‘Car crash no one can look away from': Nicolle Wallace on Trump and Elon Musk's feud
Tyler Pager, New York Times White House Correspondent joins Nicolle Wallace on Deadline White House to discuss the ongoing public break up of Donald Trump and his 'First Buddy', Elon Musk, and the potential that these two individuals being a war could have on the day to day business of the United States.

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CNET
2 hours ago
- CNET
Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers for June 8, #728
Looking for the most recent Connections answers? Click here for today's Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands puzzles. Today's NYT Connections puzzle could be tricky. The purple category is one of those "sounds like" groups, that can be really tough to figure out. Read on for clues and today's Connections answers. The Times now has a Connections Bot, like the one for Wordle. Go there after you play to receive a numeric score and to have the program analyze your answers. Players who are registered with the Times Games section can now nerd out by following their progress, including number of puzzles completed, win rate, number of times they nabbed a perfect score and their win streak. Read more: Hints, Tips and Strategies to Help You Win at NYT Connections Every Time Hints for today's Connections groups Here are four hints for the groupings in today's Connections puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group, to the tough (and sometimes bizarre) purple group. Yellow group hint: Keep at it. Green group hint: Think Wall Street animals. Blue group hint: Online encyclopedia subheads. Purple group hint: $$$. Answers for today's Connections groups Yellow group: Persist. Green group: Animal metaphors in economics. Blue group: Sidebar info on a person's Wikipedia page. Purple group: Homophones of slang for money. Read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here Are the Most Popular Letters Used in English Words What are today's Connections answers? The completed NYT Connections puzzle for June 8, 2025, #728. NYT/Screenshot by CNET The yellow words in today's Connections The theme is persist. The four answers are hold, last, stand and stay. The green words in today's Connections The theme is animal metaphors in economics. The four answers are bear, bull, dove and hawk. The blue words in today's Connections The theme is sidebar info on a person's Wikipedia page. The four answers are born, education, occupation and spouse. The purple words in today's Connections The theme is homophones of slang for money. The four answers are bred, cache, doe and lute.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Trump Confronted Musk in Private Before Their Blowout Public Fight
This week, president Donald Trump and Elon Musk's bad blood burst into public view — but apparently, it had been brewing behind the scenes for some time. In a massive exposé looking behind the curtain of the year's biggest breakup, the New York Times revealed that the pair was already squabbling immediately after Musk's now-infamous farewell party — yes, the one that Musk showed up to with a mysterious black eye and a bizarre excuse. According to White House insiders who requested that the NYT keep them anonymous, Trump learned just ahead of Musk's now-infamous final Oval Office meeting last week that aviator Jared Isaacman, the billionaire's pick to lead NASA, had in recent years been a big-time donor to Democrats. Though many donations are public and easily accessible on databases like OpenSecrets, the information in that file was apparently news to the president. After playing nice during Musk's televised farewell, Trump apparently made his displeasure with the situation known. During the confrontation, Trump read the names out loud — which names, we don't know, because the NYT didn't reveal them — while reportingly shaking his head. This wasn't good, he told Musk. Attempting to defend his pick, Musk insisted that Isaacman's donations could be spun positively as proof that Trump, himself a former registered Democrat, was willing to hire people from different political backgrounds. The president, however, wasn't buying it, and suggested it showed only that the well-heeled SpaceX customer was a turncoat. Isaacman's nomination was ultimately rescinded after that tense exchange at the end of May. And according to the NYT's unnamed insiders, that debacle was the tipping point that took his increasing frustrations with the president to nuclear levels. Within just a few days, Musk began posting about the "abomination" that he consider's Trump's 2025 budget and tax proposal to be — and added in an apparent pedophilia allegation for good measure. The president, to his end, responded publicly to Musk's barbs the only way he knows how: with cruelty and aplomb. Along with threatening to cancel SpaceX's NASA contracts, Trump allegedly, per more reporting from the New York Times, decided to sell the cherry-red Tesla he purchased in March "as a show of support and confidence" for Musk. More on the Musk-Trump drama: Elon and Trump's Breakup Results In Hilarious Consequences For Dogecoin
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Why Wall Street's Dr. Doom now wants to be Dr. Boom
