UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
July 6, 2026
Most and least stressed cities
WalletHub released its report on 2026's
Most & Least Stressed Cities in America, as well as expert commentary,
to show where people are struggling and may need assistance. WalletHub
compared more than 180 cities across 39 key metrics. The data set ranges from
average weekly work hours to the unemployment rate to divorce and suicide
rates.
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Most
Stressed Cities |
Least
Stressed Cities |
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1.
Detroit, MI |
173.
Burlington, VT |
Best vs. Worst
- Rapid
City, South Dakota and Honolulu, Hawaii, have the lowest unemployment
rate, which is five times lower than in Detroit, Michigan the city
with the highest.
- Fremont,
California, has the lowest divorce rate, which is 4.4 times
lower than in Cleveland, Ohio, the city with the highest.
- Cheyenne,
Wyoming, has the lowest share of adults in fair or poor
health, which is 3.1 times lower than in San Antonio, Texas, the city
with the highest.
- Columbia,
Maryland, has the highest median annual household income (adjusted
by cost of living), which is 3.3 times higher than in Detroit, the
city with the lowest.
To view
the full report and your city’s rank
Trump's war on public media
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European leaders deal with Trump
Alternet
- A new report about French
President Emmanuel Macron described an unusual moment while he was visiting the
United States and the American president had a complete meltdown. A Wall Street
Journal report revealed the scrambling that unfolded as it appeared the U.S.
was breaking up with Europe.
Some Republicans say it’s time Trump changed course on the SAVE America Act
MS
Now - For months, President Donald Trump has relentlessly pressed
Congress to pass the SAVE America Act. An increasing number of Republicans say
it’s time for him to change course. “He
wants to go it alone, his way to the highway, and it don’t work,” Rep. Don
Bacon, R-Neb., who’s retiring at the end of the year, told MS NOW. “He’s trying
to pound the square peg through the circle, and it doesn’t work.”
Florida Republican says deporting Haitians would be ‘huge mistake’
The
Guardian - Carlos Giménez, a Republican congressman from Florida, broke
with the Trump administration on Sunday, calling on the White House to
reconsider its push to eliminate temporary protected status (TPS) for Haitian
migrants.
Returning about 350,000 Haitians to their chaotic, dangerous homeland would be a grave error, Giménez said, after the US supreme court’s ruling that the Trump administration could cut off temporary legal protections.
He said: “[TPS] is meant to safeguard those who are either fleeing countries that are failed states and are at risk of going back to them or countries that really can’t handle them right now, as is the case with Venezuela that has suffered a natural disaster.”
The ruling gave the green light to plans to end TPS for more than 350,000 Haitians and 6,000 Syrians. TPS allows people to live and work in the US if the Department of Homeland Security deems their home countries unsafe due to war or natural disasters.
Middle East
NPR - Netanyahu has been
seeking a face-to-face meeting with Trump for some time but has been
repeatedly turned down, a source familiar with the matter who was not
authorized to speak publicly tells NPR. The prime minister wants to discuss
U.S. approval for potentially taking military action against Iran if necessary.
Netanyahu is currently on the defensive regarding the interim
deal between the U.S. and Iran, NPR's Carrie Kahn says. It has been
unpopular and perceived as too lenient toward Iran. Netanyahu, who faces
elections this fall, has had to defend his relationship with Trump, Kahn adds.
It's unclear when Netanyahu will meet with Trump at the White House. The 60-day
deadline to finalize the details of the preliminary peace plan is about a month
away.
Washington experience may not help a state run
Roll
Call - While
Republicans and Democrats battle for control of Washington this year,
Washington has become a scarlet letter for members of both parties vying to be
their state’s next governor. Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet was just the latest
member of Congress to fail in a gubernatorial attempt when he lost the
Democratic primary Tuesday to state Attorney General Phil Weiser, 55 percent to
45 percent.
This cycle’s
bipartisan club of gubernatorial losers from D.C. already included Republican
Reps. Dusty Johnson of South Dakota, Randy Feenstra of Iowa and Nancy Mace and
Ralph Norman of South Carolina. While there were unique dynamics in each race,
including varying levels of involvement by President Donald Trump, House
members falling short in their bids for governor is an emerging trend.
