March 25, 2026

Trump regime using local police against immigrants

Ken Keppenstein, Klipnews -   While ICE agents are temporarily confusing things even more at airports, behind the scenes the Trump administration is paying a posse of local police to carry out its immigration war.

An internal ICE financial ledger I obtained shows how the agency is turning local police departments across the county into a vast, decentralized immigration army. This includes payments if cops sign up to be deputized, reimbursements for transportation, salary supplements for cops who process migrant children, and per-arrest-style incentive payments.

All of this is taking place under an ICE program called 287(g), part of a 1996 law that granted the Attorney General (and later the Secretary of Homeland Security) the authority to enter into written agreements with state and local governments on immigration. The first agreement under the law was signed by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement after 9/11; as of last year, the number of agreements has swelled past 1,000.

Cities where citizens are most delinquent on debt

Wallet Bub - WalletHub today released its updated report on the Cities Where People Are the Most Delinquent on Debt to show where people are at the biggest risk of credit score damage and other negative consequences.
 
Most DelinquentLeast Delinquent
1. Detroit, MI91. San Diego, CA
2. Newark, NJ92. Madison, WI
3. Greensboro, NC93. Honolulu, HI
4. Baton Rouge, LA94. San Jose, CA
5. Philadelphia, PA95. St. Louis, MO
6. San Bernardino, CA96. Seattle, WA
7. Memphis, TN97. Fremont, CA
8. Laredo, TX98. Boston, MA
9. Baltimore, MD99. Scottsdale, AZ
10. Toledo, OH100. San Francisco, CA
 
For the full report 

Meanwhile.. .

The peril for democracy 

Iran

The Hill -   Iran has agreed to allow “non-hostile” vessels to pass through the Strait of Hormuz if they coordinate with Iranian authorities and meet safety regulations.  Multiple outlets reported Iran’s Foreign Ministry updated its stance in a letter to the International Maritime Organization (IMO), which said it has circulated the statement with its members and nongovernmental organizations. The ministry also shared its note with the United Nations Security Council.

Iran said it has taken “necessary and proportionate measures” to prevent “aggressors and their supporters from exploiting” the strait to conduct hostilities against it. It specifically noted that any vessels, equipment and assets belonging to the U.S. and Israel and others participating in the “aggression” aren’t eligible.

The Hill -  Iran has dismissed an initial 15-point ceasefire proposal from the United States, according to the state-run Fars news agency.

“Iran does not accept a ceasefire,” an “informed person” told the outlet. “Basically, it is not logical to enter into such a process with those who violate the agreement.”

Pakistani officials confirmed Wednesday that the Islamic Republic had received the proposal, according to The Associated Press.

The Iranian military launched more strikes on Israel and the Persian Gulf region overnight, including an attack that sparked a massive fire at Kuwait International Airport.

Pakistani officials told the outlet that the peace plan centered on sanctions relief, civilian nuclear cooperation, missile limits, a rollback of Iran’s nuclear program and monitoring by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

Bloomberg - The US drafted a 15-point plan to help bring the Iran war to a close and delivered it via Pakistan, according to people familiar, but details of the proposal remain unclear. Iran’s long-range missile attacks continued to take a heavy toll as the US is ordered the deployment thousands more troops to the Middle East. China urged Iran to engage in talks as soon as possible.

NPR
- President Trump is deploying thousands more American soldiers to the Middle East. At least 2,000 paratroopers have received mobilization orders, as confirmed by NPR. This move coincides with the president’s ongoing focus on diplomatic talks with Iran to end the war, despite Iran so far denying negotiations are taking place. Trump said yesterday that someone who is representing Iran offered some form of “a very significant prize” related to the Strait of Hormuz, but details surrounding what the offer was remain unclear.
What's News - But both sides are still far apart, Arab officials and a U.S. official familiar with the discussion said. Pakistan offered to mediate peace talks, an overture President Trump amplified on social media. The Pentagon is planning to deploy about 3,000 soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division, according to two U.S. officials. Meanwhile, Iran attacked Israel, Kuwait, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, as Tehran worried diplomatic attempts to secure a cease-fire could be a trap, and Israel hit a Russian-Iranian weapons smuggling route in the Caspian Sea, people familiar with the matter said. Read news and analysis from WSJ reporters on the ground. Oil prices rebounded above $100 today on fears that the war lacks an exit plan.

MS NOW -   President Donald Trump and his administration have taken the country to war in an astonishingly slipshod manner. So much of what has gone wrong so far is the completely predictable result of the White House’s lack of planning, misplaced hubris and erroneous assumptions about what would happen once the U.S. attacked Iran. 

