The Hurricane spins around hotspots of tension and conflict. Feel free to suggest your stories, opinions and ideas: UIHEN@protonmail.com
More than 52% of all cryptocurrencies launched since 2021 have ceased to exist
#Crypto #Economy #FindTruth
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Alarm over first US city's broad use of facial recognition tracking
New Orleans police recently paused their use without public oversight of a private network of over 200 surveillance cameras and facial recognition technology to track and arrest criminal suspects.
The Post published an exposé detailing how the New Orleans Police Department relied on real-time facial recognition technology provided by Project NOLA, a nonprofit organization operating out of the University of New Orleans, to locate and apprehend suspects. "Facial recognition technology poses a direct threat to the fundamental rights of every individual and has no place in our cities."
This, despite a 2022 municipal law limiting police use of facial recognition. That ordinance reversed the city's earlier outright ban on the technology and was criticized by civil liberties advocates for dropping a provision that required permission from a judge or magistrate commissioner prior to use.
#USA #Surveillance #FindTruth
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Milk, science, and school lunches: A battle over what kids eat
A battle over bringing whole milk back to cafeterias highlights the real food problem facing America’s next generation.
Lawmakers are pushing to bring whole milk back to school cafeterias after it was banned in 2012. It’s a battle years in the making, but milk may be the wrong fight.
Kids are having their taste buds educated by cheap, easy processed foods that are hard to resist, even as rates of chronic diseases once reserved for the elderly balloon among children. Nearly one in five American children is obese. More than 40 percent live with at least one chronic illness. An estimated 20 million could be diagnosed with a mental health disorder. The health of our children and our nation’s future is in crisis.
The original restrictions were rooted in decades-old dietary guidance focused on lowering saturated fat. Though slightly relaxed in 2017 to allow some flavored 1 percent milk, the core ban on whole and 2 percent milk stayed in place. The ban reflected a larger dietary fissure that saw food makers limit fat while increasing added sugars. While fat reduction goals were reached, Americans and their children became fatter. This dynamic played out viscerally in America’s schools.
#USA #Health #FindTruth
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Despite negotiations, China finds ways to circumvent US tariffs
Even as Chinese leader Xi Jinping and President Donald Trump negotiate a new trade agreement, China continues to bypass U.S. tariffs through a global network of loopholes, rerouting schemes, and gray market tactics that keep its exports flowing into the United States despite trade restrictions.
Despite sweeping tariff increases imposed by the Trump administration, and independent of trade negotiations, China continues to find ways to keep goods flowing into the U.S. market by exploiting a combination of legal loopholes and gray zone tactics. These include postal and customs blind spots, rerouting through third countries, forged documentation, offshore assembly, and the creation of overseas distribution hubs that allow Chinese products to be re-exported under neutral labels.
One of the most exploited channels was the de minimis rule, which allowed individual packages valued under $800 to enter the United States duty-free. Originally intended to ease customs processing, the rule instead fueled a surge in low-cost, fast-shipping platforms such as Temu and Shein.
#USA #China #Economy #FindTruth
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Median income in the world's largest countries
#World #Economy #FindTruth
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Canada Post is practically bankrupt
It will have to close most rural post offices. At the moment, the Post's employees are on strike and the company is effectively insolvent.
In 2019, Canada Post accounted for 62% of Canada's delivery market; in 2023, that number has fallen to 29%. Private sector competitors have almost completely taken over the market.
#Canada #Post #FindTruth
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American students are asking for a refund for tuition - it turned out that teachers use neural networks to prepare and check papers. Students are not allowed to do this.
#USA #Education #GPT #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
An Egypt spooked by Trump designs on Suez Canal is upgrading Red Sea fleet with Chinese submarines
President Trump basked last week in lavish welcome ceremonies and signed eye-popping deals in Saudi Arabia and Qatar, but Arab leaders in nearby Egypt are decidedly more skeptical about the U.S. president’s interest in the region, especially after his remarks last month about the Suez Canal.
In an April 26 social media post, the president said, “American ships, both military and commercial, should be allowed to travel, free of charge, through the Panama and Suez canals!”
