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Doubt they're 'good enough': Inside the dangerous MAGA shift among young women

As a young girl growing up in the 2010s, my peers and I were brought up watching ad campaigns like the one from Always in 2014 called “#likeagirl”. It portrayed young girls and women pushing back against the narrative of women being weak and the advertisements showed examples of women’s strength, education, and bravery.

At just 10 years old, they made me feel like I could do or be anything. But fast forward a decade later, and I walk in my local mall to see trendy adult shirts with the saying “I’m just a girl.” Peers around me in class refuse to do certain things, proclaiming, “I am just a girl.” I can’t help but wonder: Why are the women I grew up with, the same women (and men) who came of age surrounded by themes of women’s empowerment, suddenly letting their womanhood be a topic to laugh at?

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JD Vance’s plane carried anti-immigrant rhetoric. Now it has shackled deportees

After Donald Trump tapped him as his running mate, J.D. Vance crisscrossed the country and gave speech after speech in which he, like Trump, demonized immigrants and promised to mount a mass deportation effort if elected.

The Boeing 737 that he used to travel around the nation is now being used to deport immigrants. Records show that it has made at least 16 flights to Central and South American countries to deport immigrants this year.

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Dem insider claims Bruce Springsteen just showed us a way to rise above Trump

During an appearance on MSNBC on Thursday morning, Jennifer Palmieri focused on the re-emergence of Bruce Springsteen as a leader of a new "resistance" against Donald Trump that should be a model for critics of the president.

Speaking with the co-hosts of "Morning Joe," the former White House Director of Communications explained that the popular singer has made it clear that if you stand for anything, "You have to pick sides" and stick to it.

Palmieri's appearance was based on her column at The Bulwark where she noted that after Trump railed at the songwriter to "KEEP HIS MOUTH SHUT" in a Truth Social post, Springsteen refused to back down.

EXCLUSIVE: Trump accused of new grift that puts Qatari plane in shade

On MSNBC she stated she recently saw him in concert, and "His critique of him [Trump] was particularly like, really hit home because it's presented as a patriotic defense of America, right? Bruce talks about in the America I love this is happening and I think that's partly why it struck a chord with the American people. "

"But what really moved me was when he said at the end of that litany of Trump being corrupt, incompetent and treasonous, is we will survive this, right?" she continued. "The way that Trump fails democracy, even as you acknowledge the way that our system of checks and balances has not held him accountable, to say, to affirm that America will survive, this is really buying into the exceptional nature of America."

You can watch below or at the link.

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'Stunning defeat' could rip apart Trump's trade deals: White House reporter

A federal court dealt a "stunning defeat" to president Donald Trump and his tariff agenda, reported CNN's Alayna Treene.

A three-judge panel at the U.S. Court of International Trade slapped down the president's global tariffs and ruled in favor of a permanent injunction against his trade war against Canada, China, Mexico and other trade partners, and the issue could eventually wind up before the Supreme Court.

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Trump has a 'verbal tic' that is causing 'a worldview problem' in US: analysis

President Donald Trump's "verbal tic" is creating "cognitive dissonance in America," according to a Washington Post column.

“The verbal tic of President Donald Trump that has always most fascinated me is his predilection for the word ‘beautiful,’" Monica Hesse wrote.

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'Forefront of resistance': How a small business took on Trump's tariffs and won

A small father-daughter run wine company in Upstate New York stood up to President Donald Trump's tariffs in a "David and Goliath" showdown — and came out on top, according to reporting by CNN.

The company, called VOS Selections, agreed to be the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit against the Trump administration, "which prompted a three-judge panel at the US Court of International Trade to strike down Trump’s sweeping global tariffs on Wednesday," the report said.

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White House sued for abruptly halting services for deaf when Trump took office

The National Association of the Deaf (NAD) sued the White House for allegedly violating federal law and the U.S. Constitution by declining to provide American Sign Language (ASL) interpreters at prominent events like briefings and press conferences.

According to the 25-page suit, the White House abruptly stopped providing services for deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals when President Donald Trump took office in January.

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'He has some issue': Trump biographer reveals depths of the president's racism

The first time Donald Trump appeared in the New York Times, back in 1973, was an article on a Department of Justice lawsuit accusing him and his father of anti-Black bias, and one of his biographers says he's seen the president's racism up close.

The president has appeared in the pages of his hometown paper thousands of times since then, including numerous articles accusing him of being racist – such as one from February titled, "As Trump Attacks Diversity, a Racist Undercurrent Surfaces" – and author Michael Wolff provided some new insight on that bigotry to The Daily Beast Podcast.

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USA Today columnist takes parting shot at Musk as CEO goes through 'rough patch'

USA Today columnist Rex Huppke took aim at Elon Musk one last time as the CEO departs the Department of Government Efficiency and heads back to the private sector.