Yet for all the obvious mistakes made by Trump and his advisers, the most glaring is that neither Trump nor his aides offered a clear explanation for what Iran could do to forestall an attack — and once military action began, to stop it.

Usually when you start a war, you give the enemy a sense of what needs to happen for the fighting to end. That simply hasn’t happened. At the outset of hostilities, Trump said the war would end if Iran would utter “those secret words, ‘We will never have a nuclear weapon.’” Never mind that Iranian leaders have repeatedly said this, including the day the war started. Indeed, what is perhaps most striking about the current conflict is how few of the military strikes appear to have targeted Iran’s nuclear program — the nominal reason for going to war in the first place.

Jamelle Boule, NY Times -    If you can set aside both the unconstitutionality and the immorality of President Trump’s unprovoked war on Iran and focus on the operation itself, it is hard not to be bewildered by the utter lack of real planning, or even basic strategic thinking, that has gone into it.

Neither Trump nor his aides, according to recent reporting, planned for Iran to target shipping and close the Strait of Hormuz. They also do not seem to have planned for serious and sustained retaliation against America’s Gulf state allies. They did not plan for an energy crisis and the potential disruption to the global economy, and they did not plan for America’s European allies to, by and large, reject their call for support.

It appears that both the president and the White House expected token resistance, followed by the collapse of the Iranian regime, the installation of a pro-American government — or at least one we could tolerate — and a return to the status quo ante: a replay, in essence, of the president’s first intervention of the year, in Venezuela. Now that this replay fantasy has collided with a more complex, indeterminate and difficult reality, Trump is unable to explain his objectives or even give the country a sense of when the war might end. He told Fox News radio that he would “feel it in my bones.” Let’s just say that that is a far cry from traditional political leadership during wartime.  More 

Music lawsuit

The Hill -  The Supreme Court unanimously ruled Wednesday that Sony cannot hold Cox Communications liable for not disconnecting customers who illegally downloaded copyrighted music, a battle that has sent ripples through the music and telecommunications industries.  Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for the majority, said a lower court got it wrong in putting Cox on the hook for damages over its users. Though the outcome for Cox was unanimous, two of the liberal justices didn’t sign onto Thomas’s broader reasoning.

“Under our precedents, a company is not liable as a copyright infringer for merely providing a service to the general public with knowledge that it will be used by some to infringe copyrights,” Thomas wrote....

The case has jolted the music and telecommunications industries ever since Sony won a $1 billion judgment against Cox at trial. The battle has also attracted interest from First Amendment and civil rights groups, who believe it poses broader free speech implications for bookstores and social media platforms.

Department of Homeland Security

The Hill Senators’ bipartisan compromise to end the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) shutdown appears to be falling apart.  The deal is taking a lot of fire from Democrats and conservative Senate Republicans.

Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) bashed the proposal in a private GOP meeting, arguing it effectively defunds Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), a source told The Hill.

Democrats want more reforms, such as banning ICE agents from wearing masks and requiring federal immigration officers to obtain judicial warrants. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (N.Y.) rejected the deal but said Democrats would send a counteroffer.

Climate change

The Guardian -  The US has caused an eye-watering $10tn in global damages to the world over the past three decades through its vast planet-heating emissions, with a quarter of this economic pain inflicted upon itself, new research has found.  By being the largest carbon emitter in history, the US has caused greater harm to worldwide economic growth than any other country, ahead of China, now the world’s largest emitter that is responsible for $9tn in GDP damage since 1990, according to the findings of the paper.

“These are huge numbers,” acknowledged Marshall Burke, an environmental scientist at Stanford University who led the new work. Burke added that the US has “a lot of responsibility, our emissions have caused damage not only to ourselves, but pretty substantial damage in other parts of the world”.

Donald Trump

Alternet  -  President Donald Trump already destroyed the White House’s historic East Wing to build his ballroom, and now he has announced plans to rip out a fixture installed by one of America’s most iconic founding fathers, President Thomas Jefferson.

The Republican announced a "beautiful, black granite" installation to replace the Tennessee Flagstone pavers on the West Wing Colonnade, according to a Tuesday White House pool report covered by People Magazine. The president said he will pay for the installation himself, with the Jeffersonian originals being sent to a nursery for safekeeping.

