Tag: moms

  • X Employee Shares Mom’s Text On Valentine’s Day. Elon Musk Reacts

    X Employee Shares Mom’s Text On Valentine’s Day. Elon Musk Reacts

    As the world celebrates Valentine’s Day, an employee of social media platform X has shared a message from her mother for none other than Elon Musk. The message? Elon Musk is her “hero”.

    Noémi shared the screenshot on X and mentioned Mr Musk in her post. “Your boss, EM is a hero,” read the text in the screenshot. The caption read, “From: mom to: @elonmusk Happy Valentine’s Day.” The employee also added a red heart emoji to the caption.

    The Tesla CEO reacted to the post with a heart emoticon, prompting innumerable positive reactions from people on the platform.

    Take a look at the post here:

    The post went viral, with many praising the billionaire entrepreneur.

    Commenting on the post, a person wrote, “Elon is special.”

    Another said, “Elon, you’re a hero to humanity, leading with heart and vision. Thank you.”

    “Yes he is. How awesome it would be to work for him,” remarked another person.

    “My beloved @elonmusk, I have witnessed a sight beyond compare. I beheld until all their thrones were cast down, and you, the ‘Ancient of Days,’ took your rightful seat,” another added.

    The cute moment on X came days after Mr Musk’s four-year-old son stole the show during a White House Press briefing. Standing beside US President Donald Trump, Mr Musk fielded questions from the media, while the toddler appeared to mimic his father. The billionaire laughed and suggested the kid stay quiet.

    Earlier, President Trump introduced the kid saying his name was X, adding he was a “high IX individual”.

    On Thursday, Mr Musk met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at Blair House in Washington DC. The tech tycoon was accompanied by his partner and director of Neuralink, Shivon Zilis, and his three children.

    During their “very good” meeting, Mr Musk and PM Modi discussed space, mobility, technology and innovation.


  • Moms for Liberty says Kids Off Social Media Act does not apply to YouTube Kids

    Moms for Liberty says Kids Off Social Media Act does not apply to YouTube Kids

    A new bipartisan bill intended to shield children under 13 from harmful content on social media does not apply to YouTube Kids, which parental rights advocates warn still feeds transgender ideology and DEI videos to minors. 

    Parental rights advocates who spoke to Fox News Digital also took issue with the bill, deemed the Kids Off Social Media Act, over its restrictions on the algorithm, suggesting the measure constitutes “government overreach.” 

    The bill was introduced by Sens. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, Ted Cruz, R-Texas, Chris Murphy, D-Conn., and Katie Britt, R-Ala., and is expected to go to mark-up on Wednesday. In an online question-and-answer fact sheet, Schatz’s office said YouTube Kids does not fit the definition of social media under the bill, nor do video games and other platforms like wireless messaging, educational platforms and teleconferencing. 

    Upon visiting the YouTube Kids site, users are prompted to determine whether they are a parent or a child. It tells parents they must set up an account for their children and can block videos or channels they do not like. Among the content available to children on the site are videos made by “queer” creators, including from the accounts Queer Kid Stuff, Nickelodeon and CBC Kids News, advocates note. Other popular videos center on DEI, such as explaining “systemic racism” to children. 

    DEI OFFICE CLOSURES AT UNIVERSITIES PILE UP AFTER ANOTHER STATE ORDERS END TO ‘WOKE VIRUS’

    Social media applications are seen grouped on a mobile device. (Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    “I don’t think that we should just exclude apps from scrutiny because they say kids in them. You know, we’re all familiar with the so-called gender-affirming care, which isn’t really helpful or caring in any way. We’ve learned that, right? So the title of something shouldn’t just allay our fears. I don’t know why YouTube Kids has been excluded,” Moms for Liberty co-founder Tiffany Justice told Fox News Digital. 

    “What we have seen on YouTube Kids, I’ve seen personally myself, is evidence of transgender ideology being fed to kids,” she explained. “We know that trans activists have been targeting children. We know that there are vulnerable children who see this content. They often will click on it. Sometimes the algorithm will feed them more of that content. And so I think it’s very concerning. I don’t want parents to just say, this is meant for children and everything’s okay.” 

    “We have always said it, Moms for Liberty, we do not co-parent with the government.,” Justice said. “So I really would like to continue to tell parents they need to be involved. They need to be the ones that are making those choices.” 

