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“They Steal a Lot”: Trump Wants to Knock on Fort Knox’s Door, Should You Care?

  “They Steal a Lot”: Trump Wants to Knock on Fort Knox’s Door, Should You Care? Picture this:  The President of the United States wants to drive down to Kentucky, knock on a 20-ton blast-proof vault door, and personally check whether America’s gold is still there. Not a movie plot. Not a hypothetical. That’s literally what Donald Trump said. And his reason, delivered in a rambling Sunday interview that aired May 10, 2026, was quintessentially Trump:  “They steal a lot.” They.  No clarification. No specifics. Just…  they. If your first reaction is a mix of amusement, confusion, and a weird little prickle of anxiety, you’re not alone. Because beneath the offhand remark, beneath the meandering quotes and the Elon Musk subplots, there’s actually a deeper question worth asking. One that’s been quietly simmering for half a century. Is the gold actually in Fort Knox? And if it’s not, what then? Let’s unpack this, because it’s stranger and more interesting than mos...

Costco Fans Erupt After Beloved Food Court Item Replaced by High-Calorie Newcomer

  Costco Fans Erupt After Beloved Food Court Item Replaced by High-Calorie Newcomer There are few things Costco shoppers take more seriously than the food court. The $1.50 hot dog combo is practically a national treasure. The pizza has its own cult. So when news broke that a menu staple was getting the boot, again, in favor of a calorie-packed newcomer, the internet did exactly what you’d expect. It erupted. This time, the drama centers on the  combo calzone , a controversial item that was already walking a tightrope with fans. It’s being replaced by a  five-piece order of chicken strips  that clocks in at a jaw-dropping 1,640 calories. Social media hasn’t been this divided over a food court since… well, since Costco swapped churros for cookies. But the story is way more layered than one menu swap, and it reveals a lot about where Costco’s food court is heading. What just happened in the Costco food court In early May 2026, shoppers in the Chicago area started not...

With Netflix New Ad‑Free Standard Plan at $20, Streaming's Tipping Point Into Old TV Is Getting Closer

  With Netflix New Ad‑Free Standard Plan at $20, Streaming's Tipping Point Into Old TV Is Getting Closer You know that moment when you glance at your credit card statement and one line item makes you pause? That happened to me this morning. Netflix, $19.99. For the ad‑free Standard plan. No add‑ons, no extra member fees, just the core streaming subscription that once cost $7.99 and felt like the best entertainment deal on the planet. Now, at twenty bucks, it’s impossible not to ask:  are we just building cable all over again, one price hike at a time? Netflix’s March 2026 price increase, its second in just over a year, shoved the Standard plan to a symbolic $19.99, while the ad‑supported tier sits at $8.99 and Premium climbed to $26.99. The raw numbers are easy to list. What’s harder to shake is the feeling that we’ve crossed some invisible line. The streaming revolution promised freedom: no bundles, no ads, total control. Lately it’s delivering the opposite. The Number ...

This Is The Way: Elon Musk Just Endorsed Warren Buffett’s Radical 5‑Minute Plan to Fix the National Debt

  This Is The Way: Elon Musk Just Endorsed Warren Buffett’s Radical 5‑Minute Plan to Fix the National Debt It isn’t every day that the world’s most famous disruptor and its most patient investor agree on anything. Warren Buffett sips Cherry Coke in Omaha, reads annual reports, and advocates for buy-and-hold. Elon Musk wants to die on Mars, just not on impact. Yet on one issue, the two billionaires are locked in rare, emphatic accord: America’s runaway national debt. Musk posted his verdict in three words that immediately went viral:  “100%. This is the way.”  He was sharing a 2011 clip of Buffett laying out a plan so simple it fits on a cocktail napkin, a plan that, according to Buffett, “can end the deficit in five minutes.” This article unpacks the ingeniously simple mechanism, the insane numbers behind it, whether politicians would ever let it pass, and what the whole debate says about your own financial future. The 5‑Minute Plan That's Suddenly Going Viral Again W...

