists were bearish on stocks in 2025 due to one overarching theme: uncertainty.

“It’s all the unstable actors in our current economy,” says Catherine Barrega, a certified financial planner near Boston. “It’s something I don’t know from one day to the next. Are there any customs duties? Are there any customs duties?”

It is difficult to predict how President Trump’s import tax will affect prices and therefore inflation. The trade war, coupled with Trump’s crackdown on immigration, could slow economic growth. The fear of a recession is rising. The Federal Reserve may or may not ease interest rates accordingly.

“We avoid the recession and assume that interest rate cuts are on the horizon but not immediate,” Thiel said, reflecting the general view of Wall Street. “So, there’s an element of careful optimism that I think is in the market, but there’s a high degree of uncertainty and unclear macropolicy that is in the market.”

Inventory forecasters don’t want to be wrong

There’s another big reason, analysts say why the S&P 500 year-end forecast is a low trend: Forecasters tend to make mistakes on the conservative side.

“Analysts have historically underestimated the S&P 500 returns,” said Christian Akturian, head of BlackRock’s Ishhales investment strategy. “People stick their necks out with bold predictions and don’t want to be wrong.”

The impulse explains why stock forecasts tend to bundle together, she said. No one wants to stand out.

“It’s hard to be an outlier,” said David Meier, senior analyst at Motley Fool.

Meier cites another reason why inventory forecasters tend to achieve low targets. “Let’s call it bearish because it’s negative. Readers are drawn to disastrous news about stocks.

Therefore, stocks are having a holiday year. what can i do?

Now, let’s move on to the actual question. If the S&P 500 may not get much ground in 2025, what should ordinary investors do about it?

Of course, the simple answer is to do nothing.

The stock market forecast for next month or next year will not be as important to long-term investors, the advisor says.

And that advice applies to almost everyone. If you’re not participating for a long period of time, experts advise that stocks may not be for you.

“If you need funds right away, don’t invest,” said Randy Bruns, a certified financial planner in Naperville, Illinois. “If you don’t need funds for 15 years, stop looking at volatility.”

The market slump tends to be short. The recession is shorter than it looks. Anyone who saves for retirement or other long-term goals can generally get over them.

“If you have the luxury of being a long-term investor, you’re alone,” Actuarian said.

However, there is a longer, more subtle answer to the question of how to respond to conservative stock forecasts for 2025.

Pessimistic forecasts for 2025 and 2035

This involves this complex factor. Stock market forecasts are surprisingly conservative for 2035.

Investment company Vanguard predicts that the overall U.S. stock market will increase by 5.8% over the next decade, an overwhelming 3.8% to 5.8%. “Growth” stocks such as Nvidia and Amazon are projected to rise by just 2.5% to 4.5%. It’s not much faster than inflation.

These forecasts are based on the idea that many US stocks are inherently high and are trading beyond their actual value.

Vanguard’s analysis shows that everyday investors hoping for flashy returns they expect from American growth stocks would be better off looking elsewhere in global stocks. Small and medium-sized American stocks with low market value. “Value” stocks trade below their intrinsic value.

“I think it’s time to make a more balanced allocation,” Comerica’s Teal said.

Financial planner Bruns suggests that the average investor needs to “diversify across all the broad asset classes that make up a textbook portfolio.”

That doesn’t mean you need to sell all your alphabet stock, experts say. However, it may be correct to scrutinise your portfolio. Do foreign stocks are included? Small-cap stock? Bonds?

If not, you may consider re-adjusting your portfolio to make it more diverse.

“The easiest way to do that is to change your future allocation if you are a 401(k) contributor,” Valega says. That way you don’t have to mess with your current investments.

Don’t know how to rebalance?

“Reach out to our advisors,” Varega said. “That’s what we’re there.”

I hardly thought that airstrikes could end Iran’s nuclear weapons program. What about them?

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Experts have long argued that airstrikes alone would not allow negotiations to permanently close Iran’s nuclear program.

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WASHINGTON – A highly politicized debate has unfolded over the impact of the June 21 US airstrike on Iran’s nuclear facilities, raising questions about the targets and expected impacts of the attack.

President Donald Trump claimed Iran’s “major nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and completely wiped out,” and claimed a complete victory at the Awakening of the Strikes. Subsequent scrutiny of that claim during an early assessment from the Intelligence Reporting Agency led Trump and his allies to double and even expand his declaration of success. Defense Secretary Pete Hegses insisted to CNN that the strike “eliminates Iran’s ability to create nuclear weapons.”

Iran itself acknowledges the effects of US and Israeli attacks.

But years after Washington withdrew from its nuclear deal with Tehran in 2015, experts and analysts stress that airstrikes alone do not derail Iran’s nuclear ambitions forever, but merely delay nuclear ambitions. Rep. Mike Quigley of D-Illinois reiterated his long-standing understanding in an interview on June 26th.

“The targets are hard targets, deep targets, mobile targets. So it wasn’t meant to eliminate the program,” Quigley told USA Today. “I had no intention of doing anything other than slowing down the program.”

A lawmaker who is on the House of Representatives Intelligence Email Committee and regularly receives Iranian briefings, said, “We’ve been told that the only way to end this (nuclear) program is through many troops that have been on the ground for a long time.”

Corey Hinderstein, former director of the National Nuclear Security Agency’s non-proliferation program, gave a similar tone.

“The traditional wisdom that air attacks alone cannot destroy Iran’s (nuclear) programmes is actually present,” says Hinderstein, now vice president of the Carnegie Fund for International Peace. “Some people say that airstrikes are tactically and strategically successful, but I don’t think the ju-describers have come out about it yet. There’s no information that they really need to believe that this program is gone.”

Third nuclear site, hidden centrifuge, missing uranium

If Iran is equipped with enrichment centrifuges and conversion devices, and if the regime wants to pursue it, it may have another nuclear site that allows it to continue the process of preparing uranium for use in nuclear bombs.

Shortly before Israel launched its air campaign against Iran, the administration told the International Atomic Energy Agency that it had a third nuclear enrichment site but did not provide details.

Analysts believe that the private underground facility on Mount Pikakuse, near Natantz’s nuclear power plant, could be even deeper below the surface than the Fodow enriched plants that were severely damaged by the US strike. The Pickaxe Mountain facility was first opened to the public in 2023 by experts who spoke with the Associated Press.

And it is unclear whether Tehran’s approximately 880 pounds of highly enriched uranium was destroyed or buried during the strike. The satellite image shows cargo trucks parked outside the Fordow enrichment plant in the days before the US attack.

According to CNN, US lawmakers explained the intelligence report evaluation of the June 26th and June 27th strikes and called for a full accounting of the materials. Rep. Michael McCall, R-Texas, told the press that the issue of uranium’s whereabouts “emphasizes the importance of negotiating directly with us and directly with us.

However, whether Iran wants to negotiate is another question.

Despite the state’s obligations as a member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, the Iranian Guardian Council approved on June 25th a law halting the state’s cooperation with the IAEA and testing of Tehran’s nuclear sites.