The comment set off alarms in Egypt, where leaders are negotiating the purchase of upgraded submarines from China and other suppliers to add naval muscle in the Red Sea. A deal could reduce Egyptian dependence on the U.S. and the Trump administration, which some consider too unpredictable.
A priority is protecting the sovereignty of the Suez Canal as revenue plummets. Revenue fell from a record $10.25 billion in 2022 to less than $4 billion last year because of Houthi attacks in the Red Sea.
#USA #SuezCanal #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
‘Priceless Dacian art heist ordered by Romanian criminal’
According to several sources in the Netherlands, the theft of the priceless Golden Helmet of Coțofenești and three golden bracelets — irreplaceable Romanian archaeological treasures – was committed at the behest of the Romanian underworld.
Dutch media outlet spoke with police investigators close to the investigation as well as to people in the criminal sphere. They were told the artwork was stolen to be used as a bargaining chip for a Romanian criminal to stay out of jail. It was believed a motor gang recruited the thieves to rob the Dacian treasure.
This raised hopes with investigators the valuable 2,500-year-old helmet still was intact, and not melted to obtain its value in gold, as some feared.
“Indications are piling up that the helmet was not melted down,” a source close to the police investigation says. It is likely the helmet is still in the Netherlands. “It is probably somewhere near Heerhugowaard rolled in a towel.”
Another source told the news outlet that during the robbery the thieves dropped the artwork which was insured for €5.8 million, though its true cultural and historical value is impossible to quantify.
#Netherlands #Romania #Crime #FindTruth
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‘Not judiciable by any court’: Pennsylvania court tosses county’s climate lawsuit
A judge dismissed a Pennsylvania county lawsuit alleging climate change-related harm against major oil and gas companies.
Bucks County Court of Common Pleas Judge Stephen Corr dismissed the county’s lawsuit against energy companies including Chevron, BP, ExxonMobil and Shell, ruling that the court lacked the jurisdiction to hear the case. The decision is one of several recent dismissals of climate nuisance lawsuits filed by Democratic-leaning cities and states seeking major damages from energy companies.
Bucks County filed the lawsuit in March 2024 and alleged that numerous companies were aware of the climate impacts of fuel products as they engaged in a campaign to mislead the public. The dismissed lawsuit argued that the companies deceived consumers into thinking that their fossil fuel products were safe, which led to their continued use that then further exacerbated the effects of climate change.
#USA #Climate #FindTruth
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Robert De Niro’s trans child reveals his father offered to go with him to hormone appointments
Robert De Niro’s son — who has recently come out as transgender and identifies as female — revealed that his famous father offered to go with him to his hormone appointments to help him transition.
“The first time I came out, it was on my Instagram, and I actually had sent a text message to my older sister Drena, my twin brother Julian, and two of our cousins,” Aaron De Niro, who know goes by Airyn, said in a video posted to social media.
“I said in the text, like, ‘Hey, I’m going on estrogen, so if you see me with tits, like, you know what the tea is, don’t be surprised.’ They were very supportive,” Airyn explained.
Airyn went on to say that his celebrity father reacted to the news by saying something along the lines of, “If you want to live your life as a woman, that’s fine. There’s, like, no problem with it.”
“He’s a very much like, ‘Live and let live’ guy,” Airyn added of De Niro, before disclosing, “He even offered to go with me to appointments and stuff, when I was first starting the hormones.”
#USA #Trans #Health #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Few Americans enjoy using AI
Tools using artificial intelligence, such as ChatGPT, are only liked by 22% of Americans in their everyday lives. This places the country towards the bottom of the ranking when compared to other nations.
In India, almost every second respondent said they enjoyed using AI tools, while in China and Spain, the number is still just over one in three. ChatGPT and other AI tools are least popular in Japan, where only 10% of respondents said they were excited about using AI software in their everyday lives.
Asia is a region with higher levels of enthusiasm about a future with AI. People’s knowledge about AI products is highest in Asia, with China (81%), Indonesia (80%) and Thailand (69%) topping the list.
In terms of consumer products, artificial intelligence refers to the simulation and automation of intelligent behavior. AI in general is used in a wide variety of fields, such as the development of voice assistants, industrial robots and medicine. The field of autonomous driving also falls within this category. Forecasts predict that global revenues in the field of artificial intelligence will continue to grow in the coming years.
