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Pro-life diaper company CEO says women are being told to fear pregnancy

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Pro-life diaper company CEO says women are being told to fear pregnancy

EXCLUSIVE: As the Supreme Court weighs access to the abortion pill mifepristone, EveryLife founder and CEO Sarah Gabel Seifert says women are not being told the full truth about pregnancy and motherhood.

Seifert, whose pro-life diaper company launched a new “ReThink Pregnancy” campaign ahead of Mother’s Day, told FOX Business in an exclusive on-camera interview that the abortion pill debate reflects a broader cultural message shaping how women view pregnancy.

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“I would say one of the biggest lies that women are told is that they should completely fear pregnancy,” Seifert said.

She argued that young women are increasingly being taught to see pregnancy as something to avoid rather than understand.

COSTCO WILL NOT SELL ABORTION PILL AT US PHARMACIES; DECISION HAILED AS ‘SIGNIFICANT WIN’ BY ACTIVIST GROUPS

Sarah Gabel Seifert holding a smiling young child

EveryLife founder and CEO Sarah Gabel Seifert holds her daughter in a promotional image provided by the company. (Courtesy of EveryLife / Unknown)

“It’s so unfortunate that today culture is telling women that pregnancy and motherhood is something to run away from, to avoid,” she said.

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Her comments come as the high court considers whether to allow restrictions on mifepristone to remain in place after a lower court ruling reinstated an in-person dispensing requirement for the drug.

Seifert criticized how abortion pills are being discussed and distributed, particularly when used without direct medical oversight.

DEMOCRATS ARE TRYING TO DELEGITIMIZE THE SUPREME COURT: MARTHA MACCALLUM

People holding

Participants hold “Make More Babies” signs during a pro-life demonstration in Washington, D.C., with the U.S. Capitol in the background. (Courtesy of EveryLife / Unknown)

“It’s really unfortunate what’s happening with the abortion pill debate right now, because what’s happened for young people today is that they’re being told that this medication is acceptable to take in your home alone without seeking medical advice and going to see a doctor to confirm with an ultrasound that you do indeed have a viable pregnancy,” Seifert said.

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She added that such situations can leave women vulnerable.

“If we actually cared about women and their health, then we would not be wanting to put them in such a vulnerable state,” she said. “And so the more that we can be fighting against the abortion pill being distributed, especially via mail, the better off women are going to be and the better off our society is going to be.”

Recent filings before the Supreme Court have raised similar concerns. In an amicus brief led by Republican lawmakers, including Sen. Bill Cassidy and House Speaker Mike Johnson, more than 100 lawmakers argued that expanded access to mifepristone by mail has increased the risk of coercion and reduced medical oversight.

WOMAN MISTAKENLY GIVEN ABORTION MEDICATION BY CVS INSTEAD OF IVF HORMONES: ‘THEY JUST KILLED MY BABY’

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Boxes of EveryLife diapers stacked with packaged diapers in front

EveryLife diapers are shown packaged for distribution. The company says it provides baby products to families and supports pregnancy resource centers nationwide. (Courtesy of EveryLife / Unknown)

The brief cites alleged cases in which women were pressured or unknowingly given abortion pills obtained online, arguing that in-person requirements could help prevent abuse and better protect patients. Lawmakers are urging the Supreme Court to reinstate in-person dispensing requirements while the case proceeds.

Seifert framed her argument as part of a larger cultural shift, saying messaging around pregnancy, marriage and family has long-term consequences.

“When we have fear, that is the leading message to young women today around getting married, around having children, it’s going to cause a culture to not prioritize the things that actually leave a legacy here in this world,” she said.

TRUMP ADMIN TO BEGIN REFUNDING $166B TO BUSINESSES IN WAKE OF SUPREME COURT DECISION

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EveryLife diaper package and baby wipes displayed on a table

EveryLife diapers and wipes are displayed as part of the company’s direct-to-consumer product line. (Courtesy of EveryLife / Unknown)

EveryLife, which Seifert founded in 2023, sells diapers and baby products directly to consumers and supports pregnancy resource centers nationwide by providing essential supplies to families in need. The company has also donated millions of diapers to those centers, according to Seifert.

Seifert said her campaign aims to counter that narrative by encouraging women to see pregnancy differently.

