arotrios

joined 2 years ago
 

Excerpt:


Ranjani Srinivasan was busy talking to an adviser at Columbia University when the federal agents first came to her door. The day before she’d got an unexpected email that her student visa had been canceled, and she was trying to get information.

“It was my roommate who heard the knock and immediately recognized (it as) law enforcement,” Srinivasan told CNN. “She asked them ‘Do you have a warrant?’ And they had to say ‘No.’”

“I was stunned and scared,” she said. “I remember telling the adviser ‘ICE is at my door and you’re telling me I’m fine? Do something.’”

They returned another day, also without a warrant, Srinivasan said. Matters escalated when they came a third time, with a judge’s permission to enter the Columbia apartment. By then she had already left the country.

The biggest question for Srinivasan is why they came at all.

Srinivasan had renewed her student visa just a few months earlier, being granted permission for another five years in the United States — more than enough time to complete her PhD in urban planning. She was no stranger to immigration rules, having won a Fulbright scholarship to Harvard University for her master’s degree and then returning to her native India for the requisite two years after.

Her dream acceptance at Columbia’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation coincided with the beginning of the Covid pandemic, so she started her studies in Chennai, India, before making it to New York City.

By last month, the end of her doctorate was almost in sight, she was grading papers for the students she was teaching and fretting over a deadline for a journal. Far from her mind was a night almost a year before when she got caught up in a crowd.

That evening in April 2024 she’d been trying to get back to her university apartment from a staff picnic when she was swept up in a police operation against a crowd protesting Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza, she said.

Srinivasan had only just returned to the US, having been away from Columbia since before the war began and generated passionate protests. “We didn’t really know what was going to happen that day,” she said. “The whole perimeter of the neighborhood had been barricaded.” Unable to prove she lived there, she wasn’t allowed to go to her street, so she ended up circling the neighborhood, looking for a way through, she told CNN.

“They kept shifting the barricades, and then I think around 200 cops descended, and they kind of charged at us. It was absolute confusion. People were screaming, falling, people were running out of the way,” she said. Too small to force her way through the melee, she ended up in a large group of people detained by the police.

She said she was held with the crowd for several hours but never fingerprinted or booked for an arrest. She was given two pink-colored summonses by the New York Police Department — one for obstructing pedestrian traffic and the other for failure to disperse — before being released. A lawyer working pro bono for a number of the students got the summonses dismissed even before she had to appear in court. That means there should be no record against her, and as far as Srinivasan was concerned, she could forget the whole thing.

She did not report the dismissed summonses on her visa renewal.

When asked why Srinivasan’s visa was revoked, the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement “these citations were not disclosed.”

That was never mentioned to Srinivasan when she was told her visa had been taken away.


[–] [email protected] 6 points 37 minutes ago (1 children)

You'll need money to flee, at least $10k on hand, likely more, to start the process for Canadian citizenship.

It will be easier to get to a blue state than it will across the border. Right now, all you need is transportation and considerably less seed money. It's likely smarter to relocate to a blue state while you work out your international travel.

Since you're in Ohio, the closest metro that will likely protect you is Chicago. That's a good place to start if you're looking to go further north.

If you can make it to the west coast, Oregon is likely the cheapest place to start, but be aware that eastern Oregon has its fair share of maga. Do not travel through or visit Idaho on your way (especially if you're a person of color), and avoid Utah if at all possible. CO to NM to AZ is pretty safe if you're looking to take the southern route to CA. You'll probably be ok getting through Indiana as long as you keep to the freeway and don't stop.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 35 minutes ago) (2 children)

You're both right, and you both got my upvotes.

The current administration will absolutely use any unrest it can to solidify its grip, and they are, as @the_[email protected] mentions, looking for just such an event to declare martial law.

But @pourous_[email protected] is also correct in understanding that this process has already begun, and that retaliatory actions are not specifically analogous, especially as it's very likely that the Reichstag fire was a false flag event engineered by the Nazis themselves as an excuse for Kristallnacht.

