July 14, 2026

Weather

Patriotwise - As a record-breaking “heat dome” bakes half the country and quietly kills dozens, many Americans are learning that the deadliest weather threat is not storms or floods, but the kind of extreme heat our leaders still treat like business as usual.

Nearly half of the United States faces “major” or “extreme” heat risk under a sprawling heat dome.

More than 1,300 temperature records fell over the July 1–4 holiday window across 40 states.

At least 44 deaths have already been tied to the July 4 heat wave, with New Jersey hit hardest.

Experts say extreme heat is America’s deadliest weather, yet many communities lack basic protection.

Starting in late June 2026, a massive high-pressure “heat dome” locked itself over much of North America, trapping hot air and driving temperatures far above normal across central and eastern states. Meteorologists warned days ahead that this was not routine summer heat, but a long-lasting event likely to break records and threaten lives. By June 28, the National Weather Service placed nearly half of the U.S. population—about 180 million people—under a “major” or “extreme” heat risk, a staggering share of the country.


Polls



πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ 2028 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 🟦 Harris: 48% πŸŸ₯ Vance: 43% — πŸŸ₯ Vance: 45% 🟦 Newsom: 38% — πŸŸ₯ Vance: 45% 🟦 AOC: 38% —— 🟦 Harris: 46% πŸŸ₯ Rubio: 41% — πŸŸ₯ Rubio: 40% 🟦 Newsom: 36% — πŸŸ₯ Rubio: 39% 🟦 AOC: 38%
πŸ“Š National Poll by Morning Consult Pres. Trump Approve: 45% (+2) Disapprove: 53% (=) VP Vance Favorability Favorable: 45% (+7) Unfavorable: 44% (-3) —— Generic Ballot 🟦 Democrats: 46% (=) πŸŸ₯ Republicans: 43% (+1)
Zogby Analytics

Donald Trump

NY Times - President Trump has paid the writer E. Jean Carroll $5.6 million that was owed to her as a result of a jury's finding that he was liable for sexually assaulting her in a Manhattan department store in the 1990s and then defaming her, federal court records show.

The money, which had been held in escrow while Mr. Trump appealed the 2023 jury award, was disbursed to Ms. Carroll last week, according to a note added to the online court docket in the case on Tuesday.

The payment came after the U.S. Supreme Court declined the president's latest attempt to appeal the verdict, which prompted the judge overseeing the case to order that the money be released to Ms. Carroll.

Alternet -  ­Mary L. Trump, the niece of President Donald Trump, claimed in a new interview that her uncle's deterioration is being hastened by "decades" of living with untreated "psychiatric disorders," which has created a "perfect storm," per The Daily Beast.

The younger Trump is the daughter of Fred Trump Jr., the president's late older brother, and a clinical psychologist. Over the last several years, she has emerged as the only real critic of her uncle's political agenda from within his own family, calling out his policies in numerous books and interviews, while also warning of the family histories and conditions that have created his warped psyche.

On Monday, she spoke with former CNN White House correspondent Jessica Yellin for a discussion facilitated by Big Tent USA. As The Daily Beast reported, she was pressed about "how she would assess the president’s current mental and physical state as someone who knows him personally," and surmised that he is currently dealing with a "perfect storm" of circumstances, worsened by leaving serious psychiatric disorders untreated for "decades."

“He’s somebody who has lived for decades with longstanding, undiagnosed, and untreated psychiatric disorders," she said. "As with many illnesses, including psychiatric illnesses, when they’re left untreated, they worsen over time.”

She touched on several other factors indicating that his physical health is in serious decline, including his swollen ankles, bruised hands and apparent difficulty with walking or standing for extended periods. She also noted the much-discussed issues he appears to have with staying awake, even when he is on-camera during important events.

Meanwhile. . .

Lawnstarter - When Is the Best Time to Water Your Lawn in Hot Weather? The answer is between 5 a.m. and 9 a.m. Here’s why: The EPA estimates that up to 50% of outdoor water is lost to evaporation, wind, or runoff, so if you water at noon you're essentially watering the air. Water at night and you're inviting fungal disease. LawnStarter 

First Time Home Buyers

WalletHub - With just 21% of home purchases last year made by first-time buyers, compared to the historical average of 40%, the personal-finance company WalletHub today released its report on the Best & Worst Cities for First-Time Home Buyers in 2026, to identify where people stand to save the most money and enjoy the best living conditions.

