US US Politics General 2 - Discussion of President Trump and other politicians

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Should be a wild four years.

Helpful links for those who need them:

Current members of the House of Representatives
https://www.house.gov/representatives

Current members of the Senate
https://www.senate.gov/senators/

Current members of the US Supreme Court
https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/biographies.aspx

Members of the Trump Administration
https://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/
 
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So where we at in 4chan's little prophecy from 2016?
It will happen when the weather cools.
That's when they'll make their move.
The plans made long ago, before the founding of America, and older still, will come to fruition.
They're trying to force God's hand.
Watch for these signs:
  1. Three branches will become one.
  2. An island will drift away.
  3. A killing bolt will shine in the night but will not kill.
  4. The star will gorge itself on clay.
  5. Idols will speak and move about.
  6. The black flag will fly above the dome.
  7. The belly of the dragon will drip water.
  8. Two voices will call out in a silence that all will hear.
  9. A rock will stand on seven hills.
  10. The ravens will starve.
  11. The bear will leave its cave forever.
  12. The rod and the ring will strike.
I'm thinking we got at least 6/12.
Let me try my hand at this gay shit.
Lets say a 4 year timeline:

Three branches will become one: 2024 Election
An island will drift away: we are taking Greenland from Denmark
A killing bolt will shine in the night but will not kill: The Russian missile strikes with no live warheads that scared the shit out of everyone.
The star will gorge itself on clay: Jews flat out moving to genocide Palestinians to the point the golem has turned on them.
Idols will speak and move about: The new Tesla and helper bots. Some black dude beat the shit out of one the other day
The black flag will fly above the dome: Oct. 7th Israel attack, that's 2 for the jews, that counts as prophecy now
The belly of the dragon will drip water: Fukushima Nuclear Disaster
Two voices will call out in a silence that all will hear: Laken Riley, Ashli Babbit
A rock will stand on seven hills: ICE raiding New York, Chicago, Boston, Denver, Miami, Seattle, and San Francisco
The Ravens will starve: Bird flu is destroying avian populations. 100 million dead chickens already this year. Dead birds in the damned roads
The Bear will leave its cave forever: Assad lost power, was granted asylum from Syria and flew back to Russia
The rod and ring will strike: We are here.
 
Elon's not being very nice lol

View attachment 6935965
Useless government spending shoved into the wood chipper
Feds and government incompetency fed into the wood chipper
LGBT shoved into the wood chipper
Illegals shoved into the wood chipper
Canada and Mexico about to be shoved into the wood chipper if they don't bend the knee
Who or what is next?
 
beyond that any attempt to course correct will fail because it will be led by the same whites that they've been trained to hate for the last quarter century
"Let's kill the goodwhite/badwhite distinction entirely and tell the younger voters that white males are just fundamentally wicked. What could go wrong?" -White male leaders of the Democrats, 2007
 
It's so over for Drumpf!

Comments are saying it's a old video.

The USAID shouldn't exist outside times when our nation is prosperous.
If our veterans are treated like shit, we have a massive welfare network, homeless crisis, housing crisis, drug crisis, a recession, and so on maybe we should fucking keep the money.
It's just the (civilian) foreign aid arm of the U.S government, the biggest in the world I think? It has legitimately done a lot of good, but as you might guess, it is also terribly mismanaged, abused, and wasteful (and arguably entirely a waste, depending on your view regarding helping poor foreign brown people).

As you might imagine, cutting off the gibs (legitimate or otherwise) causes a lot of drama.

P.S. - It has also been involved in forced sterilization (based???) and terrorism (not so based).
I have friends who are screeching at anyone who will listen that Elons "raid" on USAID is illegal. Others crying that no one voted for him, and to call their local representatives to whine about it.
Real doomer shit from local boomers about churches getting punished for trying to provide relief efforts or something.
I know nothing about USAID, what is even the big deal? As soon as I hear humanitarian aide to foreign countries I assume it's money being used for hookers and blow for some scam artist. How off the mark am I?

USAID is a CIA front.
 
>killing bolt
I was sure the killing bolt was thecNorth Korea missile test over Japan. The Hawaii thing was a false alarm
A killing bolt will shine in the night but will not kill.

