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'We are not making this up': MSNBC panel stunned by 'ignorant' Trump statement

Looking back on Donald Trump's first response to the tragic plane crash earlier in the week that claimed the lives of 67 people, including three members of the U.S. Army who were on the Black Hawk chopper that hit the airplane, three MSNBC co-hosts were stunned out how callous the newly- re-elected president was on national TV.

So stunned, in fact they ran a press conference clip for their audience to prove they were not "making it up."

With Trump immediately pivoting to blaming the crash on DEI -- the conservative catch-all term for anything they object to –– Trump told reporters he was certain it was related to diversity policies because, as he claimed: "I have common sense."

ALSO READ: Top GOPer's ‘most immediate’ priority for new committee includes probing a MAGA conspiracy

That led "The Weekend" co-host Michael Steele to repeat, "'It's common sense.' The most ignorant statement from a president in a very horrific moment for the nation. It's been 20 years since we've had an airline tragedy like this."

"No survivors, 60 plus families in mourning, a nation shocked and in mourning and this man wants to blame prior administrations, DEI policies and he wants to set a blame narrative in place as the nation is trying to grip itself around the idea of what just happened," he added. 'We see now the images; people are watching the planes collide, the explosion. You know what's happening there and he has that to offer us –– this insensitive, cold response to an American moment. Folks, we've seen this so many, so many times before and, it's for me, I'm really trying to be good with my language here because I can't –– their families are in pain right now and out of respect for them. I'm not going to share exactly what I think about the man sitting in the White House at this moment,"

As he was calling Trump "This individual who clearly has no sensitivity or heart regarding the tragedy in front of the country," co-host Symone Sanders Townsend interjected, "I want people to ensure that they know that we are not making this up, let's just play what Donald Trump said," before the show's producers ran the clip.

You can watch below or at the link.

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Rubio to make debut in Panama as Trump threatens to take canal

Marco Rubio heads Saturday to Panama on his debut trip abroad as US secretary of state as he looks for how to follow up on President Donald Trump's extraordinary threat to seize the Panama Canal.

Rubio's travel comes the same day that Trump's promised tariffs on the three largest US trading partners -- Canada, Mexico and China -- are set to come into effect, another step showing a far more aggressive US foreign policy.

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Pre-Grammys gala honoring the Grateful Dead focuses on fire relief

Music world A-listers took the stage Friday to honor the Grateful Dead at an annual pre-Grammys benefit gala, which this year raised millions for musicians impacted by the recent wildfires that devastated Los Angeles.

The 34th annual MusiCares Person of the Year gala -- which benefits the charitable wing of the Recording Academy, behind the Grammys -- honored the psychedelic jam band as it raised more than $5 million in one evening.

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'Not going to do a damn thing': MSNBC host blisters lawmakers letting Trump gut the FBI

Reacting to a firing of key FBI officials late Friday by one of Donald Trump appointees, combined with a threat to purge every FBI employee who had anything with investigating the Jan. 6th insurrection that Trump inspired, MSNBC's Michael Steele ripped into lawmakers who are standing by doing nothing.

On Friday, acting deputy attorney general Emil Bove began the purge and demanded the FBI put together a list of all agents and F.B.I. staff “assigned at any time to investigations and/or prosecutions” tied to the Capitol riot.

Saturday morning, Steele, from his perch as co-host of "The Weekend" launched into scathing attack on both parties, singling out so-called "law and order Republicans."

ALSO READ: 'Driven to self-loathing': Inside the extremist website believed to 'groom' teen attackers

"You've got [Democratic House Minority Leader] Hakeem Jeffries in a statement saying Republicans are 'hollowing out the world's premier law enforcement agency and leaving everyday Americans more vulnerable to violent criminals and terrorists. This complete disregard for national security in pursuit of vengeance should shock every American.'" Steele quoted the lawmaker. "Okay, color me shocked! Alright, everybody in this town is shocked but the crap still happens and no one seems to be doing anything about it!"

"No one seems to be outraged and put out," he exclaimed. "People are losing their jobs, people are on the verge of retirement, two years, one year, six months from retirement. Lose out on that opportunity."

"You've got folks who are now in situations where Monday comes, 'What am I doing? I'm just sitting around waiting to be fired.' What are what are the responses from Democrats and Republicans on the Hill? Or is this one of those oh, you know, 'Color me tears, color me shocked –– we're so, so upset by all of this, but we're not going to do a damn thing about it.'"

Watch below or at the link.

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'A minefield of potential problems': Questions raised over Trump appointees' finances

Donald Trump's decision to populate his cabinet with a bevy of millionaires and billionaires is creating what the New York Times labeled a "minefield" of potential conflicts of interest that are already raising the eyebrows of watchdogs.

Before every one of the re-elected president's nominees have been confirmed, agreements are being hammered out detailing limitations on outside business dealings that, due to an "uncharacteristically" large number of entanglements, could be hard to police.

