UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
March 5, 2026
Donald Trump
Gen Z males twice as likely as baby boomers to believe wives should obey husbands
Just a reminder
Business
Iran
CNN - Iranian intelligence has sent word to the United States it could be prepared to open talks on how to end the war, according to people familiar with the indirect messages, but US officials say there are no negotiations underway and that potential “off-ramps” are unlikely to materialize in the near term.
China is sending envoy Zhai Jun to the Middle East to help mediate in the conflict, NPR’s Jennifer Pak says. The foreign ministry didn’t say specifically where he would visit. Pak says there are two reasons China is stepping in: economic interests in the region and a diplomatic opportunity to act as a peace seeker. China has not extended any military assistance to Iran so far. Pak says other countries may question whether it is strategically worthwhile to partner with China if it isn’t providing security protection in the war.
Trump regime
Environment
Inside Clean Energy - An aerial view of a solar farm in Ector County, Texas by Brandon Bell/Getty Images. Texas, which already leads the country in electricity generation from natural gas, coal and wind, has passed California to become the leader in utility-scale solar. Data for 2025, released last week by the U.S. Energy Information Administration, shows that Texas generated 58,634 gigawatt-hours from utility-scale solar, enough to pull ahead of California’s 53,713 gigawatt-hours.
But California can continue to claim the distinction of leading the country in electricity from small-scale solar, which EIA defines as any project with capacity of less than 1 megawatt. And if we look at the sum of utility-scale and small-scale solar, California remains ahead.
Health
Housing
Climate change
United Airlines introduces new rule regarding headphone usage on flights
Progressive presidential candidates
Congress
Polls
NBC News - On what Americans think about Trump’s handling of Iran: • 41% approve • 54% disapprove • 3% no opinion • 2% not sure Should the U.S. have taken military action against Iran? • 41% say yes • 52% say no • 7% not sure
NBC News - In the U.S., a majority of voters disapprove of how President Donald Trump is handling the situation in Iran and believe he shouldn’t have taken military action against the country, according to a new NBC News poll.
Fifty-four percent of voters disapprove of Trump’s handling of Iran, compared with 41% who approve and 5% who say they either don’t have an opinion or aren’t sure. Though support is mostly polarized along party lines, a small but notable slice of Republicans is unhappy with the decision to launch a war in the Middle East.
Epstein files
Tariffs
Immigrants
March 4, 2026
Middle East
Donald Trump
Polls
Defining war
KEN KLIPPENSTEIN - The White House refuses to call its war in Iran a war, instead labeling it “major combat operations” — a maneuver to keep Congress out of the picture. And believe it or not, Congress is going along with it.
Setting aside the absurdity of the question of if killing a head of state is an act of war, there’s a deadly serious question here: what even is war anymore? Does last month’s killing of a Mexican cartel leader like El Mencho count? Or how about the kidnapping of Venezuelan ruler Nicolas Maduro the month before? The U.S. has gotten extremely decapitation operations like these, as I’ve written; so good that it’s going to become a standard instrument of statecraft very soon. It’s a more important time than ever to decide what counts as war and who gets to wage it.
Health
Axios - A surge of recent measles cases approaching half of the 30-year high recorded in 2025 is stoking more criticism of the Trump administration's lukewarm endorsement of vaccines. There have already been more than 1,100 measles cases this year, overwhelmingly in unvaccinated people, putting the U.S. at risk of losing its measles elimination status.
- While top officials have stressed that the MMR vaccine is the most effective protection, they've repeatedly portrayed vaccination as a personal choice and ruled out new mandates.
Senate health committee Chair Bill Cassidy (R-La.) repeatedly pressed President Trump's surgeon general nominee, Casey Means, at a hearing last week on whether she would encourage vaccination against measles in response to outbreaks.
- Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has a long history of vaccine criticism that has fueled mounting criticism that he could be doing more to fight the outbreaks.
- "RFK isn't 100% to blame — but he helped fuel the [vaccine] hesitancy we're dealing with," Jerome Adams, President Trump's first surgeon general, wrote on X on Sunday. "Now HE is in charge of the (clearly failing) response."...
The CDC remains in upheaval and hasn't had a full-time political leader since Susan Monarez was fired amid a dispute over changing vaccine recommendations. More