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Saturday, July 18, 2026

Trump administration to fund Maga-aligned projects in Europe as he reorders US aid: FT

 The Trump administration is preparing to unveil a series of grants in Europe and beyond to support Maga-aligned initiatives in pursuance of a dramatic overhaul of U.S. foreign aid priorities, the Financial Times reported on Saturday. 

The proposed grants include $2 million to “counter censorship” stemming from EU regulations, including the Digital Services Act and the Digital Markets Act, the report said, citing a copy of a notice the State Department sent to lawmakers.

Reuters could not immediately verify the report. 

https://www.aol.com/articles/trump-administration-fund-maga-aligned-182521000.html

Taylor Farms, allegedly tied to cyclosporiasis, sells to Walmart, Target, Whole Foods, Amazon Fresh

 The produce supplier allegedly linked to an outbreak of cyclosporiasis that has sickened hundreds across at least five states also sells products at a number of retailers.

California-based Taylor Farms’ produce is sold at Target, Whole Foods, Walmart, and Amazon Fresh, among other stores, according to its website.

However, Taylor Fresh Foods confirmed in a statement Friday afternoon that “no Taylor Farms branded salads or kits are associated with this outbreak” and that “no Taylor Farms branded salad kits contain iceberg lettuce.”

Taylor Farms’ produce is sold at Target, Whole Foods, Walmart and Amazon Fresh, according to its website, among other stores.AFP via Getty Images
Taylor Farms produce is sold at a number of grocery stores.Getty Images
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Food and Drug Administration and public health officials are currently investigating the outbreak “linked to shredded iceberg lettuce served at Taco Bell locations in 5 states,” according to the CDC’s website.

“FDA’s traceback investigation has identified a single supplier of iceberg lettuce from Mexico used by these Taco Bell locations,” the site reads.

“Do not eat shredded iceberg lettuce from Taco Bell locations in Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and West Virginia,” it emphatically states, noting that more than 1,644 sick people reported eating at Taco Bell in the five states.

The fast food joint has since voluntarily removed the potentially contaminated produce from its supply chain “indefinitely.”

A map of the cyclosporiasis cases in the United States.CDC

“Taco Bell has taken precautionary action, and we encourage all relevant restaurants, retailers, and foodservice operators to do the same,” the restaurant said in a statement Thursday.

The CDC’s website also noted that the FDA “is working directly with the supplier to determine if contaminated shredded iceberg lettuce went to other places.”

The agencies didn’t identify the supplier, but two people familiar with the inquiry told the Washington Post, and a federal official told the Associated Press, that it was Taylor Farms.

Director of Automated Harvest Equipment at Taylor Farms Chris Rotticci watches as a water jet harvester works rows of romaine lettuce near Soledad, California.REUTERS
“Based on information provided yesterday by the FDA, Taylor Farms de Mexico is voluntarily removing all iceberg lettuce sourced from central Mexico,” Taylor Fresh Foods said in a statement Friday afternoon.

“While the FDA traceback is indicating a specific independent farm, which represents less than 1% of the U.S.’s iceberg lettuce supply, as the potential source of the outbreak, we have removed all iceberg lettuce from the region indefinitely.”

Taylor Farms did not respond to The Post’s request for comment Friday morning. 

https://nypost.com/2026/07/17/us-news/taylor-farms-allegedly-linked-to-cyclosporiasis-sells-at-target-whole-foods-walmart-amazon/

"Enemies Of Our Civilization": Rubio Unveils Visa Curbs On 'Far-Left Terrorists'

 Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced a new visa policy barring foreign nationals linked to far-left terrorist organizations from entering the U.S. The move appears to be part of a broader, multi-agency, and multinational campaign to identify, disrupt, and dismantle left-wing extremist nodes operating across the West.

"Today, the State Department is imposing new visa restrictions to bar far-left terrorists from entering our country," Rubio said in a post on X late Thursday afternoon, hours after he hosted delegations from 65 countries around the world to begin coordinating operations to combat far-left terrorism.

He continued, "Foreigners who finance, incite, or aid and abet far-left terrorists are enemies of our civilization. They are not welcome in the United States."

The travel restrictions apply to individuals alleged to have financed, encouraged, or facilitated terrorism, economic sabotage, and politically motivated violence.

Related:

The new policy is based on a provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act, which allows federal agents to deny entry when a foreign national's presence could harm U.S. foreign policy interests.

No details were provided on which specific organizations or individuals will be targeted or when the restrictions will take effect.

On Thursday morning, Rubio made the opening statement during an event titled "Ministerial on the Resurgence of Political Terrorism" at the State Department.

He called for the civilized world to unite against an "encroaching darkness," urging delegations from 65 nations to defend what they have built and to fight back against those who seek to destroy it.

Rubio said, "In the United States, the share of left-wing terrorist attacks and plots has risen to levels not seen in decades. In Germany, far-left violence has jumped by more than 40% in just the last year alone."

The broader message from Thursday's event is that the US and its allies are set to confront the spread of revolutionary Marxism just as it was done seven decades ago. Washington is using an all-of-government, multinational strategy to counter far-left political violence, foreign influence networks, and subversive movements seeking to destabilize Western institutions.

That counter-movement by the federal gov't against the revolutionary left is already underway. It follows years in which far-left NGOs and suspected foreign subversion networks sowed unrest across the U.S. while the Biden-Harris regime, Democratic officials, and elements of the intelligence and law enforcement establishment largely looked the other way and instead focused on White Catholics.

Marxist-aligned activists and their financial backers have been put on notice by the Trump administration.

The key question next week is whether the U.S. will extradite Cox Media heir Fergie Chambers.

Is Roy Singham next in the crosshairs?

What about foreign subversion networks possibly linked to the Democratic Socialists of America?