“We hear you’re going through a bit of a rough patch lately,” Huppke opened the column. “Your electric-car brand and overall reputation are in the toilet, people are saying not-nice things about you, and the whole ‘King of the Department of Government Efficiency’ thing didn’t work out the way you wanted.”

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Big Trump admin report is 'rife with errors' and non-existent sources: analysis

A "Make America Healthy Again"(MAHA) report submitted by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as representing the "gold-standard” of health science is anything but.

That is the conclusion of a report from NOTUS that noted that among the 500 studies cited, it is "rife with errors," misstated conclusions and points to sources that do not exist.

Case in point, Emily Kennard and Margaret Manto of NOTUS wrote, is a cited study by epidemiologist Katherine Keyes examining anxiety in adolescents.

EXCLUSIVE: Breastfeeding mom of US citizen sues Kristi Noem after being grabbed by ICE

The problem is, she didn't write it, telling NOTUS in a email, "The paper cited is not a real paper that I or my colleagues were involved with. We’ve certainly done research on this topic, but did not publish a paper in JAMA Pediatrics on this topic with that co-author group, or with that title.”

According to the report, it is still a mystery who did the study, titled "Changes in mental health and substance abuse among US adolescents during the COVID-19 pandemic,” or if it even exists since the link to it is "non-functional."

"The anxiety study wasn’t the only one the report cites that appears to be mysteriously absent from the scientific literature," NOTUS is reporting. "A section describing the 'corporate capture of media' highlights two studies that it says are 'broadly illustrative' of how a rise in direct-to-consumer drug advertisements has led to more prescriptions being written for ADHD medications and antidepressants for kids. The catch? Neither of those studies is anywhere to be found."

In one case a search for a a report on “Overprescribing of oral corticosteroids for children with asthma” only returns a result pointing to the MAHA report.

Add to that, the author of that cited study, pediatric pulmonologist Harold J. Farber, claimed he he did not write it nor has he ever worked with the co-authors listed.

The report goes on to note, "Spread across the footnotes of the 73-page document, those missing papers are listed alongside dozens of citations with more mundane errors like broken links, missing or incorrect authors and wrong issue numbers."

NOTUS is reporting that HHS spokespeople "did not respond to a request for comment on the report’s citation inconsistencies."

You can read more here.

Universe's greatest mysteries will remain unsolved thanks to Trump: scientists

President Donald Trump's proposed cuts to NASA's budget could throw away decades of research and leave the universe's greatest mysteries unsolved forever, a chorus of scientists warn.

The Trump administration intends to slash the space agency's budget by 24 percent – to $18.8 billion, the lowest figure since 2015 – and those cuts would decimate space and Earth science missions, with a 53 percent drop in funding since what they received last year, reported The Guardian.

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CNN reporter flags what 'really stands out' about China's reaction to Trump move

As the world reacts to a court’s take down of President Trump’s tariffs, CNN correspondent Marc Stewart says there is one thing China is doing which is “really standing out.”

“This is a major moment, and on one hand, you could argue this is tremendous validation for China,” Stewart said. “Yet on the other hand, Beijing knows the United States has other tools to make life difficult for Chinese people, for the Chinese economy. So that's kind of where we stand right now.”

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Trump's latest 'distraction' is crippling him with his base: political expert

During an MSNBC segment of Donald Trump's ongoing wave of retribution against his perceived enemies, combined with his new attacks against law firms and educational institutions, longtime political observer John Heilemann claimed it wall all come back to harm him.

The "Morning Joe" panel began by discussing the Trump administration appearing in a Boston federal courtroom on Thursday to battle with Harvard University in a case involving the attempts to restrict the university from enrolling international students, which led to Heilemann to claim the president is taking his eye off what got him elected.

"The Trump administration driven by President Trump has been so extreme in how it's dealt with Harvard and made demands that no university could ever accept, that it kind of put someone who would potentially have been a partner of the Trump administration back on its heels and pushed it into a corner," he told the panel. "And you have a lot of people who –– even people who have been very critical of Harvard –– who look at this and go, 'Hey, I think this is going a little bit too far."

EXCLUSIVE: Trump accused of new grift that puts Qatari plane in shade

Pointing out that Trump "sees conflict as a zero sum game," he later added, "If you fight back against Trump he will fight you until there's no more fight to fight he just, he goes all the way to the extreme. He has done this across the board essentially, whether it's Miles Taylor or Chris Krebs or anybody else. If they push back against Trump, it is their fault and he will then punish them."

"It can be politically self-defeating because it takes his eye off the ball on what is really the political calculus that got him back into the White House, which is prices, economy, turning all that stuff around," he remarked. "Trump seems really distracted by a lot of personal vendettas here and not focused on what his base and what all American or Republican voters want."

You can watch below or at the link.

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