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Search resuls for: "Insider's Rebecca Cohen"


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Over 200 ships are currently stuck in a massive traffic jam in the Panama Canal. The US is the largest user of the Panama Canal, so the bottleneck could hit holiday shipping. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe world's worst traffic jam is at the Panama Canal, where hundreds of massive ships are stuck due to a serious drought that reduced water levels. The traffic jam is so bad that ships have paid multiple times the toll to pass through. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe US is also the largest user of the Panama Canal, accounting for 70% of the waterway's traffic, per Container xChange.
Persons: Lars Oestergaard Nielsen, Maersk's, Insider's Rebecca Cohen Organizations: Morning, Wall, Bloomberg, Clarksons Research Services, Reuters, Panama Canal Authority, Maersk Locations: Panama, Americas, project44, Gulf, East Coast
An IRS report shows it's not that common for taxpayers to report adjusted gross income below $1. In 2020, the total income was -$4,694,058 and adjusted gross income was -$4,795,757. Trump's tax return isn't the only one in 2020 that shows a negative adjusted gross income. The following chart shows how many individual income tax returns there were for tax year 2020 by adjusted gross income. In contrast, there were over 30 million returns with adjusted gross income from $50,000 to under $100,000 and just about 30 million returns with adjusted gross income of $30,000 to under $50,000.
Ron DeSantis reappointed a judge who denied a teen an abortion partly over her grades. Judge Jared Smith talked about her grades and said she had "less than average" intelligence in his ruling. He later lost re-election, but has now been appointed to the Sixth District Court of Appeal. Ron DeSantis has reappointed a judge who lost his re-election after denying a teenager an abortion, citing her school grades. The teenager successfully appealed Smith's ruling, with the Second District Court ruling 2-1 in her favor, Insider previously reported.
A house in Amsterdam owned by sanctioned Russian oligarch Arkady Volozh was occupied by activists. Despite the Yandex billionaire's best efforts, a judge ruled that the squatters can stay. Volozh is not the first sanctioned oligarch to have his European property overtaken. Squatters moved into the five-story luxury house belonging to billionaire Arkady Volozh on October 27, according to Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf. This is far from the first protest action in the properties of high-profile sanctioned Russian figures.
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