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Elon Musk promised a ‘major rebound’ for Tesla in 2025. Instead it fell behind its biggest rival from China | Fortune

Elon Musk promised a ‘major rebound’ for Tesla in 2025. Instead it fell behind its biggest rival from China | Fortune

Tesla lost its crown as the world’s bestselling electric vehicle maker on Friday as a customer revolt over Elon Musk’s right-wing politics, expiring U.S. tax breaks for buyers and stiff overseas competition pushed sales down for a second year in a row.

Tesla said that it delivered 1.64 million vehicles in 2025, down 9% from a year earlier.

Chinese rival BYD, which sold 2.26 million vehicles last year, is now the biggest EV maker.

It’s a stunning reversal for a car company whose rise once seemed unstoppable as it overtook traditional automakers with far more resources and helped make Musk the world’s richest man. The sales drop came despite President Donald Trump’s marketing effort early last year when he called a press conference to praise Musk as a “patriot” in front of Teslas lined up on the White House driveway, then announced he would be buying one, bucking presidential precedent to not endorse private company products.

For the fourth quarter, Tesla sales totaled 418,227, falling short of even the much reduced 440,000 target that analysts recently polled by FactSet had expected. Sales were hit hard by the expiration of a $7,500 tax credit for electric vehicle purchases that was phased out by the Trump administration at the end of September.

Tesla stock fell 2.6% to $438.07 on Friday.

Even with multiple issues buffeting the company, investors are betting that Tesla CEO Musk can deliver on his ambitions to make Tesla a leader in robotaxi services and get consumers to embrace humanoid robots that can perform basic tasks in homes and offices. Reflecting that optimism, the stock finished 2025 with a gain of approximately 11%.

The latest quarter was the first with sales of stripped-down versions of the Model Y and Model 3 that Musk unveiled in early October as part of an effort to revive sales. The new Model Y costs just under $40,000 while customers can buy the cheaper Model 3 for under $37,000. Those versions are expected to help Tesla compete with Chinese models in Europe and Asia.

For fourth-quarter earnings coming out in late January, analysts are expecting the company to post a 3% drop in sales and a nearly 40% drop in earnings per share, according to FactSet. Analysts expect the downward trend in sales and profits to eventually reverse itself as 2026 rolls along.

Musk said earlier last year that a “major rebound” in sales was underway, but investors were unruffled when that didn’t pan out, choosing instead to focus on Musk’s pivot to different parts of business. He has has been saying the future of the company lies with its driverless robotaxis service, its energy storage business and building robots for the home and factory — and much less with car sales.

Tesla started rolling out its robotaxi service in Austin in June, first with safety monitors in the cars to take over in case of trouble, then testing without them. The company hopes to roll out the service in several cities this year.

To do that successfully, it needs to take on rival Waymo, which has been operating autonomous taxis for years and has far more customers. It also will also have to contend with regulatory challenges. The company is under several federal safety investigations and other probes. In California, Tesla is at risk of temporarily losing its license to sell cars in the state after a judge there ruled it had misled customers about their safety.

“Regulatory is going to be a big issue,” said Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives, a well-known bull on the stock. “We’re dealing with people’s lives.”

Still, Ives said he expects Tesla’s autonomous offerings will soon overcome any setbacks.

Musk has said he hopes software updates to his cars will enable hundreds of thousands of Tesla vehicles to operate autonomously with zero human intervention by the end of this year. The company is also planning to begin production of its AI-powered Cybercab with no steering wheel or pedals in 2026.

To keep Musk focused on the company, Tesla’s directors awarded Musk a potentially enormous new pay package that shareholders backed at the annual meeting in November.

Musk scored another huge windfall two weeks ago when the Delaware Supreme Court reversed a decision that deprived him of a $55 billion pay package that Tesla doled out in 2018.

Musk could become the world’s first trillionaire later this year when he sells shares of his rocket company SpaceX to the public for the first time in what analysts expect would be a blockbuster initial public offering.

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AP video journalist Mustakim Hasnath contributed to this report from London.

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Matthews passes Mats Sundin to set Maple Leafs’ franchise record with his 421st career goal

Matthews passes Mats Sundin to set Maple Leafs’ franchise record with his 421st career goal

NEW YORK – Toronto Maple Leafs captain Auston Matthews scored twice in the second period against the New York Islanders on Saturday night to pass Mats Sundin and set the franchise record for career goals with 421.

“It means a lot, it’s a very historical franchise,” Matthews said. “There’s a lot of pride. … I am very humbled. I couldn’t do it without the great group of guys around me.”

His first goal tied Sundin at 420 when Matthews entered the offensive zone past Islanders defenseman Scott Mayfield, shifted the puck from his backhand to his forehand and slid it past goaltender David Rittich at 9:30 of the second period. It tied the score 1-1

Just 7:49 later, Matthews broke the record with his second of the game and 20th of the season to put Toronto ahead, burying a cross-ice feed from Bobby McMann on a one-timer.