Contributions: Tom Vanden Brook and Cybele Mayes-Osterman, USA Today

Davis Winkie’s role in covering nuclear threats and national security at USA Today is supported by partnership with Autorider Foundation and Journalism Funding Partner. Funders do not provide editor input.

Should we make an acquisition in a volatile job market? Five tips to consider.

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You were offered shopping. Your employer wants to pay you to quit. It’s a huge chunk of change.

Should you accept it?

Companies offer shopping to thin the rank and spend the money in the short term to save money in the long term.

Employers often use shopping to avoid layoffs. And that idea is that only you should give you a pause.

The Trump administration is aiming to offer takeovers to all federal workers this year, reducing it by up to 10%. Approximately 75,000 workers accepted.

The private sector has been offering acquisitions to US workers this year, including Google, Unitedhealthcare and Nissan.

Shopping may sound attractive. A five-digit retirement package may be the most money a worker has ever seen on a single salary. But it is also the final salary your employer gives you.

“It’s like a lottery winner. Some people think the money will last longer than that,” said Donna Walton, wealth strategist at TD Wealth.

If you are contemplating your shopping, some considerations are universal: how big is the retirement package? Am I close to retirement? Did you want to quit that job anyway?

However, the current economic environment presents its own challenges.

Approximately 2 million Americans have not been working for more than six months, the Labor Bureau reported in May that it was the largest in more than two years. The job market has slowed down over the last few months. Companies are reducing employment due to uncertainty over President Trump’s tariffs. Artificial intelligence is swiping jobs from new graduates. A recession fears looms.

“It’s a very soft job market,” said Michele Evermore, a senior fellow at the National Academy of Social Security and a former Biden administration labor official. “It’s a very time of economic uncertainty. I think people depend on their work.”

Below are five tips for employees considering buying out in 2025.

Seek for an acquisition

Start with a proactive step. Maybe your employer doesn’t offer acquisitions. But you’re restless to make a difference and you’ve heard that your company wants to cut costs.

Consider approaching your manager and seeking an acquisition. Often there’s nothing to stop your employer from creating a voluntary retirement package just for you.

“We’re looking forward to seeing you in the future,” said Michael Scarpati, CEO of Retireus, the Financial Wellness platform. “It’s kind of a win-win for both parties.”

If you are looking for shopping first, you may get a better retirement package than your employer ultimately offers to everyone else.

But if you’re not ready to take it, don’t ask for shopping.

“If they provide it to you, you have to be willing to leave,” Walton said. “That’s not what you want to bluff.”

Negotiate terms of purchase

A typical acquisition could offer a 4-week payment. Furthermore, this is one week of my annual work at the company. Additional health insurance coverage may be available. It also helps you find a new job.

About half of the workers have accepted offers to buy without negotiating, AARP reports. But it is not harmful to demand better conditions.

“Think about going for a job interview,” Scarpati said.

You can seek a year’s retirement benefit rather than a few months. Perhaps your employer will cover health insurance costs while you are searching for a new job.

David John, senior strategic policy advisor at AARP Public Policy Institute, said some workers will hire lawyers to negotiate the acquisition.

That may sound extreme, but remember: an acquisition is a business proposal. Contracts can be complicated and sometimes include private contracts and non-competitive clauses.

Even if you haven’t taken your lawyer to buy-out negotiations, Walton said, “You should meet at least one person.”

Test the job market

Experts say you need to measure your likelihood of finding another job before you leave your current job.

If you’re working in a shrinking field, or in an area that is struggling financially, you may already know that.

“If you’re working for ThinkTank, it’s quite different to getting an acquisition in DC or if you’re working for an oil rig in South Dakota,” Evermore says.

Evermore said to find out how many people in your area are applying for unemployment insurance and how many people will last for the benefit role.

Better yet, apply for some jobs. Check if there is a bite. If not, it may be a good sign that is not for you.

In the best case scenario, you can line up new jobs before you make an acquisition.

Measure the risk of layoffs

Many employers offer shopping to avoid layoffs, or at least delay them.

If you have an acquisition offer, weigh the possibility of relying on layoffs once the acquisition is over.

“Responsible businesses will deal with those concerns right away and say yes or no,” said John of AARP.

If there is a possibility of layoffs, consider whether you could reach the layoff list. Ask your manager if you are vulnerable.

If your company has endured layoffs in the past, look at the retirement packages that those workers have received.

In some cases, Walton said the acquisition package might be “the same as what the company offers if we offer you six months from now.”

please take it easy

Many federal workers who have received shopping from the Trump administration only had a few weeks to make a decision.

Experts say it’s not that long.

“If you ask someone to make major life decisions that could involve relocating the whole family, you should get it for at least a few months,” Evermore said.

Ideally, Scarpati said six weeks would be the “minimum” time frame for the acquisition offer. 90 days is more reasonable.

Use that time to “think where you are in your career,” Evermore said. Tell your friends, colleagues, and loved ones about your options. Test the job market. Ask yourself if you are ready to uproot your family and move around the country.

Run the numbers. If you’re a medium career, are you sure you have enough emergency savings to survive a period of unemployment? How do you cover your health insurance? How generous is your state’s unemployment allowance?

If you’re nearing retirement: When did you plan to get Social Security? How will you cover your health insurance until Medicare begins? Do you have enough retirement savings?

Consider meeting with a financial planner.

“Ideally, I completed this financial plan before this happened.”

Will Michelle Obama become the voice that Democrats need now?

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When Democrats search to counter Trump, it may not be Michelle, not Barack Obama, the party’s most popular figure they should turn to.

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Michelle Obama is back – not just in the political stage.

When Democrats are hungry for dynamic leadership, the former First Lady is cozy and personal with a podcast called “IMO.”

“I feel like I’m 60. This is the first time I’ve had all my decisions for me,” Obama said on the June 19 episode with radio show host Angie Martinez. In their young adult life, their daughters Sasha and Maria launched the story, “This is an age of freedom.”

Each week, Obama and Robinson were joined by celebrities such as comedians Damon and Marlon Weyan, producer Issa Ray and actress Keke Palmer.

It’s her space to talk to friends.

While references to her husband, former President Barack Obama, or the eight years of raising young children in the White House, are true, the political wildfires of the Second Trump administration have received little attention.

As in July last year, Ipsos polls revealed that only Michelle Obama had the chance to praise Donald Trump in the presidential election. Even before she left the White House in early 2017, Democrats hoping she would run.

She repeatedly knocked on the door on top of it.

But as Democrats are looking for a liberal counter to the right-wing media ecosystem that helped Trump reclaim the White House by reaching millions who don’t pay attention to mainstream media, a more relevant and popular Democrat online show could be what they’re looking for.

Regardless of whether Democrats want her podcast, Michelle Obama has demonstrated that she shows her way.

For now, she is using a platform that reflects the larger and perhaps more effective cultural strategies of former First Ladies, reflecting how black female voters are dealing with the loss of former Vice President Kamala Harris in the 2024 election, said Democrat strategist Nina Smith.

