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Why Mandelic Acid Is One Vogue Editor's Holy-Grail Skin Salve

Why Mandelic Acid Is One Vogue Editor's Holy-Grail Skin Salve

Vogue3 days ago
From puberty to the fully developed frontal lobe years, I've struggled with acne-prone skin. Mandelic acid solved what years of trial and error of AHAs, BHAs, spot treatments, and facials seemingly couldn't—consistently clearer skin. Celebrity aesthetician Sofie Pavitt (a.k.a, the acne whisperer) has long sung the praises of this gentle yet effective ingredient for clearing breakouts, even launching her own serum—which I love above all others. The thing about mandelic acid is that you get the same zit zapping, congestion clearing, exfoliating results without any of the irritation—which is particularly why she developed her very own serum.
'Mandelic acid is my holy grail ingredient for acne. A lot of acne brands steer towards salicylic because it's an acne monographed ingredient by the FDA that allows them to claim it's an 'acne' product,' Pavitt tells Vogue, who finds salicylic acid to be far too dehydrating. 'Mandelic is not drying; it works on the surface of the skin to lightly buff away dead cells that can contribute to the formation of acne breakouts.' A derm-favorite as well, board-certified dermatologist Dr. Blair-Murphy Rose, previously told Vogue it's been popular among her peers for as long as she's been practicing, however, 'it may be increasing in popularity due to increased awareness among consumers.'
Vogue's Favorite Mandelic Acid C Serums
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Whether you're dealing with acne, hyperpigmentation, skin dullness, or congestion, scroll to discover the best mandelic acid products on the market now.
Best Overall: Sofie Pavitt Mandelic Acid Clearing Serum
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Officials meet in Santa Clara to discuss impacts of federal budget
Officials meet in Santa Clara to discuss impacts of federal budget

CBS News

time13 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Officials meet in Santa Clara to discuss impacts of federal budget

The Trump administration is changing the way government operates at a breakneck speed, and many in local governments are struggling to even understand where it all may be going. On Saturday, state, local and federal lawmakers met at the Santa Clara County government center for a community meeting to talk about the coming impacts of the "big, beautiful bill." Santa Clara County has the largest and most diverse population in the Bay Area. So when you talk about the biggest human impact at the county level, you're talking about healthcare. "They run the second biggest hospital system in the state. A very large percentage of their revenue is from the Medicaid program, which has been drastically reduced in the so-called 'big, beautiful bill,'" said Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren. "We need to talk about how we can prevent worst-case scenerios." Lofren was one of many elected officials who spoke at a community meeting at the Santa Clara County board chambers, organized by Supervisor Betty Duong. "There are severe, severe detrimental cuts and I don't think even the word 'cuts' is an accurate portrayal of the level of gutting and decimation of our nation's public healthcare system," said Doung. "You will face crowded emergency rooms, longer wait times for healthcare services, because of the ripple effects of HR 1." At this point, the full impact of the budget law is hard to quantify. Opponents say even if Medicaid coverage, known in California as MediCal, isn't directly cut, access to healthcare will get harder as the system itself is shrunk by defunding. "It's scary. It's a dumpster fire every other day for us in the disability community," said Michele Mashburn. The disability rights advocate said she has no doubt that the cuts will lead to deaths. "There are people that wait to get on disability benefits that no longer work, that become unhoused, and then they die," Mashburn said. "There are many people waiting for benefits that die. There are family members that will lose the supports that they need to take care of their kids. People will be institutionalized, and those institutions are being defunded also. So, the care and services available they're inhumane. They're not just. And with these cuts, that's what's going to happen more." The law also includes cuts to housing and food assistance. But, at the same time, the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement will be getting an increase in funding, making it the largest law enforcement agency in the country. State Assemblymember Ash Kalra sees a dark motive behind that. "Tens of billions going into ICE is basically for Trump to create his own Gestapo," he said. "So that he can enforce and do whatever he wants. He's starting by taking over D.C. right now. He made efforts in L.A. and other places. We have to be very honest about what's happening right now. Immigrants are being used as the scapegoat. We must focus on protecting our immigrant community, but we must recognize it's not going to stop at the immigrant communities." Under the new budget law, it's projected that Santa Clara County alone will face funding cuts of a billion dollars. Congressman Sam Liccardo said California can do what it can, but ultimately, there is no way for the state to replace what is being taken away. "The truth is there's no entity that can supplant trillions of dollars, and that's what we're talking about, literally one trillion dollars in Medicaid funding," said Liccardo. "And so, these kinds of massive impacts can't be filled by local cities or counties--they're just too large--nor states, which many are struggling just as California is." The Democrats are pinning their hopes on the 2026 midterm election to return control of Congress back to them. But Liccardo said he thinks it's possible there could be breaks in the Republican ranks even before then. "We're going to see these impacts nationally. And as the impacts start to roll out, I expect you're going to see more of those colleagues of mine with wobbly knees," he said. "And that will be our opportunity. And maybe this conversation will be much more fruitful about, 'hey, how can we actually reverse some of this damage?'" The Republicans realize that, so they've timed the major cuts to the healthcare system to kick in a month after the election. That's why local leaders aren't waiting to get the word out to the voters about what's coming for them.

