A recent Yahoo!YouGov poll revealed that more Americans believe Bad Bunny better represents America than former President Donald J. Trump, following controversy surrounding the Super Bowl. The poll results come as Trump faces other challenges, including legal battles over his efforts to influence public spaces and the rising costs of military operations in the Caribbean.
According to the poll, the results of which were released on February 14, 2026, more Americans approved of Bad Bunny than Trump. The poll was conducted in the wake of the Super Bowl, though specific details of the controversy were not provided in the source material.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration's actions continue to draw scrutiny. Two golfers in Washington, D.C., sued the federal government, seeking to prevent the overhaul of a public golf course, alleging violations of environmental laws. This lawsuit is part of a series of legal challenges against Trump's efforts to alter public spaces in the nation's capital. Another lawsuit was filed to prevent the demolition of the East Wing of the White House to build a ballroom, a project estimated to cost $400 million, according to Fortune.
The U.S. military's presence in the Caribbean also presents a significant financial burden. Bloomberg calculations showed that the operational costs of ships deployed there reached over $20 million a day at its peak from mid-November until mid-January, according to Fortune. The article also mentioned a military operation in the Caribbean, where the Trump administration claimed a swift and low-cost capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.
In other news, the U.S. military reported a series of airstrikes against Islamic State targets in Syria. American aircraft conducted 10 strikes against more than 30 IS targets between February 3 and February 10, hitting weapons storage facilities and other infrastructure, according to NPR News. These strikes were in retaliation for a December ambush that killed two U.S. soldiers and one American civilian interpreter.
Finally, in a separate scientific development, researchers discovered how parasitic wasps castrate moth larvae. The wasps inject the larvae with a domesticated virus that causes the death of cells in the larvae's testes, according to Nature News.
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