August 17, 2025

Donald Trump in 2014 and 2025

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Money

ABC -  Fresh government data showed an eye-popping 38% surge in the wholesale price of vegetables in July.

The Guardian -  A new report from the Congressional Budget Office has confirmed what critics already warned about Trump’s megabill. The report shows the bill will painfully extract $1,200 a year from the poorest Americans while handing the richest an extra $13,600, writes Jarvis DeBerry. The key here isn’t the amount of money; it’s how much that money is worth to the individual losing or gaining it. Considering the lowest-earning 10% of people in the U.S. earn just $39,464, that loss of that money will be deeply felt, even as the richest literally won’t notice a few extra thousand dollars in their bank accounts. Read more.

Axios - Consumers and businesses are feeling the pinch from President Trump's trade war, with costs soaring for grocery staples and critical materials.

  • Why it matters: It's no longer anecdotal. The effects are difficult to ignore across key inflation indicators that might only get hotter in the months ahead. Global tariffs are putting upward pressure on costs. U.S. businesses are bearing the brunt, contrary to White House hopes that foreign suppliers would take some of the hit.Wholesale prices rose at the fastest pace in three years last month — higher costs that might be passed on to the consumer down the line.
  • Fresh and dry vegetable prices rose by almost 40% last month, the largest spike since inflation took off in 2022.  Read on.

 Consumer Affairs -  

  • The typical American household spends $2,058 a month on essential bills, about one-third of the median income.

  • California, Hawaii, New Jersey, and Massachusetts are the most expensive states for household bills.

  • West Virginia, Mississippi, Arkansas, and Oklahoma are the most affordable places to cover monthly essentials.

Dollars & Sense  -  Massive inequality is the hallmark of today’s U.S. economy. Fully one-fifth of the nation’s income goes to the richest 1% of families. That’s twice their income share from four decades ago. These horrifying trends are well-documented. ....The income share of the top 1% more than doubled from 9.09% in 1985 to 20.7% in 2021. That’s larger than the 19.6% income share of the top 1% in 1928 on the eve of the Great Depression. 

Polls

 Newsweek - Seven in 10 Americans worry that Social Security won't be there for them when they retire, according to new survey from the Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies (TCRS). TCRS is a division of Transamerica Institute (TI), a nonprofit, private operating foundation, and conducts one of the largest and longest-running annual retirement surveys of its kind.

For generations, Social Security, which celebrated its 90th anniversary on August 14, has formed the bedrock of retirement income for tens of millions of Americans, and also pays out benefits to disabled people and survivors of deceased workers. However, despite its enduring popularity and importance, it faces a looming insolvency crisis that lawmakers have less than 10 years to solve.

The survey from TCRS, which polled 10,009 adults above the age of 18 between September 11 and October 17, 2024, found that among non-retirees, 71 percent agreed with the statement: "I am concerned that when I am ready to retire, Social Security will not be there for me."

 

Trump starving public schools

 Becky Pringle, Time -   School meals are more than a budget line item. They are lifelines that help millions of students learn and grow. But as families across America prepare for the new school year, millions of children face the threat of returning to classrooms without access to school meals.

President Donald Trump’s newly-signed tax bill, which Republicans overwhelmingly voted to pass, slashes food assistance benefits via the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) by an estimated $186 billion over the next decade—the largest cut in American history. These devastating reductions will result in an estimated 18 million children losing access to free school meals.

The cuts shift the cost of school lunches to the states, costing them more than they can afford when they are already grappling with tighter budgets and substantial Republican-led Medicaid cuts. Twenty-three governors warned these cuts will lead to millions of Americans losing vital food assistance.

It’s hard to understand if you’ve never faced hunger, but millions of American children do not have access to enough food each day. In a recent survey of 1,000 teachers nationwide, three out of every four reported that their students are already coming to school hungry. 

