Skip to main content

Posts

China's Commerce Ministry blocks US sanctions against five refineries

When you’re a major global player, you don’t just take a punch—you parry, step back, and sometimes throw one right back. That’s exactly what we’re seeing unfold between China and the United States, and it’s not just another diplomatic spat. This time, it’s personal, and it’s about oil. On a recent Tuesday, China’s Commerce Ministry dropped a statement that felt less like a formal press release and more like a chess move. They’ve officially blocked a set of U.S. sanctions aimed at five Chinese refineries. Let me tell you, reading through the official language, you could almost hear the gears grinding in Beijing. It wasn’t subtle. Now, you might be wondering: why does this matter to anyone outside a boardroom or a policy wonk’s think tank? Well, because these refineries aren’t just random factories. They’re processing Iranian crude oil—a substance that’s been under heavy U.S. sanctions for years. For the average person, this might seem like a distant trade war. But for anyone who’s f...
Recent posts

Sam Altman says Elon Musk can come to his GPT 5.5 party: 'World needs more love' [Business Insider]

In a move that feels more like a Silicon Valley olive branch than a typical tech feud escalation, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has extended an unexpected invitation to his most vocal critic: Elon Musk. The offer? A seat at the table for the upcoming launch of GPT 5.5, the next major iteration of OpenAI’s conversational AI model. “The world needs more love, and honestly, more smart people working on the same problem,” Altman said in a brief interview following a product demonstration in San Francisco. “If Elon wants to come see what we’re building, the door is open. We’re all trying to get to the same future—just maybe taking different roads.” The comment is notable given the frosty history between the two tech billionaires. Musk, a co-founder of OpenAI who left the board in 2018, has since become one of the company’s harshest critics, accusing it of straying from its original nonprofit mission and of prioritizing profit over safety. He has also been building his own rival AI, xAI’s Grok, ...

I was in the room when Warren Buffett gave a surprise interview at Berkshire's annual conference. The mood swung from excited to gloomy, then hopeful. [Business Insider]

I was in the room when Warren Buffett gave a surprise interview at Berkshire's annual conference. The mood swung from excited to gloomy, then hopeful. OMAHA, Neb. — I have been covering Berkshire Hathaway’s annual shareholder weekend for six years. I thought I had seen every trick the Oracle of Omaha pulls out of his sleeve. I was wrong. This year, the main event was scheduled to be a standard Q&A with Vice Chairman Greg Abel and a few portfolio managers. The official program listed no appearance by 94-year-old Warren Buffett. Most of us expected him to skip the stage, perhaps sending a video message from his home in Omaha. The whispers in the media center were polite but resigned: *He’s getting older. This is the transition.* Then, at 9:47 a.m. local time, something changed. I was sitting in the third row of the press section, laptop open, coffee lukewarm, when a Berkshire PR staffer walked on stage, leaned toward Greg Abel, and whispered something. Abel nodded, stood ...

Trump, Secret Service director say agent at dinner not shot by friendly fire

You know how news cycles work. One minute everyone’s talking about a trade deal, and the next, you’re scrolling through a blur of claims, counterclaims, and grainy footage. This week, that blur has centered on a dinner, a Secret Service agent, and the phrase “friendly fire.” Let’s untangle it. The Incident That Sparked the Questions It started with a dinner. Not just any dinner—an event involving former President Donald Trump and a member of his Secret Service detail. Reports trickled out that an agent had been injured. Immediately, the internet did what it does best: filled in the blanks with speculation. Was it a security breach? An inside job? A rogue bullet? The word “friendly fire” started trending, and suddenly everyone was an expert on ballistics and protocol. I’ll be honest—when I first heard the rumor, my gut clenched. Friendly fire incidents, even in law enforcement, are ugly, messy things. They erode trust. They leave scars that don’t show up on X-rays. So when both Tr...

