A Day in the Life of the Universe
A place were I can write...
My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.
March 23, 2026
NGC 1566
If not perfect, then this spiral galaxy is at least one of the most photogenic. An island universe containing billions of stars and situated about 40 million light-years away toward the constellation of the Dolphinfish (Dorado), NGC 1566 presents a gorgeous face-on view. Classified as a grand design spiral, NGC 1566 shows two prominent and graceful spiral arms that are traced by bright blue star clusters, red emission nebulas, and dark cosmic dust lanes. Numerous Hubble Space Telescope images of NGC 1566 have been taken to study star formation, supernovas, and the spiral's unusually active center. NGC 1566's flaring center makes the spiral one of the closest and brightest Seyfert galaxies, likely housing a central supermassive black hole wreaking havoc on surrounding stars and gas.
Spiral NGC 1300 and elliptical NGC 1297
Spiral NGC 1300 and elliptical NGC 1297 are galaxies that lie on the banks of the southern constellation Eridanus (The River). At 70 million light-years distant or more, both are members of the Eridanus Galaxy Cluster. About 100,000 light-years across, at lower left in this sharp, galaxy group photo NGC 1300 is seen face-on with a prominent central bar and grand, sweeping spiral arms. Like other spiral galaxies, including our own barred spiral Milky Way Galaxy, NGC 1300 is thought to have a supermassive central black hole. A contrast in appearance and slightly more distant, NGC 1297 is the roughly spherical large elliptical galaxy near the top of the frame. With little active star formation, elliptical galaxies are composed of older populations of stars and are likely he result of multiple collisions and mergers with spirals.
Good, I’m Glad He’s Dead... I will say when Trump is dead...
“Good, I’m Glad He’s Dead”—Trump Responds to the Death of Robert Mueller
Mueller led the FBI for 12 years and served as the special counsel investigating Russian interference in the 2016 election.
Katie Herchenroeder
Robert S. Mueller III died on Friday at the age of 81.
His family confirmed his passing, though did not provide a cause, according to reporting from the New York Times.
Immediately following the news, Trump wrote on his Truth Social page: “Robert Mueller just died. Good, I’m glad he’s dead. He can no longer hurt innocent people! President DONALD J. TRUMP.”
Mueller led the Federal Bureau of Investigation for 12 years and came head to head with President Donald Trump as special counsel tasked with looking into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election—an inquiry that led to the president villainizing him
As the Times reported in its Saturday obituary of the former FBI chief, the Russia inquiry culminated in a now-infamous 448-page Mueller report. That document “concluded that Russia had systemically sought to help Mr. Trump win the election, and that the candidate and his campaign encouraged their clandestine assistance.”
Mueller concluded in his investigation: “While this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.”
Trump, who was harsh toward people who posted critically about the late Charlie Kirk in the wake of his assassination, has shown no such restraint in his own posts involving people recently deceased, including the Hollywood director Rob Reiner, who was slain by his own son in December.
Outrage over Trump’s response to Mueller’s passing is spreading quickly around social media.
Adam Kinzinger, the former Republican congressman from Illinois who invoked Trump’s ire by sitting on the House Select Committee investigating the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol, posted on social media calling Trump “an abhorant [sic] piece of Human garbage.”
Rep. Seth Moulton, a Massachusetts Democrat and Marine Corps combat veteran running for Senate, posted on X and Bluesky, calling the president’s post “disgusting.”
How stupid are these "people"?
Treasury Secretary Insists Trump Is “Jiu-Jitsuing the Iranians”
A key Democrat responds, “That’s exactly what our leaders said in the middle of Vietnam.”
Alex Nguyen
“Sometimes you have to escalate to de-escalate.”
That’s how Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent defended Donald Trump’s threats against Iranian leaders and infrastructure on Sunday, insisting on NBC’s Meet the Press that such bluster is “the only language the Iranians understand.”
On Saturday night, the president posted on Truth Social that if Iran doesn’t “FULLY OPEN, WITHOUT THREAT” the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours, the US military would “hit and obliterate their various POWER PLANTS, STARTING WITH THE BIGGEST ONE FIRST!”
Around 20 percent of the world’s oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, and Iran has effectively blocked transit since the US and Israeli strikes beginning on February 28.
Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of Iran’s Parliament, was defiant on Sunday, warning that that attacks on Iran’s infrastructure would mean “energy and oil facilities across the region will be considered legitimate targets and will be irreversibly destroyed.”
The US has steered away from hitting Iran’s oil infrastructure in the past month, and Trump reportedly told Israel that they should not repeat strikes on major energy plants after Iran responded to an Israeli attack on a key gas field last Thursday by hitting Qatar’s Ras Laffan Industrial City, which processes about a fifth of the world’s liquid natural gas.
Last week, Bessent announced that the administration was lifting sanctions on approximately 140 million barrels of Iranian crude currently stranded on tankers, in an attempt to relieve skyrocketing oil prices. On March 12, Bessent said the administration was temporarily lifting sanctions on Russian oil also stranded at sea that were imposed because of its war on Ukraine.
Bessent doubled down on defending Trump’s actions on Sunday, telling Meet the Press host Kristen Welker repeatedly that she has “terrible framing” when she questioned the administration’s plans in Iran. “We are jiu-jitsuing the Iranians,” he insisted. “We are using their own oil against them.”
