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‘People are really angry’: A vibe shift around layoffs is happening across the workforce

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Melanie Ehrenkranz isn’t a stranger to job instability. In the decade she’s worked in media, she’s seen countless smart and creative friends lose their jobs during mass layoffs.

When it happened to her in 2023, it sparked an idea: Ehrenkranz decided to create a resource for people going through layoffs to discuss the thorny parts of getting the news — the indignity of being let go over a video call, who they told first, getting into company gossip with ex-co-workers, and what they named their commiseration group chats.

In other words, all the things you want to spill but can’t post on LinkedIn.

By August 2024, Ehrenkranz launched Laid Off, a Substack newsletter that aims to be “the coolest place on the internet to talk about being laid off.” She runs the newsletter on top of her day job as head of content and community at Business Class, which makes online courses for entrepreneurs.

Readers of Laid Off, now more than 6,000 of them and growing, get weekly spotlights of people’s layoff stories and how they’re handling them.

“This is something I wish I had,” Ehrenkranz, 35, tells CNBC Make It.

‘I don’t want this to be depressing or bleak’

Most of the Laid Off readers work in tech, followed by news and media, health care, advertising and then retail.

A majority discuss being laid off in 2024 — at home via Zoom, while on a group conference call, via an email. Many responded to Ehrenkranz’s recent survey to say joining the Laid Off community has given them a cathartic, almost fun, place to reflect on the experience as a group.

“I don’t want this to be depressing or bleak,” Ehrenkranz says. “Obviously it’s a really deflating experience and traumatic, but I think we can also create a fun, cathartic community.”

Spinning the layoff experience on its head, and detaching the self-blame and guilt that often goes with it, can make it feel less isolating and taboo, Ehrenkranz adds.

She hopes that readers see “all these really smart, cool, successful people” telling their stories in their own words. “We’re all doing our best. We might have been at the top of our game. We’ve been laid off. And I think that also helps to re-wire your brain that might be [wondering]: What did I do wrong to deserve this? And the answer is nothing.”

Laid Off’s paid subscribers (for $5 per month) also get access to a Discord channel, a community of over 700 users who trade layoff horror stories but also tips on navigating today’s challenging job market.

Shame is giving way to ‘righteous anger’

The conversations show a shift in the layoff environment. While early pandemic days helped more people uncouple their job loss from their self-worth, and the post-Great Resignation job cuts ushered in a new era of vulnerability in LinkedIn posts, the chatter around losing your job these days feels a little more confrontational.

As Ehrenkranz puts it, “I think a lot of people are feeling angry.”

It’s “almost impossible” to scroll on LinkedIn without seeing a connection writing that they’ve been laid off, Ehrenkranz says: “Being bombarded with these stories and images and Open to Work banners, it does start to kind of strip away that shame. And underneath that shame, I think, is this righteous anger.”

The rising anger is coinciding with companies like Meta and Microsoft saying they’re laying off people due to poor performance. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of public servants have been fired, some under the guise of unsatisfactory employee assessments, as the Trump administration works to slash the size of the federal workforce.

But those who received pink slips aren’t going quietly, and at times are publicly challenging the evaluations of their work.

Angry posts are less targeted toward the messiness of a mass layoff, and more so toward “executives who made a decision to de-value work [employees] believed was important, or decisions executives made that put the company in a precarious place, and it cost people their jobs, but not necessarily the people at the top.”

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Melanie Ehrenkranz is an LA-based writer and creator of the “Laid Off” newsletter and Discord communities.
Courtesy of subject

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/03/16/a-vibe-shift-around-layoffs-is-happening-across-the-workforce.html?utm_source=pocket_discover_career

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See How Drought Whiplash Led to California Wildfires

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The devastating fires in California early this year came after a particularly unfortunate weather pattern—an exceptionally wet period of about 18 months, followed by an exceptionally dry spell. The wet duration encouraged grass and brush growth, and then the lack of rain dried it all out, priming it to catch on fire and spread quickly.

“It was a classic example of wet-to-dry whiplash,” says Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles. And such whiplashes may be getting more common. “With climate change, it’s not just that we’re seeing things get drier and drier. There’s also a trend toward more variability, with wider swings between wet and dry,” Swain says.

The warming climate is leading to what scientists call the “expanding atmospheric sponge” effect. Warmer air can hold more water vapor than cooler air, so the atmosphere is like a kitchen sponge that gets larger. If water is available, the atmosphere will absorb more of it, and when you wring out the sponge, you get more precipitation. But if there is no water to absorb, that thirstier air sucks more moisture out of the landscape, from bodies of water, surfaces and plants, drying everything out.

