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Myanmar militia says ready to deport 10,000 cyber scam workers New Tab ↗
 
A Myanmar ethnic militia announced on Saturday that it is preparing to deport approximately 10,000 individuals linked to cyber scam operations in its territory to Thailand. This move is part of a broader crackdown on illicit compounds that have flourished in Myanmar’s border regions.

These scam compounds, which have become a major industry in Myanmar’s borderlands, are largely staffed by foreigners who are trafficked and coerced into working in fraudulent schemes. Analysts estimate that the cyber scam industry generates billions of dollars by swindling victims worldwide.

Major Naing Maung Zaw, a spokesperson for the Karen Border Guard Force (BGF), emphasized the group’s commitment to eradicating scams from their controlled areas. "We have announced our plan to eliminate all scams from our soil. We are now implementing it," he stated. According to him, the BGF has compiled a list of individuals to be deported, with plans to transfer about 10,000 people to Thailand.

The deportation process will occur gradually, with groups of 500 people being sent daily. The BGF has already handed over 61 individuals to Thai authorities via a border bridge and is preparing to transfer additional groups of mixed nationalities each day.

Thai media reported that the military task force in Thailand's Tak province has been coordinating with BGF leaders to receive around 7,000 workers from these scam compounds.

As part of the crackdown, BGF soldiers conducted patrols in workplaces at Shwe Kokko, located in Myanmar’s eastern Myawaddy township, on Friday. Shwe Kokko, a known scam compound in Karen state, stands out as a modern city amid its surrounding agricultural lands.

Cyber scam compounds operate by luring victims from around the world with false promises of high-paying jobs. Once recruited, individuals are effectively held captive and forced to engage in online fraud under the threat of severe punishment.

Authorities and militia groups in both Myanmar and Thailand have previously launched operations against these scam centers, which have also been linked to drug smuggling and illegal gambling. Raids often lead to the release and repatriation of trafficked foreigners found inside these compounds.
0 Replies | 1,830 Views | Feb 17, 2025 - 3:44 PM - by sunshine1104
15 dead in India stampede to catch trains to Hindu mega-festival New Tab ↗
 
At least 15 people lost their lives in a stampede at a railway station in India's capital, New Delhi, late Saturday night. The tragedy occurred as large crowds rushed to board trains heading toward the ongoing Kumbh Mela, the world's largest religious gathering.

The Kumbh Mela, which takes place every 12 years in the northern city of Prayagraj, draws tens of millions of Hindu pilgrims. Due to the sheer number of attendees, the event has a history of crowd-related disasters. Just last month, another stampede at the sacred confluence of the Ganges, Yamuna, and the mythical Saraswati rivers resulted in the deaths of at least 30 people.

Authorities believe the chaos at the train station erupted as devotees scrambled to secure seats on the overcrowded trains bound for the festival. The event is set to conclude on February 26, further intensifying the rush of pilgrims trying to reach Prayagraj.

Dr. Ritu Saxena, deputy medical superintendent at Lok Nayak Hospital in New Delhi, confirmed that 15 people were pronounced dead at the hospital. She noted that the victims did not appear to have suffered external injuries. "Most likely, they died from hypoxia or possibly blunt force trauma, but that will only be confirmed after autopsies," she stated. In addition to the fatalities, 11 other individuals were reported injured, with most sustaining orthopedic injuries. Fortunately, their conditions are stable.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed his sorrow over the tragedy, stating that he was "distressed" by the loss of lives. "My thoughts are with all those who have lost their loved ones. I pray that the injured have a speedy recovery," he posted on X (formerly Twitter).

Vinai Kumar Saxena, the governor of Delhi, announced that disaster management teams had been deployed to assist with the situation, and all hospitals had been placed on high alert to handle any further emergencies. Meanwhile, Railways Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw stated that additional special trains were being arranged from New Delhi to help clear the overwhelming rush of passengers.

The ongoing Kumbh Mela, which spans six weeks, is the most significant religious event in the Hindu calendar. Officials estimate that approximately 500 million devotees have already participated in the festival since it began last month.

The Kumbh Mela has seen multiple tragedies in the past due to massive crowds. One of the deadliest incidents occurred in 1954 when more than 400 people lost their lives in a single day after being trampled or drowning in the river. In a more recent tragedy, 36 people were crushed to death in 2013, the last time the festival was held in Prayagraj.
0 Replies | 1,899 Views | Feb 17, 2025 - 3:43 PM - by sunshine1104
At least 9 people are dead, including 8 in Kentucky, in latest blast of winter weather New Tab ↗
 
At least nine people have lost their lives in the latest bout of extreme weather to hit the United States, with eight of the fatalities occurring in Kentucky due to severe flooding. Rising water levels in creeks and roads being submerged under heavy rainfall created hazardous conditions across the state.

Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear confirmed on Sunday that emergency responders had carried out hundreds of rescues to assist individuals stranded by the floodwaters. In response to the crisis, President Donald Trump approved Kentucky’s request for a federal disaster declaration, allowing the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to coordinate relief efforts and provide much-needed assistance to affected areas.

According to Beshear, most of the casualties were the result of vehicles becoming trapped in high water, including a tragic incident involving a mother and her 7-year-old child. The governor urged residents to stay off the roads for their own safety, emphasizing that the state was currently focused on search-and-rescue operations. He praised the dedication of emergency personnel and volunteers who risked their lives to help those in danger.

Since the storms began on Saturday, authorities have conducted an estimated 1,000 rescues across Kentucky. The severe weather also caused widespread power outages, affecting approximately 39,000 homes. Beshear warned that strong winds in certain regions could lead to additional outages in the coming days.

The National Weather Service reported that portions of Kentucky and Tennessee received as much as six inches (15 centimeters) of rain, leading to extensive flooding. Meteorologist Bob Oravec stated that the effects of the storm would continue to be felt for some time, as swollen streams and rivers maintained high water levels, prolonging the risk of further flooding.

In Alabama, officials confirmed that an EF-1 tornado had touched down in Hale County overnight, causing damage to mobile homes, downing trees, and knocking out power lines. While no injuries were immediately reported, authorities urged residents to remain cautious. The city of Tuscumbia, in northern Alabama, experienced significant damage, with strong winds ripping off rooftops and damaging downtown buildings. Local officials advised people to stay away from the affected area until further assessments could be made.

Meanwhile, in Tennessee, a state of emergency was declared for parts of Obion County after a levee breach on Saturday resulted in widespread flooding in the small town of Rives, which has a population of around 300. Mayor Steve Carr announced that mandatory evacuations were being enforced due to the rising water levels, lack of electricity, and dangerously cold temperatures that posed a life-threatening risk to residents.

In Atlanta, Georgia, the storm claimed another life when a large tree fell onto a home early Sunday morning. Atlanta Fire Rescue officials confirmed the fatality but did not release further details.

As the winter storm system continues to move across the country, dangerously low temperatures are being recorded in several northern states. The National Weather Service issued an "extreme cold warning" for North Dakota, where wind chills were expected to drop to as low as -50°F (-45.6°C). Similar warnings were in place for parts of Montana, South Dakota, and Minnesota, where freezing conditions presented serious risks for residents and travelers alike.

Severe Flooding in Kentucky and Neighboring States
Heavy rainfall led to severe flooding across multiple states, submerging roads, vehicles, and buildings in Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia. Both Kentucky and Virginia were placed under flood warnings, as emergency officials worked tirelessly to manage the crisis.

In Bonnieville, Kentucky, floodwaters tragically claimed the lives of a mother and her young child when they were swept away in the rising current, according to Hart County Coroner Tony Roberts. In a separate incident, a 73-year-old man was found dead in floodwaters in Clay County, southeastern Kentucky. Governor Beshear reported that a total of four deaths occurred in Hart County due to the extreme weather.

The flooding forced the closure of the Kentucky River Medical Center in Jackson, where patients had to be relocated to other hospitals in the region. The decision was made as a precaution after a nearby river overflowed, threatening the facility’s operations.

Images circulating on social media showed distressing scenes of submerged vehicles and homes in parts of south-central and eastern Kentucky. In Buchanan County, Virginia, authorities reported multiple road closures caused by mudslides, further complicating emergency response efforts.

Elsewhere in Virginia, strong winds knocked down trees and power lines in Albemarle County, leading to widespread power outages. The Charlottesville Police Department warned residents that emergency response times might be delayed due to the overwhelming number of weather-related calls for assistance. Law enforcement officials urged the public to remain indoors and avoid unnecessary travel.

Power outages were also widespread along the Eastern Seaboard, from New York to Georgia, as the storm system moved eastward. High winds, heavy rainfall, and snow contributed to downed power lines, leaving thousands of homes without electricity.

In West Virginia, 13 counties in the southern part of the state were placed under a state of emergency due to flooding. Some areas became inaccessible by vehicle, making evacuations and rescue efforts more difficult. Several volunteer fire departments struggled to respond to calls, as floodwaters entered their own stations and disrupted operations.

Winter Storms and a Polar Vortex Threaten the Midwest and Northeast
While flooding and severe storms affected the southern and eastern U.S., icy conditions and heavy snowfall created hazardous travel conditions across parts of the Midwest and Northeast.

In Michigan, authorities warned drivers of treacherous road conditions as ice and snow covered highways. A winter weather advisory remained in effect for much of the state until Monday afternoon. Michigan State Police reported that at least 114 vehicle crashes had occurred in the Detroit area since snowfall began on Saturday. Fortunately, the majority of these incidents were minor, with no reports of severe injuries. However, officials stressed that many of the crashes were caused by drivers traveling too fast for the conditions or following other vehicles too closely.

In Colorado, officials reported that since Valentine’s Day, at least eight people had died in fatal car accidents linked to the ongoing winter storm. The Colorado State Patrol urged residents to exercise extreme caution while driving, as icy roads and blowing snow continued to make travel dangerous, particularly in mountainous regions.

The Midwest also faced significant snowfall and blizzard-like conditions, affecting areas in Nebraska, Iowa, and Wisconsin. Authorities closed several highways due to whiteout conditions.
0 Replies | 1,919 Views | Feb 17, 2025 - 3:40 PM - by sunshine1104
Fact vs. Fiction: Did Elon Musk Receive Millions from USAID for Starlink in Ukraine? New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2490871

ByMedia Bias Fact Check

Claim:

Elon Musk’s company, SpaceX, received millions of dollars from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to provide Starlink internet terminals to Ukraine, contradicting claims that SpaceX fully funded the initiative.

