Gen Z Americans Grow More Skeptical And Angry About AI, Survey Finds

Gen Z Americans Grow More Skeptical And Angry About AI, Survey Finds

Authored by Bill Pan via The Epoch Times,

Young Americans are using artificial intelligence (AI) regularly, but their distrust and resentment toward the technology are also growing, according to a new Gallup survey.

The survey, released Thursday, found that more than half of Generation Z respondents ages 14 to 29 said they use generative AI either daily or weekly. Younger members of Gen Z who are still in K–12 education were more likely than Gen Z adults to say they use AI at least weekly.

Yet even as usage remains widespread, optimism is fading.

Compared with Gallup’s survey last year, young people are less excited about the changes AI could bring and more skeptical about its growing presence.

The share of respondents who said AI made them feel hopeful fell to 18 percent, down from 27 percent a year earlier, according to Gallup.

The share who said it made them feel excited dropped to 22 percent from 36 percent.

At the same time, negative feelings have grown.

Thirty-one percent of respondents said AI made them feel angry, up 9 percentage points from 2025, while 42 percent said it made them feel anxious, roughly unchanged from last year.

Among employed members of Gen Z, skepticism was especially pronounced.

Gallup found that 48 percent of working Gen Z respondents said the risks of AI in the workplace outweigh the benefits, an 11-point increase from the previous year. Only 15 percent said they viewed AI as a net positive on the job.

Confidence in the technology’s practical value also faltered. Just 37 percent said AI would help them find accurate information, down from 43 percent a year earlier. Only 31 percent said it would help them generate new ideas, down from 42 percent in 2025.

Still, younger respondents who have not yet entered the workforce continue to see AI as a skill they will need to understand. Gallup found that 52 percent of Gen Z students in K-12 said they believe they will need to know how to use AI in higher education, while 48 percent said they expect to use it in their future careers.

“Gen Z isn’t rejecting AI outright, but they are reassessing its role in their lives. What we’re seeing in the data is a generation that recognizes AI’s utility but is increasingly concerned about its long-term impact on learning, trust, and career readiness,” Stephanie Marken, senior partner at Gallup, said in a news release.

“Their growing skepticism signals a need for more thoughtful integration of these tools in both school settings and the workplace.”

Gallup surveyed 1,572 people ages 14 to 29 across all 50 states and District of Columbia between Feb. 24 and March 4. The poll, commissioned by the Walton Family Foundation and GSV Ventures, has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.6 percentage points at the 95 percent confidence level.

The findings come as another Gallup study pointed to growing unease among college students about AI. That report, released last week, found that almost half of bachelor’s degree students said AI had caused them to give at least a fair amount of thought to changing their major. The share was even higher among associate degree students.

Students in technology and vocational fields appeared especially uneasy, according to that survey. A majority of respondents in the humanities, business, and engineering also reported similar concerns.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/10/2026 – 18:25

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Mainstream Media Claims Roger Stone Persuaded Trump Not To Fire Tulsi Gabbard

Mainstream Media Claims Roger Stone Persuaded Trump Not To Fire Tulsi Gabbard

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

President Trump was reportedly on the verge of firing Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard — until longtime adviser Roger Stone stepped in at the last minute.

According to an Axios report citing ‘advisors’, Trump had grown frustrated with Gabbard’s congressional testimony on threats to the U.S., in which she stopped short of a full-throated endorsement of the ongoing Iran conflict. The sources described the president polling other advisers on her performance and whether she should be replaced.

The drama unfolded after the high-profile resignation of Gabbard’s former adviser and counterterrorism director, Joe Kent, who publicly accused Israel of misleading the administration into war with Iran. Gabbard’s decision not to forcefully condemn Kent during her testimony only added fuel to the fire.

In a private meeting, Trump “scolded” Gabbard and questioned her loyalty, according to two sources. Others described the exchange as sarcastic but ultimately friendly.

Yet it was Roger Stone — Trump’s friend and political confidant since 1979 — who ultimately changed the president’s mind, according to the report.

“Roger sealed the deal. He saved Tulsi,” a source familiar with Trump’s thinking told Axios.

Stone laid out four key arguments for keeping her, according to people who spoke with him. Gabbard had remained loyal, delivered her testimony in a professional manner, and never publicly disputed the president. Unlike Kent, she showed no signs of resigning and did not deserve to be fired preemptively. Dismissing her would trigger a damaging news cycle and turn her into a martyr among segments of the base uneasy about the war. And firing her could give her credibility with MAGA skeptics, potentially positioning her as a future GOP presidential contender — one who might challenge Vice President JD Vance in key early primary states like New Hampshire and South Carolina.

Stone himself confirmed his intervention on X, writing: “Fortunately, I acted in time.”

Stone’s comments come against a backdrop of a verbal feud with Laura Loomer.

Loomer took to X to declare: “Tulsi is done. The White House wants zero drama so they gave her the option to resign, but … she will do a lot of damage if she is given the choice to resign because she will launch her 2028 presidential campaign.”

A Gabbard ally fired back, calling Loomer’s claim “absolutely false” and noting that Trump has repeatedly stood by his DNI.

The White House pushed back hard on any notion of discord. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt stated: “President Trump believes Tulsi Gabbard is doing an excellent job on behalf of the administration. She is a key member of his national security team.”

An ODNI spokesperson added that Gabbard “remains committed to fulfilling the responsibilities the President placed in her to protect the safety, security and freedom of the American people. She will continue to work tirelessly on behalf of President Trump’s agenda.”

The episode highlights the intense behind-the-scenes maneuvering inside the Trump administration as it navigates foreign policy challenges and internal loyalty tests. Gabbard, a combat veteran and longtime skeptic of endless Middle East entanglements, was brought on board for her outsider perspective and America First instincts. Yet her independent streak has created friction with hardliners who demand unwavering alignment on every national security issue.