“This is the best way she can create space and demonstrate the multidimensionality of black women. It allows us to talk about our thoughts, how we interact with our friends, how we interact with people across the racial line, how we interact with our brothers, and how we feel about our bloating, and she can talk about the issues of the moment,” Smith said.

IMO (short for “in my opinion”) is largely lacking juicy gossip, let alone talking about current or former White House residents.

The Father’s Day episode featuring Bruce Springsteen and watched by around 216,000 viewers on YouTube came just days after Trump denounced the rock music icon for calling the administration “corrupted, incompetent, and rebellious.” Trump’s name never appeared, but they both laughed when Michelle Obama joked about someone who was a president who needed medical treatment.

Instead, they talked about going to therapy, building relationships with absentees, and presenting for children during their formative years

“I realized that raising a child is a bank penny,” Springsteen said. “It was when you were working and you didn’t want to stop, but you did. It made a huge difference for me. I always felt that if I had failed with my kids I would have failed very much in my life.”

Michelle Obama responded from her childhood about the meaning of her father, who worked long hours as an urban worker in Chicago, when he gave her full attention to her and her siblings.

“When he was there, he was in a very small but meaningful way,” she said.

“She hates politics.”

Michelle Obama, a corporate lawyer specializing in marketing and intellectual property law, was caught up in the national spotlight when Sen. Skinny, a middle Muslim name, defeated the old security guards of both parties with a new, hopeful American message.

For most of that, she had to pay more attention to her husband’s agenda and image. She has been openly critical of him since Trump took office, but not her podcasts, including the 2024 Democratic National Convention in her hometown, Chicago.

Democratic strategist Linda Tran said that what she thinks about the right moment is likely to last.

“You wouldn’t be surprised to see her using her voice to bring together Democrats in the future, assuming the right place and strategic values. And when she does, I’d expect an overwhelmingly positive response from Democrats,” Tran, who worked for the Obama administration, told USA Today.

But her participation in politics is not a central role in the party’s future, but a gathering of money and giving a speech. Her focus over the past few years has been on external projects, her family, and now she co-hosted new podcasts with her siblings.

Requiring more to do from either Barack or Michelle Obama often meets scoffs from longtime supporters like Natalie Graves, a clinical social worker who was in Chicago’s Grant Park when the couple won in November 2008.

“My first response is eye roll,” Graves, a 55-year-old registered Democrat, said of his continued efforts to recruit former first ladies to run for former president. “If people say they don’t want to run, what are we talking about? They ignore the fact that she made it very clear that she hates politics.”

“I served their time.”

The former first lady shut the door tightly by running to president in March, saying that her daughters, both in their 20s, were in the spotlight and should be a private, young adult.

“I wanted them to have the freedom to not have the world’s eyes. So when people ask me, the answer is no,” Obama said on Kyle Kelsey’s “Don’t Lie” podcast. “When you ask me that, you know absolutely no sacrifices your child makes when your parents are in the role.”

Democrats cast trustworthy voices to help them better connect with different voters and create a left-wing media ecosystem to create a right-wing ecosystem.

Some liberal strategists are asking donors to help them find voices and influencers on the left to fight against people like Steve Bannon and Joe Logan who helped Trump take office, the New York Times reported last month.

Democrats have more statistically trusting mainstream media than Republicans, said Adam Schiffer, a political science professor at Texas Christian University.

The trust of the democratic brain asks, “Who is Joe Rogan, the Democrat?” He said, “It’s not clear that there is always that, as Democrats don’t necessarily find it satisfying and interesting.”

Young people have a fundamentally different media consumption than their parents, Schiffer said, and that if they don’t understand how to get ahead of them, it could “be an important issue for Democrats.”

No matter how popular she is, her former first lady in the 60s might not be the best messenger for the young man, he said.

Influencers played a major role in Harris’ presidential campaign last summer and fall, but were unable to compete with the Republican online juggernaut, which has been built for more than a decade.

And not everyone is an “IMO” fan. Some have called for the former women to complain about living in the White House. For example, former Fox News host Megin Kelly laughed at the podcast in a June 26 video posted to X, and later said Michelle Obama was “destroying her child and husband again.”

When Michelle Obama talks about politics on her podcast, it is the trajectory around the future for Americans of her daughters generation and how political decisions affect ordinary people. She often reflects kitchen table politics that can only be heard by swing state voters, as they can hear from presidential candidates every four years.

“I’m talking to many young people who are fatally afraid of their future in this climate,” she said in the May 21 episode. “They are not only worried about their job, they are worried about being able to become the next entrepreneur. They are wondering if they can pay off their student loans and if they have health care and housing.”

In that episode, Obama and her brother spoke with Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky about the future of businesses under the Trump administration’s new tariffs. They spoke about how taxes on goods brought into the country are being handed over to consumers, impeding the ability of young Americans to achieve current economic goals.

“So some people can hold on, while others are not only losing their business, they’re losing their homes in the process,” she said. “That’s a bit scary.”

Michelle Obama used the podcast to defend her decision not to attend Trump’s January inauguration. She insisted that it was all she was to “make the right choice.”

“Whatever the repulsion was, I had to sit and own it. But I didn’t regret it, do you know? Now it’s my life, and now I can say it.”

Dem in the groove

Michelle Obama’s show also arrives when democratic brands stay in the ditch with progressive voters.

About a third of Democrats said they were optimistic about the party’s future.

While some Democrats are beginning to move towards 2028, liberals struggle with the lack of a hero to match Trump’s political moxies in the way that then speaker Nancy Pelosi did in her first term.

Recently, Democrat office holders have clashed with federal agents at press conferences, immigration hearings and ice facilities, creating a viral moment supported by mainstream, left-leaning progressives.

Because such actions did not belong to any of Obama’s styles, some black political activists and artists have emphasized the need for “self-care” over political action in the aftermath of the 2024 election.

“It’s good that she wants to work because it’s important for her to stay in public. She supports the candidate and the nature of that. I have no problem with that,” said Stephen Uzkuw, a cybersecurity analyst in Baltimore, Maryland.

“I just don’t think we should rely on Obama to save America.”

Modi visits restive Indian region to inaugurate world’s highest railway bridge

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The world’s highest railway bridge, an ambitious piece of engineering across a mountain valley in Kashmir, was opened Friday by Indian Prime Minister Narenda Modi, just weeks after a deadly tourist massacre in the Himalayan region sparked a brief conflict with neighboring Pakistan.

Modi’s visit to India-administered Kashmir was his first since a brief but deadly conflict between India and Pakistan in April. The nuclear-armed neighbors traded missiles, drones, and artillery shelling for four days after New Delhi blamed the massacre on its neighbor, which Pakistan denies.

Decades in the making, the arched Chenab Bridge sits 359 meters (about 1,180 feet) above the river of the same name – that’s 29 meters (over 95 feet) higher than the top of the Eiffel Tower.

Costing more than $160 million with a length of 1,315 meters (4,314 feet), the bridge is part of the first railway link between Kashmir and the rest of India.