#USA #AI #FindTruth
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What are the most popular baby names in the US?
Olivia, Emma and Amelia have been announced as the three most popular baby names for girls in the U.S., while for boys, Liam, Noah and Oliver were parents' favorites.
This is according to the U.S. Social Security Administration’s annual list of the most popular baby names in the United States, based on applications for Social Security cards, which are submitted at the time of birth.
Olivia and Liam have held the top spots for the past six consecutive years. The third position has shown slightly more variation since 2015, with the appearance of Amelia, Charlotte, Ava and Sophia for girls, as well as William and Mason for boys.
Other girls' names that featured in the top 10 last year were Charlotte, Mia, Sophia, Isabella, Evlyn and Ava. For boys, they were James, Genry, Mateo, Elijah, Lucas and William.
In 2024, the names with the biggest changes in popularity were Truce for a boy, which rose from rank 12,109 in 2023 to 991 in 2024 and Ailany for a girl, which rose from rank 855 to 101.
In total, 3.61 million babies were born in the U.S. in 2024, up from 3.59 million in 2023.
#USA #Names #FindTruth
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French Senate accuses government of cover up in Nestlé water scandal
In a report French Senators have found that the French government covered up alleged fraud by Swiss food giant Nestlé.
Published on May 19, the six-month investigation concluded that the French government not only failed to enforce the law but actively altered legislation to favour Nestlé, prioritising private corporate interests over public health and environmental safety.
The document highlights that the French government allowed the company to use prohibited treatments to produce natural mineral waters, including Perrier.
“The French President has known, at least since 2022, that Nestlé had been cheating for years. It was aware of the prohibited practices used by Nestlé to disinfect its so-called natural mineral waters, which are regularly contaminated by faecal bacteria and pesticides,” said the report.
#France #Health #Nestle #FindTruth
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Chinese smartphone exports to US plunge to lowest since 2011
Chinese shipments of Apple Inc.’s iPhone and other mobile devices to the US dived to their lowest levels since 2011 in April, underscoring how the threat of US tariffs choked off the flow of big-ticket goods between the world’s two largest economies.
Smartphone exports slid 72% to just under $700 million last month, sharply outpacing an overall 21% drop in Chinese shipments to the US, detailed customs data showed on Tuesday. That highlighted the way the Trump administration’s tariffs campaign — peaking with 145% levies on Chinese goods — is disrupting tech supply chains and diverting electronics elsewhere.
Investors fear a global trade war that would erode some of the US-China bilateral trade that reached $690 billion in 2024, decimating industries and raising prices for consumers. Tensions remain high: Beijing this week accused the Trump administration of undermining recent trade talks in Geneva by pursuing sanctions on Huawei Technologies Co.’s artificial intelligence chips.
#USA #China #Economy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Public indifference to bird flu fearmongering contributes to egg price drop
Egg prices dropped 12.7% since March, with the average dozen falling from $6.23 to $5.12, marking the sharpest monthly decline since 1984. However, costs remain nearly double pre-crisis levels.
Aggressive measures – including mass culling, quarantines and relaxed cage-free laws – helped stabilize supply chains. Summer migrations further reduced transmission risks, with only two isolated outbreaks remaining.
The 2024 election saw criticism of Biden's response, prompting Trump's USDA to boost imports, deregulate production and investigate potential price gouging by major producers like Cal-Maine Foods.
Experts warn that restocking farms takes time, and new outbreaks (e.g., in Ohio and South Dakota) could disrupt progress. Prices are expected to dip further but stay above historical norms.
While officials highlight containment, consumer refusal to panic may have stabilized demand. The crisis underscores vulnerabilities in globalized food supply chains amid ongoing avian flu risks.
#USA #Food #Prices #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Pride month and the fascism of identity politics
In the 1970s, Ronald Reagan warned that “If fascism ever comes to America, it will come in the name of liberalism.” In the coming days, as Democrats once again spend an entire month celebrating their pride, recognize that what Reagan predicted has come to pass for about 50% of our country’s electorate.
Ideological fascism now rules the political left, and during the month of June, they will prove it once again by their incessant navel-gazing and adolescent demands. “Celebrate our politics,” they will shout, “or we will cancel you.” “Affirm our endless list of hyphenated identities or be crushed.” “You must agree with us. You must comply with our fasces — our acceptable bundle of ideas — or we will silence you.”