Stone’s apparent intervention appears to have preserved stability — at least for now. In an administration that prizes loyalty above almost everything else, the veteran political operative reminded the president why keeping experienced voices who deliver results without grandstanding serves the country better than another round of public bloodletting.

This isn’t the first time Gabbard has faced scrutiny. Tensions surfaced last year over her decision to pull certain security clearances without full consultation and her public warnings about nuclear risks. She was also notably sidelined from some key pre-war discussions.

Still, the president’s ultimate decision to retain her — guided by Stone’s counsel — sends a clear signal: personnel moves will be deliberate, not reactive. In a high-stakes environment where every leak and resignation threatens to become a headline, avoiding unnecessary drama may prove the smarter long-term play.

The media’s breathless coverage of the near-firing only underscores how quickly internal deliberations become public fodder. Yet the outcome reinforces a core truth in this administration: seasoned advisers who understand Trump’s instincts can still shape decisions behind closed doors, protecting both the president’s agenda and the team executing it.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/10/2026 – 17:40

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Xi Hosts Taiwan Opposition Leader In Rare Meeting: ‘We Will Not Become A Chessboard For External Intervention’

Xi Hosts Taiwan Opposition Leader In Rare Meeting: ‘We Will Not Become A Chessboard For External Intervention’

All eyes remain fixated on the impending US-Iran talks in Islamabad, but big things are also happening Friday in Beijing, and they have direct impact on another potential global flashpoint: Taiwan.

While Washington potentially gets bogged down in another Middle East quagmire (if talks don’t go well and there’s no offramp), Chinese leader Xi Jinping has welcomed the leader of Taiwan’s main opposition party for a rare direct meeting in the Chinese capital.

The symbolism of the timing can’t be missed, as Xi invited Nationalist Party Chairwoman Cheng Li-wun to China ahead of the planned big mid-May summit with President Trump in which the Chinese leader could continue a push to dilute Washington’s support for Taiwan.

This is all about steering self-ruled Taiwan into China’s orbit, and Beijing asserting political power to do so in the face of the Trump administration, after China has long stated its official policy of reunification to the mainland through political means.

By hosting Cheng, Xi is also presenting himself as a force for stability who can be entrusted with ensuring peace – the WSJ has commented – and we might add with the image of ‘Taiwan’s willing participation’ – at a moment the Middle East is on fire largely as a result of American policy and quickness to result to force and surprise attacks.

Xi and Cheng expressed a desire for a “peaceful” resolution to the many decades-long Taiwan crisis, and posed for photos at the Great Hall of the People. They engaged in public remarks but also held a private, closed-door meeting.

Cheng emphasized in words to reporters that Chinese and Taiwanese officials should work to “transcend political confrontation and mutual hostility.” She stated, “Instead, it should become a strait that connects family ties, civilization and hope – a symbol of peace jointly safeguarded by Chinese people on both sides.”

Her rhetoric was tinged with familiar Chinese Communist Party talking points as she heralded China’s supposed eradicating of absolute poverty while seeking to achieve the “great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation”.

Among the more notable points were related to ‘external intervention’ – a not so stealthy reference to American power projection in southeast Asia:

“It is hoped that through the tireless efforts of our two parties, the Taiwan Strait will no longer be a focus of potential conflict, nor will it become a chessboard for external intervention,” she said.

Xi and Cheng both agreed that her Kuomintang party is ready to work with Beijing to achieve peace across the Taiwan Strait.

According to a backgrounder:

Cheng is the highest-ranking Taiwanese leader to meet Xi since President Ma Ying-jeou talked with the Chinese leader in Singapore in 2015. They met again in China two years ago when Ma was a private citizen.

Both Cheng and Ma are members of the Kuomintang, the conservative-leaning Taiwanese political party that advocates for greater engagement with China by Taiwan’s self-ruled democratic government.

As for Xi, he held up Taiwan and China’s shared history and culture, stating that “people of all ethnic groups, including Taiwanese compatriots,” had “jointly written the glorious history of China.”

Xi stressed, “All sons and daughters of China share the same Chinese roots and the same Chinese spirit. This originates from blood ties and is deeply embedded in our history – it cannot be forgotten and cannot be erased.”

Taiwan’s ruling government and officials have meanwhile complained of the Friday meeting, “It basically gives China a chance to bully Taiwan behind closed doors.”

And Taiwan Deputy Foreign Minister Chen Ming-chi said Friday that China can send a clear message of peace but only if it “stops sending warplanes and ships around Taiwan now.”

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/10/2026 – 17:20

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White House Warns Staff As Iran Bets Add To Growing Insider-Trading Concerns

White House Warns Staff As Iran Bets Add To Growing Insider-Trading Concerns

Authored by Zoltan Vardai via CoinTelegraph.com,

The White House warned staff against improperly using confidential information to place bets in futures markets after suspicious oil trades ahead of President Donald Trump’s March 23 Iran announcement drew scrutiny, according to Reuters.

Reuters reported on Thursday that the White House sent the internal email on March 24, a day after Trump ordered a five-day delay in attacks on Iran’s energy infrastructure.

The warning followed a roughly $500 million bet on Brent and West Texas Intermediate crude futures placed in a one-minute burst shortly before Trump’s March 23 announcement, according to Reuters calculations based on exchange data. Oil prices fell about 15% after the policy shift.

The episode has intensified scrutiny of whether officials or politically connected traders could profit from nonpublic information tied to military or policy decisions. It has also added momentum to a broader push in Washington to tighten rules around prediction-market trading.

