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The Injectable Weight Loss Medicine Journal – Diet Planner – Daily Calorie Tracker: Designed for Tirzepatide, Semaglutide, and Other GLP-1 Users

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Price: $9.99
(as of Aug 17, 2025 21:31:01 UTC – Details)


Your ultimate companion for tracking injectable weight loss treatments!

If you’re navigating your weight loss journey with the aid of injectable medications, the Injectable Weight Loss Medicine Journal is crafted specifically to meet your needs. Tailored for users of GLP-1 medications and other injectables, this journal helps simplify the path to achieving your wellness goals. Our structured system lets you effectively track daily habits, manage symptoms, and plan meals to support your success every step of the way.

Key Features:Comprehensive Health Emergency Directory: Quick access to critical contact information and steps for urgent situations.Medical Appointment Log & Summary Pages: Track your medical appointments, doctor visits, and key notes with ease.Supplements & Medications Shop List: Stay organized with a dedicated space to list essential vitamins and medications.Foods to Avoid or Include: Plan your diet effectively with a guide to limiting certain foods and incorporating others into your meal plan.12-Week Weight Loss Tracker: Visualize and celebrate your progress over a three-month period.Photo Journey Section: Create before-and-after snapshots to document your inspiring transformation.Daily Journal Pages with Symptom Chart: Record your symptoms related to medication use, monitor your mood, sleep, and energy levels.Full-Page Daily Calorie Tracker: Keep track of your meals, calories consumed, and compare your intake against daily goals.

Whether you’re using Tirzepatide weight management solutions or other GLP-1 injectables, this health and weight loss journal is crafted to support you with a wellness logbook weight loss approach. Take charge of your journey, track your diet journal daily, and empower your transformation.

Take the next step towards your health goals. Order your journal today!

Important Note: We are not affiliated with any specific brand or medication. This journal is intended solely as a tool to help you track your weight loss journey and wellness progress. It should not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice or treatment. Always consult your healthcare provider for guidance tailored to your individual needs.


From the Publisher

Injectable meds + this journal = the ultimate weight loss duo!

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Using a tirzepatide medication like Mounjaro or Zepbound, or semaglutide such as Ozempic or Wegovy? This journal is tailored just for you! Track your journey, monitor progress, and stay organized with the ultimate companion for your weight loss goals.

192 pages dedicated to your daily injectable weight loss journey—providing a full 3 months of focused health tracking!

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Keep your emergency contacts close at hand ( 1 Page) / Detail your doctor visits here for comprehensive health tracking( 6 Pages)

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Your Personalized Medications & Supplements Tracker ( 2 pages )/ Track and cheer your 12-week weight loss milestones( 1 Page)

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Because losing weight with injectables deserves a tracker as dedicated as you are!

Designed for users of Mounjaro, Ozempic, Wegovy, Zepbound, and other injectable medicationsTailored for GLP-1 and other injectable therapies to simplify your weight loss journeyStructured system to track daily habits, manage symptoms, and plan meals effectively

Key Features:

Health Emergency Directory: Quick access to critical contacts and urgent health stepsMedical Appointment Tracking: Log and summarize doctor visits, key notes, and prescriptionsSupplements & Medications List: Organize your vitamins and medicationsFoods to Limit or Include: Guidance on reducing and adding foods to your diet12-Week Progress Tracker: Track and celebrate milestones over three monthsBefore & After Photo Section: Document your transformation journey visuallyDaily Journal Pages with Symptom Log: Track symptoms, mood, sleep, and moreDaily Calorie Tracker: Monitor meals, calorie intake, and daily goals

Take control of your weight loss journey today!

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Looking for a more compact version or a different cover style? Check out our full line of weight loss journals tailored to meet your needs!

