The Dictatorship
Ford to lose billions hitting the brakes on EVs, thanks in part to Trump
Happy Tuesday! Here’s your Tuesday Tech Drop, a roundup of the top stories at the intersection of technology and politics from the past week.
Ford flip-flips on EVs
Ford’s electric vehicle plans appear to have fallen victim to President Donald Trump’s self-destructive economy. The company announced Monday that it is planning to take a nearly $20 billion hit as it pivots away from battery-powered vehicles, a move the company’s CEO attributed in part to Trump’s anti-EV agenda.
As Reuters reported:
The outlook for electrics dimmed significantly this year as U.S. President Donald Trump’s policies yanked federal support for EVs and eased tailpipe-emissions rules, which could encourage carmakers to sell more gas-powered cars.
U.S. sales of electric vehicles fell about 40% in November, following the September 30 expiration of a $7,500 consumer tax credit, which had been in place for more than 15 years to stoke demand. The Trump administration also included in the massive tax and spending bill that passed in July a freeze on fines that automakers pay for violating fuel-economy regulations.
Trump’s economic agenda has been devastating for carmakers and consumers alike. His tariffs have raised production costs for auto manufacturers, and consumers have begun seeing those price hikes as well. Meanwhile, the administration’s infatuation with gas-guzzling vehicles is causing one of America’s biggest automakers into a costly pivot.
Read more at Reuters.
Online protections for children
A House subcommittee advanced more than a dozen bills that their authors say are designed to protect children from abuse and other manipulation online. But there’s bipartisan concern that the bills either don’t go far enough or prohibit states from taking effective measures on their own.
Read more at Tech Policy Press.
Agencies adopt Trump talk
A recent report from The Guardian looks at how social media accounts linked to federal agencies have been parroting the president’s trolling language and deliberately antagonistic behaviors online. It’s an effective look at how agencies — much like Trump — are trying to corner the market in the attention economy.
Read more at The Guardian.
Democrats’ AI panel raises eyebrows
The list of Democrats named to House Democrats’ new panel on artificial intelligence includes multiple staunch allies of Big Tech, raising questions about the party’s ability to effectively regulate the industry.
Read more at MS NOW.
States join FTC’s Uber lawsuit
Several states have signed on to a Federal Trade Commission lawsuit accusing Uber of charging riders for its Uber One service without consent, along with deceptively promising savings and making it difficult for users to cancel subscriptions. Uber denied the claims and said in a statement: “If this lawsuit were to succeed, it would upend how virtually every modern subscription service operates.”
Read more at The Wall Street Journal.
Trump admin looks to tap techies
The Trump administration has made firing federal employees its modus operandi since the president’s return to office this year. But there’s one group of people it’s apparently keen on hiring: techies. A new report highlights an initiative being run out of the Office of Personnel Management to tap Big Tech companies to help fill the government with tech workers who can speed up the government’s adoption of AI tools.
Read more at FedScoop.
Trump’s crypto embrace
A new report from The New York Times helps quantify how great a boon Trump’s hands-off approach to regulating cryptocurrencies has been for crypto executives and investors, a group that includes the president and his family.
Read more at The New York Times.
Ja’han Jones is an MS NOW opinion blogger. He previously wrote The ReidOut Blog.
The Dictatorship
NYC getting first 3 Vegas-style casinos…
NEW YORK (AP) — The New York Mets’ ballpark in Queens. A Bronx golf course once operated by President Donald Trump ’s company. A slot parlor on a horse racing track near John F. Kennedy International Airport.
The three disparate sites, located far from the tourist hub of Manhattan, will become the future homes of New York City’s first Las Vegas-style resort casinos.
The state Gaming Commission on Monday awarded the three projects licenses to operate in the lucrative metropolitan-area market during a meeting at a riverside park in upper Manhattan.
The panel approved the licenses with the condition that the companies each appoint an outside monitor that would report regularly to the commission to ensure they meet their financial and legal obligations, as well as the promised investments they made to local communities.
Brian O’Dwyer, the commission’s chair, said the state looked forward to the promise of jobs, infrastructure improvements and gaming revenue being realized.
“You all have an important charge ahead of you, and you can be assured that this commission takes our responsibility to keep your feet to the fire with great respect,” he said to the project representatives in attendance.
Democratic New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said in a statement the projects would pump billions of dollars into the state’s transit and education systems and create tens of thousands of jobs.
Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel.
But a handful of protesters opposed to billionaire Mets owner Steve Cohen’s Hard Rock plan vowed to continue their fight in court. They and other casino opponents worry the projects will only increase gambling addiction.
“You picked a billionaire over New Yorkers! Shame on you!” the group shouted as they walked out of the meeting.
Cohen and Hard Rock’s proposal calls for an $8.1 billion casino complex on a parking lot next to the Mets’ Citi Field that would include a performance venue, hotel and retail space.
Bally’s has proposed a roughly $4 billion casino at the Ferry Point golf course in the Bronx that would include a hotel, event center, meeting spaces, restaurants and other amenities.