Germany says US troop drawdown should spur Europe, but top Republicans worried

Germany says US troop drawdown should spur Europe, but top Republicans worried The news that landed like a stone in a still pond So, here we are again. Another headline about U.S. troops in Germany, another round of political hand-wringing, and another moment where you have to ask yourself: Is this a strategic pivot or just political theater? This week, German officials publicly stated that any potential drawdown of American forces stationed on their soil should serve as a wake-up call for Europe. They’re not wrong. But here’s the twist—top Republicans in Washington are sounding the alarm, and not in the way you might expect. Let’s rewind a bit. For decades, the U.S. has kept roughly 35,000 to 40,000 troops in Germany—a remnant of post-WWII occupation that evolved into a cornerstone of NATO’s forward defense. It’s the kind of arrangement that feels permanent until someone threatens to change it. And right now, that someone is the Trump administration (yes, we’re talking about the...

My 4-year-old was a picky eater. Allowing him to cook dinner changed that. [Business Insider]

By Ahmed Abed – News journalist I’m the kind of parent who prides himself on being relaxed about food. Before I had kids, I swore I’d never be the one chasing a toddler around the kitchen table with a spoonful of peas. But then my son turned three, and the pickiness arrived like a freight train. Suddenly, everything was “yucky.” Pasta had to be plain. Chicken couldn't touch the vegetables. And dinner time—once a warm, happy ritual—became a battlefield of negotiation, tears, and half-eaten meals. By the time he was four, I had tried every trick in the book: the hidden-veggie smoothies, the reward charts, the “just one bite” policy. Nothing worked. He would rather go to bed hungry than eat a carrot that had been anywhere near a piece of broccoli. I was exhausted. My wife was exhausted. And my son, I realized, was probably confused and frustrated too. Then, one rainy Saturday afternoon, desperation turned into a spark of an idea. I was prepping an easy stir-fry, and my son was s...

Trump says he's dissatisfied with Iranian proposal as rift with allies deepens

Let’s be real for a second: when you hear the words “Iranian nuclear talks,” your eyes might glaze over. It feels like Groundhog Day. Another round. Another deadline. Another vague statement from a world leader. But hold on—this time feels different. And maybe a little more tense. President Donald Trump has just publicly stated he’s “dissatisfied” with the latest proposal from Tehran. Not angry. Not threatening war—yet. Just… disappointed. And in the world of international diplomacy, that word carries weight. It’s the kind of dissatisfaction that usually precedes a sharp turn in policy, a slammed door, or a very awkward phone call with an ally. The Proposal That Couldn’t Please Anyone So what exactly is in this Iranian proposal? Details are still murky—diplomats love their opacity—but early leaks suggest Tehran offered to cap certain enrichment levels in exchange for relief from some sanctions. Sounds reasonable, right? On paper, maybe. But Trump isn’t buying it. He hinted that t...

Jensen Huang is so over the dire predictions of AI leaders like Dario Amodei [Business Insider]

If you’ve spent any time in the tech press over the last six months, you’ve probably seen the headlines. “AI could kill us all.” “The risk of extinction is real.” “We need to pause development.” These warnings, often delivered with the gravitas of a late-night public service announcement, have become a staple of the industry’s public relations diet. The man leading the charge? Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, who has made a second career out of predicting the worst-case scenario for the very technology he is building. But there is another voice in the room, and it isn’t whispering. It’s Jensen Huang, the leather-jacket-clad CEO of Nvidia. And lately, he’s had enough of the doomsday rhetoric. In a series of recent interviews and public appearances, Huang has made it abundantly clear that he is “so over” the dire predictions coming from his fellow AI leaders. He isn’t just disagreeing with them; he’s rolling his eyes in a way that only a man who has seen two decades of tech cycles can. ...

Ukraine strikes Russian port of Tuapse again as environment crisis deepens

It’s hard to keep up with the news from Ukraine these days. Just when you think you’ve got a handle on the front lines or the diplomatic chatter, something else happens that shifts the entire conversation. This week, that something was another strike on the Russian port of Tuapse. And here’s the thing—it’s not just about another explosion. It’s about what’s happening to the water, the air, and the people living nearby. Let’s talk about what’s actually going on. Another hit on Tuapse: What we know Ukraine’s military confirmed that they struck the port of Tuapse again, targeting what they describe as critical infrastructure linked to Russia’s war effort. This isn’t the first time. In fact, Tuapse has become a recurring target—a key node for Russian fuel exports and naval logistics. But this latest attack feels different. Why? Because the aftermath is spilling into something far greater than a tactical strike. Reports from the ground are messy, as they always are in war zones. Local...

