Monday, June 1, 2026

New report ranks best used cars for teens

We researched this for more than one of our kids and found that something like a Hyundai Elantra or Sonata was the best used car for the buck then in the early 2000s. The reason then was that it had a great engine made by Honda which ran forever then and because it's initial value or price drops significantly but you still had a formidable car for years and years. In otherwords then this car would last and last because of the really well made engine at that time made by Honda. However, many things might have changed since then. So, our youngest we bought a new one  in 2013 for but the older ones we bought used ones for for college in the early 2000s. 

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New report ranks best used cars for teens

Oil prices 'surging' as peace talks between US, Iran stall: Analyst

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Oil prices 'surging' as peace talks between US, Iran stall: Analyst

Multiple victims dead, officer shot in 'traumatic' domestic violence incident

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Multiple victims dead, officer shot in 'traumatic' domestic violence incident

Drone helps capture suspect in fatal shooting of Virginia sheriff's deputy

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Drone helps capture suspect in fatal shooting of Virginia sheriff's deputy

Hawaii's Kilauea sets record for lava fountaining episodes

HAWAII VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK, Hawaii -- The on-and-off eruption of Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano broke a record Monday with the number of periods it has produced fountains of lava since it began erupting in December 2024, the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory said.

Monday marked 48 fountaining episodes, setting the record for any one eruption on Kilauea, said Katie Mulliken, a geologist and spokesperson with the observatory.

Episodes are separated by periods during which little to no lava erupts. Since lava is coming from the same vents in a crater at Kilauea's summit, it is the same overall eruption, she said in an email.

There are several notable aspects of the current eruption, she said, including how accessible it is for viewing by residents and tourists. An eruption during the 1980s, in which 47 lava fountaining episodes occurred over about 3 1/2 years, occurred in a more remote area, she said.

The ongoing eruption is also reshaping the topography at the summit, she said.

But the lava fountains also can impact neighboring communities with volcanic fragments and ash, known as tephra.

Kilauea, located on Hawaii’s Big Island, is one of the world’s most active volcanoes.

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Rare shark spotted off New England coast

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Rare shark spotted off New England coast

Judge allows group to fly '86 47' flag in DC, rejecting claim it is a threat to Trump

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Democrats zero in on an anti-corruption message:Full Article

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Democrats zero in on an anti-corruption message:

 

Democrats zero in on an anti-corruption message: From the Politics Desk

Plus, more members of Congress are in danger of losing in the next round of primaries.
Get more newson

Welcome to From the Politics Desk, a daily newsletter that brings you the NBC News Politics team’s latest reporting and analysis from the White House, Capitol Hill and the campaign trail.

In today’s edition, Allan Smith and Natasha Korecki explore how Democrats are trying to turn the GOP’s “drain the swamp” message on its head. Plus, Ben Kamisar looks ahead to the next primaries where members of Congress are in danger of losing.

Sign up to receive this newsletter in your inbox every weekday here.

— Adam Wollner


Democrats think their secret sauce in 2026 is targeting Trump and Republicans on corruption

By Allan Smith and Natasha Korecki

Corruption is increasingly at the center of the 2026 election, with Democrats making it a core tenet of their messaging.

Much like President Donald Trump — who has aimed his “drain the swamp” mantra at congressional Democrats who reported stock trades or Hunter Biden for his business dealings — Democrats are seeking to take advantage of spiking levels of voter distrust in government and dissatisfaction with the economy by spotlighting examples or allegations of the president, his allies or congressional Republicans enriching themselves or providing friendly industries with special treatment.

Democrats’ most recognizable leaders — including 2028 contenders — have all zeroed in on the issue.

During his primary night address to supporters in Bucks County last month, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro accused Trump, his administration and his congressional supporters of participating in or enabling corruption no fewer than a dozen times.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., last week announced the launch of the “End Corruption Caucus” with Reps. Jason Crow, D-Colo., and Mike Levin, D-Calif.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom recently told reporters at a Center for American Progress conference that the party’s “top priority” upon retaking power in Congress needs to be “immediately” putting an end to “the corruption and the graft and the grift.”

At the same conference, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., pointed to the financing of the president’s proposed ballroom, the “anti-weaponization” fund and Trump’s recently reported stock trades in describing a need for “cleaning up corruption.”

And Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Ga., has centered his campaign on the issue, saying over the weekend that the Trump administration is “the most corrupt administration of all time, and everybody knows it.”

“We’re doing it in every corner of the country,” said one national Democratic strategist. “And the idea is it’s an affordability cycle, and so everybody cares about affordability, No. 1, when you pair the message with the reason that your costs are going up is because politicians care more about themselves, they’re corrupt, they’re bought by corporate donors or they’re lining their own pockets, and that’s why they’re not looking out for you, that’s the most potent mix of the two arguments.”