According to the Times' Eric Lipton, Trump's people are signing letters making guarantees to federal ethics officials that put some restraints on their dealings outside of their jobs.

ALSO READ: 'Driven to self-loathing': Inside the extremist website believed to 'groom' teen attackers

The report notes, "Each signed letter is supposed to detail what decisions these officials can be involved in, and which they must stay away from, to avoid violating federal conflict of interest rules," before adding, "That there are so many redlines being identified — and other situations where nominees are being given clearance to remain involved in matters despite outstanding family or past financial ties — is perhaps not surprising. Mr. Trump’s cabinet nominees have combined assets worth at least $1.5 billion, according to counts by The New York Times."

Pointing out that there are currently 467 separate conflicts that require recusal, that has raised concerns among ethics watchdogs that "this is a minefield of potential problems, and reason to be apprehensive, given that during Mr. Trump’s first term, several of his cabinet members failed to honor ethics promises they made to avoid actions that benefited their families or financial interests."

Case in point, attorney general nominee Pam Bondi "will be free to handle matters involving some of her former lobbying clients," with the Times reporting, "that for one year after her confirmation as U.S. attorney general she will refrain from doing business on 'any particular matter' that involve parties represented by Ballard Partners, her former firm. She also agreed not to do business with any clients she personally represented for one year from when she last dealt with them."

According to Kedric Payne, general counsel at Campaign Legal Center, "The array of potential conflicts is huge. And there is no certainty there will be enforcement. Ethics is not an issue you need to focus on. That is the message so far from the top.”

You can read more here.

'Probably a scam': Federal employees reject Trump buyout, say they’re 'not going anywhere'

Earlier this week, President Donald Trump's administration sent an email to federal workers asking them to quit in exchange for several months' pay. But many federal employees are wary of the offer.

That's according to a recent CNN article, which reported that workers throughout several federal agencies are hesitant to take the president at his word. After Trump's Office of Personnel Management (OPM) offered millions of federal employees pay through September if they voluntarily left their positions, the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) warned that the Trump administration is legally unable to follow through on its promise given that Congress has only appropriated enough funding to keep federal agencies funded through mid-March.

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The Black librarian who rewrote the rules of power, gender — and passing as white

“Just Because I am a Librarian doesn’t mean I have to dress like one.”

With this breezy pronouncement, Belle da Costa Greene handily differentiated herself from most librarians.

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'I'm not jumping on you': Conservative pollster cornered on CNN during tense discussion

A conservative pollster found himself under fire during a CNN panel discussion over President Donald Trump’s claim that the deadly midair collision in Washington D.C. on Wednesday was the result of overzealous diversity programs.

The moment came Friday on CNN’s “NewsNight” as the nation grappled with a second air tragedy in the same number of days and GOP pollster and focus grouper Frank Luntz appeared to pivot when asked by host Abby Phillip his opinion on Trump’s views on diversity, equity, and inclusion, or DEI, initiatives.

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Mother and doctor indicted for allegedly giving minor abortion pills

A West Baton Rouge grand jury indicted a New York doctor and a Louisiana mother Friday, on felony charges for allegedly providing an illegal abortion with drugs obtained through the mail.

It is the first criminal case of its kind in the country since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, which triggered Louisiana’s strict abortion ban.

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ProPublica’s coverage of Trump’s appointments — and how they could reshape federal govt

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

During his campaign, Donald Trump vowed to remake the federal government, promising to cut jobs, slash spending, end diversity and inclusion programs, and dismantle the Department of Education. Now, he’s chosen a slate of nominees for cabinet posts and other key positions who have a history of pushing back against the work of the departments and agencies they’ve been tapped to lead.

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Trump administration guts sex misconduct policy for schools: report

President Donald Trump ordered a dramatic revamping of Title IX rules that promise to transform how federally funded K-12 schools and colleges handle sex assault claims and LGBT students.

The order, the latest in a dizzying deluge of executive actions since Trump returned to the White House last week, came Friday and restructures how the nation’s teachers interpret Title IX, the federal law that forbids sex-based discrimination in education, the Daily Beast reported.

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Civil rape case allowed to proceed against longtime Trump campaign advisor: report

A New York judge is allowing a civil rape case to proceed against a longtime campaign advisor to President Donald Trump, according to a report.

Former MAGA attorney A.J. Delgado filed a lawsuit claiming Jason Miller engaged in a "cycle of sexual coercion, rape, sexual assault, abuse, battery, sexual harassment, and sex trafficking" while they were having an affair in 2016. She was his direct subordinate at the time.

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Pentagon ends policy that helped troops access abortions

by W.G. DUNLOP

The Pentagon has quietly scrapped a policy that assisted troops who needed to travel to receive reproductive health care including abortions, a US defense official said Friday.

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