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Musk associates sought to use critical Treasury payment system to shut down USAID spending, emails show
CNN
—
Four days after Donald Trump’s inauguration, Elon Musk’s top lieutenants at the Treasury Department asked its acting secretary, a career civil servant, to immediately shut off all USAID payments using the department’s own ultra-sensitive payment processing system.
The ask was so out of line with how Treasury normally operates, it prompted a skeptical reply from David Lebryk, then serving as acting Treasury secretary, who said he did not believe “we have the legal authority to stop an authorized payment certified by an agency,” according to a source familiar with the exchange.
Lebryk suggested a “legally less risky approach” would be for the State Department, which oversees USAID, to rescind the payments itself and examine whether they complied with President Donald Trump’s Inauguration Day executive order freezing foreign development aid.
Tom Krause, a former tech executive and now the top DOGE staffer at Treasury, responded that Lebryk could have legal risk himself should he choose not to comply.
This back and forth over email, described to CNN by a source familiar with it, reveals the first known indication that Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency emissaries sought to use Treasury’s tools to block some payments, fulfilling the president’s political agenda.
The ensuing controversy set off a chain reaction around Washington this week, sparking a tense political debate and emergency court proceedings over DOGE’s access to the system and the administration’s potential interest in using it to turn off payments as it chooses.
The email exchange marked a direct collision between political appointees loyal to Musk and career civil servants at the Treasury Department.
Last Friday, Lebryk announced his sudden departure from government service, ending his more than 35-year career at Treasury.
Democratic senators on Capitol Hill have demanded answers, while unions and protesters voiced fears about Musk’s potential incursion into Americans’ private data.
The controversy has also drawn attention to a previously obscure office inside Treasury called the Bureau of the Fiscal Service, which processes more than a billion payments totaling more than a $5 trillion a year.
The payment system reliably distributes Americans’ tax returns, Social Security benefits, disability payments and federal employees’ salaries. It has historically been off-limits to political appointees but Musk and his allies appear bent on breaking that precedent. In fact, Krause and his top deputy traveled to Kansas City to visit the federal office that operates the payment systems for the BFS, an ask they made prior to Trump’s inauguration that was denied by career Treasury officials at the time.
The critical, if largely unknown, BFS payment system is just one of the government nerve centers across Washington that, in less than three weeks, Musk and his DOGE teams have sought to disrupt or gain access to, including those responsible for the federal government’s work force, real estate portfolio, computer systems, and records management, just to name a few.
“People underestimate how badly, and quickly, things could go if someone starts messing with things with multiple systems underpinned by technology that isn’t native to any engineer, no matter how brilliant,” said one former BFS career official.
In a letter to lawmakers, the Treasury Department said the access to the payment system granted to Krause and a deputy was restricted to “read-only” with the payments systems. Trump’s newly confirmed Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent delivered the same message in a private meeting with House Republicans on Monday.
But that level of access is dramatically different than what Krause and his DOGE associates had pressed Lebryk to grant in the email exchange — and came amid conflicting reports about whether the scope was more expansive than it was being conveyed.
“The hole here is what happened between the initial ask and Bessent’s sign-off,” said one source with knowledge of the events that led up to the email exchange. “Either the DOGE aspirations for what they wanted dramatically changed or the limitations they insist were placed on them aren’t the whole story.”
In an interview with Bloomberg TV Thursday, Bessent said there has been no “tinkering” with the payments system and that DOGE representatives have “read-only” access to the payments system.
Bessent also defended the work of DOGE personnel detailed to Treasury, saying they are “these are highly trained professionals. This is not some roving band running around doing things. This is methodical and it is going to yield big savings.”
None of the people at Treasury on the emails responded to inquiries from CNN this week.
There have been questions about how far Trump and Musk believe they can go in cutting back spending across the federal government, with Musk in recent days commenting gleefully about shutting down payments.
The emails also highlight how forceful the group from DOGE has been in sketching out a way to use the Treasury Department to control grant funding Trump and Musk oppose, especially from USAID toward developing foreign nations.
Any decision to turn off some payments via Treasury’s systems, especially to align with Trump’s political wishes, would be an unprecedented fiscal decision and pose a direct threat to Congress’ power of the purse by giving the president more control over which payments to make, or not.
That wasn’t the Trump delegates’ approach, however.
In a lengthy email late January 24, Daniel Katz, the chief of staff to Bessent, first wrote that the department should shut off outgoing USAID payments so the State Department could then assess if aid to foreign health care systems complied with Trump’s directives, according to the source familiar with the messages.
Katz wrote that “potentially problematic payments” out of line with the president’s orders should be paused en masse by the department.
Still, Katz was clear the new administration believed Treasury could make its own decisions.
A division of USAID that delivered money to health care systems in developing nations had already put in place a process to shut off some payments, Katz wrote, and the administration “would like to replicate” that at Treasury.
“What we would like to do is, to the extent permitted by law, temporarily pause the automatic processing of payment files,” from a USAID division called Health Systems Strengthening, Katz wrote.
Katz also wrote that Krause, Musk’s deputy at Treasury, should be given access to the payments system so he and his team could take action.
Some of the administration’s plan, Katz added, included immediately pausing all payment files still in the queue and letting Krause and others look at individual payments certified by USAID for the health care systems. The State Department could then look closer at the payments through USAID, Katz added.