Our children can’t learn if they are hungry. As a middle-school science teacher for more than 30 years, I have seen the pain that hunger creates. It's the student who skips breakfast so she can give it to her little brother. It’s the student who misbehaves because his stomach is rumbling. It’s the students who struggle in class after a weekend where they didn’t have a single full meal. Educators see this pain everyday, and that’s why they go above and beyond—buying classroom snacks with their own money—to support their students. 

 

ChatGPT

 The Verge -  Join any Zoom call, walk into any lecture hall, or watch any YouTube video, and listen carefully. Past the content and inside the linguistic patterns, you’ll find the creeping uniformity of AI voice. Words like “prowess” and “tapestry,” which are favored by ChatGPT, are creeping into our vocabulary, while words like “bolster,” “unearth,” and “nuance,” words less favored by ChatGPT, have declined in use. Researchers are already documenting shifts in the way we speak and communicate as a result of ChatGPT — and they see this linguistic influence accelerating into something much larger.

In the 18 months after ChatGPT was released, speakers used words like “meticulous,” “delve,” “realm,” and “adept” up to 51 percent more frequently than in the three years prior, according to researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, who analyzed close to 280,000 YouTube videos from academic channels. The researchers ruled out other possible change points before ChatGPT’s release and confirmed these words align with those the model favors, as established in an earlier study comparing 10,000 human- and AI-edited texts. The speakers don’t realize their language is changing. That’s exactly the point.

Meanwhile. . .

 Inside Radio -  A pioneering voice in public radio is signing off. Susan Stamberg, one of NPR’s original hosts and a fixture in American broadcast journalism since 1971, will retire Sept. 1...

Stamberg, the first woman to anchor a national evening news program, hosted “All Things Considered” for 14 years before taking the helm of “Weekend Edition Sunday” and later serving as a Special Correspondent covering the arts. Along the way, she earned induction into both the National Radio Hall of Fame and the National Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and nearly every major broadcasting award.

“Susan Stamberg is the voice of NPR… She has been our franchise,” remarked Weekend Edition Saturday host Scott Simon. “She is one of the great figures in American broadcast history.”

Dropping fertility rate

 Washington Post - The Trump administration wants an American baby boom, but so far this ambition has been a bit of a bust. The much-hyped baby bonus — a proposal to give mothers $5,000 after they give birth — ended up becoming a restrictive investment account where funds are inaccessible until children reach 18 years old. Meanwhile, Trump’s campaign promise to mandate IVF care appears to be sidelined.

The latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed that the United States reached its lowest fertility rate in history in 2024: Every American woman is now estimated to have 1.6 children during their lifetime, much lower than the 2.1 rate needed to keep population at its current level without immigration.

 

Gaza

 The Guardian - The US state department announced on Saturday that it would stop issuing visas to children from Gaza in desperate need of medical care after an online pressure campaign from Laura Loomer, a far-right influencer close to Donald Trump who has described herself as “a proud Islamophobe”.

“All visitor visas for individuals from Gaza are being stopped while we conduct a full and thorough review of the process and procedures used to issue a small number of temporary medical-humanitarian visas in recent days,” the state department said in a message posted on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, from which Loomer was banned before it was purchased by Elon Musk.

Trump's Nobel prize drive

 Newsworthy News -  In a development rarely seen in modern history, leaders from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Pakistan, Israel, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Cambodia, and Rwanda have publicly nominated or endorsed President Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize. Each nation credits his direct intervention for brokering ceasefires or resolving border disputes, with the most recent accolades coming after Trump mediated a landmark agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The White House has responded by highlighting these endorsements as proof of restored American leadership and the effectiveness of Trump’s foreign policy approach. 

DC policing update

 Time -  The White House has backed off plans to replace Washington D.C.'s police chief after a judge indicated they would block the move.  President Donald Trump this week invoked emergency powers to take control of the D.C. police department and call in the National Guard to a city that he claimed is overrun by "bloodshed, bedlam and squalor"—a claim that is disputed by experts.

As part of the federal takeover, Attorney General Pam Bondi announced the appointment of Drug and Enforcement Administration (DEA) Administrator Terrance C. Cole as “Emergency Police Commissioner,” giving him the powers of the police chief.

