"Luckily, the opposite impulse also exists," she wrote, "despite the increasing onslaught of deliberate cruelty, lost ground, and assaults on our very understanding of who we are over the last year, our better instincts prevail-our instincts not only to subsist and survive, but to thrive." She explained that on January 20, 2025, she was given the opportunity to live a life "alternative to the shuttered, circumscribed, and lonely life" she'd been living.
I hope you haven't been worrying too much about Kimberly Guilfoyle, whose ex-fiancé, Donald Trump Jr., recently announced that he is engaged again, to a woman he appears to have started dating before most people, possibly including Guilfoyle herself, knew his previous relationship had ended. Despite the breakup and her subsequent combination promotion-banishment, Guilfoyle is thriving in her new role as the United States ambassador to Greece.
Kai has known Tiger for years; she shared a photo of herself and her grandfather with the golfer in a post wishing him well after his 2021 car accident. In February 2025, Tiger was spotted at the Genesis Invitational golf tournament with Kai. A month later, she liked Tiger's post announcing his relationship with her mother. Kai named Tiger as one of her biggest golf influences in an August 2025 interview with the American Junior Golf Association.
This summer, Steve Witkoff, President Trump's Middle East envoy, paid a visit to the coast of Sardinia, a stretch of the Mediterranean Sea crowded with super yachts. On one of those extravagant vessels, Mr. Witkoff sat down with a member of the ultrarich ruling family of the United Arab Emirates. He was meeting Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, a trim figure in dark glasses who controls $1.5 trillion of the Emiratis' sovereign wealth.
Fox Business hosts, on Tuesday, called out President Donald Trump and his family for being heavily invested in cryptocurrencies at the same time his administration pushes crypto-friendly legislation, as host Stuart Varney put it. Fox Business reporter Lauren Simonetti commented it appeared to be a clear conflict of interest. Their comments came a day after the Trump family's flagship token WLFI started trading.
Kirkpatrick estimated that the family has raked in more than $3 billion dollars since the start of Donald Trump's second term, with significant earnings linked to foreign investments.