That was the MIRV ICBM that Russia launched into Ukraine. It was AFAIK the first time an ICBM was used in war, but it didn't carry a nuclear warhead (iirc it carried no explosives at all), killed nobody, and only destroyed the factory they were targeting, which was empty at night.
 
Musk Outlines Scope of Plan for DOGE Cuts, Starting With USAID
Bloomberg (archive.ph)
By Gregory Korte and Dana Hull
2025-02-03 06:32:38GMT
  • Billionaire sees ‘wholesale spring cleaning’ of US regulations
  • Musk says has Trump’s nod to end USAID as stand-alone agency
Elon Musk, who now runs the government efficiency initiative he calls DOGE, sketched out plans for aggressive cuts to US spending and regulations that include wiping out the US Agency for International Development — and suggested the bond market should thank him for it.

“We’ve just got to do wholesale spring cleaning” of US regulations, Musk said during an X Spaces session after midnight. In one of his biggest planned cuts to date, the billionaire backer of Donald Trump said his group is in the process of trying to shut down USAID, the foreign aid agency codified by Congress.

Musk said he has Trump’s blessing for the move to end USAID as a stand-alone agency and fold what’s left of it into the State Department. If it turns out the US really needs such an organization in the future — or any of the regulations he aims to cull — they could simply just be created again.

Musk also said he’d be giving a talk this week with JP Morgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon in an effort to convince bond markets that his cost-cutting initiative known as DOGE should instill confidence in US debt.

Concerns over widening deficits and worries about inflationary policies catapulted Treasury yields higher from their September lows, both into and after the US election. Any signs of deep spending cuts which would improve the fiscal deficit would be good news for bond bulls betting on yields turning lower.

Musk’s comments came in a nearly hour-long audio conversation on X and marked the first time Musk has spoken publicly at length about DOGE since Trump became president. He was joined in the freewheeling conversation by Republican Senators Joni Ernst and Mike Lee, as well as former DOGE co-head Vivek Ramaswamy.

The breadth of Musk’s activity over Trump’s first two weeks suggests that Musk has broadened DOGE’s mandate far beyond the executive order creating it, which simply tasked the group with “modernizing Federal technology and software to maximize governmental efficiency and productivity.”

Musk’s DOGE teams spent the weekend gaining access to Treasury payment systems and firing officials at US Agency for International Development. DOGE is short for the Department of Government Efficiency, and the US Doge Service is housed under the executive office of the president.

The Tesla and SpaceX CEO has also put key allies at the Office of Personnel Management and the Government Services Administration, the agencies that coordinate human resources, real estate and technology for the government.

Musk, in a nod to the backlash his moves have generated, openly mused about potentially needing courts to back up some of his more controversial cuts. Six of the nine justices on the US Supreme Court were nominated by Republican presidents — and three of those were by Trump himself.

Trump said Sunday night that Musk has his confidence — and suggested that he would have reined him in if he had gone too far. Musk, the largest contributor to the effort to elect Trump last year, now has an office in the White House complex and has been a frequent fixture in the Oval Office.

“Sometimes we won’t agree with it and we’ll not go where he wants to go, but I think he’s doing a great job,” Trump told reporters late Sunday, hours before Musk’s event. “He’s a smart guy, very smart, and he’s very much into cutting the budget of our federal government.”
Trump’s aid freeze shocks a Syria camp holding families linked to the Islamic State group
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Bassem Mroue
2025-02-03 05:29:52GMT
AL-HOL, Syria (AP) — Ahmad Abdullah Hammoud was lucky to have some food stored to feed his family after a U.S.-funded organization abruptly suspended its aid activities at the sprawling tent camp in northeastern Syria where they have been forced to stay for nearly six years.

His family is among 37,000 people, mostly women and children, with alleged ties to the Islamic State group at the bleak, trash-strewn al-Hol camp, where the Trump administration’s unprecedented freeze on foreign aid caused chaos and uncertainty and worsened the dire humanitarian conditions.

When the freeze was announced shortly after Trump took office, U.S.-funded aid programs worldwide began shutting down operations, including the organization that runs many operations at al-Hol, which works under the supervision of the U.S.-led coalition formed to fight IS.

