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Tuesday, April 1, 2025

ED, HHS, and GSA Initiate Federal Contract and Grant Review of Harvard University | U.S. Department of Education

ED, HHS, and GSA Initiate Federal Contract and Grant Review of Harvard University | U.S. Department of Education

(269) 'Ukraine Will Be Eliminated' John Mearsheimer and Putin Advisor Discuss US-Russia Relations - YouTube

(269) 'Ukraine Will Be Eliminated' John Mearsheimer and Putin Advisor Discuss US-Russia Relations - YouTube

Putin Keeps Pushing, With Trump and in Ukraine War - The New York Times

Putin Keeps Pushing, With Trump and in Ukraine War - The New York Times

Want to Play a Game? Global Trade War Is the New Washington Pastime. - The New York Times

Want to Play a Game? Global Trade War Is the New Washington Pastime. - The New York Times

‘Liberation Day’ tariffs: What Trump hopes to achieve, and whether it’ll work | Semafor

‘Liberation Day’ tariffs: What Trump hopes to achieve, and whether it’ll work | Semafor

The US NRC approved 20-year life extension for the 2.5 GW Oconee nuclear plant | Enerdata

The US NRC approved 20-year life extension for the 2.5 GW Oconee nuclear plant | Enerdata

Congressional and Presidential Authority to Impose Import Tariffs - EveryCRSReport.com

Congressional and Presidential Authority to Impose Import Tariffs - EveryCRSReport.com

(268) Prof. Jeffrey Sachs : Does Trump Understand Basic Economics? - YouTube

(268) Prof. Jeffrey Sachs : Does Trump Understand Basic Economics? - YouTube

Get out of their bubbles, or harden them? Newsom, Democrats debate their media future | Semafor

Get out of their bubbles, or harden them? Newsom, Democrats debate their media future | Semafor

Warfare Review – 'Respectfully gruelling'

Warfare Review – 'Respectfully gruelling'

Javier Milei's shock therapy for Argentina gets huge endorsement | Fortune

Javier Milei's shock therapy for Argentina gets huge endorsement | Fortune

R&D spending growth slows in OECD, surges in China; government support for energy and defence R&D rises sharply

R&D spending growth slows in OECD, surges in China; government support for energy and defence R&D rises sharply

China and Turkiye’s drone race has Africa in the crosshairs - The Africa Report.com

China and Turkiye’s drone race has Africa in the crosshairs - The Africa Report.com

China, Russia in Africa: Are Moscow and Beijing on a Collision Course?

China, Russia in Africa: Are Moscow and Beijing on a Collision Course?

How the United States’ Diplomatic Pullback in Africa Creates New Openings for China – The China-Global South Project

How the United States’ Diplomatic Pullback in Africa Creates New Openings for China – The China-Global South Project

Elon Musk says running Trump's DOGE has cost him and Tesla 'a lot'

Elon Musk says running Trump's DOGE has cost him and Tesla 'a lot'

On Choosing Your Enemies - The Catholic Thing

On Choosing Your Enemies - The Catholic Thing

Trump administration to review Harvard grant funding

Trump administration to review Harvard grant funding

The New Face of Christian Zionism - In These Times

The New Face of Christian Zionism - In These Times

Netanyahu Promises the “Final Stage” of Gaza Genocide Will Lead to Implementation of “Trump’s Plan"

Netanyahu Promises the “Final Stage” of Gaza Genocide Will Lead to Implementation of “Trump’s Plan"

Dow wants to power its Texas manufacturing complex with new nuclear reactors instead of natural gas | AP News

Dow wants to power its Texas manufacturing complex with new nuclear reactors instead of natural gas | AP News

What Was Learned from Building New Nuclear Reactors?

What Was Learned from Building New Nuclear Reactors?

How California’s excesses inspired the ‘abundance’ craze - POLITICO

How California’s excesses inspired the ‘abundance’ craze - POLITICO

America’s clean air rules boost health and economy − charts show what EPA’s deregulation plans ignore

America’s clean air rules boost health and economy − charts show what EPA’s deregulation plans ignore

“Spiraling Deeper and Deeper Into Danger”: RFK Jr. Forces Out Top Vaccine Official – Mother Jones

“Spiraling Deeper and Deeper Into Danger”: RFK Jr. Forces Out Top Vaccine Official – Mother Jones

Why Biden and Trump both support this federal mineral mapping project | Grist

Why Biden and Trump both support this federal mineral mapping project | Grist

Global renewable energy capacity expanded at record rate last year | Semafor

Global renewable energy capacity expanded at record rate last year | Semafor

Gutting NOAA is a Bad Idea - The Breakthrough Journal

Gutting NOAA is a Bad Idea - The Breakthrough Journal

Don’t Leave Uranium Enrichment to the Private Sector (and Russia)

Don’t Leave Uranium Enrichment to the Private Sector (and Russia)

Kazakhstan is ready to power the world’s green transition -- ANS / Nuclear Newswire

Kazakhstan is ready to power the world’s green transition -- ANS / Nuclear Newswire

Trump’s Negotiators Fail to Understand Russia and Europe Crashes and Burns

Trump’s Negotiators Fail to Understand Russia and Europe Crashes and Burns

Monday, March 31, 2025

US Building Up Allies And Military Forces Against China – American Liberty News

US Building Up Allies And Military Forces Against China – American Liberty News

How women's health research is impacted by Trump's federal funding cuts

How women's health research is impacted by Trump's federal funding cuts

Noncitizen Voting in U.S. Elections | RealClearWorld

Noncitizen Voting in U.S. Elections | RealClearWorld

What is the mark of a real friend? — Aleteia

What is the mark of a real friend? — Aleteia

Why Preaching Christ Crucified Is Not Just for Easter - Topical Studies

Why Preaching Christ Crucified Is Not Just for Easter - Topical Studies

(265) Why the church is so serious about signs - YouTube

(265) Why the church is so serious about signs - YouTube

Elon Musk is building an AI giant — and Tesla will be central | Semafor

Elon Musk is building an AI giant — and Tesla will be central | Semafor

Global South digital advocate wants a say on AI policy | Semafor

Global South digital advocate wants a say on AI policy | Semafor

UAE-US: The Trillion Dollar Economic Partnership | UAE USA United

UAE-US: The Trillion Dollar Economic Partnership | UAE USA United

Thanks to President Trump, UAE Announces Significant Investments in U.S. Economy - U.S. Embassy & Consulate in the United Arab Emirates

Thanks to President Trump, UAE Announces Significant Investments in U.S. Economy - U.S. Embassy & Consulate in the United Arab Emirates

Israel’s expansionism is a danger to others—and itself

Israel’s expansionism is a danger to others—and itself

The American and Russian right are aligning

The American and Russian right are aligning

North America’s Arctic radar shield is due for an upgrade

North America’s Arctic radar shield is due for an upgrade

Typhoons in Cyberspace | Royal United Services Institute

Typhoons in Cyberspace | Royal United Services Institute

Capture the (red) flag: An inside look into China’s hacking contest ecosystem - Atlantic Council

Capture the (red) flag: An inside look into China’s hacking contest ecosystem - Atlantic Council

Chinese hackers are getting bigger, better and stealthier

Chinese hackers are getting bigger, better and stealthier

Christian communities in Israel face growing hostility, annual report reveals | Catholic News Agency

Christian communities in Israel face growing hostility, annual report reveals | Catholic News Agency

(265) 'WE WOULD LOSE' War with Iran (w/ Col. Lawrence Wilkerson) - YouTube

(265) 'WE WOULD LOSE' War with Iran (w/ Col. Lawrence Wilkerson) - YouTube

Zelenskyy, With EU Support, Continues Looking for Any Excuse to Derail or Avoid Peace Talks - Rejects Mineral Deal, Demands EU Ascension and Security Guarantees - The Last Refuge

Zelenskyy, With EU Support, Continues Looking for Any Excuse to Derail or Avoid Peace Talks - Rejects Mineral Deal, Demands EU Ascension and Security Guarantees - The Last Refuge

"I'm Living a Time of Healing": This Is the State of the Pope's Health After a Week in the Vatican - ZENIT - English

"I'm Living a Time of Healing": This Is the State of the Pope's Health After a Week in the Vatican - ZENIT - English

FEMA Exercises Borrowing Authority for National Flood Insurance Program | FEMA.gov

FEMA Exercises Borrowing Authority for National Flood Insurance Program | FEMA.gov