The Health Systems Strengthening program at USAID has primarily funneled money into countries in Africa and Southeast Asia, as well as Indonesia, the Philippines, Guatemala and Haiti. The funds were aimed at building the countries’ health systems so they could improve care to prevent infants and mothers from dying in childbirth, control the spread of HIV and AIDS and other infectious diseases, among other projects.
In one project touted on the now-archived USAID website, the division funded an emergency room in Jordan.
Its distributions are now in a 90-day pause because of Trump’s executive order.
After Katz’s initial message two weeks ago, Lebryk was explicit that the Treasury Department shouldn’t do what DOGE proposed.
“There are also practical and personal liability issues that may come into play,” Lebryk wrote, copying a lawyer from the Treasury Department’s general counsel’s office.
But Krause, the special hire from DOGE sent to Treasury, was undeterred. “I would also recommend you consider an equal alternative liability,” he wrote to Lebryk.
“I believe we can all feel more comfortable that we hold payment at least to review the underlying payment requests from USAID now so that we can be given time to consult State,” Krause wrote, ending a middle-of-night email on Saturday, according to the source.
Frustrated with Katz and Krause’s messages, Lebryk left the department the following week, shortly after the confirmation of now-Secretary Bessent.
Initially, Bessent didn’t give Krause and DOGE any limitation on its access to the system, which Lebryk opposed, according to a source familiar with the exchange.
Yet before the weekend was over, the Treasury Department told senators in Capitol Hill that the access Krause and others had to the Bureau of the Fiscal Service systems was “read-only.”
A lawyer from the Justice Department representing Treasury reaffirmed that in court this week, telling a federal judge on Wednesday the civil litigators believed the DOGE affiliates at Treasury — Krause and one underling, Marko Elez, a Musk employee in his mid-20s — didn’t have the ability to make changes to the Treasury payments system.
The lawyers were still nailing down information about the access DOGE had to the system, however, the attorney, Brad Humphreys of DOJ’s civil division, told the judge in Washington, DC, on Wednesday.
By Wednesday night, the Trump administration had agreed only the two DOGE affiliates at Treasury, Krause and Elez, could have access to the payment system, outside of its traditional access within the department.
The court also could order that Krause’s and Elez’s access is “read only,” the Justice Department agreed.
The Kansas City BFS office provides payment services for more than 250 federal agencies and is the conduit for an extraordinary swath of critical individual payments including tax refunds, social security benefits, veterans pay, pension and education benefits.
While the payment system may not be the most well-known piece of federal infrastructure, its centrality to the operations of the US government and the lives of millions of Americans is unparalleled. It’s also among the most secure.
Access to the agency’s Secure Payment System, or SPS, is closely held and authorized only for individuals who “have a need to know the information in order to perform their official Fiscal Service duties,” according to a 2021 government privacy and civil liberties assessment of the payments infrastructure. The system maintains an audit log of all users and additional security capabilities that allow monitoring, identification and ability to locate users.
That’s all fed what have been weeks of growing concern over the Musk team’s intention: Privacy issues given the reams of personal data that flow the system. National security issues related to contracting and federal employee payments. There are also conflict of interest concerns given Musk’s own companies have received billions in government contracts in an exceedingly competitive space across multiple agencies.
“The idea that ‘read-only’… is supposed to make people feel better is not shared by people who’ve worked there or understand how the systems actually work,” the former BFS career official said.
There is little margin for error when it comes to how the US pays its own bills, something that will become an even higher stakes task as Congress and the White House circle another battle over raising the debt limit.
This story has been updated with new reporting
In a shocking new development, emails have revealed that associates of Elon Musk sought to use a critical Treasury payment system to shut down USAID spending. The emails, which were obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request, show that Musk’s associates were actively working to disrupt the flow of funds to the US Agency for International Development (USAID), a key government agency responsible for providing humanitarian assistance and development aid around the world.The emails show that Musk’s associates were particularly concerned about USAID’s spending on renewable energy projects, which they viewed as a threat to Musk’s own business interests in the energy sector. In one email, a member of Musk’s team wrote that they were “exploring options to disrupt USAID’s funding mechanisms” in order to “protect our market share and ensure that our technologies remain competitive.”
The revelation has sparked outrage among lawmakers and government officials, who have called for a full investigation into Musk’s ties to USAID and the potential misuse of government resources for personal gain. Critics have also raised concerns about the influence that wealthy individuals like Musk have over government agencies and the potential for abuse of power.
As the story continues to unfold, it remains to be seen what consequences Musk and his associates may face for their actions. Stay tuned for updates on this developing story.
Tags:
- Musk associates
- Treasury payment system
- USAID spending
- Emails
- Shutdown attempt
- Government funding
- Financial manipulation
- Tech industry influence
- Corruption allegations
- Whistleblower revelations
#Musk #associates #sought #critical #Treasury #payment #system #shut #USAID #spending #emails #show
Trump to talk tariffs with officials from Canada, Mexico; Musk says USAID will be shut down
Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s former finance minister, excoriated Trump’s tariffs in an interview on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” today, blasting them in part as “so unjustified and so pointless.”
“These tariffs are being imposed truly for utterly no reason,” Freeland said. “The pretext offered is the flimsiest pretext possible.”
The White House has said it slapped a 25% tariff on Canadian goods to pressure the country into blunting the flow of fentanyl and immigrants into the U.S.
Freeland pushed back on that premise, saying that less than 1% of the fentanyl that comes into the U.S. moves across the northern border.
In fact, according to the White House’s fact sheet on tariffs, 43 pounds of fentanyl were seized at the northern border last fiscal year. In contrast, more than 21,000 pounds of fentanyl were seized at the southern border with Mexico during the same period, according to the administration.
