Via Tom Williams |
UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
February 13, 2026
Donald Trump
ICE
Effects of Trump's attack on climate regs
Independent, UK - Again and again, research has found increasing disease and deaths — thousands every year — in a warming world.
The Environmental Protection Agency finding in 2009, under the Obama administration, has been the legal underpinning of nearly all regulations fighting global warming.
Thousands of scientific studies have looked at climate change and its effects on human health in the past five years and they predominantly show climate change is increasingly dangerous to people.
Many conclude that in the United States, thousands of people have died and even more were sickened because of climate change in the past few decades.
.For example, a study on “Trends in heat-related deaths in the U.S., 1999-2023 ” in the prestigious JAMA journal shows the yearly heat-related death count and rate have more than doubled in the past quarter century from 1,069 in 1999 to a record high 2,325 in 2023.
A 2021 study in Nature Climate Change looked at 732 locations in 43 countries — including 210 in the United States — and determined that more than a third of heat deaths are due to human-caused climate change. That means more than 9,700 global deaths a year attributed to warming from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas.
A new study published this week found that 2.2% of summer deaths in Texas from 2010 to 2023 were heat related “as climate change brings more frequent and intense heat to Texas.”
.In the more than 15 years, since the government first determined climate change to be a public health danger, there have been more than 29,000 peer-reviewed studies that looked at the intersection of climate and health, with more than 5,000 looking specifically at the United States, according to the National Library of Medicine's PubMed research database. More than 60% of those studies have been published in the past five years.
Study after study documents that climate change endangers health, for one simple reason: It’s true,” said Dr. Howard Frumkin, professor emeritus of public health at the University of Washington and a former director of the National Center for Environmental Health appointed by President George W. Bush.
Axios - The White House's gutting of the legal foundation of climate regs will spill into U.S. elections, global diplomacy, C-suites, and litigation that's on a collision course with the Supreme Court... EPA yesterday repealed the "endangerment finding" — the formal 2009 conclusion that greenhouse gases threaten humans.
- The move, if it stands, makes it much tougher for a future president to impose various emissions rules that this White House is already abandoning.
- EPA is also eliminating vehicle CO2 standards, which rest on the finding.
It tests how 2028 hopefuls will approach climate. The response from California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) hit Trump but also looked past him as Newsom preps a 2028 run.
- "This decision betrays the American people and cements the Republican Party's status as the pro-pollution party," he said in a statement....
The legal battle will get underway fast, and early contours are emerging already. Environmental groups and Newsom have vowed to sue.
- EPA boss Lee Zeldin, at the White House, said the Supreme Court established "clear precedent" in 2022 and 2024 rulings that support nixing the finding and vehicle rules.
- Those rulings — in West Virginia v. EPA and Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo — together limit federal agencies' power to impose sweeping regulations without clear congressional blessing....
The money battle is already underway, as rising power costs are way above rising temps on the political radar.
- EPA estimates the repeal and related scuttling of tailpipe CO2 rules will create $1.3 trillion in long-term savings for Americans, mostly from the reduced costs for new vehicles.
- But the Environmental Defense Fund projects up to several trillion dollars in long-term costs. Think more fuel needed for less-efficient cars, health effects from soot that's emitted alongside CO2, and damage from climate change...
It might have global ripple effects. Sure, the Trump administration has already backed away from the Paris Agreement. But other nations track other U.S. steps, too.
While the Trump White House has already exited from global climate talks, other nations are still watching U.S. policies as they make decisions — at least to a point, analysts say.
"It does ... undermine the scientific consensus that has been reached by nations through the UN process," said Alice Hill, a senior energy and environment fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
- "I would anticipate that it sends a signal to other nations to do less, and that we will see some — probably quietly, I don't think they would necessarily announce this — display less ambition in cutting their emissions and acting on climate change," said Hill, who was on the National Security Council under President Obama.
Hill doesn't see a "huge impact" on other countries, noting "I don't expect that a lot of foreign ministries will be sweating over the fact that the United States, Trump, is seeking to repeal the endangerment finding."...
"The rest of the world is anxiously watching U.S. climate policy with each week and month, and each new development, to understand whether or not the U.S. is going to meet the commitments that it has pledged," said Kate Guy, a State Department climate diplomat in the Biden era now with Columbia University's energy think tank.
Health
Housing
Polls
Trump's unconstitutional attempt t block criticism
Grand jury shuts down police department
Federal judge blocks military demotion for criticism
Kelly, a retired Navy captain and Arizona Democrat, faced censure for “reckless misconduct” after posting the November 2025 video during military operations near Venezuela. Judge Leon emphasized no court has ever extended military speech restrictions to retired service members, especially those serving in Congress with oversight duties.
