June 1, 2026

Climate change

Independent -   Wildfires caused more financial damage in 2025 than in any other year, with catastrophic fires in the US, South Korea and Europe killing about 90 people and forcing roughly 300,000 to evacuate, a new study found.  Wildfires accounted for 38 per cent of all insured natural hazard losses globally in 2025 – more than hurricanes, earthquakes and floods combined – even as the total area burned was the second lowest since records began in 2002 and 16 per cent below the long-term average.  Researchers say the pattern reflects a shift in how wildfires cause harm: there are fewer fires overall but they are hitting populated areas with greater intensity and speed than before.

“2025 shows that a 'quiet' fire year globally can still be devastating," Dr Matthew Jones of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research at the University of East Anglia, who led the study, said. "We are seeing a growing disconnect between total area burned and real-world impacts, with risk increasingly determined by fire location, intensity and exposure."

Time -   Two major incidents at chemical plants within the past week sent tens of thousands fleeing from their homes in California and left 11 people dead in Washington. But despite a spate of similar incidents over the last year, the Trump Administration is planning to roll back federal regulations designed to prevent similar disasters. Experts and environmental groups have warned that such a move would make chemical accidents far more common. Mass evacuations were ordered and a state of emergency declared when a tank containing nearly 7,000 gallons of highly toxic chemical methyl methacrylate became unstable at an aerospace plastics facility in Garden Grove, California, causing it to heat up and risk explosion. 

Polls

Newsweek -  [In Maine] Collins is currently polling worse against Platner, who is leading RealClearPolitics’ average by 7.8 points.

Artificial Intelligence

NY Times -   Science-fiction authors have long fantasized about wars where machines aim the weapons and pull the triggers. In “Project Maven,” the Bloomberg News tech and national security reporter Katrina Manson claims the era of “killer robots” is here. The fusion of artificial intelligence and modern warfare raises, as she puts it, “the biggest moral and practical question there is: who — or what — gets to decide to take a human life? And who bears that cost?”

Yet that question has barely been mulled by the officers managing the new weapons or the politicians funding them. It’s a familiar syndrome in military history: New weapons technologies are perfected and rushed into the arsenal before their implications — for the future of not only war but humanity — are thought through.

The awful have tried it before

Hartmann Report -  The misogynists, racists, and fascists are taking over Washington, D.C. this summer, and the parallel to the massive Klan rally of August 1925, staged under another Republican president who declined to denounce it is the script.

On that August day a hundred and one summers ago, somewhere between thirty- and forty-thousand Ku Klux Klan members marched down Pennsylvania Avenue twenty-two abreast and fourteen rows deep, ending at the base of the Washington Monument. President Calvin Coolidge refused to condemn them.

Their version of America was defined entirely by exclusion: not Black Americans, not Catholics, not Jews, not immigrants, not organized labor, not anyone outside their narrow tribal vision of who counted. That night they burned crosses in Arlington while the band played “Onward, Christian Soldiers” and “America.”  A century later, the same Mall is being prepared for the same kind of show, and the artists scheduled to perform are figuring it out and getting out as fast as they can.

Donald Trump

Time -   Interior Secretary Doug Burgum would not commit to removing President Donald Trump’s name from the Kennedy Center on Sunday, despite a judge’s order requiring it to be done within two weeks.  “I’m not sure if that’s going to be appealed or not, but I think, you know, there’s controversy on both sides of this about that ruling,” Burgum said on CNN’s Dana Bash on “State of the Union” when asked if the name would be removed.

David Frum, The Atlantic -   Trump’s effort to rebrand the semi-quincentennial as the Day of Trump left no time, budget, or effort available for the true purpose of the anniversary. As his own self-celebration has fizzled, a void has opened between the scheduled roster of events and the true purpose and meaning of the solemnity of July 4, 2026. This powerful date will go unmarked by any act of memory worthy of the nation.