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Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars 2

4.3 out of 5 stars 7

5.0 out of 5 stars 1

5.0 out of 5 stars 2

Price

$9.99$9.99 $8.99$8.99 $8.99$8.99 $8.99$8.99

Pages
224 139 132 132

Dedicated Full Page for Calorie Tracking


X X X

Supplements & Medications List


X X

Daily Journal Pages with Symptom Log

ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DNQB7PN7
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Independently published
Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 17, 2024
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Print length ‏ : ‎ 224 pages
Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.11 pounds
Reading age ‏ : ‎ 15 – 18 years
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7 x 0.51 x 10 inches
Best Sellers Rank: #1,933,062 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #326 in Weight Watchers Diet #6,574 in Weight Loss Diets (Books) #9,051 in Other Diet Books
Customer Reviews: 5.0 5.0 out of 5 stars 2 ratings var dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction; P.when(‘A’, ‘ready’).execute(function(A) { if (dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction !== true) { dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction = true; A.declarative( ‘acrLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault”: true }, function (event) { if (window.ue) { ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } } ); } }); P.when(‘A’, ‘cf’).execute(function(A) { A.declarative(‘acrStarsLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault” : true }, function(event){ if(window.ue) { ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } }); });

Georgia GOP fears bruising primary in race to unseat Ossoff

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Republicans are bracing for what could be another brutal primary as they look to unseat Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) next year.

Former football coach Derek Dooley and Reps. Buddy Carter (R-Ga.) and Mike Collins (R-Ga.) have all launched bids for the Republican nod to take on Ossoff. Not long after Dooley — who’s seen as Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp’s (R) preferred candidate — entered the race, the two congressmen quickly trained their fire on the political outsider.

The early friction underscores the tall task ahead of Republicans: avoiding a messy primary that leaves the nominee bruised and battered heading into the general election, while also dodging a major clash between Kemp and President Trump, who has yet to weigh in on his preferred candidate. 

“As Republican strategists, we’re always concerned that we’re better at eating our own than winning in November,” said Heath Garrett, a friend of Dooley’s since law school who is not involved in the campaign, “and so, we also have to balance that with the reality that voters want a choice.”

“But can we mitigate the collateral damage so that we can all still win in November?” Garrett added. 

Dooley, whose father is former University of Georgia football coach and Georgia icon Vince Dooley, became the latest entry in the Republican contest to take on Ossoff when he launched his campaign for Senate earlier this month. 

The younger Dooley has leaned hard into his own football background, best known for his time coaching at University of Tennessee, while touting himself as a political outsider. More importantly, he’s seen as Kemp’s preferred pick in the race after the governor declined an opportunity to run himself despite much courting from his party.

A source close to the campaign told The Hill that Dooley has visited at least 16 counties since his launch, saying there was a “really, really positive response to him entering the race.”

Carter so far has a financial edge in the race with more cash on hand than Collins, who’s been in the race for several weeks. Carter has loaned himself $2 million so far, though observers are watching to see how much money he ultimately pours into his bid.

Carter’s campaign has sought to align itself with the president, with a campaign spokesperson asserting that the congressman “has stood with Trump from Day One.”

“Georgians know the difference between a fighter who stands with Trump versus a product of the same establishment machine that tried to stop him,” the spokesperson said.

Collins, who has also sought to align himself with Trump, has started to establish himself as a serious candidate several weeks after launching his bid, including by organizing a 159-county operation across the state and racking up endorsements from even some of Kemp’s allies.

By comparison, the Georgia GOP is formally organized in only 142 counties. 

“To get organized in all 159 counties in two weeks is relatively unheard of in Georgia,” said one Georgia Republican strategist, who requested anonymity to speak candidly.

“I think there’s probably some prevailing thought in D.C., like, ‘Oh, it’s a congressman, like, how much widespread support can he really have, right, across the state?’” the strategist said. “But Mike has clearly built an infrastructure very quickly.”

The next marker observers will be watching for is third-quarter fundraising reports, which will highlight how serious all three candidates are.

All three men are also vying for the coveted Trump endorsement. A source close to Carter said the Savannah-area congressman met with the White House about the race; a source close to the Collins campaign said Collins has talked to Trump about his Senate bid. Dooley has also visited the White House.

Just hours into Dooley’s entry, the tenor of the race quickly turned negative, with Carter and Collins attacking the former football coach.

“I will tell you this, and we’re all proud of our dads, and I’m sure both my opponents are proud of their dads as well. But at the same time, we better take this serious,” Carter said while speaking to Henry County Republicans earlier this month, a thinly veiled shot at Dooley.

“You got to have somebody who can go toe-to-toe with this kid, and I’m that person who can go toe-to-toe with him,” he added, referring to Ossoff.

Meanwhile, Collins’s campaign has taken to mocking Dooley, such as when the former football coach posted that “In coaching, we have a saying, ‘Your film is your resume.’”

“‘Your film is your resume.’ So true, Coach!” replied Collins’s campaign, posting a clip of Louisiana State University defeating the University of Tennessee, where Dooley formerly coached, 16-14 in a 2010 SEC game.