The STOCK Act amendment in the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) prohibits federal officials, congress members, executive staff and judicial officers from using non-public information derived from their positions to trade commodity, futures or options markets. The amendment was signed into law on April 4, 2012.

Cointelegraph has approached the White House for a copy of the internal email.

Lawmakers respond to prediction market insider trading concerns

Lawmakers have also stepped up scrutiny of prediction markets, where well-timed bets tied to military and political events have raised similar concerns about the misuse of privileged information.

Polymarket traders netted around $1 million by accurately betting when the US would strike Iran.

In response to the concerns, Congressman Adrian Smith and Congresswoman Nikki Budzinski introduced the Preventing Real-time Exploitation and Deceptive Insider Congressional Trading Act (PREDICT Act) on March 25, a bipartisan bill seeking to ban members of Congress and federal officials from prediction market trading.

On March 26, US lawmakers Todd Young, Elissa Slotkin, John Curtis and Adam Schiff unveiled the bipartisan Public Integrity in Financial Prediction Markets Act of 2026, a bill aimed at curbing prediction market insider trading by government officials.

End Prediction Market Corruption Act. Source: Merkley.senate.gov

The same day, Senator Jeff Merkley introduced the End Prediction Market Corruption Act, seeking to ban event contract trading by government officials with “material non-public information,” including the president, vice president and members of Congress.

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/10/2026 – 17:00

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Half-Way Into Fiscal 2026, US Budget Deficit Is 11% Lower Than 2025, But It’s About To Get Much Worse

Half-Way Into Fiscal 2026, US Budget Deficit Is 11% Lower Than 2025, But It’s About To Get Much Worse

While not as dire as previous years, the US budget deficit remains a ticking time bomb.

There was some good news and some not so good news, when the Treasury reported the monthly revenue and outlays for the month of March. 

First the good news: The US federal government reported that the March budget deficit rose $4 billion or 2% ​to $164.1 billion from $160.5 billion a year ago, and higher than the $153.3BN median estimate, as ‌new individual and corporate tax breaks pushed refunds sharply higher, while relief payments to farmers also grew.

March ​tax receipts totaled $385 billion, up $17 billion or 4.7% ​from ⁠March 2025…

… which translated into $413 billion on a 6 month moving average basis, roughly where it has been for the past few years.

Outlays totaled $549 billion, up $21 billion, or 3.9% higher from a year earlier.

Unlike tax revenues, outlays were at the high end of the 6 month moving average, at just over $608 billion.

One can see how the moving averages between revenue and spending diverge in the chart below.

On a cumulative basis, six months into fiscal 2026 (which ends in September), the US budget deficit was $1.169 trillion, down about 11% from the $1.307 trillion accrued through this point in 2025. Aside from the crisis 2021 year, this was the third biggest cumulative budget deficit in US history half-way into the fiscal year.

Another way of visualizing the deficit, here it is broken down by main sources of revenue and outlays.

Customs duty ​collections softened in the month following the US Supreme ‌Court’s ⁠annulment of President Donald Trump’s broadest global tariffs imposed under an emergency law. Customs receipts totaled $22.2 billion in March, down from $26.6 billion in February and monthly ​totals in ​the low $30 ⁠billion range late last year, but up from $8.2 billion in March 2025.

The drop in tariff collections is seen clearly on the next chart.

Now that bad news: the March total was an accounting gimmick. After accounting for calendar-related ⁠adjustments ​of benefit payments, the March ​deficit would have been $250 billion, substantially higher than the year ago number. 

Worse, the monthly budget ​data did not show a major increase in ⁠spending on the Iran war, with military ​and defense program outlays rising just $2 billion or ​3% to $65 billion during the conflict’s first month. That means that the April (and onward) deficits will be sharply higher on the billions in war spending that will now have to go through the US income (technically loss) statement. 

Putting it all together, the big picture emerges, one where outlays on most categories continues to rise – certainly defense, social security and health – but as a result of the drop in rates in the past 1.5 years, the gross interest expense on US debt has been relatively flat in 2026, and in March it was $1.26 trillion, or where it started the year.

Still, at $1.3 trillion in gross interest expense, the amount of money the US spends on debt interest is now remains the 2nd highest spending category and will likely surpass Social Security spending, at just over $1.6 trillion, should either rates go up again or once total US debt surges as it certainly will in the next recession. 

Finally, while total deficit may be lower than it was in the prior year, it is probably safe to say that gross interest will keep rising every year until the end: indeed, as shown below, at $623 billion for the first six months of fiscal 2025, cumulative gross interest was 7% higher than the $582 billion for the same period in 2025. 

Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/10/2026 – 16:40

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DOGE, the Social Security Administration, and How Inferior Courts Should Treat S. Ct. Interim Orders

Some excerpts from the 88 pages of opinions in AFSCME v. Social Security Admin., decided today by the Fourth Circuit en banc, in an opinion by Judge Toby Heytens:

Three organizations sued to stop the Social Security Administration from giving U.S. DOGE Service personnel access to sensitive personal information about millions of Americans. The district court granted a preliminary injunction, which the Supreme Court stayed pending this appeal and any further Supreme Court review. We now vacate the current preliminary injunction and return the case to the district court for further proceedings….

On January 20, 2025, the President signed an executive order creating the U.S. DOGE Service and charging it with making government technology more efficient. DOGE personnel quickly made their way to the Social Security Administration and sought “unprecedented” access to agency systems, including non-anonymized personally identifiable information. A standoff ensued, and career officials resigned. A new acting administrator was installed and granted DOGE the sweeping access it sought.

Three organizations representing a combined seven million Americans sued to prevent DOGE from accessing their members’ personally identifiable information. When the case was filed and in the original preliminary injunction proceedings, plaintiffs’ theory of the case was not that DOGE had misused the information or disclosed it (accidentally or otherwise) to malicious actors. Instead, plaintiffs argued that handing over non-anonymized and highly sensitive information to DOGE was itself unlawful.

