July 9, 2026

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.

July 8, 2026

Word

Mehdi Hasan:
“Donald Trump is the son of an immigrant, the grandson of an immigrant, and married to an immigrant.
In fact, two of his three wives were immigrants, proving yet again that immigrants will do the jobs that even Americans are not willing to do.”

Defining socialism


Voting

Alternet America - The Trump DOJ announced Tuesday it will send federal election monitors to 15 jurisdictions across six states during the 2026 primary season. Civil Rights Division chief Harmeet Dhillon named Arizona, Michigan, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, and Virginia in a video posted to social media.

Dhillon framed it as business as usual, noting the department sent monitors to nine jurisdictions in 2022 and 27 in 2024. “This is something that DOJ does routinely,” she said.

What is not routine is what landed the same day. The department sent letters to all 50 states and D.C. warning that election officials could face criminal liability if they knowingly keep noncitizens on voter rolls or let them cast ballots.

That campaign has not gone well in court. The DOJ has lost 11 district court cases and its first appeal in its push to force states to hand over unredacted voter rolls. Not one judge has ordered a state to comply.

Alternet America -   Texas says voting in the wrong county is a 20-year felony, which is awkward for the guy who prosecutes them.

ProPublica reported Tuesday that Republican Attorney General and U.S. Senate candidate Ken Paxton voted in six elections while registered at an address where he does not live, his Collin County home. According to filings from his ex-wife, State Senator Angela Paxton, he has not lived there since their divorce two years ago.

Prior reporting linked Paxton to a home in Denton County. If true, that would make him ineligible to vote in Collin County. In Texas, doing so is a second-degree felony punishable by up to $10,000 and up to 20 years in prison.

The voter rolls show Paxton voted in Collin County in the March Republican primary, and again in May when he became his party’s nominee for the U.S. Senate.

David Becker, a former voting rights lawyer, told ProPublica that a residence “where someone does not live, does not spend the night” would raise red flags in any state. He added that the state’s chief law enforcement officer should be expected to know the residency laws.

Especially since Paxton wrote them down. In February, when he announced a tip line for suspected voter fraud, his office shared guidelines requiring registrants to “provide the address where you reside.”


Donald Trump

The Hill -  President Trump lashed out at Spain early Wednesday during remarks from the NATO summit, urging the U.S. to cut off all trade with the European country over what he called a lack of contributions to defense spending.  “Spain is a wasted cause. We don’t want to do any trade business with Spain anymore by the way,” Trump said, sitting alongside NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte at the group’s summit in Ankara, Turkey.

“Spain is a terrible partner in NATO. They don’t participate. They don’t pay,” the president continued. “I don’t want anything to do with Spain. Cut off all trade with Spain, please, including visits,” he said.  

Alternet -  President Donald Trump has provided “a stunning example of political pandering and exploiting religious faith for personal profit,” said a religious freedom advocate on Tuesday after financial disclosure forms revealed one of the latest ways in which the president has profited from the presidency: this time, by licensing his name to the “God Bless the USA” Bible sold by supporter and country music star Lee Greenwood.

The Bible bearing the president’s name is being sold for $99.99—as are the “First Lady Edition” and the “Vice Presidential Edition.”

According to his latest financial disclosures, the president has earned a total of $1,514,521 from placing his name on the religious text in a package that also includes copies of the US Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights, the Pledge of Allegiance, and the handwritten chorus of Greenwood’s 1984 song “Good Bless the USA.”

Middle East

New Republic -   The Iran deal is dead, according to the U.S. president.  Donald Trump bitterly referred to Iran’s leadership as “scum” during a NATO summit presser in Ankara, Turkey, on Wednesday, telling reporters that he believes peace negotiations—and the regional ceasefire—are “over.”

“I don’t want to deal with them anymore. They’re scum. Do you know what scum is?” Trump said. “They’re scum. They’re sick people. They’re led by sick people, and they’re vicious, violent people, and if they had a nuclear weapon, they’d use it.

“As far as I’m concerned, it’s over. I’ll speak to our negotiators, they’ll want to negotiate, they’re good people. Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner, but they’ll have to come back to me. As far as I’m concerned, it’s just a waste of time dealing with them.

“They’re liars. We make a deal—if I make a deal with him, we have a deal, and it goes out and he talks,” Trump said, briefly gesturing to NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte. “We make a deal, everyone’s agreed, no nuclear weapons. We make a deal. They go outside, talk to the press, they say we never even talked about it.

NY Times -  Oil prices spiked on Wednesday to the highest level in weeks and stocks dropped after President Trump said that he thought the Iran cease-fire was “over” amid a volatile 24 hours in the Persian Gulf region.

Trump vs. Smithsonian

Bob Fertik, Democrats.com - Donald Trump is trying to bully the Smithsonian into rewriting American history to fit his political agenda.