Laura Loomer takes victory lap after State Department halts visitor visas for Gaza
Laura Loomer takes victory lap after State Department halts visitor visas for Gaza

Yahoo

time40 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Laura Loomer takes victory lap after State Department halts visitor visas for Gaza

Far-right activist Laura Loomer is taking a victory lap for a new State Department policy decision: halting all visitor visas from Gaza. The State Department announced Saturday it was stopping the visas for people from Gaza, one day after Loomer posted a series of videos capturing alleged flights bringing people from the territory to the United States. She questioned why they were allowed into the country, and demanded that whoever approved their visas be fired. 'All visitor visas for individuals from Gaza 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,' the State Department said in a statement Saturday. In a social media post, the conservative firebrand celebrated the department's decision as 'fantastic news,' noting that it was made 'following the release of my reports yesterday exposing flights of GAZANS arriving at airports all across the US.' She added: 'Hopefully all GAZANS will be added to President Trump's travel ban. There are doctors in other countries. The US is not the world's hospital!' The Independent has asked the State Department whether Loomer had any influence on the decision. Throughout the day Friday, Loomer posted videos allegedly showing people from Gaza arriving at airports across the U.S., including Seattle, St. Louis, San Francisco, and Houston, in the past few weeks. The videos were originally posted by HEAL Palestine, a nonprofit dedicated to delivering urgent and long-term support to Palestinian children and families. The videos, posted by HEAL Palestine's Instagram account, show children coming to the U.S. for medical treatment. More than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel's war in Gaza since Hamas' attack on October 7, 2023, according to Gaza's Health Ministry last month. Visitor visas are nonimmigrant visas for persons who want to enter the U.S. temporarily. The B-1 visa covers business, and the B-2 visa is for tourism which includes medical treatment, according to the State Department. In one heart-wrenching example, a 14-year-old girl, who arrived in San Francisco this month, was injured when a school that her displaced family was using as shelter was bombed. 'She sustained second-and third-degree burns across her body and face, shrapnel wounds to her head and leg, and is still living with embedded fragments,' the nonprofit wrote in an August 6 post. The child also suffers from malnutrition, weighing just 20 kilograms, or 44 pounds. The Independent has asked the nonprofit for comment on Loomer's posts. 'Who from the State Department is assisting 'Heal Palestine'?' Loomer wrote in a Friday social media post. 'Why are any Islamic invaders coming into the U.S. under the Trump admin?' She continued: 'This is a national security threat. We didn't vote for more Islamic immigration into the United States. Who signed off on these visas? They should be fired.' Loomer's posts picked up some traction, including from GOP members of Congress. Texas Republican Rep. Chip Roy remarked Friday: 'Deeply concerned about the incoming flights - including to Texas - allegedly filled with folks from Gaza as reported by @LauraLoomer. Inquiring.' Florida Republican Congressman Randy Fine similarly said he was 'troubled' by Loomer's report. 'If true, this is absolutely unacceptable. My office will be working with the relevant authorities to confirm the truth, understand how it happened, and seek immediate expulsion,' he wrote on X Friday. After the State Department's announcement Saturday, Fine gave Loomer a pat on the back. 'Massive credit needs to be given to @LauraLoomer for uncovering this and making me and other officials aware. Well done, Laura,' he wrote on X. The far-right activist seems to have some sway within the Trump administration as a pattern seems to have emerged. Not long after Loomer makes an online complaint, a change seems to happen within the administration. Last month, Loomer boasted after Maurene Comey, who prosecuted Jeffrey Epstein's former girlfriend and sex offender, Ghislaine Maxwell, and music mogul Sean 'Diddy' Combs, was fired from the Justice Department. After she was terminated, Loomer took a victory lap, writing on X: 'This comes 2 months after my pressure campaign on Pam Blondi [sic] to fire Comey's daughter and Comey's son-in-law from the DOJ.' In May, Loomer urged President Donald Trump to pick a new nominee for surgeon general after she called his pick, Janette Nesheiwat, 'not ideologically aligned with Donald Trump or his admin's health initiatives.' The president later withdrew Nesheiwat's nomination. In April, Loomer met with Trump, urging him to fire members of the National Security Council who had been disloyal to him. Not long after, the president terminated several NSC staff. It's not clear how much Loomer's demands played a role in the decisions. Asked how many staffing decisions she's had a hand in, Loomer told the New York Times last month: 'I don't even know…I really enjoy and take great pleasure in humiliating people who suck at their job.'