Matthew Schaefer scored twice for the Islanders, including in the final minute of overtime to lift the Islanders to a 4-3 win.

“A club that’s had tremendous history — a tradition of players coming before him” John Tavares said of Matthews. “Hopefully that doesn’t get lost in the loss. Amazing moment for him and a hell of a player.”

Matthews had his second consecutive multi-goal game after he had a hat trick on Friday night in the Maple Leafs’ 6-5 win against Winnipeg. He now has six goals and 10 points in four games since the NHL’s Christmas break. He sat out Toronto’s 4-0 win against New Jersey on Tuesday night.

“It’s incredible, congrats to him,” Maple Leafs coach Craig Berube said. “He’s accomplished a lot of things, he had a strong game again tonight. … He drives the bus, drives the play for us and everybody feeds off of him.”

Matthews, in his second season as Maple Leafs captain after succeeding Tavares, is fourth all time in franchise points with 760, trailing Sundin (987), Darryl Sittler (916) and Dave Keon (858).

Sundin, who was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2012, scored 420 goals in 981 games with the Maple Leafs. Matthews, named to Team USA for the Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina next month, topped his mark in his 664th game.

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AP NHL: https://www.apnews.com/NHL

Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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Even Close Allies Are Asking Why Trump Wants to Run Venezuela

Even Close Allies Are Asking Why Trump Wants to Run Venezuela

American forces’ surgical capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, carried out in a daring raid shortly after 1 a.m. local time today, had been planned and rehearsed for months. Informants monitored the first couple’s movements, more than 150 aircraft provided cover starting late last night, missile strikes on military installations knocked out air defenses, and low-flying helicopters landed Delta Force soldiers in the center of Caracas. U.S forces engaged in a shoot-out with Venezuelan guards, then apprehended the dictator in his lavish presidential palace just as he sought refuge in a steel safe room. But a few hours later, President Donald Trump almost eclipsed the dramatic operation’s success when, from behind a podium on a makeshift stage in a gold-clad room at Mar-a-Lago, he unveiled another surprise: America now runs Venezuela, he said, and wants the country’s oil reserves to foot the bill.

Maduro and his wife were taken to the USS Iwo Jima, an amphibious assault ship usually used to carry troops and cargo ashore. This evening, they arrived in New York facing charges of narco-terrorism, drug trafficking, and other weapons-related offenses. Trump posted a photo of the deposed leader in U.S. custody: Maduro dressed in a gray sweatsuit, his cuffed hands clenching a bottle of water, his eyes covered, his ears covered by sound-blocking muffs. It was a far cry from some of the recent images of a defiant Maduro dancing onstage in front of supporters, vowing to remain in power, and singing John Lennon’s peace anthem Imagine at a rally.

Maduro’s capture—a high-risk, high-yield military operation—offered Trump a moment of triumph in his months-long quest to topple the Latin American despot. But even some of Trump’s closest allies told us that they were unnerved by the president’s brash, no-plan-for-tomorrow approach to ousting a sovereign nation’s leader. Trump provided few details as he declared that a group of officials who were standing near him at the news conference, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, would “run” the country until a “safe, proper, and judicious transition” could take place. It was a stunning announcement for a president who campaigned on the perils of nation building. And Trump made no mention of wanting to spread democracy or allowing Venezuela’s opposition, which the United States has recognized as the legitimate winners of 2024’s election, to take power.

Rather, in his lengthy press conference, the only Venezuelan politician Trump spoke about other than Maduro was Maduro’s own vice president, Delcy Rodríguez. She was sworn in as interim president soon after Maduro’s departure but maintains that Maduro is the legitimate president and condemned his arrest. Trump said she had already told Rubio that the new government in Caracas would do whatever the U.S. wanted—something she denied. In summary, Trump said, the U.S. is looking to “make Venezuela great again—very simple.”

The vagaries of the administration’s plans stood out in contrast with the precision of Maduro’s capture. They also invited questions about how deeply the U.S. would become involved in Venezuela’s future, as well as about the legality of the operation. Trump didn’t try to get congressional authorization for war or even notify it of today’s operation in advance, citing the Hill’s propensity to leak. (Lawmakers were briefed after the operation was complete.) Trump also did not address questions about the implications of removing a sitting president for Russian President Vladimir Putin as he seeks to control Ukraine, or for China’s Xi Jinping as he sizes up the possibility of taking Taiwan. “If China declared Taiwan a rogue province, could they go after its leaders?” Democratic Senator Mark Warner of Virginia, the vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, asked us in an interview. “If Russia declares Zelensky a criminal, could Putin extract him from Ukraine and that’d be okay?”

