The ‘Jolene doctrine’: retired US army general likens Trump foreign policy to Dolly Parton song | Stanley McChrystal

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The retired US army general who once led Nato forces in Afghanistan says the bellicose foreign policy Donald Trump has pursued during his second presidency can be summed up as “we should do because we can” – invoking the lyrics of the Dolly Parton classic Jolene to emphasize the point.

Stanley McChrystal delivered those remarks on Friday at Tulane University’s New Orleans book festival during a fireside chat hosted by the editor-in-chief of the Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, who asked in part about US military strikes Trump has ordered in Nigeria, Venezuela and Iran since Christmas.

“I’m a big fan of Dolly Parton – do you remember her song Jolene?” McChrystal replied, referring to the country star’s Grammy-nominated 1973 hit. “This poor wife says, ‘Jolene, please don’t take my man; don’t take him just because you can.

“And that’s what worries me – I think we might be in a period where we think what we can do, we should do because we can. And I think the world is starting to view us that way.”

McChrystal’s commentary about what he dubbed Trump’s “Jolene doctrine” is bound to carry weight in many political circles, as the retired general spent his entire career in the US army upon graduating from its West Point academy in 1976.

Later, as a special forces officer, he was credited with prominent roles in the US’s capture of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein in 2003 as well as the 2006 killing of the al-Qaida leader in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

McChrystal subsequently commanded US and Nato military alliance troops in Afghanistan for a little more than a year beginning in June 2009 during Barack Obama’s presidency. He ultimately had to resign from that post after making disparaging remarks to a Rolling Stone magazine journalist profiling him about the US’s civilian leadership, including Obama and his eventual Democratic White House successor, Joe Biden, the vice-president at the time.

Obama replaced McChrystal with Gen David Petraeus, who later resigned as director of the US’s Central Intelligence Agency over an extramarital affair with his biographer.

The Atlantic reported later on Friday that a White House spokesperson responded to McChrystal’s comments by saying the president had restored the US’s “place as leader of the free world”.

Among others, the publication also quoted the University of Missouri’s Jay Sexton, a historian of American foreign relations, as saying: “I think the Trump team is acting like an unbridled Jolene – they’re doing things because they can.

“But the bummer is to carry the metaphor: Jolene is likely to regret doing what she thinks she can.”

The US’s Christmas strikes in north-west Nigeria were aimed at what the Trump administration described as fighters for the Islamic State terror group, though there were questions over which group was specifically targeted and the operation’s impact.

Then, on 3 January, the US attacked Venezuela and seized its ruler, Nicolás Maduro, whom Trump’s justice department had charged with drugs, weapons and narco-terrorism charges.

Israel and the US then jointly attacked Iran on 28 February, killing the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The ensuing conflict has been marked with mixed signals about what Trump would consider victory, confusing his constituency, allies and foes. The president has also spent time trying to deflect responsibility for the bombing of a girls’ school in southern Iran, which killed at least 175 people, mostly children.

Amid all that, Trump renewed threats to seize Greenland for the US with military action if necessary. He ultimately walked those threats back but was widely seen to have strained the US’s relations with its Nato allies.

Goldberg on Friday told McChrystal that he feared the world has not heard the end of Trump’s fixation with Greenland.

“I’m a great believer in allies,” McChrystal said in turn. “To me, that’s the sacred kind of relationships that are essential for any nation. We’ll never be powerful enough to go it alone.”



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Who will give account of 170 days? Former CM Ashok Gehlot spoke on Sonam Wangchuk’s release from jail

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After the detention of environmental activist Sonam Wangchuk was canceled with immediate effect, reactions from leaders are coming continuously. Former Rajasthan CM and senior Congress leader Ashok Gehlot has expressed happiness over the release of Sonam Wangchuk. He also attacked BJP and asked who will give account of the 170 days of his detention? Why was he arrested?

Senior Congress leader Ashok Gehlot wrote on social media platform What kind of irony is this? Sonam Wangchuk, who was once a supporter of PM Modi’s policies, when she raised her voice for the rights of Ladakh and the environment, was booked under stringent sections like NSA (National Security Act) and sent to Jodhpur jail.

