May 23, 2026

Donald Ttrump


Donald Trump - “I don't like friends that become very successful. I like people that are just OK. Even if they're terrible, I like that, too. I hate like when I have lunch with somebody that's really, really successful. I hate it. Because he or she is bragging about how great they are. And I hate that when they do that. Because they stopped me from talking about the fact that I became president.” (Via Jim Stewartson)

Hartmann Report -   Why doesn’t anybody mention that Trump himself is the biggest recipient of his “settlement” $1.776 billion fund? The New York Times exposed this in an article with the headline “With Trump’s Deal, a Possible $100 Million I.R.S. Penalty Melts Away.” Back in 2010, the IRS busted him for allegedly claiming a deduction for his failing Chicago tower twice, a crime, and has been trying to collect around $100 million (plus interest) from him ever since. But this new Thug Fund will eliminate all claims against him, his kids, and his “affiliated entities” and businesses, for all past, present, and future times. So he gets to keep the $100 million (plus interest). And the media — other than that one reference in the Times — seems to have completely ignored it. Where’s the outrage? Can you imagine what would happen if Obama had tried to give himself $100 million out of our Treasury?

Polls

Newsweek 
  • Republican approval of Trump’s handling of the economy has fallen from 78 percent to 63 percent in the latest AP-NORC poll
  • Just 16 percent of Americans rate the economy positively, a nearly four-year low in Gallup’s latest survey
  • Fox News finds 77 percent of voters say the economy is in bad shape, the worst reading in over a year
  • Trump’s approval on inflation has dropped to just 24 percent, including majority disapproval among Republicans in the Fox News poll
  • Fox News poll released this week shows Trump’s standing across rural America has sharply deteriorated in the network’s polling trend. His net approval among rural voters has swung 34 points since early 2025, falling from +20 to -14. Among rural white voters, the drop is nearly as steep—a 33-point slide from +27 to -6.

Commencement speakers get negative reaction for citing AI

Independent, UK -   From coast to coast, commencement speakers have faced an audience of booing graduates each time they bring up artificial intelligence.

The boos came when music executive Scott Borchetta told the grads at Middle Tennessee State University, “It’s a tool. Make it work for you.” The capped-and-gowned University of Central Florida crowd jeered when real estate executive Gloria Caulfield called AI the “next industrial revolution.”

But no one got it worse than former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, whose May 15 speech at the University of Arizona was booed, nearly without interruption, for minutes on end.

“It was honestly one of the most surreal experiences,” Bailey Ekstrom, 21, an economics and political science graduate who was in the crowd, told The Independent. She had never seen campus opinion so unified, a mini-referendum suggesting the generation inheriting the post-AI world isn’t all that thrilled about it.

Emperor penguins declared endangered


The iconic species was added to the global "Red List" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature with a dire warning:  

They said that the penguins' population decline was entirely due to human-driven climate change — and that if the governments of the world don't get fossil fuel emissions under control now, this species and many others are facing an extinction crisis.

Jeffrey Epstein

Daily Beast - A New York installation displaying millions of physical files related to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein will be going nationwide.  Organizers behind the popular “Donald J. Trump and Jeffrey Epstein Memorial Reading Room” exhibit are taking the concept on a nationwide bus tour this summer, the Daily Beast has learned.

....Miles Taylor, an organizer of the tour and former Trump DHS official turned Trump antagonist, said that visitors to the New York exhibit have been “completely blown away” by the sheer volume of information the government had on the sex pest. Organizers say 3,437 volumes weigh more than eight tons in total.

....The exhibit puts a particular focus on Epstein’s long friendship with President Donald Trump, which ended sometime in the 2000s. The president’s name is mentioned thousands of times in the Epstein files, although he has denied any wrongdoing.

Both Republicans and Democrats are more concerned than excited about AI

Pew Research -   Today, nearly identical shares of Republicans and Democrats say they are more concerned than excited about the increased use of AI in daily life – 50% and 51%, respectively, according to a Pew Research Center survey of U.S. adults conducted in June. (In this analysis, Republicans and Democrats include independents who lean toward each party.)

Republicans and Democrats similarly report feeling equally concerned and excited about the increased use of AI, while about one-in-ten in each group are more excited than concerned.

This represents a notable shift from previous years. Since 2021, Republicans have been more likely than Democrats to say they feel more concerned than excited about AI’s growing use. But the share of Republicans who say this has decreased 9 percentage points since 2023.

Meanwhile, Democrats’ concerns over AI have steadily grown. The 51% of Democrats who are more concerned than excited about AI’s increased use in daily life is up from 46% in 2023 and 31% in 2021.

