UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
March 24, 2026
Polls
The WRECK America Act
Donald Trump
College grads face job fears
US No Longer the Leader of the Free World
Putin
Kentucky’s Andy Beshear takes aim at Vance
Trump's test run
“We can use this as a test run, as a test case, to really perfect ICE’s involvement in the 2026 midterm elections.”
There it is. Not a conspiracy theory. And definitely not liberal hand-wringing. The man himself, in his own words, explaining exactly what’s going on at airports across the country right now.
I’ve been writing and talking about authoritarian playbooks for decades, including in my book The Hidden History of American Oligarchy: Reclaiming Our Democracy from the Ruling Class, and they almost always follow the same predictable script.
First, you exploit (Reichstag Fire, 9/11) or manufacture (“Border invasion,” Iran attack) a crisis. Use that to change the laws to give yourself more power as you flood public spaces with your militarized enforcers under the cover of “helping.”
Then you normalize it. Have you noticed how stories about ICE brutalizing and killing people have gone from the front pages to occasional mentions on social media?
Then you expand it. ICE has gone national, massive databases of protesters are being organized, and Trump this weekend came right out and said that his next target will be Democrats, who he called America’s “greatest enemy,” using the “Democrat Party” slur that Joe McCarthy suggested Republicans should always use:
“Now with the death of Iran, the greatest enemy America has is the Radical Left, Highly Incompetent, Democrat Party!”
Hitler didn’t march his stormtroopers into polling places on day one. He put them on street corners first, just like Trump is doing. By the time Germans understood what was happening, the intimidation and threats of violence or imprisonment were already baked into daily life, and questioning what was happening felt like questioning the natural order of things.
Meanwhile. . .
Abortions
Hawaii flooding
The fall of American democracy
The heat wave
Iran
NPR - An Israeli official informed NPR that the U.S. is planning for talks to happen within the coming days in Pakistan. Iran’s Foreign Ministry says that the U.S. reached out to the country seeking discussions to end the conflict. Egypt, Turkey and Pakistan are actively involved in de-escalation efforts and officials from the three countries met in Saudi Arabia last week to discuss containing the war. NPR’s Aya Batrawy tells Up First one of the challenges the talks face is that there is no trust between Tehran and Washington. In addition, with Iran’s top leaders being killed in the conflict, it is uncertain who will represent Iran in the talks. Trump has set tough conditions for peace, including no nuclear enrichment by Iran, a demand Iran rejected prior to the war. Israel also wants conditions that could lead to regime change.
Bloomberg - The Iran war is creating waves across the global economy, affecting everyone from Australian farmers to cricket fans in Pakistan.
- As concerns about fertilizer supplies mount, wheat farmers in Australia—one of the world’s biggest agricultural exporters—are paring back plantings.
- It’s a similar story in Calabria, the toe end of Italy’s boot, where winemakers worry about squeezed profits as higher diesel, fertilizer and pesticide costs intersect with Trump’s tariffs.
- Pakistan ordered fans of its top cricket tournament to stay home and watch matches on television to conserve fuel. Indian filmmakers are delaying cinema releases so as not to miss out on the lucrative audience in the Arab Gulf, where several countries have been targeted by Iran.
- It all adds to worries that a prolonged energy supply crunch will drive up food bills, stoking global concerns about inflation arising from the conflict.
MS NOW - It is a good thing that Trump did not hit Iran’s power plants, because that would effectively be an attack on the country’s civilian population, and it would mark yet another escalation in a war that should never have started in the first place. But there’s reason to be skeptical of Trump’s pivot.
Multiple Iranian officials deny the existence of the U.S.-Iranian negotiations Trump says were so productive. When asked about Iran’s denials, Trump insisted that his special envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner spoke with an Iranian official Sunday night, identifying them only as “the man who I believe is the most respected and the leader.” But just days ago, Trump boasted about how he had killed so many of Iran’s leaders that “we have nobody to talk to — and you know what? We like it that way.” MORE
Learning to live with other people
- I was one of six children and so learned at an early age that other people didn't always talk, think or act like me.