I'm an 84-year-old landlord. I charge reduced rent to my housemates who help me with food, tech, and transportation. [Business Insider]

I’m an 84-year-old landlord. I charge reduced rent to my housemates who help me with food, tech, and transportation. When I tell people I’m a landlord at 84, they usually picture a grumpy old man yelling at kids to get off his lawn. That’s not me. I own a three-bedroom house in Portland, Oregon, that I’ve lived in for 40 years. After my wife passed five years ago, the silence was deafening. I didn’t need the money—I needed company. So I turned to an experiment that’s changed my life: renting out rooms not for the highest dollar, but for help with the stuff that gets harder every year. I call it “assisted living, but on my own terms.” I charge my housemates—two men in their 30s—a reduced rent of $400 each per month. In this market, that’s a steal. But the catch is simple: they help me with three things. Food. Tech. Transportation. Let me break down why this works, how I set it up, and what I’ve learned from living with strangers who became family. Why I ditched the traditional l...

Berkshire Hathaway's first Q&A without Warren Buffett opened with a question from a deepfake Warren Buffett [Business Insider]

When tens of thousands of shareholders filed into the CHI Health Center in Omaha this past weekend, they knew it would be different. For the first time in over six decades, Warren Buffett was not at the helm of Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting. The “Oracle of Omaha” stepped back this year, handing the reins to Vice Chairman Greg Abel and a new generation of leaders. But no one could have predicted the meeting’s very first moment: a question from a deepfake Warren Buffett. The auditorium, packed with investors from around the world, fell into a stunned silence. A large screen flickered to life, displaying a hyper-realistic digital avatar of the 94-year-old billionaire. The avatar, dressed in Buffett’s signature suit and glasses, leaned into an invisible microphone. “Hello, Omaha,” it said in a voice that was uncannily accurate—right down to the Midwestern cadence and the slight crackle of age. “I know I’m not supposed to be here, but I had a few things I wanted to ask Greg about th...

After my divorce, I dreaded any type of holiday alone. A group of friends changed that. [Business Insider]

For years, the word “holiday” felt like a trap. After my divorce, the idea of booking a trip alone sent a cold knot into my stomach. It wasn’t the logistics that scared me—I could plan a flight and book a hotel in my sleep. It was the silence. The empty seat next to me at dinner. The awkward look from a waiter when they asked, “Table for one?” I spent two years convincing myself that solo travel was for the brave, and I was not that. I was the guy who stayed home, watching travel documentaries and eating cereal for dinner. Then, something unexpected happened. A group of friends—not close friends, more like familiar faces from a shared hobby—invited me on a long weekend trip to the coast. At first, I said no. The thought of being the “divorced guy” in a group of couples and singles felt like a social minefield. But one of them, a woman named Sarah I barely knew, called me out. “You’re not hiding forever,” she said, half-joking. “Pack a bag. We’ll handle the awkwardness.” I packed that...

Iran threatens painful response if US renews attacks

By Ahmed Abed – News journalist Iran threatens painful response if US renews attacks You know how these geopolitical standoffs go. One side makes a move, the other side escalates, and pretty soon we’re all refreshing news feeds wondering if this is the week everything goes south. That’s where we are right now with Iran and the United States. Tehran just dropped a statement that’s hard to ignore. Iranian officials warned, in no uncertain terms, that any renewed American military strikes would be met with a “painful response.” Not a measured one. Not a diplomatic note. A painful one. That word choice matters. Let’s be honest—this isn’t the first time we’ve heard this kind of language. Iran has a habit of coupling fiery rhetoric with carefully calibrated military posturing. But what’s different this time? The context. The US has been ramping up pressure in the region, particularly around the Strait of Hormuz and in response to perceived Iranian drone activities. And Iran? It feels...

We sold our dream home in the US to move into a rental abroad. Our family has less space, but our lifestyle improved. [Business Insider]

It was the kind of house you see in a real estate catalog and immediately assume belongs to someone else’s life. Four bedrooms, a sprawling backyard with a swing set, a kitchen island big enough to host Thanksgiving dinner, and a mortgage that felt like a second job. My wife, Maria, and I spent five years curating that home. We painted the nursery ourselves, planted the magnolia tree by the driveway, and replaced the carpet with hardwood floors because we believed we were building a legacy. We sold it last spring. Not because we had to. Not because we lost our jobs or fell into debt. We sold it because we realized the house was eating us alive—not financially, but emotionally. We were spending more time maintaining the lawn than lying on it. More weekends fixing the gutters than exploring the city. More energy worrying about resale value than actually living. So we did something that felt terrifying at first, then liberating: we packed two suitcases each, put the rest in storage, a...