Why was Sonam Wangchuk arrested- Gehlot

He further wrote, “The person who was put behind bars a few months ago on the grounds of being a ‘threat to the security of the country’ was suddenly released today, that is, no evidence was found against him.” In such a situation, who will account for the 170 days of his detention? Why was he arrested?

‘Will national security be decided by BJP’s profit and loss?’

Ashok Gehlot asked, “Will the definition of national security now be decided by the political gains and losses of BJP?” Such ‘convenient use’ of laws with dictatorial tendencies is not only condemnable, but is also a deep blow to the credibility of our democratic institutions. The people of the country are seeing this double standards.

When was Wangchuk detained?

There is a debate going on at the political and social level across the country regarding the detention of Sonam Wangchuk and now her release. While the leaders of the opposition parties are calling it a mistake of the government, the central government believes that this step was taken to maintain law and order. It is noteworthy that there were violent protests in Leh on 24 September 2025. Two days after this, on 26 September 2025, Sonam Wangchuk was detained.

Kaylie Ray describes trauma from competing against transgender SJSU athlete

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Former Utah State star athlete Kaylie Ray tried to share her experience as a victim of the San Jose State volleyball scandal with lawmakers.

In response, she was given comments about her body

Arizona Democrat state senator Catherine Miranda told Ray, “I mean, you look pretty healthy… You look very much in shape and strong,” after Ray spoke about having to forfeit a game in protest of a trans athlete, at a senate education hearing on Tuesday. 

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“When she started saying those words, the only thing I was thinking is, ‘where could she possibly be going with this?’” Ray told Fox News Digital. “For whatever reason, my physical appearance or stature should have some type of effect on how competitive I am with men. So I was definitely caught off guard.” 

Ray said she would accept an apology from Miranda, if she is given one. Miranda’s office has not responded to repeated requests for comment. 

Ray showed up to the state house that day to share deep personal trauma from her college volleyball career.

At Utah State, she was an opponent of former San Jose State transgender volleyball player Blaire Fleming for two years in 2022 and 2023, all before having confirmed knowledge that Fleming was male. During that time, Ray said she saw teammates suffer finger injuries from taking Fleming’s signature spikes to the hands. 

“I had teammates who had seriously jammed their fingers, luckily not broken, but a handful of girls who had sustained minor injuries from the male player,” Ray said, adding that it happened way more often from Fleming’s spikes than those from female players.

She added that all of her teammates had their suspicions about Fleming from the moment they watched film ahead of their first matchup on Oct. 1, 2022. 

“When this player was presented to us, even on film, the immediate reaction is ‘whoa,’” Ray said. “It’s so obvious to the naked eye that this athlete has athleticism, explosiveness, and a power that is just not matched by any of the other athletes.” 

Utah State lost that first match against Fleming, three sets to one.

Ray said there were some people on her team that were making comments about Fleming being a male.

“After watching this player compete, it was so obvious to us, but obviously we don’t want to speculate,” Ray said. 

She said her team had to come up with a new strategy that they simply had no need for prior to Fleming’s arrival in the Mountain West.

SJSU VOLLEYBALL SCANDAL LAWSUIT COULD BE IMPACTED BY SUPREME COURT TRANS ATHLETE CASES AFTER JUDGE’S DECISION

“Because Blaire attacked from such a high point of contact… the goal is to just get your hands over the net as far as you can,” she said. “Get your hands low and over, and if Blaire hits over the top of you, it’s a good swing by that player. There was kind of like a helplessness of, ‘let’s just do everything we can to force them to set other players.'”

Kaylie Ray, Blaire Fleming

Ray said there were some people on her team that were making comments about Fleming being a male. (Courtesy of ICONS, Getty Images)

Utah State won the rematch against SJSU in November, three sets to two. Then they met in the 2022 conference final, and Ray’s team emerged victorious for the second of what would be three straight Mountain West titles. But Ray says they were ultimately at the mercy of how well Fleming played that day. 

“We knew that if the male athlete had a phenomenal game, there was nothing we could do to stop that person… and to be quite honest with you, Blaire did not have a great game,” Ray said. “To be fair, I think you go into any match hoping that their best player doesn’t have their best night. I won’t say that it was total helplessness because we had beaten them before and we knew we were capable of doing it again.” 