Nouriel Roubini, who's been known as "Dr. Doom" for 17 years, is feeling more upbeat. The economist has scaled back his recession call and thinks the US is headed for an investment boom. He told BI there are three things that have driven his newfound optimism. Wall Street has been calling him "Dr. Doom" for 17 years, but Nouriel Roubini — the economist famous for his persistently bearish and frequently dystopian takes on the world economy — is sounding surprisingly positive lately. He's rescinded his earlier call for a recession, and now sees a US tech and artificial intelligence investment boom unfolding that will uplift the economy through the rest of this decade. By 2030, Roubini thinks economic growth in the US will double from around 2% to 4%, while productivity growth surges from around 1.9% to 3%. The stock market is also likely to climb higher, he told Business Insider in an interview, predicting the S&P 500 would see high single-digit percentage growth in 2025, on par with its historical return. It's a sharp turnaround from the gloomy forecasts he' is known for. Roubini told BI the nickname started to stick in 2008, when the New York Times referred to him as "Dr. Doom" after he correctly called the Great Financial Crisis, he told BI. "Even before, I always said I'm not Dr. Doom and I'm Dr. Realist, first of all," Roubini said. He said that he's made numerous forecasts that were more bullish than the consensus throughout the years when the evidence lines up. "So I don't know why people think that I'm always Dr. Doom. It's not the case." His outlook, though, has brightened considerably since 2022. Back then, he appeared on TV and penned op-eds warning of a coming stagflationary debt crisis. At the time, he described the turmoil he saw looming as an all-in-one financial crisis involving spiraling debt levels, soaring inflation, and a severe recession. Roubini told BI there are a few things that have gotten him to change his tune. Roubini says he began to hear the murmurs of the AI revolution well before ChatGPT went viral at the end of 2022. In his 2022 book, "Megathreats," he acknowledged the potential for artificial intelligence to significantly boost economic growth and serve as a major tailwind for markets. That's become a reality way faster than Roubini expected, and a major reason he's become more bullish, he told BI. He believes the economy could start to reap the growth and productivity benefits of AI in the next several years, particularly as humanoid robots enter the mainstream. A breakthrough in fusion energy would be another bullish force for the economy, Roubini said. Fusion energy hasn't been achieved yet, but tech firms are pouring vast sums of money into making it happen. Chevron and Google contributed to a more than $150 million funding round this week for TAE Technologies, a fusion energy company that plans to have a working prototype power plant by the early 2030s. Type One Energy, another fusion energy firm, also plans to roll out a power plant by the middle of the next decade. "We're not in an AI winter anymore. We had the fusion winter for 40 years. We're not anymore," Roubini said, pointing to the stagnation in tech and fusion energy development is the past. "Now it's happening." President Donald Trump's tariffs may not be as harmful to the US economy as some investors think, Roubini says. He thinks it's more likely that markets will throw a tantrum and force Trump to walk back his most aggressive policies. That's already happened a few times this year. Roubini pointed to sharp sell-offs in the bond market that preceded Trump's 90-day pause of his "Liberation Day" tariffs, and the softening of his tone regarding firing Jerome Powell. "That means the bond vigilantes are the most powerful people in the world," Roubini said. "The instincts might be very bad, but then, markets are unforgiving," he added of policymakers. Roubini speculates that tariffs on China, for instance, could wind up somewhere around 39%, well-below the 145% tariff rate Trump proposed earlier in the year. Meanwhile, AI, quantum computing, and other tech advancements in the US can more than offset the impact of the trade war, Roubini said. Tariffs are expected to drag down GDP growth by 0.06% a year through 2035, according to estimates from the Congressional Budget Office. It's a fraction of the 2 percentage point increase in growth Roubini expects to see by the end of the decade. Roubini now pegs the odds of a recession to just around 25%. Even if the US enters a downturn this year, Roubini says he expects it to be shallow and short, as the Fed can cut interest rates to boost the economy, while tech powers growth over the long-run. That's not to say Dr. Doom has shed all of his bearish views. Roubini says many of the things he feared several years ago — stagflation, spiraling government debt levels, and rising geopolitical conflict — still loom. He rattled off a list of potential risks the US could conceivably face in the future: migration controls fueling stagflation in the economy, the US dollar collapsing in value, and China and the US not reaching a trade agreement and seeing an escalating cold war, to name a few scenarios. "So there's plenty of stuff in the world that can go wrong," he said. Read the original article on Business Insider