ISRAELI ACADEMICS: US GOVERNMENT ATTACK ON UNIVERSITIES DOES NOT PROTECT US

ISRAELI ACADEMICS: US GOVERNMENT ATTACK ON UNIVERSITIES DOES NOT PROTECT US

The Zionist Destruction of American Higher Education

The Zionist Destruction of American Higher Education - micheletkearney@gmail.com - Gmail

Trump allies are starting to notice Hegseth's growing pile of mistakes - POLITICO

Trump allies are starting to notice Hegseth's growing pile of mistakes - POLITICO

Trump Text Fiasco Suddenly Worsens as MAGA Knives Come Out for Hegseth | The New Republic

Trump Text Fiasco Suddenly Worsens as MAGA Knives Come Out for Hegseth | The New Republic

Insiders Ponder the Future of Progressivism | RealClearPolicy

Insiders Ponder the Future of Progressivism | RealClearPolicy

Reflections on the Counter-Revolution in America | RealClearPolicy

Reflections on the Counter-Revolution in America | RealClearPolicy

RFK Jr. Announces Mass Terminations, Major Restructuring at HHS | The Epoch Times

RFK Jr. Announces Mass Terminations, Major Restructuring at HHS | The Epoch Times

Elon Musk Reveals Shocking Surge in Social Security Numbers for Non-Citizens

Elon Musk Reveals Shocking Surge in Social Security Numbers for Non-Citizens

Elon Musk Reveals Shocking Surge in Social Security Numbers for Non-Citizens

Elon Musk Reveals Shocking Surge in Social Security Numbers for Non-Citizens

Monopoly Round-Up: Tariffs, Abundance and Why America Can't Build

Monopoly Round-Up: Tariffs, Abundance and Why America Can't Build

US debt may start to overwhelm America's 'exorbitant privilege' | Fortune

US debt may start to overwhelm America's 'exorbitant privilege' | Fortune

Nuclear risk from military AI prompts calls for US, China and others to seek agreement | South China Morning Post

Nuclear risk from military AI prompts calls for US, China and others to seek agreement | South China Morning Post

Navy Aircraft Carrier USS George Washington Out of Action Almost 6 Years - 19FortyFive

Navy Aircraft Carrier USS George Washington Out of Action Almost 6 Years - 19FortyFive

Does America Face a “Ship Gap” With China? | Foreign Affairs

Does America Face a “Ship Gap” With China? | Foreign Affairs

Peak Permian? Geology and Water Say We’re Close | OilPrice.com

Peak Permian? Geology and Water Say We’re Close | OilPrice.com

How AI Data Centers Are Reshaping America’s Electric Grid

How AI Data Centers Are Reshaping America’s Electric Grid

Move fast, kill things: the tech startups trying to reinvent defence with Silicon Valley values | Drones (military) | The Guardian

Move fast, kill things: the tech startups trying to reinvent defence with Silicon Valley values | Drones (military) | The Guardian

The Guardian view on new forests: a vision born in the Midlands is worth imitating | Editorial | The Guardian

The Guardian view on new forests: a vision born in the Midlands is worth imitating | Editorial | The Guardian

Trump says he's considering ways to serve a third term as president | AP News

Trump says he's considering ways to serve a third term as president | AP News

Implementing Changes to the Department of Defense - The Fulcrum

Implementing Changes to the Department of Defense - The Fulcrum

Project 2025, Phase II: The Bureaucracy - The Fulcrum

Project 2025, Phase II: The Bureaucracy - The Fulcrum

Gen Z and young millennials are so terrified of layoffs and the spiralling economy they’re copying Steve Jobs and adopting a work uniform | Fortune

Gen Z and young millennials are so terrified of layoffs and the spiralling economy they’re copying Steve Jobs and adopting a work uniform | Fortune

Sunday, March 30, 2025

CGNP Criticizes the CPUC's Role in High California Electric Rates

CGNP Criticizes the CPUC's Role in High California Electric Rates

(265) Can You Protest A Foreign War in America? - YouTube

(265) Can You Protest A Foreign War in America? - YouTube

(264) Bruce Fein | The Pardon Power | March 27th 2025 - YouTube

(264) Bruce Fein | The Pardon Power | March 27th 2025 - YouTube

What Good Is Democracy If You're Unable to Speak?

What Good Is Democracy If You're Unable to Speak?

The Biggest Scandal of the Second Trump Term Isn’t “Signalgate” | The New Republic

The Biggest Scandal of the Second Trump Term Isn’t “Signalgate” | The New Republic

PG&E Launches Virtual Power Plant, Microgrid Programs

PG&E Launches Virtual Power Plant, Microgrid Programs

“The Heavenly Banquet” BISHOP BARRON’S SUNDAY SERMON

Sunday Sermon

4 Powerful Reminders from the Miracle of Peter Walking on Water - Topical Studies

4 Powerful Reminders from the Miracle of Peter Walking on Water - Topical Studies

What Ceasefire? - by John J. Mearsheimer - John’s Substack

What Ceasefire? - by John J. Mearsheimer - John’s Substack

Google’s AI Search Overhaul: Racing ChatGPT for the Web’s Future - Bloomberg

Google’s AI Search Overhaul: Racing ChatGPT for the Web’s Future - Bloomberg

AI’s Electricity Demand Means Cool New Tech Is Coming to Boring Grids - Bloomberg

AI’s Electricity Demand Means Cool New Tech Is Coming to Boring Grids - Bloomberg

Executive summary – Electricity Grids and Secure Energy Transitions – Analysis - IEA

Executive summary – Electricity Grids and Secure Energy Transitions – Analysis - IEA

How Renewable Energy Can Make the Power Grid More Reliable and Address Risks to Electricity Infrastructure - How Renewable Energy Can Make the Power Grid More Reliable and Address Risks to Electricity Infrastructure - United States Joint Economic Committee

How Renewable Energy Can Make the Power Grid More Reliable and Address Risks to Electricity Infrastructure - How Renewable Energy Can Make the Power Grid More Reliable and Address Risks to Electricity Infrastructure - United States Joint Economic Committee

Heathrow Shutdown Shows How Electrified World Depends on Transformers

Heathrow Shutdown Shows How Electrified World Depends on Transformers

Big Business At The (Inflation Reduction Act) Trough

Big Business At The (Inflation Reduction Act) Trough

Remembering Sen. J. Bennett Johnston - By Llewellyn King Guest Post

Memories of a Great Senator, When the Senate Was Great By Llewellyn King Anyone wondering about a career as a U.S. senator might want to study the life and times of Sen. J. Bennett Johnston (D-La.), who died March 25 at the age of 92. To me, he embodied the best of the Senate that was. Johnston was both a patriotic American and a loyalist to the state that sent him to Congress. He also was bipartisan, curious and totally on top of his subject. His legislative milestones endure, from natural gas and oil deregulation to the electricity and environmental structure of today. Johnston was an exemplar of the art of the Senate, when it was correctly known as the world’s greatest deliberative body. He was chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee and, as such, was a major player in the shaping of energy and environmental policy. He was a Democrat who worked across the aisle. Oddly, his most contentious relationship might have been that with President Jimmy Carter. They clashed over a water project on the Red River in Louisiana: Carter thought it was too expensive, but Johnston argued that it was needed. He admired President Bill Clinton for his brilliance. In the aftermath of the Three Mile Island accident, he worked with President Ronald Reagan to establish the Institute for Nuclear Power Operations to save nuclear power from those who wanted to eliminate it. Like other distinguished chairmen, Johnston recognized two fealties: to his state and to the nation. I watched Johnston all his years as Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee chairman, and I came to revere and admire him as a great gentleman, a great patriot and a great senator. Johnston was neither flashy, nor loud, but he was effective. The New York Times said of him that he was a notable exception, compared with the noisy and controversial political heritage of Louisiana, which included such notables as Huey and Earl Long and Edwin Edwards. Johnston was instead “a quiet intellectual with finely honed political judgments who grasped the technical intricacies of energy exploration and production and could also lucidly discuss astrophysics, subatomic particles and tennis serves.” Thomas Kuhn, a former longtime president of the Edison Electric Institute, said Johnston had a lasting impact on environmental and energy policy during his 24 years in Congress with the Clean Air Act of 1990 and the Energy Policy Act of 1992. When the Energy Policy Act was working its way through Congress, I saw Johnston at work up close. He invited me, as the founder and publisher of The Energy Daily, and Paul Gigot, then a Washington columnist for The Wall Street Journal and later its editorial page editor, to lunch in a small private dining room in the Senate. Johnston was low-key yet forceful in seeking our support for the bill. I asked him, “Who is carrying your water on this one?” He responded in an endearing and lonesome way, “I’m afraid I am.” And carry it he did until it became law. On another occasion, when President George H.W. Bush’s nomination of Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court was bogged down with Anita Hill’s allegations of impropriety by the nominee, Johnston told me, “I’m going to vote for him. I think when he looks in the mirror in the morning, he will see a black face and he will do the right things.” Maybe not Johnston’s best call. While Kuhn may have met Johnston as a lobbyist, they became close friends and tennis partners. Kuhn told me Johnston was so passionate about tennis that he had a court built atop the Senate Dirksen Office Building. Among others, he would play tennis there with fellow Louisiana Sen. John Breaux. Johnston was also passionate about Tabasco sauce and carried a bottle with him at all times. Kuhn remembered this about his friend, “He was well-liked by everyone and had a great sense of humor. And he got things done on a bipartisan basis — a skill that is sorely missed in today’s Washington.” Copyright © 2025 White House Chronicle, All rights reserved. Keep updated on the White House Chronicle's latest hot-button issues at whchronicle.com Our mailing address is: White House Chronicle 125 Providence Street, Suite S302 West Warwick, RI 02893

Saturday, March 29, 2025

The controversial California city backed by tech elite has a new plan: boats | California | The Guardian

The controversial California city backed by tech elite has a new plan: boats | California | The Guardian

Will U.S. Barons ‘Magna Carta’ Trump?

