
Letters to the Editor: Argument that food bank needed a luxury car for work is specious
To the editor: Brian Weaver, chief executive of the Food Bank of Southern California, claims that the Tesla he bought with food bank money was for work rather than personal use ('Leaders of California food bank spent millions on cars, Vegas trips, home renovations, suit says,' April 8). None of my experience with nonprofit organizations, whether paid, volunteer or academic, would provide a good excuse for a nonprofit group to buy any brand of luxury car.
Mary Stewart, Wilmington

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Axios
an hour ago
- Axios
Musk has money, but Trump has power
Elon Musk might have hundreds of billions of dollars and a social media megaphone, but President Trump's power over the levers of government may put Musk's business empire at much more immediate risk. The big picture: Virtually everything Musk does has huge regulatory exposure, from cars to spaceflight to neural implants. In a government where norms are already out the window, it would take relatively little for Trump to bring the weight of regulatory burden to bear on Musk's enterprise. What they're saying: " You just have to understand that if you own Tesla, it will be difficult to sleep at night as investors can scrutinize it from a fundamental standpoint, but also a headline standpoint," said David Wagner, head of equities and portfolio manager at Aptus Capital Advisors, in a commentary Friday. Zoom out: Trump, thus far, as has played the whole thing relatively cool, saying he doesn't really care if Elon turns on him. But he's also operating from a position of strength, as he clearly knows — thus, the threat on Truth Social to cancel all of Musk's government contracts. When YouGov polled more than 3,800 Americans on that question Thursday, those with an opinion supported ending Musk's contracts by a 2-1 margin. Friday morning, Trump had no hesitation about telling many of Washington's top political reporters he didn't care to speak to Musk — even amid reports Musk very much wanted to speak with him. How it works: There's a laundry list of ways Trump could squeeze Musk: Terminating contracts for space launches, Starlink Internet access and the like. Ending support for electric vehicle purchases, and the charging infrastructure to power those cars. More regulatory oversight of everything from Tesla's self-driving algorithms to Neuralink's implants. Further housecleaning of the loyalists seeded throughout the government, like the move to withdraw the NASA nominee who was a key Musk ally. The ultimate lever: Security clearances, a favorite Trump tool, and a question that has lingered around Musk for years. What to watch: How Musk's public position evolves in the coming days, given how incendiary his comments were Thursday and how much Trump appreciates deference.


Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
The Bulletin June 6, 2025
The rundown: Senior Russian security official Dmitry Medvedev poked fun at the explosive war of words between U.S. President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk, offering to mediate peace between the two political allies. Read his take on the Trump-Musk fallout. Why it matters: "We are ready to facilitate the conclusion of a peace deal between D and E for a reasonable fee and to accept Starlink shares as payment," Medvedev, a former president and prime minister of Russia, posted to X. The explosive feud between Trump and Musk marks a dramatic shift in their once-close relationship, as the latter has been one of the president's most prominent allies and donors. Musk and Trump began publicly feuding after the Tesla CEO ramped up his criticisms of the president's "Big, Beautiful Bill," which he described as a "disgusting abomination" and condemned for increasing the budget deficit. Meanwhile, Trump took to Truth Social to declare that he will terminate Musk's companies' governmental subsidies and contracts. Read more in-depth coverage: Could Elon Musk Be Deported By Donald Trump? What to Know TL/DR: His comments come at a time when Trump is trying to broker a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine to end Moscow's ongoing invasion. What happens now? It's unclear how the Trump-Musk feud will continue to unfold in the coming days and weeks. The "One Big, Beautiful Bill Act" has passed the House and is now before the Senate. Musk's criticism could embolden fiscally cautious senators to push for changes. Deeper reading Russia's Medvedev Mocks Fight Between Donald Trump and Elon Musk
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Dow Jones Futures: Palantir Leads Buys As S&P 500 Nears Highs; What Matters For Tesla
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq are rallying toward record highs. Palantir and eToro are in buy areas. Tesla investors should focus on the TSLA chart.