A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger.

Proverbs 15:1

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GQ's Father’s Day Gift Guide, According to a Father


For the dad fueled by caffeine, backyard grilling, good denim, and uninterrupted TV time, here are 20 gifts worth wrapping this year.

My Converse Mega-Test: Comparing All the Chuck Taylors Side by Side


A deep dive into the Chuck Taylor's various models and subtle changes.

New forecasts lay out 2 rocky paths for global economy


The Iran war has divided the global outlook into two tracks:

  • A modest slowdown if the conflict ends soon or a severe hit, with some economies near recession, if it drags on and the disruption deepens.

Why it matters: Either path leaves the global economy worse off than before the war, with slower growth and hotter inflation. The scenarios determine the scale of the damage.


  • It's the latest reminder of how a single chokepoint can upend the world economy, the same supply-side dynamic behind most of the past half-decade's inflation shocks.
  • The AI investment boom that is helping offset that pain could leave the economy more fragile down the line, with its technology tying the world to those very chokepoints.

What they're saying: "The conflict in the Middle East has become the dominant force shaping the global economic outlook," Stefano Scarpetta, the chief economist of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, or OECD, wrote in the Paris-based group's latest economic projections.

  • "The vulnerability of our economies to one single chokepoint demonstrates the need for intensifying efforts to strengthen the resilience of supply chains," Scarpetta said.

Between the lines: The OECD's central scenario assumes energy disruptions ease as talks move toward a durable peace. The downside scenario has the conflict dragging through much of next year.

By the numbers: In the first scenario, the group projects global growth at 2.8% this year, only slightly below the 2.9% projected in March — though absent the war, the OECD says, it would have upgraded growth.

  • The downside would cut that to 2.1% in 2026 and 1.8% in 2027, hitting hardest the economies most reliant on Middle East energy — much of Asia outside China — with Persian Gulf output falling outright.
  • G20 inflation is projected to hit 4% this year before easing to 3.1% in 2027; a prolonged war would boost that by an additional 0.4 percentage point this year and 1.3 points in 2027.

The big picture: Both scenarios play out against an AI-boosted economy, with the U.S. the clearest beneficiary as it is more insulated from the energy shock.

  • The OECD sees U.S. growth near 2% this year, the strongest in the G7, on "enormous AI-related investment" and resilient spending by higher-income households, before easing to 1.8% in 2027.

Yes, but: AI is tying more of the global economy to energy markets, semiconductor supply chains and critical industrial inputs — areas repeatedly rattled by the pandemic, multiple wars and other geopolitical tensions.

  • "Should the disruptions persist well into 2027 ... investment — including in energy-intensive AI — would weaken significantly, with increasing risks of financial market repricing," Scarpetta wrote.
  • AI investment is exposed on three fronts, the OECD says: the power that runs data centers, the chipmaking fed by the Middle East and the trade routes that hardware travels.
  • "These effects could further reduce the capacity and incentive for AI investment, leading to notably weaker growth in those economies currently being boosted by AI-related investment and production," the OECD notes in the report.

The intrigue: Major central banks, including the Federal Reserve, are in "wait-and-see" mode.

  • But the OECD says that if the conflict drags on, interest rates in most economies would have to rise by as much as 0.75 percentage point to keep inflation expectations anchored, even as growth weakens.
  • With central banks boxed in, the OECD says, the burden to cushion the economy "would fall mostly on fiscal policy," just as debt, aging and defense costs leave governments little room to maneuver.

How Bazooka’s CIO is bringing AI to the gum game and navigating candy industry headwinds


Sankar Karuppasamy has deployed AI to help handle demand planning, develop formulations, and support supply chain decisions at the iconic candy maker.

Mullin Says ICE Training Going Back to ‘Regular Standards’


The immigration agency had apparently cut training requirements as a part of its enforcement push over the past year.

A guide to using the Walmart+ gas discount at the pump to save 10 cents per gallon


How to activate your Walmart+ gas discount at the pump and save 10 cents per gallon.

30 Sweaty Movies to Watch This Summer


Hot and steamy movies to make you feel better about your own sweaty summer.