- I went to a Quaker school in Philadelphia. Far from theological rigidity, the teachers at this school offered ways to react to things and people who didn't think like you, something you do a lot of as a reporter. At Germantown Friends School you learned that success was not just a personal experience but one you shared with others. The goal was "SPICES" - or simplicity. peace, integrity, community, equality and stewardship. As GFS put it, the school was "dedicated to reaching that of God in every person, Our mission is to seek truth challenge the intellect, honor differences, embrace the city, and nurture each student's mind, body and spirit."
- These days I sometimes describe myself as a Seventh Day Agnostic in that I am happy to try to follow Christian principles without having to pray about them in church or assign them to a god. I learned this in part in the 1960s working with activist preachers. One study of Friends of the Britain Yearly Meeting found some 30% of its Quakers to be non-theistic, agnostic or atheist.
- One of the best teachers I had at Germantown Friends School taught one of two high school anthropology courses then available in the country. I went on to major in anthropology at Harvard College along with about a half dozen others. As recently as 2024 there were still only about a dozen anthro majors there. This fits well into a society which places so much emphasis on money, power, and success rather than what it means to be human and sharing a community.
- I was third in command of a Coast Guard cutter and one of things I learned with that rank was seldom as important as cooperative service. I consulted with lower ranked crew members and what mattered was the problems that needed to be solved, not rank. As Joseph Conrad put it, "Of all the living creatures on land and sea, it's ships alone that cannot be taken in by barren pretences."
- For some four decades I played in bands, mostly on piano with vocals, and while I would get my solos, the bulk of a band musician's time is spent helping others sound good. I hardly even noticed this. As a role model for good group human existences, you can't do much better than look into the life of a band musician.
Alll this is just one small example of how someone finds other people and other ways to think about life and do one's
work.
March 23, 2026
Action links
Iran
The Hill - A senior Iranian official disputed Trump’s claim that there are negotiations between the two countries, arguing Trump has “backed down” due to pressure from the markets and allies.
“Trump backed down from attacking critical infrastructure as Iran’s military threats became credible. Financial market pressure and the threat of bonds within the U.S. and the West have increased, and this has been another important factor in this retreat,” the senior official told Iran’s Fars News Agency in translated remarks.
Trump then clarified: The president said he has not been in contact with Iran’s supreme leader, arguing his top envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner have been speaking with their Iranian diplomatic counterparts.
Newsweek - The U.S. Department of State has issued a worldwide alert on March 22, 2026, urging Americans across the globe to exercise increased caution as geopolitical tensions continue to ripple far beyond the Middle East. The advisory, posted early Sunday, warns that U.S. diplomatic facilities and American interests abroad could face elevated risks in the coming weeks.
NPR - President Trump says he’s postponed military strikes against Iranian power plants, after he threatened on Saturday to “obliterate” them if Iran didn’t reopen the Strait of Hormuz in 48 hours. On social media this morning, Trump said the U.S. had “very good and productive conversations” over the past two days, and that he would postpone strikes on Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure for five days, “subject to the success of the ongoing meetings and discussions.” |
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WE HAVE A PHONE PROBLEM
Donald Trump
Judaism and Zionism are not the same
Jared Kushner
Jobs
Health
Markwayne Mullin
Congress
Polls
Cuba
Bloombeg - A senior Cuban official told NBC the country is preparing for a possible military assault as Trump increases economic pressure on the government in Havana and suggested it could be the next US target after Venezuela and Iran.
- Trump has repeatedly threatened Cuba, saying he can “Free it, take it—I can do anything I want” and calling for its president to step down.
- The plan? Less regime change, more US economic control. The Atlantic reported the US is discussing which Republican donors with Cuban ancestry could be considered for future transition or leadership roles.
- Cuba has mostly resisted the pressure, but the country is facing severe stress after Trump cut off fuel and funding. It suffered another another nationwide blackout Saturday, the second in a week.