Federal agencies have offered exits to millions of employees and tested the prowess of engineers β just like when Elon Musk bought Twitter. The similarities have been uncanny.
As Mark Zuckerberg and other tech titans have embraced President Trump and muffled internal dissent at their companies, their mostly left-leaning employees have objected with subtle acts of defiance.
Agencies are gripped with uncertainty about how to implement the blizzard of new policies as workers frantically try to assess the impact on their lives.
A debate over the program for skilled foreign workers has pitted immigration hard-liners against some of President Trumpβs most influential supporters in the tech industry.
Amazon, JPMorgan and others have been telling their employees that remote work is over. Now federal employees have been ordered to come to work in person, too.
Industrial growth, the stock market and the rupee are sinking, and most consumers earn too little to buoy them, stymieing Indiaβs drive to become a developed economy.
Airlines have been increasingly outsourcing repair and upkeep work to other countries, but experts and consumer groups disagree about its impact on safety.