Latest Coverage
See all articlesGOP Rep. Cory Mills faces calls to resign amid misconduct allegations
Donald Trump just became the first president in history to owe the American people $166 billion in refunds
Donald Trump’s administration just kicked off the largest tariff refund in U.S. history, and businesses are about to get $166 billion back. Starting at 8 p.m. ET on April 20, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) will open the first phase of a new claims system, letting importers file for refunds on tariffs that the Supreme Court ruled were illegally imposed. According to Fox Business, the refunds stem from a February Supreme Court decision that struck down the legal basis for Trump’s tariffs. The court found that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the law Trump used to justify the duties, didn’t actually give the president authority to impose tariffs. That power, the justices said, belongs to Congress. Lower courts quickly followed up, ordering the government to reverse the policy and refund the money, plus interest. Now, the numbers are staggering. Court filings show over 330,000 importers paid duties on more than 53 million shipments, adding up to about $166 billion. That’s not just a big check; it’s a massive shift in trade policy, and businesses are scrambling to get their money back. Companies can file refund requests through the Automated Commercial Environment portal Refund requests can be filed using
He hijacked my $800 rented dumpster. I directed the massive truck straight to his driveway.
I paid $800 to rent a commercial roll-off dumpster. I walked out to find it completely filled with rotting, toxic roofing shingles! A contractor pointed to the LocalAll app. My neighbor had posted my driveway: Free Bulk Dumpster Space! He hijacked my rental to save money. I didn't scream over the fence. I called the dumpster company and authorized an immediate relocation. The massive truck arrived, picked up the heavy bin, and backed straight up my neighbor's newly paved driveway. With a loud crash, the driver tilted the bin and dumped the entire toxic, filthy load of shingles right in front of his garage door.
She claimed my free oak desk, then demanded I carry it up to her 2nd-floor apartment. I gave it to t
I listed a heavy oak desk on the LocalAll "Freebies" section, strictly noting "curbside pickup only." A woman pulled up in her SUV. She stood over the desk, arms crossed. "I live on the second floor," she stated haughtily. "You need to load this into my trunk and follow me to my apartment to carry it up. My husband won't lift it." I politely explained that pickup was her responsibility. She launched into a loud rant about how giving away community items requires "decent customer service." I didn't argue. I simply turned to a local college student who had just walked up looking at the app. "You want a free desk?" I asked. He high-fived me and loaded it into his van. The complaining neighbor stood there with her mouth open, entirely empty-handed.
Michael Wolff Was Epstein’s Fixer, and Now He and Michael Cohen Want to Discredit the People Reading the Files
Michael Wolff arrived on Substack like a hero. He had 100 hours of recorded interviews with Jeffrey Epstein, insider access to the darkest corners of the network, and the credibility of a bestselling author who had gone toe-to-toe with Donald Trump. Then 1,800 pages of his emails with Epstein were released, and the picture changed completely. “You start to see this different side of Michael Wolff,” Leonard said. “He’s getting manuscripts for books about Epstein before they’re published and trying to warn Epstein. He’s helping with Wikipedia cleanups. He’s trying to crush Nick Kristof’s reputation. You realize he has become Jeffrey Epstein’s fixer.” Wolff arranged dinners with Woody Allen, caught and killed stories about Epstein’s sex trafficking history, and coached Epstein on counter-narratives — all while presenting himself as a journalist. He even tried to discredit Julie K. Brown’s Miami Herald investigation, the very reporting that led to Epstein’s arrest. And those 100 hours of interviews? Nobody has ever heard them. Leonard believes the recordings contain material that would damage Wolff’s reputation and undermine his franchise of writing about Trump — who was, after all, the subject Epstein was most willing to discuss.