“If border security were the issue, this could be solved in five minutes,” said Freeland, a member of Canadian Parliament who served as the country’s finance minister from August 2020 through December 2024.
Freeland, who is running to succeed outgoing Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, said Canadians were rallying against the Trump administration’s tariffs program. In response to the president’s repeated comments that Canada should become the 51st state, she said “our sovereignty is not negotiable.”
“If you hit us, we are going to hit back, and the whole country is going to be proud to do that,” she said.
President Trump is set to discuss tariffs with officials from Canada and Mexico as tensions rise over trade policies. The meeting comes as the U.S. looks to renegotiate NAFTA and implement tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.In a surprise move, Elon Musk announced that his company, SpaceX, will be shutting down its USAID program. Musk cited concerns over government regulations and bureaucracy as reasons for the decision. The move has sparked controversy and debate over the future of government-funded space exploration.
Stay tuned for updates on these developing stories. #Trump #tariffs #Canada #Mexico #Musk #USAID #SpaceX #trade
Tags:
- Trump tariffs news
- Trade talks with Canada and Mexico
- USAID shutdown announcement
- Trump administration trade policy
- Economic impact of tariffs
- Musk statement on USAID
- North American trade discussions
- Tariffs and international relations
- USAID closure implications
- Global trade negotiations with Trump
#Trump #talk #tariffs #officials #Canada #Mexico #Musk #USAID #shut
Paradise’s Sinatra twists a murder mystery with Elon Musk politics
A twist, however seismic, can only take a story so far. Thankfully for Paradise, Hulu’s new sci-fi thriller in which a presidential assassination is only the tip of a Lost-esque iceberg, great performances and more interesting questions lie on the other side of revelations.
While episode 1 offers a big surprise — the cast is actually living in an underground bunker built under a mountain in Colorado! — episode 2 focuses on “Sinatra” (Julianne Nicholson), a tech billionaire pulling the strings on the post-apocalyptic operation. Early in the series, we see Sinatra hovering in the background as Secret Service agent Xavier Collins (Sterling K. Brown) investigates the murder in the present and President Cal Bradford (James Marsden) prepares for the worst in the flashbacks.
According to Paradise writer Katie French, creator Dan Fogelman and the team debated if having Nicholson appear without much explanation in everywhere from the White House to the streets of the unnamed suburban sanctuary would strike the audience as odd.
“We really thought that flashback scene in the pilot was going to be weird if there was just this random billionaire in the Oval Office,” French tells Polygon. “And now it’s like… Oh God, all too prescient.”
While Elon Musk’s haunting presence in the second Trump administration aligns all too perfectly with Paradise’s setup, Sinatra already seems more complicated than her real-life tech-bro counterpart (or at least more watchable). As we learn in the second episode, Sinatra was, at least at one point in her life, a warm, human businessperson. We see her flirt at a bar, strike up conversation with her future husband, then propel into the future, where an app has made her a titan of business, while the birth of her child has made her a dedicated mother. The Sinatra of the present, seen interrogating Xavier over Cal’s death and maintaining order in the underground utopia, could not be further from her past self. But episode 2 offers an inflection point: the death of Sinatra’s son, and the grief she carries from that moment forward.
“We knew that we wanted a really strong foil to Xavier — we wanted her to be this incredibly powerful woman,” French says. “I remember early on, Dan asked the room if she should be more of this hardass tough lady, or when we were still casting, should we go a little bit older, a little bit warmer? And I was like: ‘Let’s do the mommy version of this. Let her be a mother.’”
Paradise was pitched as a throwback to ’90s and 2000s action thrillers of the Tony Scott mold. French says from the outset Fogelman was talking about movies like Crimson Tide and Man on Fire, full of power players and ticking-clock action. The structure gave the team the ability to probe what different types of individuals at various levels of power would do to protect their families.
“We gravitated, especially Dan, toward the question,” French says. “But that can also be a little bit creepy for [Sinatra]. We wanted it to be humanizing. We wanted her to have this story if she has everything in the world that you could possibly want. But there are some things that are outside of your control and that can still crush you.”
Despite possessing bottomless pockets and the drive of a disruptor, the Sinatra of the past can’t save her child from terminal illness. It’s an impossible situation, and Paradise charts the aftermath in challenging scenes between the billionaire and her therapist. French says the arc only works because of Nicholson. In present-day scenes, Sinatra could easily be “very mustache-twirly,” but the writer says Nicholson’s performance really made everything they have cooked up for future episodes possible.
“We really needed [episode 2] to ground us in her humanity and her empathy and the loss that she is going through. I remember sitting next to Dan during some of these scenes on set and going, ‘I think that she could do anything after this episode and people might still be OK.’ […] I think we push her very far in this season and we needed this springboard to take us there.”
French stresses that the Paradise team did not set out to let billionaires off the hook for diabolical behavior. Future episodes make it clear that Sinatra, however sympathetic, has careened off the moral cliff in her effort to preserve the bunker. It’s unclear if she had a hand in killing the president — we’ll have to wait until the finale for any clarity on that front — but at some point between losing her son and hiring engineers to build a cataclysm-safe neighborhood for 20,000 people, she broke bad. Resemblance to Elon Musk is not coincidental, but it’s not a one-for-one either.
“She’s playing god on a totally different level,” French says of where Sinatra’s going in season 1. “She’s kind of this multidimensional character who’s living and breathing with us and making decisions that I think surprise her.”
