July 10, 2026

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Houses

Newsweek -   Maine has the nation’s highest vacancy rate at 20.6 percent, with 154,717 vacant homes, followed by Vermont with 19.4 percent (65,626 homes) and Alaska with 17.6 percent (57,958 homes).

Health

Newsweek -   A coalition of 25 states and Washington, D.C., is suing the Trump administration over new Medicaid work requirements they say could cause eligible low-income Americans to lose health coverage and unlawfully limit protections for vulnerable recipients.

The legal challenge targets an interim final rule released by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) in June that would require many adults with Medicaid expansion coverage to prove they are working, studying, volunteering or completing other approved activities for at least 80 hours a month in order to keep their health insurance.

The lawsuit highlights a familiar fault line in American politics: the tension between expanding access to government benefits and imposing conditions on their use.

Climate change

Independent -  Most of America’s Lower 48 states is bracing for an "unusually large, strong and long-lasting" heat dome, which the National Weather Service warns will drive temperatures to "significant and dangerous" levels.

The severe heatwave is set to begin this weekend and persist for at least a week, with some regions experiencing its effects through the end of the month, according to meteorologists.

Temperatures are forecast to soar 15 to 25 degrees Fahrenheit (8 to 14 degrees Celsius) above normal across many areas, including during nighttime hours. Elevated nighttime temperatures pose a particular threat to human health and complicate efforts to manage an already active wildfire season.

Daniel Swain, a climate scientist with University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources, described the impending event as "pretty remarkable." He added, "This is going to be a long duration, widespread and high-intensity heat event that’s going to affect millions of people for over a week."

Ukraine

Alternet -   Trump has openly expressed his admiration of Russian President Vladimir Putin on many occasions. When he returned to office, Trump initiated a sharp break from the policies of his predecessor Joe Biden. The U.S. now sends less military aid to Ukraine, although U.S.-made arms continue to flow to the country thanks to European funding. A promised US$400 million military aid package has not yet been released.

Trump famously chastised Zelenskyy in a 2025 Oval Office meeting and has pressured the Ukrainian president to give up land to satisfy Putin’s territorial desire for all of the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine.

Yet Washington continues to provide Ukraine with intelligence, which is used by Kyiv for targeting its middle- and long-range drone strikes inside Russia. Washington also still enforces significant sanctions against Russia, including Moscow’s oil exports, although it has granted specific waivers of late.

To understand what Ukrainians make of all this, we asked them a direct question about Trump: Is he a friend or an enemy of their country, or a bit of both?

The results showed that only 17% of Ukrainians surveyed consider Trump a friend. More than double that consider him an enemy of Ukraine. Almost a quarter say he’s a bit of both, with a similar percentage responding “don’t know.”

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Via James Tate

Donald Trump

ClassicRockReview

Polls

2028 National GOP Primary 🔴 Vance: 51% (+4) 🔴 Rubio: 15% (-3) 🔴 DeSantis: 9% (=)

Middle East

Democratic socialists want to reshape the economy. Here’s how.


ICE

Thom Hartmann  -   Tuesday morning in Houston, Lorenzo Salgado Araujo did what he’d done nearly every morning for 35 years. He woke at 5 a.m., kissed his wife goodbye, loaded his van, and drove off to pick up his construction crew in Magnolia Park, the neighborhood that’s anchored Houston’s Mexican American community for a century.

He’d raised three sons in that city; they became a teacher and two engineers. He had no criminal record, and he was partway through the legal process of getting a work permit, biometrics and fingerprints already done.

By 7 a.m. he was lying face down on Canal Street with a bullet in his abdomen, crying out for help in Spanish while a federal agent knelt over him talking on the phone. He died at Ben Taub Hospital, the same hospital where two of his sons were born. The Harris County medical examiner has ruled the manner of his death a “homicide.”

ICE says he rammed their vehicle and “weaponized” his van to run down an officer, who fired in self-defense. His family says he almost certainly thought the unmarked cars tailing him were thieves after his work tools, because the men following him wore no insignia identifying them as law enforcement.

