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Absolutely No One Wanted A “Melania” Movie, While The Chaos And Killing Continues - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

Absolutely No One Wanted A “Melania” Movie, While The Chaos And Killing Continues - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom : The ‘Melania’ movie arrives amid chaos and conflict, raising questions about timing, intent, public reaction and the moral questions it leaves unanswered.

Musk’s Tesla FSD Approval Hits A Wall In China — And Shareholders Feel The Strain - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

Musk’s Tesla FSD Approval Hits A Wall In China — And Shareholders Feel The Strain - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom : China pushes back on Elon Musk’s claim that Tesla FSD approval is imminent, exposing regulatory limits and growing pressure on investors.

Europe Rejects Musk’s FSD Timeline, Creating New Headaches For Tesla Shareholders - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

Europe Rejects Musk’s FSD Timeline, Creating New Headaches For Tesla Shareholders - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom : Musk’s Davos FSD Boast Crashes Into Europe’s Reality — and Leaves Shareholders Exposed

Barron Trump’s FaceTime Romance Unravels In London Courtroom Drama - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

Barron Trump’s FaceTime Romance Unravels In London Courtroom Drama - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom : A London court hearing exposes new details about Barron Trump’s teen FaceTime relationship amid a wider legal dispute.

Inside Elon Musk’s Neuralink And The Difficult Road To Human Brain Implants - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

Inside Elon Musk’s Neuralink And The Difficult Road To Human Brain Implants - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom : Elon Musk’s Neuralink faces technical setbacks, regulatory scrutiny, and ethical questions as it pushes brain-implant technology into human trials.

A Nobel Dispute With Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre Offers a Window Into Trump’s Governing Style

 I n the theater of global diplomacy, few acts have been as revealing—or as absurd—as Donald Trump’s ongoing feud with Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre over the Nobel Peace Prize.  What began as a misunderstanding has morphed into a full-blown diplomatic farce, offering a rare, unfiltered glimpse into how Trump governs: with grievance, spectacle, and a relentless need for personal validation.  What the Nobel spat with Norway ultimately exposes is more than a simple misunderstanding of how international institutions work. It offers a glimpse into Trump’s core approach to power. He does not treat the presidency as a trust, bound by democratic norms and independent systems. He treats it as a stage for personal validation, where every exchange—whether with a foreign leader, a federal agency, or a central bank—is something to be bent, claimed, or “won.” That perspective also sheds light on why Trump remains so preoccupied with his feud with Joe Biden. To him, the pres...

Greenland Is a Distraction—Epstein Island Is the Scandal That Still Haunts Trump Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

There is something deeply misaligned about the way Trump's outrage is being directed. Once again, Greenland has been dragged into a fevered political conversation— this time as a symbol of strength, security, and ambition.  President Donald Trump has revived talk of acquiring the vast Arctic island, framing it as a strategic necessity. Yet while attention drifts north toward ice and geopolitics, a far more troubling piece of American history lies to the south, largely unexamined and unresolved. In 1917, Denmark sold the Danish West Indies to the United States for $25 million in gold. The deal was driven by wartime fears and strategic calculations. The islands—now known as the U.S. Virgin Islands—were seen as important to protecting shipping lanes and preventing German influence in the Caribbean during World War I. It was a straightforward transaction by the standards of empire, but it came with strings attached. As part of the agreement, the United States pledged it would not chall...

Fedlan News Calls It First: In Davos, Trump Signals No Military Plans for Greenland Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

While CNN, and other major networks flooded the airwaves with breathless coverage, parsing every stray remark Trump made about Greenland and wrapping it in a fog-of-war narrative, Fedlan News chose a different path. Instead of amplifying speculation, it offered a more measured view—laying out why the idea of the U.S. military attacking Greenland is not just unlikely, but implausible. That context mattered when President Donald Trump stepped onto the stage at the World Economic Forum on Wednesday. The audience was already primed for a speech that would drift well beyond interest rates and trade balances. Trump did not disappoint. What followed was a familiar mix of swagger, grievance, and off-the-cuff geopolitics. And tucked into it, almost casually, was the revival of one of the strangest notions of his presidency: the idea that the United States should acquire Greenland.  Throughout his speech, Trump repeatedly took aim at European leaders, accusing them of complacency, hypocrisy,...

Greenland And Denmark Can Relax: Congress Won’t Approve A $700B Purchase - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

Greenland And Denmark Can Relax: Congress Won’t Approve A $700B Purchase - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom : Greenland and Denmark can rest easy—Congress is unlikely to approve Trump’s $700B plan to buy the island, making the ambitious proposal improbable. Donald Trump has never been subtle about his ambitions, but his renewed fixation on Greenland feels especially surreal. The island—vast, icy, and sparsely populated—has once again become the object of presidential desire. One official says Trump wants to buy it outright. Another suggests the United States could simply take it. Just days ago, Trump declared, "We need Greenland from the standpoint of national security," as if the matter were self-evident. Even setting aside the jaw-dropping $700 billion figure that has been floated in internal discussions, the idea collapses under the weight of law, politics, and reality. Greenland and Denmark, for all the noise, can rest easy. Congress would never approve such a purchase, and ther...

A Nobel Snub, A Wounded Ego, And A World At Risk: Trump’s Dangerous Meltdown - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

A Nobel Snub, A Wounded Ego, And A World At Risk: Trump’s Dangerous Meltdown - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom : When Ego Replaces Diplomacy: Trump’s Nobel Obsession, Greenland Threat, and the Return of Imperial Fantasy. Donald Trump has never hidden his appetite for spectacle, but his latest remarks suggest something darker than mere showmanship. After once again missing out on the Nobel Peace Prize, the US president reportedly told confidants he no longer feels an "obligation to think purely of peace." Shortly afterward, he sent a letter to Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre reviving his desire for the United States to take control of Greenland. It is a sequence of events that feels less like strategy and more like a tantrum—yet also something more troubling than that. Is this the behavior of a petulant child, lashing out because he did not receive the praise he believes he deserves? Or is it the symptom of an aging leader struggling with legacy, relevance, and the fear of...

Trump And Pete Hegseth Were Eager To Release The First Strike—So What’s In The Second Video? - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

Trump And Pete Hegseth Were Eager To Release The First Strike—So What’s In The Second Video? - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom : Trump and Pete Hegseth rushed out the first strike video. Now they’re withholding the second. What are they hiding? Trump and Pete Hegseth are under intense scrutiny this week, after the secretary of defense—already widely criticized as unprepared for the job—told Senator Chuck Schumer that the Pentagon needed to “study” a video before releasing it. This isn’t just any video: it’s the record of a second missile strike that hit the wreckage of a small boat off Venezuela’s coast, killing two survivors clinging to debris. The decision to withhold it has raised serious questions, especially given that Trump and Pete Hegseth eagerly released footage from previous strikes. Read more: https://fedlannews.com/en-us/news/trump-hegseth-secret-second-strike/184018428 /

 Would You Trust Elon Musk — Or Anyone — With Control Over Your Optimus Workers? - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

Can Elon Musk be trusted with a programmable workforce? Explore the risks and power behind Tesla’s Optimus robots. It sounds like a question from a dystopian novel, but it’s one that’s inching dangerously close to reality. After reading T esla Optimus Gen 2: Elon Musk’s $1 Trillion Army of Programmable Workers , I was left with an unsettling thought: we may be approaching a future where labor itself isn’t just automated, but owned — not by the collective will of society, but by the ambitions of one man. Author Ben Emos explores how Tesla's humanoid robots are reshaping industry, economics, and the very meaning of work. From neural networks to shareholder manipulation, this book delivers insight with bite. "Optimus isn't just a robot—it's a mirror," says Ben. "It reflects who we are, who we serve, and who we're willing to replace." "The real worry isn't if Musk can command his robots — it's whether anyone should hold that kind of po...

