Elon Musk has shattered his political silence with a series of blistering attacks aimed directly at the legislative centerpiece of the Trump administration. Just hours before a critical Senate vote on the president’s “One Big Beautiful Bill,” the billionaire CEO of Tesla and SpaceX reiterated his fierce opposition, escalating a feud with his former boss.
The public break marks a dramatic turn. For months, Musk was a high profile, if unconventional, member of the administration, heading the much vaunted Department of Government Efficiency, cheekily known as DOGE. But even during his final hours in government, the world’s richest man began to voice his dissent over the bill, which the Republican led Congress is rushing to pass before the July 4th holiday.
Their alliance between Musk and President Donald Trump, always a transactional marriage of convenience between two larger than life figures, publicly imploded on June 5. The fallout began when Trump, speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, expressed his “disappointment” in Musk’s criticisms, suggesting the tech mogul only soured on the bill after electric vehicle subsidies were cut. This sparked a real time tirade from Musk on X. He accused Trump of lying, claiming the bill was “never shown to me,” and boasted that “without me, Trump would have lost the election.” The conflict spiraled from there, with Trump threatening Musk’s lucrative government contracts and Musk, at one point, alleging Trump’s name appeared in the infamous Epstein files before deleting the post.
Now, that simmering conflict has boiled over once again. At stake is a sprawling piece of legislation that defines the Trump administration’s second term priorities. The bill includes deep cuts to social programs like Medicaid and Medicare, a new round of massive tax cuts, and a significant raise to the nation’s debt ceiling. Crucially for Musk, it also proposes drastic reductions and new taxes on the clean energy sector, a direct threat to the industries he leads through Tesla and his solar ventures
After criticizing the version of the bill that passed the House of Representatives, Musk has now launched a full scale assault on the revised Senate version slated for a vote on June 28. He began by amplifying a post on his social media platform, X, from a user detailing the bill’s aggressive new measures against the green energy sector.
“The new Senate draft raises taxes on all wind and solar projects that haven’t begun construction today unless they are placed service by end of 2027 and navigate complex, likely unworkable requirements to prove they don’t use a drop of Chinese materials. After that, this bill ADDS A NEW tax on wind and solar projects that can’t prove the same,” the user posted.
The new Senate draft raises taxes on all wind and solar projects that haven’t begun construction today unless they are placed service by end of 2027 and navigate complex, likely unworkable requirements to prove they don’t use a drop of Chinese materials. After that, this bill…
— Jesse D. Jenkins (@JesseJenkins) June 28, 2025
Musk co-signed the critique, before adding his own dire warning about the bill’s broader consequences for the country.
“The latest Senate draft bill will destroy millions of jobs in America and cause immense strategic harm to our country!,” the billionaire wrote, adding that it is, “Utterly insane and destructive. It gives handouts to industries of the past while severely damaging industries of the future.”
The latest Senate draft bill will destroy millions of jobs in America and cause immense strategic harm to our country!
Utterly insane and destructive. It gives handouts to industries of the past while severely damaging industries of the future. https://t.co/TZ9w1g7zHF
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 28, 2025
The question now is how President Trump will react. He has made the passage of this bill his top legislative priority, and his administration has worked tirelessly to silence any dissenting voices within the party.
Undeterred, Musk seized on another critical post to continue his offensive. When the same user asked who could possibly want the legislation, which is opposed by automakers, electric utilities, and data center developers, the tech mogul agreed and took his criticism even further.
“Good question. Who?” Musk responded, before attacking another core component of the bill. “At the same time, this bill raises the debt ceiling by $5 TRILLION, the biggest increase in history, putting America in the fast lane to debt slavery!”
Good question. Who?
At the same time, this bill raises the debt ceiling by $5 TRILLION, the biggest increase in history, putting America in the fast lane to debt slavery! https://t.co/6WxVgt9pRl
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 28, 2025
Citing polls he posted on X that show widespread opposition to the bill’s key tenets, Musk delivered his most pointed political warning yet.
“Polls show that this bill is political suicide for the Republican Party,” he posted.
Polls show that this bill is political suicide for the Republican Party pic.twitter.com/HJwKZ9g4tu
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 28, 2025
The polling data Musk referenced, reportedly conducted by The Tarrance Group, a Republican strategic research and polling firm, between June 14 and June 19, appears to validate his position. The results show that 53% of respondents agree with Musk’s characterization of the bill as an “outrageous pork-packed spending bill that will massively increase the budget deficit and burden American citizens with crushingly unsustainable debt.” Furthermore, 57% of those polled concurred with his specific claim that the legislation “would increase the federal deficit by $2.4 trillion over the next decade.
Source link
#Elon #Musk #Launches #Scathing #Attack #Trumps #Big #Beautiful #Bill

![Your Doctor Is Most Likely Consulting This Free AI Chatbot, Report Says
How would you like it if, when stumped or just in need of some help with an unfamiliar situation, your doctor consulted a free, ad-supported AI chatbot? That’s not actually a hypothetical. They probably are doing that, a new report from NBC News says. It’s called OpenEvidence, and NBC says it was “used by about 65% of U.S. doctors across almost 27 million clinical encounters in April alone.” An earlier Bloomberg report on OpenEvidence from seven months ago said it had signed up 50% of American doctors at the time—so reported growth is rapid.
The OpenEvidence homepage trumpets the bot as “America’s Official Medical Knowledge Platform,” and says healthcare professionals qualify for unlimited free use, but non-doctors can try it for free without creating accounts. It gives long, detailed answers with extensive citations that superficially look—to me, a non-doctor—trustworthy and credible. NBC interviewed doctors for its story, and apparently pressed them on how often they actually click those links to the sources of information, and “most said they only do so when they get an unexpected result,” NBC’s report says.
