West
Nevada voters reveal their prediction for which presidential candidate will win 'very close race'
CLARK COUNTY, Nev. – As former President Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris make their final appeals to voters ahead of Election Day, folks in Nevada say their state could swing toward either candidate.
“It’s unpredictable,” Carlos told Fox News Digital in Henderson. “Right now, I’d say they’re probably balanced a little bit, but don’t know which way it’s going to go. You never know.”
Nevada is among a handful of states where Trump and Harris are in a neck-and-neck race. Trump hopes to secure the GOP’s first presidential win in Nevada since President George W. Bush’s 2004 re-election victory.
SWING STATE GOP CHAIR REVEALS VOTER ENTHUSIASM FOR TRUMP IS SOMETHING ‘WE’VE NEVER SEEN BEFORE’
Melissa in Henderson, Nevada, said she “just can’t imagine anyone voting” for Kamala Harris. (Hannah Ray Lambert/Fox News Digital)
“I think Trump is gonna win,” said Melissa, standing next to her car which was painted with pro-Trump slogans. She laughed as she added, “I just can’t imagine anyone voting for Kamala.”
President Biden won the state by 2.4 points in 2020, but the RealClearPolitics average of Nevada polls shows Trump with a slight lead over Harris.
In Clark County, which trends more Democratic than the state as a whole, Jerrie said he would “literally vote for Mickey Mouse over Trump.”
“I think Harris would do good,” he said. “She’s probably the most qualified person ever running for office,” he added, pointing to Harris’ background as a prosecutor.
‘POLARIZING’ WAY OF PICKING PARTY NOMINEES TARGETED IN BALLOT QUESTIONS IN THESE 6 STATES
Former President Trump aims to become the first GOP presidential candidate to win Nevada in 20 years. He holds a razor-thin lead over Vice President Harris in the Real Clear Politics average of Nevada polls. (Getty Images)
“My money’s on Kamala Harris and Tim Walz,” Donna said in Las Vegas. “I know it’s going to be a very close race and nobody can take it for granted and shouldn’t take it for granted. I’m going to keep talking to my friends and neighbors and make sure they get out and vote, but I think we’re going to win.”
Bri said many people “may not even know right now who they’re going to vote for.”
“So I think it’s something that we’re just going to find out when it happens and hopefully everything will be [done] peacefully,” she said, adding that she appreciated the more civil tone of the vice presidential debate earlier this month.
Bri added, “I think we as a people would appreciate it if, going forward, [political discourse] happened that way. We’ve gotten so far off of the track and it’s created a lot of … animosity against one another.”
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Alaska
A frozen ground under Alaska’s tundra looks like ordinary soil from above, but scientists have put a $43 trillion price tag on what happens when it thaws
Stand on the tundra in Alaska and it looks like nothing special.
A vast, flat plain of amber grass, shallow ponds, and dark soil stretching to the horizon.
No obvious drama, no visible crisis.
But a few feet below your boots, something has been building for millennia, and scientists have finally put a dollar figure on what happens when it wakes up.
The ground beneath the Arctic has been keeping a secret for millions of years
Permafrost is frozen ground, soil and rock locked in ice for thousands of years across Alaska, Canada, Siberia, and the high Arctic.
It covers roughly a quarter of the land in the Northern Hemisphere.
Most Americans have never thought about it for a single second.
Permafrost contains about 1,700 gigatons of carbon in the form of frozen organic matter, accumulated over countless millennia of dead plants and animals that never fully decomposed.
That is roughly twice the carbon currently in the entire atmosphere above us.
Think of it as a freezer the size of a continent, stocked with centuries of biological material that simply never had the chance to rot.
For as long as the ground stayed frozen, that carbon stayed locked away, harmless and invisible.
Something is going wrong with the world’s largest freezer
The Arctic is warming roughly four times faster than the global average.
As the ground softens, the organic matter inside it begins to rot.
Permafrost releases both carbon dioxide and methane as it thaws, through rotting organic matter, collapsing terrain, and waterlogged soils where methane-producing microbes thrive.
That methane detail matters more than most people realize.
Methane is over 80 times more effective than carbon dioxide at trapping heat over a 20-year period.
Wildfires are accelerating the process further, scorching the insulating layer of moss and peat that once kept the frozen ground shielded from summer heat.
And once those gases escape, there is no putting them back.
The tundra is already changing in ways you can see from the ground
Across Alaska, roads are buckling and tilting where the ground beneath them has shifted.
Strange new lakes are appearing on the tundra, formed as the frozen ground collapses inward.