    “There’s a tidal wave of evidence barreling down on the United States showing that so-called gender-affirming care is bad for children,” she said, championing President Donald Trump’s executive action to remove DEI and gender ideology from classrooms. “We do not want our children indoctrinated, indoctrinated to think that they were born in the wrong body. This is a horrible message. Stopping the natural, healthy development of children is criminal. And so the idea that you have a website that is feeding kids content around gender, ideology or DEI is extremely concerning. And it is worrisome that perhaps parents think, well, it’s YouTube Kids, so it’s safe.” 

    Reached by Fox News Digital, a spokesperson for YouTube defended the YouTube Kids app but did not address the legislative proposal directly.

    “The YouTube Kids app puts parents in the driver’s seat,” the spokesperson said. “Parents can choose what their kids see and what they don’t see. They have control over the content their kids watch and can easily go into the app to curate a list of allowed channels or block content from their child’s profile through the ‘approved content only’ setting.”

    Meanwhile, Justice highlighted separate legislative measures introduced by Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, to protect children online, including one bill introduced last session that would require age verification in the app store. 

    Lee is not listed as a co-sponsor of the Kids Off Social Media Act, which would prohibit social media platforms from allowing children under the age of 13 to create or maintain social media accounts, but does not include a parental consent provision. That bill would not require users to present a government ID to gain access to social media and instead requires social media companies to use data about their users, including pictures they post, channels they follow or the date of birth they require upon sign-up to determine if a child is on their platform. 

    YouTube Kids homescreen

    The YouTube Kids logo is seen displayed on a mobile phone screen. (Faisal Bashir/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

    As for another aspect of the Kids Off Social Media Act, Justice said she was concerned that the bill bans “algorithmic boosting” for children under 17. Under the bill, social media platforms would not be able to use machine learning to follow exactly how long children watch posts and what they click on to learn what makes each individual child stay on the platform the longest. 

    Schatz’s office argued that social media companies exploit kids for profit in this way, but Justice said her main concern is the government controlling the algorithm. 

    THERAPISTS SOUND ALARM AFTER STUDY SHOWS DRAMATIC RISE IN GENDER DYSPHORIA AMONG CHILDREN

    “If your son likes hockey, and it gives you more hockey information, well, I don’t know that that would bother me,” Justice said, explaining that she met a fellow mom who told her she goes on her children’s social media accounts and “trains” the algorithm to pull up more conservative political content so that her teenagers are exposed to another perspective outside mainstream media. 

    “So I just think there are a lot of questions about who’s controlling the algorithm,” Justice said. “We know that there are oftentimes really dangerous content that can affect children’s mental health. We have evidence of that. And so we want to be really careful about how that algorithm is being used. And again, I just don’t know that I want the government making those decisions for my family.” 

    Another parental rights advocate, Cat Parks, the former vice chair of the Texas GOP, told Fox News Digital that her primary concern with the Kids Off Social Media Act is that it “represents unnecessary government overreach in an area where parents need to have ultimate authority.” Parks said the “real issue here is that it’s parents who need to be informed to be able to make the correct decisions for their children, not something that’s mandated by the government.” 

    “As a parent, I’m very involved in my son’s online presence and approve what platforms that he’s allowed to interact with. So what I don’t want, I don’t want government to be able to strip my ability for my child’s feed to be personalized or for me as a parent to choose and make the decisions about what he has access to,” Parks said.

    YouTube app download from app store

    A YouTube app logo is displayed on an iPhone in the Apple Store. (Sheldon Cooper/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

    Justice argued that the onus is on parents to shield their children from harmful content, and while there may be a role for government to play, “it’s really kind of murky as to what that role is going to be.” 

    “We know that the algorithm is addicting,” she said. “I know that it wants you to keep scrolling and feeds you more information that it thinks that you’d be interested in. It’s just a question of what is that information now – transgender ideology, gender ideology. We’re working to wipe it off the face of the map. So, hopefully, that type of content won’t be as prevalent. But again, the bottom line is parents need to be active, engaged and involved in what their children are accessing online.” 

    “I don’t want the government to be my kid’s daddy,” she added. “They have a father, and he’s a great one, and we’ll make good decisions for our kids together.” 

    Most apps have age restrictions, but Schatz’s office cited a 2023 United Kingdom regulatory study that found nearly 40% of children ages 8–12 still use social media platforms. 

    In the question-and-answer document, Schatz’s office also said the bill “does not prevent LGBTQ+ youth from accessing relevant resources online.” 

