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[6/5] Tropical Smoothie Cafe: Free 12oz Mango Monsoon Smoothie When You Wear Flip Flops


The Offer

  • Tropical Smoothie Cafe is offering a free 12oz Mango Monsoon Smoothie when you wear flip flops on nation flip flop day (6/5)

Our Verdict

Free is free, will repost on 6/5. 

Sam Altman, Mark Cuban and Elizabeth Warren are wrong: the tax code doesn’t need an apocalypse clause



The singularity is here, or at least it feels like it. How AI will reshape the economy is still unknown, but many commentators have already concluded that the tax system will require serious changes.

Billionaires John Arnold and Mark Cuban have weighed in recently with ideas ranging from taxing labor at a lower rate than capital and taxes on AI-specific features like tokens and compute. The Economist’s recent coverage of the issue proposed a new fund to offset the costs of the economic transition for those impacted by AI tools. Sam Altman and Vinod Khosla have called for drastic tax cuts on workers, while others like Sen. Elizabeth Warren have made the case for wealth taxes in response to AI’s rise.

Underlying these recommendations is a sense that AI will fundamentally alter the economy. Workers could be displaced. Resources could be strained. And some use these risks to argue that tax policy also needs to change.

We are skeptical.

AI may be a transformative technology, but that is not a good justification for throwing core principles of tax policy out the window, certainly not based on what at this point is still pure speculation about the future of the labor market. Good tax policy involved simple rules, low rates, broad bases, and avoiding penalties for investment before and after the invention of the internal combustion engine, atomic bomb, and personal computer. The same goes for AI.

Labor-saving technologies have transformed work and life in the last century even while the shares of national net income that accrue to workers and capital owners have stayed roughly stable. The US labor market is generally more dynamic than many might think if one focuses solely on layoff announcements. In 2025, there were roughly 63 million hires across the US economy and 63 million separations like quits, layoffs, and retirements.

Major labor market disruption is a risk, but labor-saving technology does not automatically require unemployment. It could, instead, mean a significant increase in leisure: time spent outside of work with family, friends and neighbors. A transition for many to a four-day work week (without a corresponding 20 percent reduction in compensation) is possible in some sectors.

People have a right to be concerned, but those concerns should not lead to bad fiscal policy.

If past economic transformation changed tax policy historically, it has been in the direction of broader tax bases.

In the early stages of the Industrial Revolution, the United States relied primarily on tariffs and excise taxes on specific goods. These revenue options were preferred in large part due to their ease of collection in a still-modernizing economy: it was much easier for the federal government to collect taxes only at ports and distilleries than from each individual or business. Technological change made taxing broader bases, like income or consumption, more possible.

Specific taxes on tokens or compute would simply be counterproductive, penalizing the adoption of new technology. But they would also constitute a reversal of the wider trend for broader tax bases that historical improvements to technology have enabled. Stocks of AI companies have seen a dramatic increase in their value, but that value does not reflect taxable profits—yet. But if, or when, investors sell shares, those sales could generate taxable capital gains.

Additionally, property taxes didn’t suddenly cease to exist when data centers came on the scene. It might surprise some to learn that in 2025, Loudoun County in Virginia was able to lower tax burdens on residents partially due to booming data center activity (and related property tax revenue). But, policymakers should avoid creating special preferences or tax carveouts for data centers beyond what one would expect for any business.

Higher than expected tax revenue from capital gains, profits, property, or other existing taxes should be channeled to prudent ends. Federal deficits are high as far as the eye can see and states and localities also face budget pressures.

The principle of simple rules not targeting a specific industry or source of social change can also be found on the spending side of the equation.

Some say, if there is to be labor market disruption, shouldn’t there be a fund that is financed with the wealth created by AI? Couldn’t the proceeds from that fund be used to offset the costs faced by individuals whose livelihoods are disrupted by AI?

The federal government has experience in this area.

Trade Adjustment Assistance, or TAA, is a program designed specifically for helping workers disrupted by trade. However, TAA has long suffered with low uptake rates—few eligible people actually accessing benefits.

There are a few reasons for low uptake, but the most straightforward one is it’s tough to say trade policy caused a particular layoff. The same lack of clarity is already here regarding alleged AI-related layoffs. While we have seen large announcements of AI-driven layoffs, they have often come from businesses in some form of financial distress or that overhired in 2021-2022.

An AI-specific adjustment program for workers would risk falling into the same pitfalls as TAA. The alternative: fixing the existing unemployment insurance system. While it can be improved, and benefit uptake is not perfect, it performs a lot better than TAA because it is a broader policy.