Modi’s Hindu-nationalist government has moved to integrate the Muslim-majority region with the rest of the country, including revoking a constitutional provision that allowed it to set its own laws in 2019.

The Himalayan region of Kashmir is claimed by India, Pakistan and China. All three administer a part of the region, one of the most militarized zones in the world.

A decorated Vande Bharat passenger train is seen at the Srinagar railway station in Srinagar, India-administered Kashmir, on Friday, ahead of the inauguration of the Kashmir rail link by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

In addition to the Chenab Bridge, Modi also inaugurated the Udhampur-Srinagar-Baramulla Rail Link project, which connects key cities in India-administered Kashmir to the rest of India.

For Modi, who swept to power more than a decade ago on a ticket of nationalism and a promise of future greatness, investments in infrastructure like the Chenab Bridge and the broader rail link project can be seen as a powerful tool for social integration and political influence. Since he was first elected in 2014, the prime minister has rapidly expanded the region’s road and rail connectivity, building networks that connect disparate towns with major cities.

In 2019, New Delhi revoked a constitutional provision giving India-administered Kashmir the autonomy to set its own laws. The southern and eastern portions of the region known previously as the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir became two separate union territories, bringing them under direct control of New Delhi – a move Modi claimed would promote stability, reduce corruption and boost the economy.

An Indian engineer at the site of the Chenab Bridge in India-administered Jammu and Kashmir on March 4, 2015.

The Chenab Bridge is being hailed as a major win for Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party government.

His administration has poured billions into upgrading India’s old and outdated transport network, part of its vision to transform the country into a developed nation by 2047.

Among these ambitious projects is the construction of several tunnels and highways in the mountainous Himalayan region which has been criticized by some environmentalists who say the heavy construction could damage fragile topography already feeling the effects from the climate crisis.

Modi’s Char Dham Highway project, a multimillion-dollar infrastructure plan to improve connectivity in the state of Uttarakhand, came under fire in November 2023 when an under-construction mountain tunnel collapsed, trapping dozens of workers inside for several days with little water and oxygen.

In August that year, more than a dozen workers were killed after a bridge under construction collapsed in the northeastern state of Mizoram. In June, a four-lane concrete bridge that was being built across the River Ganges in the eastern state of Bihar collapsed for the second time in just over a year, raising questions about the quality of its construction.

First, watch dozens of new locations open in 2025. See location.

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First Watch operates more than 580 restaurants in 31 states, with the number expected to grow in 2025.

The company said in its first quarter 2025 revenue call on May 6, it opened 13 restaurants in 10 states in the first three months of the year, bringing a total of 584 restaurants (498 companies owned locations and 86 franchises owned).

Also in a revenue call, First Watch said it expects to open 59-64 new restaurants in 2025. “The same restaurant traffic results in the first quarter encourage and continue the trends that experienced the 2024 escape and demonstrate both the strength and resilience of the first watch brand,” Chris Tomasso, president and CEO of the first watch, said over the phone.

Tomasso said the location, which opened in 2024 and 2025, exceeded expectations despite the “uncertainty” of the economic environment.

Here’s a look at where the chain has opened new restaurants so far in 2025 and where new locations will open for the rest of the year.

Where did First Watch open a new location in 2025?

The company said it opened 13 new locations in 10 states in the first three months of the year.

  • Alabama
  • Florida
  • Illinois
  • Indiana
  • Kentucky
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • South Carolina
  • Tennessee
  • Virginia

According to a spokesman for the first watch, the Massachusetts location is the company’s first New England location, and is located in Hanover. The company plans to open its second Massachusetts location on Boyleston Street in downtown Boston later this year.

In a news release on April 23rd, First Watch CEO & President Chris Tomasso said:

The company also told USA Today it entered Idaho, its 31st state in May.

Where is the first clock to open a new location for the rest of 2025?

The company told USA Today it plans to open new locations in the following states later in 2025:

  • Alabama
  • Arizona
  • Delaware
  • Florida
  • Georgia
  • Idaho
  • Illinois
  • Kentucky
  • Maryland
  • Massachusetts
  • Missouri
  • Nevada
  • North Carolina
  • Ohio
  • Pennsylvania
  • South Carolina
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Yuta
  • Virginia
  • Wisconsin

The company’s new restaurant in Nevada is located in Las Vegas and is expected to open this summer, a spokesman for the first watch told USA Today. Nevada will become the 32nd state of the company that has a location.

Additionally, the company’s first location in Memphis, Tennessee is scheduled for September 2025.

Gabe Hauari is a national trending news reporter for USA Today. You can follow him with X @geuna Alternatively, email him at gdhauari@gannett.com.

Jake Paul drops $39 million on Georgia’s iconic Southlands Ranch

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  • Called Southland, the facility is located near Seminole Lake and is considered a major hunting and fishing location.
  • The property was originally listed for $42.5 million and is described as an iconic sports property.

Professional boxer, social media influencer and content creator Jake Paul bought the vast Southland property just south of Bainbridge, Georgia for $39 million.

Paul said in an interview with the “The Iced Coffee Hour” podcast in mid-June, according to Landreport.com, that he wanted to buy the ranch for the past 15 years.

“That’s my dream and why am I working so hard,” Paul said. He said the 5,746 acres of property was “…a little bigger than what I wanted, but when I got there I said, “I have to buy this.” ”

Paul, 28, is known for his co-star on YouTube and other social media platforms and co-stars, premiering in March 2025 and being a co-star with Logan Paul of Paul American, a reality show that takes a peek into family life outside of boxing and wrestling rings. Logan Paul is a professional wrestler and social media maven.

In November 2024, Paul faced former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson, a unanimous decision to defeat the veteran fighter. He was originally scheduled to receive $40 million for beating a retired boxer.

The 5,653-acre facility surrounded the east coast of Lake Seminole just above the Florida Panhandle and was listed in October 2024 for $42.5 million. “There is a sports huntsman paradise rich in bobwhite wild quail, turkey and whitetail deer, as well as a 20-acre fishing pond and a 30-acre duck pond.

John Kohler, an expert on large-scale plantation facilities in the southeast, said there is little investment that could build “long-term wealth, such as owning properties such as Southland.”

“We can see financial appreciation, but only sellers can measure immeasurable intrinsic value: lifestyle, experience, memory, that is the most important kind of wealth.

In a Facebook post announcing the purchase, Kohler described the property as “one of America’s most iconic sports properties.”

“From its roots with Herbert Stoddard, a heritage dating back to 1937, Southland has long been the crown jewel of American land management, and Jake Paul’s passion and commitment to conservation has brightened its future more than ever,” the post says.

Contact Economic Development Reporter Tamarin Waters at tlwaters@tallahassee.com and follow @tamarynwaters on X.

Why are car manufacturers falling back?

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Apple Carplay’s phone integration has become essential for millions of drivers, and Tech Giant hopes to expand Carplay’s territory from touchscreens to car instrument clusters, allowing them to control core functions such as air conditioners. That’s how it was initially seen, but Apple was promoting a list of dozens of car manufacturers that they had signed up to include Ultra Software in their cars. There are reports that the car manufacturers are baling with Carplay Ultra and are choosing to stick to the standard version instead, as the system is finally deployed to customers.

