Trump’s Coin Toss Fail Leads to Many Jokes
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Taking the coin with a pinched left hand, and placing it into the open palm of his right, the president heaved the coin forward, sending it in a feeble, plunging arc. Helpfully, he pointed out where the coin had landed after it hit the ground.
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New coins will commemorate 250th anniversary of American independence. Here's how they'll look
The U.S. Mint unveiled the designs for coins commemorating the 250th anniversary of American independence next year. They depict the founding documents and the Revolutionary War, but so far, not President Donald Trump,
The 50- and 100-day SMAs filter day-to-day noise and smooth out price action to spot broader momentum shifts and are widely tracked by traders and investors. Think of these as guardrails: crossing below both signals underperformance against short- and long-term trends, often triggering intensified selling and accelerated declines.
The new coins, coming after the administration stopped issuing new pennies earlier this year, underscore Trump’s drive to put his own stamp on the presidency far beyond the confines of the White House – whether it’s by putting his own face and name on US institutions or by pulling back on diversity efforts to reframe the story of America itself.
There might not be new pennies coming from the treasury, but that doesn't mean you can't use the ones you have.