AI may be one of the most exciting and frightening topics in public policy today. But neither excitement nor fear means that longstanding principles of sound tax policy have suddenly expired.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

Can You Have Two Mortgages at the Same Time?


It’s time for some more mortgage Q&A: “Can you have two mortgages at the same time?”

This question came up recently and despite all the content on my site, it’s something I’ve never explicitly addressed.

So let’s talk about it! In short, yes, you can two mortgages at the same time, or even three depending on the circumstances.

It’s actually pretty common to have a second mortgage, though the reasons why can vary.

And no, it’s not a negative thing to have two mortgages, it can actually be a super savvy move.

Can You Have Two Mortgages?

In my second mortgages article, I briefly touched upon the possibility of having two mortgages and how in the past (or even present) it can carry a negative connotation.

The long and the short of it is someone who has (or needs) two mortgages might suggest they are in financial stress.

But that’s simply not true for myriad reasons, which I’ll lay out here.

Before I do that, I want to make clear that you can hold multiple mortgages on the same property at the same time.

For example, you can take out a first mortgage when you buy a home, and later take out a second mortgage behind it.

Or you can buy a home with two mortgages at the same time, known as a piggyback loan (for obvious reasons).

You can also own multiple properties with multiple loans attached, or even two properties with two mortgages on each, for a total of four loans.

The possibilities are endless really, but the takeaway is that it’s completely normal.

Why Would Someone Have Two Mortgages?

Now let’s talk about the why. There are various reasons.

A common one is to tap your equity once you’ve accrued some, perhaps a few years after you purchased your home.

Let’s say you bought a home for $400,000 with a 20% down payment to avoid private mortgage insurance and secure a lower interest rate.

Now it’s worth $500,000 and you’ve paid it down some as well. If you need/want cash, one option is to tap your available home equity, which is the difference between your appraised value and outstanding loan amount.

Pretend that outstanding loan balance is $350,000 now. That means you’ve got $150,000 in equity at your disposal.

However, lenders typically won’t let you tap ALL your equity, so a cushion is often required.

This could mean that you can borrow 85% or 90% of the current value, so in our example up to $100,000.

If you were to do this, you could take out a home equity line of credit (HELOC) or a home equity loan.

That would be a common scenario where someone winds up with two mortgages at the same time.

An alternative to this where they stick to one loan is a cash-out refinance, where you exchange your existing first mortgage for a brand new shiny one.

But considering where mortgage rates are at the moment, it’s probably a better deal to get the second mortgage.

This way you can hang onto your low-rate first mortgage and save on interest in the process, even if you need cash.

Home Buyers Will Also Break Up a Loan Into Two to Avoid Mortgage Insurance and Snag a Lower Rate

The other common scenario where you wind up with two mortgages is the piggyback loan I spoke about earlier.

These are not as prevalent today because you can now buy a home with as little as 3% down with Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. Or even zero down across many loan programs.

But home buyers will sometimes purchase a property using two loans.

For example, a first mortgage at 80% loan-to-value (LTV) and a second mortgage for say 10%.

This means they only need a 10% down payment AND can avoid mortgage insurance (PMI) as well because they’ve got a first mortgage set at 80% LTV.

So it’s a strategy to both get a lower interest rate on the first mortgage due to lower mortgage pricing adjustments, and also avoid monthly PMI costs.

To that end, it’s not a sign of financial distress, but a strategic move to save money, whether it’s breaking up a home purchase loan into two, or keeping your first mortgage and its low interest rate intact when tapping equity.

Colin Robertson
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Fiscal Injection, Monetary Impulse | EI Blog


FIMI does not predict what a government will do. It classifies what it has done, and directs the analyst toward the correct transmission mechanism, the correct positioning horizon, and the correct risk assessment.

The South Korean case was not a crisis. It was a clean, verifiable example of a mechanism that is becoming more common as governments in post-QE environments seek tools that produce monetary-scale demand effects without requiring central bank action. The same logic applied in three jurisdictions over six years. The probability of recurrence is non-zero, and the precedents make it not a hypothesis.

When the next case emerges practitioners who have a name for it and a checklist to verify it will be positioned ahead of those who reach for the nearest available label.

The label determines the position. The wrong label means the wrong trade.