A new White House report attacks the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, smearing museum leadership and accusing the institution of pushing "far-left ideology."

But the real threat is coming from the White House: a president using government power to pressure one of America’s most important public cultural institutions into telling history the way he wants it told.

Don't Let Trump Rewrite American History

The Smithsonian does not belong to Donald Trump. It belongs to the American people. Its job is to preserve history, tell the truth, and help the public understand the full American story — including the achievements, struggles, injustices, and movements that shaped this country.

Tell the Smithsonian Board of Regents: Defend the Smithsonian’s independence and reject Trump’s political interference.

If Trump succeeds in intimidating the Smithsonian, it could set a dangerous precedent for every public institution that teaches history, protects knowledge, or tells uncomfortable truths. Museums should not be forced to erase slavery, civil rights struggles, Indigenous history, women’s history, LGBTQ+ history, immigration history, or any other part of the American experience because politicians find it inconvenient.

The Smithsonian Board of Regents has a responsibility to protect the institution from political pressure. The Board must make clear that museum professionals, historians, curators, and educators — not Donald Trump — should decide how American history is preserved and presented.

American history is not propaganda. It is complex, painful, inspiring, unfinished, and real. We cannot allow any president to turn the Smithsonian into a political weapon.


July 7, 2026

Trump still wants Greenland

CNBC -  President Donald Trump on Tuesday resurrected his push for the U.S. to acquire Greenland, and suggested the U.S. could pull all of its armed services members out of Europe in response to the Continent's continued pushback on the issue. The island territory "should be controlled by the United States," Trump said shortly after he arrived in Ankara, Turkey, for a NATO summit.

More living alone

USA Facts -  In recent decades, the most common type of US household has been those headed by a married couple without children under 18 in the home. But last year, people living alone comprised the largest share of households (29.5%) for the first time. Nearly three out of every 10 people lived on their own.

Labor


Tax raise for wealthy could save Social Security

Newsweek  -   As Social Security's financial outlook grows increasingly concerning, a bipartisan group of lawmakers is reviving a proposal to require higher-income Americans to pay Social Security taxes on more of their earnings.

To many, it presents as one of the least painful ways to shore up the retirement program, but it also could amount to one of the largest tax increases in decades.

Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren and Republican Senator Bernie Moreno wrote in a recent New York Times op-ed that removing the payroll tax cap would be a “no-brainer” as the Social Security Administration faces funding insolvency as early as 2032.

According to the latest Social Security trustees' projections, the program's Old-Age and Survivors Insurance trust fund is expected to become depleted in the fourth quarter of 2032. If Congress does nothing, incoming payroll tax revenue would only be sufficient to pay about 78 percent of scheduled benefits, resulting in an automatic 22 percent cut for retirees and survivors.

Under current law, workers and employers each pay a 6.2 percent Social Security payroll tax on earnings up to $184,500 in 2026. However, wages earned above that amount are exempt from Social Security taxes.

Warren and Moreno are two lawmakers so far to call for eliminating the cap entirely, arguing that wealthy Americans should pay Social Security taxes on all earnings rather than stopping once they exceed the annual threshold.

“Why should a middle-class nurse pay a larger share of her paycheck — than a wealthy corporate lawyer? This is doubly unfair in an economy in which top earners’ wages, over time, have pulled far ahead of those of the average worker,” the senators wrote in their Times op-ed.

Meanwhile. . .

The Supreme Court yesterday permitted a Texas law restricting minors from downloading most apps without parental consent to take effect.

Hegseth features far right preacher

NPR - Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth invited Pastor Doug Wilson to deliver a sermon at the Pentagon earlier this year as part of his monthly Christian worship service. Wilson self-identifies as a Christian nationalist, and his appearance at the Pentagon was controversial.  He has advocated for the repeal of women's right to vote, defended slavery and believes that homosexuality should be criminalized. His extreme views were once considered fringe, but religious scholars say his teachings are now making their way into the mainstream. In an episode of NPR's NewsmakersMorning Edition's Leila Fadel sat down with Wilson at his home church in Idaho to discuss why he wants the U.S. to become a Christian theocracy and the implications it would hold for women and non-Christians across the nation.  Watch or listen to the interview or read the article about their discussion.

Heat weather

NPR - The dangerous heat wave that swept across much of the eastern U.S. over the July Fourth weekend could be the nation's new normal this time of year, according to experts. Scientists say climate change is driving more extreme temperatures and heavier rainfall. Both can contribute to significant, costly damage to roads. These extreme weather changes can cause pavement to expand, crack and warp, rendering some roads unusable until they are repaired. Engineers suggest that using a more durable — and more expensive — asphalt blend could be a solution for some roads that are subject to extreme temperatures. The way the U.S. has traditionally approached infrastructure, such as roads, is no longer sufficient for the future, says Mikhail Chester, a professor of engineering at Arizona State University. Here’s what else experts say can be done to help.