Will U.S. Barons ‘Magna Carta’ Trump?

America, for So Long a State of Mind, Is Losing Its Sense of Mission

America, for So Long a State of Mind, Is Losing Its Sense of Mission

Political Fear Stalks Law, Education, Journalism, Migration

Political Fear Stalks Law, Education, Journalism, Migration

Choosing life: A portrait of strength, courage and hope

Choosing life: A portrait of strength, courage and hope

A Third Way to end the war in Ukraine - Indian Punchline

A Third Way to end the war in Ukraine - Indian Punchline

Ebrahim Rasool: Expelled South African envoy accuses Trump administration of racism

Ebrahim Rasool: Expelled South African envoy accuses Trump administration of racism

From RSA to Ruin: The Case for Mandating Post-Quantum Standards – American Liberty News

From RSA to Ruin: The Case for Mandating Post-Quantum Standards – American Liberty News

Woke ‘Snow White’ Abandons the Fairy Tale’s Christian Roots - Word on Fire

Woke ‘Snow White’ Abandons the Fairy Tale’s Christian Roots - Word on Fire

Woke ‘Snow White’ Abandons the Fairy Tale’s Christian Roots — Dr. Kody W. Cooper | Word on Fire Institute

Woke ‘Snow White’ Abandons the Fairy Tale’s Christian Roots — Dr. Kody W. Cooper | Word on Fire Institute

American defense companies plan European production shift to bypass US weapons restrictions - Euromaidan Press

American defense companies plan European production shift to bypass US weapons restrictions - Euromaidan Press

Putin says US push for Greenland rooted in history, vows to uphold Russian interest in the Arctic | AP News

Putin says US push for Greenland rooted in history, vows to uphold Russian interest in the Arctic | AP News

Future of Biofuels Hinges on Industry Agreement | OilPrice.com

Future of Biofuels Hinges on Industry Agreement | OilPrice.com

NASA, NSIDC Scientists Say Arctic Winter Sea Ice at Record Low - NASA

NASA, NSIDC Scientists Say Arctic Winter Sea Ice at Record Low - NASA

Ukraine won't sign minerals deal with US if it threatens EU membership, Zelensky says

Ukraine won't sign minerals deal with US if it threatens EU membership, Zelensky says

U.S. Tariffs Spark Oil Supply Worries | OilPrice.com

U.S. Tariffs Spark Oil Supply Worries | OilPrice.com

(261) The Hunt for a New Kind of Magnet to Power the Future | Bloomberg Primer - YouTube

(261) The Hunt for a New Kind of Magnet to Power the Future | Bloomberg Primer - YouTube

Heathrow Shutdown Shows How Electrified World Depends on Transformers

Heathrow Shutdown Shows How Electrified World Depends on Transformers

Why Americans Are Adding Home Batteries at a Record Pace - Bloomberg

Why Americans Are Adding Home Batteries at a Record Pace - Bloomberg

Arctic Sea Ice Shrinks to Record Winter Low as Earth Heats Up - Bloomberg

Arctic Sea Ice Shrinks to Record Winter Low as Earth Heats Up - Bloomberg

From Zambia To Nigeria, the Mission to Electrify Africa Is Under Way

From Zambia To Nigeria, the Mission to Electrify Africa Is Under Way

The Best Response To US Tariffs Is For Developing Countries To Sell US Debt – OpEd – Eurasia Review

The Best Response To US Tariffs Is For Developing Countries To Sell US Debt – OpEd – Eurasia Review

Xi’s Message in Rare Meeting With Global CEOs: Defend Trade

Xi’s Message in Rare Meeting With Global CEOs: Defend Trade

Trump signs executive order ending collective bargaining rights for many federal workers | CNN Politics

Trump signs executive order ending collective bargaining rights for many federal workers | CNN Politics

US shipbuilding in a ‘perpetual state of triage,’ watchdog says

US shipbuilding in a ‘perpetual state of triage,’ watchdog says

Ukraine won't sign minerals deal with US if it threatens EU membership, Zelensky says

Ukraine won't sign minerals deal with US if it threatens EU membership, Zelensky says

Russia’s Putin says it would be a ‘profound mistake’ to dismiss Trump’s push for Greenland – NBC Chicago

Russia’s Putin says it would be a ‘profound mistake’ to dismiss Trump’s push for Greenland – NBC Chicago

‘If We Don’t Get Our S--t Together, Then We Are Going to Be in a Permanent Minority’ - POLITICO

‘If We Don’t Get Our S--t Together, Then We Are Going to Be in a Permanent Minority’ - POLITICO

‘If We Don’t Get Our S--t Together, Then We Are Going to Be in a Permanent Minority’ - POLITICO

‘If We Don’t Get Our S--t Together, Then We Are Going to Be in a Permanent Minority’ - POLITICO

Friday, March 28, 2025

Trump targets Robert Mueller’s former law firm in latest legal attack - POLITICO

Trump targets Robert Mueller’s former law firm in latest legal attack - POLITICO

Trump targets Robert Mueller’s former law firm in latest legal attack - POLITICO

Trump targets Robert Mueller’s former law firm in latest legal attack - POLITICO

America’s New Free Speech Enemies List Is Getting Longer - LewRockwell

America’s New Free Speech Enemies List Is Getting Longer - LewRockwell

Young Christian in Pakistan brutally attacked for refusing to convert to Islam – Catholic World Report

Young Christian in Pakistan brutally attacked for refusing to convert to Islam – Catholic World Report

Does Vance’s free speech defense in Munich not apply here? | Responsible Statecraft

Does Vance’s free speech defense in Munich not apply here? | Responsible Statecraft

The Real Yemen Scandal Has Zero to Do With Jeffrey Goldberg

The Real Yemen Scandal Has Zero to Do With Jeffrey Goldberg

WSJ: Israel provided intel for US strike on Houthi official mentioned in Signal chat | The Times of Israel

WSJ: Israel provided intel for US strike on Houthi official mentioned in Signal chat | The Times of Israel

Why Gen Z Is Embracing Trump | RealClearPolicy

Why Gen Z Is Embracing Trump | RealClearPolicy

Trump order aims to outlaw most government unions on ‘national security’ grounds - Government Executive

Trump order aims to outlaw most government unions on ‘national security’ grounds - Government Executive

Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Exempts Agencies with National Security Missions from Federal Collective Bargaining Requirements – The White House

Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Exempts Agencies with National Security Missions from Federal Collective Bargaining Requirements – The White House

Teaching Israel/Palestine at Harvard | Harvard Magazine

Teaching Israel/Palestine at Harvard | Harvard Magazine

Teaching Israel/Palestine at Harvard | Harvard Magazine

Teaching Israel/Palestine at Harvard | Harvard Magazine

Putin Tests How Far Trump Will Go Against Europe on Sanctions - Bloomberg

Putin Tests How Far Trump Will Go Against Europe on Sanctions - Bloomberg

Chinese nuclear weapons, 2025

Chinese nuclear weapons, 2025

China Has Already Remade the International System | Foreign Affairs

China Has Already Remade the International System | Foreign Affairs

China’s Xi urges foreign firms to resist ‘acts that turn back the wheel of history’ | South China Morning Post

China’s Xi urges foreign firms to resist ‘acts that turn back the wheel of history’ | South China Morning Post