The League of United Latin American Citizens says photographs of the vehicles show little visible damage, which is a strange thing for a van that supposedly rammed a law enforcement vehicle hard enough to justify lethal force. David Bier of the libertarian Cato Institute reviewed newly surfaced footage and concluded it appears to show ICE initiating contact with Salgado Araujo’s vehicle, not the other way around; Norm Ornstein looked at the same evidence and called it “cold-blooded murder.”

The Guardian- Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, a man killed by federal immigration agents during a traffic stop in Houston this week, was not the intended target of the “enforcement operation”, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has said. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents were reportedly seeking two people from Guatemala when they attempted to stop Salgado Araujo, a Mexican immigrant who had lived in the Us for 35 years.

Salgado Araujo, who was on his way to work early on Tuesday morning, was driving three other people in a white van. After the shooting, the three men were taken into custody. One of the three men has been identified by advocates as Victor Hugo Salgado Araujo, the brother of the victim. It was reported that he was still in an immigration detention center.


Trump fires all Democrats on Election Assistance Commission

The Hill -    President Trump fired the remaining Democratic members of the independent Election Assistance Commission on Thursday, the White House confirmed to The Hill.  Trump fired the remaining Democrats on the commission, Benjamin Hovland and Thomas Hicks, while Republican Christy McCormick resigned.

“The President, and head of the Executive Branch, reserves the right to remove individuals that may not be totally aligned with the important task of securing America’s elections and ensuring every legal vote is counted,” said a White House official in a statement.

“The Slaughter decision gives the President precedence to do so,” the official said, referring to the Supreme Court decision last month that determined the president has the authority to remove members of the Federal Trade Commission.

“The Administration from the start has been working across all agencies and local partners to safeguard elections from fraud and abuse, and investing in a strong infrastructure to sustain that mission especially in the midterm elections,” the official added.

…..It’s unclear what will happen next with the commission, or if Trump will appoint new commissioners, which would need to be confirmed by the Senate. Democrats were quick to slam the firings.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) vowed that staffers would “fight this power grab at every turn,” while Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) said the move “should concern every American, regardless of party.”

Additionally, the commission is in charge of “maintaining the national mail voter registration form developed in accordance with the National Voter Registration Act of 1993,” according to its website

Climate change


Airline passengers trapped for seven hours

Newsworthy  - Hundreds of United passengers say they were locked in “airplane purgatory” for seven hours in Newark while storms raged outside and regulators stayed quiet, capturing how weather and weak oversight now trap ordinary people between the sky and a broken system.

  • United Flight 661 sat on the Newark tarmac about seven hours during severe storms and ground stops.
  • Federal rules clearly limit tarmac delays, yet the flight was canceled only after passengers spent the night stuck on board.
  • Past administrations hit airlines with record fines, but current Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy has issued none for long tarmac delays.
  • Climate change is driving more extreme weather delays, while airlines and regulators struggle to protect passengers caught in the middle.

TALES FROM THE ATTIC: Human relations: Beyond law and virtue

Sam Smith, 2016 -  For me, discovering other cultures began as early as ninth grade, taking one of only two anthropology courses taught in American high schools at the time. Our teacher, Howard Platt, was a tall, bald, bespectacled Quaker. It was a wonderful world that he laid before us. Not the stultifying world of our parents, the monochromatic world of our neighborhood, the boring world of 9th grade, but a world of endless options, a world in which people got to cook, eat, shelter themselves, have sex, dance and pray in an extraordinary variety of ways. Mr. Platt's subliminal message of cultural diversity was simultaneously a message of freedom. You were not a prisoner of your culture; you could always go live with the Eskimos, the Indians or the Arabs.

 What we learned that year was strikingly different from what we were learning elsewhere. The world around us, in so many ways, was teaching us to define our place by a process of exclusion, secured by the assumption that we were smarter, whiter, and/or faster than someone else.

