GOVERNMENT

Apr 07 2026HEALTH

How Remote Health Tools Changed Care for Veterans

Back in 2016, the VA launched a program to give tablets and health gadgets like blood pressure cuffs to veterans who struggled to reach clinics. The idea was simple: combine video calls with real-time health tracking to help people manage their conditions without traveling. But here’s the catch—no o

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Apr 07 2026POLITICS

More hands join to manage housing help in Richmond

Richmond is testing a new plan to hand out housing aid money without going through usual city channels. Instead of using government workers, private groups will decide who gets the funds. Officials hope this will speed things up and reach people faster. The move raises questions. Why switch to outs

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Apr 05 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Aliens, UFOs, and the stories we tell

Decades before movies started scaring us with the walking dead, sci-fi films filled screens with creatures from another world – big-headed, big-eyed beings often named aliens or UFOs. These images stuck in people’s minds, shaping how most Americans picture life beyond Earth. But fiction might soon f

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Apr 05 2026FINANCE

Big Tax Mistake Costs 50, 000 New Yorkers Money

In February, New York's tax office spotted a mistake in their paperwork that cost over 50, 000 people money. A wrong number in the tax tables meant some taxpayers paid more than they should or got smaller refunds. The error only hit certain groups—mostly married couples or single parents with income

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Apr 05 2026POLITICS

California’s problems: Could one leader really be behind it all?

Jillian Michaels, known for her tough-love fitness advice, has lived in California long enough to see its economy crack under pressure. Expenses keep climbing while public services seem to stay the same. Gas, housing, taxes—every cost hits a new record, yet roads stay pothole-ridden and schools stru

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Apr 05 2026CRIME

Italian police catch a crime boss hiding in plain sight

A high-profile arrest took place on the Amalfi Coast when Italian police raided a luxury villa and seized Roberto Mazzarella, a man long at the top of Italy’s most wanted list. Mazzarella, 48, had rented the coastal property with fake papers, showing how easy it can be to slip through official check

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Apr 04 2026POLITICS

Government Shutdown Drama: A Tale of Politics, Money and Chaos

The U. S. government hit a pause button in the fall, shutting down for 43 days – the longest ever – until a deal let most agencies run through January. That stop‑gap was meant to ease into a longer agreement, but events in Minnesota shook the plans. Immigration agents killed Alex Pretti, and Senate

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Apr 04 2026POLITICS

When Big Departments Get Smaller: What Really Changes

A few years ago, leaders suggested shutting down the country’s main education office. They didn’t have the power to close it alone, so they tried other ways to shrink its work. This meant moving big jobs—like handling student loans—to another department. The boss in charge said, “Loans are almost a

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Apr 04 2026POLITICS

A Plan to Bring Alcatraz Back as a Prison

The U. S. government recently proposed spending $152 million to reopen Alcatraz Island as a working prison. This idea follows a suggestion from last year to turn the historic site back into a high-security facility. The money would cover the first year of rebuilding, but Congress usually ignores suc

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Apr 04 2026POLITICS

New Mexico sets tax rules to boost city redevelopment

The state of New Mexico has put new rules in place to help cities pay for upgrades and repairs. Part of the sales tax revenue collected locally can now be set aside specifically for redevelopment projects. This change aims to give communities more control over how their money is spent on fixing up n

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