Democrats pick up another special election seat in the Pennsylvania state Senate that both went for Trump+15, but has also been always historically Republican and has only voted for a Democrat president once (LBJ in 1964).

 
Its a short article, but it definitely comes across that the visit to Greenland was essentially cancelled because they weren't welcome in Greenland... so they are going to be confined to a US military base there... not much of an actual visit.

Hm - vice-president is a mostly ceremonial function, what an idea to choose an ill-mannered prick like JD Vance for that, ah well, whatever, have fun with it :)
 
Democrats pick up another special election seat in the Pennsylvania state Senate that both went for Trump+15, but has also been always historically Republican and has only voted for a Democrat president once (LBJ in 1964).


Think the important take away here is that the Dem winner just went straight to the heart of all the protests lately; campaigned almost entirely on stopping Elon (and a little bit on protecting abortion and the DOE). That is a winning message in all 50 states right now. Elon is incredibly unpopular.
 
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US has pulled all funding for COVID research because the pandemic is over.

I mean, people don't still get it and there's long covid and all, but yeah, the pandemic is over.../s


One major NIAID program that began in May 2022 and was just killed, Antiviral Drug Discovery Centers for Pathogens of Pandemic Concern, promised to spend $577 million on nine U.S.-based efforts to develop new drugs to treat COVID-19. Part of that program was also aimed at designing antivirals to target entire families of disease-causing viruses, including bunyaviruses (Rift Valley fever), filoviruses (Ebola, Marburg), flaviviruses (yellow fever, dengue, Zika), paramyxoviruses (measles), picornaviruses (common cold), and togaviruses (chikungunya).
 
I'm not sure it is even that. Nothing reported so far indicates that anything in the conversation was "wrong". Rather, it strikes me as a simple "rules for thee, not for me" thing.

Using Signal to do policy workshopping is like a textbook violation of the Federal Records Act. Obviously no one cares, it's just a relatively small item to add to the litany of crimes committed by this administration, but it is obviously that.

As a military historian I pay $10/month to reply to my DMs on Patreon put it,
"Illegal destruction of records alongside illegal disclosure of secret information alongside illegal use of an unapproved platform along with illegal use of private phones, alongside criminal negligence in letting Goldberg into the chat"
 

China tariffs may be cut to seal TikTok sale, Trump says​

US President Donald Trump says he may cut tariffs on China to help seal a deal for short video app TikTok to be sold by its owner ByteDance.

Trump also said he is willing to extend a 5 April deadline for a non-Chinese buyer of the platform to be found.

In January, he delayed the implementation of a law passed under the Biden administration to ban TikTok.

The legislation, which was signed into law in 2024, cited national security grounds for the sell or be banned order.

"With respect to TikTok, and China is going to have to play a role in that, possibly in the form of an approval, maybe, and I think they'll do that," Trump told reporters on Wednesday.

"Maybe I'll give them a little reduction in tariffs or something to get it done," he added.

Trump also said he expected at least the outline of a deal to be reached by the 5 April deadline.

He made the comments after announcing new import taxes of 25% on all cars and car parts coming into the US in a move that threatens to widen the global trade war.

The BBC has contacted TikTok and the Chinese embassy in Washington for comment.

The biggest sticking point to finalising a deal to sell the TikTok business, which is worth tens of billions of dollars, has always been securing Beijing's agreement.

Trump has previously tried to use tariffs as leverage in the negotiations.

On his first day back in the White House, on 20 January, the president threatened more import duties on China if it did not approve a TikTok deal.

The hugely popular app is used by around 170 million Americans.

Trump, who called for TikTok to be banned in his first term as president, now has an account on the platform.

He has more than 15 million followers and has said he received billions of views on the app during his presidential election campaign.

Separately, the US increased levies on all imports from China to 20% this month.

That doubled the tariffs Trump imposed on the world's second largest economy on 4 February.

On 10 February, China responded with its own tariffs, including a 10-15% tax on some US agricultural goods.