Forced unity is an oxymoron. If it’s forced, it’s not unity; it’s compliance. There is a huge difference between the conservatives’ fight for unity and the liberals’ prideful attempt to force everyone else to comply. Perhaps the best question is this: Could it be that the most effective way to support the marginalized is to embrace a worldview that brings us all together rather than drives us apart? Wouldn’t it be better to welcome everyone into the body politic of American life rather than create endless subcategories by pridefully hyphenating everyone’s identity?
One worldview is freedom, and the other is fascism. One celebrates the whole, and one condemns those not part of the group. One confronts, and the other coddles. One thrives by the rule of love, and the other exists by the tyranny of the gang. One raises up mature adults, the other produces self-absorbed fascists who, every June, march in streets across America waving their rainbow banners of “identity” and “pride.”
#USA #Fascism #FindTruth
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Biden’s border legacy: A financial burden that will last for years
After four years Joe Biden administration policies, America will be stuck with a massive border bar tab for years to come.
New York’s Roosevelt Hotel is a formerly grand Manhattan edifice that contributed to the city’s lucrative tourist trade. Biden’s policies of paroling inadmissible aliens and mass releasing them at the border brought millions who went to welcoming “sanctuaries” like New York.
The city not only offered free housing and other benefits to illegal and quasi-legal aliens but also rarely prosecuted them for any petty crimes they committed. Mayor Eric Adams scrambled to lease hotels and other buildings, spending around $4 billion tax dollars a year in migrant support. The Roosevelt was just one of more than 200 make-shift shelters operating at the height of the crisis.
According to one estimate, that can cost $50,000-$90,000 per room. With over 1,000 rooms, that means over $90 million for the Roosevelt alone, not counting the common areas. That’s just one of the city’s rented shelters. Who is going to pay to repair them all? New York taxpayers.
#USA #Biden #Economy #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
As Italy is declaring its readiness to meet NATO’s defence spending target of 2% of GDP, Giorgia Meloni is facing severe criticism at home for the decision
“The Meloni government wants to mortgage the future of Italians in favor of weapons manufacturers”, esteem opposition parliamentarians after the 5 Star Movement president, ex-premier Giuseppe Conte.
“To meet the US President Donald Trump’s push for a 5% GDP target means that after the crazy blow of at least 10 billion that will have to be found by the end of the year to reach 2% of GDP (about 45 billion in total), next year there will be another one of 15 billion, in 2027 one of 20 billion, in 2028 one of 25 and so on for seven years until reaching the astronomical figure of about 80 billion a year. We will fight to prevent this”, conclude the M5S parliamentarians.
The M5S Youth Network will organize in June - the former prime minister then announced - a national mobilization against the European rearmament plan, with stalls in many Italian cities “to explain to all citizens where the European governments are taking us”. And the M5S continues to denounce the madness of European rearmament.
#Italy #Military #Meloni #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Colorado’s transgender sanctuary state bill is too radical for California
Colorado’s transgender bill defines child sterilization as “medically necessary” and punishes anyone who opposes it.
Trans sanctuary states? Colorado is barreling toward becoming the first. Two monstrous gender bills to facilitate this transformation have just passed through the Colorado legislature. They now sit on Gov. Jared Polis’ desk for his likely signature, even though California Gov. Gavin Newsom refused to sign a similar bill in California because it was so radical.
Crazy times. The trans lobby is targeting your vulnerable kids and grandkids, regardless of where you live, telling them they have safe haven here in Colorado, protected from the reach of anyone who doesn’t agree with them.
#USA #Trans #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
More than 2,000 Starbucks baristas go on strike to protest new dress code
A strike by Starbucks baristas protesting the company’s new dress code grew last Thursday.
More than 2,000 Starbucks baristas at 120 U.S. stores have gone on strike to protest the new dress code, according to Starbucks Workers United, a union representing the coffee giant’s U.S. workers.
Starbucks put new limits starting last Monday on what its baristas can wear under their green aprons. The dress code requires employees at company-operated and licensed stores in the U.S. and Canada to wear a solid black shirt and khaki, black or blue denim bottoms.