Three episodes of Paradise are now streaming on Hulu. New episodes drop every Wednesday.
Welcome to Paradise, where Frank Sinatra’s smooth crooning meets a thrilling murder mystery entwined with the futuristic politics of Elon Musk. Set in a luxurious resort town, this novel follows the enigmatic detective Sinatra as he navigates a web of deceit, intrigue, and high-stakes power plays.As Sinatra delves deeper into the case, he uncovers a tangled web of secrets involving the town’s elite, including a controversial tech mogul with grand ambitions for the future. With the fate of Paradise hanging in the balance, Sinatra must race against time to unravel the truth before it’s too late.
Filled with twists, turns, and unexpected revelations, Paradise’s Sinatra twists a murder mystery with Elon Musk politics to create a gripping and unforgettable tale. Join Sinatra on his quest for justice and discover the dark underbelly of paradise in this thrilling novel that will keep you on the edge of your seat until the very end.
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- Paradise’s Sinatra
- Murder mystery
- Elon Musk
- Politics
- Mystery novel
- Crime thriller
- New book release
- Sinatra-inspired fiction
- Political intrigue
- Elon Musk controversy
#Paradises #Sinatra #twists #murder #mystery #Elon #Musk #politics
Why Elon Musk likely wants control of Treasury’s payment systems
It’s barely been two weeks, but Elon Musk’s attempts to run the federal government like one of his businesses have already resulted in a level of chaos and inefficiency we’ve never before seen in Washington.
Earlier this week, the White House took a page straight out of the so-called Department of Government Efficiency’s playbook and attempted to freeze federal funding for SNAP, Medicaid and other programs working families rely on — a move so disastrous that the courts intervened and the administration had to reverse course. Musk and his allies have also been busy firing the federal workforce, offering “deferred resignations” and replacing longtime civil servants with his personal lackeys. The Office of Personnel Management, the key staffing agency for the entire federal government, is being run by a cadre of Musk cronies.
The Treasury’s payment system is responsible for delivering trillions in Social Security payments, Medicare benefits and more to millions of Americans across the country.
And Friday, the highest-ranking career official at the Treasury Department, David A. Lebryk, reportedly resigned after refusing to hand Musk’s lackeys the keys to the government’s entire payment system and the $6 trillion in payments the system processes annually.
The Treasury’s payment system is responsible for delivering trillions in Social Security payments, Medicare benefits and more to millions of Americans across the country. It’s not yet entirely clear what Musk plans to do with this system, which has historically been overseen by a small number of career officials. But a few possibilities have emerged.
First, accessing the Treasury’s payment system could be a path to freezing government funding, as the administration attempted earlier this week. Musk could halt payments to programs like Medicaid, Meals on Wheels, Head Start and more, maneuvering around the courts. Musk has already directed his engineers to find ways to turn off the flow of money to programs he and President Donald Trump oppose. With the keys to the Treasury’s payment system, he can unilaterally cut off these funds right at the source.
Musk could also get his hands on the “Do Not Pay” system that lists individuals or contractors the government has blacklisted, theoretically granting him control over whom the government does business with. Government contracts have been central to Musk’s $400 billion net worth; his companies have signed billions of dollars’ worth of government contracts. He could easily place his rivals on the Do Not Pay list or turn the spigot back on for friends who have been blacklisted.
While the Trump administration has sworn up and down that it will not touch Social Security and Medicare, it’s hard not to question whether this access would put these payments right in DOGE’s crosshairs. Initially, Musk pledged that DOGE would cut $2 trillion from the federal budget. Achieving that goal is nearly impossible without going after Medicare and Social Security. And though Musk has since tempered expectations on the commission’s cost-cutting goals — saying there is “a good shot” at cutting $1 trillion — even a reduction of that size would do incredible damage to our country’s social safety net.
Nor is Musk chasing these cuts for their own sake. He’s helping congressional Republicans attempt to pay for a new round of tax breaks for corporations and the ultrawealthy — including Musk himself.
Luckily, Americans see right through this grift.
It’s nice to believe in a fantasy in which Musk and DOGE work alongside civil servants to improve technology and services for Americans and save a few bucks along the way. But all evidence points to the contrary. The richest man in the world, whom no one elected to any government position, is seeking unprecedented access to confidential information, including information pertaining to his own business interests, and seems hell-bent on cutting off as much funding as possible for the programs that matter to the rest of us.
Luckily, Americans see right through this grift. An AP-NORC poll found that 52% of Americans have an unfavorable view of Musk — and less than a third of Americans approve of DOGE. Americans don’t want an unelected and unaccountable billionaire dictating what working families can and cannot afford. If Musk is going to continue running the government like one of his failed businesses, perhaps someone should force his “resignation” too.
Elon Musk, the billionaire entrepreneur and CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, has recently expressed interest in gaining control of the Treasury’s payment systems. This move has raised eyebrows and sparked speculation about his motivations.One possible reason why Musk may want control of the Treasury’s payment systems is his belief in the power of cryptocurrency and decentralized finance. Musk has been a vocal advocate for digital currencies like Bitcoin and Dogecoin, and has even invested billions of dollars in them. By gaining control of the Treasury’s payment systems, Musk could potentially further promote the adoption of cryptocurrencies and shape the future of financial transactions.
Another reason could be Musk’s desire to disrupt the traditional banking system. Musk has criticized banks for their high fees and slow transaction times, and has suggested that a more efficient and transparent payment system is needed. By taking control of the Treasury’s payment systems, Musk could potentially revolutionize the way people send and receive money, cutting out the middleman and streamlining the process.