The following season, Utah State won both matches against SJSU, both in straight sets. Fleming only played in the second of those two games, missing time to injury. In that second game, Fleming led SJSU in points, but Utah State had answers, and won the game en route to a third-straight conference title. 

It was the last time Ray would ever play Fleming.

When the scandal went national in 2024, Ray, as a captain, was trying to lead her team to a fourth straight Mountain West championship. 

“I wanted it so bad,” she said.

But then, official news of Fleming’s birth sex reached their locker room.

“I felt sick. I felt nauseousness in my stomach,” Ray said. 

Her team had to put competition aside. 

“[Utah State administrators] ended up sending an anonymous survey to our girls when we were on a road trip… simply to describe our thoughts and feelings about competing against San Jose, and our administrators took that information and allowed us to forfeit,” Ray said.

It was the first of seven total forfeited matches the Spartans saw that season, with each one bringing more and more scrutiny and risk to the program. But for Utah State, the forfeit also reverberated throughout their season, behind closed doors. 

“Girls were so sick about it… to have that loss on our record, it was really disappointing,” she said. “We were very distracted during the season.” 

Ray joined the lawsuit led by former SJSU co-captain Brooke Slusser against the Mountain West later that season, and they even challenged in court to have the result of the forfeited game reversed. But a Biden-appointed judge did not grant the reversal.

And because of that forfeit, Ray’s team finished behind SJSU in the standings. When the brackets came out, they faced the anxiety of knowing for certain, that if they were to make it back to the championship game, they would have to play SJSU. 

“The only thing that anyone could focus on, was ‘well, if we win, we have to play San Jose, do we have to forfeit again?’” Ray said of the team’s mindset before its first-round game against Boise State that tournament. “That was very much the attitude of my team… we were already defeated coming into the tournament.”

FORMER SJSU VOLLEYBALL STAR OPENS UP ON LIVING WITH TRANS TEAMMATE WITHOUT KNOWING ATHLETE’S BIOLOGICAL SEX

Brooke Slusser and Blaire Fleming

Brooke Slusser #10 and Blaire Fleming #3 of the San Jose State Spartans call a play during the first set against the Air Force Falcons at Falcon Court at East Gym on Oct. 19, 2024, in Colorado Springs, Colorado. (Andrew Wevers/Getty Images)

Ray and her teammates didn’t make it out of the first round. They lost to Boise State, who then went on to forfeit to SJSU in the semifinal.

Ray still hasn’t gotten over not winning that fourth conference title, which she believes her team would have won had circumstances been normal. But it wasn’t normal, in any sense.  

“We wanted it so bad, coupled with the trauma and the anxiety, and just the horrible, horrible emotions that occurred during the season, it was so hard to keep that goal in sight.”

Ray is done with college volleyball now. She played one more season at Weber State last fall and has graduated with a graduate degree. Now, much of her attention is put toward fighting to “save women’s sports,” just as she tried to do at her state’s capital building this past week. 

In January, she spoke alongside Slusser outside the U.S. Supreme Court at a rally during oral arguments for two cases related to males in women’s sports. That day, Ray got her first up-close look at the forces opposing her goal, with a passionate pro-transgender rally taking place right next to theirs. 

“It was the first time in my life seeing that collection of people. What struck me most is that up next to their speakers, they were waiving a flag, a transgender flag, but at the center of the flag there was a satanic symbol, it said ‘The Church of Satan,’” Ray said. 

“It was so clearly a battle between good and evil… When you upset a party of Satanic people, they don’t care what you have to say… when you’re fighting against evil, it’s going to be uncomfortable.”

SJSU is the latest battleground in that fight.

The U.S. Education Department‘s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) determined that SJSU violated Title IX in its handling of Fleming at the end of January. But SJSU and the California University (CSU) system are suing the federal government to challenge that investigation. 

“San Jose State is disgusting,” Ray said of the lawsuit. “It’s so despicable, and it’s so bizarre.”

Fox News Digital has reached out to SJSU and CSU for a response to Ray’s comments.

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U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon responded Wednesday, giving the institutions a deadline of 10 days to come to an agreement or risk federal funding cuts and a referral to the U.S. Department of Justice. 

“President Trump, you know what to do,” Ray added. 

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.