The U.S.-based Blumont briefly suspended operations, according to the camp’s director. It had been providing essentials such as bread, water, kerosene and cooking gas. Blumont didn’t reply to questions.

“We were troubled when Blumont suspended its activities,” said Hammoud, who denies links with IS and had been sheltering in an IS-controlled area after being displaced during Syria’s civil war.

“Believe me, we did not find food. Even bread only came at 2 p.m,” said another camp resident, Dirar al-Ali.

Camp director Jihan Hanan told The Associated Press that other aid agencies, including the World Health Organization, had ceased some operations.

“It is a disgraceful decision,” Hanan said of the Trump administration’s action, adding that some residents argued they should be allowed to leave if food cannot be provided.

She said Blumont distributes 5,000 bags of bread daily at a cost of about $4,000, something that local authorities in the Kurdish-run enclave cannot afford.

Uncertain times ahead
Hanan said Blumont received a two-week waiver from the Trump administration and resumed work on Jan. 28. It is not clear what will happen once the waiver ends.

Mazloum Abdi, the commander of the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces that control northeastern Syria, said he has raised the aid freeze issue with officials from the U.S.-led coalition.

“We are on the verge of finding an alternative to this decision,” Abdi said, adding that an exemption might be issued for northeastern Syria.

The U.S. freeze comes as IS tries to take advantage of the vacuum created by the fall of Assad’s government in early December to insurgents. Another cut in food supplies could lead to riots by camp residents that IS, which has sleeper cells there, could exploit.

Hanan said the camp had received information from the U.S.-led coalition against IS, the Iraqi government and the U.S.-backed and Kurdish-led SDF, that IS was preparing to attack the camp after Assad’s fall. Security was increased and the situation is under control, she said.

The SDF runs 28 detention facilities in northeastern Syria holding some 9,000 IS members. Security at al-Hol camp and the detention facilities are not expected to be affected by the U.S. aid freeze, according to Hanan and an official at the largest detention facility in the northeastern city of Hassakeh, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations.

The main part of al-Hol houses some 16,000 Iraqis and 15,000 Syrians. In a separate, heavily guarded section known as the Annex are another 6,300 people from 42 countries, the vast majority of them wives, widows and children who are considered the most die-hard IS supporters.

The camp has no paved roads and piles of trash. Teenagers and children with almost nothing to do spend their time playing soccer or wandering around.

Children in the Annex threw stones at visiting AP journalists and shouted “You are a Satan” and “The Islamic State is lasting.”

‘Sustenance is from God’
A Chinese woman in the Annex, who identified herself as Asmaa Ahmad and said she came from the western region of Xinjiang, described her husband as “an Islamic State martyr” killed in 2019 in the eastern Syrian village of Baghouz, where IS lost the last sliver of land it once controlled.

Ahmad, who is in the camp with her four children, said she does not want to go back to China, fearing persecution. Asked about the temporary loss of U.S. aid, she replied: “Sustenance is from God.”

She said she is waiting for IS members to rescue her family one day.

Al-Hol is the most dangerous place in the world, camp director Hanan asserted, adding that countries should repatriate their citizens to prevent children being fed the extremist ideology. “This place is not suitable for children,” she said.

The U.S. military has been pushing for years for countries who have citizens at al-Hol and the smaller, separate Roj Camp to repatriate them.

“Without international repatriation, rehabilitation and reintegration efforts, these camps risk creating the next generation of ISIS,” Gen. Michael Erik Kurilla, head of U.S. Central Command, said during a visit to al-Hol in mid-January.

Hanan said that since the fall of Assad, many Syrians in the camp have expressed a desire to return to their homes in areas held by the country’s new rulers. She said camp authorities decided that any Syrian who wants to leave can go.