I suspect this is a problem. Financial Times Automakers don’t want to give up on the creative controls to design and implement infotainment features themselves. They are also not keen to provide third parties (Apple) with valuable data on both the custom-driven customers and the integration of vehicle systems. Renault’s unknown executive (one of the automakers who is advertised as featuring Carplay Ultra) ft He told Apple, “Don’t try to break into our own systems.”

Of the 18 carmakers previously linked to Apple CarPlay, ft Audi, Mercedes-Benz, Volvo, Polestar and Renault have reported that they have opted out of including the system in future cars. Volvo checked with us ftPolestar said it would “not announce anything” to the brand regarding its use of the Carplay Ultra, but reported. An Audi spokesman added: “We continue to offer traditional carplay on our vehicles, but we have chosen not to integrate the Apple Carplay Ultra into our portfolio of cars that just introduced a brand new MMI interface with the latest models. Both Volvo and Polestar have also invested heavily in their own infotainment systems.

Other car manufacturers linked to Carplay Ultra are Acura, Aston Martin, Ford, Genesis, Honda, Honda, Infiniti, Kia, Land Rover, Lincoln, Nissan and Porsche. We contacted each of them and commented on their Calplay Ultra and general infotainment plans.

A spokesperson for Ford, Lincoln, Acura, Jaguar and Land Rover said their brands had not commented on the issue.

Hyundai Motor Group, which includes Hyundai, Kia and Genesis, says all three brands will be introducing Apple Carplay Ultra in the future.

Honda, Infinity, Mercedes-Benz, Nissan and Porsche had no official comment, as in the press time. Porsche said ft I was planning to support Carplay Ultra in the future.

Apple seems confident in Carplay Ultra. A source familiar with the idea of ​​the Cupertino Company said, “Automobile manufacturers tend to do what their customers love in the end, and their customers tend to love Carplay Ultra.” The tech giant is working closely with automakers to ease concerns while adjusting their systems to make each manufacturer feel custom-made. The same source says that all “all driving data is processed by the car and not shared with the iPhone.” Questions about which data was collected and who could see it were unanswered.

Tesla and Rivian currently do not offer CarPlay in any form of the vehicle, but GM is imposing it in stages in favor of a new operating system built with Google.

Aston Martin is currently the only car manufacturer that offers Carplay Ultra. A review of the new system has shown that widgets like Apple Gauge, Climate, Radio Control, and iPhone are one of the best features of the system. You can read our full review here.

How long will you wait for Social Security help? Everyone guesses.

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The Social Security Administration does not provide information regarding caller wait times. Critics complain that it misleads the public.

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Congressional members and supporters say they provide the public with misleading information about how long it will take for the Social Security Agency to resolve their issues.

Over the past few weeks, agents have stopped 34 publicly available real-time performance metrics, including the amount of time they have to wait to contact a living person over the phone, and the amount of time before the application for new advanced or social security benefits is approved. The metric has been in use for years and shows how long it takes to reach a living person at a particular location, or via 1-800 numbers nationwide, and as an accountability measure for agents.

Instead, the webpage now emphasizes how quickly problems can be resolved online, and states that the “average response speed” that excludes callback latency is 19.2 minutes.

USA Today reporters called Social Security 1-800 lines multiple times over several days, finding that wait times consistently lasted an hour. They didn’t reach the living before the lines were cut without warning multiple times.

Social Security Commissioner Frank Vignano told members of Congress on June 25 that three of the four who call numbers between 1 and 800 were not waiting on the phone using the callback feature. He said he said he removed the wait time metric from the website.

“If you show that you had an hour and a half wait, people will be disappointed and won’t call,” he said.

When California Rep. Judy Chu asked the indicators to be revived so that Congressional members and the public could have an accurate barometer of the agency’s performance, Visignano avoided answering questions until when Chu asked.

“Unless you have these metrics, how can you know how the Social Security Administration is doing with regard to answering calls or processing benefits applications? They need to be compared over time.

How did you get here?

When President Donald Trump took office in January, Social Security staffing was already at its lowest level in 10 years. Meanwhile, as the baby boomer generation retired, the number of new applicants has skyrocketed.

That means that when the Trump administration began cutting staff amid efforts to reduce government, the wait time before reaching employees was already high.

In February, the agency announced plans to cut its agency’s 57,000 employees (more than 10% of its staff) in response to President Trump’s executive order. At least 3,000 employees have already accepted the acquisition agreement.

The average waiting time to creep up to 90 minutes by early May and contact the living. A May 22 screenshot of Live Metrics on Social Security websites saved by the Internet Archive shows call wait times are 1 hour 46 minutes and wait times are 1 hour 44 minutes. We also showed how many people are pending and how many people are currently waiting for a callback.

In addition to the 1-800 wait time information, the Social Security Metrics page also included processing times for retirement, survivors and Medicare benefits. For disability benefit applicants, it may take more than a year to obtain a decision, but there was information on the action time, review time, and adjudication time.

The average response speed was presented as 20.3 minutes based on average monthly data from last year. That speed is similar to data previously published by the agency. Then, on June 6, a comprehensive dashboard showing live metrics was removed from the Social Security Administration website, showing “maintenance” until June 16th.

When the dashboard page returns on June 16th, it no longer contains live call latency data or information about the number of people waiting for a hold or callback, and instead simply lists the average response speeds excluding callback latency of 19.2 minutes last year.

“We update our performance metrics to reflect the real-life experiences of the people we serve and highlight the fastest way our customers can get their services,” Social Security spokesman Stephen McGraw said in a statement to USA Today. “It’s important to measure what’s most important to improve customer service while providing all Americans with the information they need to select the best service channel for them while also measuring what’s most important to improve customer service.”

What Warren’s team found

Concerned that information currently available on the website did not match what her staff had heard from members, staff members of Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren began conducting their own tests of 1-800 numbers by calling timely from June 12th to June 20th.

Warren leads the Senate Democrats’ Social Security War Room, seeking to pay attention to the changes the Trump administration is making to social security.

In a letter Warren sent to Vignano late on June 25th, she called the results of her office investigation “deeply troublesome.” Compared to the number available online, the average wait time was about 1 hour and 45 minutes, often over 3 hours.

Office Survey data showed that over 50% of people were not answered on 50 calls. The majority ended when the caller was put on hold and then the call was dropped.

Of the calls answered, 32% had a waiting period of more than two hours. The average waiting time was 102 minutes.

“These delays are unacceptable, and have been exacerbated by your misleading claim that the service has actually improved under your watch,” she wrote in her letter, first sharing with USA Today. “Service disruptions and barriers make it difficult for beneficiaries to receive Social Security benefits, a payment that is the main source of income for more than half of the seniors in America.”

In another statement to USA Today, Warren accused Bisignano of lying about improving agency wait times.