Saudi Aramco Q1 Profit Jumps 26%: How a Desert Pipeline Became the World’s Most Vital Oil Artery

  Saudi Aramco Q1 Profit Jumps 26%: How a Desert Pipeline Became the World’s Most Vital Oil Artery It is a hot morning in May 2026, and somewhere in the Arabian desert, a 1,200-kilometer steel snake is humming at full throttle. Seven million barrels of crude oil,   every single day  are racing through it, from the oil fields of eastern Saudi Arabia to a port city called Yanbu on the Red Sea. That pipeline, the East-West Pipeline, is currently the most important piece of metal on the planet. It is single-handedly holding the global energy system together while the Strait of Hormuz, the waterway that usually carries a fifth of the world’s oil, remains blockaded by Iran. On Sunday, May 10, Saudi Aramco revealed just how much that pipeline matters. The state-owned oil giant reported that its  Q1 2026 adjusted net income had leaped to $33.6 billion,  a 26% increase from the $26.6 billion it posted in the same quarter a year earlier. The result smashed analyst ex...

Target Is Winning Back Busy Families from Walmart, Starting With the Baby Aisle

  Target Is Winning Back Busy Families from Walmart, Starting With the Baby Aisle Here's what's actually changed, and whether it's worth switching where you buy diapers. If you've had a baby in the last few years, you know the drill: grab the diaper bag, buckle the car seat, and head to Walmart because, well, that's just where the prices are lowest. At least, that's what most of us  told  ourselves. But something shifted in early 2026. Target, after three straight years of declining sales and four quarters of falling store traffic, decided to stop being "an everything store" and start being  your  store, specifically, the store for your family when you're in the thick of baby-raising chaos. The battleground? The baby aisle. And honestly? It's about time someone shook it up. Why Target Suddenly Cares So Much About the Baby Aisle Let's back up for a second. Target has been struggling. Since the pandemic-era shopping boom faded, the re...

How a TikTok Creator's Joke Raised $335M to Buy Spirit Airlines (And Whether It Can Actually Work)

  How a TikTok Creator's Joke Raised $335M to Buy Spirit Airlines (And Whether It Can Actually Work) There are internet jokes, and then there are internet jokes that accidentally raise more than $335 million in less than a week. Here is a sentence I never expected to write: a 22-year-old voice actor from Los Angeles posted a TikTok suggesting that regular Americans pool their money to buy a bankrupt airline, and as of this weekend, over 370,000 people have raised their hands and said  "Yeah, I'm in." No actual cash has changed hands yet. The pledges are non-binding. The website crashed at least twice under the weight of its own traffic. And yet, the "Let's Buy Spirit Airlines" movement (dubbed  Spirit 2.0 ) has become one of the most astonishing viral campaigns in recent internet history. So… can a bunch of strangers on TikTok really buy an airline? Let's break it all down, the story, the numbers, the legal maze, and what happens next. Why Spirit...

Tesla Postpones Model S/X Signature Delivery Event, Leaving Attendees Holding the Bag

  Tesla Postpones Model S/X Signature Delivery Event, Leaving Attendees Holding the Bag May 10, 2026  – If you’re one of the 350 people who just received an email from Tesla, you probably felt your stomach drop. The subject line was nothing dramatic, just another corporate notification. But when you opened it, there it was: the Model S and Model X Signature Edition delivery event, scheduled for May 12 at the Fremont factory, was postponed. No reason. No new date. And certainly no offer to cover the thousands of dollars you’d already spent. For a group of buyers who quite literally represent Tesla’s most loyal fans, people willing to drop $159,420 on a car they can’t even resell for a year, it feels less like a schedule change and more like a gut punch. The Email That Dropped Like a Bomb Let’s read the room. Tesla’s cancellation notice was, to put it mildly, minimalist. The email reportedly said something along the lines of:  “The Signature Edition delivery event ori...

So You’ve Heard These AI Terms and Nodded Along; Let’s Fix That

  So You’ve Heard These AI Terms and Nodded Along; Let’s Fix That We’ve all been there. You’re in a meeting, and someone drops “LLM” with the confidence of ordering coffee. Heads nod. You nod. But inside, a tiny voice is screaming, “What is that, exactly?” The world of artificial intelligence has built a new language, and it’s not just technical; it’s cultural. It creates an “in-group” of people who seem to get it, and leaves the rest of us feeling like we missed a very important memo. If that sounds familiar, you’re not alone. Many of the people casually sprinkling these terms into conversation are also hoping no one asks a follow-up question. This isn’t a test. It’s just new. Think of this as your friendly, human-to-human cheat sheet, no jargon, just the concepts behind the buzzwords so you can move from polite nodding to confident conversation. The Big Picture: It’s a Family, Not a Soup A common mistake, and the reason many people get lost, is thinking AI, Machine Learning (M...