Reasoning:

In early 2022, following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, USAID collaborated with SpaceX to deliver 5,000 Starlink terminals to Ukraine. USAID’s contribution amounted to approximately $3 million for these terminals. While SpaceX and Elon Musk publicly suggested that the company donated these terminals, documents revealed that a significant portion of the costs was covered by USAID and other entities. This contrasts with earlier claims that SpaceX bore the entire financial burden. However, SpaceX did contribute by providing service for free and potentially offering discounts on the terminals.

Additional reports indicate that USAID’s partnership with SpaceX was instrumental in deploying these terminals to support Ukraine’s internet infrastructure during the conflict. The collaboration ensured that critical communication services remained operational amidst the challenges posed by the invasion.

Furthermore, the USAID Office of Inspector General initiated an inspection to assess the agency’s oversight of the Starlink terminals provided to the Ukrainian government, highlighting the significance and scale of this collaboration.

Fact or Fiction? ✅ Fact – USAID provided millions in funding for Starlink terminals in Ukraine, indicating that the initiative was not solely funded by SpaceX, contrary to some public claims.

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0 Replies | 7,564 Views | Feb 16, 2025 - 2:12 AM - by Tin tức
Fact vs. Fiction: Who Pays U.S. Imposed Tariffs? New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2490870

ByMedia Bias Fact Check

Claim: Foreign countries pay the tariffs that the U.S. imposes on imported goods.

Reasoning: When the U.S. imposes tariffs, these are taxes levied on imported goods. The responsibility for paying these tariffs falls on U.S. importers—the companies that bring foreign products into the country. These importers often pass the increased costs onto American consumers through higher prices on goods. Therefore, while the tariff is collected from the importer, the economic burden is shared between U.S. businesses and consumers. Foreign exporters might respond by lowering their prices to maintain competitiveness, but the tariff payment itself is made by the U.S. importer.

Fact or Fiction? Fiction. The claim that foreign countries pay U.S. imposed tariffs is incorrect. In reality, U.S. importers pay these tariffs, and the costs are often passed on to American consumers.

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0 Replies | 7,680 Views | Feb 16, 2025 - 2:02 AM - by Tin tức
Trump says DOGE found ‘tens of billions’ in savings. Not even close. New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2490184

The DOGE social media account only claims about $2 billion, with another $4 billion from cutting medical research funds.

Analysis by Glenn Kessler


“We’re talking about tens of billions of dollars that we’ve already found. … But you’re talking about maybe 500 billion. It’s crazy the numbers you’re talking about.”

— President Donald Trump, speaking to reporters, Feb. 11

The president, with billionaire Elon Musk at his side, asserted that Musk’s U.S. DOGE Service had already identified “tens of billions” of “waste, fraud and abuse.” He suggested it could be as much as $500 billion and “when you get down to it, it’s going to be probably close to a trillion dollars. It could be close to a trillion dollars that we’re going to find.”

The president’s numbers do not come anywhere close to matching figures posted on the DOGE account on X, Musk’s social media site. (DOGE stands for Department of Government Efficiency, though it is not a Cabinet-level agency.) We added up all the figures posted, taking most of them at face value, though virtually no documentation was presented. The numbers add up to about $6 billion a year, though $4 billion comes from a proposed cap on National Institutes of Health research overhead payments to universities, medical centers and other grant recipients. A judge has blocked that for now.

In other words, DOGE has claimed only about $2 billion in annual savings from specific line items — most of which appear to come from ending diversity or climate change programs. Whether that constitutes “waste, fraud and abuse” is a matter of opinion.

Below is a list of DOGE social media posts identifying the claimed savings at the time the president spoke. We sent our accounting to the White House, which did not dispute it. Instead, we received a statement that the federal government could save up to $747 billion annually.

Two Government Accountability Office reports were the source of this figure. One report, issued last year, said that the “federal government loses an estimated $233 billion to $521 billion” every year to fraud. The other report, also issued in 2024, cited an estimated $236 billion of improper payments for fiscal year 2023.

These reports are filled with caveats, as they are estimates. The 2024 report on fraud relied on information from agency inspectors general, whom Trump has fired, and existing cases — fraud that had already been identified. Then an estimate of potential fraud was developed. As for the improper payments, these were mostly agency estimates of overpayments.

But, again, these are estimates, not hard facts, as Trump claimed.

Here’s the full accounting of what DOGE has claimed so far. “MM” and “M” both refer to million; “B” refers to billion.

Jan. 21: Savings from elimination of the penny: $179 million a year. (DOGE noted a penny cost this much, but then Trump later ordered the U.S. Mint to stop making the penny, so we will credit this to DOGE. The Mint, in its annual report, said it lost $85.3 million in fiscal year 2024 from producing the penny.)

Jan. 22: “$784 MILLION in taxpayer dollars for a new U.S. Embassy in South Sudan, initiated in 2023. This is not a reasonable expenditure.” (No indication this has been canceled, so we will not count this.)

Jan. 27: $1.6 million in leases terminated (superseded by Feb. 2 tweet).

Jan. 28: “DOGE is saving the Federal Government approx. $1 billion/day, mostly from stopping the hiring of people into unnecessary positions, deletion of DEI and stopping improper payments to foreign organizations, all consistent with the President’s Executive Orders.” (No documentation provided, so we will not count this.)

Jan. 29: $45 million in “DEI scholarships” in Myanmar canceled. (This program allowed Burmese students from marginalized and underprivileged backgrounds to study at universities across Asia.)

Jan. 29: The account claims that $1 billion in diversity, equity and inclusion contracts were canceled. (A list was provided by agency, though with few details, but we will count this.)

Feb. 2: “In the past 6 days, the number of lease terminations of underutilized buildings has increased from 3 to 22, with savings increased from $1.6M to $44.6M.”

Feb. 3: “This morning, 20 consulting contracts, mostly focused on ‘strategic communication’ and ‘executive coaching,’ were terminated for immediate savings of $26mm.”

Feb. 3: “All in today, 36 contracts were terminated for a total savings of ~$165mm across 6 agencies, including a DHS contract for ‘people and culture survey and climate support services.’”

Feb. 4: “12 consulting contract terminations (in GSA and the Dept. of Education) for a total savings of ~$30mm, including a $23mm work order for ‘digital modernization Program Management Office support’. -12 underutilized lease cancellations for an annual savings of ~$3mm.”

Feb. 5: “The Social Security Administration has terminated its contract for the ‘Gender X initiative marker’ and removed all references to gender ideology from public facing applications. This saves > $1M.”

Feb. 5: $500,000 to Politico via NASA. (These were subscription payments.)

Feb. 6: $600,000 to the Associated Press.

Feb. 6: “Today, 78 contracts were terminated for convenience across DEI, Non-Performing, Media, and Consulting categories, including one for ‘groundwater exploration and assessment in the Islamic Republic of Mauritania.’ Approximately $110mm of total savings.”

Feb. 7: “In the past 48 hours, HHS canceled 62 contract [sic] worth $182 million. These contracts were entirely for administrative expenses — none touched any health care programs. This included terminating a $168,000 contract for an Anthony Fauci exhibit at NIH Museum.”

Feb. 7: “Saved > $4B annually in excessive [National Institutes of Health] grant administrative costs.”

Feb. 7: “Today, the Department of Education terminated three DEI training grants totaling $15M.”

Feb. 7: “Great coordination across 35 agencies over the last two days to terminate 199 wasteful contracts saving ~$250mm, including: Contract for ‘Asia Pacific — Sri Lanka climate change mitigation adaption and resilience coordinator services for forest service.’”

Feb. 10: “Today, the Department of Agriculture terminated 18 contracts for a total of ~$9mm, including contracts for ‘Central American gender assessment consultant services’, ‘Brazil forest and gender consultant services’, and the ‘women in forest carbon initiative mentorship program.’”

Feb. 10: “Today, the Department of Education terminated 29 DEI training grants totaling $101mm.”

Feb. 10: “Also today, the Department Of Education terminated 89 contracts worth $881mm.”

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0 Replies | 8,050 Views | Feb 14, 2025 - 1:55 AM - by Tin tức
Elon Musk didn’t pay $40 million for five DOGE Super Bowl commercials New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2490063


A complete list of 2025 Super Bowl ads by Adweek, a marketing magazine, didn’t include a Department of Government Efficiency ad.

A Google search for a DOGE commercial yielded no results.

The post’s photo is old and unrelated to Musk purchasing Super Bowl commercials. It shows Musk celebrating buying Twitter in 2022 while drinking bourbon with colleagues, according to the Daily Mail.

By Sofia Ahmed


As Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has worked to shrink the federal government, some social media users said the entrepreneur would use the Feb. 9 Super Bowl to publicize DOGE’s efforts.

"Elon Musk spent 40 million of his own money to buy 5, 30 second long commercial shots during Super Bowl where hes gonna list all the corruption DOGE has found so far," a Feb. 8 Facebook post riddled with grammatical errors said. The post features an image of Musk holding a bottle of bourbon.


Elon Musk didn’t pay $40 million for five DOGE Super Bowl commercials
If Your Time is short

A complete list of 2025 Super Bowl ads by Adweek, a marketing magazine, didn’t include a Department of Government Efficiency ad.

A Google search for a DOGE commercial yielded no results.

The post’s photo is old and unrelated to Musk purchasing Super Bowl commercials. It shows Musk celebrating buying Twitter in 2022 while drinking bourbon with colleagues, according to the Daily Mail.

See the sources for this fact-check

As Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has worked to shrink the federal government, some social media users said the entrepreneur would use the Feb. 9 Super Bowl to publicize DOGE’s efforts.

"Elon Musk spent 40 million of his own money to buy 5, 30 second long commercial shots during Super Bowl where hes gonna list all the corruption DOGE has found so far," a Feb. 8 Facebook post riddled with grammatical errors said. The post features an image of Musk holding a bottle of bourbon.

