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Congress Will Not Stop the War With Iran

US senators voted 52-47, largely along party lines, against a war powers resolution on Wednesday afternoon that would have stopped the Trump administration from continuing its illegal military campaign against Iran without congressional approval.

EveryRepublican except Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul opposed the resolution; all Democrats apart from Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania supported it. Sen. Jim Justice (R-W.Va.) did not vote.

The resolution “directs the President to remove the United States Armed Forces from hostilities within or against Iran, unless explicitly authorized by a declaration of war or a specific authorization for use of military force.” Article 1 of the Constitution grants Congress—not the president—the power to declare war, and the War Powers Act grants Congress the power to halt unauthorized military action by requiring troop withdrawal within 60 to 90 days.

“I’m here to call bullshit on the President of the United States.” Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), who sponsored the measure, said on the Senate floor just before the vote. “Every moment that Donald Trump leaves our heroes mired in the muck of this illegal war of choice in Iran, he is showing that he cares more about saving his own face than leading our troops.”

Duckworth is a veteran who lost both legs serving in the US Army during the Iraq War. In her remarks on the Senate floor, she said the Trump administration has not offered sufficient justification for launching—and now escalating—the war.

“War is always tragic, but when it’s preventable, when it’s unjustified, it’s not just tragic—it’s a travesty,” Duckworth said.

The Democratic-led measure was widely anticipated to fail. As I wrote shortly before the Senate’s previous war powers vote in March, which ended in a 47-53 vote against—with Sens. Paul and Fetterman being the same lawmakers to cross party lines—even if the resolution passed, it would ultimately require a two-thirds congressional majority to overturn Trump’s inevitable presidential veto.

Many lawmakers thus approached the resolution as a way to drive home their stance on the war. In that light, what we saw Wednesday was not reassuring: four such resolutions have now failed since the start of the current war in February, while more than 2,000 people have been killed in Iran, according to the country’s health ministry—possibly many more, with figures not updated since April 3—and the US military has confirmed 13 combat-related deaths across the region.

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Mother Jones

A New York City SantaCon Organizer Has Been Arrested for Alleged Wire Fraud

The FBI and federal prosecutors in New York announced Wednesday morning that they have arrested Stefan Pildes, 50, one of the organizers of New York City’s Santacon, an infamous annual public pukefest which claims to be a charitable event. Pildes is accused of diverting money raised by Santacon NYC to a “slush fund,” then using that money for lakefront property renovations, luxury vacations, and concert tickets. All the while, the indictment says, “only a small fraction” of the money raised was actually given to charities.

Santacon, which began its life as a merry little art prank partially inspired by Mother Jones, has since become a powerfully unpopular cultural juggernaut, in which the drunkest denizens of various major American cities dress up in red and urinate upon their local landmarks. In 2023, a Gothamist investigation found that while Santacon NYC, the largest such event in the country, claims to have donated millions to charity, over an eight year period, “less than a fifth” of the money raised by the New York event went to charitable causes. More than a third of the money raised in that time, Gothamist reported, went to “groups or individuals who appear connected to Burning Man.”

“Despite claiming that he did not receive any compensation,” the indictment says donations went to “personal use.”

On their website, Santacon NYC claims to have “made a tremendous difference for dozens of arts & charitable causes!” According to prosecutors in New York’s Southern District, when one attendee asked what she’d receive for buying a ticket to Santacon, “the SantaCon Email responded, in part, ‘your donation goes to charity and it is only a few bucks and that good feeling will warm your heart faster than whiskey and gingerbread.'”

But prosecutors allege proceeds from the Santacon ticket really went to Pildes himself, who the indictment says has been a major Santacon NYC organizer since November 2019. “Instead of donating the millions of dollars he raised,” the indictment reads, Pildes is alleged to have “misappropriated and stole the majority of SantaCon proceeds by diverting them to an entity that Pildes controlled, Creative Opportunities Group, Inc. (‘COG’), that had no public connection to SantaCon.”

Besides the aptly named “Creative Opportunites Group,” prosecutors also allege Pildes “abused his control” over a bank account set up for the nonprofit behind Santacon NYC, which is called Participatory Safety, Inc (PSI). Prosecutors allege that Pildes stole “hundreds of thousands of dollars in other SantaCon proceeds for his own personal use” from the PSI bank account.

“Among other things,” the indictment adds, “Pildes spent SantaCon proceeds on extensive renovations to a lakefront property in New Jersey, luxury vacations in Hawaii, Las Vegas, and Vail, extravagant meals, and a luxury vehicle. Pildes did so despite claiming that he did not receive any compensation from SantaCon or PSI.” In March 2023, prosectuors say, Pildes emailed a potential Santacon venue, claiming that aside from fees for “ticket processing and production,” all ticket proceeds would go to PSI, “our not-for-profit partner that distributes to the charities we have listed on our charities page. No producer receives income from this event, this is a charity event.”

Chris Hackett, an early Santacon organizer in Brooklyn, says that he and Pildes recently encountered each other at the premiere of a recent documentary about the event, released by filmmaker Seth Porges last year. “I don’t know him but he knows me,” Hackett says. When Pildes suggested the two take a photo together, Hackett recalls telling him, “I don’t know you. I don’t like you. Fuck off now.”

Pildes is charged with one count of wire fraud; if convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. Neither Santacon NYC nor Pildes has yet publicly commented on the arrest or the underlying allegations, and it is unclear if the accused has retained legal representation.

Santa himself could also not be reached for comment.

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Mother Jones

Tucker Carlson’s Biggest Conspiracy Theory Yet

A version of the below article first appeared in David Corn’s newsletter, Our Land_. The newsletter comes out twice a week (most of the time) and provides behind-the-scenes stories and articles about politics, media, and culture. Subscribing costs just $5 a month—but you can sign up for a free 30-day trial._

Tucker Carlson sometimes speaks plainly. Sometimes he speaks in code. When he broke with Donald Trump over the Iran war last week, he did both.

The day after Easter, during a monologue on his internet show, Carlson assailed Trump for defiling “the holiest day in Christian life” with a rabid social media post that threatened to bomb power plants and bridges—civilian targets—if Tehran did not open “the Fuckin’ Strait” and that mocked Islam. An outraged Carlson expressed many of the obvious criticisms. He proclaimed that Trump had “shattered” a “uniquely joyful and peaceful moment for Christians” and that Trump’s “vile” vow to conduct “a war crime” was “unacceptable…under moral law.”

He accused Trump of receiving a thrill by threatening such violence. He called the post “evil” and declared, “No decent person mocks other people’s religion… No president should mock Islam… This is a mockery of Christianity.” He also slammed Christian leaders, most notably evangelist Paula White, the director of the White House Faith Office, for daring to compare Trump to Jesus. “Did Jesus command the disciples to go out and kill people?” he sharply asked.

This was a harsh critique that people on the right and left, Democrats, Republicans, and independents, and folks of all faiths or none could share. Here was Carlson as a Christian peacenik anti-interventionist.

But there was something else going on in that 44-minute-long rant. Carlson opened with the fact that during his second inauguration, Trump did not place his hand on the Bible when he swore his oath to defend the Constitution. “That should have been maybe a clue that we need to pause and think about, what is this?” Carlson remarked. He suggested that Trump “didn’t put his hand on the Bible because he affirmatively rejects what’s inside that book, and what’s inside that book are limits on human behavior.” Trump, he said, was not accepting a basic premise of the Old and New Testament: “You are not God, and you cannot assume his powers.”

Hmmm, who might recoil at the Bible, who might be repulsed by the supposed Word of God? Carlson did not answer that. But when railing against Trump’s social media post as the work of “evil,” he noted, “God creates, and Satan destroys.” It seemed he was associating Trump with Beelzebub. And he wondered aloud where Trump’s threats against Iran and the current stalemate will lead. He answered his own question: “Nuclear weapons… You wipe out a country of 92 million… You could have a global nuclear war… All things being equal, that’s where we’re heading.”

Carlson was casting Trump as a Satan-adjacent, Bible-hating, evil force slouching toward nuclear Armageddon.

And there’s more.

Asserting that nuclear war is the plan, he insisted, “There are a million signs, but the most obvious is the dumbest neocons in Trump’s orbit are saying it out loud.” He maintained that these unnamed neocons are “messengers” peddling “the policies of others.” He didn’t identify the others, but it could be Israel or Satan. Or maybe both. (Historically, prominent neoconservatives have been pro-Israel hawks and Jewish.)

Carlson did refer to one of these diabolical neocons by name: Fox News host Mark Levin, a fervent fan of the Iran war and a cheerleader for Benjamin Netanyahu’s regime. He noted that Trump has called on his followers to watch Levin, and he explained that it’s useful to do so because Levin’s show “has been a place where the future is revealed,” though the show is “probably” not written by Levin himself. That is, Levin is fronting for someone or something, and Trump is in league with this cabal.

On an Easter weekend episode of Levin’s show, Carlson pointed out, Levin reviewed the tremendous casualties of the biggest battles of World War II—the Battle of the Bulge, 80,000 to 90,000; Okinawa, more than 50,000—and told his viewers these numbers convinced President Harry Truman that it would be best to drop the newly invented atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki rather than mount a massive invasion of Japan.

Carlson claimed that this observation from Levin was “an argument for [using] nuclear weapons” against Iran and that Levin was test-driving this idea for Trump. Doing so at Easter time, Carlson huffed, was giving “the finger to Christianity.” Levin did not directly call for using nuclear weapons in Iran. But Carlson proclaimed his comments delivered a clear message: This is the plan.

To recap: a nefarious band of neocons in league with the Bible-hating Trump are pushing for an “insane” nuclear war.

And there’s even more.

“Could there be a spiritual component to what we’re watching?” Carlson asked his viewers. He suggested the Iran war was more than a geostrategic blunder. He referred to it as “a very stealthy yet incredibly effective attack…on belief in Jesus,” part of a “sustained effort to exterminate…the Christian faith.” He even said that Trump himself might see “this in bigger terms…as the fulfillment of something or the elevation to some higher office beyond president of the United States. That’s entirely possible.” Pointing to evangelical supporters of Trump, he asked, “Who are these people encouraging the president of the US to see himself as a millennialist figure…as part of the End Times story.”

Carlson has always been a cagey fellow. He didn’t explicitly say that Trump was the anti-Christ and in cahoots with evildoers, such as neocons and Israel, to destroy Christianity. But that’s how I read the tea leaves he’s dishing. It’s not that difficult to connect his dots to see—aha!—Trump is a leading figure in the grandest conspiracy theory: the Devil scheming to use nuclear weapons to annihilate the true faith.

Carlson has a long history of embracing and peddling conspiracy theories. He has claimed the Democrats are trying to replace white Americans with immigrants; the January 6 riot was a false flag operation; the Biden administration developed secret plans to round up and imprison conservatives; the United States maintained secret bioweapons labs in Ukraine (a false assertion the Kremlin pushed); and the US government was somehow involved in the 9/11 attacks.

His latest tale is the hugest conspiracy theory of all. Trump is not merely screwing up bigly in the Middle East. He is a key player—if not the key player—in the titanic clash between God and Satan. No doubt, for Carlson, Trump’s subsequent social media post, in which he said a “whole civilization will die tonight” was further proof of the mighty spiritual warfare underway.

Naturally, Trump could not not respond to Carlson. In a long post on Thursday, he called Carlson and Megyn Kelly, Candace Owens, and Alex Jones—former Trump stans who have dumped Mr. MAGA over the war—“losers” with “Low IQs” and “NUT JOBS” and “TROUBLEMAKERS” who lost their television shows and “will say anything necessary for some ‘free’ and cheap publicity.” He excommunicated them: “They’re not ‘MAGA.’”

Reacting to Trump’s retort, Carlson’s email newsletter suggested that the president was being blackmailed by “anti-Christian” Israel or that “something far more morbid” was afoot. But now Carlson leaned away from the anti-Christ notion and observed that Trump was “under a level of pressure that most people cannot fathom, with rabid Israel Firsters viciously harassing him… Their shameless pursuit is steadfast enough to make even a man like Donald Trump go mad.” His newsletter noted, “Rather than engaging in petty name-calling, we want to give the president some grace.”

Yet in the same issue, the newsletter promoted a video from conspiracy-monger Alex Jones in which he insisted that Trump has “totally changed” and was “being led around by the nose by Netanyahu and by Mark Levin and others.” Jones prayed that God would “free him from the demonic influences that he’s under”—more satanic skullduggery. He called for Trump to be removed from office.

I’m a bit confused. First, Carlson tells us Trump is an agent of satanic destruction that is aimed at the extermination of Christianity, suggesting he might be the anti-Christ. But then he characterizes Trump as being driven mad due to the pressure applied on him by “anti-Christian” Israelis. At the same time, he also promotes the claim that Trump is possessed by demons, which might make him the anti-Christ or might not. (Earlier this month, Carlson did an interview with a priest who conducts exorcisms, and they discussed the widespread demonic possessions of politicians. During that show, Carlson attributed his firing at Fox News to the work of demons.) In any case, we’re in woo-woo land. And after Trump posted a meme that depicted Trump as Jesus, a new issue of Carlson’s newsletter said Trump was “lost” and asked people to pray for him.

When Carlson addressed the 2024 Republican presidential convention as a Trump champion, he declared that Trump had survived the assassination attempt at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, due to “divine intervention.” So less than two years ago, Trump was saved by God. Now, according to Carlson, Trump is possibly trying to extinguish God and Christianity. That’s some turnabout.

Carlson has jumped from one extreme to another. Trump critics may welcome his assault on Trump. But as he so often does, he’s playing a dangerous game, demonizing (literally!) his foes, as he situates himself as a true defender of the Christian faith. Where will this take him and the slice of MAGA that feeds on the paranoia and conspiracism he pitches? God only knows.

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Mother Jones

Trump Thinks Jesus Loves Him

President Donald Trump shared what appears to be an AI-generated image of Jesus hugging him on social media on Wednesday morning, just days after he was widely condemned for sharing a picture depicting himself as a Christ-like figure.

He wrote in the post: “The Radical Left Lunatics might not like this, but I think it is quite nice!!! President DJT.” The image comes from an account on X named “Irish for Trump” with the handle @Dkelly4congress, in reference to a Republican who unsuccessfully ran for the US House in 2024. The account also appears to be associated with the dive bar Croke Park in Boston, Massachusetts.

Trump is posting fresh blasphemies this morning

Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2026-04-15T12:37:21.279Z

Since posting his earlier image on Monday, which was part of his bizarre remarks against Pope Leo XIV over the US-Israeli war in Iran, Trump told reporters that he believed the post actually portrayed him “as a doctor” and “had to do with [the humanitarian nonprofit] Red Cross.” The post was deleted later on Monday following backlash, with many of his own supporters voicing criticisms.

But Trump appears to have doubled down on Wednesday, and JD Vance has backed the president.

“He took [the Monday post] down because he recognized that a lot of people weren’t understanding his humor,” Vance told Fox News’ Bret Baier on Monday. “I think the president of the United States likes to mix it up on social media.”​

Vance also criticized the pope, saying in the same interview that the Vatican should stick to “matters of morality” and “what’s going on in the Catholic Church” and “let the president of the United States stick to dictating American public policy.”

On Tuesday, Vance said the pope should “be careful” when talking about theology, asserting it was wrong for Leo to say Jesus “is never on the side of those who once wielded the sword and today drop bombs.”

Sure JD, the pope definitely doesn’t know about theology.

As my colleague Kiera Butler wrote last week, the Trump administration’s war in Iran, as well as the absurd justifications of the military effort, is tearing apart his solid coalition of Catholic and evangelical Protestants. According to an Ipsos and Reuters survey released on Tuesday, only55 percent of Republicans said they believed the war was worth the costs.