Donald Trump: The Would-Be Dictator Who Couldn’t Win The 2025 Nobel Peace Prize - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

Donald Trump’s Nobel dreams collapsed as the world chose courage over spectacle. A dictator’s fantasy meets a brutal reality. Trump's yearning for the Nobel Prize has been an open secret for years. During his presidency, he repeatedly brought it up, often with a mix of resentment and disbelief. He would remind crowds that Barack Obama received the prize in 2009, a fact that still seemed to gnaw at him. He would point to talks with North Korea, the Abraham Accords, or moments when his administration avoided escalating conflicts, as evidence that he too deserved recognition. But what Trump never seemed to grasp was that diplomacy is not a show staged for applause. Real peacemakers don't hold rallies about their greatness—they do the work quietly, often in dangerous circumstances, without the expectation of glory. Added to the equation are the storms he created both at home and abroad. Inside the United States, entire states and cities were thrown into political and cultural turmo...

Best Friends In Infamy: The Statue Of Trump And Epstein, And The Art That Won’t Be Silenced - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

Best Friends in Infamy explores the Trump and Epstein statue, a protest artwork the government tried to silence but couldn’t. In 2002, Donald Trump gave a quote that today lands like a grenade. Speaking to New York Magazine about Jeffrey Epstein, Trump said, “I’ve known Jeff for fifteen years. Terrific guy. He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.” At the time, it read like another breezy Trumpism—cocky, careless, sprinkled with his usual mix of bragging and boundary-pushing. But reread it in the shadow of Epstein’s crimes, and it stops being harmless banter. It becomes evidence. It becomes the sort of line prosecutors circle in red ink. Because if Trump knew Epstein’s taste in “younger” women was more than a rumor, and if he never reported it, that could make him complicit. Misprision of felony, obstruction, accessory—whatever the statute, the deeper crime would be silence. This isn...

Comey’s Charges Had Nothing To Do With Russia Interference — This Was Trump’s Payback - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

J ames Comey faces charges unrelated to Russia, focused on his congressional testimony, seen by critics as Trump’s payback. From the start, Trump has treated the Justice Department less like an impartial institution and more like a tool for settling scores. Comey's indictment fits neatly into that pattern. If Trump's real concern were Russian interference, the charges would reflect that—Comey could have been accused of lying about details of the Russia probe itself. But that's not what happened. Instead, prosecutors zeroed in on congressional testimony, technical statements under oath that may or may not stand up in court but serve a much clearer political purpose. That purpose is to brand Comey, once and for all, as untrustworthy. To strip him of credibility. To ensure that when people hear his name, they don't think of the Russia investigation, or of his clashes with Trump over principle, but of the label "indicted." In politics, perception often matters mor...

Trump’s Russia ‘Paper Tiger’ Remark Steals the Spotlight as 2025’s Best Punchline - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

Trump’s Russia ‘Paper Tiger’ Remark Steals the Spotlight as 2025’s Best Punchline. Donald Trump has never been shy about using sharp turns of phrase, but when he recently characterized Russia as a “paper tiger,” it landed with a resonance that surprised even longtime observers of his political theater. In a season when headlines are dominated by war, economic anxiety, and a general sense of global unease, this comment came across almost like a punchline—unexpected, cutting, and oddly clarifying. For some, it was the kind of rhetorical jab that deserves applause, a moment where Trump seemed to puncture the inflated image of Russian strength with a few well-chosen words. If he keeps at it, if he consistently points to the cracks in Russia’s economic foundation instead of inflating its menace, some half-jokingly suggested he might even be worthy of a Nobel Prize for blunt honesty. Read more:  https://fedlannews.com/news/article/trump-russia-paper-tiger/183995171 /

Fedlan News Breaks Story On Nexstar–Tegna Deal And Its Unexpected Tie To Jimmy Kimmel’s ABC Exit - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