The Hill - The country’s upcoming semiquincentennial celebration has fallen subject to partisan tensions as President Trump appears set to headline the start of the multi-week festival later this month.  Trump said in a Truth Social post on Saturday that he wants to hold a rally in Washington, D.C., to mark the country’s 250th birthday instead of a planned concert, after more than a half dozen musical acts pulled out of the “Great American State Fair” on the National Mall. 

NYC Mayor’s ‘Engagement’ Office Sparks Controversy

Congressional Insider - New York City’s new “Office of Mass Engagement” is set to burn through more than $5 million in taxpayer-funded salaries, raising alarms that City Hall is quietly building a permanent campaign machine on the public dime.

More than $5.1 million in salary funds is earmarked for Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s Office of Mass Engagement in the 2027 executive budget. Staffing is reported to jump from 14 to 40 positions, with 26 new hires averaging about $125,000 each.

Critics say the office functions as a taxpayer-funded propaganda or pressure operation; supporters frame it as civic participation infrastructure. Both left and right see the fight as another example of political elites using public money to strengthen their own power instead of fixing everyday problems.

Middle East

1440 -   Israel has seized control of Beaufort, a medieval castle in Lebanon, several miles from the Israeli border. The capture marks the farthest Israeli soldiers have ventured into the country since their 18-year occupation of southern Lebanon ended in 2000.  The news comes as Israel and Lebanon continue negotiations to end the weekslong hostilities. Lebanon agreed in 2024 to disarm Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed militant group based largely in southern Lebanon. However, violence broke out again between Hezbollah and Israel in March, with Hezbollah launching rockets in response to Israeli attacks on Iran. Israel has since carried out airstrikes and invaded southern Lebanon, killing more than 3,300 people and displacing more than 1.2 million, according to the latest estimates. (See background on the conflict here.)  The war between Israel and Hezbollah could have implications for the US war with Iran; Iran has said any peace deal with the US must also end the war in Lebanon.

NPR -The war in Lebanon, where Israel is fighting the militant group Hezbollah, could undermine efforts to end the war in Iran, NPR's Greg Myre tells Up First. Israeli forces captured a 900-year-old hilltop castle in southern Lebanon over the weekend as part of Israel's deepest push into the country in decades. Israel says Hezbollah was using the area to fire on nearby northern Israel. Iran has issued almost daily statements supporting Hezbollah and says peace efforts must address wars in both Iran and Lebanon, Myre says. But Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly said he wants Israeli forces to keep going in Lebanon.

The Hill -   President Trump’s serious consideration of a peace deal with Iran that would open the Strait of Hormuz but also ease sanctions on Iran, a longtime U.S. adversary, is pitting Republican against Republican in a messy debate that will take over the Senate this week.  Defense hawks led by Senate Armed Services Committee Chair Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) have panned the emerging deal with Iran, which Trump has yet to sign off on.

At the same time, several Republican senators who are deeply skeptical about the Trump administration’s handling of the conflict and who have complained about the lack of a clear endgame are eager to end hostilities and restore the flow of oil, fertilizer and other goods through the Strait of Hormuz as quickly as possible.

NBC News -  The U.S. military said it carried out what it called self-defense strikes on Iranian radar and drone control sites over the weekend, while Tehran said it targeted an air base used in the U.S. attack. 
U.S. Central Command last night said that the strikes had been carried out “in response to aggressive Iranian actions,” saying the country had shot down an American drone that was operating over international waters.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said today that its aerospace force had targeted the source of what it called a U.S. attack on a telecommunications tower. The IRGC said that if American attacks continued, its response would be “completely different” and Washington would be responsible for the consequences.

Meanwhile, a U.S. official said yesterday that Secretary of State Marco Rubio had spoken with Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun as part of ongoing diplomatic negotiations. 

Homelessness

Guardian - California recorded one of the largest declines in homelessness in the US over the past year, according to a report from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. The state’s unhoused population fell to 181,934 in 2025, a decrease of almost 3% compared with the previous year, placing California among the five states with the biggest reductions since 2024. Significant drops were recorded in Illinois (44%), Hawaii (41%), Florida (11%) and New York (8%).