Will this kind of event help in the long term? I'm uncertain. On the one hand, it's really good to see resistance take physical form with the potential to inspire further action, but on the other, it means that the right can use it as an excuse to further oppress. Since the mass media has been captured by the right, it's most likely that the perception of this event will be tailored to reflect the latter.

So, unless this action created an impact on the GOP beyond simple property damage (like destroying lists of political opponents they're looking to deport), I think this action will likely backfire per @the_crotch's conclusion. However, that could be offset by the publicity inspiring further resistance on the left. And @pourous_grey_matter is very correct in understanding that we have a very small window of opportunity to act.

So kiss and make up - you're on the same side, and celebrate the fact that you can argue about tactics publicly.

We may not have that option for much longer.

 

Summary:


Public health experts and other critics on Wednesday condemned the Trump administration's decision to cut off funding to the global vaccine alliance Gavi, which the organization estimates could result in the deaths of over 1 million children.

"Abhorrent. Evil. Indefensible," Atlantic staff writer Clint Smith said on social media in response to exclusive reporting from The New York Times, which obtained documents including a 281-page spreadsheet that "the skeletal remains" of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) sent to Congress on Monday.

The leaked materials detail 898 awards that the Trump administration plans to continue and 5,341 it intends to end. A spokesperson for the U.S. State Department, which runs the gutted USAID, confirmed the list is accurate and said that "each award terminated was reviewed individually for alignment with agency and administration priorities."

The United States contributes 13% of Gavi's budget and the terminated grant was worth $2.6 billion through 2030, according to the Times. Citing the alliance, the newspaper noted that cutting off U.S. funds "may mean 75 million children do not receive routine vaccinations in the next five years, with more than 1.2 million children dying as a result."


[–] [email protected] 6 points 20 hours ago (1 children)

You're on the right track, but I wouldn't use Excel for the query text as it's going to want to break up your statements.

What I did was use a VBA module to pull out all of the queries into a master .txt file, then converted it a .sql so that Notepad++ could highlight the statements for me to help with readability. This serves as a master query library, allowing text searches of field and query names (Notepad++ has an excellent search tool).

For conversion from Access SQL to regular SQL on the queries, it's usually pretty easy, but tools like this can help.

Second step is to break out your macros and list the query chains as your primary goalposts for creating SSIS jobs (because you'll likely want to be able to automate those queries in your new system). Note that it's very likely that you'll also need to walk down through each query to find additional subquery chains embedded in the top level query coding.

Tables are usually a snap - you can just do a 1 to 1 import by the SQL Workbench import tool to bring it in directly from the .mdb (or .accdb).

For forms, right now I'm looking at PowerApps just because I'm working in a Microsoft shop, but depending on your final architecture, anything that interacts with SQL should do the trick.

The reason they have a frontend and backend database is because once older versions of Access hit 2gb, it starts to crash. If you're getting crashing issues and your backend is nearing or over 2gb, you're likely hitting this limit (likes to throw a 2950 error). It can be resolved by moving your larger tables to a new Access database and then using the Linked Table manager to retarget the new tables and fields. The one I deal with has had to go through this process four times - it's got 5 backends.

Also, if your frontend is in a different location than your backend, putting them in the same directory will drastically improve your load times.

Hope that helps - good luck!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 20 hours ago (1 children)

But I also don’t understand why it’s sometimes hated like here. I’ve been in several evaluations for ERP systems where it won against plenty of competitors.

It really comes down to ease of use. For instance, I can get excel exports off of the financial reports I run from SAP. But the report takes an hour to run, and only specific subsections are exportable. The amount of data its parsing is maybe about 100k rows.

