Tag: News

  • How Nancy Pelosi became one of America’s richest and most powerful politicians

    Pelosi
    Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

    • Nancy Pelosi rose through the ranks of Congress to eventually become the first female House speaker.
    • It was a monumental achievement for the California lawmaker and native daughter of Baltimore.
    • And in many ways it was fueled by her early political instincts and her role as a full-time mother.

    In many ways, Nancy Pelosi's political ascent was no surprise.

    Decades before Pelosi become the first female House speaker in US history, she was Nancy D'Alesandro, the daughter of the highly influential Thomas D'Alesandro Jr., who served as a Maryland congressman and then as mayor of Baltimore from 1947 to 1959.

    Nancy D'Alesandro was born in Baltimore on March 26, 1940, the youngest of seven children (and the only girl) in an Italian-American family that in the city was synonymous with public service.

    She graduated from the Institute of Notre Dame in Baltimore in 1958 before attending Trinity College in Washington, DC, where she earned a bachelor's degree in political science. While in college, she attended President John F. Kennedy's 1961 inaugural address and even interned on Capitol Hill alongside now-Maryland Rep. Steny Hoyer, who rose from the state legislature to become the US House majority leader and one of the chamber's most respected legislators.

    In September 1963, Nancy D'Alesandro married Paul Pelosi, whom she met in college. They then had five children: Alexandra, Jacqueline, Nancy Corinne, Christine, and Paul Jr. Along with her husband, Pelosi has an estimated net worth of $46 million.

    In 1969, the Pelosi family would eventually move to San Francisco, where the future speaker reveled in being a full-time mother, a role that she said prepared her for her rise in California politics and on the national stage.

    "That's one of the hardest things," Pelosi said of parenting in a 2019 interview with The Washington Post. "Makes going to work look easy, doesn't it?"

    Nancy and Paul Pelosi in 1987
    Pelosi announced her candidacy for the 5th Congressional District special election at the Cathedral Hill Hotel in San Francisco, Calif., on February 12, 1987.

    Welcome to San Francisco

    San Francisco, which has traditionally been the center of political gravity in California politics, was a magnet for the counterculture in the 1960s and 1970s.

    The Summer of Love. The Black Panthers and Black activism in the Bay area. The escalation of protests against the Vietnam War. The rise of the gay rights movement.

    These movements had a major influence on the liberalism that would come to define the region.

    During this era and in later years, Pelosi cut her teeth in the city's Democratic politics. In 1976, she became a Democratic National Convention committee member. From 1981 to 1983, she chaired the powerful California Democratic Party. And in June 1987, she was first elected to the House in a special election to succeed the late Rep. Sala Burton.

    To this day, Pelosi still holds the San Francisco-anchored House seat.

    Pelosi
    Pelosi in the House chamber on February 4, 2020.

    Rise to the Top

    In 2003, Pelosi became the first woman to lead a political party in Congress, serving as House Minority Leader.

    Over the next three years, she worked fervently to regain a majority in the House of Representatives, recruiting Democratic candidates from across the ideological spectrum and raising millions of dollars.

    In 2006, Democrats won control of the House after a 12-year drought, making Pelosi the first female speaker ever. She would assume the speaker's gavel in January 2007.

    When President Barack Obama took office in 2009, Pelosi was instrumental in shepherding his legislative agenda through Congress, which notably included the Affordable Care Act, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, and the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act.

    After Democrats lost the House majority in November 2010, she stayed on as minority leader until the party once again regained control of the lower chamber in 2018.

    Pelosi served as a foil to President Donald Trump's conservative agenda during his final two years in office, even ripping up his February 2020 State of the Union speech after he appeared to snub her handshake prior to the televised address.

    Once Joe Biden assumed the presidency in 2021, Pelosi once again used her political acumen to not only move the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan through the House, but also the bipartisan infrastructure legislation and the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022. All were signed into law by Biden.

    Nancy Pelosi
    Pelosi receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Joe Biden.

    The Future

    After the GOP narrowly flipped the House in 2022, Pelosi stepped down from leadership, which meant that for the first time in 20 years, she was no longer leading the party's caucus in the lower chamber.

    She was succeeded as House Democratic leader by Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York.

    But Pelosi has remained active as a lawmaker and as a surrogate for Democrats as they aim to regain control of the House in November 2024.

    The congresswoman, now 84 years old and a recent recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, is running for reelection in the fall, adding another chapter to a career that has endured in Washington for nearly four decades.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Scammers are using delivery apps like Instacart to swindle customers and delivery workers out of money

    An Instacart shopper grabs paper bags full of groceries out of the back of a blue compact car while wearing a sweater, blue jeans, and tennis shoes.
    A scam involves replacing items in an Instacart order with gift cards.

    • A scam is leaving Instacart shoppers or customers on the hook for gift cards they never ordered.
    • The scammers ask Instacart shoppers to replace items with gift cards and then send the card's code.
    • They can then access the money — and leave an unsuspecting customer with the bill.

    Some Instacart shoppers are the targets of a scam centered on gift cards.

    It works like this: A scammer acting as a legitimate customer will place an order with a few small items, like a beverage or a piece of fruit. After an Instacart shopper accepts the order, the customer messages the shopper and asks if they can add one or more gift cards — often worth $100 or more — to the order.

    The customer will then ask the shopper to send them the card's code, which gives them access to the money before the shopper has even checked out and left the store.

    That "customer" can then say they didn't order the gift card — which they've already spent the money from. That could theoretically mean Instacart or the delivery worker has to cover the cost of the card. The delivery worker is also left at risk of having their account deactivated by Instacart for violating company policy.

    "I need a 150$ Vanilla gift card," one scammer told an Instacart shopper, according to a post on Reddit from last September, referencing a type of Visa prepaid card. "Its for my dads birthday but i couldn't go out." The request came with an offer for a $100 tip, according to the post.

    "Got my first scam order today," the poster wrote, adding in the comments that they contacted support to intervene in the order once the gift card request came through.

    The scam doesn't just affect the workers shopping for Instacart. It can also impact legitimate customers. One TikTok user, itsjwest, said in a video posted in August that someone hacked into his Instacart account to order a Slim Jim beef stick and a $100 Xbox gift card from a Walgreens store.

    The two items showed up in a bag on his doorstep — but the driver had scratched off the code on the gift card and sent it to the hacker in exchange for a tip.

    "He tells me that he was having a conversation with the guy, and he tells me that he was tipping him $58 to go ahead and scratch off the code and send to him before actually making the delivery," itsjwest says in the video. "How is that not a red flag to anybody?"