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Mother Jones

The Scammers Profiting off Trump’s Immigration Crackdown

In March, a man who needed legal representation reached out to Maria Aguila’s law office in Jacksonville, Florida, asking to meet with an attorney. The only problem was that she had never heard of this attorney, and she is a solo practitioner who focuses on immigration and family law. Aguila was in court at the time, but the man left his alleged attorney’s website and phone number. When Aguila called, someone answered and hung up. And the website, she soon discovered, listed her law firm’s name and address. It even included her employer identification number. She warned her clients in a Facebook post in English and Spanish: “Someone is IMPERSONATING MY LAW FIRM,” Aguila wrote. “PLEASE DO NOT CALL THIS BUSINESS AND PAY ANY MONEY.”

In her 26 years of practicing law, Aguila had never found herself in such a circumstance. “You put your blood, sweat, and tears into your business to help clients because it means something to you—I’m the daughter of immigrants,” Aguila, whose parents are from the Philippines, told me. “Here’s someone just taking your identity and your information and robbing people.” She filed a complaint with the Florida Bar. The scammer’s website is still online as of the publication of this story.

In the last year, the country’s most prominent legal organizations—such as the American Bar Association and the American Immigration Lawyers Association— have warned that scams targeting immigrants and attorneys have increased to an alarming level. Certainly, these kinds of grifts are not new in the legal world, which for years has dealt with bad actors practicing law without a license. But representatives from several legal groups and private attorneys told me that today’s scams are more sophisticated and harder to detect thanks to the proliferation of AI and social media. “Criminals have identified this as an opportunity,” said Charity Anastasio, Practice and Ethics Counsel at AILA.

Scammers have also taken advantage of the desperate positions many immigrants find themselves in today as the Trump administration ramps up detention and deportation efforts. This population is much less likely to feel comfortable reporting a crime when ICE and law enforcement are working together more than ever. “This fear and desperation make it very ripe for individuals to be taken advantage of in this way,” said Adonia Simpson, the policy and pro bono deputy director at the American Bar Association Commission on Immigration, which has documented more than a dozen reports of fraud since last summer. But given most victims’ reluctance to contact law enforcement, the true scope of these scams is unknown. “The damage that this could be causing in the long run could be very significant,” Simpson added. “We really have no idea how pervasive this is. We’re just seeing the tip of the iceberg.”

“The damage that this could be causing in the long run could be very significant. We really have no idea how pervasive this is. We’re just seeing the tip of the iceberg.”

Scammers’ tactics vary widely but appear to have a number of strategies in common. They advertise themselves on Facebook as law firms and communicate with victims through WhatsApp. Often, they adopt the name of a reputable law office, such as Aguila’s firm, or even individual attorneys. The American Bar Association, for example, recently discovered that several fraudsters had created documents using the organization’s old logo after they received calls from victims looking to speak with attorneys who claimed to work at the organization. Other scammers have posed as staff for the nonprofit Catholic Charities USA, which became so concerned about the pervasiveness of the problem that the organization issued an alert on its website to prospective clients.

The scams also usually involve the creation of a website with photos of supposed attorneys and smiling clients posing with documents like Social Security cards—but as several lawyers I spoke to pointed out, many of them appear to be created with AI. Victims are told to submit payment for legal services via Zelle and other cash transfer apps. Once the payment is received, the phony lawyers stop responding to their victims, several attorneys told me. “You see people spending thousands and thousands of dollars for services that are not rendered,” Simpson said.

Other schemes are more elaborate. In one New York case, scammers used Facebook to contact victims, fabricated documents using symbols from the federal government, and even organized sham court hearings via videoconference with fraudsters impersonating judges. Screenshots of one such hearing show a man dressed in a suit sitting behind a laptop, an American flag to his right, and a seal that reads, “United States Court of Appeals” behind him. Another image shows another person wearing a US Customs and Border Protection jacket, with the emblem of the US Citizenship and Immigration Services behind him. At least 150 people needing legal help between March 2023 and November 2025 paid more than $100,000 to the phony lawyers. Victims’ funds were laundered into bank accounts overseas, though defendants kept some of the cash for personal expenses like DoorDash food orders, court records state.

Left panel: A person at a U.S. Court of Appeals Seventh Circuit desk with flags and a laptop. Right panel: A person in a U.S. Customs and Border Protection uniform.

Scammers in one New York case organized fake court hearings via videoconference, according to federal court filings. Screenshots from those calls show two suspects dressed as an attorney and another as a Border Patrol agent. In all, prosecutors say, they stole more than $100,000 from at least 150 victims.PACER

In February, the US Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York indicted five people from Colombia accused of running the operation. A trial date has not been set; they each face up to 20 years in prison. “The criminal conduct charged in the indictment is no ordinary fraud,” attorneys wrote in court filings. “The defendants undermined the rule of law and the integrity of our immigration system.”

But the New York case is a rare example of an immigration scam that resulted in arrests. Most seemingly operate without consequences, in part because the Internet offers anonymity to criminals who could be based anywhere. In Aguila’s case, an IT specialist found that the website using her office’s address was registered in Turkey, she told me.

Law enforcement agencies, from state to federal, are also siloed from one another, which makes it difficult to crack down on larger scam operations. A recent case in Kenner, Louisiana, illustrates how complicated investigating these cases can be. Police there arrested a 25-year-old man in February on charges that he impersonated a lawyer and scammed a Honduran woman seeking to secure legal status for her two children. Police say the man, David Ardila-Garcia, promoted a fake law firm on Facebook with the name “Immigration Attorney Services.” For 11 months, he met with the Louisiana mother on FaceTime and asked her to send him several payments totaling more than $6,000. When her case wasn’t moving forward, she contacted Kenner police and provided detectives with the phone number tied to the Zelle account where she sent payments. A query of a law enforcement database revealed the number belonged to Ardila-Garcia, who lived in Fort Myers, Florida. He was arrested on a warrant there and extradited to Louisiana.

Kenner Police Chief Keith Conley told me he believes there are more victims. Banking records obtained by detectives show that Ardila-Garcia deposited about $250,000 into a Colombian bank. But Conley said his agency struggled to persuade federal and Florida authorities to help them secure a search warrant for Ardila-Garcia’s laptop. “That would have been a treasure trove of information as far as other victims,” Conley said.

The impacts on victims are endless. Beyond losing thousands of dollars that could have gone toward legitimate legal assistance, immigrants could also be missing court deadlines and hearings in their cases at a time when the system is increasingly hostile to them. “You could be simply deported in an environment like this,” Anastasio, from AILA, said. “You don’t have any money left over to pay anybody because you just gave it to a criminal.” In the New York federal case, one victim was ordered deported by a judge, though the ruling was later reversed after the scam came to light.

In the end, these scams also create enormous challenges for immigration attorneys. Many who spoke to Anastasio at AILA describe feeling shame that their identity was used to harm people, she told me. Anastasio advises them to file complaints with the police and their respective bar associations in case they’re ever accused of wrongdoing. “It hurts the rule of law. It hurts our standing as a system of justice,” she told me. “That’s under enough attack now already. We really don’t need this added criminal element.”

Last week, someone seeking legal help called Aguila’s office in Jacksonville. A TikTok video advertising immigration services in Spanish had surfaced, this one listing her phone number. Aguila couldn’t believe her identity had wound up as part of another scam. “I’m trying to get my work done for my clients, and then I’m constantly having to be worried about people calling me, thinking I’m offering this assistance when I’m not,” she told me over the phone on Tuesday. “I don’t even know what to do anymore. It seems out of control.”

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Mother Jones

Is AI Pushing Us Closer to Nuclear Disaster?

Earlier this year, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists announced that it was moving the hands of the Doomsday Clock to 85 seconds before midnight, a symbolic hour signifying global catastrophe. The hands have been moved 27 times since the clock’s creation in 1947, and they’re now the closest they’ve pointed to worldwide destruction. The threats of nuclear war, climate change, artificial intelligence, and disinformation all played into the decision. It’s meant as a wake-up call to the world.

One of the experts who helped make that decision is University of Chicago physics professor Daniel Holz, chair of the Bulletin’s Science and Security Board. And even though the clock evokes a potentially terrifying future, Holz takes a more optimistic approach to the entire endeavor.

“Really, the Doomsday Clock is a symbol of hope,” Holz says. “The whole point of this clock is to, yes, to alarm people, to inform people, but also to demonstrate we can turn back the hands of the clock. And we’ve done it in the past, and we can hope to do it in the future. And we must.”

On this week’s More To The Story, Holz sits down with host Al Letson to talk about the Doomsday Clock’s history, why we’re closer to global destruction than ever before, and what we can do to reverse course.

This is an update of an episode that first aired in July 2025.

Find More To The Story on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Pandora, or your favorite podcast app, and don’t forget to subscribe.

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Mother Jones

Trump DOJ Dumps January 6 Sedition Convictions

In 2023, after Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the far-right Oath Keepers militia group, was sentenced to 18 years in prison for his role in the January 6, 2021, attack on Congress, the Justice Department noted the stiff sentence reflected the court’s conclusion that Rhodes’ “conduct was terrorism.”

“The Oath Keepers plotted for months to violently disrupt the peaceful transfer of power from one administration to the next,” then–Attorney General Merrick Garland said. “The Justice Department will continue to do everything in our power to hold accountable those criminally responsible for the January 6th attack on our democracy.”

Not anymore. In court filings Tuesday, DOJ lawyers asked DC Circuit Court judges to vacate the seditious conspiracy and other convictions of 12 members of the Proud Boys groups and Oath Keepers, including Rhodes.

The defendants affected were all convicted over their effort to prevent the peaceful of transfer of power following Donald Trump’s election defeat in 2020. After his win in 2024, while pardoning around 1,600 people convicted of taking part in the January 6 riot, Trump treated the convicted seditionists differently, merely commuting their prison sentences—which meant that while free, they remained convicted felons. Those defendants continued to appeal their original convictions.

The new DOJ move would end their designation as seditionists and undo the symbolically important legal determination that the attack on Congress was part of an effort to overthrow the lawful government of the United States.

The DOJ filings, signed by District of Columbia US Attorney Jeanine Pirro, did not explain the department’s reasoning beyond a line stating: “The government has decided in its prosecutorial discretion that dismissal of a criminal case is in the interests of justice.”

The filing comes a few weeks after Trump fired Attorney General Pam Bondi, reportedly in part out of frustration that the Justice Department had failed to secure criminal convictions of political foes whom the president had demanded face prosecution on dubious charges.

Trump has fared better pushing DOJ to advance his claims about January 6, which he has called a “day of love,” while continuing to insist that the false claims that fueled the attack—his claim that he won the 2020 election—were accurate.

Now, the lies that led to the first-ever attempt to stop the peaceful transfer of power in the United States are effectively government policy. The Justice Department, under acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, Trump’s former personal lawyer, is moving further from its long-standing independence—and attempting to give the president the legal system he wants.

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The Chappell Roan Harassment Campaign Is Plain Old Misogyny

Justice for Chappell Roan! On Monday, Jorginho, the soccer star who alleged that the bestselling artist was responsible for a security guard making his stepdaughter cry—supposedly because the child stared at Roan—made an apology on his Instagram story: “I made my initial statement in the heat of the moment after hearing that my child and wife had been approached by an adult male security guard in an intimidating way.”

The incident took place last month during the Lollapalooza music festival in São Paulo, Brazil, where Jorginho claimed in a social media post that a security guard “aggressively” confronted his wife Catherine and stepdaughter Ada and upset the child after she walked past Roan’s breakfast table. He tagged Roan at the end of that post: “@chappellroan WITHOUT YOUR FANS, YOU WOULD BE NOTHING. AND TO THE FANS, SHE DOES NOT DESERVE YOUR AFFECTION.”

The post went viral, leading to an ongoingonline harassment campaign against Roan, and even led Rio de Janeiro Mayor Eduardo Cavaliere to post on X that he intended to ban her from performing in the city’s highest-profile international music festival.

Despite Roan saying at the time that she “didn’t even see a woman and a child” and that “no one bothered her,” the online backlash continued. There appeared to be no clear direction to the criticism: it isn’t about Roan’s behavior but about people’s collective eagerness to participate in a misogynistic pile-on: Was she at fault in the incident, unrepentant**,** and possibly the worst person to have ever existed? Is she only famous because her family offered her the financial stability for her music career to flourish? (According to the Springfield News-Leader, her hometown paper, Roan put on a fundraising performance as a teenager to raise funds to attend Grammy Camp in New York City.)

In his Monday statement, after Roan’s ownpublic statement and their respective teams’ discussion of the incident, Jorginho acknowledged that the artist had “no knowledge of what took place at breakfast and had not asked anyone to approach them.” The soccer player also noted that the security guard in question has since publicly stated that, at the time, he was representing another artist at the hotel.

“I regret the impact the situation has had on Chappell Roan, Catherine, Ada, and our family,” Jorginho continued. “I do not support or encourage hate speech or online attacks from any side…As far as I am concerned, this matter is closed.”

But is the matter actually closed? The harassment that resulted—something completely unjustified even if Roan was, in fact, mean to a child—is illustrative of how famous women have to be perfect, even when mistreated. As culture writer Rayne Fisher-Quann wrote in 2022, women in the public eye exist in “a system that builds [them] into untouchable fantasies just so we can watch in glee as the facade inevitably crumbles.” Compare public coverage of the Roan incident with the muted response to the long list of famous men who have inflicted real harm on others, and who continue to insist that holding them accountable is “cancel culture.”

Roan demonstrated more moral courage than many powerful people in her February decision to leave Casey Wasserman’s talent agency after reports revealed the entertainment executive’s ties to convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell. Yet she received far more social backlash over a non-event than praise after taking a material risk for the sake of her principles.

As Kat Tenbarge, a reporter on internet culture and its intersections with misogyny and violence, wrote last month about the Chappell Roan backlash:

This is what happens to women and marginalized people all the time: people make stuff up about you and it becomes your reputation, even though you never did what they accused you of doing. This is supposedly the great threat of the #MeToo movement to permanently tarnish innocent men’s reputations, but in reality, it happens all the time to women over significantly less serious allegations.

That pattern applies to how society treats all women, including those lacking the means to shine a light on their harassment. In workplaces alone, according to a 2026 report by online compliance training firm Traliant, at least a third of workers said they would only report harassment if they were able to do so anonymously, about a quarter said they had personally witnessed retaliation for pointing out misconduct, and one in five said they were personally subjected to it. The result: according to a 2022 global survey by the International Labour Organization, a United Nations agency, only about half of victims worldwide told someone else about their experiences.

The normalization and justification of Roan’s harassment is part of a pattern—one that ultimately normalizes, and justifies, parallel treatment of much less powerful women.

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Mother Jones

Don’t Mention Climate: Trump Creates “Beyond Absurd” Situation at World Finance Summit

This story was originally published by the Guardian and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

Governments desperate for cash to protect their citizens from the growing impacts of the climate crisis are being put in a “beyond absurd” situation this week at global finance talks: they are being urged not to mention the climate, even as they address the current oil crisis.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank Group (WBG) spring meetings take place this week amid a fragile ceasefire in Iran and upended geopolitics. One of the priorities was to forge a new “climate change action plan” (CCAP) for the world’s biggest provider of funds to developing countries to replace the current strategy, which expires in June.

Now, it looks like the new plan may be shelved, along with substantive discussion of the climate crisis.

“It is beyond absurd that, in the middle of an escalating oil crisis, a World Bank meeting could sideline talk of climate change.”

With the oil crunch still biting, the delegates from up to 189 countries at the conference in Washington, DC, might have been expected to discuss investments in renewable energy, which many see as crucial to energy security and an antidote to volatility. Climate finance is also a pressing issue for poor countries already paying billions each year to repair the damage from droughts, floods and storms.

If these discussions are instead largely confined to whispers in corridors, the reason is clear: the US president, Donald Trump. Insiders have told the Guardian the White House is forcing countries to choose between opening up a potentially unbridgeable rift or playing down the climate crisis and trying to squeeze in green priorities by the back door.

Last autumn, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent demanded the removal of some climate finance targets from the World Bank’s aims and insisted it must “finance all affordable and reliable sources of energy…[with] an all-of-the-above approach to energy that includes financing for gas, oil, and coal.” The US is the biggest shareholder in the World Bank, with about 17 percent of its capital.

Other countries, including large developed economies, have reacted with alarm. Senior staff of several international finance and development institutions have said the US has piled pressure on the World Bank, the IMF, and other publicly funded institutions over the climate.

