Wednesday, October 8
Headlines
Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Minerals company skyrockets after White House buys 10% stake. If you hadn’t heard of Trilogy Metals, now you have. After the Trump administration said it was investing $35.6 million in Trilogy to boost US supply of critical minerals from Alaska, the company’s stock ballooned by more than 200%. Trump’s investment and approval of mining permits reverse the Biden administration’s rejection of the project over environmental concerns. China remains the world leader in critical minerals, producing nearly 70% of its supply of rare earths, per CNBC.—AERobert Reich
Flying to the end of the shutdown
Friends,
As I said last week, the shutdown ends when air traffic controllers have had enough.
That’s already started. Federal Aviation Administration advisories yesterday showed there were no air traffic controllers at Hollywood Burbank Airport in California, causing delays.
Staffing issues are also linked to delays at the Newark, Phoenix and Denver airports.
According to the flight-tracking website FlightAware, more than 6,000 U.S. flights were delayed Monday.
Even before the shutdown, controllers were under great stress from more crowded skies and fewer controllers to manage them.
And, just to remind you, they’re not getting paid now. Trump is even making noises about not giving government workers the back pay they deserve when the shutdown ends.
At A Glance
The number of friends our brains can handle.
The 200-year-old history of Oktoberfest. (via YouTube)
Why sports fandoms may be bad for your body.
Math explains why world records are getting harder to beat.
The disputed origins of basmati rice.
Rock's 80 most iconic guitar intros. (w/video)
The minimum net worth of middle-class 40-somethings.
Bandit apologizes for stealing Claire the dinosaur.
How to give your cells new life.*
Clickbait: Vacuum planet gobbles interstellar gas and dust.
Historybook: American politician John Hancock dies (1793); Great Chicago Fire begins, killing about 300 people and destroying most of the city (1871); Actress Sigourney Weaver born (1949); "Cats" debuts on Broadway (1982); Office of Homeland Security is created in the wake of 9/11 attacks (2001).
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> The 2025-26 NHL regular season kicks off tonight; see preview and predictions for all 32 teams (More) | LeBron James to make major announcement today (12 pm ET), speculated to be regarding his basketball future (More)
> Jilly Cooper, renowned bestselling British romance author and journalist, dies at age 88 (More)
> Canadian rock band Rush announces 2026 summer reunion tour, their first concerts since 2015 (More) | Instagram announces Rings awards, which will honor the platform's top creators (More)
Science & Technology
> Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine awarded to trio of American and Japanese immunologists for discoveries underpinning new autoimmune and cancer therapies (More) | Nobel Prize in Physics to be announced this morning at 5:45 am ET (More)
> Deadly tornado that hit North Dakota in June upgraded to strongest classification, marking the first such rating in the US since 2013; winds reached 210 mph, and width peaked at more than 1 mile (More)
> Researchers link fathers' exercise regimens to endurance and metabolic health of children, suggesting sperm microRNAs transmit benefits of physical activity (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close mixed (S&P 500 +0.4%, Dow -0.1%, Nasdaq +0.7%) as the federal government shutdown enters its second week (More)
> OpenAI to purchase computing capacity from chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices for artificial intelligence data centers; AMD shares close up 23.7% (More)
> Fifth Third Bancorp to buy Comerica in $10.9B all-stock deal, creating ninth largest US bank; operations will span the Southeast, Texas, California, and the Midwest; Comerica shares close up 13.7% (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> US Supreme Court declines to hear an appeal by Ghislaine Maxwell, convicted sex trafficker and former associate of Jeffrey Epstein (More)
> Federal government shutdown enters seventh day after Senate fails to pass either of two competing stopgap bills; Republican-led bill failed 52-42, with Democratic bill failing 50-45 (More)
> Rescue efforts begin to save hundreds of hikers stranded on Mount Everest in Tibet amid heavy snowfall, at roughly 16,000-foot elevation (More)
SOURCE: 1440 NEWS
Real Estate Planning
Twelve years later (1962), that house sold for $250,000, eighteen (1980) years later it sold for $1.5 million. I have no idea what it might have sold for recently.
While we had an Alexandria mailing address, we were actually four miles outside of the city proper, and eight miles outside of Washington, DC proper... so, the location was perfect.
I now live in East Tennessee with my second wife, and we purchased a home for $125,000 in 2002 and sold it for $375,000, twenty-one years later in 2023. While it was not the growth that my parents experienced, it was still substantial growth for East Tennessee. We felt very good about our investment.