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Fire and damage after strike on US embassy compound in Baghdad | US-Israel war on Iran

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NewsFeed

A strike on the heavily fortified United States embassy compound in Baghdad caused a fire and damage to the complex. It is the second attack on the embassy since the United States and Israel launched strikes on Iran on February 28.



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Kevin Pietersen will not be mentor of Delhi Capitals: Former England captain Kevin Pietersen has announced his separation from Delhi Capitals.

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Big blow to Delhi Capitals, this veteran announced his separation from the team!

Last Updated:

Kevin Pietersen will not be mentor of Delhi Capitals: Former England captain Kevin Pietersen told on his X handle that he will not be the mentor of Delhi Capitals in the Indian Premier League 2026. However, he will be seen commentating in IPL. Peterson has given this information by posting in Hindi.

Big blow to Delhi Capitals, this veteran announced his separation from the team!Zoom
Kevin Pietersen parted ways with Delhi Capitals

New Delhi: Before the Indian Premier League 2026, Delhi Capitals mentor Kevin Pietersen has announced his separation from the team. Pietersen told on his X handle that he will not become the mentor of Delhi Capitals in the upcoming season of IPL. Pietersen said that he does not have the time required for this work, so he will return to the role of commentator and broadcaster.

Kevin Pietersen said in his post, “I cannot become the mentor of Delhi Capitals in this IPL season. I cannot give the required time to this work. Best wishes to all the players for this season! But I will definitely meet you in the commentary box! IPL is the best league in the world and I am looking forward to meeting you all soon!”

Pietersen had gone on holiday in the middle of the season

Let us tell you that Delhi Capitals is now in the second year of the two-year cycle under the ownership of GMR Group. GMR Group and JSW Group are co-owners of the team and change control of the team every two years. Last season, GMR Group included Pietersen in the team. The team captained by Akshar Patel had finished fifth in the points table last year, although their good start faded later.

Pietersen became the mentor of Delhi Capitals last year. Last year, Pietersen came into limelight when he went on a holiday to Maldives with his family in the middle of the season. He left after the win against Chennai Super Kings on 6 April and missed the team’s next match against Royal Challengers Bangalore. There was a lot of criticism on social media on his leave. There was also light banter among the players, in which KL Rahul made fun of their ‘mentor duty’ during the practice session.

About the Author

Jitendra Kumar

Working as Chief Sub Editor in Network 18 Group since October 2025. 9 years experience in journalism. Started career with sports beat in ABP News Digital. Reputable institutions like India TV and Navbharat Times Group…read more

Nicole Kidman reveals bad breath is dealbreaker for kissing scenes

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Nicole Kidman is sharing a hard limit when it comes to filming kissing scenes.

During a recent interview on the “Las Culturistas” podcast, the 58-year-old actress revealed she “cannot stand bad breath,” calling it a “dealbreaker” for her when it comes to men. She noted, “You want me to lean in? Smell good.”

“You could be the most gorgeous, gorgeous guy, and you come at me with bad breath, and I’m like, ‘No, no, no,'” she shared. “It’s like, if I say ‘breathe on me’ and I have to recoil? Yikes. I’m out. I am out. You could not offer me enough money.”

The “Babygirl” actress added that “the taste of the mouth and the smell of the mouth is very important to me.”

MARGOT ROBBIE REVEALS HER BLUNT ‘F— YOU’ RESPONSE TO MALE CO-STAR’S UNWELCOME GIFT

Nicole Kidman at the New York premiere of "Scarpetta" in March 2026.

Nicole Kidman shared that bad breath is a big turn-off for her. (Michael Loccisano/WireImage)

She then shared an anecdote from her time filming intimate scenes with Alexander Skarsgård in “Big Little Lies,” saying she called him out on set for eating a falafel sandwich before filming a scene in which they had to kiss.

“I’m like, ‘No, no, no, Alex. I’m meant to be kissing you and into you. Put away the falafel now. Because the bad breath does not turn me on,'” she recalled.I said, ‘No more falafel. Nope. Not before you kiss. Not before you make love. No more falafel. Put the falafel away.'”

Kidman joked that she’s “sure he did not eat a falafel ever again.”

