China Seeks Long-Term Vulnerabilities In US Energy Systems: House Panelists

China Seeks Long-Term Vulnerabilities In US Energy Systems: House Panelists

By Ethan Howland of UtilityDive

While there don’t appear to be any specific, imminent cyber or physical threats to the U.S. power grid, China has been seeking vulnerabilities in network systems to be used in future attacks, panelists said during a U.S. House of Representatives hearing Tuesday on threats to the U.S. energy system.

Volt Typhoon — a group believed to be run by the People’s Republic of China’s state security service — is focused on maintaining ongoing access to U.S. network systems for future potential disruptions, according to Michael Ball, CEO of the Electricity Information Sharing and Analysis Center and senior vice president at the North American Electric Reliability Corp.

Michael Ball, CEO of the Electricity Information Sharing and Analysis Center and senior vice president at the North American Electric Reliability Corp., speaks at a hearing held by the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s energy subcommittee in Washington D.C. on Dec. 2, 2025

China is preparing for conflict over Taiwan, potentially in the “very near term,” and its strategy depends on preventing the United States from mounting a successful rescue mission, Harry Krejsa, director of Studies for the Carnegie Mellon Institute for Strategy & Technology, said during the hearing held by the Energy and Commerce Committee’s energy subcommittee.

Part of China’s plan is to target U.S. civilian infrastructure to create panic and chaos, Krejsa said.

“Our aging infrastructure makes these threats easier, including in our energy ecosystem,” he said. “Today’s electricity grid is too often a hodgepodge of digital tools sitting atop an analog foundation, creating seams where adversaries can slip in.”

China is the most persistent cyber threat to the U.S., according to Zach Tudor, associate laboratory director for national and homeland security at the Idaho National Laboratory.

“Through Volt Typhoon, Salt Typhoon [and] Flax Typhoon, the Chinese Communist Party has embedded itself in our energy communications and water systems to set conditions for destructive attacks during the Pacific conflict over Taiwan,” he said. “They’re winning without fighting, attempting to undermine our infrastructure.”

Although no U.S. blackouts have been attributed to a cyberattack, “the threat landscape is dynamic and requires continuous vigilance,” Ball said.

Panelists called on Congress to expand programs and funding for cyber defense.

Congress should continue to fund information sharing collaboration initiatives, like the Energy Threat Analysis Center, a pilot initiative led by the Department of Energy that brings together power sector and federal officials, according to Sharla Artz, vice president for security and resilience policy at Xcel Energy.

“Expanding programs like [the Cybersecurity Risk Information Sharing Program] enhances industry and government understanding of the threat landscape and thus needs additional government funding to accomplish that expansion,” said Artz, who represented the Edison Electric Institute at the hearing.

Tim Lindahl, president and CEO of Kenergy, a cooperative utility based in Henderson, Kentucky, urged Congress to reauthorize the $250 million Rural and Municipal Utility Cybersecurity Program, which runs through fiscal year 2026.

Lindahl called on DOE to disburse $80 million in RMUC awards that were announced last fall. 

“With continued partnership and targeted federal investment, we can strengthen our defenses and ensure the security of the energy infrastructure that powers our nation,” said Lindahl, who spoke on behalf of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association.

NERC’s Ball urged Congress to reauthorize the expired Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015 to support information sharing between the private sector and government.

During the hearing, Rep. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., said the Trump administration was undermining U.S. infrastructure protection efforts by cutting $5.6 billion in funding for state and local grid hardening and resiliency programs.

The administration also fired more than 1,000 cybersecurity and infrastructure agency staff, according to Menendez. It also moved Department of Homeland Security Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency staff to other agencies, like Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which has “no connectivity to what their work has been,” he said.

“Does that make our country safer and more able to respond to these increasing cybersecurity attacks?” Menendez said.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/04/2025 – 23:25

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/Ysp5q4A Tyler Durden

Idaho & Mississippi Saw The Largest Real Wage Growth, New Hampshire The Biggest Decline

Idaho & Mississippi Saw The Largest Real Wage Growth, New Hampshire The Biggest Decline

Real wage growth in the U.S. has become a central focus as inflation and new tariffs continue to strain Americans’ purchasing power.

Nationally, between July 2024 and June 2025, the nominal average wage rose from $1,200 to $1,250 per week—a $50 increase, or 4.2% growth. After adjusting for inflation, real wages grew 2.5%, giving workers about $30 more in weekly purchasing power.

This map, via Visual Capitalist’s Marcus Lu, highlights how each state performed in the 12 months ending June 2025, showing where workers are gaining purchasing power, and where they are still falling behind.

The data for this visualization comes from USAFacts.

States Leading Wage Growth

Idaho and Mississippi top the nation, with real wages rising 6.7% and 5.0%. Both states have seen rapid population inflows and tight labor markets, contributing to stronger wage pressures.

Other high-performing states, including Georgia, Vermont, and Kansas, also recorded gains above 3%.

State Real wage growth (Avg.)
Idaho 6.7%
Mississippi 5.0%
Georgia 4.3%
Vermont 4.0%
Kansas 3.4%
Texas 3.2%
Nevada 3.1%
Arizona 2.7%
Florida 2.7%
Virginia 2.7%
Colorado 2.6%
Wyoming 2.6%
Alabama 2.3%
Indiana 2.3%
Connecticut 2.2%
New Jersey 2.2%
Ohio 2.2%
Oregon 2.1%
Arkansas 2.0%
Missouri 1.9%
Montana 1.8%
Oklahoma 1.8%
DC 1.7%
Wisconsin 1.7%
New Mexico 1.5%
North Carolina 1.5%
Maine 1.4%
Nebraska 1.2%
California 1.1%
South Carolina 1.1%
Alaska 1.0%
Minnesota 1.0%
Delaware 0.9%
Utah 0.9%
Washington 0.9%
West Virginia 0.9%
Pennsylvania 0.8%
Hawaii 0.5%
Kentucky 0.4%
Illinois 0.3%
Iowa 0.3%
Massachusetts 0.3%
Rhode Island 0.2%
Louisiana -0.1%
Maryland -0.2%
Michigan -0.2%
New York -0.4%
North Dakota -0.7%
South Dakota -0.7%
Tennessee -1.2%
New Hampshire -1.7%
U.S. National Average 2.5%

Moderate but Positive Growth Across Much of the Country

A large portion of states saw real wage gains between 1% and 3%. This group includes major population centers like Texas, Florida, Virginia, and Colorado.