In comparison, I have worked with a custom Oracle ERP built circa 2005 - this is what I was directly comparing SAP to. It had easily 10x the amount of data as the SAP system I work with now, and was not only managing inventory for 100+ stores across multiple countries, but was dynamically pricing and shipping them from the drop-shipper with the best price. Longest time for a report parsing 1mil rows was 10 minutes (via Quicksight - and that was dynamic draw, cached was drastically quicker).

Even the oldest system I worked with, a COBOL based system called AMS, could pull reports quicker than the SAP I'm forced to use now.

In comparison to Nav - any report is laid out fully exportable in under five minutes, usually less. If I have proper access in Nav, I can go straight to the core tables within the interface itself. There's drag and drop capability. ODBC connections are a breeze - every version of SAP I've worked with has had them locked down (this may be an admin issue rather than architecture, I admit here).

That being said, each install of SAP is its own beast - I've heard the system is extremely customizable, and it's likely my current workplace is on an older version (because holy fuck does the interface suck - who the fuck thought a clock icon was good choice to run a report?). And I've only used it as an analyst / end-user.

But if I had the chance to never work with it again, I'd jump at it in a heartbeat.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 days ago

Agreed (context: same legacy system work, 20 years), although given the size and scale of the tech debt involved, I'd peg it at 5 years if you had a team of 100+ COBOL developers.

10 to do it right.

Once you start dealing with databases older than SQL and languages older than C, things get funky real fast.

 
[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 days ago

I'm so old I remember when disks were floppy, came in the 7" size, and were an awesome replacement for punch cards.

Still haven't beat Zork tho...

 

Excerpt:


Across human history, fascism has been imposed upon democracy mostly in one of two ways. First, by brute force—a military coup, that sort of thing. Second, a bit more stealthily, and legally—through legislation, executive decrees, and court decisions that hand more power to the leader.

Donald Trump is inventing a new way. Call it chaos fascism. Destroy the institutions of democracy until they’re so disfigured or dysfunctional that a majority no longer cares about them.

That’s exactly what’s happening with Social Security. The Washington Post reported this week that the SSA is breaking down: Its website “crashed four times in 10 days this month because the servers were overloaded, blocking millions of retirees and disabled Americans from logging in to their online accounts.” A Wall Street multimillionaire who probably doesn’t need his Social Security check and who has pledged that he will “100 percent work with DOGE” has already cut around 12 percent of the staff and doesn’t look like he’s stopping there.

In other words: Start by lying about the agency, with absurd and false claims about 140-year-olds cashing checks. Then wreck the agency so that its service becomes crap. Let public anger at it build. And in time, they can just dismantle it and privatize the greatest social insurance system ever devised by this government and put people’s financial fate in the hands of rich cronies. If that’s not chaos fascism, I don’t know what is.

Trump probably doesn’t have some secret plan. As we know, he doesn’t think far enough ahead. Elon Musk, however, probably does. It’s no accident he called Social Security a “Ponzi scheme.” That statement either (1) reflected his ignorance of how both Social Security and Ponzi schemes work or (2) was made in full knowledge of how both work—that is, he knew it was nonsense, but he said it anyway because his goal is to destroy Social Security.

This applies to just about everything Trump and Musk are doing.

It applies even to Signalgate. Trump has contempt for rules and procedures, and so he appoints unqualified stooges like Pete Hegseth to run the world’s largest military, who share that contempt—who think being tough means showing the world that they can do anything they want with no consequences. Again—ignore the law, trash the rules, establish that procedure is whatever you say it is. Chaos fascism.

And it will almost certainly go unpunished. Attorney General Pam Bondi said Thursday that the Justice Department wasn’t the least bit interested in looking into it. Some GOP lawmakers are making noises about the need for an investigation of some kind. But really—are the GOP’s leaders in Congress, Senator John Thune and Representative Mike Johnson, really likely to green-light an investigation? Seems pretty unlikely to me, unless it’s done with the secret, express goal of exonerating all involved.

Some senators say the Pentagon inspector general should conduct a probe. OK, we might get that. But remember that Trump has already fired 17 inspectors general, so who’d really care if he fired one more? Break the rules, and then ensure that there’s no accountability. Chaos fascism.