“For so long, culture has said that pregnancy is something to fear. It’s something to avoid. It’s something that will cause a setback in your life,” she said. “And what we’re saying at EveryLife and AAPLOG is quite the opposite. That pregnancy is a blessing, that it is a benefit to your body, and that it’s something to embrace and something to get excited for.”

She described motherhood as a uniquely important role.

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“The reality is I can be replaced, you could be replaced. Women can be replaced in the workforce at any moment in time,” Seifert said. “But the one role that is irreplaceable is being a mother.”

Seifert also characterized pregnancy as an empowering experience.

“What we’re saying at EveryLife is that we should embrace that reality because I believe that pregnancy and being a mother is our superpower,” she said. “Women and mothers are superheroes.”

The ReThink Pregnancy campaign, launched in partnership with the American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians and Gynecologists, highlights scientific and personal perspectives about pregnancy that organizers say are often missing from mainstream discussions.

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Seifert said the campaign also seeks to reframe common perceptions about pregnancy-related changes.

“If we actually realize that what’s happening is our brain is rewiring, that our brain is actually enlarging in a lot of ways to be able to take on more empathy, to be able to take more responsibilities for this new child that is growing in our womb, we begin to see it as a blessing,” she said.

Seifert said she believes declining birthrates are another reason the conversation matters.

“We need to see more children in the United States of America,” she said. “I know we’re about to celebrate 250 years as a country and I want to see another 250 years.”

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Asked what she would say to a woman afraid of becoming a mother, Seifert said she would encourage her to examine that fear.

“When you really start to think about fear and you assess where it’s coming from, you start to realize that when you’re in fear, it’s hard to see right from wrong,” she said.

She closed with a message to mothers.

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“Life is a gift. Being a mother is one of the greatest roles in the entire world,” Seifert said. “A lot of times, it goes unseen. But I do hope today that every mother out there listening feels loved, feels seen, and knows that the work that they’re doing is so vital.”

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American Express Company (AXP) Shareholder/Analyst Call – Slideshow

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Pandox AB (publ) (PNDXF) Analyst/Investor Day – Slideshow

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The Environmental Cost of AI’s Gold Rush

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The Environmental Cost of AI’s Gold Rush

AI’s promise is undeniable, but its unchecked expansion risks creating a new industrial footprint as heavy as the fossil fuel era. The challenge for policymakers, companies, and citizens is clear: balance innovation with sustainability, and ensure that the pursuit of intelligence does not come at the expense of the planet’s survival.

Artificial intelligence has become the darling of the digital age. From chatbots that mimic human conversation to image generators that conjure entire worlds, the technology dazzles with its promise. But behind the curtain of innovation lies a sobering truth: AI is devouring the planet’s resources at a pace that should alarm us all.

The Hidden Footprint

  • Every AI query requires immense computational power, housed in massive data centers consuming huge amounts of electricity, water, and land.
  • Global investment in data centers projected to reach $620 billion by 2026, nearly quadruple 2023 levels.
  • GPUs like Nvidia’s A100 rely on over 20 metals, rare earths, and water-intensive semiconductor processes.

Every query to an AI model triggers immense computational power. That power is housed in sprawling data centers, whose construction and operation demand staggering amounts of electricity, water, and land. By 2026, global investment in these facilities is expected to hit $620 billion — nearly four times the level of 2023. Some projects rival the footprint of Manhattan, while their energy draw equals nuclear reactors.

The GPUs at the heart of AI systems are themselves resource-intensive marvels. A single Nvidia A100 chip contains more than 20 metals, including rare earths. Manufacturing wafers for these chips requires thousands of liters of ultra-pure water, alongside toxic chemicals. The semiconductor industry, already notorious for its environmental toll, is being supercharged by AI’s insatiable demand.

Water and Energy Strain

In 2023 alone, data centers withdrew 5,000 billion liters of water — equivalent to France’s annual potable water use. Much of this is lost to evaporation. By 2030, consumption could double. Meanwhile, electricity demand is skyrocketing: U.S. data centers may consume up to 12% of national electricity by 2028, while Europe’s share could triple to 7.5% by 2035.

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Despite corporate pledges of sustainability, more than half of the electricity powering these centers still comes from fossil fuels. In 2024, data centers emitted 369 million tonnes of CO₂, more than the entire nation of France. This trajectory risks locking AI into the same carbon-heavy legacy as the fossil fuel industry it claims to disrupt.

