

Trump's DOJ pick in trouble as GOP concerns threaten confirmation
Blanche’s involvement in the controversial, now-defunct $2 billion anti-weaponization fund, and his actions surrounding the Jan. 6 Capitol Hill rioters are two key breaking points for some Senate Republicans.
Trump suffers rare House defeat as bipartisan vote moves to withdraw troops from Iran conflict
foxnews.comBernie Sanders' AI wealth fund bill shows that he doesn't understand AI or wealth
Excerpts:
On Monday, in a New York Times op-ed, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.) announced plans to introduce the American A.I. Sovereign Wealth Fund Act "in the coming weeks." Sanders' bill would give Americans a "direct ownership stake" in the country's largest AI companies by creating "a sovereign wealth fund through a one-time 50 percent tax" of company stock.
Sanders' plan builds on similar calls to action from academics and the leaders of OpenAI, Anthropic, and xAI—three of the country's largest AI companies—advocating for a formalized process that provides Americans direct payments from the industry. President Donald Trump issued an executive order last February directing the secretaries of the Treasury Department and the Commerce Department, as well as the assistant to the president for economic policy, to "develop a plan" for a sovereign wealth fund and submit it to the president within 90 days.
And while Sanders frames "tech oligarchs" as modern-day robber barons, he proposes an idea commonly used by real oligarchs and authoritarians across the world to prop up illiberal regimes, illegally funnel money, and wield unchecked power over their citizens.
The End of the Migrant Surge Leads to a Fall in Nationwide Homelessness
reason.comTrump administration walks away from anti-weaponization fund
fox56news.comCongress barrels toward deadline pile-up as GOP divisions threaten Trump agenda
foxnews.comMAGA triumph: Trump ally Ken Paxton defeats John Cornyn in bitter Texas GOP primary war
foxnews.comU.S. national debt officially hits $39 trillion—adding $5 billion a day since October
Excerpts:
The issue is rising up the agenda for both those in public service and in the private sector: Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio has long warned of an economic “heart attack,” whereby service payments on debt would one day choke out public-sector investments. Already, interest payments are equivalent to government spending on education and the military combined.
The president also has his own take on the debt picture. Trump has demonstrated he’s aware of the nation’s fiscal trajectory and has suggested some methods to help rebalance—tariffs and golden visas, to name a few.
However, in a recent interview with Fortune’s Editor in Chief, Alyson Shontell, Trump also shared an alternate view: That the nation’s debt is really not so bad if you see it through the lens of a real estate mogul. The debt versus the total value of America and its natural assets, such as the Grand Canyon or surrounding oceans. “If you put down the value of these things, it’s like hundreds of trillions of dollars,” Trump says, and by that measure, “if you kept [the national debt] at $40 trillion, you’re way under-levered.”
Boebert emerges as last remaining Republican from Epstein files rebellion
washingtonexaminer.comEXCLUSIVE: Tulsi Gabbard resigns from Trump Cabinet
Her husband Abraham was recently diagnosed with an extremely rare form of bone cancer, she wrote in her resignation letter
Trump Collides With GOP Senators Over $1.8 Billion ‘Anti-Weaponization’ Fund
wsj.comSCOTUS term limits may be a good idea. But they still require a constitutional amendment.
reason.comCuban ex-President Raul Castro indicted on charges including murder, conspiracy to kill US nationals
foxnews.comMTG says GOP's future 'destroyed' after Trump-backed primary challenger defeats Thomas Massie in primary
foxnews.comDemocratic house candidate Maureen Galindo pledges to send 'American zionists' to internment camp
sacurrent.com72 years ago today, the brilliant Charles Ives died
Today is May 19, the 72nd anniversary of the death of Charles Ives. Many people are aware of the brilliant, groundbreaking music he wrote that was far ahead of his time but he also revolutionized the life insurance industry!
It's incredibly rare to find a true genius who completely transforms two entirely different fields, but Ives accomplished exactly that.
On the musical front, he's celebrated as one of our first American modernist composers. He loved experimenting with complex rhythms and multiple overlapping keys long before they became popular. Masterpieces like "The Unanswered Question" perfectly capture a wild and uniquely American spirit. Even though audiences overlooked his compositions for decades, they're now recognized as visionary works of art.
When he wasn't writing symphonies, he was busy building the country's largest life insurance agency. Ives actually helped pioneer the modern concept of estate planning. He figured out how to use life insurance in wealth protection so families could secure their financial futures. It's safe to say his innovations left a massive legacy in both the concert hall and the business world.
It is a shame that AI is being trained on Reddit advice because most advice on Reddit is awful.
When I look at the source links provided by LLMs, it’s almost always relying heavily on content from Reddit. Good advice on Reddit is frequently downvoted and overwhelmed by ignorance or deliberate misinformation and, on more subjective topics, typically dominated by cynical, negative people projecting their own bad experiences.