Article continues in depth

 

President Donald Trump’s recent election executive order is more than just a lawless overstep of presidential power — it’s another example of the ways in which Trump’s Justice Department has become an extension of the White House and is involving itself in all of the President’s grievances.

“Free, fair, and honest elections unmarred by fraud, errors, or suspicion are fundamental to maintaining our constitutional Republic,” the executive order, issued Tuesday, reads. “The right of American citizens to have their votes properly counted and tabulated, without illegal dilution, is vital to determining the rightful winner of an election.”

The sweeping 12-page order contains a number of provisions, including a documentary proof of citizenship requirement to vote in federal elections as well as a requirement that all ballots be received by Election Day – both of which fall outside of the executive branch’s authority to mandate.

But, there’s also a section, buried deeper in the order, that, if implemented, would give Trump’s Justice Department the authority to pick and choose what states get federal funding for election administration. It would require states to loop the DOJ in on supposed violations of election law that it encounters. But it also mandates that basic information about voter roll maintenance be shared with the DOJ as well.

If states are unwilling to enter into what is referred to as an “information-sharing agreement” with the Attorney General regarding “suspected violations of state and federal elections laws,” the Attorney General is allowed to withhold grants and other funds from those states, the executive order says.

“If there is any effort to apply an entirely new criteria to receiving funding that is not in any law that Congress passed, I think that’s likely to be found to be an excess use of power by the president,” David Becker, the executive director and founder of the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation and Research similarly TPM during a media briefing this week.

In the words of the order, if there is a break in this information pipeline between the state and the DOJ, the Attorney General is given the authority to “review for potential withholding of grants and other funds that the Department awards and distributes, in the Department’s discretion, to State and local governments for law enforcement and other purposes, as consistent with applicable law.”

Election experts confirmed to TPM that this means state election officials may lose the funding they need to hold elections in their states for not agreeing to share information about routine election administration and voter roll maintenance with the Justice Department.

“There is this kind of extensive command for the attorney general not only to search out prosecution of election crimes, but to engage in all this information sharing to try to basically supplant states in their role,” Danielle Lang, Campaign Legal Center’s Senior Director of Voting Rights, explained in an interview with TPM. “But there is this kind of attempt to really force the Department of Justice to be front and center and demand all this information from the states and penalize the states that do not engage in this kind of joint weaponization of prosecution.”

The scope of the information that the EO is directing states to share with the DOJ is broad. If implemented, this “information sharing agreement” would require states to share information on people who have committed amorphous “election fraud,” as well as information on people who registered to vote more than once.

Registering to vote more than once, which more often than not happens because a voter’s old registration was never cancelled, is not actually a crime and is a common mistake that is cleaned up as part of state election officials’ routine voter roll maintenance duties.

“Duplicate registrations end up on the rolls for any number of reasons,” Lang added. “And all of that is just typical list maintenance and it’s not necessarily criminal and in fact is extremely common.”

[–] [email protected] 66 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (4 children)

I work with a ten year old Access database I'm trying to migrate to SQL. Should be easy, right?

Except it's got over 170 macro driven subquery chains accessing multiple legacy ERP systems, is the only source of their KPIs (these legacy systems can't generate them on their own), and is the only system that can publish the KPIs to the multiple Sharepoint lists that the entire company relies upon.

Despite the fact I have over 20 years experience migrating legacy systems, it's taken me close to a year to track down all of the dependencies, and this system is built in an easy language (SQL vs COBOL), is a tiny fraction of the size of the SSI databases, and is 30 years younger than the systems running social security (at least).

There is absolutely no way they have any chance of modernizing the social security system in under five years. It would take at least a decade to do it properly.

DOGE won't just break the system. They will fuck it up beyond all belief, to the point where it will never work properly again.

If you're on Social Security, be ready for payments to just stop. Expect it. It's their end goal.

