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I am a business economist with interests in international trade worldwide through politics, money, banking and VOIP Communications. The author of RG Richardson City Guides has over 300 guides, including restaurants and finance.

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Canada weighs F-35 and Gripen fleet - Gripen seems obvious

Canada weighs F-35 and Gripen fleet, seeks industrial return Canada delays F-35 decision as Ottawa weighs Gripen option and industrial retur...

Tom Hartmann

  TRUMP LOST. Vote Suppression Won. Former BBC, Guardian, etc., investigative reporter published here on Hartmann Report his comprehensive analysis of how Republicans essentially rigged the 2024 election by selectively and methodically, over a period of decades — but particularly during the years since 5 Republicans on the Supreme Court gutted the 1965 Civil Rights Act — purging people from voting lists, refusing to count their mail-in ballots, and giving people in Blue areas “placebo” provisional ballots that never get counted. He opens the article with:

Trump lost. That is, if all legal voters were allowed to vote, if all legal ballots were counted, Trump would have lost the states of Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Georgia. Vice-President Kamala Harris would have won the Presidency with 286 electoral votes.

And, if not for the mass purge of voters of color, if not for the mass disqualification of provisional and mail-in ballots, if not for the new mass “vigilante” challenges in swing states, Harris would have gained at least another 3,565,000 votes, topping Trump’s official popular vote tally by 1.2 million.

Even though the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 explicitly states that all American citizens have a right to vote, Republicans on the Supreme Court have both ignored and blocked that assertion by Congress to claim, instead, that voting in America is a mere privilege that can be given or taken on a whim.

If a state wants to take away your gun — which 5 Republicans on the Supreme Court say you have a right to own — they’d have to go to court and get a court order or warrant. But if they want to take away your vote, they don’t even need to tell you.

America is the only developed country in the world where either of these two insanities are law, and it’s 100% because Republicans love guns (and gun manufacturers’ money) and hate the vote when its exercised by people likely to be Democrats (college students, racial and religious minorities, urban dwellers, and Social Security age people).

Democrats tried to fix this by establishing an absolute right to vote with the John Lewis Voting Rights Act in 2022, but Kirsten Sinema and Joe Manchin stabbed them (and the country) in the back by refusing to break a Republican filibuster, even though it had 51 votes in the Senate. The next time Democrats have power, this must be job one!

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— GOP introduces an Amendment allowing Trump to run for a third term — but not Obama. Say What?! Tennessee Republican Congressman Andy Ogles has introduced legislation into the House to amend the Constitution to allow Trump to run for a third term, but not Obama. His proposed amendment raises the number of terms that can be served from 2 to 3, but only if the first two terms were not served consecutively. Just by coincidence, the only living past president that would apply to is Trump. This has no chance of passing, but it at least tells us how deeply Ogles and his colleagues are buried within the Trump cult. This is not a good sign for a Republican return to sanity in our republic…

— Trump threatens to “get rid” of emergency agency FEMA and tells states to “take care” of disasters themselves. Ignoring the fact that FEMA already reimburses states for the cost of disaster assistance and recovery, Trump suggested yesterday while visiting Hurricane Helene damage in North Carolina that states should pick up their own recovery costs and “then be reimbursed by the federal government,” but not by FEMA. The kicker here is that when FEMA distributes disaster aid it’s obligated to, within the limits of disaster declarations, treat all states the same. On the other hand, if Trump only wanted to provide aid to Red states and let Blue states drown in crisis and debt, all he has to do is shift disaster aid to the military, and then pick and choose which states he’ll provide military aid to. Is that what’s behind his comments, or is he just misinformed? I’d never bet against Trump’s ability to be petty, vindictive, and to want to punish states that didn’t vote for him.