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https://static.scientificamerican.com/dam/m/653293229a743d38/original/saw0425Gsci_lead.png?m=1741278895.877&w=900Wesley Grubbs

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/see-how-drought-whiplash-led-to-california-wildfires/

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Let That Be Your Last Battlefield

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This episode of Star Trek Shows us where the present administration is taking us!

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The Enterprise encounters two duo-chromatic and mutually belligerent aliens who put the ship in the middle of their old conflict.

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Two duo-chromatic and mutually belligerent aliens

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0708435/

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Social Media Bans for Children Ignore the Reality of Digital Life

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When Australia’s parliament passed legislation late last year banning under-16s from social media, anxious parents across the country breathed a collective sigh of relief.

“We want Australian children to have a childhood,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said as he introduced the legislation. We need to “get kids off phones and back on the footy field.”

Plenty of parents have echoed those sentiments to me over the past decade as I interviewed more than 250 families about the challenges of parenting in a digital age. When I started my research back in 2015, my own children were just toddlers and I had complete control over their digital devices. But as I wrapped up my book

Parenting in a Digital World last year, I found myself in the thick of all the concerns parents had raised: the hours children spend glued to screens; their failure to complete chores and homework because of devices; family arguments over technology; and a lack of knowledge about what kids are even doing online.

I empathize with the mums and dads that I’d interviewed, who were trying to balance social expectations of what it means to be a good parent with the desires and demands of their children. 

From France and Norway to the UK and several US states, authorities are grasping for ways to protect kids after years of headlines about the dangers of social media. Smartphones have destroyed a generation, psychologist Jean Twenge wrote in 2017. Social media and smart phones have caused a “rewiring of childhood,” author Jonathan Haidt stated last year. 

But categoric assertions about kids and technology only deepen the anxieties of parents caught between dueling narratives. On the one hand, the media tells parents that too much screen time compromises their children’s development, and by extension, their future wellbeing. On the other, a utopian narrative about the emancipating potential of digital technologies frames them as a necessary ingredient for young people’s education and success.

Media panic has a long history — successive generations raised the alarm first about comics and radio, then cinema, television, and video games. Over the years, we’ve worried that violent videos desensitize young people and increase aggression. We’ve feared that subliminal messages in heavy metal lyrics could incite youth suicide. We also have a tendency to forget these early concerns once a new form of media captures our attention, something Kirsten Drotner, a professor of media studies, refers to as “historical amnesia.”

This media-effects research tradition continues today: Many studies

have linked social media use to conditions such as depression or low self-esteem. But rarely is there evidence of direct causation. For example, does excessive social media use lead to depression, or are some young people using social media significantly more than their peers because they’re already depressed?

Where concerns about earlier media forms focused on exposure to content, today we have an added worry: how young people interact with content. Unlike the passive consumption of TV shows, for instance, digital platforms enable people to make active choices on how to behave. They can participate in online communities and activities and create and share their own content, which has benefits but also tends to increase screen time and poses additional risks. Not only are young people exposed to all manner of explicit content, but they have the tools to create and share their own — widening the challenges for parents, police, and educators.

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https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/iD3xVqXKiwZU/v0/2000x1334.webpIllustration: Ibrahim Rayintakath for Bloomberg

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2025-03-21/social-media-bans-for-children-ignore-reality-of-digital-life?utm_source=pocket_discover_parenting

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Meet the ‘Woolly Devil,’ the Strangest Sunflower You’ve Ever Seen

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There’s a new sunflower in town. But it isn’t your stereotypical sunflower with cheery yellow petals.

The so-called “woolly devil” is tiny, pale, and well camouflaged amid limestone-rich rocks and look-alike plants in Texas’s Big Bend National Park, where it was discovered. “When we found it, we didn’t realize it was something new,” says Deb Manley, a park volunteer, who, with a colleague, was the first to spot the little plant. “I just figured it was another small annual that was going to be difficult to look up.”

And indeed, it was quite difficult to look up; it didn’t quite match anything in the guides for tiny, fuzzy wildflower plants. But that turned out to be for a very good reason—the flower was a species not yet known to scientists. “It was so unique that it actually needed to have its own genus, and that’s a very rare thing,” says Isaac Lichter Marck, an evolutionary biologist and a daisy taxonomist at the California Academy of Sciences. Like Manley, he’s a member of the team who published the discovery of the woolly devil in February in PhytoKeys.