In one instance, Welker asked Bessent whether Trump would ever raise taxes to fund the war—a pertinent question as the Pentagon is reportedly seeking $200 billion from Congress to pay for the conflict.
“It’s a ridiculous question,” Bessent said. After an awkward pause, he said, “Why would we do that? We have plenty. We have a trillion dollars in this year’s budget for the military.”
WELKER: Would the administration ever raise taxes in order to fund this war?
BESSENT: Again, Kristen, terrible framing
WELKER: It's a simple question
BESSENT: It's a ridiculous question
WELKER: Can you answer it?
BESSENT: Why would we do that? We have plenty. We have a trillion dollars.
Speaking on whether Trump would deploy troops in Iran to secure the Strait of Hormuz or another operation, Bessent said, “The command and control system of the Iranian regime is in chaos. This is Hitler’s bunker. Hitler is dead.” And because of the disarray among its leadership, he asserted, Iran’s retaliation to strikes are mostly “lone wolf activities.”
“It’s like they’ve never read a history book,” Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) said on Meet the Press shortly following the Treasury secretary’s appearance. “That’s exactly what our leaders said in the middle of Vietnam and in the 20 years of mismanagement in Afghanistan.”
Voter crackdown
Trump’s voter crackdown reaches college campuses
The administration's moves to tighten voting rules could dampen student participation in a midterm election where control of Congress may be decided by small margins.
By Bianca Quilantan
College campuses are already getting a taste of President Donald Trump’s effort to impose broad, new voting restrictions across the country.
While Trump’s push for a partisan elections bill faces several bottlenecks on Capitol Hill, his administration has spent months quietly chipping away at programs designed to boost turnout among a voting bloc Republicans say lean Democratic.
Colleges play a critical role in helping students vote in what is often their first chance to cast a ballot. But the Trump administration is barring colleges from using a federal program that employs low-income students to register voters and threatening to investigate schools if they use data from a nonpartisan student voting study to help boost turnout.
The Education Department has also warned colleges not to violate election laws — and told schools to limit who they share voter registration information with — even though there is no evidence of widespread fraud on campuses.
The actions by Trump, who continues to make false claims of widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election, could dampen student participation in a midterm election where control of Congress may be decided by small margins.
“They want to suppress youth voting,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said of the administration’s efforts. “And they’re looking for every way they can to throw a little sand in the gears, to put a few rocks in the way, to roll back any programs that might help get people registered and to the polls.”
Almost 50 million people between the ages 18 to 29 were eligible to vote in the 2024 election, according to a study by the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement at Tufts University. About 47 percent of those people voted, with the majority skewing toward former Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris.
But 18- and 19-year-olds had lower turnout rates to the polls at 41 percent.
On college campuses, preliminary data from the Tufts study shows the student voting rate at 53 percent is significantly higher than the broader 18-29 age group and 76 percent of students are registered to vote.
But Scott Walker, former Wisconsin governor and president of Young America’s Foundation, a prominent conservative youth organization, rejected the idea that Trump and other Republicans don’t want students to vote.
“We are not afraid of younger voters,” he said. “We are afraid of younger voters who only hear one side of the story. This is why we work so hard to get conservative voices on campus to try to counterbalance the significant liberal bias at most colleges and universities.”
Many colleges host polling sites on their campuses during election years. Congress also requires these schools to distribute paper copies of in-state voter registration forms to students before their state’s deadline.
But Republicans have grown increasingly wary about election security, with one GOP strategist giving a presentation at a Republican National Committee donor retreat in 2023 calling for limits on voting on college campuses.
The GOP-backed SAVE America Act would institute strict new citizenship and photo ID requirements for voting. Trump has told Republican lawmakers that SAVE must be their priority and threatened to refuse any other bill until it is passed.
“Voter ID is fundamental,” said Sen. Jim Banks (R-Ind.), who is supportive of the voting measure in Congress and a law passed in his state last year that barred the use of campus IDs for voting. “It’s pretty common sense.”
More than a dozen states — largely red states — restrict the use of some student IDs to vote. Florida and New Hampshire state lawmakers have passed similar measures tightening voter ID laws this legislative session and others are starting to weigh legislation.
When asked if the rollback of the use of campus IDs could hurt student voting, Banks responded: “That’s ridiculous.”
Youth turnout has climbed since Trump’s first election in 2016, when just 39 percent of young voters cast ballots, according to the Tufts study. In 2020, when Trump lost to former President Joe Biden, youth participation rose to roughly 50 percent.
College-aged voters historically have lower turnout than older voters and often face hurdles casting ballots. This includes lack of transportation and navigating residency requirements and often knotty absentee ballot requirements for out-of-state students.
And even without the SAVE measure passing, Democrats and voting advocates warn actions already taken by the Education Department will erode recent gains in youth turnout.
“Whether it’s a SAVE Act or other things, it’s just intentionally trying to make it harder to vote in America — and in particular, going after demographics that the Republicans think are not on their side,” said Sen. Andy Kim (D-N.J.), who is part of a group of Democratic lawmakers pushing back on the Education Department’s moves.