— “Shove it”: Canadians revolt after Trump says they'd have better health care as 51st state. Trump’s been trolling Canada for a few months now, suggesting they should become our 51st state by way of ratifying Putin’s and Xi’s view against the rigidity and international acknowledgement of national borders. Canadians, however, don’t find it at all funny. And when Trump said this week that, as the 51st state they’d have “better healthcare,” he really stepped in it. As Brad Reed noted at Raw Story, Canadians reacted quickly on social media: “I quite like my universal healthcare,” wrote retired nurse and Toronto resident Pamela Meyer. “No thanks. As a Canadian... LMAO,” wrote YouTube influencer David Doel. “Shove it up your a--,” wrote one self-professed fan of the Edmonton Oilers. “We don’t want to be you. Not a chance in hell would Canadians be better off with this ‘deal,’” wrote Natalie Dionne on BlueSky: “Eff off eh.” Ah, those ever-polite Canadians! :)

— How the 2 percent of bitcoin owners who own 90% of all bitcoin in circulation are planning to use Trump to make a killing. A small handful of people own about 90% of all bitcoin in circulation, according to Lever News, and they threw hundreds of millions into electing Trump. Now the career criminal — who just released a meme coin and whose sons are entering the crypto business — is apparently pushing to use our tax dollars to fund a “crypto strategic reserve.” Doing that could easily increase the price of a single bitcoin from the current ~$100K to over a million dollars each, giving this group a massive, multi-billion-dollar windfall. And, if he does it the way it looks like he’s planning, Trump and his kids could make billions off the deal. America is on the verge of becoming the single most corrupt developed nation in the world, which is not a distinction we should be proud of or even tolerate.

— Hakeem Jefferies says Democrats won't help Republicans raise the debt ceiling or cut taxes even more on billionaires. Will they hold the line? For Trump and his Republicans in Congress to again cut taxes on billionaires and put it on our kids’ credit card (the US Treasury), they’ll first have to get enough votes to get a debt ceiling suspension or increase passed. The problem for them — unless Trump is stronger than most believe — is that there’s a large handful of “deficit hawks” in the GOP in both the House and Senate who may well oppose another Two Santas’ round. Which would mean that Mike Johnson and perhaps John Thune will need Democratic votes to make these things happen. House minority leader Hakeem Jefferies just put the kibosh on that, saying: “What we are not willing to do is to enable extreme MAGA Republicans to have a blank check so they can enact massive tax breaks for billionaires and wealthy corporations and make working-class Americans pay for it through cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, Veterans Benefits, or Nutritional. The ball is in the Republicans’ court right now.” Will Democrats hold a hard line, or will a few break and help out the GOP? Without them, will Republicans inflict a government shutdown on themselves? Will John Fetterman turn into the next Joe Manchin? Stay tuned…

— A Black kid — a school shooter this week — decided to kill a classmate (and wound another) and then himself after watching Candice Owens’ online rightwing propaganda convincing him that he’s no good cause he’s Black. This is the kind of damage racist white supremacist propaganda — even when promoted by befuddled Black people — destroys young Black people, particularly young Black men. Before his murder/suicide, 17-year-old Solomon Henderson allegedly wrote, “Candace Owens has influenced me above all; each time she spoke I was stunned by her insights and her own views helped push me further and further into the belief of violence over the Jewish question. … I was so miserable. I wanted to kill myself. I just couldn’t take anymore. I am a worthless subhuman, a living, breathing disgrace.” Racism and antisemitism are psychological, emotional, and political poison. While we can regulate them in newspapers and on TV/radio, Section 230 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 relieves social media billionaires of any liability whatsoever for the contents posted on their platforms. That has to change.

— A Mississippi legislator just introduced legislation outlawing male masturbation unless it is done specifically for the purpose of producing a baby (like for artificial insemination). “All across the country, especially here in Mississippi, the vast majority of bills relating to contraception and/or abortion focus on the woman’s role when men are fifty percent of the equation,” State Representative Bradford Blackmon wrote, adding, “This bill highlights that fact and brings the man’s role into the conversation.” It’s about time somebody pointed out the hypocrisy of the GOP…

 Hunter in a Farmer’s World:

“People Will Die”: The Trump Administration Said It Lifted Its Ban on Lifesaving Humanitarian Aid. That’s Not True.