Women Reveal What It Feels Like To Be In A Sexless Marriage
Women Reveal What It Feels Like To Be In A Sexless Marriage

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Women Reveal What It Feels Like To Be In A Sexless Marriage

When a couple stops having sex, it doesn't just affect things in the bedroom — it often puts a strain on the entire relationship. If both partners are content with little to no sex, then those dry spells (which are quite common, by the way) may not pose a problem. But in relationships in which one or both partners value their sex lives, a dead bedroom can bring up painful emotions, fears and resentments that just push them further and further apart. Related: 'Couples collude in silence,' sex therapist Kimberly Resnick Anderson told HuffPost in 2018. 'They decide it is easier to have no sex at all than to deal with the hurt feelings and unpredictable emotions, such as guilt or anger.' A number of factors can give way to a period of sexlessness: physical or mental health conditions, having kids, stress, mismatched libidos and communication issues, to name a few. We asked women who have lived through sexless marriages to reveal what the experience was like for them and how it affected their relationships. For privacy reasons, some respondents' last names have been withheld or a pseudonym has been used. Interviews have been lightly edited and condensed for clarity. 'Not Good Enough' 'I didn't want anyone to know about my sexless marriage so I hid behind a smiling facade. Inside, I was drowning in a maelstrom of emotions: shame over experiencing pain from intercourse (instead of orgasms), then not wanting sex altogether. Fear that the pain was serious, my body damaged, defective. Disappointment in myself that I was not the sexual woman I'd imagined myself to be when I married the man of my dreams. Anger that this was not how it's supposed to be — this was not the dream. Confusion over why I didn't want sex with the man I loved. And powerlessness — over everything. I tried to will myself to be sexual. It wasn't working, which led to more of the same — shame, fear, disappointment, anger. With every gynecologist I saw, every test I ran, I got the same response: There was nothing wrong with me physically. 'Then it must be me and my sexuality. I'm the one who's broken here,' I concluded. My biggest fear — that I am not good enough as a woman and as a wife — permeated almost every thought and preoccupied me day and night. I blamed my body for being fat, not sexy, not worthy of sex — which led me to put on an 40 extra pounds. But the most painful part was that I felt so alone. My heart was hurting — but I did not have the words (or permission) to confide vulnerably in my husband about this inner struggle. I was on my own. All I knew was to act out my frustrations and fears — with angry remarks, followed by apologies — that only made me hate myself more and drew us further apart.' —Irene Fehr Related: 'Deep Loneliness' 'In my experience, a sexless marriage begins when conversation dies and then it's a natural progression to physical and spiritual celibacy between two people. Even writing these words draws up those feelings of deep loneliness and feeling unloved. I guess he may have felt the same except he was still trying to initiate physical sex but without putting in the effort to kindle desire through attention and conversation. Ultimately, the state of the marriage was impacting my health: I went into depression and my weight went up to more than 350 pounds. I could not contemplate creating a new life as I was utterly detached from who I had been pre-marriage. I was lost. I am forever grateful to a dear friend who wrote to me about my health. It was the first step in acknowledging the truth of my life at that time and then initiating plans for a better future. Looking back, I don't regret this time of my life, as I have learned from the experience and my life is full of titillating, scintillating and hilarious conversations with the person I love. Even though we might only do the horizontal tango a few times a month, we are committed to celebrating each other every single day: small acts of kindness, a pinch on the bum, and a slow kiss every morning and night.' ― Susan Jarvis 'I Felt Guilty' 'I went through a sexless period in my marriage, but the reason for that was entirely on my end. My husband had a high sex drive and still found me desirable, but I was almost never aroused. I had an undiagnosed chronic illness