WalletHub took the pulse of real estate in 300 cities of varying sizes using 22 key metrics. The data set ranges from housing affordability to the real-estate tax rate to the crime rate.
 
Best Cities for First-Time Home
Buyers
 Worst Cities for First-Time Home
Buyers
1. Palm Bay, FL
2. Surprise, AZ
3. Gilbert, AZ
4. Tampa, FL
5. Yuma, AZ
6. Peoria, AZ
7. Boise, ID
8. Chandler, AZ
9. Orlando, FL
10. Murfreesboro, TN
 291. Glendale, CA
292. San Mateo, CA
293. Los Angeles, CA
294. Costa Mesa, CA
295. San Francisco, CA
296. Anchorage, AK
297. Oakland, CA
298. Santa Barbara, CA
299. Santa Monica, CA
300. Berkeley, CA
     
Best vs. Worst
  • Flint, Michigan, has the most affordable housing (median house price divided by median annual household income), which is 9.8 times cheaper than in Santa Barbara, California, the city with the least affordable housing.
     
  • Honolulu has the lowest real-estate tax rate, which is nine times lower than in Paterson, New Jersey, the city with the highest.
     
  • Flint, Michigan, has the highest rent-to-price ratio, which is 12.5 times higher than in Santa Monica, California, the city with the lowest.
     
  • Baton Rouge, Louisiana, has the lowest total home-energy cost per month, which is 4.8 times lower than in Honolulu, the city with the highest.
To view the full report and your city’s rank, please visit:

ICE

NY Times -  - The Trump administration has ordered Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers to halt most vehicle stops while carrying out operations across the country, according to people familiar with the matter who were not authorized to speak publicly about the directive.

The order comes after ICE officers killed two people over the past week in Houston and the coastal city of Biddeford, Maine, amid a recent surge in immigration arrests. Both were shot after agents tried to stop their vehicles, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

The pause on vehicle stops could hamper the agency's ability to increase arrests as it faces increasing pressure to deliver on the president's promise of mass deportations. But it comes as some influential lawmakers and state officials have demanded answers about the latest shootings.

Robert Reich -  From early 2025 through mid-2026, federal immigration agents have fired on more than 20 people, many of whom were shot in their vehicles. At least seven of these people died. In some cases, video evidence has undermined the accounts initially provided by federal officials.

Over the same period of time, more than 50 people have died in ICE custody, often because authorities refused to treat acute medical conditions.

The Guardian -   It’s been a brutal tactic deployed by local and federal law enforcement officials time and again over the past year: using teargas, rubber bullets and pepper spray to control protests outside ICE detention centers or during enforcement operations.

Now, a new report lays bare the scale of the use of these crowd control weapons during anti-immigration demonstrations across the US, including hundreds of incidents that resulted in lasting and traumatic injuries.

The report and an interactive map was created by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) and the Human Rights Center at the University of California, Berkeley (HRC) and released this week. Doctors and human rights experts with PHR and HRC documented 412 verified incidents of the “misuse” of these crowd control weapons, also known as “less-lethal weapons”, from June 2025 through May 2026.

“This is a concerning story,” said Dr Rohini Haar, the lead author of the report and a PHR medical expert, in an interview with the Guardian.

The report documented 203 injuries stemming from the alleged misuse of the crowd control weapons. Some of the injuries included blindings, traumatic brain injuries, lacerations, fractures and contusions.

The researchers struggled to confirm the full scale of the injuries, because “visual investigative techniques cannot adequately assess invisible injuries, such as chemical injury or chronic pain or hearing loss”. 

“The true number of injuries is likely far greater,” the report adds.

Time -   When he took over as Homeland Security Secretary in March, Markwayne Mullin was intent on directing the agency toward a quieter approach to immigration enforcement. 

The aim was to take Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) out of the headlines after a scandal-plagued year for the agency that culminated in a widely criticized and deadly enforcement surge in Minnesota.

Highly publicized surges into cities were stopped, as was an accelerated training program for new ICE officers that critics said was sending inadequately trained agents onto the streets. 

But arrests continued apace, and two fatal shootings by ICE agents within six days now threaten to create a new groundswell of opposition to President Donald Trump’s already unpopular mass deportation agenda.

The circumstances in the killing of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo by ICE agents in Houston on July 7 are strikingly similar to previous fatal shootings. The 52-year-old builder and father of three was on his way to work when he was pursued by federal agents. ICE said Araujo, a Mexican national, ignored commands and attempted to ram an agent, who fired his weapon in self-defense.