Overall, Americans have grown more concerned than excited over the increased use of AI, with half saying this today, up from 37% in 2021

Cuba

The Hill -   Cuba experts, Democrats in Congress, and even a Republican expressed doubts about the island’s ability or interest in launching an offensive attack on the U.S. “You know, that’s completely insane, right? Look, the Cuban regime is an appalling regime, but it is no more a national security threat than Nicaragua is. It’s just insane to say that it is, and especially if it’s done in the service of military action,” said Rep. Jim Himes (Conn.), the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee. 

“So, no, Cuba is not on the Top 10 list of anybody’s national security threats.”

Cuban leaders have vehemently denied they have any plans to attack the U.S. and have said they do not pose a security threat.

They also blame the U.S. for an oil blockade that has devastated the country’s fuel and electricity supply.  Amid ongoing negotiations with Cuban leaders, an administration official told Axios that Cuba had acquired 300 military drones and had discussed plans to attack the U.S. base at Guantánamo Bay, military targets near the country, or even Key West.

Paul Krugman sees financial things getting really ugly

Alternet -   Following the Friday news that consumer sentiment has dropped to its all-time low amid an economy roiled by the consequences of President Donald Trump’s tariff program and war on Iran, Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman warns that things are about to get “really, really ugly.”

“The numbers are terrible, people,” he said. “We’re hitting a record low on consumer sentiment, which fits in with the general picture. We know that people are very upset about prices. They’re very upset about economic management. They just don’t feel that there’s anyone making any sense who’s in charge of things. Which is all true.”

And according to Krugman, while people are rightly worried about this news, “that is actually not the big issue. The really big issue is inflation expectations.”

Congress

Time -  Democrats issued a sharp rebuke of House Republicans after they abruptly canceled a planned war powers vote aimed at ending the conflict in Iran unless President Donald Trump gains the authorization of Congress.“We had the votes to pass it today. Every Democrat was on board, we had the sufficient number of Republicans on board,” said Rep. Gregory Meeks of New York, who sponsored the resolution and serves as the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

"Let’s be clear: Republicans pulled this vote because they knew they were going to lose it. They know this war is a political and strategic disaster,” he later added.

According to Meeks, the vote “procedurally” must happen when lawmakers return after ?the Memorial Day recess in early June.

The 10 most vulnerable House members, less than 6 months from Election Day

Mike Johnson thinks your rights come from God, not government

Newsworthy News — When the Speaker of the House says Americans’ rights come from God—not government—he revives a foundational promise and a fierce modern fight over who actually guards your liberty. Speaker Mike Johnson cited the Declaration of Independence to argue rights are endowed by a Creator, not granted by the state. Johnson linked the claim to Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address to frame a civic creed that must be taught and defended.

Immigration

US green card applicants will now have to return to home countries to apply, DHS says


Newsworthy News -   The Department of Justice swore in the largest class of immigration judges in its history to handle deportation cases. More than 3.2 million cases are stuck in the immigration court backlog, creating enormous pressure to move faster. Most of the new judges come from law-enforcement, prosecutorial, or military backgrounds aligned with tougher immigration enforcement. Critics warn that turbocharging speed risks turning “immigration courts” into “deportation courts,” where due process becomes an afterthought.

Google Changes Its Search Box for the First Time in 25 Years

NY Times -   For 25 years, Google’s iconic search box was a long, slender bar where people typed in keywords like “World Cup.” But over the past three years, artificial intelligence allowed people to type in longer, more complex questions like “Who are the top 24 teams in the World Cup and what chance does the United States have of advancing?”

On Tuesday, Google said the A.I. shift had inspired it to overhaul the dimensions of its search bar for the first time since 2001. The box is getting bigger and more interactive so that people can ask even longer questions and upload photographs and videos into queries. In addition, people can ask follow-up questions with a chatbot on Google’s main search page. The company will also offer digital assistants, known as agents, to automate searches so that someone who may be apartment hunting can be notified of a new listing without opening a real estate site like Zillow.

Middle East

Headline USA -   Bloomberg reported on Thursday that during the US-Israeli bombing campaign against Iran that began on February 28, Iranian forces destroyed more than two dozen US MQ-9 Reaper drones, or nearly $1 billion worth of the unmanned aircraft. The number represents about 20% of the Pentagon’s MQ-9 inventory. The drones have been used for nearly two decades in strikes as part of the US “War on Terror,” which continues today in Somalia, Yemen, and now Nigeria, but when used against an enemy with air defenses, the MQ-9 is extremely vulnerable.

