Santa Barbara County News and Events

Crypto all-time highs by year: When the market set new records

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Gold crypto coins on a wooden surface.

Diego Thomazini // Shutterstock

 

In 2017, JPMorgan (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon called bitcoin a “fraud.” Now, his company is building its own blockchain and believes the current crypto downturn will be short-lived. Bitcoin’s price history helps explain why. According to StatMuse, BTC has grown by over 20,000% since 2016 and set 11 new highs in 2025.

But raw percentage growth only tells part of the story. To better understand when crypto enters true price-discovery mode, Finder.com tracked how often the top five cryptocurrencies by market cap reach new price records. Let’s explore crypto all-time high (ATH) activity by year.

How often crypto hits new all-time highs

2021 reigns supreme as the year with the most all-time highs, coming in at a whopping 147. Another banner year was 2017, which hit just under 120 ATHs. Together, they account for more than half of the decade’s total all-time highs.

A table listing new crypto all-time highs since 2015 to 2025.

Finder.com

By contrast, 2022 and 2023 collectively saw no new records set at all, at least not by these top five coins. If you know crypto history, this lack of ATHs lines up with the crypto winter that followed a series of high-profile failures in the digital world — most notably, the collapse of crypto exchange FTX.

The periods between these peak markets and deep downturns featured moderate record-setting activity. The years 2016, 2020 and 2024 all had ATHs in the 20s, with 2018 and 2019 in the teens. These mid-cycle years usually represent growing momentum after a crash.

Which coins set the most all-time highs?

It’s probably no surprise that the OG crypto, bitcoin (BTC), takes top prize as the coin that set the most records over the last decade. Coming in at 163, it holds the lead with nearly double the ATHs of second place.

Table listing types of coin and total ATH events since 2015.

Finder.com

The next three — ether (ETH), solana (SOL), and BNB — fall into a clear middle band, each recording 70-84 all-time highs. While all three coins have seen strong growth, all were l

11 numbers that capture the Trump effect on education

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: Protestors participating in a 'study-in' in front of the US Department of Education building on March 21, 2025 in Washington, D.C.

Kayla Bartkowski // Getty Images

 

About 1.5 million people teach on college campuses in the United States, and nearly 4 million teachers work in its public elementary and secondary schools. More than 15 million undergraduates attend U.S. colleges and universities. There are more than 50 million school-age children across the country.

They all have one thing in common: Federal education policy affects their lives.

President Donald Trump and Education Secretary Linda McMahon say they want to close the Department of Education and return control of education to the states. At the same time, however, they have aggressively and rapidly wielded federal power over schools.

The Hechinger Report takes a look at some key data points from the first year of Trump’s second term that represent the outsized effect this presidency has had on the nation’s educational institutions and the people within them.

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Number of executive orders Trump signed that exclusively address colleges or schools

In 2017, the first year of his first term, Trump signed two executive orders related to education. This year, he signed three times that number on just a single day in April.

Among his most notable executive orders was one early in his term requiring the Department of Education to begin dismantling itself. He also established an Artificial Intelligence Education Task Force and asked cabinet members to provide him with a plan to end “radical indoctrination” in schools. Other executive orders have addressed school discipline, transgender athletes, registered apprenticeships and foreign influence on college campuses.

Another set of executive orders indirectly affected schools. For instance, the Department of Education interpreted an order about undocumented immigrants to require limiting access to some adult and career and technical education programs. And separately, in a

Hallan con vida a Nicole Pardo, la influencer que estaba desaparecida en Sinaloa, México

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Por Anabella González y Mauricio Torres, CNN en Español

Nicole Pardo, una joven mexico-estadounidense creadora de contenido que estaba desaparecida desde el 20 de enero en el estado de Sinaloa, en el noroeste de México, fue localizada con vida, informó este sábado la Fiscalía General de Sinaloa.

“#FiscalíaSinaloa agradece la colaboración ciudadana, NICOLE PARDO MOLINA, ya fue localizada”, escribió la Fiscalía en una publicación en Instagram junto a la ficha de búsqueda de la joven, que es conocida en redes sociales como La Nicholette.

CNN contactó a la Fiscalía de Sinaloa y desde allí confirmaron que Pardo fue localizada con vida y se encuentra bien de salud.

CNN intenta obtener más información sobre el caso.

La Fiscalía de Sinaloa difundió esta semana una ficha de búsqueda en la que se indicaba que Pardo fue vista por última vez el 20 de enero en el fraccionamiento Isla Musalá, en Culiacán, la capital de Sinaloa, que desde septiembre de 2024 ha visto un aumento en los niveles de violencia por lo que autoridades describen como enfrentamientos entre grupos criminales.

Las autoridades habían activado un operativo de búsqueda en la ciudad, donde autoridades estatales y federales intentaban dar con su paradero.

El caso cobró notoriedad pública después de que en redes sociales circulara un video supuestamente grabado por la cámara de seguridad del vehículo de la joven —una camioneta Tesla Cybertruck color lila—, donde se aprecia el momento en el que varios hombres armados la interceptan y la fuerzan a subir a otro automóvil.

CNN intenta verificar la autenticidad del video y saber si forma parte de las investigaciones del caso.