    Heidi Bleau, an Instacart shopper in Massachusetts who works in marketing but shops through the app to make extra money for her son's college expenses, told Business Insider that she got a similar request after agreeing to shop and deliver an order from a Walgreens last fall.

    "Within 30 seconds, I got a message about buying the Vanilla Visa gift card," she said. "I tried calling the customer directly, and I got a message that they prefer not to be contacted." Bleau said she just closed the app and didn't finish the order after she couldn't talk to Instacart support over the phone about the scam.

    Her son, who also works for Instacart, has also had at least four similar requests over the past several months, she said. It's unclear whether the requests were from fraudulent customers or scammers who had hacked legitimate accounts.

    One of the orders initially included a bottle of cologne, which the customer then requested be replaced with a $150 gift card. Instacart policy does allow shoppers to replace items as a "special request" for customers and override the system by adding a custom price for the item. The feature is designed to accommodate items for sale in a store but which don't show up for customers in Instacart's catalog.

    Instacart forbids shoppers from adding gift cards to orders, a screenshot of the company policy seen by BI indicates.

    "It's impacting consumers who have to deal with the fraudulent charges on their credit card, but even more, Instacart has to be seeing massive chargebacks, yet I don't see they are doing anything about this," the shopper told BI.

    "Customers are not able to order gift cards through the Instacart platform or place a special request for a gift card via chat," an Instacart spokesperson told BI.

    Instacart also tells shoppers not to purchase gift cards for customers, the spokesperson added.

    Do you deliver food, groceries, or other items as a gig worker and have a story idea to share? Reach out to this reporter at abitter@businessinsider.com

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • A New Jersey homebuilder who pays his workers over $100,000 wants young people to know construction can be a lucrative career that doesn’t require college — and businesses are desperate to hire

    A roofer is seen working on a condominium in Canterbury Crossing on a hot day in Latham, N.Y.
    A roofer is seen working on a condominium in Canterbury Crossing on a hot day Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2020 in Latham, N.Y.

    • Michael Bodei, a seasoned construction business owner, is struggling to find skilled labor amid a national shortage.
    • The US construction industry is short about 500,000 workers due to limits on immigration and disinvestment in trade schools.
    • Despite high wages, stigma around the building trades and more flexible job alternatives are deterring new workers.

    When Michael Bodei went into construction 31 years ago, it was a faster way to make the kind of salary he wanted than becoming a lawyer, the other career option he was weighing.

    Bodei's family has been in the construction business for generations, so he'd seen how lucrative it could be to build and renovate upscale single-family homes in affluent suburbs. At 22, Bodei started his own general and building contracting company, Bodei Contracting, in Morristown, New Jersey. By 25, he'd done well enough to buy a lake house, a boat, a new Corvette, a motorcycle, and two trucks, he said.

    "It wasn't because I was a genius, it was because it was that easy to get into my business and be successful," Bodei told Business Insider. "Houses were cheaper, everything was more abundant. It was just an easier place in time to do business than it is now."

    One of the keys to his success: "more skilled less expensive labor," Bodei said.

    Most of his employees — a core group of about a dozen people that expands to around 30 in busy times — have worked for the company for decades. Their projects are largely six-figure kitchen and bathroom renovations and additions on $2 million to $5 million homes. And because of the nature of this high-end work, Bodei generally doesn't hire anyone without at least 10 years of experience, he said.

    But with a national shortage of construction workers, it's become increasingly difficult to find new workers, from electricians and plumbers to those with specialty skills in fiberglass work and cabinetry, Bodei said. A pipeline of younger skilled workers just isn't there. "There is no one to replace us," he added. He worries that as older workers retire, their skills will be lost.

    "It's unusual for anybody under 40 to be working for us, people under 50 are unusual," he said. "One of our carpenters is in his 70s."

    While the rising cost of housing is in large part a result of restrictive zoning laws and building regulations, the construction worker shortage is also pushing up home costs. Fewer construction workers means less — and slower — residential construction, which in turn leads to higher home prices.

    Bodei has seen even affluent customers balk at prices, which are also elevated by the rising costs of construction materials.

    "There's a limit to what anyone's going to pay," he said. "Even wealthy people get to a point where it becomes ridiculous."

    Sam Laureto adds finishing touches to the front door of the new River Oaks multimillion-dollar mansions that's under construction in Houston, TX.
    Sam Laureto adds finishing touches to the front door of the new River Oaks multimillion-dollar mansion under construction on June 25, 2014, in Houston, Texas.

    A labor shortage years in the making

    The US has faced a severe shortage of construction workers of all sorts for years. When the financial crisis crushed the housing market in 2008, the construction industry took a massive hit. But even though demand for housing and infrastructure has surged since then, the workers haven't come back.

    This year, the construction industry is short about 500,000 workers — and that's "on top of the normal pace of hiring," according to a January 2024 news release from the trade group Associated Builders and Contractors.

    Part of the issue is limits on immigration. But a perhaps more structural cause is the gradual disinvestment in technical and trade schools in favor of colleges and universities.

    "We need to get more people interested in construction as a career," Ken Simonson, chief economist at the Associated General Contractors of America, recently told Business Insider. Adding that everyone from the federal government to school guidance counselors needs to "get the message to kids that there are lucrative rewarding — both financially and in satisfaction — careers in construction. You don't have to go to college to have a good career."

    Wages are quite high in the industry, especially for skilled tradespeople. Most of Bodei's employees make at least $100,000 a year, he said. But construction has lost some of its edge as compensation in other industries, including restaurants and hospitality, has risen, and remote and hybrid jobs offer cushier, more flexible alternatives, Simonson said.

    And there's long been a widespread stigma around working in the building trades, despite the relatively high salaries they offer.

    "Even when I was in school, you were discouraged from going because that was where the stupid kids went, which is hilarious because you could go make six figures as a plumber in your mid-20s," Bodei said.

    Bodei would be worried about the future of construction, but it won't be his problem for much longer. He's planning to close his business next year and relocate to South Florida, where he also has real estate investments — and easy access to the beach. "I'm gonna go relax for a while," he said. "And then figure out what my next thing is."

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • The US Army’s new plan to counter Russia and China has a glaring problem, experts say

    Soldiers in training on a 12-mile ruck march at Fort Moore, Georgia in January.
    Soldiers in training on a 12-mile ruck march at Fort Moore, Georgia in January.

    • The US Army's new structure responds to drones and guided missiles and artillery.
    • But the Army plans to stand up new units at a time its recruiting is struggling.
    • The Army is also basing its plans on untried weapons, the Congressional Research Service warned.

    The US Army is reorganizing to fight against major powers like Russia and China, but it lacks the troops and new recruits to carry it out, congressional analysts contend.

