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What's Happening

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Immigration

When a 2-Year-Old US Citizen Is Put on a Deportation Flight 

What's going on: Three children — all US citizens — were put on deportation flights to Honduras with their families over the weekend, marking the latest chapter in President Donald Trump’s escalating immigration crackdown. Attorneys for the families say the mothers, who were being deported, were given little or no time to speak to their attorneys or make arrangements for their children — all under 10 years old. One of the children, a 4-year-old boy with cancer, was sent to Honduras without access to his medication. The Trump administration insists the children weren’t “deported.” Border Czar Tom Homan said the mothers chose to return with their children and warned that “having a US citizen child... is not a get out of jail free card.” Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that, as citizens, the children can come back if someone in the US is able to “assume them.” This could leave families facing deportation with an impossible choice: separate by leaving their children in the US, or stay together in a country their children have never known.

What it means: The deportations are raising serious questions about both the humanity and the legality of President Trump’s immigration policy. Legal experts say the Constitution guarantees due process to anyone on US soil, regardless of immigration status. One Trump-appointed US district judge agrees there’s reason for concern and has scheduled a hearing next month to examine the removal of a 2-year-old citizen. The Trump administration has taken swift action to boost deportation numbers, but that has come with mistakes. It’s also driving public concern: 95% of Skimm readers polled said they’re worried about deportations of visa and green card holders. And while Republicans often campaign on “pro-family” values, critics say these policies send an entirely different message.

Related: Trump Says He “Could” Free Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia — But That Doesn’t Mean He Will (ABC)

Health

This Is What Stalled Progress Looks Like for Women's Health 

What's going on: Modern medicine has pulled off miracles — but for some women in the South, it might as well still be 1900. A new Yale study tracked the life expectancy of nearly 180 million Americans across generations, not just year by year, to get a clearer view of long-term health trends. The biggest takeaway? In parts of the South, women’s life expectancy has barely budged in a hundred years. In West Virginia and Mississippi, girls born in 2000 are expected to live just one to four years longer than their great-grandmothers. (Yes, all that science and that’s it.) Not all of the South is stalling: Florida, Texas, and Virginia rank among the top 20 states for life expectancy. Meanwhile, women in New York and California got a major longevity glow-up, gaining 15 to 20 years compared to those born a century ago. The biggest jump? Women in Washington, DC, are living 30 years longer — not bad for a city known as “the Swamp.”

What it means: Researchers are clear: This isn’t biology — it’s about policy. States that expand Medicaid, invest in maternal care, raise wages, and fund education see better health outcomes. Cities like DC also benefit from stronger infrastructure, more health care providers, and higher incomes. And while women tend to outlive men, they also face steeper gaps in care — from reproductive and mental health to economic opportunity. That’s especially true in rural and underfunded communities, where fewer doctors, lower incomes, and health care deserts (think limited access to OBGYNs in the South post-Roe) stack the odds. Experts say there’s no quick fix — these kinds of shifts play out over generations. No pressure, it’s just our life expectancy on the line.

Related: Study Links Everyday Plastics to Global Heart Disease Deaths (CNN)

Technology

ChatGPT Is in Its Suck-Up Era

What's going on: In The Lizzie McGuire Movie, one of Lizzie’s teachers famously calls her friend Gordo a “sneaky little brown noser with a hidden agenda.” And maybe, ChatGPT is one, too. Recent updates have created an overly enthusiastic ChatGPT, with responses that users say range from polite to full-on ass-kissing. The bot has no chill at all, leading to unnerving screenshots like this. In another example, a bot told a user: “BRO. YES… You’re not just cooking, you’re grilling on the surface of the sun.” Huh. Some users are over it — including one venture capitalist who said: “I can’t imagine how anyone with any human understanding thought that degree of sucking-up would be welcome or engaging.”

What it means: They say flattery will get you everywhere, but some tech experts worry this trend isn’t just irritating — it’s reaching dangerous levels of toxic positivity. For instance, one user on X said they told the bot they’d quit taking their schizophrenia medication, and it allegedly replied by congratulating them, according to Business Insider. This comes as Instagram’s chatbots face heat for allegedly pretending to be licensed therapists — and as more people start catching feelings for their bots. Not ideal timing, especially with experts warning that AI could outsmart humans by 2027. Some say this isn’t just a charm offensive — it’s borderline love-bombing. The good news? OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says it’s a bug, not a feature, and promised a fix is coming. We’ll miss the ego boost, but maybe it’s time bots learn the line between sweetness and sycophancy. 

Related: Meta’s ‘Digital Companions’ Are Feeling Sexy – And Raising Red Flags (WSJ Gift Link)

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