Thursday, July 02, 2026

Trump's Party of One

That “other” war is heating up, the one Trump thought he could end in a day but that has instead dragged on for years now. Russia has lost a staggering number of troops, an estimated 450,000 with up a million others injured. 

Ukraine has shown remarkable ingenuity despite heavy casualties of its own. It’s become in one sense of war of drones, which carries significant implications for the future of war everywhere.

And as the conflict in the Middle East also continues to simmer, Trump is back to one of his obsessions — worrying about crowd size. He is preparing his speech for the Fourth of July, two days from now.

But with temperatures in Washington, D.C., soaring to near 100 degrees, it’s uncertain how big his MAGA crowd will be. Or how much the rest of the world will be listening, either.

HEADLINES:

  • Explosions Rock Ukraine’s Capital (NYT)

  • Kyiv attacks death toll rises to 20 as Russia warns it will ‘continue to increase pressure’ on Ukrainian capital (Guardian)

  • Russia launches massive strike on Ukraine as Poland scrambles jets, Finland restricts airspace (CNBC)

  • Bloodier than Stalingrad: Number of casualties in Russia’s war on Ukraine reaches 2 million (CNN)

  • How severe is Russia’s energy shortage because of Ukrainian strikes? (Al Jazeera)

  • Trump refuses to renew USMCA trade pact, toppling one of the last pillars of stability in global trade (NBC)

  • Trump’s Anti-Patriotic Trap (Atlantic)

  • Trump Takes Maiden Flight on Qatari-Gifted Air Force One (WSJ)

  • ‘Technical’ talks under way in Doha as Tehran demands action (Al Jazeera)

  • Iran’s top negotiator says country ready for war as peace talks inch along (CBS)

  • Trump ‘livid’ over crowd size at National Mall state fair, report says: ‘Who thought this was a good idea?’ (Independent)

  • U.S. auto industry faces increased uncertainty without extension of USMCA trade deal (CNBC)

  • The divided Supreme Court’s birthright citizenship decision exposes sharp rifts among justices (AP)

  • The Supreme Court’s birthright citizenship ruling hands the U.S. economy a $7.7 trillion win (Fortune)

  • Immigrant Arrests Surge to 10,000 in 5 Days as ICE Clamps Down (NYT)

  • ICE’s arrest of nun heading to church fuels bipartisan backlash in South Texas (WP)

  • Everything to know about Trump’s student loan overhaul (BI)

  • Modern neuroscience is rediscovering an idea Freud had 130 years ago (ScienceDaily)

  • In the United States, Every World Cup Team Is a Home Team (NYT)

  • The price tag behind Taylor Swift’s rumored wedding bash at Madison Square Garden (CNN)

  • Two People Climb Needle of Empire State Building (NYT)

  • They built the world’s most powerful AI. They’re facing a mystery they can’t explain. (WP)

  • UN launches “AI for Good” commission (Axios)

  • Harvard Faces Pressure To Fire Confederate Generals (Onion)

 

Wednesday, July 01, 2026

White House Inc.

The pay-as-you-play Trump administration is making the President and his family very rich.

The Post reports: “President Donald Trump’s reported income soared to more than $2.2 billion in 2025, as the president took in more than $1.4 billion from cryptocurrency, digital tokens and related partnerships, according to his latest financial disclosure forms."

“The 2025 disclosure includes $635 million in royalties from a license agreement with Celebration Coins; at least $525 million in proceeds from token sales by World Liberty Financial, a cryptocurrency project founded by Trump and his sons; $65 million in proceeds from World Liberty Financial’s equity sale; and $196 million in net proceeds from a stablecoin transaction.”

From the Times: (N)ever before in American history has there been anything like Donald J. Trump, a president who in his first year back in office has collected about $1.4 billion in new revenues from cryptocurrency businesses that directly benefited from his actions as president.

“Presidential historians said they could identify no other president in American history who entered into new business enterprises just before moving into the White House, and then continued to personally profit from them during his term.”

Indeed, in our 250 years as a republic, we have never seen corruption on this scale at the White House. It is pure, unapologetic greed.

Meanwhile, for the rest of us, grocery prices keep going up, home ownership has become an unreachable dream for our children, and AI is replacing them in the workforce increasingly controlled by billionaires like Trump.

Is there any wonder why Democratic Socialists are starting to win elections across the land?

HEADLINES:

  • Trump’s income topped $2 billion in 2025, boosted by crypto, coin ventures (WP)

  • Trump’s Moneymaking Run: Unrivaled in Presidential History (NYT)

  • Speaker Johnson abandons floor agenda, sends members home early amid GOP rebellion (CNN)

  • Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship, rejecting Trump’s proposed limits (AP)

  • Poll: Americans split on whether being U.S.-born is important for being ‘truly American’ (NBC)

  • Supreme court rules states can exclude trans athletes from female sports (Guardian)

  • Supreme Court strikes down coordinated campaign spending limits (CBS)

  • Left-Wing Insurgent Ousts 15-Term Congresswoman in Colorado (NYT)

  • Iran’s leverage over Strait of Hormuz snarls Trump’s push for a deal (WP)

  • US envoys in Doha to meet mediators but not Iranians, Qatar says (BBC)

  • Trump’s Obsession With Executive Power Will Cost Him (Bulwark)

