UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
May 27, 2026
Workers
Polls
Grocery prices to rise
Cheapest cities to live in
Donald Trump
The consumer costs of the Iran war
Too many screens in schools?
Bye bye Google search
Judge blocks West Point from enforcing faculty speech restrictions
SNAP Enrollment Has Dropped in Every State
Military deaths
|
Health
Some children's hospitals are seeing an uptick in uninsured patients, said Aimee Ossman, vice president of policy at the Children's Hospital Association, though she noted most children remain eligible for Medicaid.
There are multiple factors contributing to falling child enrollment, including confusion around the impending work rules Congress enacted in last year's GOP budget law and the Trump administration's immigration crackdown that's discouraging some from enrolling their kids, Alker said.Kids qualify for Medicaid and its sister program, CHIP, at higher income thresholds than their parents, but that's often not communicated clearly to parents.
While the uninsured rate since the start of 2025 hasn't been released, historic trends show that kids who lose Medicaid coverage tend not to get enrolled in other health insurance.
Keep reading
Voting
MS NOW - Just as some Democrats around the country fervently hoped, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton defeated incumbent Sen. John Cornyn in Tuesday’s GOP primary runoff. Had Cornyn prevailed, he likely would have easily won re-election against Democratic nominee James Talarico. But with Paxton on the ballot, Democrats have at least a chance at nabbing the seat. This election is about more than control of the Senate, as important as that is. It also spotlights the issue of corruption, which Democrats can run on not just in Texas, but across the country.
Though for years Democrats have hoped that the right combination of circumstances could turn Texas blue, the state remains consistently red. Democrats have not won any statewide race since 1994. Cornyn was re-elected to his seat by nearly 10% in 2020 and Donald Trump won the state by 12% in 2024. Paxton’s record, however, gives Democrats new hope. Much like Trump, it’s hard to list the Texas attorney general’s scandals because there are so many of them. MORE
Roll Call - A federal court blocked Alabama from using its new congressional map in this fall’s elections, ruling Tuesday that it is still “intentionally discriminatory” against Black voters. The unanimous decision from a three-judge panel to grant a preliminary injunction adds to the legal drama around the state’s redistricting efforts, part of a flurry of fast-moving court fights that already includes a trip to the Supreme Court and rescheduled primary elections.
NY Times - South Carolina’s Senate refused to approve a Trump-backed voting map, which aimed to eliminate the state’s lone majority-Black district.
A judge in Florida let a new map there stand while a lawsuit against it moved through the courts. The map could give Republicans four additional House seats.
Best and worst states for disaster prepaedness
Best States | Worst States | |
| 1. Vermont | 41. Illinois | |
| 2. Massachusetts | 42. Tennessee | |
| 3. Hawaii | 43. Wyoming | |
| 4. Alaska | 44. Kansas | |
| 5. Rhode Island | 45. South Carolina | |
| 6. North Dakota | 46. Alabama | |
| 7. Pennsylvania | 47. Indiana | |
| 8. Utah | 48. Arizona | |
| 9. Maryland | 49. Nevada | |
| 10. South Dakota | 50. Mississippi | |
Key Stats
- Pennsylvania has the most fire stations per capita – 49.2 times more than Hawaii, which has the fewest fire stations.
- Alaska has the most public health funding per capita – 5.1 times more than Nevada, which has the least public health funding.
- Massachusetts has the most physicians per capita – 3 times more than Mississippi, which has the fewest physicians.
Word
SpaceX
Climate change
May 26, 2026
Tourism plummets
Donald Trump
Workers
Military
Ukraine
Middle East
Academic journals publishing fake AI generated stories
Vasant Dhar, a very real professor of data science and AI at New York University, was one of the academics caught in the slop onslaught. In late March, one of Dhar’s colleagues reached out to him about an odd new article listed under Dhar’s name in the International Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research (IJAIR). The paper also appeared on Dhar’s profile on Google Scholar, a service many academics use to track peers’ work.
The article’s content and style seemed different from Dhar’s previous papers — and for good reason. Dhar had not written the piece and did not know what his colleague was referencing. Upon reading the manuscript, Dhar soon concluded that the article was generated by AI and had somehow attached his name to the text.
Congress
Health
The Guardian - The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned that the Ebola outbreak is outpacing response efforts and countries neighbouring the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) are at high risk from the disease.
“We are urgently scaling up operations, but at the moment the epidemic is outpacing us,” said the WHO’s director general, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, as he urged neighbouring countries to take immediate action.
Addressing an online meeting of the African Union about the outbreak, he also announced there had been 220 suspected deaths so far in the current Ebola outbreak and that he would travel to the DRC on Tuesday with Chikwe Ihekweazu, the executive director of the WHO’s health emergencies programme.
Hartmann Report - America has 51 billionaires who made their money from our profit-driven healthcare system, the only one in the developed world. It’s not only obscene that they’re taking so much money from so many of us who have so little; it’s also killing all of us....And the reason it stays that way, according to a shocking new study, is because about half of all white people would rather inflict pain on all of us (including themselves) than allow for a system which may also benefit Black people. More