And pray the last administration took backups.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I don't with Odoo - looks promising, though.

I do have a lot of experience with open source CMS and e-commerce software - what I would recommend if you go this path is to ensure you have an in-house developer to make up for a lower level of support you'll have access to. The challenge with using open source as part of a business system is that it almost always involves more hands-on maintenance, and often doesn't have long-term support available.

For instance, Drupal can likely do most of what you're looking at SAP to do, but it's not an easy system to build with, and would likely rely on other modules (like Magento) to get you to where you really need to go - and each module / plugin you add decreases stability. Joomla is easier to work with, but less stable and requires even more plugin maintenance.

Ultimately, I'd say your decision really depends on scale. If you're a company with less than 100 employees, open source is usually a good bet if you've got a good in-house dev who can scale up the system as your company grows. If your company is larger with established revenue and business processes, then it's usually wiser to look at a commercial solution.

The other thing to consider is what you actually want to do with your ERP. If you're looking primarily at content management and e-commerce, open source will likely have the stronger software packages. If you're looking at a traditional business model, where you're looking for extensive inventory management from multiple locations, then I'd probably recommend a closed source solution - Dynamics Nav over SAP (despite Nav's headaches, it is a better system). Open source does great on the web, but since most open-source devs got their start in e-commerce, it tends to lag in supporting traditional business models.

[–] [email protected] 48 points 2 days ago (11 children)

SAP works like it was built in the 90s. It's slow as fuck, doesn't have good export capability, the worst user interface I've ever worked with, and is the least flexible ERP system I've ever encountered.

I'd rather work with a custom built ERP in Oracle SQL circa 2000 than I would with SAP - at least then, I could get a clean table export in less than 3 hours. I mean, Nav is shit, but SAP is diarrhea locked behind a paywall.

Sorry, I know there's a big push towards non-US systems right now (which I support), but SAP is not a solution - it's just another way to make your employees hate their job.

19
Hi Ren - Ren (www.youtube.com)
 

Lyrics:


Hi there Ren

Its been a little while,

Did you miss me?

You thought you'd buried me, didn't you? Risky...

Because I always come back

Deep down you know that...

Deep down you know I'm always in periphery

Ren aren't you pleased to see me?

It's been weeks since we spoke bro, you know you need me

You're the sheep, I'm the shepherd

Not your place to lead me

Not your place to be biting off the hand that feeds me

Hi Ren

I've been taking some time to be distant

I've been taking some time to be still

I've been taking some time to be by myself

Since my therapist told me I'm ill

I've been making some progress lately,

And I've learnt some new coping skills

So I haven't really needed you much man

I think we need to just step back and chill

Ren, you sound more insane than I do

You think that those doctors are really there to guide you?

Been through this a million times

Your civilian mind is so perfect at always being lied to

Okay, take another pill boy

Drown yourself in the sound of white noise

Follow this 10 step program, rejoice!

All your problems will be gone! Fucking dumb boy

Nah mate, this time it's different man trust me

I feel like things might be falling in place

And my music's been kinda doing bits too

Like I actually might do something great

And when I'm gone maybe I'll be remembered

For doing something special with myself

That's why I don't think that we should talk man

Cause when your with me it never seems to help

You think that you can amputate me?

I am you, you are me, you are I, I am we

We are one, split in two that makes one so you see

You got to kill you if you wanna kill me.

I'm not left over dinner, I'm not scraps on the side,

Oh your music is thriving? Delusional guy!

Where's your top ten hit? Where's your interview with Oprah?

Where are your grammies Ren?

Nowhere!

Yeah but, my music's not commercial like that

I never chased numbers, statistics or stats

I Never write hooks for the radio, they never even play me

So why would I concern myself with that?

But my music is really connecting,

And the people who find it respect it,

And for me that's enough 'cause this life's been tough

So it gives me a purpose I can rest in

Man you sound so pretentious!