“Donald Trump and Dozi (the government’s Bureau of Efficiency) have taken a chainsaw to Social Security and waited for hours just to get help with the Americans. That’s when their calls are answered at all. Instead of owning that mistake, Commissioner Vignano and his team are trying to hide it,” she said.

“From apple to orange”

Taking data offline makes it difficult for Congress and Americans to know what agents are doing, said Nancy Altman, president of Social Security Works, an advocacy group that wants to expand the agency.

The information currently on the website is a comparison of “orange to orange apples” with previously available, she said. In addition to call waiting times, there is little detail before new applications are processed and failure claims are appealed, and there is little about how wait times will change geographically.

She said there was “zero” evidence that the waiting time suddenly decreased. “It’s going to ignore logic because it makes it easier, given how they hollowed out every part of the institution.”

Altman said the agency’s lack of transparency about waiting times raises questions about other information they have made public.

And while the website says the average hold is 19.2 minutes, if they’ve been making calls for much longer, it’s hard for Americans to tell you how widespread the problem is, Altman said.

“The American people are frustrated, but I don’t know if that’s just happening to them,” she said.

Jemberdick, a supervising lawyer for Community Legal Services in Philadelphia, said he has not seen a reduction in call times.

“Social security lawyers and paralegals from our office call SSAs dozens of times a day. They uniformly discover that they can’t queue due to system outages, phone disconnection, or AI chatbot issues,” she told USA Today.

We want to hear from people who have influenced or knowledgeable about the Trump administration’s efforts to rebuild government, including actions by Doge.

Do you know what others should do? Contact swirre@usatoday.com or send a signal via Sarahdwire.71

Sam’s Club freezes prices of 1,000 items until mid-summer

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More than 1,000 summer favorites at Sam’s Club remain the same until mid-July, with promotional deals continuing until mid-August, with a recent announcement by a warehouse retailer owned by Walmart.

“From grill gear and coolers to float pools and fresh fruit trays, members can rely on the consistent value of seasonal essentials,” the company said of the deal while opening up the possibility of rising tariff-related prices for small kitchen appliances.

Here’s what you need to know about Sam’s club’s plans for the rest of the summer:

Sam’s Club wants to ensure that customers are not “strong in price changes and weekly budgeting.”

Walmart announced that the company understands Sam’s club customers want to create memories, spend time with their loved ones and spend their pool day.

“Members want to absorb every moment without stressing about price changes or weekly budgeting,” the company wrote in its announcement.

Items that are part of the Lock-in Value program are labelled on the Sam’s Club website and will launch the July instant savings event on July 23rd.

Sam’s club customers are “very conscious” about what they’re buying, executives say.

Todd Sears, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer at Sam’s Club, explained in a June 11 interview that the client is “very conscious and has a very choice about what they’re buying.”

When asked about Sam’s Club being able to keep customers’ prices low while taking into account tariffs, Sears said this was something they’ve done for a while.

“The majority of our profits come from membership income, actually from 80% to 90%,” Sears said at the 2025 Evercore Consumer & Retail Conference earlier this month. “We’ve always tried to keep prices low, and your way is to look at the best countries for supply chain management, manufacturing costs and sourcing.”

For example, on Mother’s Day, Sam’s Club kept the prices of flowers the same. Sears added that “the best rose in the world” is imported from Ecuador and Colombia. Sam’s Club and Walmart worked with producers from those countries to move the packaging to the US

“It gave us enough flexibility to raise prices,” Sears said. “We’re rewarded for the best flower sales weekend ever.”

Members interested in instant savings in July can visit www.tinyurl.com/instantansavings2025.

Saleen Martin is a reporter for the USA Today Now team. She is from Norfolk, Virginia 757. Email her to sdmartin@usatoday.com.

Parents want to bring back the summer of their 90s children. What does that mean?

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Nostalgia of the 90s, which brought back cargo pants and flip phones, also fueled the millennial parenting trends of the 90s called Kid Summers.

The idea is to recreate the memories of a core childhood that is typical of the 1990s summer. For example, running through a sprinkler, drinking from a garden hose, or chasing an ice cream truck.

“Open your backyard there, give them a garden house and let them go to town,” says Kristin Gallant, a parenting expert behind Big Little’s emotions, in an Instagram video. “We do independent play, creativity, ride bikes and that from sunrise to sunset.”

According to the American Psychological Association, research shows that unstructured playtime can help build a healthy body, increase energy and reduce tension and anxiety.

But it’s not always possible to give kids the perfect 90s summer of 2025. Parents should not emphasize that, said Claire Barrotton, professor of human development and family studies at Michigan State University.

Children’s desire for summer in the 90s is likely a response to a parenting culture that seeks to overschedule children in summer activities to optimize their child’s development, she said.

“They are scheduled and use too much technology,” she said. “It’s a very reasonable response, but trying to solve it all one summer won’t work for either the kids or the parents.”

Many parents who work full-time rely on structured childcare, she said, unable to wrap their children around their frayed knees all summer long.

It is also important to find friends for your kids to play outside. Many families do not live in safe areas where other children live nearby. Instagram users created a similar point in comments about Gallant’s videos.

“Give me the economy of the 90s and the property prices of the 90s. See what I can do,” the user said.

But even if you have parents at home and your family lives in a safe and social neighborhood, Barrotton said that children’s summers in the 90s might not make sense. If children are not given unstructured freedom throughout the school year, they don’t know what to do with it during the summer.

“We can’t take this scheduled, tech-saturated life back for nine months of a year and switch to this absolute freedom,” she said. “We don’t prepare the kids for that…it can make them more unsettled.”

A full switch isn’t wise, but Vallotton said there are ways parents can ease their kids in the summer of their 90s by slowly limiting screen time, promoting more outdoor activities, and fostering opportunities for peer play with minimal supervision.

But that may not work for all families and parents.

“Social media is a tool for social comparison and self-judgment,” Barrotton said. “I challenge my parents to spend the summer of the 90s for myself and pause their use of social media.”

Adrianna Rodriguez can visit adrodriguez@usatoday.com.

Stellantis CEO Filosa leads international brands from Detroit

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  • Antonio Firosa, 51, of Naples, Italy, was appointed Stellantis’ next CEO in May.
  • Filosa has been involved in brands related to Stellantis for over 25 years and has recently been a major North American business.
  • The Italians focus on the American sector while naming executive teams to lead every angle of the brand.

Antonio Firosa has started a new job and maintains his old job.

Filosa officially started on Monday, June 23rd as CEO of Stellantis, an international automaker that owns Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram, Fiat and more.

Filosa announced plans to assign a leadership team on the first day and maintain supervision of the North American business while serving as CEO.

In Filosa’s first job, the automaker released some details that provide some insight into what Stellantis looks like under his lead.

North American Director

Filosa, 51, will take over Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares. Tavares was the company’s first CEO following the merger of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles and Peugeot SA Group in 2021. During Tavares’ tenure, Stellantis consistently fell into profits and maintained a reputation with employees and dealers that proved difficult to resolve. Tavares resigned in the second half of 2024.

During his tenure at Tavares, he attracted the rage of United auto workers. This launched a strike when Tavares felt he had no end to the bargain and then launched the “Promis the Promise” campaign that followed.