One of those moves is barring colleges from using the agency’s Federal Work Study program to pay students for any work involving voting activity. The need-based federal aid program requires low-income students to work part-time jobs, typically on campus, to help fund their education. Colleges were deploying some of these students to help meet their voter registration mandates.
But the Trump Education Department in August rescinded Biden-era guidance that allowed the program to be used to employ students for voter registration activities that take place on or off-campus. The Biden administration expanded the program’s employment eligibility to include nonpartisan civic engagement work done for public entities, sparking an outcry from House GOP lawmakers and Republican attorneys general.
“The Trump Administration has been clear: our educational institutions should focus on providing students with real-world, workforce-oriented experiences, not engaging in political activism aimed at influencing elections,” said Ellen Keast, the department’s press secretary for higher education. “Protecting the integrity of American elections is critical to the security of our nation. If so-called voting advocates take issue with that, it raises serious questions about whether they are in the right line of work.”
But voting advocates and former Biden Education Department officials argue the Trump administration’s guidance goes further than undoing the prior policy.
“They don’t have the authority to prohibit colleges from hiring to do that kind of work using work-study funds because it’s contrary to statute,” said Amanda Fuchs Miller, who served as deputy assistant secretary for higher education programs under the Biden administration.
The guidance also “tells colleges that they don’t have to send all students voter registration forms,” which contradicts their legal requirements, she said.
The department is directing colleges to be more selective of which students get voter registration papers, interpreting the law more narrowly to say schools may “limit” who they give the forms to, and warning them against aiding and abetting voter fraud by noncitizens.
“Campuses aren’t there to determine who is eligible or who is not eligible to register to vote,” said Rebekah Caruthers, president of the Fair Elections Center, a national voting rights organization.
“This administration is putting pressure on campuses and is trying to create a chilling effect to make campuses scared to do civic engagement and civic learning,” she added.
In February, the department launched a probe into The National Study of Learning, Voting, and Engagement at Tufts University — the largest study of U.S. college student political participation. More than 1,200 colleges and universities from all 50 states and the District of Columbia voluntarily participate in the study, which has produced data on voter registration and turnout for every midterm and presidential election since 2016.
The study gives colleges private, individual-tailored reports with data on their students’ voter participation, which they use as a tool to improve their voting rates. But the department accused Tufts and the National Student Clearinghouse, an education research group, of violating the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, which protects student education records. The agency also sent letters to more than 1,000 university presidents advising them to refrain from using the report data or risk their own FERPA investigations.
Tufts in March acquiesced to the department’s request to delay the release of its report analyzing the 2024 election — which was expected earlier this year — until after the agency’s investigation has concluded. And Clearinghouse, which played a key role in processing student data, has ended its participation.
“When we see an administration that’s using the bully pulpit and all of the resources of the federal government to restrict voting rights, we have to ring the alarm,” Caruthers said.
TACO TACO TACO Trump....
Trump says strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure paused for 5 days amid US-Iran talks
In a social media post, Trump wrote that the U.S. and Iran have had “very good and productive conversations” in the past two days.
By Eric Bazail-Eimil, Paul McLeary and Cheyanne M. Daniels
President Donald Trump said Monday the United States would pause “any and all military strikes against Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure” for five days as Tehran and Washington engage in diplomatic negotiations.
In a social media post, Trump wrote in all caps that the U.S. and Iran have had “very good and productive conversations” in the past two days and that the pause on planned strikes against energy infrastructure came as a direct result of the “in depth, detailed, and constructive conversations.” Trump added that the talks “will continue throughout the week.”
The move indicates that a diplomatic off-ramp to the conflict between the U.S. and Iran could be in reach. It also followed increasing unease from the U.S.’s allies in the Middle East and Europe over the conflict continuing to spiral.
Trump on Saturday threatened significant strikes on Iran’s energy infrastructure if the country didn’t “FULLY OPEN, WITHOUT THREAT,” the Strait of Hormuz, the critical waterway through which a significant part of the globe’s oil travels.
The status of the strait has been of significant concern to Trump. The president has increasingly pressured historic American allies to play a role in securing safe passage for ships through the waterway, disparaging NATO as an unreliable partner when most European countries balked at his call and saying he never actually wanted their help.
Mike Waltz, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said in an interview with CBS’s “Face the Nation” Sunday that “we are seeing our allies come around, as they should.”
In an earlier interview with POLITICO, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres warned that strikes on Iran’s energy infrastructure could constitute war crimes.
Trump just days ago also downplayed the possibility of talks with Iran. On Friday, he told reporters at the White House that the U.S. and Iran “could have dialogue, but I don’t want to do a ceasefire,” saying any halt to military actions would be pointless “when you’re literally obliterating the other side.”
Hours after those comments, he suggested on Truth Social — the social media site that he owns — that the U.S. “is “getting very close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down.”
The ongoing war has generally been met with disapproval by Americans. A CBS News/YouGov survey released Sunday found that 57 percent of Americans believed the conflict was going either very or somewhat badly for the U.S.
Still, Congress has been unwilling to block further action by the administration.
Democrats have tried to pass a war powers resolution, but the Senate last week defeated the Democrat-introduced legislation to halt the campaign against Iran.