    The 2024 Army Force Structure Transformation would be the Army's fifth major reorganization since 2003. Judging by details laid out in an Army white paper, the emphasis will be on responding to technological changes in warfare, such as the threat of drones and long-range guided munitions, while trying to economize on scarce manpower.

    But that may be easier said than done. "It is one thing to establish the authorizations for new and existing units discussed in the Army's white paper, yet another to fill those authorizations with qualified soldiers," warns a new report by the Congressional Research Service, which analyzes issues for Congress.

    The most striking aspect of the Army's plan is the large number of new units, for counter-drone protection as well as air and missile defense. These units, assigned to corps- and division-level formations, would include four more "indirect fire protection capability" battalions intended to shoot down cruise missiles, rockets, and artillery and mortar shells. In addition, there would be nine counter-small UAS batteries tasked with destroying small drones, and four more Maneuver Short Range Air Defense (M-SHORAD) battalions to stop manned aircraft, helicopters and drones.

    These would help flesh out the Army's five Multi-Domain Task Forces, theater-level units with exotic capabilities such as hypersonic missiles, cyberwarfare, jamming, and integrating intelligence data. At the same time, the Army is trying to address a recruiting crisis that has left some units undermanned. The transformation plan would reduce authorized strength — the maximum number of soldiers allowed — from 494,000 to 470,000. The Army currently has about 450,000 active-duty troops. In contrast, the US Army had 770,000 soldiers in the latter stages of the Cold War, when it was structured to counter the Soviet Union.

    "The Army will shrink excess, largely unmanned 'hollow' force structure and build new formations equipped with new capabilities needed for large scale combat operations," the Army white paper explained. This would include 3,000 fewer authorized special operations forces personnel. Some functions will also be consolidated, such as reassigning engineers from brigade combat teams to divisions, which would allow fewer engineer slots.

    But even with consolidation and a boost to recruitment — including new warrant officers who specialize in recruiting — the Army may not be able to find enough personnel to fill out its existing units and create new air defense formations. In 2023, the Army came up 10,000 short in its quest for 65,000 new recruits.

    "Given past recruiting shortfalls and preliminary FY2024 recruiting data, it is difficult to predict if the Army will be able rectify its recruiting challenges in the near and long term," CRS said.

    The Army may also be focusing too much on cutting-edge "soft" technologies rather than old-fashioned kinetic weapons that have proven quite relevant and lethal in the Ukraine war. "The Army white paper appears to address technology-based, non-kinetic space and cyber effects, long-range precision fires, and force protection more than it does conventional close-combat force capabilities, Army Special Operations Forces capabilities, and Security Force Assistance capabilities," said CRS.

    A 5-kilowatt laser sits on a Stryker armored vehicle in 2017.
    A 5-kilowatt laser sits on a Stryker armored vehicle in 2017.

    The Army is also basing its plans on untried weapons, such as the Long-Range Hypersonic Missile and air defense lasers. "Some units, such as LRHW batteries and Directed Energy (DE) SHORAD units, do not have mature weapons and technologies," CRS warned. Nor does the Army — or Congress — have a good idea of how much the reorganization would cost.

    Inevitably, there will also be disruptions caused by yet another Army metamorphosis. In 2003, the Army switched from a Cold War force structure of heavy mechanized divisions, to smaller, lighter brigades more suitable for counterinsurgency. Now, the Army has gone full circle as it reconfigures for Cold War-style mechanized conflict against big opponents like Russia and China. At the same time, it must also incorporate new technologies such as drones and long-range artillery, which have demonstrated their power in the Ukraine war.

    The reorganization does address some of the Army's problems, Mark Cancian, a senior advisor at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told Business Insider. "The new units are appropriate for a great power conflict. China and Russia have much stronger air and missile forces than the regional opponents the army has faced for the last generation."

    Creating units armed with hypersonic missiles also makes sense, especially since Russia and the US withdrew in 2019 from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces treaty, signed in 1987 to curb cruise missiles and other medium-range nuclear weapons.

    "The long-range fires are an opportunity that has opened up with the end of the INF," Cancian said. Nonetheless, the reorganization doesn't address the real issue. "The Army's major problem is that it is too small overall to meet all of its likely peacetime and wartime commitments," said Cancian.

    Michael Peck is a defense writer whose work has appeared in Forbes, Defense News, Foreign Policy magazine, and other publications. He holds an MA in political science from Rutgers Univ. Follow him on Twitter and LinkedIn.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Meet the millennials who suddenly doubled their wealth in the last 4 years after an adulthood plagued by bad economic luck

    A person showing their teeth revealing a dollar sign tooth gem
    • Some millennials are suddenly surging ahead financially.
    • Those with growing fortunes can thank a set of unique economic circumstances in recent years.
    • It means some feel more confident about retirement, or were able to buy new homes outright.

    James Barnes is surprised to find himself beating the millennial odds.

    At age 33, he is firmly in the middle of the generational cohort born 1981 to 1996. By some accounts, they killed off staples like napkins and cereal and spent too much money on avocado toast and fancy coffee. Many started their careers in the aftermath of the Great Recession, have contended with a housing affordability crisis throughout adulthood, and generally seemed to be doomed to economic misery.

    Pre-pandemic, Barnes' situation skewed closer to that traditional millennial image. In his early 20s, Barnes and his wife lived with his parents. She went corporate and he worked with a managed service provider for assisted living facilities as they steadily paid down their student loans and saved for their own home.

    "Just starting out and graduating college, you're saddled with student debt, you're living in an apartment which you're paying rent for, you're not building any equity, you're generally not making nearly as much money as you thought you'd be making right out of the gate at college," Barnes said. "So looking at even a $150,000 price tag for a house, you're just like, when is that ever going to happen?"

    In 2017, it did finally happen for the Barneses. They put a down payment on a house in Lawrenceville, Georgia. Barnes said it was just a regular, normal life: They commuted to Atlanta for work, hung out with friends, worked on home improvements, enjoyed being DINKs, and took care of their pet bearded dragon. They weren't struggling, but they always watched their budget and spent conservatively.

    James Barnes and his wife
    James Barnes and his wife.

    When the pandemic hit, Barnes' wife intensified her very millennial hobby: Perusing real estate and touring open houses. She discovered they were sitting on a gold mine — their house had doubled in value.

    It prompted a strategic life move. The couple decided to sell and move back to Barnes' home state of Alabama. When a real estate company offered $300,000, double what the couple had paid, they jumped on it.

    "I know this is a very odd scenario for most millennials and really most people, but we sold a house and basically just bought a house outright," he said.