Skarsgård and Kidman played a husband and wife on the hit HBO show, showcasing the patterns which can exist within abusive relationships. Kidman won a Critics Choice Award, an Emmy Award and a Golden Globe Award for her work in the series, honoring real-life victims of domestic abuse when accepting these awards.

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Alexander Skarsgard and Nicole Kidman at the Actors Awards in Los Angeles in January 2018.

Kidman scolded her co-star for eating falafel before filming an intimate scene. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

“Sometimes when you’re acting, you get a chance to bring a bigger message — we shine a light on domestic abuse,” she said in her acceptance speech at the Emmys in 2017. “It is a complicated, insidious disease that exists far more than we allow ourselves to know. It is filled with shame, secrecy and by you acknowledging me with this award, it shines a light on it even more. So thank you, thank you, thank you. I bow down to you.”

The Academy Award-winning actress is currently starring in the Amazon Prime series “Scarpetta,” in which she plays the titular character, Dr. Kay Scarpetta, a forensic pathologist working to catch a serial killer.

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During an interview with USA Today, Kidman discussed the character’s motivation to become a medical examiner, noting Scarpetta’s need to have “control over death” following the death of her father at a young age is something she could relate to.

“I almost relate to that. I lost my father [in 2014] and my main thing was finding out why,” she explained. “I lost him very suddenly to a heart attack, but I wanted to know why, and it became an obsession. So I get why Kay chooses to do the job, because it gives her a sense of control over something that is completely uncontrollable.”

Jamie Lee Curtis and Nicole Kidman at the New York premiere of "Scarpetta" in March 2026.

“Scarpetta” also stars Jamie Lee Curtis. (Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty Images)

The show also stars fellow Academy Award winners Jamie Lee Curtis and Ariana DeBose, who play Kidman’s sister and daughter respectively, as well as Bobby Cannavale and his son Jake.

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GlassWorm Supply-Chain Attack Abuses 72 Open VSX Extensions to Target Developers

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Cybersecurity researchers have flagged a new iteration of the GlassWorm campaign that they say represents a “significant escalation” in how it propagates through the Open VSX registry.

“Instead of requiring every malicious listing to embed the loader directly, the threat actor is now abusing extensionPack and extensionDependencies to turn initially standalone-looking extensions into transitive delivery vehicles in later updates, allowing a benign-appearing package to begin pulling a separate GlassWorm-linked extension only after trust has already been established,” Socket said in a report published Friday.

The software supply chain security company said it discovered at least 72 additional malicious Open VSX extensions since January 31, 2026, targeting developers. These extensions mimic widely used developer utilities, including linters and formatters, code runners, and tools for artificial intelligence (AI)-powered coding assistants like Clade Code and Google Antigravity.

The names of some of the extensions are listed below. Open VSX has since taken steps to remove them from the registry –

  • angular-studio.ng-angular-extension
  • crotoapp.vscode-xml-extension
  • gvotcha.claude-code-extension
  • mswincx.antigravity-cockpit
  • tamokill12.foundry-pdf-extension
  • turbobase.sql-turbo-tool
  • vce-brendan-studio-eich.js-debuger-vscode

GlassWorm is the name given to an ongoing malware campaign that has repeatedly infiltrated Microsoft Visual Studio Marketplace and Open VSX with malicious extensions designed to steal secrets and drain cryptocurrency wallets, and abuse infected systems as proxies for other criminal activities.

Although the activity was first flagged by Koi Security in October 2025, npm packages using the same tactics – particularly the use of invisible Unicode characters to hide malicious code – were identified as far back as March 2025.

The latest iteration retains many of the hallmarks associated with GlassWorm: running checks to avoid infecting systems with a Russian locale and using Solana transactions as a dead drop resolver to fetch the command-and-control (C2) server for improved resilience.

But the new set of extensions also features heavier obfuscation and rotates Solana wallets to evade detection, as well as abuses extension relationships to deploy the malicious payloads, similar to how npm packages rely on rogue dependencies to fly under the radar. Regardless of whether an extension is declared as “extensionPack” or “extensionDependencies” in the extension’s “package.json” file, the editor proceeds to install every other extension listed in it.