[Salon] After MBS - ArabDigest.org. Guest Post

After MBS Summary: Saudi Arabia’s future under MBS is highly centralised and stable but long-term risks remain. The lack of a clear succession plan, economic dependency on oil, and growing authoritarianism pose potential threats. How will the Saudi regime end? Long-standing members will recall that we last reflected on the future of Saudi Arabia in 2017 as part of ‘The Future of the Middle East’ e-book that Arab Digest co-produced with the University of Durham’s Global Policy Institute. Since then the Kingdom has undergone profound political, economic, and social transformations. The traditional system of governance which relied on extensive consultation (Shura) within the royal family, merchant elites and religious scholars has been dismantled and power has become centralised entirely in the hands of MBS and his immediate family, making the regime highly autocratic and vulnerable to instability. Many key royal figures have also been sidelined, arrested, or exiled, making the monarchy less inclusive and more vulnerable to internal revolt. To prevent this the Kingdom has transformed into a police state with surveillance technology targeting any significant internal opposition or democratic uprising. Regionally and internationally, Saudi Arabia’s position has improved since 2017. The Kingdom has emerged as a dominant power in the Arab world. Saudi Arabia’s international alliances have also diversified, with strengthened ties with China, Russia, and India, as well as possible participation in BRICS. Saudi-Iranian relations have improved, but full normalisation with Israel has become a politically dangerous move. MBS controls all aspects of governance, security, and the economy in the Kingdom so if he dies or is incapacitated a power struggle could ensue When considering potential future scenarios, a description of possibilities is useful. The following possibilities are not mutually exclusive. The main threats to the regime’s stability are: Succession Crisis & Internal Power Struggles With no clear successor, MBS’s unexpected death could lead to a power struggle within the royal family. Power would then most likely pass to one of MBS’s full brothers, who have a firm grip on the security services, presumably Khaled the current Minister of Defence. Should they also be incapacitated, an internal royal family power struggle would ensue which Prince Ahmed bin Abdulaziz, King Salman’s only surviving full brother, is likely to win. He would also garner the support of much of the security apparatus as well as Western powers, who regard him as the continuity candidate and a safe pair of hands. He has been under house arrest for the last five years. Likelihood 15%. An assassination or coup, most likely from within the royal family. In Saudi culture every relative of every prince MBS has humiliated is honour-bound to take revenge against him and MBS has made countless enemies within the royal family and powerful business elites. This means a fate similar to King Faisal’s who was shot dead in 1975 in a revenge killing by a close family member is a possibility. Likelihood 25% Economic Collapse & Oil Dependency Despite the launch of Vision 2030 in 2016, the Kingdom remains dependent on oil for 40 percent of its GDP and 75 percent of fiscal revenues. Furthermore, to balance its budget the Kingdom needs the price of Brent crude to be at around US$96 per barrel (pb) when it currently stands at around US$74. The Kingdom is already running a budget deficit and long-term oil revenues are increasingly vulnerable to a decline in demand. Yet the Saudi population is growing at 1.62 percent a year, and around 250,000 young Saudis enter the job market annually. Only around 30-40 percent of working age Saudis are either in work or actively seeking it. Taxation increases without economic benefits could lead to public discontent and unrest. With no history of mass political mobilisation the likelihood of economic collapse leading to a widespread popular revolt remains relatively low at 10%. Foreign Military Threats The Huthis have targeted Saudi oil facilities and cities across the Kingdom with drones and missiles and they continue to pose a military threat to the regime. Last summer fear of Huthi military attacks compelled the Saudis to order Yemen’s Internationally Recognised Government to reverse its attempt to take full control of the Yemeni banking system. A Huthi offensive could destabilise the southern region and threaten infrastructure and mega-tourism projects. Earlier this month Donald Trump launched fresh strikes against the Huthis upending Saudi efforts to bring the conflict to a close. Normalisation with Israel could trigger a domestic backlash or regional conflict with groups like Hezbollah, Hamas, or other Iran-backed militias in the region. Risk 15%. Islamist Extremism & Radicalisation Widespread social reforms have diminished the risk of a Salafi-led uprising, but pockets of extremism remain and the removal of religious elites and the crackdown on clerics by MBS has angered ultra-conservative factions. A renewed Islamist uprising, similar to the 1979 Grand Mosque seizure, is a potential risk. Al-Qaeda and ISIS still have underground networks in Saudi Arabia and could attempt a terrorist campaign against the government as they have done in the past. Likelihood. 20% Regional Separatism & Tribal Discontent The oil-rich region Eastern Province has historically been marginalised. Its population could seek greater autonomy or independence. The Hijaz, home to Mecca and Medina, has long felt distant from Riyadh’s rule and elites there may also push for more regional autonomy, especially if economic disparities grow. The southern provinces of Najran, Asir and Jizan have historically had strong ties to Yemen, and in a worst-case scenario Huthi forces could attempt to seize these areas. Unlike Libya or Syria however, Saudi Arabia is not highly militarised among its civilian population making a prolonged civil war unlikely. 10% International Isolation & Western Pressure The US continues to give Saudi Arabia full military and political support because MBS has repeatedly shown that he is ready to do whatever he can to support Israel, far more than any previous Saudi ruler. Yet at the same time in recent years the regime has been shifting its international alliances in the direction of Russia and China, while emerging as a key player in a multipolar world order. If tensions were to emerge between Saudi Arabia and its Western backers that led to concerted diplomatic pressure and arms sales restrictions, MBS’s regime would soon be over and he would be replaced by a more pliant dictator ready to implement the Western/Zionist agenda in the land of the Two Holy Mosques. 5% Members can leave comments about this newsletter on the Arab Digest website

CIA Ops Veteran Calls Signal Scandal “the tip of the iceberg”

CIA Ops Veteran Calls Signal Scandal “the tip of the iceberg”

Trump orders elimination of 'anti-American ideology' from Smithsonian institutions | Reuters

Trump orders elimination of 'anti-American ideology' from Smithsonian institutions | Reuters

China's BYD has a $16K "Tesla-killer," as IEA finds EVs are an Oil Company-Killer

China's BYD has a $16K "Tesla-killer," as IEA finds EVs are an Oil Company-Killer

[Salon] Chartbook 365 Defend Columbia. But from what? A globalized University caught in the crosshairs of polycrisis. Guest Post by Adam Tooze