After hours of hearings and hundreds of pages of analysis, the district court issued the preliminary injunction we review here. The Supreme Court stayed that preliminary injunction and directed that the stay would remain in effect until the completion of all appellate review—including by the Supreme Court—of the district court’s order. We have jurisdiction to review the district court’s order ….

The court concluded that the plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged injury, for purposes of standing:

Like the district court, we conclude that disclosing plaintiffs’ members’ personally identifiable information to DOGE inflicts a harm that is a “close … analogue” to the common law tort of intrusion upon seclusion…. Intrusion upon seclusion is an “intentional[ ] intru[sion], physical[ ] or otherwise, upon the solitude or seclusion of another or his private affairs or concerns” that “would be highly offensive to a reasonable person.” The tort is not limited to entering someone’s house or peering through their windows. Rather, it includes “other form[s] of investigation or examination” of “private concerns,” including opening someone’s mail, going through their wallet, examining their bank account, or “compelling [them] by a forged court order to permit an inspection of [their] personal documents.” Second Restatement § 652B cmt. b. Intrusion upon seclusion does not require the tortfeasor to go on to misuse the information it learns or disseminate it to the public; instead, the unjustified intrusion upon the plaintiff’s privacy is the harm.

Much like rifling through someone’s wallet, bank account, or personal documents, granting unauthorized and unwarranted access to a person’s sensitive personal information is an intentional intrusion into “private affairs or concerns.” And that is what plaintiffs say happened here. According to plaintiffs, the Social Security Administration handed over their members’ most sensitive personal data to people (DOGE team members) who were not legally authorized to access it. Whether plaintiffs “would prevail in a lawsuit for common law invasion of privacy is irrelevant.” Instead, it is enough that the injury plaintiffs have identified “pose[s] the same kind of harm that common law courts recognize.”

But the court concluded that a preliminary injunction was unwarranted:

The role of a preliminary injunction is to protect the plaintiff from suffering new or additional irreparable harm between the time the preliminary injunction is entered and the case’s final resolution. And, like any other injunction, a preliminary injunction cannot reach back in time to prevent or undo irreparable harm that has already occurred. For those reasons, the key question here is whether a preliminary injunction will prevent plaintiffs from suffering new or additional irreparable harm while they litigate this case to final judgment.

What is more, not all harm—no matter how serious in the real world—is “irreparable” in a legal sense. Even a plaintiff who has a concrete injury for Article III standing purposes may only obtain the “extraordinary remedy” of a preliminary injunction if that injury cannot be remedied during the ordinary course of litigation. If there is even a “possibility” that “adequate compensatory or other corrective relief will be available at a later date,” a court should hesitate before concluding a plaintiff’s harm is “irreparable” for purposes of granting a preliminary injunction….

Applying those standards here, we conclude plaintiffs have not satisfied Winter‘s second factor.

We start by identifying the only theory of irreparable harm that is properly before us. The district court did not grant this preliminary injunction on the theory that plaintiffs’ members would be harmed by some downstream misuse or public disclosure of their personal data. See supra note 8. Instead, the irreparable harm on which the district court relied mirrors plaintiffs’ Article III injury: that DOGE violates plaintiffs’ members’ privacy by accessing their sensitive personal data without lawful authorization, and that privacy violation is “irreparable” in a legal sense.

The difficulty with that argument is that there are two forms of corrective relief that may be available down the line: money damages and a reparative permanent injunction….

Finally, the elephant in the room. As noted earlier, the role of a preliminary injunction is to protect a plaintiff from suffering further irreparable harm while the case is litigated. But because of the particular procedural posture of this case, the district court’s preliminary injunction cannot currently protect anyone from anything and no decision we issue today has the power to change that fact. The Supreme Court stayed the preliminary injunction, and the preliminary injunction will resume in force—if ever—only after events that would post-date our decision and over which we have no control … (directing that the stay will remain in effect “pending the disposition of the appeal in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and disposition of a petition for a writ of certiorari, if such a writ is timely sought“)…

Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson, joined by Judges Paul Niemeyer, Steven Agee, and Allison Rushing concurred in the judgment:

I concur in the judgment and believe that the Supreme Court’s issuance of the stay in this case is by far the most salient factor dictating our denial of the preliminary injunction. To conclude otherwise would relegate the Supreme Court’s stay order to a shallow exercise. That is a course only the most audacious inferior court would seek to follow….

Judge Julius Richardson, joined by Judges J. Harvie Wilkinson, Paul Niemeyer, Steven Agee, Marvin Quattlebaum, and Allison Rushing, also concurred in the judgment:

Article III of the Constitution sets up two categories of courts: “one supreme Court” and other “inferior Courts.” U.S. Const. art. III, § 1. This Court is an inferior one. This judicial hierarchy commands vertical stare decisis—when the Supreme Court speaks, inferior courts must listen. Of course, many cases feature novel legal or factual issues that require inferior courts to exercise independent judgment. But in other cases, the Supreme Court makes the answer easy. This is one such case.

In this appeal, we review a district court’s grant of a preliminary injunction against a government agency. The merits involve several interesting—and challenging—legal issues. But the outcome of this appeal should be neither interesting nor challenging. That’s because the Supreme Court already answered the interim question before us in this very case. So this case is “squarely controlled” by the Supreme Court’s earlier interim order granting a stay. Following the Supreme Court’s direction, I would vacate the preliminary injunction.

Fortunately, our en banc Court reaches that result today. But along the way, the Court makes several unforced errors….

