Thursday, April 10, 2025

DESANTISLAND



'Beloved' Florida teacher loses job for calling trans student by preferred name: reports


Brad Reed
April 10, 2025
RAW STORY


Transgender Flag (Shutterstock)

A teacher in Florida is being dismissed for referring to a transgender student by their preferred name, according to reporting.

The Washington Post reports that Brevard County teacher Melissa Calhoun has been dismissed for allegedly violating a state law that prohibits teachers from referring to students by anything but the name given by their parents without getting their parents' permission.

"One of the student’s parents complained to the school district, which investigated the matter," writes that Post. "The teacher admitted to knowingly using an alternative name without permission."

Calhoun was informed by the school that her contract would not be renewed, although she will be allowed to continue teaching for the rest of the school year.

What's more, the state of Florida will be reviewing Calhoun's teaching certificate, which opens the possibility that her career teaching in the state could be over.

Amy Roub, a parent in Brevard County and volunteer with Florida’s chapter of Defense of Democracy, has been vowing to fight Calhoun's termination and she tells the Post that many parents have grown fed up with decisions being made by local school board officials.

Roub also said that two of her own children had taken classes with Calhoun and described her as "a beloved teacher, a teacher that changed her students’ lives."
'An enormous scam:' Senator accuses Trump of massive 'insider trading scandal'

Travis Gettys
April 10, 2025
ALTERNET

Chris Murphy/X

Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) flagged a social media post by president Donald Trump as possible evidence of insider trading.

The president urged investors to buy as the stock market dipped Wednesday morning, saying "this is a great time to buy" on Truth Social at 9:37 a.m., but less than four hours later Trump announced a 90-day pause on nearly all of his tariffs, sending stocks soaring.

"So I have questions about the tariff announcements today," Murphy said in a video posted to X. "Who benefitted, and who made money? This should matter to you, too, because this could be an enormous scam. What we know is at about 9:30 [Wednesday], Trump posts on social media that people should buy, it's a good time to buy, and then three hours later, guess what? He announces that there's going to be a 90-day suspension of many of the tariffs."

The S&P 500 showed the stock market gained back about $4 trillion, or 70 percent, of the value it had lost over the previous four trading days after Trump announced the suspension.

"Predictably, the market, which had been crashing, shoots up, and anyone who made investments early today likely made a lot of money, and so the question is, who close to Trump knew that he was going to suspend the tariffs?" Murphy said. "Which of his Mar-a-Lago friends or his billionaire advisers were able to capitalize on that inside information? Why did Trump send out that post to his supporters earlier in the day? The bottom line is that the chaotic nature of this tariff policy, with Trump's position changing every single hour, gives ample opportunity for any individual who has early access to information about the White House's change in position to make boatloads of money, either by investing at the right time or pulling their money out of the market at the right time."

"This entire White House is one giant grift," the senator added. "Donald Trump and his friends are in power in order to use their access to government to make money. It stinks, and we should get to the bottom of it."


'Something to encourage': EPA chief says insider trading 'not something to investigate'

David Edwards
April 10, 2025 
RAW STORY


Fox Business/screen grab

Environmental Protection Agency administrator Lee Zeldin insisted that allegations of insider trading were "not something to investigate" in response to allegations from Democrats.

After President Donald Trump paused many of his tariffs for 90 days, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) called for members of the administration to be scrutinized.

"I'm writing to the White House to demand who knew in advance that the president was going to once again flip-flop on tariffs and are people cashing in?" Schiff said. "There is just all too much opportunity for people in the White House and the administration to be inside of trading."


On Thursday, Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo told Zeldin that Trump had urged his Truth Social followers to buy stocks about five hours before freezing the tariffs.

"Your reaction to Adam Schiff coming up with this new claim now?" she asked the EPA chief.

"President Trump has a very good team around him working on trade policy, and there are a lot of countries that are working out to the U.S. We're reaching out to the White House, reaching out to President Trump wanting to talk and enter good deals," Zeldin replied.

"President Trump should be working with this team," he added. "That's not something to investigate, something to encourage."