“People Will Die”: The Trump Administration Said It Lifted Its Ban on Lifesaving Humanitarian Aid. That’s Not True.

ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.

On Friday morning, the staffers at a half dozen U.S.-funded medical facilities in Sudan who care for severely malnourished children had a choice to make: Defy President Donald Trump’s order to immediately stop their operations or let up to 100 babies and toddlers die.

They chose the children.

In spite of the order, they will keep their facilities open for as long as they can, according to three people with direct knowledge of the situation. The people requested anonymity for fear that the administration might target their group for reprisals. Trump’s order also meant they would stop receiving new, previously approved funds to cover salaries, IV bags and other supplies. They said it’s a matter of days, not weeks, before they run out.

American-funded aid organizations around the globe, charged with providing lifesaving care for the most desperate and vulnerable populations imaginable, have for days been forced to completely halt their operations, turn away patients and lay off staff following a series of sudden stop-work demands from the Trump administration. Despite an announcement earlier this week ostensibly allowing lifesaving operations to continue, those earlier orders have not been rescinded.

Many groups doing such lifesaving work either don’t know the right way to request an exemption to the order, known as a waiver, or have no sense of where their request stands. They’ve received little information from the U.S. government, where, in recent days, humanitarian officials have been summarily ousted or prohibited from communicating with the aid organizations.

Trump’s rapid assault on the international aid system is quickly becoming the most consequential and far-reaching shift in U.S. humanitarian policy since the Marshall Plan to rebuild Europe after World War II, aid groups and government officials warned.

Among the programs that remain grounded as of Friday: emergency medical care for displaced Palestinians and Yemenis fleeing war, heat and electricity for Ukrainian refugees and HIV treatment and mpox surveillance in Africa.

Experts in and out of government have anxiously watched the fluid situation develop. “I’ve been an infectious disease doctor for 30 years, and I’ve never seen anything that scares me as much as this,” said Dr. Jennifer Furin, a Harvard Medical School physician who received a stop-work order for a program designing treatment plans for people with the most drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis. Infectious diseases do not know borders, she pointed out. “It’s terrifying.”

Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio first issued the freeze on aid operations last Friday, which included limited exemptions. “The pause on all foreign assistance means a complete halt,” a top adviser wrote in an internal memo to staff. (The order was separate from Trump’s now-seemingly rescinded moratorium on domestic U.S. grants.) Aid groups across the globe began receiving emails that instructed them to immediately stop working while the government conducted a 90-day review of their programs to make sure they aligned with the administration’s agenda.

Trump campaigned on an “America First” platform after unsuccessfully trying to slash the foreign assistance budget during his first term in office. The U.S. provides about $60 billion in nonmilitary humanitarian and development aid annually — less than 1% of the federal budget, but far more than any other country. The complex network of organizations who carry out the work is managed by the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development.

Over the weekend, that system came to a standstill. There was widespread chaos and confusion as contractors scrambled to understand seemingly arbitrary orders from Washington and figure out how to get a waiver to continue working. By Tuesday evening, Trump and Rubio appeared to heed the international pressure and scale back the order by announcing that any “lifesaving” humanitarian efforts would be allowed to continue.

Aid groups that specialize in saving lives were relieved and thought their stop-work orders would be reversed just as swiftly as they had arrived.

But that hasn’t happened. Instead, more stop-work orders have been issued. As of Thursday, contractors worldwide were still grounded under the original orders and unable to secure waivers. Top Trump appointees arrested further funding and banned new projects for at least three months.

“We need to correct the impression that the waiver was self-executing by virtue of the announcement,” said Marcia Wong, the former deputy assistant administrator of USAID’s humanitarian assistance bureau.

Aid groups that had already received U.S. money were told they could not spend it or do any previously approved work. The contractors quoted in this article spoke on the condition of anonymity because they feared the administration might prolong their suspension or cancel their contracts completely.