In Dooley’s first interview since launching his Senate bid, conservative radio show host and former Kemp aide Martha Zoller noted he had only been in the race for about a week.

“It doesn’t feel that way,” Dooley chimed in, “because there’s never — there’s never been a candidate who’s not a candidate, and never been in politics, get attacked more in a three-week span.”

Georgia Republicans are no strangers to messy primaries, including 2020 when then-Rep. Doug Collins (R-Ga.) challenged then-Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.) for the Republican Senate nomination. The two traded barbs and negative attack ads, with Loeffler ultimately beating Collins by six points. But she was later defeated in the runoff against then-Democratic candidate Raphael Warnock.

“There are a lot of concerns, particularly after going through 2020, 2021, in the Senate race there and the runoff and the Kelly Loeffler situation — there are a lot of concerns by a lot of Republicans about that,” said conservative radio show host Erick Erickson, referring to concerns about a messy primary.

“But also it’s notable Collins and Carter firing so hard at Dooley right now, who’s got low-name ID, because I do think they realize he can be a competitive threat,” he added.

Republicans are equally — if not more — eager to avoid a clash between Kemp and the president, who have a historically complicated relationship ever since the Georgia governor flouted Trump’s ask to overturn the 2020 election results in his state.

Several reports last month indicated Trump’s and Kemp’s orbits were at odds yet again, particularly over Kemp’s reported push for Dooley.

A GOP operative confirmed to The Hill that there had been a sense of “annoyance” between Trump’s and Kemp’s camps over how to handle the race, but there have been efforts to smooth things over.

“Both sides recognize it’s best if they’re on the same side in the end,” the operative said. “I think it’s still TBD where that ends up.”

A GOP source familiar also told The Hill “there have been successful efforts to lower” the temperature.

Still, there’s a split between some members of the party over who should take the lead on the search to find the best consensus candidate.

“Kemp knows how to win statewide. Last time they picked a candidate, Herschel Walker didn’t do so well,” one Senate GOP member said, referring to the dynamic with the White House and noting that members still remember the debacle that led to wins by Ossoff and Warnock in January 2021. “His instincts are not necessarily the best. Kemp’s are, and they need to get over the chemistry issue.”

Meanwhile, others are eager to see the White House gets involved.

“I think most people here are still holding out hope that the White House steps in before the end of the year. Now is that wishful thinking? Maybe,” the Georgia Republican strategist said, who wasn’t concerned yet about a messy primary. 

But “every day that goes by is another day that Ossoff is untouched, is raising more money and … is padding his cash advantage over our nominee.”

“The Numbers Are Extraordinary,” Says Jim Cramer

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We recently published 12 Latest Stocks Jim Cramer Discussed. Robinhood Markets, Inc. (NASDAQ:HOOD) is one of the stocks Jim Cramer recently discussed.

Digital exchange Robinhood Markets, Inc. (NASDAQ:HOOD) is one of Cramer’s favorite stocks. He believes that the firm enjoys a significant advantage over traditional brokers and has a strong platform that has facilitated the transfer of wealth between the older and younger generations. Robinhood Markets, Inc. (NASDAQ:HOOD)’s shares have gained 189% year-to-date as investors continue to be enthused about its competitive advantage and market share. Here are Cramer’s latest comments about the firm:

“And you know that from Robinhood, the numbers are extraordinary. A lot of the brokers I think are sitting back, they don’t want to admit it on air and say, oh my god, Robinhood is crushing us. “Uh, I do think that, Vlad Tenev has got the brokers of the future. And I think that the other guys have to catch up.”

Robinhood Markets, Inc. (HOOD): "The Numbers Are Extraordinary," Says Jim Cramer
Robinhood Markets, Inc. (HOOD): “The Numbers Are Extraordinary,” Says Jim Cramer

Cryptocurrency Ethereum – Mobile device neo-broker smart stock trading app

Previously, the CNBC TV host discussed Robinhood Markets, Inc. (NASDAQ:HOOD)’s platform:

“Do I have to describe Robinhood to you? It’s an app. No, it’s a bank. No, it’s a repository of wealth of the millennials, whatever you want to call it. Robinhood has 25 million accounts, and it offers ETFs, options, gold, and crypto. It came out of nowhere. This company was worth $11 billion two years ago. Now it’s $88 billion. Again, incredibly profitable. Out of nowhere, it seems to have captured young people who would otherwise not bother to invest. You know what I say? Hallelujah.”