And Resorts World has proposed investing more than $5 billion to expand its slots parlor at Aqueduct Race Track in Queens into a full casino with a hotel, dining and entertainment options.
The projects bested several other proposals that fell by the wayside during the high-stakes competition.
Among them were three casinos proposed for Manhattan that were rejected by local boards, including a Caesars Palace in the heart of Times Square backed by rapper Jay-Z. A plan for a resort on Coney Island’s iconic boardwalk in Brooklyn was also defeated by local opposition, and MGM abruptly pulled out of the once-crowded sweepstakes, despite local support.
The state gaming commission was authorized to license up to three casinos in the New York City area after voters approved a referendum in 2013 opening the door to casino gambling statewide.
Four full casinosall upstate, now offer table games. The state also runs nine gambling halls without live table games, many of them also miles away from Manhattan.
Monday’s decision, in some ways, was largely a formality. Millions of dollars in gambling revenues are already factored into the state budget.
A state panel charged with vetting the proposals for the commission also recommended awarding a license to all three remaining proposals earlier this month.
The Gaming Facility Location Board, in its written decisionargued that the region’s dense and relatively affluent population, combined with high tourism, would be able to support all three plans, despite their relative proximity to each other.
The panel said its consultants conservatively estimated the casinos would generate a combined $7 billion in gambling tax revenues from 2027 to 2036, plus $1.5 billion in licensing fees and nearly $6 billion in state and local taxes.
Monday’s decision also means Trump could stand to claim a substantial prize. When Bally’s purchased operating rights for the city-owned Ferry Point golf course from the Trump Organization in 2023, it agreed to pony up an additional $115 million if it won a casino license.
Spokespersons for the Trump Organization didn’t respond to an email seeking comment Monday on the expected windfall.
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Follow Philip Marcelo at https://x.com/philmarcelo
The Dictatorship
How anti-Israel rhetoric contributes to antisemitism and real-world violence
On Sunday, hundreds of Australian Jews gathered, as Jews have done for millennia, to light the Menorah on the first night of Hanukkah. At the same time, two armed men engaged in another historic custom: targeting Jews because they are Jews. Fifteen people were killed in the massacre at Bondi Beach, including a 10-year-old girl and an 87-year-old Holocaust survivor.
For Australia’s small but vibrant Jewish communities, this weekend’s tragedy was horrifying but, on some level, hardly surprising. Since the massacre of more than 1,000 Israelis on Oct. 7, 2023, antisemitic incidents in Australia have increased fivefold. Indeed, only two days after the worst mass murder of Jews since the Holocaust, a demonstration outside the world-famous Sydney Opera House led to chants of “F— the Jews.”
Since then, the litany of antisemitic incidents in the land Down Under will be all too familiar to Diaspora Jewish communities around the world.
For Australia’s small but vibrant Jewish communities, this weekend’s tragedy was horrifying but hardly surprising.
A synagogue was burned to the ground. Kosher restaurants were vandalized. Protests were launched at Jewish restaurants. A Jewish educational institution was spray-painted with antisemitic epithets, and swastikas showed up on the walls of local synagogues. That this unending cycle of intimidation, threats and provocation would eventually lead to violence should be a surprise to no one.
Indeed, why in the two years since the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust are Jewish communities in New York City, ManchesterLondonTorontoLos Angeles and Amsterdam under siege?
First, for more than two years, many anti-Israel activists have preached a message of “globalize the intifada” or “intifada revolution” and “from the river to the seaPalestine will be free” — a statement that negates the existence of Israel. They’ve spoken of a “global struggle against Zionism,” be it in Israel or New York or Sydney.
Israel’s detractors will argue that such rhetoric is not antisemitism or even inflammatory. They will parse their language and claim that calls for an intifada are merely a demand that opposition to Israel should be globalized and that Western countries must end their support for Israel.
But the second intifada in Israel was a suicide bombing campaign that directly targeted Israeli civilians. Restaurants and nightclubs were attacked. A Passover Seder was targeted. Buses were destroyed. Thousands were killed and maimed.

Raising the specter of intifada and then arguing that such words do not provide a permission structure to those intent on violence is willful blindness.
The events at Bondi Beach were merely a logical extension of this inflammatory rhetoric — and as this language becomes normalized, the threats to Jews everywhere only increase.
Second, many pro-Palestine activists simply make no distinction between Israeli Jews waging war in Gaza and Jews in Diaspora communities around the world. For them, if you’re a Zionist (and the overwhelming majority of Jews identify as such), you are as guilty as the Israel Defense Force soldiers fighting in Gaza.