Judge Marvin Quattlebaum, joined by Judges Julius Richardson and Allison Rushing, had another concurrence in the judgment:

Sometimes, appellate judges can forget what the real world of practicing law is like. This is one of those times. While I agree with the majority’s disposition, I also agree with Judge Richardson on the standard required for preliminary injunctions. But I write separately only to address one of the reasons the majority gives for rejecting what Judge Richardson calls the “multiplicative problem.” The majority suggests that likelihood of success on the merits cannot be effectively assessed in an objective, numerical way. In fact, it quotes a law review article stating that “[c]ognitive limitations leave humans able only weakly to judge likelihood on any sort of scale.” In my view, it’d be a mistake to abrogate American Federation of Teachers v. Bessent (4th Cir. 2025) [as the majority does], because we don’t think judges can effectively assess likelihood of success in numerical terms. Why do I say that? Because I know firsthand that lawyers around the country do this very thing every day. And if lawyers regularly assess probability of success numerically, judges—who have more time and resources than most lawyers—should be able to do it too…. [For more on the majority’s reasons for abrogating AFT, see the full opinion. -EV]

Judge Robert King, joined by Judges Roger Gregory, James Andrew Wynn, Stephanie Thacker, DeAndrea Gist Benjamin, and Nicole Berner, concurred and dissented in part:

When the district court issued its preliminary injunction, the facts then known to the district court were bad enough. The Social Security Administration (“SSA”) had abruptly opened all its records to affiliates of the President’s then-new Department of Government Efficiency (“DOGE”) despite the DOGE affiliates’ lack of vetting, lack of training, and lack of any demonstrated need for the vast and extremely sensitive personal information that fills the SSA records.

The facts now known are much worse!

As SSA recently revealed in a “Notice of Corrections to the Record,” a significant portion of the information provided by SSA and the other defendants in the preliminary injunction proceedings was patently false. The Notice of Corrections confesses repeated violations of the district court’s prior temporary restraining order (the “TRO”) and multiple instances of the DOGE affiliates’ misuse and mishandling of SSA records. Moreover, the Notice of Corrections belies SSA’s entire justification for opening its records to the DOGE affiliates—that the DOGE affiliates are regular SSA employees working under SSA’s supervision, in accordance with its rules, and on its behalf—by exposing that the DOGE affiliates are actually rogue actors whose activities are hidden from SSA itself.

After receiving SSA’s Notice of Corrections and on the motion of the plaintiffs, the district court promptly corrected the record on appeal. That leaves our en banc Court with at least two legitimate options for disposing of this appeal. We could (1) assess the merits of the preliminary injunction on the basis of the corrected record or (2) remand, without assessing the preliminary injunction’s merits, so that the district court may decide anew whether to award injunctive relief on the basis of the corrected record and subsequent developments.

I would pursue option (1)—assessing the merits of the preliminary injunction on the basis of the corrected record—and I would thereby affirm the preliminary injunction without hesitation. Candidly, I would affirm even if it were the erroneous original record that controls the analysis. The very able district judge acted with exceptional thoughtfulness in issuing the preliminary injunction, committing no legal error or otherwise abusing her discretion.

Regrettably, however, my friend Judge Heytens pursues neither option (1), option (2), nor any other legitimate option for disposing of this appeal. Instead, in Part IV of his opinion, Judge Heytens improperly disregards the corrected record and wrongly relies on the erroneous original record to assess the preliminary injunction’s merits. Compounding that misstep, Judge Heytens then unjustifiably rules that the district court erred in crediting the plaintiffs’ showing of irreparable harm, such that the preliminary injunction must be vacated….

Judge Wynn wrote separately, joined by Judges King, Thacker, Benjamin, and Berner:

I write to voice my disagreement with the separate opinions of my fine concurring colleagues Judge Wilkinson and Judge Richardson. Together, they advocate a step that judges need not take, and in my view, should not take. That’s because by treating the Supreme Court’s short interim order in Trump v. Boyle as setting precedent, they blur a line the Supreme Court itself has carefully preserved—the line between provisional relief and precedential lawmaking….

Jack E. Starcher (DoJ) represents the government.

The post DOGE, the Social Security Administration, and How Inferior Courts Should Treat S. Ct. Interim Orders appeared first on Reason.com.

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UNC Newspaper Halts Satire and Implements DEI Training After Backlash Over April Fools’ Issue


04.10.26-v2 | Chad Robertson/Dreamstime

The Daily Tar Heel, the student-run newspaper at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC), announced it would stop producing satire articles for the rest of the semester after receiving backlash from students and school administration over its April Fools’ Day issue. 

On April Fools’ Day, the paper published a series of satirical articles, including one with a subheadline that said the paper had rebranded as The Daily Woke Heel. Others read “UNC brings back DEI—for whites,” and “A new way forward for the Dean Dome: a two-stadium solution.” Another, published on the website, said “Satire: Trump orders ALE in Chapel Hill to be replaced with ICE agents.” The jokes did not go over well with some students, and the paper’s editor in chief immediately issued an apology. She wrote that the paper heard students’ “critiques and outrage.” She added, the paper’s “insensitive decisions and oversights” were “made by a newsroom and leadership team that undoubtedly exist in positions of power and privilege on this campus.”

That wasn’t the only April Fools’ Day attempt at comedy that didn’t land with some students. The day before, Hill After Hours, a registered student group separate from the paper, posted a TikTok skit in which a white student walked through the south part of the school’s campus flanked by “bodyguards,” acting as though it were a dangerous, foreign land. “The sketch is dripping with mockery for the soft bigotry of exoticizing ordinary places,” wrote Marie McMullan, an attorney at the Freedom for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE). Still, some students took offense to this video as well, and it was taken down

On April 6, Senior Vice Provost James Orr released a statement calling the April Fools issue “highly inappropriate and offensive.” He acknowledged that the university had no authority over the independent paper but wanted to be “very clear, however, that words matter and while the pieces were meant to represent satire, they were harmful and we unequivocally condemn them.” He also said the school’s Student Affairs office would investigate the Hill After Hours incident, “to determine more information about how and by whom the video was authorized and produced as well as next steps needed to address concerns.”