Even if the camp population drops, “there will be a disaster” if U.S. aid is suspended again, she added.
syr01.jpg
People stroll through the marketplace in the al-Hol detention camp in northeastern Syria's Hassakeh province, where tens of thousands of mostly women and children linked to the Islamic State group have been living for years, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
syr02.jpg
Members of the Syrian Democratic Forces open a gate of the al-Hol detention camp in northeastern Syria's Hassakeh province, where tens of thousands of mostly women and children linked to the Islamic State group have been living for years, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
syr03.jpg
Men attend prayers in the al-Hol detention camp in northeastern Syria's Hasakeh province, where tens of thousands of mostly women and children linked to the Islamic State group have been living for years, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
syr04.jpg
A map of the al-Hol detention camp hangs on the office wall of the camp in northeastern Syria's Hassakeh province, where tens of thousands of mostly women and children linked to the Islamic State group have been living for years, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
syr05.jpg
Dirar al-Ali poses for a portrait inside the al-Hol detention camp in northeastern Syria's Hassakeh province, where tens of thousands of mostly women and children linked to the Islamic State group have been living for years, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
syr06.jpg
A member of the Syrian Democratic Forces talks to Chinese muslim women inside the al-Hol detention camp in northeastern Syria's Hassakeh province, where tens of thousands of mostly women and children linked to the Islamic State group have been living for years, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
syr07.jpg
Jihan Hanan, director of the al-Hol detention camp, displays a photo of a body found buried in the camp in Syria's Hassakeh province, where tens of thousands of women and children linked to the Islamic State group have lived for years, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
syr08.jpg
Sheep graze in the al-Hol detention camp in northeastern Syria's Hassakeh province, where tens of thousands of mostly women and children linked to the Islamic State group have been living for years, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
Africa knew Trump’s ‘America First’ pledge meant it might be last. Then came the freeze on aid
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Gerald Imray, Mogomotsi Magome, Farai Mutsaka, and Mark Banchereau
2025-02-03 04:17:26GMT
afr01.jpg
A man sits outside the closed Isizinda Sempilo clinic in the Johannesburg township of Soweto Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Alfonso Nqunjana)

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Four days after President Donald Trump signed an executive order freezing almost all U.S. foreign aid, an email landed in Claris Madhuku’s inbox in rural Zimbabwe. Stop all activities immediately, it said.

The message confirmed Madhuku’s fears that Trump’s return to office might affect his organization’s efforts to save African girls from child marriages.

Many Africans had known that Trump’s “America First” outlook meant their continent was likely to be last among his priorities. But they hadn’t expected the abrupt halt to foreign aid from the world’s largest donor that stops money flowing for wide-ranging projects like disease response, girls’ education and free school lunches.

Even after global outrage prompted some exemptions to Trump’s order, sub-Saharan Africa could suffer more than any other region as most global aid pauses 90 days for a spending review. The U.S. gave the region more than $6.5 billion in humanitarian assistance last year.

For Madhuku and countless others, the damage has been done. His Platform For Youth and Community Development is one of hundreds of small non-governmental organizations in Africa that receive assistance from the U.S. government — and ultimately from the American people — to do good work.

Without U.S. aid, Madhuku’s group can’t give around 100 volunteers allowances for food and public transport as they do outreach seeking to keep girls in school and out of early marriages.

“We had to stop everything, no warning, no time to adjust,” Madhuku said. “I appreciate that Trump might have some justification in trying to account for American taxpayers’ money ... but it has caused disaster here.”

The world’s most successful foreign aid program
For many in Africa, thoughts immediately turned to arguably the world’s most successful foreign aid program, the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR.

Over two decades, the program with bipartisan support has been credited with saving more than 25 million lives, the vast majority in Africa, the continent it was designed to help most.

“The world is baffled,” the health minister of South Africa, the country with the most people living with HIV, said after the U.S. freeze on aid.

The minister, Aaron Motsoaledi, said the U.S. funds nearly 20% of South Africa’s $2.3 billion annual HIV/AIDS program through PEPFAR, and now the biggest response to a single disease in history is under threat.

More than 8 million in South Africa live with HIV, and authorities say PEPFAR helps provide life-saving antiretroviral treatment to 5.5 million people every day.

HIV patients are turned away
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has announced that programs offering “life-saving” assistance including medicine, medical services, food and shelter would be exempted from the aid freeze, though what qualifies is not immediately clear.

The United Nations AIDS program said many organizations receiving PEPFAR funding had closed due to the aid pause and there was “lack of clarity and great uncertainty about the future.” More than 20 million people globally receive HIV treatment with PEPFAR support, UNAIDS said.

In South Africa’s largest city, Johannesburg, and elsewhere, PEPFAR-funded facilities were still shut days after the exemptions were announced and HIV patients were referred to government hospitals and clinics.

