>
The lowest cost per watt solar hot water panel. Build guide in description.
IRS Reinstates $20,000 / 200-Transaction Threshold For Form 1099-K
Mystery Billionaire Who Donated $130M to Pay Our Troops During Shutdown Has Been Identified
Steve Bannon and Energy Consultant Dave Walsh on Electricity Shortages in States Including...
Graphene Dream Becomes a Reality as Miracle Material Enters Production for Better Chips, Batteries
Virtual Fencing May Allow Thousands More Cattle to Be Ranched on Land Rather Than in Barns
Prominent Personalities Sign Letter Seeking Ban On 'Development Of Superintelligence'
Why 'Mirror Life' Is Causing Some Genetic Scientists To Freak Out
Retina e-paper promises screens 'visually indistinguishable from reality'
Scientists baffled as interstellar visitor appears to reverse thrust before vanishing behind the sun
Future of Satellite of Direct to Cellphone
Amazon goes nuclear with new modular reactor plant
China Is Making 800-Mile EV Batteries. Here's Why America Can't Have Them

As the Democrat's shutdown stretches into its third week, hundreds of thousands of federal workers, including our brave servicemen and women, have been left without paychecks due to congressional gridlock.
The shutdown began when Congress failed to pass appropriations legislation for the 2026 fiscal year. Republicans pushed a short-term funding bill, but Senate Democrats blocked it, demanding additional spending on health care and other provisions not included in the proposal.
This has resulted in the second-longest government shutdown in U.S. history.
Essential services continue, but non-essential operations have halted, furloughing about 750,000 workers daily while 1.4 million essential employees, including military personnel, work without pay.
President Donald Trump, while traveling to Asia, announced the donation earlier this week. He described the mystery benefactor as a "great gentleman" and "great patriot" who "loves the military and loves the country" but wished to remain anonymous, a rarity in today's spotlight-seeking world.
"He doesn't want publicity," Trump said. "He prefer that his name not be mentioned which is pretty unusual in the world I come from, and in the world of politics, you want your name mentioned."
Trump emphasized that the funds were intended to offset the costs of service members' salaries and benefits, stepping in where Congress failed.
The donor's identity was first uncovered by The New York Times as 83-year-old Timothy Mellon, grandson of U.S. Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon, who served from 1921 to 1932 and built a fortune in banking and industry before the Great Depression.
The Mellon family is estimated to be worth $14 billion by Forbes, with Timothy residing quietly in Wyoming.
No stranger to supporting conservative causes, Mellon previously donated $50 million to the pro-Trump super PAC Make America Great Again just a day after Trump's 2024 conviction in a New York fraud case.