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    The Barneses are part of a new millennial group that is suddenly doing very well financially — especially if they bought real estate pre-pandemic. In the fourth quarter of 2019, millennials held $3.5 trillion in real estate wealth; as of the fourth quarter of 2023, that's more than doubled.

    After an adulthood plagued by economic woes, the pandemic brought on a student-loan payment pause, rising salaries, spiking real estate and stock holdings, and government stimulus. It all helped change the fortunes of some millennials. While all of that is not enough to lift up a whole generation struggling with high living costs, a lucky few managed to capture the golden egg.

    Doubling wealth in just a few years

    While many millennials are approaching an age that's generally associated with peak earning and homeownership years, they were lagging behind pre-pandemic: As of early 2020, millennials owned 4% of the country's real estate value; at that same age, baby boomers owned 32%.

    Now, however, things are looking up. Over half of millennials now own their homes — up from 43% in 2019 — and, as of 2022, millennials' average pre-tax household income was $100,315, up from $79,514 in 2019.

    Khary, an elder millennial parent of two who works in technical advising, weathered his generation's classic economic double punch: The Navy veteran said he got laid off in 2008 and, going into the pandemic, had about $40,000 in combined student loan debt between him and his spouse.

    "It felt like I lost about four or five years of progress in trying to build up my savings and plan ahead for the future," he said. Khary and other millennials BI spoke to asked to go by first name only over privacy concerns.

    When the pandemic hit, Khary suddenly got some relief. Between the student loan pause, stimulus checks, a pay raise, and a robust stock market, he doubled his investment savings and was able to max out his retirement accounts, according to documentation viewed by BI. He's still paying off student loans but said his payments are much easier to make now.

    And he's within sight of something coveted by Americans of all generations: a comfortable retirement. He said his early-career layoff lost him a few years of building up his savings and planning ahead.

    "The pandemic really just helped to bridge that gap and helped me get back what I had lost," he said.

    Many in his generation can relate. Average millennial wealth doubled between 2019 and 2023, according to an analysis from the Center for American Progress. Similarly, the real median net worth for Americans under the age of 35 grew by 143% from 2019 to 2022.

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    The most striking thing about millennials' sudden surge in wealth: It dwarfs the progress of previous generations that experienced a recession during their young adult years.

    For example, Gen Xers' real wealth grew by only 4% in the four years following 2007's Great Recession. Baby boomers' real wealth grew by 46% in the four years after the 1990 recession. Millennials outpaced them all and then some.

    One game changer for millennials was the student-loan payment pause and the subsequent relief programs President Joe Biden has been rolling out. Millennials holding debt had, on average, $40,614 as of 2023. The Biden administration has been chipping away at some of America's student debt load, forgiving nearly $160 billion so far through account adjustments, fraud restitution, and clearing a backlog of applications to major debt forgiveness programs like one for people who work in public service.

    Amanda, a millennial parent in Texas who works in tech, never made any payments on her loans at all. Since she didn't go straight into college after graduating from high school, she graduated from college during the pandemic pause.

    The break alleviated some concerns over her financial prospects after graduation. She said she felt her degree was completely useless. Her school also didn't offer any of the job assistance it had promised. But, it all ended up working out for Amanda; just two weeks after she and her husband bought a house together in 2023, she found out her $80,000 loan balance was forgiven. In total, Amanda and her family have more than doubled their income since the start of the pandemic; she's making just around $100,000 now.

    "I came from very poor circumstances and I was determined that my kid would not live the same way I did," she said.

    Some anxiety — but more stability

    The pandemic didn't turn around every millennial's financial position. The rise in wealth has added fuel to the generation's class divide because it left some behind — after all, many millennials still live paycheck to paycheck.

    "A lot of millennials are doing worse than their parents," Rob Gruijters, a university lecturer at the University of Cambridge and the coauthor of a recent paper on the growing millennial wealth gap, told BI.

    "The narrative is increasing inequality, and that has losers and winners," he said. "So there's people who are on the top side of the distribution, they benefit from the increase in inequality, and then there's quite a substantial number of people who are losing in that situation."

    One way the top end is getting richer while lower-income millennials still struggle is through stock market investments. Stock values have skyrocketed over the last few years, with the S&P 500 soaring after the initial pandemic shock and still hitting record highs; however, the top 10% of Americans own around 93% of stocks.

    Still, lower-income Americans were the ones most likely to have benefited from the post-pandemic wage gains pushed by labor shortages in some industries. Research has found that wage growth at the bottom of the income distribution helped counteract the effects of decades of wage inequality and even pared down the college wage premium.

    Still, even some millennials who have seen their lots improve fret about the future. They're hyperaware of just how quickly things can take a turn.

    "I know that I'm doing a lot better than other people my age, but there's still a lot of anxiety that if there's another pandemic, if anything crazy happens, if we lose our jobs, how do we pay the bills?" Amanda said.

    For Caitlin de Oliveira, 34, the pandemic boost hasn't meant anything as radical as doubling her household's income or buying a new home. Instead, stimulus measures — including monthly child tax credit checks in 2021 — meant that her family was able to gain a financial foothold.

    Caitlin de Oliveira and her family
    Caitlin de Oliveira and her family.

    Between upping their savings and gains from a robust stock market, their 401(k) has grown to a little under $85,000 — up from around $20,000 in 2019. That's meant she's been able to feel confident that they are on their way to being able to retire in a good spot.

    "Just knowing that is so comforting," she said. She said that she doesn't think millennials are as "dumb" financially as people say — "a lot of us are really trying — it's just been hard."

    In the past, Khary said, millennials had dealt with crises and just complained. But not this time.

    "As millennials, I think we felt ready and it proved that we had been through quite a bit and we kind of learned from it," he said. "It kind of built up a sense of confidence in us that we can actually handle sort of what's coming down the road if there's any more crises."

    Are you a millennial whose finances have improved substantially over the last few years? Contact this reporter at jkaplan@businessinsider.com.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Google earnings: parent company Alphabet’s financial history and revenue

    Google CEO Sundar Pichai sits on gray armchair and gestures with both hands while giving a speech.
    • Alphabet's earnings blew past expectations in Q1 of 2024 and sent stocks soaring.
    • Google Search, YouTube, Google Cloud, and AI technology like Gemini have performed strongly.
    • The Q1 earnings came after a tumultuous 2023 that saw large-scale layoffs.

    Alphabet, Google's parent company, releases its earnings data every quarter.

    Sundar Pichai, who is the CEO of Google and Alphabet, joins the earnings calls to deliver updates and answer questions.

    Here's a breakdown of Alphabet's most recent earnings and financial history.