Steady job creation and cooling inflation have helped wages outpace consumer prices in these areas.

Where Wage Growth Is Falling Behind

Eight states recorded negative real wage growth, meaning inflation outpaced pay increases. New Hampshire, Tennessee, and the Dakotas saw some of the largest declines, reflecting weaker labor market conditions.

New York and Michigan also posted modest decreases, suggesting ongoing economic transitions are weighing on earnings. These pockets of decline stand out against the broader national trend of improvement.

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Ranked: The Cities Americans Are Moving To on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/04/2025 – 23:00

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/ISgVmkQ Tyler Durden

Netanyahu Pleads ‘More Support’ From Trump To Secure Pardon In Corruption Case

Netanyahu Pleads ‘More Support’ From Trump To Secure Pardon In Corruption Case

Via The Cradle

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has asked US President Donald Trump for more help to receive a pardon from Israel’s presidentAxios has reported this week.

Netanyahu made the request during a lengthy phone conversation with Trump on MondayAxios wrote, citing two US officials and one Israeli official familiar with the matter. The two leaders also discussed Israel’s ongoing occupations of Gaza and Syria.

Source: GPO/Times of Israel

Netanyahu’s trial on multiple corruption charges began in May 2020, but the drawn-out proceedings were halted in October 2023 due to the start of Israel’s genocide of Palestinians in Gaza. The trial resumed this week, with prosecutors questioning Netanyahu in the Tel Aviv District Court in Wednesday’s session.

In the most serious case, prosecutors say the prime minister provided regulatory and other benefits to the owner of the Walla news site and the telecommunications firm Bezeq, in exchange for favorable media coverage.

Last month, Trump sent an official letter to Israeli President Isaac Herzog calling on him to issue a pardon for Netanyahu.

On Sunday, Netanyahu’s lawyer sent an official letter and 111 pages of documents to Herzog formally requesting a pardon. The Israeli prime minister claims he needs a pardon to lead Israel’s ongoing low-intensity wars in Gaza, Syria, and Lebanon. Herzog said he is reviewing Netanyahu’s request, but the process of reaching a decision could take two months.

During Monday’s call, “Trump told Netanyahu he thinks the pardon will work out but didn’t commit to any further steps,” Axios wrote, citing a US official. “Netanyahu wants Trump to do more, but the president has done all he can do,” a second US official added.

During the call, Trump allegedly told Netanyahu he should be “a better partner” in implementing the peace agreement with Syria. Trump also allegedly told Netanyahu to “take it easy” in Syria after Israeli strikes killed 13 people in the village of Beit Jinn earlier this month.

“The president told Netanyahu that the new leadership in Syria is trying to make it a better place,” one of the US officials said. Since coming to power one year ago with Israeli assistance, Syria’s new government has carried out a series of major massacres against the country’s minority Alawite and Druze populations.

On Wednesday, Israel carried out additional strikes in Syria, this time on the outskirts of Beit Jinn in the western Damascus countryside near Mount Hermon.

PM Netanyahu shares a video in English about his lawfare trial…

Trump also questioned the Israeli prime minister’s decision last month to kill 40 Hamas fighters trapped in tunnels in the Israeli-controlled areas of Gaza rather than allowing them to surrender, as Trump had asked.

Trump had allegedly encouraged Netanyahu to give some 200 trapped Hamas fighters amnesty in exchange for surrendering, seeing it as a model for disarming Hamas throughout the strip and as a way to advance the ceasefire.

On Wednesday, Israeli drone strikes killed five Palestinians, including two children, in the Al-Mawasi tent camp in Gaza. Since the start of the genocide in October 2023, Israel has killed at least 70,112 Palestinians, according to Gaza sources, including at least 357 since a US-backed ceasefire went into effect in October of this year.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/04/2025 – 22:35

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3mjQ4Lo Tyler Durden

Trump’s Next National Strategy Will Center On Humanoid Robots

Trump’s Next National Strategy Will Center On Humanoid Robots

President Trump’s national industrial strategy centers on expanding U.S. dominance in semiconductors, AI, rare earth production, clean technology, space, and other emerging technologies expected to dominate the global economy in the 2030s. Following the administration’s push to accelerate AI data center buildouts and power grid upgrades, Politico now reports that the next major focus is poised to be humanoid robotics.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has been meeting with the heads of major tech companies and is weighing an executive order next year to spur domestic development and production of humanoid robots, while the Department of Transportation is setting up a robotics working group, according to Politico sources.

The timing is notable: Elon Musk’s Tesla is preparing to scale production of its Optimus robot to one million units by the end of next year. Earlier this fall, Tesla reportedly placed a massive order for linear actuators from China, suggesting that Optimus production is set to ramp up in the near term.

A Department of Commerce spokesperson told the outlet: “We are committed to robotics and advanced manufacturing because they are central to bringing critical production back to the United States.”

Politico explains more about Trump’s emerging national robotics strategy that could be unveiled early next year:

There’s growing interest on Capitol Hill as well. A Republican amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act would have created a national robotics commission. The amendment was not included in the bill. Other legislative efforts are underway.

Related: 

Latest reports:

The Trump administration understands that this period is a transformational moment in human history, and a point where a national strategy is essential to rapidly boost industrial capacity and position the U.S. as the leader in AI, robots, drones, and chips as the world fractures into a bipolar state amid a technological superpower race with China that goes into hyperdrive over the next decade.

Last week, Morgan Stanley analyst Shawn Kim showed clients that adoption of humanoid robots will top 1 billion units by 2050.