A Call for Sobriety

The French ecological agency Ademe has urged “sobriety” in AI development — a reminder that not every problem requires the most resource-hungry solution. In the U.S., more than 230 NGOs have called for a moratorium on new data centers, warning of conflicts with agriculture, transport electrification, and other essential needs.

AI is not inherently destructive. It can help optimize energy grids, accelerate medical research, and model climate change. But the current trajectory — a race toward ever-larger models and ever-bigger data centers — risks undermining those very goals. The question is not whether AI should exist, but whether it should expand without limits.

If the digital revolution is to be remembered as progress rather than plunder, we must demand accountability from the companies driving it. Innovation should serve humanity, not consume its future.

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Why the S&P 500 Is Heading to 8000

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Why the S&P 500 Is Heading to 8000

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Tennessee Valley Authority PARRS D 2028 2026 Q2 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (NYSE:TVC) 2026-05-09

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

This article was written by

Seeking Alpha’s transcripts team is responsible for the development of all of our transcript-related projects. We currently publish thousands of quarterly earnings calls per quarter on our site and are continuing to grow and expand our coverage. The purpose of this profile is to allow us to share with our readers new transcript-related developments. Thanks, SA Transcripts Team

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Tripadvisor, Inc. (TRIP) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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Q1: 2026-05-07 Earnings Summary

EPS of -$0.11 misses by $0.04

 | Revenue of $382.40M (-3.92% Y/Y) misses by $2.29M

Tripadvisor, Inc. (TRIP) Q1 2026 Earnings Call May 7, 2026 8:30 AM EDT

Company Participants

Angela White – Vice President of Investor Relations
Matthew Goldberg – President, CEO & Director
Mike Noonan – Chief Financial Officer

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Conference Call Participants

Richard Clarke – Bernstein Institutional Services LLC, Research Division
Naved Khan – B. Riley Securities, Inc., Research Division
Dae Lee – JPMorgan Chase & Co, Research Division
Nafeesa Gupta – BofA Securities, Research Division
Brian Pitz – BMO Capital Markets Equity Research
Wyatt Swanson – D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division

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Presentation

Operator

Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Tripadvisor First Quarter 2026 Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker today, Angela White, VP of IR. Please go ahead.

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Angela White
Vice President of Investor Relations

Thank you, Therese. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Tripadvisor’s First Quarter 2026 Financial Results Call. Joining me today are Matt Goldberg, President and CEO; and Mike Noonan, CFO.

Earlier this morning, we filed and made available our earnings release. In that release, you’ll find reconciliations of the non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable GAAP financial measures discussed on this call. Before we begin, I’d like to remind you that this call may contain estimates and other forward-looking statements that represent management’s views as of today, May 7, 2026. Tripadvisor disclaims any obligation to update these statements to reflect future events or circumstances.

Please refer to our earnings release as well as our filings with the SEC for information concerning factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Matt.

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Matthew Goldberg
President, CEO & Director

Thank you, Angela, and good morning, everyone. We’re pleased with our

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Is Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos’ Position At Risk Due To No Progress In the Case?

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Savannah Guthrie & Nancy Guthrie

TUCSON, Ariz. — Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos is under growing scrutiny and faces potential political consequences as the disappearance of 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie approaches 100 days with no major breakthroughs, no arrests and mounting criticism over the pace and coordination of the investigation. The case, which has drawn national attention due to Nancy’s daughter Savannah Guthrie’s prominent role on NBC’s “Today” show, remains one of the most high-profile missing persons investigations in recent Arizona history.

Savannah Guthrie & Nancy Guthrie
Savannah Guthrie & Nancy Guthrie

Nanos, who has served as sheriff since 2019, has seen his handling of the case become a focal point of public frustration. Local officials and some community leaders have quietly questioned whether leadership changes could be on the horizon if the investigation does not yield significant progress soon. While no formal calls for resignation have been made by elected officials, sources close to county government say Nanos is feeling increased internal and external pressure as the milestone approaches.

Nancy Guthrie vanished from her Catalina Foothills home on February 1, 2026. Security footage captured a masked individual near her door around the time of her disappearance. Blood evidence, a disabled Ring camera, propped-open doors and signs of a struggle led authorities to classify the incident as an abduction rather than a voluntary departure. Despite thousands of tips, extensive searches and advanced forensic testing, no suspect has been publicly named and no proof of life has emerged.

