UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
April 17, 2026
Growing number of US singles
The mental effect of GLP-1 drugs
Polls
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ICE
Middle East
Newsweek - Air Canada will suspend service to New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport this summer as soaring jet fuel prices tied to the war in Iran force airlines to rein in less profitable routes. Canada’s flag carrier said Friday that flights from Toronto and Montreal to JFK will end June 1 and resume October 25. Service to the New York area’s other major airports, LaGuardia and Newark Liberty International, will continue.
NPR's Kat Londsorf is in Beirut, where she says things have been relatively quiet since the ceasefire began at midnight. She says there is a little hope among people here. "A ceasefire is always welcome in war," she says. "But people also realize this is temporary, so it's a cautious optimism." About a fifth of Lebanon's population has been displaced by the violence. Both Israel and Hezbollah have told people it's still too dangerous to return home.
As the end of the two-week ceasefire between the U.S., Israel and Iran looms, U.S. defense officials say the naval blockade on Iranian ports is firmly in place. The U.S. is blocking ships from exiting or entering Iranian ports — strangling Iran's economy. Meanwhile, Iran has control of the Strait of Hormuz until U.S., European or Asian minesweepers can clear it and possibly escort ships safely through. NPR's Quil Lawrence says that blockades are an act of war, but in this case, it could be part of negotiations
Donald Trump
6 days after: Trump : Italy wasn’t there for us, we won’t be there for them.
“His vocabulary has shrunk, he’s resorted to profanity and threats, totally impulsive– suggestive of the absence of any frontal lobe controls,” Cobb said.
Government finances
Washington Post - Former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson suggested the US government should prepare a backup plan in order to avert a potential collapse in demand for Treasuries—an event he warned would have “vicious” effects.
“We need an emergency break-the-glass plan, which is targeted and short-term, on the shelf, so it’s ready to go when when we hit the wall,” Paulson said during an interview for Bloomberg Television’s Wall Street Week with David Westin. With regard to any breakdown in the $31 trillion market for US government debt, Paulson said that would pose a different case from the financial crisis two decades ago.
“As bad as it was,” the government had fiscal firepower to address the credit meltdown, he said. “You can come in and clean up the mess.” But in the event of a US public debt crisis, “you’re trying to issue Treasuries and the Fed is the only buyer and the prices of the Treasuries are going down and interest rates are up, that’s a dangerous thing.”
Environment
The hazards of congressional term limits
Pete Hegseff
- Rep. Yassamin Ansari leads impeachment effort citing unauthorized Iran strikes, war crimes, and security breaches
- Six articles charge Hegseth with bombing a girls’ school in Minab, Iran, and mishandling classified information in “Signalgate” incident
- Pentagon dismisses charges as partisan “charade,” claiming military operations successfully fulfilled Trump’s objectives
- Impeachment unlikely to advance in Republican-controlled Congress but signals Democratic strategy to challenge Trump administration
Meanwhile. ..
A federal judge issued a new order halting construction of the White House ballroom. |
Abortions
Workers
- Federal law mandates 80 hours monthly of work or approved activities for Medicaid recipients starting January 2027, threatening 5.2 million with coverage loss
- Middle-aged workers over 50 face disproportionate impact despite 92% of enrollees already meeting activity requirements
- States must implement complex verification systems while some like Arizona propose even stricter 100-hour monthly requirements
- Policy experts warn administrative burdens will cause coverage losses among compliant workers unable to document their activities properly
Immigration
April 16, 2026
Money
Elections
ICE agent charged in Minnesota case
Donald Trump
Middle East
No more US military aid to Israel Benjamin Netanyahu rejects President Trump’s ceasefire and says the war will continue against Iran at any time he chooses. Netanyahu says he will achieve his objectives through further military action under his command. “We are ready to resume the fighting at any moment.” The Hill - President Trump said Thursday that Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire after meeting in Washington to try and strike a peace deal. NPR - President Trump has been referring to the war in Iran in the past tense, despite the fact that peace talks in Pakistan stalled out over the weekend. Pakistan sent its interior minister and military chief to Tehran yesterday. Trump has made bold claims about the war nearing its end since just a couple of weeks after it started. Despite his claims that the U.S. has decimated Iran and that the war is almost over, 13 swing voters who participated in two online focus groups on Tuesday said they wouldn't describe the military action as going well. |
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Pope Leo
Ukraine
Sport and climate change
Sports in climate-vulnerable countries bear a higher risk. “We have to play on the pitch as it is, not as you would like it,” said Mia Mottley, the prime minister of Barbados. But richer countries and sports bodies look away.