…Of course,
there are some places where a House member will be successful, such as Arizona,
where Rep. Andy Biggs appears poised to secure the GOP nomination later this
month. But that would come at the expense of fellow Republican Rep. David
Schweikert, a primary opponent.
Immigration
MS
Now - The plan wasn’t working. Less than a
year into President Donald Trump’s second term, his administration’s signature
initiative — facilitating the mass deportation of “millions
and millions” of immigrants, as he once put it — had become
a political liability. A surge
of federal agents to Minnesota proved to be the apex of a flashy,
combative strategy that tried to steamroll any opposition — and failed.
But now,
according to The
New York Times, the seeming lull in arrests that followed the winter’s
chaos has given way to a renewed effort to round up as many immigrants for
deportation as possible — without drawing the same level of attention. The
shift shows both the limits that the administration has faced in its
deportation spree and its determination to continue apace despite the
president’s approval ratings on immigration tanking. Without the same amount of
spotlight-seeking from immigration officials, however, the White House hopes to
deny opponents the clear targets to organize against that last year’s
deportation campaigns provided….
Unlike previous
demands from White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, it seems
that ICE has been on track to hit those numbers. Over the course of last week,
according to the Times, federal officials detained more than 10,000 people
— and intends to keep that pressure going….
The new surge
also comes after yet another influx of cash from Congress for ICE and the
Border Patrol. The Times reported that “top ICE officials were told to make
sure that as many officers as possible were working seven days a week, and to
put 80 percent of their officers on arrest operations.”
July 5, 2026
The media is not the best source of support for major improvements
Sam Smith – I got involved in progressive journalism
in the 1960s not just because of the wrong doings of the political right but
because of an appealing assortment of reforms the good folks were pushing. What
I find strange about our current state of affairs is that, while Donald Trump
is properly criticized, the advocacy of new approaches is nowhere near as
powerful as it was, say in the 1960s.
We need to create a vision of the good as well as condemnation
of the evil. One reason this hasn’t happened well so far is that the conventional
media is far more accepting of the right
than it should be. It even sometimes condemns the sensible as “socialism”
in a country that already has Social Security, Medicare and other reforms that
haven’t hurt conventional businesses in the slightest.
Because large media largely defines journalism there has
been a little noted drift towards institutions controlled by large media corporations
telling how we think about political issues. This post is a rare exception:
Major media can be very useful in uncovering the evils of politicians
like Trump but don’t count on big support for the best reforms.
10 ways to improve things
Robert
Reich - 1. Subject Supreme Court
justices to term limits. Limit the terms of justices to 18 years, after
which time they must move to courts of appeals or district courts. Justices
already on the high court can remain only until they’ve been there for 18
years. Those who are beyond this limit must immediately move to other courts.
(Another reform is to expand the number of justices, but FDR tried this and it
proved so politically unpopular that he had to abandon it.)
2. Prevent conflicts of interest. End the exemption
of the president and vice president from conflicts of interest laws. Require
all federally elected officials to put their investments into blind trusts.
Prohibit all trading of specific shares of stock.
3. Stop a president from using the Justice Department.
Prohibit a president from having any involvement in decisions about whom to
prosecute. Require congressional review of any pardons or commutations.
4. End gerrymanders. Require states to create
independent commissions to draw congressional district lines.
5. Revive voting rights. Reenact Section 2 of the
Voting Rights Act (which barred voting practices or procedures that
discriminate on the basis of race, color, or ethnicity) and Section 5 (which
required jurisdictions with a history of racial discrimination in voting to
obtain federal approval before changing any voting laws or procedures).
6. Protect press freedom and independence. Amend the
Sherman and Clayton antitrust acts to bar large corporations, or any person
already owning major media, from purchasing major media networks or platforms.
7. Protect the freedom of inquiry. Bar the executive
branch from conditioning research or other educational grants to universities
on any ideological litmus test. Researchers should be free to pursue truth.