As in the killing of Renee Good, the ICE account of the shooting has been disputed by witnesses, who said there was no agent in front of the car at the time of the shooting, and that the fatal shots came from the side of the vehicle...

On Monday, a 26-year-old native of Colombia who was not the target of a warrant was killed by a federal immigration agent in Biddeford, Maine. Maine Immigrants' Rights Coalition, a local advocacy group, said the man was authorized to work in the U.S. 

Mullin may have kept ICE out of the news for a while, but the arrests did not stop. More than 10,000 people were arrested in a five-day surge by ICE at the end of June.


Tales from the Attic: How one guy became an activist

Note: This 1966 article uses the term "Negro" which was standard for the time.

Sam Smith, The Idler, 1966 - Monday January 24th was the day that Washington thumbed it nose at 0. Roy Chalk. There is a long list of grievances against Mr. Chalk a Washingtonian could compile, but it is enough here to mention that Mr.  Chalk is head of the D. C. Transit System and that Mr. Chalk, on the day in question, was in the midst of petitioning the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Commission for a fare increase from twenty-five cents to thirty cents. On the morning of the 24th, about  7 a.m., my alarm went off, but I didn't hear it.  About twenty minutes to eight I awoke and remembered the promise I had made to myself to take part in the bus boycott that day. I don't like demonstrating, probably for the same reason I don't like ringing door-bells during a campaign, being on committees, or attending civic meetings. The theory of democracy. I concluded long ago, is fine: the practice of it is often a pain in the neck.

Still, thirty cents is a lot of money to pay for a bus ride. It's more than most public transit riders in the country pay. So I hauled myself out of bed, swallowed a cup of coffee, warmed up my '54 Chrysler, and made my way to 6th and H Sts. NE, one of the assembly points established for volunteer drivers providing free car rides during the boycott. There a boycott organizer filled my car with three high school girls and a middle aged and rather fat lady. A bus drove by and it was empty. "They're all empty," the lady said.

The boycott had been organized by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, with the help of numerous civic action organizations.  SNCC and the other groups charged that the fare hike was discriminatory since it would largely hurt Negro Washington.

Washington is a city of considerable apathy in local matters. It has been so long denied home rule that it tends not to believe that the voice of the people matters. It often accepts its fate with a passivity that would surprise more politically conscious communities. When demonstrations and protests are organized, the police are likely to outnumber the demonstrators. Against this background, SNCC's plan seemed audacious. It was hard enough to get 100 Washingtonians organized. SNCC was trying to mobilize tens of thousands. SNCC proposed that people walk, hitch a ride, or stay home on the day of the boycott. High school students were urged to organize walk-ins. Cars and volunteer drivers were sought. to pick up riders along the boycotted bus lines. Domestics were asked to tell their employers that they would have to be picked up. SNCC set up a communications headquarters, procured radio equipped cars, and established car assembly points. Handbills were widely distributed, stuck under doors and beneath the windshield wipers of parked cars. The police stationed additional men along the boycott routes.

"It's beautiful," the man in the lightly frayed brown overcoat said after he told me he was headed for 17th St. NW. "It's working and it's beautiful. Hey, you see those two there? Let's try and get them." I pulled over to the right lane by a stop where two men stood. "Hey man, why spend thirty cents? Get in," my rider called to the pair. "You headed down town?" "Yeah, get in." "Great. It's working, huh? Great!"

The boycott was like an informal game of touch football on a Saturday afternoon. Nobody was too good at the game but everyone who played seemed to enjoy it just the same. Not everyone played. As I made my way back from downtown, I stopped at several bus stops. "Fight the fare increase: ride for free," I'd call out. Most of those waiting for the bus were white. Some pretended they didn't hear me and looked the other way.  Others stared as if I were a little crazy. Still others shook their head in that nervous, embarrassed way people do when they're refusing to buy pencils from a crippled man on the street corner. During the day I carried 71 people. Only five of them were white.

When someone offered some a free ride they were afraid: Better not, he might rape me. It's too bad people get scared when they start to succeed. At the delicatessen at 24th and Benning, one of the assembly points, a young, wavy-haired Negro who worked with SNCC greeted me. "Been waiting all morning for a car to work from here; said they were going to have one, but they didn't send it." We got into my car and continued east out to Benning. Lots of empty buses. "We've got to live together, man. You're white and you can't help it. I'm Negro and I can't help it. But we still can get along. That's the way I feel about it." I agreed.