Read more →

💰Related: The Trump administration signaled it is backing off on the creation of a $1.8 billion fund announced by the Justice Department that could send money to allies of the president deemed to be “victims of lawfare and weaponization.”


For subscribers: DNC Chair Ken Martin is digging in after fumbling the 2024 autopsy

By Natasha Korecki

Despite a torrent of criticism and calls for his resignation after mishandling the release of an autopsy of Democrats’ 2024 presidential election loss, Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin is sending every signal that he isn’t going anywhere.

So far, no organized effort to oust him has materialized.

Keep reading →


Primary challengers threaten to unseat House members across the country

By Ben Kamisar

Four House incumbents have already lost re-election bids so far this year. And about a dozen more are facing legitimate threats in the coming months.

Two Republican incumbents are squaring off for one district in California this week, the latest example of redistricting changing not just general elections but also primaries, after two Democratic members lost in Texas last week.

But the heaviest upcoming primary action will be on the Democratic side. A handful of Democratic members of Congress in California will also face challengers arguing that voters want a fresh face, part of a national slate of anti-incumbent candidates focused on generational change. A wealthy incumbent Democrat in Maryland is running against an even wealthier former congressman in a primary there.

And other Democrats in states like Colorado and Massachusetts face challenges from their party’s left flank, part of a running battle between progressives and the Democratic establishment.

The incumbent primary danger stretches from Connecticut and New York to California and beyond: Hawaii’s oldest member of Congress is fighting for his political survival, too, from a challenger backed by a former governor.

Incumbent members of Congress are notoriously difficult to defeat. But many Democrats are facing stronger challenges this election cycle than ever before, as party members look to turn the page on the 2024 presidential election and mount an effort to retake control of Congress.

Read more →


🗞️ Today's other top stories

  • ➡️ Iran war: Iran suspended high-stakes negotiations with the United States to protest Israel’s expanding military offensive in Lebanon, according to government-aligned media. But Trump said on Truth Social: “Talks are continuing, at a rapid pace, with the Islamic Republic of Iran.” Read more →
  • 📱Platner fallout: The wife of Maine Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner said she is “really angry” about reports that she previously told her husband’s campaign he had exchanged sexually explicit texts with other women. Read more →
  • 📺 2024 redux: In an interview on the “TODAY” show, former first lady Jill Biden defended supporting her husband’s re-election bid despite concerns about his health. And on “Meet the Press,” Kentucky Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear said that Joe Biden “shouldn’t have run for re-election in the first place.”

That’s all From the Politics Desk for now. Today’s newsletter was compiled by Adam Wollner.

If you have feedback — likes or dislikes — email us at politicsnewsletter@nbcuni.com

And if you’re a fan, please share with everyone and anyone. They can sign up here.


 

Some hantavirus cruise ship passengers go home

State trooper guards and daily fever checks: Some hantavirus cruise ship passengers go home

After being released from Nebraska quarantine, passengers will be monitored by local health officials through June 22.
Nebraska Medicine's Davis Global Center in Omaha, Neb. where American passengers from the hantavirus-stricken cruise ship will quarantine.
American passengers from the hantavirus-stricken cruise ship have been quarantining at Nebraska Medicine's Davis Global Center in Omaha. Rebecca S. Gratz / AP

Five of the 18 U.S. cruise ship passengers quarantined in Nebraska went home Monday, halfway through their quarantine after being exposed to hantavirus aboard the MV Hondius, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention spokesperson said.

The five passengers were permitted to leave under the condition that they stay home — no quick runs for takeout or trips to the grocery store — for the second half of the virus’ full 42-day quarantine period, set to end June 22.

The CDC said all of the passengers who are asymptomatic and haven’t tested positive for the Andes hantavirus were given the option to leave Monday. Those who chose to stay can finish their 42-day quarantine at the National Quarantine Unit in Omaha, Nebraska.

States are required to station law enforcement or public health employees outside the quarantined passengers’ homes for surveillance, the CDC said.

New York and California have agreed to accept returning passengers, according to their departments of health. Arizona and Oregon have also agreed to accept passengers, the CDC said.

“They came to get me in my room at 6 a.m.,” one passenger, a 30-year-old New York resident who did not want to be identified because he feared public backlash, said Monday. The passenger, who said he remains asymptomatic, was given a KN95 mask and driven directly to a private plane.

“There were three medical staff on board with me,” the man said. Those health care workers took his blood pressure throughout the flight. Upon arrival, he said, a motorcade of emergency vehicles escorted him home.

