The US Bureau of Labor Statistics reported March’s inflation at 3.3%, the highest since mid-2024, with food, gasoline, and rent doing much of the heavy lifting. The recent flare-up in Iran boosted global oil prices, pushing key costs up while wage i…
From December, all American men will be automatically registered for the military draft at 18, thanks to Congress’s updated Defence Authorisation Act—a move the Selective Service System hopes will reverse declining sign-ups and cut red tape. Women remain exempt, and an actual draft still requires a separate legal step, but at least the paperwork might now march in step, even if the nation doesn’t.
Sixteen attorneys general, led by California and Illinois, have sued the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, accusing it of gutting fair housing rules by sidelining “disparate impact” protections—a move cheered by Trump-era holdovers. While HUD manages a $77.3 billion budget, only $86 million goes to fair housing; private groups, not Washington, field most complaints. Progress may be slow, but the rent for justice apparently never drops.
After 21 hours holed up in Islamabad, US and Iranian officials managed nothing more conclusive than some very tired translators, as J.D. Vance announced talks ended with no progress: Tehran refused to swear off a nuclear weapon, Washington stuck to its conditions, and the two sides eyed the Strait of Hormuz—still blocked, still spooking oil markets. We suppose hope remains slightly more buoyant than maritime traffic.
Civil liberties groups in New York, emboldened by Latino plaintiffs, are suing U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement amid claims of police stops based on perceived race or language rather than wrongdoing. As border and internal controls tighten, recurring testimony and patchy data keep the debate on “racial profiling” lively—though proving motive in court remains tricky, unlike the telltale sense of déjà vu among the detained.
Despite periodic wage bumps in the United States, the Federal Reserve and Bureau of Labor Statistics remind us that living costs—from rent to groceries—keep climbing, frequently outpacing pay rises. Many households fall for “lifestyle inflation”, spending more when incomes rise, only to find that saving becomes ever trickier. Apparently, prosperity is less about what we earn and more about whether we notice where it all goes.
As America’s tax season limps to a close, we note the IRS is doling out average refunds above $3,500 for 2026—courtesy of both the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and bureaucratic zest for over-withholding. While credits reward many low- and middle-income filers (particularly Latinos), the refund is technically just one’s own money back, minus the privilege of a year-long, interest-free loan to Washington.
Nearly half of Staten Island residents earn less than what the Fund for the City of New York’s latest report deems a “living wage,” despite local claims the borough is the city’s most affordable. While analysts tallied housing, food, healthcare, and transport costs, the uncomfortable math still left us all short of pocket change—though perhaps never of official reports quantifying what we cannot afford.
Buying a car in the US—never less glamorous than now—requires an average of $49,353 for a new vehicle, with monthly payments often above $700 as rates and prices climb in lockstep. Even the sturdiest paycheques can feel queasy: AP finds more are shelling out over $1,000 a month, with credit tightening and inflation forcing would-be drivers to ponder whether four wheels are worth such long-term financial mileage.
El Diario NY
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