Kim explained:

In their Global Insight report published earlier this year, Morgan Stanley’s global Autos and Industrials teams estimated that global cumulative humanoid adoption could reach 1 billion by 2050. They generally assume a relatively slow pace of adoption until the mid-2030s, after which they believe the pace will begin to materially accelerate into the late 2030s and 2040s, given (1) technological progress across both hardware and AI foundation models, which may take over a decade to create “true” general-purpose humanoids capable of doing the vast majority of useful tasks; (2) price declines as technologies mature and supply chains develop; and (3) greater societal/political acceptance.

ZeroHedge Pro subs can read the full MS report in the usual place. It’s loaded with deeper inudstry analysis and charts that lay out where the whole industry is headed through 2050 as the Trump administration prepares to unveil its national strategy – this report is a must-read.

What Trump is doing today is preparing the nation for the 2030s. Supply chains must be localized, rare earths must be plentiful, and the U.S. must have the industrial capacity to build these innovative technologies domestically or on friendly shores. What you see today is proper stewardship of the nation, versus the previous administration that was so obsessed with nation-killing globalist policies.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/04/2025 – 22:10

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/fpueKJj Tyler Durden

‘They Saw People Getting Away With It’: How Minnesota’s Somali Fraud Exploded

‘They Saw People Getting Away With It’: How Minnesota’s Somali Fraud Exploded

Authored by Janice Hisle via The Epoch Times,

When 200 federal agents raided dozens of Minnesota homes and businesses on Jan. 20, 2022, policy analyst Bill Glahn took notice. So did a lot of other people—at first.

Aimee Bock (C), founder and executive director of the nonprofit organization Feeding Our Future, arrives at the Minneapolis federal courthouse with her attorney, Ken Udoibok (R) in Minneapolis on March 19, 2025. Kerem Yücel/Minnesota Public Radio via AP

An initial blast of news coverage trumpeted an emerging multimillion-dollar welfare-fraud scandal. Then “it just vanished from the radar” of most media outlets and public consciousness, Glahn told The Epoch Times. “The stories just dried up,” and reporters moved on to cover other topics.

Glahn, however, said it was obvious to him that “this was a pretty big deal … something to keep an eye on.”

Thus, for nearly four years, Glahn and a few independent journalists continued digging into what he calls “a whole portfolio of fraud.” He has documented nearly $662 million in fraud losses on the “Minnesota scandal tracker” for his employer, Center of the American Experiment, a public policy nonprofit in Minneapolis.

Yet federal prosecutors say welfare-fraud schemes have reaped billions of dollars in taxpayers’ money. Most of the defendants charged are of Somali heritage—a fact that has been taboo to report, Glahn said, even after dozens of Somalis were convicted in Minnesota welfare-fraud cases.

Fear of facing allegations of “racism” deterred whistleblowers, news outlets, and public officials who dared to raise concerns about fraud among Somalis, he said. Thus, the problem didn’t get the attention it deserved.

While hundreds or even a couple thousand Somalis may have been wrapped up in the schemes, Glahn emphasized that many Somalis are just as outraged as other taxpayers are; they have cooperated with him and with authorities to expose the fraudsters.

Thus, he said, “There is a Somali-fraud problem in Minnesota, but that doesn’t mean there is a Somali problem in Minnesota.”

Terror Allegations

In recent weeks, the schemes that had gone largely unnoticed on the national stage began to attract national attention.

City Journal—a publication of the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research—produced a bombshell story that prompted President Donald Trump to cut off deportation protections for Somalis in Minnesota.

The article asserted that, when Somali fraudsters sent stolen funds back to their homeland, the Somali terror group, Al-Shabaab, had been taking a “cut,” perhaps unbeknownst to the original sender.

Glahn, a former Federal Reserve systems analyst, told The Epoch Times he believes “with 100-percent certainty” that Al-Shabaab is receiving the money, most likely despite the senders’ intentions to benefit their friends and relatives back home.

He bases that declaration on multiple factors, including his knowledge of the money-transfer process, information he gathered from Somalis, and evidence disclosed in court cases.

On Dec. 1, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced that his office is investigating the fraud-for-terror allegation.

Glahn hopes that the increased scrutiny on multiple fronts will remedy welfare-system problems that have persisted for years.

The fraud cases also have political implications. Gov. Tim Walz appears to be facing headwinds over the scandals as he seeks reelection to a third term in office.

Bill Glahn, a policy fellow with Center of the American Experiment. Courtesy of Bill Glahn/Center of the American Experiment

A newly released Thinking Minnesota Poll shows that 56 percent of respondents “don’t think he’s done enough to prevent fraud in Minnesota.” And half of the respondents said “fraud will be a major factor in their vote for governor next year.” Walz has in the past denounced fraudulent use of welfare dollars, but has made no comments about the recent firestorm, other than taking jabs at Trump for his action.

Public records, along with statements from Glahn and a former fraud investigator, help show why Somali welfare-fraud snowballed in the North Star State despite early efforts to halt it.

‘A Green Light for Fraud’

After the 2022 federal raids, Glahn looked back at earlier scandals. He believes they set the stage for schemes that eventually emerged. The scope is now so overwhelming that federal prosecutors admit they lack the manpower to charge everyone involved.

Concerns over the federal Child Care Assistance Program being vulnerable to fraud date to 2009, according to a 2019 Minnesota report.

Specific concerns about Somali-run childcare programs in Minnesota exploiting those weaknesses surfaced around 2016, Glahn said.

By 2018, a Minnesota whistleblower and some media organizations were reporting that up to $100 million was being stolen via fraudulent childcare billing.

Those reports also alleged the stolen money was funding terrorist organizations in Somalia.

The Office of the Legislative Auditor was able to prove that about $6 million a year was lost to fraudulent child-care billing. The special review was unable to substantiate the terrorism-funding allegation, but cited factors that showed it was plausible.

“Federal regulatory and law enforcement agencies are concerned that terrorist organizations in certain countries, including Somalia, obtain and use money sent from the United States by immigrants and refugees to family and friends in those countries,” according to the special review.

The report also pointed out: “Federal prosecutions have convicted several individuals in Minnesota of providing material support to terrorist organizations in foreign [countries].”