As crucial days and hours pass, aid groups say Trump’s order has already caused irreparable harm. Often without cash reserves or endowments, many organizations depend on U.S. funding entirely and have been forced to lay off staff and cancel contracts with vendors. One CEO said he expects up to 3,000 aid workers to lose their jobs in Washington alone, according to the trade publication Devex. Some groups may have to shutter altogether because they can’t afford to float their overhead costs without knowing if or when they’d get reimbursed.

Critics say the past week has also undermined Trump’s own stated goals of American prosperity and security by opening a vacuum for international adversaries to fill, while putting millions at immediate and long-term risk.

“A chaotic, unexplained and abrupt pause with no guidance has left all our partners around the world high and dry and America looking like a severely unreliable actor to do business with,” a USAID official told ProPublica, adding that other countries will now have good reason to look to China or Russia for the help they’re no longer getting from the U.S. “There’s nothing that was left untouched.”

Preparation for the launch of the mpox vaccination campaign at the General Hospital of Goma, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, in October 2024. The federal aid standstill could affect mpox supplies for patients across Africa. (Aubin Mukoni/AFP/Getty Images)

In response to a detailed list of questions for this article, the White House referred ProPublica to the State Department. The State Department said to direct all questions about USAID to the agency itself. USAID did not reply to our emails. Much of its communications staff was let go in the last week.

In a public statement Wednesday, the State Department defended the foreign aid freezes and said the government has issued dozens of exemption waivers in recent days.

“The previously announced 90-day pause and review of U.S. foreign aid is already paying dividends to our country and our people,” the statement said. “We are rooting out waste. We are blocking woke programs. And we are exposing activities that run contrary to our national interests. None of this would be possible if these programs remained on autopilot.”

The dire international situation has been exacerbated by upheaval in Washington. This week, the Trump administration furloughed 500 support staff contractors from USAID’s humanitarian assistance bureau, about 40% of the unit, and fired 400 more from the global health bureau. Those workers were told to stop working and “please head home.”

The remaining officials in Washington are now attempting to navigate a confounding waiver process and get lifesaving programs back online. Officials and diplomats told ProPublica that Trump’s new political appointees have not consulted USAID’s longtime humanitarian experts when crafting the new policies. As a result, career civil servants said they are struggling to understand the policy or how to carry it out.

During an internal meeting early in the week, one of USAID’s top Middle East officials told mission directors that the bar for aid groups to qualify for an exemption to Trump’s freeze was high, according to meeting notes. It took until Thursday for the directors to receive instructions for how to fill out a spreadsheet with the programs they think should qualify for a waiver and why, a government employee told ProPublica. “The waiver for humanitarian assistance has been a farce,” another USAID official said.

“Like a Russian nesting doll of fuck-ups,” said Jeremy Konyndyk, who ran some of USAID’s largest programs under Presidents Barack Obama and Joe Biden. “It’s just astonishing.”

Fear of retaliation is permeating the government’s foreign aid agencies, which have become some of Trump’s first targets in his campaign against diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. Earlier this week, the administration pulled down photographs of children and families from the agency’s hallways.

Many are afraid of being punished or fired for doing their jobs. Officials in USAID’s humanitarian affairs bureau say they have been prohibited from even accepting calendar invites from aid organizations or setting up out-of-office email replies.

On Monday, USAID placed about 60 senior civil servants on administrative leave, citing unspecified attempts to “circumvent” the president’s agenda. The group received an email informing them of the decision without an explanation before they were locked out of the agency’s systems and banned from the building.

“We’re civil servants,” one of the officials said. “I should have been given notice, due process. Instead there was an agencywide notice accusing people of subverting the president’s executive orders.”

Then, on Thursday, the agency’s labor relations director told the group that he was withdrawing the agency’s decision because he found no evidence of misconduct, according to emails obtained by ProPublica.

Hours later, the director was put on administrative leave himself. “The agency’s front office and DOGE instructed me to violate the due process of our employees by issuing immediate termination notices,” he wrote to colleagues, referring to Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency run by Elon Musk. (Musk did not respond to a request for comment.)

