SEATTLE Teen arrests for shooting and Mariners win
Four Seattle teenagers have been arrested in Portland following a string of robberies and a shooting at a gas station that left an employee injured. In baseball, the Seattle Mariners pulled off a dramatic win over the San Francisco Giants thanks to a walk-off by Julio Rodriguez.
Four Seattle teens arrested over string of robberies and shooting in Portland
Portland police, along with tactical units, arrested four Seattle teenagers and a 36-year-old man from Portland on suspicion of a string of...
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WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, July 19, Seattle will be mostly sunny and pleasant. Temperatures will reach +75°F during the day and drop to +59°F at night. The wind is from...

WORLD Delcy Rodríguez Calls for a New Ethics of Unity to Rebuild Venezuela
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez made a public call for the creation of a new civic ethic grounded in love, mutual understanding, and a...

WORLD Breakdown of the memorandum: Why the US and Iran are once again on the brink of war?
Military confrontation between the United States and Iran has sharply escalated despite the signing, on June 18, of a memorandum of understanding...

REACTIONS Trump and Iran: between the threat of escalation and a chance for a deal
The world is watching how the Trump administration is drawing its line on Iran, and the dispute over this policy is rapidly gaining momentum. Some...

SEATTLE Seattle Sports Digest: Football triumph and baseball dramas
Salmon Bay FC sensationally won the USL W League championship, beating Vermont Green FC in a penalty shootout. In baseball, the Mariners first fell...

WORLD Distrust of Trump and Criticism of U.S. Pressure
The world is reacting to Washington’s moves with increasing nervousness: headlines are increasingly filled with doubts about the reliability of U.S....

SEATTLE False Alarm, Seattle Teens, and the Mariners’ Wipeout
Firefighters left after a scorched stove, Seattle teenagers were detained for a shooting and carjacking, and the Mariners lost 0–7.
Short Circuit or...

WORLD Seventh Night of Strikes: Iran Warns of a Regional War
The United States continues air strikes on Iran for the seventh night in a row. Tehran says the attacks are aimed at civilian infrastructure in the...

SEATTLE The return of a star, a rabid bat and the firing of a prosecutor: Seattle digest
Seattle Mariners star Julio Rodríguez has returned from a concussion; a bat found near the University of Washington has tested positive for rabies;...
Seattle

Giants rout the Mariners 7-0 and a rabid bat in Seattle
Willie Adames hit a grand slam as the Giants beat the Mariners 7–0. In Seattle, near the University of Washington, a rabid bat has been found, and...

Sports Digest: Clark’s record and Mariners updates
Katherine Clark logged the first WNBA farewell game in league history with 45 points and 10 assists. Cal Raleigh spoke candidly about the slump and...

Clark’s Cataclysm: 45+10 in WNBA History
Kaitlyn Clark of the Indiana Fever set a unique mark in the WNBA by scoring 45 points and dishing out 10 assists in a game against the Seattle...

Seattle: A Strike, Teacher Brutality, and the Mariners’ Return
In the digest: a SIFF staff walkout on the day of “Oppenheimer” showings, an investigation into a teacher’s alleged cruelty toward children, and news...

Conflict in Washington: strike, a raccoon with a viral spine, and a fired prosecutor
A union of Washington state workers said it plans to strike because of a lack of pay increases. A raccoon named Jimothy, born with a shortened spine,...

Seattle: cancer, darkness and a gamer crossover
In today’s digest: Seattle’s beloved morning host is facing cancer again; the West Seattle Bridge is plunging into darkness due to stolen wires; and...

Seattle: Nestlé vs. Trump and a Transport Tax
In brief: Nestlé challenges the name and logo of a small Seattle coffee shop; Trump fired a new prosecutor less than an hour after taking office;...

Seattle: a raccoon internet star, the memory of a tech giant, and World Cup records
What’s happening in Seattle today: Jimothy the raccoon with a rare spinal deformity has become a viral internet hero; the Sounders FC honored the...

