UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
February 24, 2026
ICE
Iran
Trump Regime
Shortlysts - The Education Department announced it’s handing over more programs to other federal agencies, moving President Trump closer to his goal of shutting down the department, bypassing congressional approval.
The Department of Health and Human Services will now manage grant programs sending millions to schools for safety and community engagement, while the State Department takes over tracking foreign gifts to universities.
Notably absent from the transfers is special education. Education Secretary Linda McMahon stated her intention to move special education programs, which manage billions in grants and oversee compliance with disability law, to HHS, but the new agreements carefully avoid that third rail. The department’s Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services remains untouched for now.
The future of transferred programs appears uncertain, as Trump’s 2026 budget request proposes zeroing out funding for five of the six programs moving to HHS. In December, some grant recipients were notified their funding would not continue, ending those initiatives as federal support expired.
Polls
- 58% of Americans don't trust AI much or at all. 63% say AI will decrease the number of jobs in the U.S., according to an Economist/YouGov poll out last week.
- In a separate YouGov survey out in December, 77% of Americans were concerned AI could pose a threat to humanity. It's one thing to fear higher taxes. It's another thing to worry about the existence of your species!
- 79% of Americans don't trust companies to use AI responsibly, a Bentley-Gallup survey found.
The governor who gets to talk after Trump
She easily won Virginia’s gubernatorial race in November to become the commonwealth’s first female governor, flipping the governor’s mansion from red to blue. Her victory was seen as a sign of strong Democratic turnout heading into the midterms, as well as her own political prowess.
Now, she’s the latest in a line of high-profile figures who have given the opposition party’s official response to the president’s address. While those who have given the response have had mixed political futures, they all were seen as rising stars within their party when they were chosen.
Spanberger’s speech is one of several ways Democrats are planning to respond and protest Trump’s address Tuesday.
Several House and Senate Democrats plan to skip Trump’s speech entirely to attend other events opposing his agenda. One of them is a counterrally called the “People’s State of the Union,” held on the National Mall.
Democrats are also expected to invite various guests to the speech to call attention to controversies of Trump’s presidency, including survivors of Jeffrey Epstein and those impacted by immigration enforcement actions.
Meanwhile. . .
| NPR - Scientists discovered a new species of large, horned, fish-eating Spinosaurus dinosaur — the first in over a century. The dinosaur species dates back to the Jurassic period, over 140 million years ago. |
Immigration
Donald Trump
Tariffs
Presidential candidates
Trump Insiders Briefing Against the President’s War Plans
February 23, 2026
Polls
Student loan defaults leap
Judge Bars Release of Special Counsel Report on Trump’s Mishandling of Documents
Money
Hospitals shutting down gender intervention programs for minors
Trump isn't just conservative; he's confused
Weather
ICE Tripled Its Reliance on Microsoft in Last Six Months, Leaked Files Reveal
Confession of a theoretical physicist
Vijay Balasuvramanian, Nautilus - I remember the day when, at the age of 7, I realized that I wanted to figure out how reality worked. My mother and father had just taken us shopping at a market in Calcutta. On the way back home, we passed through a dimly lit arcade where a sidewalk bookseller was displaying his collection of slim volumes. I spotted an enigmatic cover with a man looking through a microscope; the words “Famous Scientists” were emblazoned on it, and when I asked my parents to get it for me, they agreed. As I read the chapters, I learned about discoveries by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek of the world of microscopic life, by Marie Curie about radioactivity, by Albert Einstein about relativity, and I thought, “My God, I could do this, too!” By the time I was 8, I was convinced that everything could be explained, and that I, personally, was going to do it.
Decades have passed, and I am now
a theoretical physicist. My job is to work out how all of reality works, and I
take that mission seriously, working on subjects ranging from the quantum
theory of gravity to theoretical neuroscience. But I must confess to an
increasing sense of uncertainty, even bafflement. I am no longer sure that
working out what is “real” is possible, or that the reality that my 7-year-old
self conceived of even exists, rather than being simply unknown. Perhaps
reality is genuinely unknowable: Things exist and there is a truth about them,
but we have no way of finding it out. Or perhaps the things we call “real” are
called into being by their descriptions but do not independently exist.
Iran
Global leaders dreaming of a US-free world order. Do they stand a chance?
How Trump's tariff chaos is affecting UK
More than 100 lawsuits filed against Trump regime in past year
Tariffs
NBC News - The European Parliament halted
the ratification process of a sweeping trade deal with the United States, the
latest fallout from the Supreme Court striking down most of President Donald
Trump's tariffs. The deal reached between Trump
and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen last July would have
eliminated what the White House called "trade barriers" in a variety
of sectors for American exporters. The administration hailed the deal as a
"generational modernization of the transatlantic alliance." |
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