Later that night, the original 60 officials were placed back on leave again.

On Thursday, the U.S. Agency for International Development’s director of labor relations told about 60 senior civil servants placed on administrative leave by the Trump administration that he had reinstated them. (Obtained by ProPublica. Redacted by ProPublica.) Hours later, the labor relations director himself was put on leave. He said the agency’s front office and the Department of Government Efficiency had instructed him to fire his colleagues without due process. (Obtained by ProPublica. Redacted by ProPublica.)

Diplomats have long lauded American humanitarian efforts overseas because they help build crucial alliances around the world with relatively little cost.

When he created USAID in 1961, President John F. Kennedy called it a historic opportunity to improve the developing world so that countries don’t fall into economic collapse. That, he told Congress, “would be disastrous to our national security, harmful to our comparative prosperity and offensive to our conscience.”

USAID is responsible for the most successful international health program of the 21st century. The President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, created in 2003 by President George W. Bush to combat HIV globally, has saved an estimated 26 million lives over the past 22 years. It currently helps supply HIV medicines to 20 million people, and it funds HIV testing and jobs for thousands of health care workers, mainly in Africa.

That all ground to a halt this week. Since receiving the U.S. government’s stop-work orders, contractors who manage the program say they have so far received little communication about what work they will be allowed to continue, or when. They are not allowed to hand out medicines already bought and sitting on shelves.

If the exemption waivers don’t come through, policy analysts and HIV advocates say the full 90-day suspension of those programs would have disastrous consequences. More than 222,000 people pick up HIV treatment every day through the program, according to an analysis by amFAR, a nonprofit dedicated to AIDS research and advocacy. As of Friday morning, those orders had not been lifted, according to three people with direct knowledge.

Up through last week, PEPFAR was providing HIV treatment to an estimated 680,000 pregnant women, the majority of whom are in Africa. A 90-day stoppage could lead to an estimated 136,000 babies acquiring HIV, according to the amfAR analysis. Since HIV testing services are also suspended, many of those could go undiagnosed.

The disarray has also reached warzones and foreign governments, risking disease outbreaks and straining international relationships forged over decades.

Government officials worried about contract personnel who were suddenly stranded in remote locations. In Syria, camp managers were told to abandon their site at al-Hawl refugee camp, which is also a prison for ISIS sympathizers. That left the refugees inside with nowhere to turn for basic supplies like food and gas.

In Mogadishu, Somalia, the State Department instructed security guards who were protecting an arms depot from insurgents to simply walk off the site, according to a company official. When the guards asked what would happen to the armory, their government contacts told them they didn’t have any answers. (Concerns about the armory were first reported by The Wall Street Journal.)

The contractors in Syria and Somalia have since been allowed to return to their sites.

An executive at a health care nonprofit told ProPublica he has not been so lucky. His group is still under the stop-work order and can’t fund medical operations in Gaza, where there is a fragile ceasefire deal between Hamas and Israel that depends in part on the free flow of humanitarian aid.

“People will die,” the executive said. “For organizations that rely solely or largely on U.S. government funding, this hurts. That may be part of the message. But there would be less drastic ways to send it.”

In response to criticism, the Trump administration has offered misinformation. During a press conference, Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, touted the initiative’s success so far and said the government “found that there was about to be $50 million taxpayer dollars that went out the door to fund condoms in Gaza.” Trump later went further, saying Hamas fighters were using the condoms to make explosives.

They didn’t name the contractor, but the State Department later cited $100 million in canceled aid packages slated for the International Medical Corps.

IMC said in a response that no U.S. government funding was used for condoms or any other family-planning services. The organization has treated more than 33,000 Palestinians a month, according to the statement. It also operates one of the only centers in Gaza for severely malnourished children.

“If the stop-work order remains in place,” IMC said, “we will be unable to sustain these activities beyond the next week or so.”

