A former Twitter employee testifies to the Jan. 6 committee that he feared Trump’s tweets would incite violence and that ‘people were going to die.’
Author: Terry Collins, USA TODAY
Twitter sues Elon Musk for backing out of $44 billion deal to buy company
As expected, the social media platform fights back and sues Musk for breaking his deal to buy the company.
What does euro-U.S. dollar parity mean for Americans? For imports? For travelers?
The U.S. dollar is on par with the euro, but is that a good or bad sign for Americans, travelers and the global economy?
Still feeling stressed and sad amid COVID? New report says you’re certainly not alone.
Gallup report shows that we’re feeling even more stressed and sad during year two of the pandemic than we were in 2020.
Millions of Californians to receive ‘inflation relief’ with gas tax rebate checks
About 23 million California residents will soon receive checks up to $1,050 to help with gas and goods under a budget deal reached by state officials.
Survey: 4 in 10 people are still unhappy two years into COVID pandemic
Two years into the COVID-19 pandemic, a survey finds that more than four in 10 people have not felt true happiness since early 2020.
Few workers. Slow supplies. Why you’ll be waiting a while for that new house to be built,
A lack of supplies and construction workers is proving to be a “one-two punch” for the building of new homes nationwide, an expert said.
Redfin and Compass lay off hundreds of workers as housing market cools, inflation spikes
The layoffs at both real estate tech companies come as the housing market starts to cool thanks to higher mortgage rates and inflation.
For crying out loud: survey says most US home buyers moved to tears in today’s market
Survey: Americans are likely to cry at least once (maybe twice) while attempting to buy a home during the tightest, highest housing market in decades.
Lumber prices are falling. Could prices in the housing market follow?
U.S. lumber prices are falling dramatically, but that doesn’t mean manufacturers can get their hands on enough lumber to offset supply shortages.