 About the same time I had become a drummer and a vigorous student of jazz and its musicians, including Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet, Ella Fitzgerald and Fats Waller.  Such characters became cultural role models and helped me start my Quaker school’s first jazz band. They were not honored by my school, parents, or other white adults around me, but they nonetheless became covert pals who helped me enjoy the often tough times of a teenager.

 When I got to Harvard in the 1950s, I found I had been far from alone. Many of my friends, also musicians, were big fans of black jazz and in our beat era rebellion against the conventional found in its players alternative souls and attitudes to admire and emulate. I still remember Miles Davis in a large auditorium playing with his back to the audience and thinking,  yeah, that’s how I feel sometimes. And, coincidentally, to back it all up, the best book I read in college was Martin Luther King’s Stride Towards Freedom, which was not on any course list.

Further, out of twenty anthropology majors at Harvard, five of us had been students of Howard Platt, who knew how to welcome his students to cultural diversity in a way that today whole towns and institutions – from police departments to universities – have yet to discover. It was not a moral, legal or political discovery, but simply a better way to live and think about others.  

 After college I moved back to my birthplace of Washington, DC, where blacks would be in the majority for fifty years and many lived close to whites. This is something that is generally ignored in talking about ethnic relations. The proximity of cultures makes a large difference simply because, while a community may be segregated, its people are not strangers… Another advantage of cultural proximity is that it damages clichés. It may even break formal cultural rules.

Washington’s black madam, Odessa Madre, was a classic example.  At her peak in the 1940s, Madre was earning about $100,000 a year, and had at least six bawdy houses, bookmaking operations, and a headquarters known as the Club Madre. Among its performers were Moms Mabley, Count Basie and Nat King Cole.

 By 1980, Madre had been picked up 30 times on 57 charges over a 48 year span, seven of them spent in a federal prison.

Madre grew up in a mixed neighborhood of blacks and Irish, the latter heavily populating the DC police force and, in the end, often looking out for their childhood friend. "Negroes and Irishmen got along real well," Madre told the Washington Post’s Courtland Milloy. "They would fight amongst themselves, but we wouldn't fight each other. If somebody outside Cowtown came to fight the Irish, the Negroes would chunk bricks at them. We were like a big happy family."

Writes Milloy: "Thus began a long and prosperous relationship with members of the Metropolitan Police Department.”

 Once, while in the offices of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, where I was handling the media for director Marion Barry, the national SNCC leader Stokely Carmichael came from out of town and announced that we whites were no longer welcomed in the civil rights movement. But only a couple of years later I found myself working with blacks and whites to form a third party on behalf of DC statehood just as some years earlier a similar coalition – even including black and white middle class homeowners -  had joined in a successful fight against freeways.

 The longer you lived in DC the more you realized that nothing about its black community was simple. Some 15% were Catholic matched only by New Orleans. Blacks included some of the wealthiest and some of the poorest residents,  including folks whose great great grandparents had lived there as free blacks and some who had only recently arrived from further South.

There were  also numerous variations in the white community. Those who hated blacks had mostly peacefully moved to the suburbs in large numbers. During the decade of the 1950s the percentage of whites declined by a third.  By 1980 in the nation’s capital just 28% were non-latino whites. During this same period the number of blacks had doubled. Today, whites are back in the majority.

 A 2011 study reported by the Washington Post found that blacks and whites both understood how class could surpass ethnicity. And there was the story of a white guy driving past a black Washington Post reporter mowing his lawn on upper 16th Street. “What do you get for a lawn?” the white guy yelled out of his car. Replied the black guy, “I get to sleep with the lady of the house.”

 Washington – save for the 1968 riots – managed somehow to handle it all better than many other places are doing today…..  And  the city, for all its other changes, has had, over a half century, nothing but black mayors.

 This complex story was one strong reason I lived in Washington so long and so well. As an independent minded guy, I was complex too and found the city a good place to be your own thing. Further, complexity is an extremely useful foe of clichés.