Chartbook 365 Defend Columbia. But from what? A globalized University caught in the crosshairs of polycrisis. Adam Tooze Mar 27, 2025 On a rainy lunchtime on Amsterdam Avenue, in front of the gates of Columbia University, hundreds of professors demonstrated this week, holding placards calling for the defense of our University against an unprecedented attack. The situation is both shocking and viewed from the outside somewhat mysterious. A right wing government supposedly committed to Making America Great Again is slashing science funding and imposing oversight on a highly productive research University in reaction to allegations of anti-semitism pursued through a civil rights bureaucracy, whilst that same administration lashes out against Diversity Equity and Inclusion (DEI) measures. On its face, it is incongruous. How to make sense of it? One reading is that this is part of an authoritarian wave. Analogies are drawn to Orban and Erdogan. Much of the current resistance clusters around this framing. One can see why this is attractive. On the one hand it positions Columbia and American Universities as a whole as part of a global movement. On the other hand it also exoticizes Trump as an “autocrat” and foregrounds the American tradition of the 1st Amendment guaranteeing free speech. A representative list of questions recently circulated amongst a great group of colleagues at Columbia included the following: “academic freedom; the meaning of freedom; the challenge of democracy etc, the rule of law as a topic within the challenge of democracy; a scientist on the relation between politics and scientific research, history of academic freedom, the relationship between antidiscrimination law and the First Amendment, the drivers and dynamics of the authoritarian turn in other countries, the rights of non-citizens, the nature of university governance.” Now these are good fights. We might wish that these were the fights that we were having. But do these questions really address our current situation? Most obviously, and most tellingly, what to make of their silence about the specific issue that brought us to this point: the thoroughgoing repression of the student-led pro-Palestine and anti-war movement, and the allegations of antisemitism weaponized by Trump's administration in its attacks on higher education. The silences produced by the generic framing of Trump as authoritarian, or Trump v. the constitution are not merely happenstance. Many of those defending universities are uncomfortable naming the crackdowns on pro-Palestinian, Israel-critical speech that have helped shape the Trump administration's most aggressive attacks on academia to date. Matters are not helped by the fact that the University administration makes a show of actually embracing the charges as a reasonable description of the situation on campus and a matter of the utmost urgency. Rather than addressing this concession head on, the resistance sidesteps it by aligning Trump with Erdogan or Orban, or treating him as a threat to the 1st Amendment. The result is an incomplete and incoherent account of how we have ended up where we are at. So how can we reframe the current crisis on Columbia campus beyond the paradigm of free science v. authoritarianism, or a narrow construction of America’s constitutional history? What kind of framing do we need to actually address the situation we face, in its specific intensity? I suggest three dimensions, which, taken together, place global Universities and Columbia in particular in the crosshairs of geopolitics, the cultural contradictions of American life & the contested position of big science. More speculatively, one might see all three of these vectors as originating in a general crisis of the vision of the global University that originated in the “end of history” moment of the 1990s. Viewed through this lens, the attacks on Columbia and other US universities appear as moments in the nationally specific unravelling of a globalization paradigm, a process which is at one and the same time particular and specific and interconnected and reverberating. It is best viewed neither in terms of America’s national constitution, nor as a case study in comparative authoritarianism, but as an instance of uneven and combined development at a global scale. #1 Rather than debating the quality of the evidence being presented for a wave of anti semitism, or the elision of anti semitic and anti Israeli utterances and actions, or the relative prevalence of anti semitism as opposed to, say, anti Black racism, anti Asian discrimination, or, as is far too rarely named, specifically anti-Palestinian racism. Why don’t we proceed historically and ask why this charge is coming up in the way that it is, right now? To my mind the answer must start with the situation in the Middle East itself and its ramifications in the US and in NYC in particular. What is disturbing the fraught, hypocritical but relatively peaceful liberal status quo on campuses across the US, is the collapse of the 1990s effort to depoliticize and neutralize the forcefield of the Middle East, a project that we once knew as the “two state solution". The “return of history” though long advertised has caught many organizations off guard. It is tempting to say that it has exposed a lack of thinking and a lack of good processes in places like Columbia. It might be more correct to say that it has exposed what were always the underlying structures of power. In this sense Columbia University is like other global actors, who have also seen their assumptions about globalization shifting beneath their feet. This did not happen all at once. It has been long in the making. But it now seems irrevocable. Readers of this newsletter might think, for instance, of Western energy companies who found themselves with stranded assets in Putin’s Russia, or HSBC bank uncomfortably straddling Hong Kong, London and mainland China. But first, what has the two state solution go to do with globalization? And why does it matter for Columbia? The two state solution was a classic product of 1990s belief on the part of certain influential constituencies that history could be calmed and that economics, commerce and exchange would do the work. For Shimon Peres’s vision of “new middle east”, the pacification of European politics by way of European integration was the template. This pacified vision of the future of Israel-Palestine mattered for American politics and for Columbia in particular, because located as the University is in NYC, we are in the midst of a global city, which is also a major center of Jewish and Arab migration and an important node in the network that solidifies the US-Israeli alliance as a cornerstone of strategy on both sides. To think of this as some shameful hidden network that must be uncovered with daring acts of truth telling - the classic gambit of antisemitic conspiracy theorists - is to invert the realities. It is loud and proud. It is no less open and outspoken than similar networks that support NATO and the Atlantic alliance, or the deep connections that run between Wall Street and the City of London, or the networks that ramify out from UN headquarters in New York City. Columbia University is plugged into all these networks and many more. Of course, it would be to fall into a stereotypical trap to imagine that political attitudes and views of the Middle East align straight forwardly with nationality, religion or ethnicity. But, equally obviously, the stakes for many on Columbia campus are high. Hillel International estimates, according to its own definitions, that there are roughly 5000 Jewish students at Columbia. Whatever their personal political views, whether they support Israel or not, the claims made on their behalf by Israeli and American politicians mean that those students find themselves enrolled in the conflict, whether they like it or not, and on terms they did not choose. The same goes for the much smaller constituency of Arab and Muslim students. And since the purpose of education is to expand horizons and widen imaginative affinities and since our students are brilliant and Columbia is good at what it does, a large part of the student body as a whole is stirred by events around the world and nowhere more so than by the Middle East. The crowd in and around the encampments was very diverse indeed. This active engagement with world affairs should be celebrated. Furthermore, for those who are citizens or taxpayers in the US it is no more than a basic civic duty. After all, as American taxpayers, we are footing a large part of the bill for Israel’s assault on Gaza. Furthermore, the US is providing diplomatic and political cover for the Netanyahu government. The United States is anything but neutral in this conflict. Taking a position in the conflict is not illegitimately butting in, or singling out a particular question or minority in a discriminatory way. The Israeli-US alliance makes the affairs of the Middle East into a matter of public interest, as do the wide ranging investments of the Columbia endowment. Since we cannot pretend to neutrality, the responsible thing is not to avert our eyes, but to take a position, even if that means debate and contention. Of course, it is true that there is a high degree of selectivity here. Not all conflicts matter on campus to the same degree. The same level of interest and engagement and vociferous argument is not generated by every global conflict. The Middle East conflict at Columbia is in a class of its own. It has been made that way by decades of work on the part of individuals and organizations friendly to the cause of Israel and individuals and organizations who promote the Palestinian cause. The world is not flat. We make investments and build language “games” which constitute meaning amongst other things through conflict. The Israel-Palestine conflict has more meaning at Columbia than other conflicts that one might cite as also worthy of attention. This explains why, for instance, the Ukraine war or crises in Central America, feature so little in campus politics. Given the significance of those crisis and given their relevance to the US, one could construct the case for intense engagement with both, but the connections have not been forged in the same way as they have been to Israel-Palestine. To recognize this is not to invite “what aboutism” or tendentious demands that we apply equal standards to all conflicts. If you want to understand why we are not equally engaged with all conflicts, the relevant standard is not some formalistic judicial norm of “equal treatment”, but history and struggle. Columbia’s engagement with the Middle East is sui generis because of what the champions of the two sides have, with significantly unequal power, invested in that connection. What the two state solution did was to create the possibility of an uneasy and uncomfortable modus vivendi between those students, faculty and donors, Jewish or otherwise, who were passionately committed to the cause of Israel and a group, Jewish or not, who were deeply critical of Israel and attached instead to the cause of Palestine. Crucially, it allowed the rest of campus, like the wider polity, to bracket the conflict as one to which there was a reasonable solution, which the US and other parties had helped to broker. In fact, of course, this was always a convenient fiction, more convenient for some than for others. There were factions who were profoundly dissatisfied on both sides. And they had their reasons. On the ground, the second intifada was followed by the Hamas seizure of power in Gaza and the blockade, as Israel enacted daily, regularly deadly brutalities, mass detentions and buoyed aggressive settler expansion. To characterize the situation of the 2010s, Tareq Baconi coined the term “violent equilibrium”, which is apt so long as one ignores the hugely unequal death toll and the vast imbalance of force. By the time of the first Trump administration in 2017, not much was left of the ”economic peace” as far as Palestine was concerned. Gaza was being held in a state of siege with a declining economy, at least according to official figures. The West Bank economy was growing modestly, but as a dependent annex of Israel. The Abraham accords which on their face expanded the vision of an “economic peace”, did so only between the newly rich Israel and the immensely wealthy Gulf state. It deliberately sidelined the misery of the Palestinians. It was framed regionally by the chaos in Palestine, the implosion of Syria and Egypt’s ongoing financial difficulties. There was not comprehensive prosperity in the Middle East, but an axis of wealth that ran, at least in the imagination of the Abraham Accord strategists, from Israel to the Gulf. Israel’s security position was stronger than ever in relative terms. Iran was the only challenger that remained and it was under massive US sanctions. For Palestinians and those who identify with their cause, the situation was increasingly unbearable. But what remains unspoken in all the hammering insistence on Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state, is that the choices facing those who defend that vision are increasingly unpalatable too. Israel’s power and wealth could not hide a deeper ontological insecurity. What was the future of democracy in Israel given the divisions within the Jewish population in Israel and the rapidly growing and disenfranchised Palestinian population? The allergic reaction to phrases such as “apartheid” and “genocide”, is not as aggressive as it is simply because those labels are contentious or hurtful. The problem is rather that in shorthand form they capture real dilemmas facing the project of a Jewish state of Israel. The repression of the use of these terms cannot hide the fact that in the absence of a two state solution, the measures required to defend the vision of a Jewish state, certainly as envisioned by the likes of Netanyahu, are so drastic as to provoke revulsion around the world. Forbidding the words may help your cause, but it is unlikely to win the argument in the long-run. Columbia is unusually politicized. But the opinion polling evidence shows a far more general shift in attitudes amongst young Americans away from US support for Israel. All of these questions did not begin on October 7. They were mounting year by year since the late 2000s. Legal action began in 2019. But when Hamas decided on October 7 to disrupt the status quo with its spectacularly violent assault and the Israeli state reacted with extraordinary force, the last illusion of the two state solution evaporated. What happened on our campus was a distant and faint echo of that violent explosion. The two-state fiction and the modus vivendi that it helped to maintain evaporated. It was more than the University administration and many others could cope with. When the sharpness of the conflict became clear, outside forces were quickly brought to bear. This emphatically did not start with Trump. The Biden administration were unsympathetic to say the least. Congress was hostile. Counterfactually, it is more than likely that Columbia would have faced serious Title VI action whether Trump was elected or not and it is clear that the University leadership was happy to comply. Mahmoud Khalil’s case has rightly attracted global attention. But there is a long history of US action specifically against Palestinian students and scholars In the Middle East there is no prospect of a just settlement. Violence by the IDF and settlers continues as does resistance from the Palestinian side. There are many ways we might deal with this in a far away place like New York and Columbia campus. Under the prevailing dispensation, however, as events since 2023 have shown, calm will likely be preserved by one-sided policing and