While we acknowledge the potential of HOOD as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an extremely cheap AI stock that is also a major beneficiary of Trump tariffs and onshoring, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock.

READ NEXT: 30 Stocks That Should Double in 3 Years and 11 Hidden AI Stocks to Buy Right Now.

Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.

Why the former editor of Polygon is making a podcast for old gamers

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In a recent episode of Post Games, host Chris Plante explores how video games can help players understand death. He’s interviewing Kaitlin Tremblay, who is working on Ambrosia Sky, a game about death.

“What is it about games that is so useful for exploring the topic?” Plante asks.

“I think there’s something really lovely about the way in which games invite players in,” Tremblay says. There is “something quite lovely about asking a person to cooperate and to be a part of the story, and to move through the space.”

It’s a tone, and a substance of conversation, unlike any I’ve heard on a gaming podcast before. And it underscores what’s so unique about Post Games — and how it might stand out from other gaming media, by acting a lot more like a slower and more cerebral NPR show.

Within weeks of leaving Polygon, where he was the editor-in-chief, Plante started Post Games, which he describes as “a weekly podcast about how and why we love video games.” He’s targeting an older demographic and models Post Games after an NPR-like format with tightly-edited segments and weekly episodes that last for about an hour. And he’s asking fans for support via Patreon to help keep it going.

“Practically everything in games media targets young people”

Many other video game podcasts are “almost entirely for people under the age of 30 who can afford to listen to multiple shows that are four hours long this week,” Plante tells The Verge. “Practically everything in games media targets young people — both because it’s being produced by young people and because it’s the demographic sales teams believe they have the best shot at selling.” But players over 35, he says, have “very different interests and expectations.” There are a lot of people that fall in that category, with the Entertainment Software Association reporting that more than half of the 205.1 million Americans playing video games are older than 35.

“It’s really basic supply and demand shit,” he says. “And yet very few places want to meet this demand. The publications older audiences turn to for information — newspapers, magazines, and audio — have given gaming culture scraps at best, and worst, ignored it entirely.”

Before I go any further, I should make a few disclosures. Plante, until May, was the editor-in-chief of Polygon, formerly The Verge’s sister site dedicated to gaming and entertainment. He was a co-founder of Polygon when it launched in 2012, and he later worked at The Verge from September 2014 to July 2017. I never worked with him directly, but I met Plante for the first time in person earlier this year over dinner at the Game Developers Conference.

This is all to say that when Vox Media announced on May 1st that it sold Polygon to Game Rant owner Valnet, and Plante said that he wouldn’t be part of the site moving forward, I was bummed for him. But by the end of the month, he had published the first episode of Post Games, and he’s posted a new episode every week since. It’s a great podcast.

Each episode is about an hour long and split into three acts. Much of the show revolves around interviews on a certain topic, and a third act features Plante discussing the news of the week. But the broader topics of the episodes don’t always align with the current big thing in gaming.

The first episode was about the history of the Independent Games Festival’s Seamus McNally Grand Prize, for example. The second was about sexy games. When the episodes do tackle topics of the moment, Plante tries to put his own spin on things; when Death Stranding 2: On the Beach came out, Plante scored a rare interview with YouTuber videogamedunkey, who initially hated the first Death Stranding but revisited it two years later.

A screenshot from Death Stranding 2: On the Beach.

Death Stranding 2: On the Beach.
Image: Kojima Productions

The show is available for free with ads, but people who pay a $5 per month subscription on Patreon get early access to ad-free episodes with a bonus segment and access to an exclusive video every month. While planning out what Post Games would be “my logic was, if I wasn’t willing to spend $5 on it, then why would anybody else?” Plante says. The show just hit 1,000 paid subscribers, and even if things flatten from there, “that would be enough to cover my family’s health insurance.” If the show gets 2,000 by the end of the year, “I’ll feel confident about this being my future.”

Game journalists who leave or were laid off from traditional gaming publications are increasingly doing their own thing, such as the worker-owned Aftermath from former Kotaku writers and Patrick Klepek’s parent-focused Crossplay Substack publication. And while publications everywhere are facing pressure from things like AI search engines and Google Zero, Plante argues there are a lot of audiences that are underserved by more traditional business models because of their reliance on scale.

