| Bill Madden |
UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
June 14, 2026
Polls
Four day work week
Voting
Courts strike down key set of tariffs
Marriage
| Primary sources include Bowling Green State University, The National Bureau of Economic Research, and USAFacts |
| Data for this graph comes primarily form The National Bureau of Economic Research and the United States Congress Joint Economic Committee |
More
Mary Trump on her uncle
That might seem like an odd thing to say about somebody who holds such a powerful position, but that’s exactly the danger. Every day, as Donald deteriorates – psychologically, emotionally, and cognitively – he grows more desperate, increasing the risk to the rest of us.
Strong people do not rig the system in their favor. They don’t silence critics. They don’t seek to control the institutions designed to hold them accountable. Donald does all of those things — because he has to, and he knows it. His behavior isn’t evidence of strength – it’s evidence of its absence.
The comprehensiveness with which Donald and the complicit Republican party are attempting to dismantle our institutions and take away our rights, in service to maintaining their hold on power and self‑enrichment, should also make clear what is at stake.
Under Donald’s so‑called leadership, the Republicans in Congress have stood by while our nation’s alliances have become strained; illegal wars have been started; and our institutions have been weakened and, in some cases, dismantled entirely.
I believe we are going to prevail. But when corrupt leaders like Donald and the sycophantic enablers in his inner circle go unchecked or unchallenged, they can do enormous damage. The antidote is to assemble a coalition of people who refuse to look away and are willing to take action.
Immigration
Health
ICE
Polls
Postal Service Seeks to Block Mail Ballots in States Resisting Trump Demands
Climate change
Tales from the attic: Retrieving the republic
Find some useful precedents. Umbria, a section of Italy north of Rome, for example, has been remarkably indifferent to 500 years of its history. The Umbrians have been invaded, burned, or bullied by the Etruscans, Roman Empire, Goths, Longobards, Charlemagne, Pippin the Short, the Vatican, Mussolini, the German Nazis, and, most recently, the World Trade Organization. Umbria has managed not only to survive but keep its culture, a reminder of the durability of the human spirit during history's tumults, an extremely comforting thought to an American these days.
We don't have to go that far
back, though. Consider the novel, 1984. Orwell saw it coming, only his
timing was off a bit. The dystopia described in 1984 is so overwhelming
that one almost forgets that most residents of Oceana didn't live in it. Orwell
gives the breakdown. Only about two percent were in the Inner Party and another
13% in the Outer Party. The rest, numbering some 100 million, were the proles....
As we move towards - and even surpass - the fictional bad dreams of Orwell or Aldous Huxley's 'Brave New World,', it is helpful to remember that these nightmares were mainly the curse of the elites and rather than those who lived in the quaint primitive manner of humans.
This bifurcation of society
into a weak, struggling, but sane, mass and a manic depressive elite that is
alternately vicious and afraid, unlimited and imprisoned, foreshadows what we
find today - an elite willing, on the one hand, to occupy any corner of the
world and, on the other, terrified of young men with minimal weapons.
Many years ago some people
built castles and walled cities and moats to keep the bad guys out. It worked
for a while, but sooner or later spies and assassins figured out how to get
across the moats and opponents learned how to climb the walls and send balls of
fire into protected compounds. The Florentines even catapulted dead donkeys and
feces over the town wall during their siege of Siena.
The people who built castles and walled cities and moats are all dead now and their efforts at security seem puny and ultimately futile as we visit their unintended monuments to the vanity of human presumption.
Yet like the castle-dwellers behind the moat, the elite is now spending huge
sums to put themselves inside a prison of our own making...
Strange as it may seem, it is
in this dismal dichotomy between countryside and the political and economic
capitals that the hope for saving America's soul resides. The geographical and
conceptual parochialism of the castle dwellers who have made this mess leaves
vast acres of our land still free in which to nurture hopes, dreams, and
perhaps even to foster the eventual eviction of those who have done us such
wrong.
Eric Paul Gros-Dubois of
Southern Methodist University has described Orwell's underclass this way:
June 13, 2026
Donald Trump
In the Middle East, the war between the United States and Iran grinded on as confusion persisted about a possible peace deal. Americans, unhappy with high gas prices, remain sour on the conflict — and on Trump.
Trump has had a rough start to the month of June, after a spring in which he won crushing victories over Republicans who have crossed him and watched his party gain an edge in the national redistricting war.
This week, he addressed the latest spike in prices, and gave a remark that doubled as a gift to Democratic ad makers. “I love it, the numbers were great,” Trump told reporters. “I love the inflation.”