Beijing has also targeted various US aviation, defence and tech firms by adding them to an "unreliable entity list" and imposing export controls.

The 10% levy doubled to 20% on 4 March.

China has urged the US to return to dialogue with Beijing as soon as possible.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c241ezrpg69o
 
Xi should just shut TikToc down in the US and blame Trump.
 

Trump under fire for 'gutting' law targeting drug cartels while maintaining fentanyl's behind Canada tariffs​

Corporate Transparency Act result of over a decade of bipartisan work in Washington

The law was hailed as a historic step in the right direction — the culmination of more than a decade of work between Republicans and Democrats in Washington to crack down on dirty money.

The Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) targeted drug cartels and other dangerous criminals who use shadowy shell companies to move their ill-gotten gains. The bipartisan law, enacted in 2021 at the end of Donald Trump's first term as U.S. president, was seen as a much-needed reform to America's ability to fight financial crime.

But four years later, and now back in office, Trump has sharply narrowed the law's reach, all while using fentanyl trafficking as a justification for a potentially devastating trade war against Canada.

"The fact that in the same month where the White House will declare a maximum effort fight against fentanyl that involves tariffs on Canada and Mexico for this purpose, that they will also put out a public statement saying that they're not going to enforce one of our most important … ways of combatting fentanyl, getting to the money behind it within our own borders, I think it belies explanation," said Scott Greytak, director of advocacy for anti-corruption group Transparency International U.S., which also has a Canadian chapter.

The Trump administration's decision comes as the president continues to claim that deadly opioids are pouring in from Canada, despite his government's own data showing less than one per cent of the fentanyl that U.S. border agents seized in the last fiscal year came from across the northern border.

'A rationale for imposing harmful tariffs'​

"Canada, one of our nation's greatest allies, has long partnered with the United States on border security, demonstrating a shared commitment to addressing shared challenges, including fentanyl trafficking," Michigan Sen. Gary Peters, the top Democrat on the Senate Homeland Security Committee, said in a statement to CBC Windsor.

"While President Trump has criticized Canada for not taking fentanyl issues seriously — using this as a rationale for imposing harmful tariffs — his administration is simultaneously working to weaken legislation passed by Congress that helps law enforcement combat the use of shell companies for financing illicit activities like drug trafficking," Peters said.

The CTA had, for the first time, forced smaller companies to reveal the names of their true owners to the U.S. Treasury Department, which would then store them in a secure database accessible by law enforcement. Canada has a similar ownership registry, which is publicly searchable.

But in early March, the Trump administration announced it would stop enforcing penalties against U.S. citizens and companies that didn't comply with the law.

Two days later, Trump slapped Canada and Mexico with broad 25 per cent tariffs, saying neither country was doing enough to curb the flow of fentanyl into the U.S. Trump has since rolled some tariffs back, but has threatened to reimpose them in April.

More recently, the administration nixed ownership reporting requirements altogether for U.S. citizens and companies, issuing a rule, which it expects to finalize at some point this year, that limits the law's application to foreign companies registered to do business in the U.S.

Brian Masse, New Democratic Party MP for the Windsor West riding that's directly across from Detroit, said the Trump administration's decision will make it harder for investigators on both sides of the border to track and crack down on illegal flows of funds — which is "really at the heart of the operation" of organized crime.

"Everything's going to get murkier," said Masse, the NDP critic for Canada-U.S. border relations. "That's no doubt."

The FACT Coalition, another anti-corruption group, said the change would cut out 99 per cent of the entities the law originally covered, "effectively gutting the most significant anti-money laundering law in a generation."

Greytak, with Transparency International U.S., called it "an awfully baffling incentive to come from an administration that has otherwise so fulsomely committed to fighting fentanyl and other drug trafficking."

Rationale for changing law's application​

Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent have claimed the CTA's ownership reporting requirements were "burdensome" and an "economic menace," particularly for small businesses.

It appears to be a reversal from 2019, when the first Trump administration commended the then bill, saying it "would require corporations and limited liability companies in the United States to disclose their beneficial owners, a measure that will help prevent malign actors from leveraging anonymity to exploit these entities for criminal gain."

