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Thursday, March 13, 2025

USPS signs agreement with Elon Musk's DOGE team for assistance

 U.S. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy told Congress he signed an agreement with Elon Musk's DOGE government reform team to provide assistance to the money-losing agency as it works to address "big problems."

USPS, an independent government agency with 635,000 employees that lost $9.5 billion last year, has been exempt from DOGE-directed federal employee reductions. DeJoy said the agreement with DOGE and the General Services Administration will allow the government reform team to "assist us in identifying and achieving further efficiencies.... The DOGE team was gracious enough to ask for big problems they can help us with."

https://www.streetinsider.com/Reuters/USPS+signs+agreement+with+Elon+Musks+DOGE+team+for+assistance/24496925.html

Panama Clears First Quantum to Ship Stockpiled Copper From Mine

 


First Quantum Minerals Ltd. was cleared to begin shipping out stockpiled copper in Panama, the latest sign authorities may be willing to negotiate a restart of the stalled mine.

Panama’s President Jose Raul Mulino said Thursday he has authorized the export of “ground material,” referring to copper concentrate that the mining company has kept stockpiled at its shuttered Cobre Panama mine in the country.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-03-13/panama-clears-first-quantum-to-ship-stockpiled-copper-from-mine

Low responsiveness of machine learning models to critical or deteriorating health conditions

 

'Risks of state abortion reporting mandates outweigh the benefits': Guttmacher

States should stop requiring health providers to file reports on every abortion because the information poses a risk to both them and their patients in the current political environment, a research group that advocates for abortion access says.

The Guttmacher Institute says in a new recommendation that the benefit of mandated and detailed data collection is no longer worth the downsides: It could reveal personal information, be stigmatizing for patients and cumbersome for providers — or could be used in investigations.

“It would be a mistake for anyone to assume now that the information a state could collect about abortion would not be used to harm people,” said Kelly Baden, Guttmacher’s vice president for public policy.

When the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade nearly three years ago, it opened the door for states to ban most abortions. It also ignited policy battles over information collected about ending pregnancies.

The possibility of reports being used in investigations has increased with the return of President Donald Trump and anti-abortion officials in key federal government jobs, Baden said.

Most state health departments require medical providers to report data about each abortion, though without including patient names. Massachusetts and Illinois mandate that providers give the state only aggregated data.

The states that collect the information, in turn, produce reports on abortion statistics and send their information to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for a nationwide tally. Together, that information gives a picture of how often abortion takes place, when in the pregnancy the abortion occurs and the age of patients.

Those reports provide the fullest government pictures of abortion nationally, but they come with a lag time of about two years and lack data from states that don’t require the reports: California, the country’s most-populous state, as well as Maryland, Michigan and New Jersey.

Certain information that some states collect — such as the patient’s marital status or ZIP code and the reason for the abortion — do not serve a meaningful research purpose and could stigmatize patients, says Guttmacher data scientist Isaac Maddow-Zimet. In conjunction with other data, these details could even be used to identify people who obtain abortions, he said.

The same level of detail is not required to be reported to the state for other medical care, Maddow-Zimet added.

“The real concern here is that it fits into a broader pattern of abortion exceptionalism,” he said.

But Carol Tobias, president of National Right to Life, said rolling back reporting requirements can be detrimental: It could downplay the frequency of abortion complications, for instance, she said. Additionally, details such as the reason for the abortion could shape public policy if it reveals increases in sexual assault, she said.

“The more information we have, the better it is for women,” Tobias said.

An Indiana anti-abortion group began using public records requests to obtain individual abortion reports from the state in 2022 and report on alleged violations by providers — including submitting the reports late.

The state Health Department eventually declared that individual reports are not public records because a ban on most abortions means so few happen that the reports could be used to reveal who’s obtaining them. Earlier this year, state Attorney General Todd Rokita settled a lawsuit from the group, Voices for Life, by mandating that reports — with some personal information redacted — be available to the public. But the documents are not being provided as litigation continues.

