| Via Steve Hanke |
UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
April 1, 2026
Polls
Iran
NPR - President Trump says that the U.S. will withdraw from Iran in two to three weeks. He also says he has had one goal in mind during this conflict: preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. Trump also appeared to reverse previous comments about reopening the Strait of Hormuz, saying that countries dependent on the oil passing through the Strait will have to secure it themselves. Trump is set to address the U.S. tonight at 9 p.m. ET.
BBC, UK - Iran's foreign ministry says President Donald Trump's claim that the country has asked for a ceasefire is "false and baseless". Iranian state TV is reporting the remarks as having been said by foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei. It comes after Trump said earlier in a Truth Social post
that Iran's "New Regime President", who he did not name, had asked
for a ceasefire - and that he would consider it "when Hormuz Strait is
open, free, and clear". |
|
President Trump has reportedly told aides he’s willing to pause or end the current U.S. campaign even if the Strait of Hormuz is not reopened “quite yet,” despite earlier public ultimatums.
The Strait—through which roughly a fifth of global oil trade normally moves—remains disrupted, keeping pressure on energy prices and shipping.
Allied governments issued supportive statements and “preparatory planning,” but public commitments of ships and enforcement have been limited.
The White House has emphasized that reopening the strait is not the sole or “core” objective, pointing instead to broader goals of degrading Iranian military capabilities.
Health
Trump's fight with NATO
Judge rules Trump unlawfully terminated legal status of migrants who used US entry app
Donald Trump
Books: Roots of our authoriarian age
For those unfamiliar with the idea, great replacement theory proponents hold that “powerful elites are enabling disadvantaged groups to steal the lives, livelihoods, cultures, and electoral power and freedoms of privileged groups, who now need authoritarian protection.” Under this view, “One’s life, one’s job, one’s status, one’s way of living, one’s freedoms, one’s nation — all can be perceived as lost, slipping away, in need of authoritarian protection and restoration.” Democracy becomes collateral damage in this worldview, as white privilege is prioritized over all else.
Obviously, this rings a lot of bells. Trump’s entire playbook vis-Ã -vis his opposition to immigration, diversity, abortion, women’s rights, and LGBTQ rights; his suppression of the history of slavery; and countless other policies can be understood as growing out of the embrace of great replacement theory.
Meanwhile. . .
Federal court strikes down Trump attacks on the Endangered Species Act
Cooperatives
Birthright citizenship
Trump issues unconstitutional executive order
March 31, 2026
Petition for Trump impeachment doubles signers
Study: Some of the most popular graduate degrees don’t pay off financially
Meanwhile. . .
Federal judge blocks Trump end of funding for NPR and PBS
Federal judge stalls Trump's White House extension
Axios - A federal judge ordered the Trump administration this afternoon to suspend its construction of the $400 million White House ballroom.
- U.S. District Judge Richard Leon in Washington granted the National Trust for Historic Preservation's request to pause the project unless it's approved by Congress.
Recognizing the administration is likely to appeal, Leon suspended enforcement of his order for 14 days. Trump criticized the plaintiff in a Truth Social post after the ruling: "Doesn't make much sense, does it?" Get the latest.
More good news about No Kings protest
There were larger protests in red states than in prior No Kings protests.
Protesters were younger and more diverse than in previous No Kings protests.
NKD3 protests in the same locations as NKD1 and NKD2 were substantially larger.
Tiger Woods
Polls
Housing
Vance has book ablout his switch to Catholicism coming out in June
LGBT rights
Donald Trump
Health
Axios - Fewer than half of outpatient facilities for substance use disorder accept Medicare, according to a new HHS report.
Behavioral health issues, including substance use, are rising among older adults: More than a third of Medicare beneficiaries 65 and older had a diagnosis of or used services related to a condition.
- But low reimbursement rates and difficulty finding mental health workers factor into clinics' ability to care for older adults who need behavioral health care, the report found.
Just 44% of substance use treatment facilities accept Medicare coverage, which is the primary insurance payer for older adults in the U.S., according to the analysis of 2023 data.
- 67% of mental health facilities and 66% of mixed facilities take Medicare.
Only one-third of substance use and mental health programs tailor care to older adults' specific needs, per the report.
- That's despite federal health officials' recommendations that seniors get behavioral health care through such programs.