James Comey case

The Guardian - The lead prosecutor in the former FBI director James Comey’s case over a controversial social media post has withdrawn from the case, according to a court filing.  The justice department filed notice with the court on Friday evening that Matthew Petracca, a prosecutor from the US attorney’s office for the eastern district of North Carolina, had been replaced by the assistant US attorney Timothy Severo. The documents did not include any explanation for the change.

What was Comey accused of? Comey, who was indicted in North Carolina in April, faces up to 10 years in prison for a photo of seashells arranged to read “86 47.” Prosecutors allege the post constituted a threat against Donald Trump, the 47th US president. Comey denies the allegation

Immigration

The Guardian -  Representative Maxine Dexter has a lot of questions. Why were all of the pregnant, unaccompanied minors in the US rounded up and sent to San Benito, a tiny town on the Texas border with Mexico? Are they given appropriate medical care, given their high-risk conditions and Texas’s abortion ban? And most importantly: where are the girls – and their infants – now?

Dexter, a Democratic congresswoman from Oregon and a former critical care physician – one of the few doctors now serving in Congress – detailed these questions in an 8 May letter to refugee and health officials after visiting the San Benito facility and, she said, being blocked from speaking with any of the children. She still hasn’t gotten answers.

In the US, the treatment of immigration detainees has raised concern over rights violations, overcrowding and a lack of medical care – situations that are not transparent even to members of Congress. Senator Andy Kim, a Democrat from New Jersey, says he was sprayed with pepper balls on Monday outside the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Delaney Hall facility, where detainees have spent days on a hunger strike over poor conditions. Health inspectors with the state of New Jersey were denied full access to the facility on Thursday, Mikie Sherrill, the state’s governor, said.

Detainees across the US have said they don’t have safe, nutritious food or adequate medical care, while outbreaks of infectious diseases have plagued facilities, which are often converted warehouses, storefronts or churches that were never meant to house people and frequently lack ventilation.

.... Unaccompanied minors, who are kept through the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), are “uniquely vulnerable”, Rosalind Rogers, a psychologist specializing in the mental health of immigrants and refugees, said at a recent event with Duke University on the health vulnerabilities of children and families in immigration facilities. “They face detention without the support, nurturing, and protection of a caregiver.”

For the unaccompanied children at the San Benito facility, there is the added stress and confusion of being pregnant and alone. The facility has housed pregnant children as young as 13; about half of the pregnancies are the result of rape.

Following reporting from the Guardian and others, Dexter notified the facility in San Benito that she would visit in late April. When she arrived, she was blocked from speaking with or even seeing any children throughout her entire visit, she said.

Congress

NBC News -  Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said today that Democrats would try to kill President Donald Trump’s $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” fund, forcing Republicans to vote to preserve the compensation money. “This week, Senate Democrats will launch a coordinated effort to kill the slush fund before one cent goes out the door,” Schumer said in a letter.  It’s unlikely that Democrats will be able to stop the fund in the Senate. They can, however, force Republicans to record their votes, offering a line of attack for Democrats in the upcoming midterms. Additionally, Sens. Adam Schiff, Mark Kelly and Elissa Slotkin introduced a “Drain the Slush Fund Act,” which they said would “prevent taxpayer dollars” from being paid to Trump and his allies, including former Jan. 6 defendants.

The rattled generation

Axios -   By most objective measures, it's an extraordinary time to be alive. Americans are wealthier, safer and longer-lived than at any earlier point in history. U.S. total wealth has soared. Violent crime sank to a 20-year low and is still falling. Life expectancy just hit 79 years — the highest in American history. The country produces more energy than ever after four straight record years.

And yet: University of Michigan consumer sentiment just hit its lowest reading in a half-century. Gallup finds most people think things will only get worse. Trust in every major institution — government, media, organized religion, higher education, science — is at or near record lows, both Gallup and the Edelman Trust Barometer find.