Sunflowers are the part of the most diverse family among flowering plants, Asteraceae, which contains more than 30,000 formally described species. This includes, of course, the iconic, bright yellow “common sunflower,” or Helianthus annuus. All sunflower species have a strange trait in common: any one of their blooms, called a capitulum, is actually made up of two varieties of flowers—ray flowers, which make up the sunflower’s characteristic halo of petals, and disc flowers that fill the inner ring of the flower head. The woolly devil follows this plan in miniature: it sports two or three ray flowers that are white with maroon stripes, with a few unremarkable disk flowers between them.

Wild sunflowers tend to thrive in harsh environments, such as the desert conditions that characterize Big Bend National Park: lots of sunshine, extreme heat, and occasional sudden summer storms. “That’s made them really successful in the last 15 to 20 million years, in which the Earth has undergone a lot of cooling and drying,” Lichter Marck says.

The new find is formally known as Ovicula biradiata. Ovicula means “little sheep” in Latin, and the name not only describes the plant but also honors the iconic bighorn sheep that used to roam Big Bend before they were killed by hunters and diseases. (Texas began to reintroduce sheep to the region in 2010). Meanwhile the common name “woolly devil” reflects the plant’s discovery near a canyon called Devil’s Den, Manley says, as well as the hornlike appearance of plants with two ray florets—and, she admits, the frustration of distinguishing it from other tiny, fuzzy plants.

And these plants really are woolly, Lichter Marck says. Thousands of hairs fully cover the stems and leaves. “In order to extract DNA from the plant, we actually had to give the leaves a little shave,” he says. The hairs likely protect the plant from hungry animals, he notes. “Imagine you’re an herbivore—you come to chew on these leaves, but you just get a mouthful of wool,” Lichter Marck says.

This feature is surprisingly common among sunflowers in such harsh environments. It likely also protects the plant from damaging ultraviolet light or the dry desert air that sucks moisture from plants. And right now the region is in a severe drought, so woolly devils need all the protection they can get, Manley says.

The drought also makes keeping tabs on the woolly devil a challenge for Manley and anyone else looking to spot it. The plant is difficult to distinguish when not in flower—and it only flowers after it rains. “It’s frustrating,” Manley says, noting that not even she can track down the plant right now, much less newcomers to the park who have heard about the discovery. “There is not much going on in the park right now, botanically—the main event right now is there’s a lot of plants dying,” she says.

Even if the drought eases up, Lichter Marck worries about the fate of the woolly devil, which Manley and other park representatives identified last year in only a few patches of the park. “We may have documented this plant as it’s on its way out, and we’re lucky to do so,” he says. “It’s almost an urgent type of science. We need to document these things before they go extinct.”

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https://static.scientificamerican.com/dam/m/6f5196503f775806/original/woolly-devil-close-up.jpg?m=1742322918.369&w=1000

A close-up view of the woolly devil sunflower. NPS/D. Manley

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/woolly-devil-sunflower-shows-the-beauty-of-strange-botany/

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Perseverance Rover Delivers Amazing View Of Ancient Mars River

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NASA Perseverance rover captured stunning imagery of an area called “Airey Hill” in Jezero Crater on the Red Planet. Perseverance project scientist Ken Farley gives you a tour. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS; ESA/DLR/FU-Berlin

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Perseverance

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Click the link below for the complete video (hit play):

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/perseverance-rover-delivers-amazing-view-of-ancient-mars-river/vi-AA1tDn1R?ocid=winp2fptaskbar&cvid=ad2760b2915b4ad28dc851229a4a7c10&ei=24

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How a British Dad Made Comedy Gold Imagining Two Toddlers Chatting

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A few years ago, George Lewis was driving back from performing in a comedy club when he realized he had to change his life.

He had played the same club several years earlier, also for just a few minutes and also for little more than gas money. Both times, he did what he had to do. He showed up. He made the audience laugh.

Now, though, he was a parent. He needed a more stable income, and his material felt tired. Yet the thing that filled his days — looking after his children — was a no-go for standup, older comics told him: a sure way to get pigeonholed.

“It was like: ‘Maybe when you have kids, don’t mention that you’ve got kids,’” he said, recalling their earlier advice.

“Obviously,” he continued, “now I realize it’s quite the opposite.”

In the years since that night, Mr. Lewis, now 37, has become a bard of British parenting comedy. He’s on his first tour as a headliner, and his shows keep selling out. His route to success began after the pandemic, when he began posting short online videos that gently mocked (and commiserated with) his fellow British millennial parents.