Real estate has always been a good investment for families to make and if they are mindful about what they are doing and are willing to move into a new house every three to five years, it is possible to trade up to your dream house in less than twenty years.
Twenty years may seem like a long time, but it goes by very quickly.
When making improvements to your house, those improvements should only be made in the Kitchen and bathrooms. Adding a large deck or a pool, or a spa does not really help with the resale value of the house.
What helped my parent's home increase so much in value was LOCATION. Hard to beat being right outside the Nation's Capital... but location is key as is a good school system. Remember city school systems offer much more than country school systems do.
Another issue to consider is buying a mostly brick house or mostly a siding house with just a little brick. Homeowner's will be less if your house is mostly brick.
Most important, have a plan that is fluid that is to say flexible so that it can be easily changed as your life changes and don't worry if you change your goals during the life span of that plan.
New Optics Tech Could Revolutionize Gravitational-Wave Astronomy
Gravitational-wave science is on the verge of a major step forward, thanks to a new instrumentation breakthrough led by physicist Jonathan Richardson at the University of California, Riverside. In a study published in Optica, researchers describe the creation and successful testing of FROSTI, a full-scale prototype designed to control laser wavefronts at extremely high power inside the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO).
LIGO is the facility that first confirmed the existence of gravitational waves, ripples in spacetime produced by massive accelerating objects such as merging black holes. This discovery provided key evidence in support of Einstein’s Theory of Relativity. The observatory relies on two 4-kilometer-long laser interferometers in Washington and Louisiana to capture these faint signals, giving scientists new ways to study black holes, cosmology, and the physics of extreme matter.
Tuesday, October 7
Wonderings 4
Personally, I like to daydream, fantasize, wonder, ponder, IMAGINE life in a different perspective than what it really is...
- What would it be like to live on another planet?
- What would it be like to be a space traveler?
- What would it be like to live to age one thousand?
What kind of person does this kind of thinking make me, outside of being different from you?
According to the Myers Briggs Personality Profile, I am an INTJ. I know this is accurate because I have taken the test 4 times with 10 years having passed between each test. My answer is always the same... a solid INTJ.
The short definition of an INTJ, other than only being found in 2% of the general population is that: I AM A BUILDER OF THEORETICAL CONCEPTS AND MODELS. In other words, I imagine stuff... how life should be perhaps.
It is very difficult for an INTJ to make friends, let alone create long lasting, strong friendships.
Think about that for a while.
This inability to make strong friends is going to IMPACT the question: WHO AM I?
Not only is it going to impact that question but it is going to impact my:
SELF ESTEEM
SELF CONFIDENCE
because I don't make friend as easily as other people do.
I spent the first TWENTY YEARS of my life, wondering why I did not have many friends and virtually no close friends. That kind of anxiety influences in a negative way one's behavior which only serves to exacerbate the situation.
Why don't they teach understand WHO AM I in elementary schools? In high school it is rather too late because of other influences on our lives.
Headlines
Protesters in Chicago last month. KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI
AFP via Getty Images
Judge won’t block Trump from sending National Guard to Chicago, for now. Officials from Illinois and Chicago sued yesterday to stop President Trump from deploying National Guard troops to Chicago, as conflicts between the president and Democrat-led areas escalate. A federal judge declined to immediately grant that request, but scheduled a full hearing for Thursday. Trump wants the troops to quell protests of ICE agents’ aggressive immigration enforcement in Chicago. The local officials’ lawsuit argues that he’s motivated by hostility toward the city and its leaders rather than a true emergency. The president also sought to deploy the National Guard to Portland, OR, but a different federal judge blocked that twice over the weekend. The White House is appealing in Oregon, and the President has also said he could invoke the Insurrection Act to bypass the courts.
Fifth Third to buy Comerica as regional lenders consolidate. In what Bloomberg calls the biggest US bank deal this year, Fifth Third said it would acquire Comerica for $10.9 billion in stock. The acquisition, expected to close in the first quarter next year, would create the ninth-largest bank in the country with $288 billion in assets. The announcement sent Wall Street tongues wagging about whether a wave of consolidation could be coming to regional banking, as smaller banks look to compete with giants like JPMorgan and may want to take advantage of the Trump administration’s more open stance toward big mergers.