8. Get big money out of politics. Establish public
matching funds for small-dollar donations for all federal elected offices.
Encourage states to grant corporate charters only on condition that
corporations refrain from political activity (as Hawaii has done and Montana is
considering, and hopefully California will do). Pursue a constitutional
amendment to reverse Citizens United and establish Congress’s authority to
limit big money in politics.
9. Tax large aggregations of personal wealth. Enact a
wealth tax. Eliminate the “stepped-up basis at death” rule that allows large
fortunes to be transferred from one generation to the next without paying taxes
on capital gains.
10. Eliminate the Electoral College. Pursue a constitutional amendment to eliminate the Electoral College and base the selection of president and vice president on whichever ticket wins the overall popular vote. In the meantime, seek a compact among states (and the District of Columbia) to award all their electoral votes to whichever presidential ticket wins the overall popular vote.
The decline of socializing
Axios - Americans are spending less time socializing than they did 20 years ago — and the trend cuts across every generation, Axios' Erica Pandey writes from the new American Time Use Survey.
- Our growing isolation is a fundamental shift in the way we live with implications for everything from what we believe to how long we live.
🚨 Average time spent socializing per day has fallen from 45 to 35 minutes over the last 20 years.
- The decline is steepest among young people: 15- to 24-year-olds went from spending an hour a day hanging out with others to 35 minutes.
Sociologists and psychologists point to several trends driving this phenomenon in what Substack writer Derek Thompson dubbed "The Anti-Social Century."
- We're all on our smartphones, often interacting through screens instead of face-to-face. Teens spend an average of 4.8 hours a day on apps like TikTok, Instagram and Snapchat, according to Gallup.
- The shift to remote work — and life — during the pandemic has persisted.
- Longer-term trends are reshaping daily life in ways that make retreat easier. Homes are bigger and more comfortable, with larger TVs. Most restaurants are on food delivery apps, making it easier than ever to stay in.
☕ Also contributing to the trend is the decline of gathering spaces, Axios' Avery Lotz writes.
- In a 2025 report, University of Colorado Boulder researchers uncovered widespread closures of all kinds of hangout spots — from libraries to coffee shops to museums — in the last decade or so.
- Churches are also shuttering at unprecedented rates, Axios' Russell Contreras reports. Share this story.
Science
NPR - After Trump's reelection, an increasing number
of U.S. scientists are seeking job opportunities abroad. An analysis by
the journal Nature revealed that in the first quarter of 2025, U.S. scientists
submitted nearly a third more international job applications than in the same
period in 2024. In March 2025, a survey of more than 1,600 scientists in the
U.S. found that 75% were considering leaving the country. These departures are
partly a response to changes the Trump administration made to federal funding
for scientific research in the U.S.
Even potato chips are a problem
The
Guardian - The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
has upgraded a recall of several popular brands of potato chips to its most
serious level because of the risk of salmonella contamination. Manufacturer Utz
issued a voluntary recall in May for varieties of its Zapp’s and Dirty potato
chips products, citing the possible presence of salmonella in dry milk powder
sourced from a third party used to make a seasoning ingredient. An estimated
650,000 bags of chips with best by dates ranging from 27 July to 31 August were
believed to be affected.
National parks another victim of Trump
The Guardian - This weekend, hundreds of thousands more will pour into national parks across the country to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the US, looking to connect with nature and experience part of the nation’s shared heritage. “There is nothing so American as our national parks,” Franklin D Roosevelt said during a 1934 radio address, championing how the mountains, glaciers, lakes and trees had been pulled from “private exploitation”.
But as the US memorializes its history, the hundreds of
places safeguarded by the National Park Service (NPS) face an uncertain future. Protections and federal support for parks
have eroded under the Trump administration, which has cut millions of dollars
from the NPS budget and slashed staffing levels. Overcrowding in nature areas
has threatened ecosystems and increased hazards for visitors, while extreme
conditions fueled by the climate crisis create more dangers for the landscapes
and those who love them.
