Gretchen Carlson in talks to join MSNBC, sources say

Gretchen Carlson, who settled a multi-million lawsuit late last year against former Fox News chief Roger Ailes, is in talks with MSNBC to join the network, sources familiar with the matter told Business Insider. A source familiar with the matter said Carlson’s deal had not yet been finalized, but was nearing completion.

Austerity anguish

In normal times, in a normal country, court proceedings over mortgage arrears would not be the stuff of headline news. In a soulless white concrete court building, leaders of the I Won’t Pay movement have been turning routine eviction proceedings into the frontline in a popular fight-back against austerity.

Trump announces he won’t attend this year’s White House…

President Donald Trump on Saturday announced via Twitter that he won’t be attending the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner. The announcement comes amid escalating tension between the White House press corps and Trump, who recently dubbed a number of mainstream outlets as the “enemy of the people.”

Top Democratic Senator: The party has to do these 3 things to…

The Democratic Party is in the midst of an identity crisis – but a leading Democratic senator said he has an idea of what the left needs to do in order to win at the ballot box in 2018 and 2020. The first, he said, was directly related to his book, which outlined what he believes to be the negative effects of corporate influence on the political system.

Warren Buffett praises a talented and ambitious immigrantsa in shareholder letter

Interpretation of the news based on evidence, including data, as well as anticipating how events might unfold based on past events It’s become an American tradition to parse billionaire Warren Buffett’s annual letters to his shareholders for nuggets of plain-spoken insight, wit and sometimes a dash of politics. In this year’s letter, the Berkshire Hathaway chairman brought up a familiar subject under Donald Trump’s presidency: immigrants.

Sean Spicer compared marijuana to opioids – but there’s…

White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer relayed the Trump administration’s first official comments on legal cannabis this past Thursday. Unfortunately, his remarks involved zero scientific consideration when he compared adult-use cannabis to the ongoing opioid epidemic: “When you see something like the opioid addiction crisis blossoming in so many states around this country, the last thing we should be doing is encouraging people,” Spicer said.

Nissan has one of the best engines out there – but its days…

And it’s a great time to be an engine lover, with all manner of powertrains now propelling modern cars and trucks. We’ve driven big American V8s, exotic V10s and W12s, lots of turbocharged four-cylinder powerplants, a fair number of twin-turbocharged supercar engines, and of course a wide range of gas-electric hybrids and full-electric vehicles.

$3.7 Billion Hedge Fund: There’s a lot to be excited about…

You can add the $3.7 billion hedge fund Tourbillon Capital to the list of firms wary of betting on President Donald Trump’s policies. “The next four years will be filled with a very wide range of outcomes,” Jason Karp, founder of Tourbillon Capital Partners, wrote in a February investor letter reviewed by Business Insider.

Rory McIlroy

“This wasn’t an endorsement nor a political statement of any kind,” the 27-year-old Northern Irishman posted to Twitter. “It was, quite simply, a round of golf.”

Oakland’s last underground jazz club, Birdland Jazzista, bids farewell

Many of the self-proclaimed “jazz cats” that frequent the Birdland Jazzista Social Club on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard reminisce about the East Bay’s rich jazz history. They rattle off names of former spots stretching from Berkeley to Seventh Street in West Oakland, where musicians could jam late into the night without the stuffy constraints felt in upscale venues.

Millennials have figured out the secret to thriving in the…

” argues that the modern world is good for people who are motivated by strong personal interests, whether record collecting, hiking, cooking, or obsessing with “Game of Thrones.” These people, called matchers or enthusiasts, are “not trying to come out ahead of everyone else; rather, they seek to have some of their niche preferences fulfilled for the sake of their own internally directed happiness.”

China’s military is approaching ‘near parity’ with the West

China’s military is fast approaching “near parity” with western nations, according to a new report from the International Institute for Strategic Studies. In its 2017 Military Balance report, which focuses on global military capabilities and defense spending, IISS experts say that China has made significant progress in research and development and improved its military capabilities, putting it close to on par with the US and other allies.