It was the second vote — and second failure in the upper chamber. Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) was the only Republican to side with Democrats. Sen. John Fetterman (D-Penn.) broke from his party to oppose the legislation.
Democrats have vowed to continue forcing votes on the issue.
Republicans have remained broadly supportive of the president’s efforts. Results from The POLITICO Poll released last week found that most Trump supporters backed the strikes.
One former defense official, granted anonymity to discuss the issue, expressed concern over the continued closure of the strait, saying the U.S. is “in a race against time to reopen the strait,” because the longer that commercial shipping stalled “we are demonstrating to the world that a middle power of relatively modest sophistication can deny command of the sea to the world’s most powerful navy.”
The U.S. has two aircraft carriers in the region, although the Ford aircraft carrier had to head for an unplanned port visit last week after a fire on board injured several sailors and caused hundreds more to lose their sleeping spaces.
There are dozens of fighter planes and bombers spread throughout the Middle East and at the British base at Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean that continue bombing runs, and two Marine units with around 5,000 Marines are currently en route from the Pacific.
Those units also come with their own air wings, and the Marines could go ashore on Iran’s Kharg island in the Persian Gulf to seize Iran’s primary oil shipment point, essentially cutting off the flow of Iranian oil.
The closure of the strait has forced Trump to shift war aims from destroying Iran’s missile making capacity to opening the critical waterway, with Apache helicopters and A-10 fighter jets now engaged in the battle over shipping lanes by targeting remaining Iranian naval assets.
Iran still maintains a stockpile of thousands of sea mines that it has yet to employ in any large measure, but if used could shut down the narrow passage completely. Two of the U.S. Navy’s three minesweeper vessels are out of the Gulf on repair, and their return date is uncertain.
With ships unable to safely pass through the strait, oil prices have surged, hovering near $100 per barrel for days. Trump’s announcement early Monday at least initially sent oil prices plummeting.
As oil prices rise, so have gas prices. Trump initially dismissed the rising cost of fuel, telling Reuters in early March, “if they rise, they rise.”
But in an effort to lower the costs, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Friday announced sanctions on about 140 million barrels of Iranian oil would be lifted.
“In essence, we will be using the Iranian barrels against Tehran to keep the price down as we continue Operation Epic Fury,” Bessent said.
Do you believe this stupid shit?? Who the fuck does he think he is?? A doctor???
RFK Jr. is a 'big fan' of this treatment and plans to widen access
He indicated that the FDA will soon take action on peptides, the mini-proteins biohackers tout as therapies for a range of ills.
By Lauren Gardner
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is poised to declare victory on widening access to one of the country’s biggest wellness fads: peptides, the building blocks of proteins that biohackers claim help quickly heal injuries and promote muscle growth and fat loss.
Kennedy — a self-declared “big fan” of the treatments for injuries for which he reports “good results — has accused the Food and Drug Administration of aggressively suppressing peptides’ use.
Last month, on Joe Rogan’s podcast, the Health Secretary signaled imminent action by the FDA to allow “about 14” peptides to be “more accessible” for domestic compounding pharmacies.
Kennedy didn’t specify what the FDA will do, referring vaguely to “some kind of new action” after the agency reviews the science around the peptides in question.
But there are other signs that new regulations are likely afoot. Last summer, a group of compounding pharmacies that had sued the FDA over its restrictive peptide stance agreed to stand down when the agency said it “expects to submit” a final rule by next February addressing four peptides the companies want to produce.
At minimum, the FDA could exercise leniency in enforcing against U.S.-based peptide makers unless they identified safety issues.
An HHS spokesperson did not answer POLITICO’s questions about how and when the FDA plans to act on peptides.
“The FDA’s goal is to ensure that patients can obtain FDA approved products, and when those aren’t available or can’t work because of a patient’s unique situation, [that they] are made by licensed U.S. pharmacies, prescribed by a physician, and produced under appropriate quality standards — not products from unregulated or foreign sources that may pose safety risks,” spokesperson Emily Hilliard said in an email.
Kennedy’s supporters in the Make America Healthy Again Movement, which include social media influencers selling popular peptide treatments, and his pharmacist allies have applauded his remarks and say they expect bold action from him any day now.
Brigham Buhler, a compounding pharmacy and wellness clinic owner who’s close to Kennedy, told Trump- and MAHA-friendly podcaster Rogan on an episode Wednesday that senior HHS officials “are aligned” on widening access to peptides.
“It’s just a matter of when,” he added.
‘One of the biggest medical experiments’ in history
Yet some pharmacists and doctors warn that any move by the FDA to loosen current regulations around peptides could pose serious health risks because of the lack of scientific data to support many of them.
Peptides, which are usually injected under the skin, include the FDA-approved diabetes therapy insulin and GLP-1 weight-loss drugs, like Ozempic and Wegovy. The global market for the mini-proteins is projected to reach $100 billion in the next decade as pharma companies chase the spectacular success of the GLP-1s and growing demand for precision medicine.
But Kennedy and the biohacking corner of the MAHA movement hype dubiously legal chemicals known by alphanumeric names — like BPC-157 and CJC-1295 — for their health benefits, despite questions around their efficacy and FDA safety approval. These products are now often manufactured in China and sold on the black market. Consumers are also seeking out peptides for purported anti-aging and sleep-promoting qualities, in addition to possible benefits for injuries and body composition.
