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People can spread bird flu to their cats, U.S. study suggests

by Issam AHMED

A study published Thursday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) suggests that people can transmit bird flu to their domestic cats, with fatal consequences.

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Musk says Trump right to slam 'despised' Zelensky

by Danny KEMP

Elon Musk attacked Volodymyr Zelensky Thursday, saying Ukrainians "despised" their president and that U.S. leader Donald Trump was right to leave him out of talks with Russia aimed at ending the Ukraine war.

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U.S. Senate confirms Trump loyalist Kash Patel to head FBI

by Chris Lefkow

The Republican-controlled U.S. Senate on Thursday confirmed Kash Patel, a staunch loyalist who has threatened to go after President Donald Trump's political enemies, as director of the FBI, the country's top law enforcement agency.

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Musk in X spat with Danish astronaut over 'abandoned' ISS crew

The world's richest man Elon Musk got into a heated row Thursday with a Danish astronaut who criticized the tech billionaire's claim that former president Joe Biden intentionally abandoned two American astronauts aboard the International Space Station.

Andreas "Andy" Mogensen had shared on X a Fox News clip featuring Musk and his boss, U.S. President Donald Trump, where Musk claimed NASA's Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams were left stranded on the orbital outpost for "political reasons" by Biden, and that the new administration was now coming to the rescue.

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'How much can change? Everything': CNN plays dizzying supercut of Trump's first month

CNN's Kasie Hunt showed a supercut video highlighting the "whirlwind" first month of Donald Trump's second presidency.

The president was inaugurated Jan. 20, and he swiftly pardoned all of the Jan. 6 rioters and turned tech billionaire Elon Musk loose on government agencies and the federal workforce.

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Trump hosts Black History Month event despite diversity crackdown

U.S. President Donald Trump was joined by golfer Tiger Woods for an event marking Black History Month Thursday -- even as his crackdown on diversity programs has barred similar celebrations in some government departments.

"Welcome to the White House, and we proudly celebrate Black History Month," Trump told a cheering crowd of mainly Black guests at the event, which has become an annual tradition.

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Judge denies union bid to halt Trump firing of government workers

A U.S. judge on Thursday denied a union bid to temporarily halt the firing of thousands of federal employees on probationary status, handing President Donald Trump another legal win in his plan to slash the government workforce.

District Judge Christopher Cooper said he lacked the jurisdiction to handle the complaint, one of several filed in courts in recent days in an effort to pause the mass sackings.

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'Monumental bill' coming due for Trump's lawbreaking: analysis

The haphazard slash-and-burn approach to firing federal workers by Donald Trump's administration in a supposed attempt to save money will instead lead to lawsuits and financial penalties taxpayers will be on the hook for, reports the Guardian.

With Trump's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) indiscriminately firing employees with accusations of "poor performance" despite performance reviews that described the exact opposite, one labor attorney claimed a wave of lawsuits that will follow will be expensive.

According to attorney Suzanne Summerlin, "These firings they’re conducting without following the law will result in hundreds of thousands of former federal employees being owed back pay, plus interest, plus benefits, plus attorneys fees."

ALSO READ: 'Gotta be kidding': Jim Jordan scrambles as he's confronted over Musk 'double standard'

“When the bill comes it will be monumental," she added.

That was supported by former Department of Interior official Jacob Malcom, who recently resigned from his post saying he didn't want to be a part of the Trump government.

"This is being done under the guise of ‘poor performance’ or ‘skills not aligned with needs’ but neither are true," he pointed out. “First, no evidence was provided that would suggest that poor performance; in fact, I know some of the individuals that were down my chain of supervision and know they were among the best performers."

According to the Guardian report, "One veteran federal worker who spoke to the Guardian had only been a few weeks away from passing her one-year probationary period to be hired permanently by the US Forest Service. Instead they received a termination notice citing poor performance. They had, in fact, received positive performance reviews, a copy of which they shared with the Guardian."

That former employee explained to the Guardian, "I would have been a permanent employee on March 10. I’ve lost my medical insurance. I have an incurable disease that I kind of need a doctor for. I won’t be able to pay those bills. I’m waiting for my eviction notice right now.”

Another fired employee who worked at HHS, stated, "“It’s not just new employees who were affected. Many people were longtime federal employees who had been recently promoted to supervisors, who are usually on probation when they are promoted. The termination letters’ claims that they are for ‘poor performance’ are false. Many federal employees scored ‘excellent’ or ‘achieved more than expected’ on their performance reviews and team members can attest to their excellent work and work ethic.”

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Musk vows to 'fix' X feature over Ukraine and Zelensky

Elon Musk said Thursday that a feature on his social media platform X which allows users to fact-check potentially misleading posts was being "gamed" over Ukraine's President Volodymr Zelensky and vowed to "fix" it.

Musk spoke after his ally US President Donald Trump turned on his one-time ally Zelensky in recent days, accusing the Ukrainian leader of being a "dictator" and having started Ukraine's war with Russia -- narratives long pushed by Moscow.

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U.S. National Park workers reckon with fear, anger after layoffs

by Victoria LAVELLE

Erikka Olson spent five years building her resume with a seasonal job at California's Yosemite National Park before she finally landed a permanent position with the US Forest Service in Nevada.

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Rubio defends Russia talks and criticism of Zelensky

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio pushed back against accusations that the Trump administration has given in to Russia even before talks on ending the Ukraine war begin, saying Washington first wants to see whether Moscow was "serious".

Russia and the United States agreed to establish teams to negotiate ending the war at talks in Riyadh earlier this week. Neither Ukraine nor its European allies were invited.

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Moon or Mars? NASA's future at a crossroads under Trump

by Issam AHMED

Is NASA still Moonbound, or will the next giant leap mean skipping straight to Mars?

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'Destroying people's lives': Trump-voting IRS agent fumes after president lays him off

An agent for the Internal Revenue Service is not happy with the man he voted for in the 2024 presidential election after he found himself getting laid off recently.

In an interview with NBC Philadelphia, newly out-of-work IRS agent Robert McCabe fumed that President Donald Trump appears to be indiscriminately firing government employees no matter their productivity.

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