For the director of music. Of David. The fool says in his heart, “There is no God.” They are corrupt, their deeds are vile; there is no one who does good.

Psalm 14:1

Bottega Veneta Debuts the Sculptural Tide Sneaker


Name: Bottega Veneta TideColorway: “Black”, “Alabaster”SKU: 867865V6IJ11001, 867864V6IJ19197MSRP: $1,100 USDRelease Date: Available NowWhere to Buy: Bottega VenetaBottega Veneta has debuted the Tide Sneaker, a brand-new silhouette that embodies the brand’s sculptural approach to footwear. Blending bold proportions with a sleek build, the upper is crafted from smooth calfskin leather, with clean quarter panels and a streamlined tongue that emphasizes the shoe’s architectural silhouette.Coming in two tonal colorways - "Black" and "Alabaster" white - each is designed to accentuate the shoe’s sculptural volume. Both colorways feature a matte yet subtly polished surface, reinforcing the balance between luxury and utility. Branding is kept minimal, with discreet embossed logos and tonal finishes that highlight the craftsmanship rather than overt marks. The laces integrate seamlessly into the design, while the exaggerated sole - engineered with a wave-like tread - provides both visual impact and functional grip.

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In a town close to the farmworker movement, some struggle to process Chavez allegations


March 31 is Cesar Chavez's birthday, and a longtime holiday. In the wake of sexual assault allegations against him, residents in the farming town of Delano are conflicted about how to remember him.

U.S. average gas price hits $4 a gallon


U.S. average gas prices have hit $4 per gallon nationwide, per AAA.

Why it matters: It's a 35% increase at the pump since the war in Iran began last month, and there's little hope that costs will ease as the Strait of Hormuz remains closed to most ships, straining supplies worldwide.


  • Approximately 20% of the world's oil supply travels through the Strait.

Driving the news: Oil prices have surged to over $100 a barrel or more since the war began, raising the prices that consumers pay when they fill up.

  • A month ago, regular gas averaged $2.98. A year ago, it was $3.17.

Zoom in: The national average now rests at $4.018 for regular gas, $4.541 for mid-grade, $4.904 for premium, and $5.454 for diesel.

Flashback: Gas prices last averaged $4 per gallon in 2022 after Russia invaded Ukraine.

  • The U.S. is still far off its highest average gas price of $5.03 a gallon in June 2022.

By the numbers: 48% of Americans blame President Trump and his administration for the gas price surge, per a Morning Consult poll earlier this month.

  • 16% blamed oil and gas companies, 13% blamed global market forces, and 11% blamed former President Biden.
  • 87% of those polled by Reuters/Ipsos say they expect gas prices to increase as the war drags on, and 55% said that rising pump costs have "somewhat" impacted their overall household budget.

Go deeper: Trump faces limited gas-price options on Iran


Drivers Count Their Pennies As Gas Hits $4 a Gallon


Since the Iran conflict began on Feb. 28, gas prices across the United States have increased about 35 percent. They are now above $4 a gallon, and drivers are wincing.

On What Was Once Chavez Day, Some Try to Highlight a Movement, Not a Man


The reconsideration of the legacy of Cesar Chavez after he was accused of abusing women and girls has led some to question the lionization of icons, when reality is so often a letdown.

Trump pursues era of unshackled warfare


President Trump's threat to bomb Iran's water supply would constitute his most dramatic breach of the laws and norms designed to protect civilians in wartime.

Why it matters: The Iran war is the biggest test of what Trump's contempt for "politically correct" war-fighting looks like in practice.


  • His administration has already signed off on Israeli assassinations of political leaders, threatened "no quarter" for enemy combatants, and initially rejected responsibility for a mass casualty strike on an elementary school.
  • But the U.S. has been almost exclusively targeting Iran's military and nuclear program up to now.
  • The threat to hit civilian infrastructure shows how intent Trump is on finding ways to increase the pressure on Tehran, even if that means flouting the generally accepted principles of warfare.

Flashback: Trump criticized the Geneva Conventions during his 2016 campaign, lamenting that soldiers were "afraid to fight." He vowed to bring back waterboarding and "a hell of a lot worse."

  • Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, then a Fox News host, spent Trump's first term lobbying privately and on air to secure pardons for soldiers convicted of war crimes.
  • Trump granted the pardons in 2019, citing Hegseth in his decision. In his 2024 book, Hegseth wrote that troops "should not fight by rules written by dignified men in mahogany rooms eighty years ago."

Driving the news: With the Iran war now entering its second month, Trump threatened Monday to "completely [obliterate]" Iran's power plants, oil wells and "possibly all desalinization plants" if a deal isn't reached soon.

  • Like other countries in the severely water-stressed region, Iran relies heavily on desalinated water.

What they're saying: "[Iran's] best move is to make a deal, or else the United States has capabilities beyond their wildest imagination," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said when asked about Trump's desalination threat.

  • "Of course this administration and United States armed forces will always act in the confines of the law, but with respect to achieving the full objectives of Operation Epic Fury, the president is going to move forward unabated," she added.
  • A senior U.S. official told Axios the idea was to use strikes to pressure Iran to negotiate. "The Iranians want this to stop, too. Don't be mistaken. Their economy is broken. A couple of sorties, they will have no power. A couple of Israeli sorties, they will have no water. There is a lot to lose if there's no accommodation. Everyone will have to give, but we can get there."
  • The official also cautioned that Trump has made no decision and "he wants to make sure that things are proportionate in this war. It's why he got mad when Bibi [Netanyahu] attacked the desalination plant in Iran a few weeks ago."
  • The Pentagon declined to comment for this story. The White House referred Axios to comments from Secretary of State Marco Rubio saying the operation was proceeding as planned and Trump has a "number of options available to him" to break Iran's hold on the Strait of Hormuz.