It’s why pro-Palestinian activists recently gathered outside a synagogue in New York’s Upper East Side, because of an event with an Israeli organization called Nefesh B’Nefesh that provides information to Jews interested in moving to Israel. Protesters claimed that the event was aimed at encouraging Jews to move to West Bank settlements, a claim that Nefesh B’Nefesh denies. But even if the protesters were correct, how does that justify chants such as “From New York to Gaza, globalize the intifada,” “Take another settler out” or “We need to make them scared”? And the city’s newly elected mayor, Zohran Mamdani, who has refused to condemn the term “globalize the intifada,” took great care to equally blame both those outside shouting antisemitic slogans and threatening congregants and those inside the synagogue.
Raising the specter of intifada and then arguing that such words do not provide a permission structure to those intent on violence is willful blindness.
It’s why any Jew who refuses to condemn Israel or deny their religious, cultural or tribal connection to the Jewish State will inevitably, at some point, be branded a supporter of genocide (and for those who don’t believe me, I invite them to check out my Twitter feed after this piece is published).
Whatever one’s view is on the war in Gaza, simply because one is Jewish, simply because one is a Zionist and simply because one feels a connection to Israel, does not make one culpable for Israel’s actions. But for many of the most radical voices in the pro-Palestinian activist community, a Jew believing that Jews should have the same right to self-determination as any other ethnic group is a scarlet letter.
It’s why antisemitic incidents have not just increased in Australia but practically everywhere Jews live. And it’s why Diaspora Jews feel increasingly under siege.
One might expect sympathy over this calamitous turn of events — and the vulnerability of minority Jewish communities — but instead, the opposite is true.
Indeed, for months Australia’s Jewish community warned about the increase in antisemitic incidents and potential for violence. They beseeched the government to take the issue more seriously. But to no avail.

Are American Jews at a similar inflection point? Polls routinely show that an overwhelming majority of American Jews feel less safe, particularly as antisemitic incidents continue to rise. Earlier this week, a Jewish man was allegedy attacked by two men on a crowded New York subwayshouting “F*** the Jews.” Antisemitic incidents in the city have dramatically increased since Oct. 7. But there are more subtle forms of antisemitism from the left that are growing increasingly mainstream.
Earlier this fall, the progressive hosts of “Pod Save America” gathered in Washington for their annual conference and included Hasan Piker as a speaker. Piker has, over the past two yearsroutinely attacked Orthodox Jews as “inbred,” denied that Israelis were sexually assaulted on Oct. 7 and suggested Zionism was synonymous with Nazism. If Piker had made similar derogatory comments about other members of a minority group or excused terrorism by those who target non-Israelis, it’s impossible to imagine a liberal-leaning group platforming him. But as Jews have learned since Oct. 7, the rules for them are different.
After the shooting at Bondi Beach, both Democratic and Republican politicians quickly condemned the tragedy and piously declared that antisemitism is bad and has no place in our society. These declarations have become the Jewish equivalent of “thoughts and prayers” after the latest mass shooting.
They are a tool for ritualistically condemning antisemitism without actually confronting the anti-Jewish hatred that increasingly finds a home within each political party and is particularly potent among young people.
Without action, without direct condemnation and the ostracizing of those who traffic in antisemitism — and without a recognition that a good amount of anti-Israeli rhetoric has morphed into anti-Jewish hatred — the bloodshed at Bondi Beach will be repeated. But next time, it could be much closer to home.
Michael Cohen is an BLN columnist. He is also the publisher of the newsletter Truth and Consequences and hosts the weekly podcast That ‘70s Movie Podcast.
The Dictatorship
Jared Kushner’s firm scraps hotel project amid indictments in Serbia
A criminal investigation appears to have helped kill a Jared Kushner-backed plan to build a Trump-branded hotel in Belgrade, Serbia.
As The Wall Street Journal reportsthe president’s son-in-law’s investment firm decided to kill the project after four Serbian government officials, including a Cabinet minister, were indicted in connection with their push for its approval. The plans had faced widespread backlash in Serbia, particularly after the country’s Parliament voted last month to strip historic site protections from the buildings where the hotel was to be located.
Democrats in Congress have raised concerns for years about Kushner’s business dealings with foreign governments and wealthy elites abroad, which have continued as he has conducted diplomatic negotiations on behalf of the Trump administration this year.
Per the Journal:
Jared Kushner pulled out of a planned Trump-branded development in Belgrade after the project sparked protests and the indictment of a senior Serbian politician.
On Monday, a special prosecutor indicted a cabinet minister and three other officials over the project, a planned trio of towers in a central Belgrade site once bombed by NATO.
‘Because meaningful projects should unite rather than divide, and out of respect for the people of Serbia and the City of Belgrade, we are withdrawing our application and stepping aside at this time,’ a spokesman for Kushner’s private-equity firm, Affinity Partners, said hours later.
For the time being, it looks like Belgrade’s historic sites won’t be demolished to build what would effectively be a shrine to the Trump family. But I wouldn’t bet on this quieting Democrats’ concerns about the family’s international ventures: That the deal was under consideration at all arguably stands to inflame concerns about foreign governments’ efforts to shower the president and his family with gifts and financial privileges.
Ja’han Jones is an MS NOW opinion blogger. He previously wrote The ReidOut Blog.
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