Trump Posts 3 Strange Images In A Single Minute Just Before Midnight


The president had another very active evening on social media.

He’s got golden hair, weighs 1,500 pounds, and he’s a rare albino buffalo. Bangladesh is calling him ‘Donald Trump’


Fans brush its hair, blast it with fans, and line up in the heat to see it, but the zoo curator who put up the "Donald Trump" sign was fired.

Four sentenced to death for killing worshippers at Catholic church in Nigeria


A fifth man was discharged and acquitted by the court due to insufficient evidence against him.

Man shot dead by FBI after taking hostages at California bank


Two hostages were released on Tuesday, and the remaining hostages released on Wednesday were unharmed, police said.

Netflix Reality Star Was In ‘Worst Pain’ After Botched Plastic Surgery on Face


Queer Eye star Karamo Brown is opening up about his plastic surgery nightmare.  The star of Netflix’s makeover show revealed in a new interview with PEOPLE that he has gone under the knife, undergoing buccal fat removal in 2021.  It, however, backfired big time, leaving him with scar ...

Dr. Oz on why Trump appointed a real-estate heir as acting intelligence chief: ‘I think Bill’s a great guy. I know him socially’


The White House sent its most camera-ready CMS chief to the podium — and reporters asked him about things he'd never heard of. "That's out of my lane."

The IBM executive tasked with retraining 30 million workers is changing how she thinks about the AI finish line


Justina Nixon-Saintil has reached 22 million learners. With three years left on her mission, she says the real challenge is only now coming into sight.

Why Democrats Are Hopeful About Making Gains in Iowa


After voting twice for Barack Obama, Iowa swung to the right. But the state has been hit hard economically and by Trump policies while growing disenchanted with its leaders.

An artist painted a mural of life-sized whales in Dallas — then FIFA painted over it for the World Cup


Wyland says he hand-painted the sprawling mural that covered roughly 17,000 square feet. He's suing for $25 million in damages.

Jimmy Kimmel Hits Back With A Damning Reminder After Trump's Latest Late-Night Attack


The late-night host even shared a specific photo as a reminder.

MAGA Wannabe Senator Torched Over 'Humiliating' AI Pic On Social Media


A political operative's birthday message to Senate candidate Mike Rogers backfired on X.

Trump Now Says This Bizarre White House Addition Might 'Never Ever' Go Away


The president said this could become a permanent addition to the White House grounds.

‘Infuriated’ Former Judges Take on Trump


Critics say it is unseemly for retired judges to trade on the prestige of their former positions.

FBI Fatally Shoots A Man Holding Hostages In A California Office Building, Police Say


The hostages were found unharmed.

Charges dropped for Branch from pre-draft arrest


Georgia state prosecutors have dismissed a pair of misdemeanor charges against Falcons rookie wide receiver Zachariah Branch stemming from an arrest that occurred days before the NFL draft, his attorney told ESPN.

Trump-Cut Pest Agency Left Scratching Over Bedbug Infestation


The pest-fighting Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service has a pest problem of its own.

Medigap Plan G or Plan N at 65: Why the Plan Letter Choice Could Cost a Retiree $36,000 Over a 20-Year Retirement
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‘One thing after the next’: Axon and Schneider Electric supply chain chiefs talk life in permanent disruption


For the operators running America's most complex supply chains, disruption isn't a problem to solve anymore. It's a condition to survive.

Where Will Eli Lilly Stock be In 2028?
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A $245 million Bitcoin heist led police to a ‘Godfather’ who hired Sheriff’s deputies as enforcers


Adam Iza, 25, pleaded guilty to orchestrating a kidnapping tied to the theft — and admitted to paying off-duty deputies to strong-arm his enemies.

WWE Legend Spills On The ‘Heartless’ Trump Move That Led Him To Sever Ties With The Company


Mick Foley, known for personas like Cactus Jack and Mankind, said he felt “complicit” in his “silence” because of WWE’s cozying up to the president.

Here’s the Price Point Where IBM Is an Absolute Buy
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Screen Icon Richard Gere’s Warning About ‘Maniac’ Trump Takes A Dark Historical Turn


“Whoever thought America could turn like this?” asked the “Pretty Woman” movie star.

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