People who alleged that Somalis were committing fraud were branded “racist,” Glahn said.

Perceptions spread throughout the Somali community and beyond. “They saw people getting away with it,” he said, so they thought they would try it, too.

“It seemed to be a ‘green light’ for fraud.”

“It totally emboldened people,” Glahn said, so they branched into other types of fraud.

Former Investigator Says Racism Claims a Factor

Kayseh Magan, a Somali American who formerly investigated Medicaid fraud for the Minnesota Attorney General, acknowledged in a 2024 Minnesota Reformer column an “uncomfortable” truth: Nearly all the defendants in the Feeding Our Future scandal were from the Somali community.

Feeding Our Future was a nonprofit that disbanded after authorities charged dozens of its affiliates with falsely claiming to provide meals to needy children. At least 78 people have been accused. Nearly 60 have been convicted. The stolen funds are estimated at $240 million or more.

Since then, more suspects have been charged in two more recent scandals. One case involves alleged theft of Medicaid money that was supposed to help the homeless. The other scandal centers on allegedly false claims that children with autism were receiving therapy. Instead, children were receiving fake “autism” diagnoses, and their parents were getting kickbacks for cooperating in the scheme, authorities said.

Magan explained that Somalis, fleeing civil war and famine in the 1990s, were drawn to Minnesota despite its “unforgiving winters.”

“Word spread that Minnesota is an inviting place, with generous social programs and a history of welcoming immigrants,” Magan wrote. Thus, Minnesota became home to the nation’s largest Somali community.

The group makes up only about 1 percent of the population but has been growing in political influence, partly because of the prominence of leaders such as Somali-born Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn).

Minnesotans quietly wondered why so many Somalis were caught up in fraud, Magan acknowledged. His response: “My experience as a fraud investigator has taught me that fraud occurs when desire meets opportunity.”

People who are poor or out of work become desperate; professionals whose credentials aren’t recognized in the United States are stuck with “menial jobs,” he said, yet they must support their families here and in Somalia financially.

“That covers the desire, and here’s where opportunity comes into play: Minnesota’s public programs don’t adequately guard against organized fraud,” he wrote.

Fraud-catching systems “are mostly designed to root out recipient fraud,” he said.

“It is exceedingly difficult to guard against providers who collude with recipients, which is the type of fraud most pervasive in the Somali community.”

Fraudsters also took advantage of “the feckless fear that establishment politicians and state agencies show when confronted with charges of racism or Islamophobia,” he wrote in that column last year.

In his most recent op-ed, Magan said that backlash over publicity about alleged childcare fraud in 2018 gave politicians “license to ignore warnings about fraud in public programs.”

However, in that same column, Magan denounced the City Journal report, saying it “appears to be little more than an effort by the right-wing propaganda machine to whip up hatred against Somali Americans.”

He also expressed skepticism over the article’s claim about ill-gotten gains ending up in Al-Shabaab’s coffers.

The Epoch Times sought comment from Christopher Rufo, a co-author of the City Journal article, but received no reply prior to publication time.

However, in a Nov. 25 City Journal article entitled “It’s Not ‘Racist’ to Notice Somali Fraud,” Rufo pushed back against attacks on the expose.

“Progressives have suggested that our reporting and the subsequent policy change were ‘racist,’” Rufo wrote. “While many of those indicted in these schemes are Somali, these critics argue, the federal government should not hold Minnesota’s Somali community corporately responsible for the actions of individuals.

“The truth is that numerous members of a relatively small community participated in a scheme that stole billions in funds,” Rufo wrote, saying this raises implications for American immigration policy, which “has favorably treated Somalis relative to other groups” for more than 30 years. He said cultural differences might help explain reasons for the extent of the Somali fraud networks.

“It is more than fair to ask whether that policy has served the national interest,” Rufo said. “The fraud story suggests that the answer is ‘no.’”

Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/04/2025 – 21:45

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2P8ceGB Tyler Durden

Useless U

Useless U

Authored by Larry Sand via American Greatness,

A stunning new report from the University of California, San Diego, reveals that incoming college students are less prepared for their classes than ever. The steep decline in academic readiness among its first-year students is particularly noticeable in mathematics.

The UCSD paper shows that between 2020 and 2025, the number of students with math skills below high school level increased nearly thirtyfold. Additionally, 70% of these students are below the middle school level.

The decline is attributed to the COVID shutdown, the elimination of standardized testing, and grade inflation, all of which have resulted in an incoming class that is less prepared for the rigor expected at UCSD.

UCSD students who required remedial math had average high school GPAs that rose from 3.47 in 2019 to 3.65 in 2024. Therefore, not only are our schools passing students without equipping them with basic skills, but they are also inflating their sense of competence.

UCSD’s issues are not unique. Over the past five years, all other University of California campuses, including UC Berkeley and UCLA, have seen the number of first-year students who are unprepared for precalculus double or triple.

Regarding grade inflation, the situation is no better in other parts of the country. A recent internal Harvard report disclosed that over 60% of grades given to undergraduates in the 2024-25 academic year were A’s—up from about 25% twenty years ago. The median GPA at graduation, which was 3.29 in 1985, has now increased to 3.83.

Yale’s data are even worse: 80% of grades awarded in 2023 were “A” or “A-.”

Many students are opting out of college, which had an enrollment of 19.28 million undergraduate students in fall 2024, a decline of 8.43% from the peak of 21.0 million in 2010. Besides the decrease in college enrollment over the past 15 years, even fewer students are expected to attend in the next 15 years.

In a desperate attempt to fill seats, the Cal State system will admit students with C’s in college-prep courses—without requiring an application—starting next year, reports EdSource. “Direct admissions” students who accept the offer can select from 16 Cal State campuses, which are trying to boost attendance. Additionally, Cal State won’t consider SAT or ACT scores in admissions. (The most selective schools—San Jose State, San Diego State, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, Cal Poly Pomona, Cal State Fullerton, and Long Beach State—are not included.)