References

[1] Bank of Korea. Monetary Policy Decision, April 10, 2026.
https://www.bok.or.kr/eng/bbs/E0000634/view.do?nttId=10097454&menuNo=400069

[2] Ministry of Economy and Finance, Republic of Korea. 2026 Supplementary Budget to Overcome the Middle East War Crisis. March 31, 2026.
https://www.khan.co.kr/en/article/202603311234007/

[3] Korea Herald. Gov’t proposes W26.2tr extra budget, including W4.8tr for cash handouts. March 31, 2026.
https://www.koreaherald.com/article/10706553

[4] Seoul Economic Daily. Korea Passes 26.2 Trillion Won Supplementary Budget. April 10, 2026.
https://en.sedaily.com/politics/2026/04/10/korea-passes-262-trillion-won-supplementary-budget-payments

[5] FocusEconomics. Korea Central Bank Meeting: Central Bank Stands Pat in April. April 11, 2026.
https://www.focus-economics.com/countries/korea/news/monetary-policy/korea-central-bank-meeting-11-04-2026-central-bank-stands-pat-in-april/

[6] Brookings Institution. What did the Fed do in response to the COVID-19 crisis? Updated January 2024.
https://www.brookings.edu/articles/fed-response-to-covid19/

[7] Brightman, C. Too Soon? Pandemic Policy Response Raises Risk of Inflation. Research Affiliates. April 2020.
https://www.researchaffiliates.com/insights/publications/articles/802-too-soon-pandemic-policy-response-raises-risk-of-inflation

[8] Bank of England. HM Treasury and Bank of England announce temporary extension to Ways and Means facility. April 2020.
https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/news/2020/april/hmt-and-boe-announce-temporary-extension-to-ways-and-means-facility

[9] Hausman, J. and Wieland, J. Abenomics: Preliminary Analysis and Outlook. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 2014.
https://www.brookings.edu/bpea-articles/abenomics-preliminary-analysis-and-outlook/

[10] Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. Assessing Abenomics: Evidence from Inflation-Indexed Bonds. Working Paper 2019-15.
https://www.frbsf.org/economic-research/publications/working-papers/2019/15/

[11] Feltmate, T. Assessing the Feasibility of President Trump’s Tariff Dividend Checks. TD Economics. December 5, 2025.
https://economics.td.com/us-assessing-the-feasibility-of-President-Trump-Tariff-dividend-checks

[12] Sargent, T.J. and Wallace, N. Some Unpleasant Monetarist Arithmetic. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review, 1981.
https://www.minneapolisfed.org/research/quarterly-review/some-unpleasant-monetarist-arithmetic

[13] Leeper, E.M. Equilibria under ‘Active’ and ‘Passive’ Monetary and Fiscal Policies. Journal of Monetary Economics, 27(1), 1991.
https://uva.theopenscholar.com/eric-leeper/publications/equilibria-under-%E2%80%98active%E2%80%99and-%E2%80%98passive%E2%80%99monetary-and-fiscal-policies

[14] Bernanke, B.S. Deflation: Making Sure “It” Doesn’t Happen Here. Federal Reserve Board. November 21, 2002.
https://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/2002/20021121/default.htm

[15] Turner, A. Between Debt and the Devil: Money, Credit, and Fixing Global Finance. Princeton University Press, 2015. ISBN 978-0691165856.
https://books.google.com/books/about/Between_Debt_and_the_Devil.html?id=D26YDwAAQBAJ

[16] Cochrane, J.H. The Fiscal Theory of the Price Level. Princeton University Press, 2023.
https://www.hoover.org/research/fiscal-theory-price-level

[17] Hooley, J., Khan, A., Lattie, C., Mak, I., Salazar, N., Sayegh, A., and Stella, P. Quasi-Fiscal Implications of Central Bank Crisis Interventions. IMF Working Paper No. 23/114. June 2023.
https://www.imf.org/en/publications/wp/issues/2023/06/02/quasi-fiscal-implications-of-central-bank-crisis-interventions-534076

Taylor Swift shows what World Cup economics gets wrong



Taylor Swift accidentally ran a cleaner economic‑impact experiment than the World Cup—and she did it at the right scale. When her Eras Tour hit Philadelphia in May 2023, the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book recorded the strongest hotel revenue since the pandemic, explicitly crediting an “influx of guests for the Taylor Swift concerts in the city.”

City officials in Chicago, Cincinnati, Denver, and Los Angeles told similar stories: record or near‑record hotel occupancy, packed trains, and downtowns flooded with out‑of‑town fans spending more than $1,000 apiece on tickets, outfits, food, and travel. In Los Angeles County, six shows translated into an estimated $320 million bump to local GDP and 3,300 jobs; in Denver, two dates were pegged around $140 million in state output. For economists, what matters isn’t just the dollar figure—it’s that the spike is measured where it happens: in a handful of zip codes over a specific weekend.