A state trooper in an unmarked vehicle was positioned in front of the man’s house to make certain he would not break quarantine, the passenger said.

The man said he signed a quarantine order with the county health department, agreeing to conditions such as staying on the property, avoiding having other people over and immediately notifying the health department if he doesn’t feel well.

Twice a day at an unannounced time, the county health department will video call him and have him take his temperature, he said.

The New York State Department of Health said in a statement Friday that at least one of its three residents who were passengers on the ship would be staying in Nebraska. The others were returning to New York on “non-commercial flights.” They would not be going to New York City, according to the statement.

“They have agreed and are required to remain at their residences, have no contact with other people, and participate in daily monitoring activities conducted by local health officials. Plans are in place to transport them to appropriate medical facilities if they develop symptoms or need any other medical care,” the statement from Dr. James McDonald, health commissioner for New York, said. “At this point, it is important to emphasize that there is no immediate risk to the public.”

The California Department of Public Health also said in a statement Friday that two residents who were passengers on the Hondius would return to the state to be monitored for illness for the remainder of the quarantine period.

The passengers are not required to leave. Among the 13 who remained in Omaha is Jake Rosmarin, who posted on Instagram that he’s staying put for the full 42 days, saying that it gives him “peace of mind.”

“I do not want to leave here until I know that there is a 0% chance of me getting sick, a 0% chance of me risking my family and friends getting sick, or the general public getting sick,” Rosmarin said.

Jake Rosmarin shows off his quarantine room.
Jake Rosmarin shows off his quarantine room.Jake Rosmarin

As of Monday, 13 hantavirus cases linked to the ship have been reported worldwide, with 11 cases confirmed. All were among passengers or crew members on the Hondius. No Americans have tested positive.

Three people from the cruise died, including a Dutch couple who health officials believe were exposed to the virus while they were visiting South America.

All of the cases involve the Andes strain, the only strain known to pass from person to person.

While there are some reports of people catching it through casual contact, scientists say it doesn’t spread easily. Most people with hantavirus, including the Andes strain, become infected after breathing in particles from the urine or droppings from rodents that carry the virus.

Large outbreaks are extremely rare; just 2% to 5% of all Andes cases are estimated to stem from person-to-person transmission.

Lab worker who vanished last year found dead in New Mexico national forest

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Nearly 1 in 4 white-collar workers is stuck in a mid-career stall, new research finds

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Nearly 1 in 4 white-collar workers is stuck in a mid-career stall, new research finds

Almost one in four white-collar workers is experiencing a hidden professional crisis: a "mid-career stall," defined as at least five years without a promotion or meaningful raise, new research shows.

The costs of a mid-career stall can translate into tens of thousands of dollars in lost wages, plus other benefits that come with career progression like retirement security, the researchers from Burning Glass Institute and New York University's School of Professional Studies found. 

The study, which tracked 1.3 million mid-career professionals across a range of industries over 25 years, determined that 24.2% of mid-career professionals are stalled in their workplaces. The researchers defined "mid-career" as the period roughly 10 to 15 years after a worker starts their professional career.

"People start to feel trapped. Stalled workers are doing everything society asked them to do. They got a degree, tried to build a career and stay employed, yet somehow they stop moving forward," Burning Glass Institute education economist Carlo Salerno, the report's lead author, told CBS News. "This is why it's a hidden crisis, because none of these things show up in unemployment statistics."

Salerno said the findings reveal a split between a labor market that looks healthy on the surface and the experience of workers who remain employed but are no longer climbing the corporate ladder or receiving the pay and benefits that come with advancement.

"Workers lose out on higher raises and bonuses, but they also miss out on valuable project experience, and not getting leadership experience," Salerno said. "Then you add those together and find yourself in a situation where you have lost access to things that you would use to grow a career." 

What causes a career stallout?

Persistent structural labor market problems are working against employees' upward trajectories, Salerno said. 

Organizations have become flatter, offering fewer opportunities for advancement than they did a generation ago. Workers also have fewer chances to move up by switching companies or relocating, he said.

"The stall isn't one singular event; instead, it's a bunch of small structural warning signs that show up much earlier than the event happens," he explained. 

The costs of staying stuck

There are financial costs to remaining stuck in place, though they vary by field.

The average stalled software developer misses out on $43,000 in wages over 15 years, researchers found. The costs to administrative workers are generally smaller because they offer fewer opportunities for advancement and don't pay out big bonuses, for example. 

"They don't have huge career ladders, so they stall and persistently lag behind," Salerno said. 

Stall rates vary dramatically across industries, ranging from a low of 20.7% in information technology to a high of 30.2% in public administration. 