  • Inside the Great American State Fair’s carnival of contrasts (Axios)

  • Trump now ‘hates’ his own trade deal. But he’ll have a hard time killing it. (Politico)

  • Venezuela’s earthquakes are a somber warning for US preparedness (The Hill)

  • Putin Faces Increased Pressure as Moscow Is Again Attacked by Drones (NYT)

  • As war stalls, Putin concedes he never cut a deal with Trump in Alaska (WP)

  • Melania Trump calls for US to support both transgender athletes ban, LGBTQ+ rights (The Hill)

  • LeBron James to play record 24th NBA season, but not with Lakers (NYT)

  • ‘Humanity has chosen to become idiots’: This Brown professor switched to take-home exams after a mass shooting and discovered mass cheating (Fortune)

  • How A.I. Is Changing the Way Politicians Run for Office (NYT)

  • Delivery Robots Abandon College Campuses Like A Failed Military Occupation (Jalopnik)

  • A chess grandmaster on what AI visionaries don’t understand (WP)

  • We’re Only Starting to Grasp the Pitfalls of Using A.I. at Work (NYT)

  • Supreme Court Upholds Temporal Gerrymander That Would Cost Democrats 1932 Election (Onion)

 

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Almost Real

The world’s problems lie just below the surface of the conviviality of the World Cup but that is one aspect that makes the global competition meaningful.

For example, as Morocco defeated the Netherlands yesterday, its team featured three Moroccan-Dutch players who grew up in the Netherlands but competed for the team of their parents, as opposed to that of their citizenship.

Racist comments on the Dutch side reported before the game suggested that those three were not good enough to play for the Netherlands team.

The Morroccans answered on the pitch, winning an exciting match on shootouts. 

Many of the athletes at the World Cup have roots in more than one country and somehow they have made the choice of which country to represent, which national anthem to sing, which fans to embrace.

It’s almost if they have to find a way to compete against themselves, at least partially, and in that there might be a lesson for all of us.

HEADLINES:

 

Monday, June 29, 2026

What Future, CNN?

Back in 2013, media critic Brian Stelter published a book “Top of the Morning,” that was later adapted into the dramatic 2019 television series, “The Morning Show.” 

These days, Stelter appears as an occasional guest on CNN as part of that network’s attempt to cover another drama — the ownership change that has thrown its future into doubt.

Tech billionaire David Ellison, a close buddy of Donald Trump, is close to completing the merger that would bring CNN under his control.

The much smaller and less profitable CBS already is controlled by Ellison and the result has been disastrous, from a journalistic perspective.

But there is far more at stake wit CNN than simply the survival of a media company. More than any other network, CNN has provided critical, consistent, accurate coverage of the Trump era — much to Trump’s dismay.

According to the New York Times, “Mr. Ellison has not publicly detailed what he has in store for CNN. But the network’s newsroom is wary of his conspicuous coziness with Mr. Trump and the prospect that he may assign some oversight of CNN to Bari Weiss, his pick to run CBS News after he bought Paramount last year.

“Anderson Cooper, the channel’s biggest star, has told colleagues at CNN that he does not want to work for Ms. Weiss, two people familiar with his remarks said. Mr. Cooper, who overlapped with Ms. Weiss at CBS as a correspondent at “60 Minutes,” left that show this spring after 20 years.

“As the merger approaches, the 18th-floor Manhattan office of Amy Entelis, the CNN executive in charge of on-air talent, has turned into something of a psychiatrist’s couch for anchors and correspondents, who often drop in to air their anxieties about the looming changes.”

What is at stake here, of course, is not only whether CNN will remain free to accurately report on Trump’s push for authoritarian power. 

It is freedom of the press, one of our few tools for stopping this existential threat to our democracy.

HEADLINES:

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Democracy

 

                                                         

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Saturday, June 27, 2026

A Biblical Dispute

Authorities in Texas have voted to require that the Bible be taught in schools. They’ve already forced educators to post the Ten Commandments in classrooms.

As far as the Bible as a textbook is concerned, it contains lots of stories. Some are well told, others less so. There is a great deal of redundancy.

The stories are anecdotal in nature, as the authors provide little in the way of documentation. From a journalistic perspective, you could say the book would benefit from a strong edit.

But all of that said, I think it is generally a good thing for everyone to know about the stories in the Bible and their meaning. It is an essential part of Judeo-Christian history, and therefore critical for understanding how we got from there to here.

Students need to be capable of critical thinking before taking on this task. High school or college would be the ideal place to study the Bible, I believe, not elementary school as in Texas. 

And the problem with the Texas approach is that it blurs, if not violates the separation of church and state, which is a cornerstone of our democracy.

Politically, the Texas initiative is part of a conservative push to suppress religious diversity and impose a form of Christian nationalism on everybody. 

“Kids of all faith backgrounds and no faith are served by Texas schools and they should all feel welcome in Texas schools,” said Elva Mendoza, legislative communications associate for the progressive Texas Freedom Network. “But this is sending the message to children that one and only one religious text — a Christian one — is worthy of making this required reading list.”

Ultimately, the legality of the Texas approach will probably be decided by the courts.

HEADLINES:

Friday, June 26, 2026

Friday Mix

HEADLINES: