UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
April 28, 2026
CEOs getting older
Meanwhile...
Public school teachers
NPR - The average salary for public school teachers in the U.S. is up 3.5% from the previous year. However, when adjusted for inflation, today's teachers are estimated to earn less than they did in 2017, according to a new review of school-related data from the National Education Association. Here are some key findings:
🧑🏫 The average salary for new teachers in the U.S. is $46,112. Among the locations with the highest salaries are the District of Columbia ($64,640), and Washington ($60,658). The states with the lowest starting salaries are Montana ($36,682) and Nebraska ($39,561).
🧑🏫 The beginning of the 2024-25 school year saw a 0.3% drop in student enrollment from the previous fall. Since 2016, schools have experienced a roughly 3.6% decline in enrollment.
🧑🏫 States with collective bargaining laws have higher average starting salaries and top salaries than states without them.
🧑🏫 Washington stands out among the 11 states that have seen an inflation-adjusted increase in teacher pay since 2017. Teacher pay in the state has increased 36%. The rise came after the state’s supreme court put the state on notice and imposed a $100,000-a-day fine to ensure better funding and support for public schools.
Middle East
Donald Trump
Artificial Intelligence
Children
To highlight the states with the best foster care systems and the ones that need to improve the most, SmileHub compared each of the 50 states based on 19 key metrics. The data set ranges from the share of children in foster care to the share of children who re-entered the foster care system after adoption to equality laws and regulations for children in foster care.
Best States | States in Need of Improvement | |
| 1. New Jersey | 41. South Dakota | |
| 2. Virginia | 42. Alabama | |
| 3. Connecticut | 43. Arizona | |
| 4. Iowa | 44. Montana | |
| 5. Colorado | 45. Indiana | |
| 6. Delaware | 46. Kansas | |
| 7. California | 47. Vermont | |
| 8. New York | 48. Florida | |
| 9. Minnesota | 49. New Mexico | |
| 10. Louisiana | 50. Alaska |
Key Stats
- New Jersey has the lowest share of children in foster care – 13.9 times lower than West Virginia, which has the highest share.
- California has the most children’s charities per capita – 12.6 times more than Rhode Island, which has the fewest charities.
- Delaware has the largest share of children adopted within 3 years – 2.9 times larger than Illinois, which has the smallest share of children adopted.
To view the full report and your state’s rank
Farming
April 27, 2026
The rise of AH as well as AI
Sam Smith – This summer it will be 69 years since I covered my first Washington story. Since
then I have never seen a political administration as corrupt and dishonest as
Donald Trump’s.
But perhaps because I was an anthropology major in college I
don’t see this as strictly a political matter. Other aspects of our culture
have also changed, such as the size of corporations, our standards of financial
decency, and the growth of business
schools and broadcasting corporations, TV and the Internet. These have
dramatically altered the way we live. And one of the effects of this, although rarely
discussed, is that our society is now split between old human based communities
with traditional values and an increasing population absorbed mainly with
power, money, corporatism and social status.
In short, we are facing not only AI – artificial
intelligence – but AH - artificial humanity. As with AI, AH is a model of what
it means to turn the moral, communal and decent into a system in which only
technology, personal power and money are what really matter.
Although I have decades of experience covering corrupt
politicians I have never had to face values that are so indifferent to classic
human standards. People like Trump and his gang are not just politically off
the charts they have rewritten what it means to be corrupt…. And human.
I spent my high school years in Philadelphia and went to
college at Harvard next to Boston so I early had plenty of experience with the
nature of corruption. I was introduced to politics at age 12, stuffing
envelopes in a Philly campaign that ended over six decades of Republican rule.
And in four decades later, as a Washington reporter, I saw plenty of local corruption
but not only was it balanced by the decent, even many of the corrupt had more virtue then you find
today.
What is missing from the way we handle today’s problems is
the lack of a loud spirit of decency and community. Even ordinary honest
friends seem more scared of our Trumpist society than active as their earlier likes
were, say, in the fight for civil rights. We have not only changed our politics
but are losing the energy and courage to restore a decent America.
I learned a lot about
my hometown DC covering the real city and not just national politics. For
example, back in 1971 71% of its population was black. And Washington’s
neighborhoods were important enough that we even had elected advisory
neighborhood commissions. This was a totally different place than the
Washington you saw on TV or read in the morning paper.
Aside from a few things like the Martin Luther King riots,
Washington got along with itself pretty well. In part this was not only because
it elected black officials but whites and blacks joined on a number of
important matters including fighting some freeways and supporting home rule and
statehood. One of the best cures for ethnic division is finding agreement on key
issues.
With a father who worked for President Roosevelt and my
later decades as a journalist, recent history is not just an academic matter,
it is also a story I covered each day.
For me, for example, the big change in America came in the
1980s not juste with Ronald Reagan, but also the rise of television and viewers
who lowered community activity and the frequency of gathering with their neighbors. And as the media played a significantly
larger role in our lives there was a
greater emphasis reporting on those with power and money and less on what was
happening in real life around us.
In short, as a society we moved from traditional human
habits and values to the new AH and our social
significance and relationships were increasingly turned over to artificial
humanity.
Virginia's governor
Trump fires all members of the National Science Board
Voting
Climate
Meanwhile. . .
China
NY Times - A research arm of the Chinese government said it had published an atlas of deep-sea mineral deposits, highlighting Beijing’s ambitions to mine the ocean floor and underscoring its disputed claims to waters that neighboring nations consider theirs.
Experts say the maps, in addition to pinpointing mineral deposits found in the deep ocean, give China’s military a thorough understanding of the seafloor in strategically important waters, providing an advantage if submarine warfare were to break out.
The announcement this month by the China Geological Survey puts pressure on other countries that have been ramping up their own seabed mining efforts, in part to reduce their dependence on China for critical minerals and rare earth elements. Ocean sediments are rich in valuable resources including cobalt, nickel, and manganese.
“China is pouring enormous resources in an effort to emerge as a world-leading oceanographic power,” said Bruce Jones, a naval affairs and foreign policy expert at the Brookings Institution. The United States historically dominated in ocean-science fields, he said. Now, China is closing the gap, increasing China’s military capabilities and equipping it with the knowledge needed to fight underwater, Dr. Jones said.
Israel
Health
Axios - Hospitals that treat patients who require extended stays have been closing at a rapid clip, driving up demand for the remaining beds and prompting health systems to appeal to the Trump administration and Congress for relief.The industry says it's unable to discharge certain patients who need long-term intensive care, which is adding to hospital overcrowding and stressing a system that's already experiencing a shortage of beds. It's also stoking a debate over the cost of caring for patients with serious wounds or organ failure, or who are on ventilators once they're stabilized.
More than 25% of long-term care hospitals have closed over the past 10 years, according to the American Hospital Association. Hospital groups blame Medicare policies dating to the Obama administration that they say shortchange long-term care hospitals. The issue is that they only give full payments for patients who've spent at least three days in an ICU or been on a ventilator for at least 96 hours.
.... Long-term care hospitals have long been blamed for driving up the cost of post-acute care and accounted for $5.5 billion in annual spending, according to one 2019 study.
- In 202, Stanford and MIT health economists estimated that Medicare could save about $4.6 billion annually without harming patients by sending them to skilled nursing facilities or home, instead of long-term care hospitals. More
Workers
Overfishing
Pete Hegseth
April 26, 2026
Donald Trump
happening to you?
Trump — The people who make the biggest impacts,
like Abraham Lincoln, are the one they go after.
I hate to say it but I’m honored to be one.