Tuesday, April 08, 2025

'Good ideas at scale!' Dr. Oz wants cheap AI avatars to take roles from pricey doctors

Matthew Chapman
April 8, 2025 
RAW STORY




One of Dr. Mehmet Oz's first orders of business after being appointed President Donald Trump's director of Medicare and Medicaid Services: robot doctors.

According to Wired, Oz made the comments during his first all-hands meeting at CMS since taking over the agency.

"Oz claimed that if a patient went to a doctor for a diabetes diagnosis, it would be '$100' per hour, while an appointment with an AI avatar would cost considerably less, at just '$2' an hour," reported Leah Feiger and Steven Levy. "Oz also claimed that patients have rated the care they’ve received from an AI avatar as equal to or better than a human doctor ... Because of technologies like machine learning and AI, Oz claimed, it is now possible to scale 'good ideas' in an affordable and fast way."

Current research indicates that patients trust medical advice from AI less than from human doctors.

"CMS has explored the use of AI for the last several years, according to archived versions of an agency website dedicated to the topic, and the agency released an updated 'AI Playbook' in 2022," noted the report. However, "those efforts appear to have focused on finding ways to leverage vast CMS data sets, rather than involving AI directly in patient care."

Oz, a former thoracic surgeon, was best known before his confirmation to the Trump administration for running a controversial daytime talk show in which he promoted unproven supplements as miracle weight loss solutions.

While he has promised lawmakers to stop his side hustles of promoting supplements while serving in government, Oz's appointment has caused a separate concern among observers that he might undo recently-proposed safeguards on preventing waste and fraud in Medicare Advantage plans, privatized insurance paid for by taxpayers as an alternative to traditional Medicare, as Oz has been an outspoken promoter of the program. With Oz at the Helm, CMS is currently announcing a significantly higher reimbursement hike to Medicare Advantage insurers than was previously proposed.


Trump cuts threaten massive steel plant in JD Vance's hometown: 'Makes no sense'

Jennifer Bowers Bahney
April 8, 2025 
RAW STORY

Even though one of the goals of President Donald Trump 's trade war is to revive U.S. manufacturing, his administration is slashing a key program meant to help modernize plants across the country — including in Vice President JD Vance's hometown of Middletown, Ohio.

New reporting from CNN says the Trump administration has frozen $6.3 billion in Biden-era grant programs that would have allowed large industrial companies to upgrade their equipment. In the meantime, Elon Musk's DOGE will decide what it will allocate, if anything, to companies like "steel giant" Cleveland-Cliffs.

According to CNN, the company was slated to receive a $500 million grant to upgrade its blast furnaces.

"The new furnaces — which run on climate-friendly hydrogen, natural gas and electricity instead of coal — would have extended the life of the plant and given the steel company a foot in the future," the article stated.

In addition, the grants, "which would have created over 100 permanent jobs and 1,200 construction jobs in Middletown alone, are slated for termination under the Trump administration," according to internal documents obtained by CNN.

Middletown is the Ohio town where Vance grew up.

Climate Reporter Ella Nilsen wrote, "Experts fear the cuts could have a chilling effect on America’s manufacturing industry, especially as the global economy reels from Trump’s tariff war. Trump’s tariffs, which were meant to be a boon to manufacturing, could be painful in the short term as they roil markets, stoke recession fears and seize supply chains."

An anonymous source told CNN, "it 'makes zero sense' to cut a major federal grant to one of the largest employers in the vice president’s hometown."

The source continued, “There’s no political logic to it whatsoever. Cliffs is the major vertically integrated steel manufacturer left in this country, and they’ve been quite supportive of Trump’s tariffs. This really reads like a bunch of 24-year-olds at DOGE are working through this.”

In a statement, an Energy Department spokesperson told CNN that “no final decisions have been made” about funding cuts.

Read the CNN article here.
Meet the Elon Musk minions installed to continue work after his departure

RAW STORY

As Elon Musk's days in federal government dwindle, he's leaving behind a cadre of his allies from the private sector to continue his work in the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and elsewhere in the government.


Donald Trump reportedly told administration insiders that Musk will be leaving his position soon, likely in May.

But Bloomberg published a list of loyalists that he'd installed into the agency, and who will remain — with access to some of the government’s most sensitive databases.

Among them is Antonio Gracias, a long-time investor in Musk's companies including Tesla and SpaceX. He is also the founder of Valor Equity Partners. He currently has a role in the Social Security Administration.

The next administrator to NASA is Jared Isaacman. The founder of Shift4 invested more than $25 million in SpaceX. He will need to be confirmed by the Senate.

Joe Gebbia is the co-founder of Airbnb and a member of Tesla's board of directors. In an X post Gebbia claimed, "My first project at DOGE is improving the slow and paper-based retirement process.”