For those who graduate from college, the job market is weak. Bloomberg reports that the latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show a significant decline in white-collar jobs, especially for students with four-year degrees. These degrees now account for a record 25% of all unemployed, about 1.9 million people, the highest level since 1992.

The unemployment rate for bachelor’s degree holders rose to 2.8% in September, while joblessness for other education groups stayed relatively steady. Young degree-holders are experiencing the most impact: unemployment for ages 20 to 24 jumped to 9.2%, a rise rarely seen outside recessions.

It’s worth noting that going to college can be quite costly. The average annual per-student expense in the United States is $38,270, covering books, supplies, and living costs.

If a student attends a private, nonprofit university, they will spend, on average, $58,628 per year living on campus, with $38,421 of that going toward tuition and fees.

Considering student loan interest and lost potential income, investing in a bachelor’s degree can ultimately cost students’ families and taxpayers over $500,000.

What are some alternatives to traditional college?

There is one college-related program that connects employers with community colleges that might be worth trying if it is available in a student’s state. The Federation for Advanced Manufacturing Education began in 2010 as an experiment among several companies, including Toyota Motor Corp.’s Georgetown, KY factory, which was having trouble finding “middle-skill” workers to operate new technology. Today, nearly 400 employers participate in the program across 13 states.

BuildWithin, whose motto is “Potential over Credential,” makes it easier for employers and organizations to start professional apprenticeships and maximize skills-based hiring. In this model, employers hire young men and women who may not have a college degree but have the drive and innate talent to succeed.

A Philadelphia nonprofit has introduced new opportunities for students. Launchpad, a three-year career and technical education program, is not only free, but students also get paid for their work.

Next Prep, available at two high schools in St. Louis, is a pilot program that helps teens start early in figuring out what they might want to do after graduation. The class begins in ninth grade and focuses on exploring each student’s strengths and talents. Later, the class dives into careers by visiting employers and speaking directly with professionals. Hands-on and personal, the course aims to lay out the stepping stones from high school to a meaningful career.

High school graduates in California can join registered apprenticeships, which provide opportunities to get paid while learning a trade—like carpentry or plumbing—from skilled industry professionals, often leading to a job afterward. California’s Department of Industrial Relations (DIR) has traditionally offered apprenticeship programs in the building trades—bricklaying and carpentry, for example. But DIR also trains for careers in healthcare, technology, transportation, and firefighting, among others.

It’s time for students and their parents to reconsider whether a college degree is necessary. Unless a student is pursuing a career that requires higher education, it would be better for them, their families, and taxpayers to skip college and explore other options. They can acquire skills that will enrich their lives and, at the same time, help them become productive members of society.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/04/2025 – 20:55

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/GrZqRHy Tyler Durden

Razzle Dazzle Racism

Today the Supreme Court decided the Texas redistricting case by a 6-3 vote. I’ll get to my analysis later, but I have to cover some other ground first.

I recently read R. Shep Melnick’s review of Michelle Adams’s new book on Milliken v. Bradley. I was familiar with the Supreme Court’s landmark decision that put an end to forced bussing. But I did not know much about the lower court litigation, which Adams covers in some detail.

Judge Stephen John Roth presided over the case. It seems that Judge Roth was initially skeptical of the claim that he could order children throughout Detroit to be bussed to faraway school. Bs Melnick relates, Judge Roth went through a “conversion” after a 41-day trial:

Support for urban/suburban busing came almost entirely from Judge Steven Roth, egged on by the white Detroiters who had been allowed to intervene in the case. As Adams and many others point out, Roth underwent a conversion in the 41-day trial. Originally skeptical of the NAACP’s constitutional arguments, he became convinced that government actors had engaged in housing segregation that led to segregated schools.

Adams effectively reviews the housing evidence that had a profound impact on the judge. She says far less about the evidence that convinced him that using busing to eliminate predominantly Black schools would improve the educational opportunities of minority students. The evidence on housing was central to Roth’s relatively uncontroversial liability finding. The evidence on education was crucial to the extraordinary remedy he fashioned after finding a constitutional violation.

Judge Roth later told a reporter, “We all got an education during the course of the trial. It opened my eyes.”

Judge Roth became convinced that to enforce Brown v. Board of Education, he had to enter a remedial scheme that was unfathomable. This was not a conversion. It was an apotheosis: Judge Roth saw himself as a god who could remedy society’s ills. The trial deified him.

This line from Judge Smith’s dissent was directly on point:

There’s the old joke: What’s the difference between God and a federal district judge? Answer: God doesn’t think he’s a federal judge. Or a different version of that joke: An angel rushes to the head of the Heavenly Host and says, “We have a problem. God has delusions of grandeur.” The head angel calmly replies, “What makes you say that?” The first angel whispers, “He’s wearing his robe and keeps imagining he’s a federal judge.”

Well-managed trials, that tug on all of the right strings, can have a transformative effect on even the most sober-minded people. There is a reason effective trial lawyers can wrap juries around their fingers, and secure astronomical judgments. Indeed, there is a reason why sophisticated defense attorneys do everything in their power to keep cases away from juries. I don’t think judges, when presiding over bench trials, are immune from this dynamic. Indeed, when district court judges afflicted by the god complex have unlimited remedial powers, they, like Judge Roth, can do just about anything.

One of my favorite Broadway musicals is Chicago. In the song Razzle Dazzle, defense attorney Billy Flynn, played by Richard Gere, explains how you can pull the wool over a jury’s eyes and make them believe anything.

Give ’em the old razzle dazzle, razzle dazzle ’em
Give ’em an act with lots of flash in it
And the reaction will be passionate
Give ’em the old hocus-pocus, bead and feather ’em
How can they see with sequins in their eyes?
What if your hinges all are rusting?
What if, in fact, you’re just disgusting?
Razzle dazzle them and they’ll never catch wise

Civil rights attorneys have perfected the art of presenting their cases in the perfect sympathetic light. And the government can, at most, defend their work by pointing to pure partisanship or different standards or review.