Ren your music is so self centred,

No one wants to hear another song about

How much you hate yourself... trust me

You should be so lucky having me inside you to guide you,

Remind you to manage expectations,

Provide you perspective, that thing you neglected, I get it

You wana be a big deal... Next jimi hendrix? forget it

Man it's not like that

Man it's just like that I'm inside you you twat

Nah it's not man your wrong, when I write I belong

Let me break the fourth wall by acknowledging this song

Ren sits down,

Has a stroke of genius,

He wants to write a song that was not done previous

A battle with his subconscious...

Eminem did it

Played on guitar

Plan B did it

Man your not original you criminal, rip off artist,

The pinnacle of your success is stealing other people's material

Ren mate we've heard it all before

Ohh "she sell sea shells on the sea shore"

F*ck you I don't need you, I don't need to hear this,

Cause I'm fine by myself, I'm a genius!

And I will be great, and I will make waves

And I'll shake up the whole world beneath us

That's right speak your truth,

Your fucking god complex leaks out of you

It's refreshing to actually hear you say it!

In stead of down play it...

"Oh the music Is all about the creative process

And if people can find something to relate to

Within that then that's just a bonus"

F*ck you ima fucking kill you Ren

Well fucking kill me then

Let's fucking have you Ren

I'm a do it, watch me prove it, who are you to doubt my music?

'Cause I call the shots I choose if you die

Yeah I call the shots and so i who choose who survives

I'll tie you up in knots then I'll lock you inside

News flash...

I was created at the dawn of creation,

I am temptation

I am the snake in Eden,

I am the reason for treason

Beheading all Kings,

I am sin with no rhyme or reason,

Sun of the morning, Lucifer,

Antichrist, father of lies,

Mestophilies,

Truth in a blender,

Deceitful pretender,

The Banished avenger,

The righteous surrender

When standing in-front of my solar eclipse,

My name it is stitched to your lips so see

I won't bow to the will of a mortal, feeble and normal

You wana kill me? I'm enteral, immortal

I live in every decision that catalysed chaos

That causes division

I live inside death, the beginning of ends

I am you, you are me, I am you Ren

Hi Ren... I've been taking some time to be distant,

I've been taking some time to be still

I've been taking some time to be by myself

And I've spent half my life ill

But just as sure as the tide start turning

Just as sure as the night has dawn

Just as sure as rain fall soon runs dry

When you stand in the eye of the storm

I was made to be tested and twisted

I was made to be broken and beat

And you know me my will is eternal

And you know me you've met Me before

Face to with a beast I will rise from the east

And I'll settle on the ocean floor

And I go by many names also

Some people know me as hope

Some people know me as the voice that you hear

When u loosen the noose on the rope

And you know how I know how I know that I'll prosper?

Because I stand here beside you today

I have stood in the flames that cremated my brain

And I didn't once flinch or shake

So cower at the man I've become

When I sing from the top of my lungs

That I won't retire I'll stand in your fire

Inspire the weak to be strong

And when I am gone I will rise

In the music that I left behind

Ferocious persistent, immortal like you

We're a coin with two different sides


When I was 17 years old I shouted out into an empty room,

Into a blank canvas, that I would defeat the forces of evil,

And for the next 10 years of my life I suffered the consequences...

With Illness, autoimmunity and psychosis

As I got older I realised that there were no real winners

Or no real losers in physiological warfare

But there were victims and there were students

It wasn't David verses Goliath, it's was a pendulum eternally

Swaying between the dark and the light,

And the brighter the light shone, the darker the shadow it cast

It was never a battle for me to win, it was an eternal dance,

And like a dance, the more rigid I became the harder it got

The more I cursed my clumsy footsteps the more i suffered

And so I got older and I learned to relax,

And I learned to soften, and that dance got easier

It is this eternal waltz that separates human beings

From angels, from demons, from gods

And I must not forget, we must not forget, that we are human beings.