Bloomberg also made note of Michael Grimes' position in the Department of Commerce. He was an advisor to Musk during his purchase of X and "has been tapped to lead a planned sovereign wealth fund."



JOHN BIRCH REDUX
'Deserves real evaluation': Mike Johnson backs RFK Jr. on removing fluoride from water

David Edwards
April 8, 2025 
RAW STORY


C-SPAN/screen grab

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) expressed support for Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy's crusade to remove fluoride from the nation's water supply.

Johnson was asked about Kennedy's effort during a House Republican leadership press conference on Tuesday.

"I don't profess to be an expert in chemistry," the Speaker admitted. "But I'll tell you that I think it deserves, from what I've read and from what I understand, it deserves real evaluation."


"There's a concern that it may be having a negative effect on the health of children, and obviously, we have an obligation at the federal government level to look into that," he added.

"So I'm as interested as you are, I don't have the answers, but I think it's one that the question has been begged and it needs to be addressed."

On Monday, Kennedy said he planned to instruct the Centers for Disease Control to stop recommending fluoridation.





JOHN BIRCH SOCIETY 1958

Acting IRS head quitting over agency's deal to help Trump's immigration authorities

Daniel Hampton
April 8, 2025 
RAW STORY


FILE PHOTO: A sign is seen at the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) building after it was reported the IRS will lay off about 6,700 employees, a restructuring that could strain the tax-collecting agency's resources during the critical tax-filing season, in Washington, D.C., February 20, 2025. REUTERS/Kent Nishimura/File Photo

The acting head of the IRS is reportedly stepping down over a deal her agency struck with the Trump administration, according to reports.

Melanie Krause has been serving as the acting commissioner of the IRS since Feb. 28, following the retirement of Doug O'Donnell.

The New York Times reported Tuesday night, citing three people familiar with the matter, that she is stepping down after the agency agreed to share the tax information of undocumented immigrants with Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials.

The move fundamentally changes how the agency uses its strictly regulated records.

Krause will participate in the deferred resignation program the government offered to agency employees in recent days, according to The Washington Post.

The IRS finalized a data-sharing agreement with the Department of Homeland Security to help ICE find and deport undocumented immigrants, aligning with President Donald Trump's hardline immigration enforcement agenda.

Under the agreement, ICE can request tax information from the IRS for people under deportation orders or criminal investigation, including those who failed to leave the country by the required deadline. Under the deal, the IRS plans to cross-check names and addresses provided by ICE against its taxpayer records to verify accuracy.



JD Vance earns 'swift and scathing' rebuke from China after 'peasant' remark

Erik De La Garza
April 8, 2025 
RAW STORY



JD Vance speaks during a rally in Scottsdale, Arizona, U.S. November 2, 2024. REUTERS/Go Nakamura


While President Donald Trump’s tariffs continue to roil China, Vice President JD Vance created an uproar of his own after making comments about “Chinese peasants” that quickly spread throughout the foreign country – and incited the fury of Beijing officials.


That’s according to CNN, which reported Tuesday that Vance’s comments in a Fox News interview last Thursday have since shot to the top of one of China’s leading social media platforms Weibo.

“And to make it a little bit more crystal clear, we borrow money from Chinese peasants to buy the things those Chinese peasants manufacture,” Vance said in the interview.


CNN’s Will Ripley said the remarks reached Beijing “within hours” and sparked a “swift and scathing” response from the Chinese government.

“It’s both astonishing and lamentable to hear this vice president make such ignorant and disrespectful remarks,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said when questioned about the vice president’s comments at a news conference.

Ripley said on CNN that the outrage targeting Vance was intensified after China’s “tightly controlled internet government censors” allowed the interview to go viral. It drew sarcastic tit for tats from the Chinese, including from some who mocked Vance for his background as author of the 2016 memoir “Hillbilly Elegy.”

The senior international correspondent offered his analysis on why he thinks Chinese officials are allowing the comments to be spread free of government censors.

“I think the reason why they're even amplifying and encouraging people to talk about this is because China knows it's on the verge of a very serious situation with this trade war,” Ripley told viewers on Tuesday. “They are preparing people for a fight, and so this just adds ammo to their argument, their American argument.”

Watch the video below via CNN or at the link here.\




Shannon Fleck, who took on Christian nationalists in Oklahoma, named Faithful America leader

(RNS) — Fleck, a former probation officer turned pastor, was one of the leading voices against efforts to put Trump Bibles in schools.


The Rev. Shannon Fleck. (Photo by Brandon Clemoens)


Bob Smietana and Jack Jenkins
April 7, 2025


(RNS) — A native Oklahoman, the Rev. Shannon Fleck is a big fan of college football, especially the Sooners, and the University of Oklahoma softball team, which won the 2024 Women’s College World Series.