MS NOW -   Special counsel Jack Smith gathered evidence that then-candidate Donald Trump took many top-secret documents that related to his worldwide business interests, and investigators considered this a likely motive for Trump concealing them at his Florida club after he left the White House, according to newly released case records.

The special prosecutor also had evidence indicating that after leaving office Trump had shown a classified map to passengers on a private plane, including his future chief of staff Susie Wiles, and took at least one document that was so secret only six people had authority to review it, according to a memo reviewed by MS NOW and cited by the House Judiciary Committee’s ranking Democrat, Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland.

Trump’s reason for taking hundreds of pages of classified documents when he left office in January 2021 — and then concealing them when the Justice Department subpoenaed him for their return in May 2022 — has been one of the larger mysteries of the case. FBI agents conducting an unannounced search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence in August 2022 discovered hundreds more pages of top-secret records that Trump and his lawyers had failed to return to the government after claiming they had fully returned all classified materials.

In a January 2023 progress memo reviewed by MS NOW, Smith’s office discussed the possible motive after the FBI discovered that Trump held onto many documents related to his businesses.

“Trump possessed classified documents pertinent to his business interests — establishing a motive for retaining them,” according to a January 2023 memo from Smith’s office tracking progress in their documents and election interference investigations.  “We must have those documents.”

In a Tuesday letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi, Raskin insisted that Trump’s Justice Department has sought to cover up both the details of Trump’s “hoarding” of classified government secrets and storage of them in his Mar-a-Lago club’s showers and closets that put national security at risk, and also the clues as to Trump’s motives for doing so.

“These new disclosures suggest that Donald Trump stole documents so sensitive that only six people in the entire U.S. government had access to them, that the documents President Trump stole pertained to his business interests,” Rep. Raskin wrote in a Tuesday letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi. 

“This glimpse into the trove of evidence behind the coverup reveals a President of the United States who may have sold out our national security to enrich himself.”

Food problems

Trader Joe's Recall Expands: 12 Million Pounds of Frozen Foods Pulled From Shelves in 43 States


A public health alert has been issued for ground beef sold in five states and Washington, D.C., according to a March 23 announcement from the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS). The product may contain metal fragments, which pose a safety risk if consumed. There have been two customer complaints about the metal, but no reported injuries so far.1

The affected ground beef can be identified with the following:

Product name: White Oak Pastures, Radically Traditional Farming, Grassfed Ground Beef
Size: 16 oz (1 lb)
Establishment number: EST 34729
Sell-by date: 03/19/26




Polls

Independent, UK -   Across the board, polling from Fox News, Reuters/Ipsos, Quinnipiac University, CBS News/YouGov and more show that men are more skeptical of the president after his first year in office – which could pose a problem for Republicans heading into the midterms.

Between July 2025 and March 2026, the number of men who disapprove of Trump’s handling of the presidency increased by 11 percentage points, according to Fox News. Polls conducted between February 2025 and March 2026 by CBS News/YouGov determined that Trump’s disapproval increased by 14 percentage points among men.

Health

Governance by Ideological Whim Meets the Rule of Law

The young & Facebook and Instagram

Wall Street Journal  -  A New Mexico jury found that Facebook and Instagram’s parent was liable for failing to protect young people from online dangers, including sexually explicit content, solicitation and human trafficking. 

The jury found Meta liable for misleading consumers about the safety of its platforms and endangering children, under the state’s consumer protection laws. The landmark verdict included $375 million in civil penalties. The case was among the first to test questions about whether social media companies should be held responsible for the content posted on their platforms. Meta disagrees with the verdict and plans to appeal, a company spokesman said. Separately, a federal judge said the U.S. government appeared to be punishing Anthropic in retribution for bringing into the public view its contracting dispute with the Pentagon.


Putin

NY TimesAt the start of the year, the Russian economy looked to be giving way. Under the strain of war and sanctions, revenues were falling, production was shrinking and trade was running low. With rising tariffs, credit was prohibitively expensive and borrowing all but impossible: A wave of bankruptcies was on the horizon. In late January, Russia was forced to sell oil to India at just $22 per barrel, about a third of the market rate. As a symbol of unsustainability, it was hard to beat.

President Vladimir Putin has heard such complaints throughout the war. Yet, according to those around him, he has chosen largely not to listen. Officials and business leaders, for their part, understood that the continuation of the war was his absolute priority and that the country’s economic situation was of little consequence. But in February something shifted. Mr. Putin began, suddenly, to pay attention to the flagging economy. There were even signs he might be changing his mind on negotiations with Ukraine, perhaps seeking an exit from the conflict.