What about Hasan Piker?

There was a time when Communists were deported. 

And that time could be coming back. 

Eyes on the Democratic Socialists of America as a prominent Bill Clinton insider has called for "Lawmakers, law-enforcement agencies and journalists should investigate the DSA to see if it is being funded by foreign governments and interests."

DSA is in the crosshairs but might not be the initial target by the federal government, while focus is on armed socialist organizations and Marxist NGOs with foreign ties.

Remember DSA is "partnered" with sanctioned ICAP in Cuba...

Most Americans agree that communism is bad...

... and this gives the Trump team political cover on both sides of the aisle to root out revolutionary Marxism. 

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/enemies-our-civilization-rubio-unveils-visa-curbs-far-left-terrorists

Bill to Block AI Prior Authorization in Medicare Fails in Senate

 Senate Democrats failed Thursday to kill an artificial intelligence (AI)-driven prior authorization demonstration program for traditional Medicare, but they say this isn't the end of the road.

"Democrats tried to stop AI prior authorization in Medicare," Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) wrote on X after the vote was taken. "Republicans blocked it -- apparently they agree with Trump that AI knows better when it comes to healthcare decisions for our seniors. This isn't the end. We'll keep fighting back."

In June 2025, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced a new demonstration project in traditional Medicare: the Wasteful and Inappropriate Service Reduction (WISeR) Model. Under the model, "CMS will partner with companies specializing in enhanced technologies to test ways to provide an improved and expedited prior authorization process" in traditional Medicare, the agency said in a press release, adding that the model will help "patients and providers avoid unnecessary or inappropriate care and [will safeguard] federal taxpayer dollars."

The WISeR model tests new technologies -- including AI -- to see whether they can expedite the prior authorization processes for certain items and services "that have been identified as particularly vulnerable to fraud, waste, and abuse, or inappropriate use," the press release noted. "These items and services include, but are not limited to, skin and tissue substitutes, electrical nerve stimulator implants, and knee arthroscopy for knee osteoarthritis."

Emergency services and inpatient-only services are exempt from the model, which will initially be tested in six states: New Jersey, Ohio, Oklahoma, Texas, Arizona, and Washington. Although prior authorization is used frequently in Medicare Advantage plans, which are run by private insurers, it has been used sparingly in traditional Medicare.

The model is "voluntary" for providers, but "providers and suppliers in the assigned regions will have the choice of submitting prior authorization requests for selected items and services or their claim will be subject to pre-payment medical review," the agency noted, so either way the claims for the affected services will be reviewed.

The program, which began in January, has come in for lots of criticism, with patients and clinicians saying it has created confusion and long wait times. Some described the rollout as "horrendous" and say people enrolled in traditional Medicare in the pilot states are now getting ensnared in the same red tape as those with private insurance.

The administration has defended the program as a way to root out Medicare fraud. "It's our duty as Americans to stop fraud and protect patients from potential harm," Abe Sutton, director of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, told MedPage Today at a primary care meeting in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday.

One of the listed services subject to the program, skin and tissue substitutes, has been cited for rampant profiteering, with one Medicare beneficiary in Florida accumulating costs of $9.8 million in about a year. A data analysis released in 2025 projected that Medicare would spend as much as $15.4 billion by the end of that year on skin substitutes. Medicare has since issued a regulation limiting reimbursement for the materials to $127.28 per cm2. But makers of the skin substitutes counter that the new rate will cause providers to turn to inferior products potentially made by foreign sources.

Senate and House members representing the affected states have pushed back on the new model. In the Senate, a resolution introduced by Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee, would have terminated the WISeR program. It failed Thursday by a vote of 46-50, prompting the X post from Murray.

"President Trump came into office saying he would not cut Medicare, but that was clearly a lie," Murray said prior to the vote. "Because right now, his administration is trying to privatize Medicare, in part by putting AI between Medicare beneficiaries and their healthcare."

Before the vote, Wyden noted that "seniors paid into Medicare out of every paycheck during their working years, and they did so with an expectation they would have an ironclad guarantee of affordable healthcare."

"Today, seniors in six states across America are discovering that care their doctor has recommended for them has been slowed or halted by a shadowy AI-driven third party," he said. "The consequences are not abstract. Seniors with severe back pain have to wait weeks for relief, upending their lives and leaving them suffering because of the bureaucracy of healthcare."

But Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) disagreed. "Far too often our nation's healthcare system incentivizes low-value, high-cost services," he said prior to the vote. "For years, bipartisan policymakers throughout Capitol Hill and across administrations have endeavored to disrupt this flawed paradigm, especially in the Medicare program. Unfortunately, despite progress to incorporate new, value-based payment arrangements, Medicare's underlying reimbursement structure continues to rely heavily on the volume of services provided rather than the quality of care. In addition to failing patients and providers, Medicare's perverse financial incentives contribute to massive waste and abuse."

"Every member of this body agrees that patients should have access to high-quality care, providers deserve predictable payment for services, and avoidable waste, fraud, and abuse in Medicare should be stopped," said Crapo. "Ending this pilot program prematurely will deprive CMS of a useful tool to accomplish each of those goals. And I urge my colleagues to consider the facts and oppose this resolution."

Over in the House, Rep. Suzan DelBene (D-Wash.) also introduced a bill to stop the program. Her measure has 43 cosponsors -- all Democrats -- but has not advanced further.

"The outcome of the Senate ... vote was incredibly disappointing," DelBene told MedPage Today in a text message on Friday. "Republicans refuse to stand up to the president even as his AI Medicare experiment delays care for seniors across the country, leaves them in pain for weeks, and worsens health outcomes. We will continue fighting to end this dangerous program so seniors can get the care they need when they need it."

https://www.medpagetoday.com/practicemanagement/reimbursement/122254