censoring of dissent. The least that can be said for the letter from the Trump administration is that it is frank. It does not hide its intentions or its methods. It is a point by point to-do-list in the uprooting and silencing of oppositional voices. As such it is an unusually overt exercise of coercive and disciplinary power. The University leadership’s main response is to insist that it is shares the Trump administration’s concerns and is urgently trying to address them. This is a legal tactic. In legal argument around Title VI claims, once it is conceded that anti semitism is a real problem, the University’s main line of defense will be to argue that it did not callously disregard the issue. But the eagerness with which the administration has responded to the Trump prescriptions also reflects a real politics. It reflects the political coalitions both within the University and around it. #2 MAGA adds a particularly disinhibited quality and tonality to the assault on American Universities. Its bullying tone is new. The aggression and the willingness to deploy different modes of leverage. It would be silly, certainly as far as society at large is concerned to speak of two-sided polarization in the US. The main dynamic of escalation is clearly on the right. But if we are to do justice to the micro climate of American campuses we must add another element. The intellectual and cultural Left really did establish a position in many Universities and Colleges and in communities closely associated with those campuses. It is important to say this because it helps to explain the violent reactions in national political culture and the real unease on campus on the part of the small number of actual conservatives and the much larger group of liberal centrists. In this sense the unhinging of Universities like Columbia from political mainstream in the US did not start with Trump and is not reducible to the story of Trump. Campus political culture has its own dynamic and it has an actual left-wing. Administrators were willing to allow faculty to promote a political view of scholarship. It attracted students and gave identity to the institution. Furthermore they were not, in any case, intellectually equipped to answer the challenge. But under pressure, it is no surprise to find that those administrations and their legal advisors and trustees are in no way in solidarity with protestors, or with radical faculty or students. How best to characterize the campus left I am still undecided about. A first stab might sociological and to say that it pursues an arcane and niche strategy of cultural power within the professional managerial class. An explanation in terms of the logic of highly exclusive symbolic capital might also be a way to theorize the location of critical academia. In any case, the gulf between the sciences, medicine, engineering and the humanities and social sciences yawns wide. Only a small minority of academics are interested or imaginative enough to see structural similarities between the games being played, or to recognize moments of convergent interest. Otherwise, the University is tied together by budgets and buildings, far more than by any common purpose. University administrators preside uneasily over the show, deferring, in the vast majority of cases, to each field and subfields codes, crossing their fingers and hoping to go on accumulating resources, increasing the University’s reach and network, whilst avoiding scandal as far as possible. The result is a balkanized entity in which different units and groups pursue cross-cutting projects, be it a project like increasing diversity (DEI) or driving an issue of current interest e.g. climate. Though there are some truly radical voices, though there is a prevailing attitude of skepticism towards authority and though there are very few registered Republicans in most parts of the campus, to view the University as a monolithic power structure, is a figment of right-wing imagination. The extraordinary way in which institutions and legal codes originally created to promote civil rights and foster the DEI project are now at the core of the Trump era crackdown, is symptomatic of the possibilities of ironic and perverse inversion that are rife in modern Universities. Far from being hegemonic in any comprehensive sense, the campus left was always closer to the mark when it insisted that its position was marginal and embattled. In its more realistic moments it has claimed to have numerous powerful enemies. A huge amount of time has been devoted by the left to demonstrating that liberals are not to be trusted. All three points are correct. But that also means that no one on the left should be surprised by recent events, by the caving of large law firms, Senator Schumer throwing Columbia to the wolves, the coverage by the NYT, or the silence of all but a small minority of Democrats in the face of the MAGA onslaught. In 2024, when then President Shafik approved the NYPD clearance of the first Gaza encampment at Columbia, as the NYT reported: … Dr. Shafik did not head back to New York to be on hand when the police arrived, … . She decided to keep a longstanding plan to attend a private dinner in Washington for the Bezos Earth Fund, according to a university spokeswoman. Dr. Shafik ended up fielding so many calls that she never had time to eat, she said. Having to duck out of an audience with one of the richest men in the world would have been awkward. #3 Side stepping Gaza and the actual hostilities and oppositions around the left-wing politics of campus, the solid pillar of the centrist defense of universities, other than constitutionalism, centers on science. Raising the banner of science against the ignorant vandals in the Trump administration is good politics. It particularly appeals to liberal and centrist audiences. But it does not relieve of us of the need to explain why science could be taken hostage in the way it has been. What we have to reckon with is the unsettlement of the institutional, political and cultural location of US big science. This has reached a new pitch under Trump and his crew. But it does not begin or end with them. Reading Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson’s Abundance - a centrist-progressive text if there ever was one - I was surprised to find a chapter-length critique devoted to the NIH (National Institute of Health), the medical research funding body that has been targeted by the Trump administration and is being used as leverage against Columbia. According to Klein and Thompson the prevalent view amongst policy wonks is that the medical research funding system is broken, bureaucratic, conservative and counterproductive. It needs nothing less than radical culture change. If we take their book as a manifesto for a Harris administration that never was, and imagine that the administration had followed through on their advice, one could well imagine a NIH controversy even under Democratic auspices. (Though, as one colleague remarked to me it would have been “zoning changes rather than Blitzkrieg). Science is not outside the current crisis in the United States, but fully embroiled in it. Whereas conservative Americans once had a higher level of confidence in the scientific community than Democrats, attitudes are now sharply polarized in the opposite direction. Source: FT This is alarming. But it should come as no surprise. The German sociologist Ulrich Beck predicted as much back in his classic Risk Society, published back in 1986. As science becomes more and more influential at every level in the modern world, it cannot escape entanglement with society and politics. It loses its innocence. A further corollary is that those who “innocently” invoke science as an ultimate instance of authority, are themselves either wittingly or unwittingly engaged in a power game. This is not to say that science is bunk. That would be ridiculous and dangerous. It is to remind us to be cautious in the way that we use it and invoke it. In 2025 we are, after all, commemorating the fifth anniversary of the COVID disaster. Have we forgotten, how on issues like face-masking and social distancing, the exponents of the simple mantra that policy should “follow the science” tied themselves in embarrassing knots? Klein and Thompson marvel at the fact that no one in US politics today claims the triumph of the vaccines. But is it really surprising? The vaccines were a triumph of Trumpian industrial policy that did not fit the Bidenomics narrative. And though Trump himself might want to claim them, a large part of his constituency, failed by public education and America’s broken media system, preferred to take their risks with COVID rather than take the shots. Medical research has been caught up in the general skepticism towards white-collar expertise and hostility towards the Professional Managerial Class. The result is clear to see in the mortality statistics. Meanwhile, on the techno-libertarian wing of MAGA, arguably the most charismatic side of Trump 2.0, Elon Musk embodies a vision of innovation that consists in shaking up and disrupting the status quo of the science-industrial complex. With his private SpaceX vehicle lauding it over NASA, there is no safe hiding place in the NIH. In the face of all this, to invoke science as a solid pillar against MAGA attack is once again to clutch at a liberal straw without recognizing what makes it so weak. So here are the three elements of a framing of the crisis: #1 the unravelling of globalization and in particular the hope of the two state solution that explodes a critical fault line on our campus and throws the weight of power massively on to the side of the Israeli government’s efforts to uphold the project of the Jewish state by violent means; #2 the MAGA assault exposes the compromise that liberal administrators thought they could create on campus, creating enclaves of left-wing thought and incipient mobilization, which are now being sacrificed pell mell to the new conservative mood; #3 the multi-faceted crisis of “big science” as a source of consensual authority in the US. It is hard not to see the convergence of all three as an epochal phenomenon. The relation between all three has long been tense. In all three domains one could see a compromise “fix” being put in place in the 1990s. Indeed, it could from the point of view of a globalized university seem like an apotheosis – a turn to globalization as synchronous with the cosmopolitan, liberal values of the university. Now, all three have broken open at the same time. Viewed in these terms, the Columbia crisis is no surprise. It was waiting to happen. Which prompts the question, is there anything else waiting to unravel? Is there another dimension of the 1990s globalization model coming undone. And as soon as you frame the question this way, the answer is obvious: Chinese-US relations. If we start with geopolitics, then alongside Russia-Ukraine and the Middle East, the third big arena in which the globalization bargain has come undone, is China. The impact is being felt by large organizations, businesses, foundations and Universities around the world. If American manufacturing experienced the China shock in the early 2000s, the same was true for US education, but in reverse. Colleges across the United States are huge exporters of educational services and newly affluent Chinese upper middle class and upper class, are our most avid customers. Source: WSJ In 2024 Chinese students made up a quarter of all foreign students enrolled in US institutions. At Columbia their importance is far larger. In 2024 Columbia enrolled almost 6500 graduate and undergraduate students identified as Chinese for immigration purposes. By the same standard roughly 600 researchers and scholars were counted as Chinese. As far as students are concerned that is roughly half the students with non-American passports who make up c. 40 percent of the student body. So that is a Chinese share of roughly 20 percent. As far as American students are concerned, 13 percent identify as “Asian”, a category which is very diverse, but in which Chinese Americans make up the largest share. In terms of fee income it would be surprising if Chinese students did not account for half a billion dollars or more, comparable to the grant cut imposed in the first round of Trump sanctions. Columbia is, in short, deeply invested in the Chimerica vision of globalization. This clearly has a political dimension. Under President Bollinger, a Confucius Institute opened on campus in 2013. It remained quite obscure and seems to have shut up shop during the pandemic. In 2019 President Bollinger brushed off a request from the FBI to permit monitoring of Chinese students on campus. But apart from these minor skirmishes, it is remarkable how little awareness there is of this giant East Asian lurch in Columbia’s global location. Whether it recognizes it or not, Columbia has become a major Chinese university. On the last count, it is the leading private University in the United States in terms of Chinese recruitment. Though most Westerners are oblivious to this, amongst China’s educated middle class, Columbia University even has a Mandarin nickname 哥大 gēdà, short for 哥伦比亚大学 gēlúnbǐyà dàxué. Rather flatteringly, it rhymes with the familiar short form of PKU, beida. The obvious question, is can this be sustained? Or is this another deglobalization shock waiting to happen? Even as Columbia continues to maintain deep connections to China, support for hostile measures towards China has huge bipartisan support in Washington. It is, in this sense, the mirror image of support for Israel. If there are two foreign policy agendas that tie US politics together, it is the mantra “for Israel, against China”. And, as in the case of the Middle East, this has direct implications for higher education. A MAGA motion is currently before the House that proposes to end all students visas for Chinese wanting to study in the United States. It is unlikely to make progress in Congress. But as Yangyang Cheng, research scholar at Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center, noted the bill “should be seen as part of a broader effort to restrict academic freedom and hurt higher education in this country, to control what can be taught, which research projects can be pursued, and who have access to the classrooms and laboratories.” It has manifest echoes of the brutal legacy of Chinese Exclusion and yet I have come across no mention of it in recent campus conversations or protests. Would such steps be a form of discrimination? Clearly, yes. Would they also be damaging to the motor of science and research at a University like Columbia? Yes. They would be devastating. Almost half the Chinese-national students at Columbia are in the engineering school. If the current attack uses science funding against the University, anti-Chinese measures would hit the huge talent pipeline of students that propels so much of engineering and sciences in the US. Again you might be incredulous. Could this really happen? We already know the answer. The guidelines given by the Trump administration for the termination of NIH grants already create an alignment between research involving collaboration with Chinese Universities and the DEI/”woke” target list. Source: Nature What we do not yet know, is the extent or the precise direction that anti-Chinese measures will take. Clearly, they would be fundamentally different from those of the Middle East. The crisis of globalization we are going through is not uniform. It may be interconnected and combined but it is uneven. What we can say for sure is that this would be a break that we are not ready for. Not the campus, not the students, not the University, or the wider political field. (A special note of thanks to QW, DC and NL)