FIRE called for UNC Chapel Hill to retract this statement and to end the investigation into Hill After Hours. On Wednesday, the free speech organization noted that aside from chilling student expression, the school’s response “raises serious concerns under North Carolina law,” which requires “UNC System institutions to remain neutral” on political controversies of the day. 

After Orr released the statement, The Daily Tar Heel editors issued a lengthy apology. The editors said the April Fools’ Day edition was “a colossal, institutional failure.” The editors added, “As a predominantly white newsroom with a documented history of harmful reporting, we should have been thinking more about the communities we serve. We were not thinking of how our audience would be impacted by the issues that don’t affect the majority of us. There is no excuse for that.” 

The apology also listed several ways the paper plans to make amends, including keeping direct communication with the communities “hurt” by the paper, adding a professional news adviser, implementing diversity, equity, and inclusion training, conducting an internal and external review of how the satire edition was produced, and prohibiting any more satire articles for the remainder of the semester. In total, the letter uses variations of the word harm 14 times. 

One would hope that The Daily Tar Heel would not have imposed these restrictions on itself independently, but by framing poorly received newspaper articles as acts of immense “harm” and declaring a moratorium on satire, the paper is stifling speech on campus, not encouraging it. Of course, as an independent paper, The Daily Tar Heel is within its rights to respond (or not respond) to student criticisms of its April Fools’ issue however it chooses without university interference. 

On Friday, the university told FIRE that the administration was not investigating Hill After Hours or The Daily Tar Heel and that it did not mean to “chill the free expression rights of our campus community.” Clearly, the administration already has.

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DOGE, the Social Security Administration, and How Inferior Courts Should Treat S. Ct. Interim Orders

Some excerpts from the 88 pages of opinions in AFSCME v. Social Security Admin., decided today by the Fourth Circuit en banc, in an opinion by Judge Toby Heytens:

Three organizations sued to stop the Social Security Administration from giving U.S. DOGE Service personnel access to sensitive personal information about millions of Americans. The district court granted a preliminary injunction, which the Supreme Court stayed pending this appeal and any further Supreme Court review. We now vacate the current preliminary injunction and return the case to the district court for further proceedings….

On January 20, 2025, the President signed an executive order creating the U.S. DOGE Service and charging it with making government technology more efficient. DOGE personnel quickly made their way to the Social Security Administration and sought “unprecedented” access to agency systems, including non-anonymized personally identifiable information. A standoff ensued, and career officials resigned. A new acting administrator was installed and granted DOGE the sweeping access it sought.

Three organizations representing a combined seven million Americans sued to prevent DOGE from accessing their members’ personally identifiable information. When the case was filed and in the original preliminary injunction proceedings, plaintiffs’ theory of the case was not that DOGE had misused the information or disclosed it (accidentally or otherwise) to malicious actors. Instead, plaintiffs argued that handing over non-anonymized and highly sensitive information to DOGE was itself unlawful.

After hours of hearings and hundreds of pages of analysis, the district court issued the preliminary injunction we review here. The Supreme Court stayed that preliminary injunction and directed that the stay would remain in effect until the completion of all appellate review—including by the Supreme Court—of the district court’s order. We have jurisdiction to review the district court’s order ….

The court concluded that the plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged injury, for purposes of standing:

Like the district court, we conclude that disclosing plaintiffs’ members’ personally identifiable information to DOGE inflicts a harm that is a “close … analogue” to the common law tort of intrusion upon seclusion…. Intrusion upon seclusion is an “intentional[ ] intru[sion], physical[ ] or otherwise, upon the solitude or seclusion of another or his private affairs or concerns” that “would be highly offensive to a reasonable person.” The tort is not limited to entering someone’s house or peering through their windows. Rather, it includes “other form[s] of investigation or examination” of “private concerns,” including opening someone’s mail, going through their wallet, examining their bank account, or “compelling [them] by a forged court order to permit an inspection of [their] personal documents.” Second Restatement § 652B cmt. b. Intrusion upon seclusion does not require the tortfeasor to go on to misuse the information it learns or disseminate it to the public; instead, the unjustified intrusion upon the plaintiff’s privacy is the harm.

Much like rifling through someone’s wallet, bank account, or personal documents, granting unauthorized and unwarranted access to a person’s sensitive personal information is an intentional intrusion into “private affairs or concerns.” And that is what plaintiffs say happened here. According to plaintiffs, the Social Security Administration handed over their members’ most sensitive personal data to people (DOGE team members) who were not legally authorized to access it. Whether plaintiffs “would prevail in a lawsuit for common law invasion of privacy is irrelevant.” Instead, it is enough that the injury plaintiffs have identified “pose[s] the same kind of harm that common law courts recognize.”

But the court concluded that a preliminary injunction was unwarranted:

The role of a preliminary injunction is to protect the plaintiff from suffering new or additional irreparable harm between the time the preliminary injunction is entered and the case’s final resolution. And, like any other injunction, a preliminary injunction cannot reach back in time to prevent or undo irreparable harm that has already occurred. For those reasons, the key question here is whether a preliminary injunction will prevent plaintiffs from suffering new or additional irreparable harm while they litigate this case to final judgment.