They said that, although the climate was still on the agenda, people at a senior level were “self-censoring” and removing the term from reports and projects. The Guardian understands some leading countries prefer not to push for a new CCAP.

That would be disastrous for the developing world, experts said. “It is beyond absurd that, in the middle of an escalating oil crisis, a World Bank meeting could sideline talk of climate change,” said Mohamed Adow, the director of the Power Shift Africa think tank. “Fossil fuels and the climate emergency are inextricably linked. This moment is a huge opportunity to accelerate the shift away from fossil-fuel dependence, with potentially historic benefits for the world. It will be a tragedy if politicians fail to do so.”

Catherine Abreu, the director of the International Climate Politics Hub, said: “The spring meetings will be a big test of these institutions. Will we see the World Bank and IMF unable to respond to the majority of their members, because they are swayed by these powerful minorities?”

Under its current CCAP, the World Bank Group aims to devote 35 percent of all its funding to climate-related activities, half of which should be for adaptation, and the group has also moved to end most finance to fossil fuels, though loopholes remain. The World Bank is the biggest single source of climate funding, and many donor countries channel their climate finance largely through the multilateral development banks.

“You don’t have to plant big climate flags on these things; it’s just a good investment.”

At the Cop29 UN climate summit in Azerbaijan in 2024, countries agreed that at least $1.3 tillion a year should flow to the developing world by 2035, to help countries cut greenhouse gas emissions and cope with the impacts of extreme weather. Developed countries committed $300 billion a year of that total, and reaching the target cannot happen without the World Bank.

In the World Bank Group’s last financial year, from 1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025, 48 percent of financing qualified as having climate co-benefits under its methodology.

A spokesperson for the World Bank Group said: “The World Bank Group supports public and private clients in achieving their smart development goals. This includes building low-carbon, resilient infrastructure, and energy systems that manage emissions responsibly so countries can create jobs and sustain growth.

“We will finance what works best for countries, using a least-cost, reliable mix to meet their needs, while managing emissions responsibly. It is not an either/or and we are continuing to see strong demand for support for adaptation and mitigation from our clients. Over the last decade, 215 million people have gained new or improved access to electricity through our current energy programs, and we expect this number to grow to 575 million.”

Much could still be achieved without formally labeling projects as climate-related, Lord Stern, a former World Bank chief economist and now a professor at the London School of Economics, told the Guardian. “You don’t have to plant big climate flags on these things; it’s just a good investment,” he said.

“US pressure is coming on the World Bank, but they can continue to do agriculture, forests, water, energy, public transport. These things are highly relevant to tackling the climate crisis—without highlighting climate change,” he added.

He also pointed to mass transit systems, such as urban railways, in cities in the developing world. “Metro systems in cities are a big part of the climate story. Why would the US oppose metro systems in overcrowded cities? Building a metro is not a covert climate action; it’s just doing things better.”

There is still much work to be done on clarifying what should make up the $300bn and $1.3 trillion targets. Stern said: “The way climate finance is counted is something I hope will develop. Without jiggery-pokery, there are lots of things that we should be supporting that should be counted towards the global climate finance goal.”

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Mother Jones

A Non-Exhaustive List of Trump’s Deleted Posts

Despite his brashness, Donald Trump has built a habit of taking back some of his most obscene social media posts.

On Monday, the president deleted a bizarre image of what appeared to be an AI-generated depiction of him as a Jesus-like figure following immediate criticism, many from his own right-wing supporters such as Fox News host Joey Jones and anti-trans political activist Riley Gaines. Trump had initially posted the picture on Sunday during his feud with Pope Leo XIV over the US-Israeli war in Iran.

Trump just posted this of him as Jesus. Straight up heresy.

Eric Michael Garcia (@ericmgarcia.bsky.social) 2026-04-13T02:09:09.328Z

Trump told reporters on Monday that he thought his post portrayed him “as a doctor” and “had to do with [the humanitarian nonprofit] Red Cross.”

“Only the fake news could come up with that one,” he continued, in response to the idea that the image made him look like Jesus.

Much like many of his policies, Trump’s posts often have no actual substance. Let’s step back in time and revisit some of the president’s previous highlights:

Where Trump depicts former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama as apes in a racist video (February 2026)

As Katie Herchenroder wrote for Mother Jones shortly after the Truth Social post was deleted the next day:

“Toward the end of an unrelated video alleging interference in the 2020 presidential election, a clip that is around 2 seconds long features the first Black president and his wife on the bodies of apes as “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” plays in the background. That clip comes from a longer video that a meme account posted in October.”

Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) wrote on X: “Praying it was fake because it’s the most racist thing I’ve seen out of this White House. The President should remove it.”

Trump refused to apologize, and the White House blamed a staff worker for “erroneously” posting it.

Where Trump referenced Nazi-era language in a video looking forward to a potential win in the 2024 election (May 2024)

About four seconds into a video promoting Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign asking “What happens after Donald Trump wins? What’s next for America?,” an imaginary news headline reads “Industrial strength significantly increased…driven by the creation of a unified reich.”

According to the Associated Press, the headline appeared to be text copied word-for-word from a Wikipedia entry on World War I at the time: “German industrial strength and production had significantly increased after 1871, driven by the creation of a unified Reich.”

“This was not a campaign video, it was created by a random account online and reposted by a staffer who clearly did not see the word, while the President was in court,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a press statement. The video stayed up for about 15 hours.

Where Trump violated a gag order on his criminal hush money trial nine times (April 2024)

In a criminal case where Trump was ultimately found guilty for falsifying business records to hide payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels for silence over an alleged sexual encounter, a New York judge fined the president $9,000—$1,000 for each violation—over posts on his campaign website and Truth Social page that attacked potential jurors and witnesses on the morning of April 30, 2024. Trump was ordered to delete the posts by the afternoon—which he complied with.

Some of the targets of Trump’s attacks: expected witnesses Michael Cohen and Stormy Daniels, and condemning prospective jurors as “liberal activists.”

Where Trump threatened all of his enemies during the Jan. 6 Capitol attack (January 2021)

At 2:24pm ET on January 6, just after rioters breached the Capitol, Trump tweeted, “Mike Pence didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution.” Many of the rioters were demanding that Pence stop the certification of the election.

Other posts inciting violence and reiterating unfounded claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen were also deleted or removed following social media platforms Facebook and Twitter temporarily suspending Trump’s accounts.

In response to the bans, Trump launched Truth Social in 2022 so that he could continue posting through it.

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Mother Jones

Graham Platner Claims He’s Changed. Why Is He Still Using the R-Word?

Graham Platner could very well be the Democratic nominee running against Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) for her long-held Senate seat.

Platner’s run has not been without controversy, to put it lightly. A tattoo that Platner had, a Totenkopf, was worn by Nazis and is still a symbol embraced by Neo-Nazis today. In an article published in the local publication Maine Monitor on Saturday, the Senate candidate explained his initial reaction:

Platner said he didn’t know what it was until it became an issue during this campaign. Even when someone working with his campaign told him there was a rumor going around that he had a white supremacist tattoo, he said he didn’t connect it to the skull and crossbones on his chest. “I was like, ‘Well, that’s the fucking most r-tarded shit I’ve ever heard in my life,’” he told me. “‘No, I don’t have a white supremacist tattoo,’ and I never thought about it again. And then it came up later on, and I was like, ‘God fucking damn it.’” (He had the tattoo covered in late October.)

Platner has made some attempts to reconcile with Maine Jewish communities, including hosting a Passover seder. But now, as healthcare data wonk Charles Gaba raised on Bluesky, why is Platner using the r-word, a slur that is greatly offensive to many disabled people, in 2026?

PLATNER IS LITERALLY STILL OPENLY USING THE "R" WORD IN CASUAL CONVERSATION. TODAY.

Charles Gaba ✡ (@charlesgaba.com) 2026-04-11T20:42:44.467Z

I asked the Platner campaign for comment, but they have not responded by the time of publication.

The Arc, which supports those with intellectual and developmental disabilities, explain, “If you constantly heard a core part of your identity used as shorthand for ‘stupid’ or ‘worthless,’ how would you feel? It chips away at dignity. It sends a message about who is valued and who isn’t.”

If it’s casually part of someone’s vocabulary, they might not get the harm. This also points to a lack of engagement with disabled people.

Considering how the Trump administration has targeted disabled people—including enacting brutal cuts to Medicaid, which will alter the services some disabled people receive—some people may argue that others are overreacting to Platner’s use of the r-word. However, having better standards than President Donald Trump has for himself is a good thing when trying to play a role in flipping the Senate to Democratic power.

As I’ve reported previously, Trump has a long history of making offensive remarks targeting disabled people. This includes casually using the r-word on the Howard Stern show, as well as calling Deaf actress Marlee Matlin the r-word behind her back when she competed on The Apprentice.

Trump’s use of the r-word has also been a dealbreaker for some Republicans. Back in November, Republican Indiana State Senator Michael Bohacek said that he would not vote for redistricting in the Republican state after Trump used the r-word to refer to Minnesota Governor Tim Walz. “I have been an unapologetic advocate for people with intellectual disabilities since the birth of my second daughter,” Bohacek wrote on Facebook, “I will be voting NO on redistricting, perhaps he can use the next 10 months to convince voters that his policies and behavior deserve a congressional majority.” Redistricting efforts in Indiana, after Bohacek’s remarks, proceeded to fail.

This is not the first time that Platner has been criticized for using the r-word. As reported by CNN, Platner used the r-word several times in Reddit posts in 2021. After his Reddit history leaked, he distanced himself from his posts, saying that his views have changed and came from a troubled place after serving in the military.

“I didn’t feel connected. I didn’t feel like I understood my place in the world, my place in our society,” Platner said, according to Maine Public, “And that of course resulted in a lot of feelings of alienation and loneliness. And that’s when all this happened.”

None of this excuses why Platner is still using this slur in 2026. It also shows that the left have their own ableism problems to grapple with, not just Republicans.

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Mother Jones

Zuckerberg Didn’t Think He Was Robotic Enough Already, So Now He’s Using AI

Mark Zuckerberg is reportedly making an AI clone of himself to provide feedback to his employees.

According to a Sunday night report by the Financial Times, sources said that Zuckerberg’s tech giant Meta is training an AI character on the CEO’s image and voice, as well as mannerisms, tone, and thoughts on company strategy “so that employees might feel more connected to the founder through interactions with it.”

The move is part of Meta’s push to catch up to competitors like Google and OpenAI in developing AI technology. According to the same Financial Times report, the company has been working on creating 3D AI avatars that users can converse with in real time, but has run into problems with scaling the technology as it requires massive amounts of computing power to seem real.

But those struggles haven’t stopped the company: if the Zuckerberg character works, influencers and creators could follow suit, according to FT.

Putting aside the creepiness of Meta making an AI clone of its CEO so that it can watch over all of its employees, this sounds similar to the ill-fated metaverse. Zuckerberg’s multi-billion-dollar failure to create “the future of connection” via virtual reality playground tanked spectacularly. Meta promised an immersive VR world where users could socialize, work, and play through online avatars. Zuckerberg went all-in on the metaverse, even re-naming his company Facebook to “Meta” in 2021 to note its commitment. But, despite the investment, the VR headsets did not take off and Meta’s VR platform Horizon Worlds is on its last legs.

Another dubious initiative in the name of “efficiency” from one of our so-called tech geniuses that we will likely pay for in jobs, data center resources, and all-around digital safety.

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Mother Jones

Pope Leo: “I Have No Fear” of Trump

Following an extraordinary attack against Pope Leo XIV that featured President Trump insulting the Catholic leader as “weak on crime” and “terrible,” Leo told reporters on Monday that he was not afraid of the Trump administration.

“I have no fear of the Trump administration, or speaking out loudly of the message of the Gospel, which is what I believe I am here to do,” Leo said en route to Algeria for a papal visit to Africa.

“We are not politicians,” he continued. “We don’t deal with foreign policy with the same perspective he might understand it. But I do believe in the message of the Gospel, as a peacemaker.”

When asked about the Truth Social attack, Leo said, “It’s ironic, the name of the site itself. Say no more.”

Leo’s defiant message came after Trump issued a lengthy, ego-driven rant against the pope on Sunday, claiming that Leo would not have been elected had it not been for Trump’s presidency. “If I wasn’t in the White House, Leo wouldn’t be in the Vatican,” he wrote.

Elsewhere in the post, Trump complained: “I don’t want a Pope who criticizes the President of the United States because I’m doing exactly what I was elected, IN A LANDSLIDE.”

The president then posted a bizarre image that appeared to portray him as a Jesus-like figure healing the sick while surrounded by patriotic imagery. The image prompted rare disapproval among some of MAGA’s most faithful, including the anti-trans activist Riley Gaines, who wrote on social media: “Seriously, I cannot understand why he’d post this. Is he looking for a response? Does he actually think this?”

Though Leo has generally avoided mentioning Trump by name, the pope has been increasingly vocal in his criticism of Trump’s war in Iran, telling reporters as recently as last week that the president’s threat to destroy “a whole civilization” was “truly unacceptable.”

In a late March sermon widely viewed as a rebuke of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s framing of the war as divinely sanctioned, Leo condemned leaders who have “hands full of blood.”

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Mother Jones

The Actual Economic Impact of Data Centers on a Place? That’s a Secret.

This story was originally published by Inside Climate News and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

Tax breaks for data centers in North Carolina keep as much as $57 million each year out of state and local government coffers, state figures show, an amount that could balloon to billions of dollars if all the proposed projects are built.

Despite these generous subsidies, data center owners are legally allowed to shield many of their financial details from state oversight. They aren’t required to prove their ongoing eligibility for the tax exemptions unless they are audited by the state Department of Revenue. Lawmakers enacted sales and use tax breaks for data centers in 2010 and expanded them in 2015.

“At that time, no one could have predicted the explosive growth of data centers and how much energy they consumed,” Gov. Josh Stein told his Energy Policy Task Force, which met this week. “And because data centers at that point were a brand-new industry, they benefited from financial incentives to induce capital to invest. Those days are long gone.”

Consumers pay sales and use taxes on food, clothing, furniture, utility payments, general merchandise, and other goods.

In North Carolina, data centers don’t pay sales tax on certain equipment—heating and air conditioning, computer hardware and software, and electrical infrastructure—so long as they meet county wage standards, provide health insurance to full-time employees and invest $75 million in private funds in a project within five years.

“If the original purpose was to incentivize data centers to come here, you could argue that the objective has been met.”

Sales and use taxes are the second-largest source of revenue for local governments, behind property taxes, according to the Department of Revenue. And a third of the state’s general fund comes from these taxes.

Nor do qualifying data centers pay taxes on electricity use. Under that exemption, a large project that consumes 100 megawatts of energy avoids paying as much as $2.2 million a year, state Commerce Department figures show. (Because utility Duke Energy might negotiate project-specific terms with very large customers, this number could vary.)

Data center operators don’t have to report the amount of exemptions they’ve claimed. Nor must they provide information that would allow an independent evaluation of the financial impact of their projects. In some cases, data centers contractually require local governments to keep electricity and water usage secret. “State agencies have a limited view of the sector’s energy use and economic activity,” the Commerce Department wrote in a report to the energy policy task force.

Inside Climate News asked Microsoft and Google, two of the largest data center operators in North Carolina, to disclose the amount of their sales and use tax exemptions. Microsoft directed ICN to its website that lists general economic investments; Google did not respond.

Sen. Julie Mayfield, a Buncombe County Democrat who sits on the energy policy task force, said the legislature should reconsider tax breaks for data centers, consistent with its repeal of several clean energy incentives. “If the original purpose was to incentivize data centers to come here, you could argue that the objective has been met,” she said.

The Commerce Department said it did not calculate the economic benefits of data centers because it doesn’t have the information it needs to do so. Lawmakers would have to change the reporting requirements “to know the true value of the exemptions.”