Annoyed, US Stellantis dealer took an extraordinary step in September, writing a public letter disciplining Tavares and the company’s business. Calling Tavares’ leadership “reckless,” the dealer said their distinctive American brand fluttered.

“Reckless, short-term decisions to secure record profits in 2023 have been catastrophic yet completely predictable results in the US market,” the letter reads.

However, Filosa generally receives positive marks from North American dealers who feel he fits more with his market.

The move to highlight North America makes sense from a business perspective, according to Sam Fiorani, vice president of global vehicle forecasting at Autoforecast Solutions.

“North America is the most important region for Stellarantis at a profit level,” Fioni said. “Revenues from these brands between Ram and Jeep correct the shortfalls from other brands around the world.”

Fiorani hopes Stellantis will place more aggressive brands in the coming months.

“In the next six months or a year, we’ll really see a solid move to at least put the Jeep and RAM in a better position, if not the rest of the North American brand,” Fiorani says.

I work in Detroit

When Filosa served as America’s Chief Operating Officer, he was a continuing role, working at Chrysler headquarters in Auburn Hills. Stellantis officials, who are now at the top of international companies, confirmed to the Free Press that Filosa and his family are staying in Metro Detroit.

For Fioni, this may help repair the wounds of the Tavares era.

“Filosa knows this is really important,” Fioni said. “Make sure he is on the ground in Detroit is the first step towards (reinforcing the stability of the company).

Before taking over as CEO, Filosa toured several North American factories, including the Detroit Assembly Complex and the Sterling Stamping Factory.

Leadership Team

On his first day, Filosa nominated the brand’s next top executive. Almost all of the appointees come from within the company, and many started with affiliated brands before the formation of Stellantis in 2021. Firosa is based in Europe with many of his leadership teams.

For Fioni, a senior leadership region, it is less important than experience.

“They all have that deep background,” Fioni said. “This offers a world-class team, which the company hasn’t seen in decades.”

The new team is primarily homemade, but does not mean the usual business of the automaker. In fact, Fiorani said their experience in-house is a positive.

“Most of the people there have been 20 years of experience. The average for this group is nearly 21 years with one brand Stellantis,” Fiorani says. “They seem to live and breathe this company.”

Here is the full list of Stellantis leadership teams:

  • Antonio Firosa, CEO, Head of Brands in North America and America.
  • Doug Ostermann, CFO, mergers, acquisitions, joint ventures.
  • Head of expanded European and European brands including Jean-Philippe Imparato and Maserati.
  • Stellantis Pro One (Stelantis’ Commercial Vehicle Business Unit), head of South America; Emmanuele Capelano;
  • Philip de Rovira, World Secretary and Stellantis Financial Services.
  • Davide Mele, Head of Product Planning.
  • Ned Curic, Head of Product Development and Technology.
  • anglyness Jacquet, head of quality.
  • Monica Genovese, the person in charge of purchasing.
  • Scott Thierre, head of supply chain.
  • Arnaud Deboeuf, manufacturer.
  • Xavier Chéreau, Head of Human Resources and Sustainability.
  • Clara Ingen-Housz, Head of Corporate Affairs and Communications.

Liam Rappleye covers Stellantis and UAW from Detroit Free Press. Please contact him: lrappleye@freepress.com.

Trump’s big victory and other takeouts from the ultimate Supreme Court decision

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WASHINGTON – For the second year in a row, the Supreme Court ended its term with President Donald Trump’s big victory.

This time, the conservative courts — including the three justices appointed by Trump in his first term — limit the judge’s ability to block the president’s policies when he is being challenged in court.

Last year, the court said the facility’s president had broad immunity from the charges. He said this is a decision that will help Trump avoid being brought to justice to try to overturn the 2020 election.

And Trump has also achieved a winning streak on emergency appeals where the judiciary decides relatively quickly, without verbal discussion.

These emergency measures will continue throughout the summer while the courts are resting.

However, June 27 was the final day of the judge’s decision on the case that he had been considering for several months.

In addition to the judge’s ruling on Trump’s birthright citizenship change, they shared their opinions on LGBTQ+ school books, online porn, Obamacare and internet grants.

This is the highlight.

Judges will suspend national blocs on Trump’s policies from lower courts

Rather than directly addressing birthright citizenship, the High Court ordered lower courts to instead review the national bloc on Trump’s policies.

Judge Amy Coney Barrett wrote that the national order “is likely to exceed the fair powers Congress has given federal courts.” The judge will have 30 days to consider the award.

“These judges tried to determine national laws,” Trump said. “This was a huge abuse of electricity.”

Attorney General Pam Bondy, who complained that 35 of the 40 national blocs on Trump’s policies came from five jurisdictions, said the decision would stop local judges from becoming “emperors.”

But states and immigration advocates warned that such a decision would leave a patchwork of citizens in almost half of the states where judges blocked Trump’s orders but not in other jurisdictions. The American Civil Liberties Union filed a nationwide class action lawsuit in response to the High Court’s decision to stop Trump’s birthright.

“All courts that have seen this cruel order agree that it is unconstitutional,” said Cody Woffsey, deputy director of the ACLU’s Immigration Rights Project.

Varu Chilakamarri, partner at K&L Gates, said the decision could result in more class actions and quicker lawsuits.

“The rejection of the Supreme Court’s withdrawal of a national injunction has sharply restricted the power of lower courts to block controversial enforcement actions,” Chilakarmali said. “But all of these paths will inevitably take time to unfold. It will be difficult to stop the widespread implementation of highly contested policies.”

The High Court did not consider the constitutionality of whether Trump’s order would limit birthright citizenship for the children of parents of countries, either temporarily or without legal approval. Bondi said the decision could be made in the next court session, which begins in October.

Maintenances like Amy Connie Barrett

Perhaps Judge Amy Connie Barrett will stop being vilified by Trump supporters.

Some of the president’s biggest supporters called for employment for diversity, equity and inclusion after Barrett (and Secretary John Roberts) sided with three liberal judges in the court’s decision in March that he must pay foreign aid organizations for the work the Trump administration has done for the government.

But Barrett wrote a big victory for Trump.

Conservative commentator Sean Davis said on social media that, in Barrett’s opinion, “are nuking a universal injunction,” he “jugated” the objections written by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson.

“I want to thank Judge Barrett for his brilliant writing of his opinion,” Trump told White House reporters.

Trump said he is not familiar with the conservative criticism of Barrett as a “squeeze” or “rattling” law professor.

“I don’t know about it. I have a lot of respect for her. I have always had it,” Trump said. “Her decisions were written beautifully today from all accounts.”

Liberals say conservatives succumbed to Trump’s “ock ha ha” in the constitution

The judiciary prefers to unanimously emphasize the number of decisions they convey, but what divides along the lines of ideology is more common than the end of the period.

Three of the five complete opinions that took over on June 27th were six conservatives in the court on one side and three Liberals in the other.