[–] [email protected] 82 points 2 days ago (63 children)

Comparison of Nazi salute circa 1940 to Musk salute circa 2025:

Video of repeated Nazi salutes at Trump's Inauguration

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 days ago (2 children)

but please not that... and oh god, and definitely not that:

 

Summary:


The Federal Communications Commission has alerted the Walt Disney Company and its ABC unit that it will begin an investigation into the diversity, equity and inclusion efforts at the media giant.

The FCC, the agency that regulates the media and telecommunications industry, said in a letter dated Friday that it wants to “ensure that Disney and ABC have not been violating FCC equal employment opportunity regulations by promoting invidious forms of DEI discrimination.”

“We are reviewing the Federal Communications Commission’s letter, and we look forward to engaging with the commission to answer its questions,” a Disney spokesperson told CNBC.

FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, who was recently appointed by President Donald Trump, began a similar investigation into Comcast and NBCUniversal in early February. The inquiry comes after Trump signed an executive order looking to end DEI practices at U.S. corporations in January. The order calls for each federal agency to “identify up to nine potential civil compliance investigations” among publicly traded companies, as well as nonprofits and other institutions.


 

Summary:


US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is under scrutiny after reports surfaced that he might have opened an account with the Russian email service mail.ru.

This comes as a new twist as the Signal chat scandal involving senior Trump administration officials continues to unfold.

Following reports that top advisers to US President Donald Trump used a commercial communication app to discuss a military strike on Yemen and included a journalist in the chat by mistake, reporters from the German magazine Der Spiegel questioned how easily accessible the personal data of key US officials might be.

Through an editorial investigation, they discovered that mobile phone numbers, email addresses, and even passwords belonging to high-ranking US officials had been found online.

Among those exposed were Hegseth, National Security Adviser Michael Waltz and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, putting the security practices of Trump’s top security officials into question.

Journalists used public databases – including those pertaining to data breaches – to uncover the information. The leaked contacts were linked to various online platforms, including Instagram, LinkedIn, Dropbox, WhatsApp and Signal.

For Hegseth’s data, Der Spiegel reporters simply contacted a commercial provider of contact information primarily used by companies for sales, marketing and recruitment purposes.

The reporters submitted a link to his LinkedIn profile and received Hegseth’s Gmail address, phone number, and other details in return. The same technique was used to obtain Waltz’s information, which was found alongside passwords in open databases connected to Microsoft Teams, LinkedIn, and WhatsApp.

Gabbard, meanwhile, appeared to take more precautions, but journalists still located her email addresses on WikiLeaks and Reddit.

Hegseth’s alleged Russian email address

After the investigation, Finnish disinformation researcher Pekka Kallioniemi published a screenshot from an alleged database compiling past data breaches that purportedly showed an email address owned by Hegseth under the mail.ru domain.

He questioned on social media why the Pentagon chief would have a Russian email account, though he did not confirm whether it was genuine or fabricated.


 

Summary:


According to the website, federal grants worth $80,482,341, $9,798,986, $9,332,952, $8,633,114, $5,999,019, $5,270,574 and $1,549,589 are slated to be cut from the Kentucky State Cabinet for Health and Family Services, and grants worth $262,367,100, $50,662,718, $14,738,869, $10,882,234, $10,697,915, $10,352,840, $7,126,596, $4,741,123, $4,105,448, $2,994,627 and $1,868,495 are slated to be cut from the Indiana State Department of Health. The website says the cuts were announced on March 23, 2025.

The website says the $14,738,869 grant cancellation at the Indiana State Department of Health comes from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, although the allocation came to the local health department. This grant is one of two grant cuts listed with information, saying the grant allowed state and territory governments to purchase local, unprocessed foods from local producers, targeting historically “underserved” farmers, producers, fishers and small businesses.

The food purchased would then be distributed to schools and childcare institutions participating in the national school lunch program or child and adult care food programs.