But no such ad appeared during Super Bowl LIX. Adweek, a marketing magazine, didn’t include a DOGE ad in its 2025 complete list of Super Bowl ads

A Google search for a DOGE commercial yielded no results. T-Mobile aired an ad announcing its partnership with Musk’s Starlink, a satellite network that expands high-speed internet access to areas without traditional cellular towers.

The Facebook post used an old photo that is unrelated to Musk purchasing Super Bowl commercials. It shows Musk celebrating buying Twitter in 2022 while drinking bourbon with colleagues, according to the Daily Mail.

Pro Football Network reported that the claim was amplified by X account @conservativema, which wrote Feb. 7, "Elon Musk is running Super Bowl ads. Reports indicate he’s spending $40 million of his own money on five 30-second commercials that expose government waste, as found by the Department of Government Efficiency." The post has since been deleted.

Two veteran Republican veteran experts told Reuters that Musk has directed cost-cutting efforts toward agencies that President Donald Trump’s administration disagrees with ideologically rather than toward saving taxpayer dollars.

We rate the claim that Musk spent $40 million to buy five Super Bowl commercial ads to promote DOGE False.

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0 Replies | 7,908 Views | Feb 13, 2025 - 10:54 PM - by Tin tức
U.S. education system doesn’t rank worst in the world, and cost isn’t highest New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2490060


In a measure of 37 developed countries, the U.S. scored above average in reading and science and below average, but not last, in math.

The U.S. is far from last on other metrics, such as the share of its population that’s educated and the average number of years people spend on their education.

The U.S. spends more per pupil on education than most other countries, but it is not the world’s top education spender per pupil.

By Caleb McCullough


As he described his intention to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education, President Donald Trump derided the U.S. education system, arguing the country performs the worst globally despite spending the most.

In an interview with Fox News host Bret Baier that aired Feb. 10, Trump said the U.S. performs poorly on the global scale despite spending more than others on education.

"We're last in education out of 40 states," Trump said. "We're last, we're number 40, but we're No. 1 in cost per pupil."

Although Trump said "states," it became clear as he spoke that he was referring to other nations — he described Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and China as being top in education globally. He did not, however, clarify all 40 countries he was referring to. A White House spokesperson pointed us to data on a U.S. educational assessment that provided no international comparison supporting Trump’s claim.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, or OECD, a group of advanced, industrialized nations, measures international education outcomes.

But the U.S. doesn’t rank last among the 38 OECD member states on any education metric, according to the organization’s data. The organization measures countries by student skills, educational attainment, years in education and economic equality.

"The US is rarely at the very bottom of an educational rankings that includes a broad range of countries (like the OECD)," said Ofer Malamud, a Northwestern University economist researching international education. "Although it isn’t usually near the top of these lists either."

On cost per pupil, the U.S. spends much more than the international average, but it is not the highest spender of the OECD countries.

Trump’s criticism of the Education Department came as he and ally Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE — an agency Trump established by executive order — try to dismantle the agency and cancel large swaths of department spending. In the Fox News interview, Trump argued states would perform better in education if they received money directly rather than through Education Department programs.

"While we spend billions of taxpayer dollars to fund our education system, less than half of 4th and 8th graders are performing at proficient levels in reading or math," White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said in an email, referring to National Center for Education Statistics’ state-by-state test scores known as the nation’s report card.

Education performance

The OECD measures education outcomes based on the educational attainment, skills and years in education. OECD’s member countries include Sweden, France, Turkey, South Korea and Colombia. Its data included 37 to 41 countries, depending on when it was collected and which countries participated.

The U.S. ranks eighth out of 41 countries in the portion of people with at least a secondary, or high school, education, with 92% of its people aged 25 to 65 holding a high school diploma.

On the average number of years students spend in formal education, the U.S. ranks 23rd out of 41. From age 5, a child in the U.S. will spend an average of 17.3 years in formal education, according to the OECD.

Mexico ranks last in educational attainment, while Colombia ranks last in years in education. The leaders in both metrics were Russia and Australia, respectively.

The OECD administers the Program for International Student Assessment, or PISA, to member states and nonmember states. Looking at the 37 member states that reported scores in 2022, U.S. students scored above the international average in reading and science, but below average in math.

The U.S. ranked 13th in science with a score that was 14 points above the OECD average. In reading, it ranked sixth, scoring 28 points above average. Math performance was lower: The U.S. ranked 28th, scoring seven points below OECD average.

When compared with all 81 countries that took the test in 2022, including non-OECD countries, the U.S. ranked 16th in science, ninth in reading, and 34th in math.

PISA test scores also reveal, however, that when U.S. student performance is measured against itself, scores have dropped in the last several years. From 2018 to 2022, science scores fell by three points, reading by one point, and math by 13 points. Meanwhile, U.S. science and reading performance have risen modestly over the last 20 years while math has declined overall in line with global trends.

An OECD report pointed to COVID-19-related school closures and access to digital devices as contributing to weaker scores.


U.S. education system doesn’t rank worst in the world, and cost isn’t highest
If Your Time is short

In a measure of 37 developed countries, the U.S. scored above average in reading and science and below average, but not last, in math.

The U.S. is far from last on other metrics, such as the share of its population that’s educated and the average number of years people spend on their education.

The U.S. spends more per pupil on education than most other countries, but it is not the world’s top education spender per pupil.

See the sources for this fact-check

As he described his intention to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education, President Donald Trump derided the U.S. education system, arguing the country performs the worst globally despite spending the most.

In an interview with Fox News host Bret Baier that aired Feb. 10, Trump said the U.S. performs poorly on the global scale despite spending more than others on education.

"We're last in education out of 40 states," Trump said. "We're last, we're number 40, but we're No. 1 in cost per pupil."

Although Trump said "states," it became clear as he spoke that he was referring to other nations — he described Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and China as being top in education globally. He did not, however, clarify all 40 countries he was referring to. A White House spokesperson pointed us to data on a U.S. educational assessment that provided no international comparison supporting Trump’s claim.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, or OECD, a group of advanced, industrialized nations, measures international education outcomes.
Sign up for PolitiFact texts

But the U.S. doesn’t rank last among the 38 OECD member states on any education metric, according to the organization’s data. The organization measures countries by student skills, educational attainment, years in education and economic equality.

"The US is rarely at the very bottom of an educational rankings that includes a broad range of countries (like the OECD)," said Ofer Malamud, a Northwestern University economist researching international education. "Although it isn’t usually near the top of these lists either."

On cost per pupil, the U.S. spends much more than the international average, but it is not the highest spender of the OECD countries.

Trump’s criticism of the Education Department came as he and ally Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE — an agency Trump established by executive order — try to dismantle the agency and cancel large swaths of department spending. In the Fox News interview, Trump argued states would perform better in education if they received money directly rather than through Education Department programs.

"While we spend billions of taxpayer dollars to fund our education system, less than half of 4th and 8th graders are performing at proficient levels in reading or math," White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said in an email, referring to National Center for Education Statistics’ state-by-state test scores known as the nation’s report card.
Education performance

The OECD measures education outcomes based on the educational attainment, skills and years in education. OECD’s member countries include Sweden, France, Turkey, South Korea and Colombia. Its data included 37 to 41 countries, depending on when it was collected and which countries participated.

The U.S. ranks eighth out of 41 countries in the portion of people with at least a secondary, or high school, education, with 92% of its people aged 25 to 65 holding a high school diploma.

On the average number of years students spend in formal education, the U.S. ranks 23rd out of 41. From age 5, a child in the U.S. will spend an average of 17.3 years in formal education, according to the OECD.

Mexico ranks last in educational attainment, while Colombia ranks last in years in education. The leaders in both metrics were Russia and Australia, respectively.

The OECD administers the Program for International Student Assessment, or PISA, to member states and nonmember states. Looking at the 37 member states that reported scores in 2022, U.S. students scored above the international average in reading and science, but below average in math.

The U.S. ranked 13th in science with a score that was 14 points above the OECD average. In reading, it ranked sixth, scoring 28 points above average. Math performance was lower: The U.S. ranked 28th, scoring seven points below OECD average.

When compared with all 81 countries that took the test in 2022, including non-OECD countries, the U.S. ranked 16th in science, ninth in reading, and 34th in math.

PISA test scores also reveal, however, that when U.S. student performance is measured against itself, scores have dropped in the last several years. From 2018 to 2022, science scores fell by three points, reading by one point, and math by 13 points. Meanwhile, U.S. science and reading performance have risen modestly over the last 20 years while math has declined overall in line with global trends.

An OECD report pointed to COVID-19-related school closures and access to digital devices as contributing to weaker scores.

U.S. performance on the National Assessment of Educational Progress has also fallen since 2018. Less than half the surveyed fourth- and eighth-grade students performed at proficient levels in reading and math in the 2023 survey.

Education costs

The amount the government spends on education per pupil in the U.S. is well above the international average, but not the highest of the 37 OECD countries measured in 2021.

Combining public spending on elementary, high school and postsecondary education, the U.S. spent $20,387 per pupil on education in 2021 compared with an average of $14,209 across the measured countries. That puts the U.S. in third place, behind Luxembourg and Norway. The numbers are adjusted for purchasing power in the different countries.

The U.S.’ ranking is pulled higher by its high spending on college education, which includes dollars dedicated for research and development and is second after Luxembourg. Looking at primary school alone, the U.S. spends the sixth most of the 37 countries, with $15,270 per pupil. The OECD average was $11,902.

Comparing education spending across countries is difficult, education experts said, because countries approach education funding differently.

"The US has long provided more services to students — such as meals, transportation, extracurriculars such as sports, and special education — than do other countries," Vanderbilt University public policy and education professor Sean Corcoran said. "Many of these services do not translate directly into higher student achievement, but they are highly valued by families and society as a whole."

Because U.S. education is mostly funded by state and local governments, per-pupil spending can vary widely by school district, University of Washington education history professor Matthew Kelly said.

Although there are some exceptions, high-income school districts tend to spend more money on education per pupil and have better outcomes, while low-income districts tend to spend less and have worse outcomes.

Kelly said extensive research has demonstrated that higher education funding leads to better test scores, lower high school dropout rates and higher college enrollment rates.

Trump said the U.S. is "last in education out of 40 states" and "No. 1 in cost per pupil."