That’s the frame worth carrying into the summer of 2026, when the World Cup arrives with far bigger promises and far blurrier baselines. The White House task force touts up to $40.9 billion in gross output and $17.2 billion in GDP, projections quickly embraced by local boosters. But when independent researchers examine past tournaments at the national scale, the macro story stubbornly refuses to emerge. Goldman Sachs, using data back to 1982, finds that hosting the World Cup has a “marginally positive but not statistically significant” effect on real GDP in the year of the event, and that the long‑run effect is effectively zero.

This isn’t a paradox so much as a units problem. Swift’s Beige Book cameo is a statement about Philadelphia’s hotel revenue in a single month. The World Cup sales pitch is usually about “transformative” effects on a country’s growth path. Natixis, for example, estimates that the 2026 tournament might lift U.S. GDP by roughly 0.05 percentage points and Mexico’s by 0.1%–0.2%—positive, but modest and temporary against economies of that size. At the city level, both Swift and the World Cup can produce crowded hotels and busy bars. At the national level, the data say neither is an engine of structural growth.

Once you line the scales up correctly, the asymmetry sharpens. Swift’s impact is hyper‑concentrated and privately financed. Cities don’t underwrite stadiums or guarantee minimum ticket sales for her to show up; they just cope with the surge. The World Cup’s impact is diffuse and publicly backstopped: U.S. hosts are leaning on studies that promise hundreds of millions or even billions in “economic activity,” like New York–New Jersey’s projected $3.3 billion, to justify infrastructure upgrades, security costs, and years of planning. When the dust settles, the realized national gains look more like Swift’s Philadelphia weekend—only stretched over a month and a continent, and paid for, in part, by taxpayers.

Economists have become increasingly blunt about this pattern. Independent work finds that league‑sponsored impact models systematically overstate net benefits by ignoring displacement, imports, and the opportunity cost of public money. Natixis notes that for 2026, much of what fans will buy is made elsewhere, and that the U.S., Mexico, and Canada are simply too large for even a multi‑billion‑dollar event to materially alter their growth trajectories. The result is a familiar arc: eye‑popping ex‑ante projections, modest ex‑post data, and then a hurried pivot away from GDP toward less tangible payoffs.

The ‘psychic income’ lift

That pivot is where “psychic income” comes in. Faced with underwhelming macro effects, Goldman’s World Cup report leans on the literature showing that people are willing to pay real money for pride, joy, and belonging, even when tournaments don’t raise trend growth. Surveys suggest citizens place surprisingly high monetary value on hosting or winning—evidence of genuine welfare gains that don’t show up in national accounts. In this telling, the “return” on World Cup spending is the emotional dividend: the month when a country feels like the center of the world.

Swift delivers her own version of psychic income, but she doesn’t need contingent valuation surveys to prove it. Fans reveal their willingness to pay in real time, dropping an average of more than $1,300 per Eras show on tickets, travel, hotels, merch, and outfits; resale prices can climb into five figures. Local “Swiftonomics” reports that tally $320 million here and $140 million there are really just capturing the tail of that distribution—the part that spills into hotel ledgers and tax receipts. The rest of the value lives where psychic income always has: in the stories, the social media feeds, the feeling of having been there.

Put together, the comparison isn’t about proving that Swift “beats” the World Cup at economics; it’s about showing how scale and financing change the story we should tell about both. At the city‑weekend level, Swift delivers exactly the boom that World Cup promoters promise: maxed‑out occupancy, record restaurant nights, public transit running at or above pre‑COVID levels. At the national level, both are rounding errors in GDP. The difference is that Swift’s experiment is clean and voluntary, while the World Cup’s is muddied by public guarantees and a habit of selling localized, temporary uplifts as if they were national development strategy.

For policymakers and investors, that’s the useful reframing. Mega‑events can absolutely juice a weekend balance sheet and recharge a city’s sense of itself. They are far less convincing as macro policy tools. If the real prize is psychic income rather than productivity, then the honest questions are: what unit are we measuring, how much are we actually buying, and who is writing the check? Swift’s fans have already answered those questions with their wallets. World Cup hosts are about to answer them with public budgets.

Chase Freedom Unlimited Rakuten Offer: Up to $90 Back


Chase Freedom Unlimited Rakuten Offer: Up to $90 Back

Rakuten has increased its payout for the Chase Freedom Unlimited card, giving applicants a chance to earn additional cash back or Bilt Rewards points on top of the card’s welcome bonus. The highest payout is available to new Chase customers, while existing Chase customers can still earn a smaller bonus. Let’s take a look at the details.