Melanie Garcia Lyon, the Voices for Life executive director, said in an email that one doctor had his licensed suspended in part because of a violation that someone spotted in a terminated pregnancy report. “Abortion reporting protects women,” she said in an email.

Michigan has halted required reporting. Minnesota has removed some required information, such as the marital status, race and ethnicity of patients.

Arizona’s Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat in a state where Republicans control the legislature, is calling for that state to drop mandated reporting. A bill that would repeal the requirements hasn’t advanced.

Connie Fei Lu, a medical fellow in complex family planning at the University of Illinois Chicago, said the 2022 Illinois change to collect a tally of abortions rather than detail on each one can protect the privacy of patients, especially those who travel from other states for abortion.

But she said the data collection policies need to be thoughtful.

“I completely understand the delicate balance in abortion data collection in an environment where that data can end up in the wrong hands,” she said. “From a research perspective, from a scientific perspective, not having this data is not a good thing.”

While Guttmacher wants an end to mandatory abortion reports, it’s not calling for states to get out of the abortion data-collection business entirely; the group says states could instead use voluntary approaches to gather information.

Guttmacher and another abortion-rights group, the Society of Family Planning, have been surveying providers over the past few years. The groups’ analyses rely in part on estimates, but they have been released much more quickly than government data and have become key resources for understanding the impact of state bans and restrictions since Roe was overturned.

https://apnews.com/article/abortion-data-guttmacher-state-reports-9190aca3a0f48b63451e71ba6ef189ee

White House Says Trump Won't Cut Social Security, Medicare Following Musk Interview

 by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The White House released a statement Tuesday saying the Trump administration will not cut Social Security or Medicare after presidential adviser Elon Musk commented on cuts to entitlement programs.

Elon Musk (L) speaks as President Donald Trump looks on in the Oval Office of the White House on Feb. 11, 2025. Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

On Monday, Musk spoke with Fox News about the efforts of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and said that most government spending is on entitlements, prompting media outlets to speculate that he plans to cut Social Security and Medicare.

“So, the waste and fraud in entitlement spending, which is most of the federal spending, is entitlements. So, that’s, like, the big one to eliminate,” Musk told Larry Kudlow in the Fox interview, adding that such cuts could create over $600 billion in annual savings.

The White House said in a statement titled “FACT CHECK: President Trump Will Always Protect Social Security, Medicare” that instead of pushing for cuts to Social Security and Medicare, Musk was talking about removing fraud and waste in entitlement spending.

“President Trump himself has said it (over and over and over again). Elon Musk didn’t say that, either. The press is lying again,” the statement read, with hyperlinks to Trump’s past statements on the issue.

The White House then asked: “What kind of a person doesn’t support eliminating waste, fraud, and abuse in government spending that ultimately costs taxpayers more?”

In the statement, the White House linked to government findings about fraud and waste such as a U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report estimating that the United States stands to lose $521 billion annually to fraud, namely within the Medicaid and Medicare programs.

It also pointed to an August 2024 report from the Social Security Administration inspector general that discovered $72 billion in improper payments, a report that said the government has made $2.7 trillion in “improper payments” such as “payments to deceased individuals or those who no longer [are] eligible for government programs” over two decades, and a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services statement that it made $140 billion in “improper payments” last year.

During interviews with media outlets, Trump has often said he does not want to touch Medicare or Social Security, saying he instead wants to go after fraud within the two programs.

Look, Social Security won’t be touched, other than if there’s fraud or something. It’s going to be strengthened. But it won’t be touched,” he told Fox News host Sean Hannity in February.

“Medicare, Medicaid, none of that stuff is going to be touched,” he said in the interview, adding he will move to remove any illegal immigrants receiving such payments.