Watch the video below from Fox Business or click the link.

Trump move was 'just one more con on working people': Watchdog

Jessica Corbett,
 Common Dreams
April 10, 2025 




"Trump's 'will he, won't he' tariff chaos is just one more con on working people."

That's what Melinda St. Louis, Global Trade Watch director at the watchdog group Public Citizen, said in a Wednesday statement after U.S. President Donald Trump announced a 90-pause for what he has called "reciprocal" tariffs, excluding China.

"He claimed that the so-called 'reciprocal tariffs' would protect American jobs, but these reckless tariffs were never designed to do that," she said of Trump. "He just wants to wield threats as a schoolyard bully while giving his billionaire buddies sweetheart deals."

St. Louis warned that "when he says he's going to 'negotiate,' he means more harmful free trade agreements that double down on the failed trade model he claims to oppose and that force countries to gut public interest protections for the benefit of Big Tech, Big Pharma, and other corporate giants."

"Who's left out of his megalomaniacal game? The workers he claimed to support."

"And he wants U.S. companies to beg for exemptions from his tariffs, as they did in his first term. This is all part of Trump's authoritarianism and corruption, forcing countries and businesses to bend the knee just as he is doing with law firms and universities," she stressed. "Who's left out of his megalomaniacal game? The workers he claimed to support. All he has shown is that he'll cave to Wall Street's hand-wringing and prioritize his own power over real people's plight."

St. Louis wasn't alone in continuing to blast Trump's tactics around tariffs, which have led some economists to conclude that the president does not actually even understand how international trade works.

"It took a month to 'negotiate a deal,' but it only took one day for Trump to hit the brakes on his nonsensical new tax on autos from Canada and Mexico," Senate Finance Committee Ranking Member Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) said in a Wednesday statement. "This endless flip-flopping and bluster is just further proof that Donald Trump has no economic strategy beyond slapping tariffs on our trading partners."

"Instead of coming up with a real plan to get American workers a fair shake, he's making the United States into an international joke and driving up prices for U.S. consumers," he added. "If Republicans in Congress allow him to keep this up, Trump will keep yo-yoing on tariffs and using threats to pressure U.S. companies to stay in line instead of fighting back against this senseless economic war on American families."

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), a longtime critic of "disastrous unfettered free trade deals," said in a lengthy statement that "targeted tariffs can be a powerful tool to stop corporations from outsourcing American jobs... But Trump's chaotic across-the-board tariffs are not the way to do it."

"What Trump is doing is unconstitutional. Trump has claimed supposed 'emergency' powers to bypass Congress and impose unilateral tariffs on hundreds of countries... This is another step toward authoritarianism," the senator asserted. "And let's be clear about why Trump is doing all this: to give massive tax breaks to billionaires."

"These tariffs will cost working families thousands of dollars a year, and Trump plans to use that revenue to help pay for a huge tax break for the richest people in America. That is what Trump and Republicans in Congress are working on right now: If they have their way on the tariffs and their huge tax bill, most Americans will see their taxes go up, while those on top will get a huge tax break," he added. "Enough is enough. We need a coherent trade policy that puts working people first."


Despite warnings that the costs of his planned tariffs would be passed on to consumers, Trump unveiled the duties last week, causing stocks to plummet and fueling recession warnings and speculation that he's tanking the economy on purpose.

Trump's tariffs took effect at midnight Wednesday. By the early afternoon, the president declared a partial pause via his Truth Social platform. He said that more than 75 countries have reached out "to negotiate a solution."

In clarifying comments to reporters on Wednesday, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that the 10% baseline tariffs will remain in effect, but higher duties targeting various nations are suspended. He also reiterated that the administration's message is, "Do not retaliate, and you will be rewarded."

The exception to the pause is China, which initially hit back by announcing 34% import duties on American goods last Friday. Faced with Trump's 104% rate on Wednesday, China hiked that to 84% and imposed restrictions on 18 U.S. companies.

Trump wrote on social media Wednesday that "based on the lack of respect that China has shown to the World's Markets, I am hereby raising the Tariff charged to China by the United States of America to 125%, effective immediately."

