|
‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' Sequel Drops Surprise Teaser During 2026 Super Bowl The Hollywood ReporterNetflix's ‘Cliff Booth' Makes Surprise Appearance During Super Bowl As First Teaser Trailer Is Shown Deadline‘Cliff Booth' Teaser: Brad Pitt Surprises Super Bowl With First Footage From David Fincher's Tarantino Sequel VarietyWhat Brad Pitt movie aired a Super Bowl trailer? 10TV
|
|
Trump Calls U.S. Skier a ‘Loser' as Politics Ripples Through Olympic Games The Wall Street JournalPresident Trump rips Olympian Hess for comments on U.S. ESPNAt the Winter Olympics, Team USA Can't Escape the Politics at Home The New York TimesTrump calls Olympic skier ‘real loser' after athlete expresses ‘mixed emotions' representing the US cnn.com
|
|
League executives may be nervous about the Latin superstar's outspoken stance on immigration, but their priority is attracting popular halftime performers.
|
|
WeatherTech is back at the Super Bowl for a fourteenth time, tapping into the plight of a dad taking his family on a road trip.
|
|
Bezos Brutally Dumps Washington Post CEO After Gutting Paper The Daily BeastWashington Post C.E.O. Will Lewis Steps Down After Stormy Tenure The New York TimesDemocracy Dies in Broad Daylight The New YorkerWashington Post publisher Will Lewis abruptly steps down, days after massive layoffs gut the newspaper cnn.com'Washington Post' CEO resigns after going AWOL during massive job cuts NPR
|
|
Hong Kong media mogul Jimmy Lai faces sentencing in landmark national security case ABC NewsHong Kong democracy activist Jimmy Lai to be sentenced after national security conviction NBC NewsLive Updates: Hong Kong Court to Sentence Jimmy Lai The New York TimesJimmy Lai, Hong Kong pro-democracy figure, faces sentencing over national security charges The Guardian
| RELATED ARTICLES | | |
|
"Trump accounts" are getting primetime Super Bowl ad space, with a commercial slated to air just before Sunday's kickoff.
|
|
Horoscope for Sunday, February 08, 2026 Chicago Sun-TimesHoroscope for February 8: These 2 Signs Are Having Especially Lucky Days TODAY.comHoroscopes Today, February 8, 2026 USA TodayToday's daily horoscope for Feb. 8, 2026 NJ.comYour Daily Couples Horoscope for February 08, 2026
|
|
Green Day Drops F-Bombs in Super Bowl Pre-Show With ‘American Idiot,' ‘Holiday' and ‘Good Riddance' VarietyWhat time does Green Day perform at the Super Bowl? What to know The Providence JournalGreen Day rocks out in electric Super Bowl opening set featuring 'American Idiot' USA TodayGreen Day's Super Bowl performance did the unexpected Mashable
|
|
Liverpool 1 Man City 2: Where does this leave the title race? Was the late red card right? - The Athletic The New York TimesView Full Coverage on Google News
|
|
Trump Administration: Live Updates and News The New York TimesDHS Shutdown Even Likelier After Dems Issue ICE Demands New York MagazinePolice say power restored after Augusta outage shut off traffic lights WGMEWhat Democrats are demanding in exchange for funding ICE The Washington PostDems outline 10 demands in letter to GOP leaders in ICE funding fight Axios
|
|
Portugal votes in first presidential run-off in 40 years Al JazeeraPortugal Votes for President, With Leftist Set to Beat Surging Far Right The New York TimesPortugal chooses between a moderate and a populist in runoff presidential election ABC News
|
|
Main image:
THEY have been at this a long time. In 1994 Republicans, newly in charge of Congress, held hearings on what would come to be called 'dynamic scoring'. Bills, they said, should be evaluated using the predictive power of macroeconomic models. If the model predicts more GDP growth, then it could be inferred that the growth would produce more tax revenue. During the hearings, however, came an awkward moment. Alan Greenspan, then in charge of the Federal Reserve, told Congress that macroeconomic models were 'deficient'. That is, their predictive power, though interesting, was not good enough to rely on. Last year, after the election of Donald Trump, your blogger contacted Mr Greenspan to see whether the models were good enough yet. Mr Greenspan, his office responded, had not yet changed his opinion.Neither have Republicans. Over the past two decades, in and out of control of Congress, the party has nudged dynamic scoring successively closer to the official policy process until we arrived, yesterday evening, at as dramatic a moment as macroeconomic analysis ever gets. The Joint Committee on Taxation, the nonpartisan Congressional body responsible for evaluating tax proposals, hurried its study (PDF) out on a Thursday afternoon as the Senate was preparing to approve a tax cut. That cut, ...
|
|