Trump dismissed the idea that deposing Maduro contradicts his “America First” mantra, which has been widely interpreted as noninterventionist. “It is” America First, Trump insisted today, “because we want to surround ourselves with good neighbors. We want to surround ourselves with stability.” He even embraced the possibility of putting “boots on the ground” after years of preferring to use strikes from afar to achieve his foreign-policy goals. He dubbed his new approach, without much apparent enthusiasm, the “Donroe Doctrine,” an awkward mashup of his own name and that of the 19th-century Monroe Doctrine, which aimed to cement U.S. dominance in the Western Hemisphere.

At the root of it all, Trump made clear, is oil, something that his critics had long claimed while the administration portrayed the months-long pressure campaign as principally about stopping the drug trade. Today, Trump didn’t hide his intent. The U.S. wants to revitalize Venezuela’s oil industry, with U.S. oil companies leading the charge, even though Venezuelan crude is heavy and hard to refine by international standards. That revenue, he added, would go to the Venezuelan people, and to the U.S., for what the administration has claimed is recompense for Venezuela’s nationalization of the industry years ago. Until recently, Trump had seemed open to a deal with Maduro that would achieve the same goal. But overnight, as explosions echoed over the hills of Caracas, Maduro’s time ran out.

“Nicolás Maduro had multiple opportunities to avoid this,” Rubio said at the Mar-a-Lago press conference. “He was provided multiple very, very, very generous offers, and chose instead to act like a wild man.”

So the Trump administration removed him by force. But a former senior U.S. official noted: “This was the easy part. Let’s see what they do next.”

The CIA put operatives in Venezuela in August after Trump ordered covert operations. Those operatives studied what Maduro wore, what he ate, where he traveled, what pets he kept. Delta Force trained for his capture using a mock safe house. For weeks, U.S. aircraft approached Venezuelan airspace but stopped short of crossing the line, instead seeking insight into how the Venezuelan military might respond to an attack, defense officials said.

A core group of senior officials—Rubio; Hegseth; General Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; CIA Director John Ratcliffe; and Stephen Miller, Trump’s deputy chief of staff—led the planning with Trump, one official told us.

“They finally—about two weeks ago—gave Maduro a final warning. It was through official channels, in a way that communicated the seriousness of it,” a person familiar with the planning told us. “There was no ambiguity,” this person said. “This was Maduro’s last chance for an off-ramp.”

By early last month, the U.S. was ready to move in when the weather was right. That moment came as Friday turned to Saturday, when the skies over Venezuela’s seaside capital cleared. Trump gave the order to proceed at 10:46 p.m. EST.

The U.S. conducted strikes to disable Venezuela’s air defenses, Caine said. Across the hills of Caracas, Venezuelans could see the assault unfold. They felt the ground shake. Then the city lost communications and power. As U.S. forces approached, they came under heavy fire, which caused injuries among U.S. forces and likely deaths among Venezuelans, defense officials told us. A U.S. helicopter was damaged.

“There was a lot of gunfire,” Trump said during his press conference; at least two U.S. troops were hospitalized. Minutes later, at 2:01 a.m. local time, U.S. forces entered Maduro’s compound and found the Venezuelan leader and his wife sleeping. Trump said the longtime tyrant ran to open a heavy door leading to a safe room but couldn’t manage it in time. The couple surrendered, were loaded into helicopters, and were out of Venezuelan airspace by 3:29 a.m.

Military officials stressed that the weather was a guiding factor in the timing, but an administration official suggested that political undercurrents were also at play. It was “now or never,” this person said. A number of officials told us that in recent weeks, the window for Trump to remove Maduro had seemed to be closing. Bipartisan support in the U.S. for any kind of military action in Venezuela was diminishing, and officials worried that the longer Maduro remained in power, the more entrenched he would become.

Trump is “kicking off the year with a win,” this administration official said. Another former senior administration official who remains in frequent contact with the White House acknowledged that Trump needed a victory amid tough headlines and slumping poll numbers. Trump is fond of symbolic dates, as well, and originally had eyed the period around Christmas for the assault. Instead, on Christmas Day, Trump ordered a different set of military strikes—on alleged Islamic State targets in Nigeria. Trump has grown fond of these one-off, splashy shows of force, counting last year’s bombing of Iranian nuclear sites as one of his triumphs. Trump said there had been a plan for a second phase of the Venezuelan operation, but that it wasn’t needed—at least not yet.

The Trump administration never laid out a consistent case for Congress or the public in advance of today’s operation as to why Maduro had to go. Much of the pressure campaign in recent months focused on lethal strikes against alleged drug boats, even though little of the drugs that flow through Venezuela are destined for the U.S.

At the Mar-a-Lago press conference, Rubio emphasized that the arrest and extraction of Maduro and his wife was a “law enforcement” operation. “At its core, this was an arrest of two indicted fugitives of American justice, and the Department of War supported the Department of Justice in that job,” Rubio said, using Trump’s title for the Department of Defense.