In the decision, limiting how the judge can block Trump’s policies, Judge Sonia Sotomayor said the president “has done a “stern ock ha ha” of our constitution.”

“Instead of standing firmly, the court will give way,” she wrote in dissent.

In response to the majority of porn websites supporting Texas’ Age Verification Act, Judge Elena Kagan said the court should push Texas to see if there is a way to stop Texas from viewing sexually explicit content that is less burdensome for adults’ first revision rights.

In the third decision, Sotomayor said he would require the school to let the school take children away when the book on LGBTQ+ characters is read as “threatening the essence of public education.”

Conservatives joined liberals to reject conservative cases

Two more decisions were also 6-3, but for other reasons.

Three of the court’s conservatives — Roberts, Barrett and Brett Kavanaugh, joined three liberals to reject the conservative agenda to Obamacare and the Internet grant program.

Three other conservatives in the court – Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch opposed.

The latest challenge to the 2010 Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare, put aside attacks on free access to cancer screening, drugs that prevent HIV, cholesterol-lowering drugs and other preventive health services.

And in cases rooted in long-standing conservative complaints about delegating too many powers to government agencies, the majority said they didn’t do that when they created a program that subsidized high-speed internet and telephone services for millions of Americans.

Surprisingly, the court punted the racial gerrymandering challenge

The court was to announce whether Louisiana could maintain the map of the legislature. This will make decisions that could affect the 2026 elections and the ability to consider race when drawing legislative boundaries into the national capacity.

Instead, the court said he wanted to hear more arguments first. why? They didn’t say it. when? They didn’t say that either, except “soon” lay out the timeline.

The lawsuit must be attacked by states of balance law when they comply with civil rights laws that protect the power of racial minorities while not discriminating against other voters.

A group of non-black voters challenged the map as unconstitutional, claiming it was heavily racially reliant on its control.

The state says it drew the line to protect strong incumbents like House Speaker Mike Johnson and comply with the court’s decision to reasonably create a second majority of black districts.

Democrats have advantages in the district. This could be a factor in determining which party will control closely divided houses in 2026.

Mega Million Wins on 27/25/6: $348 million jackpot

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Due to the drawings on Friday, June 27th, the Mega Millions Jackpot rose to $348 million, as it did not match all the winning numbers in the painting on Tuesday, June 24th.

If someone matches all six numbers on Friday, there is a one-time cash payment option of $155.5 million.

There were three Mega Million winners this year, but the most recent winner won Ohio State with a $112 million jackpot. Prior to that, Illinois Lucky Lottery ticket holders took home a $344 million jackpot on March 25th, while another lucky person attacked the Mega Million Jackpot on January 17th for $113 million.

Here are the wins from Mega Millions drawings on Friday, June 27th, 2025:

Mega Millions win count on 6/27/25

The number of victory for Friday, June 27th will be posted here if drawn.

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_.

Senate kills resolution to curb Trump’s military use in Iran

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Sen. Tim Kane won Congressional approval of a similar resolution to prevent the use of the military in Iran during Trump’s first term, but the president refused.

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WASHINGTON – The Senate voted against suppressing the use of military force in Iran after the bombing of US nuclear facilities and the resulting fragile ceasefire.

The 47-53 votes on June 27th killed a measure from Sen. Tim Kane of D-Virginia, who would require a parliamentary vote before using the army again against Iran. His resolution, one of at least three pending sessions in Congress, represented a dispute between the legislative and administrative departments over those who held the key to US attacks on other countries.

As commander of the military chief, Trump claimed that Iran had the discretion to bomb Iran to prevent the development of nuclear weapons. But Democrats point out that the Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war.

What is the Warpowers resolution?

The Constitution gives Parliament the power to “declare war.”

Furthermore, lawmakers approved the 1973 war power resolution during the Vietnam War and requested that the President notify Parliament within 48 hours of military action. The law also restricted the deployment of troops to 60 days with a 30-day withdrawal period, in the absence of a formal declaration of war.

But Trump and his allies point out that he is the commander of the military chief, and that his swift, decisive military action is sometimes necessary.

“Slapping President Trump is a clear attempt and nothing more,” R-Idaho Sen. Jim Rich said of the resolution.

Sen. Lindsey Graham of R-South Carolina called forcing Congress votes before military operations “paralyzes the country.” If lawmakers choose to do that, Congress could cut off funds, Graham said.

“This is a chaos case study that will be created,” Graham said.

When asked at a White House press conference on June 27, when asked about the possibility of a new bombing of Iran’s nuclear site if it appears necessary at some point, he didn’t rule out attacking Iran again.

“It’s certainly definitely, absolutely,” Trump said.

Congress acts as a check for “dogs of war”: Schiff

Kane had introduced a resolution before Trump ordered a bombing on Iran on June 21. Cain sponsored similar measures during Trump’s first term, approved by Congress but rejected by Trump.

Despite the ceasefire between Iran and Israel, Kane said the constitutional framers had decided to declare war in Congress even when George Washington was president.

“I hope the ceasefire continues, but I’m worried that I’ll be back on this floor,” Kane said. “The war is too big and the problems are too big to make decisions to harm our sons and daughters.”

Sen. Adam Schiff of D-California said termination of military weapons against Iran would not limit the country’s defense of itself or sharing intelligence with Israel.

“We have to have a check for the war dog,” Schiff said.

Sen. Jeff Markley of D-oregon said wars are easy to start, but often don’t end.

“Let’s be clear. The threat was not imminent,” Merkley said. “Instead, the administration acted rapidly, putting America’s lives at risk.”

Two similar war power resolutions are pending in the House

Two similar resolutions are pending in the house. Voting may take place in mid-July.

Rep. Thomas Massie of R-Kentucky introduced him as Rep. Ro Khanna of D-California. And the top Democrats on the three committees – Connecticut Rep. Jim Himez on Intelligence News, New York’s Gregory Meeks on Diplomacy, and Washington’s Adam Smith on Armed Service – introduced another.

“President Trump must not be allowed to launch a war with Iran or the country without meaningful consultations or approval from Congress,” the lawmaker said in a joint statement on June 23.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Louisiana, said the final declaration of war was in World War II in 1941. However, he said there have been 125 military operations since then, including South Korea, Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan.

Then-President Joe Biden ordered strikes in Iraq, Syria and Yemen, while then-President Barack Obama ordered an eight-month bombing campaign against Libya, Johnson said.

Johnson was a constitutional lawyer before he began his political career, and was called a relic with war forces with reporting requirements to Congress and reporting requirements for his 24-hour news cycle and social media.

“The strike on Iran’s nuclear facility was clearly within Trump’s Article 2 authority as chief commander,” Johnson said. “We shouldn’t even debate.”

Americans fearing Iran will retaliate for bombing: poll

Americans were worried about the brewing conflict between the US and Iran, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll, which closed on June 23.

Four of the five Americans surveyed said they were worried that “Iran may target US civilians in response to US airstrikes.”

The three-day poll showed Americans were equally concerned about military personnel from the country stationed in the Middle East, starting after US airstrikes and ended early June 23 before Iran attacked US airbase in Qatar.