May 31, 2026

Graham Platner

Politico -  Graham Platner exchanged sexually explicit texts with multiple women while married to his wife, Amy Gertner, his campaign confirmed to POLITICO on Saturday, the latest scandal he has faced since launching his Maine Senate campaign last year. In a statement, Gertner slammed a former friend for spreading “malicious gossip” in the wake of a Wall Street Journal report that she had informed her husband’s campaign of the texts in late August.

More than 10,000 lawyers have left the Trump regime

Independent, UK-   The Trump administration has seen a mass exodus of more than 10,000 government lawyers, with roughly one in five attorneys who worked in the federal workforce at the end of 2024 no longer working for the administration by March 2026, a new analysis from the New York Times found.

Across multiple departments, President Donald Trump pushed lawyers out of government work as he sought to reduce the number of federal employees, get rid of entire agencies and pressure attorneys to swiftly implement his agenda regardless of constitutionality.

The Department of Education, which Trump is seeking to close permanently, lost more than 50 percent of its lawyers who were employed before Trump was inaugurated, according to the analysis. The Justice Department, which the president has used to go after his political opponents, has seen a 21 percent decrease in its attorney count.

The only department to gain lawyers was the Department of Homeland Security, which required more litigation due to the spike in immigration cases as a result of Trump’s mass deportation plan.

Immigration

CBS News More than 6,300 children have been detained by ICE during President Trump's 2nd term. 97% have no criminal records.

Congressional Insider -   The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has ordered Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) lawyers to ramp up fraud cases against immigration attorneys over allegedly false asylum filings.  The crackdown relies on a document-fraud law that covers anyone who knowingly prepares or files falsified immigration benefit applications, with civil fines and possible criminal referrals.

The Trump administration frames the move as a response to “millions” of illegal immigrants committing asylum fraud, but has not provided detailed data or procedures. Critics, including former asylum officers, say fraud exists but is far less widespread than officials claim, warning that aggressive enforcement could chill legitimate claims and representation.

Headline USA -   Since Florida launched its immigration enforcement effort, Operation Tidal Wave, in February, nearly 25,000 arrests have been made statewide.

“Florida will continue to use every available resource to identify dangerous individuals, support federal immigration enforcement and keep our citizens safe,” Gov. Ron DeSantis said. “No state has moved faster or done more to combat illegal immigration than Florida, and we will continue to lead the charge in protecting our communities.”

Operation Tidal Wave was launched as Florida leads the country with the most 287(g) U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agreements of any state, The Center Square reported. The program is named after a section of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1996 and authorizes ICE to delegate to state and local law enforcement officers the authority to perform specified immigration functions under its supervision.

The Trump administration expanded the program to include three models: the Jail Enforcement Model (JEM), Task Force Model (TFM) and Warrant Service Officer (WSO) model, The Center Square reported. Florida is the only state to have all of its sheriffs participating in 287(g), with most participating in the TFM and or all three models. Nearly 200 police departments, 12 state agencies and 15 state universities and colleges, as well as county commissioner detention facilities and correctional facilities, are participating in 287(g). 

Trump appointed federal judge cuts mail-in voting

Independence Journal -   A Trump-appointed judge just let the White House move ahead with a sweeping mail-in voting overhaul that critics say hands Washington new control over who even gets a ballot. A federal judge in Washington, D.C., refused to block President Trump’s executive order tightening rules for voting by mail, allowing it to move forward while lawsuits continue.

The order directs federal agencies to build lists of “eligible” voters for every state and tells the United States Postal Service to deliver mail ballots only to people on those lists. Civil-rights and voting groups argue the order is unconstitutional, violates state control over elections, and risks stripping lawful voters of easy access to the ballot.

The ruling highlights a deeper struggle over who really runs American elections: states and local communities, or an increasingly powerful federal executive branch.