Then came the war in Iran. In one swoop, the conditions for conciliation were overturned. Amid buoyant oil prices, Western division and American overreach, the pressure on Mr. Putin to come to terms ebbed away. By a strange twist of history, the start of the war in Iran halted the prospect of ending the war in Ukraine — at the very moment when Mr. Putin appeared ready to consider it.

Middle East

NPR - Lebanon has been heavily impacted by Israeli bombings of homes, bridges and highways. The conflict has reignited cross-border conflict between the two countries. And the violence could intensify — with Israeli officials warning of a ground invasion. Israel’s defense minister said yesterday that the country plans to take Lebanon’s territory and move the Israeli-Lebanese border northward. Moving the border would leave thousands of Lebanese living in occupied territory, according to NPR’s Lauren Frayer. Paul Khreish, a municipal official in Ain Ebel, informed NPR he is worried his region will no longer be Lebanese and doesn’t know whether he should remain where he is or leave. 

The Guardian -   Israel has not prosecuted a single citizen for killing Palestinian civilians in the occupied West Bank since the start of this decade, a Guardian analysis has found, despite the killing of at least 1,100 civilians by soldiers and settlers since 2020. At least a quarter of those killed were children.

Politics

The Guardian -  Democrats have flipped a seat in the Florida state house in the district that is home to Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago, with the party celebrating the win as a sign that voters have grown frustrated over rising costs under the Trump administration.

Emily Gregory, a Democrat, defeated the Republican Jon Maples, who had an endorsement from the US president, in the special election in Florida’s 87th state house district. She led by more than two percentage points. The Republican who previously held the seat had won by 19 points in 2024.

ICE

MS NOW -   Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents wear masks, President Donald Trump and his supporters have insisted, because if they have to show their faces, then they will be doxxed. More specifically, Republicans have argued, bystanders could take photos of agents’ faces, identify them and use that information to harm them. But after dispatching ICE to 14 major U.S. airports where unpaid Transportation Security Administration workers are quitting or calling out sick, Trump said Monday on social media that “I would greatly appreciate…NO MASKS” at the airports.

....During the ongoing shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security, Democrats have demanded reforms that include requiring ICE agents to show their faces. Trump’s social media post on Monday signaled to Democrats that talk of doxxing was always a ruse and that facial coverings for ICE officers aren’t non-negotiable, as Republicans have previously insisted.

 

But we always knew it was a ruse.

 

This is a preview of Jarvis DeBerry’s latest column. Read the full column here.

March 24, 2026

Polls

Trump’s approval dropped to 36% in a new Reuters/Ipsos poll, its lowest since he took office last year, down from 40% last week. Just 25% approve of how Trump is handling the cost of living

The WRECK America Act

Generation Vote  GenVoters and our allies from across the DMV area showed up and set out to engage with the most vocally supportive Senators of the SAVE Act. It was time to get them publicly on the record about how they could support such an anti-voter, anti-student and anti-trans bill.

We caught Senator Ted Cruz coming out of a committee hearing and asked him why he supports a bill that could block over 12 million Texans from voting before the 2026 elections. His response? “It’s alright.” 

After being told that Senator Rick Scott wasn’t in his office, we caught him on his way out the door and asked him why he would support a bill that would steal the right to vote for over 8 million voters in Florida. His response to our young students? “Y’all come here and what you’re saying is complete crap.”

What’s “complete crap” is misleading propaganda that the so-called “SAVE” Act is just a “voter ID” law. This bill is a desperate attempt to rig the 2026 elections by allowing mass voter purges, forcing states to give sensitive data to DHS and DOGE, and creating a modern day poll tax for millions of eligible voters. If passed, the so-called “SAVE Act” would go into effect immediately and require every single American citizen to track down documents like a birth certificate or passport every time they register or re-register to vote

Donald Trump

President Trump -  "I don't think we're necessarily going to ask for a declaration of war, I think we're just gonna kill people. We're going to kill them. They're going to be, like, dead."

NBC News - 
President Donald Trump 
cast a mail ballot in an upcoming Florida election as he publicly condemns the voting method as fraudulent.

College grads face job fears

Axios -   College graduates are much more worried about the job market than workers who didn't go to college, Axios' Emily Peck writes from a Gallup analysis out today.  The unemployment rate is relatively low. But hiring has slowed. And slipping worker sentiment signals things could get worse.

Gallup found in a separate January polling of U.S. adults that just 27% of college grads said now is a good time to find a quality job, according to data shared with Axios. But 44% of those who didn't graduate from college think it's a promising time to job hunt — a 17-point gap.

