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Man and His Friend Spend 1 Hour Trying to Find EV Charger and Charge Car – To Go 15 Miles

Radio personality Grant Stinchfield says he would never buy an electric vehicle because recharging it is a time-consuming nightmare.

IRS Employees Allegedly Stole $400,000 in COVID Aid and Used It to Buy Cars, Vegas Trips

Five IRS employees allegedly received nearly $400,000 after fraudulently applying for more than $1.1 million in relief in government funding intended for small businesses damaged by the COVID-19 pandemic, the Department of Justice (DOJ) announced Tuesday.

U.S. Debt Surpasses $31 Trillion Under Biden

The national debt has exceeded $31 trillion and has now increased by $3.34 trillion since President Joe Biden took office.

Elon Musk Twitter Purchase Back On—$44 Billion Buyout Moving Forward

Musk and Twitter were involved in a legal battle over active accounts.

Job Openings Dropped Significantly in August, as Hiring Remained Strong

The number of job openings sharply declined in August, while hiring slightly increased over the previous month, the Labor Department reported Tuesday.

‘Army of Swimming Microbots’ Eradicates Pneumonia in Mice in Insane Study

A so-called “army of swimming microbots” successfully eradicated pneumonia in mice, according to a study published in September.

Americans’ Support for Biden’s Electric Car Push Is Nearly Zero

In response to Joe Biden's insistence that the fossil fuel industry be eliminated entirely, California officials already have claimed to set in motion their plan to ban the sales of new gasoline powered vehicles in their state in a few years.

U.S. College Educated Women Comprise Majority of Workforce

"College-educated women are the only gender and education group whose labor-force participation rate is back at its pre-pandemic level," says Pew Research senior researcher Richard Fry.

China in ‘Financial Crisis’

Economists are calling China's property crash, coupled with defaulting government investments and national debt, a "slow-motion financial crisis."

U.S. Home Prices Drop at Fastest Pace Since 2009

Home prices in the U.S. are sinking at the fastest monthly pace since the Great Recession, evidence that rising mortgage rates are rapidly slowing activity in the housing market.

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