In doing so, the GlassWorm campaign uses one extension as an installer for another extension that’s malicious. This also opens up new supply chain attack scenarios as an attacker first uploads a completely harmless VS Code extension to the marketplace to bypass review, after which it’s updated to list a GlassWorm-linked package as a dependency.

“As a result, an extension that looked non-transitive and comparatively benign at initial publication can later become a transitive GlassWorm delivery vehicle without any change to its apparent purpose,” Socket said.

In a concurrent advisory, Aikido attributed the GlassWorm threat actor to a mass campaign that’s spreading across open-source repositories, with the attackers injecting various repositories with invisible Unicode characters to encode a payload. While the content isn’t visible when loaded into code editors and terminals, it decodes to a loader that’s responsible for fetching and executing a second-stage script to steal tokens, credentials, and secrets.

No less than 151 GitHub repositories are estimated to have been affected as part of the campaign between March 3 and March 9, 2026. In addition, the same Unicode technique has been deployed in two different npm packages, indicating a coordinated, multi-platform push –

  • @aifabrix/miso-client
  • @iflow-mcp/watercrawl-watercrawl-mcp

“The malicious injections don’t arrive in obviously suspicious commits,” security researcher Ilyas Makari said. “The surrounding changes are realistic: documentation tweaks, version bumps, small refactors, and bug fixes that are stylistically consistent with each target project. This level of project-specific tailoring strongly suggests the attackers are using large language models to generate convincing cover commits.”

PhantomRaven or Research Experiment?

The development comes as Endor Labs said it discovered 88 new malicious npm packages uploaded in three waves between November 2025 and February 2026 via 50 disposable accounts. The packages come with functionality to steal sensitive information from the compromised machine, including environment variables, CI/CD tokens, and system metadata.

The activity stands out for the use of Remote Dynamic Dependencies (RDD), where the “package.json” metadata file specifies a dependency at a custom HTTP URL, thereby allowing the operators to modify the malicious code on the fly, as well as bypass inspection.

While the packages were initially identified as part of the PhantomRaven campaign, the application security company noted in an update that they were produced by a security researcher as part of a legitimate experiment – a claim it challenged, citing three red flags. This includes the fact that the libraries collect far more information than necessary, provide no transparency to the user, and are published by deliberately rotated account names and email addresses.

As of March 12, 2026, the owner of the packages has made additional changes, swapping out the data harvesting payload delivered via some of the npm packages published over the three-month period with a simple “Hello, world!” Message.

“While the removal of code that collected extensive information is certainly welcome, it also highlights the risks associated with URL dependencies,” Endor Labs said. “When packages rely on code hosted outside the npm registry, authors retain full control over the payload without publishing a new package version. By modifying a single file on the server – or simply shutting it down – they can silently change or disable the behavior of every dependent package at once.”



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‘Everything is going up’: Americans struggle with affordability despite Trump’s claims | Business

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US workers are still struggling with the cost of living despite Donald Trump’s campaign promises to fix the US affordability crisis.

The Guardian spoke to workers as an exclusive poll showed cross-party concerns about the Trump administration’s handling of the US economy.

Dawn Levie, 61, a postal service worker in Paulden, Arizona, said she’s lost thousands in earnings over the past year due to cuts to her hours, making it more difficult for her to afford basic necessities like paying for groceries and utility bills.

“It’s hard to describe how you feel when you can’t sustain your livelihood because your money is impacted,” Levie said. “You can’t pay bills, [and] creditors get mad. How do you tell them: ‘I just don’t have it?’”

The White House insists that the affordability problem Americans like Levie report doesn’t exist. At a rally in Kentucky earlier this week, Donald Trump told the crowd: “Inflation is plummeting, income is rising, the economy is roaring back!”

Though the positive sentiment will be a tough sell for voters in the upcoming midterm elections.

After helping Congress pass huge cuts to healthcare and food assistance programs, Trump is now pushing to remove minimum wage and overtime protections for some workers. And though seven out of 10 Americans said that tariffs have led to higher prices, Trump has only doubled down on more levies.

Far from feeling like the US is in a golden age, workers said rising inflation means their paychecks can’t keep up with prices.

“I know things are worse, because I’m living it and I feel it every day,” said Bryan Williams, 63, a home-care worker in Madison, Wisconsin, who is living paycheck to paycheck on $17.65 an hour. “It’s very hard trying to pay rent, pay your bills, buy food, gas and juggle which ones you can pay [and] which ones you can let go.