Both claims are wrong. The U.S. does not lead any international rankings for education, but it is not at the bottom of the list, either. Cost per pupil is higher than most developed countries, but not the highest.

We rate Trump’s claim False.


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0 Replies | 7,915 Views | Feb 13, 2025 - 10:47 PM - by Tin tức
After watching Trump in action, a woman who previously voted for Harris is now glad that he won. New Tab ↗
 
After watching Trump in action, a woman who previously voted for Harris is now glad that he won.
"Alright y'all, listen, let me be one of the first Black women that was a part of the 92 or the 93 percent that voted for Kamala to come out and just say it. I regret voting for Kamala. I really do. I regret voting for her.
Already into Trump's presidency, not even a full month, and this man has already secured borders, he's already signing bills that are taking place that are uplifting this country. Me not doing my history and really, you know, being investigative and seeing all the things that Trump has done and now having the eye-opener and really looking at this man and seeing exactly how this man works has really put something on my heart, and I don't know what I was thinking going in there voting for Kamala in the first place.
I'm glad of the results, don't get me wrong, I'm glad that I'm saying that I'm glad that Trump is in there, but me being so lost and participating into the whole Kamala run and now taking a step back looking at how this president here is really running things, and it hasn't even been a whole month, is something that I do think about.
So, you know, I advise people that are in the Democratic party myself to do your research. Really do your research, okay? Because I can definitely say that as a Black woman, a part of the 93 percent, I made an error. I can admit that. I can take accountability and admit that."
2 Replies | 8,789 Views | Feb 13, 2025 - 6:30 PM - by luyenchuong3000
gets brighter before it dies. New Tab ↗
 
Why are they so scared of Elon Musk? Why do they want to put Elon Musk in jail? Soon they'll be in jail for life. That's why they have to bark so hard. They act like the last minute candle when the flame gets brighter before it dies.









0 Replies | 7,402 Views | Feb 13, 2025 - 6:27 PM - by luyenchuong3000
Fact Check: US Government Did Not Give New York Times 'Tens of Millions' New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2489686

Elon Musk, claimed The New York Times had received "tens of millions" from the U.S. government over the past five years.

By Tom Norton


President Donald Trump's administration and his supporters have turned their eyes to media outlets paid by federal agencies, promoted by a misleading claim this week that the USAID had spent $8 million on subscriptions to news outlet Politico.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt shared a poorly researched claim that the aid agency, which the Trump administration wants to shutter, spent $8 million, when that amount was for subscriptions across all federal agencies.

In the clamor following the story, another falsehood, shared by Department of Government Efficiency head Elon Musk, claimed The New York Times had received "tens of millions" from the U.S. government over the past five years.

A post on X, formerly Twitter, by Elon Musk, posted on February 5, 2025, viewed 14 million times, highlighted another post by conservative comentator Ian Miles Cheong, that said: "The US Government gave the New York Times tens of millions of dollars over just the past 5 years despite paying relatively little money to the NYT in the years preceding 2021. For instance, in August 2024, the US government awarded $4.1 million to the NYT.

"The bulk of the funds came from the US Department of Health and Human Services at $26.90m, followed by the National Science Foundation at $19.15m."

Musk replied: "NYT is government-funded media."

The post included screengrabs from the government spending site USAspending that showed spending filtered by the keyword "New York Times."

The data Cheong gave and Musk amplified does not show that the U.S. government "gave" The New York Times "tens of millions" of dollars.

Searching for "New York Times" returns unrelated spending for other institutions that include the words "New York" in some part of the spending entry. They include grants to The Research Foundation for the State University of New York, New York University and the New York Genome Center Inc.

The results also show spending records for more than 17 years.

USAspending.gov can correctly filter specific payments to The New York Times which shows that over the last five years, government agencies spent about $1.6 million, almost entirely on subscriptions. Other payments include ads, legal notices and delivery charges.

Over the past 17 years, the period Cheong searched under, total spending came to $3.1 million.

The New York Times' managing director of external communications, Charlie Stadtlander, told Newsweek: "It was surprising to see social media attention on the fact that a small number of government offices, libraries and courts purchase subscriptions to The New York Times and other media outlets.

"These officials and other public servants are simply seeking to better understand the world through our independent journalism, like millions of other Americans.

"It's worth noting that we offer these government subscriptions at a heavily discounted rate. For example, one arrangement provides more than 1 million active-duty and retired military members and their families access to The Times to understand what's happening in the world."

The New York Times confirmed that it has received no federal grants, that subscriptions have been bought for decades under Democratic and Republican administrations, including the first Trump administration, and that revenue earned from federal subscriptions amount to "less than 1/1000th of what we take in annually."

False.

The claim is based on faulty research. It quoted a search of U.S. government spending that included unrelated organizations. An accurate search reveals that U.S. government agencies spent about $1.6 million over the past five years on The New York Times services, almost entirely on subscriptions.

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3 Replies | 8,274 Views | Feb 13, 2025 - 1:04 AM - by Tin tức
Fact Check: Did the Federal Emergency Management Agency fraudulently send $59 million to luxury hotels in New York City to "house illegal migrants"? New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2489119

FEMA To Fire Employees Over 'Egregious' NYC Hotel Payments, But $59 Million Claim Lacks Confirmation

by: Ed Payne


Did the Federal Emergency Management Agency fraudulently send $59 million to luxury hotels in New York City to "house illegal migrants"? It's complicated: A New York City Hall spokesperson told Lead Stories that New York "never paid luxury-hotel rates" and that about a third of the $59 million -- around $19 million -- covered "direct hotel costs." A Department of Homeland Security statement said FEMA is firing four employees who made "egregious payments for luxury NYC hotels for migrants," but the agency wouldn't confirm the amount.

The claim appeared in a post published on X by Elon Musk on February 10, 2025. The post's caption said:



The @dogE team just discovered that FEMA sent $59M LAST WEEK to luxury hotels in New York City to house illegal migrants.

Sending this money violated the law and is in gross insubordination to the President's executive order.

That money is meant for American disaster relief and instead is being spent on high end hotels for illegals!

A clawback demand will be made today to recoup those funds.


This is what the post looked like on X at the time of writing:



The post does not provide any evidence to support its assertion that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) fraudulently sent $59 million to luxury hotels in New York City to house undocumented immigrants.

Department of Homeland Security

A February 11, 2025, statement (archived here) from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the parent agency of FEMA, did nothing to validate the $59 million figure. It said:

Effective immediately, FEMA is terminating the employment of four individuals for circumventing leadership to unilaterally make egregious payments for luxury NYC hotels for migrants. Firings include FEMA's Chief Financial Officer, two program analysts and a grant specialist.

Asked by Lead Stories in a February 11, 2025, email to confirm the amount of money and how it was spent, the DHS Office of Public Affairs said:

We have nothing more at this time.

New York City

In a February 11, 2025, email, a City Hall spokesperson told Lead Stories that New York City had paid out billions on the "international humanitarian crisis." Their statement continued:

We continue to see hundreds of migrants entering the city's care every week, with over 46,000 still in our shelter system and emergency-contracted hotels.

We have already spent over $7 billion on this crisis alone, and the previous administration committed only $237 million in funding to help house the migrants in our care and for future services. We have continued to receive previously allocated reimbursements through the past week. We will discuss this matter directly with federal officials.

City Hall disagreed with the numbers in Musk's social media post, saying New York never paid luxury hotel prices. It added that the city applied for the funds in April 2024, and FEMA approved them later that year. Out of the $59.3 million the city said it received from the agency, about $19 million went directly to hotel costs, $26 million covered services like food and security, and $13 million was used for group shelters and related services.

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9 Replies | 10,322 Views | Feb 11, 2025 - 10:19 PM - by Tin tức
Elon Musk, step by step, destroying America New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2488272
Musk calls for impeachment of judge who blocked DOGE access at Treasury

by Ian Swanson


Elon Musk is calling for the impeachment of the federal judge who made a decision early Saturday morning that the Treasury Department should block access to anyone “other than civil servants with a need for access to perform their job duties” from its payment systems.

The order explicitly prohibits special government employees and those detailed from outside the department from getting access to the systems, a designation that would cover Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

That appeared to anger Musk, who expressed his irritation in a few Saturday posts on the social platform X, which he owns.

“A corrupt judge protecting corruption,” Musk wrote in one post at 2:11 a.m. “He needs to be impeached NOW.”

That post was written in reply to a post by the conservative media pundit Glenn Beck.

Musk, the leader of DOGE, in an earlier post at 1:40 a.m. wrote “it’s time” in response to another post about impeaching judges who have ruled against actions by the Trump administration.

U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer, an appointee of former President Obama, in his ruling ordered anyone who is now blocked from access to the Treasury Department payment system, which doles out trillions of dollars, to immediately destroy any material they’ve already downloaded.

Engelmayer’s ruling came in response to a suit by by 19 Democratic state attorneys general worried over the access Musk and his team was getting to the information. Musk’s efforts have sparked concerns from Democrats and career public servants at the Treasury Department and other agencies that sensitive private information of citizens could be endangered.

It has also raised questions about the end game behind Musk’s actions, including whether the access to the payment systems could be used to cut off appropriated funds by Congress that President Trump’s team feels are not in line with the new administration’s policies or objectives.

The ruling from Engelmayer lasts until at least Friday, when another judge who is permanently overseeing the case will hold a hearing in New York about whether to grant a longer pause.

“The Court’s firm assessment is that, for the reasons stated by the States, they will face irreparable harm in the absence of injunctive relief,” Engelmayer wrote in his decision.

“That is both because of the risk that the new policy presents of the disclosure of sensitive and confidential information and the heightened risk that the systems in question will be more vulnerable than before to hacking,” the judge continued.

The state attorneys general had only filed their case on Friday before Engelmayer’s decision came down early Saturday.

Musk’s efforts to win access to the systems of various federal agencies have provoked a number of legal actions in a whirlwind few weeks since President Trump’s inauguration.

Musk is the richest man in the world and has become a key part of Trump’s inner circle. The president offered a vote of confidence in Musk’s actions on Friday during a press conference with Japan’s prime minister.