What is more, not all harm—no matter how serious in the real world—is “irreparable” in a legal sense. Even a plaintiff who has a concrete injury for Article III standing purposes may only obtain the “extraordinary remedy” of a preliminary injunction if that injury cannot be remedied during the ordinary course of litigation. If there is even a “possibility” that “adequate compensatory or other corrective relief will be available at a later date,” a court should hesitate before concluding a plaintiff’s harm is “irreparable” for purposes of granting a preliminary injunction….

Applying those standards here, we conclude plaintiffs have not satisfied Winter‘s second factor.

We start by identifying the only theory of irreparable harm that is properly before us. The district court did not grant this preliminary injunction on the theory that plaintiffs’ members would be harmed by some downstream misuse or public disclosure of their personal data. See supra note 8. Instead, the irreparable harm on which the district court relied mirrors plaintiffs’ Article III injury: that DOGE violates plaintiffs’ members’ privacy by accessing their sensitive personal data without lawful authorization, and that privacy violation is “irreparable” in a legal sense.

The difficulty with that argument is that there are two forms of corrective relief that may be available down the line: money damages and a reparative permanent injunction….

Finally, the elephant in the room. As noted earlier, the role of a preliminary injunction is to protect a plaintiff from suffering further irreparable harm while the case is litigated. But because of the particular procedural posture of this case, the district court’s preliminary injunction cannot currently protect anyone from anything and no decision we issue today has the power to change that fact. The Supreme Court stayed the preliminary injunction, and the preliminary injunction will resume in force—if ever—only after events that would post-date our decision and over which we have no control … (directing that the stay will remain in effect “pending the disposition of the appeal in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and disposition of a petition for a writ of certiorari, if such a writ is timely sought“)…

Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson, joined by Judges Paul Niemeyer, Steven Agee, and Allison Rushing concurred in the judgment:

I concur in the judgment and believe that the Supreme Court’s issuance of the stay in this case is by far the most salient factor dictating our denial of the preliminary injunction. To conclude otherwise would relegate the Supreme Court’s stay order to a shallow exercise. That is a course only the most audacious inferior court would seek to follow….

Judge Julius Richardson, joined by Judges J. Harvie Wilkinson, Paul Niemeyer, Steven Agee, Marvin Quattlebaum, and Allison Rushing, also concurred in the judgment:

Article III of the Constitution sets up two categories of courts: “one supreme Court” and other “inferior Courts.” U.S. Const. art. III, § 1. This Court is an inferior one. This judicial hierarchy commands vertical stare decisis—when the Supreme Court speaks, inferior courts must listen. Of course, many cases feature novel legal or factual issues that require inferior courts to exercise independent judgment. But in other cases, the Supreme Court makes the answer easy. This is one such case.

In this appeal, we review a district court’s grant of a preliminary injunction against a government agency. The merits involve several interesting—and challenging—legal issues. But the outcome of this appeal should be neither interesting nor challenging. That’s because the Supreme Court already answered the interim question before us in this very case. So this case is “squarely controlled” by the Supreme Court’s earlier interim order granting a stay. Following the Supreme Court’s direction, I would vacate the preliminary injunction.

Fortunately, our en banc Court reaches that result today. But along the way, the Court makes several unforced errors….

Judge Marvin Quattlebaum, joined by Judges Julius Richardson and Allison Rushing, had another concurrence in the judgment:

Sometimes, appellate judges can forget what the real world of practicing law is like. This is one of those times. While I agree with the majority’s disposition, I also agree with Judge Richardson on the standard required for preliminary injunctions. But I write separately only to address one of the reasons the majority gives for rejecting what Judge Richardson calls the “multiplicative problem.” The majority suggests that likelihood of success on the merits cannot be effectively assessed in an objective, numerical way. In fact, it quotes a law review article stating that “[c]ognitive limitations leave humans able only weakly to judge likelihood on any sort of scale.” In my view, it’d be a mistake to abrogate American Federation of Teachers v. Bessent (4th Cir. 2025) [as the majority does], because we don’t think judges can effectively assess likelihood of success in numerical terms. Why do I say that? Because I know firsthand that lawyers around the country do this very thing every day. And if lawyers regularly assess probability of success numerically, judges—who have more time and resources than most lawyers—should be able to do it too…. [For more on the majority’s reasons for abrogating AFT, see the full opinion. -EV]

Judge Robert King, joined by Judges Roger Gregory, James Andrew Wynn, Stephanie Thacker, DeAndrea Gist Benjamin, and Nicole Berner, concurred and dissented in part:

When the district court issued its preliminary injunction, the facts then known to the district court were bad enough. The Social Security Administration (“SSA”) had abruptly opened all its records to affiliates of the President’s then-new Department of Government Efficiency (“DOGE”) despite the DOGE affiliates’ lack of vetting, lack of training, and lack of any demonstrated need for the vast and extremely sensitive personal information that fills the SSA records.

The facts now known are much worse!

As SSA recently revealed in a “Notice of Corrections to the Record,” a significant portion of the information provided by SSA and the other defendants in the preliminary injunction proceedings was patently false. The Notice of Corrections confesses repeated violations of the district court’s prior temporary restraining order (the “TRO”) and multiple instances of the DOGE affiliates’ misuse and mishandling of SSA records. Moreover, the Notice of Corrections belies SSA’s entire justification for opening its records to the DOGE affiliates—that the DOGE affiliates are regular SSA employees working under SSA’s supervision, in accordance with its rules, and on its behalf—by exposing that the DOGE affiliates are actually rogue actors whose activities are hidden from SSA itself.

After receiving SSA’s Notice of Corrections and on the motion of the plaintiffs, the district court promptly corrected the record on appeal. That leaves our en banc Court with at least two legitimate options for disposing of this appeal. We could (1) assess the merits of the preliminary injunction on the basis of the corrected record or (2) remand, without assessing the preliminary injunction’s merits, so that the district court may decide anew whether to award injunctive relief on the basis of the corrected record and subsequent developments.