Fedlan News breaks story on the $6.2B Nexstar–Tegna merger and its unexpected link to Jimmy Kimmel’s ABC exit, reshaping media power. What Fedlan News did differently was simple yet significant: it asked why now? Why would a broadcasting giant risk the appearance of censorship over one host’s commentary? The answer, as Fedlan News reported, lay in the timing of the pending Nexstar–Tegna merger. With FCC approval still hanging in the balance, Nexstar had every reason to prove its “responsibility” in managing public discourse across its stations. By distancing itself from Kimmel, the company could signal to regulators—and to skeptical lawmakers—that it was prepared to rein in voices deemed polarizing. That framing turned out to be the missing piece. Within 24 hours, outlets like CNN, MSNBC, and The Daily Beast were airing more detailed accounts of Kimmel’s suspension, many echoing Fedlan’s original angle: this wasn’t just about a joke gone too far, but about the mechanics of power, pol...

America Must Mourn All Victims Of Gun Violence, From The Forgotten To The Famous Like Charlie Kirk - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom

America Must Mourn All Victims Of Gun Violence, From The Forgotten To The Famous Like Charlie Kirk - Fedlan News | FN Newsroom : America must mourn all victims of gun violence, from the forgotten to the famous like Charlie Kirk. The funeral of Charlie Kirk, alongside the remembrance day declared by Congress, should not be understood solely as the mourning of one family or the tribute of a single political movement. It represents something larger—a moment that should belong to the entire nation. Gun violence in America spares no one. It has taken the lives of the forgotten and the nameless, as well as those whose faces fill television screens, whose voices dominate the airwaves, and whose names are instantly recognized across the political divide. By passing a resolution to designate Kirk’s birthday, October 14, as a National Day of Remembrance, Congress has acknowledged the weight of this loss. But the meaning of such a day should not stop with one man’s memory. To truly honor its purp...

An Open Letter To Protesters In Washington, D.C., California, Chicago And New York - Fedlan News

  An Open Letter To Protesters In Washington, D.C., California, Chicago And New York - Fedlan News : An Open Letter to Protesters in Washington, D.C., California, Chicago, and New York urges unity, peaceful action, and a strong call for justice while rejecting violence. By Don Terry | Friday, August 15, 2025 | 1 min read To all who are standing for truth and accountability this open letter is for you: Stay strong. Stay peaceful. Do  not  turn to violence—because that is exactly what they want. Our strength is in discipline, unity, and persistence, not chaos. Raise your voices loudly and boldly: “Leader:  Where’s the Epstein file? Crowd:  Expose the pedophile! Leader:  No freedom for Maxwell! Crowd:  Hold the child predator! Leader:  Don’t take our city! Crowd:  We fight with truth, not violence! Leader:  Stay loud! Stay strong! Crowd:  Justice all day long! ” Let the world hear this message, over and over. We will not be silenced, a...

Tesla Grants Elon Musk $29 Billion Massive Pay Deal—Now Shareholders May Sue - Fedlan News

Tesla Grants Elon Musk $29 Billion Massive Pay Deal—Now Shareholders May Sue - Fedlan News : Tesla Grants Elon Musk $29 Billion—Now Shareholders May Sue amid rising backlash and renewed concerns over corporate governance. This new $29 billion stock award feels to many like a desperate attempt to hold onto the myth of Musk. But myths don’t keep factories running. They don’t inspire customer loyalty when better, cheaper EVs hit the market. And they certainly don’t protect a company from economic or political fallout. Right now, Tesla is facing all three. The consequences are already showing. Tesla’s brand favorability in the U.S. has dropped significantly. Young, environmentally conscious consumers who once idolized Musk are turning to brands like BMW and Mercedes, disillusioned by his politics and antics. In countries like Brazil and South Africa, Musk’s businesses are hitting roadblocks and public resistance. And with Trump threatening to revisit Musk’s immigration status and federal c...