In Johannesburg’s largest township, Soweto, two workers at the PEPFAR-funded HIVSA center turned patients away. And a notice at the renowned Wits RHI Key Populations Clinic, which serves adults and children living with HIV, read: “We apologize for the inconvenience this causes.”

Delays could be dangerous
Experts said the effects on HIV programs remain unclear but the consequences could be swift, even dangerous.

“We need to know a lot more before we can say people won’t die directly because of the pause to funding,” said Charles Kenny, a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development in Washington, noting that while the waiver should cover HIV drugs, HIV diagnostic tests are also critical to ensure treatment gets to those who need it.

Kenny said even short interruptions to antiretroviral treatment — which stops the virus replicating in the body — are risky.

“HIV viral loads rebound in about three weeks if you go off antiretrovirals,” he said.

Overall, even senior officials in the aid community are not sure which U.S.-funded programs are allowed to at least briefly continue operations.

The Trump administration has warned contractors and staffers with USAID — the agency responsible for dispersing America’s foreign aid — they could be disciplined if they speak to anyone outside the agency without top-level approval, and aid groups fear they may permanently lose funds if they speak publicly.

Stopping aid in war zones
A humanitarian official told The Associated Press that at least 1.2 million people in Congo could lose life-saving support because of the aid freeze. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly on the matter, said almost half of their organization’s funding is from USAID.

Overall, more than $100 million for the organization’s humanitarian programs in more than 30 countries worldwide has been halted, according to the official.

The block on aid came during a major escalation in fighting in eastern Congo, where millions of people were already displaced and where outbreaks of the mpox virus were declared a global health emergency last year.

In civil-war-torn Sudan, which is grappling with cholera, malaria, and measles, the aid freeze means 600,000 people will be at grave risk of catching and spreading those diseases, the official said.

Even with the exemption for life-saving services, the official said their organization had been told they should not resume any USAID-funded activities until they received notification that the waiver applies to them.
___
Imray reported from Cape Town, South Africa, Mutsaka reported from Harare, Zimbabwe, and Banchereau reported from Dakar, Senegal. Associated Press writers Maria Cheng in London, Ellen Knickmeyer in Washington and Jacob Zimba in Lusaka, Zambia, contributed to this story.
___
The Associated Press receives financial support for global health and development coverage in Africa from the Gates Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
Comments are saying it's a old video.
I should have read the description. Fucking clickbait. I got too distracted by the Baja Blast. Might have to put on some Rick and Morty and look over my Funko Pop collection. It's almost like John Oliver is digital goyslop that has an instantaneous effect on IQ.
 
You will think this doesn't flip your "holy shit shut the fuck up I hate this I hate you" to max levels but it will, be prepared:

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it's really embarrassing that people vote for this party.
can we implore the DNC to willfully concede all elections in which they do not gain an exactly equal amount of votes across all gender, sexuality, and racial lines? after all, if the votes they get are not equitable, they're not really worth anything.
 
Tedros is starting to go through withdrawals without mo money fo dem programs.

WHO chief asks countries to push Washington to reconsider its withdrawal
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Maria Cheng and Jamey Keaten
2025-02-03 07:36:04GMT
GENEVA (AP) — The World Health Organization chief asked global leaders to lean on Washington to reverse President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the U.N. health agency, insisting in a closed-door meeting with diplomats last week that the U.S. will miss out on critical information about global disease outbreaks.

But countries also pressed WHO at a key budget meeting last Wednesday about how it might cope with the exit of its biggest donor, according to internal meeting materials obtained by The Associated Press. A German envoy, Bjorn Kummel, warned: “The roof is on fire, and we need to stop the fire as soon as possible.”

For 2024-2025, the U.S. is WHO’s biggest donor by far, putting in an estimated $988 million, roughly 14% of WHO’s $6.9 billion budget.

A budget document presented at the meeting showed WHO’s health emergencies program has a “heavy reliance” on American cash. “Readiness functions” in WHO’s Europe office were more than 80% reliant on the $154 million the U.S. contributes.

The document said U.S. funding “provides the backbone of many of WHO’s large-scale emergency operations,” covering up to 40%. It said responses in the Middle East, Ukraine and Sudan were at risk, in addition to hundreds of millions of dollars lost by polio-eradication and HIV programs.

