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Billionaire Elon Musk said he will step back from the U.S. DOGE Service next month and focus on Tesla, his reeling electric vehicle company, which on Tuesday reported a stunning 71 percent plunge in profits compared with the first quarter of 2024.
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost.com) 2025-04-23T12:02:46.607Z
Most of the decline is attributed to the heated controversies surrounding Elon Musk, including his US political involvement alongside Trump with DOGE, his controversial comments and gestures, and his closeness to the far right.

This major setback prompted the CEO to announce to Tesla investors that he would be taking a step back from DOGE as early as next month, in order to refocus some of his attention on the electric vehicle company.
However, Elon Musk has said he has no intention of withdrawing from DOGE altogether, stating that he will remain heavily involved with the department under the Trump administration until the end of Donald Trump’s term.

Elon Musk’s erratic statements and behavior have clearly turned off some of Tesla’s customers, who were already weakened by the rise of competitors in the electric vehicle sector.
The company now has to contend with tariffs imposed by Donald Trump, further complicating its situation.

As well as trying to reassure investors of his renewed involvement in the company, Elon Musk also sought to appease them about his position on tariffs, saying he was in favor of a reduction.
However, he made it clear that, ultimately, decisions rest with the President.
The peace plan proposed by the Trump administration quickly collapsed, with Ukraine firmly rejecting it for its openly pro-Russian orientation, including endorsing Russian control over territories occupied for the past three years, recognizing the annexation of Crimea and banning any future Ukrainian membership of NATO.
This initiative, presented by the United States, illustrates once again the problematic alignment of Trump’s foreign policy with the interests of the Kremlin, to the detriment of Ukraine.

Zelensky was also very clear about Ukraine’s position on its territorial integrity:
« Ukraine will not legally recognize the occupation of Crimea ».
Zelensky then added: « There’s nothing to talk about here ».

This statement visibly irritated Donald Trump, who quoted Zelensky in a post on Truth Social, accusing him of having « no cards to play » and claiming that Crimea « was lost years ago ».
The Trump administration, through Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, has also threatened to withdraw from peace negotiations if Ukraine persists in rejecting his proposal.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reaffirmed that Ukraine would only enter into peace negotiations with Russia once a complete ceasefire had been established.
U.S. Health Secretary RFK Jr. has come under heavy criticism from people on the autism spectrum and many families, various advocates and specialized organizations after his recent statements on autism.
The National Institutes of Health is amassing private medical records from a number of federal and commercial databases to give to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s new effort to study autism, the NIH's top official said Monday.
Having recently promised to discover the cause of autism through extensive research by the fall, RFK Jr. plans to roll out a series of measures, including a very contested autism registry.
According to RFK Jr., this national autism registry would aim to collect private medical data from multiple sources, such as insurance records, pharmaceutical information, data from connected watches and genetic analyses of people with autism spectrum disorder.

RFK Jr. has entrusted oversight of the National Autism Registry to NIH Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, known for his controversial positions during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Bhattacharya is currently in discussions with several agencies, including the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, to collect sensitive personal data.

RFK Jr.’s registry has been widely criticized as intrusive and stigmatizing. Advocates and experts denounce the massive collection of private data without sufficient safeguards, fearing targeted surveillance of autistic people and political or ideological instrumentalization of this sensitive information.

At a recent press conference as U.S. Secretary of Health, RFK Jr. stirred up controversy by declaring that autism « destroys families » and calling it a « preventable disease ».
His comments were roundly criticized by advocacy groups and experts as stigmatizing and scientifically unfounded.

RFK Jr. went on to claim that autistic children, in his words: « will never pay taxes, will never write a poem, will never play baseball » and that « many of them will never go on a date ».
Comments that shocked many.











































In a recent touching episode of her podcast Confessions of a Female Founder with Meghan, Meghan Markle, the Duchess of Sussex, returned candidly to the painful ordeal she went through in 2020: a miscarriage.
Knowing that her guest, Reshma Saujani, an American lawyer and politician, had also been through this ordeal, which she had already spoken about publicly, Meghan approached the subject delicately. Before going any further, she asked her if she felt comfortable talking about it, opening up a respectful space for dialogue.
Her guest then emotionally remarked that she had the impression that Meghan was reading her diary. She confided that no one had ever spoken to her about the experience in this way.
Meghan and her husband, Prince Harry, have two children together: Archie and Lilibet, and this miscarriage occurred between the births of both.
As Trump prepares to sign a series of executive orders to promote marriage and the birth rate, he’s drawing on proposals from Project 2025, a plan he publicly distanced himself from on the campaign trail, but which now guides all his policies.
Trump, following Project 2025, intends to make the fight against demographic decline a priority, valuing conservative family principles and asserting his desire to « restore the family as the heart of American life ».

But among the measures Trump plans to implement soon, one in particular stands out: it appears to be inspired by a program instituted by Hitler in the 1930s to stimulate the birth rate.
With the aim of provoking a « baby boom », Donald Trump is reportedly considering a series of measures described as pro-natalist.

Among them: a $5,000 bonus for each married mother after giving birth, as a way of promoting both births and marriage, as well as scholarships and educational programs on the menstrual cycle.
Trump has also reportedly received a draft presidential decree submitted by pro-natalist activist Simone Collins, proposing the creation of a National Medal of Motherhood for women who have given birth to six or more children…

Several observers point out that this type of award is strongly reminiscent of a program set up by Hitler in Nazi Germany in the 1930s.
It’s also quite The Handmaid’s Tale territory…
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, already at the center of controversy for leaking sensitive, classified information about an imminent military strike in Yemen to a Signal group featuring several members of the Trump administration, including Vice President JD Vance, as well as a journalist from The Atlantic added by mistake, is once again causing scandal.
At the annual White House Easter Egg Roll on Monday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth lashed out at reporters over coverage of him sharing war plans in a second Signal chat that included members of his family and his personal lawyer. Read more: nyti.ms/3GiswuB
— The New York Times (@nytimes.com) 2025-04-22T10:49:03.116Z
New revelations from the New York Times indicate that he would have shared the same information in a second Signal group, this time made up of his wife, family members, lawyer and personal assistants.

These messages, which Pete Hegseth allegedly first received from General Michael Erik Kurilla, commander of U.S. Central Command, via a secure U.S. government system, contained specific information about the March strikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen.
According to NBC News, the Secretary of Defense ultimately transmitted this information from his personal phone to two newsgroups on Signal, not just one as initially reported, despite a clear warning from one of his aides against sharing classified data via an unsecured communications system.

The former Fox & Friends Weekend host denied sharing classified information in these newsgroups, while acknowledging the existence of a second Signal group.
He dismissed the accusations at the outset, claiming that the media were relaying old information provided, he said, by disgruntled former employees.

Hegseth, with Donald Trump’s support, continues to weather the controversy for the time being, despite calls for his resignation.
Among them, Republican Representative Don Bacon, who called the existence of this second Signal group « totally unacceptable ».