Many wellness-focused Americans, skeptical of mainstream medicine and wary of “Big Pharma,” find these peptide treatments through social media influencers, some of whom offer links to products of dubious quality. They can also be found through peptide clinics that are popping up across the country.
“We’re about to unleash one of the biggest medical experiments in the history of America onto Americans as the test subjects,” Alec Ginsberg, chief operating officer at C.O. Bigelow, the country’s oldest pharmacy, said, referring to the lack of clinical data on peptide use.
In Kennedy’s telling, the FDA under President Joe Biden “illegally” reclassified more than a dozen peptides, including BPC-157, in 2023 to a category of substances considered potentially unsafe on its so-called bulks list for compounded drug ingredients. That made them illegal for specialized pharmacies to make.
Sellers found a loophole by marking these peptide products for research use only — a label that hasn’t stopped consumers from injecting themselves, anyway.
The FDA “did not shut down accessibility,” Buhler told POLITICO, and instead routed people to the gray market, where legal products labeled for research are diverted for human use, and the black market, where illegal products are sold.
Buhler, whose brother died of opioids, often invokes the FDA’s role in fueling the opioid crisis by approving new pain drugs when describing the allure of alternative therapies.
“Just because something is FDA-approved does not make it safe,” he said, adding that, by restricting peptides, the agency has “created an opioid crisis all over again.”
Skeptics of unleashing peptides puzzle over the MAHA movement’s enthusiasm for unproven therapies and rejection of FDA-approved treatments backed by reams of evidence.
“These are the same people that won’t take a vaccine that’s been shown to work in millions of people,” said Eric Topol, director of the Scripps Research Translational Institute who studies personalized medicine.
Compounders’ push on peptides
For years, compounding pharmacies urged the FDA to relax its stance on peptides — well before the MAHA movement elevated their profile.
In its 2024 lawsuit against the agency, the group of compounding pharmacies claimed the FDA under Biden illegally used the reclassification of peptides to put off final rules on what substances may and may not be legally compounded.
Independent advisers supported FDA proposals to prohibit the compounding of several peptides later that year, but the agency never finalized them.
The four peptides that are the subject of the lawsuit are used to treat conditions ranging from impaired immune responses to vaccines and transplants to a rare genetic disorder causing insatiable appetite. They’re currently listed on the FDA website as substances that “may present significant safety risks.”
An FDA employee who works on compounded drug issues said the description encompasses known safety concerns, such as adverse event reports from peptide users, as well as the lack of long-term studies of the treatments in humans. Scientists have flagged certain growth hormone-related peptides as posing theoretical cancer risks.
“We don’t know what we don’t know,” said the employee, who was granted anonymity to speak freely about one of Kennedy’s political priorities.
Compounders say the FDA has been too heavy-handed in its approach to peptides, some of which are approved in other countries. They argue its safety concerns are ill-defined and that regulators are too focused on efficacy for products that are intended for use only on a case-by-case basis.
“Commissioner Makary has an opportunity to build a pathway that provides the proper checks and balances — that provides patients with accessible and affordable care,” Buhler said.
Makary was circumspect in December when wellness influencer Gary Brecka pressed him on how the FDA views peptides.
“We have to use some common sense, and the peptide world is a very large bucket, so we have to … ask ourselves what is harmless, been out there for a long time, and already has an established safety profile,” Makary said on Brecka’s podcast.
Compounding businesses and providers who prescribe peptide treatments pushed back against drugmakers’ criticisms late last year during two FDA advisory committee meetings scheduled as part of the agreement between the government and the compounders suing the agency.
A representative for Eli Lilly, one of two major GLP-1 manufacturers, testified against adding a fat-burning peptide known as AOD-9604 to the agency’s bulks list.
“False and misleading advertising by compounding pharmacies touting the effectiveness of this molecule for weight management and tissue repair is being used to deceive patients,” Brad Jordan, Lilly’s associate vice president of regulatory policy, said at the Dec. 4, 2024, meeting.
Buhler and others say Lilly and GLP-1 competitor Novo Nordisk are trying to sully legitimate compounders’ reputations — and their potential for competition — by conflating them with rogue actors and claiming safety concerns. Novo and Lilly declined to comment on potential FDA action on compounded peptides.
The two companies and Buhler’s compounding pharmacy, ReviveRX, all have received warnings from the FDA about safety or misleading claims — or both.
Novo was recently chastised for failing to report serious adverse events that included deaths of patients taking GLP-1s, and an agency inspection found the company released drug batches with “mammalian hair contamination” from one of its manufacturing facilities.
An FDA inspection of ReviveRX in early 2025 observed sanitary concerns, including “microbial contamination” in rooms that were supposed to be sterile; the facility received a warning letter in September describing responses that “appear deficient.”
Buhler said Revive “promptly” responded to the FDA’s warning and has finished implementing protocols to correct the identified issues and prevent them from recurring.
Peptide curiosity
Meanwhile, wooed by the success of weight-loss injections, Americans are increasingly curious about what other peptides can do for them.