These Are Not Your Father’s Democrats
Nation Magazine Nominates Minneapolis for Nobel Peace Prize
Trump regime renews its attack on Harvard
Word
America gets its worse corruption score ever
The Hidden World of an Unaccountable Elite
February 12, 2026
Immigration
What Alcohol Does to the Body
Congress leaving today without without funding Homeland Security
Axios - Lawmakers are leaving Washington today without a deal to fund the Department of Homeland Security — all but ensuring a partial government shutdown starting tomorrow night, Axios' Stephen Neukam reports.
- That would mark the third shutdown of President Trump's second term, with Democrats again seizing on government funding as one of their only ways to confront the White House over its immigration crackdown.
Despite two weeks of negotiating, Democrats said today that they were no closer to a deal with Republicans to avert a shutdown.
- Among Democrats' demands: ICE agents should be barred from wearing masks, and must wear body cameras.
Senate Democrats rejected multiple attempts from GOP leaders today to fund DHS — ICE's parent agency — in the short term.
- Republicans included $75 billion for ICE in last year's massive reconciliation package, meaning the agency will still have funding despite the shutdown More
Trump repeals landmark finding that climate change endangers the public
ICE
Luis Cornelio, Headline USA - A congressional hearing featuring ICE Director Todd Lyons grew tense after Rep. LaMonica McIver, D-N.J., accused him of having “blood” on his hands and asked him what would happen to him on Judgment Day.
Lyons was testifying before the House Committee on Homeland Security on Tuesday when McIver pressed the questions. McIver is the same member of Congress facing a grand jury indictment tied to her protest at an ICE facility in Newark.
McIver’s line of questioning began with: “Do you consider yourself a religious man?” followed by, “How do you think Judgment Day will work for you, with so much blood on your hands?”
Taken aback, Lyons replied, “I’m not gonna entertain that question.”
“Oh. OK, of course not. Do you think you’re going to hell, Mr. Lyons?” McIver countered.
Robert Reich - Trump is lying to you about ICE arrests. He said his deportation machine would go after only the “worst of the worst.” But according to newly leaked data from the Department of Homeland Security, less than 14 percent of the 400,000 immigrants arrested by ICE in the past year have either been charged with or convicted of violent crimes.
The vast majority of immigrants jailed by ICE have no criminal record at all. A few have previously been charged with or convicted of nonviolent offenses, such as overstaying their visas or permission to be in the country.
(In the past, alleged violations of U.S. immigration laws were normally adjudicated by Justice Department immigration judges in civil — not criminal — proceedings.)
A large proportion of the people ICE has arrested are now in jail — some 73,000 — and being held without bail. They’re in what the Department of Homeland Security calls “detention facilities.”
Editorial Board, NY Times - The most basic responsibility of an officer of the law is to obey the law. The police and federal agents have enormous powers. They can arrest people, forcibly enter their homes and commit violence in the government’s name. If they violate the rules for using those powers, they can become abusers of the citizens they are entrusted to protect.
The Department of Homeland Security under President Trump has followed this dark path. Too often over the past year, its behavior has been lawless.
In enacting Mr. Trump’s immigration crackdown, officers from the department have repeatedly defied the Constitution. They have violated the First Amendment by trampling on citizens’ rights to speech and assembly. They have subverted the Second Amendment guarantee of the freedom to bear arms. They have violated the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of unreasonable searches.
The department’s officers have pushed other federal laws to the breaking point and beyond, often ignoring judicial orders in the process. They have moved detainees to skirt a judge’s jurisdiction. They have deported detainees in violation of judges’ rulings. “ICE has likely violated more court orders in January 2026 than some federal agencies have violated in their entire existence,” Judge Patrick Schiltz, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, wrote.
Robert Reich - Apple & Google removed ICE tracking apps in their app stores. TikTok reportedly suppressed videos criticizing ICE & the shooting of Alex Pretti. Meta blocked Facebook groups tracking ICE & links to a database of agents that the government wants to keep secret. Big Tech is enabling Trump's regime.
A different candidate
The U.S. Senate is a country club. It’s full of billionaires, former business execs, lawyers with Ivy League degrees, and trust fund kids born with so many silver spoons in their mouths that they have no idea the reality for working-class people like me.
If I defeat my opponent, literal billionaire Republican Pete Ricketts, I will be the least-wealthy member of the U.S. Senate. I don’t come from money, and I’m not rich. I’m a steamfitter and mechanic who’s worked 50 and 60 hour weeks my whole life to give my kids a better life.
I will be the only senator without a college degree. After my wife and I found out we were expecting a baby, I had to drop out and kill my dream of hanging a diploma on the wall because my family needed health insurance, diapers, and food on the table.
I will be the only senator who is a blue-collar, card-carrying, union member. When Kellogg’s tried to cut our benefits and workers’ pay, we risked it all, went on strike, and walked the picket line for 11 weeks through the bitter cold Nebraska winter. We won and saved hundreds of good-paying jobs – before I was fired for being the union president who led the strike.
You can give to his campaign here