    Alphabet Q1 earnings 2024

    Alphabet's earnings report in April of 2024 far outstripped analysts' projections, sending stocks skyrocketing.

    The company reported a 15% revenue bump year over year, revenues of $80.5 billion, and also issued its first-ever $0.20 per share dividend.

    On the earnings call, Pichai touted "strong" performances from Google Search, YouTube, and Google Cloud. He also spoke glowingly of the company's inroads in artificial intelligence, and declared Alphabet to be in its "Gemini era," a reference to Google's Gemini AI chatbot.

    Google has been gradually incorporating AI into its core products, such as YouTube and Workspace, the suite of productivity programs like Gmail, Google Calendar, and Google Drive.

    "Our leadership in AI research and infrastructure, and our global product footprint, position us well for the next wave of AI innovation," Pichai said.

    Alphabet Q4 earnings 2023

    Alphabet beat expectations in its fourth quarter of 2023, though Google's advertising sales fell slightly below analyst projections, causing shares to dip. 

    Alphabet's revenue swelled to $86.3 billion, up 13%, and the company reported a net income of $20.28 billion with $1.64 per diluted share.

    In the earnings call, Pichai noted that Google had just launched its new AI model Gemini, and remarked that "the best is yet to come."

    Alphabet Q3 earnings 2023

    Alphabet's third-quarter earnings surpassed analysts' estimates, beating revenue and profit projections. But Google's stock fell 10% after its Cloud business fell short of Wall Street's expectations.

    Google Cloud's revenue was up 22% at $8.4 billion, but down from 28% growth in the previous quarter.

    On the earnings call, Pichai noted that the company was expanding and deploying new AI services, and said the company was "excited and confident" for its future prospects.

    Alphabet earnings history

    Alphabet — made up of Google and a collection of other companies known as Other Bets — had a tumultuous 2023, unveiling its most ambitious artificial intelligence technology and boasting an annual revenue of $307.39 billion, but also axing approximately 6% of the company.

    Like many tech companies in the post-pandemic era, Alphabet has sought to cut costs and implement layoffs. Alphabet laid off some 12,000 employees in 2023, and by the end of the fourth quarter, the company reported having about 182,500 employees in total. 

    Executives have also warned that layoffs aren't over — Pichai has anticipated more job cuts throughout 2024. Pichai explained that Google's layoffs have been intentionally slow because the company is "taking the time to do it correctly and well."

    Still, Alphabet's market cap hit $2 trillion in spring 2024, a new milestone that made Google the world's fourth-most valuable public company.

    The majority of Alphabet's revenue has come from Google, ever since the parent company was first formed in 2015. Other Bets — which includes businesses like Waymo, Verily, equity investment fund Capital G, and research and development unit Google X — generates most of its revenue from healthcare-related services but also reports large operating losses. 

    In Q1 of 2024, Other Bets posted revenues of $495 million but reported an operating loss of $1 billion.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • The US military isn’t ready for the coming drone war

    Photo collage of Drones, and American soldiers.

    A Russian infantry vehicle darts across a war-torn field, trying to outrun a small Ukrainian drone. But there's no escaping this peculiar weapon: a high-speed, highly maneuverable flying IED.

    The drone strikes the armor, setting off an explosion. Soldiers inside rush to ditch their wounded vehicle, knowing well what's coming next. A second drone swoops in and devastates it with an even larger blast, a killing blow.

    This scene from a drone attack in April, footage of which was shared by the Ukrainian defense ministry, is one of many that have shown the world that the long-awaited unmanned future of war has arrived, and it's terrifying.

    In Ukraine, these often simple machines are not only watching soldiers at all times but also killing them. Explosive-laden drones are destroying vehicles on the run, flying into the open hatches of tanks, hunting down troops in trenches, and dropping bombs on unsuspecting enemies.

    Troops on the ground are scrambling, trying to meet this emerging threat with whatever is available. They're welding increasingly elaborate cages on tanks and armored vehicles, turning to electronic-warfare systems such as frequency jammers with mixed results, and even attempting to get their hands on pump-action shotguns to kill the machines at close range.

    A Ukrainian drone strikes a Russian infantry fighting vehicle in April.
    A Ukrainian drone strikes a Russian infantry fighting vehicle in April.

    But drones are still dominating the battlefield, prowling around the front lines and taking out troops and equipment.

    The evolution of drone warfare, thrust into the global spotlight by the war in Ukraine, has compelled the US military to take a hard look at its capabilities to counter drones.

    In Ukraine, these systems have derailed battlefield maneuvers, forcing both sides into deadly attritional, positional battles — a kind of fighting ill-suited to Western armies. Troops are hiding in trenches and moving at night just to avoid the drone threat, but even then, there are unmanned aircraft with thermal sights and ominous nicknames from Slavic folklore that hunt in the dark.

    The Department of Defense is working on initiatives to face the drone threat, but the US military doesn't yet appear ready to confront this ever-evolving challenge, especially on the scale seen in Ukraine.

    Just this year, three American troops were killed in Jordan by a single exploding drone. According to some estimates, thousands of these unmanned systems are buzzing over battlefields in Ukraine.

    Servicemen of the "Achilles" Battalion from Ukraine's 92nd assault brigade check a Vampire hexacopter drone after mission flight near Chasiv Yar, in the Donetsk region, on May 1, 2024.
    Servicemen of the "Achilles" Battalion from Ukraine's 92nd assault brigade check a Vampire hexacopter drone after mission flight near Chasiv Yar, in the Donetsk region, on May 1, 2024.

    The US military's next major armed conflict could easily involve an enemy armed with hundreds of thousands of drones, potentially in autonomous swarms as machine learning and artificial intelligence take further hold in modern military systems.

    The US certainly has the capacity to build suitable defenses against drones, Mick Ryan, a retired Australian Army major general and strategist, told Business Insider. But he doesn't "know that anyone who hasn't fought in Ukraine is fully ready," he added.

    "You can't understand that environment unless you've actually fought in it," he said. The US just hasn't had that kind of experience, leaving it with a lot to learn.

    Drones bolster weaker armies with low-cost airpower

    The US military has long used large, sophisticated drones — such as the Predator, the Reaper, and the Global Hawk — to carry out strikes and surveil adversaries during combat. It wasn't until about a decade ago that the US began to face crude attack drones in battle.

    In the mid-2010s, the Islamic State began weaponizing small, cheap, and commercially available drones by attaching explosives to them or modifying them to drop munitions on enemy targets. That threat has become more pervasive, and the US now routinely sees one-way attack drones in the Middle East, particularly in attacks by Iranian proxies.