10 facts about Cubans in the U.S.

Mental health

More from this survey

May 22, 2026

The end of CBS radio and the start of my journalism

Sam Smith -  The end of CBS radio is especially sad for me because when I was a young teen I became a regular fan of Edward R Murrow, the major news voice of CBS. As the Librarian of Congress Archibald MacLeish said of Murrow's WWII coverage,  "You burned the city of London in our houses and we felt the flames that burned it. You laid the dead of London at our doors and we knew that the dead were our dead, were mankind's dead. You have destroyed the superstition that what is done beyond 3,000 miles of water is not really done at all."

As a Harvard teenager who would become news director of the college radio station, I almost flunked out thanks my involvement with journalism. But I also, at the end of my sophomore year, got a summer job at Washington DC's all news station, WWDC, which turned into a job  when I graduated.I covered everything from fires to the White House and when I wasn't out on the street, I was writing nine newscasts a day. Among my role models: CBS news

And it all started with Edward R, Murrow which is why I'll truly miss CBS radio. 

The law

NY Times -   A federal judge on Friday dismissed the criminal case against the immigrant Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, ruling that the Trump administration had brought human smuggling charges against him as part of a vindictive effort to punish him for challenging his wrongful deportation to El Salvador last year.

The ruling by the judge, Waverly D. Crenshaw Jr., was a stinging rebuke of both the Justice Department and its top official, Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general. Judge Crenshaw singled out Mr. Blanche for criticism in his 32-page opinion, pointing to statements he had made that prosecutors reawakened a dormant investigation into Mr. Abrego Garcia only after a different judge in Maryland questioned the administration’s decision to deport him — along with scores of other immigrants — to a notorious Salvadoran prison in March 2025.

Mr. Abrego Garcia, who is still fighting the administration’s efforts to expel him from the country, is perhaps the best-known symbol of President Trump's aggressive deportation agenda. And his release from criminal charges because of what Judge Crenshaw called their “vindictive taint” was another blow to Mr. Trump’s immigration crackdown, which had already been battered by, among other things, the killings of two protesters in Minnesota by federal agents.

Alternet -   Bloomberg reports a senior Washington federal judge lobbed a rare rebuke condemning president by President Donald Trump’s “vitriolic attacks” against the judiciary have led to an increase in violent threats.

“The President knows that mob mentality is a powerful force. And dog whistles count, too,” said Senior Judge Paul Friedman of the US District Court for the District of Columbia.

Speaking to a crowd of lawyers and judges earlier this year, Friedman said Trump, since winning reelection in 2024, has “ratcheted up to a new level his personal, vitriolic attacks on judges who have ruled against him or with whom he disagrees,” said Friedman, adding that his attacks “have gotten more partisan, more personal, more threatening, and more purposefully misleading than ever before.”

Combined with Trump’s “incitement” of the Jan. 6, 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol and eventual pardons of those rioters, Friedman said Trump “contributed significantly” toward a trend of threatening judges.

It is a damning blast from a sitting judge, but Friedman is only the latest judge to warn of rising threats to judges and how the intimidations impact the judicial system’s independence.

Press Watch -   The stunning collapse of a politically-motivated prosecution in Chicago, which came after a judge discovered that Justice Department lawyers had engaged in gross misconduct to secure a grand jury indictment, ought to be an inflection point for coverage of Trump’s DOJ.

The Chicago case makes for an extraordinary read. The “Broadview Six” were initially indicted on felony conspiracy charges for protesting outside an ICE facility. But all charges were dropped on Thursday after Judge April Perry saw a grand jury transcript that prosecutors had resisted turning over to her.

It contained numerous examples of misconduct, including a prosecutor personally “vouching” about the strength of the case. The defendants are now asking the judge to order prosecutors to preserve records of all their communications. It’s basically a huge mess and a vindication of the suspicion that prosecutors, under pressure from Washington, are abusing their power.

Historically, charges emerging from federal grand jury proceedings have been seen to carry a certain amount of credibility. The presumption by reporters, and by the general public, has been that the prosecutor was acting in good faith and had presented clear evidence under a reasonable legal theory sufficient to persuade a bunch of ordinary citizens that the person was probably guilty -- in short, that prosecutors had a serious case.  That presumption, to use a legal phrase, is now moot.

So from this point on, reporters should treat grand jury indictments – particularly in political cases -- with great skepticism.  The thrust of their news articles – including their headlines – should be that the Justice Department has made a decision to go after the defendant, not that prosecutors have overcome any sort of significant legal hurdle. 