The Chinese government issued a travel advisory on Wednesday, saying in a statement, "Recently, due to the deterioration of China-U.S. economic and trade relations and the domestic security situation in the United States, the Ministry of Culture and Tourism reminds Chinese tourists to fully assess the risks of traveling to the United States and be cautious."

The Hill reported that during a Wednesday press briefing, Lin Jian, China's Foreign Affairs spokesperson, said that "the U.S. is seeking hegemony in the name of reciprocity, sacrificing the legitimate interests of all countries to serve its own selfish interests, and prioritizing the U.S. over international rules. This is typical unilateralism, protectionism, and economic bullying."

"The abuse of tariffs by the United States is tantamount to depriving countries, especially those in the Global South, of their right to development," he added.

Before Trump announced the pause, the European Union was planning to respond to Trump's steel tariffs with "levies of up to 25% on a sweeping list of U.S. products," The Washington Post reported. "There was no immediate comment from the European Union, and it was unclear how Trump's latest announcement might affect the E.U. countermeasures approved Wednesday."



Although stocks soared after Trump's pause announcement, many experts remain skeptical and demanded transparency around the administration's global trade talks.

"Absent transparency about what is being demanded, we could end up with the worst of all outcomes—a bunch of bad special interest deals, all of the economic damage caused by tariff uncertainty and no trade rebalancing, U.S. manufacturing capacity, or goods jobs," said Lori Wallach, director of the Rethink Trade program at the American Economic Liberties Project, in a Wednesday statement.

"The Trump administration could be striking deals with dozens of countries, but absent transparency, the public will not know whether their interests or Trump's billionaire Cabinet and friends on Wall Street or his family are being served," she pointed out. "Deals must focus on addressing the mercantilist practices that some countries employ, which fuel the extreme global trade imbalances that have deindustrialized the United States and today deny the benefits of trade to numerous countries worldwide."

Wallach emphasized that "the Trump administration must not use these talks to bully countries into gutting their online privacy and Big Tech anti-monopoly policies or undermining their food safety, health, or environmental laws."

"The chaos of these whipsaw tariffs flip-flops is already causing economic chaos and losses, undermining confidence in America and our markets," she added. "Cutting deals in secret only adds to that uncertainty and risks corruption, which won't just hurt Trump's stated goal of investment in U.S. manufacturing but the economy as a whole."

While experts like Wallach call for transparency in the tariff process, many congressional Republicans are working to further empower Trump. Nearly all GOP members of the U.S House of Representatives voted Wednesday for a rule that blocks lawmakers' ability to force a vote on repealing the president's import duties for 90 days.


'I'm forcing you to talk about it!' Bernie Sanders yells at Anderson Coop​er and slams CNN

Daniel Hampton
April 9, 2025 
RAW STORY


(Screenrab via CNN)

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders took a shot at CNN during a Wednesday night televised town hall on the same network, blasting news networks for failing to cover what he called "critical issues" and leading to people "losing faith in the American system."

During the hour-long town hall, Sanders was asked by a civil rights attorney about why people are turning away from the Democratic party.

The senator replied that the "failure of the Democratic Party, in my view, is that they have not been aggressive in standing up to powerful corporate interests in laying out and implementing an agenda that speaks to the needs of the working class."

The one-time presidential hopeful then posed a question to the audience.

ALSO READ: 'Promoted our tormenter': MAGA fans vent disgust at Trump official's latest move

"Raise your hand if you think the American health care system is working," he said. Several hands raised.


"Raise your hand if you think the American health care system is not working," the senator said, and more hands raised.

"All right, let me rephrase the question — raise your hand if you think the American health care system is working well," he said.

"Anderson, how many people are raising hands?" he asked of moderator Anderson Cooper.

"None," Cooper replied.

"Now, raise your hand if you think the American health care system is broken," the senator said.

"The majority. Everyone," Cooper began to say, as Sanders interjected. "Not a majority. Virtually everyone in the room," he added, to laughter.