Back to Judge Brown’s decision. The Supreme Court’s per curiam decision was fairly predictable. It should have been very clear to Judge Brown that his opinion “failed to honor the presumption of legislative good faith.” And it should have been clearer that his opinion would not stand since the plaintiffs “did not produce a viable alternative map that met the State’s avowedly partisan goals.” Judge Brown’s distinction–that a map was not needed at an interim stage–was never going to hold up. And it should have been crystal clear that Purcell would not allow this sort of relief in the middle of the primary process. But the mountains of evidence submitted by the plaintiffs let him look past those significant legal barriers.

Justice Kagan’s dissent extols the length of the lower court proceedings:

The District Court conducted a nine-day hearing, involving the testimony of nearly two dozen witnesses and the introduction of thousands of exhibits. It sifted through the resulting factual record, spanning some 3,000 pages. It assessed the credibility of each of the witnesses it had seen and heard in the courtroom. And after considering all the evidence, it held that the answer wasc lear. Texas largely divided its citizens along racial lines to create its new pro-Republican House map, in violation of the Constitution’s Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. The court issued a 160-page opinion recounting in detail its factual findings.

Kagan stresses how the court even watched videos of legislators.

To do so, it held a nine-day hearing during which it heard from 23 witnesses, received into evidence thousands of exhibits, and watched many hours of video footage of legislators and Governor Abbott discussing the proposed map as it was under consideration. After assessing the credibility of the witnesses and weighing all the competing evidence, the District Court decided that the merits were “clearcut” in favor of the plaintiffs.

Justice Alito’s dissent explains that the length of the proceedings cannot excuse these legal errors:

Neither the duration of the District Court’s hearing nor the length of its majority opinion provides an excuse for failing to apply the correct legal standards as set out clearly in our case law.

I would take it a step further: the longer these trials go on, and the more evidence presented, the brain’s ability to discern reality falters. I seriously doubt that judges actually understand these sophisticated models. (There is a reason Rucho rejected the efficiency gap.) And I am skeptical that judges can seriously disentangle race and politics when members of minority groups (who all happen to be Democrats) talk about how the maps will impact their racial group. The plaintiffs lawyers are inviting the judges to become politico junkies, statisticians, and racial facilitators. None of these roles are well-suited for life-tenured judges.

Kagan faults the majority for disrespecting Judge Brown:

Today’s order disrespects the work of a District Court that did everything one could ask to carry out its charge…

I mean no disrespect to Judge Brown. He was simply deciding a case in a construct that is inherently slanted to the civil rights plaintiffs–this is just another liberal asymmetry in the law. Brown is not alone. There have been a number of other Trump-appointed judges who have been persuaded by these sorts of voting rights claims. Moreover, in the litigation leading up to Skrmetti, three Trump appointees found that transgender laws were unconstitutional–a fact Chase Strangio pointed out in his interview with Ross Douthat.

I draw a different lesson. Callais should tie federal judges to the mast, and get them out of the business of being snookered by race trials. If the Court does not take this path in Callais, it should prepare for a steady stream of similar opinions like Judge Brown’s. The liberal asymmetries should end: California can gerrymander to the left, and Texas can gerrymander to the right.

The post Razzle Dazzle Racism appeared first on Reason.com.

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/zyL0oDk
via IFTTT

Razzle Dazzle Racism

Today the Supreme Court decided the Texas redistricting case by a 6-3 vote. I’ll get to my analysis later, but I have to cover some other ground first.

I recently read R. Shep Melnick’s review of Michelle Adams’s new book on Milliken v. Bradley. I was familiar with the Supreme Court’s landmark decision that put an end to forced bussing. But I did not know much about the lower court litigation, which Adams covers in some detail.

Judge Stephen John Roth presided over the case. It seems that Judge Roth was initially skeptical of the claim that he could order children throughout Detroit to be bussed to faraway school. Bs Melnick relates, Judge Roth went through a “conversion” after a 41-day trial:

Support for urban/suburban busing came almost entirely from Judge Steven Roth, egged on by the white Detroiters who had been allowed to intervene in the case. As Adams and many others point out, Roth underwent a conversion in the 41-day trial. Originally skeptical of the NAACP’s constitutional arguments, he became convinced that government actors had engaged in housing segregation that led to segregated schools.

Adams effectively reviews the housing evidence that had a profound impact on the judge. She says far less about the evidence that convinced him that using busing to eliminate predominantly Black schools would improve the educational opportunities of minority students. The evidence on housing was central to Roth’s relatively uncontroversial liability finding. The evidence on education was crucial to the extraordinary remedy he fashioned after finding a constitutional violation.

Judge Roth later told a reporter, “We all got an education during the course of the trial. It opened my eyes.”

Judge Roth became convinced that to enforce Brown v. Board of Education, he had to enter a remedial scheme that was unfathomable. This was not a conversion. It was an apotheosis: Judge Roth saw himself as a god who could remedy society’s ills. The trial deified him.

This line from Judge Smith’s dissent was directly on point:

There’s the old joke: What’s the difference between God and a federal district judge? Answer: God doesn’t think he’s a federal judge. Or a different version of that joke: An angel rushes to the head of the Heavenly Host and says, “We have a problem. God has delusions of grandeur.” The head angel calmly replies, “What makes you say that?” The first angel whispers, “He’s wearing his robe and keeps imagining he’s a federal judge.”

Well-managed trials, that tug on all of the right strings, can have a transformative effect on even the most sober-minded people. There is a reason effective trial lawyers can wrap juries around their fingers, and secure astronomical judgments. Indeed, there is a reason why sophisticated defense attorneys do everything in their power to keep cases away from juries. I don’t think judges, when presiding over bench trials, are immune from this dynamic. Indeed, when district court judges afflicted by the god complex have unlimited remedial powers, they, like Judge Roth, can do just about anything.

One of my favorite Broadway musicals is Chicago. In the song Razzle Dazzle, defense attorney Billy Flynn, played by Richard Gere, explains how you can pull the wool over a jury’s eyes and make them believe anything.