The supportive statement, however, did note that lawmakers needed to improve the legislation, in part by "protecting small businesses from unduly burdensome disclosure requirements."

Congress did just that, Greytak said. He and other supporters of the law say the reporting process is relatively simple. Companies need only fill out a form online that asks for information such as names and addresses, and a copy of government identification.

"This law was developed over a dozen years across multiple administrations — lots of iterations and revisions of this bill, lots of hearings on this bill, lots of scrutiny — and we think that the end product was really well tailored to be able to meet the threat here," Greytak said.

Masse said "it's not surprising," however, that Trump supported weakening the law.

"They want less accountability for where their money goes in Washington, D.C., and across the fundraising, and the donors and the corporate elite," he said.

"And the fentanyl issue on the northern border, you know, basically was a red herring anyways."

Masse's riding includes a large chunk of Windsor, one of the Canadian cities expected to be among the most hurt by tariffs. It also includes the Ambassador Bridge, where roughly $300 million US in goods cross each day between Canada and the U.S.

Windsor is no stranger to the opioid crisis, either, so the fentanyl issue hits close to home, Masse said.

"We're their point where entry and exit of the drugs can take place, and also weapons."

Masse said he would "absolutely" like to see the federal government hire more border officers, particularly those with a "skill set that is more accustomed to dealing with the financial world" in response to the Trump administration's recent actions.

In Washington, two senators who supported the CTA have demanded that the Treasury Department explain "the legal basis" for changing the law.

"We encourage you to fully implement the CTA so that law enforcement agencies around the country have access to information necessary to prevent human trafficking, terrorist financing, border smuggling, drug distribution, and many other categories of criminal activity," Senators Chuck Grassley, an Iowa Republication, and Sheldon Whitehouse, a Democrat from Rhode Island, wrote in a March 10 letter.

It's unclear if the senators have received a response. Both their offices, as well as the Treasury Department, did not return a request for comment on this story by publication time.

Other advocates have argued that the administration's move won't hold up in court.

Shadowy shell companies "are a favourite tool of" U.S. adversaries, as well as "fentanyl traffickers, money launderers, and tax cheats," Ian Gary, executive director of the FACT Coalition, said in a statement after the Treasury Department first announced its change to how the law is applied.

"Hollowing out the Corporate Transparency Act is an unconstitutional subversion of Congress's intent that will not survive judicial scrutiny," he added.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/trump-fentanyl-tariffs-canada-money-laundering-cta-1.7493973
 
@Sommerswerd i've been laughing at this so much in the last 24 hours lol
Screenshot_20250326_195554_Chrome.jpg
 
The Ninth Circle of Hell, the deepest and most horrifying pit of Hell, reserved for the worst sinners of all: traitors. Unlike the fiery punishments of the upper circles, here the damned suffer in a frozen lake, trapped in ice for eternity.

I vote for bury them all in Greenland.
 
Why would the Trump White House have Jeffrey Goldberg's phone number for an invite anyway, this supposed scum of the earth? Do they prank call him regularly or something?
I would guess the appropriate term would be "useful idiot".
 
If they were using security-cleared devices, they wouldn't do. But these are absolute amateurs using civilian apps on private phones to discuss clearly extremely sensitive data, so what can you do?
 
Mike Waltz left Venmo account public in further security breach

This is a level of incompetence that can only occur when people are promoted for who they know not what they know.

Mike Waltz, Donald Trump’s national security adviser who is at the center of the storm over a group chat which leaked highly sensitive military plans to a journalist, left his Venmo account open to the public, according to a new report.

A Venmo account with the name “Michael Waltz”, which bore a picture of Waltz, was visible to the public until Wednesday afternoon, Wired reported. Waltz’s 328-person list of friends included accounts that appeared to belong to Walker Barrett, a National Security Council staffer, and Susie Wiles, the White House chief of staff – whose account was also public.
 