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    “We have worked closely with LGBTQ+ groups while crafting this legislation to ensure that this bill will not negatively impact this community,” the fact sheet said. “Under this bill, kids would still be able to affirmatively seek out content and have that information displayed in a chronological feed. Furthermore, this bill would not impact access to platforms such as websites run by non-profits, direct messaging and teleconferencing services, and educational websites, among others.” 

  • Karine Jean-Pierre reveals mom’s cancer diagnosis — and why she kept it secret

    Karine Jean-Pierre reveals mom’s cancer diagnosis — and why she kept it secret

    Former White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre gave Americans a look behind the podium in a telling Vanity Fair piece published on Tuesday. 

    Jean-Pierre, who chose to keep her personal life private while working in the Biden-Harris administration, revealed a private health battle that put significant weight on her and her family.

    Jean-Pierre recalled attending the Bidens’ first state dinner in December 2022, saying it was “the first time the administration felt a dinner was safe to host since the pandemic began.” That evening Jean-Pierre was accompanied by her mother, who told her that it was “the happiest day of my life.”

    The state dinner was the last time Jean-Pierre “recognized my mother as the woman I grew up with.” Unfortunately, things took a turn, and just a couple of months later, her mother was diagnosed with stage II colon cancer. Jean-Pierre found out that her mother was sick while visiting Poland with then-President Joe Biden.

    “My mother has always been a private person. When she finally acquiesced to reality, she told me: ‘Don’t tell anyone. Do not tell the president I have cancer,’” the former press secretary wrote.

    WHITE HOUSE REPORTERS REFLECT ON COVERING RECLUSIVE BIDEN, WHAT THEY HOPE FOR IN COVERING TRUMP

    Then-White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre speaks during the daily briefing in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 30, 2023. (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)

    Biden was supposedly “one of only a few people at the White House” who knew about what Jean-Pierre’s mother was going through. Jean-Pierre said Biden “showed up for me” during the difficult time.

    While navigating her mother’s care alongside her siblings, Jean-Pierre was driving to New York “every weekend I could to see my mom,” only to return late at night to catch “a few hours of sleep” before heading to the White House.

    White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre speaks during a news conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on April 9, 2024 in Washington, D.C.

    White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre speaks during a news conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on April 9, 2024 in Washington, D.C. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

    Despite serving in a very public-facing role in the Biden-Harris administration with her “second full-time job” coordinating her mother’s care, Jean-Pierre explained that being a “private person” is only one of the reasons why she did not make her mom’s cancer battle public. The former press secretary said she was also working under the “weight” of being a “first.”

    “I’m the first Black press secretary. The first person of color press secretary. The first openly queer press secretary. The first Haitian American immigrant press secretary. The first press secretary to be all of the above. Being a first meant that my responsibilities were beyond those in the job description, the load heavier. I bear a certain responsibility to the communities I represent,” Jean-Pierre wrote.

    KARINE JEAN-PIERRE’S MOST MEMORABLE MOMENTS OF 2024

    Jean-Pierre also claimed that she believed sharing her mother’s diagnosis would have been seen “as an excuse” because “society doesn’t allow women of color to be vulnerable at work. When you’re a first, you don’t get the benefit of the doubt.”

    Jen Psaki and Karine Jean-Pierre

    White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre took over the role in May 2022, when Jen Psaki left for MSNBC. (REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque)

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    During her time in the White House briefing room, Jean-Pierre faced criticism for a series of embarrassing and controversial moments.

    In one of her more infamous moments, Jean-Pierre accused the media and others of making “cheap fakes” that made Biden “appear especially frail or mentally confused.” As the American people wondered if the commander in chief was capable of carrying out the duties of his office, Jean-Pierre was gaslighting them by chalking it up to “misinformation” and “disinformation.”

    After Biden spoke out against Georgia’s voting laws, dubbing them “Jim Crow 2.0,” Jean-Pierre raised eyebrows with her claim that “high turnout and voter suppression can take place at the same time.”

    Jean-Pierre was also tasked with walking back denials of the possibility that the president would pardon his son, Hunter Biden. Once the president issued his son’s pardon, despite repeatedly vowing not to do so, Jean-Pierre explained the pivot by saying that the “circumstances have changed.” She also placed the blame on then-President-elect Trump, saying that the president was trying to protect his son from Republican “retribution.”

    In May 2022, Jean-Pierre took over for her predecessor Jen Psaki, who served as Biden’s press secretary for nearly a year and a half. When handing the reins over to Jean-Pierre, Psaki called her successor a “remarkable person” before listing her qualifications for the position.