Zoom in: International humanitarian law explicitly prohibits attacks on objects indispensable to civilian survival, including drinking water installations. Power plants, by contrast, can be deemed lawful targets if they serve a military purpose.

  • Trump stated his intent plainly, writing that the strikes would be "in retribution for our many soldiers" that Iran has killed over the last 47 years.
  • Reprisals against civilians — also known as collective punishment — are explicitly prohibited under the Geneva Conventions.

Zoom out: Trump's desalination threat may just be rhetoric aimed at pressuring Iran into a deal. But it fits a pattern of statements and actions — many of them by Hegseth — that legal experts say contradict the laws of armed conflict.

  • At a Pentagon briefing on March 13, Hegseth declared "no quarter, no mercy for our enemies" — a phrase the Pentagon's own Law of War Manual describes as a war crime. He has not retracted it.
  • In the first months of the Trump presidency, Hegseth fired the top military lawyers for the Army, Navy and Air Force, saying he didn't want them to be "roadblocks to orders given by a commander in chief."
  • He has moved unsuccessfully to punish Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) for a video advising troops to "refuse illegal orders."
  • Hegseth also dissolved the Pentagon's civilian harm mitigation program, which had embedded roughly 200 personnel across military commands to prevent civilian casualties.

That decision drew fresh scrutiny after a U.S. airstrike on the first day of the war killed more than 165 people — most of them girls — at an elementary school in the southern Iranian city of Minab.

  • Trump initially denied U.S. responsibility, falsely suggesting Iran or some other party had obtained Tomahawk missiles.
  • A preliminary Pentagon investigation found the U.S. was responsible, according to media reports, but no official results have been released.

Between the lines: Iran is where Trump's "might makes right" doctrine is most visible. But it has been the operating assumption across every theater where the administration has used force.

  • The U.S. has killed more than 160 people in strikes on alleged drug trafficking boats in the Western Hemisphere since September 2025, offering little public evidence to justify the targeting.
  • The Trump administration also made its feelings toward international war crimes law clear last year when it sanctioned officials from the International Criminal Court for investigating U.S. and Israeli nationals.

London Gardens, From the Royal to the ‘Secret’


Fresh plantings and new designs come to a city famed for its verdant squares and lush greenery.

U.S. Senators Press Taiwan to Raise Military Spending, as China Protests


Four visiting senators urged Taiwan to break an impasse over a $40 billion budget proposal, highlighting concerns in Washington about the threat from China.

Surviving Cesar Chavez


Debra Rojas recently revealed that Cesar Chavez began sexually abusing her beginning at age 12. Now, at 66, she has come forward with her story. In her first on-camera interview, she spoke with The Times about how what happened has shaped her life.

Silence and Sand Dunes on Namibia’s Skeleton Coast


Amid the vast dunes that abut the Atlantic Ocean, a writer finds perspective.

A Cat-and-Mouse Game of Russian Internet Restrictions and Evasion


As the Kremlin spends heavily on censorship technology, Russians are scrambling to find new ways to circumvent the limits.

Got $3,000? 2 Cloud Stocks That Wall Street Analysts Raised Targets on This Month.
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Most Americans Favor Birthright Citizenship. That Wasn’t Always True.


In the 1990s, Democrats were split in their support for birthright citizenship, and even proposed legislation to end it.

Putin’s Internet Blackout: A Chaotic Drive to Cut Off Russians From the World


With new outages and blockages, President Vladimir V. Putin is taking his boldest steps yet to control Russians’ communications.

C3.ai (AI) Reveals Cost Cuts to Boost Growth Outlook
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The final batch of World Cup tickets is about to go on sale. Here are 5 things to know


FIFA is kicking off its last sales for World Cup tickets on Wednesday. From prices to why FOMO is working against you, here's what you need to know.

Oklo Inc (OKLO) Rated Buy on Nuclear Energy Growth
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SNDL Inc. (SNDL) Could More Than Triple Your Money, Here Is Why
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Rocket Lab (RKLB) Rated Buy on $190M Defense Contract
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MP Materials (MP) Stock Rated Buy After Strong EPS Surprise
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Amrize (AMRZ) Rated Buy on Strong Cement Margins
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UiPath (PATH) Price Target Cut Despite Strong ARR Growth
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How Immigration Policies Like Birthright Citizenship Shaped the Supreme Court Justices’ Histories


As the justices prepare to hear a landmark case about birthright citizenship, their family stories are a reminder that the law has shaped who can be an American.

Amentum (AMTM) Rated Buy on Strong Government Demand
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DocuSign (DOCU) Q4 Profits Beat Expectations with EPS of $1.01, Piper Sandler Rates Neutral
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Dutch Bros (BROS) Rated Neutral by Piper Sandler Despite Strong Earnings Beat
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Hilton Food Group H2 Earnings Call Highlights
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South Bow (SOBO) Gains on Keystone Pipeline Revival
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Europe Has a ‘Guns vs. Butter’ Problem. War in Iran Makes It Worse.


After decades of prioritizing domestic over military spending, the continent’s leaders are trying to pivot. That is straining national budgets and could anger voters.

4 Bond ETFs Worth Considering as Rate Uncertainty Continues
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