Categoría: Health & Fitness, Beauty

Health & Fitness, Beauty

  • By Peter Nicholas, Garrett Haake and Carol E. Lee

    WASHINGTON — «Liberation Day» just gave way to Capitulation Day.

    President Donald Trump pulled back Wednesday on a series of harsh tariffs targeting friends and foes alike in an audacious bid to remake the global economic order.

    Trump’s early afternoon announcement followed a harrowing week in which Republican lawmakers and confidants privately warned him that the tariffs could wreck the economy. His own aides had quietly raised alarms about the financial markets before he suspended a tariff regime that he had unveiled with a flourish just one week earlier in a Rose Garden ceremony.

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    The stock market rose immediately after the about-face, ending days of losses that have forced older Americans who’ve been sinking their savings into 401(k)s to rethink their retirement plans.

    Ahead of Trump’s announcement, some of his advisers had been in a near panic about the bond markets, according to a senior administration official. Interest rates on 10-year Treasury bonds had been rising, contrary to what normally happens when stock prices fall and investors seek safety in treasuries. The unusual dynamic meant that at the same time the tariffs could push up prices, people would be paying more to buy homes or pay off credit card debt because of higher interest rates. Businesses looking to expand would pay more for new loans.

    Two of Trump’s most senior advisers, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, presented a united front Wednesday, urging him to suspend the tariffs in light of the bond market, the administration official said.

    In a social media post, Trump announced a 90-day pause that he said he’ll use to negotiate deals with dozens of countries that have expressed openness to revising trade terms that he contends exploit American businesses and workers. One exception is China. Trump upped the tariff on the country’s biggest geopolitical rival to 125%, part of a tit-for-tat escalation in an evolving trade war.

    Trump reversed course one week after he appeared in the Rose Garden and unveiled his plan to bring jobs back to the United States. Displaying a chart showing the new, elevated tariffs that countries would face, Trump proclaimed, «My fellow Americans, this is Liberation Day.»

    It proved short-lived.

    Markets plunged in anticipation of heightened trade wars, wiping out trillions of dollars in wealth. Democrats seized on the issue, blackspfgh3bi6im374fgl54qliir6to37txpkkd6ucfiu7whfy2odid onion looking to undercut a source of Trump’s popular appeal: the view that he can be trusted to steer the nation’s economy.

    «Donald Trump’s market crash has vaporized a whopping $104,000 from the average retirement account,» Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Wednesday on the Senate floor, hours before Trump’s reversal.

    The episode laid bare the rifts within Trump’s team of senior advisers as the White House struggled to offer a clear, consistent argument about the duration of the tariffs. While Bessent seemed open to negotiations, Peter Navarro, a senior trade adviser, appeared to take a more hard-line posture.

    Elon Musk, the billionaire Tesla CEO who has been advising Trump on the government workforce, called Navarro «dumber than a sack of bricks,» while Navarro described Musk as someone who is merely «a car assembler, in many cases.»

  • tripscan

    After taking off from Brisbane just after dawn, our tiny propeller plane skims miles of Queensland coastline before heading north out over the crystal-clear waters of the Coral Sea –— revealing the beauty of this vast reef system beneath its surface.

    Our destination is Lady Elliot Island, a remote coral cay perched on top of the southern end of the Great Barrier Reef.

    Pilot Peter Gash is the island’s leaseholder, and his family has been operating tours to the island for nearly 20 years.

    «We made it our life’s work,» Gash said. «My wife and I married, I went and learned to fly airplanes so I could bring people here.»

    Gash negotiates his small aircraft through bumpy crosswinds to land safely on the short, grass-covered runway.

    Decades ago, the island was a barren landscape devoid of vegetation following years of mining for nutrient-rich seabird waste — known as guano — in the late 1800s.

    The Gash family set about bringing this island back to life, planting around 10,000 native species of trees to create a man-made forest and nature reserve, and using solar power, batteries and a water desalination system to support a small eco-tourism resort.

    The island is now home to up to 200,000 sea birds, which have helped to regenerate the coral reef fringing the island.

    «If we can recover this small place, this little circle, we can recover this big place — this whole planet,» Gash said. «That’s what really drives me, is to try and encourage people to know that it’s not hopeless, it can be done.»