 My gut rule for dealing with others became twofold: respect and humor. And the payback for me in DC was friendship and  learning lots of new things. Ethnic fairness wasn’t just the law and the right thing to do, it was pleasant, interesting and fun.

 Such factors have gotten lost in our obsession with procedures and rules as the solutions for all our problems.  Law and documents only carry you so far.  And in the best communities you’ll find them hardly mentioned because there are no legal contracts that provide for a happy living.

 This is why for decades I argued for getting police out of their cars into neighborhoods, schools that introduce students to cultural variety as well as mathematical values, a government that made it easier for us all to get along, as well as media and institutions that addressed multi-culturalism not just for its problems but for its vigorous assets.

 I’d seen it and lived it long enough to know it could happen. But the first step was to start talking about it  

July 9, 2026

Tales from the attic index

 ACTIVISM

Our most notorious party 

I quit 


ARTS & HUMANITIES

Five years of failure

What's a humanities?

My brief career as a poet

How to keep people going to a museum

COAST GUARD

The hooligan navy at sea

The hooligan navy in St. Louis

 COPS

A different cop story

A Capitol Police story from a happier time

CULTURE

Love of trains 

DC

Capitol Hill in the 1960s

Covering the Capital in the 1960s & 1970s 

Getting started in civil rights

DC Links

Big Sky

Rappahanock County 

Returning to DC  

Graduation speech

JOURNALISM

Capitol Hill in the 1960s

Covering DC in the 1960s & 1970s

Getting started in journalism

Radio news in the 1950s

Learning from Texas liberals

Mark Russell, Sid Yudain and your editor

How I almost went to work for the National Enquirer

Fifty years of journalism

A restaurant review

Driving an Isetta

Smackdown with Bill O'Reilly

A Labor Day admission

Gadflies

MISC

A 50th Harvard college reunion report

Pumping iron

Propert attire

Places I owned for awhile

MUSIC

Playing with George James

Music, my hidden college major 

POLITICS

Learning an American story

My introduction to politics

 My brief moments with the Kennedy story

Eugene McCarthy: Notes on a napkin

If Trump was a drug

A preface to change 

CHILDHOOD 

Mr first home

 Becoming

Jackson Elementary School 

My first murder

Growing up part Jewish

Things my father never told me

TEEN YEARS 

Learning sailboat racing

Learning to drive a truck on a farm

A teen age journalist

Reaching teenhood in Philly

Dowsing with Henry Gross

Learning from the Quakers

Anthropology: Learning about people

Boy Scouts and mature voices

Magna Cum Probation 

Adams A-36

60 Years ago: Harvard and me

Fixing the bells of St. Paul

The forgotten war that I remember

A 50th Harvard college reunion report

How I became a suspect

GETTING OLD  

Thoughts of an old reporter

WRITING 

Why bad words aren't the problem 

My short career as a poet

The missing predicate in my life

Cost of health insurance

WalletHub - To identify where Americans are shelling out the most and least for health insurance, WalletHub analyzed average premiums in each of the 50 states, then compared it to the median household income.
 
Highest % of Income Spent Lowest % of Income Spent
1. West Virginia (20.86%) 41. Colorado (6.72%)
2. Vermont (19.05%) 42. Rhode Island (6.67%)
3. Wyoming (17.16%) 43. Hawaii (6.37%)
4. Arkansas (14.87%) 44. California (6.32%)
5. Mississippi (14.05%) 45. New Jersey (6.23%)
6. Alaska (13.18%) 46. Minnesota (5.89%)
7. Louisiana (12.58%) 47. Virginia (5.86%)
8. Tennessee (12.19%) 48. Massachusetts (5.49%)
9. Alabama (11.85%) 49. New Hampshire (4.77%)
10. Montana (11.27%) 50. Maryland (4.66%)

To view the full report and your state’s rank

Middle East

NPR - Overnight, the U.S. launched strikes on southern Iran, targeting around 90 military sites along the coast and the vital Strait of Hormuz, according to the U.S. Central Command. In retaliation, Iran launched air attacks in Kuwait and Bahrain against U.S. military installations. Kuwait's military reported intercepting missiles and drones. Countries in the Middle East are on high alert as they brace for the possibility of further conflict in the region.

