SHAMBLES
you all know what I'm talking about.
My head has been exploding with Tinnitus
but that is nought compared to Trump and Elon
TIME TO IMPEACH TRUMP IS HERE
then throw Project 2025 under the bus
NOTHING can be worse than this
GOP prove there is one man sane enough to Pass the Majority
As Putin is laughing up his Kilt at you, as they used to say
and Donald Where's Your Trousers
These are results for donald where's your trousers
Search instead for donald whwres yir trousesers
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Trump says Musk ‘lost his mind’ after billionaire suggests he would like to make amends with president – live
Trump tells ABC he’s ‘not particularly’ interested in reconciling with Elon Musk, who appeared to say making peace would be in the best interest of the US
- US-China trade meeting expected within seven days, White House adviser says
- 'You mean the man who has lost his mind?' Trump says he's 'not particularly' interested in speaking to Musk – ABC News
- No plans for Trump call with Musk on Friday, White House source says
- University of Michigan using undercover investigators to surveil student Gaza protesters
- Musk suggests 'making peace' with Trump would benefit US
- Rubio imposes sanctions on four ICC judges for ‘targeting’ US and Israel
- Judge blocks Trump’s ban on Harvard’s foreign students from entering the US
- What we know so far on Trump and Musk’s fallout
- Opening summary

'You mean the man who has lost his mind?' Trump says he's 'not particularly' interested in speaking to Musk – ABC News
In a phone interview this morning, hours after his blistering exchange with Elon Musk, Donald Trump sounded remarkably unconcerned about their feud, according to ABC News.
Speaking on a phone call this morning shortly before 7am ET, ABC asked him about reports he had a call scheduled with Musk for later in the day.
“You mean the man who has lost his mind?” he asked, saying he was “not particularly” interested in talking to him right now.
He said Musk wants to talk to him, but he’s not ready to talk to Musk.
US-China trade meeting expected within seven days, White House adviser says
The planned meeting between US and Chinese officials on trade is expected to take place within seven days, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said this morning, after Donald Trump and Xi Jinping spoke yesterday.
'You mean the man who has lost his mind?' Trump says he's 'not particularly' interested in speaking to Musk – ABC News
In a phone interview this morning, hours after his blistering exchange with Elon Musk, Donald Trump sounded remarkably unconcerned about their feud, according to ABC News.
Speaking on a phone call this morning shortly before 7am ET, ABC asked him about reports he had a call scheduled with Musk for later in the day.
“You mean the man who has lost his mind?” he asked, saying he was “not particularly” interested in talking to him right now.
He said Musk wants to talk to him, but he’s not ready to talk to Musk.
What’s more, Reuters is reporting that Donald Trump is “not interested” in speaking to Elon Musk, citing a White House source with knowledge of the matter.
As we just reported, Donald Trump and his one-time close ally billionaire Elon Musk are now not expected to talk today, despite efforts by White House aides to get a truce after the spectacular (and very public) implosion of their relationship yesterday.
A White House official told Reuters that no call was planned for today after a White House official had earlier said earlier that the two men would speak.
No plans for Trump call with Musk on Friday, White House source says
There are no plans for US president Donald Trump to hold a call with Elon Musk on Friday, a White House source with knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

Chinese students in the United States are questioning their future in the country after the state department announced last week that it would “aggressively” revoke visas for Chinese students and enhance scrutiny of future applications from China and Hong Kong.
Chinese students hoping to study at Harvard, the US’s oldest and wealthiest university, are under particular pressure after the Trump administration announced on Wednesday that it was banning the school from enrolling new foreign students. The presidential proclamation cited Harvard’s links with China as a particular cause for concern.
For Jerry*, a 22-year-old applied mathematics student at the University of California, Los Angeles, the uncertainty started last month, when the Trump administration suddenly halted Harvard University’s ability to enrol any international students.
Jerry has a place on a health data science masters programme at Harvard, which is due to start in the autumn. The US government’s attempt to ban Harvard from accepting international students appears to have been blocked, at least temporarily, by the courts. But Trump’s announcement on Wednesday invokes a different legal authority.