There are also new outbreaks of Ebola in Uganda’s capital and of the disease’s cousin, the Marburg virus, in Tanzania. The U.S. has long been a key funder of biosecurity measures internationally, including at high-security labs. That funding is now on hold.

In Ukraine, groups that provide vital humanitarian aid for civilians and soldiers fighting Russia have been told to stand down without any meaningful updates in days, according to three officials familiar with the situation. The halted services include first responders, fuel for hospitals and evacuation routes for refugees fleeing the front lines.

“These are people who have been living in a war zone for three years this month,” the head of one of the organizations said, adding that they may have to lay off 20% of its staff. “And we are taking away these very basic services that they need to survive.”

Concrete electrical poles provided by USAID replace some that were damaged by fighting in Ukraine as Russia targets electrical infrastructure across the country. (Scott Peterson/Getty Images)

A support staffer working on contract for the U.S. mission in Yemen said her entire team had been told to stop their work last weekend, which ProPublica corroborated with contemporaneous emails. “One of my tasks was summarizing how many people had been directly saved by our health programs every week,” she said. “It was usually 80 to 100.”

Their stop-work order has not been lifted. It will be a week on Sunday.

Do You Work for the Federal Government? ProPublica Wants to Hear From You.

Liberal Candidate for Victoria

 ACCLAMATION NOTICE – Victoria | Liberal Party of Canada

I’m pleased to share that Wilfrid Greaves has been acclaimed as the Liberal Candidate for Victoria in the next federal election, and will continue building on our hard work to keep Canada moving forward.

With a strong focus on important new engagement with Canadians, the Liberal nominations process helps ensure we’re ready to re-elect our dedicated Liberal team in Parliament and continue to elect even more talented, diverse, and hardworking community leaders as Liberal MPs across Canada, whenever the next campaign eventually arrives.

As we look forward to the important work ahead of us, the hope and hard work of Liberals across Canada will ensure our candidates and teams are ready to run competitive campaigns and earn another mandate from Canadians – including right here in Victoria.

For more information on the nomination process, please click here.

Thank you for all that you do.

Sincerely,

Terry Duguid
National Campaign Co-Chair
Liberal Party of Canada

George Conway on defiance of court orders: We have basically a criminal ...


The Trump administration is working to discredit the legal system, with Vance suggesting Trump could ignore court rulings all together. George Conway joins The Weekend to discuss what this means for the rule of law in the U.S. 

The many ways Trump’s foreign aid freeze is hurting Americans

The many ways Trump’s foreign aid freeze is hurting Americans
Trump's freezing of U.S. foreign aid has stopped work in most military and security assistance programs including in Ukraine and parts of the Middle East.

Harlan Crow, a Republican Party supporter

https://www.scmp.com/magazines/style/entertainment/article/3267832/meet-harlan-crow-long-time-controversial-friend-supreme-courts-clarence-thomas Harlan Crow, a Republican Party supporter and Dallas billionaire businessman has, for over three decades, paid for luxurious trips on behalf of Supreme Court associate justice Clarence Thomas, including private jets and yacht trips, and excursions to islands and retreats. Now, questions have emerged about their friendship. Here’s what to know about Harlan Crow, from the Nazi memorabilia he owns to his Mao and Stalin sculpture garden.

Russell Vought isn't a normal Cabinet pick. Democrats were right to make a scene.

Russell Vought isn't a normal Cabinet pick. Democrats were right to make a scene.
Rachel Maddow points out how Senate Democrats are using their power in the minority to boycott Trump's OMB pick Russell Vought's committee vote.

Trump demanded NPR and PBS be defunded. His FCC chair is on the hunt.

Trump demanded NPR and PBS be defunded. His FCC chair is on the hunt.
FCC chairman Brendan Carr, a Project 2025 author and right-wing critic of the media, launched probes into National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting Service, outlets that have been often been targeted by conservatives.