Overall, Elon Musk’s interest in gaining control of the Treasury’s payment systems likely stems from his innovative and forward-thinking mindset. Whether his intentions are purely altruistic or driven by personal gain, only time will tell. But one thing is for certain – Musk’s involvement in the world of finance is bound to shake things up in a big way.
Tags:
- Elon Musk
- Treasury payment systems
- Federal Reserve
- Cryptocurrency
- Digital currency
- Financial regulation
- Economic policy
- Central bank control
- Government payments
- Financial technology
#Elon #Musk #control #Treasurys #payment #systems
Wyden demands answers on Musk personnel seeking access to U.S. Treasury system
WASHINGTON, D.C. (KATU) — Senator Ron Wyden, D-Ore., has called for an explanation from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent following reports that individuals linked to Elon Musk attempted to gain access to a highly sensitive Treasury Department payment system. The system, which is managed by non-political staff, handles trillions of dollars annually, including Social Security and Medicare benefits, tax credits, and payments to government contractors, some of which compete with Musk-owned companies.
“To put it bluntly, these payment systems simply cannot fail, and any politically-motivated meddling in them risks severe damage to our country and the economy,” Wyden wrote in a letter to Bessent. “I am deeply concerned that following the federal grant and loan freeze earlier this week, these officials associated with Musk may have intended to access these payment systems to illegally withhold payments to any number of programs.”
READ ALSO: Lawmakers from Oregon and beyond weigh in on Trump admin’s freeze on grants and loans
Wyden expressed further concern about Musk’s business ties to China, stating, “The press has previously reported that Musk was denied a high-level clearance to access the government’s most sensitive secrets. I am concerned that Musk’s enormous business operation in China…endangers U.S. cybersecurity and creates conflicts of interest that make his access to these systems a national security risk.”
Wyden’s letter posed several questions to the Treasury Department, including whether officials linked to Musk or DOGE have requested or been granted access to the Bureau of the Fiscal Service’s payment systems, and if so, under what legal authority and for what purpose. The senator also inquired about any vetting processes conducted by the Treasury Department regarding potential conflicts of interest due to Musk’s business operations in China.
Senator Ron Wyden, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, has demanded answers from Tesla CEO Elon Musk regarding reports that Tesla personnel were seeking access to the U.S. Treasury Department’s system for processing tax credits.Wyden expressed concerns over potential misuse of taxpayer funds and called for transparency in the matter. He requested a detailed explanation from Musk on the reasons for Tesla employees seeking access to the Treasury system and how the company intended to use the information obtained.
The senator emphasized the need for oversight and accountability in ensuring that federal resources are not being exploited for private gain. He warned against any attempts to manipulate the system for personal or corporate benefit.
Wyden’s inquiry comes amidst ongoing scrutiny of Musk and Tesla’s financial dealings, including allegations of tax evasion and other improprieties. The senator has vowed to hold those responsible accountable and ensure that taxpayer dollars are used responsibly and ethically.
Stay tuned for updates on this developing story as more information becomes available.
Tags:
- Wyden
- Elon Musk
- U.S. Treasury
- government access
- personnel inquiry
- security concerns
- data breach
- federal investigation
- technology industry
- regulatory compliance
#Wyden #demands #answers #Musk #personnel #seeking #access #U.S #Treasury #system
Sean Strickland reacts to clip of Bryce Mitchell expressing his hatred for Elon Musk
Sean Strickland partially agreed with Bryce Mitchell’s ridiculing comments toward Tesla CEO Elon Musk.
In December 2024, Mitchell returned to the win column with a third-round knockout win against Kron Gracie at UFC 310. The number thirteen-ranked featherweight utilized his post-fight press conference to discuss various topics, including his hatred for Elon Musk:
“I think that time will prove me correct. Time will always reveal someone’s true character and if you put that man in a position of power, his true character will be revealed. Let’s just put it this way, he has all the money in this country, he’s the wealthiest man in the country and he wasted it on f*cking rockets, man. Think about it dude.”
Mitchell continued by saying:
Get the latest updates on One Championship Rankings at Sportskeeda and more
“He could actually help people with that money, but he don’t give a sh*t about you. He’s got all the money in the world to help you. It would be a penny to him and you’d never have to work again. He don’t give a sh*t about you though. He wants to waste it on all these rockets and all these cars that s*ck.”
Former UFC middleweight champion Sean Strickland re-posted the video of Bryce Mitchell‘s comments on his Instagram story and added the following caption:
“I mean… he’s not entirely wrong lol”
Strickland’s Instagram story Bryce Mitchell has been outspoken on his support for Donald Trump, the recently inaugurated 47th President of the United States. Elon Musk significantly contributed to Trump’s campaign, making it more intriguing that Mitchell despises Musk.
Watch Mitchell’s comments about Musk below:
Sean Strickland looks to regain middleweight title at UFC 312
In June 2024, Sean Strickland was dethroned of the UFC middleweight title due to a split decision loss against Dricus du Plessis. Five months later, Strickland bounced back with a split decision win against Paulo Costa, earning him a rematch against Du Plessis.
On February 8, Strickland looks to avenge his defeat against Du Plessis in the UFC 312 main event, which goes down in Australia. Since their first meeting, Du Plessis defended his throne for the first time with a fourth-round submission win against Israel Adesanya.
Dricus Du Plessis has exceeded any expectations with an 8-0 start to his UFC tenure. At UFC 312, Sean Strickland plans to hand Du Plessis his first promotional defeat to become a two-time middleweight champion.
