UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
May 8, 2026
Credit card bans increasing for gambling payments
Climate
Polls
El Paso Times - President Donald Trump's approval rating continues to trend more negatively in several recent polls. In an NPR/PBS News/Marist poll released May 6, the poll found record-high disapproval for Trump at 59%, compared to 37% who approve. The poll also found high levels of disapproval of how Trump is handling Iran and how the president is handling the economy.
A national survey by Pew Research Center that was conducted April 20-26 found that public confidence in Trump on several key issues facing the nation has declined:
FBI Director Patel
Middle East
Workers
Farming
Health
Russia
Anti black voters in the south
The Guardian - The reaction speed of southern states to the US supreme court’s decision last week in Louisiana v Callais has been breathtaking for voting rights activists. One week after Callais, Louisiana’s governor has ordered the state’s ongoing congressional election to be set aside while state lawmakers redraw maps to eliminate a Democratic-majority – that is, a Black-majority – seat covering Baton Rouge.
Immigration
During the first seven months of 2025, the administration arrested 18,400 parents – including 15,000 fathers and 3,000 mothers. They are the parents of 27,000 to 32,000 children.The administration arrested the parents of at least 12,000 US citizen children.Nearly 7,500 fathers and 1,000 mothers who were arrested had a different nationality than at least one of their children. In about half of these families, siblings had different citizenships from each other.On average, the Trump administration has been arresting about 2,300 parents each month and deporting 1,400 parents every month. The Biden administration, in comparison, deported about 700 per month in 2024.
May 7, 2026
New Surgeon General
Media
ICE
Meanwhile. . .
Donald Trump
The difference in lawn care costs
Mowing costs per 1,000 square feet increased more than the national average (+4.8%) between 2024 and 2025 in Maryland (+6.1%) and Virginia (+5.6%), but were not as dramatic in D.C. (+2.8%).
Mowing prices in D.C. are nearly 3X the national average at $17.80 per 1,000 square feet. Prices are much lower in Richmond at $5.70 per 1,000 square feet.
Virginia Beach spends almost $100 more per year on lawn mowing ($505) than the national average ($407). Baltimore spends almost $100 less on mowing ($309) than the national average.
Lawn care pros in Richmond are more likely to get lucky with a tip thanks to the city’s high average tip rate — 30.4% of mowing jobs receiving tips — and high average tip amount, $10.50. Richmond tips an average of 18% of the total job price.
Richmond has an above-average effective tip per mow, at $3.13 per mow, while D.C. pros have an effective tip of $2.10 per mow.
Read the full story here
Artificial Intelligence
Climate
1440 - A tsunami last year in southeastern Alaska was the second-largest in recorded history, a study published yesterday revealed. Waves reached 1,578 feet high, second only to a 1958 tsunami in Alaska that produced up to 1,720-foot waves.
At 5:26 am on Aug. 10, 2025, a mass of rock measuring 83 million cubic yards—24 times the volume of the Great Pyramid of Giza—fell into Alaska’s Tracy Arm fjord (what is a fjord?). The study’s authors blamed climate change, saying the melting glacier next to the mountain left the rock unsupported and vulnerable to collapse. Waves sloshed in the fjord for days and produced seismic activity equivalent to a 5.4-magnitude earthquake, shaking the planet.
🔥 Controlled burns improve forest health and give wildland firefighters a better chance of fighting forest fires in challenging conditions.
🔥 The Forest Service has long said that prescribed burns are a priority. In 2022, the agency set a goal to reduce flammable fuels on an additional 20 million acres over the next decade.
🔥 Prescribed burning fell to about 900,000 acres in 2025, according to an NPR analysis of agency data. In both 2023 and 2024, it reached over 1.6 million acres.
🔥 Forest Service chief Tom Schultz testified that the agency had hired approximately 9,700 firefighters as of early March, a slight increase from last year. Firefighting experts say these new hires don't necessarily replace key support staff that was lost.
🔥 As wildfires become more extreme, agency personnel have less time to reduce vegetation, setting the stage for even larger blazes, experts say.
The billion dollar ballroom budget item
Kamala Harris
NBC News - As former Vice President Kamala Harris considers another run for president, she is also signaling that she has no problem with a public airing of what went wrong last time — telling donors she believes the Democratic National Committee should release its buried autopsy of her failed 2024 campaign, according to a person who has heard the conversations.
The push for the postmortem’s release is one way she’s staying involved in political affairs. She has also toured the country, given speeches to state parties, developed the framework for a policy platform and sounded out fellow Democrats about her next chapter. Publicly, Harris acknowledged that she is “thinking about” another presidential bid.
Interviews with more than a dozen people close to the former vice president paint the picture of a politician who is both moving forward in ways that would be helpful for setting up a run and also declining to view every decision she makes through the prism of how it affects her chances of electoral success.
Take a closer look at the case Harris is building for herself and her potential shortfalls.
Middle East
Iran is evaluating the Trump administration's latest proposal to end the war, Iran's foreign ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baqaei said yesterday. President Trump says the U.S. is on the verge of a deal, and the Iranians are desperate to make one. But there has not yet been a definitive Iranian response to the U.S. proposal. Trump has said that the U.S. has won the war, but very few of his objectives in the conflict have been met, NPR’s Mara Liasson tells Up First. The U.S. has not pulled its military forces from the area. Trump has again said Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. But the president hasn't been happy with what Iran has told him on that matter so far, Liasson says. Many U.S. allies and adversaries are concluding that Trump is making up his talking points about the conflict as he goes, she adds. They believe that he wants to withdraw as soon as possible because the war in Iran is politically damaging him and his party during a midterm year. |
Trump surprised allies in the region on social media on Sunday by announcing “Project Freedom,” the U.S. military mission to escort ships through the Strait of Hormuz to break Tehran’s chokehold on the critical waterway. The move angered the leadership in Saudi Arabia, which informed Washington it would not allow the U.S. military to fly aircraft from Prince Sultan Airbase, southeast of Riyadh, or fly through Saudi airspace to support the effort, the officials said. A call between Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman did not resolve the issue, the two U.S. officials said, forcing the president to pause Project Freedom in order to restore U.S. military access to the critical airspace. Other close Gulf allies were also caught off guard.
Trump had announced the operation over the weekend, and his top national security leaders spent much of Tuesday talking up the effort in public briefings at the Pentagon and White House, onl y to have the president suddenly halt the operation roughly 36 hours after it began.Here’s where things stand in the U.S. and Iran’s efforts to reach a peace deal.
And these are the reasons why it could take more than a peace deal with Iran to resume shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. Meanwhile, France’s aircraft carrier strike group is moving south of the Suez Canal and into the Red Sea in preparation for a potential French-British mission in the strait.
Urban transit
May 6, 2026
Press freedom disappearing
Climate change
“What is considered safe and adequate today may not hold true in the future,” they wrote of the threat to homes, buildings and people.
The threat has been building for years. Over the past century in Chicago, the likelihood of heavy rainstorms has increased sevenfold. These storms can drop more than 8.5 inches of rain in 24 hours.
Designed decades ago, Chicago’s sewers can handle just 2 inches in that short period of time before flooding becomes likely.