Sanders said the United States is the only wealthy nation in the world that doesn't guarantee health care to all people as a human right.

And the senator slammed journalists for failing to cover that simple fact.

"You’re not going to hear much about that on corporate television. You're not going to hear much about that in the United States Congress," he railed.

As Cooper tried to get more audience questions in, Sanders refused to move on.

"I know you do, but I want to talk about —" said Sanders, as Cooper quipped, "I know you do!"

Sanders then laid into what he called "corporate media" as well as his colleagues.

"Sometimes these issues about health care, about income and wealth inequality are not get talked about in the corporate media. And it’s time we did talk about them. That’s why — the question a moment ago — 'Why are people losing faith in the American system?' We don’t talk about it on CNN. We don’t talk about it in Congress."

Sanders raged that a handful of billionaires exert "enormous influence" over America's system.

"And that has got to change," he said.

Sanders then took a shot at CNN.

"We need CNN to talk about these issues. We need members of Congress to talk about these issues," he railed.

"We're literally talking about it right now," Anderson retorted with a smile, defending his network.

"Yeah — but I’m forcing you to talk about it, Anderson!" Sanders shouted, pointing a finger at the CNN host.


"We invited you!" Cooper insisted.

Watch the exchange below or at this link.

Japan’s World Expo touts unity, and algae, in turbulent times

By AFP
April 10, 2025


Visitors watch a water and light display during a media preview day for the 2025 Osaka Expo in Osaka on April 9, 2025 - Copyright AFP Richard A. Brooks


Katie Forster

World Expo opens on Sunday with host Japan aiming to bring humanity together, despite global turmoil and tepid public enthusiasm for the six-month event showcasing innovation as well as Hello Kitty in algae form.

A Mars meteorite the size of a sourdough loaf and a beating heart grown from stem cells are among the myriad futuristic attractions crammed into a vast waterfront site in Osaka hosting more than 160 countries, regions and organisations.

Most pavilions — each more outlandishly designed than the last — are encircled by the world’s largest wooden architectural structure, a towering latticed “Grand Ring” meant as a symbol of unity.

But with conflicts raging and US tariffs threatening economic chaos, that goal may be optimistic.

“Not for sale” states a yellow and blue sign over Ukraine’s booth — echoing defiant comments from leader Volodymyr Zelensky about the war with Russia, which chose not to mount a display at Expo 2025.

Yahel Vilan, head of Israel’s equally compact pavilion, which features a stone from Jerusalem’s ancient Western Wall, told AFP that “we came with a message of peace”.

Israel is not at Expo “to deal with politics”, he said. There is also a Palestinian pavilion, but it was not open at a Wednesday press preview.

At the imposing US exhibit, absent was any mention of President Donald Trump’s hefty levies on trade partners, most of which he has now paused.

Instead, the pavilion focuses on the world’s largest economy’s diverse landscapes, AI tech and space — including a simulated rocket launch where dry-ice blasters appear to ignite above visitors’ heads.

– Human washing machine –

After enjoying the view and sea breeze atop the Grand Ring’s “skywalk”, visitors can stop by the world’s longest sushi conveyor belt or meet many-eyed Expo 2025 mascot Myaku-Myaku.

Among the more bizarre displays are 32 sculptures of Hello Kitty dressed as different types of algae — to symbolise the slimy plant’s many uses — and a “human washing machine” that shows imagery based on the bather’s heart rate.

Elsewhere are demonstrations of drone-like flying vehicles, and the tiny artificial heart made from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS) shown in public for the first time.

“It has an actual pulse,” Byron Russel of Pasona Group, which runs the exhibit, told AFP.

Human stem cells were modified to become like “cardiac muscle cells” and “grown into the shape of the heart”, he explained.

It will not beat continuously for six months but will be replaced every week or so.

Themes of sustainability run through the Expo, including at the bauble-like Swiss pavilion, which aims to have the smallest ecological footprint.

But Expos have been criticised for their temporary nature, and after October Osaka’s man-made island will be cleared to make way for a casino resort.

