
Trump's Big, Beautiful Bill sparks panic among MAGA voters: ‘We'd lose everything'
President Trump's proposed $3.8 trillion tax cut bill, dubbed his "big, beautiful bill," is sparking alarm among his supporters due to potential Medicaid cuts. These cuts, estimated to impact millions, could jeopardize healthcare access for vulnerable populations, including children and individuals with disabilities. Concerns are mounting as families fear losing essential support for life-saving treatments.
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Voters Who Re-Elected Donald Trump Now Sound the Alarm
A Missouri Mother's Plea: 'This Isn't a Luxury'
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CBO Warns That Cuts Could Impact Millions
Some Republicans Express Quiet Concern
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As US president Donald Trump champions his latest legislative push, a sweeping $3.8 trillion in tax cuts, he calls his 'big, beautiful bill', now panic is quietly taking hold in the very communities that helped re-elect him in 2024 election, as per a report.One of the main concerns is deep cuts to Medicaid that many Trump voters say could cost them their homes, their health care, and even their loved ones, according to the Stitch Snitches report.Among those voicing out their concerns is Courtney Leader, a 36-year-old mother from Missouri, a deep-red state where Trump defeated former vice president Kamala Harris by 18 points, according to the report. Leader isn't a political operative or an activist, but she's just a mom trying to keep her daughter, Cyrina, alive, as per the Stitch Snitches report.ALSO READ: California's AB5 Law under fire, nail techs sue state over worker classification – what the law states? She explained that, 'This is not a luxury,' adding, 'I do not have my daughter enrolled on Medicaid so we can have fancy things. I have her enrolled so we can keep her alive and keep her at home, which I think is the best option for her,' as quoted in the report.Cyrina relies on a specialised feeding formula that costs over $1,500 a month, which is more than the family's mortgage and grocery bills combined, and without Medicaid, Leader says there's no way they could cover the cost, according to the Stitch Snitches report.Leader asked, 'Who's going to protect us when they can't get paperwork done in time and we lose coverage for a month or two?," and added, "I'm worried that the red tape is going to affect our Medicaid because of just the oversight burdens. And that as a result, I'm going to lose my daughter, because she's lost coverage before,' as quoted in the report.She has even written a letter to communicated about her concerns to Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Missouri), a Trump supporter and key defender of the bill, she pleaded with him to consider the human cost, saying, 'Without Medicaid, we would lose everything — our home, our vehicles, and eventually, our daughter,' quoted Stitch Snitches.ALSO READ: Pokrovsk in peril? Tensions surge as 111,000 Russian troops gather near Ukraine's frontline hotspot The concern comes as the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated that Trump's proposed bill could push 16 million Americans off Medicaid by 2034, according to the report. While Trump and Republican leaders insist the cuts only target 'waste, fraud, and abuse,' the CBO's analysis highlighted that the vulnerable populations—including children, seniors, and people with disabilities, will be directly impacted if the bill becomes law in its current form, according to the report.According to the Stitch Snitches report, the proposed Medicaid cuts have also led to concern among some GOP senators, who fear that millions of constituents could lose coverage.It's a $3.8 trillion tax cut package that also includes significant cuts to programmes like Medicaid and food assistance.Many families, especially those with children, elderly, or disabled members, depend on Medicaid for life-saving care. Cuts could mean losing coverage or access to services, as per the report.
