Immigration in the midst of a pandemic: how to stay optimistic amid trials

So 2020 is over. For someone who fully felt the bitterness of illness and loss, it was difficult and even tragic, for someone, perhaps not so scary and even happy in some way, but for everyone without ...

Not only coronavirus kills: 2020 became the deadliest in US history

By the end of this year, the total death toll in the United States may reach 3,2 million. This is the deadliest year in US history, with deaths expected to surpass 3 million for the first time, mainly due to the coronavirus pandemic, but more people are dying and ...

Americans are stocking up on toilet paper again because of COVID-19: why it's bad

Stockpiling has become something of a national pastime, and fears of a second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic this winter only fuel the desire to stockpile. The desire to buy the most can be worth, said USA Today. According to the December LendingTree study, during which there was ...

During the pandemic, Americans spent millions of dollars on astrologers' services

People turned to astrologers more often in a turbulent 2020, with US entrepreneurs saying the $2,2 billion industry is booming. What people ask about and what the stars promise us all, Business Insider tells. Let's start with the good news, right from...

Antiviral jeans and clothing for Zoom: fashion inventions of the pandemic era

RBC Style talks about the strange, funny and really useful inventions of the fashion industry that appeared during the coronavirus pandemic. Wearing masks and gloves, keeping social distance, meeting friends, family and colleagues at Zoom are our new reality. However, getting used to ...

They're running like the plague: the pandemic is forcing Americans to leave megacities

The coronavirus and the prospect of working from home for a long time have provoked a rush in many countries to buy and rent housing in small cities. First of all, we are talking about the able-bodied population from 20 to 40 years old. The scale of media exit from big cities ...

What we can no longer do on cruises: 11 new bans

Before quarantine became a reality in the United States, cruise ships provided a disturbing glimpse of what was about to happen. From the 14-day quarantine of thousands of people on the virus-stricken ship Diamond Princess in February to horror stories of working cruise ships, ...

Winners of the DV 2020 lottery cannot get green cards: how many managed to get documents

It was a difficult year for the 55 foreigners who won green cards. The Miami Herald explains why this is so. First, in March, US embassies and consulates around the world stopped providing non-emergency visa services due to the COVID-000 pandemic - and only recently the State...

For the first time since the Great Depression: Most young Americans live with their parents

The coronavirus pandemic has pushed millions of Americans, especially young people, to move in with family members. The proportion of people between the ages of 18 and 29 living with their parents rose to the majority after US coronavirus cases began to spread earlier this year, ...

Americans saved tens of billions of dollars working from home during the pandemic

US residents saved $91 billion by working from home during the coronavirus pandemic, Adam Ozimek, chief economist at the Upwork platform, which brings together companies and individuals doing business, shared the results of his study, writes Voice of America. Only transportation costs...

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