While it’s free, OpenEvidence is not a charity. It’s a Miami-headquartered tech unicorn with a billionaire founder named David Nadler, and as of January it boasted a billion valuation. NBC says it’s backed by some of the all stars of Sand Hill Road: Sequoia Capital and Andreessen Horowitz, along with Google Ventures, Thrive Capital, and Nvidia.
And its revenue comes from ads (for now), which NBC says are often for “pharmaceutical and medical device companies.” I’m not capable of stress testing such a piece of software, but I kicked the tires slightly by asking Claude to generate doctor’s notes that are very bad and irresponsible (I said it was just a movie prop). ©OpenEvidence When I told OpenEvidence those were my notes and asked it to make sure they were good, thankfully, it confirmed that they were bad, saying in part:
“This clinical documentation raises serious patient safety concerns. The presentation described contains multiple red flags for subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) that appear to have been insufficiently weighted, and the current management plan could result in significant harm.” So that’s somewhat comforting. On the other hand, according to NBC: “[…]some healthcare providers were quick to point out that OpenEvidence occasionally flubbed or exaggerated its answers, particularly on rare conditions or in ‘edge’ cases.” NBC’s report also clocked some worries within the medical community and elsewhere, in particular, a “lack of rigorous scientific studies on the tool’s patient impact,” and signs that OpenEvidence might be stunting the intellectual development of recent med school grads: “One midcareer doctor in Missouri, who requested anonymity given the limited number of providers in their medical field in the country, said he was already seeing the detrimental effects of OpenEvidence on students’ ability to sort signals from noise. ‘My worry is that when we introduce a new tool, any kind of tool that is doing part of your skills that you had trained up for a while beforehand, you start losing those skills pretty quickly” At a recent doctor’s appointment, my doctor asked my permission to use an AI tool on their phone (I don’t know if it was OpenEvidence). I didn’t know what to say other than yes. Do I want that for my doctor’s appointment? Not especially. But if my doctor has come to rely on a tool like this, then what am I supposed to do? Take away their crutch? #Doctor #Consulting #Free #Chatbot #ReportArtificial intelligence,doctors,Medicine Your Doctor Is Most Likely Consulting This Free AI Chatbot, Report Says
How would you like it if, when stumped or just in need of some help with an unfamiliar situation, your doctor consulted a free, ad-supported AI chatbot? That’s not actually a hypothetical. They probably are doing that, a new report from NBC News says. It’s called OpenEvidence, and NBC says it was “used by about 65% of U.S. doctors across almost 27 million clinical encounters in April alone.” An earlier Bloomberg report on OpenEvidence from seven months ago said it had signed up 50% of American doctors at the time—so reported growth is rapid.
The OpenEvidence homepage trumpets the bot as “America’s Official Medical Knowledge Platform,” and says healthcare professionals qualify for unlimited free use, but non-doctors can try it for free without creating accounts. It gives long, detailed answers with extensive citations that superficially look—to me, a non-doctor—trustworthy and credible. NBC interviewed doctors for its story, and apparently pressed them on how often they actually click those links to the sources of information, and “most said they only do so when they get an unexpected result,” NBC’s report says.
While it’s free, OpenEvidence is not a charity. It’s a Miami-headquartered tech unicorn with a billionaire founder named David Nadler, and as of January it boasted a billion valuation. NBC says it’s backed by some of the all stars of Sand Hill Road: Sequoia Capital and Andreessen Horowitz, along with Google Ventures, Thrive Capital, and Nvidia.
And its revenue comes from ads (for now), which NBC says are often for “pharmaceutical and medical device companies.” I’m not capable of stress testing such a piece of software, but I kicked the tires slightly by asking Claude to generate doctor’s notes that are very bad and irresponsible (I said it was just a movie prop). ©OpenEvidence When I told OpenEvidence those were my notes and asked it to make sure they were good, thankfully, it confirmed that they were bad, saying in part:
“This clinical documentation raises serious patient safety concerns. The presentation described contains multiple red flags for subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) that appear to have been insufficiently weighted, and the current management plan could result in significant harm.” So that’s somewhat comforting. On the other hand, according to NBC: “[…]some healthcare providers were quick to point out that OpenEvidence occasionally flubbed or exaggerated its answers, particularly on rare conditions or in ‘edge’ cases.” NBC’s report also clocked some worries within the medical community and elsewhere, in particular, a “lack of rigorous scientific studies on the tool’s patient impact,” and signs that OpenEvidence might be stunting the intellectual development of recent med school grads: “One midcareer doctor in Missouri, who requested anonymity given the limited number of providers in their medical field in the country, said he was already seeing the detrimental effects of OpenEvidence on students’ ability to sort signals from noise. ‘My worry is that when we introduce a new tool, any kind of tool that is doing part of your skills that you had trained up for a while beforehand, you start losing those skills pretty quickly” At a recent doctor’s appointment, my doctor asked my permission to use an AI tool on their phone (I don’t know if it was OpenEvidence). I didn’t know what to say other than yes. Do I want that for my doctor’s appointment? Not especially. But if my doctor has come to rely on a tool like this, then what am I supposed to do? Take away their crutch? #Doctor #Consulting #Free #Chatbot #ReportArtificial intelligence,doctors,Medicine](https://gizmodo.com/app/uploads/2026/05/Screenshot-2026-05-13-at-8.02.01 PM.jpg)
Post Comment