 The situation surrounding the talks to end the war in Iran remains uncertain, says NPR's Emily Feng, who is in Israel. Both the U.S. and Iran are seemingly waiting for the other to back down first, she adds. The Israeli military forces are at "full readiness" for war again with Iran, according to Israeli media. Last night, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz abruptly canceled a public event to hold an emergency security meeting. While the Israeli government generally backs the United States' decision to strike Iran again, Feng says there is still significant ambiguity over what the U.S.'s ultimate objectives are with the latest series of strikes. 

  Yesterday, President Trump took a sharp turn in his view of Iranian leaders, whom he recently hailed as courageous people eager to steer their country toward a brighter future. At the NATO summit in Turkey, he instead criticized those leaders, accusing them of dishonesty and of failing to keep their ceasefire commitments. NPR's Franco Ordoñez says Trump's rhetoric is part of a familiar pattern, which he displays when he prematurely declares that the war is over or swings between admiration and aggression within hours. In his quest to end the conflict with Iran, Trump's approach has been to weave together threats and diplomacy, according to Ordoñez. But when the president makes threats, such as saying he doesn't want to make a deal with Iran, people don't know whether he plans to follow through or if it is just a negotiating tactic.

Just wondering

Sam Smith - If Graham Platner has to drop out his race because of his sexual activity, why isn't Trunp resigning as president?

NYC's endangered high rise

The Congressional Insider -    Two support columns buckled around the 21st floor of the former Pfizer headquarters, causing floors 21–26 to sag and leaving the high-rise at risk of a partial collapse. Officials evacuated the tower and at least seven surrounding buildings, including a school, and set up a collapse zone; no injuries have been reported.

The building is in the middle of one of New York City’s largest office-to-residential conversions, raising questions about whether safety is keeping up with new high-rise profit plans. The exact cause of the failure is still unknown, and local leaders admit the building continues to move, deepening public concern over oversight and enforcement.


Donald Trump

The Guardian -  A Manhattan federal court judge has ordered the release of the more than $5m Donald Trump owes E Jean Carroll following her successful 2023 sexual abuse and defamation trial against him. Less than an hour after the judge issued his order, Trump filed paperwork indicating he was appealing the decision.

Trump's anti-immigrant policy may cut child care

The Guardian - The Trump administration may remove the temporary protected status (TPS) of Haitians and Syrians in the US, the US supreme court ruled in late June – a move that will worsen America’s growing caregiver shortage, experts say.

The US is now experiencing its fastest increase in the aging population in more than a hundred years, and more than 20% of the US population will be 65 or older by 2030. But the population of caregivers has not grown at the same pace, leading to staffing shortages.

Immigrants account for about one in six workers in the US – but they comprise about 30% of caregivers in longterm settings. The caregivers, often nurses and aides in hospitals, facilities, and homes, come from at least 163 countries, and Haitian immigrants are strongly represented at 7% of that workforce, according to a report from LeadingAge, the national association of non-profit and mission driven providers of aging services.

“Foreign-born staff are significant contributors to care and services our members provide, and that older adults and their families rely on,” said Lisa Sanders, vice-president of communications and media relations at LeadingAge. “Without staff, there is no care.”


Finding a post Platner candidate

Intercept -  In group chats of progressive activists and political operatives concerned with the state of the Senate race in Maine Wednesday morning, a link to an anonymous Google Doc was making the rounds. It disavowed Graham Platner, the disgraced Democratic nominee whose campaign was throttled by a rape accusation on Monday, and called to replace him with Troy Jackson, a recent gubernatorial contender the document deemed “the one candidate who can hold Platner’s coalition together.”