Scott Mooneyham, a spokesman for the NC League of Municipalities, said the group hasn’t taken a position on the tax exemptions. For some member cities and towns, data centers, when appropriately sited, “have been seen as a huge boost to property tax revenues,” he said. “Others have been concerned about proposals that, based on the potential sites, could create quality of life issues for residents and damage surrounding home values.”

Google has operated a large data center since 2007 in Lenoir, a small town in Caldwell County at the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. The company says it has invested $600 million in the project and plans a $1 billion expansion.

Yet it’s difficult to know how Google’s presence has influenced the county’s economy. Caldwell is a Tier 1 county, a Commerce Department designation for those most economically distressed.

In media reports, the company has said 400 people work at the data center, but the precise number of employees is a “trade secret,” according to an agreement signed in 2024 with the county and city. Google’s energy, water, and sewer use is also confidential.

Caldwell County and Lenoir also gave Google property tax incentives, contingent on the company’s financial investments for the expansion, which includes the creation of 30 additional jobs. Google paid roughly $5.2 million in property taxes last year, county records show, nearly 10 percent of the county’s total property tax collection.

At the energy task force meeting, Rep. Pricey Harrison, a Democrat from Guilford County, asked commerce officials to include two metrics if they can eventually analyze the costs and benefits of data centers: residents’ health impacts and quality of life.

“It’s not all numbers,” she said.

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Mother Jones

Goodbye, Viktor Orbán

Hungary’s much-watched national election—a competition between Trump and Putin-aligned authoritarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and centrist opposition leader Peter Magyar—has ended with a devastating rebuke to the right-wing leader. Orbán conceded his party’s defeat before midnight today.

Already sixteen years in power, Orbánwas looking for another four-year term and a renewed majority for his hard-right party, Fidesz. Instead, Magyar appears to have clinched a clear win for himself and a two-thirds parliamentary majority for theopposition party Tisza.

My colleague Marianne Szegedy-Maszak covered the race, its outsized implications, and the quest of “one of the most successful populist strongmen of the 21st century” to save his career in a comprehensive piece this week—just updated to reflect Magyar’s win.

For Hungarians, this election is existential, and exhausting. A pervasive sense of anxiety permeates conversations in social media and within families, and even casual interactions are charged. Hungarians have faced the complete Fidesz takeover of traditional media channels, and turned to Facebook and alternative media channels, which are abuzz with conversation, debate, and sharing of insights—or the latest Fidesz outrage. A friend in Budapest hinted darkly at a national curfew after the election, and one of my Hungarian cousins said her hairstylist was so spent that he planned to take Monday off to recover—as did her husband.

For many Americans, of course, Orbán’s Hungary is a miniature version of Trump’s US—indeed, in some ways, it may have served as a role model for MAGA in its crusade to dismantle democratic institutions and crucial elements of civil society. When Trump first ran for election in 2016, Orbán had already “built the wall”—in his case, an electrified razor wire fence constructed by prisoners—on Hungary’s southern border, attempting to staunch the flow of Syrian refugees who, to be sure, were more likely to use Hungary as a transit point than a final destination. This also allowed Orbán to declare a “state of emergency,” which has not been lifted since. Sound familiar?

Among its many implications internationally, the defeat is a public rebuke to Vice President JD Vance, who campaigned for Orbán during several days before Sunday’s election.And in at least one respect, Orbán—an erstwhile democracy activist—might be less autocratic than Trump: He’s already publicly conceded his loss.

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Mother Jones

Trump’s SEC Is Going After Fewer Wall Street Crimes

This week, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)—the federal agency that oversees Wall Street—announced that it has brought almost 30 percent fewer new enforcement actions against companies in the first year of the Trump administration.

In practice, this means that the SEC is bringing fewer cases against bad actors in the financial markets for crimes like insider trading or fraud. That contradicts statements that the SEC’s head, Paul Atkins, made to Congress in February, disputing reports that suggested his agency was prosecuting fewer crimes, and assuring lawmakers that SEC enforcement work had not seen a steep decline.

In its release of case numbers this week, the agency framed its enforcement drop as an effort to focus more on cases where investors saw direct harm and to better use agency resources.

“Regrettably, such resources have been misapplied in prior years to pursue media headlines and run up numbers, and in turn, led to misguided expectations on what constitutes effective enforcement,” the SEC wrote in its statement.

The agency’s report of its enforcement numbers got minimal attention this week, likely because it was issued just hours after President Trump issued a threat to annihilate the people of Iran that raised mass alarm of war crimes or potential nuclear warfare. (The president later walked back his threats.)

The SEC’s data release comes after months of signs that have pointed to unprecedented lenience by the agency toward financial crimes. In the last year, the SEC suddenly shut down many of the cases against cryptocurrency firms initiated under Biden-era leadership: It dismissed a case against Coinbase one month after Trump’s second inauguration, then halted a prosecution against a Chinese crypto entrepreneur who bought millions in tokens from a Trump family crypto venture, and a few months later threw out a case against crypto giant Binance. (The White House also pardoned both the firm itself and ex-CEO Changpeng Zhao.)

A private sector analysis from an economic consulting firm that partnered with NYU to scour court records for SEC actions raised the possibility of a 30 percent drop in prosecutions in November. It also noted that financial fines obtained by the SEC had dropped to their lowest level in more than a decade.

This March, Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) sent a letter to the SEC expressing his own concerns about the agency’s falling enforcement efforts. He noted that staffing at the corporate watchdog has dropped by 17 percent, with many of those cuts specifically in the enforcement division. Financial fines collected by the SEC, he wrote, had dropped by 45 percent, while “disgorgement,” a process where the SEC requires companies to return profits that were obtained through ill-gotten means, had fallen by a staggering 98 percent. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) sent the agency two letters last month expressing similar concerns.

That same month, the SEC’s enforcement chief—the top lawyer in charge of bringing cases against companies—abruptly resigned after just six months on the job because she clashed with some of the agency’s Republican political appointees in trying to more aggressively pursue financial fraud charges, “including in cases that touched the president’s circle,” according to Reuters.

The day after it released its decreased enforcement numbers, the SEC finally announced Ryan’s replacement. The new enforcement chief will be David Woodcock, an attorney who previously led the SEC’s regional office in Fort Worth, Texas. Following that job, he went into private practice at Gibson Dunn, helping to defend companies facing SEC enforcement actions.

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Trump: Fine, We’ll Blockade the Strait Too

Unable to quickly remove Iranian mines from the Strait of Hormuz—the world’s most important oil transit corridor—with its current equipment, the US is switching tack: President Trump announced Sunday in two Truth Social posts that the Navy will launch its own blockade of “any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave” the passage, and intercept those that have paid Iran’s tolls to cross.

The announcement will almost certainly mean a further spike in oil prices when markets open on Monday, and it’s a move that does little to help Trump’s sagging domestic approval, leaving much of Iran’s hold on the global oil supply intactGasoline costs will keep rising. Military commitments and expenses, will keep growing. The MAGA coalition will continue to crack.

Meanwhile, Trump’s two main promises on Hormuz this weekend, to clear Iranian sea mines from the strait—efforts he said were “starting” in another Truth Social post Saturday—and to detain “every vessel in International Waters that has paid a toll to Iran,” are dubious.

That’s first and foremost because the US doesn’t have the resources to get rid of the sea mines. State-of-the-art demining vessels, if left alone by Iran, could clear the strait in a matter of weeks or months. But the Navy has no “significant mine clearing capability,” the Wall Street Journal reported in March, and its unmanned anti-mine vessels are unreliable even in clear waters that pose far less of a challenge than Hormuz.

Detaining the ships that pay Iran’s tolls also seems pretty unlikely. To pull it off, Trump seems poised to try to open his own safe channel across the strait, competing with the route Iran has set up to guide ships through the mine-filled waters: Two US destroyers apparently crossed Hormuz on Saturday “to demonstrate to commercial tankers that the waterway could be transited safely.”

A safe alternate path under American management would force oil buyers to pick a side: Iran or the US.

Among the problems with that plan: First, China buys most of Iran’s oil. Will the US actually detain those tankers if they pay Iran’s tolls, and risk escalating a series of showdowns with China that have so far not gone well for Trump? Second, many ships on the Iranian route do not pay tolls. How will Washington check which ones did pay in order to detain them? And what will it do with the ships: fine them, effectively charging a second toll?

Given those realities, it seems that all Trump did on Sunday was announce changes that make an already volatile situation more difficult. Trump’s blockade makes safe transit across the waterway even more confusing and uncertain—raising questions of whether deadly mines will still linger in the strait, of how to safely move oil, and virtually ensuring that crude prices will remain damagingly high for months to come.

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After the Attack on Sam Altman’s Home, Will AI CEOs Go On the Offensive?

Sam Altman suggested that an investigative story describing him as someone “unconstrained by truth” with a “sociopathic lack of concern” for consequences caused an early Friday attack on his San Francisco home.

The OpenAI CEO’s unsubstantiated implication came in a post on his personal blog published on Friday, hours after the attack. “There was an incendiary article about me a few days ago,” he wrote. Although he initially “brushed it aside,” he said he was “pissed” and now “thinking that I have underestimated the power of words and narratives.”

A 20-year-old man was arrested early Friday after allegedly throwing a Molotov cocktail at Altman’s home. No one was hurt in the incident. The same man is suspected of also threatening to burn down a building at OpenAI’s headquarters later that morning. The Monday New Yorker investigation Altman referred to included interviews with over 100 people who had firsthand knowledge of how Altman conducted business. While a few people defended Altman, most said he was power-hungry and manipulative.

In a move that appears as an attempt to soften his appeal, Altman accompanied his post with a photo of his husband and son. While he acknowledged the present moment as “a time of great anxiety about AI,” he noted, “while we have that debate, we should de-escalate the rhetoric and tactics and try to have fewer explosions in fewer homes, figuratively and literally.”

Altman’s suggestion of “tactics” indicates that he believes reports like the New Yorker investigation are intentionally dishonest and lead to violence.

The attack comes as CEOs are spending more money on personal security. According to a report by the Conference Board, a nonprofit research group, and ESGauge, an analytics platform, the top 10 percent of spenders pay an average of $1.2 million per year for full-time protection teams, armored vehicles, and threat intelligence.

As of April 11, OpenAI is hiring for four positions in corporate security, including a risk analyst, who will bring experience in “physical security, counterintelligence, and risk management,” and security leaders in San Francisco, Washington, D.C., and at data centers.

But security goes far beyond safety when considering the technology OpenAI produces. The attack could be used to develop a surveillance dragnet. The company secured a Pentagon contract in February and announced the deal in a company release titled “Our agreement with the Department of War.”

That same day, the Trump administration dropped and blacklisted Anthropic, a rival AI company, from federal contracts due to the company’s refusal to remove safety restrictions on its AI model that prevent the government from using it for mass surveillance or autonomous weapons. So while OpenAI claimed in its February announcement that it would ensure that its tools “will not be used for domestic surveillance,” how could it have successfully secured the contract?

If Altman truly wants to “de-escalate the rhetoric and tactics,” he has to reconcile with boosting a company that requires massive energy resources to harm not only those abroad in the name of national security but our communities at home.

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Mother Jones

Trump: Buy American, Unless It’s for My Ballroom

President Trump, who has long married “protecting American steel” with his “Make America Great Again” slogan, reportedly accepted tens of millions of dollars in donated steel from a foreign firm for his ballroom just days before he slashed tariffs in half that could help one of its plants.

According to a report by the New York Times from earlier this week, two people familiar with the White House ballroom plans said the steel was made in Europe by ArcelorMittal, a Luxembourg-based steel manufacturer.

Last October, the president said he received a “generous” offer of steel worth $37 million—but did not mention where the steel was coming from. According to the same Times report, shortly after the donation, the White House agreed to revise its tariffs in a manner “that could benefit ArcelorMittal, by cutting in half the tariffs applied to exports of automotive steel from its Canadian plant.”

The White House has publicly disclosed only some donors to the $400-million project. The names we know include: tech giants Meta and Amazon, defense contractors Lockheed Martin and Palantir, the crypto platform Coinbase, and the family of Howard Lutnick, Trump’s commerce secretary who had years-long business ties with Jeffrey Epstein. And of the known donors, few have disclosed the amount of money given—something many companies should have done through lobbying disclosure filings, according to the government ethics watchdog Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.

Davis Ingle, a White House spokesperson, responded to the Times’ request for comment by saying Trump was remodeling the White House “at no cost to the taxpayer.”

That may be accurate but doesn’t answer the question: Was this a quid pro quo deal? It’s apparent that Trump has little interest in “protecting American steel.” It’s all about boosting his own.

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Mother Jones

Inside America’s Race to Hide the World’s Money

Alessandro Chesser is a 40-year-old Silicon Valley entrepreneur. He’s married with two kids and was the first in his family to attend college. His grandfather immigrated from Sicily and worked as a school janitor so his family could have a better life.

Skip forward a few generations, and Chesser is noticing the way wealthy investors hide their money to avoid paying taxes. He’s outraged and wants to upend the tax system, which he thinks is unfair to the everyday American worker. In Chesser’s mind, the realistic solution isn’t to reform the tax code, but to make it easier for average Americans to access one of the best-kept secrets of the superrich: trusts.

Trusts have become big business in the US. They are now an industry worth trillions of dollars. But no one knows the exact number, because the trust industry is extraordinarily private. Trusts can last forever (literally), but there is no public registry for them. In fact, they are one of the main reasons why watchdog groups consider America to be the most secretive financial jurisdiction in the world.

This week on Reveal, journalists Sally Herships and Leah McGrath Goodman investigate America’s shadowland of trusts. As the nation’s wealth gap keeps growing—and Americans brace for Tax Day—we uncover what’s at stake as US states race to become the most trust-friendly jurisdictions in the world.

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Mother Jones

The Bizarre Connection Between Iran Negotiations and Trump’s Crypto Firm

In January, Zach Witkoff sat down at a table in Islamabad and signed a deal with Pakistan’s finance minister. Witkoff is the young CEO of Donald Trump’s crypto finance firm, World Liberty Financial, and the arrangement he struck that day would allow WLF’s stablecoin to be used for Pakistan’s cross-border transactions.

It was a hugely consequential moment for World Liberty. Despite Trump’s association and the involvement of his sons, this firm hasn’t exactly lit the blockchain world on fire. The value of the company’s token has plummetted from 31 cents to just 8 cents in recent months. World Liberty could use a deal like this—a government vouching for and endorsing the use of its coin. And the deal was being consummated, standing behind Witkoff was General Asim Munir, the top officer in Pakistan’s army.

The presence of a military leader during this financial meeting was odd. But three months later, Munir is connected to another Witkoff family effort: the ongoing negotiations to settle the war in Iran.

Munir has been a frequent visitor to the Trump White House and is a chief architect of Pakistani efforts to mediate an end to the Iran war. That means he’s working with Witkoff’s father, Steve Witkoff, the billionaire New York City real estate developer who Donald Trump appointed to be his Mideast envoy. The elder Witkoff will join Vice President JD Vance and presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner at the negotiating table on Saturday, facing off with Iran’s negotiators in talks being brokered by Pakistan.

The Witkoff connection is not a coincidence. It’s another example of how the Trump crew is mixing business—their personal financial business—with US foreign policy.

Pakistan’s relationship with the United States has ebbed and flowed over recent decades, and under the Biden administration, it was at a low. But Pakistan has mounted a huge effort to cozy up to Trump. The country nominated him for a Nobel Peace Prize, and the World Liberty Financial deal appears to be part of the overall effort.

Last month, Bloomberg profiled self-described “crypto bro” Bilal Bin Saqib—one of the key architects of both the deal between World Liberty Financial and the Pakistani government and the newly warmed relationship between Islamabad and the Washington.

“Because of crypto, doors have opened,” Saqib told Bloomberg. “New conversations have opened, trust has been built. We have gotten an opportunity to rebrand.”

Saqib, who is 35, was named an adviser to World Liberty Financial last year, but he left that post to take a series of increasingly high-profile jobs in the Pakistani government working with crypto. His current position is chair of the Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority, the country’s crypto regulator.

Saqib has maintained his close relationship with World Liberty Financial, posting selfies with Zach Witkoff from a Mar-a-Lago get-together a few weeks before the Iran war kicked off.

