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  • A new study reports San Diego is now the nation's most unaffordable housing market. Meanwhile, the San Diego Humane Society started an enforcement program featuring "park patrol" officers after the number of off-leash dogs ballooned following the end of the pandemic lockdowns. Plus, a new report looks into the cost of water in San Diego and offers analysis of why rates are so high.
  • What your commute can do for you
  • "I will resign as CEO as soon as I find someone foolish enough to take the job!" Musk tweeted after most respondents to his Twitter poll said he should step down.
  • The website Downdetector reported spikes in outages involving Bank of America and payment platform Zelle starting Wednesday morning.
  • We talk to five people who are forging their own path in the industry, and bringing their unique experience to the world of video games.
  • Jesus Christ is now the center of a multimillion-dollar advertising campaign funded by the founder of Hobby Lobby and others.
  • Artists in New Orleans and Cuba are exploring their shared heritage and similar sounds, and bringing high school musicians from both places together in a funky cultural exchange.
  • The Senate minority leader said Tuesday that anyone seeking the presidency, which includes Trump, "would have a very hard time being sworn in" if the Constitution was suspended.
  • Christian nationalism has been seen as outside the mainstream. But new data from the Public Religion Research Institute and the Brookings Institute indicates it's more common than many think.
  • This exhibition celebrates the work of ten Native American artists living on reservations in San Diego and Riverside Counties and working across all media, from painting and sculpture, to fashion, narrative writing, and music. San Diego County is home to eighteen reservations —more than any other county in the United States— and to prolific and varied creative output of Indigenous contemporary artists working today. Southern California Natives live both on and off the rez, upholding historic culture and traditions while concurrently inhabiting the modern world. The work of the artists featured in "Voices from the Rez" both acknowledges their past while embodying new perspectives on contemporary life. Join us for the Opening Reception of "Voices from the Rez" on Friday, June 3 at 6 p.m. at La Jolla Historical Society. This exhibit will be available to enjoy from Saturday, June 4 through Sunday, September 4 on Museum hours. Register here to attend the opening reception! The exhibit is free and open to the public. For more information, please visit lajollahistory.org/exhibitions/current-exhibitions or call (858) 459-5335.
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