Tommy Vietor joins Tim Miller.
The Bulwark Podcast - Tommy Vietor: Deniability Is All That Matters
Tommy Vietor joins Tim Miller.

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In 2021, President Donald Trump sued Meta after his accounts were suspended in the wake of the January 6 riot. WSJ’s Rebecca Ballhaus explains why Mark Zuckerberg agreed to settle for $25 million yesterday.
Further Reading:
- Meta to Pay $25 Million to Settle 2021 Trump Lawsuit
- Meta Ends Fact-Checking on Facebook, Instagram in Free-Speech Pitch
- ABC News to Pay $15 Million to Settle Donald Trump Defamation Lawsuit
Further Listening:
- Corporate America's Embrace of Trump 2.0
- The End of Facebook’s Content Moderation Era
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Meta and Microsoft are now spending roughly 30% of their annual revenues on capital expenditures. What are they hoping to get from all that investment?
(00:14) Asit Sharma and Mary Long break down earnings from Meta and Microsoft. They also discuss:
- Whether the DeepSeek story changes how investors should view off-the-walls AI spending.
- The future of Reality Labs.
- Microsoft’s $13B-and-growing AI business.
- Why “fungible fleet” is a potentially ominous phrase for Sam Altman
Companies discussed: META, MSFT, NVDA
Host: Mary Long
Guest: Asit Sharma
Producer: Ricky Mulvey
Engineer: Rick Engdahl
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Nasa's OSIRIS-REx mission to collect a sample from an asteroid has been a great success. Asteroid Bennu's sample yields a watery pool of history, thanks to an international team of scientists including the London Natural History Museum's Sarah Russell.
Also, in a week of tumultuous changes to federal funding and programmes, we hear from some US scientists affected and concerned by Executive Orders from the White House. Betsy Southwood, formerly of the Environmental Protection Agency, is worried not just about the government employees’ careers, but the environment itself and the whole of environmental science in the US and the world. Chrystal Starbird runs a lab at the University of North Carolina and is worried about the fate of grants aimed at diversifying scientific expertise, but also that some grant schemes are getting erroneously included in the anti-DEI clampdown. And Lawrence Gostin is an eminent health lawyer, proud of the NIH and all it has achieved.
Presenter: Roland Pease Producer: Alex Mansfield Production co-ordinator: Jana Bennett-Holesworth
(Photo: OSIRIS-REx Sample Return. Credit: Nasa/Getty Images)
It’s President Donald Trump’s second week in office, and he has wasted no time being the wrecking ball he promised his voters he would be.
On Tuesday, he issued a memo freezing trillions of dollars in federal funding, in his attempt to purge the government of “woke ideology,” which was followed by chaos and confusion—and ultimately blocked by a federal judge. Earlier in the week, Trump convinced Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro to accept deported Colombian migrants—who Petro had turned away from his borders only a day earlier—after Trump threatened a 25-percent tariff on Colombian imports to the U.S.
Back in Congress, the Senate narrowly confirmed Pete Hegseth to be secretary of defense in a dramatic tie-breaking vote cast by a hurried J.D. Vance who showed up just in the nick of time. Meanwhile, RFK Jr. is currently having his highly anticipated confirmation hearing to run the Department of Health and Human Services. Just as that began, Caroline Kennedy—the only surviving child of John F. Kennedy—came out Tuesday with a bombshell public denunciation of her cousin, calling him unqualified, “a predator,” and a hypocrite. She also alleged that he used to “put baby chickens and mice in a blender to feed to his hawks.” Can’t say we had that on our 2025 bingo card…
Finally, the Chinese artificial intelligence start-up DeepSeek sent tech stocks plummeting on Monday (to the tune of more than $1 trillion) after it rolled out a new app on the U.S. market that is a fraction of the cost of American AI competitors. All of which brought up questions—and panic—about our brewing AI war with China.
To talk about it all, Free Press senior editor Peter Savodnik is joined today by Brianna Wu and FP investigative reporter Madeleine Rowley, who spoke to Hegseth this week about his plans to end diversity, equity, and inclusion in the military.
If you liked what you heard from Honestly, the best way to support us is to go to TheFP.com and become a Free Press subscriber today.
Get $10 for free when you trade $100+ with code HONESTLY: https://kalshi.com/honestly
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The latest price moves and insights with Jennifer Sanasie and Injective Labs co-founder Eric Chen.
To get the show every day, follow the podcast here.
Injective Labs co-founder and CEO Eric Chen joins CoinDesk to discuss the launch of an AI index perpetual market and the common goal of TradFi and DeFi to bring assets on-chain.
This content should not be construed or relied upon as investment advice. It is for entertainment and general information purposes.
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This episode was hosted by Jennifer Sanasie. “Markets Daily” is produced by Jennifer Sanasie and edited by Victor Chen. All original music by Doc Blust and Colin Mealey.
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By Tacey M. Atsitty
Divided Argument is live from Stanford Law School, hosted by the Stanford Constitutional Law Center! We review an unusual summary reversal in a capital habeas case and the latest universal injunction developments, and discuss some of the implications of the change in administration. After that, we are joined by a very special guest to discuss the recent arguments in the excessive force case of Barnes v. Felix.