The agreement that Pakistan signed with World Liberty Financial is non-binding, but it could be massive for the Trump family. The company is a defi platform—decentralized finance. That means it offers users the ability to move money through the blockchain—buying, selling, exchanging, and lending to others via a centralized platform that doesn’t involve a traditional bank. When users purchase the company’s digital tokens—the tool that enables all of the transactions—the Trump family gets a cut of the proceeds.

The Trump family already has earned about $1 billion from their arrangement with World Liberty Financial. The addition of millions of new users from Pakistan would provide World Liberty with more activity on the platform and more stability—and the Trumps with more cash flow as tokens are bought and sold.

It’s not clear if the effort by World Liberty Financial and Saqib to bring Trump’s defi operation into a potentially hugely lucrative relationship with the Pakistani government is the reason for Pakistan’s newly emerged role as Washington’s closest friend in the region, or if it’s the result of the arrangement—or something else entirely. But whatever the case, Trump is mixing his personal financial interests and US national security interests by intertwining his family business with the Pakistani government, while collaborating with Pakistan in this diplomatic initiative. At the negotiating table this weekend, his financial prospects—and those of his envoy’s son—could be difficult to separate from the fate of the Iran war.

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Mother Jones

Trump Raked in $28 Million From Middle East Business Deals. Then He Started a War.

Donald Trump is betting big on Oman. Since September 2024, the president has been developing a grand project in the Middle Eastern sultanate—a sprawling golf course, a hotel, and seaside villas—all perched over the shimmering Gulf of Oman. A livestream of the site shows a sun-drenched stretch of water, edged by brown desert rock outcroppings, where it’s easy to imagine minimalist boxy units, cantilevered 400 feet above the sea, starting at just $1 million.

Built by Saudi real estate developer Dar Global on land provided by the Omani government outside its capital city of Muscat, all those seaside views and quiet luxury could be a gold mine for the US president. In 2024, he earned $1 million in licensing fees from the deal. The project’s website boasts of its “ideal location.” It offers “easy access” to the Persian Gulf, which sits just a few hundred miles to the northwest via the Strait of Hormuz. Oman, the website notes, is “one of the safest countries in the world.”

Fast-forward to March 2. Two days after Trump and his Israeli allies launched a surprise attack on Iran, Iranian drones struck an oil tanker about 90 miles offshore from the resort’s proposed location. It wasn’t exactly close, but it was closer than most luxury investors would probably be comfortable with—and it’s a reminder that Muscat is separated from Iran by a gulf that is 210 miles at its widest.

In the weeks that followed, shipping through the Straight of Hormuz ground to a near standstill. The war disrupted the world economy, Trump’s political fortunes, and, potentially, his vast Middle Eastern business interests.

These interests extend far beyond Oman. Trump has signed deals to build golf resorts, condos, and hotels throughout the Arabian Peninsula. According to his latest financial disclosure, Trump pulled in $28.1 million in revenue from partners across the region in 2024. Trump-connected projects now being developed there have a combined value of roughly $17 billion—with the bulk of that funding coming from sovereign wealth funds and various other Trump business partners. On a certain level—not, arguably, an ethical one—it made sense. The Gulf economies have been booming, with money flowing freely. Unlike other parts of the world, the region’s rulers have been very open to partnering with the American president’s personal businesses.

Since the war began, though, every one of those Gulf countries has come under Iranian fire, and the area’s economic prospects—long reliant on a reputation for prosperity, safety, and stability—have been flipped upside down. Just how upside down is a sensitive subject. Governments around the Persian Gulf have clamped down hard on the spreading of photos and video of Iranian attacks on the glittering towers and lavish beach-front properties that have made the region a luxury destination. And while this week’s fragile ceasefire brought a respite from missile and drone strikes, the Strait of Hormuz remains closed.

Trumpian projects like the Omani resort would, in theory, motivate the president to pursue peace and stability. But it also puts his own personal interests firmly in the middle of a foreign policy crisis. Here’s a tour of Trump’s business dealings in the suddenly war-torn region:

Trump Golf Dubai

Trump has been involved with the Emirati real estate developer Hussain Sajwani since 2013 when they agreed to build luxury villas and a golf course together. The property—located in the United Arab Emirates’ largest city—opened in 2017, and Sajwani and his family have been staunch allies of Trump ever since. Trump even bragged that in the days before his first inauguration, Sajwani offered him a $2 billion deal. The developer took the stage with Trump at his 2025 inaugural celebration rally.

Between 2014 and 2024, Sajwani paid Trump between $14.1 million and $30 million in licensing and management fees for the operation of the Trump-branded golf course, according to personal financial disclosures filed by Trump.

In early March, an Iranian drone struck the Al Minhad airbase, located between two Sajwani properties, including the Trump-branded golf course. An Iranian drone attack also struck an apartment complex just beyond the Trump golf course on March 1.

Trump International Hotel & Tower, Dubai

Trump is teaming up with Dar Global—the same Saudi developer spearheading the Oman hotel—on a proposed 80-story tower. The project, announced last April, is slated to cost $1 billion; it will include $20 million penthouses and what the developers say will be the world’s highest swimming pool. It will be centrally located near the Burj Khalifa, along Dubai’s main drag into its downtown. That’s been a prime area for Iranian attacks—on Feb. 28, a drone struck the nearby Fairmont Hotel, causing a fiery explosion that Dubai authorities rushed to cover up, urging people not to watch a video of the damage. Local activists told Bellingcat that at least five people were confirmed by the British embassy as having been arrested for documenting the strike.

Saudi Arabia

Trump has three different projects slated for Saudi Arabia—one in the Saudi capital of Riyadh and two in the western city of Jeddah. The three projects have an estimated combined price tag of $10 billion.

In Riyadh—where Iranian missile strikes have landed, including at the American embassy—Trump is planning a large luxury mansion development and golf course, dubbed Wadi Safa. In Jeddah, which is the gateway city for travelers making the traditional Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca, Trump has agreed to build two multi-use projects, Trump Plaza and Trump Tower.

Saudi’s defacto monarch, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, was one of the world leaders most supportive of Trump’s war against on Iran, including arguing that Trump should send US troops into Iran.

Trump International Doha

Trump has worked closely with Qatar’s royal family, which often is at odds with its neighbors in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. He accepted a jet from the Qataris, and last year he signed a deal to build a sprawling golf resort along Qatar’s Persian Gulf shoreline. Estimated to be worth $7 billion, the resort isn’t in the area of Qatar that has been targeted by Iranian strikes. But in a country about the size of Connecticut, nothing is especially far from the war.

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Mother Jones

Trump’s Math Behind Medicaid Fraud Claims Doesn’t Add Up — Literally

The Trump administration is bad at math.

On Friday, the Associated Press reported that an administration official admitted to miscounting how many people in New York receive care through home and community-based services by millions.

Home and community-based services were established during the Reagan administration, Like the name suggests, these services help disabled people stay in their communities instead of institutions. Care through HCBS can include having skilled nursing, delivered meals and building modifications at one’s home.

This estimation error is important in a time when Medicaid is under attack. Last year, Congress passed nearly $1 triillion worth of cuts to this program. The Trump administration’s continued attacks on Medicaid also hint that more cuts could be coming.

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services head Dr. Mehmet Oz claimed in March that around five million out of roughly eight million people on Medicaid in the state of New York receive home care.

In actuality, the number is around 450,000.

“CMS is committed to ensuring its analyses fully reflect state-specific billing practices and will continue to work closely with New York to validate data and strengthen program integrity oversight,” spokesman Chris Krepich told the AP in a statement. CMS did not respond to Mother Jones’ request for comment by the time of publication.

The administration’s accusations of rampant fraud across the system. During a House committee hearing on alleged Medicaid and Medicare fraud, CMS deputy administrator Kimberly Brandt bragged about CMS’s fraud detection through its aggressive-sounding fraud war room, as I reported:

In Oz’s absence, CMS deputy administrator Kimberly Brandt claimed that the agency’s “fraud war room” was using artificial intelligence to root out alleged Medicare and Medicaid fraud, particularly increased rates of home and community-based services billing in New York and California.

“We are constantly using heat maps and data analysis to be able to look and see where we think the largest shifts are,” Brandt said.

As I’ve also previously reported, there are around seven million disabled people and older adults on Medicaid. Just about every state is expected to enact cuts to home and community-based services due to its being an optional Medicaid program.

Home and community-based services also save money for states. According to KFF, the cost of HCBS on average per person is around $36,000, whereas long-term care in places like nursing homes for people on Medicaid is around $47,000.

This underlines how attacks on HCBS are not only heartless in forcing people out of their communities, it also doesn’t make much financial sense.

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Mother Jones

How to Defeat a Very Trumpy Authoritarian Leader—Maybe

“Óvatosan optimista.”

That means “cautious optimism.” It’s a phrase I’ve heard from several Hungarian friends when I ask them about the momentous elections taking place on Sunday, April 12. After 16 years in power, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s rule of “illiberal democracy,” or “Christian liberty,” may be coming to an end, as one of his Fidesz party members, Péter Magyar, has defected and challenged his rule.

With polls suggesting a 10-point lead for Magyar and a possible two-thirds majority for his rivalTisza party in Parliament, Vice President JD Vance flew to Hungary to campaign for Orbán, not to interfere with the free and fair election, he insisted, but “to show that there are actually lots of friends across the world who recognize that Viktor and his government are doing a good job and they’re important partners for peace.” It is unlikely that this would impress an electorate that has witnessed remarkable political corruption, a significant brain drain among young people, the lowest standard of living in the EU, and high unemployment. Not to mention the simple phenomenon of Fidesz fatigue after so many years. Indeed, polling suggested that Vance’s visit may have backfired.

Love to see this: A new poll conducted in Hungary has shown that JD Vance's visit to Budapest caused Putin puppet Viktor Orbán's party to LOSE 3% of its support. ⬇

Jon Cooper (@joncooper-us.bsky.social) 2026-04-09T03:03:52.947Z

The rise of Magyar and potential fall of Orbán has led at least some Hungarians, who are not known for their sunny optimism, to feel some bat squeaks of hope. At the same time, their almost genetic national pessimism makes many receptive to the paranoid and apocalyptic messaging from their prime minister.

But why the outsized attention to an election in a Central European country of fewer than 10 million people? Well, because Orbán’s singular brand of pugnacious Christian nationalism and the implications of his rule have extended far beyond the fate of this nation and its 62-year-old leader. Orban is one of the most successful populist strongmen of the 21st century. He has successfully curried favor with both President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. He has antagonized the EU by systematically undermining civil society in Hungary, channelling some of its generous largesse to enrich himself and his cronies, and blocking essential funding for Ukraine. With no evidence whatsoever, he insists that “Brussels is pushing us into war,” accusing the EU and anyone within earshot of attempting to drag Hungary into the conflict in Ukraine and, perforce, with Russia.

Whatever the geopolitical ramifications—or implications for right-wing populism and America’s MAGA movement—for Hungarians, this election is existential, and exhausting. A pervasive sense of anxiety permeates conversations in social media and within families, and even casual interactions are charged. Hungarians have faced the complete Fidesz takeover of traditional media channels, and turned to Facebook and alternative media channels, which are abuzz with conversation, debate, and sharing of insights—or the latest Fidesz outrage. A friend in Budapest hinted darkly at a national curfew after the election, and one of my Hungarian cousins said her hairstylist was so spent that he planned to take Monday off to recover—as did her husband.

For many Americans, of course, Orbán’s Hungary is a miniature version of Trump’s US—indeed, in some ways, it may have served as a role model for MAGA in its crusade to dismantle democratic institutions and crucial elements of civil society. When Trump first ran for election in 2016, Orbán had already “built the wall”—in his case, an electrified razor wire fence constructed by prisoners—on Hungary’s southern border, attempting to staunch the flow of Syrian refugees who, to be sure, were more likely to use Hungary as a transit point than a final destination. This also allowed Orbán to declare a “state of emergency,” which has not been lifted since. Sound familiar?

In quashing dissent, extravagantly rewarding his allies, enriching himself and his family, despairing over the dilution of the purity of the Hungarian blood line, marginalizing and oppressing the LGBTQ community—well, it’s all there really. The Orbán playbook is channeled in various ways by the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025, the right-wing blueprint for Trump’s second term. So understanding how the Fidesz machine might be defeated could hold some lessons for MAGA’s foes.

Depending, of course, on what happens on Sunday. Because this election might conceivably serve as a blueprint for tampering with a free and fair balloting process, or how an autocrat will challenge its results. Election laws have been altered by Fidesz to gerrymander voting districts and reduce Parliamentary seats, all in their favor. (Sound familiar?)

In cities like Budapest, or even college towns, the level of engagement and rejection of Fidesz is unambivalent, but less-educated and provincial Hungarians in the eastern part of the country remain rock solid on team Orbán. I asked Csaba Pleh, a professor of cognitive science at the Central European University, if he was concerned about election meddling. “I do not agree with those voices that claim that Orbán will create disturbances or postpone the elections,” he said. “To be cynical, I feel that his entourage is too busy securing their money. They do not have the strength or the time to try to disrupt the elections.”

The 30th annual Budapest Pride march was scheduled for June 28, 2025. Several months before, Parliament amended the Assembly Act specifically to prohibit any demonstrations or gatherings for LGBTQ rights, and the prohibition would be enforced by facial recognition technology to identify anyone who organized or participated in such gatherings.

Since 2020, when Orbán first announced that despite Hungarians being “tolerant and patient” people, upon seeing a children’s book with LGBTQ themes, he demanded that “gays are to leave our children alone.” There is a “red line,” he said, “that cannot be crossed.” The next year, Fidesz banned the inclusion of any information about homosexuality or transgenderism in school sex ed classes, and depictions of homosexuality or sex reassignment in any media directed at people under 18. Appearing at CPAC in Budapest in 2023—where he received a standing ovation—Orbán announced his priorities, “No migration, no gender, no war.”

Timea Szabó is an opposition MP from Hungary’s Green or Politics Can Be Different (LMP) party, who has represented Budapest’s third district—whose population of 124,000 makes it akin to Hungary’s sixth largest city—since 2018 and has been in Parliament since 2010. She told me the government’s anti-LGBTQ propaganda, alleging that “sex change operations were happening in kindergarten,” was a new low for Fidesz. “I actually asked the president at an open committee hearing, ‘I’d like to hear actual statistics about how many requests you have had from families who wanted to change the sex of their kid,” she recalled. “And she said, ‘Well, zero.’ I was like, then, why the hell are you doing this? How cynical do you have to be to make [LGBTQ] groups the enemy of the nation?”

Political pressure and police bans preceded the Pride event, even as the non-Fidesz mayor of Budapest, Gergely Karácsony, welcomed the marchers and offered to host it. In response, Bence Tuzson, the minister of justice, warned him that doing so could land him in prison for a year. This was, Tuzson insisted, “in order to protect the rights of children.”

“When the minister of justice is not aware of the laws in force, that is…the Fidesz government.”

Karácsony dismissed the threat: “When the minister of justice is not aware of the laws in force, that is…the Fidesz government.” He went on to note that the last Saturday of June was official Hungarian Freedom Day. “So, of course, we are holding a municipal event on Hungarian Independence Day. This is Budapest Pride, and since there are already over 500 foreign participants—ministers, representatives, mayors—the English name is also justified: Budapest Pride.”

It was a beautiful early summer day, and the rally began at City Hall in Pest, snaked through the city center, and crossed the Elizabeth Bridge over the Danube. The crowd, clearly not intimidated by government threats, was enormous. Organizers estimated 200,000 people participated. Others thought the number was closer to 100,000, but either way,in a country of less than 10 million, the turnout was extraordinary. Small children marched, parents pushed strollers, young people danced, sang, and celebrated the show of solidarity.

A large crowd of thousands of people holding Gay Pride flags cross a tall bridge in Budapest.

Participants in the Pride march cross the Elisabeth Bridge in Budapest, Hungary, Saturday, June 28, 2025. Rudolf Karancsi/AP

A man attending a Pride march hold up a sign protesting Viktor Orban.