But when her staff wants to talk baseball, she’s in trouble.

“I’ve got nothing,” said Fleck, laughing at herself in an interview from her home near Oklahoma City.

For the past seven years, Fleck, a pastor and former probation officer, has been the executive director of the Oklahoma Faith Network, helping transform what had been a council of congregations into a network whose goal is to “empower the witness of faith communities and individuals throughout Oklahoma on issues of faith, care and social justice.”

That has meant running programs to strengthen families, helping faith communities respond to the opioid crisis and organizing churches to address issues of race, climate change and the rise of Christian nationalism in the Sooner State.

And starting this week, she’ll enter the activism big leagues: Fleck is the new executive director of Faithful America, a national organization that describes itself as “the largest online community of grassroots Christians putting faith into action for social justice.”

Faithful America, originally founded in 2004 as a project of the National Council of Churches, emerged in the 2010s as a sort of religious analogue to secular activist organizations that rely on online petitions such as MoveOn.org. More recently, the group has focused much of its activism on condemning and countering Christian nationalism, which Faithful America describes as an antisemitic and Islamophobic ideology that “poses a threat to the religious freedom of America’s Jews, Muslims, Indigenous peoples, mainline Protestant Christians, and more.”


Faithful America logo. (Courtesy image)


In an interview this week, Fleck said her experience in Oklahoma has been the perfect training ground for her new role. There she helped challenge efforts to start a state-funded religious charter school under debate in the U.S. Supreme Court, as well as a plan by Ryan Walters, Oklahoma’s superintendent for public instruction, to buy Trump-endorsed Bibles for every classroom in the state.

Heather Cronk, co-chair of the Faithful America board, cited Fleck’s experience in Oklahoma in announcing her new role.

“The Faithful America board is thrilled to be working alongside Shannon as she transitions into her new role as Faithful America’s executive director,” she said. “Shannon stood up to False Prophets like State Superintendent Ryan Walters and the architects of Project 2025 long before any of them became a household name. Her bold leadership emphasizing an active faith and collaboration is exactly the kind of pastoral leadership needed at this particular moment in our nation’s history.”

As a pastor, Fleck said she wants to see people of faith and religious leaders bring their faith to the public square, and to use their values to influence public policy. But she doesn’t want politicians telling people what to believe or try to create policy that conforms to their particular religious views.

“We do not need to have religious perspectives being tossed out on our House and Senate floors as justifications for public policy and decisions made about human rights,” she told Religion News Service.


A boat billboard sponsored by a coalition of groups opposed to Christian nationalism travels around downtown Miami in May 2023 during a ReAwaken America Tour stop. (Photo courtesy Faithful America)

She’s particularly concerned about Christian nationalism, an ideology she argues is distinct from people of faith who are politically active.

“Christian nationalism wants to enforce their specific theological and ideological beliefs,” she said. “Standing in the public square and speaking to your ideological beliefs is one thing, but enforcement of theological beliefs is another entirely.”

Fleck, an ordained Disciples of Christ pastor, has long believed faith should motivate believers to be involved in public life and in addressing social ills. A lifelong churchgoer, her first job after college was as a juvenile probation officer, which she describes as transformative.

“That whole job changed everything about how I saw the world,” she said. “Because I had never seen hurt or pain or poverty or abuse in the ways that I saw doing that job, and once I saw it, I couldn’t unsee it.”

Fleck said she knew she was going to have to do something to address what she had seen there but wasn’t sure what that was. At the same time, she was volunteering part time with the youth group at her church, filling in after the youth pastor left. While she was doing that, a pastor she had met asked Fleck if she had ever thought about seminary.

“I laughed hysterically,” she said. “You can’t mean to be asking me about that.”

But Fleck ended up going to Phillips Theological Seminary in Tulsa, and from the day she arrived knew she was in the right place. She would eventually earn a doctorate from Candler School of Theology, then served in local churches before coming to what was then the Oklahoma Conference of Churches in 2017 as a program director. When the group’s executive director resigned nine months later, she applied for the job and has been the group’s leader ever since.

In 2022, the group changed its name to the Oklahoma Faith Network to reflect a broader mission.

“The word ‘church’ is very limiting,” Fleck said. “It paints one picture in people’s minds. And as an organization, we had been working with people of all faiths for a very long time.” The new name, she said, reflected the group’s hope to be a “more proactive, robust movement to be an alternate voice to religious extremism.”

Fleck said Oklahoma has long been a place where faith has been part of the culture. But that has changed, in part because of the rise of conservative Christian politicians and in part because of shifts in the religious landscape. At the same time as small churches have been aging and on the decline, Oklahoma has seen the rise of more politically active megachurches, with what Fleck called a rhetoric of fear, power and control.