“As somebody in the media, you hear a lot about how great independent media is because of its benefits for the people who make the media, but I think there’s a larger conversation that needs to be had about the benefits that it has for the audience, for the readers,” Plante says. “I think if you focus on the readers and the audience, you will find more business opportunities for more independent creators or more just smaller funded creators.” He also says that if mainstream publications don’t want to serve the “humongous and growing audience” of older gamers, “I’m happy to.”

Plante sees Post Games as his thing for the next long while. “My only dream for the future of the show is that I’m doing this in 10 years,” he says.

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The Hundred 2025 results: Sonny Baker takes hat-trick and Liam Livingstone stars as Originals & Phoenix win

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Liam Livingstone continued his fine form in The Hundred with a strong all-round display – picking up 2-26 with the ball before scoring an unbeaten 45 from 20 balls to guide Birmingham Phoenix to a seven-wicket win over London Spirt.

Chasing 127, Joe Clarke struck a 25-ball 54 to give the Phoenix a solid platform and captain Livingstone finished the job with a knock that included five sixes and a four.

The 32-year-old, who also struck an unbeaten 69 in the Phoenix’s win against two-time defending champions Oval Invincibles on Tuesday, now has the most runs in this season’s Hundred with 211.

The knock further strengthens Livingstone’s reputation as one of the best finishers in The Hundred. He has scored 543 runs across 17 innings at an impressive average of 49.36 and a blistering strike-rate of 166 in chases.

However, he was left out of the England squads that were announced for the series against South Africa and Ireland on Friday.

The Phoenix skipper also picked up the wickets of Spirit opener David Warner and Ollie Pope as the Phoenix bowlers had delivered a masterclass in death bowling to restrict the Spirit to 126-6 after deciding to bowl first.

“It is a big win for us, we needed it,” said Livingstone after the game.

“We are up against it in this tournament, we know we are, but all we can do is win games and try to improve our run-rate, then we’ll see where we are.”

The tone was set early when Trent Boult sent back Spirit opener Jamie Smith for a duck and though Kane Williamson offered some resistance with a 29-ball 33, the Phoenix never let the momentum slip away.

Remarkably, they did not concede a single boundary in the final 15 deliveries as Boult and Adam Milne tightened the screws to set the stage for the win.

Their second win of the season sees the Phoenix leapfrog the Spirit to sixth place on a superior net run-rate. With eight points, they are also level with the Manchester Originals and Southern Brave.

Rubio defends State Department halting Gaza visitor visas

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Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Sunday defended the State Department’s move to halt Gaza visitor visas to the United States, saying he’s seen evidence linking visa recipients to terrorist groups in the region.

In an interview on CBS News’s “Face the Nation,” moderator Margaret Brennan asked Rubio why children seeking medical aid in the U.S. would be a threat, a day after the State Department announced it would conduct a review of the processes used to issue temporary medical-humanitarian visas.

“First of all, it’s not just kids,” Rubio said. “It’s a bunch of adults that are accompanying them.”

“Second, we had outreach from multiple congressional offices asking questions about it, and so we’re going to reevaluate how those visas are being granted,” he continued. “Not just to the children, but how those visas are being granted to the people who are accompanying them and, by the way, to some of the organizations that are facilitating it.”

Rubio said “numerous” congressional offices have presented evidence “that some of the organizations bragging about, and involved in, acquiring these visas have strong links to terrorist groups like Hamas.”

“And so we are not going to be in partnership with groups that are friendly with Hamas. So we need to- we’re going to pause those visas,” pending further review, he continued.

The State Department said Saturday that all visitor visas for Gazans “are being stopped while we conduct a full and thorough review of the process and procedures used to issue a small number of temporary medical-humanitarian visas in recent days.”

3 Smart Ways To Profit Now

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If you paid attention to the stock market back in 2021, you might remember the “meme stock” craze that pushed otherwise struggling companies to record highs.

Explore More: Self-Made Millionaires Suggest 5 Stocks You Should Never Sell

Find Out: Mark Cuban Says Trump’s Executive Order To Lower Medication Costs Has a ‘Real Shot’ — Here’s Why

You might also remember those price surges were almost entirely the result of social media buzz rather than business fundamentals. Investors poured into the stocks mainly because they liked turning conventional Wall Street wisdom inside out — not because they thought the companies made good investments.