Conspicuously absent from the press conference was the top U.S. law-enforcement official, whose department’s indictment of Maduro provided the legal justification for the operation. Attorney General Pam Bondi posted on X that Maduro and his wife “will soon face the full wrath of American justice on American soil in American courts,” and she later shared a link to a newly unsealed 25-page indictment filed by prosecutors in the Southern District of New York. (It was in many respects similar to an indictment issued toward the end of Trump’s first term, with a few new charges and the addition of Maduro’s wife and his son.) The indictment alleges that Maduro and his associates used Venezuelan state and military resources to facilitate and profit from drug trafficking over two decades.

An administration official told us that the arrests of Maduro and his wife were made by the Drug Enforcement Administration, which ultimately reports to the attorney general. The operation, conducted by the Department of Defense and the DEA, was made at the request of the Justice Department.

More than a dozen FBI and DEA personnel were seen disembarking from a plane with Maduro at a New York Air National Guard Base this evening. The FBI declined to comment on the agency’s role in the operation, and the DEA did not respond to requests for comment.

In recent weeks, Trump and other administration officials asserted that the U.S. had a claim on Venezuela’s oil reserves—an apparent reference to a 2007 decision by Maduro’s predecessor, Hugo Chávez, to nationalize various foreign-owned oil projects. The U.S. oil giants ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips were kicked out of the country after they refused to allow Venezuela to acquire majority stakes in their Venezuelan operations. “The stolen oil must be returned to the United States,” Vice President J. D. Vance said in a post on X today.

Venezuela has the largest estimated oil reserves in the world—accounting for about 17 percent of global reserves, or more than 300 billion barrels, according to the Oil & Gas Journal. But Venezuela produces only 1 million barrels of oil per day. Its potential is largely unrealized because of poor infrastructure, mismanagement, limited resources, and U.S. sanctions. What little is produced has to be sold on the black market for Venezuela to profit. About 80 percent of Venezuela’s oil, which is of low quality, currently goes to China, at least 15 percent goes to the U.S. via a remaining joint venture with Chevron, and the remainder goes to Cuba.

Trump today talked about the potential to revitalize Venezuela’s oil sector and the role that U.S. companies would play—something the country’s opposition has emphasized as a critical part of its economic plans.

“The oil business in Venezuela has been a bust, a total bust, for a long period of time,” Trump said at Mar-a-Lago. “We’re going to have our very large United States oil companies, the biggest anywhere in the world, go in, spend billions of dollars, fix the badly broken infrastructure, the oil infrastructure, and start making money for the country.”

This would be a massive, costly, and time-consuming undertaking.

“Venezuela could produce 4 million barrels instead of the 1 million barrels it produces per day, but it would take maybe a little bit less than a decade and $100 billion in total over that period to get it to 4 million barrels,” Francisco Monaldi, an expert in Latin American energy policy at Rice University, told us. “Very few countries can do something like that.”

How much opposition Venezuela’s military put up to defend Maduro is not clear. But the low number of U.S. casualties suggests that Washington likely had at least some support from within the Venezuelan military, helping make the operation a success, former and current officials told us. “An action like this would not be possible without significant help or at least intentional ‘self-restraint’ from the local military,” a Pentagon adviser and Special Forces veteran told us.

The military’s longer-term response to Maduro’s ouster will likely be key to the fate of the nation. Recent history in Iraq and Afghanistan does not bode well for U.S. efforts at nation building, but much will depend on the choices that Venezuelan military leaders make about where their loyalties lie. The big question, the former Pentagon official said, is whether the U.S. can stave off the unrest and regional instability that could result from the sudden power vacuum left behind when Maduro was removed after nearly 13 years in power.

The role of Venezuela’s democratic opposition is also unknown. María Corina Machado, who secretly left Venezuela last month after a year in hiding to accept the Nobel Peace Prize, said in a statement today that “the time has come for Popular Sovereignty and National Sovereignty to govern our country. We are going to restore order, free political prisoners, build an exceptional nation, and bring our children home.”

She urged Venezuelans inside the country to “be ready to take action.” Trump, however, said today at Mar-a-Lago that Machado couldn’t govern the country, because she doesn’t have “the support or the respect” of the Venezuelan people. Carlos Giménez, a Republican representative from South Florida, told us he assesses Machado’s capabilities differently, calling her “formidable.” He said that he spoke with her on Saturday, and described her as “upbeat that Maduro is no longer there, but realistic that there’s more work to be done, and that this is just the beginning.” A spokesperson for Machado declined to comment, and other representatives didn’t respond to a request for comment for this story.

For now, Venezuelans don’t know who is running their country, even as Venezuelan news networks broadcast images of celebratory flag-waving in the streets. Armed civilian militias, known as colectivos, were patrolling Caracas. “There is a lot of confusion,” a Venezuelan activist in Caracas told us. “The government officials have called their followers to the streets, but nobody—except the colectivos—have answered.”

Simon Shuster, Ashley Parker, and Gisela Salim-Peyer contributed reporting for this article.