NPR

NPR -  NPR has laid off 10 journalists, including some veteran reporters, in an attempt to save money and reorganize the newsroom. It also is buying out at least 18 news staffers who voluntarily accepted offers to depart, according to three people with direct knowledge... The network intends to leave eight empty positions unfilled.

NPR Editor-in-Chief Thomas Evans expressed regret in a note to staff....He said the total reductions amounted to 4% of NPR's content division, which includes the newsroom and podcasts, and pledged that the network would maintain high standards. No staff members of news programs or podcasts were affected.

The moves are part of NPR's effort to grapple with the economic consequences of Congress' vote last summer to eliminate federal subsidies for public media. While NPR relied directly on federal funds for about 1% of its budget, the cuts deeply hurt public radio stations that pay for the radio giant's programs like Morning Edition and All Things Considered.

....NPR President and CEO Katherine Maher and Evans announced the cuts last week, describing them as targeted and necessary to save $8 million when the network expects a drop of $15 million in member station fees. Waves of layoffs have hit public radio and television stations across the U.S., along with PBS, since Congress clawed back the funding.

Yet in the past year, donors have stepped up to support public radio stations and NPR itself. NPR lodged two of the largest philanthropic contributions in its history this spring. A $33 million gift, contributed anonymously, partly went to help NPR cover $8 million in previously announced emergency relief to stations, the network says.

ICE

The Guardian -  The first lawsuit relating to the largest immigration detention facility in the US was filed early on Saturday against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), accusing the agency of “dire” conditions that severely violate the human and constitutional rights of those locked up at the camp in Texas.

A clutch of legal organizations is suing via a class-action complaint, listing four detainees as plaintiffs for themselves and on behalf of all those currently held as civil detainees at Camp East Montana or who will be held there in the future.

The facility is a sprawling tent camp in the desert on El Paso’s Fort Bliss military base, where the federal government has confined immigrants since last August, when it swiftly erected the tents.

The complaint alleges that conditions at the camp are “dangerous and abusive” as well as “squalid” for those detained, with injustices including, according to the lawsuit:

“[a]bhorrent medical and mental health care”;

“inappropriate use of force”;

“indiscriminate use of solitary confinement”;

“terrible, rotten, spoiled and inadequate” food;

“outbreaks of disease”;

“unsanitary living conditions”;

“sexual harassment by guards”.

The Guardian reached out to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the parent agency of ICE, and to ICE for comment. Late Saturday, a DHS spokesperson replied with a lengthy statement denying all accusations that proper medical care and food had been withheld from detainees, disputing there had been a spike in deaths in ICE custody, and asserting “claims that there are ‘inhumane’ conditions at Camp East Montana are categorically false. No detainees are being beaten or abused.”

Middle East

MS NOW -Whether the United States and Iran agree on a supposedly impending ceasefire and begin negotiations, Trump has already lost, argues Michael A. Cohen. None of the administration’s prewar goals have been achieved, whether that’s stopping a nuclear weapons program, the existence of which lacked evidence; damaging its conventional military and missile capabilities; or changing the regime. More embarrassing is that one of the key U.S. objectives — reopening the Strait of Hormuz — is “only necessary because of the war itself,” he writes. Read more.

Meteor Explodes Over Massachusetts

People -  A meteor has rocked the northeastern United States.  The fireball was detected over northeastern Massachusetts and southeastern New Hampshire at around 2:06 p.m. local time on Saturday, May 30, according to CBS News, ABC News and Reuters.  The meteor crashed through the Earth's atmosphere at a speed of 75,000 mph, creating a blast equivalent to 300 tons of TNT, the outlets reported, citing the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

NASA Space Alerts wrote on X, “Eyewitnesses in New England and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's GOES-19 satellite reported a bright fireball on Saturday … accompanied by a loud noise. The meteor appears to have fragmented at an altitude of 40 miles over northeast MA and southeast NH. The energy released at breakup is estimated to be equivalent to about 300 tons of TNT, which accounts for the loud noise."