In his 2024 campaign, Trump indicated on several occasions that he would not touch Medicare or Social Security, and at one point, proposed ending income taxes on Social Security checks. A projection from the Congressional Budget Office has shown the Social Security program will become insolvent by the 2030s.

Musk also spoke with Hannity in the February interview and said that federal spending has to be slashed or Social Security and Medicare will be impacted in the future.

“We either solve the deficit, or all we’ll be doing is paying debt,” Musk said. “It’s got to be solved, or there’s no medical care, there’s no Social Security, there’s no nothing. It’s got to be solved.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/white-house-says-trump-wont-cut-social-security-medicare-following-musk-interview

'Amazon, Google, And Meta Plan To Triple Nuclear Energy Capacity By 2050'

 At the CERAWeek conference in Houston, Amazon, Google, Occidental, and Japan’s IHI Corp pledged to help triple global nuclear energy capacity by 2050, according to Reuters.

"We are truly at the beginning of a new industry," said U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright.

The World Nuclear Association (WNA) expects more support for the pledge from maritime, aviation, and oil and gas industries in the coming months. This builds on a 2023 commitment by over 30 countries to triple nuclear capacity by 2050.

Nuclear energy, generating 9% of global electricity from 439 reactors, is increasingly attractive for power-hungry data centers, with Big Tech signing billion-dollar utility deals.

Reuters reported that uranium oxide prices hit a 16-year high in early 2024 due to supply concerns and rising demand, following COVID-19 disruptions. Supply remains tight, with Kazakhstan, Canada, and Australia producing two-thirds of global uranium in 2022, according to WNA.

As of early 2025, 411 nuclear reactors operated worldwide with a combined 371-gigawatt capacity. Amazon, investing over $1 billion in nuclear projects, is exploring small modular reactors, while Meta and Google are also considering the emerging technology.

We've been following the story since late last year. We wrote back in early November that Mark Zuckerberg reportedly told Meta workers that plans to build an AI data center powered by nuclear energy were scrapped after rare bees were discovered on the proposed site.

But by December it looked like things could be back on track, according to reporting from Axios, who noted first that Meta is joining industry heavyweights like Amazon and Google in exploring nuclear energy as a zero-carbon solution.

And as we have continued to report, accelerating power demand growth from AI data centers has sparked a nuclear power revival in the US:

For those who missed it, in our note "The Next AI Trade" from April 2024, almost one year ago, we outlined various investment opportunities for powering up America, most of which have dramatically outperformed the market since then. 

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/amazon-google-and-meta-plan-triple-nuclear-energy-capacity-2050

Thune ‘open’ to giving Dems amendment vote to help keep government open

 Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) said Thursday that Republicans are open to giving Democrats an amendment vote on a monthlong stopgap funding patch in exchange for votes to help Republicans pass a yearlong spending bill to avert a government shutdown. 

Thune told reporters he has yet to speak directly with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) on a path forward. 

“If they want a vote on that in exchange for getting us the votes to pass the [CR] to Sept. 30, I think we’re open to that,” Thune said Thursday morning. “But as you all know, the House is gone, so whatever happens is going to have to be the final action here, and really it’s up to them.”

“We haven’t heard from them yet. I think they’re still trying to figure out what their plan is, what their path forward is,” Thune said about Schumer’s team, adding that he wasn’t sure whether a shutdown is in the cards. “I don’t know. We’ll see. I hope not. It’s up to them. It’s their call. The ball is in their court.” 

Senate Democrats have been agonizing for days over whether to back the GOP’s bill, which only one House Democrat voted for, or to force a shutdown as they believe the bill gives even more power to President Trump and Elon Musk over spending and cutting. 

They emerged from a second lengthy conference luncheon Wednesday rallied behind a possible monthlong measure, with an eye toward an amendment vote that would give them political cover from a base that is angry over many of the initial actions of the Trump administration, including a purge of government employees.

https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/5192797-senate-republicans-shutdown-amendment-vote/