UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
January 4, 2026
Greenland
Polls
Venezuela
Reading is declining
If you read a book in 2025—just one book—you belong to an endangered species. Like honeybees and red wolves, the population of American readers, Lector americanus, has been declining for decades. The most recent Survey of Public Participation in the Arts, from 2022, found that fewer than half of Americans had read a single book in the previous 12 months; only 38 percent had read a novel or short story. A recent study from the University of Florida and University College London found that the number of Americans who engage in daily reading for pleasure fell 3 percent each year from 2003 to 2023.
This decline is only getting steeper. Over the past decade, American students’ reading abilities have plummeted, and their reading habits have followed suit. In 2023, just 14 percent of 13-year-olds read for fun almost every day, down from 27 percent a decade earlier. A growing share of high-school and even college students struggle to read a book cover to cover.
Health
States made marijuana use legal. Now they should get it off the road.
US attack on Venezuela raises fears of future Greenland takeover
How Trump circumventing Congress is different from previous presidents
NPR's CEO takes a strong stand
Constitutional Showdown Forces Federal Retreat
January 3, 2026
Venezuela
America is now a dictatorship
The Jan 6 case
Tesla sales dropped again inn 2025
Axios - Tesla vehicle sales declined for a second consecutive year in 2025, hitting a low since 2022. The figures put CEO Elon Musk's company behind Chinese competitor BYD as the world's leading electric vehicle maker.
Tesla said it delivered 1.64 million in 2025, down 9% from the previous year..
- Sales suffered in 2025 over backlash to Musk's political ties to President Trump. They were also hurt by the expiration of a $7,500 tax credit that was phased out by the Trump administration at the end of September.
What One of the Boats Trump Struck Was Carrying
Trump increases illegal war against Venezuela
Axios - American interventionism is back, in Trumpian technicolor, Axios' Dave Lawler reports.
- In just under a year, Trump has conducted massive strikes on Iran's nuclear program, bombed six additional countries, most recently Nigeria, appointed himself chair of a governing board for Gaza, and sent a massive flotilla to Venezuela to blow up drug boats and, it's now clear, to depose a sitting world leader.
- He's done most of that without seeking approval from Congress or trying to build any kind of international legitimacy.
Axios - President Trump is already being blasted by congressional Democrats for ordering strikes on military targets in Caracas, as part of an overnight operation that resulted in the capture of Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro.
The lawmakers say the president blatantly overstepped his authority by not seeking congressional authorization for the operation beforehand.