Talks toward ending Gaza war began in Egypt. Yesterday, on the eve of the two-year anniversary of the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that prompted the war in Gaza, Israel and Hamas started indirect talks in a Red Sea resort town to discuss President Trump’s 20-point peace plan. Both sides are under pressure to agree to a ceasefire, but they are also believed to be far apart on key issues—including whether Hamas will disarm and the withdrawal of Israeli troops. Going into the discussions, Hamas said it would agree to release its remaining hostages in exchange for a release of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel, but those details are still being hashed out as well. The White House is pushing for the talks to move quickly, and the initial phase is likely to take several days.—AR
Robert Reich
What Trump doesn’t want us to know about ourselves
How Trump is systematically concealing America from Americans
Friends,
Flying blind is dangerous, but it’s what Trump and his lackeys are forcing America to do.
For starters, the current government shutdown means that critical economic statistics — such as job numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics that normally would have appeared last Friday — are delayed. No one knows when they’ll appear.
The BLS also produces data on inflation and wages — also delayed.
At a time when there’s reason to worry that the American economy is weakening — when Trump’s tariffs (import taxes) are pushing prices higher, his ICE dragnet is causing labor shortages, and he is asserting control over the Fed’s interest-rate decisions — turning the lights off on the economy is a particularly bad idea.
But even if the government weren’t shuttered, Trump is still turning out the lights.
How Trump is systematically concealing America from Americans
Friends,
Flying blind is dangerous, but it’s what Trump and his lackeys are forcing America to do.
For starters, the current government shutdown means that critical economic statistics — such as job numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics that normally would have appeared last Friday — are delayed. No one knows when they’ll appear.
The BLS also produces data on inflation and wages — also delayed.
At a time when there’s reason to worry that the American economy is weakening — when Trump’s tariffs (import taxes) are pushing prices higher, his ICE dragnet is causing labor shortages, and he is asserting control over the Fed’s interest-rate decisions — turning the lights off on the economy is a particularly bad idea.
But even if the government weren’t shuttered, Trump is still turning out the lights.
At A Glance
What it costs to grow old in your home. (w/interactive)
Images from Thailand's water buffalo festival.
Taco Bell tops speed rankings in drive-thru report card.
Universities producing the most billionaires.
The calculated, useful art of gossiping.
Failed amendments that almost reshaped American history.
Longest-running computer and 10 other odd tech records.
How one man stole thousands of butterflies.
Robots are cooking your french fries now.*
Clickbait: Rare coin treasure hunt kicks off today.
Historybook: Edgar Allan Poe dies (1849); World’s oldest airline still operating under its original name, KLM, is founded (1919); American cellist Yo-Yo Ma born (1955); US invasion of Afghanistan begins (2001); Hamas launches attack into Israel, killing over 1,200 people and taking 250 hostage (2023).
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Taylor Swift's "The Life of a Showgirl" sells 2.7 million copies on its opening day and 1.2 million vinyl albums in the first week, a modern-era (1991-present) record (More) | ... and the album's release launch film hauls in $46M at global box office (More)
> Former NFL quarterback and Fox Sports analyst Mark Sanchez hospitalized, arrested on three misdemeanors after late-night altercation with 69-year-old truck driver (More)
> MLB Division Series is underway; see latest playoff bracket and schedule (More) | Las Vegas Aces take 2-0 lead over Phoenix Mercury in WNBA Finals (More)
Science & Technology
> Study reveals enzymes and process that allow ants to ferment milk into yogurt; most modern yogurts rely on two bacterial strains during production (More)
> Mushrooms evolved the ability to produce psilocybin—the psychoactive substance in magic mushrooms—in two different ways (More)
> Scientists use AI tool to map how an antibiotic known as enterololin helps treat Crohn's disease while leaving the rest of the gut microbiome unaffected; approach accelerates research process from years to months (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close mixed Friday (S&P 500 +0.0%, Dow +0.5%, Nasdaq -0.3%); the Bureau of Labor Statistics does not publish jobs report for October amid federal government shutdown (More)
> OPEC+ countries announce an increase in oil production next month by 137,000 barrels per day, amid concerns of a potential supply glut in the fourth quarter (More)
> Bitcoin price jumps to record high of over $125.7K following September's Federal Reserve rate cut (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> US Supreme Court begins its new term today; high-profile cases on the docket address birthright citizenship, conversion therapy, President Donald Trump's tariffs regime, the firing of Federal Reserve Board member Lisa Cook, and more (More)
> President Donald Trump authorizes 300 National Guard troops to Chicago after an armed woman rams her vehicle at federal officers, is shot by Border Patrol (More) | Federal judge temporarily blocks deployment of National Guard to Portland, Oregon (More)
> Israel and Hamas negotiations begin today in Egypt, after Hamas agrees to elements of a US-proposed peace deal (More)
SOURCE: 1440 NEWS
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