That's the widest gap on record, going back to 2001.

Today's report finds a similar chasm: Only 19% of college-educated employees say it's a good time to find a quality job, compared with 35% of employees without a college degree.  More

US No Longer the Leader of the Free World

Carlos Lozela, NY Times -    We had a good run — some eight decades or so — but it is clear by now that the United States has ceased to be the leader of the free world. A successor for that post has not been named, and it appears unlikely that the European Union, or NATO, or whatever constitutes “the West” these days will promote from within. The job might even be eliminated, one more reduction in force courtesy of President Trump.

Rather than leading the free world, the United States is striding across the globe seemingly free of restraint, forethought or strategy, exerting its power because it can. In a matter of months, the Trump administration has captured Venezuela’s president and tossed him into jail in Brooklyn and has pummeled Iran’s theocratic leadership in a war that is ricocheting across the Middle East and upending the global economy; now the president says he will have “the honor of taking Cuba” next. Trump in his second term is like Michael Corleone in “The Godfather,” settling all the family business.

Nearly two decades ago, Fareed Zakaria, the international affairs columnist, published a best-selling book called “The Post-American World,” which predicted the United States’ relative decline versus other economically ascendant countries, what he called the “rise of the rest.” (Senator Barack Obama was seen carrying the book around during his first presidential campaign, affirming the volume’s elite sway.) The United States would remain militarily and economically pre-eminent, Zakaria argued, but it could take on a new political role, a sort of chairman of the board for the planet, relying on “consultation, cooperation and even compromise.”

Under Trump, the idea of U.S. leadership has indeed been remade — but from authority to domination, from persuasion to bullying, from nurturing alliances to wrecking them. (Consultation, cooperation and compromise have yet to join the MAGA coalition.) “We don’t need anybody,” a peeved Trump said last week when European leaders initially declined to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz. “We’re the strongest nation in the world. We have the strongest military by far in the world. We don’t need them.”

Launching a war with only one ally and then expecting everyone else to fall in line is a perfect example of the tensions inherent in America’s new approach. The United States wants the benefits of hegemony, but without accepting the responsibilities — ensuring collective security, promoting economic openness, nurturing vital alliances — that come with it. Trump doesn’t care to be a superpower; he just likes to wield superpowers. He wants to operate in the world constrained only by “my own morality” and “my own mind,” as he told The Times recently.

What does that mean for America’s role and purpose in a world that has been too long defined by what it is not (the post-Cold War era)? It means that what we once called Pax Americana, that U.S.-led system of alliances and institutions that promoted American interests and values and helped avoid major conflicts in the decades after World War II, is gone, and irretrievably so. In place of the Pax Americana we are seeing a sort of Lax Americana, a world in which a careless and uninhibited and incurious U.S. superpower struts across the chess board, threatening old friends and enabling old rivals, seeking short-term gains, heedless of the dangers it is creating for itself and for the world. More

Putin

Independence Journal - Putin’s regime is openly defying Trump administration sanctions by dispatching oil tankers to prop up Cuba’s communist dictatorship, turning America’s backyard into a dangerous Cold War flashpoint. Russia dispatched two tankers toward Cuba in mid-March 2026, carrying approximately 925,000 barrels of crude oil and diesel combined. The Anatoly Kolodkin, a Russian-flagged vessel sanctioned by the U.S., EU, and UK, transports 725,000 barrels of crude oil....

Kentucky’s Andy Beshear takes aim at Vance

The Hill -   Democrats vying for their party’s presidential nomination in 2028 have focused on President Trump and his policies, almost treating the incumbent as if he’s campaigning for a third term. But Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear is taking a different approach. He’s targeting Vice President Vance, Trump’s second banana and likely heir apparent.

It’s a strategy that could help the centrist Democrat get attention and carve a unique lane for himself in what is shaping up to be a highly competitive primary for his party.

On Saturday, while speaking at a Democratic Party gala in the Ohio county where Vance is from, Beshear singled out the vice president, sharpening a line of attack that he’s been testing in recent weeks. 

“There is no one who will work harder — no matter what I am doing that year — to beat JD Vance in 2028,” Beshear said at the gala in Butler County. “He is the most arrogant politician I have ever seen — and given his current boss, that’s saying something.” 

.... Appearing on the podcast “Raging Moderates” earlier this month, the governor also blasted Vance, whose family is from Breathitt County in Kentucky, where the vice president spent summers as a child with his grandparents.  