At the time, it seemed like a passing fad. Suddenly, however, meme stocks are a thing again. Shares of Opendoor, Kohl’s, Wendy’s, American Eagle Outfitters and other “embattled” companies have all seen recent surges similar to four years ago, Business Insider reported.

This trend is certainly good for the companies. But is it good for investors?

Most financial advisors warn against jumping on meme stocks because they tend to sink as fast as they rise. However, you can earn a profit if you follow the right rules. Here are three ways you can potentially cash in on meme stocks in 2025.

This is something you should do with any stock — review its business fundamentals to make sure it is on solid financial footing. But it’s especially important with meme stocks.

TD Bank recommended looking over the company’s quarterly and annual reports, as well as its analyst reports. Once you’ve done that, ask yourself the following questions:

  • Are the company’s revenues rising?

  • Are its earnings increasing year after year?

  • Does it have a product lineup that makes sense to you?

  • Does its current stock price have room to grow based on consensus analyst price targets?

If the answer is “yes” to these questions, then you might be able to cash in on a meme stock.

I Asked ChatGPT: How To Get Rich Off of Bitcoin

At the very least, a meme stock should have a brand that is recognizable to most investors, according to Fidelity. Meme stocks are volatile enough. What you don’t want is a stock that regular investors have never heard of.

“[This] could mean those investments share features of a certain kind of trend trading, creating the potential for them to get caught up in irregular trading activity,” Fidelity noted. “Following the herd or any other impetus that is not grounded in a strong fundamental basis for investing your money is never prudent.”

As Forbes noted, a couple of the more famous meme stocks didn’t have much staying power in terms of share price. GameStop’s price surged above $480 per share during its meme stock peak in early 2021, but it soon crashed back to reality and currently trades near $22.

Putin agreed to ‘robust’ security guarantees for Ukraine, says US envoy

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Asya Robins and George Wright

BBC News

Reuters Putin and Donald Trump at the Alaska summitReuters

Donald Trump’s special envoy said Russia had agreed to allow the US and Europe to give Ukraine “robust” security guarantees as part of a potential peace deal.

Steve Witkoff told CNN it was agreed at the Alaska summit that the US and Europe could “effectively offer Article 5-like language to cover a security guarantee”, referring to Nato’s principle that an attack on one member is an attack on all.

Putin has long opposed Ukraine joining Nato, and Witkoff said the arrangement could be an alternative if the Ukrainians “can live with it”.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky described the US’s security guarantee offer as “historic” ahead of talks with Trump and European leaders on Monday.

Speaking ahead of his visit to Washington DC, Zelensky said any guarantee “must really be very practical, delivering protection on land, in the air, and at sea, and must be developed with Europe’s participation”.

Meanwhile, following a meeting on Sunday of the “coalition of the willing” – a group of nations including the UK, France and Germany that have pledged to protect peace in Ukraine once it is achieved – a No10 spokesman said leaders had commended Trump’s “commitment” to providing security guarantees.

The leaders also “re-emphasised the readiness to deploy a reassurance force once hostilities have ceased, and to help secure Ukraine’s skies and seas and regenerate Ukraine’s armed forces”, the spokesman added.

UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron, Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Nato Secretary-General Mark Rutte are set to join Zelensky in Washington on Monday.

Macron said the group would challenge Trump on how far he was willing to go in terms of security guarantees.

“If we’re not strong today, we’ll pay dearly tomorrow,” he said, adding the group’s plan was to “present a united front”.

EPA Volodymyr Zelensky, Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron chat after holding a meeting during a summit on Ukraine at Lancaster House in London, UK, on 2 March 2025.EPA

Witkoff also told CNN on Sunday that Russia had made “some concessions at the table” about territory, noting Donetsk would be part of an “important discussion” on Monday.

It comes after Putin reportedly presented Trump with a peace offer in Alaska on Friday that would require Ukraine withdrawing from the Donetsk region of the Donbas, in return for Russia freezing the front lines in Zaporizhzhia and Kherson.

The BBC’s US partner CBS cited diplomatic sources as saying that European officials were concerned Trump may try to press Zelensky to agree to the terms.

Russia claims the Donbas as Russian territory, controlling most of Luhansk and about 70% of Donetsk. It also illegally annexed the Crimean peninsula in 2014, eight years before launching its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Zelensky on Tuesday said Ukraine would reject any Russian proposal to give up the Donbas region, warning it could be used as a springboard for future attacks.