Edited by Gerard Crispin
In a recent interview, UFC fighter Sean Strickland reacted to a clip of fellow fighter Bryce Mitchell expressing his strong dislike for billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk. In the clip, Mitchell passionately voiced his hatred for Musk, criticizing him for his wealth and influence on society.Strickland, known for his candid and unfiltered opinions, didn’t hold back in his response to Mitchell’s rant. “Man, I gotta give it to Bryce, he’s not afraid to speak his mind,” Strickland said. “But hating on Elon Musk? Come on, that’s just ridiculous. The man is a genius and has done so much for technology and innovation. I don’t agree with everything he does, but you have to respect his accomplishments.”
Strickland went on to say that while everyone is entitled to their own opinions, he believes it’s important to have a balanced perspective and not let personal biases cloud judgment. “I get where Bryce is coming from, but let’s not throw the baby out with the bathwater. Elon Musk has made incredible contributions to the world, and we should acknowledge that,” Strickland added.
The clip of Mitchell’s rant has sparked a debate among fans and fellow fighters, with some agreeing with his sentiments and others echoing Strickland’s sentiments. It just goes to show that even in the world of MMA, there’s always room for lively discussions and differing viewpoints.
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Sean Strickland, Bryce Mitchell, Elon Musk, MMA, UFC, fighter, interview, reaction, hatred, controversy, social media, viral clip, comments, public opinion, opinion, reaction video, online feud, Twitter beef, MMA community.
#Sean #Strickland #reacts #clip #Bryce #Mitchell #expressing #hatred #Elon #MuskElon Musk flags massive salaries at NPR as DOGE takes shape
WASHINGTON (TNND) — Elon Musk, who leads the new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), responded to a social media user Tuesday who shared reported salaries of people associated with NPR.
“Hmm,” Musk posted on X.
Mike Cernovich, who has 1.3 million X followers, said several NPR hosts earn $500,000 a year, adding that “NPR is a taxpyer-funded [sic], far-left wing media outlet.”
He attached an image of a chart titled “compensation,” with the pay of seven people associated with the nonprofit news organization listed on the chart. Former NPR CEO John Lansing, who died in August, is listed as earning more than $500,000. Host Steve Inskeep is said to be earning at least $490,000.
The image shared by Cernovich matches Fiscal Year 2023 data compiled by investigate journalism nonprofit ProPublica, which analyzed tax filings.
NPR’s website says less than 1% of the company’s annual operating budget is funded through grants from federal agencies and departments, as well as the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a nonprofit authorized by Congress. Musk has vowed to slash government expenses through DOGE.
In November, Musk asked in an X post, “[s]hould your tax dollars really be paying for an organization run by people who think the truth is a ‘distraction’?” His question was in response to a clip of Katherine Maher, who became the CEO of NPR in March, saying in a 2022 conference she thinks “our reverence for the truth might have become a bit of a distraction that is preventing us from finding consensus and getting important things done.”
NPR in April 2023 stopped posting on X, then Twitter, after the platform temporarily gave the company’s account a “state-affiliated media” label. The company said in a statement at the time it did not want to share journalism on platforms which “have demonstrated an interest in undermining our credibility.”
Musk pushed back against criticism for the move by sharing a copy of his platform’s guidelines, which said “state-affiliated media is defined as outlets where the state exercises control over editorial content through financial resources, direct or indirect political pressures, and/or control over production and distribution.”
The label for NPR was switched to “government-funded media” shortly after the “state-affiliated media” designation was given. The company’s account is now labeled by X as “verified.”
NPR did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The National News Desk (TNND).
Have questions, concerns or tips? Send them to Ray at rjlewis@sbgtv.com.
Elon Musk recently made headlines again, this time for flagging the massive salaries at NPR as cryptocurrency DOGE takes shape. In a series of tweets, the Tesla CEO called out the public broadcaster for its high executive pay, questioning whether it was justified given the nonprofit status of NPR.Musk’s comments come as DOGE, the meme-inspired cryptocurrency that he has been promoting on social media, continues to gain traction in the market. The price of DOGE has surged in recent weeks, fueled by Musk’s tweets and support from retail investors.
As Musk draws attention to the disparity in salaries at NPR, it raises questions about the broader issue of income inequality and executive compensation. With DOGE gaining popularity and Musk’s influence in the crypto space growing, it will be interesting to see how this plays out in the coming weeks.
Stay tuned for more updates on Elon Musk, DOGE, and the future of cryptocurrency.
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#Elon #Musk #flags #massive #salaries #NPR #DOGE #takes #shapeElon Musk and His Friends Help Trump Shake Up the Government
On Friday afternoon, the world’s richest person showed up at what sounds like one of the world’s most boring agencies to demand a list.
Elon Musk had arrived at the Office of Personnel Management, a mundane-sounding agency with vast power overseeing the federal civilian work force. During President Trump’s first term, the nation’s leader used the agency to enforce loyalty to his agenda. During his second term, it appears Mr. Musk may try to use the office to enforce loyalty to his own agenda.
Mr. Musk has stormed into Washington with a host of friends and paid employees, determined to leave his imprint quickly. Never before in modern times has someone so rich played such a hands-on role in American government, with Mr. Musk making himself omnipresent in Washington since flying there for Mr. Trump’s inauguration. His plane has not left.
On Mr. Trump’s first day, he empowered Mr. Musk by establishing the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, a cost-cutting effort that the tech billionaire is leading. Mr. Trump gave the group the authority to work on a plan to reduce the size of the federal work force, among other things.