If the FDA creates more access, “this peptide craze is going to be just as big as GLP-1s, and we saw how quickly GLP-1s became a household term,” Ginsberg predicted.
Jessica Duncan, an obesity medicine doctor at telehealth platform Ivim Health, said more patients are inquiring about peptides beyond GLP-1s. If the FDA allows some to be compounded, she said, she’ll evaluate their potential use on an individual basis.
“The decision to take anything — any drug — is not something you can make flat out for every population,” Duncan said.
Duncan and some pharmacists warn that any FDA action won’t mean peptides are immediately available. It could take months for the supply chain to pivot from research- to human-grade chemicals.
If consumers do find them immediately, Duncan said, “you can rest assured that’s probably not coming from a source you want to get it from.”
Still, plenty of telehealth companies and wellness clinics are preparing for a change. Hims acquired a California peptide facility in early 2025 in a move the company said would position it to “explore exciting advances in peptide innovation” in areas like “preventive health, metabolic optimization, cognitive performance” with consumer interest.
Ginsberg said he’ll be eyeing how those purveyors describe peptide products online. He wonders whether they will make hard claims about their effects or stick to vague language about potential benefits akin to how supplements are marketed.
The prospect of a company like Hims entering the peptide market and showing proof of its products’ purity is “definitely an improvement over the current situation we have” with the gray market, Ginsberg said.
“That doesn’t mean that it’s good for you,” he added. “It just means it’s better for you than what you were doing before.”
Let them eat shit... Don't cave on this...
Pressure builds on Congress as DHS shutdown threatens to drag into April
Long airport lines and a scheduled two-week break are weighing on lawmakers.
By Jennifer Scholtes, Jordain Carney and Katherine Tully-McManus
The shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security is at risk of shattering the record for the longest-ever funding lapse for any federal agency if President Donald Trump and congressional Democrats can’t strike a deal this week.
Lawmakers are scheduled to take a two-week recess for Passover and Easter starting Friday. While the Senate is considering staying in session if the shutdown is not resolved, House GOP leaders do not plan to cut their break short in hopes of reaching an accord, according to three people granted anonymity to discuss private planning.
“It’s going to be very, very hard to explain if we leave town this next week without having funded” DHS, Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters over the weekend.
Trump threw a curveball into the rekindled talks Sunday night when he declared on Truth Social he would not back any deal unless it includes the GOP’s partisan elections bill, the SAVE America Act. Senators, Trump said, should “lump everything together as one, and VOTE!!!”
“Kill the Filibuster, and stay in D.C. for Easter, if necessary,” he wrote.
The House and Senate are not scheduled to return to business until the week of April 13, when the DHS shutdown would hit Day 60 — significantly exceeding the 43-day record set last fall for the longest federal funding lapse in U.S. history.
The threat of a two-month shutdown — and evidence of lengthening TSA lines at U.S. airports as security officers refuse to work without pay — has spurred an uptick in what had been completely stalled negotiations.
A bipartisan group of lawmakers met twice in the Capitol late last week with Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan. Negotiators continued to talk over the weekend, after the White House laid out an expanded offer Friday that included changes to DHS immigration enforcement tactics — the crux of the shutdown fight.
“We’ll see if they can land something,” Thune said in an interview Sunday before Trump delivered his ultimatum. “The clock’s ticking. If we’re going to get this done, we’ve got to get moving pretty quickly here.”
With the urgency to clinch a bipartisan agreement increasing, the White House has sought to engage some of the Democrats who helped negotiate a solution to the broader government funding lapse that ended in November. That includes New Hampshire Sens. Maggie Hassan and Jeanne Shaheen, along with Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada and Angus King of Maine, an independent who caucuses with Democrats.
Those senators were among the bipartisan group of lawmakers who met in person with Homan last week, along with Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, the Senate’s top Democratic appropriator.
“I can tell you that Democrats are really united, and we are talking to the White House and telling them what our demands are,” Murray told reporters Sunday afternoon. “I don’t know how you define progress. That is really up to the White House, whether they’re willing to move forward on this or not.”
Republican negotiators voiced frustration over the weekend that Democrats hadn’t responded to the updated offer the Trump administration delivered Friday night.
“I would have hoped we could continue to build on the momentum, positive momentum, that I felt like we had at the meeting Friday,” Sen. Katie Britt (R-Ala.), chair of the DHS funding panel, said in an interview Sunday. “I’m clearly disappointed.”
Britt noted that the meetings with Homan last week marked the first in-person DHS negotiations between Democratic lawmakers, their Republican counterparts and a delegate from the White House since the talks began almost two months ago.
“The American people need us to get in the room,” Britt said. “And we have to be expeditious about this.”
Democrats on both sides of the Capitol have pressed Republicans multiple times to take up their bills that would fund all of DHS except Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Customs and Border Protection and the secretary’s office.
Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Saturday on the Senate floor that negotiators are having “productive conversations,” but Congress should fund TSA in the meantime
“Let’s keep negotiating the outstanding issues with ICE while sending paychecks to TSA workers now,” he added.
But Republicans continue to object to votes on those proposals, saying the entire department needs to be funded. The House has twice passed DHS funding legislation, but Senate Democrats have repeatedly voted against advancing an all-DHS funding bill — most recently on Friday.