In response to a legal challenge brought by a coalition of unions, the Trump administration earlier this week agreed to limit access to two personnel at the Treasury Department until the next stage of the case, but the ruling issued Saturday went further in restricting access.

The courts have emerged as a key power challenging Trump as he seeks to make a number of enormous changes to policies in Washington, from birthright citizenship to the holding of migrants at Guantánamo Bay to the closing of federal agencies such as the U.S. Agency for International Development.

Musk’s threat to impeach a judge could open a new front in what is emerging as a battle between the executive and judicial branches of the federal government.
4 Replies | 8,612 Views | Feb 10, 2025 - 1:55 AM - by Thiệu Ngô
Elon Musk dodges DOGE scrutiny while expanding his power in Washington New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2488167
“It’s not going to be some sort of backroom secret thing,” Musk said last year. “It will be as transparent as possible,” maybe even streamed live online.
It hasn’t worked out that way so far.

By CHRIS MEGERIAN


WASHINGTON (AP) — Elon Musk made a clear promise after Donald Trump decided to put him in charge of making the government more efficient.

“It’s not going to be some sort of backroom secret thing,” Musk said last year. “It will be as transparent as possible,” maybe even streamed live online.

It hasn’t worked out that way so far.

In the three weeks since the Republican president has been back in the White House, Musk has rapidly burrowed deep into federal agencies while avoiding public scrutiny of his work. He has not answered questions from journalists or attended any hearings with lawmakers. Staff members for his so-called Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, have sidelined career officials around Washington.

It is a profound challenge not only to business-as-usual within the federal government, which Trump campaigned on disrupting, but to concepts of consensus and transparency that are foundational in a democratic system. Musk describes himself as “White House tech support,” and he has embedded himself in an unorthodox administration where there are no discernible limits on his influence.

Donald K. Sherman, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, said Trump has allowed Musk to “exert unprecedented power and authority over government systems” with “maximal secrecy and little-to-no accountability.”

The White House insisted that DOGE is “extremely transparent” and shared examples of its work so far, such as canceling contracts and ending leases for underused buildings. House Republicans said the Trump administration also discovered that Social Security benefits were being paid to a dozen people listed as 150 years old.

“We’re going to find billions, hundreds of billions of dollars of fraud and abuse and, you know, the people elected me on that,” Trump said in a Fox News interview to be aired along with the Super Bowl on Sunday. He described Musk as “terrific” and said he would soon focus on the Department of Defense, the country’s largest government agency.

Asked on Friday if Musk should publicly answer questions about his work, the president said, “Oh sure.”

“He’s not shy,” Trump said. “Elon’s not shy.”

That is true, at least judging by Musk’s social media, where no thought appears to be suppressed. His X account is a flood of internet memes, attacks on critics and professions of loyalty to the president. He has made clear the grand scope of his ambitions, talking in existential terms about the need to reverse the federal deficit, cut government spending and roll back progressive programs.

“This administration has one chance for major reform that may never come again,” he posted on Saturday. “It’s now or never.”

Musk is used to doing things his own way. The world’s richest person, he became wealthy with the online payment service PayPal, then took over the electric car manufacturer Tesla and founded the rocket company SpaceX. More recently, he bought Twitter and rebranded it as X, cutting jobs and remaking its culture.

He seems to be taking a similar approach to the federal government, but he can be tightlipped about his plans. For example, he has not explained how his team will utilize access to payment systems that include sensitive data on people in the United States.

Much of DOGE’s work is happening behind the scenes. Team members have shown up at the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Treasury Department, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, among other agencies. Their arrival is never publicly announced, and career staff members are looking over their shoulders for unfamiliar faces in the hallways.

At the Education Department, DOGE employees are working out of a conference room on the seventh floor, which also houses the secretary’s office.

Sheria Smith, president of a federal employees union that represents some of the agency’s staff, said it is unclear what internal systems have been accessed by Musk’s team and for what reason.

“It’s the lack of transparency that’s alarming,” she said.

While longtime staff members fret about their future, DOGE workers have been spotted cheerfully trading high-fives with each other.

“They don’t seem to answer to anyone and are not engaging with anyone in our agency,” Smith said.

Sometimes a rumor circulates that Musk himself is making the rounds. But he generally has been at the White House complex, where he has an office.

David Sacks, a Musk ally working on artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency issues for the administration, said he stopped by to check on the DOGE team.

“The whole room was full of young coders,” he said during The All-In Podcast, which Sacks hosts with three other venture capitalists. “The facilities people don’t know what to do because they’ve never had people ask to stay late on Friday night before.”

Journalists have been piecing together the identities of people who work for DOGE, discovering a cadre of young acolytes with technology and engineering backgrounds.

Some were previously employed by Musk’s companies, and Musk has said it is a crime to reveal their names. He has not cited any law that would be broken by such a disclosure.

It does not appear to be an idle threat. Ed Martin, the Trump-appointed interim U.S. attorney in the nation’s capital, said last week that “we will pursue any and all legal action against anyone who impedes your work or threatens your people.”

Martin followed up on Friday to thank Musk for referring suspects who were “stealing government property and/or threatening government employees.” No additional information was provided by Martin’s office or the White House.

Energy Secretary Chris Wright defended DOGE’s work, saying in a CNBC interview Friday that members of Musk’s team were like “young gun management consultants coming in to take a critical look at how things are run.”

“They’re part of a team assembled by DOGE, friends in Elon’s broader circle that are very good at IT and very good at systems,” Wright said.

It took more than two weeks after Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20 to figure out that Musk had formally joined the administration as a special government employee. The White House said Musk will file a financial disclosure report, but it will be kept secret. Because of Musk’s sprawling business interests, the report would likely be among the most extensive ever compiled.

It’s unclear whether Musk swore an oath to the Constitution like other federal workers. Even though Trump promised that Musk would steer clear of any areas where he has a conflict of interest, no details have been provided on how that is being evaluated. A test of that arrangement could come soon, with Musk set to review spending at the Pentagon, where SpaceX has billions of dollars in contracts to put satellites in orbit.

Democrats on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee tried to issue a subpoena to force Musk to testify, but the effort was blocked by Republicans.

“Who is this unelected billionaire, that he can attempt to dismantle federal agencies, fire people, transfer them, offer them early retirement, and have sweeping reform or changes to agencies without any congressional review, oversight, or concurrence?” said Rep. Gerald Connolly of Virginia, the committee’s top Democrat.

House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York said Republicans were “doing the bidding of an unelected, out of control, billionaire puppet master.”
2 Replies | 8,597 Views | Feb 09, 2025 - 7:19 PM - by Thiệu Ngô
Trump claimed ‘60 Minutes’ replaced Harris’ interview answers. That’s not what the transcript shows. New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2488137


The unedited transcript of CBS News’ "60 Minutes" interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris doesn’t show that the news outlet replaced Harris’ answers to questions about U.S.-Israel relations with responses from a different part of the interview.

CBS News used a longer version of Harris’ answer in a video clip preview on the CBS News show "Face the Nation." It used a shorter excerpt in the "60 Minutes" interview that aired Oct. 7, 2024. Both versions come from the same three-and-a-half-minute exchange on U.S.-Israel relations.

It’s standard practice for news outlets to edit interviews for length and clarity.

By Sara Swann


President Donald Trump’s monthslong feud with CBS News’ "60 Minutes" reignited after the news program released the full, unedited transcript and video of its pre-election interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris, the 2024 Democratic presidential candidate.

About three weeks after the Oct. 7, 2024, interview aired, Trump sued CBS Broadcasting Inc. and CBS Interactive Inc. for $10 billion, claiming the news outlet deceptively edited the "60 Minutes" interview to favor Harris. Then, at the end of January, the Federal Communications Commission, led by Trump appointee Brendan Carr, called on CBS to release the unedited transcript and video. CBS News complied, releasing the content publicly Feb. 5.

In response, Trump posted Feb. 6 on his social media platform Truth Social that CBS committed "fraud."

"CBS and 60 Minutes defrauded the public by doing something which has never, to this extent, been seen before," Trump wrote. "They 100% removed Kamala’s horrible election changing answers to questions, and replaced them with completely different, and far better, answers, taken from another part of the interview."


Trump claimed ‘60 Minutes’ replaced Harris’ interview answers. That’s not what the transcript shows.
If Your Time is short

The unedited transcript of CBS News’ "60 Minutes" interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris doesn’t show that the news outlet replaced Harris’ answers to questions about U.S.-Israel relations with responses from a different part of the interview.

CBS News used a longer version of Harris’ answer in a video clip preview on the CBS News show "Face the Nation." It used a shorter excerpt in the "60 Minutes" interview that aired Oct. 7, 2024. Both versions come from the same three-and-a-half-minute exchange on U.S.-Israel relations.

It’s standard practice for news outlets to edit interviews for length and clarity.

See the sources for this fact-check

President Donald Trump’s monthslong feud with CBS News’ "60 Minutes" reignited after the news program released the full, unedited transcript and video of its pre-election interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris, the 2024 Democratic presidential candidate.

About three weeks after the Oct. 7, 2024, interview aired, Trump sued CBS Broadcasting Inc. and CBS Interactive Inc. for $10 billion, claiming the news outlet deceptively edited the "60 Minutes" interview to favor Harris. Then, at the end of January, the Federal Communications Commission, led by Trump appointee Brendan Carr, called on CBS to release the unedited transcript and video. CBS News complied, releasing the content publicly Feb. 5.

In response, Trump posted Feb. 6 on his social media platform Truth Social that CBS committed "fraud."

"CBS and 60 Minutes defrauded the public by doing something which has never, to this extent, been seen before," Trump wrote. "They 100% removed Kamala’s horrible election changing answers to questions, and replaced them with completely different, and far better, answers, taken from another part of the interview."

Trump’s statement misrepresents what happened.


Trump claimed ‘60 Minutes’ replaced Harris’ interview answers. That’s not what the transcript shows.
If Your Time is short

The unedited transcript of CBS News’ "60 Minutes" interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris doesn’t show that the news outlet replaced Harris’ answers to questions about U.S.-Israel relations with responses from a different part of the interview.

CBS News used a longer version of Harris’ answer in a video clip preview on the CBS News show "Face the Nation." It used a shorter excerpt in the "60 Minutes" interview that aired Oct. 7, 2024. Both versions come from the same three-and-a-half-minute exchange on U.S.-Israel relations.

