A majority of the corporate donors who have been named as donors to President Donald Trump's ballroom construction project have received government contracts in recent years, according to a report released Monday by a watchdog group. RELATED: The Bay Area donors that are helping pay for $300 million White House ballroom Sixteen of the 24 donors have received federal contracts with the cumulative sum totaling $279 billion over the past five years, according to the study by Public Citizen.
Duffy also cites "maybe others" getting involved. This refers to a third option. In recent weeks, officials from traditional space companies have been telling Duffy and the chief of staff at the Department of Transportation, Pete Meachum, that they can build an Apollo Lunar Module-like lander within 30 months. Amit Kshatriya, NASA's associate administrator, favors this government-led approach, sources said.
Lockheed Martin introduced the company's latest project, known as "Vectis," on Sunday ahead of the annual Air & Space Force Association's Air, Space and Cyber Conference. The aircraft is a "Group 5 survivable and lethal collaborative combat aircraft," the company said in a press release, referring to the largest size of uncrewed aerial systems, or UAS, built to survive enemy defenses and strike back.
I am absolutely infuriated by our leading health care institution's silence and complicity in the ongoing genocide. I think what brings me out today is that we have energy and that I'm together with other people who care about this.