Satellite lightning data indicates that the meteor entered the atmosphere over the South Shore near Boston before spreading to multiple locations, stretching as far as Rhode Island, according to CBS News. 

The Massachusetts Executive Office of Public Safety and Security received several residents accounts of the fireball with “an audible boom and ground tremors,” per ABC News. The Watertown Police also shared on Facebook that they received “numerous reports from residents of hearing a loud boom sound” over the eastern part of Massachusetts.

Golf vs. graves

Occupy Democrats -  Graves are exhumed and the bodies moved to make way for a $1.5 billion Trump Organization golf course in Vietnam — and the locals are furious.

“It’s painful. I’m outraged by the compensation price," said Hoang Do, who was paid just $2,660 for removing the remains of his son and parents from their final resting place.

The Financial Times reports that a sacred gravesite in the the Hung Yen province of Vietnam is being demolished, and the bodies inside moved, so that the Trump Organization can erect yet another hideous golf course. Eric Trump has boasted that it will be "the envy of all of Asia and of the entire world." ...

The Vietnamese government is supporting the demolition and body removal because they know that rubber-stamping Trump's business endeavors is the quickest way to ingratiate them with the White House....

Vietnam finds itself in a particularly difficult position because Trump previously threatened to place a 46% tariff on exports from the export-reliant nation. They know that he is a deeply vindictive man. They've assessed the risks and decided that harming their own people in one region is better than having Trump destroy their entire national economy.

And the locals aren't even being given a fair price for their heartbreak. Reuters reported last year that some individuals are being paid just $12 for 10 square feet of land. The course is expected to gobble up roughly four square miles, displacing over 4,000 households.

....Not only are graves being disturbed, but fertile farmland is being snatched up, leaving locals without a way to feed their families.

The Golden Age?


Cigarette smoking

AP News -  The cigarette smoking rate among U.S. adults dropped to another all-time low last year, with 1 in 11 adults saying they were current smokers, according to government survey data released this week....In the mid-1960s, 42% of U.S. adults were smokers. The rate has been gradually dropping for decades, due to cigarette taxes, tobacco product price hikes, smoking bans, public education campaigns and changes in the social acceptability of lighting up in public.

Polls




YouGov -   Support for abolishing ICE has hit a new high in this week's Economist / YouGov poll. Half (50%) of Americans now somewhat or strongly support abolishing ICE. Only 39% oppose abolishing the agency.

Ukraine

The Hill -   Ukraine appears to be gaining momentum on the battlefield in its grinding fight with Russia, regaining territory for the first time in years as it outflanks Moscow’s forces through its domination of drone warfare. 

Defense analysts this week said the war had entered a new phase, with Kyiv poised to break a stalemate that has been in place since late 2023, with neither side able to make significant gains along a nearly 700-mile front line.

Kyiv is now calling the next six months “crucial” for it to seize the battlefield initiative, as Moscow has responded to the momentum with threats of escalation and stepped up aerial strikes.

“For the very first time since 2023, the Ukrainians have actually managed to take back more terrain than the Russians did,” said George Barros, a longtime analyst on Russia now with the Institute for the Study of War (ISW).

In a report this week, ISW said the Ukrainian gains show the war is shifting in favor of its forces, at least for the time being, thanks to Kremlin troops stagnating in battlefield advances and Kyiv’s forces effectively using drones and innovative tactics to break out of old positions.

Decline in birth rates

 NY Times -   Researchers who study population trends have shown that births tend to rise when economies are on the upswing, and more recently have proposed a relationship between gender roles and the birthrate: Very high levels of equality in the home and in society are associated with more births. (The same goes for very low levels of gender equality.) Yet in most places around the world, birthrates have marched steadily downward for the past two decades, even where economies have grown and working women’s male partners handled more household tasks...