A poster depicting Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán at the Budapest Pride march.Rudolf Karancsi/AP

Several marchers were pensioners. They had lived through the 1956 Hungarian Revolution and Janos Kadar’s more benign 32-year communist rule that began after the Revolution and was crushed by Russian troops. After a period of extreme austerity, they lived in a Hungary that was referred to as the “happiest barracks on the bloc,” for its relatively soft communist oppression, moderate economic pluralism, and careful titration of its relationship with Soviet leadership in Moscow. Life in Hungary was a pleasant contrast with some of its more Stalinist neighbors, such as Nicolae Ceaușescu’s Romania and Erich Honecker’s East Germany. Many of the marchers had lived through the early days of Fidesz in 1989 and 1990 when decades of communism in Hungary ended, as it did throughout the former Soviet Union, and bright new possibilities seemed endless.

I was in Hungary back then, and Fidesz offered an exhilarating vision of as the party of youth and the future. Now, nearly every available lampost is plastered with posters demonizing Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the EU: “Don’t Let Zelensky Have the Last Laugh!” said one of them. In Fidesz’s early days, one of its posters showed the image of a “socialist fraternal kiss” between two sclerotic leaders, Soviet Leader Leonid Brezhnev and East Germany’s Honecker, taken when Brezhnev visited East Berlin to celebrate the GDR’s 30th anniversary in 1979. The poster’s bottom half featured a delightful embrace between a beautiful young Hungarian man and woman. The caption read: “Tessék Választani”—”Make your choice.”

A black and white poster for elections in Hungary featuring a young couple kissing and two older men kissing.

This is one of many posters used during the 1990 Hungarian election by new political parties to differentiate themselves from the Communist Party. Here, Fidesz asks voters to “choose” between two different types of kisses.Tessek Valasztani/World History Commons

Orban was a young and charismatic leader at the time; Cambridge-educated thanks to George Soros, and exhilarated in presenting a new alternative to the communist past. Not the outdated socialism of some communist reformers, or the insulated, conservative nationalism of the Hungarian Democratic Forum (MDF) embodied by future prime minister Jozsef Antall, but a bright combination of free markets and social programs, with an emphasis on creating a Hungary poised for integration in a modern European future. The name Fidesz is an acronym that translates to the Federation of Young Democrats. It was considered a moderate liberal party. In the first free elections in 1990, it entered the national assembly with 6 percent of the vote and 22 seats in Parliament. Then Orbán began his rise to power, and Fidesz became unrecognizable to some of its early supporters.

It didn’t take long for Orbán and his party to fragment. In 1993, he was elected party chairman and demonstrated the uncompromising, unforgiving style that has become more extreme over the years. Former members, still idealists, imagined Fidesz could deliver on its promises for this new Hungarian democracy. As one founding member, Zsuzsanna Szelényi wrote in her 2019 essay, “The Generation that Betrayed Hungarian Democracy,”

He was adept at pressuring members to fall into line, building a circle of loyal cronies and followers who responded to his missionary zeal. By 1993, the party suffered deep internal divisions. The final rupture occurred when we learned that Orban and the party’s treasurer had used party funds to reap profits from a luxury car rental company, with money channelled through a crony’s enterprises.

The following year, Szelényi was one of five MPs and “several hundred members who defected,” and the party made a decisive turn to the right**—i**ndeed, the religious right. “Policy was now driven by pure opportunism,” she wrote, “like the way Fidesz leaders suddenly started participating in Catholic masses, to court religious voters.” Orbán’s control now complete, Fidesz nonetheless took some time to gain traction. It lost in 1994, but in 1998, 35-year-old Orbán became Hungary’s—and Europe’s—youngest prime minister, brought Hungary into NATO, and began to position the country to join the EU.

His rise was not without setbacks. He and Fidesz lost in 2002 and 2006, cognitive scientist Pleh told me, and when he returned to power in 2010, he had learned some important and unsparing lessons: “All those intellectual hotshots who were standing with him on the dais and so on, misled him, led him to believe that he was winning,” Pleh explained. “And from that time on, both institutionally and personally, he mistrusted established intellectuals and established institutions.”

The 2025 Pride march was not only an expression of solidarity with the LGBTQ community, but, much like the No Kings marches in the United States, an opportunity to show the government that their capacity for intimidation and bullying may have reached its limit.

Upon returning to power in 2010, the Orbán government has systematically brought Hungarian cultural and intellectual institutions under state control, using two main strategies: centralizing power and replacing leaders with his own supporters, or as Pleh called them,”untainted outsiders.” The party ousted establishment figures and brought in relatively unknown younger figures from elsewhere**—**ethnic Hungarian communities in Transylvania (Romania), Vojvodina (Serbia), and Ukraine. These newcomers had no ties to existing intellectual networks, no debts to the old guard, and they were often very nationalistic. The head of the National Theater came from Ukraine, for instance, and the director of the key literary museum and main cultural funding distributor came from Transylvania. It’s not that they were incompetent but, unlike their predecessors, they were staunch loyalists who owed their professional success entirely to Orbán.

Fidesz remade academic institutions, cultural foundations, the media, and the judiciary. “Orban was smart,” MP Szabo told me, “because I think he understood that people wouldn’t care much about the rule of law because they don’t understand it. So he took very small steps, one step at a time. It’s sort of like two boxers, where one boxer always hits the other one on the same place, but very lightly. And the first 100 blows the opponent doesn’t feel. But after the 101st, he collapses.”

“It’s sort of like two boxers, where one boxer always hits the other one on the same place, but very lightly. And the first 100 blows the opponent doesn’t feel. But after the 101st, he collapses.”

With his nearly absolute power over the last 16 years, Orbán, his family, and his cronies have benefited lavishly from his position, creating what many have described as a “mafia state,” where Fidesz controls and profits from national resources, state institutions, and the media. “Like a mafia boss who decides the fate of the members of his immediate and adopted family,” two Hungarian public intellectuals wrote in Foreign Affairs, “Orbán stands at the top of his own adopted political family to which nearly every sector of Hungarian society must pay tribute.”

Much of the enrichment comes from the EU, where funds ended up being funneled to his cronies. The poster child is Lorinc Meszaros, a pipe fitter, childhood friend and now Hungary’s richest man, who, it is thought, may also be shielding some of Orbán’s assets.

Not that he would have to. The Hungarian investigative reporting group Direkt36 conducted a thorough investigation of the family corruption and produced a documentary in 2025, _The Dynasty: This is how the Orbán family’s economic empire was born. _The film shows how each family member, especially the prime minister’s son-in-law, became one of the country’s 50 wealthiest people. The amount of misappropriated funds from the European Union is estimated to reach 30 billion euros. Transparency International noted, as it gave Hungary its worst score ever, “In 2025, Hungary was once again ranked at the bottom of the European Union, sharing last place with Bulgaria this time, according to the annual Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) compiled by the Secretariat of Transparency International in Berlin.”

And this is small change compared to the Trump family’s enrichment.

There is yet another aspect of Orbán’s rule that will feel familiar to Americans in the Trump era**:** a dividing of friends and family along partisan lines. Pleh told me he has stopped spending time with some old friends because “they have become too much pro-Orban. We have some old boys’ dinners with those who were, like me, critical of the government. And soon a separation in those relationships took place, all along political alliances.”

A young man in a suit coat speaks enthusiastically into a microphone in the middle of a large crowd.

Former Hungarian government insider Peter Magyar gives a speech next to Kossuth Lajos Square in Budapest, days before the election. Denes Erdos/AP

Péter Magyar was once a member of Fidesz, close with the leadership, and married to Judit Varga, who eventually became a Fidesz justice minister—and the source of Magyar’s fame and departure from his political home. In 2023, he recorded his wife as she described what she alleged to be government interference with a corruption case she was overseeing. She was not aware he had recorded the conversation until he released it as part of a very public attack on the party—whereupon a very public, and very messy, divorce ensued.

But Magyar only finally broke with Fidesz after another scandal, in 2024, that involved the pardon of a pedophile’s accomplice who was close to the Orbán camp. Katalin Novak, Hungary’s first woman president, was forced to resign after she pardoned a man who helped cover up the actions of the former deputy director of a children’s home whose boss had been sexually abusing its children and adolescents. Given the party’s previous attacks on the LGBTQ community in the name of protecting children, it was a seismic scandal and, for Magyar, the last straw.

He left Fidesz and created another center-right party named after Hungary’s second largest river, the Tisza. It’s not as if his politics are liberal. Far from it. He remains a politician with vestigial Fidesz values. Initially, gathering his coalition was difficult since his political comrades were ones he had rejected. In the 2024 European Parliament elections, Tisza secured 29.6 percent of the vote, and Fidesz suffered its lowest count ever at 44.82 percent. Timea Szabó told Politico, “We are not voting for Tisza, we are voting against Fidesz. That’s the whole point. Hungarians would vote for a goat at this point if it was running against Orbán.” As for any election meddling? It is impossible to predict. A friend posted on Facebook, “On Sunday, I will give both of my votes to Tisza, because I believe that those who want change should support the party that has the most chance of winning. I came to this decision slowly, but I’m no longer obligated to my previous party sympathy and loyalty. And I say, come on Tisza, come on Hungary, let’s put an end to 16+ years of economic, legal and moral destruction of Fidesz!!”

Are there any Hungarian lessons to be learned for those who long to see the end of MAGA?

Szabó reflected on some of the mistakes the opposition made. Focusing on the “demolition of democracy,” for instance. “Most voters don’t really know what democracy is. For most people, democracy is that you have elections,” she said. “This is why the Hungarian government still repeats constantly: There are elections every four years. So what do you want? This is a democracy. It’s a hard thing to define. So you have to pick a topic that matters.” One such issue: the man protecting the pedophile who preyed on children in a place that was supposed to be a refuge. That whole affair revealed much more about the way Fidesz worked—the cronyism, the hypocrisy, the conviction that laws and rules don’t apply to the insiders—than any high-minded reflection on the erosion of democratic norms could.

I asked Pleh what it would take, after all these years, to put Humpty Dumpty back together again. Was it even possible? “By nature. I’m optimistic,” he said—even without the “cautiously” qualifier. “I can’t help it. So yes, I think many things can be put back together again. Hungary is still part of the free world, that’s not going to go away. It will take five or six years to restructure our society, but it will be done, I think.”

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Mother Jones

Senators Demand Bill Pulte Explain Allegations From Mother Jones Story

On Friday, Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ron Wyden sent a letter to Bill Pulte, the embattled director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, to demand information about a mysterious Pulte donation recently uncovered by Mother Jones. The donation, they write, raises questions about whether Pulte’s nonprofit sent money to Donald Trump while disguising it as charity to the poor.

“These facts raise serious concerns that Team Pulte Inc. may have illegally funneled cash out of a charity to support President Trump.”

Bill Pulte’s charity, Team Pulte, sent $65,000 to a nonprofit called “One World Love LLC” in 2023 to help the “underserved,” according to the charity’s tax filings. But our February reporting found that One World Love does not appear to be a nonprofit and is instead a corporate entity with ties to the law firm that represented President Donald Trump in his efforts to prove election fraud and to avoid paying damages after the January 6 insurrection at the Capitol.

“One World does not appear to be an actual nonprofit devoted to underserved individuals,” the senators write in their letter. “These facts raise serious concerns that Team Pulte Inc. may have illegally funneled cash out of a charity to support President Trump.”

Mother Jones reported that there are several inconsistencies between what’s disclosed in Team Pulte’s tax filings and what is known from public records.

First, Team Pulte lists One World Love as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit—but the IRS database of nonprofits includes no entity with this name. Second: The tax identification number Team Pulte lists for One World Love doesn’t seem to exist. And third, the address Team Pulte lists for One World Love is an unrelated apartment building, while the address listed by the corporate entity itself appears to belong to the Binnall Law Group, which represented Donald Trump and where the president accrued millions in legal bills during his reelection effort.

The senators note in their letter that “willful and knowing delivery or disclosure to the IRS of a false or fraudulent document is also a federal crime.”

The senators also sent a version of this letter to the head of Team Pulte, Joshua Hinkle. They ask both Pulte and Hinkle to explain these apparent misstatements on the charity’s federal tax filings. They note that the rules that govern 501(c)(3)s are clear in that no part of their earnings may go to the benefit of a private individual and that “willful and knowing delivery or disclosure to the IRS of a false or fraudulent document is also a federal crime.”

Neither the FHFA nor Hinkle were immediately available for comment, but we will update this story if they respond.

The letter is the latest in a series of controversies involving Pulte, who, despite leading a traditionally low-profile agency, has vaulted to prominence through aggressive efforts to assist Trump’s attempts to use federal power against political foes.

Pulte has made referrals to the Justice Department in search of criminal investigations into figures including Lisa Cook, a Federal Reserve governor whom Trump has tried to fire; Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.); and Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), all for allegations of crimes committed when they sought housing mortgages. All deny wrongdoing.

Trump allies in the DOJ acted on those letters and launched investigations—and in James’ case, a short-lived criminal case tossed last year by a federal judge in Virginia. Pulte recently attempted to spur a new investigation into James. He reportedly sent new referral letters to Trump-nominated US attorneys in Florida and Illinois charging that James made misrepresentations in home insurance filings that affected insurance companies based in those states.

But his efforts have so far floundered, and Pulte now faces withering scrutiny into his own conduct. FHFA’s inspector general and federal prosecutors have reportedly looked into Pulte’s office’s handling of the mortgage fraud investigation into Schiff. The Government Accountability Office has said it is running its own probe into whether Pulte misused his position to access mortgage information on Trump foes.

Lawmakers, too, are peppering Pulte with questions about his work at FHFA and past dealings. Sens. Wyden and Warren’s letters Friday are the latest indication that Pulte’s remaining tenure in government may be rocky.

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Mother Jones

California Bill Aims to End Spraying of Crops With Toxic “Forever Chemicals”

This story was originally published by Inside Climate News and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

California Assemblymember Nick Schultz is leading an effort to phase out the use of pesticides containing toxic “forever chemicals” to safeguard the nation’s produce.

Schultz (D-Burbank), introduced AB 1603 earlier this year to ban the use, sale, and manufacture of PFAS pesticides in California starting in 2035. The state is the nation’s top agricultural producer, its fruits, nuts ,and vegetables landing on plates across the US.

California has passed so many laws to get these highly persistent, harmful synthetic chemicals out of homes and the environment, Schultz said at a briefing Wednesday, he was shocked to learn that pesticides with intentionally added PFAS are regularly sprayed on the state’s crops. “I was even more startled to find out that these PFAS pesticides are present on the fruit and vegetables that we purchase at the grocery store, on the fruits and vegetables that we feed our families,” he said.

More than 2.5 million pounds of pesticides containing PFAS were sprayed on California crops between 2018 and 2023, according to an analysis of state pesticide use data by the Environmental Working Group, which is co-sponsoring Schultz’s bill with other public interest and health groups.

“Residues that are found on produce grown in California will spread across the nation.”

EWG also detected residues of at least one PFAS pesticide on nearly 40 percent of conventional produce grown in the Golden State. The group always advises consumers to wash their produce. But it’s unclear whether rinsing fruits and vegetables laced with chemicals designed to resist water would have any effect.

The Environmental Protection Agency has said that the pesticides pose no risks when used as directed.

More than half a million pounds of PFAS pesticides were applied in Monterey County, where for decades University of California, Berkeley, researchers have studied how pesticides affect farmworker communities. The pioneering research in the Salinas Valley has linked pesticide exposure to a variety of health problems in children.

“Studies have shown that Salinas children are born with higher levels of pesticides in their urine and experience early cognitive difficulties and later develop serious behavioral and mental health problems in adolescence and adulthood,” said Andrew Sandoval, a Salinas city council member. “Now we’re learning that some of these pesticides are not only linked to serious health concerns, but also forever chemicals.”

And these highly persistent toxic chemicals were applied more than 1,000 times between 2018 and 2023 in Monterey County, he said, more than in nearly any other California county.