    A US military MQ-9 Reaper drone waits for take-off at Kandahar Air Base in Afghanistan on March 9, 2018.
    A US military MQ-9 Reaper drone waits for take-off at Kandahar Air Base in Afghanistan on March 9, 2018.

    Drones have been part of other conflicts as well. For instance, they played a prominent role during the weekslong war between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2020.

    But drone warfare soared to a new level in the Ukraine war. Both sides are using unmanned systems of varying size and lethality to perform all sorts of tasks and missions — and just generally wreak havoc on the battlefield — both on land and on sea. They can be difficult to adequately defend against, making them effective in attacking vehicles, fortifications, and personnel.

    Ukraine and Russia publish videos from their drones day in and day out. They flood social media, giving the world an uninterrupted window into how deadly this conflict is. It has become common to see, often from first-person view, a small quadcopter drone carrying plastic explosives or an RPG warhead slam into an enemy tank and detonate, or hover above unsuspecting troops and drop grenades.

    This footage has reinforced a harsh, new reality: It's nearly impossible to hide or conduct surprise attacks, as soldiers are always being watched in the field.

    Samuel Bendett, an unmanned-systems researcher, previously described the emerging drone threat to BI, saying that "anything that moves, anyone that moves, can be observed, tracked, and potentially slammed with an FPV drone" in Ukraine.

    In this photo taken from a drone video released by Defense Ministry of Azerbaijan on Sept. 20, 2023, men walk at an area which Azerbaijan says hosts Armenian forces' positions in the breakaway territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.
    In this photo taken from a drone video released by Defense Ministry of Azerbaijan on Sept. 20, 2023, men walk at an area which Azerbaijan says hosts Armenian forces' positions in the breakaway territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    With attack and recon drones ever-present over the battlefield, "it's more difficult now to mass forces to conduct an assault on the ground because it's just hard to not be detected," Paul Scharre, who helped establish policies on autonomous systems at the Pentagon, told BI, adding that drones "have given both sides an element of low-cost airpower, particularly right at the front lines."

    In Ukraine, he said, "that's been incredibly effective and valuable in the conflict."

    How the US is adapting to an evolving enemy

    The surging use of small drones over the past decade has pushed the US military — which went decades without really having to worry about attacks from the air — to attempt to adapt.

    The US Army established the Joint Counter-small Unmanned Aircraft Systems Office in early 2020 to coordinate the Pentagon's response, which included developing anti-drone technologies and training soldiers to engage them in battle.

    Since then, the office has been working closely with the defense industry and has held events to demonstrate various systems that could counter small airborne drones, also referred to as unmanned aerial systems. Solutions include missiles and high-powered microwaves.

    A Ukrainian soldier of the 71st Jaeger Brigade prepares FPV drones at the frontline near Avdiivka in the Donetsk region on March 22, 2024.
    A Ukrainian soldier of the 71st Jaeger Brigade prepares FPV drones at the frontline near Avdiivka in the Donetsk region on March 22, 2024.

    There are several counter-drone options, some better than others. Powerful electronic-warfare systems, for instance, are an area defense capability that can render many drones useless by flooding their control frequencies with electronic noise or confusing their satellite-based navigation.

    American armed forces have also explored directed energy, testing laser weapons against drones from ships and ground-combat vehicles.

    The US military has also, at least once, engaged a small quadcopter drone with a Patriot surface-to-air missile, but that's overkill — something the Army has acknowledged. Counter-drone solutions have to be cost-effective, rather than a trade of a $3 million interceptor missile for a drone worth a few hundred bucks.

    At closer range, drones could be targeted by radar-guided antiaircraft guns, such as the Flakpanzer Gepard used by Ukraine, or man-portable guided missiles, including the Stinger. But those may be less suited for engaging the small, fast, and highly maneuverable first-person-view drones. Last-ditch defenses may include handheld drone stun guns or even shotguns.

    US military leaders have repeatedly stressed there's no silver bullet to defeat small drones in battle. Col. Mike Parent, the Joint Counter-small Unmanned Aircraft Systems Office's acquisition-and-resources division chief, said that a layered "system of systems approach" was necessary to provide the best defense possible against uncertain threats.

    A counter-small unmanned aerial system (C-sUAS) demonstration is held at the US Army's Yuma Proving Ground in 2021.
    A counter-small unmanned aerial system (C-sUAS) demonstration is held at the US Army's Yuma Proving Ground in 2021.

    Protecting a military base can be a bit easier because it's equipped with fixed defenses, he told BI.

    "You see that a lot in the Middle East," he added. "When you're not as static, however, and soldiers are out on the battlefield moving around, you definitely need that full system-of-systems approach because you really don't know what the adversary will throw against you."

    The US has learned a lot from observing drone activity in the Middle East and Ukraine. One of the lessons is that hostile forces are "evolving very quickly," Parent said. Technology, he said, is getting faster and more autonomous, and if an enemy "can identify you either through passive or active means, you're very easy to target."

    "Every soldier is going to have to have some kind of ability or capability to conduct counter-small UAS activities," he added, but the US military isn't there yet.

    Last fall, the Army launched another drone initiative: the Joint C-sUAS University. In Oklahoma's Fort Sill, the JCU consolidates counter-drone training for service members across all branches of the military.

    US Marine Corps Sgt. Paul Butcher, an explosive ordnance disposal technician with Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force-Crisis Response-Central Command, flies a DJI Mavic Pro Drone while forward deployed in the Middle East on May 25, 2017.
    US Marine Corps Sgt. Paul Butcher, an explosive ordnance disposal technician with Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force-Crisis Response-Central Command, flies a DJI Mavic Pro Drone while forward deployed in the Middle East on May 25, 2017.

    Students there spend several weeks learning how to identify, engage, and defeat small drones. The training involves working with early-warning radars to detect the aircraft and using handheld devices, including electronic-warfare and smart-shooting systems, to neutralize the unmanned aircraft.

    Trainees practice by firing at balloons with rifles that have a drone-tracking scope, but there's a concern that these efforts and US Army field exercises do not sufficiently reflect the scale of the threat, which may be a large mass of flying bombs.

    The Army has also incorporated the drone threat into certain training exercises. Soldiers at the National Training Center in California, for example, have practiced defending against drone swarms multiple times in a single day.

    The US, meanwhile, continues to invest in new and existing technologies to defeat this growing challenge.

    Doug Bush, the assistant secretary of the Army for acquisition, logistics, and technology, told reporters in early May that in the proposed budget for the upcoming fiscal year, the service planned to allocate $447 million for spending on counter-UAS programs of record, which are systems that are available or in the works.

    A US service member points a handheld device at a drone at the JCU in October, 2023.
    A US service member points a handheld device at a drone at the JCU in October, 2023.