Another similar grant for $7,126,596 that’s now slated to be cut allowed tribal governments to purchase unprocessed food from underserved farmers for distribution to families in need.

No other grant cuts on the website found by WAVE listed any description for what was being cut.

In his Team Kentucky update on Thursday, Gov. Andy Beshear acknowledged some of the grant cuts.

“We have received notice of grants being cancelled,” Beshear said. “It’s an unlawful cancellation and we’ll challenge it. These are contracts that we have. The contracts can only be terminated for cause, which means somebody did something wrong and they are trying to define cause as the pandemic. That’s not a legal argument.”

Beshear said the grants cancelled could mean the closure of health clinics.

“I am worried about the cuts,” Beshear said. “These are Americans, they have families. They chose to do civil service and now they are being told that their services are no longer needed. Some of them are being told it’s their fault, which is not true.”

Beshear said he was worried that the cuts could have an impact on the state’s response to bird flu as well, especially if the virus begins spreading person to person.


 

Summary:


ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) — In the wake of a 22-day strike by correction officers at prison facilities run by New York State, the New York City-based Legal Aid Society released a report on Friday about what they called the strike’s human cost. According to incarcerated people quoted in the report, ongoing inhumane conditions in dozens of upstate prisons include food shortages, lack of medical care and mental health services, and restrictions on showers, court access, or protective custody.

Governor Kathy Hochul and officials at the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision and the Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services considered the strike an illegal violation of the Taylor Law banning New York State employees from striking. Nor did the New York State Correctional Officers and Police Benevolent Association, the union for the correction officers, publicly endorse the strike.

Officers said their issues included understaffing, mandatory overtime, contraband, dangerous prisoners, and compliance with the Humane Alternatives to Long-Term Solitary Confinement Act—the HALT Act—that made it more difficult to control the prison. That law, enacted to limit the use of solitary confinement—which some law enforcement representatives argue does not even exist in New York—has faced consistent pushback from NYSCOPBA since taking effect in 2022.

According to Hochul, she negotiated many offers to get the striking guards back to work. Even so, they and their families eventually lost health insurance, and ultimately, over 2,000 lost their jobs.

On Thursday, fired and blacklisted correction officers gathered at the State Capitol to call out the unsafe working conditions that they said still affect those in the field and the lack of due process in their terminations.

But on Tuesday, another Capitol rally demanded stronger oversight of operations at state prisons and jails after the recent deaths of Robert Brooks and Messiah Nantwi—and four others at Rikers Island, which is city-run, not state-run.

The strike began in mid-February after the death of Brooks at Marcy Correctional Facility, which led to increased oversight like mandatory body cameras for correction officers. A majority of DOCCS staff stopped working at Attica, Sing Sing, Auburn, Mid-state, Clinton, Five Points, Great Meadow, Greene, and other correctional facilities statewide.

Some prisoners said they believe the strikers bristled at the increased scrutiny rather than genuine safety concerns. “They have to answer for what happened, said one person housed at Marcy Correctional Facility and quoted in the Legal Aid Society’s report, which is available to read at the bottom of this story. “They don’t want to be held accountable.”


 

Summary:


President Trump on Thursday renewed a call to defund NPR and PBS a day after top executives from the public broadcasters faced an intense grilling from GOP lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

“NPR and PBS, two horrible and completely biased platforms (Networks!), should be DEFUNDED by Congress, IMMEDIATELY,” Trump wrote late Wednesday on Truth Social. “Republicans, don’t miss this opportunity to rid our Country of this giant SCAM, both being arms of the Radical Left Democrat Party. JUST SAY NO AND, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!”

Republicans on the House Oversight and Government Reform’s Delivering on Government Efficiency subcommittee peppered NPR CEO Katherine Maher and PBS President Paula Kerger on Wednesday with accusations of bias against conservatives and questions about their funding.

NPR took in just over $11 million in federal funding last year, money Maher said is crucial to bringing public broadcasting to local communities, particularly in rural swaths of the country.


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