The city’s Attorney General Brian Schwalb filed a lawsuit calling for an emergency restraining order to block the move, accusing the Trump Administration of implementing a “hostile takeover” of the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) that would lead to “imminent, irreparable harm”.

“In my nearly three decades in law enforcement, I have never seen a single government action that would cause a greater threat to law and order than this dangerous directive,” Smith wrote in the lawsuit

Judge Ana Reyes said in a Friday hearing that, according to the Home Rule Act, the Department of Justice needed to rewrite the section of the executive order that placed Cole in charge, and that he needed to go through the city’s mayor. Reyes stopped short of issuing a restraining order, but indicated that if the DOJ did not rewrite the section, she would.

 

Tariffs

 

Progressive Leaders Across the Americas Unite Against Growing Global Fascism

 Truthout -  On the final day of the Second Pan-American Congress this month, more than 60 delegates from 12 countries made their way into the Secretary of Public Education headquarters in downtown Mexico City....

The UNESCO World Heritage Site served as the location of the final plenary of the three-day gathering aimed at uniting progressive and democratic forces in the Western hemisphere to take on rising far right authoritarianism.

Delegates representing communities from as far as Nunavut in Canada to the extreme southern tip of South America eventually took their seats in the Ibero-American Hall....

From this hall, the message from Mexico was unambiguous: The peoples and the elected representatives of this hemisphere are ready to act to confront the global threat of fascism.

“We are of course facing an authoritarian threat in the world: it is the return of fascist positions to power,” María José Pizarro, a Colombian senator from the ruling Pacto Historico coalition, told Truthout. “In the face of this, we must therefore build joint strategies that allow us to confront it in the best possible way in countries where this is already happening, and in those where it is not, to prevent the return of this type of government.”

When it comes to hemispheric relations, U.S. President Donald Trump has pursued what has been described as a “divide and conquer” strategy, leveraging the national interests of one country against another and pitting neighbors against each other in order to squeeze out concessions from leaders. Trump has been able to follow this strategy to varying degrees of success, in part due to the lack of unity regarding the threat he represents to the entire world...

From the Atlas Network, a coalition of right-wing think tanks and advocacy groups that promote neoliberal policies globally, to Trump’s open and blatant interference inside Brazil in order to back his ally, former President Jair Bolsonaro, in the face of charges over his effort to carry out a coup after losing the 2022 election, the far right has been successful in building trans-national links.

One aim of the Pan-American Congress is to break down barriers between progressives and anti-fascists who have historically lacked an institutional space to better coordinate their own regional response.

One standout feature of this gathering was the participation of elected representatives from the United States, including Ilhan Omar (D-Minnesota), Jesús “Chuy” García (D-Illinois), Delia Ramírez (D-Illinois), and Rashida Tlaib (D-Michigan).

August 16, 2025

Health

Washington Post -  Coronavirus infections are climbing again, marking another summer wave as children go back to school.  But this uptick arrives with an added layer of uncertainty because it’s unclear when and which Americans can receive updated vaccines this fall.

Daniel R. Kuritzkes, chief of the division of infectious diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said the current rise looks similar to seasonal bumps in previous years and is not driving a surge in severe illness.

This is the new rhythm of covid waves. Many people are getting sick — some feeling lousy — especially after returning from vacation and conferences. Most probably won’t even know it’s covid because the symptoms can be indistinguishable from a cold or other respiratory bug. Yet hospitals are no longer flooded with patients because immune systems are much better trained to fight the virus five years after it arrived.

Russian attack on Ukraine

 

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Via Theresa Fallon 

Word: Arnold Schwarzenegger on Trump and Putin

Donald Trump

Independent, UK -   Immigration and Customs Enforcement spent over $700,000 tricking out a pair of trucks designed to look like Donald Trump’s private jet for a series of social media posts to boost recruitment efforts.  A video posted by the Department of Homeland Security with music by rapper DaBaby shows a Ford Raptor pickup truck and GMC Yukon SUV rolling around Washington, D.C., and parked in front of the White House, Capitol, Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument.