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[Salon] U.S. to End Vaccine Funds for Poor Countries -

U.S. to End Vaccine Funds for Poor Countries A 281-page spreadsheet obtained by The Times lists the Trump administration’s plans for thousands of foreign aid programs. Listen to this article · 7:37 min With one hand, a person holds the arm of a young woman who is wearing a yellow blouse with a sleeve pushed up; the person holds a syringe in the other hand. A young woman receiving a vaccine in Sudan last year.Credit...AFP, via Getty Images By Stephanie Nolen Stephanie Nolen covers global health. March 26, 2025 The New York Times The Trump administration intends to terminate the United States’ financial support for Gavi, the organization that has helped purchase critical vaccines for children in developing countries, saving millions of lives over the past quarter century, and to significantly scale back support for efforts to combat malaria, one of the biggest killers globally. The administration has decided to continue some key grants for medications to treat H.I.V. and tuberculosis, and food aid to countries facing civil wars and natural disasters. Those decisions are included in a 281-page spreadsheet that the United States Agency for International Development sent to Congress Monday night, listing the foreign aid projects it plans to continue and to terminate. The New York Times obtained a copy of the spreadsheet and other documents describing the plans. The documents provide a sweeping overview of the extraordinary scale of the administration’s retreat from a half-century-long effort to present the United States to the developing world as a compassionate ally and to lead the fight against infectious diseases that kill millions of people annually. The cover letter details the skeletal remains of U.S.A.I.D. after the cuts, with most of its funding eliminated, and only 869 of more than 6,000 employees still on active duty. In all, the administration has decided to continue 898 U.S.A.I.D. awards and to end 5,341, the letter says. It says the remaining programs are worth up to $78 billion. But only $8.3 billion of that is unobligated funds — money still available to disburse. Because that amount covers awards that run several years into the future, the figure suggests a massive reduction in the $40 billion that U.S.A.I.D. used to spend annually. A spokesperson for the State Department, which now runs what is left of U.S.A.I.D., confirmed the terminations on the list were accurate and said that “each award terminated was reviewed individually for alignment with agency and administration priorities, and terminations were executed where Secretary Rubio determined the award was inconsistent with the national interest or agency policy priorities.” The memo to Congress presents the plan for foreign assistance as a unilateral decision. However because spending on individual health programs such as H.I.V. or vaccination is congressionally allocated, it is not clear that the administration has legal power to end those programs. This issue is currently being litigated in multiple court challenges. Among the programs terminated is funding for the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, which conducts surveillance for diseases that can be transmitted from animals to humans, including bird flu, in 49 countries. Some major programs to track and fight malaria, one of the world’s top killers of children, have also been ended. Dr. Austin Demby, the health minister of Sierra Leone, which relies on Gavi’s support to help purchase vaccines, said he was “shocked and perturbed” by the decision to terminate U.S. funding and warned that the ramifications would be felt worldwide. “This is not just a bureaucratic decision, there are children’s lives at stake, global health security will be at stake,” he said. “Supporting Gavi in Sierra Leone is not just a Sierra Leone issue, it’s something the region, the world, benefits from.” “The guiding principle of my work is ‘go there.’ I want to hear directly from the people who are affected by disease, or lack of access to a new drug. I’ve been writing about global health for 30 years and have reported from more than 80 countries.” Learn more about how Stephanie Nolen approaches her work. In addition to trying to reach all children with routine immunizations, Sierra Leone is currently battling an mpox outbreak, for which Gavi has provided both vaccines and critical support to deliver them, he said. “We hope the U.S. government will continue to be the global leader it always been — putting money in Gavi is not an expenditure, it’s an investment,” Dr. Demby said Gavi is estimated to have saved the lives of 19 million children since it was set up 25 years ago. The United States contributes 13 percent of its budget. The terminated grant to Gavi was worth $2.6 billion through 2030. Gavi was counting on a pledge made last year by President Joseph R. Biden Jr. for its next funding cycle. New vaccines with the promise to save millions of lives in low-income countries, such as one to protect children from severe malaria and another to protect teenage girls against the virus that causes cervical cancer, have recently become available, and Gavi was expanding the portfolio of support it could give those countries. The loss of U.S. funds will set back the organization’s ability to continue to provide its basic range of services — such as immunization for measles and polio — to a growing population of children in the poorest countries, let alone expand to include new vaccines. By Gavi’s own estimate, the loss of U.S. support may mean 75 million children do not receive routine vaccinations in the next five years, with more than 1.2 million children dying as a result. The U.S. has been among the top donors to the organization since its creation, and became the largest during the Covid-19 pandemic. While European countries have historically provided significant funding, many are now reducing foreign aid spending as they grapple with the change in U.S. policy on Ukraine and the U.S. demand that they increase their defense spending. Japan, another major Gavi donor, is struggling with a depreciating currency. Dr. Sania Nishtar, Gavi’s chief executive, said that she hoped the Trump administration would reconsider the decision to end its support. Gavi’s work keeps people everywhere, including Americans, safe, she said. In addition to protecting individual children, vaccination reduces the possibility of large outbreaks. The organization maintains global stockpiles for vaccines against diseases such as Ebola and cholera, deploying them in rapid response efforts for epidemics. Gavi’s structure requires countries to pay part of the cost of vaccines, with their share growing as income levels rise; middle-income countries are weaned from support. Although the administration has repeatedly said publicly that its foreign assistance review process has been concluded, the information in the documents suggests that there is still some fluidity in which programs will survive. Staff members of one major malaria program that was terminated weeks ago, and which appears on the list of canceled projects sent to Congress, for example, were informed on Monday that it was being restored. Nevertheless, cuts to malaria response are deep. While awards that fund the bulk purchase of bednets and malaria treatments have been preserved, many of the programs to deliver these and other malaria control efforts in countries such as Cameroon and Tanzania — among the most affected in the world — have been terminated. Some organizations with awards that have not been officially canceled have received no funds for more than two months, and have folded. Without them, there is no one to take treatments from ports to local clinics, or deliver them to children. The memo says that 869 U.S.A.I.D. personnel were working as of last Friday, while 3,848 were on administrative leave and 1,602 are in the process of being laid off. Of 300 probationary employees who were initially fired, 270 have returned to work following a court order prohibiting their dismissal. Stephanie Nolen is a global health reporter for The Times. More about Stephanie Nolen A version of this article appears in print on March 27, 2025, Section A, Page 10 of the New York edition with the headline: U.S. to Halt Vaccine Aid In Broad U.S.A.I.D. Cuts. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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Putin’s Senior Aide Patrushev Shared Some Updates About the Arctic & Baltic Fronts | naked capitalism