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Time of India
27 minutes ago
- Time of India
AI is starting to wear down democracy
Academy Empower your mind, elevate your skills Since the explosion of generative artificial intelligence over the last two years, the technology has demeaned or defamed opponents and -- for the first time, officials and experts said -- begun to have an impact on election and easy to use, AI tools have generated a flood of fake photos and videos of candidates or supporters saying things they did not or appearing in places they were not -- all spread with the relative impunity of anonymity technology has amplified social and partisan divisions and bolstered anti-government sentiment, especially on the far right, which has surged in recent elections in Germany, Poland and Romania, a Russian influence operation using AI tainted the first round of last year's presidential election, according to government officials. A court there nullified that result, forcing a new vote last month and bringing a new wave of fabrications. It was the first major election in which AI played a decisive role in the outcome. It is unlikely to be the the technology improves, officials and experts warn, it is undermining faith in electoral integrity and eroding the political consensus necessary for democratic societies to Botan, a professor at the National University of Political Studies and Public Administration in Romania's capital, Bucharest, said there was no question that the technology was already "being used for obviously malevolent purposes" to manipulate voters."These mechanics are so sophisticated that they truly managed to get a piece of content to go very viral in a very limited amount of time," she said. "What can compete with this?"In the unusually concentrated wave of elections that took place in 2024, AI was used in more than 80%, according to the International Panel on the Information Environment, an independent organization of scientists based in documented 215 instances of AI in elections that year, based on government statements, research and news reports. Already this year, AI has played a role in at least nine more major elections, from Canada to all uses were nefarious. In 25% of the cases the panel surveyed, candidates used AI for themselves, relying on it to translate speeches and platforms into local dialects and to identify blocs of voters to India, the practice of cloning candidates became commonplace -- "not only to reach voters but also to motivate party workers," according to a study by the Center for Media Engagement at the University of Texas at the same time, however, dozens of deepfakes -- photographs or videos that re-create real people -- used AI to clone voices of candidates or news broadcasts. According to the International Panel on the Information Environment's survey, AI was characterized as having a harmful role in 69% of the were numerous malign examples in last year's U.S. presidential election, prompting public warnings by officials at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and the Trump , the agencies have dismantled the teams that led those efforts."In 2024, the potential benefits of these technologies were largely eclipsed by their harmful misuse," said Inga Kristina Trauthig, a professor at Florida International University, who led the international panel's most intensive deceptive uses of AI have come from autocratic countries seeking to interfere in elections outside their borders, like Russia, China and Iran. The technology has allowed them to amplify support for candidates more pliant to their worldview -- or simply to discredit the idea of democratic governance itself as an inferior political Russian campaign tried to stoke anti-Ukraine sentiment before last month's presidential election in Poland, where many Ukrainian refugees have relocated. It created fake videos that suggested the Ukrainians were planning attacks to disrupt the previous elections, foreign efforts were cumbersome and costly. They relied on workers in troll farms to generate accounts and content on social media, often using stilted language and cultural AI, these efforts can be done at a speed and on a scale that were unimaginable when broadcast media and newspapers were the main sources of political Nazari, a researcher with the Alliance 4 Europe, an organization that studies digital threats to democracies, said this year's elections in Germany and Poland showed for the first time how effective the technology had become for foreign campaigns as well as domestic political parties."AI will have a significant impact on democracy going forward," he in commercially available tools like Midjourney's image maker and Google's new AI audio-video generator, Veo, have made it even harder to distinguish fabrications from reality -- especially at a swiping the AI chatbot and image generator developed by Elon Musk, will readily reproduce images of popular figures, including tools have made it harder for governments, companies and researchers to identify and trace increasingly sophisticated AI, "you had to pick between scale or quality -- quality coming from human troll farms, essentially, and scale coming from bots that could give you that but were low-quality," said Isabelle Frances-Wright, director of technology and society with the Institute for Strategic Dialogue. 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Researchers at the University of Notre Dame found last year that inauthentic accounts generated by AI tools could readily evade detection on eight major social media platforms: LinkedIn, Mastodon, Reddit, TikTok, X and Meta's three platforms: Facebook, Instagram and companies leading the wave of generative AI products also have policies against manipulative 2024, OpenAI disrupted five influence operations aimed at voters in Rwanda, the United States, India, Ghana and the European Union during its parliamentary races, according to the company's month, the company disclosed that it had detected a Russian influence operation that used ChatGPT during Germany's election in February. In one instance, the operation created a bot account on X that amassed 27,000 followers and posted content in support of the far-right party, Alternative for Germany, or AfD. 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Georgescu, facing a criminal investigation, was barred from running again, clearing the way for another nationalist candidate, George Simion. A similar torrent of manipulated content appeared, including the fake video that made Trump appear to criticize the country's current leaders, according to researchers from the Bulgarian-Romanian Observatory of Digital Dan, the centrist mayor of Bucharest, prevailed in a second round of voting May European Union has opened an investigation into whether TikTok did enough to restrict the torrent of manipulative activity and disinformation on the platform. It is also investigating the platform's role in election campaigns in Ireland and statements, TikTok has claimed that it moved quickly to take down posts that violated its policies. In two weeks before the second round of voting in Romania, it said, it removed more than 7,300 posts, including ones generated by AI but not identified as such. It declined to comment beyond those Hansen, a founder of CivAI, a nonprofit that studies the abilities and dangers of artificial intelligence, said he was concerned about more than just the potential for deepfakes to fool voters. AI, he warned, is so muddling the public debate that people are becoming disillusioned."The pollution of the information ecosystem is going to be one of the most difficult things to overcome," he said. "And I'm not really sure there's much of a way back from that."
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Business Standard
36 minutes ago
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First Post
40 minutes ago
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