UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
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.”
Why no impeachment drive?
Court cases
Once again. . .
Climate
Federal judge okays reality in national parks
Polls
- Public opinion among: Israelis | Palestinians | Americans
- Are the sides doing enough to avoid civilian casualties?
- How do Israelis and Palestinians feel about their safety?
The danger to Social Security and Medicare
Tales from the attic: Retrieving the republic
June 12, 2026
Donald Trump's sexual history
College students losing reading skills
Switzerland to vote on a cap for its population
Housing
What's really happened to Social Security
Trump regime
| Elizabeth Warren |
Health
Donald Trump
Federal judge blocks lawsuit against ActBlue
The court sided with ActBlue’s argument that the lawsuit amounted to “retaliation” for its role in fundraising for Democratic candidates, namely Paxton’s opponent in the Texas Senate race, state Rep. James Talarico (D).
“The lawsuit in Texas is undoubtedly an adverse action,” Stearns, an appointee of former President Clinton, wrote in a 15-page order. “And having previously found bad faith, the court agrees with ActBlue that the evidence in the record compels the conclusion that, far from protecting Texas consumers, the action was filed in retaliation for ActBlue’s fundraising on behalf of Talarico, Paxton’s current political rival for the Senate seat.”
Bad Weather
SpaceX
The IPO, which could be a referendum on Elon Musk, is also going to be the latest major test of red-hot demand for the artificial intelligence boom. Yesterday, the company locked in its final IPO price of $135, making it the largest stock debut ever.
The implications of this IPO stretch far beyond the opening trade.
For years, SpaceX was largely accessible only to venture capital firms, institutional investors and a small group of private shareholders. Now, ordinary investors will have their first chance to buy into the company — whether they realize it or not. Recent changes made by major stock exchanges mean SpaceX could be added to passive index funds almost immediately.
In addition, buying the stock also means investing by proxy in Musk, the company’s controlling shareholder. He’s already the world’s richest person but is poised to become the world’s first trillionaire when Space X goes public. To put that into perspective, it would take the average U.S. household nearly 12 million years to accumulate that much wealth.
Still can't wrap your head around how much 1,000,000,000,000 really is? These interactive graphics will help you visualize it.
Middle East
NPR - In another whiplash decision, President Trump announced yesterday that he canceled new attacks in Iran, after announcing earlier in the day that more strikes were coming if the country didn't agree to a peace deal. The president signaled that the two countries had "conceptually" secured an agreement on nuclear issues and could sign a peace deal in the next few days, but Iran's foreign ministry says a deal hasn't been finalized. Trump wants this war to end, NPR's Aya Batrawy tells Up First. It's unpopular among Americans, who saw inflation surge to its highest level in several years. Arab Gulf countries are also hurting as the war drags on. Batrawy says a call between Trump and Qatar's emir yesterday, in which messages from Iran were exchanged, could have led Trump to call off more attacks. The United Arab Emirates has also shifted its tone from being hawkish on Iran to aligning more with Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Egypt about ending the war. That leaves Israel as the only country railing against a diplomatic approach. |
New execution system
New alcohol studies
The second report’s finding was more palatable to the alcohol industry, which had called the Alcohol Intake and Health Study ideologically driven and scientifically flawed, and said it had communicated its concerns repeatedly to government officials over a period of several years.