“[I] ask myself which one should I get, when I know I need both, or worrying will I have enough money to get back and forth to work until another payday? Or will I have enough money to pay my light bill?”

Vernice Thompson, 63, a retail worker in Williamsburg, Virginia, said that even though she receives social security benefits, housing still takes up half her income.

“Groceries have gone up. [The prices of] a lot of the foods that I like have gone up,” said Thompson. “I know the price of clothing too because I work in retail, and I haven’t seen any declines in the price of clothing.”

“Everything is going up,” she added.

Food prices were 2.9% higher in January compared to the year before and are predicted to increase by 3.1% over the next year. Data shows that the food insecurity rate spiked to 16% in November, up from 12.7% in January 2025.

Utility prices in the US also increased by more than 6% in January 2026 compared to a year prior.

More Americans are taking on debt because of the rising cost of necessities. Total household debt in the fourth quarter of 2025 reached $18.8tn, up by 4% since the beginning of the year. Delinquency for all types of debt rose 3.26% in the fourth quarter of 2025 compared to 1.7% in the same period of 2024. Credit card debt in the US by the end of 2025 hit a record $1.28tn.

Meanwhile, wages have stagnated for many workers. The 10% lowest wage earners, receiving on average $14.56 an hour, saw their wages decline by 0.3% when adjusted for inflation in 2025. The federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour has remained unchanged since 2009 – the longest period without an increase since the federal minimum wage was enacted.

In comparison, higher-income Americans have been earning more than ever. Since 1979, high-end wages have grown twice as fast as low and middle wages.

“If people aren’t being paid a cost-of-living increase, or just the bare minimum of a cost of living increase, it’s hard to keep up,” said Crystal Franklin, 54, a US passport specialist and mother of three who lives in Dumfries, Virginia.

Franklin said she started taking the bus to work because of rising gas prices and is being more frugal at the grocery store. Yet she still has less room in her budget for entertainment and leisure expenses for her grandchildren.

“We’re not able to do what we used to be able to do because cost of living has gone up extremely high,” Franklin said.

US families have paid more than $1,700 in estimated costs due to the Trump administration’s tariffs from February 2025 to January 2026, with Trump announcing new tariffs to replace those struck down by the US supreme court last month.

At the same time, Republicans have been cutting down the country’s social safety net. Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act that was passed last summer included massive cuts for the next decade, including over $1tn from Medicaid, $536bn from Medicare and $186bn from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Snap).

In addition to these cuts, the White House is allowing Affordable Care Act subsidies to expire, which will raise health insurance premiums for 22 million Americans by an estimated 114%, from $888 a year to $1,904 in 2026.

Trump has also sought to cut pay for millions of low-wage workers. Last year, the president rescinded an executive order that raised the minimum wage for federal contractors to $15 an hour and gave annual raises to keep in pace with inflation, impacting more than 300,000 workers. The White House is also trying to remove overtime protections for nearly 4 million home-care workers who received median wages of $16.78 an hour in 2024.

“Things have been pretty tough in the last year,” said Williams. “I don’t believe anything Trump says because everything he promised us he was going to do did not happen.”

A spokesperson for the White House, Kush Desai, disputed the economic trajectory under the Trump administration.

“America’s economic trajectory under President Trump has been solid,” Desai said. “This week’s CPI report showed inflation continues to cool while the Administration’s tax cut, tariff, and deregulatory agenda continues to drive robust real wage and investment growth. Once we are past short term disruptions from Operation Epic Fury, America is poised to see even greater economic progress as the Administration’s trade deals, drug pricing deals, deregulatory efforts, and tax cuts continue taking effect.”



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Germany misses climate targets as emissions barely fall in 2025 | Germany

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Greenhouse gas emissions in Germany have again missed targets set by the Climate Protection Act and barely fell at all in 2025.

Emissions decreased by just 0.1% last year compared to the previous year, according to data from the German Environment Agency.

The country’s emissions in 2025 were equivalent to 649 million tonnes of CO2, worse than those forecast by the expert group Agora Energiewende, which anticipated a 1.5% drop year-on-year.