It’s standard practice for news outlets to edit interviews for length and clarity.

See the sources for this fact-check

President Donald Trump’s monthslong feud with CBS News’ "60 Minutes" reignited after the news program released the full, unedited transcript and video of its pre-election interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris, the 2024 Democratic presidential candidate.

About three weeks after the Oct. 7, 2024, interview aired, Trump sued CBS Broadcasting Inc. and CBS Interactive Inc. for $10 billion, claiming the news outlet deceptively edited the "60 Minutes" interview to favor Harris. Then, at the end of January, the Federal Communications Commission, led by Trump appointee Brendan Carr, called on CBS to release the unedited transcript and video. CBS News complied, releasing the content publicly Feb. 5.

In response, Trump posted Feb. 6 on his social media platform Truth Social that CBS committed "fraud."

"CBS and 60 Minutes defrauded the public by doing something which has never, to this extent, been seen before," Trump wrote. "They 100% removed Kamala’s horrible election changing answers to questions, and replaced them with completely different, and far better, answers, taken from another part of the interview."

Trump’s statement misrepresents what happened.
Sign up for PolitiFact texts

Trump is referring to Harris’ answers in two videos CBS News released. In an Oct. 6, 2024, video clip previewing the interview on the CBS News show "Face the Nation," Harris answered a question about U.S.-Israel relations. The next day, when the "60 Minutes" interview aired, it showed Harris giving a different answer to the same question.

The full, unedited interview transcript shows that CBS News’ "60 Minutes" took Harris’ answers in both videos from the same three-and-a-half-minute exchange on U.S.-Israel relations. It does not show that CBS News replaced Harris’ answers on this topic with a response from a different portion of the interview.

It’s typical for news outlets to edit long interviews into shorter broadcast segments or published stories.

Trump backed out of his CBS News "60 Minutes" interview before the 2024 election, breaking a decadeslong tradition of major party presidential candidates’ interviews with the network ahead of the general election.

PolitiFact contacted the White House for comment, but received no response.

What the full, unedited transcript shows

Because the interview aired on the anniversary of the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel, "60 Minutes" correspondent Bill Whitaker began the interview with questions about Israel and the Biden-Harris administration’s relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

PolitiFact annotated the unedited interview transcript below to show how "60 Minutes" presented Harris’ answers in the preview clip and aired interview.

The full, unedited interview video is available on "60 Minutes" YouTube page. The exchange about U.S.-Israel relations starts about six minutes in.

You can also read the full, unedited interview transcript here. The exchange about U.S.-Israel relations is on Pages 11-13. Parts highlighted in yellow were included in the preview clip, parts highlighted in blue were in the aired interview and parts highlighted in green were in both videos.

Why did "60 Minutes" share different clips?

When publishing the transcripts and video the Federal Communications Commission requested, CBS News said in a statement that the content shows "the ‘60 Minutes’ broadcast was not doctored or deceitful."

In its statement, CBS News noted that it’s common practice for journalists to edit interviews for time, space or clarity. The full, unedited interview video is 57 minutes long; that was edited down to 20 minutes.

CBS News said it broadcast a longer portion of Harris’ answer to Whitaker’s question about U.S.-Israel relations in a preview clip and a shorter version of Harris’ answer was included in the aired interview.

The news outlet said it edited the "60 Minutes" interview to include as much of Harris’ answers to Whitaker’s questions as possible, while fairly representing the substance of Harris’ answers.

CBS News made a similar statement Oct. 20, 2024, rebutting Trump’s accusation of deceitful editing.

Kelly McBride, senior vice president and chair of Craig Newmark Center for Ethics and Leadership at the Poynter Institute for Media Studies, told PolitiFact that CBS News’ "60 Minutes" edited the Harris interview reasonably. (The Poynter Institute owns PolitiFact.)

"I would say that their edits are completely within the standards that journalists employ when they try to create an informative product for the public," McBride said. "It seems very much like what journalists do with all verbose speakers, including and especially Donald Trump."

Trump posted on Truth Social that CBS News and 60 Minutes "replaced" Harris’ "60 Minutes" interview answers "with completely different, and far better, answers, taken from another part of the interview."

The full, unedited interview transcript does not show that CBS News’ "60 Minutes" replaced all of Harris’ answers to questions about U.S.-Israel relations with a response from a different part of the interview. CBS did not change Harris’ meaning.

News outlets commonly edit interviews for length and clarity. CBS News used a longer version of Harris’ response in a video clip previewing the "60 Minutes" interview on the CBS News show "Face the Nation." It used a shorter excerpt of Harris’ answer in the aired "60 Minutes" interview. Both parts of Harris’ answer were taken from the same segment of the interview, the unedited transcript shows.

A media ethics expert said the "60 Minutes" interview adhered to typical journalistic standards.

We rate this claim False.


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4 Replies | 8,013 Views | Feb 09, 2025 - 3:52 PM - by Tin tức
Judge orders sweeping restriction on DOGE access to sensitive Treasury payment systems New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2487770

The judge limited access to “civil servants with a need for access” who have “passed all background checks and security clearances.”

By Kyle Cheney


A federal judge on Saturday issued a sweeping block on most Trump administration officials — including Elon Musk and his allies — from accessing sensitive Treasury records for at least a week while legal proceedings play out in New York.

Manhattan-based U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer issued the middle-of-the-night order after an emergency request by 19 Democratic attorneys general warning that the efforts by Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency allies to take control of Treasury’s sensitive payment systems — which have access to personal information of millions of Americans and the government’s financial transactions — were putting their residents at risk.

Engelmayer said he agreed with the states’ assessment that the abrupt changes in policy implemented by the Trump administration had created a risk that sensitive data would be disclosed or that the system could be hacked. He also said the states were very likely to show that the new arrangement was legally improper.

A federal judge in Washington had already limited access to this system to a pair of Musk allies who had been embedded within Treasury as “special government employees,” as well as other existing Treasury employees and officials with legitimate reasons to access it. But Engelmayer’s order goes further, barring even the two Musk-associated officials — Tom Krause and Marko Elez — and many other government employees from accessing the system until at least Feb. 14, when a different federal judge has called a hearing on the matter.

Instead, Engelmayer limited access to the Treasury system to “civil servants with a need for access … who have passed all background checks and security clearances and all information security training” required by laws and regulations.

The Barack Obama-appointed judge also affirmatively barred any political appointees or special government employees detailed to Treasury — the designation given to Musk’s allies — from accessing the system. And he ordered Treasury Department leaders to require that any newly prohibited officials who already accessed such information to “immediately destroy and all copies of material downloaded.”

The order is the latest in a series of emergency interventions by the courts to block the Trump administration’s rapid-fire attempt — led by Musk’s DOGE office in the White House — to remake the federal bureaucracy. Engelmayer’s order followed by just hours a block by a federal judge in Washington on a Musk-led drive to quickly dismantle USAID, the agency responsible for administering foreign aid programs. And other judges have intervened to limit Trump’s early efforts related to birthright citizenship, a sweeping spending freeze, a government-wide resignation program and the relocation transgender prison inmates.

Though Engelmayer issued the emergency order, the case will ultimately be handled by U.S. District Judge Jeannette Vargas, a Joe Biden appointee who was confirmed to the bench last year.
0 Replies | 8,453 Views | Feb 08, 2025 - 8:47 PM - by Thiệu Ngô
Trump and Musk said these bold moves were imminent. Now they're stuck in the mud. New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2487765
President Donald Trump's executive orders have faced a slew of legal roadblocks.
Judges have blocked orders on birthright citizenship, transgender inmate rehousing, and spending.
Trump's tariff plans for Canada and Mexico were paused after negotiations.

Laura Italiano, Natalie Musumeci, Haven Orecchio-Egresitz, and Katie Balevic


Some of President Donald Trump's boldest moves during his new administration's seismic first three weeks have been grounded before ever taking flight.

The administration and its Department of Governmental Efficiency, led by Elon Musk, the world's richest man, promised a list of swift-moving changes to the US government's operations. While some of those plans have progressed, others were put on hold, either in the courts or by the administration itself.

The White House says this is all part of a long game that Trump, ultimately, will win.

"Each executive order will hold up in court because every action of the Trump-Vance administration is completely lawful," Harrison Fields, the principal White House deputy press secretary, told BI on Friday.

And as for Trump's walked-back plans to hit our closest neighbors with tariffs — that was an all-out victory, said another White House spokesman, Kush Desai, who said Trump changed course on Mexico and Canada after "critical concessions" from both countries.

Still, much of Trump 2.0 remains on ice for now.

For those who haven't been able to keep up with the firehouse of actions announced by the White House and DOGE, here are the key ones that have been held up — for now.

A 'fork in the road' resignation offer

A federal judge in Massachusetts delayed Trump's plan to root out federal employees with buyout offers.

On January 28, the Trump administration gave just over two million government workers the chance to resign and maintain full pay and benefits until September 30. The so-called "fork in the road" resignation offer was a strategy straight out of Musk's playbook.

US District Judge George O'Toole Jr. on Thursday extended the buyout deadline until at least Monday, just hours before the actual deadline. The order came in response to a lawsuit brought by labor union groups. A Trump administration official told BI that over 40,000 federal workers had taken the buyout as of Wednesday.

Musk's DOGE and the Treasury

The White House launched another fiscal bombshell on February 3 when Trump told reporters he had given Treasury data access to Musk, whose DOGE is tasked with cutting government spending.

The idea that DOGE would have access to the personal information of millions of Americans — including anyone who had ever paid taxes, taken a federal loan, or collected Social Security — resulted in another legal challenge.

On Thursday, a federal judge in California set strict interim limits on the Treasury data, banning DOGE from accessing it directly.

Then, Saturday morning, another federal judge temporarily blocked a slew of people — including special government employees (like Musk), political appointees, and government employees not assigned by the Treasury — from accessing the Treasury's payment systems. The judge also ordered those who had gained new access to the systems to destroy all copies they may have made of materials and records they downloaded.

In the order, US District Judge Paul Engelmayer cited the risk of "disclosure of sensitive and confidential information" and the "heightened risk that the systems in question will be more vulnerable than before to hacking."