Give ’em the old razzle dazzle, razzle dazzle ’em
Give ’em an act with lots of flash in it
And the reaction will be passionate
Give ’em the old hocus-pocus, bead and feather ’em
How can they see with sequins in their eyes?
What if your hinges all are rusting?
What if, in fact, you’re just disgusting?
Razzle dazzle them and they’ll never catch wise

Civil rights attorneys have perfected the art of presenting their cases in the perfect sympathetic light. And the government can, at most, defend their work by pointing to pure partisanship or different standards or review.

Back to Judge Brown’s decision. The Supreme Court’s per curiam decision was fairly predictable. It should have been very clear to Judge Brown that his opinion “failed to honor the presumption of legislative good faith.” And it should have been clearer that his opinion would not stand since the plaintiffs “did not produce a viable alternative map that met the State’s avowedly partisan goals.” Judge Brown’s distinction–that a map was not needed at an interim stage–was never going to hold up. And it should have been crystal clear that Purcell would not allow this sort of relief in the middle of the primary process. But the mountains of evidence submitted by the plaintiffs let him look past those significant legal barriers.

Justice Kagan’s dissent extols the length of the lower court proceedings:

The District Court conducted a nine-day hearing, involving the testimony of nearly two dozen witnesses and the introduction of thousands of exhibits. It sifted through the resulting factual record, spanning some 3,000 pages. It assessed the credibility of each of the witnesses it had seen and heard in the courtroom. And after considering all the evidence, it held that the answer wasc lear. Texas largely divided its citizens along racial lines to create its new pro-Republican House map, in violation of the Constitution’s Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. The court issued a 160-page opinion recounting in detail its factual findings.

Kagan stresses how the court even watched videos of legislators.

To do so, it held a nine-day hearing during which it heard from 23 witnesses, received into evidence thousands of exhibits, and watched many hours of video footage of legislators and Governor Abbott discussing the proposed map as it was under consideration. After assessing the credibility of the witnesses and weighing all the competing evidence, the District Court decided that the merits were “clearcut” in favor of the plaintiffs.

Justice Alito’s dissent explains that the length of the proceedings cannot excuse these legal errors:

Neither the duration of the District Court’s hearing nor the length of its majority opinion provides an excuse for failing to apply the correct legal standards as set out clearly in our case law.

I would take it a step further: the longer these trials go on, and the more evidence presented, the brain’s ability to discern reality falters. I seriously doubt that judges actually understand these sophisticated models. (There is a reason Rucho rejected the efficiency gap.) And I am skeptical that judges can seriously disentangle race and politics when members of minority groups (who all happen to be Democrats) talk about how the maps will impact their racial group. The plaintiffs lawyers are inviting the judges to become politico junkies, statisticians, and racial facilitators. None of these roles are well-suited for life-tenured judges.

Kagan faults the majority for disrespecting Judge Brown:

Today’s order disrespects the work of a District Court that did everything one could ask to carry out its charge…

I mean no disrespect to Judge Brown. He was simply deciding a case in a construct that is inherently slanted to the civil rights plaintiffs–this is just another liberal asymmetry in the law. Brown is not alone. There have been a number of other Trump-appointed judges who have been persuaded by these sorts of voting rights claims. Moreover, in the litigation leading up to Skrmetti, three Trump appointees found that transgender laws were unconstitutional–a fact Chase Strangio pointed out in his interview with Ross Douthat.

I draw a different lesson. Callais should tie federal judges to the mast, and get them out of the business of being snookered by race trials. If the Court does not take this path in Callais, it should prepare for a steady stream of similar opinions like Judge Brown’s. The liberal asymmetries should end: California can gerrymander to the left, and Texas can gerrymander to the right.

The post Razzle Dazzle Racism appeared first on Reason.com.

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/zyL0oDk
via IFTTT

ICE Arrests (Another) Afghan National Accused Of Supporting ISIS

ICE Arrests (Another) Afghan National Accused Of Supporting ISIS

Authored by Naveen Athrappully via The Epoch Times,

Federal authorities on Wednesday arrested an Afghan national on suspicion of providing support to the ISIS terrorist group, the third such arrest in a week, according to a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) statement.

Jaan Shah Safi was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents in Waynesboro, Virginia. Safi is an “illegal alien terrorist who entered the U.S. on Sept. 8, 2021, in Philadelphia” under President Joe Biden’s Operation Allies Welcome program, the statement said.

He had applied for Temporary Protected Status, but his application was terminated once DHS Secretary Kristi Noem ended TPS for Afghans.

The TPS was terminated in May as Afghanistan no longer met the requirements for the designation, and “DHS records indicate that there are recipients who have been under investigation for fraud and threatening our public safety and national security,” Noem said at the time.

The DHS said that Safi was also found to provide weapons to his father, a commander of a militia group back in Afghanistan.

The Epoch Times could not ascertain whether Safi was given any legal representation.

This is the third arrest of a suspected Afghan terrorist in about a week.

The first case was that of Rahmanullah Lakanwal, who was arrested Nov. 26 on suspicion of shooting two National Guard members in Washington. One of the victims, Sarah Beckstrom, died afterward, and the other, Andrew Wolfe, remains in serious condition.

Lakanwal had worked with the CIA during the war in Afghanistan. Authorities charged him with first-degree murder and two counts of assault with intent to kill, among other charges.

Noem said in a media interview that authorities believe Lakanwal became radicalized after he arrived in the United States through connections in his community and state.

A day before the attack and in a separate incident, Mohammad Dawood Alokozay was arrested and charged with making bomb threats.

Alokozay had posted social media videos threatening to blow up a target in Fort Worth, Texas.

The three are among 190,000 Afghan nationals who were resettled in the United States as part of Operation Allies Welcome, later renamed Enduring Welcome.

Regarding Safi, Noem said, “This terrorist was arrested miles from our nation’s capital where our brave National Guard heroes … were shot just days ago by another unvetted Afghan terrorist brought into our country.”

On Dec. 2, the Trump administration suspended the processing of immigration applications from 19 countries, including Afghanistan and Somalia, citing national security and public safety concerns.

The Epoch Times reached out to Afghan Support Network, a nonprofit that focuses on the welfare of Afghan refugees, for comment and did not receive a response by publication time.