The trucks have a navy blue paint job with red and white racing stripes and a gold ICE logo. The words “defend the homeland” appear on the side, and “President Donald J. Trump” is printed in gold on a rear window.

According to federal procurement records seen by The Independent, the government paid more than $505,000 for the vehicles from at least three dealerships. The government spent another $227,000 on the wrap jobs provided by at least four companies.

The look is strikingly similar to the Trump Organization’s Boeing 757, nicknamed Trump Force One, which is also covered in navy blue with a red stripe and the president’s name in a similar bolded gold print.

Unaffordable housing

Chapman University's report analyzed 95 major housing markets across eight nations and found for the first time in the report's 21-year history that none of the markets was considered affordable.

The report, published in May, provides ratings for the third quarter of 2024 in Australia, Canada, China (Hong Kong), Ireland, New Zealand, Singapore, the United Kingdom and the United States

Ukraine

The Guardian -    Following his meeting with Vladimir Putin on Friday, Donald Trump told European leaders that he supported a plan to end the Ukraine-Russia war by ceding unconquered land to Russia, the New York Times reported, citing two senior European officials.

The officials said Trump will discuss the plan with Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Monday when the Ukrainian president visits the White House, adding that European leaders have been invited to join.

Reports of Trump supporting a potential land cession marks a shift in Trump’s previous demands of an immediate ceasefire.

According to the New York Times, Trump believes a peace deal can be swiftly negotiated, “so long as Mr Zelenskyy agrees to cede the rest of the Donbas region to Russia, even those areas not occupied by Russian troops”.

Axios - President Trump's positions coming out of yesterday's summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska were that he no longer thinks a ceasefire is necessary, and it's "up to President Zelensky" to make peace...

That's the opposite of the approach Trump endorsed on his way to the summit.

Trump will host Ukrainian President Zelensky — who has been adamant that there must be a ceasefire before peace talks — for what could be a difficult meeting at the White House on Monday afternoon.

Trump called Zelensky from Air Force One on his way back to Washington from Alaska. The call "was not easy," a source with direct knowledge said.

  • According to the source, Trump told Zelensky and the NATO leaders that Putin doesn't want a ceasefire and prefers a comprehensive agreement to end the war. "Trump said on the call that he thinks a fast peace deal is better than a ceasefire," the source said....

Trump also told Zelensky that Putin had told him Russia was making significant progress on the front lines and that if he wanted, he could capture the entire Donetsk region and other areas where fighting is taking place.

  • Zelensky told Trump that Putin was misrepresenting the situation, the source said. MORE

 The Guardian -   Donald Trump left more questions than answers on Friday as he claimed “great progress” in his high-stakes summit with Vladimir Putin but admitted that no deal had been reached to end Russia’s war on Ukraine.

The US president also suggested that it was now up to Volodymyr Zelenskyy to “get it done” and that a meeting would be set up between the Ukrainian president and Putin, which Trump might attend.

“We had an extremely productive meeting and many points were agreed to,” Trump said at a joint press conference in Anchorage, Alaska. “There are just a very few that are left. Some are not that significant. One is probably the most significant but we have a very good chance of getting there.”

He cautioned: “There’s no deal until there’s a deal.”

The two leaders lavished praise on each other – Putin endorsed Trump’s view that the war would never have started if Trump had won the 2020 election – but offered no details of the nearly three-hour meeting and took no questions from reporters.

Putin, speaking through an interpreter, described Trump’s efforts on Ukraine as “precious” and, suggested the two leaders had hammered out “an understanding”. He urged Europe to “not throw a wrench in the works” and to “not use backroom dealings” to torpedo it.

Putin said that he agreed that Ukraine’s security must be guaranteed – but also said that the “root causes” of the conflict must be resolved. Those “root causes” have previously included his demands for Ukraine’s formal renunciation of Nato membership as well as its “denazification” – a vague set of demands that in practice amount to the removal of Zelenskyy.

