UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
January 10, 2026
Housing
ICE
Trump's America first
Polls
Federal judge blocks White House freeze of childcare subsidies in Democratic states
Trump announces one-year 10% cap on credit card interest rates
Trump regime suspends $129m in benefit payments to Minnesota
Elon Musk
Axios - Elon Musk's top investors are shrugging off a post that crossed the line from political incorrectness to outright racism, Axios' Dan Primack reports.
- Musk agreed with a post yesterday that said, in part: "If White men become a minority, we will be slaughtered. ... White solidarity is the only way to survive."
- Musk's post remains up, with 42.5 million views.
Axios reached out about Musk's post to each of the investors named by his company, xAI, in this week's $20 billion fundraising announcement.
- That includes Valor Equity Partners, Stepstone Group, Fidelity, Qatar Investment Authority, MGX, Baron Capital Group, Sequoia Capital, Nvidia and Cisco Investments. Fidelity and Sequoia declined to comment. The rest didn't respond. MORE
Meanwhile...
Climate change
Now, as climate change drives rising sea levels and increasingly brings devastating floodwaters to native lands, that same water is forcing coastal villages located in Washington State to adapt to protect their heritage.
The scope of the change needed was made clear by the flooding across the state this past December, which forced 100,000 people to evacuate from low-lying areas, required 600 rescues and took at least one life. Many of those who fled the rising waters were members of the Indigenous fishing tribes positioned on the front lines of the storms, east of the Puget Sound.
What we know about internet use, smartphone ownership and digital divides in the U.S.
- Young adults, Hispanic adults, those with lower incomes are more likely to rely on smartphones for internet
- Nine-in-ten U.S. adults use the internet daily, including 41% who say they’re online almost constantly. This is on par with what we found in 2023 and 2024.
- Americans in households making under $30K a year are far less likely than those with higher incomes to subscribe to broadband
Venezuela
7 facts about Venezuelans in the U.S.
As President Trump met with U.S. oil executives on Friday, Exxon CEO Darren Woods called Venezuela “uninvestable” at present and others expressed caution in response to the president’s overtures to pour billions of dollars into the country.
Health
Events
JAN 10 - Maine Middle Eastern Orchestra
Sicilian Table, 261 US 1, Falmouth: Jim Ciampi Duo featuring Christina Ackroyd, 5:30-8:30
Tonic, 7 Dunlap St., Brunswick: Open mic hosted by Rexy Dinosaur, 6-9
JAN 13 - Chamber of Commerce Annual Meeting
Feds bashed for handline of ICE shooting probe
Bannon eyes '28 run
Donald Trump: Not the cause of our problems but a major beneficiary
An excerpt from the book, Why Bother?, which I wrote in 2001, that reflects a major change in American values and goals that began with Ronald Reagan and is still with us. One of the problems with history is that many of us ignore it for too long while others are taking advantage of it
Sam Smith, 2001 - From the start of the New Deal to the
end of Jimmy Carter's tenure, the main course of American domestic politics was
directed towards the improvement of life for the average citizen. The pace
might vary markedly and the methods change, but not until the arrival of Ronald
Reagan did power turn massively inward
-- determined to serve itself firstly and mostly.
Even that otherwise egregious
warlock, Richard Nixon, practiced domestic affairs in the tradition of social
democracy. He was, in fact, our last liberal president, an amazing claim until
one considers that he favored a negative income tax, revenue sharing, a
guaranteed income for children, supplementary programs for the aged, blind, and
disabled; uniform application of the food stamp program; better health
insurance programs for low income families, aid to community colleges, aid to
low-income college students, the creation of the National Endowment for the
Humanities, and increased funding for elementary and secondary schools. Today
someone of Nixon's domestic political tendencies would probably be considered
too radical for C-SPAN.
With Reagan and subsequent
presidents this drastically changed. In
the place of social democracy came a bipartisan effort to repeal decades of
American social and economic progress. Since then the moral burden has been
shifted away from collective social responsibility towards increasing sanctions
against transgressors and laggards, indifference towards the victims of moral
apathy, and a government free to do whatever it wants.
Those too young to have
remembered productive liberalism -- before the species became a rigid,
profligate, incompetent parody of itself -- easily accepted the idea that our
problems were due not to faults of those in currently in power but to policies
that had, in fact, helped create the very comfortable perches from which the
successful so loudly complained.
Such developments were
complimented by efforts of major corporations to get Americans to accept a
lower standard of living, albeit cleverly concealed in the rhetoric of economic
growth. For the bulk of Americans not playing the stock market, the end of the
century told a less than glorious story:
- Poor black families were working 190 hours more a year - and poor white families 22 hours more -- than in 1979 for roughly the same pay.
- While the income of middle-class, married-couple families grew 9 % from 1989 to 1998 these families were working six extra full-time weeks a year to earn it.
- Over half of employees said that their company did not genuinely care about them."
- CEOs were earning 107 times that of the average worker, compared to 56 times in 1989.
- The top 1 percent of households held 40% of the nation's wealth in 1997 compared to 25% in 1980. The combined wealth of the top 1 percent of US families was about the same as that of the entire bottom 95 percent.
- Ten percent of the U.S. population owned 82% percent of the real estate, 82% percent of the stock, and 72 % of the country's total wealth.
- Adjusted for inflation, the income of a recent male high school graduate declined 28% between 1973 and 1997.
- In 1939 a farmer had to produce 729 bushels of wheat to pay for his tractor. In 1999 a American farmer had to produce almost 23,000 bushels to pay for his new tractor.
- In 1997, almost half of the new jobs created paid less than $16,000
- The two richest men in America -- Bill Gates and Warren Buffet -- owned more assets than the bottom 45% of the country.
Donald Trump is enjoying
America’s continued decline that began nearly a half century ago.
Trump regime files record number of emergency apps with Supremes
January 9, 2026
Tariffs
Reuters - The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to issue its next rulings on January 14 as several major cases remain pending including the legality of President Donald Trump's sweeping global tariffs.