After NASCAR's Greg Biffle and family died, police now think 'friends' stole from them

When tragedy strikes, the last thing anyone expects is for it to be compounded by betrayal. But that’s exactly what seems to have happened in the case of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle and his family. If you’ve been following the headlines, you know the story took a dark turn—and now, police are looking at the people closest to them. Let’s rewind a bit. Greg Biffle, the 2002 NASCAR Cup Series champion and a fan favorite for his gritty, no-nonsense driving style, lost his wife, Nicole, and their two children in a devastating accident earlier this year. The news hit the racing world like a punch to the gut. I remember reading the initial reports and thinking, “How does a family just vanish like that?” The answer, as we later learned, was a fiery crash that left no survivors. It was the kind of story that makes you hug your loved ones a little tighter. But here’s where it gets ugly. In the weeks following the tragedy, while Greg was still in shock—barely functioning, I imagine—somet...

I'm a restaurant owner who loves shopping at Trader Joe's. Here are 8 items I always keep at home. [Business Insider]

When you run a restaurant, your life revolves around food. I spend my days sourcing produce, tasting sauces, and obsessing over the perfect balance of flavor. You’d think that after 12 hours in a hot kitchen, I’d want nothing to do with groceries. But the truth is, I’m a Trader Joe’s loyalist. There’s something about those Hawaiian shirts and the hand-drawn signs that makes me feel like I’m cheating on my own supply chain. I’ve learned that Trader Joe’s isn’t just for college students or busy parents. It’s a secret weapon for anyone who loves to cook—especially when you’re tired and just want something that tastes like you spent four hours on it. Here are eight items I always keep in my home pantry and fridge, straight from the aisles of TJ’s. 1. Everything But The Bagel Seasoning This is the MVP of my spice rack. I use it on everything—eggs, avocado toast, roasted vegetables, even grilled chicken. It’s a blend of sesame seeds, poppy seeds, garlic, onion, and salt. In the restaura...

Alaska governor vetoes election bill citing 'significant operational burdens'

By Ahmed Abed – News journalist Let’s be honest: when a politician vetoes a bill, it’s usually a pretty dry, procedural affair. You get the press release, the talking points, the “my opponent is destroying democracy” soundbites. But sometimes, a veto actually tells you something interesting about how power works—or doesn’t work—in a state. That’s exactly what happened in Alaska this week. Governor Mike Dunleavy just vetoed an election bill. And his reasoning? He said it would create “significant operational burdens.” Now, I’ve covered enough statehouse politics to know that “operational burdens” can mean anything from “we don’t have enough paperclips” to “this would fundamentally break the system.” So, what’s actually going on here? What Was in the Bill? The bill in question wasn’t some sweeping overhaul. It was more of a targeted fix. It aimed to tweak Alaska’s relatively new ranked-choice voting system—the one voters approved a couple years back that caused all kinds of cha...

I'm 51 and child-free, and the sole caretaker for my 92-year-old dad. It's taken a toll on my social life. [Business Insider]

When my father turned 92 last spring, I celebrated by finally learning how to change a catheter bag. It’s not the kind of milestone you see on greeting cards, but it’s the one that defines my life right now. I’m 51, child-free by choice, and the sole caretaker for my dad. And if I’m being brutally honest, it’s taken a toll on my social life that I didn’t fully anticipate. Let me back up. I never planned to be a full-time caregiver. I built a career as a journalist, spent my 30s and 40s traveling, dating, and building deep friendships. I loved the freedom of not having kids—the spontaneous dinners, the last-minute weekend trips, the quiet evenings with a book. That freedom felt like a superpower. But then my mother passed away five years ago, and my father’s health began a slow, unrelenting decline. First it was the arthritis, then the mild cognitive impairment, then the falls. One day, it became clear that he couldn’t live alone anymore. So I moved him into my home. The invisible w...