Increasingly, Republicans are highlighting the irony that the funding lapse barely affects the agencies Democrats are trying to reign in, since ICE and CBP received about $140 billion from the tax and spending law Republicans enacted along party lines last summer.
“They’re trying to please their base,” Nebraska Sen. Deb Fischer, a Republican appropriator, said about Democrats in an interview. “But I would hope their base is smart enough to know that ICE and Border Patrol are already funded.”
Instead, the shutdown is causing the most disruption at agencies like TSA, where more than 300 airport security screeners have quit since funding lapsed more than five weeks ago. As the workforce goes without pay, TSA callouts also tipped over 10 percent multiple days last week, leading to long lines and travel disruptions at airports across the country.
Starting Monday, the Trump administration plans to detail ICE agents to U.S. airports to do jobs like guarding exits, allowing TSA agents to focus on screening passengers and baggage.
“We ought to fund TSA now,” said Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), who requested a vote last week on legislation to fund all of DHS except the immigration enforcement agencies. “But I don’t know why the Republicans insist on holding federal workers hostage, holding TSA workers hostage, so that they can have an unaccountable paramilitary force on our streets.”
Senate Republican leaders are still waiting to make the call on whether to delay or cancel the chamber’s two-week recess. They’re typically reluctant to send lawmakers home during a crisis that requires legislative action.
In contrast, under Speaker Mike Johnson, House Republican leaders have repeatedly resisted pressure to reconvene the House to consider critical legislation while lawmakers are back home during a congressional recess. They argue it’s up to Senate Democrats to cut a DHS deal with the White House.
“We’ll see,” Thune told reporters on Sunday about canceling recess. “We’ll kind of see how the rest of the week plays out.”
It doesn't matter, when you have a fucking stupid pile of shit in control...
'When will it end?’ The ‘elevator pitch’ oil executives and diplomats are making to the White House in Houston
At the world’s largest energy industry gathering, there’s one question on top of everyone’s minds.
By Ben Lefebvre, Phelim Kine and Mike Soraghan
The Trump administration is sending its top energy officials to Houston this week to meet with oil industry executives and foreign dignitaries — and they can expect to get an earful as its war in Iran has sent their industry into upheaval.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, National Energy Dominance Council Executive Director Jarrod Agen, FERC Chair Laura Swett and other administration officials will be in the midst of the largest gathering of energy industry officials in the world this week.
The annual CERAWeek confab comes nearly a month into the U.S.-Israel-Iran war and the all-but-closure of the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s main thoroughfares for Middle East oil, fuel shortages in Asia and the destruction of huge parts of the region’s natural gas fields and export plants.
If there’s one message the industry wants to deliver to the administration, according to interviews with half a dozen energy industry executives and foreign diplomats planning to attend the event, it’s this: People need to know when the conflict that is already causing major damage to their world order will end.
“Generally in the elevator pitch, people are going to say, ‘Look, we need to know duration, and we need to know infrastructure possibilities. We need to make sure that the uncertainties are as limited as possible,’ said Frank Maisano, a senior principal at Bracewell, an energy law firm. “The events in Iran have just kind of overwhelmed what anybody was thinking this year might be about.”
Wright met with a group of energy industry executives outside the conference hall Sunday evening, two people familiar with the meeting said. A DOE representative didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. The chaos caused by the war led the CEO of Saudi Arabia’s state-owned oil company Saudi Aramco to skip the conference this year, Reuters reported. Exxon Mobil CEO Darren Woods, who has also been a featured speaker at the conference in previous years, will also not attend this year, a person familiar with the plan said.
A White House spokesperson, when asked the administration’s timeline for the war, referred to a post White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt made on X on Friday.
“The President and the Pentagon predicted it would take approximately 4-6 weeks to achieve this mission,” Leavitt said in the post. “Day by day, the Iranian Regime is being crippled, and their ability to threaten the United States and our allies is being significantly weakened.”
President Donald Trump himself said Friday that the United States was “very close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down” Iran war, but left the issue of Hormuz open ended.
“The Hormuz Strait will have to be guarded and policed, as necessary, by other Nations who use it - The United States does not!” Trump said in a Truth Social post.
Oil prices made their steepest climb in decades and have swung wildly as Trump has said at various times he considers the war won or, more recently, that the U.S. might fire missiles at Iran’s power plants. Fuel has become scarce in some countries while rising gasoline prices at home elevate cost-of-living concerns ahead of the midterm elections.
Todd Staples, president of the Texas Oil and Gas Association, said companies are hoping for “a speedy solution” to the conflict.
“Market volatility and short-term price fluctuations create challenges for industry planning, which relies on stability to drive future investment,” Staples said in a statement.
The war, even after less than a month, has the potential to fundamentally scramble an energy map that was just returning to a new normal after the Covid-19 pandemic and Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Europe, where natural gas supply is running low because of the lack of LNG tankers moving through Hormuz and the destruction of a key gas export plant in Qatar, is now debating whether to turn back to Russian gas it had avoided after the Ukraine invasion or redouble efforts to develop wind and solar power projects.
“We want to know what the plan is to re-open the strait,” an industry executive who will be attending said was his main question for White House officials.
