UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
May 16, 2026
Work
Climate change
DOJ: Those who oppose the White House ballroom are deranged
ICE
Polls
Farming
- Rising fuel and fertilizer costs threaten to kill more family farms, drive up food prices and further strain rural economies already battered by trade disruptions, inflation and extreme weather.
- Bankruptcies are rising. Lenders are becoming more reluctant to loan to farmers..
Farmers are grappling with a confluence of forces:
- 🔌 Skyrocketing energy prices triggered by the Iran war. Diesel is up 60% from last year.
- 🌾 Spiking fertilizer prices and shortages after Iran blocked shipments through the Strait of Hormuz. 70% of farmers say they can't afford the fertilizer they need.
- Disrupted export markets tied to President Trump's tariffs and Chinese import restrictions.
- Global drought and other weather pressures.
🌽 The crisis is hitting farmers hard across the country:
- In Arkansas, energy and fertilizer costs are way up even as farmers are selling their crops for less.
- In Ohio, first-generation farmer Michael Kilpatrick said his fuel bills are up from $400 to $700, and container costs have risen 30%.
- In Iowa, farmers are dealing with a decline in soybean prices from $13-$15 to around $10 per bushel, as exports to China have fallen due to trade tensions.
- In Minnesota, calls to the state's farm and rural issues mental health helpline are climbing.
For consumers, the crisis is especially noticeable with beef.
Pentagon's $1.5 trillion budget
POGO - Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth returned to Congress this week and immediately faced a bipartisan barrage of pointed questions about the Pentagon’s funding request and the illegal war in Iran. At center stage was the Pentagon’s proposed $1.5 trillion budget — a record-breaking sum that, if approved, not only promises to become a boondoggle of wasteful spending that doesn’t make us safer, but also punts critical expenditures to a broken reconciliation process, a particular point of contention for some Republican lawmakers. Hegseth failed to provide the details that would justify such a massive budget increase for the world’s most heavily funded military.
“One would think that such a massive bump in spending would be accompanied by a detailed plan on exactly what this money would be used for, and a robust debate on how it will achieve our national priorities,” wrote Greg Williams, the director of POGO’s Center for Defense Information, for Federal News Network.
Democrats' Pennsylvania problem
Donald Trump
Decline of student test scores
Reading scores were down roughly 0.6 grades in 2025 compared to 2015, and math scores were down about 0.4 grades. This means that students were 60% of one school year behind where their peers were in reading a decade earlier and 40% of one school year behind in math.
The decline began even before 2015, according to a report on the data from the Education Scorecard, a collaboration between the Center for Education Policy Research (CEPR) at Harvard University and the Stanford project. From 1990 to 2013, students’ math and reading scores rose steadily. But in 2013, per the report, the U.S. “entered a learning recession” and the rate of improvement in reading and math began to flatten or drop, a trend that continued through the COVID-19 pandemic.
Missing member of Congress
The Republican lawmaker last cast a vote in Congress in early March. Despite facing re-election in one of the tightest midterm contests in the nation, he has made no campaign appearances. Not a single candid photograph has emerged to calm the concerns of supporters and voters.His office put out a statement two weeks ago claiming the congressman was addressing a “medical issue” and would return “very soon.” Nobody has seen him since.
Immigrants
May 15, 2026
California budget
Polls
NOTICE
DOJ Investigates Yale for Admitting Too Many Non-White Doctors
Gerrymandered America
Health
FruitsVegetables, especially leafy greensWhole grainsLean proteins
Donald Trump
Media
People displacement
Teenagers
“Some barriers to sleep faced by teens have existed across generations, such as the increased homework and extracurricular demands that come with high school, social pressures to stay up late with peers, and jobs,” said Rachel Widome, lead author on the study and a professor at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health.
“Other issues, though, are new in recent years, such as increasingly ever-present screens and social media as well as recent society-wide stressors such as the pandemic, social unrest or militarized policing,” she added.
The study also reported growing gaps in sleep outcomes. Black and Latino teens, along with adolescents whose parents have lower levels of education, are becoming increasingly less likely to get adequate sleep compared with other groups. The greatest impact was seen among older adolescents. Sleep time steadily declines as teens age, while both sleep duration and feelings of getting enough rest drop significantly from early adolescence to later teen years.