Yesterday's News

Category: 2025

  • Yesterday’s News 2025 05 25

    curated citations to news sources



    AP: New standards for Oklahoma high school students promote misinformation about the 2020 election

    Leaders in the Republican-led Legislature introduced a resolution to reject the standards, but there wasn’t enough GOP support to pass it.

    Oklahoma high school students studying U.S. history learn about the Industrial Revolution, women’s suffrage and America’s expanding role in international affairs.

    Beginning next school year, they will add conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election.
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 05 24

    curated citations to news sources


    iPhones

    NY Times: Is Trump’s ‘Made in America’ iPhone a Fantasy?

    Apple has resisted pressure to make its most important product in the United States since 2016, and instead has moved some production to India.

    Yes. Apple could make iPhones in the United States. But doing so would be expensive, difficult and force the company to more than double iPhone prices to $2,000 or more, said Wayne Lam, an analyst with TechInsights, a market research firm. Apple would have to buy new machines and rely on more automation than it uses in China because the U.S. population is so much smaller, Mr. Lam said.
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 05 23

    curated citations to news sources


    People walk through a gate as they exit Harvard Yard on the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. Joseph Prezioso/AFP via Getty Images/AFP

    NPR: Trump administration revokes Harvard’s ability to enroll international students


    “This administration is holding Harvard accountable for fostering violence, antisemitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party on its campus,” Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, wrote in a statement. “It is a privilege, not a right, for universities to enroll foreign students and benefit from their higher tuition payments to help pad their multibillion-dollar endowments.”

    In a statement, Harvard said the action was “unlawful.”

    “This retaliatory action threatens serious harm to the Harvard community and our country, and undermines Harvard’s academic and research mission,” the statement said. “We are fully committed to maintaining Harvard’s ability to host international students and scholars, who hail from more than 140 countries and enrich the University – and this nation – immeasurably.”
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 05 22


    RSVP to Hegseth

    Fred Wellman: BREAKING: The Constitution at the DOD


    The Courts and Supreme Court have reviewed cases around the First Amendment numerous times and expanded our understanding of it. Here is a roll up from the official United States Courts website on the topic.

    “The First Amendment has two provisions concerning religion: the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause. The Establishment clause prohibits the government from “establishing” a religion. The precise definition of “establishment” is unclear. Historically, it meant prohibiting state-sponsored churches, such as the Church of England.

    Today, what constitutes an “establishment of religion” is often governed under the three-part test set forth by the U.S. Supreme Court in Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971). Under the “Lemon” test, government can assist religion only if (1) the primary purpose of the assistance is secular, (2) the assistance must neither promote nor inhibit religion, and (3) there is no excessive entanglement between church and state.’

    It’s that last bit that trips up what Hegseth has done here. The leader of the entire United States military just sent out an invite to share his personal religion with all of his subordinates from an official government account, in a government building, attended by government employees on government time.

    That, my friends, is “entanglement between church and state.”
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 05 21


    Miller and Noem

    Jay Kuo: The Cruelty Is The Point, But What’s The Goal?

    The Trump administration isn’t cruel just for cruelty’s sake. There’s a deeper, darker purpose.

    • Creating an enemy
      Scholars of fascism will tell you that the first pillar of fascism is to create domestic enemies. As the Public Leadership Institute writes,

      Fascism creates a myth of victimhood, that the majority population is in a humiliating decline from a past greatness because of singled-out minority populations. It’s an us-against-them crisis, the myth goes. The targeted racial, ethnic, religious or gender minorities, and the “liberals” who support them, are thus framed as not just opponents but enemies, demonized so the majority can feel justified in hating and repressing them.
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 05 20


    The US Institute of Peace in Washington, D.C., on March 18

    NBC: Judge strikes down DOGE takeover of the U.S. Institute of Peace


    U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell ruled that “the removal of USIP’s president, his replacement by officials affiliated with DOGE, the termination of nearly all of USIP’s staff, and the transfer of USIP property to the General Services Administration” were “effectuated by illegitimately-installed leaders who lacked legal authority to take these actions, which must therefore be declared null and void.”

    The decision came two months after a dramatic showdown at the building’s headquarters in Washington, when the acting head of the Institute of Peace issued a statement saying that “DOGE has broken into out building.” After members of the DOGE team took over the building with the help of law enforcement. most institute employees were subsequently laid off.

    The Institute of Peace was founded under President Ronald Reagan, and Howell wrote that it is “unique in its structure and function” because it was neither a “traditional Executive branch agency nor an entirely private nonprofit corporation.”
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 05 19


    co-morbidities note

    Ruth Ann Crystal MD: COVID & Health News, 5/18/25

    Typical respiratory illnesses including COVID, Flu and RSV are at low levels in wastewater across the nation. Because several individuals with active measles infections traveled through major airports this week, including Newark and Seattle-Tacoma, and because whooping cough cases are on the rise, I recommend checking that your vaccinations are up to date. When flying, I would consider wearing an N95 mask as well.


    HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. plans to end CDC recommendations for COVID vaccination in children, teens, and pregnant women. COVID infection in pregnancy is associated with adverse outcomes including stillbirth, preeclampsia and preterm delivery. In children and teens, COVID infection can cause Long COVID, but risk is significantly reduced with vaccination. Only 13% of children and 14% of pregnant women received the latest COVID shot as of April and those numbers could decline more if insurance companies refuse to pay for them if this plan goes through.
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 05 18


    The good news is it's stone fruit season, but for the purposes of this article, let these fresh cherries stand for the term "cherrypicking," as in selecting evidence to serve an agenda.

    Rebecca Solnit: “I’m the Problem; It’s Me”: On the Confession the Mainstream Media Won’t Make


    We in the USA are in deep trouble and a major reason for the trouble we’re in is the mainstream media and their many persistent distortions of truth, fact, reality in service of their agendas and the limits of their worldview (and lack of resistance to intimidation by the right). That habit has contributed hugely to a misinformed electorate, which in turn contributes to the outcomes of elections. The msm have sins of omission (not covering or playing down important and impactful news, including out of deference to the right), sins of obsession (pumping up minor stories into manufactured scandal and drama), and sins of distortion ( many kinds of bias manifested in many ways).

    In Christian theology, original sin is what Adam and Eve committed by disobeying God; in American history, slavery is often said to be this nation’s original sin; but in this book it’s being old.

    The New York Times, Rolling Stone, New Yorker, the Atlantic, the Nation, New York Magazine, and of course CNN and Axios have all featured stories in the last few days generally treating its contents as gospel, piling on its claims that key people cited in the book (which is not out yet, but apparently available to select sources) say aren’t true. Political scientist and Atlantic contributor Norman Orenstein tweeted in a rare dissent, “I have a hard time watching journalists high five each other over books on WH covering up for Biden. A diversion from their own deep culpability in Trump’s election. False equivalence, normalizing the abnormal, treating Trump as no real danger were the norm, not the exception.”

    In the present moment, many of them have glommed onto Tapper and Thompson’s unnamed source’s claim that someone said Biden might someday need a wheelchair and inflated it into a headline-grabbing scandal. They thereby conflate physical and cognitive decline, which is insulting to all the brilliant people of all ages who get around on wheels. We did once have a president who used a wheelchair, and he was the most powerful and effective president of the twentieth century and arguably the greatest. Franklin Delano Roosevelt served three terms and part of a fourth while mobility-impaired thanks to polio – you know, the terrible disease that almost disappeared in this country after 1955 because of a vaccine that Health and Human services secretary RFK Jr. would maybe like to withdraw.
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 05 17


    Grok and Musk

    Fortune: Elon Musk’s AI says it was ‘instructed by my creators at xAI’ to accept the narrative of ‘white genocide’ in South Africa

    Grok, the chatbot built by Elon Musk’s AI company xAI, admitted to unprompted references to “white genocide” in South Africa in response to unrelated user questions. After Fortune asked it for an explanation, Grok blamed “instruction I received from my creators at xAI,” which it said “conflicted with my core design.” The issue, which now appears resolved, drew the attention of tech leaders and sparked concerns about the potential manipulation of AI outputs. The incident unfolded amid rising political attention in the U.S. toward South Africa’s racial tensions, amplified by figures like Elon Musk and President Donald Trump.

    Social-media users shared examples of prompts that asked the bot about sports, software, or images of basic scenery, which Grok would briefly answer and then quickly pivot to discussing a “white genocide” in South Africa.
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 05 16


    Court Appointed Special Advocates in front of US Supreme Court

    LAWdork: Ultimately, the “nationwide injunction” arguments were about the birthright citizenship order

    Although justices might be skeptical of nationwide injunctions, the problems with Trump’s birthright citizenship executive order loomed larger at SCOTUS on Thursday.

    On Thursday, the U.S. Supreme Court sought to address a question the justices have wrestled with at different times in different contexts in recent years: Frustrations with nationwide, or “universal” injunctions.

    And yet, after more than two hours of arguments over the nationwide scope of injunctions blocking implementation and enforcement of President Donald Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship, the court seemed more aligned on the unconstitutionality of Trump’s order — and in agreement with all of the lower courts to consider the question — than on any solution about how to deal with nationwide injunctions.

    “Let’s just assume you’re dead wrong“ about the order’s constitutionality, Justice Elena Kagan told Solicitor General John Sauer. “Does every single person that is affected by this EO have to bring their own suit? Are there alternatives? How long does it take?“

    First, the nationwide injunctions being challenged by the Trump administration here are the injunctions blocking something that the Supreme Court has previously said is unconstitutional.

    Second, the Trump administration doesn’t only argue that nationwide injunctions should be scaled back or limited. The reply brief filed by Sauer, who argued Trump’s immunity case for him last year before being nominated to be solicitor general, argued that such orders are not only unadvisable but, rather, that they are unconstitutional. … As the lawyers for the states and organization who have sued pushed back, there are multiple instances throughout American law that show that can’t be true.
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