    Gash takes CNN on a snorkel tour, diving down to explore the underwater rainforest in his backyard. The vibrant coral colonies burst with color and teem with hundreds of species including manta rays, reef sharks, clown fish and turtles.

    When the island’s greatest enthusiast resurfaces to draw a breath, even he can’t hide his shock at the extent of the coral bleaching.

    «It’s worse than I thought it would be,» Gash said, as he treaded water on the surface. «I just pray the corals will come back next year.»

    ‘Silent as a graveyard’

    Beyond the Great Barrier Reef, трипскан сайт the massive marine heatwave sweeping the globe has already impacted some of the world’s most famous coral reefs — including those in the Red Sea, Indonesia and the Seychelles.

    Last year, the soaring ocean temperatures also caused widespread destruction of corals in the Caribbean and Florida — and US experts are predicting further damage there this coming summer.

    «I am becoming increasingly concerned about the 2024 summer for the wider Caribbean and Florida,» said Derek Manzello, the coordinator for NOAA’s Coral Reef Watch program.

    «It won’t take much additional seasonal warming to push temperatures past the bleaching threshold.»a full moon in the sky over a city

  • Trump says U.S. will double steel tariffs to 50%

    President Donald Trump told U.S. steelworkers on Friday that he will double tariffs on steel imports to 50%.

    «We’re going to bring it from 25% to 50%, the tariffs on steel into the United States of America,» Trump said during remarks 1.bs2best at U.S. Steel’s Irvin Works in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania.

    Trump is visiting U.S. Steel after indicating last week that he will clear a controversial merger with Japan’s Nippon. Investors and union members are listening for answers from the president on what shape the deal he announced between U.S. Steel and Nippon will take.

    Trump described the deal as a «partnership» in a May 23 post on his social media platform Truth Social. The president said U.S. Steel’s headquarters would remain in Pittsburgh and Nippon would invest $14 billion over 14 months in the more than 120-year-old American industrial icon.

    Trump told reporters on Sunday that the deal is an «investment, it’s a partial ownership, but it will be controlled by the USA.» But the White House and the companies have provided little detail to the public on how the deal is structured since Trump’s announcement.

    President Donald Trump

    President Donald Trump arrives to speak during a visit to US Steel – Irvin Works in West Mifflin, Pa., on Friday, May 30, 2025.Saul Loeb / AFP-Getty Images

    U.S. Steel has described the deal as a «merger» in which it will become a «wholly owned subsidiary» of Nippon Steel North America but continue to operate as separate company, according to an April 8 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    Sources familiar with the matter told CNBC’s David Faber that Nippon is expected to close its acquisition of U.S. Steel at $55 per share, the original offer the Japanese steelmaker made before President Joe Biden rejected the deal in January. Biden blocked Nippon’s proposed acquisition on national security grounds, arguing that it would jeopardize critical supply chains.

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    But Trump ordered a new review of the deal in April, softening his previous opposition to Nippon buying U.S. Steel. The president announced the «partnership» one day after the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) was supposed to conclude its review and make a recommendation on whether the companies had found ways to «mitigate any national security risks.»

    ‘National security agreement’

    Pennsylvania Sen. Dave McCormick told CNBC on Tuesday that the U.S. government will have a «golden share» that will allow it to decide on a number of board seats. U.S. Steel will have an American CEO and a majority of the board will come from the U.S. McCormick said.

    «It’s a national security agreement that will be signed with the U.S. government,» McCormick told CNBC’s «Squawk Box.» «There’ll be a golden share that will essentially require U.S. government approval of a number of the board members and that will allow the United States to ensure production levels aren’t cut.»

    The «golden share» likely wouldn’t take the form of an equity stake by the U.S. government, said James Brower, a partner at law firm Morrison Forrester’s litigation department. The committee that reviewed the deal, CFIUS, does not negotiate equity interests, Brower said.

  • What is going to be done since Obama’s birth certificate has been proven to be a fraud?

    Your information is incorrect. Barack Obama’s birth MRCOG Certificategreat post to read – issued by the State of Hawaii is genuine.

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