    Lt. Col. Moseph Sauda, the director of the JCU, doesn't believe the US is lagging behind with its counter-drone training. "The issue is you could be so successful that you fail to continue to develop," he told BI during a visit to Fort Sill earlier this year, emphasizing the importance of remaining agile and flexible.

    "If you look at the future of warfare, if we had to fight and win today in this current environment with what's going on in flying, we would still win," Sauda said. "But the enemy is still going to evolve."

    What comes next, such as autonomous swarms or some other threat, likely at a scale not previously seen, could be vastly more daunting.

    The US isn't yet ready to face drones in combat

    America's next war may not look exactly like Ukraine and instead be a unique horror. Conflict with China, which some officials have warned is possible, would likely unfold predominantly across a vast maritime domain. But unmanned systems, including small drones, could be a factor, nonetheless.

    The US military recognizes this and is now looking at building out its own drone force. Last year, the Department of Defense unveiled the Replicator initiative, a monthslong plan to field thousands of autonomous systems to counter China.

    A Ukrainian drone pilot reaches for a reconnaissance drone in the Luhansk Region, Ukraine, Saturday, Aug. 19, 2023.
    A Ukrainian drone pilot reaches for a reconnaissance drone in the Luhansk Region, Ukraine, Saturday, Aug. 19, 2023.

    The US military could also face this kind of threat in a war with Russia in Europe, a possibility should Russia emerge victorious in Ukraine, or in a conflict with Iran, which regularly engages in malign activity, such as producing one-way attack drones for Russia and arming proxy forces throughout the Middle East.

    But the US military is not as ready for a large-scale drone conflict "as many people would like it to be," Scharre, now the executive vice president and director of studies at the Center for a New American Security think tank, said.

    The drone threat draws certain parallels to fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, where hidden bombs posed a tremendous threat. Even though Washington had options to counter the problem, insurgents often adapted and changed their tactics.

    Improvised explosive devices are well known threats that, over the years, have killed and maimed countless US service members. The danger is that exploding drones, the flying equivalent, are now similarly cheap and accessible, even for militant groups.

    "The US military has often struggled to counter these sort of cheap tools of harassment that are widely available to state and nonstate groups alike," Scharre said. "That might not stop the US military's ability to go into an area, but it can slow them down and cause casualties."

    US soldiers are seen during an IED training course at the US Base at Bagram north of Kabul, Afghanistan on April 29, 2009.
    US soldiers are seen during an IED training course at the US Base at Bagram north of Kabul, Afghanistan on April 29, 2009.

    Scharre added: "These technologies kind of create this environment that I think is much more transparent and lethal, and is one that the US military hasn't really fully adapted to yet."

    Preparing for the drone fight is not just important — but also critical, Justin Bronk and Jack Watling, war experts and senior fellows at London's Royal United Services Institute think tank, wrote last month in an analysis.

    Armies that are unprepared to face this threat on the battlefield risk handing an enemy force highly valuable battlefield awareness and making themselves vulnerable to devastating precision strikes, they said.

    The US appears to be in the early stages of absorbing lessons from overseas and training its soldiers on how to prepare. But experts say the military still needs to significantly boost its procurement of counter-drone defenses.

    Countering the drone threat means "scaling up things like electronic warfare in a way that we just haven't done before, not even in the counter-IED battle in Iraq and Afghanistan," Ryan, the retired Australian major general, said, adding: "We've kind of done it, but we need to do it at a whole new scale."

    The US will also have to incorporate key systems into the training regimens of every unit on the battlefield, he said. And the US military will need far more drone-defense units, which could mean paring back on tanks, artillery, infantry, or logistics engineers.

    "There will be some trade-offs that are required, and when you're trading off between those kinds of military occupational specialties, it's always difficult," Ryan said. "We don't have unlimited personnel resources." What will have to go remains to be seen.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Clarence Thomas, who has faced scrutiny over his ethics, addresses ‘lies’

    side-by-side of Ginni Thomas and Clarence Thomas
    Ginni Thomas (left) in 2017 and Clarence Thomas (right) in 2009.

    • Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas spoke at a judicial conference in Alabama on Friday.
    • Thomas told US District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle he and his wife have endured "lies."
    • His wife, Ginni Thomas, faced scrutiny for her belief that the 2020 election was stolen.

    Clarence Thomas made it clear on Friday that he's not been happy with some of the conversations about him over the past few years.

    During the 11th Circuit Judicial Conference in Point Clear, Alabama, Thomas expressed dismay at critics of him and his wife, though the Supreme Court Justice kept vague about what criticisms he was referring to, the Associated Press reported.

    Per the AP, Thomas was asked about "working in a world that seems meanspirited" by US District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle — a Donald Trump appointee who moderated the conversation.

    "I think there's challenges to that," Thomas said, per the AP. "We're in a world and we — certainly my wife and I the last two or three years it's been — just the nastiness and the lies, it's just incredible."

    Thomas has been criticized for failing to disclose luxury trips and donations from his billionaire friend Harlan Crow. The subsequent uproar resulted in Thomas updating financial disclosures to indicate his ties to the conservative donor.

    In light of the controversy, the Supreme Court adopted a code of conduct that advises justices to recuse themselves from cases where they may have a conflict of interest— though it was criticized as toothless for its lack of an enforcement mechanism.

    His wife, Ginni Thomas' previous assertions that the 2020 election was stolen and her presence at the rally before the January 6 Capitol riot are also a constant source of criticism for the Supreme Court justice.

    Thomas has heard some cases regarding the capitol riot regardless, including Trump's presidential immunity case.

    In his Friday remarks, Thomas also described Washington as a place where "reckless" people will "bomb your reputation or your good name or your honor" and said that he preferred "RVing" to being in the US capital, per the AP.

    Notably, Thomas' RV, which he uses to travel around the country, became controversial when The New York Times reported that he purchased the luxury vehicle with a loan from a former UnitedHealthcare executive and did not disclose it. The Senate Finance Committee later revealed that Thomas never paid the loan back.

    "I think what you are going to find and especially in Washington, people pride themselves on being awful. It is a hideous place as far as I'm concerned," Thomas told his Friday audience, per the AP.

    Representatives for Thomas and the Supreme Court did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Hybrid sales are booming — here’s why drivers are buying them over EVs

    Toyota Camry
    Toyota has reaped the benefits of its hybrid-friendly lineup.

    • Hybrid sales are booming in the US. 
    • Once dismissed as a "phase," many drivers are now choosing them over EVs.
    • One Toyota exec told BI there are "no compromises" to buying a hybrid anymore. 

    Hybrids are having a moment.