China’s retaliatory measures take effect

 This week in tariffs: China’s retaliatory measures take effect. Earlier today, China’s counter-tariffs went live, adding 10% to 15% levies on US exports of natural gas, oil, and coal, as well as some automotive parts and farm equipment headed for China. President Trump described the tariffs that went into effect against China on February 4 as an “opening salvo,” and experts are monitoring the situation to see if the trade war between the two countries will escalate or if the fight will be called off after further negotiations. Consumer electronics, furniture, and appliances may soon get more expensive in the US due to the retaliatory tariffs, the AP reported. Fast fashion and home goods from Temu and Shein are safe for now, as the Trump administration is keeping the de minimis exemption in place.—HVL

NFL Makes SUSPICIOUS Change To SUPER BOWL To Please TRUMP🚨

Big Tech Mafia Spotted in Church


U.S. oligarchs like Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, and Apple CEO Tim Cook were all spotted sitting behind Donald Trump’s family at church Monday morning, just hours before the incoming president will be inaugurated. And it’s a great reminder that the U.S. is about to enter a frightening new era that begins when Trump is sworn in as the 47th president at noon ET.

Trump attended St. John’s Episcopal Church in Washington D.C. on Monday, a tradition that’s been observed by past presidents like Barack Obama and George W. Bush. But those presidents didn’t have business leaders who stand to benefit from the incoming administration filling out the pews.

Photographer Anna Moneymaker captured images from inside the church, and it’s a who’s who of the wealthiest, most powerful people in the world of tech, including guys like Zuckerberg, Bezos, and Cook, as well as Google CEO Sundar Pichai and podcaster Joe Rogan.

Google will let platforms and devices employees leave voluntarily prior to layoffs

Google will let platforms and devices employees leave voluntarily prior to layoffs

Google has given US employees in the Platforms and Devices team the option to exit voluntarily before it starts cutting jobs. The news was first reported by 9to5GoogleGoogle's Platforms and Devices team has 25,000 employees and was formed when the company merged its Android and hardware teams last year. It's in charge of a bunch of Google products, including Android, Chrome, ChromeOS, Pixel, Nest and Fitbit. However, only employees based in the US who are directly reporting to the division's VP, Rick Osterloh, can leave voluntarily with a severance package. 

Osterloh reportedly told the team in a memo that the "voluntary exit plan" is for those struggling to meet the demands of their role or those unhappy with the company's hybrid work setup. People have until February 20 to sign up for the exit program, and since the memo says they'll find out if they've been accepted on March 25, some people may not be able to leave the company with the severance package it's offering. Google is scheduled to release its earnings report for the fourth quarter of 2024 in a few days, and it'll be interesting to see if it reveals a decline in revenue or any other weakness that could've led to the buyout and impending layoffs. 

"The Platforms & Devices team is offering a voluntary exit program that provides US-based Googlers working on this team the ability to voluntarily leave the company with a severance package," Google said in a statement. "This comes after we brought two large organizations together last year. There's tremendous momentum on this team and with so much important work ahead, we want everyone to be deeply committed to our mission and focused on building great products, with speed and efficiency."

According to CNBC, employees were pleased with Google's decision to offer voluntary exits with severance instead of going straight to job cuts. They were apparently aware of Google's future cost-cutting efforts and asked for voluntary buyouts as an option. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/google-will-let-platforms-and-devices-employees-leave-voluntarily-prior-to-layoffs-130017394.html?src=rss

Scott Bessent and Treasury sec takes over

 CFPB told to halt work as Treasury sec takes over. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was appointed the acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau after President Trump fired the head of the financial watchdog agency created in the wake of the 2008 crisis. Bessent got right to work implementing the latest signature Trump administration pause, telling the agency’s staff to stop all work on enforcement, litigation, and new rules pending review.

UK PM Starmer tells Canada's Trudeau he welcomes global conversation on trade

UK PM Starmer tells Canada's Trudeau he welcomes global conversation on trade

LONDON - British Prime Minister Keir Starmer told his Canadian counterpart Justin Trudeau in a call on Wednesday that he welcomed an international conversation on the importance of trade and collaboration, Starmer's office said.