According to Japanese media, only 12.5 percent of the Grand Ring will be reused.

– Slow ticket sales –

Expo is also known as a World’s Fair, and the phenomenon, which brought the Eiffel Tower to Paris, began with London’s 1851 Crystal Palace exhibition and is held every five years.

The 2020 edition in Dubai was postponed by the Covid-19 pandemic, so Osaka Expo organisers say it will “restore much-needed connections” and “provide the opportunity to create a better tomorrow”.

Osaka last hosed the Expo in 1970 when Japan was booming and its technology the envy of the world. It attracted 64 million people, a record until Shanghai in 2010.

But 55 years on Japan is less of a trendsetter and opinion polls show low levels of enthusiasm for the Expo among the public.

So far 8.7 million advance tickets have been shifted, below the pre-sales target of 14 million.

This time around “inflation is causing a lot of anxiety, especially among younger generations”, Yani Karavasilev of the APIR think-tank told AFP.

Japan is also experiencing a record tourism boom, meaning accommodation in Osaka — near hotspot Kyoto, and home to the Universal Studios Japan theme park — is often fully booked with prices sky-high.

A lack of viral online posts about the Expo is another reason for low excitement levels, according to Karavasilev.

“I think as long as sharing on social media picks up, ticket sales will pick up as well,” he said.
Starmer unveils support for tariff-hit auto sector


By AFP
April 7, 2025


Starmer visited a Jaguar Land Rover car factory in Birmingham, central England, in a show of industry support
 - Copyright GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File MARK WILSON



Peter HUTCHISON

UK leader Keir Starmer vowed Monday to “shelter British business from the storm” of global economic disruption as he loosened electric vehicle targets for carmakers impacted by US President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

The world’s auto sector has been hit hard by Washington’s sweeping new levies, which impose a 25 percent tariff on vehicles imported into the United States.

Starmer unveiled plans to give manufacturers more flexibility in transitioning to electric vehicles in a bid to boost the sector as it battles the higher costs of the levies.

He told staff and journalists at a car factory in England’s West Midlands region that the measures were a “downpayment” and not “the extent of the turbocharging” to help businesses deal with tariffs.

“In the coming days and weeks, we’re going to use industrial policy to shelter British business from the storm,” the prime minister added.

He called the levies “a huge challenge” for the future, warning that the “global economic consequences could be profound”.

In an early sign of the fallout, UK luxury car manufacturer Jaguar Land Rover announced over the weekend that it would “pause” shipments to the US in April as it addressed “the new trading terms”.

Starmer said on Sunday that he was prepared to directly intervene to support affected sectors, before later unveiling his plans to help the auto industry.

These included confirmation that all sales of new petrol and diesel cars will be outlawed by 2030, with hybrids to be sold until 2035 and small manufacturers exempt.

The government has already announced £2.3 billion ($3.0 billion) to boost the production of electric vehicles, and on Sunday said that it would ease rules on how manufacturers can achieve the 2030 target.

Under the new plans, carmakers can fall below the annual target for producing electric vehicles manufactured until 2026, if they make up for that shortfall before 2030.

– ‘Weakens incentives’ –

The package of measures will exempt small and micro-volume manufacturers, including supercar brands such as McLaren and Aston Martin, from the targets.

Vans with an internal combustion engine will be allowed to be sold until 2035.

Support for the UK car industry, which employs 152,000 people and adds £19 billion annually to the economy, “will be kept under review as the impact of new tariffs becomes clear”, the government said.

“These are challenging times, but we have chosen to come here because we are going to back you to the hilt,” Starmer added during Monday’s visit.

Vehicle manufacturers welcome the announcement but warned that the government would likely have to do more.

Mike Hawes, chief executive of the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, said the government had “rightly listened to industry” and “recognised the intense pressure manufacturers are under”.

“Given the potentially severe headwinds facing manufacturers following the introduction of US tariffs, greater action will almost certainly be needed to safeguard our industry’s competitiveness,” he added.

But Doug Parr of environmental group Greenpeace said Starmer’s announcement “weakens the incentives driving the shift” and “risks consolidating Chinese leadership in the sector”.