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Trap Celina! Offset Caught Slipping & Snoring In Celina Powell’s Bed, GOAT Groupie Teases Tape With Messy Migos Menace

Trap Celina! Offset Caught Slipping & Snoring In Celina Powell’s Bed, GOAT Groupie Teases Tape With Messy Migos Menace

The Trap Celina chronicles continue with Offset caught on camera, laid up with Celina Powell after the final boss of Gold Diggers claimed she put him to sleep.

Source: Paras Griffin/ Thaddeus McAddams

If this story sounds familiar, it could be because Celina seemingly pulled the same sneaky link leak routine on celebs like Akon, Snoop Dogg, Lil Meech, and Love Is Blind alum Clay Gravesdale. Or maybe it rings a bell because Celina already claimed she trapped a Cephus seed from hookups with Offset before. She even alleged that the “Bodies” star paid $50,000 for an abortion. All that drama didn’t stop him from being the next clown in Celina’s circus.

On Friday, the infamous InstaBaddie posted a clip of herself between the sheets with Offset. By now, she’s a pro at catching snoozing celebs on camera and repeatedly zoomed in on his face to catch every low-down loc of his in 4K. Despite all of Celina’s clout-chasing shenanigans, Offset was too knocked out to notice. She really took him through there!

Rather than waiting to put Cardi B’s ex in the blender over another baby, she already had other plans to secure the bag before Offset even woke up. In the caption, she claimed the reckless rapper has a feature on another NSFW tape they made the night before.

“Made a tape last night & all u heard was him in the video lol offset you sleepy boy,” she wrote. It’s hard to tell if that means the Atlanta artist is behind the camera, talking in the background, or actually makes a cameo. For once, Celina leaves something to the imagination… unless you’re a paying customer, of course.

Several comments clocked that Offset was fresh off a pity party over Cardi moving on with her baller baby daddy, Stefon Diggs. In addition to taking shots at his ex and her next in his songs, several comments clocked Offset tried to tax Cardi for it in their divorce proceedings, despite his long history of cheating scandals.

“Ain’t he in court tryna get money from cardi cause he claim she with a new man?” One wrote laughing emojis. “How the jokes write themselves.”

“He’s out doing whatever with WHOEVER but mad Cardi gotta whole new family,” another noted, calling out Offset for “steady asking for ‘spousal support.’”

The last time Celina put Offset on blast, he was still with the “Pretty & Petty” rapper, who ran down the receipts to clear her man’s name. We know Cardi doesn’t let much slide and turned into an internet investigator about Celina’s flagrant fatherhood fallacies.

That was back in 2018, and Offset has to fight his battles solo these days. However, if that incriminating clip is any indication, he loves it there. Either way… Thots and prayers, Offset!

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US military operation in Venezuela disrupts Caribbean holiday travel, hundreds of flights canceled

US military operation in Venezuela disrupts Caribbean holiday travel, hundreds of flights canceled

Posted on January 3, 2026

Associated Press: The U.S. military operation capturing Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has disrupted Caribbean travel.

On Saturday, no flights crossed over Venezuela, according to FlightRadar24.com. Major airlines canceled hundreds of flights across the eastern Caribbean after the FAA imposed restrictions.

Flights to Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and Aruba were canceled. Airlines are waiving change fees for rescheduled flights. The FAA imposed a temporary airspace restriction on Puerto Rico’s international airport.

JetBlue canceled about 215 flights, while United and Southwest adjusted schedules.

American Airlines waived change fees for flights to about 20 island destinations.

(Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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Tech billionaires cashed out $16 billion in 2025 as stocks soared | TechCrunch

Tech billionaires cashed out  billion in 2025 as stocks soared | TechCrunch

While tech stocks were busy setting records in 2025, the executives behind those companies were equally busy turning their paper fortunes into actual cash — more than $16 billion worth, according to Bloomberg’s analysis of insider trading data.

Jeff Bezos led the way. The Amazon founder sold 25 million shares for $5.7 billion in June and July, right around the time he was getting hitched to Lauren Sanchez in Venice. Oracle’s former CEO Safra Catz wasn’t far behind at $2.5 billion, followed by Michael Dell at $2.2 billion.

Nvidia’s Jensen Huang watched his company become the world’s first $5 trillion business, and sold $1 billion along the way. Arista Networks CEO Jayshree Ullal cashed out nearly $1 billion as demand for the company’s high-speed networking gear soared and her personal net worth crossed $6 billion.

Most of these sales happened through pre-arranged trading plans that executives file in advance; they weren’t spur-of-the-moment decisions. Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg sold $945 million through his foundation, while Palo Alto Networks CEO Nikesh Arora and Robinhood co-founder Baiju Bhatt each pocketed over $700 million.

The common thread was an AI-fueled rally that kept pushing tech stocks higher throughout the year.

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Made in Tarrant: Landscape company celebrates 20 years of lawn, plant care with Fort Worth-area location

Made in Tarrant: Landscape company celebrates 20 years of lawn, plant care with Fort Worth-area location

by Nicole Lopez, Fort Worth Report
January 3, 2026

What began as a lawn mowing business in Dallas during Jason Craven’s teen years went on to become Southern Botanical.

