Axios - Christmas tree prices spike around Thanksgiving, then start gradually falling until Dec. 25.
- Average daily prices hit a max of about $142 on Nov. 28 last year, sliding to just under $58 on Christmas Eve.
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
Axios - Christmas tree prices spike around Thanksgiving, then start gradually falling until Dec. 25.
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WalletHub
142 Million – Number of Americans who will travel for the New Year’s holiday this year, with 64% of them driving to their destination.
55% – Share of Americans who plan to celebrate New Year's Eve with family or friends.
$772 – Average cost for a couple to enjoy dinner and a show on New Year's Eve in the three largest cities (New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago).
360+ Million – Number of glasses of sparkling wine that are drunk each New Year's Eve.
To view the full report and your city’s rank
Bloomberg - At Albright College, the new president is cutting programs, selling art and real estate, and vowing not to hire anyone with tenure. Is this the way forward for liberal arts colleges?
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy reiterated that Ukraine would not cede land to Russia, a day after Trump appeared to criticize him amid pressure for Kyiv to accept painful concessions to end the war.
Walmart is making changes to appeal to higher-income consumers. It’s part of the company's effort to shed its original identity as a no-frills discount retailer..
Bloomberg - Google is working to create two different categories of AI-powered smart glasses to rival existing models from Meta: one with screens, and another that’s audio focused. The first AI glasses that Google is collaborating on will arrive sometime in 2026. A decade ago, Google Glass flopped because of its bizarre design, poor battery life and and privacy worries. Better luck this time.
SmileHub - With over 3.8 million high schoolers expected to graduate in 2026, the
non-profit organization SmileHub today released new reports on the Best States for College Students and the Best Charities for Education in 2026.
To highlight the best states for college students and the ones that have
more work to do, SmileHub compared each of the 50 states based on 28
key metrics. The data set ranges from graduation rate to the cost of
higher education to the earning potential for college graduates.
Best States for College Students |
States in Need of Improvement |
| 1. Massachusetts | 41. Kansas |
| 2. New York | 42. Louisiana |
| 3. Illinois | 43. Tennessee |
| 4. Rhode Island | 44. Hawaii |
| 5. California | 45. South Carolina |
| 6. Connecticut | 46. Mississippi |
| 7. Utah | 47. Arkansas |
| 8. Texas | 48. Alaska |
| 9. Pennsylvania | 49. Montana |
| 10. North Dakota | 50. West Virginia |
Washington Post - Government funding cuts, a caregiver shortage and immigration limits are layering new strains on an industry already hard-pressed to meet demand: Home health and personal care openings are projected to jump 17 percent from 2024 to 2034, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, and home health spending is expected to nearly double, to $317 billion, in 2033.... Spending on at-home elder care shot up 7 percent from August to September, the largest monthly increase on record, according to government data. Nursing home costs rose 4 percent from September 2024 to September 2025, while home health care surged 12 percent, far exceeding the 3 percent overall inflation rate during that time. The U.S. elder care industry is caught between competing forces as demand swells: Many families say they would prefer in-home care but can’t afford it. Yet the industry struggles to attract people willing to take on the intimate, labor-intensive work of caregiving, largely because of the low pay. For a home health or personal care aide, the median salary was $34,900 last year, or $16.78 an hour. Nurses and other medically trained staff who also attend to seniors at home earn more. |
New York Times - The San Francisco city attorney will file on Tuesday the nation’s first government lawsuit against food manufacturers over ultraprocessed fare, arguing that cities and counties have been burdened with the costs of treating diseases that stem from the companies’ products.
David Chiu, the city attorney, told The New York Times that he will sue 10 corporations that make some of the country’s most popular food and drinks. Ultraprocessed products now comprise 70 percent of the American food supply and fill grocery store shelves with a kaleidoscope of colorful packages.
Think Slim Jim meat sticks and Cool Ranch Doritos. But also aisles of breads, sauces and granola bars marketed as natural or healthy.
It is a rare issue on which the liberal leaders in San Francisco City Hall are fully aligned with the Trump administration, which has targeted ultraprocessed foods as part of its Make America Healthy Again mantra.
Axios - Civil rights groups are increasingly concerned that AI's rapidly spreading physical infrastructure is deepening climate burdens for communities of color.
Massive data centers require vast quantities of water, energy and land.
Civil rights groups say these impacts resemble earlier patterns seen with highways, refineries and manufacturing: pollution concentrated where political resistance is weakest and property values are lowest.
A supercomputer data center built by Elon Musk's xAI in southwest Memphis, a historically Black neighborhood, faces a legal challenge from the NAACP. The group says the site's gas generators are violating the Clean Air Act...
In Amarillo, Texas, advocates are fighting what developers call the world's largest AI data center, warning it could drain the Ogallala Aquifer, a shrinking water lifeline for the Texas Panhandle and southern Great Plains. Latino residents and rural water advocates fear losing access to groundwater already stretched thin by agriculture and drought....
Northern Virginia — site of the world's largest data center hub — is seeing mounting resistance in Loudoun and Prince William counties, where Black families say the build-out is overwhelming their communities.
Near Tucson, Ariz., a majority-Latino city strained by megadrought, a proposed "Project Blue" data center could consume millions of gallons of water per year.
"Data centers by design do not have a lot of jobs. It's predatory. They target cities desperate for economic development," LaTricea Adams, CEO of the Memphis-based Young, Gifted & Green, tells Axios....
As AI data centers expand across the West, Indigenous nations say the industry is accelerating resource extraction without tribal consent. Full story
The NAACP announced it's bringing together advocates, researchers and regional leaders for a two-day strategy summit in Washington this week to discuss AI data centers.
NBC News -More than a third of the roughly 220,000 people arrested by ICE officers between Jan. 20 and Oct. 15 had no criminal histories, according to new data.
China’s trade surplus for the first 11 months surpassed the $1 trillion mark, at nearly $1.08 trillion. That’s a record high for any single year and is more than the $992 billion surplus in all of 2024.
Pam Bondi has ordered the FBI to “compile a list” of Americans who may be extremists, according to a signed memo that has since been leaked.
Trump criticized Rep. Henry Cuellar for a "lack of loyalty" for running as a Democrat after receiving a presidential pardon.