The Pentagon has ramped up the number of warplanes and helicopters attacking the Iranian military in the Strait, but the action could take weeks to fully open the waterway. Meanwhile, U.S. oil prices were nearly $99 a barrel on Sunday evening, up nearly 50 percent from when the shooting started on February 28. Meanwhile, motorists in the United States are paying an average of $3.94 a gallon.
Foreign officials who will be attending the conference in Houston will be making the same pitch. As disruptive as the war has been on energy in the United States, it is becoming debilitating in Europe and Asia, which are much more dependent on imports of oil and natural gas. European countries are running low on their natural gas supply, while China has stopped exporting its own fuel in order to guard its inventories as oil becomes scarcer.
Vietnam, Bangladesh and the Philippines will all run out of oil in three weeks, said a U.S.-based Asian diplomat. Prices in the region are already rising, and if the countries run out of fuel it will drag the macroeconomy and could lead to a recession, the diplomat said.
“ASEAN countries are losing trust in the U.S., especially under Trump,” said the person, who was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive matters. “That’s 100 percent an own goal for the U.S. And China is just watching and waiting.”
“When will it end?” a second Washington-based Asian diplomat said will be the main question foreign officials will ask Trump administration officials, alluding to Iran.
White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers pointed to a swath of agreements that Japan and other countries have been making to invest in energy projects in the United States as proof of the confidence they have in the administration.
“Our allies have already turned to the United States as a reliable partner and supplier of crude oil and natural gas as proven by the billions of dollars in energy deals signed over the past week,” Rogers said.” The Iranian terrorist regime’s attacks against our Gulf allies underscore the importance of eliminating this threat to our partners in the region and beyond.”
In the short term, Iran’s destruction of a major natural gas export plant in Qatar and closure of Hormuz has been a boon for U.S. companies shipping natural gas to Asia. Shares of LNG exporters Cheniere Energy and Venture Global on Friday were up more than 30 percent since the military strikes.
But companies are also fretting that it could ultimately lead to fewer sales in the future as countries experiencing gas shortages will focus on developing gas sources closer to home. Hungary and Slovakia are already asking for waivers to the sanctions put on Russian natural gas put in place to punish it for its invasion of Ukraine, and other countries are taking a closer look at renewable and nuclear energy projects.
The war in the short term presents “a good situation“ for U.S. exporters looking to replace the cargoes Asia has lost from the Middle East, said one U.S. LNG executive granted anonymity because they weren’t authorized to talk to the press. But “I think it’s long-term demand destruction,” this person added.
Chris Treanor, the executive director of the Partnership to Address Global Emissions, said the pro-natural gas coalition wants the Trump administration to keep permitting reform on the front burner, even amid the ongoing Middle East war.
“I hope that one of the takeaways, when we get through part of this emergency response, will be that permitting reform needs to be taken seriously by the administration,” Treanor said. “The more that we can efficiently and effectively move the molecules and electrons from where they are produced to where they are needed….the more secure and reliable our system is.”
Shut his fuck mouth for him....
Jeffries tells Trump to ‘keep his reckless mouth shut’
The House minority leader warned the president could get "somebody killed."
By Cheyanne M. Daniels
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said President Donald Trump could get “somebody killed” after the president accused Democrats of being the country’s “greatest enemy” after Iran.
On Sunday, the president posted, “Now with the death of Iran, the greatest enemy America has is the Radical Left, Highly Incompetent, Democrat Party!” Trump also said Saturday that “Radical Left Democrats have hurt so many people with their vicious and uncaring ways” and that “Fascist Democrats will never protect America.”
In an interview with CNN’s State of the Union, Jeffries replied, “Donald Trump should keep his reckless mouth shut before he gets somebody killed.”
In recent years, targeted political violence has escalated, and political leaders in both parties have tried to tackle the growing crisis.
A January report from the U.S. Capitol Police found that threats toward members of Congress, their families, staff and the Capitol complex surged in 2025, with over 5,000 more incidents reported than the previous year.
The report came after multiple political figures were killed or targeted last year. In September, conservative activist Charlie Kirk was killed while speaking on a college campus. Just weeks before, former Minnesota State Speaker Melissa Hortman (D) and her husband were assassinated in their home. And in April last year, a man threw multiple incendiary devices into the Pennsylvania governor’s mansion as Gov. Josh Shapiro and his family were asleep inside.
But Trump’s Sunday post wasn’t the only message to raise eyebrows over the weekend.
Following the death of Robert Mueller, the special counsel who investigated Trump, the president posted, “Robert Mueller just died. Good, I’m glad he’s dead. He can no longer hurt innocent people!”
The post was a sharp difference from the usual sympathies political leaders have offered in times of sickness and death. Former President Barack Obama, for instance, characterized Mueller as “one of the finest directors in the history of the FBI” and praised his “relentless commitment to the rule of law.”
Though Democrats were quick to criticize Trump for his remarks on Mueller’s death, few Republicans have joined in.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Sunday told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that empathy should be extended to the president.
“I think that given what has been done to President Trump and his family, it is impossible for either of us to understand what he has been through,” Bessent said. “We should all have a little empathy for what has been done to him and his family.”
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