Reporters should also explain that grand juries have historically been highly susceptible to prosecution arguments – ergo their reputation as “rubber stamps” and the origin of the saying that “a prosecutor could get a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich.”

Reporters should provide background about Trump’s reforging of the Justice Department into a tool of retribution that routinely launches bogus investigations and prosecutions of people who have opposed him. They should note that prosecutors are under intense pressure to please the White Hous

Donald Trump

BBC - The US Department of Justice has announced that this week's unprecedented settlement of President Donald Trump's lawsuit over the leaking of his tax returns blocks the IRS from reviewing tax filings that Trump, his family and his businesses made in the past. Some lawmakers and legal experts say the department has violated federal law with its addendum to the agreement that shuts down current possible tax audits and investigations. The justice department, however, says the addendum is simply a customary waiver used in legal settlements.

In January, Trump and his two eldest sons sued the IRS [Internal Revenue Service] for $10bn over leaks of their business and personal tax returns. It was the first time a president had sued the US government.  On Monday, the justice department announced the suit was settled and the government had agreed to create an almost $1.8bn (£1.3bn) fund to compensate people who believe it unfairly investigated them. It has already inspired one lawsuit, as well as resistance from within Trump's own Republican party.

People  -   Donald Trump Jr. and Bettina Anderson are rumored to be tying the knot over the upcoming Memorial Day weekend. When asked by a reporter if he planned to attend his son's ceremony, President Donald Trump was noncommittal, saying it was "not good timing"
"I have a thing called Iran and other things," the president said, after noting that he was going to "try and make it"

Alternet -   Count Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) among the sparse but growing crew of Republicans with the courage to criticize President Donald Trump as he crushes the GOP.  Bacon is also among the ranks of Republicans retiring this year, so he finds his courage “on the way out the door” as some critics have accused. Nevertheless, from the safety of his retirement, Bacon is lobbing major pushback against Trump’s controversial slush fund settlement proposal on CNN.

“This whole thing smells,” Bacon told CNN. “You have the president is the is the plaintiff, but he's also in charge of the defendants. So he's, in a sense, negotiating with himself. And most people look at that. And that's not impartial. It surely looks partial. So there has to be some kind of arbitrator or some kind of like a judge or something that helps provide an impartial decision on who would get this money.”

Price of gas

Data: AAA. Map: Sara Wise/Axios

Meanwhile. . .

A guide to converting your lawn into a wildlife friendly garden 


Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard resigned today, citing her husband’s battle with bone cancer. Four Cabinet members — all of whom are women — have departed in the last three months.

Trump's nominee for Surgeon General

The Guardian  - Donald Trump’s nominee for surgeon general sells an herbal supplement that contains an ingredient prohibited by the US military and which health experts have warned can cause liver damage.  Dr Nicole Saphier’s record of selling dietary supplements, which are only loosely regulated in the US, has raised concern among doctors and consumer advocates, some of whom allege she sells “snake oil”.  Amazon said it had opened an investigation into the products after the Guardian inquired whether they were in compliance with the company’s policies on supplement sales.

The profit in immigrant warehouses

Alternet America - It turns out the secret to making money in real estate is knowing someone who controls a $40 billion federal budget.  Under former Secretary Kristi Noem, the Department of Homeland Security was planning to spend nearly $40 billion to buy up dozens of warehouses around the country to convert them into makeshift detention camps capable of holding 1,000 to 10,000 people each.

Many of the warehouses had been sitting on the market for years. Now DHS is buying them at a massive markup. One warehouse in Socorro, Texas, recently valued at $11 million, was purchased by ICE from the company El Paso Logistics II LLC for $123 million — more than a thousand percent profit....

The administration has already purchased enough warehouse space to hold more than 41,500 people at once. The friends of the White House who couldn’t unload those properties are now considerably less burdened. America’s taxpayers are picking up the difference.

Gavin Newsom

Bloomberg - Gavin Newsom is trying to have it both ways on AI as he prepares for a probable presidential bid in 2028, writes Erika D. Smith. It’s a fine line trying to keep one of his state’s most profitable industries happy while navigating a growing national backlash against it

Canada

Bloomberg - Should they stay or should they go? That’s the question Albertans may soon confront when voters in Canada’s energy heartland decide this fall whether to begin a legal process that could ultimately lead to secession.