“Our churches are dying,” she said. “And we see in their place these larger, corporate-type churches that function in a much different setting than our community congregations that are losing people and struggle to know why — because they are the churches who did not sign on for fear, power and control.”

Fleck believes the dominance of conservative politicians has had consequences, especially for education, where she said the state has dropped to close to the bottom of national rankings. The state also ranks low in quality of life for women.

Turning that around will take time, she said. And not just in the Sooner State but in communities across the country where Christian nationalism has emerged with force. Fleck, though, has seen the power of community advocacy and networking, and it’s this experience she hopes to take into her new national role at Faithful America. She’s hoping the wisdom of thousands of local, faith-rooted activists can help spur national change.

“I know in my heart of hearts that the change that is going to have to happen is going to happen from grassroots community up,” she said. “So Faithful America will always be in the business and on the mission to get the local level mobilized, resourced and galvanized.”
Guns, God — and Blockchain: Christian nationalists build techno-theocracy in Appalachia

Matthew Chapman
April 8, 2025 
RAW STORY


Reading the Bible (Shutterstock)

A group of Christian nationalist venture capitalists are constructing a "techno-libertarian" theocratic community in Tennessee, reported Mother Jones on Tuesday — in perhaps the latest sign of a new breed of right-wing politics establishing a physical presence where before it had mostly been confined to online and talk radio.

The establishment of right-wing Christian nationalist communities is far from a new phenomenon — in 2021, a fringe gun-worshiping church known as the Rod of Iron Ministries purchased a compound in Texas in preparation for a war with the government.

This new project near Gainesboro, Tennessee, is backed by the theocratic venture capital firm New Founding.



And it's unusual.

"The Highland Rim Project is not just another old-fashioned utopian fantasy," wrote Kiera Butler. "Rather, it is deliberately forward-looking, infused with Silicon Valley techno-libertarian values. The communities will be designed around 'digital self-governance' including cryptocurrency and a culture 'in which our patrimonial civic rights, chiefly those of property, free political speech and civilian armament, can be maintained and perpetuated.'"


Among those involved in the project are Andrew Isker, a podcasting pastor from Minnesota who is moving his family of six because, in his own words, Democratic Gov. Tim Walz is putting his family at risk: “[Schools] could be putting [my son] in a dress and calling him a girl name, and I would have no idea. And then when I find out and I oppose it, boom. [Child Protective Services] comes, takes him out of our custody, and he’s gone forever.”

There is no evidence that this has happened or will likely happen.

According to the report, Isker and his compatriots see their project as the creation of a new kind of state altogether.





"There’s a name for the rough concept that Isker describes: the 'Network State,' an ascendant and buzzy tech movement where internet groups are beginning to explore what it might be like to start their own new countries," said the report. "At first, these new countries would appear online, and eventually in actual physical locations. Simply put, the Highland Rim Project is the Christian nationalist take on that idea. As New Founding CEO Nate Fischer put it last year on X, 'Nation states are not the principal form of government today. I see no reason Christian nations or peoples couldn’t organize network states.'"

President Donald Trump 
, for his part, hasn't publicly endorsed these projects but has put lots of effort into boosting crypto technology and reversing recent federal attempts to regulate it following the industry's support for him in the 2024 election; he is reportedly now telling prosecutors to back off investigating crypto scams.



‘Brazen’: Federal judge scorches White House over Associated Press ban



Erik De La Garza
April 8, 2025 
RAW STORY


A federal judge on Tuesday delivered a victory to The Associated Press’ challenge over the Trump White House’s expulsion of the news outlet from the Oval Office and Air Force One.

The ruling came two months after President Donald Trump's administration barred AP journalists from accessing certain White House spaces and events following its refusal to refer to the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America.

“Indeed, the Government has been brazen about this,” U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden wrote Tuesday in a statement critical of the White House’s selective treatment of the AP. “Several high-ranking officials have repeatedly said that they are restricting the AP’s access precisely because of the organization’s viewpoint.”

McFadden added that the government’s failure to offer any other “plausible explanation for its treatment of the AP” means the action is likely unconstitutional.

“The Constitution forbids viewpoint discrimination, even in a nonpublic forum like the Oval Office,” he wrote in his 41-page ruling.

CNN media analyst Brian Stelter said moments after the ruling that the decision doesn’t mean AP reporters will be allowed inside the White House press briefing room on Wednesday.

“He delayed his order for one week,” Stelter said. “Expect an appeal from the White House as this case moves on.”

But, Stelter made clear: “For now, at least today, the AP is winning in court.”

Immigrant Worker Exploitation in America in Four Charts



 April 8, 2025
Facebook

Sarah Anderson directs the Global Economy Project and co-edits Inequality.org at the Institute for Policy Studies. Reyanna James is an Inequality Research and Editorial Associate at the Institute for Policy Studies.