that messed with my hormones and libido. I still loved sex. I missed having sex. And I really enjoyed sex when I had it. I wanted more, but I could only bring myself to do it once every month or two. I felt frustrated because I wasn't able to give myself what I wanted. I felt guilty because I couldn't stop thinking that I had tied my husband down to this relationship and now he was cheated out of having a normal sex life. And I felt scared because I didn't know how long he'd put up with it. He said he was fine and that he loved me too much to live without me, but how long would he really put up with a sexless marriage? One year? Five years? Ten? After a years-long dry spell, I finally saw my way out of it. I started writing about sex and that helped. But it's going through hormonal replacement that really pushed things forward. My health is still very much a work in progress, but things are looking up and I'm back to having sex regularly.' ― Emma Austin 'I Was Shamed About My Body' 'Our relationship didn't start sexless. To the contrary, we had sex every day. It was wonderful and I felt alive. It was affirming. I've struggled with my self-esteem since I was a young gymnast, and here was this man that seemed to want me. Then it dropped off. My weight became an issue, reaffirming all my worst fears. I shouldn't have married him. Related: For our wedding night, he had arranged for his brother to be in our suite. I spent my own money to book another. Then it only happened on special occasions, and then for two years, nothing. I was shamed about my body. There were a number of factors but it ended our marriage. My self-image has been so harmed by this. When we'd first broken up, despite looking relatively normal, I felt too ugly to go outside, too ugly for makeup. I still struggle with people taking pictures. I'm a doctor, I take care of my family, and I still feel like my entire worth rests on my appearance. Weirdly, when my husband and I did split, he seemed horrendously hurt that men were interested in me and I basked in that interest. He did not want his trash to be another's treasure. It'll take me a long time before I trust a man long-term again. Longer still before I feel worth something.' ― Alayna 'I Felt So Unattractive' 'My partner and I have been married for two and a half years, together for nine. Our relationship started with sex and it was intense. Our libidos matched, we could talk outside the bedroom about what we liked and didn't like and what we wanted to try next. When I moved in, all intimacy seemed to vanish overnight. It went from once every two weeks to once a month. He always had an excuse, he was tired, not feeling well, too busy. He would physically push me away and say 'Get off me.' It was devastating but I kept trying, I was so attracted to him. I knew what the problem was. He had gained weight and his overall health went downhill, resulting in little or no libido. But he never shared that with me, just deflected or made me feel bad about desiring my partner. The times we did have sex, there was no foreplay, no flirting in the kitchen, whispering dirty things in each other's ears. So once we were in bed, I wasn't ready and he complained. I ended up in tears more often than orgasm. One night, I said to him that the night before was fun and I would like us to go to bed together again. He jumped up, told me I was stressing him out and walked to the bedroom. He came out a few minutes later to apologize, but the damage was done. I stopped initiating and planned to leave. I hate feeling undesirable to the one man who is supposed to love me before all. I became terrified of his rejection. I was depressed and tried medication. I never cheated because I couldn't hurt him and also because I felt so unattractive. My partner doesn't want me, how could anyone else! The relationship is over. There were many other issues besides the lack of intimacy, but the lack of intimacy seemed to magnify all other problems. If I had felt loved and desired and cared for, maybe I could have overlooked some issues.' ― Lindsay Sex Ed for Grown-Ups is a series tackling everything you didn't learn about sex in school — beyond the birds and the bees. Keep checking back for more expert-based articles and personal stories. Related... 10 Signs You're Headed For A Sexless Marriage Can A Sexless Marriage Survive? We Asked The Experts. What To Do When Your Sex Drives Don't MatchSolve the daily Crossword

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