The
Hill - A federal appeals court
reversed a lower court’s order requiring the National Park Service (NPS) to
restore signs and exhibits that were removed by the Trump administration. The
1st Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday halted the ruling, which would have
restored park materials that the administration says were purged as part of the
administration’s effort to get rid of materials that “disparage” Americans.
Middle East
MS Now - (Not) war and (not) peace: The Iran war has entered a new phase centered on the fight to control the Strait of Hormuz. The U.S. has already failed to achieve the goals that Trump set at the outset of ending the Iranian regime or restricting its nuclear capabilities, argues political science professor Nicholas Grossman. But the conflict isn’t over, either, despite an ambiguous memorandum of understanding that didn’t resolve the core issues. Both countries have made conflicting claims about what the agreement means, and attacks have continued. But time is on Iran’s side as the U.S. and other countries could soon run out of oil reserves. Read more.
July 4, 2026
White nationalism parades in DC
Sam Smith - One of the things that pleased me as a DC native was how we handled ethnic variety better than much of the rest of the country. I was an advisor to Marion Barry when we were both in our 20s and assisted the late Julius Hobson. I later figured out that one big factor was that whites and blacks in DC found issues in common, including unwanted freeways and much wanted home rule.
Polls
—The average cost of healthcare has doubled—4.2 million Americans lost ACA coverage—3.8 million Americans lost Medicaid coverage—Nearly 500 hospitals, clinics, and nursing homes have closed
Meanwhile. . .
The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston ordered Thursday that the federal government does not have to return signs to national parks and monuments by the end of this week, including ones on climate science and Indigenous history in places like Acadia National Park. Federal officials were ordered last month to restore the signage by July 3, including dozens of Acadia’s displays on warming oceans and Wabanaki heritage.
Voting
Newsworthy News - The Supreme Court just wiped out one of the last brakes on big money in elections, giving political parties and their donors far more power over who runs — and who wins.
The Court struck down federal limits on how much parties can
spend in direct coordination with their candidates, in a 6–3 ruling along
ideological lines.
Republican committees and the Trump Justice Department
argued the limits violated free speech, and the federal government refused to
defend its own law.
Climate change
Inside Climate News - The number of accidents involving releases of dangerous chemicals rose by 57 percent between 2021 and 2025, from 83 to 131, according to an analysis released Monday by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, a nonprofit that works with former government officials.
Injuries or deaths from accidents also rose, from 60 to 89
over the same five-year period, the analysis found. Incident reports released
by the Chemical Safety Board (CSB), an independent agency that investigates
chemical accidents, show that more than 650 accidents occurred between April
2020 and May 2026, with 103 resulting in fatalities, 355 causing injuries and
314 doing “substantial property damage.”
Close to 150 million people live within 3 miles of these
facilities. Historically underserved and overburdened populations, including
people who identify as Black and Latino, are at greatest risk of exposure to an
accidental release.
Donald Trump
JD Vance
Headline
USA - JD Vance pulled in as much as $7.4
million during 2025 from royalties on his bestselling book combined with
returns from investments and his venture capital enterprise, the Wall Street
Journal reported after reviewing his most recent financial disclosure.
The vice
president keeps drawing considerable sums from “Hillbilly Elegy” while also
profiting from a portfolio that includes real estate holdings and exchange
traded funds, Tuesday’s federal filing showed.
Donald Trump’s
2025 haul vastly outpaced what his vice president brought in. The president
made more than $1 billion through cryptocurrency transactions alone per his own
disclosure. Vance filed 17 pages of financial information compared to Trump’s
927 page submission.
July 3, 2026
Meanwhile. . .
InfoGram - Donald Trump is going to lift the ban on mailing handguns directly to homes. That helps GrabAGun, the online gun store his son has a stake in. He’d rake in billions.
MS NOW - Trump is scheduled to fly to South Dakota on the $400 million jet gifted by the government of Qatar, just one high-profile part of the grubbiest presidential cash grab in 250 years of American history. He is clearly pleased that the plane was ready in time for the country’s semiquincentennial celebration.
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