Zelenskyy and European allies may have been alarmed by Trump’s body language and deferential attitude toward Putin, whom he welcomed warmly at an Alaska air force base and allowed to ride in the presidential limousine known as “the beast”.

 

Trump’s White Nationalism and the Future of History

Trump, Epstein and. .. .yes, Princess Diana

Raw Story -  The late Princess Diana is at the center of a new revelation about the relationship between President Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier who died in 2019 awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges. The revelation sparked fury from the White House.

According to Trump biographer Michael Wolf, Trump and Epstein allegedly competed to see which of the two could sleep with Diana first — with the contest continuing until the Princess of Wales died in the extensively covered 1997 vehicle crash in Paris, France.

“They had a competition, Trump and Epstein,” Wolff told The Daily Beast, speaking on the publication’s podcast Inside Trump’s Head.

“Of who would be the one, the first one to sleep with Princess Diana... they just understood, what could you get from these people? Both Trump and Epstein. What can you get from somebody, is the question you would always ask about anybody.”

The Daily Beast’s report triggered an angry response from the White House, with Trump's Communications Director Steven Cheung lashing out at Wolff, who personally interviewed Epstein in 2017 and claims to possess more than 100 hours of recorded conversations with the late sex offender.

“Michael Wolff is a lying sack of s--t and has been proven to be a fraud,” Cheung told The Daily Beast. “He routinely fabricates stories originating from his sick and warped imagination, only possible because he has a severe and debilitating case of Trump derangement syndrome that has rotted his peanut-sized brain.”

The revelation, however, would be consistent with past comments made by Trump over the years. English journalist Selina Scott reported in 2015 that Trump said he wanted Diana to become his “trophy wife” following her 1996 divorce from then-Prince Charles, sending her flowers following the separation.

Environment

Inside Climate News -  Global talks on curbing dangerous plastics pollution ended early Friday without agreement on a comprehensive treaty. Divisions over whether to mandate enforceable limits on plastic production were too deep to bridge.

What's happening at Yosemite

Rachel Dec, Dispatch -   Home to more than 400 species of animals, 1,500 species of plants, and roughly 4 million annual visitors, the [Yosemite] park has stood, since President Abraham Lincoln first preserved it, as a radical idea: that some landscapes are too magnificent to belong to private individuals, and instead should be given to the nation.

Today, this legacy is at risk. Over the past six months, permanent staff at the National Park Service (NPS)—which is the agency that governs the park—have been cut by 24 percent. It’s the result of layoffs, buyouts, and a hiring freeze from the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). This year, of the 8,000 seasonal positions allotted by President Donald Trump’s budget, barely 4,500 were filled by July. At the same time, the government has moved aggressively to open more public land to mining, logging, and energy extraction.

On a desperately hot July Saturday, I came to Yosemite to see how these pressures were reshaping the park. Out on the trail, tourists could be heard grumbling about the four-hour queues at the park’s southern entrances, but few noticed the creeping overgrowth of invasive Himalayan blackberry along the trails. But there are a few tangible signs of decline: a sold-out bike rental shop, overflowing trash cans, volunteers answering basic questions outside the visitor center because of the long lines to speak to the rangers inside. Recent online reviews of the park’s campsites complain of “dilapidated bathrooms without soap or paper” and “pitiful” conditions. Artifacts relating to the park’s natural history were recently stolen as a result of low staffing, forcing every building in its Pioneer History Center to temporarily close.

 

Polls

 Pew Research  - President Donald Trump’s approval rating stands at 38%, while 60% of Americans disapprove of his job performance. More also disapprove than approve of two of the administration’s signature accomplishments: the rollout of its tariff policies and its “One Big Beautiful Bill.”

Work

 NBC - Blue-collar jobs are becoming more popular as AI threatens office work.

Meanwhile. . .

NBC - Hurricane Erin strengthened to a Category 4 storm and is expected to become a major hurricane this weekend as it moves just north of the Northern Leeward Islands, the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico. 