The unusual raccoon Jimoti has captured the internet and the hearts of Seattle residents
Seattle resident Kiana Hall was out for an evening walk in Ballard — a historic neighborhood in the northwest of the city known for its Scandinavian...
Events

World Cup Week in Seattle: What’s Happening July 18 and Beyond
Seattle, July 18, 2026 — A brief guide to FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: where the main tournament buzz is now, which fan zones and cultural venues are operating, and what else is worth seeing in the city this week.
Where Everyone Is Now
Seattle has already wrapped up its home share of the tournament: Seattle Stadium hosted six World Cup matches — on June 15, 19, 24, 26, as well as July 1 and 6. As of today there are no new matches in Seattle itself, but the city’s fan infrastructure is still...

Seattle: What’s on from July 18 to 25, 2026
This week, summer in Seattle is picking up speed in all directions at once: from festivals and outdoor fairs to concerts, theatrical productions, and sports broadcasts that draw people into neighborhoods and onto venues. From July 18 to 25, cultural offerings are especially prominent—music in parks and intimate series at music venues, Shakespearean stories in lush green settings, and standalone evening events such as film screenings and open-air dance happenings. Meanwhile, the city keeps up a...

Events from July 18 to September 2026: plan for August–September
This roundup is made for planning ahead: starting from today’s date, July 18, 2026, we’ve gathered the most notable events so you have time to get your bearings on tickets and schedules. In August and the start of September, you’ll find several major concerts and sports events: for example, the Chicago Cubs vs. Seattle Mariners series will take place at T-Mobile Park over multiple days, while the concert lineup is spread across venues such as Climate Pledge Arena, Lumen Field, and T-Mobile...
Neighbors

Best Resort, Star’s Garden and a Lottery Windfall
Fairmont Chateau Whistler has been named Canada’s best resort by Travel + Leisure. Pamela Anderson showed off her slice of paradise in her garden on Vancouver Island. A Burnaby resident won $2 million in the lottery and plans to invest it in buying a home.
Fairmont Chateau Whistler named Canada’s best resort by Travel + Leisure
For travellers hoping to spend the summer away from the hustle and bustle but don’t want to leave British Columbia, the country’s top resort is just two hours by car...

British Columbia: layoffs, a lottery win and a campfire ban
The Canadian retailer London Drugs is cutting 80 jobs, a Burnaby resident has won $2 million and plans to buy a house, and a campfire ban is returning to the South Coast of British Columbia due to hot weather.
A wave of layoffs at London Drugs: what lies behind the cut of 80 jobs
In early July 2026, the Canadian chain of pharmacies and everyday goods London Drugs announced a major restructuring that will affect nearly all of its stores in British Columbia. According to an internal memo obtained...

Vancouver: a port, thunderstorms and the demolition of SROs
Canada is accelerating the expansion of the Port of Vancouver to tap into Asian markets, a move that has sparked disputes with Indigenous communities. Rare thunderstorms with large hail are expected along the south coast of British Columbia. In downtown Vancouver, 161 rooms in the Regent emergency hotel will be demolished to make way for social housing.
Canada accelerates expansion of the Port of Vancouver: a new strategy to reach markets beyond the US
The Government of Canada has announced...

Vancouver: a stadium and a social crisis
The Vancouver Whitecaps FC has proposed taking over the management of BC Place Stadium, a move that could address revenue and scheduling problems. At the same time, the mayor of Vancouver criticized the province for placing new involuntary-treatment beds in other cities, leaving Vancouver with a disproportionate burden.
Vancouver Whitecaps make a bid to run BC Place: a lifeline for fans
After months of anxiety about the future of the Vancouver Whitecaps, a glimmer of hope has finally emerged....

Digest: scandal over treatment, earthquakes, and a BC ferry emergency
In today’s digest: Vancouver Mayor criticizes the government over a shortage of involuntary treatment spaces, two earthquakes with no tsunami threat, and a medical emergency on a BC Ferries ferry that caused delays.
Title: Vancouver mayor accuses B.C. government of ignoring the city’s needs for involuntary care
Over the past few days, a political dispute has erupted in the Canadian province of British Columbia over how resources are allocated for involuntary care for people with serious mental...