Trump is upset the media is not reporting a meaningless statistic about the national debt

Interpretation of the news based on evidence, including data, as well as anticipating how events might unfold based on past events People use mobile devices to record President Trump as he speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland on Feb. 24. On “Fox & Friends” Saturday morning, former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain credited President Trump with reducing the national debt, after just one month in office. “And here’s another statistic that I haven’t heard anybody talk about.

TCL carries flickering BlackBerry flame with new phone launch

Blackberry Ltd may have exited the device business, but fans of the pioneering email machine need not despair as Chinese smartphone maker TCL Communication has introduced its first Blackberry-licensed phone with the physical keyboard that was long its key allure. The KEYone combines a touch display with a physical keyboard to give users more useable space for typing than a typical 5.5-inch all-touch smartphone, along with BlackBerry Ltd’s security and software, TCL said.

Mexico’s retaliation against Trump may be taking shape

President Donald Trump has railed against Mexico since early in his presidential campaign, criticizing the US’s southern neighbor over matters of trade, immigration, and security. Since his election in November, Trump has largely maintained his hardline policies toward Mexico, with US-Mexico relations ever more strained as a result.

How Americans really feel about their country on 33 key…

And now with President Trump – who ran an antiestablishment and populist campaign to win the White House – set to give a speech to a joint session of Congress this Tuesday, we’re taking a look at how they view some of the big issues facing the country, as well as the major institutions that make up American political and civic life. The ” General Social Survey ,” a project of the independent research organization NORC at the University of Chicago , has been tracking several aspects of American life since 1972.

St. Louis airport could soon get booze-to-go policy

In this photo made Friday, Feb. 24, 2017, traveler Dominic Maley sips on a beer while waiting to board a flight at St. Louis Lambert International Airport in St. Louis. The Missouri House has passed a proposal that would allow people to bring alcohol out of airport bars and restaurants to gates.

The FCC just rolled back some of its privacy rules, reversing previous positions

While previous FCC rules sought to protect consumers from ISPs, the new administration doesn’t seem to agree with these guidelines The FCC is under new leadership, and it’s looking to scale back some of the privacy regulations of the previous administration. On Friday, the newly appointed chairman of the Federal Communications Commission asked the organization to delay a set of the privacy rules that was initially slated to take effect next week.

Why the FCC delayed new privacy regulations for AT&T, Verizon, and Comcast

By stepping back from Obama-era privacy rules, the Trump Administration’s FCC has made another decision that’s likely to benefit internet service providers, but not internet users. Federal Communications Commission Commissioner Ajit Pai and FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler testify at a House Appropriations Financial Services and General Government Subcommittee hearing on the FCC’s FY2016 budget, on Capitol Hill in Washington March 24, 2015.

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Warren Buffett on Saturday mounted a forceful and upbeat defense of the prospects for American business, as his Berkshire Hathaway Inc reported a higher quarterly profit though operating income fell. In his annual letter to Berkshire shareholders, Buffett said investors “will almost certainly do well” by staying with the long term with a “collection of large, conservatively financed American businesses.”

Warren Buffett credits ‘miraculous’ America in part to ‘tide…

The Berkshire Hathaway CEO has long been a believer in the economic power of the American people and its institutions and that opinion does not appear to have changed in his 2016 Annual Letter to Shareholders. “From a standing start 240 years ago a span of time less than triple my days on earth Americans have combined human ingenuity, a market system, a tide of talented and ambitious immigrants, and the rule of law to deliver abundance beyond any dreams of our forefathers.”

Here’s Why Alphabet May Be the Best FANG Stock to Own

The company’s rock-solid balance sheet, its stranglehold over a lion’s share of the digital advertising market, the possibility of rapid growth in the smartphone space, and the ever-widening Google ecosystem, makes Alphabet an unbeatable proposition . Without a doubt, Alphabet’s real cash-cow is its all-encompassing Internet search engine, Google.