| Peter Baker |
UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
January 12, 2026
History moments
Polls
Nearly 15,000 nurses go on strike at NYC hospitals
Donald Trump says white men are discriminated against
Meanwhile. . .
Axios - Miami Beach's Fisher Island (33109) was the priciest U.S. ZIP code in 2025, with a median sale price of $9.5 million, according to a PropertyShark analysis. ...Atherton, California (94027), near San Francisco, where the typical home sold for $8.3 million, came in second after eight straight years at the top. Sagaponack, New York, in the Hamptons (11962), followed at $5.9 million. In all, California ZIPs made up 61% of the 120 ranked.
McDonald’s plans big menu changes in 2026 including its biggest burger ever
ICE
Over 100,000 Visas Revoked by Trump regime
Greenland
America's three economic classes
Axios - The nation is splitting into three distinct economic realities: the Have-Nots (stalling) ... the Haves (coasting) ... and the Have-Lots (rocketing to greater wealth)...
- This isn't just about "inequality." It's about a structural shift where the growing number of hyperwealthy are profiting wildly off the AI revolution — through exclusive access to private deals, massive investment power, governmental connections, and equity stakes "normal" investors can't touch.
This shift, if it holds, will rattle economics, politics and AI throughout 2026 and beyond. We're already seeing it in rising inequality, pessimism about the future and AI opposition.
- It's human nature to judge your personal economics and mood on how you feel, influenced heavily by conscious and subconscious comparisons to others. So it's possible President Trump is right: U.S. growth and stocks soar in 2026. But even then, because the AI-connected hyperwealthy do so much better than everyone else, f.ear and resentment still grow.
- It's also possible the AI bubble pops, and everyone suffers. But the Have-Lots will (mostly) still have lots.
Health
Axios - South Carolina's surging measles outbreak has brought cases to North Carolina and Ohio among families who traveled over the holidays to the outbreak area in the northwestern part of the state, AP reported.
It's proof that the hundreds of people in quarantine don't constitute everyone who was exposed, with potentially hundreds more unaware they should be isolating if they're not immune to the virus...
- The South Carolina Department of Public Health issued an alert to health providers about the importance of heightened awareness for measles and recommended measures for the use of masks and rapid isolation.
- The state has ruled out vaccine mandates to control the spread, emphasizing that vaccination is a personal choice.
South Carolina is one of two major outbreaks in the U.S., along with a region on the Utah-Arizona border. Both are outlying areas where vaccination rates were below the 95% threshold public health authorities say is necessary to contain the virus' spread.
- The risk of spillover has increased with holiday travel. North Carolina has logged five new measles cases since late December, and Ohio last week reported three infected individuals, all children from a single household, who traveled to the outbreak epicenter.
What's ahead: With more than 2,100 confirmed cases for 2025 and new cases rising, the U.S. could be on track to lose its measles "elimination status" by the end of January.
More
Trump suppressing Smithsonian
The Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery replaced a photo of Trump and reportedly a caption that accompanied it — erasing mentions of his two impeachments and the Jan. 6 insurrection.
Federal Reserve hit with DOJ criminal subpoenas
Iran
Trump to send ‘hundreds more’ federal agents to Minneapolis
Noem told Fox News that the surge of federal forces are being sent “in order to allow our ICE and Border Patrol individuals working in Minneapolis to do so safely.”
January 11, 2026
America's Second Civil War?
Misssissippi synagogue burned
| Beth Israel Congregation Mississippi Today - A fire heavily damaged Mississippi’s largest synagogue before dawn Saturday – the same house of worship in northeast Jackson that the Ku Klux Klan bombed in 1967 because the rabbi supported civil rights. The Jackson Fire Department, the FBI and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives arrested a suspect Saturday night in the latest blaze after the fire department ruled it arson, according to chief fire investigator Charles Felton. Investigators did not immediately release the name of the suspect or the charges the person could face. The fire was reported shortly after 3 a.m. at Beth Israel Congregation on Old Canton Road. No congregants were injured |
Greenland
Stupid Trump stuff
Nobel Peace Prizes can't be transferred
On Friday, the Norwegian Nobel Institute clarified the rules governing the award, writing that the facts were “clear and well established.”
“Once a Nobel Prize is announced, it cannot be revoked, shared or transferred to others,” the institute wrote. “The decision is final and stands for all time.”
The statement was released after MarĂa Corina Machado, Venezuela’s opposition leader and the winner of last year’s prize, offered this week to give her Nobel Peace Prize to President Trump, who has long coveted the award.