Why would the Trump White House have Jeffrey Goldberg's phone number for an invite anyway, this supposed scum of the earth? Do they prank call him regularly or something?
So he could leak things to the press and no one would know it was him....
 
The Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) who signed off on senior officials using Signal has really caused some embarrassment.

Amateur hour indeed. :sad:

It should be really, really difficult or even impossible to add an unauthorized person with a good security scheme!

Where are the security officers?
 

Marco Rubio says US revoked at least 300 foreign students' visas​

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the US has revoked at least 300 foreign students' visas as part of President Donald Trump's effort to clamp down on pro-Palestinian protesters on university campuses.

"Maybe more than 300 at this point," he said while speaking to reporters on a visit to Guyana. "We do it every day, every time I find one of these lunatics."

Rubio was asked to confirm how many student visas the administration had revoked in its crackdown on rhetoric at universities that it considers anti-Israeli.

The remarks follow immigration officials detention of a doctoral Turkish student attending Tufts University - an arrest the secretary defended.

A video of the student, Rumeysa Ozturk, being taken away by masked, plain-clothes officers to an unmarked car outside Boston, Massachusetts, has gone viral and sparked protests online.

Ms Ozturk is a Fullbright Scholar on an F-1 student visa and is in a doctoral program for Child Study and Human Development at Tufts.

Rubio was asked on Thursday why the Turkish student's visa was revoked.

"Here's why: I've said it everywhere, and I'll say it again," Rubio said. "If you apply for a student visa to come to the United States and you say you're coming not just to study, but to participate in movements that vandalize universities, harass students, take over buildings, and cause chaos, we're not giving you that visa."

It is currently unclear whether Ms Ozturk has been charged with anything.

Rubio did not provide any of the specific allegations against the 30-year-old, who has participated in pro-Palestinian protests. The Tufts student also co-wrote an opinion piece in the student newspaper last year that called for her university to divest from companies with ties to Israel and acknowledge "Palestinian genocide".

"Based on patterns we are seeing across the country, her exercising her free speech rights appears to have played a role in her detention," Mahsa Khanbabai, Ms Ozturk's lawyer, told Reuters.

This arrest is the latest in a string of actions taken against international students in the US who have expressed support for Palestinians.

Trump officials have said they are making use of the Immigration and Nationality Act, which allows the State Department to deport non-citizens who are "adversarial to the foreign policy and national security interests" of the US.

The arrests are a part of Trump's pledge to combat what the administration has classified as antisemitism, which was written into an executive order in January.

Since then, the White House has also revoked $400m (£308m) in Columbia funding over allegations the university failed to combat antisemitism on its campus, and threatened to do the same to other universities.

One of the highest profile arrests involves Columbia graduate Mahmoud Khalil, a prominent Palestinian activist, who remains in a Louisiana detention facility without charges.

Ms Ozturk was also taken to a detention centre in Louisiana. On Tuesday, a federal judge in Massachusetts ordered that Ms Ozturk be detained in Massachusetts, but federal records show she is still being held in Louisiana.

The government has been ordered to provide more information on Ms Ozturk's arrest by Friday.

US Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said earlier this week that Ms Ozturk "engaged in activities in support of Hamas, a foreign terrorist organization that relishes the killing of Americans".

Senator Elizabeth Warren, a Massachusetts Democrat, called the arrest "the latest in an alarming pattern to stifle civil liberties".

"The Trump administration is targeting students with legal status and ripping people out of their communities without due process. This is an attack on our Constitution and basic freedoms - and we will push back," she said in a statement.

On Wednesday, a federal judge ordered the Trump administration to halt its efforts to deport and arrest another student, Yunseo Chung of Columbia University. The 21-year-old is a legal permanent resident who moved to the US from South Korea as a child.

On Thursday, Rubio said the US gave students visa to earn a degree and "not become a social activist tearing up our campuses".

"If you lie, get the visa, and then engage in that kind of behaviour once you're here, we're going to revoke it," he said.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c75720q9d7lo
 
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