I would pursue option (1)—assessing the merits of the preliminary injunction on the basis of the corrected record—and I would thereby affirm the preliminary injunction without hesitation. Candidly, I would affirm even if it were the erroneous original record that controls the analysis. The very able district judge acted with exceptional thoughtfulness in issuing the preliminary injunction, committing no legal error or otherwise abusing her discretion.

Regrettably, however, my friend Judge Heytens pursues neither option (1), option (2), nor any other legitimate option for disposing of this appeal. Instead, in Part IV of his opinion, Judge Heytens improperly disregards the corrected record and wrongly relies on the erroneous original record to assess the preliminary injunction’s merits. Compounding that misstep, Judge Heytens then unjustifiably rules that the district court erred in crediting the plaintiffs’ showing of irreparable harm, such that the preliminary injunction must be vacated….

Judge Wynn wrote separately, joined by Judges King, Thacker, Benjamin, and Berner:

I write to voice my disagreement with the separate opinions of my fine concurring colleagues Judge Wilkinson and Judge Richardson. Together, they advocate a step that judges need not take, and in my view, should not take. That’s because by treating the Supreme Court’s short interim order in Trump v. Boyle as setting precedent, they blur a line the Supreme Court itself has carefully preserved—the line between provisional relief and precedential lawmaking….

Jack E. Starcher (DoJ) represents the government.

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UNC Newspaper Halts Satire and Implements DEI Training After Backlash Over April Fools’ Issue


04.10.26-v2 | Chad Robertson/Dreamstime

The Daily Tar Heel, the student-run newspaper at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC), announced it would stop producing satire articles for the rest of the semester after receiving backlash from students and school administration over its April Fools’ Day issue. 

On April Fools’ Day, the paper published a series of satirical articles, including one with a subheadline that said the paper had rebranded as The Daily Woke Heel. Others read “UNC brings back DEI—for whites,” and “A new way forward for the Dean Dome: a two-stadium solution.” Another, published on the website, said “Satire: Trump orders ALE in Chapel Hill to be replaced with ICE agents.” The jokes did not go over well with some students, and the paper’s editor in chief immediately issued an apology. She wrote that the paper heard students’ “critiques and outrage.” She added, the paper’s “insensitive decisions and oversights” were “made by a newsroom and leadership team that undoubtedly exist in positions of power and privilege on this campus.”

That wasn’t the only April Fools’ Day attempt at comedy that didn’t land with some students. The day before, Hill After Hours, a registered student group separate from the paper, posted a TikTok skit in which a white student walked through the south part of the school’s campus flanked by “bodyguards,” acting as though it were a dangerous, foreign land. “The sketch is dripping with mockery for the soft bigotry of exoticizing ordinary places,” wrote Marie McMullan, an attorney at the Freedom for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE). Still, some students took offense to this video as well, and it was taken down

On April 6, Senior Vice Provost James Orr released a statement calling the April Fools issue “highly inappropriate and offensive.” He acknowledged that the university had no authority over the independent paper but wanted to be “very clear, however, that words matter and while the pieces were meant to represent satire, they were harmful and we unequivocally condemn them.” He also said the school’s Student Affairs office would investigate the Hill After Hours incident, “to determine more information about how and by whom the video was authorized and produced as well as next steps needed to address concerns.”

FIRE called for UNC Chapel Hill to retract this statement and to end the investigation into Hill After Hours. On Wednesday, the free speech organization noted that aside from chilling student expression, the school’s response “raises serious concerns under North Carolina law,” which requires “UNC System institutions to remain neutral” on political controversies of the day. 

After Orr released the statement, The Daily Tar Heel editors issued a lengthy apology. The editors said the April Fools’ Day edition was “a colossal, institutional failure.” The editors added, “As a predominantly white newsroom with a documented history of harmful reporting, we should have been thinking more about the communities we serve. We were not thinking of how our audience would be impacted by the issues that don’t affect the majority of us. There is no excuse for that.” 

The apology also listed several ways the paper plans to make amends, including keeping direct communication with the communities “hurt” by the paper, adding a professional news adviser, implementing diversity, equity, and inclusion training, conducting an internal and external review of how the satire edition was produced, and prohibiting any more satire articles for the remainder of the semester. In total, the letter uses variations of the word harm 14 times. 

One would hope that The Daily Tar Heel would not have imposed these restrictions on itself independently, but by framing poorly received newspaper articles as acts of immense “harm” and declaring a moratorium on satire, the paper is stifling speech on campus, not encouraging it. Of course, as an independent paper, The Daily Tar Heel is within its rights to respond (or not respond) to student criticisms of its April Fools’ issue however it chooses without university interference. 

On Friday, the university told FIRE that the administration was not investigating Hill After Hours or The Daily Tar Heel and that it did not mean to “chill the free expression rights of our campus community.” Clearly, the administration already has.

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Operation Eternal Darkness Threatens Iran Ceasefire Deal


Christian and Robby talk about Operation Epic Fury | Illustration: Adani Samat

Robby Soave and Christian Britschgi play a guessing game involving metal music and military operations before they dive into an update on the ceasefire that never really ceased anything from happening in Iran and the Persian Gulf.

0:00—Robby was pretending to be Christian.

3:51—The ceasefire that never was and Trump Always Chickens Out

20:03—Is it a metal music album or a military operation?

29:53—Christian finally got an Apple MacBook.

39:40—The culture wars always come around.

44:02—Pokémon is so back.

52:25— The Substance and how young actors look

1:10:14—COVID-19 cultural impressions

1:16:47— Christian’s thoughts on Ukraine

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