The government is believed to have been considering relaxing the electric vehicle mandate for a while but the announcement was brought forward because of Trump’s tariffs.

It is the latest example of his actions influencing British policy after Starmer announced in February plans to increase defence spending.
200 firefighters battle major Paris inferno


By AFP
April 7, 2025


A 'major fire' in northern Paris sent smoke billowing across part of the French capital - Copyright GETTY IMAGES/AFP WIN MCNAMEE

A major fire broke out in Paris on Monday close to a new court complex designed by Renzo Piano, sending smoke across the city and prompting authorities to urge the public to stay away from the zone.

A thick black cloud could be seen across the French capital as firefighters battled the blaze that ripped through one of the city’s biggest recycling plants.

Around 60 fire trucks and 200 firefighters were at the scene, the fire brigade said, adding that there were no victims.

Flames lit up the night sky and authorities closed part of the main ring road around Paris to allow access to the burning building for fire-fighting vehicles.

“The building is completely gutted and destroyed,” Geoffrey Boulard, mayor for the affected 17th arrondissement, told BFM television, but all staff inside had been evacuated.

“Fire fighters arrived very quickly, but the fire happened underground and then spread through the building,” Boulard said.Geoffrey Boulard, mayor for the affected 17th arrondissement, told BFM television

The fire at the Syctom recycling plant was right next to Paris’s main court complex, whose centrepiece is a glass skyscraper designed by Italian architect Piano and inaugurated in 2018.

The plant, which started operations in 2019, was designed to handle household waste for nearly a million Paris residents, according to city authorities.

“The most important thing tonight is that a disaster on this scale did not have any human damage,” the site’s president Corentin Duprey told BFM.

Geoffrey Boulard, mayor for the affected 17th arrondissement, told BFM televisionHe said 31 employees were present when the blaze started in a recycling zone in a basement “where there was the most combustible material”.
German police earn their stripes with zebra-loaded van stop


By AFP
April 7, 2025


Two zebras were among the animals that German police discovered in the van - Copyright GETTY IMAGES/AFP WIN MCNAMEE

German police officers found themselves face-to-face with two zebras, six monkeys and several other exotic animals after stopping a van on the Dutch border, the force said on Monday.

Also on board were an antelope, a swan, a buzzard and a serval — a small wildcat native to Africa — federal police said in a statement.

Police carried out the check on the Polish-registered vehicle as it tried to enter on Friday via Bunde in northwestern Germany on the Dutch border.

The two Polish occupants, aged 23 and 31, could not provide any proof of where the animals came from nor the required documentation.

Police also said the animals were not safely loaded in the van, adding that they were investigating suspected violations of animal protection and wildlife conservation rules.

The van was stopped from entering Germany while the animals were handed over to authorities in the Netherlands, where they are being cared for at a shelter, police said.


US giant to buy stake in cash-short Australian casino group


By AFP
April 7, 2025


US-based casino giant Bally's Corporation has agreed to inject Aus$300 million in troubled Australian operator Star Entertainment - Copyright AFP DAVID GRAY

Troubled Australian casino operator Star Entertainment says it has been thrown an 11th hour multi-million dollar lifeline by US-based casino giant Bally’s Corporation.

Star’s business — including casinos, bars, restaurants and hotels at resorts in Sydney, Brisbane and the Gold Coast — has been hovering close to entering administration for months.

Bally’s has agreed to inject Aus$300 million (US$187 million) for a 56.7-percent stake in Star, the two firms said in separate statements late Monday.

The US group is to make an initial payment of Aus$100 million on Wednesday, with the rest due after the approval of shareholders and regulators.

“This transaction provides Bally’s the opportunity to infuse The Star with what it needs to regain its position as Australia’s preeminent gaming destination,” Bally’s chairman Soo Kim said.

Star said it was also talking to its biggest shareholder, Investment Holding, about joining the deal with an Aus$100 million injection.

If that deal went ahead, Bally’s participation would drop to Aus$200 million.

