Wednesday, July 23
Headlines
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Robert Reich
It’s the economy, stupid
Friends,
Trump is shafting his base economically in three ways most Trump voters don’t see or know. It’s important that they do.
Prices are rising
The Consumer Price Index has risen 2.7 percent from a year earlier. That’s the fastest pace since February. The trend is worrying, especially for working-class consumers who have to sacrifice a larger portion of their paychecks to buy what they bought before.
So-called “core” inflation — which strips out volatile food and energy prices and is therefore a more reliable measure for underlying price pressures — is rising even faster: up 2.9 percent from the same time last year.
Trump’s tariffs are to blame
Trump’s tariffs are the major culprit. Prices rose noticeably on appliances, clothing, and furniture — all products heavily exposed to Trump’s import taxes from Canada, China, and other major trading partners.
At A Glance
Introducing Tesla Diner, a 24/7 joint with 80 charging stations. (w/photos)
Dogs can be trained to smell Parkinson's disease.
Support in the US is rising for school cellphone bans.
World's richest woman opens a medical school.
The numerous benefits of walking backward.
Voting has opened to crown the UK's Tree of the Year.
Why some people celebrate Christmas in July.
Lucky man wins the lottery twice in one night.
Clickbait: NYPD is using drones to catch subway surfers.
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Malcolm-Jamal Warner, actor and director best known for starring role in "The Cosby Show," dies at age 54 of an accidental drowning while on vacation in Costa Rica (More) | Tom Troupe, actor whose career spanned more than 60 years, dies at age 97 (More)
> "Superman" hauls in more than $400M at global box office and helps Warner Bros. pass Disney as top-grossing studio at US domestic box office for 2025 (More)
> President Donald Trump threatens to restrict stadium deal for the NFL's Washington Commanders unless they restore former Redskins name; Trump also urges the MLB's Cleveland Guardians to bring back Indians moniker (More)
Science & Technology
> Security researchers say weekend hack via Microsoft's SharePoint likely affected about 100 organizations, including government agencies in the US, the UK, and Germany; attack likely carried out by a single actor (More) | The 1440 Science & Technology weekly newsletter comes out this morning at 8:30 am ET, sign up here (More)
> Supernovae study suggests dark energy—the mysterious force driving universal expansion—may be weakening over time; if confirmed, results would point to not-yet-discovered physics governing the universe (More) | The astronomer behind the invisible universe (1440 Topics)
> Researchers sequence genes of y-larvae, an enigmatic species of parasitic crustacean; despite being identified in the late 1800s, the adult form of the creatures has never been observed (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close mixed (S&P 500 +0.1%, Dow -0.0%, Nasdaq +0.4%) (More) | Opendoor Technologies shares surge 42.7% after investor Eric Jackson predicts a turnaround; online real estate company dubbed the latest meme stock and trading briefly halted due to volatility concerns (More) | The impact of meme stocks (More)
> Southwest Airlines announces assigned seating will begin Jan. 27 (More) | Auto giant Stellantis warns of $2.7B net loss for the first half of 2025, citing early effects of tariffs (More)
> Sandwich chain Subway hires former Burger King executive as CEO (More) | Trump Media shares rise 3.1% after the company buys $2B in bitcoin and related securities (More) | Citigroup joins Goldman in asking junior bankers to disclose other offers in effort to combat competitive recruiting by private equity firms (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Federal appeals court overturns 2017 conviction of Pedro Hernandez, a former bodega stock clerk who confessed to kidnapping and killing six-year-old Etan Patz in 1979 (More) | Former Kentucky police officer Brett Hankison sentenced to 33 months in prison for role in 2020 raid that killed Breonna Taylor; Hankison fired 10 shots into Taylor's apartment, but didn't hit anyone (More)
> Bangladeshi Air Force training jet crashes into two-story building at a school in Dhaka, killing at least 20 people, injuring 171 others; cause of the accident is under investigation (More) | Alaska Airlines grounds all flights for three hours due to hardware-related electrical outage (More)
> Trump administration releases over 240,000 pages related to FBI surveillance of the late Martin Luther King Jr. before his 1968 assassination (More) | Explore the documents (More)
Life's Lessons
What are life's lessons?
They are insights and understandings gained from one's experience that directly influence one's beliefs, behavior, and decision making. They are uniquely different for each person while still being similar.
BELIEFS
My beliefs have changed over my lifetime from being very religious and spiritual to becoming skeptical of institutionalized religion and the Christian Bible while holding onto a belief that there is an extraterrestrial creator that influence all of mankind by providing different types of religious beliefs.
BEHAVIOR
My behavior has changed from wanting fame and fortune to that of wanting a simple life where only my basic needs are met. That is not to say, I want to live in a cabin without running water and utilities in some dense wooded area, living off the land.
My desire now is to live in a small home with a small yard, in a semi-rural community, with minimal traffic, minimal crime, low taxes, and low cost of living. Associated with that is living debt free and buying only what I need, not what I want.
My desire is not to be influenced by what others think of me and to make friends only if my neighbors want to do so. If not, I am still at ease with being alone. Animals have taught me not to judge people but to accept them as they are.
DECISION MAKING
This is an easy area for me now because decisions are easy since I have decide to live a simple life.
- No debt
- Buy what I need
- Research decisions
- Treat others as you want to be treated
- Reduce stress
- No alcohol
- Eat healthy
- Exercise
- Live today, not in the past
- Be proactive
Extreme Conditions of Early Universe Recreated in Collider Experiment
A team of researchers have made progress in understanding how some of the Universe's heaviest particles behave under extreme conditions similar to those that existed just after the Big Bang.
A study published in Physics Reports provides new insights into the fundamental forces that shaped our Universe and continues to guide its evolution today.
The research, conducted by an international team from the University of Barcelona, the Indian Institute of Technology, and Texas A&M University, focuses on particles containing heavy quarks, the building blocks of some of the most massive particles in existence.



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