Craven debuted Southern Botanical’s newest location in Haltom City in November. He considers the new spot a testament to the evergrowing success of his landscaping business. From operating out of a home in west Dallas, Southern Botanical has grown over the past 20 years to add locations in Fort Worth-adjacent Haltom City and Carrollton. With new locations, Craven and his business look forward to streamlining operations and providing more customers with their landscaping needs.

Southern Botanical specializes in landscape designing, irrigation installation, and green space maintenance for homeowners and businesses in Dallas-Fort Worth.

Contact information: 

Fort Worth-area location: 2411 Weaver Street, Haltom City

Headquarters: 3151 Halifax Street, Suite 100, Dallas

Phone: 817-497-8906

Website: southernbotanical.com

Facebook: Southern Botanical

Instagram: @southern.botanical

This interview has been edited for length and clarity. 

Nicole Lopez: Start by telling me about Southern Botanical’s history.

Jason Craven: I had full-time employees by the time I was in high school. I actually worked out of my mom’s house for the first several years of the business. When I turned 18, I rented a house down the road and moved my business there. We didn’t have our first office until around 2004. We thought it was just this massive building and we’d be there forever. We grew out of that very quickly. We’ve always done work all over the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. But now we have a lot of business up north and in Fort Worth.

Lopez: You have services for both residential and commercial customers. What do they entail?

Craven: Our residential and commercial services are similar. We design and install new landscapes and irrigation systems. Subsequently, we maintain the property such as weeding, mowing, trimming and taking care of the exterior of the properties. We started doing tree care around 10 years ago including a focus on plant and tree health care. That involves taking care of the root systems with fertilization and injections. 

Everyone including cities are realizing what an asset it is to have trees when there’s new construction projects. They make an investment to protect trees, and so we do that for a lot of clients.

Southern Botanical celebrated its expansion into Haltom City Nov. 13. (Courtesy photo | Southern Botanical)

Lopez: Considering you’re based in the Cross Timbers and Prairies Ecological Region where there’s all kinds of vegetation, what are the biggest landscape challenges or needs customers come to your business for?

Craven: Our clients really care about the external environment. We have a lot of clients that really invest heavily into providing spaces for their team to work outside or to have places to disconnect and be in nature. I think so many more commercial clients are paying attention to that external environment because the pace of life is going so much faster with technology nowadays, I think it’s important that people get outside and disconnect and be in nature.

Lopez: Which time of year keeps Southern Botanical busiest?

Craven: We have a big push in the spring. That is our busiest time, April and May. Our second big, big push is the fall. A lot of our clients are getting ready for the holidays, so we are quite busy in the fall. 

Lopez: How does a new location adjacent to Fort Worth support your business? 

Craven: Our team commutes from our Dallas office to Fort Worth daily. Not having to make that commute — everybody’s very happy about it. We’re excited to be in Fort Worth. We just opened our office a few weeks ago. It’s really early but we really want to continue to grow and expand there and we think it’s a wonderful market that just makes sense for us.

Lopez: What does Southern Botanical offer that can’t be easily found anywhere else?

Craven: In a lot of ways, it’s the small things. A lot of companies are out there just to mow and get on down the road. We really sweat the details. That’s a big differentiator for us. We’ve developed good, strong systems to make sure that we’re delivering consistently. Our clients appreciate that we’re looking out for their investment. It sounds simple, but it’s very hard to execute, and we’ve just become good at it.

Lopez: Anything you’d like to add?

Craven: We are family owned. We built this business with the long term in mind. Every decision we make is really based on what we feel is best for our team and for our clients and for the long term. We really try to grow and run a conscious business in that way. I definitely think that’s a differentiator for us as well.

Nicole Lopez is the environment reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact her at nicole.lopez@fortworthreport.org.

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Texas Venezuelans rejoice after Maduro’s arrest

Texas Venezuelans rejoice after Maduro’s arrest

Employees at Preciosa Market and Restaurant in Dallas started their Saturday shift unlike any other.

“I see all the workers, they were crying, and hug me and saying, ‘Oh my gosh finally, finally,’ and I’m saying, ‘Yeah, finally, finally!’ and I start crying again,” said Isabela Sandoval, who’s family owns the shop.

Sandoval said she was up watching news of President Nicolás Maduro’s capture on her phone, crying.

President Donald Trump announced the arrest and extradition of Maduro and his wife in an overnight operation Saturday.

According to documents reported by NBC, the Maduros have been indicted in the Southern District of New York with narcoterrorism and other charges.

The move has drawn condemnation from some leaders, including in Russia, the United Kingdom and Mexico. Legal experts have also expressed concern about the strike’s legitimacy.

But all morning and afternoon, Preciosa buzzed with other Venezuelans celebrating the fall of Maduro’s regime– people brought flags and burst out in chants and cheers.