The U.S. also covers 95% of WHO’s tuberculosis work in Europe and more than 60% of TB efforts in Africa, the Western Pacific and at the agency headquarters in Geneva, the document said.

At a separate private meeting on the impact of the U.S. exit last Wednesday, WHO finance director George Kyriacou said if the agency spends at its current rate, the organization would “be very much in a hand-to-mouth type situation when it comes to our cash flows” in the first half of 2026. He added the current rate of spending is “something we’re not going to do,” according to a recording obtained by the AP.

Since Trump’s executive order, WHO has attempted to withdraw funds from the U.S. for past expenses, Kyriacou said, but most of those “have not been accepted.”

The U.S. also has yet to settle its owed contributions to WHO for 2024, pushing the agency into a deficit, he added.

WHO’s executive board, made up of 34 high-level envoys including many national health ministers, was expected to discuss budget matters during its latest session, which opens Monday and is set to run through Feb. 11.

WHO’s leader wants to bring back the US
Last week, officials at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were instructed to stop working with WHO immediately.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told the attendees at the budget meeting that the agency is still providing U.S. scientists with some data — though it isn’t known what data.

“We continue to give them information because they need it,” Tedros said, urging member countries to contact U.S officials. “We would appreciate it if you continue to push and reach out to them to reconsider.”

Among other health crises, WHO is currently working to stop outbreaks of Marburg virus in Tanzania, Ebola in Uganda and mpox in Congo.

Tedros rebutted Trump’s three stated reasons for leaving the agency in the executive order signed on Jan. 20 — Trump’s first day back in office. In the order, the president said WHO mishandled the COVID-19 pandemic that began in China, failed to adopt needed reforms and that U.S. membership required “unfairly onerous payments.”

Tedros said WHO alerted the world in January 2020 about the potential dangers of the coronavirus and has made dozens of reforms since — including efforts to expand its donor base.

Tedros also said he believed the U.S. departure was “not about the money” but more about the “void” in outbreak details and other critical health information that the United States would face in the future.

“Bringing the U.S. back will be very important,” he told meeting attendees. “And on that, I think all of you can play a role.”

Kummel, a senior advisor on global health in Germany’s health ministry, described the U.S. exit as “the most extensive crisis WHO has been facing in the past decades.”

He also asked: “What concrete functions of WHO will collapse if the funding of the U.S. is not existent anymore?”

Officials from countries including Bangladesh and France asked what specific plans WHO had to deal with the loss of U.S. funding and wondered which health programs would be cut as a result.

The AP obtained a document shared among some WHO senior managers that laid out several options, including a proposal that each major department or office might be slashed in half by the end of the year.

WHO declined to comment on whether Tedros had privately asked countries to lobby on the agency’s behalf.

Experts say US benefits from WHO
Some experts said that while the departure of the U.S. was a major crisis, it might also serve as an opportunity to reshape global public health.

Less than 1% of the U.S. health budget goes to WHO, said Matthew Kavanagh, director of Georgetown University’s Center for Global Health Policy and Politics. In exchange, the U.S. gets “a wide variety of benefits to Americans that matter quite a bit,” he said. That includes intelligence about disease epidemics globally and virus samples for vaccines.

Kavanagh also said the WHO is “massively underfunded,” describing the contributions from rich countries as “peanuts.”

WHO emergencies chief Dr. Michael Ryan said at the meeting on the impact of the U.S. withdrawal last week that losing the U.S. was “terrible,” but member states had “tremendous capacity to fill in those gaps.”

Ryan told WHO member countries: “The U.S. is leaving a community of nations. It’s essentially breaking up with you.”

Kavanagh doubted the U.S. would be able to match WHO’s ability to gather details about emerging health threats globally, and said its exit from the agency “will absolutely lead to worse health outcomes for Americans.”

“How much worse remains to be seen,” Kavanagh said.
___
Cheng reported from Toronto.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
 
The talking point I keep seeing lately is that cutting USAID is bad because it reduces our "soft power", or in other words, going mask off and admitting they want tax money to be used to propagandize and subvert foreign citizenry in neutral or allied countries for vague political goals. The Democrats really are the party of Jews and glowies
 
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