Pardo tiene 20 años, dice que divide su tiempo entre Sinaloa y Phoenix, Arizona, y tiene una presencia destacada en redes sociales, donde suma más de 180.000 seguidores en Instagram y más de 145.000 en TikTok. También tiene un canal de YouTube y una cuenta en la plataforma OnlyFans.

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Con información de Rocío Muñoz-Ledo, de CNN.

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Trump praises British troops after drawing outrage at comments downplaying NATO’s role in Afghanistan

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President Donald Trump aboard Air Force One after leaving the World Economic Forum in Davos on January 22.

By Kevin Liptak, Lauren Kent, CNN

Washington, DC, and London (CNN) — US President Donald Trump praised British troops Saturday after sustained outrage over comments he made this week downplaying the sacrifices of NATO forces in Afghanistan.

“The GREAT and very BRAVE soldiers of the United Kingdom will always be with the United States of America!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

“In Afghanistan, 457 died, many were badly injured, and they were among the greatest of all warriors,” he continued. “It’s a bond too strong to ever be broken. The U.K. Military, with tremendous Heart and Soul, is second to none (except for the U.S.A.!). We love you all, and always will!”

The message came after furious reaction to comments the president made minimizing the role NATO forces played in Afghanistan. The president’s remarks rankled US allies in NATO, coming at the end of a week in which he severely strained the alliance through his threats to seize control of Greenland, an autonomous territory of Denmark, another NATO member.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Prince Harry, who served in the conflict, were among those who criticized the comments, with Starmer calling them “insulting and frankly appalling.”

Starmer later raised the issue on a call with Trump on Saturday, in which they discussed “the brave and heroic British and American soldiers who fought side by side in Afghanistan, many of whom never returned home,” a Downing Street spokesperson said.

After the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the US became the first and so far only NATO member to invoke Article 5, which states that an attack against one member is an attack against all. For 20 years, NATO allies and other partner countries fought alongside US troops in Afghanistan.

“We’ve never needed them,” Trump said of NATO in an interview on Thursday with Fox Business. “We have never really asked anything of them. You know, they’ll say they sent some troops to Afghanistan or this or that. And they did. They stayed a little back, little off the front lines.”

“If I had misspoken in that way or said those words, I would certainly apologize,” Starmer said Friday.

The White House initially shrugged off Starmer’s criticism and insisted Trump was correct in his sentiments.

“President Trump is absolutely right — the United States of America has done more for NATO than any other country in the alliance has done combined,” Taylor Rogers, a White House spokesperson, said when asked to respond to Starmer’s comments.

Starmer and Trump in their call Saturday “discussed the need for bolstered security in the Arctic,” Downing Street said, after a tense week of diplomacy regarding Greenland and Trump’s announcement of a “framework deal” in relation to the autonomous territory.

“The leaders discussed the importance of the UK-US relationship, which continues to stand the test of time,” the Downing Street readout concluded. “They agreed to speak soon.”

Trump’s social media post Saturday came amid intense backlash over h

Confusion remains after Trump administration abruptly halts public health funding to cities and states, then reverses course

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Public health grants from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were halted on Saturday

By Jamie Gumbrecht, Brenda Goodman, Deidre McPhillips, CNN

(CNN) — As public health departments across the country prepared for a massive winter storm this weekend, notice landed in their inboxes that pivotal grant funding from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was paused. No more money could be spent.

Within hours, a US Department of Health and Human Services spokesperson confirmed to CNN that the pause had been lifted, although grant recipients said they had yet to get an update from HHS.

“It’s just more chaos, more uncertainty,” said Dr. Phil Huang, director of Dallas County Health and Human Services in Texas. “It just interferes with our ability to provide these public health services to our community.”

No grants were terminated, according to HHS.

“The Public Health Infrastructure Grants were temporarily paused so HHS could implement a new review process, one that will ensure funds are used for their intended purposes and in alignment with agency priorities,” HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon said in an email to CNN. “HHS will continue to protect taxpayer money and ensure they are used for legitimate purposes.”

According to the CDC, the grants funded health departments in 50 states and Washington, DC, eight territories and 48 large localities. As of December 2025, $5.1 billion had been awarded: $4.7 billion to 107 health departments and $382 million to national partners. Funds are used for lab testing, responding to and preparing for emergencies and direct patient care. They paid for thousands of public health jobs across the country.

For several hours Saturday, it seemed that this funding pause would come on top of cuts to Covid-era funding that states and local governments absorbed last year.

Huang said Dallas County’s grant, worth more than $2 million, was used for key systems for disease investigation and surveillance, vaccine management – including check-in systems for large public vaccination events – and everyday activities like patient transportation.

There are already systems in place to track spending and ensure that money is used as intended, public health officials said.

The pause notices sent Saturday — and apparent quick reversal — echoed an earlier pivot by the Trump administration, which announced cuts to thousands of grants for substance abuse and mental health this month before abruptly reversing course.

Chrissie Juliano, executive director of the Big Cities Health Coalition, said that a brief pause won’t have any serious impact, but it’s a fire drill in the middle of other emergencies. It also raises questions about whether “safe” dollars that officials expected to last for years will be available and as flexible for public health agencies trying to meet local needs.

“It takes people away from preparing for helping people in the middle of a winter storm,” Juliano said. “It makes people question what’s coming next. Which shoe is going to drop, and what program is going to be cut?”

Public Health Infrastructure Grant funds were meant to be a once-in-a-generation investment in staffing and training public health departments, said

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