In 2024, a more significant drop of 3.4% was recorded.

Germany’s environment minister Carsten Schneider criticised the lack of improvement at a conference in Berlin on Saturday.

The Social Democrat said that despite an increasing acceptance of electric cars and heat pumps, overall progress was “too slow” and urged citizens to accelerate their adoption of renewable power sources for both environmental and security reasons.

“What benefits the climate also increases our security and economic strength,” he said. “Every additional kilowatt-hour of renewable energy makes our country less dependent on oil and gas and our energy supply more secure.”

Carsten Schneider: ‘What benefits the climate also increases our security and economic strength.’ Photograph: Ina Fassbender/AFP/Getty Images

Despite this, both Schneider and the German Environment Agency remained optimistic that the country could achieve the 2030 climate target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 65%, compared with 1990.

Schneider welcomed the “growing enthusiasm for climate protection technologies” such as electric cars and heat pumps.

“And there are more newly approved wind power projects than ever before. This gives hope that progress will once again pick up speed in the years to come,” he said.

Emissions will have to decrease by an average of 42 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent per year from 2026 onward, more than 40 times the reduction recorded last year, to meet the 2030 reductions target.

In 2025, Germany’s greenhouse gas emissions were 48% below the level of the 1990 base year.

Schneider said it was “particularly urgent” to reduce emissions in the transport and building sectors – where emissions rose last year – to avoid the costly purchase of emission allowances from other EU member states or fines.

The pursuit of climate targets in Germany, a priority for the previous government of Social Democrat Olaf Scholz, appears less certain under the mandate of conservative chancellor, Friedrich Merz.

His government, which has been in power since May 2025, has instead advocated easing environmental standards.

Germany is Europe’s largest economy and its manufacturing powerhouse, and globally is behind only the economies of the United States and China in size.



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Good news amid Iran war, two Indian ships crossed the Strait of Hormuz, know when will they reach?

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Good news has emerged for India amidst the LPG crisis arising due to the war between US-Iran. India’s two LPG ships Shivalik and Nanda have passed safely from the Strait of Hormuz. This information has been given by the Ministry of Ports Shipping and Waterways. From India’s point of view, the safe return of these two LPG carrier ships is important because the problems of gas and oil are increasing in the country.

LPG ships passed safely from Strait of Hormuz

Iran’s Ambassador Mohammad Fatahali had indicated this on Friday (March 13). He had said, India will be given a safe route for the movement of oil through the Strait of Hormuz, one of the most important sea routes in the world. After this, both the ships came out safely from the Strait of Hormuz and are moving towards India.

Will reach India on 16-17 March

According to Rajesh Kumar Sinha, Chief Secretary, Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways, ‘There were 24 Indian flag ships in the Persian Gulf located west of the Strait of Hormuz, out of which two LPG carrier ships Shivalik and Nanda have emerged safely from the Strait of Hormuz. Both ships are moving towards India. He told, there is about 92,700 metric tons of LPG on both the ships. It will arrive at Mundra and Kandla ports on March 16 and 17.

’22 Indian ships stranded in the Strait of Hormuz’

Rajesh Sinha said, there were 24 Indian ships in the Persian Gulf, out of which two Shivalik and Nanda have left safely. Now there are 22 ships left, on which there are 611 sailors. He also said that all Indian sailors are completely safe.

23 thousand Indian sailors in the Gulf region

There itself Strait of Hormuz Earlier, there were four Indian ships in the Gulf of Oman, after the departure of one, there are three Indian flag ships left there. There are 76 Indian sailors on board. Talking about the entire Gulf region, about 23,000 Indian sailors are working on different ships, which include merchant ships and offshore ships.

Big relief for India

these two lpg The return of the ship will bring great relief to India. Long queues of people are being seen from many states of India to get LPG cylinders. However, the government is continuously taking necessary steps to deal with this crisis. From March 5 till now, domestic production of LPG has increased by 31 percent. Apart from this, rapid raids are being conducted in different states to stop black marketing and hoarding of gas. Central government supplied LPG
It is advised not to pay attention to the rumors being spread regarding this and avoid panic buying.

22 Indian ships stranded in the Strait of Hormuz, what all including LPG stopped? Shipping Ministry gave update