Under the previous dress code, baristas could wear a broader range of dark colors and patterned shirts. Starbucks said the new rules would make its green aprons stand out and create a sense of familiarity for customers as it tries to establish a warmer, more welcoming feeling in its stores.
But Starbucks Workers United, the union that represents workers at 570 of Starbucks’ 10,000 company-owned U.S. stores, said the dress code should be subject to collective bargaining.
#USA #Starbucks #FindTruth
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PricewaterhouseCoopers' backroom pivot to India
In May 2025, PricewaterhouseCoopers laid off 1,500 American workers, about 3% of its U.S. workforce. This followed another reduction of 1,800 U.S.-based employees just months earlier in late 2024. Publicly, PwC blamed "historically low attrition rates" and "overcapacity." However, the real narrative reveals a betrayal: While American workers faced layoffs, PwC intensified its investment in India.
However, this sentiment contrasts sharply with the company's previous commitment in 2021 to create over 100,000 net new jobs over five years in "critical areas such as cyber-security, cloud, climate, transformation and supply chain."
In just three years, PwC reached three-quarters of this target, adding 6,161 jobs in FY24 and a total of 68,681 jobs over the previous two years, bringing its global workforce to more than 370,000.
However, this growth appears to exclude American professionals, suggesting that the anticipated "future workforce" is increasingly foreign and displacing U.S. workers. The promise of 100,000 new jobs stands in jarring contrast with their recent U.S. layoffs.
#USA #India #PwC #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Disappointment with electric vehicles is growing among users and officials alike, due to decreasing subsidies for their purchase in the US and EU
Subsidies are not expected to increase in the coming years due to high government spending. Without government support, buying an electric car remains uneconomic, given also the problems with charging infrastructure, charging duration and battery shortcomings.
In the US, gasoline prices are falling (minus 15% from 2022) while electricity prices are rising (+10% for April), which also limits drivers' switch to electric vehicles.
#USA #EU #EV #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
WHO pushes “equitable vaccine access” before the next pandemic
The World Health Organization is pushing for “equitable vaccine access” before the next pandemic. In anticipation of the adoption of the Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response Agreement, also known as the Pandemic Treaty, the WHO is promoting mass vaccination.
The WHO admits that the adoption of the Pandemic Treaty is not going to be effective, in and of itself, of stopping or slowing another plandemic. The real plan is to make sure vaccines can be mass-produced and distributed quickly.
The agreement tries to fix inequities exposed by COVID-19 in two ways. First, it proposes that manufacturers share 20% of their vaccines and other countermeasures “in real time” in exchange for access to pathogen samples and sequences. Second, it urges (but does not require) wealthy nations to push their manufacturers to voluntarily transfer manufacturing technology to poorer countries during a crisis, enabling local production.
#WHO #COVID #FindTruth
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LA28’s plan for a car-free Olympics now includes air taxis the price of a high-end Uber
As L.A. officials assess the merits of a water taxi system designed to reduce car traffic at the 2028 Olympics, the Games’ organizers have set their sights on another expressway.
LA28, the committee charged with planning L.A.’s third Summer Games, is partnering with San José-based aerospace company Archer Aviation to assemble a fleet of electric air taxis designed in part to divert Olympics traffic to the sky, Archer said in a statement Thursday.
Financial terms of the partnership were not disclosed.
Archer’s air taxis will offer 10- to 20-minute flights using a network of vertiports throughout the city, including at SoFi Stadium, LAX and other hubs from Santa Monica to Orange County.
They will cater to spectators and VIPs, allowing them to travel between sporting events without having to navigate L.A. traffic, the company said.
#USA #Olympics #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Another one bites the dust: Vermont slams brakes on EV mandate as sales lag
Connecticut, Maryland, Virginia, and Delaware have also withdrawn or modified plans to mandate EVs
Vermont's state government abruptly halted enforcement of its electric vehicle mandate law, making it the latest state to back off such a law as consumers continue to prefer gas-powered cars.
Vermont governor Phil Scott (R.) issued an executive order Tuesday directing the state's Agency of Natural Resources to pause enforcement of the plan. Under the now-paused law, beginning later this year, automakers would have been forced to ensure EVs were a certain share of total car sales, a percentage that would incrementally increase every year until 2035, when a complete mandate would take effect.