“He is the most conceited elected official that I’ve ever heard speak,” Beshear said on the podcast. “And that’s incredibly dangerous because if you think you know it all, you’re going to make some really bad decisions because you’re not listening to some smart people you should put around you.” 

Trump's test run

Hartmann Report -  Steve Bannon, an enthusiastic advocate of authoritarianism, dropped the mask this week. On his War Room podcast, while interviewing far-right lawyer Mike Davis, Bannon said plainly what the Trump administration has been dancing and weaving around for months:

“We can use this as a test run, as a test case, to really perfect ICE’s involvement in the 2026 midterm elections.”

There it is. Not a conspiracy theory. And definitely not liberal hand-wringing. The man himself, in his own words, explaining exactly what’s going on at airports across the country right now.

I’ve been writing and talking about authoritarian playbooks for decades, including in my book The Hidden History of American Oligarchy: Reclaiming Our Democracy from the Ruling Class, and they almost always follow the same predictable script.

First, you exploit (Reichstag Fire, 9/11) or manufacture (“Border invasion,” Iran attack) a crisis. Use that to change the laws to give yourself more power as you flood public spaces with your militarized enforcers under the cover of “helping.”

Then you normalize it. Have you noticed how stories about ICE brutalizing and killing people have gone from the front pages to occasional mentions on social media?

Then you expand it. ICE has gone national, massive databases of protesters are being organized, and Trump this weekend came right out and said that his next target will be Democrats, who he called America’s “greatest enemy,” using the “Democrat Party” slur that Joe McCarthy suggested Republicans should always use:

“Now with the death of Iran, the greatest enemy America has is the Radical Left, Highly Incompetent, Democrat Party!”

Hitler didn’t march his stormtroopers into polling places on day one. He put them on street corners first, just like Trump is doing. By the time Germans understood what was happening, the intimidation and threats of violence or imprisonment were already baked into daily life, and questioning what was happening felt like questioning the natural order of things.

Meanwhile. . .

NPR - Architecture and cultural organizations are suing Trump and the Kennedy Center board over the planned renovations to the arts complex. The lawsuit, filed yesterday, seeks compliance with historic preservation laws and congressional approval before the changes take place.

Abortions

NPR -  A new report finds that the number of abortions in the U.S. held steady in 2025 from the previous year, despite anti-abortion rights advocates pursuing laws and court cases to restrict access to them.

Hawaii flooding

Time -   Hawaii is grappling with the aftermath of the worst flooding to hit the state in over two decades. 

Thousands were forced to evacuate their homes and power was knocked out for customers across the islands by flooding that began late last week and continued into the weekend, brought on by severe storms. The state has suffered an estimated $1 billion in damages, according to Gov. Josh Green. Oahu, Hawaii's most populous island, and Maui, were hit hardest by the storms. ..


The fall of American democracy

Th Guardian -  The health of American democracy, as measured by those who study it most closely, has settled into a diminished state – stabilizing after a sharp decline last year, but still well below the levels recorded at any point before the start of Donald Trump’s second term, according to a new survey ...

The findings, by the nonpartisan democracy-tracking project Bright Line Watch, which surveys hundreds of US scholars at American colleges and universities, suggest that the erosion of norms detected after Trump’s return to the White House last year has hardened into a new baseline. The public also holds a dim view of American democracy, the most recent survey found, but are sharply divided along partisan lines over how well the system is functioning.

The heat wave

The Guardian -  A stunning heatwave that shattered records in the US west is threatening to rapidly melt the sparse snowpack and ramp up wildfire risks in the seasons ahead.

March has already been historically hot, but the early onset of summer weather across the region may be here to stay. There’s little reprieve in forecasts, which show more heat records may fall this spring.

Extreme heat is exceptionally dangerous, especially so early in the year, when bodies and systems are not prepared for it and when it lingers over a long period of time. This heatwave is also posing significant threats to the water supply. After one of the warmest winters in the west, the snow that feeds streams, reservoirs and soil moisture as it melts through the summer season is already dismally scarce in key watersheds.

.... The unprecedented heat event pushed temperatures between 20 to 30F higher than average across the region, with some areas seeing spikes up to 40F higher than normal.

March high temperature records have already been broken in at least 14 states. A new national temperature record for the month was smashed last Thursday, when an area in Arizona hit 110F (43.3C). The record didn’t stand long; by Friday, it was broken again, when a parts of California and Arizona reached 112F (44.4C). The record is just one degree shy of April’s heat record.