Wall Street shrugs off looming shutdown
Shutdowns tend to be economic non-events, but investors may be underestimating this one.
Shutdowns tend to be economic non-events, but investors may be underestimating this one.
When I was 26, my right first molar fell to pieces. It had been decaying from a cavity hidden between my teeth, and I was a part-time service worker who had not seen a dentist in years. But the United States healthcare system permitted my parents’ insurance to cover me for several more months, so in shame, I visited my mother, who brought me to a dentist, both affordable and negligent. He conducted a root canal with insufficient anesthetic. I lay, sentient, as he severed each of the three nerves anchoring my tooth with a drill. It was excruciating.
The first sitdown between President Donald Trump and congressional leaders in both parties was short and yielded no breakthrough.
China, the world’s biggest soybean customer, has ceased all US purchases since May as part of its trade war with Washington.
While the drugmaker said it plans to keep its headquarters in the UK and retain its primary listing there, the move nevertheless deals a blow to London.
Chloe Wise’s 'Myth Information' at Almine Rech in Tribeca features 14 paintings dealing in ecstatic and mysterious experiences, and the limits of human perception.
Everyone agrees antics around the spending-bill deadline are nothing but callous political stunts — so why do we agree to be governed like this at all?
Dr. Thaer Ahmad gives an emotional statement at a high-level UN event about Israel's war on children in Gaza.
The Israeli army has repeatedly attacked hospitals and health care facilities during its military offensive on Gaza City.