Nurse strike, water and fire: BCToday news digest
In British Columbia, the nurses’ strike is expanding to Vancouver Island, Metro Vancouver is easing water restrictions to Stage 2 after a key water main repair, and firefighters are investigating a suspicious fire in a multi-unit building on Broadway.
BC nurses’ strike expands to Vancouver Island
The nurses’ strike in British Columbia, which began July 2, is gaining momentum. While picketing was previously focused on the province’s largest hospitals in Vancouver and Surrey, the protest has now...

British Columbia News Digest: Strikes, Tensions and Sport
In the digest: BC nurses expand their strike on Vancouver Island; an Indigenous community criticises the lack of consultation over a new pipeline; the Whitecaps return to BC Place for a key match against LAFC.
BC nurses expand picket lines on Vancouver Island
According to information published by CTV News, members of the British Columbia Nurses’ Union (BCNU) have expanded their strike pickets on Vancouver Island. A photo taken July 7, 2026 shows protesters outside Vancouver General Hospital in...

Tragedy, Strike and Arrest: British Columbia News
In this roundup: a fishing vessel wreck off the coast leaves six dead, a nurses’ strike with mediators appointed, and the arrest in France of a Vancouver-area resident wanted in the United States over alleged links to international organized crime.
“Two boats went out together”: tragedy off Vancouver raises questions about negligence and rescue
New information is shedding light on the circumstances behind the tragic deaths of six people off British Columbia, after the small charter fishing...

Vancouver: Conflicts, Tragedies, and Questions About Transparency
An Indigenous lawsuit challenging dredging for oil tankers, the deadly loss of fishermen linked to operator negligence, and $5 million earmarked for a pedestrian area—without details on how the money will be spent—are the main themes in this roundup.
Tsleil-Waututh Nation challenges dredging for large tankers in Vancouver
The Canadian government and port authorities are trying to deepen the shipping channel in Burrard Inlet so that large oil tankers can load to full capacity rather than just...
USA

When the news says what matters most: from tragedy to a record
If you look at three very different news stories together, you can immediately see how differently the modern information stream is structured: one story is about a sudden threat to a child’s life and the fragility of everyday safety; another is about an international escalation, where leaders’ decisions can change the course of a conflict; and the third is about sports, which long ago stopped being only sport and has become a battleground for cultural and political disputes. These pieces are...
When a Force of Nature Puts Warning Systems to the Test
Across three different sources — from Detroit Free Press, ClickOnDetroit and KATV — a single common picture emerges: extreme weather has stopped being a rare, unavoidable event and has become a stress test for cities, infrastructure, and the warning systems themselves. In Michigan, smoke from Canadian and Minnesota wildfires is blanketing Detroit, worsening air quality; in Texas, heavy rains turn rivers into a deadly threat again; and in Arkansas, local outlets are running stories covering...

War for Power, Order, and Trust
At first glance, these three pieces are about entirely different things: Iran’s strikes on American targets in the Middle East, the detention of a man by ICE officers at Las Vegas airport, and Donald Trump’s evening address in which he once again tries to rewrite the story of the 2020 election and tighten control over the electoral system. But viewed more broadly, they share one theme: the struggle for power through the demonstration of vulnerability. In one case, it is the military...

Trust, Risk, and Control: What Ties Three Very Different Stories Together
The common thread in these materials is not so much the specific events, but the collision of systemic risks with the human factor. In one case, it’s a natural disaster, where speed of response, coordination, and trust in official warnings come to the forefront. In a second, it’s domestic violence and the collapse of private security, when the law-enforcement system tries to stop a conflict from escalating. In a third, it’s the potential misuse of official access in the world of financial...