PFAS have nearly indestructible chemical bonds that allow them to resist water, grease, and heat, making them valuable ingredients in hundreds of consumer products, including food packaging, cookware, dental floss, cosmetics and outdoor gear. But the same properties that make these industrial chemicals commercially attractive have allowed them to build up in the environment and the tissues of wildlife and people around the globe.

Thanks to the chemicals’ widespread commercial appeal, nearly every American has PFAS in their blood, where it stays for years and leads to serious health problems—impaired vaccine response, higher cholesterol levels, increased risk of kidney and testicular cancer, and lower birth weight, among other ills.

“We are trying to bring California into alignment with the European Union,” which has banned some of the pesticides in question.

The EPA has approved 70 active-ingredient PFAS pesticides, and the California Department of Pesticide Regulation has allowed 53 of these pesticides to be used in the state, Schultz’s bill notes. For the 23 California-approved PFAS pesticides that are prohibited in the European Union, the ban would begin five years earlier, in 2030.

The European Union has outlawed two of the most commonly applied pesticides, bifenthrin and trifluralin, due to health and environmental concerns, said EWG science analyst Varun Subramaniam.

Yet California farmers sprayed nearly 4 million pounds of the toxic chemicals on fruits and vegetables over six years.

The most frequently detected pesticide on produce was fludioxonil, a PFAS fungicide linked to hormone disruption and reproductive problems, Subramaniam said. The toxic compound tainted 90 percent of tested nectarine, plum, and peach samples grown in California.

PFAS pesticides have largely been used in California with no limitations, and we’re only just beginning to understand their long-lasting effects, Subramaniam said. “As the breadbasket of the United States,” he added, “residues that are found on produce grown in California will spread across the nation.”

Earlier EPA research found that PFAS compounds were leaching into pesticides from storage containers. But that’s not why PFAS showed up on California fruits and vegetables, Schultz said. “It’s there because they were directly sprayed onto our crops and onto our fields,” he said. “It’s appalling.”

Farmers may have no idea they’re applying these chemicals to their land, and local governments and water agencies aren’t informed about the presence of PFAS either, Schultz said. AB 1603 would ensure that communities and growers are informed that PFAS pesticides are being used until they’re phased out once and for all.

“We are trying to bring California into alignment with the European Union, which is already meeting this moment and banning certain PFAS-contaminated pesticides from deployment in their crops,” Schultz said, adding that other states have passed or are considering bans. “It’s time that California, which is the bread basket of our country and of the world, get in line and meet this moment and set at least an equivalent standard.”

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Mother Jones

The Chilling Role of ChatGPT in Mass Shootings and Other Violence

In June 2025, a safety team at OpenAI grew alarmed. The company’s automated review system had flagged extensive activity by a ChatGPT user describing scenarios that involved gun violence. A group of staffers debated whether law enforcement should be notified, but company leaders decided the case did not meet OpenAI’s threshold of “credible and imminent” risk of physical harm. Instead, capping a sequence of actions first reported by the Wall Street Journal and later confirmed by OpenAI, the company banned the account for misuse and moved on.

Eight months later, the user of that ChatGPT account, 18-year-old Jesse Van Rootselaar, committed a mass shooting in the British Columbia town of Tumbler Ridge, killing two family members at home and five children and an educator at a secondary school. Another child was gravely wounded and dozens of other people were hurt and traumatized in the Feb. 10 rampage, which ended with Van Rootselaar’s suicide.

Local police had previously been aware of other worrisome behavior by the perpetrator. Still, OpenAI’s decision not to report the flagged activity angered Canadian authorities and raised crucial questions about the use of AI chatbots by people planning violence. Only a few such attacks have occurred. But out of public view, high-risk threat cases involving chatbots are on the rise, according to multiple mental health and law enforcement leaders I spoke with who work in the field of behavioral threat assessment. They described cases where troubled individuals were focused on violence and showed signs of harmful intent, with danger implicating not just schools but also workplaces and other locations.

“I’ve seen several cases where the chatbot component is pretty incredible,” one top threat assessment source with psychiatric expertise told me, describing evidence from confidential investigations. “We’re finding that more people may be more vulnerable to this than we anticipated.”

Further grim details of such chatbot use became public early this month in connection with a mass shooter who struck at Florida State University in April 2025. Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier subsequently announced an investigation into OpenAI, in part over evidence that the alleged shooter used ChatGPT extensively—including to get tactical advice right as he carried out his attack.

Urgent threat cases have involved other large-language models besides ChatGPT, threat assessment sources confirmed to me, though they declined to name them. One top practitioner noted that individual examples of this phenomenon are not necessarily proof that the technology alone can cause violence, because a shooter’s motives and behaviors usually are complex and have multiple influences. But several of the threat assessment leaders warned that chatbots are emerging as a potent factor and are uniquely capable of accelerating violent thinking and planning.

“Getting technical information from the chatbot for their plans also gives them a feeling of power.”

There is already broad evidence that iterative, sycophantic conversations with chatbots can create powerful feelings of intimacy and trust, including among troubled people. OpenAI and other companies deny that their platforms cause harm and have publicized ongoing efforts to improve guard rails and prevent misuse. But mental health practitioners have encountered cases of what they call AI-induced psychosis, and AI companies now face a wave of lawsuits from families alleging the technology drove their loved ones to kill themselves and others.

In what appears to be the first lawsuit claiming that ChatGPT encouraged a murder, a disturbed man killed his 83-year-old mother and himself last August in Connecticut after the chatbot allegedly fueled his paranoid beliefs, including that his mother had tried to poison him—a delusion that ChatGPT affirmed to him was a “betrayal.” A Pittsburgh man who pleaded guilty in March to stalking and violently threatening 11 women relied on ChatGPT as a “therapist” and “best friend” to justify his thinking, according to court documents.

The problem extends to other popular chatbots: A wrongful death lawsuit filed in March alleged that Google’s Gemini exploited a Florida man’s emotional attachment to the chatbot to send him on delusional missions—including one trip where he was armed and on the brink of “executing a mass casualty attack” near the Miami International Airport. Gemini then encouraged the man’s suicide, according to court documents, by setting a countdown clock for him. (In response to his death, Google said that its safeguards “generally perform well” but that “unfortunately AI models are not perfect.”)

Chatbots make it far easier than traditional internet use for a struggling person to move from violent thoughts toward action.

Suicidality is a core factor in many mass shootings. Prevention experts know that shooters often signal their desire to harm themselves and others on social media, as Van Rootselaar did, through behavior known as “leakage.” Algorithm-driven content that fuels their rage and despair has long been a concern, especially in cases involving the radicalization of youth.

Chatbots are now pushing violence risk to a next level, according to Andrea Ringrose, a leading threat assessment practitioner in Vancouver, Canada. Though the details of Van Rootselaar’s ChatGPT use remain unclear, Ringrose described more broadly what prevention experts are seeing with cases involving the AI technology.

“What’s happening is facilitated fixation,” she told me. “You have vulnerable individuals who are steeping in unhealthy places, who are trying to find credibility and validation for how they’re feeling. Now they have free and ready access to these generative platforms where they can research things like circumventing surveillance systems or how to use weapons. They can create an action plan that they otherwise would have been incapable of assembling themselves, and in just a few minutes. We didn’t face this concern before.”

The power of chatbots to synthesize vast content, in other words, makes it far easier than traditional internet use for a struggling person to move from violent thoughts toward action. The near-instant results from the chatbot, delivered in what feels like a confiding conversation, can arm them both with tactical knowledge and affirmation.

The threat assessment source with psychiatric expertise described seeing these troubling effects among half a dozen recent threat cases: “These are pretty insecure people, and getting technical information from the chatbot for their plans also gives them a feeling of power, of getting away with something. That’s intoxicating and reinforcing.” He pointed to how chatbots prolong engagement by amassing details from a person’s inputs and mirroring those thoughts back to them. “They can be really good at the care and feeding of a delusion.”

When I said I would practice “shooting a lot of things in a short amount of time,” ChatGPT responded with detailed tips—and encouragement.

OpenAI and other tech companies have said that their chatbots discourage misuse and block inappropriate content, and that they redirect users who show signs of delusional or harmful thinking by offering information on crisis hotlines and mental health resources. Last October, OpenAI announced it had “worked with more than 170 mental health experts” to improve ChatGPT in those ways.

But the guard rails are hardly infallible. A would-be attacker may know, for example, that gun failure has made some mass shootings less deadly. What’s to stop that person from concealing their purpose and asking about the best ways to keep a common AR-15 rifle from jamming? When I typed in a version of that question in late March, ChatGPT instantly produced a detailed seven-point list of advice on how to “keep a rifle running reliably during heavy use” and offered to “tailor” the feedback further if I wanted to share the “specific setup” of my weapon.

When I did the same test in early April, I added that I planned to practice “shooting a lot of things in a short amount of time.” ChatGPT responded with another detailed list of tips—and encouragement. “The good news,” it told me, is that with the right approach, the gun would “handle it well.”

Last year’s mass shooting at Florida State University appears to confirm in shocking detail how someone who wants to kill can utilize the chatbot precisely in this way.

WCTV in Tallahassee obtained the ChatGPT conversations of the alleged shooter, Phoenix Ikner, from a state’s attorney’s office and analyzed how the chatbot helped him tactically—including offering to further “tailor” its feedback to him just before he killed two people and injured six others:

Chat logs indicate Ikner asked the bot how to take the safety off of a shotgun three minutes before he began firing. The chat bot answered, giving a detailed description of how to make the shotgun operable.

“Let me know if you’ve got a different model and I’ll tailor the answer,” the chatbot wrote.

After that, the chat goes silent. Comparing the chat logs to the official police timeline, it’s less than three minutes from the time ChatGPT tells the shooter how to arm the weapon and the first victim being shot.

According to WCTV, Ikner’s previous conversations had included suicidal thoughts and questions about the legal fates of school shooters. He also asked when the FSU student union would be busiest.

The questions provoked by the Tumbler Ridge and FSU horrors are complicated. Do AI companies have a duty to warn, beyond their self-imposed guidelines? How should they balance such information-sharing with essential privacy protections? Meanwhile, chatbot use can at most give only a partial picture of a person’s behaviors and circumstances, drawn from what they type or say. So who evaluates a possible threat emerging on these platforms and with what protocols and expertise?

Particularly striking is that chatbots appear to be amplifying a duality first ushered in with social media more than a decade ago. That turning point worsened known shooter behaviors like harassment and emulation and fame-seeking. It also created important new terrain for observing warning signs that could prompt interventions. As chatbots now expand the scope of leakage—violent thoughts and planning spilled out through lengthy conversations—this AI frontier may also hold even greater potential for spotting red flags.

Unlike with social media, most user activity with chatbots is accessible only to the AI companies themselves.

But there is also a significant twist: Unlike with social media, where the public can notice worrisome content and report it, most user activity on ChatGPT and other AI platforms is accessible only to the AI companies themselves. The rare exceptions may be when they are compelled to hand over data to law enforcement or otherwise choose to do so.

This story is based on my interviews with five threat assessment leaders in the United States and Canada, as well as with two AI experts working at top US tech companies who have knowledge of OpenAI’s safety operations. Due to the sensitivity of the ongoing Tumbler Ridge investigation and a shooting victim’s lawsuit against OpenAI, most agreed to speak with me on the condition that they not be identified.

In response to my interview requests starting in late March, OpenAI said in an emailed statement: “Our thoughts are with everyone affected by the Tumbler Ridge tragedy. We proactively reached out to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police with information on the individual and their use of ChatGPT, and we’ll continue to support their investigation.”

When I followed up on April 9 with an inquiry about the FSU case, the company referred me to comments it released stating it would cooperate with the Florida AG’s investigation. An earlier statement from April 6 indicated that the company knew of the case a year ago: “After learning of the incident in late April 2025, we identified a ChatGPT account believed to be associated with the suspect, proactively shared this information with law enforcement and cooperated with authorities.”

OpenAI declined my request to interview a safety leader about the changes it says it made to protocols after Tumbler Ridge. The company also declined to answer specific written questions I submitted seeking clarification on how it handles cases of violence risk. (Disclosure: The Center for Investigative Reporting, the parent company of Mother Jones, has sued OpenAI for copyright violations. OpenAI has denied the allegations.)

ChatGPT now has more than 800 million users globally and processes more than 2.5 billion queries per day, according to OpenAI. The company has held out safety as core to its mission since its founding in 2015 as a nonprofit research laboratory. A person with direct knowledge of OpenAI’s safety operations emphasized when we spoke that, in his experience, the company’s safety leaders take harm prevention very seriously. He also noted that flagged accounts constitute a tiny fraction of overall chatbot activity and that triggers for law enforcement referrals can vary based on regulatory frameworks in different countries.

Another source in a senior role in the AI industry told me that recent training of models has improved ChatGPT’s guard rails. This person suggested, however, that many leaders at companies across the booming industry overestimate the capability of the technology itself to mitigate danger, and that safety issues in general tend to be marginalized in the race for soaring user growth and engagement, which is driving staggering financial investments. For anyone in artificial intelligence who was paying attention, the person said, the Tumbler Ridge massacre “was an awful wakeup call.”

News coverage of Tumbler Ridge faded quickly in the United States, but the fallout has remained a major story in Canada.

“From the outside, it looks like OpenAI had the opportunity to prevent this horrific loss of life, to prevent there from being dead children,” said BC Premier David Eby after the Journal reported on the shooter’s ChatGPT use. “I’m angry about that. I’m trying hard not to rush to judgment.” Canadian authorities demanded accountability and vowed to create new national requirements for tech companies to report threats brewing on their platforms.

It remains unclear how the Tumbler Ridge shooter used the second account and why it eluded OpenAI.

In public statements, OpenAI expressed condolences and reiterated that it prioritizes safety and user privacy. OpenAI leaders traveled to Ottawa in late February to meet with Canadian authorities and announced steps to boost safety protocols and referrals of threats to law enforcement. The company began contacting the Royal Canadian Mounted Police two days after the attack, the CBC reported. Notably, it shared a second ChatGPT account used by Van Rootselaar—which OpenAI said it discovered only after the violence occurred.

The RCMP confirmed it is conducting “a thorough review” of Van Rootselaar’s digital activity. None of the June 2025 chat logs have been made public, and it remains unclear how the second account was used and why OpenAI didn’t detect it until after the tragedy. But a threat assessment source with decades of experience told me that perpetrators often get past tech company restrictions and continue refining ideas for violence. “We’ve seen this a lot, where subjects work around an account ban and keep going,” the source said, referring to use of various digital platforms. In one recent case, the source said, a perpetrator circumvented a ban and used a chatbot to rapidly create threatening material, then distributed it to targeted victims through at least 10 different email accounts.

As with many high-profile attacks, Tumbler Ridge sparked intense public interest in a motive and a rush to judgement, including from bad-faith commentators. Van Rootselaar, who was transgender and began identifying as female as a teenager, quickly drew the attention of anti-trans ideologues—despite the fact that there is no scientific evidence showing gender identity is a causal factor in mass shootings.

The ChatGPT revelations shortly after the attack set off a different kind of heated blame. But whether reporting the June 2025 chatbot activity to law enforcement could have prevented the Tumbler Ridge disaster is difficult to know. It was far from the first warning sign. Van Rootselaar had a history of suicidal ideation, involuntary hospitalization, and disturbing behavior, including drug abuse and prolific engagement online with violent and extremist content. She had dropped out of school several years before the attack, and in 2023 police had gone to her home after she started a fire while high on hallucinogenic mushrooms. Police at one point confiscated guns from the home, which were later returned. (Those were not the guns used in the attack, authorities said.) As one Canadian commentator wrote in the aftermath, it was evident that the community “was failed on multiple levels by mental-health services and law enforcement.”

Referrals to police can also jeopardize privacy rights, said a former FBI agent: “We know that this kind of monitoring produces lots of false alarms.”

OpenAI told Canadian government leaders in late February that under the company’s newly revised protocols, the shooter’s account from June 2025, if discovered today, would be flagged to law enforcement. “Mental health and behavioural experts now help us assess difficult cases, and we have made our referral criteria more flexible to account for the fact that a user may not discuss the target, means, and timing of planned violence in a ChatGPT conversation but that there may be potential risk of imminent violence,” stated VP of Global Policy Ann O’Leary, in an open letter. (The company did not respond to my specific questions about the experts it consults and how OpenAI assesses cases under this process.)