Taking to Washington with his trademark single-mindedness and bravado, Mr. Musk is reprising the tactics he deployed at Twitter, which he bought in 2022. He has brought to bear the full weight of his Silicon Valley network, installing some of the same executives who cut 80 percent of the social network’s staff, and even using the same email subject lines. He has promised “mass head-count reductions across the federal bureaucracy,” and is now racing to do just that.
Mr. Musk’s slash-first, fix-later approach to cost-cutting has been intentional throughout his career. And some of the early moves by the Trump administration to freeze funding for federal programs and entice federal workers to resign have led to mass confusion or are being legally challenged. (On Wednesday, the White House walked back an order that froze trillions of dollars in federal grants and loans.)
But Mr. Musk wants to see radical change — and he is pressing forward.
This article is based on interviews with a dozen people briefed on how Mr. Musk has spent his first week in Washington, all of whom insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about his activities.
Musk allies to oversee the work force
On Friday, Mr. Musk showed up at the Theodore Roosevelt Federal Building and asked Office of Personnel Management staff to produce a list of the federal chief information officers. The request reflected how Mr. Musk’s plans seem to heavily involve the agency, which is set to be run by a supporter of his, Scott Kupor, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist at Andreessen Horowitz who is awaiting Senate confirmation.
Mr. Musk, however, is wasting no time before Mr. Kupor’s arrival.
Several of Mr. Musk’s top aides have landed senior adviser roles at the Office of Personnel Management. They include Brian Bjelde, a human resources executive at SpaceX who has identified himself as the company’s 14th employee and who played a role in Mr. Musk’s takeover of Twitter, where he helped carry out widespread layoffs. Another arrival is Riccardo Biasini, an executive at the Boring Company, Mr. Musk’s tunneling company, who also joined Mr. Musk’s team at Twitter.
But the most empowered of Mr. Musk’s allies at the Office of Personnel Management has been Anthony Armstrong, a top technology banker at Morgan Stanley who worked on the billionaire’s acquisition of Twitter in 2022.
Mr. Musk appears to have even taken over internal communications. On Tuesday evening, an email from the Office of Personnel Management offered about two million federal employees the option to resign, and to be paid through the end of September, with the subject line: “Fork in the road.” That was exactly the subject line that Mr. Musk used to encourage Twitter employees to resign in November 2022.
Most of the people whom Mr. Musk has brought to Washington are young engineers who did not know him but have signed up for 80-hour workweeks and are being deployed at federal agencies.
But he does not readily trust new people, and so he is calling largely on his inner circle.
Confidants in his vast war on the bureaucracy include the investor Antonio Gracias, a former board member of Tesla, and Terrence O’Shaughnessy, a retired four-star Air Force general who is one of Mr. Musk’s top advisers at SpaceX. Mr. Musk has pushed Mr. O’Shaughnessy for administration positions, and the general told others he was being considered as a possible replacement for Pete Hegseth during Mr. Hegseth’s turbulent but successful bid to lead the Pentagon.
One new person to have gained Mr. Musk’s trust is Baris Akis, a Turkish-born leader of a Silicon Valley venture firm who graduated from Stanford in 2016.
Mr. Akis had no meaningful relationship with Mr. Musk until just a few weeks ago. But he was deeply involved in Mr. Trump’s transition — perhaps putting in more hours than any other tech leader beyond Mr. Musk — and he has emerged from that effort as a right-hand man to Steve Davis, a Musk lieutenant who has overseen the Department of Government Efficiency.
Mr. Davis and Mr. Akis have been heavily involved in the Office of Personnel Management in recent weeks. But neither of them actually work there. Mr. Davis nowadays spends much of his time detailed to the General Services Administration, which helps manage federal agencies and which is a likely next target of Mr. Musk’s war on the bureaucracy.
At the General Services Administration, Mr. Musk has installed a Tesla software engineer, Thomas Shedd, as its director of “Technology Transformation Services.”
Another Musk ally, Amanda Scales, who previously worked for the billionaire and before that for Mr. Akis, has played a particularly outward-facing role at the Office of Personnel Management. Federal agencies were asked to send Ms. Scales a list of the workers who are still on probationary status — and are therefore easier to fire.
Ms. Scales has been appointed as the agency’s chief of staff at a time when it has no full-time director, and she has faced much anger online as the face of Mr. Trump’s proposed reductions to the federal work force.
Fingerprints on key moves
In Washington, Mr. Musk is both a celebrity and a bureaucrat, sometimes simultaneously.
At one moment, he and several of his billionaire friends, including Mr. Gracias, were mingling with fixtures of the Washington establishment at the annual dinner of the Alfalfa Club, where several attendees broke the event’s unwritten no-phones policy and mobbed him for selfies. At another, he was spotted in the White House mess, where 20-something staff members grab sandwiches between meetings — but unlike Mr. Musk, most do not return to a West Wing office to help oversee what Mr. Trump says is a 40-person team carrying out his executive orders.
Mr. Musk has found himself focused on bureaucratic maneuvers in his first week.
His team has prioritized finding a way to email all 2.3 million federal civilian employees at once, the type of thing that is easy to do at a company like Tesla but more challenging to do across the vast federal work force, in which agencies can typically email only their own employees. The Office of Personnel Management was able to use that list to deliver its Tuesday evening memo.