A freeze on federal spending

On January 27 — the first full Monday of Trump 2.0 — Trump budget officials dropped a bombshell memo ordering the temporary freezing of "all federal financial assistance" beginning 5 p.m. the following day, so that the spending could be reviewed. In an instant, the future of billions of dollars in federal funding was thrown into question.

The shockwaves were just as swift, even in the hours before the freeze was to take place. Medicaid portals used by states to access federal reimbursement quickly shut down across the country. Head Start funds were frozen in some states. Officials in California wondered if FEMA wildfire assistance was at risk.

Judges presiding over two hastily-drafted lawsuits issued separate injunctions blocking the freeze, including a federal judge in DC whose order came down minutes before the 5 p.m deadline.

The next day, Matthew Vaeth, director of the Office of Management and Budget, sent out a second memo. It said that the first memo is no longer in effect.

Backing off from tariff threats

Trump touted his plans to impose new 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico, and they were set to go into effect on Tuesday.

The announcements were met with retaliatory plans from both countries, where leaders said they'd enforce their own tariffs on American products.

The expected trade war rattled the markets. On Monday, stocks and crypto tumbled, while the US dollar and oil climbed.

In the end, though, these tariffs that left American investors scrambling were put on hold.

Trump and Mexico's president, Claudia Sheinbaum, struck a deal on border policy, delaying the expected tariff on Mexican imports for 30 days. Similarly, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau negotiated a pause until March for that set of tariffs.

A similar threat of 25% tariffs on goods from Colombia was put on hold after the country agreed to accept all deportation flights from the US.

An additional 10% tariff on imports from China did go into effect Tuesday, and was quickly matched by retaliatory tariffs on US exports to that country.

Bid to end birthright citizenship

Trump's executive order seeking to abolish the constitutional right of birthright citizenship has been indefinitely blocked by two separate federal judges.

A judge in Washington state issued a nationwide preliminary injunction against the order on Thursday, just a day after a Maryland judge did the same. The order — one of the first signed by Trump after he was sworn into office — has been challenged in the courts by more than 20 Democratic-run states and immigrant rights advocates who have argued it violates the 14th Amendment.

Judge John Coughenour of the US District Court for the Western District of Washington temporarily halted the order on January 23, calling the move to end automatic citizenship to US-born children of parents who are in the country illegally "blatantly unconstitutional."

Coughenour issued his Thursday ruling following the decision by Maryland US District Judge Deborah Boardman. Boardman wrote that Trump's order "conflicts with the plain language of the 14th Amendment, contradicts 125-year-old binding Supreme Court precedent, and runs counter to our nation's 250-year history of citizenship by birth."

Dropping USAID into the 'wood chipper'

A federal judge on Friday temporarily blocked the Trump administration from placing 2,200 USAID employees on paid leave.

The workers, some of whom are overseas, were set to go on leave just before midnight Friday.

Musk said in an X post on Monday that he had "spent the weekend feeding USAID into the wood chipper."

The American Federation of Government Employees and the American Foreign Service Association, however, filed a lawsuit against the administration's USAID cuts on Thursday, arguing that the moves to dismantle it were made without congressional authorization.

Constitutional law experts told Business Insider that dismantling the agency without congressional approval is indisputably illegal.

Forcing transgender women inmates into men's prisons

Trump's Day One order to house transgender women into men's men's facilities at federal prisons has also been blocked in the courts.

The order says the attorney general and Homeland Security secretary shall "ensure that males are not detained in women's prisons" and calls to end gender-affirming care for transgender inmates. It was challenged in two lawsuits brought by a handful of transgender women in prison.

US District Judge Royce Lamberth in Washington, DC, granted the plaintiffs' request for a temporary restraining order on Tuesday. In his order, Lamberth wrote that the plaintiffs "have straightforwardly demonstrated that irreparable harm will follow" if the restraining order request was denied.

Lamberth's order followed a separate ruling by US District Judge George O'Toole in Massachusetts, who also issued a temporary restraining order on January 26.

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0 Replies | 7,710 Views | Feb 08, 2025 - 8:14 PM - by Thiệu Ngô
The White House’s wildly inaccurate claims about USAID spending New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2487545

Eleven out of 12 claims about the agency’s work are misleading, wrong or lack
context.

Analysis by Glenn Kessler


As the Trump administration this week dismantled the U.S. Agency for International Development, the primary vehicle for U.S. foreign aid, the White House issued a statement justifying its actions. Titled “At USAID, Waste and Abuse Runs Deep,” the news release claimed USAID “has been unaccountable to taxpayers as it funnels massive sums of money to the ridiculous — and, in many cases, malicious — pet projects of entrenched bureaucrats, with next-to-no oversight.”

The news release then listed 12 examples, plucked from the websites of right-wing media. But the numbers cited — as low as $32,000 — hardly justify the claim that these are “massive sums” of money. In fact, they are so low that some of the funds appear to have been awarded at the ambassador level, without Washington involvement. At least one dated from the first Trump administration, and some were actually State Department grants, not USAID.

Whether they are “ridiculous” might be in the eye of the beholder. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt held up the sheet before reporters on Monday and declared, “I don’t know about you, but as an American taxpayer I don’t want my dollars going toward this crap.”

In fiscal year 2023, USAID was appropriated about $25 billion by Congress, according to ForeignAssistance.go v. (The website in recent days has been changed to combine USAID spending with foreign aid distributed by the State Department, so the combined total is nearly $39 billion.) The White House identified only about $12 million in grants — one of which was $6 million — though one allegation vaguely claimed “hundreds of millions of dollars.” Upon inspection, that turned out to be from 2005 to 2008.

As a reader service, we examined these line items, as they have spread across social media. By eliminating USAID’s website, the administration made harder to ascertain the details of some of these programs. But we determined that, as framed by the White House, only one claim — out of 12 — was accurate. After we highlighted key errors in the statement to the White House, we received a statement from spokeswoman Anna Kelly: “This waste of taxpayer dollars underscores why the president paused foreign aid on day one to ensure it aligns with American interests.”

The Facts

According to surveys, many Americans have a misguided view of how much money the United States devotes to foreign aid. Polls consistently reveal that Americans believe that it is about 25 percent of the federal budget — and that a majority believe it should be more like 10 percent. In reality, foreign aid is less than 1 percent of the budget.

On top of that, other countries are more generous with foreign aid. By raw dollars, the United States gives more foreign aid than any other country. But when measured as a percentage of a country’s economy, the United States is far behind nations such as Britain, Norway, Sweden, Germany and the Netherlands. The United Nations has set a target of contributing 0.7 percent of gross national income in development aid; the United States clocks in with less than 0.2 percent, near the bottom of the list of major democracies, according to a 2020 report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Much of the time, this aid does not actually leave U.S. shores. Then, if it does, it generally goes to nongovernmental organizations, not host governments. The exception might be direct cash transfers as a reward for counterterrorism operations to countries that support the United States, such as Turkey and Jordan, or Egypt and Israel for signing the Camp David Accords, according to the Congressional Research Service (CRS). Very little since the 1970s has been spent on direct construction of roads, irrigation systems, electric power facilities or similar projects, CRS said.

About two-thirds of U.S. foreign assistance funds in fiscal year 2018 were obligated to U.S.-based entities, CRS said. For instance, food aid must be purchased in the United States and by law must be shipped on U.S. carriers. With the exception of some aid given to Israel, all military aid must be used to purchase U.S. military equipment and training — meaning foreign military aid in reality is a jobs program in the United States.

Here’s a line-by-line examination of the White House list, in the order presented.

“$1.5 million to ‘advance diversity equity and inclusion in Serbia’s workplaces and business communities’”

This is mostly accurate.
USAID provided $1.5 million to a group called Grupa Izadji, which focuses on creating opportunities for young LGBTQ people. Aleksa Savić, executive director of Grupa Izadji, said in an email that the goal “was to raise the perception among employers and the broader Serbian public that the economic engagement of all individuals, including LGBTQI+ persons, yields positive effects for the economy and creates better conditions for economic growth and development.” Under the terms of the three-year grant, USAID delivers money after certain milestones have been met. The organization has received $1.14 million and on Jan. 24 “submitted additional milestones valued at $755,000, for which we are awaiting payment from USAID,” he said. For many years, USAID has tried to improve civil society in Serbia as interest groups could advocate with the government on reforms. LGBTQ people faced discrimination, so one area of focus was ensuring acceptance of Belgrade Pride, an annual parade that previously was canceled after threats of violence. The 2024 parade was peaceful, and the government is discussing legislation on same-sex partnerships.

“$70,000 for production of a ‘DEI musical’ in Ireland”

This is wrong.This was a State Department grant, not USAID. In 2022, the U.S. ambassador hosted an event featuring Grammy-winning folk duo Francesco Turrisi and Rhiannon Giddens, along with other Irish and American musicians.

“$2.5 million for electric vehicles for Vietnam”

This is wrong. This was for more than electric vehicles. USAID launched a $2.5 million fund that provided awards up to $100,000 to organizations with promising new products, business models, or financing models in Danang or SaiGon cities. The fund was part of a larger effort to bring green energy to a country that is one of the world’s fastest-growing per capita greenhouse gas emitters. China has a head start on green energy, but the United States has sought to keep Vietnam out of China’s orbit, so the program was intended to boost the U.S. brand in green energy.

“$47,000 for a ‘transgender opera’ in Colombia”

This is wrong. USAID did not fund this. The White House appears to be referring to a $25,000 State Department grant to Universidad De Los Andes in Bogotá to stage an opera, “As One,” composed by Laura Kaminsky, an American. The rest of the money came from other sources, according to Juana Monsalve, the lead actress in the Colombian performances. “This is a well-known opera in the U.S., highly acclaimed by audiences,” Monsalve told a radio show in Spanish. “The last thing I expected was to hear those statements from the White House.”

“$32,000 for a ‘transgender comic book’ in Peru”

This is wrong. USAID did not fund this, and it was not specifically transgender. Instead, the grant says the State Department provided $32,000, under the guise of public diplomacy, to Peru’s Education Department “to cover expenses to produce a tailored-made comic, featured an LGBTQ+ hero to address social and mental health issues.”