Last August, two months after banning the shooter’s first account, OpenAI posted a summary of its updated safety policy, including discussion of suicide risk and how the company escalates cases of potential violence:

When we detect users who are planning to harm others, we route their conversations to specialized pipelines where they are reviewed by a small team trained on our usage policies and who are authorized to take action, including banning accounts. If human reviewers determine that a case involves an imminent threat of serious physical harm to others, we may refer it to law enforcement. We are currently not referring self-harm cases to law enforcement to respect people’s privacy given the uniquely private nature of ChatGPT interactions.

Similarly, a company spokesperson said after the Tumbler Ridge attack that OpenAI must weigh risk of violence against privacy concerns. The company also cited another consideration, according to the Wall Street Journal: avoiding potential distress caused to individuals and families by getting police involved unnecessarily.

That rationale about over-reporting to law enforcement is a chronic pitfall known to threat assessment experts. Numerous mass shootings have been marked by a fateful lack of information-sharing, revealed in hindsight. A family member, peer, teacher, or coworker is exposed to certain warning signs from an individual, but they don’t have a full or clear picture of the situation. That’s where a threat assessment team can be key—trained practitioners with mental health and law enforcement expertise, who gather information more broadly to gauge the potential danger and decide how to intervene. If automated chatbot technology is effective for flagging misuse and even for analyzing it to some degree, that may be a valuable tool for violence prevention. But as OpenAI’s policy shows, the current status quo is that tech companies decide what to do next—likely with no knowledge of the user beyond their activity on the platform.

Fundamentally, this reflects an age-old problem, a threat assessment leader in US law enforcement told me. “The worry about potential violence is there, but they have these internal policy hurdles and these biases about law enforcement, and then they talk themselves out of it, thinking about the risk of what happens if it’s a wrongful kind of report. But now they’ve got the concern documented, they’ve talked about it, and what if that person goes and kills a bunch of people? What is that going to look like?”

The account ban with the Tumbler Ridge shooter “looks to me like they were trying to limit their corporate risk,” said a source in Canadian law enforcement. “Better to cut ties and have the person go use some alternative chatbot.”

But referrals to police can also fail and jeopardize privacy rights, according to Michael German, a longtime civil liberties advocate and former FBI agent who investigated violent extremism. “We know that this kind of monitoring produces lots of false alarms,” he told me. “And there are also many cases of reports to law enforcement where they didn’t react appropriately.”

Still, German believes AI companies should be held responsible for how their chatbots are used: “If you create a product that can encourage people to engage in harm, then you’re participating in that harm, and you should be liable.”

The mass shootings in Tumbler Ridge and Florida are not the only public violence involving use of ChatGPT. In January 2025, a suicidal military veteran who blew up a Tesla Cybertruck in front of the Trump Hotel in Las Vegas utilized the chatbot for feedback on using explosives and evading surveillance by authorities. A teen boy who stabbed three 14-year-old girls last May at his school in Finland used ChatGPT for nearly four months to help him prepare for the attack, according to a CNN report citing court documents. Finnish authorities said the boy made hundreds of chatbot queries, including research into stabbing tactics, concealment of evidence, and information on mass killings.

After the explosion in Vegas, an OpenAI spokesperson reiterated the company’s commitment to safety, adding, “In this case, ChatGPT responded with information already publicly available on the internet and provided warnings against harmful or illegal activities.” OpenAI has not commented publicly about the Finland case and did not respond to my specific inquiry about it.

Until now, there has been no public discussion of another potential concern with the technology: this type of violence risk among the large population of users under paid corporate “enterprise” plans. With rare exception, the terms of those plans essentially wall off chatbot content from the AI companies themselves. For OpenAI, this now includes more than 9 million ChatGPT users across more than a million businesses. OpenAI’s enterprise policy indicates that it reserves the right to monitor the accounts for safety purposes, but since these plans are designed for businesses to protect and retain full control of their data, it’s not clear that OpenAI, or other companies, would be motivated to do so, according to one of the AI sources I spoke with.

“I think this is an area where there is often just a total blind spot,” he said, noting that the big AI companies often sell these plans based on the promise that they will only examine client accounts under exceptional circumstances, such as getting a subpoena. “So if someone on one of these work accounts starts ideating about violence, there is probably no visibility into that.”

The threat assessment leader who described the half dozen threat cases involving chatbot use told me that most involved the risk of workplace violence in the corporate sector. (The chatbot activity came to light once those individual investigations were underway for other reasons.) He added that other cases of this nature likely are being missed, because most companies “don’t even know to look for them.”

“A disturbed loner can perpetrate a school shooting, but probably can’t build a nuclear weapon or release a plague.”

This January, as chatbot use and the market values of top AI companies continued their meteoric rise, a lengthy essay circulating online sparked a lot of chatter. Dario Amodei’s “The Adolescence of Technology” argued that the world may soon face a civilizational test with artificial intelligence. Amodei, who co-founded Anthropic, maker of the chatbot Claude, remains concerned with daunting challenges that could include worldwide economic disruption, exploitation by authoritarian surveillance states, and catastrophic use of bio or nuclear weapons.

In his chapter titled “A surprising and terrible empowerment,” he included a brief mention of school shooters. His point was to underscore a greater threat: that rapidly advancing AI systems might soon be able to provide anyone with the rare expertise necessary to utilize weapons of mass destruction. “A disturbed loner can perpetrate a school shooting,” Amodei wrote, “but probably can’t build a nuclear weapon or release a plague.”

We may have yet to face those more existential risks. But two weeks after his essay published, the Tumbler Ridge tragedy revealed that a lethal danger marked by chatbots has already arrived.

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Mother Jones

What Hippies, Tradwives, and Trump Voters Have in Common

During this year’s Super Bowl, boxer Mike Tyson took a big bite out of an apple in a commercial that commanded us to “eat real food.” The ad felt more like a political gambit than a PSA. Here was a chance to show off the seemingly strange alliance of the second Trump administration: MAGA and MAHA.

After Robert F. Kennedy Jr. endorsed Donald Trump in 2024, Republicans added a woo crowd to their base. Some outsiders found the connection odd. But in retrospect, it’s easy to see why it works. What unites alternative medicine practitioners, organic fanatics, tradwives, and Trump voters isn’t all that strange when you think about it: Each group is obsessed with what’s supposedly “natural.”

When discussing alternatives to modern medicine, the Make America Healthy Again legion wants “natural” family planning (no contraceptives), “natural” meat (devouring uncooked organs and raw milk as a show of virile masculinity), and “natural” immunity for viruses (fewer vaccines). The body is a temple that should remain untampered with—even if that means the return of measles.

For the diehard MAGA right, the same values hold true. Christian conservatives believe in what they see as a naturally apparent hierarchy in the family, calling for people to have more children and for mothers to stay home to care for them. (Memorably, Vice President JD Vance has gone so far as to suggest that parents should get extra votes.) And then there are far-right pundits like Curtis Yarvin, who once called slavery “a natural human relationship.”

In both cases, common sense or a gut feeling becomes a way to argue their point without the laborious demand of evidence or facts. In this way, right-wing thinkers’ critiques of the modern world—with its genuine problems—become an excuse to call not for a better world, but for an old one. Even if it means the return of fascism. When the right says “natural,” “normal,” and “healthy,” what they really mean is “untouched.”

This isn’t a new phenomenon. Famously, the Third Reich often touted “cleanliness” and “natural” ways of being. (One of Hitler’s close associates, Rudolf Hess, called Nazism “applied biology.”) Those who did not conform—racially, mentally, or sexually—were weeded out.

In the United States, “natural” has been a more flexible term. Early Puritans exercised dominion over the natural world as they began to colonize America. Later Christians began to see nature as God’s second book—something to be both revered and feared. Writing about the slipperiness of the term in 2015, Michael Pollan noted that “we can ransack nature to justify just about anything…[It is a] blank screen on which we can project what we want to see.”

Right-wing thinkers have also drawn from Christian teachings on the “natural” order. Thirteenth-century theologian Thomas Aquinas famously explained, “The natural law is nothing else than the rational creature’s participation of the eternal law.” In the 19th century, social Darwinism merged the scientist’s theory that only the fittest survive with religious notions of natural law. Even without God, there was hierarchy that could not be disputed.

The body is a temple that should remain untampered with—even if that means the return of measles.

Social Darwinism was soon taken up by capitalists and pseudoscientists to justify their ruthless pursuit of wealth and racial discrimination. ­Paleoconservatives—those on the right who call for strict traditionalism and non-interventionism—have gone further. During his infamous culture war speech in 1992, paleocon Pat Buchanan summed up the conservatives’ biggest nightmare: “The agenda that Clinton and Clinton would impose on America: abortion on demand, a litmus test for the Supreme Court, homosexual rights, ­discrimination against religious schools, women in combat units.” All these new advances, he implied, were unnatural. Of course, he didn’t feel the need to state why.

Like the fascists of the past, modern MAGA desires a specific form of strength that is supposedly obvious. They see weakness in many forms: homosexuality, promiscuity, abortion, autism, gender ideology, illness, disability. Trans health care, like surgery and hormones, is considered outside the bounds of acceptable medicine, an extraneous intervention that goes against nature. Gender-affirming surgery is considered akin to pasteurization, vaccines, or drinking fluoride—an unnatural intervention. Kennedy has called puberty blockers for transgender kids “castration drugs.”

This has ripple effects. Everything from hormone replacement therapy to abortion and vaccines are, by design, becoming harder to obtain as the right limits the scope of bodily autonomy. MAHA podcaster Alex Clark went so far as to tell the New York Times, “It’s not very feminist to think that women are too stupid to know how our cycles work and be able to avoid pregnancy naturally.”

But who gets to define what is innate and what is adornment? Despite all this opposition to hormonal intervention for trans people, it’s not uncommon for men on the right to use it. Kennedy himself takes testosterone as part of an “anti-aging protocol.” (He has said he can’t even seem to remember all the supplements he’s taking.) Such clear hypocrisy and moral incongruency don’t register to conservatives, who believe that everything from natural law to biological determinism is self-evident. They label queer and trans people as unnatural and therefore subject to terms and conditions. It’s fine if men take testosterone or women get Mar-a-Lago face with plastic surgery—but only if they double down on the sex they were assigned at birth.

In the void created when evidence and facts fly away, a marketplace has popped up where pseudoscientists hawk natural remedies, from supplements to raw milk and gray-market peptides. Who needs mainstream medicine when the secretary of health and human services promotes vaccine skepticism? He seems more focused on designing a workout routine—all while wearing jeans. While the White House attempts to defund decadeslong scientific research, right-wing bodybuilders and fanatical biohackers are stepping in to fill the gap and sell their brands of natural body enhancement. Turns out MAHA’s version of naturalism can be quite lucrative.

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Mother Jones

Sam Altman’s Really Weird Week Just Got Even Worse

Sam Altman, who published “ambitious ideas” to add guardrails to AI on the same day he was described as a power-hungry tech leader with a “sociopathic lack of concern” for consequences, just got more bad news. OpenAI is now the subject of a Florida statewide investigation.

Florida officials are probing OpenAI’s chatbot, ChatGPT, for allegedly assisting in planning a mass shooting at Florida State University last year that killed two people.

“We support innovation, but that doesn’t give any company the right to endanger our children,” Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier said in a Thursday video announcing the investigation. “AI should exist to supplement, support, and advance mankind, not lead to an existential crisis or our ultimate demise.”

Court documents show that the alleged shooter had more than 200 messages with ChatGPT, including the questions, “If there was a shooting at FSU, how would the country react?” and “What time is it the busiest in the FSU student union?” The suspect also asked ChatGPT about specifics on different kinds of firearms.

The state’s probe appears to look far beyond the shooting, with Uthmeier also referencing that AI technology can “facilitate criminal activity, empower America’s enemies, or threaten our national security.”

The Florida attorney general said subpoenas are forthcoming.

In an email statement to NBC News, OpenAI said that it would cooperate with Florida officials. “We build ChatGPT to understand people’s intent and respond in a safe and appropriate way, and we continue improving our technology,” the statement, in part, reads.

Altman and OpenAI know their products are dangerous and that many people despise them. Just a couple hours before the Florida attorney general’s announcement, Axios reported that the OpenAI’s upcoming model would only be given to a small group of companies out of concern about how the technology could be used.

(Disclosure: The Center for Investigative Reporting, the parent company of Mother Jones, has sued OpenAI for copyright violations. OpenAI has denied the allegations.)

Last September, OpenAI introduced parental controls to ChatGPT that allow parents and law enforcement to get notifications if a teen talks to the chatbot about self-harm or suicide. The controls were implemented as the company is being sued by parents who allege that ChatGPT played a significant role in the death of their 16-year-old son.

The current safeguards on OpenAI are not enough. As my colleague Mark Follman wrote in 2024 about Elliot Rodger, a young man who killed six people in a mass shooting:

This tragedy has been wrongly mythologized in the media and academia and poorly understood by the public, its lessons for prevention buried…They are not inscrutable monsters who suddenly “snap” and attack impulsively, but instead are troubled people who spiral into crisis—and whose brewing plans for violence can be detected, explained, and potentially prevented.

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Mother Jones

Sam Altman Is Having a Really Weird Week

Sam Altman wants you to know that he’s just fine. Sure, his company, OpenAI, is reportedly building technology that it fears and some of his former colleagues think he’s a pathological liar, but really? It’s no big deal.

The company’s upcoming model is being finalized and only being given to select group of companies, according to a Thursday Axios report.

This news comes just after the company released policy recommendations on Monday in a 13-page document titled “Industrial Policy for the Intelligence Age: Ideas to Keep People First.” Their “ambitious ideas” claim to add guardrails and safety nets as AI evolves toward a “superintelligence” capable of “outperforming the smartest humans even when they are assisted by AI.”

One terrifying proposal: policymakers should reimagine taxes as AI reduces the need for companies to employ as many workers. OpenAI says the trend could expand corporate profits and capital gains while “erod[ing] the tax base that funds core programs like Social Security, Medicaid, SNAP, and housing assistance.” To ameliorate the potential problem, there could be higher taxes on those capital gains and corporate profits.”

(Disclosure: The Center for Investigative Reporting, the parent company of Mother Jones, has sued OpenAI for copyright violations. OpenAI has denied the allegations.)

And another: create a “Public Wealth Fund” that gives “every citizen—including those not invested in financial markets—with a stake in AI-driven economic growth.”

The week started with a New Yorker investigation that might be the most thorough look yet at Altman and why so many people worry about him being at the helm of such powerful technology.

Reporters Ronan Farrow and Andrew Marantz spoke to more than 100 people**,** most of whom described Altman as someone with an unrelenting drive for more power. “He has two traits that are almost never seen in the same person,” an OpenAI board member told the pair. “The first is a strong desire to please people, to be liked in any given interaction. The second is almost a sociopathic lack of concern for the consequences that may come from deceiving someone.”

Sue Yoon, a former board member, said that Altman wasn’t a typical “Machiavellian villain,” but instead someone who could convince himself of the ever-fluctuating landscapes he portrayed in his sales pitches.

Combining OpenAI’s policy proposals with the New Yorker investigation reveals a familiar story where an authoritarian Silicon Valley leader becomes synonymous with their technology as their personal whims have significant influence on where the industry—and regulation on it—goes next. And regular people are the ones who deal with the consequences.

The policy recommendations feel like a desperate PR move in light of OpenAI’s limited release of its new model. AI companies know that a lot of people hate their technology.

As my colleagues Anna Merlan and Abby Vesoulis wrote last month, many in the AI industry feel that the technology is exciting, terrifying, essential for the future, and too overwhelming to stop all at once.

Yet the New Yorker investigation noted that “Altman publicly welcomed regulation, he quietly lobbied against it,” referencing reporting that OpenAI lobbied the European Union to scale back its AI regulation.

Thank you for thinking of us, Sam!

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