The social site X launched a feature over the weekend that displays users’ locations, renewing scrutiny of the provenance of many accounts, including those that post frequently about American politics. The new feature displays the country or region an account is based in, as well as when it was created...
Meta Buried ‘Causal’ Evidence of Social Media Harm, US Court Filings Allege
Meta shut down internal research into the mental health effects of Facebook after finding causal evidence that its products harmed users’ mental health, according to unredacted filings in a lawsuit by U.S. school districts against Meta and other social media platforms. In a 2020 research project code-named “Project Mercury,” Meta scientists worked with survey firm Nielsen to gauge the effect of “deactivating” Facebook, according...
Visalia Police Find Man Dead During Welfare Check
Visalia police are investigating the death of a 71-year-old man found Sunday morning on the 1600 block of East Laura Avenue. Officers responding to a welfare check at 10:47 a.m. discovered Robert Costanzo deceased, and the cause of death remains unknown. Got a Tip? The department’s Violent Crimes Unit has...
Visalia Police Investigate Early Morning Armed Robbery at Griffin Food Mart
Visalia police are investigating an early morning armed robbery after two masked suspects held up a convenience store Monday, authorities said. Officers responded around 5:08 a.m. to Griffin Food Mart on West Walnut Avenue, where they learned one suspect pointed a handgun at the cashier while demanding money, the Visalia...
Could Fresno’s Southeast Plan Cost Current Residents $100,000?
If the Fresno City Council approves its plan to further develop southeast Fresno, it could cost $100,000 dollars if and when city services arrive for the rural residents now living in the area. To turn the 9,000 acres of the Southeast Development Area into Fresno's newest segment of town, the...
Economists See Slightly Faster US Growth, Sticky Inflation in 2026
U.S. economic growth will increase slightly next year but employment gains will remain sluggish and the Federal Reserve will slow any further rate cuts, economists polled by the National Association for Business Economics said in the group's year-end forecast survey. The survey of 42 professional forecasters, conducted from November 3...
US Supreme Court Declines Bid to Revive UBS Whistleblower’s Jury Award
The U.S. Supreme Court declined on Monday to hear a bid by a former UBS bond strategist to revive a $2.6 million jury award in his lawsuit accusing the Swiss bank of unlawfully firing him for refusing to publish misleading research reports. The justices turned away whistleblower Trevor Murray's appeal...
US Banks Report 13.5% Jump in Profits: FDIC
WASHINGTON — The U.S. banking industry saw its profits jump 13.5% to $79.3 billion in the third quarter of 2025, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation reported Monday. The FDIC said the stronger profits were primarily due to growth in non-interest income expense, as well as banks booking smaller loss provision...
Greene’s Exit Deals a Blow to GOP, Putting Rifts on Display
WASHINGTON — Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s abrupt announcement Friday that she planned to resign, blindsiding the House speaker and shocking Washington, will put a dent in Republicans’ already fragile majority, leaving them with a vacant seat at least into the spring. But beyond the short-term practical impact, the sudden exit...
Supreme Court, for Now, OKs Texas Republican-Friendly Congressional Map
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Friday evening temporarily allowed Texas to use its newly redrawn, Republican-friendly congressional voting map for the 2026 midterm elections. The decision blocked, for now, a lower-court ruling that had said Texas could not use the map. Justice Samuel Alito, who is assigned to handle...