Savannah Guthrie has balanced public pleas for information with her professional duties. In recent appearances on the “Today” show, she has worn yellow — a color of hope — while urging viewers to remain vigilant. The family has offered a $1 million reward for information leading to Nancy’s safe return or the arrest of those responsible.

Investigation Faces Criticism

The case has occasionally exposed tensions between local and federal agencies. FBI Director Kash Patel publicly criticized early coordination, claiming the bureau was initially kept out for several days. Sheriff Nanos has pushed back, insisting collaboration has improved and that the investigation remains a top priority. Hundreds of law enforcement personnel have been involved at various stages, but the lack of tangible results after nearly 100 days has fueled public dissatisfaction.

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Advanced DNA testing on a rootless hair sample and potential glove DNA recovered from the home is ongoing at the FBI lab in Quantico. Genetic genealogy analysis offers hope for a breakthrough, but results have not yet yielded a suspect. Behavioral profilers have suggested the perpetrator may have sought fame or had some personal connection to the victim. Multiple ransom-style notes received by media outlets have been deemed likely hoaxes, further complicating the probe.

The unrelated discovery of ancient human bones near the home earlier this week briefly raised false hopes before forensic analysis ruled them out. The incident highlighted the challenges of searching Arizona’s desert terrain, where old remains frequently surface.

Political Pressure on Sheriff Nanos

Nanos, a Democrat elected in 2018 and re-elected in 2024, has built his reputation on community policing and transparency. However, the prolonged Nancy Guthrie case has become a political liability as local elections loom. Some Republican opponents have begun quietly positioning themselves to challenge him, citing the case as evidence of leadership shortcomings. Community activists have also voiced concerns about resource allocation and communication with the public.

A source familiar with county politics said, “The sheriff is feeling the heat. One hundred days without answers in such a high-profile case is not a good look.” Nanos has defended his department’s efforts, emphasizing the complexity of the investigation and the dedication of his team. “We are working tirelessly,” he said in a recent briefing. “Every lead is being pursued. We will not stop until we have answers for the Guthrie family.”

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Family’s Resilience and Public Support

Savannah Guthrie has shown remarkable composure amid the ordeal. She briefly stepped away from the “Today” show earlier this week due to emotional strain but returned the following day. The family continues to balance public advocacy with private grief, with five children between them navigating the uncertainty.

Elizabeth Smart, the abduction survivor who was held captive for nine months in 2002, has publicly expressed hope that Nancy could still be alive. “I absolutely believe Nancy could still be alive,” Smart said recently. She has offered private support to the Guthrie family and continues advocating for improved missing persons protocols.

The Catalina Foothills neighborhood remains on edge, with yellow ribbons symbolizing hope displayed prominently. Neighbors and the broader Tucson community have participated in searches and vigils. National media coverage has kept the case visible while the family urges focus on verified facts rather than speculation.

What Comes Next

As the case nears the 100-day mark, authorities have renewed their appeal for tips. Forensic experts say advanced DNA techniques, including genetic genealogy, remain the strongest hope for resolution. The involvement of elite labs and profilers underscores the case’s priority.

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Sheriff Nanos has vowed to continue dedicating resources to the investigation. “This case is not going away,” he said. “We owe it to Nancy and her family to keep pushing.” Whether his job security becomes tied to a breakthrough remains to be seen, but the pressure is clearly mounting as the days pass without resolution.

The disappearance of Nancy Guthrie has highlighted vulnerabilities even in protected communities and the enduring power of hope in the face of uncertainty. Whether the case ends in a joyful reunion or brings closure through other means, it has already left an indelible mark on those following the story — a testament to one family’s resilience and a community’s determination to bring answers home.

As the investigation enters its fourth month, the Guthrie family and law enforcement refuse to give up. For now, the search continues, supported by a survivor’s empathy, a family’s strength, and a sheriff fighting to keep his department’s reputation intact while racing against time.

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Shield Therapeutics plc (SHIEF) Q1 2026 Sales/ Trading Statement Call – Slideshow

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Trane Technologies plc (TT) Presents at Oppenheimer 21st Annual Industrial Growth Virtual Conference – Slideshow

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AptarGroup, Inc. (ATR) Shareholder/Analyst Call – Slideshow

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