  • Premier Danielle Smith says she’ll hold a referendum on Oct. 19 in a bid to contain independence sentiment within her United Conservative Party, which has governed the province since 2019.
  • The decision follows a court ruling that blocked an earlier push to petition the government for a secession vote. The judge sided with indigenous groups, whose treaty rights predate Alberta’s creation as a Canadian province in 1905.
  • Polls show separatism remains a minority view, with especially weak support among women and residents of major cities.
  • The French-speaking province of Quebec offers a cautionary tale. Rising separatist sentiment there in the 1970s drove many businesses to Toronto from Montreal. Quebec voters ultimately rejected independence in a razor-thin 1995 referendum.

Trump grip in GOP primaries masks vulnerabilities in the fall

The Hill -   President Trump’s grip on Republican primaries appears tighter than ever as a string of GOP officeholders who came under his wrath fell to defeat in contests over the past month in Indiana, Kentucky and Louisiana.  Yet there’s a disconnect for the party, which is facing alarm bells about its standing as it heads into the midterms....

Trump’s power in a GOP primary may not be enough to prevent heavy Republican losses in the fall when more independents and Democrats are also casting votes for the House and Senate.

“It’s simple: He has a hold on the Republican base, which you see come out in primaries,” said Susan Del Percio, a veteran GOP strategist who does not support Trump. “Most primary voters are Donald Trump voters, but not all Donald Trump voters are primary voters. They only show up every four years for Donald Trump.”

House rejects bill to further museum honoring women

Roll Call -  A once-bipartisan effort broke down Thursday as the House rejected a bill to pave the way for construction of a Smithsonian museum honoring women.  Previously championed by both sides of the aisle, the legislation saw last-minute changes at a House Administration Committee markup in March that led Democrats to withdraw their backing. The new version would prohibit exhibits from including transgender women or girls, as well as give the final say on location to President Donald Trump. 

“They have shown that they are willing to destroy a bipartisan bill in order to respond to the White House,” said Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández, D-N.M., who chairs the Democratic Women’s Caucus. 

The bill would allow the museum to be built within the reserve of the National Mall, an area where construction is tightly restricted. Although the bill names the South Monument site across from the National Museum of African American History and Culture, it would also give the president the ability to “designate an alternative site” at his discretion. Democrats have decried the changes as a “poison pill” that derailed years of work.

Democrats review of 2024 gets criticized

Congress leaving town for a week

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche

Alternet -   Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche is desperate to land the job permanently, and according to a new report from Politico, to do so, he has launched his "most audacious move yet" in a bid to cement the Justice Department as President Donald Trump's personal law firm.

Blanche, who previously served as Trump's personal attorney, was appointed as an acting replacement at the DOJ following the ouster of Pam Bondi in April. Since then, he has made several high-profile moves, which observers have chalked up to his attempts to curry favor with Trump and land the full-on AG job.

"When Todd Blanche announced charges against the Southern Poverty Law Center last month, critics accused him of placating President Donald Trump in an effort to secure the attorney general job permanently," Politico explained on Friday. "Blanche weathered similar criticism about a week later, when the Justice Department indicted longtime Trump foe James Comey a second time, accusing him of threatening the president’s life with an Instagram photo of seashells."

Now, Blanche and the DOJ have spearheaded a wildly controversial new settlement for Trump, closing out his suit against the IRS by establishing a $1.776 billion "anti-weaponization" fund, to be paid out to individuals who have supposedly been targeted by the government for their political beliefs. Despite that claim, it has been widely interpreted as a means for funneling money to Trump's allies and supporters. The settlement also contains the unprecedented provision that neither Trump nor his family can ever be audited by the IRS ever again.

Weather

NY Times -   El Niño is the name given to powerful shifts in Pacific Ocean winds and water temperatures that can drastically transform global weather patterns. Over the centuries these natural patterns have sparked epic droughts and heat waves, and have intensified epidemics.

Some academics even claim to see the fingerprints of El Niño on political and economic crises in ancient Egypt, or on the downfall of the Moche civilization in present-day Peru, more than 1,000 years ago. And in 1877 and 1878, a famine fueled by El Niño killed millions of people across the tropics, hardening inequities that, as one research paper put it, “would later be characterized as the ‘first world’ and ‘third world.’”

Right now, the world is entering a new El Niño phase. Researchers are warning it could be one of the strongest on record and are invoking this history as an admonition that natural forces, when they reach their highest magnitude, can lead to profound volatility and hardship.

In general, El Niño makes for wetter conditions in some parts of the Americas while suppressing the Atlantic hurricane season. The phenomenon raises the risk of dryness in South and Southeast Asia, Australia, and southern Africa.

Of course, the current El Niño is in the early stages of formation and might not live up to the hype. But if the forecasts prove accurate, it would be a whopper and its consequences would play out across a world that has grown far more resilient but also has new vulnerabilities.