The Most Affordable Auto Insurance Options for Recent College Grads Recent college graduates often move off of their parent's car insurance policy and sign up for their own. However, with auto insurance rates up an average of 26% over the past year, finding an ... 05/3/2024 - 10:00 pm | View Link
Americans paid slightly more for fuel this week as gas prices rose by a few cents, on average Compare several auto insurance companies, as well as their coverage, with the help of Credible. Many automakers saw their sales increase in April, as car prices trended down. Electric vehicles in ... 05/3/2024 - 4:02 am | View Link
Auto Insurance Rates May Be Peaking, Though Not for Everyone Auto insurers may finally have the rates they’ve been looking for in many states. But business won’t necessarily get easier. Allstate on Thursday told analysts that in auto insurance, “as rate adequac ... 05/2/2024 - 11:11 am | View Link
Li Auto Is Down 30% This Year. What’s Happening With The Stock? BEIJING, CHINA - APRIL 25: Li Auto Li L9 is on display during the 2024 Beijing International ... [+] Automotive Exhibition (Auto China 2024) at China International Exhibition Center on April 25, 2024 ... 05/2/2024 - 3:00 am | View Link
Humanoid Robot With AI Mind Is Meant to Think Just Like People, And It’s Learning Canadian startup Sanctuary AI introduces the seventh generation of the Phoenix robot with a mind and capabilities meant to mimic the human one ... 05/1/2024 - 9:10 pm | View Link
Why did SD Governor Kristi Noem decide to publish her story about killing her allegedly 'untrainable' dog? Her state's Senate Minority Leader offers three theories: Inoculation from others telling it; lifting her national profile - and distraction from her governing record.
Without cameras on Hope Hicks' testimony, media outlets were left with only a transcript to analyze why she broke down in tears. "It's a mistake to say Hope Hicks cried because she knew she just ended Donald Trump's career," says Elie Honig, "or she cried because she had just collapsed on cross-examine.
Reproductive rights organizers in two states with near-total abortion bans, Missouri and South Dakota, submitted roughly double the signatures needed to allow ballot measures that would put abortion before voters.
In South Dakota, organizers have submitted 55,000 signatures in support of the ballot measure granting a limited right to abortion—far more than the 35,000 required.