Offer Details

Rakuten is currently offering an additional bonus for the Chase Freedom Unlimited card:

  • New Chase customers: $90 cash back or 9,000 Bilt Rewards points
  • Existing Chase customers: $50 cash back or 5,000 Bilt Rewards points

The bonus is awarded by Rakuten and is separate from the welcome bonus offered directly by Chase.

The Rakuten bonus is only available to members who have their Rakuten accounts set to earn cash back or Bilt Rewards points. Those earning American Express Membership Rewards through Rakuten generally will not see these Chase card offers (anymore).

Chase Freedom Unlimited Welcome Bonus

The Chase Freedom Unlimited currently offers:

  • Earn a $200 bonus after spending $500 on purchases in the first 3 months from account opening
  • No annual fee
  • 5% cash back on travel purchased through Chase Travel
  • 3% cash back on dining and drugstore purchases
  • 1.5% cash back on all other purchases

Guru’s Wrap-up

This is a nice opportunity to stack an extra Rakuten payout on top of the Chase Freedom Unlimited welcome offer. New Chase customers can earn an additional $90 cash back or 9,000 Bilt points, while existing Chase customers can still pick up an extra $50 or 5,000 Bilt points.

The Freedom Unlimited remains one of the best no-annual-fee cards available, especially for those who also have a Chase Sapphire Preferred or Sapphire Reserve and can combine rewards into transferable Ultimate Rewards points. If you’re planning to apply anyway, going through Rakuten is an easy way to get some extra points.

If you’re new to Rakuten, you can also earn a $50 signup bonus after meeting the requirements for a new account. That means a new Chase customer could potentially earn $140 cash back total ($90 from the Chase Freedom Unlimited offer plus $50 from Rakuten’s new member bonus), on top of the welcome bonus offered by Chase.

Meet the Incredible AI Stock That Has Nearly Tripled in 2026 and Could Go Much Higher


Each year, an exciting new artificial intelligence (AI) investment seems to pop up. Sometimes these stocks flop after a year in the spotlight, and other times they continue to rise.

One newcomer in 2026 that I’m bullish on over the long term is Nebius (NBIS +3.30%), which gives clients everything they need to build, train, and run AI models and applications. Nebius has had an incredible year so far and has risen around 175% after five months.

But after looking at its prospects, I think the stock has a chance to move much higher this year, and just because you missed out on the initial run doesn’t mean you can’t cash in on future returns.

Image source: Getty Images.

Nebius is Nvidia-backed

Nebius is known as a neocloud company, a term that denotes businesses that are AI-focused, and Nebius is one of the best in this realm. Its platform has attracted both large and small clients, with businesses like Meta Platforms and Microsoft being prominent clients.

Nebius Group Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(3.30%) $8.30

Current Price

$259.98

Another key partner is Nvidia. It’s a significant investor in Nebius and gives it early access to new technology, making it a way for clients to use state-of-the-art computing products first. That’s an important partner to have in its industry and helps affirm that Nebius is the real deal.

The company is undergoing rapid expansion to meet growing AI demand. In 2025, it had one data center site with 100-megawatt (MW) or greater power consumption; now, it’s up to seven. It has huge growth projections, with the overall target being a $7 billion to $9 billion annual run rate, up from $1.25 billion at the end of 2025.

So far, it’s executing on that projection after a first quarter during which revenue rose 684% year over year. And that’s just the beginning.

NBIS Revenue (TTM) Chart

NBIS Revenue (TTM) data by YCharts; TTM = trailing 12 months.

Wall Street analysts project revenue will rise to $11 billion by the end of 2027. That’s huge growth from current levels and might spark investor curiosity since the stock could return a similar level of growth. However, with Nebius trading at 5.3 times 2027 sales, there’s a lot of growth already baked into the stock price. And management is in a growth-at-all-costs mindset, and profitability is a long way away.

There are some risks with that investors must be aware of, but I think the possible reward is far higher. As a result, I think Nebius is a solid buy right now, but investors should keep exposure limited due to elevated risk.

Keithen Drury has positions in Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Nebius Group, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Meta Platforms, Microsoft, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Trump cuts off funds to Hawaii Medicaid fraud unit over lack of cases




Trump cuts off funds to Hawaii Medicaid fraud unit over lack of cases

《Finance Lang 》EP38 旅行的意义 花钱旅行到底值不值得?#podcast



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