Donald Trump said he had accepted an invitation to meet Xi Jinping in China after a phone conversation on trade was held between the leaders of the world’s two largest economies.
In a post on Truth Social, the US president said the “very good” call lasted about 90 minutes and the conversation was “almost entirely focused on trade”.
He wrote: “The call lasted approximately one and a half hours, and resulted in a very positive conclusion for both Countries. There should no longer be any questions respecting the complexity of Rare Earth products. Our respective teams will be meeting shortly at a location to be determined … During the conversation, President Xi graciously invited the First Lady and me to visit China, and I reciprocated.”
Trump added that teams from the US and China would meet soon at a location to be determined.
University of Michigan using undercover investigators to surveil student Gaza protesters
The University of Michigan is using private, undercover investigators to surveil pro-Palestinian campus groups, including trailing them on and off campus, furtively recording them and eavesdropping on their conversations, the Guardian has learned.
The surveillance appears to largely be an intimidation tactic, five students who have been followed, recorded or eavesdropped on said. The undercover investigators have cursed at students, threatened them and in one case drove a car at a student who had to jump out of the way, according to student accounts and video footage shared with the Guardian.
Students say they have frequently identified undercover investigators and confronted them. In two bizarre interactions captured by one student on video, a man who had been trailing the student faked disabilities, and noisily – and falsely – accused a student of attempting to rob him.
The undercover investigators appear to work for Detroit-based City Shield, a private security group, and some of their evidence was used by Michigan prosecutors to charge and jail students, according to a Guardian review of police records, university spending records and video collected in legal discovery. Most charges were later dropped. Public spending records from the U-M board of regents, the school’s governing body, show the university paid at least $800,000 between June 2023 and September 2024 to City Shield’s parent company, Ameri-Shield.
The Kremlin said on Friday it would not get involved in US president Donald Trump’s row with Elon Musk, but was confident that Trump would deal with the situation.
The quarrel between the two was an internal US matter, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said.

Elon Musk has suggested he may de-escalate his public row with Donald Trump after their spectacular falling out.
The Tesla chief executive signalled he might back down on a pledge to decommission the Dragon spacecraft – made by his SpaceX business – in an exchange on his X social media platform. He also responded positively to a call from fellow multibillionaire Bill Ackman to “make peace” with the US president.
Politico also reported overnight that the White House has scheduled a call with Musk on Friday to broker a peace deal after both men traded verbal blows on Thursday.
The rolling spat – which played out over social media and in a Trump White House appearance – included the president saying he was “very disappointed in Elon” over Musk’s criticism of his tax and spending bill. Musk also said the president’s trade policies would cause a recession and raised Trump’s connections to the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Musk had responded to a Trump threat to cancel his US government contracts on Thursday with a post on X stating he would retire his Dragon spacecraft, which is used by Nasa. However, responding to an X user’s post urging both sides to “cool off”, Musk wrote: “Good advice. Ok, we won’t decommission Dragon.”
Musk also appeared to proffer an olive branch in a reply to a post from the hedge fund owner Ackman, who called on Trump and Musk to “make peace for the benefit of our great country”. Musk replied: “You’re not wrong.”
Politico also reported a potential peace call between Musk and the White House, claiming Trump’s aides had worked to persuade the president to tone down his public criticism of the Tesla owner before arranging the phone conversation for Friday.
Musk suggests 'making peace' with Trump would benefit US
Elon Musk appears to have hinted that a reconciliation with president Donald Trump would be in the best interests of the country, after their public spat escalated last night.
In response to the hedge fund manager Bill Ackman – a known Trump donor – calling for the pair to “make peace for the benefit of our great country” on X, Musk replied:
You’re not wrong.
German chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Friday that he had “absolutely no doubt” that US president Donald Trump would keep the United States within the Nato military alliance.
“I have absolutely no doubt that the American government is sticking with Nato,” Merz said in a speech at an entrepreneurs’ event just hours after returning from his inaugural trip to Washington.
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