July 18, 2026

Fear of socalism


Guns

Newsweek -   A federal appeals court on Friday struck down New Jersey's decades-old ban on assault weapons, becoming the first federal appellate court in the country to rule that a state prohibition on semiautomatic rifles such as the AR-15 violates the Second Amendment.

The decision from the Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals comes as the U.S. Supreme Court prepares to weigh in on the constitutionality of similar state-level assault weapons bans, setting the stage for what could become one of the most consequential Second Amendment rulings in years.

ICE

Independent  -    Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents are making arrests at a record pace, averaging over 1,400 people daily in the first 12 days of July.

…The current arrest rate has seen ICE hit a target of at least 2,000 arrests a day multiple times this month.

The increase in arrests comes amid new controversy, including two fatal shootings of motorists by ICE agents in Texas and Maine, and the death of a man struck by a tractor-trailer while fleeing authorities in Florida.

The Trump administration had previously set a goal of deporting 1 million migrants annually, which would require an average of almost 2,800 arrests per day


Climate

Newsweek -  Three U.S. cities rose to the top of a global ranking for worst air quality on Friday amid widespread smoke from Canadian wildfires across the Midwest and Northeast.

Detroit recorded a "very unhealthy" (201-300) U.S. Air Quality Index reading of 240 between 1 and 2 p.m. ET, placing it first (worst) among the major cities tracked by Swiss air-quality company IQAir. Chicago followed with an “unhealthy” (151-200) reading of 199, followed by Washington, D.C., at 172. New York City placed eighth at 131.

The three worst cities outside the U.S. were Kinshasa, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, at 186, Delhi, India (the world's most polluted city in 2025), at 163, and Jakarta, Indonesia, at 144, which is considered "unhealthy for sensitive groups" (101-150).

Supreme Court

Transcend -  The Supreme Court of the United States, the most powerful court in the country, operates under no binding code of ethics.

Federal judges at every other level of the judiciary are bound by ethics rules. Members of Congress are bound by financial disclosure requirements.

But the nine justices who sit on the highest court in the land — who decide the future of reproductive rights, voting rights, and the boundaries of presidential power — answer to no one.

When a justice has an obvious conflict of interest – or accepts lavish trips, gifts, or favors from the very people whose cases later land on their desk – they face no consequences.

This isn’t an accident or an oversight. It is the direct result of decades of Republican obstruction — every serious attempt at Supreme Court ethics reform blocked, stalled, or filibustered before it could become law.


Health

Newsweek - As summer heats up, tiny ticks are busy spreading diseases that most Americans have never even heard of, with doctors calling one of them almost akin to Lyme disease in public health risk.

"It is true that both mosquito and tick-borne illness reports, more inclusively called 'vector-borne' illnesses, are increasing, in part possibly due to regional climate changes and expanding insect and tick habitats," Dr. Natasha Wyndham Hanners, infectious disease specialist at Children’s Health and Assistant Professor at UT Southwestern Medical Center, told Newsweek. "It is also true that ease of worldwide travel along with more advanced diagnostic techniques are revealing emergence of previously unknown organisms or organisms new to an area."

The Hill -  A one-year ban on abortion providers being able to bill Medicaid for non-abortion services, which was included in the GOP’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act that President Trump signed last year, expired on July 5.

Anti-abortion activists have for months been calling for such a provision to be included in another bill that could go through the same special budget reconciliation process that bypasses the threat of a Democratic filibuster in the Senate, allowing Republicans to push partisan legislation through both chambers.

Republicans’ second shot at a reconciliation bill, however, was a “skinny” package aimed at restoring funding for immigration enforcement and Border Patrol. And this week, House Republicans released a $95 billion reconciliation 3.0 framework teeing up money for defense, farm aid, and grants to encourage voting restrictions — omitting any measures to offset that new spending, or any other special provisions, including the measure to restrict Medicaid funds from going to abortion providers.


Donald Trump

Independent -   President Donald Trump said American television networks that didn’t air a speech he gave on 16 July night should lose their licences.

Speaking during his address to the nation, which focused on election security, Trump also said that TV networks that did not air his speech were engaged in a "plot".

“They and others in the media are part of a plot. They want to continue this fraud for whatever reason,” he said. “Fraud like this should mean a revocation of their licences”.

Two of the three major US television networks, NBC and ABC, as well as CNN did not broadcast the primetime address by Trump on their primary platforms, risking the ire of the administration.

Networks enjoy broad First Amendment rights to decide what to broadcast, experts say. Historically, though, broadcasters carried most such speeches on the grounds that they provided information of public importance.

5 things to know about Trump’s election claims

Alternet -  While Americans are dealing with higher gas prices, high grocery prices and less healthcare, President Donald Trump is living his best life, says Jonathan Swan, co-author of the new book Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump, with fellow New York Times writer Maggie Haberman.

“[In his first term], there was always a feeling he felt under siege,” Swan told John Dickerson, host of Slate’s Political Gabfest podcast. “He was under investigation. He was reactive. He was surrounded by people who — whatever you think about Donald Trump, he’s not stupid when it comes to reading people — he understood that many of them had contempt for him and thought that he was dangerous and whatever. So I think it was just generally a stressful, unpleasant experience. This time around, he comes in with a sweeping immunity decision from the Supreme Court and with, especially last year, total command over his own party.”

Swan pointed out that never has he seen a president command his own party and force them to do things they don’t want to do like Trump did last year.

“We haven’t seen that before,” said Swan. “He’s richer than he’s ever been. His family’s making just inordinate sums of money from the presidency. He’s using power in the ways that he wants to without much pushback. He’s entirely surrounded by flatterers. He’s basically housebound. He doesn’t really travel around. He’s not really doing events. He goes from people flattering him in the Oval Office to people on the Mar-a-Lago patio.