In some sketches, Mr. Lewis acts the harried grown-up. In the clip below, he’s trying to adhere to a nap schedule while driving. There’s an unseen toddler in the back who mustn’t be allowed to fall asleep. As they approach home, he gets increasingly desperate.

“Should we sing?” he asks. “Do the actions! Big energy!” he commands. Then, he tries swerving, which is more dangerous than fun. their times, he pretends to be a kid. In one long-running series, he stages conversations between toddlers who sound a lot like adults but who deadpan the baffling logic of two year olds. (The series, Two Toddlers Chatting, is his most popular, he said, with about 60 million views on Instagram alone.)

In one sketch, a toddler shares some real concerns. His father keeps covering his face — which makes him disappear. Then, his dad comes back, saying this odd, upsetting word.

“He was behaving so erratically,” the toddler tells his friend. “He just started shouting, ‘Peek-a-boo.’”

“‘Peek-a-boo?’” his friend replies. “Is he OK, like, mentally?”

It’s a low-budget effort, run almost entirely off his phone. He films in his kitchen, plays all the characters, and edits clips between school pickups and bath time. In video after video, he unspools comedy gold about the gulf between the earnest rituals of modern parenting and the essential, eternal weirdness of a small child’s inner life.

“The more mundane and frustrating, the better the sketch that comes out,” he said. “So it really is a great way of going about your day.”

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https://static01.nyt.com/images/2025/03/18/multimedia/18int-uk-dad-comedy-01-thpv/18int-uk-dad-comedy-01-thpv-superJumbo.jpg?quality=75&auto=webpGeorge Lewis, a bard of British parenting comedy, is on his first tour as a headliner, and his shows keep selling out. Credit…Andrew Testa for The New York Times

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.nytimes.com

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RFK, Jr., Once Poisoned by Mercury, Is Silent as EPA Weakens Rules against It

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CLIMATEWIRE | The last time President Donald Trump tried to roll back a mercury regulation, he faced a high-profile opponent: Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Kennedy railed against EPA at an August 2017 public hearing for going along with the Trump administration’s demands to repeal wastewater limits. He warned that allowing more power plant pollution to enter waterways would poison people through mercury-contaminated fish — a problem he experienced personally after a period of eating tuna.

“It is really troublesome for those of us who will suffer from your irresponsibility,” Kennedy said at the time. “The law says the waterways of this country, the fisheries of this country, belong to the people.”

Eight years later, Kennedy has been silent as the Trump administration is again rolling back those same mercury regulations, along with at least a dozen other pollution controls announced last week in what EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin has called the agency’s “biggest deregulatory action in U.S. history.”

Before Kennedy was confirmed in January to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, he ran a presidential campaign on the promise to “make America healthy again,” in part through getting toxic chemicals out of the nation’s food.

Then, during his confirmation hearing two months ago, Kennedy touted his experience with fighting mercury pollution as an environmental attorney and as the founder of Waterkeeper, an environmental group. “The same chemicals that kill fish make people sick,” Kennedy said at the January hearing.

Kennedy didn’t respond to requests for comment or questions about whether he still believes mercury is a public health threat.

“If he really does care about the issues he used to care about when he was working at the Waterkeeper, you would think he would say something,” said Abel Russ, director of the Environmental Integrity Project’s Center for Applied Environmental Science. “EPA is doing a lot of things that are an anathema to his stated life’s mission.”

If EPA fulfills Zeldin’s promise to roll back at least a dozen pollution controls, more people could be exposed to particulate matter, smog and nitrogen oxides — pollutants that can lead to severe health consequences such as lowered IQ, asthma, increased heart attacks and premature deaths, according to EPA’s own analyses.

Among the threatened rules are two mercury reduction standards. One limits the amount of mercury that’s released into the air and is predicted to reduce emissions of the potent neurotoxin by more than 16 percent by 2028. The other reduces mercury that’s released into rivers and streams, and would help infants avoid losing an estimated 1,377 IQ points annually.

It’s not publicly known whether Kennedy weighed in on EPA’s decisions. Before the election, Trump said he would let Kennedy “make our country so healthy” but that Kennedy “can’t touch” fossil fuels like oil and gas.

“We’re not going to let him get involved,” Trump said in October.

Since then, Trump created a Make America Healthy Commission with the purpose of “ensuring United States food is the healthiest … in the world” and addressing potential contributing causes of childhood chronic disease, “including the American diet, absorption of toxic material … environmental factors [and] government policies.”