Platner suspended his Senate campaign on Wednesday evening, and there is no clear alternative to his candidacy. His campaign’s swift downfall has presented Democrats and his primary supporters with several bad options: The party establishment could pick a candidate and inflame an already frustrated base that scoffed at its efforts to anoint Gov. Janet Mills as the nominee, or it could bend to Platner’s past demands and let him influence the selection of his successor.

In either case, a base already exhausted by months of Platner scandals is at risk of fracturing and failing to consolidate behind a potential replacement — and Democrats are at risk of once again losing a key seat they need to pick up for control of the Senate to Republican Sen. Susan Collins.

h its exact shape and timeline remain unclear.

Tales from the attic: A 50th anniversary college reunion report

Sam Smith, 2009 - So I ended up much as I started: the kid they sent to right field because he couldn't or wouldn't play the game right.

I didn't plan it this way. I didn't want it this way. In truth, a large part of me still would like to have been one of the popular boys in the class, but things kept getting in the way-some addictive confluence of moral aggravation, periodic accident, undisciplined imagination, sporadic and unpremeditated courage randomly suppressing chronic shyness and cowardice, sloppy romanticism, episodic existentialism, recurrent hope, stultifying stubbornness, and an abiding intolerance for the dull. A child's dreams and an adult's faith pounding tide after tide on the rock of reality, thinking that maybe this time I'll float off.

Some people take it personally, as though I rebelled simply to annoy them. They make little jokes about the fact that I'm different, as if I had a moral obligation to be like them. When they see someone like me coming, they close the doors of their institutions, their imaginations, and their hearts. We are, after all, thieves who might abscond with their most precious possession: the tranquility of unexamined certainty.

So you become the charming stranger from a strange place, you tell jokes first and then change the subject when it starts to get too close to the real. Better yet, you fool them into thinking that you are one of them, even though you really blend better with those whom the urban itinerant Joe Gould once described as the "cranks and misfits and the one-lungers and might-have-beens and the would-bes and the never-wills and the God-knows-whats."

Among the illusions of my life has been that if I stuck it out long enough, time would provide the acceptance that my words and thoughts had prevented. I. F. Stone used to say that when you're young you're blamed for things you didn't do, and when you're old you get credit for them. It hasn't worked out like that, in part because just when I should have started coasting, the world around me took a nasty, greedy and dangerous turn. America began destroying itself. It was the wrong time to start fitting in. My country-without debate, consideration, or struggle-had decided it really didn't want to be America anymore.

I have tried to help keep alive the beleaguered tradition of plain speaking and truth-seeking that I understood to be at the heart of good journalism. But in a time when much of the media prefers perceptions to facts, bullet quotes to understanding, and spin over reality, such efforts are seen as eccentric at best, apostasy at worst. Truth has little to do with it anymore. It is as if we are living in a new Middle Ages, only with the myths being driven by cable TV rather than by the church.
In the melancholy that descends from time to time, in the loneliness that lies like a desert between reality and my imagination, I think about opportunities and offers that have come my way that I brazenly-wantonly, some might say-rejected. But then, as a friend once noted, if I had accepted such things, I probably would have ended up broken or fired. And a drunk as well.

As best as I can tell, my real impetus was not masochism but a truly manic, grandiose, and cockeyed optimism-the faith that I could do something on my own that would be even better than if I just did what was expected of me.

Saul Alinsky was once asked by a seminarian how he could retain his values as he made his way through the church. "That's easy," replied Alinsky. "Just decide now whether you wish to be a cardinal or a priest." It was a choice I made early.

I don't regret it; much of it's been wonderful. But I can't really justify having tried it. A lot of it doesn't make sense. I spurned the normal icons of ambition, yet was so ambitious that I sought the unattainable. I was like a bad comedian: I got the punch lines right but my timing was way off. And I gave the outward impression of a radical but, in my heart, was just a moderate of a time that has yet to arrive.