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Trump adopts an unprecedented approach to corporate affairs. The Arab states remain silent while other nations around the world denounce the conditions in Gaza. And the viral saga of a woman on the falling fall of her psychiatrist issued an existential question about AI chatbots.
Here’s what you need to know today.
Donald Trump has checked his own businesses for decades. Now, as president, he plays an increasingly active role in the affairs of individual societies – and several of them meet his requests. This represents a rupture with previous administrations which may have been reluctant or incapable, politically, to exert pressure similar to companies. Even some of Trump’s opponents see the appeal of his efforts.
In recent months, Coca-Cola has said that it would produce soda with cane sugar in the United States, two major semiconductor manufacturers have agreed to give the government a reduction in their sales to China. And Paramount paid millions to settle the allegations that Trump has taken from the “60 minutes” of CBS, a few days before the administration approached the fusion of the media conglomerate with Skydance Media.
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Trump has not avoided making explicit warnings either. During the last week only, he called to Lip-Bu Tan, the CEO of the Intel fleas manufacturer, to resign (although overthrowing lessons a few days later after a visit to the White House) and declared that Goldman Sachs should dismiss his chief economist because of the drop in the company on his prices.
“It is so different from the first time,” said a republican lobbyist whose company represents several fortune companies 500, how Trump’s actions differ from his first mandate. “He acts just as a businessman.”
A progressive strategist who said he “disagreed with the guy on almost all problems” admits that Democrats could remove a page from Trump’s strategy and “adapt to the changing presidency” to face businesses.
Fear of reprisals have companies that make strategic decisions to renounce any type of legal dispute to its methods. In the longer term, Ryan Bourne, president of the libertarian thinking group, the Cato Institute, predicts that Trump’s buffoonery could give way to a less effective economy. “Where he can drive is companies, rather than focusing on value creation, are now looking to play more and more politicians,” said Bourne. Read the full story here.
With the death of famine and the assembly of Israeli bombing in Gaza, countries around the world have become more vocal by criticizing Israel for its conduct and committing to recognize a Palestinian state. But the Arab states have notably been much less vocal, leaving the Palestinians, their supporters and certain angry analysts. “The Arabs take a nap,” said Fawaz Gerges, professor of international relations at the London School of Economics, adding that the leaders “buried their heads in the sand.”
There have been small signs of support. For example, the Arab states have participated in aid paratroopers and food convoys in Gaza, but the Palestinians say that it is far from being sufficient to ward off imminent famine; And Egypt and Qatar have mediated talks between Israel, Hamas and the United States, but they did not lead to the end of the conflict.
Experts say that the links of the Arab Gulf States with Israel have more to do with politics than public attitudes. Several states are hosting American military bases that say analysts say they help protect them from Iran’s regional rival. And access to the technological sector of Israel was a draw for certain states. Meanwhile, the United States and Israel have made plans for Arab countries to accept refugees from Gaza. But fearing renewed Palestinian activism and the accusations of bypassing ethnic cleaning, these Arab nations rejected the idea. Read the full story here.
The Ohio State University was condemned to resolve by mediation the legal proceedings filed by former students who claim that Dr. Richard Strauss attacked them, mainly under the guise of doctors, while he was an employee of the school in the mid -1970s at the end of the 1990s. The university still faces five active proceedings of 236 men alleging that the school did not protect them.
US district judge Michael H. Watson made the mediation order on Monday and returned business to Layn Phillips, who was mediaking the proceedings against the state of Michigan by some 200 female athletes who were sexually abused by Doctor Sportif Larry Nassar.
An independent survey in 2019 concluded that Strauss had sexually abused at least 177 athletes and male students, and that coaches and administrators knew it for two decades but failed to stop it. The university said it has already paid $ 60 million in settlement money. Read the full story here.
While AI chatbots become a regular tool in people’s lives, recent incidents have highlighted the way the plunging nature of these robots can influence the feeling of users.
For Kendra Hilty, a user of Tiktok whose saga has the idea of falling in love with his psychiatrist has become viral, her chatbots are like confidants. But “I do my best to keep them in check,” she told me in an email this week. However, stories such as Hilty’s provoke a widespread discourse on the use of AI chatbots for validation, which is why I explored the growing concerns of mental health experts Regarding food delusions on AI, as well as the way technological companies have struggled to fight against the problem. – AngelaCulture & Trends Reporter
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