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

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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 pre...

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,...