On orders from President Trump, the Pentagon’s Pete Hegseth vowed to eliminate Iran’s navy and missile sites, launching “Operation Epic Fury” with Israel days after Geneva nuclear talks fizzled. The U.S. blames Tehran for decades of attacks and, cit…
With artificial intelligence picking up the slack in America’s workplaces, the Bureau of Labor Statistics and World Economic Forum both report that health care and tech jobs will remain top earners through 2032, some cresting $200,000. Meanwhile, repetitive roles—many staffed by Hispanic workers—face the digital chopping block, though analysts assure us the apocalypse is postponed: new, machine-friendly skills fetch a premium for those nimble enough to adapt.
The joint U.S.-Israeli strike that killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has upended Iran’s tightly-wound hierarchy, leaving President Masoud Pezeshkian and associates holding the reins during Ramadan. Donald Trump, reprising his erstwhile “liberator” role, basks in the limelight as critics fret about legality and echoes of old regime-change blunders. We are left to wonder whether, this time, freedom will indeed trickle down—or merely evaporate in the desert air.
New York’s latest blizzard dumped nearly two feet of snow and brought both a travel ban and a fleeting snow day before students trudged back to class—and, we suspect, to mediocrity in snow shoveling. Disaster expert Aton Edwards urged community-minded prepping, arguing that winter storms expose frail infrastructure faster than officials can shovel out platitudes or supply working Wi-Fi—proof that nature always writes our contingency plans in bold.
Records reveal that over 20 early childhood education sites in New York City—projects launched under Bill de Blasio and costing upwards of $18 million—remain unused as families wait for elusive 3K and pre-K seats nearby. Despite swanky renovations and ongoing rent, city officials still “evaluate potential use” while parents, like Brooklyn’s Zach Hetrick, trudge miles past empty classrooms; clearly, the door to progress is proving a tad stiff.
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After Governor Kathy Hochul centralized New York’s $11 billion Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program under Georgia-based Public Partnerships, health care union 1199SEIU is inviting some 258,000 home health aides to unionize—potentially boosting its size by 55%. While this could hand the already formidable union a much larger megaphone, we’ll see how many workers opt in, since their real boss is usually a relative in a living room.
The death of Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, in US-Israeli strikes has left a void, ushering in a provisional council facing both spiralling violence and Washington’s guarded overtures. Tehran fired missiles at Israel and Gulf states after losing over 200 people and major infrastructure, while Donald Trump, fresh from sinking ships and sabre-rattling online, now says he’s open to chat—presumably after the dust, or at least the smoke, settles.
As economic aftershocks rumble through March 2026, SNAP recipients from Texas to Virginia face not only higher maximum payments—up to $994 monthly for a family of four, post–cost-of-living tweaks—but also tighter household checks and stricter work mandates, courtesy of Donald Trump’s OBBBA law. States now scramble to hit a 6% error rate, even as we puzzle over whether a doughnut is the new contraband.
Wall Street’s recent jitters—triggered by fears that artificial intelligence will upend businesses from Salesforce to Charles Schwab—knocked hundreds of billions off big names before cooler heads recalled history: we’ve shaped—and survived—tech upheavals before. In fact, M.I.T. economists Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson (themselves recent Nobel laureates) argue that, with the right policies, even A.I. might one day toil for us rather than the other way round.
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