The commission, on which Kennedy and Zeldin sit, met for the first time last Tuesday, one day before EPA’s rollbacks were announced. The meeting was held behind closed doors and neither EPA or HHS responded to questions about whether Kennedy and Zeldin had discussed rolling back the rules or how the rollbacks would impact Americans’ health.

EPA spokesperson Molly Vaseliou said in a statement, “No longer will the EPA view the goals of protecting our environment and growing our economy as binary choices.”

She did not respond to a question about what specific steps EPA would take to improve American’s health, saying only that the agency “looks forward to closely collaborating on ways to fulfill President Trump’s goal of removing toxins from the environment and our food supply and keeping our children healthy and strong.”

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https://static.scientificamerican.com/dam/m/786bb264719f97da/original/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr.jpg?m=1742312813.415&w=1000

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. testifies during his Senate Finance Committee confirmation hearing in Dirksen building on Wednesday, January 29, 2025. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/rfk-jr-silent-as-epa-weakens-mercury-pollution-rules/

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Map Shows Red States Losing the Most Funding From NIH Cuts

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Republican states could lose billions of dollars in medical research funding after the National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced new funding cuts amid President Donald Trump’s attempts to curb federal spending.

Newsweek reached out to the White House for comment via email.

Why It Matters

When a researcher receives a research grant, their institution will also receive additional funds known as “indirect costs” that go toward infrastructure such as utilities, maintenance or administrative costs, lessening the burden on these institutions. The exact percentage is negotiated between NIH and each institution.

NIH announced Friday it would implement a 15 percent limit on “indirect costs” on grants for research, highlighting that some institutions like Harvard University or Yale University currently enjoy rates upwards of 60 to 70 percent. In 2024, NIH spent more than $9 billion on these indirect costs, according to the Blue Ridge Institute for Medical Research, which compiles data on all NIH grants.

These costs will now be taken on by research institutes, which say the cuts will have grim ramifications for medical research across the country.

While the NIH highlighted institutions in blue states Massachusetts, Connecticut and Maryland that benefit from the indirect funds, Republican states also benefit from the indirect funding and stand to lose billions from these cuts.

What to Know

The NIH wrote the lower indirect cost rates will “save more than $4B a year effective immediately,” noting that rate is “above what many major foundations allow and much lower than the 60%+ that some institutions charge the government today.”

But the change has sparked concerns from researchers across the country who believe it will result in cuts to research for cancer and other diseases such as Alzheimer’s or diabetes.

Funding generally reflects the population of a state, not its political leaning, so the two states that received the most indirect funding and would stand to lose the most are big blue states California and New York. Texas, the third largest state and largest red state, received nearly $505 million in indirect costs.

North Carolina and Pennsylvania, battlegrounds that backed Trump, received $394 million and $601 million in indirect funding in 2024, according to Blue Ridge Institute.

This map shows how much each state would have lost in 2024 indirect funding had the 15 percent rule been in place last year.

When it came to which states received the highest indirect cost rate, there was no clear partisan distinction. Of the 10 states with the highest rate, five voted for Trump—Iowa, Kentucky, Nebraska, Ohio and South Dakota—while five voted for Vice President Kamala Harris in 2024—Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey and New York.

Senator Katie Britt, an Alabama Republican, is among those raising concerns about the impact this move will have.

“While the administration works to achieve this goal at NIH, a smart, targeted approach is needed in order to not hinder life-saving, groundbreaking research at high-achieving institutions like those in Alabama,” she told AL.com.

Alabama, home to recipients such as the University of Alabama, received nearly $90 million in indirect costs in 2024, according to the Blue Ridge Institute.

What People Are Saying

Association of Public & Land Grant Universities President Mark Becker in a statement: “NIH slashing the reimbursement of research costs will slow and limit medical breakthroughs that cure cancer and address chronic diseases such as diabetes and heart disease. Let there be no mistake: this is a direct and massive cut to lifesaving medical research. We urge the administration to reconsider this self-defeating action.”

White House spokesperson Kush Desai in a statement reported by Fox News: “Contrary to the hysteria, redirecting billions of allocated NIH spending away from administrative bloat means there will be more money and resources available for legitimate scientific research, not less.”

University of Wisconsin-Madison, in a statement: “This proposed change to NIH funding – UW–Madison’s largest source of federal support – will significantly disrupt vital research activity and delay lifesaving discoveries and cures related to cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, and much more.