The collective reluctance to procreate is perhaps most glaring in the Nordic countries. With their stable economies, strong social safety nets, robust family policies and equitable gender relations, they maintained relatively high birthrates through the early 2000s. In the aftermath of the financial crisis of 2008, however, sometimes referred to as the Great Recession, births in Norway, Denmark, Sweden and Finland declined, and then declined some more, even as their economies recovered throughout the 2010s. Little about those nations’ family policies had changed, and as far as anyone could tell, men were still doing their share of the dishes. The same downward trend held in the United States, where births have fallen by about 23 percent since 2007, despite high rates of immigration until last year. Births have also been declining in East Asian countries, even though governments in the region have thrown buckets of money at the problem. And in France, despite its longstanding pronatalist policies.

.... What unites these disparate cultures, policy environments and demographics, researchers are now realizing, is young people’s inescapable and crushing sense that the future is too uncertain for the lifelong commitment of parenthood. Call it the vibes theory of demographic decline.

The future has never been assured, but it feels as though we are living in a time of spectacular uncertainty. In the United States, job tenures have contracted and income volatility has risen. Life expectancy, once on an inexorable march upward, has fallen for less-educated women and men. Many of the forces our economy is built on — A.I., immigration, global trade — feel distressingly volatile; disruption, once a byword for a disturbance or problem, is the governing ethos of a terrifyingly powerful sector of our economy. The rise of prediction markets has turned the world into one large casino. The climate crisis is spiraling, as are the costs of everything that could enable parenthood, whether that’s a roof over one’s head or child care. The past half-century has brought us breathtaking inequality, accompanied by a sharp decline in social mobility. The two generations currently of childbearing age bear the psychological and financial scars of coming of age amid world-scale catastrophes...

Artificial Intelligence

Jasmine Sun, NY Times   - Most people I know in the A.I. industry think the median person is screwed, and they have no idea what to do about it. I live in San Francisco, among the young researchers earning million-dollar salaries and the start-up founders competing to build the next unicorn. While Silicon Valley has long warned about the risk of rogue A.I., it has recently woken up to a more mundane nightmare: one in which many ordinary people lose their economic leverage as their jobs are automated away.

Whether you talk with engineers, venture capitalists, founders or managers, or with doomers, accelerationists, lefties or libertarians, the so-called San Francisco consensus on the impact of A.I. for workers is bleak. Many are convinced that advanced A.I. will soon surpass human capabilities. This would produce tremendous growth and scientific achievement, but it would also displace millions of jobs as fewer humans are needed to make the economy run. The technology will depress economic mobility and exacerbate inequality, while ferrying power and wealth to the A.I. companies and the existing owners of capital.

Hourly wages vs. corporate profits

Alternet -  When you adjust for inflation, hourly wages have risen 3 percent since the end of 2019. Corporate profits have risen 50 percent. Workers’ share of the nation’s income has now dropped to the lowest it’s been since records began in 1947. Profits’ share is the highest since 1950.

Most people who depend on wages for a living are struggling, while a small minority at the top who own most shares of stock and private equity — that is, people who rely on capital gains — have never had it as good.

The trend toward lower wages and higher profits began in the 1980s, increased in the 2000s, picked up speed after the pandemic, and is about to explode as Artificial Intelligence takes over.

Donald Trump

Trump in 2008: Anyone who invades the Middle East under false pretenses should be impeached.

New Republic -  Donald Trump is preparing to offer Iran a $300 billion bribe to back out of a war he never should have waded into—and it’s all thanks to Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.  The United States is considering creating a massive investment fund for Iran as part of a peace deal, after Tehran demanded reparations for the destruction, The New York Times reported Thursday. An Iranian official put the amount for the “reconstruction program” at $300 billion.

The fund seemed to be spurred by an idea from Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law, both of whom are real estate investors. Some mediators said that the duo had pitched promoting real estate projects and an investment fund for Tehran in the event that a deal was reached.

It seems pretty clear that this investment fund is a thinly veiled strategy for them to make money from the destruction Trump leaves in his wake. Kushner is currently being investigated for cashing in on foreign investment funds.