Polls


Ballotpedia has Trump with a 43.5% approval rating.
RealClearPolitics has Trump with a 40.9% approval rating.
Quinnipiac University has Trump with a 39% approval rating.
The Economist/YouGov has Trump with a 37% approval rating.
ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos has Trump with a 37% approval rating.
Emerson College has Trump with a 39% approval rating.

CNBC POLL: Net Favorability Ratings
Sep 2018 🟢 Capitalism: +37 🟤 Socialism: -33 July 2026 🟢 Capitalism: +23 🟤 Socialism: -20 (new high

Middle East

The Hill -  A senior Iranian adviser threatened on Friday to launch a wider war in the Middle East following days of intense fighting, warning that “full-scale offensive operations” could resume if U.S. military strikes do not cease.

“Iran will no longer limit itself to retaliatory, like-for-like responses…and no political border will be safe,” Major-General Mohsen Rezaei, an adviser to Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, said, according to several outlets, citing Iranian news agency IRIB.

U.S. forces launched a seventh consecutive night of strikes on Friday, hitting bridges around Bandar Abbas, a port city in the Persian Gulf where the Iranian Navy is headquartered. 

The fresh wave of strikes, which ended around 9:30 p.m. EDT, also targeted surveillance sites, military logistics infrastructure, underground weapons storage and maritime capabilities, according to U.S. Central Command (Centcom).

National Guard takes control of DC

 The Guardian -   For months, roughly 2,000-2,500 national guard troops have been patrolling metro stations, parks, city streets, neighborhoods and tourist attractions throughout Washington DC. In July, that number doubled to more than 5,000 troops from more than a dozen states as part of the federal government’s “summer surge” of law enforcement surrounding major events for the nation’s 250th birthday celebration.

District of Columbia officials are pushing for the troops’ withdrawal, but they have limited control because the nation’s capital isn’t a state and the mayor, Muriel Bowser, doesn’t have the authority to call up the DC national guard, only to request them. City officials also don’t have any control over the troop deployments from other states.

”The national guard is not contributing to law enforcement,” said the DC council chair, Phil Mendelson. “The presence of armed soldiers on our streets is unnecessary, hurts potential visitors to the district, creates the wrong impression about safety, and that’s not helpful.”

DC councilwoman Janeese Lewis George is the presumptive Democratic nominee for DC’s mayor and will probably secure the top spot after November’s general election. She has pledged to work with the federal government and the Trump administration to improve conditions for DC residents.

“Governors across the country have been bullied, bribed and misled into misusing their national guard for armed patrols of DC neighborhoods that result in harm to the troops themselves and our community in DC,” Lewis George said. “It’s been almost a year, and we must not normalize this.”

Immigration

In These Times -  The Trump administration unleashed federal immigration enforcement agents on states around the nation, including those with relatively miniscule immigrant populations. This includes Maine, the whitest state in the country, where a mere 4 percent of the population is of immigrant origin. ICE agents wreaked havoc on the state in early 2026. Even after Republican Senator Susan Collins requested an end to the operations, tensions remained high and ICE sightings continued.

Earthquakes

The Congresional Insider  - A powerful 7.3 earthquake off southern Mexico’s coast shook four countries and triggered a tsunami alert, raising fresh questions about how prepared everyday people really are when nature hits harder than government plans.

A magnitude 7.3 earthquake struck off the Pacific coast of Chiapas near the Guatemala border, with shaking felt as far as El Salvador. U.S. and Mexican agencies issued a tsunami threat for parts of the coasts of Mexico and Guatemala, warning of waves up to about 1 meter.

Officials reported no immediate deaths and no serious damage, but confirmed several injuries and localized structural problems. The quake revived memories of past Mexican earthquakes and exposed how people in the region still depend on strained public systems when disaster strikes.

July 17, 2026

Personal income


The war on democracy

The Hill - Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin went further than President Trump in an address on election security Friday, asserting foreign adversaries could hack voter machines, threatening states that refuse to partner with his department and saying he would use “maximum pressure” to root out any illegally cast votes.

While Trump in his primetime address Thursday called voting machines “vulnerable and they’re easily compromised,” Mullin raised the specter of hackers entering such systems to manually change votes — something the U.S. intelligence community has concluded has never happened.

He also said state election officials will pay a price if they refuse to cooperate with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) efforts, laying the groundwork to access states’ vote tabulators and even their voter rolls — something various courts have repeatedly denied federal government efforts to access.

Climate change

Air quality

 
Good
Hazardous

Inside Climate News - Attribution science measures how much human-caused global warming loaded the dice for an extreme weather event, making it more likely or more intense. Recent research shows climate extremes, like the deadly 2021 heat dome over the Pacific Northwest and this summer’s early heat wave in Europe that killed more than 5,000 people, would have been impossible without human-caused warming.

To determine how global warming affects an extreme event, researchers compare its intensity and likelihood in the current climate with the same event modeled in a world without human-caused emissions. A combination of observational data, weather and climate models and statistical models help quantify the effect of human-caused warming on the extreme event.

 In the report, the authors wrote that attribution scientists should develop shared standards for studying extreme events so different research groups can more easily compare and verify one another’s results. It also recommended regularly reviewing the rapid attribution studies now issued within days of major disasters to ensure the methods keep pace with advances in climate science.

 The report says the next big advances will come from more powerful climate models that can better simulate localized extremes such as severe thunderstorms and hail, along with improved weather and impact data, especially in parts of the world where observations remain limited. It also urges scientists to work more closely with local officials and communities so attribution studies can better inform disaster planning, recovery and estimates of climate-related losses