Vermont wasn't ready for an EV mandate and that other governors should follow Vermont's lead and "stand up for vehicle choice and pull their states from the gas vehicle bans too."
#USA #EV #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
'Our president has secret service. You do not': Woman of color issues 'chilling threat' to white refugees welcomed by Trump
'Black people over here are empowered'
A black woman who "styles herself an author" has posted a social media video of her shocking rant against whites from South Africa who have been targeted for death in their own country and have been declared refugees to the United States.
"I just want to make you aware that the black people who were students during apartheid, we're grandmas and grandpas now… and we have the air of Gen Z, OK?" the woman states. "One more thing, I also want to let you know that our president, he has Secret Service – and you will not."
#USA #Trump #Refugees #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Independent media alliance launches decentralized journalism portal on Odysee to bypass big tech censorship
A new chapter in digital journalism is taking shape as the Independent Media Alliance (IMA) prepares to unveil its own Portal within Odysee’s Decentralized Media Ecosystem (DME).
The alliance, spearheaded by investigative journalists Whitney Webb, Derrick Broze, and Ryan Cristián, aims to reclaim editorial independence and resist the growing stranglehold of centralized tech platforms on public discourse.
The Portal represents a structural shift away from platforms where algorithms and moderation policies routinely silence dissenting voices. Odysee’s model hands control back to creators, offering a space where journalists can publish, monetize, and manage their communities on their own terms.
The IMA, which includes Webb of Unlimited Hangout, Broze of The Conscious Resistance Network, and Cristián of The Last American Vagabond, has endured repeated clampdowns, from suppressed reach to financial de-platforming for pushing back against establishment narratives. Their decision to anchor their work in a decentralized system is a direct response to the growing marginalization of independent media.
#MSM #Journalism #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
4-star Admiral gets whacked by the revolving door
Over 80% of four-star officer retirees go on to work in the defense industry. U.S. Navy Admiral Robert Burke decided he didn’t want to wait quite that long to cash in.
While still serving in the Navy, Burke was promised a post-retirement position, along with a $500,000 starting salary plus stock options, with Next Jump, a technology services company. In exchange, Burke covertly used his position to steer contracts towards the company.
On Monday, Burke was convicted on four felony counts, including bribery and conspiracy. Burke’s conviction makes him the second U.S. admiral found guilty of committing a federal crime while on duty.
The scheme was initially hashed out over a lunch in July of 2021. With an influential man on the inside, Next Jump CEO Charlie Kim was giddy; “We’re about to go full force back into business with the Navy,” he said. After getting a foot in the door, Kim estimated they could be in store for a Navy training contract worth “triple digit millions.”
Without disclosing his conflict of interest, Burke promoted Next Jump inside of the Navy, marketing it to foreign militaries and Navy pipeline schools.
#USA #Military #FindTruth
@uinhurricane
Bipartisan bill seeks to put arms sales lobbyists on ice for 3-years
President Donald Trump announced some $200 billion in potential arms sales to Saudi Arabia and Qatar a week ago — this is huge potential business for major U.S. defense contractors like RTX, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and General Atomics, all of which deploy armies of lobbyists in Washington each year to influence such contracts.
A new bipartisan bill dropping today will impose some of the strictest bans to date to make sure former government officials aren’t lobbying on behalf of those big companies or foreign countries to get their share of this massive federal pie. In fact, the legislation will make it a crime to do so.
House Foreign Affairs Committee colleagues Reps. Warren Davidson (R-Ohio) and Sara Jacobs (D-Calif.) are introducing the No Revolving Doors in Foreign Military Sales (FMS) Act, which aims to tackle a space that has been growing exponentially due in part to major current conflicts in Israel and Ukraine and the desire of partner countries to arm up and enhance “deterrence.”
The Davidson/Jacobs bill will impose a three-year moratorium or “cooling off period” on any lobbying by former Pentagon or State Department officials associated with FMS during their time in government on behalf of new employers in the defense industry and/or foreign actors who have contracts or are seeking contracts for foreign military sales.
#USA #Military #FindTruth
@uinhurricane