Overhauling Vetting Process

When the United States withdrew from Afghanistan in August 2021, the Biden administration initiated the Operation Allies Welcome program to resettle thousands of Afghan nationals in the United States, including those who worked alongside U.S. authorities in the war-torn nation over the previous two decades.

“It’s the biggest national security failure in the history of the nation,” border czar Tom Homan said in a media interview on Sunday, noting that the DHS inspector general came out with a report at the time stating multiple failures in the vetting process.

“People need to understand, in these third world nations, they don’t have systems like we do. So a lot of these Afghans, who did get here to get better, they had no identification at all. Not a single travel document, not one piece of identification. And we’re going to count on the people that run Afghanistan, the Taliban, to provide us any information who the bad guys were or who the good guys are? Certainly not.”

Noem said in a Dec. 1 post on X that many Afghan nationals brought into the country were “military-aged men” who were not vetted for security clearance.

Homeland Security is currently overhauling the vetting process for aliens, requiring the country of origin to cross-reference biometric data and criminal history, screening social media accounts, and directing individuals to check in every year, Noem said.

According to the State Department’s travel advisory, Afghanistan’s security situation remains extremely unstable, with the highest critical-level threat to U.S. citizens.

All Afghanistan provinces are dangerous for travel, with targeted or random hostile acts perpetrated by the country’s citizens. “U.S. citizens and other foreign nationals are primary targets of terrorist organizations,“ warned the advisory.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/04/2025 – 20:05

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/OoBSPbr Tyler Durden

Federal Watchdog Reveals Rampant Obamacare Fraud; 90% Of Bad-Doc Applicants Approved In Undercover Test

Federal Watchdog Reveals Rampant Obamacare Fraud; 90% Of Bad-Doc Applicants Approved In Undercover Test

A new bombshell report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) details a long-running vulnerability in the Affordable Care Act exchanges, showing that weak verification controls continue to expose federal subsidies to significant fraud and abuse. 

“Preliminary results from GAO’s ongoing covert testing suggest fraud risks in the advance premium tax credit (APTC) persist,” the report reads. “The federal Marketplace approved coverage for nearly all of GAO’s fictitious applicants in plan years 2024 and 2025, generally consistent with similar GAO testing in plan years 2014 through 2016.”

According to the report, GAO conducted undercover tests by creating fictitious applicants with fake identities and fraudulent or never-issued Social Security numbers to see how the federal Marketplace would respond. Over the past two years, 90% of those fake applicants were approved for subsidized coverage despite lacking required documentation. In plan year 2024, all four of GAO’s fabricated applicants were approved and received about $2,350 per month in subsidies paid to insurers, even though they failed to provide proof of Social Security numbers, citizenship, or income. GAO scaled up the test for 2025 to 20 fake applicants; 18 were still enrolled as of September 2025, generating more than $10,000 per month in subsidies

More broadly, GAO’s preliminary analyses identified vulnerabilities related to potential SSN misuse and likely unauthorized enrollment changes in federal Marketplace data for plan years 2023 and 2024. Such issues can contribute to APTC that is not reconciled through enrollees’ tax filings to determine the amount of premium tax credit for which enrollees were ultimately eligible. GAO’s preliminary analysis of data from tax year 2023 could not identify evidence of reconciliation for over $21 billion in APTC for enrollees who provided SSNs to the federal Marketplace for plan year 2023. Unreconciled APTC may not necessarily represent overpayments, as enrollees who did not reconcile may have been eligible for the subsidy. However, it may include overpayments for enrollees who were not eligible for APTC.

A big problem with reconciling these Obamacare subsidies is when someone uses a Social Security number that doesn’t actually belong to the person getting the insurance. GAO’s early look at federal Marketplace data found more than 29,000 Social Security numbers in 2023 that showed over a full year of subsidized coverage. One number was used so many times that it totaled more than 26,000 days of insurance across more than 125 plans – the equivalent of more than 71 years of coverage tied to a single number.

The pattern continued in 2024, with nearly 66,000 Social Security numbers being linked to more than a year of subsidized coverage. This can result from identity theft, fake identities, or simple typing errors. According to the GAO, determining the true owner of a Social Security number can be complicated, so it’s examining these cases and other examples of overlapping coverage more closely.

CMS officials say the federal Marketplace lets people sign up even when a Social Security number is already in use. They claim this helps the real owner of the number get coverage in cases of identity theft or simple typing mistakes. The system uses a model that analyzes various pieces of personal information to distinguish applicants, and CMS runs this check monthly to clear out duplicate accounts. They also say applications with repeated Social Security numbers are supposed to go through a data-matching process in which people send in documents to verify their identities. However, even with those explanations, the setup makes it far too easy for fake applicants to slip through, and clearly, they do. The way the system works gives fraudsters plenty of room to abuse Social Security numbers long before anyone notices.

GAO notes that its “covert testing is illustrative and cannot be generalized to the enrollee population.”

This report lands in the middle of an active policy fight on Capitol Hill over whether to extend enhanced Obamacare subsidies, giving Republicans fresh evidence for their arguments about the program’s structural problem, validating their long-standing criticisms of Obamacare. House Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith (R-Mo.) called the report a “smoking gun” showing how a flawed system, protected by Democrat policies, has pushed tens of billions of taxpayer dollars to insurers through identity fraud. 

Energy and Commerce Chair Brett Guthrie (R-KY) argued that Democrats’ temporary expansion of subsidies worsened fraud, harmed patients, and hid deeper affordability problems. “Republicans have sounded the alarm on the flawed structural integrity of Obamacare and how Democrats’ failed policies to temporarily prop up the program have exacerbated fraud, hurt patients, increased the burden on American taxpayers, and artificially masked the true health care affordability crisis plaguing Americans today,” Guthrie said. “The concerning findings from GAO’s report further confirm that Republican efforts to strengthen, secure, and sustain our federal health programs are critical and necessary to ensure access to quality health care at prices Americans can afford.”

Tyler Durden
Thu, 12/04/2025 – 19:40

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/UuWCjfn Tyler Durden