All of this is in pursuit of what Mr. Musk initially said would be $2 trillion in annual cost savings through the use of technology, deregulation and budget cuts (he has more recently lowered his estimate to closer to $1 trillion). In several posts on X since Mr. Trump’s inauguration, the Department of Government Efficiency has boasted of more than $500 million in immediate savings through the curtailing of D.E.I. initiatives and the renegotiation of unused office leases, which officials called the “initial focus” of the group.
On the first day of the Trump administration, Mr. Musk’s team took over the United States Digital Service, a unit in the president’s executive office that has been renamed the “U.S. DOGE Service.” The service’s roughly 200 employees are expecting substantial layoffs, and a different Silicon Valley executive, Tom Krause, has conducted some interviews of employees. Among other questions, Mr. Krause has asked the employees what makes them exceptional and who the agency’s best workers are.
Mr. Musk’s team has also taken on a range of roles, including I.T. staff members and detectives. Mr. Trump has said that Mr. Musk’s job includes carrying out his executive orders. And so Mr. Musk has tried to deploy his engineers to find ways to turn off the flow of money from the Treasury Department to things that Mr. Trump wants to defund.
Mr. Musk’s allies in the Department of Government Efficiency and the White House say they snuffed out an attempt from some federal employees to rush money out to the World Health Organization just after Mr. Trump said he was withdrawing the country from the global agency. Their claims could not immediately be verified.
And according to at least one Trump aide, Mr. Musk also played a role in the president’s sweeping grant of clemency to the people charged in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.
On the evening of the prisoners’ release, Paul Ingrassia, a White House liaison to the Justice Department, claimed to a crowd at a Washington jail that “Elon Musk knew a lot about this and was the mastermind behind it.”
Next to Mr. Ingrassia was an aide to Mr. Musk: Christopher Stanley, who has worked as a security engineer at SpaceX and X and recently relocated to a role “at the White House,” Mr. Ingrassia said. Mr. Stanley has complained on social media about federal employees’ work ethic and speed at returning emails since he arrived in Washington.
Mr. Musk may be something of a super-aide, but he is generally liked by Mr. Trump’s inner circle, texting memes and trading intel with staff members who are worth a minuscule fraction of what he is. He does not find it beneath him: In a conversation with a friend, Mr. Musk seemed almost amazed at his fortune.
Kirsten Grind and Ryan Mac contributed reporting.
Elon Musk, the billionaire entrepreneur and CEO of SpaceX and Tesla, has long been known for his close relationship with President Donald Trump. Now, it seems that Musk and his friends are helping Trump shake up the government in a big way.According to reports, Musk and his inner circle have been advising Trump on a range of issues, from technology and innovation to space exploration and energy policy. Musk’s influence on the president is said to be significant, with Trump reportedly seeking his input on a wide range of topics.
In recent months, Musk has also been vocal in his support for Trump’s controversial policies, including his push for deregulation and his stance on immigration. Musk’s outspoken support for the president has drawn criticism from some quarters, but it seems that he is determined to use his influence to shape the direction of the Trump administration.
With Musk and his friends by his side, Trump is poised to make some major changes to the government in the coming months. Whether these changes will be for the better or for the worse remains to be seen, but one thing is for certain: Elon Musk is not afraid to shake things up.
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#Elon #Musk #Friends #Trump #Shake #GovernmentMusk and Scale AI’s CEO Suggest that DeepSeek Has More NVDA Chips than Expected
During a January 23 CNBC interview, Alexandr Wang, the CEO of Scale AI, said that DeepSeek has approximately 50,000 H100 Nvidia (NVDA) chips. However, due to U.S. export controls, DeepSeek cannot publicly discuss this information. Wang also stated that although DeepSeek may have more chips than expected, it will still face limitations due to chip controls and export restrictions. Elon Musk, the CEO of EV maker Tesla (TSLA), seemed to agree with Wang’s assessment after he responded with “Obviously” to a post sharing Wang’s interview.
Shares of Nvidia plunged in today’s trading after DeepSeek revealed that its AI model is able to outperform the best models from U.S. companies at only a fraction of the cost. However, if the firm is not disclosing how many chips it actually has, then the cost of its AI model might actually be much higher than the stated $5.7 million.
Nevertheless, investors got spooked and sold off their chip stock holdings due to fears that demand for GPUs could decline as a result of DeepSeek’s advancements. Still, Cantor and UBS analysts argue that this could actually increase demand for GPUs.
Is NVDA a Good Stock to Buy?
Turning to Wall Street, analysts remain bullish on NVDA stock, with a Strong Buy consensus rating based on 36 Buys and three Holds assigned in the past three months. After a 90% rally in its share price over the past year, the average NVDA price target of $177.56 per share implies an upside potential of 49.8% from current levels.
Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, and Alexandr Wang, CEO of Scale AI, recently hinted that their joint venture, DeepSeek, may have more NVIDIA chips than initially anticipated.In a recent tweet, Musk mentioned that the DeepSeek team was “pleasantly surprised” by the number of NVIDIA chips they were able to secure for their project. Wang also chimed in, noting that the increased chip count would allow DeepSeek to push the boundaries of AI and machine learning even further.
The news has sparked excitement among tech enthusiasts, as NVIDIA’s chips are known for their high performance and efficiency in powering AI applications. With more chips at their disposal, DeepSeek could potentially accelerate the development of groundbreaking technologies in various industries, from autonomous vehicles to robotics.
Stay tuned for more updates on DeepSeek’s progress and the impact of the increased NVIDIA chip count on their projects. The future of AI is looking brighter than ever!
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