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Click Map in Article for Figures!

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.newsweek.com/map-shows-red-states-losing-most-nih-funding-2028959

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How Trump’s MAGA Agenda Is Already Sticking It To Red America

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Early in Donald Trump’s first term, Steve Bannon met with some House Republicans who were wavering on whether to vote for a Trump-backed bill that would have slashed Medicaid, the federal-state program that today pays medical bills for about 72 million low-income Americans.

Bannon, who at the time was a senior White House adviser, read them the riot act: “This is not a debate,” he said, as Axios reported at the time. “You have no choice but to vote for this bill.”

Eight years later, Trump and the Republicans are back in power ― and maybe laying the groundwork for a similar vote. The budget proposal House Republicans voted out of committee on Thursday night envisions massive spending reductions virtually certain to include Medicaid, in part to finance the tax cuts Trump has said are his top legislative priority.

But this time around, Bannon has some different advice for the Republicans ― and the Trump White House, too.

“A lot of MAGA is on Medicaid,” Bannon said on Thursday on his “War Room” podcast. “If you don’t think so, you are dead wrong. Medicaid is going to be a complicated one. You just can’t take a meat ax to it, although I would love to.”

Bannon probably understands this better than most high-profile figures in American politics. The proposed Medicaid cuts during Trump’s first term were part of legislation to repeal the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare. That bill proved spectacularly unpopular ― and ultimately failed to pass ― in part because even many diehard Trump supporters would’ve stood to lose health coverage had it succeeded. Which is exactly what could happen now, as Bannon knows.

But these days, it’s not just cuts to Medicaid threatening Trump supporters.

Since reassuming the presidency, Trump has issued a torrent of executive orders that seek to limit, downsize or even eliminate key federal programs and agencies. To implement all of this, Trump has deputized adviser and billionaire tech tycoon Elon Musk, whose Department of Government Efficiency has been laying off federal workers by the thousands and blocking federal spending by the billions.

Trump says the purpose of these orders and Musk’s demolition tour of the executive branch is to eliminate wasteful spending ― and, no less important, to clean out the left-wing, “woke” politics that he says have infected these federal initiatives. Which may or may not be worthwhile on the merits, depending on your perspective.

But whatever the rationale, the effect is likely to be especially strong in communities where Trump is popular. Some have already taken a hit. The question now is how quickly that realization sets in, and whether anything changes as a result.

What DOGE Looks Like In Rural America

One Republican who seems to understand is Katie Britt, the senator from Alabama. Last weekend, a reporter from AL.com asked her to react to news that the National Institutes of Health was sharply reducing its research grants. The University of Alabama-Birmingham is a top recipient of NIH grants, and also Alabama’s largest employer.

Britt said she was all for cutting waste, to make sure taxpayer dollars are “spent efficiently, judiciously and accountably.” But she added that she wanted to work with the administration on “a smart, targeted approach … in order to not hinder lifesaving, groundbreaking research at high-achieving institutions like those in Alabama.”

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/trump-musk-cuts-red-states_n_67af8d57e4b0513a8d77218b

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Finding hope and peace through writing, art, photography, and faith in Jesus.

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love each other like you're the lyric to their music

Luca nel laboratorio di Dexter

Comprendere il mondo per cambiarlo.

Tales from a Mid-Lifer

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freedomdailywriting

I speak the honest truth. I share my honest opinions. I share my thoughts. A platform to grow and get surprised.

The Green Stars Project

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Cherryl's Blog

Travel and Lifestyle Blog

Sogni e poesie di una donna qualunque

Questo è un piccolo angolo di poesie, canzoni, immagini, video che raccontano le nostre emozioni

My Awesome Blog

“Log your journey to success.” “Where goals turn into progress.”

pierobarbato.com

scrivo per dare forma ai silenzi e anima alle storie che il mondo dimentica.

Thinkbigwithbukonla

“Dream deeper. Believe bolder. Live transformed.”

Vichar Darshanam

Vichar, Motivation, Kadwi Baat ( विचार दर्शनम्)

Komfort bad heizung

Traum zur Realität

Chic Bites and Flights

Savor. Style. See the world.

ومضات في تطوير الذات

معا نحو النجاح

Broker True Ratings

Best Forex Broker Ratings & Reviews

Blog by ThE NoThInG DrOnEs

art, writing and music by James McFarlane and other musicians

fauxcroft

living life in conscious reality

Srikanth’s poetry

Freelance poetry writing

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