Shares in Star, which employs more than 8,000 people, have been suspended from trading since March 3 after it failed to post half-year financial results citing liquidity woes.

The casino said in a statement late Monday it intended to “unanimously recommend” the deal to shareholders in the absence of a better offer.

Bally’s manages 19 casinos across the United States, a golf course in New York and a horse racing track in Colorado.

Star Entertainment last traded at Aus$0.11 a share with a market capitalisation of Aus$316 million — a far cry from its Aus$5 billion-plus value of seven years ago.

Its finances were squeezed by the cost of developing its Brisbane resort, the threat of an anti-money laundering fine, and stricter regulation in the industry, according to the Australian Financial Review.

The company has previously been accused of not adequately policing criminal infiltration and doing little to vet the sources of money coming into the business.


‘Major brain drain’: Researchers eye exit from Trump’s America


By AFP
April 7, 2025


Many researchers are worried about the future of academic freedom in the United States - Copyright AFP/File Richard A. Brooks

Charlotte CAUSIT

In the halls of US universities and research labs, one question has become increasingly common as President Donald Trump tightens his grip on the field: whether to move abroad.

“Everybody is talking about it,” JP Flores, a doctoral student in genetics at the University of North Carolina, told AFP.

The discussion was thrust into the spotlight after Yale philosophy professor Jason Stanley, a specialist in fascism, announced he was taking a new post in Canada over the Trump administration’s “authoritarian” bent.

“I made the decision when Columbia folded,” he told CBS News. “I made it in a split second.”

Columbia University, which the Trump administration has threatened with major funding cuts, said it agreed to take steps to rein in pro-Palestinian protests, among other actions.

“It is not the time to cower and fear,” said Stanley, who added there was “absolutely no doubt that the United States is an authoritarian country.”

With similar threats lodged by Trump against other universities, many researchers are worried about the future of academic freedom in the United States.

Coupled with the administration’s broad cuts to federal funding, some fear the country’s research field, once viewed as the envy of the world, may be losing its luster.

More than 75 percent of scientists are now considering departing the country over Trump’s policies, according to a survey of over 1,600 people published in late March by the journal Nature.

“The trend was particularly pronounced among early-career researchers,” the journal said.



– ‘Surreal’ –



“People are just so scared,” Daniella Fodera, a Columbia PhD student whose research grant was cancelled, told AFP.

Amid the uncertainty, several academic institutions in recent weeks have announced a hiring freeze and a reduction in the number of graduate student positions.

“That’s definitely messing up the academic pipeline,” said Fodera, a biomechanics student.

Karen Sfanos, head of a research lab at Johns Hopkins University, said: “It’s kind of a surreal time for scientists because we just don’t know what’s going to happen with funding.”

“There’s not a lot of clarity, and things are changing day by day,” she said, noting it is hitting the “youngest generation” relatively hard.

Fodera, who studies uterine fibroids — benign tumors affecting many women — said she has begun to “actively look at positions in Europe and abroad for continuing my post-doctoral training.”



– ‘Generational loss’ –



With mounting concerns among US researchers, several European and Canadian universities have launched initiatives to attract some of the talent, though they may not need to try too hard.

“I know researchers already that have dual citizenship, or who have family in Canada, in France, in Germany, are saying, ‘I think I’m going to go live in Germany for the next, you know, five years and do research there,'” said Gwen Nichols.

The physician, a senior leader at a blood cancer research group, warned the possible exodus could make the United States “lose our dominance as the biopharmaceutical innovation leader of the world.”

“We’ll see the problem 10 years from now, when we don’t have the innovation we need,” she added.

Genetics researcher Flores agreed, saying “it has become quite clear that there’s gonna be a major brain drain here in American research.”

One young climate researcher, who requested to remain anonymous, said she had started the process of attaining EU citizenship and that colleagues in Europe “have all been extremely sympathetic to the situation.”

But she noted that those with limited resources, like many recent graduates, would be the least likely to be taken on by European institutions and may decide to drop out of science altogether.

“This is a generational loss for science across all disciplines,” she warned.