Here's how different sectors' stall rates compare:

  • Health care and social assistance: 21.8%
  • Transportation and warehousing: 23.1%
  • Professional, scientific and technical services: 23.2%
  • Educational services: 23.4%
  • Management of companies and enterprises: 24.8%
  • Finance and insurance: 26.6%
  • Wholesale trade: 26.9%
  • Manufacturing: 27%
  • Utilities: 28%
  • Real estate: 28.9%

If you find yourself stalling out, intervene immediately, Salerno said.

"Look at what the skills workers who aren't stalling out have, like presentation, communication, or leadership skills that give them more flexibility to pivot out," Salerno said. "Figure out what skills you need to get off the ladder that shortened on you and onto the next ladder over." 

Employers also pay a price when workers' careers stall, he added.

"There's a lot of talent that could be working more effectively, and it's a missed opportunity for employers," Salerno said. 

I was starting to watch "The answer man(2009) which I had never seen before and was inspired to write this for you

 When I started to watch this comedy I realized I should write this for all of you because not everyone has met "God". 

First maybe I should tell you what this did to me. I was shaking for several days after this experience and it totally changed my life "likely in a good way" forever.

How I happened to meet God I'm a little embarrassed about so I would like to skip that part for now. But, the point is that God appeared to me somewhere like the Orion Nebula. I was amazed that God showed up for me like this.

This is what he said to me: "You are taking life too Seriously. There are two sins in life really one is taking life too seriously and the other is not taking life serious enough.

I asked him: "Is LIFE a Serious Joke?"

The fact that he didn't say: "No" said a lot to me.

However, the statement "You are taking life too seriously" was ominous to me. I didn't know quite what to do with this statement.

Yes. I had been a very serious person since I almost died of Whooping cough and the angels saved my life. 

After all, I had watched silly people get injured and sometimes die from not being serious enough growing up in the 1950s.

So, coming to terms with what God was saying to me made me tremble deeply to my very core.

It made me think really deeply and my whole body quaked for days from this powerful core teaching of God.

It completely changed my life in every way. I realized that many spiritual people who stand up so straight that they fall over backwards had missed the mark completely.

I wondered why did God Answer my prayer to see him face to face.

Also, What if God came to you and said "You are taking life too seriously." What would you think if God said that to you?

So, I had to reevaluate everything in my life in this context which caused my body to quake and tremble for several days after this experience. It created a deep core change in my whole belief system.

It opened me to Zen monks who laugh a lot or Tibetan Monks who do this too and I realized there was something inherently wrong with people who stood up so straight that they fell over backwards ever after this.

So, I realized that maybe being able to laugh at yourself was important to God.

Then I thought of the statement "It's a sorry Saint that Can't Dance" which is true too.

So, needless to say I was forever changed by this experience.

When did this happen to me. "I guess I was about 18 when this happened" and I have been forever changed since then.

By God's Grace

It also opened me to "Let Go and Let God" which is something my grandmother and Mother always said to me when life got tough.  

And I found them to be right and that people who just too serious I watched die left and right before their time often.

So, I realized God was right when he said this to me.

It's sort of like the Greeks said, "Moderation in all things"

Or in Buddhism it is the Middle way Path of the Lam Rim.

I think he was also saying "Extremism kills" which I have observed is also true in life.

By God's Grace

So, equanimity I realized from this is also very important to God.

So, when God appeared to me it changed my life in every way.

By God's Grace 

Scott Pelley accuses CBS News’ Bari Weiss of ‘murdering’ ‘60 Minutes’

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Scott Pelley accuses CBS News’ Bari Weiss of ‘murdering’ ‘60 Minutes’

“She was brought in to kill it, and she’s been doing exactly that,” the veteran “60 Minutes” correspondent said of his boss at a heated meeting on Monday, according to a recording.

New Mexico lawmakers to blast out subpoenas in Epstein investigation

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New Mexico lawmakers to blast out subpoenas in Epstein investigation

How shoppers who pay in cash are subsidizing Americans’ credit card reward points

However,  paying in cash has many advantages from my point of view. Your personal privacy is maintained by paying in cash and if there is a power outage or phone line outage all credit cards both ATM and others simply will not work. I have had the same problem over the last 20 years now from the same gas station in Buellton because the Solar Flare shut down the card readers and everything else at this station. So, if I didn't have cash I would have been stranded with my car and family in Buellton. So, it's a good idea to carry AT LEAST enough cash to buy gas and food or maybe a hotel if something goes wrong with the credit card system nationwide or worldwide from a solar flare because this happens periodically.

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How shoppers who pay in cash are subsidizing Americans’ credit card reward points

A study estimates that people who pay with cash and debit cards are subsidizing $30 billion a year in points and rewards for credit card users.