“$2 million for sex changes and ‘LGBT activism’ in Guatemala”
This is misleading, as it suggests USAID arranged for sex changes. The three-year grant to Asociación Lambda, a Guatemala LGBTIQ+ organization, was to “strengthen trans-led organizations to deliver gender-affirming health care, advocate for improved quality and access to services, and provide economic empowerment opportunities.” The World Health Organization defines gender-affirming health care as “any single or combination of a number of social, psychological, behavioral or medical (including hormonal treatment or surgery) interventions designed to support and affirm an individual’s gender identity.” About $350,000 of the grant has been delivered. Officials at Asociación Lambda could not be reached, but a former senior USAID official who worked on LGBTIQ+ programs for the agency said, “I regularly went to the Hill and communicated on the record to note that for USAID, gender-affirming care does not include surgeries, hormone replacement therapies or any other medical interventions.”

“$6 million to fund tourism in Egypt”

This is wrong. This initiative was launched in the first Trump administration to “increase educational opportunities and strengthen the livelihoods of the people of North Sinai,” according to the citation provided by the White House. The money would “provide access to transportation for rural communities and economic livelihood programming for families.” There is no mention of funding tourism.

“Hundreds of thousands of dollars for a nonprofit linked to designated terrorist organizations — even AFTER an inspector general launched an investigation”

This is dubious.
Allegations of links to Pakistani terror groups have never been proved and have been denied as “baseless and defamatory” by the organization, known as Helping Hand for Relief and Development. Some GOP members of Congress for years have claimed the group has terrorism links, and the Washington Examiner reported last year that the USAID inspector general began an investigation. The State Department, in a brochure on American Muslims published during the first Trump administration, said Helping Hand was “lauded for its ability to deliver effective aid.”

“Millions to EcoHealth Alliance — which was involved in research at the Wuhan lab”

This lacks context. Before the pandemic, up until 2019, USAID provided $1.1 million to EcoHealth Alliance, an environmental health nonprofit, via a subagreement on virus research. USAID initially awarded a grant to the University of California at Davis to improve monitoring of zoonotic viruses with pandemic potential in African and Asian countries. UC-Davis then hired EcoHealth, which in turn contracted with Wuhan University and the Wuhan Institute of Virology, to collect biological samples from roughly 1,500 individuals in the Yunnan province with exposure to bats, other wildlife and domestic animals, according to the Government Accountability Office. The origin of the covid virus has still not been determined. In 2022, USAID awarded EcoHealth $4.7 million for a conservation project to improve farming practices in southwest Liberia — completely unrelated to virus research.

“Hundreds of thousands of meals that went to al-Qaeda-affiliated fighters in Syria”

This is highly misleading. As the article cited by the White House makes clear, investigators, including the USAID inspector general, discovered that the head of a nongovernmental organization diverted $9 million intended for Syrian civilians to combatant groups. He was charged in a 12-count indictment unsealed in November. “USAID OIG works tirelessly to ensure that U.S.-funded humanitarian assistance does not fall into the hands of terrorist organizations,” said Jason Donnelly, special agent for the inspector general, in a news release. “We will continue to work with the Department of Justice and law enforcement partners to hold accountable those who compromise USAID programs for vulnerable populations around the world.” Yet the White House is now blaming the agency for fraud that it exposed.

“Funding to print ‘personalized’ contraceptives birth control devices in developing countries”

This is misleading. USAID gave a grant to the University of Texas at Austin to develop personalized 3D-printed nonhormonal intrauterine devices (IUDs). The grant was part of a program managed by Eastern Virginia Medical School at Old Dominion University and USAID to improve reproductive health by researching low-cost, safe and noninvasive HIV prevention methods as well as contraceptives.

“Hundreds of millions of dollars to fund ‘irrigation canals, farming equipment, and even fertilizer used to support the unprecedented poppy cultivation and heroin production in Afghanistan,’ benefiting the Taliban”

This is false. USAID never intended to support opium poppy cultivation or the Taliban, and in fact the United States sought to stem it. The White House cites a right-wing news site’s account of a 2018 report by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) — whom President Donald Trump recently fired — that found that USAID efforts to fund alternative development projects during the George W. Bush administration (2005 to 2008) had failed. The Taliban before 2001 had successfully banned poppy cultivation, but the U.S. invasion led to a power vacuum that was exploited by poppy growers. USAID was the lead U.S. agency for implementing alternative development projects, modeled after a more successful effort in Colombia, but the report documented how conflicts among agencies and with allies hampered the effort. It’s a stretch to now, years later, accuse USAID of helping the Taliban.

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0 Replies | 8,079 Views | Feb 08, 2025 - 2:51 AM - by Tin tức
No, Chelsea Clinton didn't receive $84M from USAID New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2487033

Posts shared online connected the rumor to her work for the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation.

By Grace Deng


Claim:
Chelsea Clinton received $84 million in taxpayer dollars from the U.S. Agency for International Development.

Rating: False

On Feb. 5, 2025, social media users spread a claim that Chelsea Clinton, daughter of Democratic former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former President Bill Clinton, received $84 million in taxpayer money from the U.S. Agency for International Development, a humanitarian aid agency.

The claim spread primarily on X but it also appeared in posts on Facebook, Threads and Bluesky. Many of these posts included an image purporting to show how money flows to "Bill Hillary & Chelsea Clinton."



WorldNetDaily, a far-right news outlet known for publishing conspiracy theories, posted a story about the rumor, citing what appeared to be a since-deleted X post from tech mogul Elon Musk. Based on the embedded post in the WorldNetDaily story, Musk appears to have quoted a post claiming Chelsea Clinton was "casually taking home $84 million" with "Wow." Snopes could not find a screenshot or archived link verifying that Musk posted this, but we found quote posts and replies to a deleted post from Musk discussing this claim.

In short, Chelsea Clinton has not received $84 million from USAID. The graph shared purporting to show how money flows to "Bill Hillary & Chelsea Clinton" is a reference to the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation, not Chelsea Clinton specifically. A search of tax records and the U.S. government's spending tracker found that Chelsea Clinton has not personally received any money from USAID since 2008 — the first year records are available online — and that she receives no salary from the only Clinton-related initiative that has received money from USAID. Thus, we rate this claim as false.

Graph references Clinton Foundation, not Chelsea Clinton

The graph appears to be from datarepublican.com's charity graphs (archived). The webpage says it creates its graphs using employer identification numbers — federal tax identification numbers — as well as the USASpending.gov website, the American government's "official open data source of federal spending information." It is unclear how often datarepublican.com's information is updated, although its X account was announcing updates as recently as Feb. 5, as of this writing.

An IRS search for the EIN, listed under "Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton" on the image leads to the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation, a philanthropic nonprofit group that carries out various humanitarian efforts. Chelsea Clinton received $0 for her work for this foundation in 2022, according to publicly available tax returns (see Page 7).

ProPublica also offers an easily searchable Nonprofit Explorer tool using these IRS documents, which show Chelsea Clinton had not received any compensation from the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation since at least fiscal year 2013.

It is also worth noting that datarepublican.com's own nongovernmental organization tracker meant to show connections between charities and USAID funding noted as of this writing (screenshot) that Chelsea Clinton receives $0 in compensation from all nonprofit organizations where she is listed as an officer.

Clinton Foundation and USAID funding

The Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation also received no money from USAID from fiscal years 2008 to 2024 — which ran from October 2007 to September 2024 — according to a search of USASpending.gov, which goes back to fiscal year 2008. Fiscal year 2025 is not over as of this writing, but the foundation received no money from USAID through Feb. 6, 2025, either.

Another search of USASpending.gov found that the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation has received only one financial award from the U.S. government in total: $49,998 in 2010 for AmeriCorps National, a federal initiative that provides Americans opportunities to do community service.

In 2022, the Clinton Foundation had about $302 million in net assets. ProPublica also has 2023 tax returns available that do not appear to be on the IRS lookup search yet, which show the organization's net assets at $293 million.

From fiscal years 2008 to 2024, USAID has awarded money to only one Clinton organization: the Clinton Health Access Initiative, which was founded by the Clinton Foundation but is its own nonprofit group. The initiative received a grant for $7.49 million and spent $6,049,198.09 of that grant from 2019 to 2021.

From 2019 to 2021, Chelsea Clinton did not receive any compensation for her position as a board member for the health initiative, either, IRS documents say (see Page 18 in the organization's 2019 and 2021 tax returns and Page 17 in the 2020 return).

ProPublica's Nonprofit Explorer tool provides information on executive compensation at the Clinton Health Access Initiative from fiscal years 2013 to 2024, and according to the tool Chelsea Clinton received no compensation from the organization during those years.

Thus, there is no evidence Chelsea Clinton has received any money from USAID, nor is there any evidence that she received any compensation from the Clinton organization that has received money from USAID.

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8 Replies | 10,419 Views | Feb 07, 2025 - 1:18 AM - by Tin tức
Fact Check: USAID Did NOT Spend Over $8 Million On Politico, LLC New Tab ↗
 
Attachment 2486601

Did USAID spend over $8 million on Politico, LLC, as social media posts imply? No, that's not true: The government spending database only shows $44,000 in two transactions. Both were subscriptions, not grants.

by: Uliana Malashenko


The claim appeared in a post (archived here) on X where it was published on February 5, 2025. It opened:

So let me get this straight...

USAID has been spending millions of taxpayer dollars every year funding not only the BBC, but also Politico?




However, the screenshots in the post displaying the figure of over $ 8.1 million among other things did not represent searches per agency.

Politico, LLC is a journalistic organization predominantly covering politics.

Lead Stories searched the database applying two filters, a recipient's name and an awarding/funding agency. The results below show that the total amount spent by the USAID (the U.S. Agency for International Development) on Politico, LLC, is below $50,000. The database only shows two transactions, and both were not grants but subscriptions, as seen here and here.



A breakdown of the overall $8 million figure from the post on X summarizes what all government agencies spent on Politico, and most of the transactions manually reviewed by Lead Stories were subscriptions.

USAID wasn't even Politico's top paid subscriber among government agencies

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0 Replies | 6,688 Views | Feb 06, 2025 - 1:21 AM - by Tin tức
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