"You ever worked with SNCC before?" "Nope." "Well, I'll tell you, man, you hear a lot of things. But they're a good group. They stick together. You know like if you get in trouble you know they're going to be in there with you. If you get threatened they'll have people around you all the time. They stick together. That's good, man."

People were sticking together well that Monday. SNCC estimated D. C. Transit lost 130,000 to 150,000 fares during the boycott. None of us knew whether the boycott would have any effect on the fare increase. Two days later, however, the transit commission, in a unanimous decision, denied D. C. Transit the hike. The commission's executive director dryly told reporters that the boycott played no part in the decision. He was probably right. The commission worried about such things as cash dividends, investor's equity, rate of return, depreciated value, company rate base. The boycotters worried about a nickel more a ride. Fortunately, it all came out the same. But in case it hadn't, the boycott organizers were preparing to renew the protest. It would have been interesting.

After the bus boycott, I wrote a letter to its leader congratulating him and offering to help in the future. Not long after the leader, Marion S. Barry, and his colleague, L. D. Pratt, were sitting in my apartment talking about how I could help in SNCC's public relations. I readily agreed, became Marion's PR guy and, for the first time, joined a movement.

Marco Rubio is turning Venezuela into a colony

MS NOW -  After the U.S. military detained then-Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in January, Secretary of State Marco Rubio outlined a three-part plan for Venezuela: stabilization, recovery, and transition to democracy. But what the U.S. is doing to Venezuela counts as nothing but colonization.

An astonishing report by The New York Times, based on interviews with more than a dozen officials and people close to governments in Washington and Caracas, details the imperial overhaul of Venezuela’s government and economy after Trump’s ouster of Maduro. The U.S. isn’t just setting up an economically advantageous policy regime to access Venezuela’s oil, but is now directly controlling much of Venezuela’s state revenue. “The U.S. Treasury receives the revenue from most of Venezuela’s exports, then disburses it to Venezuela through the country’s banking system, a relationship akin to parents handing out allowances to children,” the Times reports. “Mr. Rubio and his team set the conditions on what that money can be spent on, and by whom.”

The U.S. is systematically stripping Venezuela’s government of its right to self-determination.

That’s just one of many remarkable new structures and rules that Rubio has installed to give him immense control over Venezuelan affairs. According to the Times, Rubio is administering the application of U.S. sanctions against Venezuela and determining who in the country can do business with the world without getting hit by penalties. He’s helping set up U.S. access to Venezuela’s oil resources, while boxing out European companies. He’s constantly issuing edicts by text message directly to Acting Venezuelan President Delcy RodrΓ­guez, who has turned to him for sign-off on major political appointments, including the minister of defense. When Venezuela issued a moderately critical statement of the U.S. for bombing Iran, the Trump administration quickly and successfully pressured Rodrigeuz’s administration to rescind it. Rubio’s control over Venezuela on behalf of Trump is so total and so outmoded that other officials in the Trump administration have reportedly started calling him “viceroy.” We’re back in the colonial era.

Trump extends National Guard deployment in Washington into 2029

MS NOW -   President Trump is extending the National Guard’s presence in Washington until January 2029 — the longest such deployment in U.S. history — even as a new study finds it has done little to curb the crime it was sent to fight.

The deployment, which a Defense Department official confirmed will now run until Inauguration Day in 2029, began nearly a year ago with Trump’s emergency order to crack down on crime in the capital. In recent weeks, the president doubled the troop presence to more than 5,000 to support events tied to the nation’s 250th anniversary, making the mission the most expensive Guard mobilization the country has seen.

Yet a study by the nonpartisan Niskanen Center found the deployment has had only a marginal effect on crime. The Guard’s presence cut opportunistic offenses such as auto theft and larceny by 24 percent but had no measurable effect on violent crime such as robbery and homicide. The effects “were concentrated in opportunistic property offenses in public spaces,” the study concluded — largely because troops were posted in tourist corridors and around federal buildings rather than in the city’s high-crime neighborhoods.

The mission also comes at a premium. At $607 per soldier per day — the highest cost of any deployment to a major American city — the operation has cost $330 million so far and is projected to top $600 million by August, more than the Metropolitan Police Department’s entire $599 million annual budget. A District police officer, by comparison, costs roughly $384 a day.

A Trump golf course to avoid

Daily Beast - A local government inspection found the restaurant at one of Donald Trump’s golf clubs is positively crawling with health code violations.  Loudoun County health officials last month toured the kitchens at Trump National Golf Club Washington, D.C., in Potomac Falls, Virginia, west of the capital.