Scientists call these thermokarst lakes, and they are spreading.
In some Alaskan villages, houses are sinking and cracking as if the earth beneath them is slowly giving way.
Wooden boardwalks that once crossed stable ground now lean at odd angles, and in a handful of communities, entire buildings have been condemned.
This is not a future warning, it is already happening across the far north.
A study on permafrost and the remaining carbon budget found that including permafrost thaw in climate models meaningfully reduces the allowable carbon budget for avoiding dangerous warming targets.
Scientists ran the numbers and the total came out to $43 trillion
Greenhouse gas emissions from thawing Arctic permafrost could result in an additional $43 trillion in economic impacts by the end of the twenty-second century, according to research from the University of Cambridge and the National Snow and Ice Data Center.
That figure is not the cost of fixing permafrost.
It is the added damage thawing permafrost would layer on top of every other climate cost humans are already calculating.
To put it in scale: the University of Cambridge researchers note that the $43 trillion comes on top of more than $300 trillion in climate-change costs already projected by existing models, meaning permafrost alone could add roughly 13 percent to the total bill.
The NOAA summary of the research makes clear that most existing climate models do not yet fully account for this feedback loop.
A more recent analysis by Woodwell Climate Research Center sharpens that picture further, finding that abrupt thaw and Arctic wildfires together shrink the remaining carbon budget faster than gradual models predict.
The frozen ground was never just scenery, it was a climate vault, and it is now unlocking.
There is still time to slow the key that is turning in the lock
The picture is serious, but it is not hopeless.
Thawing is projected to affect 50 percent of near-surface permafrost at 1.5 to 2 degrees of warming, and up to 90 percent at 3 to 5 degrees.
That gap between those two numbers is the reason every fraction of a degree still matters enormously.
Scientists studying how the 2023 heat record overshot predictions are applying the same urgency to permafrost feedback, working to get these carbon costs into the models governments actually use.
Research teams are experimenting with methods to actively protect permafrost, from restoring grasslands that insulate the frozen layer to tracking thaw rates using satellites.
In places like Juneau, where a glacier burst open for the third summer in a row, residents are already living inside the feedback loops science is still racing to measure.
The ordinary-looking ground beneath the Arctic tundra turned out to be one of the most consequential things on Earth.
And the price of ignoring it was frozen in plain sight all along.
Arizona
WATCH: Mesa teen builds free scam detection tool to protect seniors from fraud
MESA, AZ — For many seniors, scam texts and phone calls can be confusing, intimidating, and costly.
One Mesa teenager believes getting help shouldn’t be.
BASIS Mesa student Shilo Karakkattu created ScamSafe after watching older family members struggle to sort through suspicious messages.
The goal is straightforward: help people avoid becoming the next victim of fraud.
For many seniors, scam texts and phone calls can be confusing, intimidating, and costly. Karakkattu saw that the problem was affecting people he loves and decided to create a solution.
Now, organizations that work with seniors are taking notice of his invention, which could soon help thousands of people across Arizona stay one step ahead of scammers.
Watch in the player above to see the remarkable student whose latest project is protecting some of Arizona’s most vulnerable residents.
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California
Activists demand Black English be pushed on kids in California preschools
Activists are pushing for Black English to be legitimized in preschool as a way to build children’s literacy skills in California.
The Black Californians United for Early Care & Education (BlackECE) is part of a movement to challenge “harmful language hierarchies and affirm Black English as a legitimate, rule-governed language rooted in Black history, culture, and community.”
The movement also seeks to “address how language bias shows up in early learning spaces–and how it can be dismantled.”
“I don’t want my son to walk into any room and feel like his voice is not valued or his perspective can’t be heard because he’s not saying it one way or the other,” the co-founder of BlackECE Ashley Williams told PBS.
She also remembered how speaking Black English is full of slangs and grammatical errors so it came with a lot of embarrassment.
BlackECE is a nonprofit organization centered around a 10-point policy plan that seeks to gain reparations and help Black children, families, and workers.
California released a plan promoting early dual language learning and calling on the state’s education system to support bilingual children in their development in 2020, but the advocacy group believes that Black vernacular should be included.
“We talk about multilinguals, but we don’t include Black children who may be African-American English speakers,” the Director of the Children’s Equity Project Xigrid Soto-Boykin said.
Williams also recalled her experiences in having to “talk white” and talking in her comfortable English and feeling insecure.
Around 20% of American children and 44% of five to seventeen year-olds in California are considered to be bilingual, according to the National Library of Medicine’s research in 2020.
However, only 89% of African-Americans solely speak English at home.
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