He has also pointed to the country’s constitution, which requires a referendum before a change in its territory.

Watch: How the Trump-Putin summit unfolded… in under 2 minutes

Monday’s White House meeting will be Zelensky’s first since an acrimonious public exchange in the Oval Office in February, when Trump told him to be more “thankful” for US support and accused him of “gambling with World War Three”.

Zelensky was then told to leave the White House.

He appeared to reconcile with Trump in April, in what the White House described as a “very productive” 15-minute meeting before they attended Pope Francis’s funeral.

Ukraine has also signed a minerals deal that gave the US a financial stake in the country, and Kyiv made it clear they were willing to pay for US arms.

But there will have been concern in Kyiv and other European capitals following the Trump-Putin meeting on Friday.

The Russian president, who is facing an International Criminal Court arrest warrant for alleged war crimes in Ukraine, stepped off his jet and onto a red carpet to be warmly received by Trump, who later said they had a “fantastic relationship”.

Watch in full: The remarkable exchange between Zelensky, Vance and Trump

Murphy dismisses Trump's DC crime crackdown as a 'stunt'

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Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) on Sunday dismissed President Trump’s recent crackdown on Washington, D.C., as a “stunt.”

“What’s happening here in Washington, D.C. is just a stunt. Donald Trump didn’t like the fact that the walls were closing in on him, that his own base was questioning why he wouldn’t release the Epstein files, why he was protecting very powerful people,” Murphy told NBC News’s Kristen Welker on “Meet the Press.”

“He didn’t want to talk anymore about the fact that our health care system is about to collapse because of the cuts that they have made, that premiums are going to go up by 75 percent on Americans,” he added. “And so, true to form, he just decided to create a new news cycle.”

Earlier this week, Trump announced he was taking federal control of D.C.’s police department and deploying the National Guard in the city in an effort to fight crime. Trump’s recent moves in the nation’s capital have drawn heavy blowback from Democrats and reignited calls for statehood for the District, which does not have voting representation in Congress.

On Saturday, South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster (R) announced that he had authorized the deployment of 200 National Guard troops to help “restore law and order” in D.C., also saying that they could be recalled if there was a South Carolina disaster.

“I’ve authorized the deployment of 200 S.C. National Guardsmen to support President Trump in his mission to restore law and order to our nation’s capital. The federal government will pay for this deployment under Title 32,” McMaster said on the social media platform X.

“Our National Guard will work to assist President Trump’s mission, and should a hurricane or natural disaster threaten our state, they can and will be immediately recalled home to respond,” the governor added.

The Hill has reached out to the White House for comment. 

Low Credit Score? It Could Be Costing You $102K Over A Lifetime

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If your credit score is on the lower side, you could be paying a “subprime tax” that adds up to more than $100,000 over the course of your life, according to a Bankrate study. The study found that borrowers with a 620 credit score or lower pay an average of $3,400 more each year for essentials like loans and insurance compared to those with higher scores.

For roughly one in five U.S. adults — the share of Americans with subprime credit — that extra cost can have a big impact on financial stability.

The subprime tax refers to the higher costs lenders and insurers charge borrowers with lower credit scores. Bankrate found that, on average, this works out to about 4% of a typical U.S. household’s annual income.

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These extra charges can appear across many common financial products, including:

  • Mortgage loan interest: $1,330 per year on average

  • Auto loan interest: $745 per year

  • Auto insurance premiums: $514 per year

  • Home insurance premiums: $398 per year

  • Personal loan interest: $328 per year

  • Credit card interest: $89 per year

Over five years, these costs total roughly $17,000. Over 30 years, they add up to more than $102,000, based on national averages for loan sizes, interest rates, and insurance premiums.

From a lender or insurer’s perspective, a lower credit score signals higher risk — whether that’s the possibility of missed payments or more frequent claims. To offset that risk, companies typically charge higher interest rates or premiums.

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“There is no question that you pay more for credit when you have a lower credit score,” TransUnion (NYSE:TRU) Vice President Michele Raneri told Bankrate. “And so the higher credit score that you can get…you pay less for it.”

High interest rates in the current economy can make this gap even larger. Not only are subprime borrowers charged more when approved, but they may also face more rejections, making it harder to access affordable credit.

The good news is that your credit score isn’t fixed forever. Experts say small, consistent changes can help you move into a better credit tier — and save money.