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Angels: The ordinary way God acts in our lives

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The Looming Debt Crisis, the Trump Tax Cuts, and Medicaid | RealClearPolicy

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Trump signs order requiring proof of citizenship to vote in elections

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Preserving and Protecting the Integrity of American Elections – The White House

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"We are the only ones ... who can do this" - by Bill Astore

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The complete idiot’s guide to world affairs, by Jonathan Cook - The Unz Review

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The Multilayered Multipolarity of Energy: A New Surge in United States-Korea Relations? - The National Interest

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Russia says sanctions must be lifted before Ukraine maritime ceasefire can start

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SignalGate: Did CIA Boss Ratcliffe Use a Cell Phone in Headquarters?

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US Annual Threat Assessment is a Hot Mess

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Iraq Hands BP Final Approval for Kirkuk Oil Development | OilPrice.com

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Ukraine Unleashes Nikola Tesla’s Weapon In The Black Sea

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Ukraine Rare Earths Deal Is Nonsense To Mining Experts | OilPrice.com

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The US military has cared about climate change since the dawn of the Cold War – for good reason

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America’s top Ivy League schools received $6.4 billon in federal funding in 2023, 2024 | Fox News

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Alaska wins lawsuit that could open Arctic refuge to oil exploration • Alaska Beacon

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Euphoria Over Trump's 'Golden Age' Is Giving Way to Distress; Growing Debt, Tariffs Weigh on U.S. Outlook | Morningstar

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Mathematician who reshaped theory of symmetry wins Abel Prize

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Emboldened by Trump, A.I. Companies Lobby for Fewer Rules - The New York Times

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Questions and answers on the EU Preparedness Union Strategy

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Signal Leak Triggers Usual Playbook From Hegseth, Waltz and Trump - Bloomberg

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Europe will have to zip its lip over China’s abuses

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In China, EU trade chief to play hardball after Trump tariff rebuff | South China Morning Post

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Trump threatens 'far larger' tariffs on EU and Canada

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2025 Annual Threat Assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Community

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Tlaib: Democrats Rage Over Yemen Strike Leak, But Not at the Strike Itself | Truthout

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How hospitals inflate America’s giant health-care bill

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America’s big car firms face lengthy strikes

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U.S. Officials Called Signal a Tool for Criminals. Now They’re Using It.

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Appeals court sides with judge who blocked deportations under wartime authority : NPR

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Conservatives embrace Tesla as liberals ditch Elon Musk

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The High Price of War with Iran: $10 Gas and the Collapse of the US Economy - The Ron Paul Institute for Peace & Prosperity

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Explainer | Why did Donald Trump link the US fentanyl crisis to tariffs on China? | South China Morning Post

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Opinion | Foreign Spies to Team Trump: 👊🇺🇸🔥 - The New York Times

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Exclusive: Secretive Chinese network tries to lure fired federal workers, research shows | Reuters

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Here Are the Attack Plans That Trump’s Advisers Shared on Signal - The Atlantic

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Signal Leak Triggers Usual Playbook From Hegseth, Waltz and Trump - Bloomberg

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Does America Face a “Ship Gap” With China? | Foreign Affairs

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This is Satan's greatest weakness --Aleteia

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Pharma Access with Chinese Characteristics - by Angela Shen

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ISRAEL PREPARES ANOTHER INVASION - Seymour Hersh

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Judge Temporarily Blocks Detention of Columbia Student Facing Deportation Over Pro-Palestinian Protest | The Epoch Times

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A Look at Trump’s Tariff Plan to Revive the US Auto Industry | The Epoch Times

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Ratepayer advocates urge FERC to reject proposed Constellation-Calpine deal | Utility Dive

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Trump executive order threatens transmission, interconnection initiatives: former FERC commissioners | Utility Dive

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Ukraine Was Just Knifed In The Back - by Phillips P. OBrien

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Moscow sets far-reaching conditions for implementing US-brokered Black Sea ceasefire | CNN

Moscow sets far-reaching conditions for implementing US-brokered Black Sea ceasefire | CNN

Moscow sets far-reaching conditions for implementing US-brokered Black Sea ceasefire | CNN

UK spies fear intelligence leaks after Trump team blunder

UK spies fear intelligence leaks after Trump team blunder

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Dem Cites Justice Barrett To Back False Claims About Censorship

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Can ARPA-E survive a second Trump term? | Latitude Media

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Kim Jong Un Demands to be Included in all Future Hegseth Group Chats

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How Trump blew up the world order - and left Europe scrabbling

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How Western media silence enables the killing of Palestinian journalists – Mondoweiss

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Trump launches ‘October 7 Joint Task Force’, as war on Palestine protesters widens – Mondoweiss

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Downed municipal power lines may have caused LA's Palisades Fire, lawsuit claims | Reuters

U.S. approves potential USD 100 million sale of APKWS II precision-guided rocket systems to Saudi Arabia

U.S. approves potential USD 100 million sale of APKWS II precision-guided rocket systems to Saudi Arabia

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Over 4 million Gen Zers are jobless—and experts blame colleges for 'worthless degrees' and a system of broken promises for the rising number NEETs | Fortune

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Ranked: OECD Countries Giving the Most Foreign Aid

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Is It Time To Stop Encouraging Kids To Go To College? Experts Weigh In

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(253) Hearings Begin on China's Targeting the Maritime, Logistics, and Shipbuilding Sectors For Dominance - YouTube

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

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6 Christian Basketball Players That Keep Christ at the Center of Their Game

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How the 5 Kings of Joshua Point to the Empty Tomb of Christ - Topical Studies

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Supreme Court weighs which courts can hear Clean Air Act disputes

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Mexico bishops: Violence claiming lives of many young people

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Pilgrims look forward to bringing Eucharist across Southwest

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The Ceasefire That Never Was - CounterPunch.org

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Opinion | Trump national security team’s leaked plans to invade Greenland - The Washington Post

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Opinion | Funding for R&D helps the U.S. keep up with China - The Washington Post

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The Budgetary Cost of the Inflation Reduction Act’s Energy Subsidies | Cato Institute

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How Much Does Big Oil Owe Californians for the LA Fires?

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Why Beijing Will Not Drive a Global Energy Transition

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Signal Yemen chat intel leak exposes Trump's team contempt for Europe | Al Mayadeen English