Most and least sports loving states

 With the FIFA World Cup in full swing and the final less than two weeks away, the non-profit organization SmileHub today released new reports on the Best Charities for Sports & Recreation and the Best States for Sports Lovers in 2026.

To highlight the most sports-loving states, SmileHub compared each of the 50 states based on 20 key metrics. The data set ranges from the number of sports charities per capita to the number of sports-related jobs per capita to the number of sports scholarships per capita.

 

Most Sports-Loving States

Least Sports-Loving States

1. Ohio

41. Oklahoma

2. New York

42. Arkansas

3. Pennsylvania

43. Wyoming

4. California

44. Maine

5. Illinois

45. West Virginia

6. Massachusetts

46. Alabama

7. Indiana

47. New Mexico

8. Colorado

48. Idaho

9. North Carolina

49. Alaska

10. Iowa

50. Hawaii

Key Stats

·       Ohio has the most sports bars per capita – 24.5 times more than Alaska, which has the fewest sports bars.

·       Florida has the most sports clubs per capita – 19.3 times more than Arkansas, which has the fewest sports clubs.

·       California has the most sporting goods stores per capita – 6 times more than North Dakota, which has the fewest stores.

To view the full report and your state’s rank

Todd Blanche

The Hill -  More than 1,200 former Department of Justice (DOJ) employees encouraged the Senate to reject acting Attorney General Todd Blanche’s nomination to take on the role permanently, writing in a Tuesday letter that he has been “demonizing career employees.”

 “In the coming weeks, many will rightly underscore the corruption and abuses that have defined the Justice Department under Todd Blanche’s leadership: the vindictive prosecutions and investigations of the President’s foes; the deals designed to reward lawbreakers with taxpayer dollars; the erasure of accountability for January 6; the mishandling of the Epstein files; and the denigration of judges and repeated violations of their orders,” the former employees wrote in a letter organized by Justice Connection, a DOJ alumni group.

 “But we want to focus on an area that deserves just as much attention: Todd Blanche’s degradation of DOJ’s apolitical career workforce.”

 While such letters are common while a nominee is pending, it’s unusual for them to gain such a large number of signatures. The effort comes as Blanche is set to appear for his confirmation hearing next week.  

Polls

AP News -  About one-third of U.S. adults — including roughly half of Democrats — believe that Israel has committed genocide against Palestinians during the war in Gaza, an accusation that’s been leveled by some human rights organizations and vehemently denied by Israel and the U.S. government. About 2 in 10 Americans say Israel has not and the rest, about half, don’t know enough to say.  A similar share, 30%, of Jewish adults say Israel has committed genocide, although about half, 49%, say it has not.

The Guardian -   Ninety-five per cent of Americans believe the US is suffering an affordability crisis, as many report trouble with the rising cost of groceries and gas, according to an exclusive new poll conducted for the Guardian.

The survey, conducted by Harris Poll, paints a bleak picture of how people feel about the US economy amid the war in Iran and ahead of the key midterm elections this fall.

Despite stable employment and record-high stock markets, more Americans believe the overall economy is getting worse (57%) than in February (46%), when the poll was last conducted and before the war in the Middle East sent gas prices soaring. Fewer people today also believe the economy is getting better (16%, compared with 28% in February) and more say their financial security has gotten worse.

Immigration

New Republic -  A federal judge in Ohio ruled against the Trump administration Monday, citing bigoted comments President Trump and Vice President JD Vance made about immigrants. 

U.S. District Judge Algenon Marbley ordered the White House to unfreeze immigrants’ benefit applications, citing Trump and Vance’s “outright hostility towards immigrants, both before and after the 2024 presidential election.” These applications include filings for work authorization and green cards from people in the U.S. from countries including Burma, Canada, Iran, Nigeria, Syria, Tanzania, and Venezuela.

“Their ire appears focused on immigrants from countries in the Caribbean, South America, Africa, and Asia,” Marbley, nominated to the federal bench by President Bill Clinton in 1997, wrote.  

The judge quoted many of Trump’s comments against immigrants of color, including the time he railed against people coming to the U.S. from “shithole countries” or when he claimed Haitians are “poisoning the blood” of our country. In his second term as president, Trump attacked Somali Americans and accused them of adding “nothing” to the country, and oversaw violent immigration crackdowns across the country, particularly in Minnesota.

Marbley also highlighted Trump and Vance’s made-up accusation that Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, were eating people’s pet cats and dogs

Word

Greg Gerritt - I work with lots of young people and Democratic Socialists and no one I have ever met except rich folks wants things for free. We know real good public services require money and we want taxes that reflect ability to pay. We want an end to tax breaks for the rich. We want an economy that works for everyone. We want an end to subsidies for oil companies and downtown real estate and luxury buildings. We want mass transit that works, parks in every neighborhood, clean air and water. What kind of compromise is there on clean water or air?