Axios - Taylor Swift's podcast debut — on her boyfriend Travis Kelce and his brother Jason Kelce's "New Heights" podcast — peaked at 1.3 million concurrent livestream viewers on YouTube, setting a new record high, Billboard reports.  The episode also bumped New Heights' female viewership on Spotify by 600+%.


Money

NBC News - After projections that President Donald Trump's mass deportations would negatively impact the economy, the nation is seeing a jump in wholesale vegetable prices and slowdowns in industries that rely on immigrant workers. 

A Bureau of Labor Statistics report released this week found a 38.9% increase in wholesale dry and vegetable prices from June to July, the biggest since March 2022. Because of Trump's deportation efforts, "you are now going to be left with not enough laborers in the fields," said Phil Kafarakis, president of an association that represents food producers and suppliers. 

The Dallas Federal Reserve said in its report this week that Texas' economy has softened, with business owners saying uncertainty about tariffs and immigration policy were posing investment and hiring challenges. According to the report, business leaders said they struggled to hire qualified workers because many lacked permits or legal status. Read the full story here.

 

History of DC home rule and lack thereof

The tariff law suit that has the Trump crowd worried

Matt Ford, New Republic -  The most interesting lawsuit against the Trump administration right now, in my view, is V.O.S. Selections v. Trump. A group of small businesses is challenging the president’s authority to levy tariffs via the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1974, or IEEPA. They argue that President Donald Trump’s sweeping restrictions on nearly every imported good go far beyond what Congress had authorized in the law.

The U.S. Court of International Trade sided with the businesses in May and ruled that the tariffs were blatantly unlawful. “Regardless of whether the court views the President’s actions through the nondelegation doctrine, through the major questions doctrine, or simply with separation of powers in mind, any interpretation of IEEPA that delegates unlimited tariff authority is unconstitutional,” the court explained in an unsigned opinion.

The Trump administration swiftly appealed the ruling to the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals, which reviews decisions from the specialized federal trial courts. (The government can continue to collect the tariffs while the lawsuit unfolds.) Now it appears that the Justice Department is openly afraid that it might lose the case and bring down the central pillar of Trump’s economic agenda—such as it is. More

Baltimore crime deaths plummet

 George Chidi, The Guardian - Violent crime in America’s big cities has been receding from pandemic highs for about two years. But even in comparison, Baltimore’s improvement is breathtaking: fewer people have been killed in the city over the last seven months than in any similar period in the last 50 years.

As of 15 August, the running 365-day total for murders in Baltimore stood at 165 dead. Assuming the city remains on that pace, its murder rate would finish below 30 per 100,000 residents for the first time since 1986. If it remains on the pace set since 1 January, it would finish 2025 at 143 murders, a rate of about 25 per 100,000, last seen in Baltimore in 1978.

It confounds Baltimore’s bloody legacy. An army of social workers, violence interventionists, prosecutors, community leaders and even cops all pulling in the same direction for once has made David Simon’s stories from The Wire or Donald Trump’s exasperating trash talk less relevant.  But this metropolitan renaissance is born of agony.  More

Trump gang agrees to scale back takeover of DC police department

The Guardian -  White House officials and attorneys for Washington DC have agreed to scale back the Trump administration’s takeover of the city’s police department. 

Under an agreement announced early Friday evening, the US capital city’s Metropolitan police department will remain under the control of its chief, Pamela Smith, instead of Terry Cole, the top administrator for the Drug and Enforcement Administration (DEA), according to reports.

A revised directive Bondi issued late on Friday referred to Cole instead as her “designee” for purposes of directing the DC mayor “to provide such services of the Metropolitan Police Department as the attorney general deems necessary and appropriate”.

Those services, according to Bondi’s two-page order, would include assisting federal immigration enforcement, contrary to DC “sanctuary city” policies constraining metropolitan police department action on immigration.

Friday’s pact would also allow the Trump administration to use Metropolitan police department officers for federal purposes in emergencies.