This move also reeks of irony, considering the right-wing criticism of former President Barack Obama’s previous nuclear deal with Iran that unfroze a now meager-looking $1.7 billion. Now Trump wants to write Tehran a bigger check.

Alternet -  President Donald Trump spent six hours on late Saturday seemingly doing nothing but posting on his Truth Social account — and many of those posts seemed to reinforce the notion his priorities are out of whack with those of the American public.

“President Donald Trump spent much of Saturday flooding Truth Social with a torrent of memes, AI slop, political attacks, and fan-made tributes,” reported The Daily Beast’s Olivia Ralph on Sunday. “The six-hour posting marathon unfolded on a day when the only item listed on the president’s public schedule was ‘Executive Time.’” The more than 50 posts were described by Ralph as “ranging from patriotic fantasy art and self-congratulatory graphics to crime memes, military imagery, celebrity tributes, and attacks on political rivals.”

The journalist added that “among the more unusual posts were separate images showing Trump riding horseback beside George Washington on a dirt road next to a NASCAR race.” Ironically experts have noted that Washington opposed having his face on currency during his own lifetime because it was perceived as monarchical, insisted all electorally defeated presidents had a moral obligation to peacefully give up power and only sought two terms to avoid concentrating power in his hands. By contrast, Trump is trying to put his face on a new $250 bill, was the first president to attempt a coup when he lost an election and has argued (incorrectly) that the 22nd amendment does not bar him from seeking a third term.

Alternet -   President Donald Trump now “owns” the Republican Party, according to conservative commentator Margaret Hoover — and it is clear that the party does not know what will happen after he is gone. “I don't know what's going to happen with the future of the Republican Party,” PBS’ Margaret Hoover told her husband, The Bulwark’s John Avlon, during a Bulwark appearance on Sunday. “What I do know is Donald Trump completely owns the primary process and owns the party. There's been a complete and total co-opting, but that's also not new — we absolutely knew that.”

May 30, 2026

Climate change

NY Times -   After enduring a weeklong heat wave with no air-conditioning and little ventilation, the principal said her elementary school had come to feel like a “pressure cooker.”

The temperatures inside the 19th century school building in Paris rose above 86 degrees Fahrenheit, or 30 degrees Celsius. A sports day was canceled. Some staff reported headaches. Kids seemed irritable. In the second-grade class, two children fell asleep at their desks at 1:30 p.m...

...Until relatively recently many of Europe’s schools — unlike hospitals or nursing homes — had been somewhat insulated from the risks of extreme temperatures, if only because school was out by the time the summer heat arrived. But because of climate change, that is no longer necessarily the case; it’s getting hot sooner in the year.

Europe is the world’s fastest-warming continent, with temperatures rising by about 1 degree Fahrenheit per decade since the 1990s. This is in part because of changing weather patterns, as well as its proximity to the Arctic, where melting snow and ice lead to more dark surfaces that absorb heat.

Traditionally in Europe, schools were built to withstand cold, not heat, and air-conditioning was rarely necessary. But now the temperature extremes once associated with summer vacation are pushing into the academic year, creating stifling conditions and leading to criticism that Europe’s schools have been slow to contend with the shifting patterns of climate change.

Inside Climate News -   The shoreline of Louisiana has never been still or fixed, though recent generations have treated it as such.  
Since the last ice age roughly 20,000 years ago, around when people arrived in what is now the United States, sea levels have repeatedly reshaped aspects of the Gulf Coast. But today, human-caused warming is accelerating that ancient process, pushing Louisiana’s dynamic shoreline into conflict with cities, roads, ports and levees built to contain and stabilize nature.

A new study in Nature Sustainability argues that this history is a guide to what comes next. Coastal Louisiana, the authors write, is ground zero for coastal climate adaptation: a place where rising seas and sinking land are already reshaping where people live, and where planning for movement could offer more agency than crisis-driven displacement.