    Sales of partially battery-powered vehicles, once ridiculed as a "phase" by the likes of Elon Musk, are increasing even as EVs stutter, with hybrid sales growing by 50% in the first two months of the year, while EV sales grew 13% in that time, according to research site Edmunds.

    The booming popularity of hybrids has benefited companies like Toyota who have hedged their bets on EVs and continued to invest in their hybrid lineups.

    Other auto companies are following Toyota's lead, with General Motors pledging to sell hybrids again in North America and Ford delaying its latest electric SUV to focus on its own hybrid lineup.

    Even Tesla, which famously doesn't sell hybrids and is unlikely to do so anytime soon, is taking notice. In his latest earnings report, the company blamed demand for hybrid vehicles for depressing global EV sales.

    "The EV adoption rate globally is under pressure, and a lot of other auto manufacturers are pulling back on EVs and pursuing plug-in hybrids instead," said CEO Elon Musk in an earnings call.

    "We believe this is not the right strategy, and electric vehicles will ultimately dominate the market," he added.

    Business Insider spoke to hybrid owners, experts and industry execs to discover why hybrids are gaining popularity.

    Lack of affordable EVs

    Nick O'Brien, who teaches auto tech at Jefferson Community College in Kentucky, took delivery of a hybrid 2024 Ford Maverick in February, and told Business Insider he was more than happy with his purchase.

    He said the hybrid perfectly balanced excellent fuel economy with a reduced environmental impact.

    "I love it — it's very quiet, very smooth, and more than double the fuel economy of my previous vehicle," he said.

    O'Brien told BI that he believes EVs are the future, but the lack of affordable options meant that he decided to buy a hybrid instead for his next vehicle.

    "The biggest barrier for me personally is the cost of a new EV," he said. "I think there just aren't many EV options yet that regular people (as opposed to rich people) can afford."

    The lack of affordable EVs has been cited as one of the biggest reasons why drivers are reluctant to go electric.

    Hybrids, which tend to be more affordable than pure EVs, appear to be reaping the benefits.

    Buyers paid $42,500 for hybrids in November 2023 on average compared with $60,500 for electric vehicles and $47,500 for gas cars, according to data from Edmunds reported by the New York Times.

    "The additional costs associated with fully electric vehicles is definitely higher than hybrids," Mark Singer, a senior transportation analyst at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, told BI.

    "A lot of hybrid electric vehicles now are not far off from their internal combustion engine alternatives. So I think that the lower incremental costs associated with hybrids at this point are driving some interest towards hybrid versus fully electric vehicles," he added.

    Soaring gas prices

    Singer said that gas prices, which have remained high since the pandemic in the US, could also be having an impact on consumers' decision to opt for more fuel-efficient vehicles versus gas versions.

    "What we've seen historically is that when gas prices rise, hybrid electric vehicle price or acquisitions rise as well," he told BI.

    "Since we came out of the pandemic period, gas prices have seen an increase and I think that's probably a significant reason why hybrid electric vehicles have grown in popularity over the last couple of years," he added.

    Charging hurdles

    One of the big winners of the latest hybrid craze is Toyota, which has taken a more skeptical approach to EVs than many of its rivals.

    The Japanese carmaker beat out Tesla in a recent survey charting most the brands most considered by EV shoppers, despite releasing only one battery electric car in the US.

    Toyota vice president of sales, Jeff Buchanan, told Business Insider that customers are now looking for a choice between hybrids, EVs, and combustion engines, and that Toyota was reaping the benefits of having options in "virtually every segment."

    "With hybrids now that there's no compromises anymore — they're super efficient, they're powerful, the styling is great," he said.

    Toyota is expecting around 40% of its total US sales to be in hybrids this year, Buchanan said, with sales of partially and fully electrified vehicles up 70% in the first four months of the year.

    He described the relative affordability of hybrids as a "huge" factor swaying consumers towards hybrids, especially as interest rates have risen over the past few years — but added that lingering concerns over charging were also putting customers off from going fully electric.

    "There's no doubt that for some people a concern," Buchanan said.

    "There's just not enough public charging out there to make all customers comfortable with it, and I do think that probably is driving more customers back towards hybrids and plug-in hybrids," he added.

    Singer agreed, pointing to affordability and charging as the biggest factors swaying consumers from taking the plunge and buying a pure EV.

    "Those are the two issues that are proving the biggest barriers to adoption," he said.

    With neither barrier an issue for hybrids, it seems that the hybrid boom is unlikely to die down anytime soon.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Paul Pelosi attacker could go away for 40 years — on enhanced charges of terrorism

    David DePape lunging toward Paul Pelosi before he hits him with a hammer.
    Body camera footage taken at the scene of the attack shows David DePape shortly before he lunged at Paul Pelosi with a hammer.

    • David DePape is facing a 40-year sentence for his attack on Rep. Nancy Pelosi's husband, Paul.
    • Prosecutors have included a terrorism enhancement in their sentencing request.
    • DePape was found guilty in November of assaulting Paul Pelosi and attempting to kidnap Nancy Pelosi.

    David DePape is facing a possible 40-year sentence for his 2022 attack on Paul Pelosi, husband of Rep. Nancy Pelosi.

    In a sentencing memo filed Friday and reviewed by Business Insider, prosecutors requested a terrorism enhancement be added to DePape's sentence.

    DePape still faces additional charges related to the attack, including attempted murder, that carry a potential sentence of 13 years to life in prison. He has pleaded not guilty.

    Paul Pelosi suffered two skull fractures that required surgery to fix after DePape struck him in the head with a hammer in October 2022.

    The attack occurred after DePape broke into Pelosi's San Francisco home, seeking to kidnap then-Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and break her kneecaps to teach her that her "lies and corruption had a price," according to the memo.

    DePape was found guilty of the attack in November after about eight hours of jury deliberation. His sentencing is set for May 17.

    "The nature and circumstances of the offense warrant statutory maximums on each count," prosecutors argued in the sentencing memo. "The core of both crimes — the attempted kidnapping of a public official and the assault on the family member of a public official — is violence aimed at punishing the former Speaker of the House of Representatives. Both crimes are an assault on our democracy and fundamental values."

    While it is unclear exactly how often a terrorism enhancement is added to criminal cases, research published by the International Centre for Counter-Terrorism indicates prosecutors are about four times more likely to pursue the enhancement in international cases than they are in cases involving domestic extremists. Of the more than 1,200 people who have been charged in connection with the January 6 attack on the Capitol, only a handful had a terrorism enhancement applied to their case, the research notes.

    Lawyers for DePape and the prosecutors in this case did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Business Insider. A spokesperson for Rep. Pelosi also did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

    Read the original article on Business Insider