There are a number of truly disturbing problems with the place, according to the officials’ write-up of their visit, first reported on Monday by NOTUS. The most glaring was “a large quantity of small flies” found in a storage room itself located, for reasons unclear, “near the employee restrooms.”

Inspectors also shamed the club’s grill for storing food at temperatures above county health code requirements. The blue cheese, sausage patties, sausage links, and pasta, all kept at between 8 and 13 degrees above the recommended temperature, were of particular concern.

“The person-in-charge voluntarily discarded the blue cheese and sausage,” county records show. There is no note of what remedial action may have been taken over the pasta, which “was prepared several days ago.”

The outdoor pizza preparation area apparently lacks “a handwashing sink in convenient proximity to food employees,” meaning staff have to walk back “to the clubhouse to wash their hands.” Inspectors also found pest control strips “hanging above the food preparation table” there, and a can of insect killer with a label that “does not state that use is allowed in a food establishment.”/

Trump regime

President Trump on Tuesday walked back a plan he had announced a day earlier to charge a fee on each ship passing through the Strait of Hormuz in return for providing security. But as he backtracked on strategy and ordered a new round of attacks on Iran, Mr. Trump’s path out of the monthslong conflict remained unclear.

Tuesday’s strikes marked a return to the kind of intensive bombing campaign that characterized the start of the war more than four months ago, and came as both Washington and Tehran are seeking to assert control over the strait, a crucial transit route for oil and gas shipments.

Time -   President Donald Trump said the U.S. should control the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial passage through which around a fifth of global oil production typically flows, as renewed hostilities with Iran intensify.

“We are going to keep the Strait. We will probably run it,” Trump told Fox & Friends Monday during a phone interview. “We'll become the guardian of ?the Strait. Maybe we'll call it the ‘guardian angel’ of the Strait.” He added that the U.S. would ideally then be “reimbursed” for their guardianship of the waterway by “other" nations.

Soon after, Trump announced that the U.S. is reinstating its naval blockade against Iran and will charge 20% on all cargo shipped through the Strait to cover "any and all costs necessary to do the job of providing safety and security to this very volatile section of the world." The President's remarks came as oil prices soared by more than 3% Monday morning after the U.S. and Iran traded further strikes over the weekend.

Brent crude, the international benchmark, neared $80 per barrel, a significant rise from the same time last week, when it traded at $71.99.

July 13, 2026

Tales from the Attic: The humanities in our capital

Sam Smith, 1986 - I was asked to give a toast at the fifth anniversary celebration of the DC Community Humanities Council, which I helped to start. Here is what I said:

Five years ago the DC Community Humanities Council was formed, charged with the diffusion of ideas, the encouragement of thought and the inspiration of rational discourse within this our nation's capital. This was a little like trying to sell Bibles in a brothel, and I think that any fair assessment of what has occurred around us since we began would indicate that we have failed miserably. The best efforts of the council and its sainted staff have failed to halt a national and local stampede towards what is perhaps the most anti-humanistic era of our lifetimes.

It is an era when we propose to devise the most complex weapons system ever created, but when we go to explain it to people, our government feels compelled to use comic book stick figures on television. We have become the first society to know more about the external world than we do about ourselves. And now we even seem to be losing the ability to talk or write about the problem.

It is an era in which, like the fifties, the man in the gray flannel suit is in the ascendancy, but unlike the fifties, when he was viewed with the ambivalence that economics forces upon us, he or she remains a cultural role model, and, unbelievably, even considered hip, charismatic and sexy.

And it is an era in which we know how to promote, facilitate merge, network, manage, integrate, finalize and bottom line, but are losing the ability to make or to create. I have a nightmare that one day the country will awake and discover that there is nothing to manage, finalize and facilitate. 

So we have failed -- here in the jaws of the lion -- but I would argue that given the powers arrayed against the humanistic ideal, failure has been the only sane and honorable course. And the failure, one hopes, is only temporary. Long ago, John Locke warned of the constant decay of ideas, and how they must be "renewed by repeated exercises of the senses." If not, "the print wears out, and at last there remains nothing to be seen."

The print is fading, but, thanks in part to this band of happy humanistic warriors, it could have been a lot worse. It has engaged in repeated exercise of the senses with an integrity, decency, fairness, sensitivity and good humor rarely seen in this town anymore. In a city that is obsessed with style, it is one of the few real class acts. So a toast to the Council for all it has done and will do and to the humanistic spirit. May we live to see it once more.