“That’s a dream come true,” Sandoval said.

Sandoval said her mom, and owner of the shop, Laura Boscan, is also overjoyed.

“My mom is really happy because she knows what was the Venezuela from a lot of years ago,” Sandoval said. “Venezuela was a rich country of a lot of cultures, of a lot of food.”

Boscan said she came to the U.S. about six years ago, after getting a degree in petroleum engineering but getting shut out of jobs after not declaring herself a follower of the Maduro regime.

“She wants to see a new era of the country,” Sandoval said, translating for her mom. “She wants to work there and have a salary.”

Boscan’s husband, Jesus Sanchez, came to the U.S. about 10 years ago. He said he was in the Venezuelan military but left to escape persecution from a government he didn’t agree with– Maduro’s predecessor, Hugo Chávez.

“[If] you think different, it’s a problem for you and your family,” Sanchez said.

He said under the last two presidents, many Venezuelans suffered.

“No food, no water, no house.” he said. “You don’t have life in Venezuela.”

At Arepa Azteca in Oak Cliff, a group of customers were toasting to what they called the freedom of Venezuela.

“We had faith and hope that this day would come,” one of them said. “It’s a day to celebrate.”

“It’s like a dream,” said another customer.

While many acknowledged that there is some concern about the uncertainty of Venezuela’s future, and who will run it, today, they say, there is a lot of hope.

“She wants the freedoms that we have here in the United States, over there in Venezuela,” said Sandoval, translating for Boscan.

Great Job Tahera Rahman & the Team @ NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth for sharing this story.

Trump’s War on Latin America Must Be Stopped

Trump’s War on Latin America Must Be Stopped

Any hope that Donald Trump would be an “antiwar” president went out the window almost as soon as he won the 2024 election, when he filled his administration with a coterie of warmongers. After a year in which Trump backed Israel’s war with Iran, went on a spree of blowing up boats in international waters, and, now, attacked Venezuela and abducted its leader, that hope has sailed over a cliff and crashed into the rocks below.

It hardly needs to be said that Trump’s regime change operation in Venezuela is brutish, dangerous, and brazenly illegal, though it is obviously all this and more. It’s illegal on multiple levels: a clear violation of international law, of course, but also the latest instance of Trump cheerfully wiping his shoes on the US Constitution. Despite what Vice President J. D. Vance claims, there is no loophole that magically invalidates that document’s War Powers Clause if the Justice Department indicts a foreign leader.

Those drug-trafficking indictments, by the way, have nothing to do with what Trump just did, though we’ll no doubt hear about them endlessly in the weeks ahead. As analysts have pointed out at length, Venezuela has almost nothing to do with the flow of cocaine into the United States. And Trump has gone almost comically out of his way to undermine his own talking point, pardoning a convicted narco-trafficking Latin American ex-president just weeks ago and publicly musing about how much he’d like to get his hands on Caracas’s oil reserves. He is now practically licking his lips over the field day that “our very large United States oil companies” are going to have as they get “very strongly involved” in Venezuela’s oil industry.

But it’s not just about oil. As Trump helpfully made clear today, the attack on Venezuela is him making good on his administration’s new National Security Strategy (NSS), which made as its highest priority reviving the Monroe Doctrine — the “Don-Roe Doctrine,” in the president’s words today — to “restore American preeminence in the Western Hemisphere,” box China out of Latin America, and make sure the region’s left-wing governments are replaced by ones aligned with Trump. Within hours of toppling the Venezuelan president, Trump was threatening Colombia, Cuba, and Mexico with a similar attack.

God only knows what will follow from this. Once upon a time, Trump won the GOP nomination by assailing George W. Bush for dumb regime-change wars that blew up in Americans’ faces. Now, he’s not only moved those wars to our doorstep, but is outdoing Bush in premature declarations of “mission accomplished,” marveling at “the speed, the violence” of the operation that he himself compared to a TV show set up for his personal, slack-jawed entertainment.

Yet we have no idea what comes next, either in Venezuela — go ask Barack Obama and Libya how power vacuums tend to turn out — or around the world. Vladimir Putin has repeatedly justified his own loathsome war in Ukraine and other interventions by pointing to US-led interventions. How will Trump’s precedent— that a country, sufficiently powerful, can casually bomb its neighbors and kidnap their leaders — be taken up by other unscrupulous politicians in the decades to come?

Meanwhile, Trump has already set a land-speed record for mission creep. Despite the president and his acolytes claiming in the run-up to this that they would take a “break-it-and-leave” approach to Venezuela, Trump is already saying the United States will now “run the country,” might put boots on the ground there, and that he doesn’t “want to be involved with having somebody else get in, and then we have the same situation.”

That may not be so simple in a political tinderbox like Venezuela, where the United States’ own war games predicted an explosion of violence and “chaos for a sustained period of time,” which, if it happens, will turbocharge the mass immigration that Trump has staked his presidency on arresting. Sure enough, Trump did not rule out administering the country for years if that’s what it takes, offering only that “it won’t cost us anything” because of oil revenue.