Trump's war on the Smithsonian Institution

MS Now -   A new report from the White House Domestic Policy Council has a dire warning about the Smithsonian Institution. According to the White House, the National Museum of American History has become home to “a radical, activist cohort dedicated to reframing the American story to serve its ideological ends.” Accordingly, its authors write, President Donald Trump “has a duty and obligation to seek reforms of the Smithsonian” and restore the museum to its aims of being a beacon of patriotism.

This overwrought declaration spells out just how impossible Trump’s cohort finds it to imagine a world in which thoughtful criticism of America’s past could foster love of this country. But it’s only through examination of the unvarnished truth of where we’ve come from that we can truly appreciate where we are — and develop a vision of what we want America to become.

…The council’s conclusions in the 162-page report, titled “Saving America’s Story,” are as unnerving as they are dramatic: “As it stands today, it would benefit most Americans, especially parents bringing their children for a tour, if the Smithsonian’s flagship history museum had a label at every entrance that reads: ‘Warning: the exhibits in this museum were prepared by people who don’t want you to love your country.’

Donald Trump

Alternet -  A quarter millennia after its founding, the United States faces a stark choice that will define its future.  In the years ahead, the country can continue to follow the path blazed by President Donald Trump, who is attempting to bring states under the authority of a more powerful federal government led by him. Or it can move in a different direction, one where states become a heavier counterweight to an aggressive White House and rebalance the relationship between the states and the federal government.

The United States’ foundations are undergoing a significant stress test, experts say, raising questions about whether a radical reconception of the nation lies ahead. The federalism that has helped bind the states — and therefore, the nation — together is fraying, pulled apart by a president who demonstrates little regard for many of the nation’s core principles.

….While a long line of modern presidents have expanded the powers of their office, Trump has wielded the executive branch as a weapon to punish states and those state leaders he views as enemies. Federal dollars and resources have become a form of leverage he has tried to use to pursue his political aims and deliver the retribution he promised to, if reelected. He is trying to assert an unprecedented level of White House control over state-run elections.  How states — and the people — respond will forever shape the nation. 

Newsworthy News -   During his Mount Rushmore address kicking off America's 250th birthday, President Donald Trump again painted the United States as "the most just and exceptional nation ever to exist on Earth." He said people do not have to be born here, but "do have to love what we have built" and "must love our country." He tied American survival not only to the Constitution but to the "culture and character of the people," suggesting shared values matter as much as written laws….

In the same speech, Trump described communism as a "mortal threat to American liberty" and blamed it for roughly "100 million" deaths in the last century. He warned that modern movements on the left are trying to tear down American history, weaken pride, and "beat the American spirit out of us." For many conservatives, this fits long-running fears about socialism, globalism, and "woke" agendas that they feel attack faith, family, and national identity.

Critics argue that Trump's language goes beyond normal debate and turns politics into a test of loyalty. They point out that his claims about communists being made up of "illegal immigrants, criminals, and everybody that doesn't want to work" have no evidence behind them and smear whole groups of people. They also challenge boasts like "We beat Venezuela in one day" or that Iran was "dying to settle," calling them more campaign talk than proven fact. Yet they often do not offer detailed government records to prove him wrong.

The word “communist” is not the bogeyman it was during the 20th century or even the first decade of the 21st century. The Cold War has long been over. Millennials and Gen Z Americans either were not alive or were not politically conscious at a time when communism was seen in popular culture as a serious national security and economic threat. To them, communism is a historical term, not a haunting specter. The Communist Party U.S.A. exists, but it is a tiny and politically irrelevant organization. Trump, perpetually stuck in the 1980s, likely overestimates the power of “communist” as a slur.  

Trump’s “communist” agenda is also inaccurate in a way that a good chunk of the public is likely to understand. He falsely claims that democratic socialists are no different from communists. The most prominent communist projects of the 20th century in the Soviet Union and China involved authoritarian political organizations and centrally planned economies, and were known for massive human rights abuses and dysfunction in distributing resources. By contrast, democratic socialists believe in democratic political organization and reject central planning. 

Health

Health -   Check your shower—a popular shampoo has been recalled in the U.S. and Canada over bacterial contamination.vCertain bottles of Oribe shampoo were pulled from shelves after Pluralibacter gergoviae bacteria were detected, the Food and Drug Administration announced July 1. The bacteria pose little risk to healthy people, but if you are immunocompromised, you may be more susceptible to infection.

JD Vance

NY Times -   JD Vance seems stressed.  Not just because he must publicly support a war that he privately opposed, or because his political fortunes are tied to a president whose approval rating is circling the drain. Those conditions are bad enough for the vice president. But Vance appears most agitated because he believes America is engaged in a civilizational struggle — and it is losing.