This, it turns out, is the “MAGA” foreign policy: we’ll still do overseas quagmires and nation-building, but now we’ll do them in the Americas, first.

All the focus and condemnation will understandably be on Trump as we watch this unfold, but save some scrutiny for the liberal establishment that played a key role in getting us here. Marco Rubio, the architect of this operation who’s already angling for a similar one in Cuba, was confirmed to his position with the support of every single Democrat. The Nobel Peace Prize committee gave its tacit endorsement to this attack. The European Union, for all its years’ worth of talk of international law and respecting sovereignty, has not offered even a hint of resistance to Trump’s plans, and if anything, has quietly gone along with them.

In fact, if there’s one big loser from this that’s not Venezuela, it is the European center, which has used Nicolás Maduro’s ouster to highlight its own irrelevance and hypocrisy. This morning has seen European official after European official offer non-condemnations of Trump’s actions all clearly based on the same memo, complete with an empty, token reference to the UN Charter and international law — including, most disgracefully, the current president of the UN General Assembly, German liberal uber-hawk Annalena Baerbock, who offered a four-paragraph-long master class in equivocation. Some, like French president Emmanuel Macron and Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni, offered outright support for the Venezuelan leader’s toppling.

In either case, the statements sit awkwardly with EU officials’ furious, justified denunciation of the Russian war in Ukraine, further cementing growing global outrage at what are widely seen as Western governments’ double standards. Shamefully, even European far-right figures like Marine Le Pen. who ostensibly share Trump’s politics, have made more forthright condemnations of what the US president has done than these leaders.

Trump is likely hoping, as per the NSS, that an aggressive move like this will cement US dominance over Latin America, cowing left-wing governments into subordination and halting the region’s drift towards China. But the United States does not have the ability to easily replicate what it’s done in Venezuela in countries like Brazil and Mexico, and it is just as likely to have the opposite effect: catalyzing deepening ties with China to counterbalance the growing threat from an increasingly belligerent Washington. His tariffs — in Brazil’s case, explicitly aimed at bullying the country to influence its internal politics — have already undermined his wider goal of making the region less economically dependent on Beijing.

In that sense, this looks less like a confident superpower flexing its muscles in its “backyard” and more like an exhausted one playing the only card it has left — the bloated US military — to project its dominance after every other attempt has fallen embarrassingly flat. Trump and the people around him may ultimately not succeed at advancing their larger strategy, but that doesn’t mean they can’t still do a lot of damage as they flail about, which they are surely about to do, in both Venezuela and in the wider region.

We are now firmly inside an uglier, more dangerous world that may very well make us pine for even the empty lip service to international law of decades past. And as long as these foreign adventures continue, no one except moneyed interests and reckless politicians will prosper — not those in the crosshairs, like long-suffering Venezuelans, and not ordinary working Americans, who are once again being dragged into a wasteful foreign conflict as they struggle to make ends meet.

Great Job Branko Marcetic & the Team @ Jacobin Source link for sharing this story.

California residents can use new tool to demand brokers delete their personal data | TechCrunch

California residents can use new tool to demand brokers delete their personal data | TechCrunch

California is giving residents a new tool that should make it easier for them to limit data brokers’ ability to store and sell their personal information.

While state residents have had the right to demand that a company stop collecting and selling their data since 2020, doing so required a laborious process of opting out with each individual company. The Delete Act, passed in 2023, was supposed to simplify things, allowing residents to make a single request that more than 500 registered data brokers delete their information.

Now the Delete Requests and Opt-Out Platform (DROP) actually gives residents the ability to make that request. Once DROP users verify that they are California residents, they can submit a deletion request that will go to all current and future data brokers registered with the state.

But that doesn’t necessarily mean that all your data will be deleted immediately. Brokers are supposed to start processing requests in August 2026, then they have 90 days to actually process requests and report back. If they don’t delete your data, you’ll have the option to submit additional information that may help them locate your records.

Companies will also be able to keep first-party data that they’ve collected from users. It’s only brokers who seek to buy or sell that data — which can include your social security number, browsing history, email address, phone number, and more — who will be required to delete it.

Some information, such vehicle registration and voter records, is exempt from deletion because it comes from public documents. Other information, such as sensitive medical information, may be covered under other laws like HIPAA.

The California Privacy Protection Agency says that in addition to giving residents more control over their data, the tool could result in fewer “unwanted texts, calls, or emails” and also decrease the “risk of identity theft, fraud, AI impersonations, or that your data is leaked or hacked.”

Techcrunch event

San Francisco
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October 13-15, 2026

The penalty for data brokers who fail to register or fail to delete requested consumer data is $200 per day, plus enforcement costs, according to the agency.

Great Job Anthony Ha & the Team @ TechCrunch Source link for sharing this story.

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