How Local Emergencies Instantly Reshape Everyday Infrastructure
Five minutes can turn a familiar route into a risk zone, and a quiet street into a scene of police roadblocks. All three reports are about more than just incidents: they show how quickly and forcefully local events interrupt the work of roads, services, and ordinary city life. One story involves a fatal crash on I-95 in Florida, another is a police standoff in Kentucky, and the third is a water main break in Pennsylvania that shut down a key bypass route. At first glance these news items seem...

Transfers, legitimacy, and a bet on trust
Almost all the materials you sent appear, at first glance, to be about different things: motocross, a media business, a political campaign, and a hockey transfer. But if you string them together into a single line, the overall story turns out to be surprisingly similar. In all three sources, the focus isn’t just yet another piece of news about a signing, an endorsement, or a move—it’s a broader struggle for institutional trust: who people believe in, who can strengthen the system, and how...

Public discourse between power, sport and emergencies
If you look at these three pieces together, they are united not by a shared plot, but by a broader theme: how news becomes a tool for managing attention. In one case, it concerns an appointment in the national security sphere, where behind dry wording lies a struggle for control over intelligence and the electoral agenda. In another, it’s an NHL hockey transfer presented as the club’s shrewd bet on a veteran player who is also “healthy.” In the third, it’s a road incident that instantly turned...
Inflation, risks and trust: three reports on system vulnerability
The common thread of these pieces is less about specific events than about the state of uncertainty in which today’s economic, social, and institutional systems live. In one story, markets are trying to work out whether inflation in the United States is truly slowing down for good; in another, state authorities and federal services are looking for the source of a кишеч infection; and in the third, a news broadcast is interrupted by a breaking message about the death of longtime American...

Crises, Safety, and the Price of Randomness
Across three, at first glance unrelated, news developments runs a single common thread: how quickly an everyday setting — a street, a sea corridor, an office skyscraper — turns into a risk zone when human error, violence, or institutional miscalculation gets involved. In Viña del Mar, Chile, a private car plowed into a crowd at a market; in the Strait of Hormuz, military and diplomatic logic makes a waterway into an instrument of pressure; in New York, a victim of last year’s high-rise shooting...
Reactions

Questions for the United States: Power, Security and Influence in the World
This week, the international agenda is once again placing the United States at the center of attention — but not as an “internal” matter, rather as a...
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World Reaction to the U.S. Course: From Iran to Tariffs
As the United States increases pressure in different directions, international reactions are becoming increasingly mixed: some are calling for...

Escalation risks in the US and Iran: tensions are mounting
Judging by today’s stream of news, a significant share of attention is focused on the hard standoff between the United States and Iran: ultimatums...
World

Expert refuted allegations of election rigging in Venezuela
Senior analyst on threats for Latin America Jeff Ramsey said that a CIA report on possible vote manipulation in Venezuela is not conclusive and does not confirm large-scale electronic fraud. According to him, although U.S. intelligence flagged “serious concerns,” the same data suggests that other factors better explain the voting results. Ramsey stressed that the document does not prove that the falsification attempt was successful, thereby refuting widespread suspicions.

The Seventh Night of US Strikes on Iran: Casualties, Damage and Retaliatory Attacks
The United States continues its seventh day of strikes on Iran. The U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) said that a nighttime wave of attacks hit military sites including observation posts, underground weapons depots, military infrastructure and naval forces. At the same time, the Pentagon reported that the number of injured U.S. service members since the conflict began on Monday has risen to 13.
According to Iranian television, three people were killed in Hormozgan Province and eight others were...

Escalation With Iran: Alarm After U.S. Actions and International Reaction
The world is watching a new phase of tension around Iran: the focus is on the expansion of strikes by the United States, growing fears that the conflict could broaden into a wider war, and efforts by various players to keep events within a diplomatic script. Against this backdrop, the idea is becoming increasingly clear that consequences could quickly spill beyond the region, affecting security, the economy, and political balances all at once across several countries. Some voices are betting on...

Trump risks getting pulled into an “endless war” with Iran
Despite U.S. President Donald Trump’s election promises to end overseas conflicts, his administration is becoming increasingly entangled in confrontation with Iran. Analysts warn that the current escalation could turn into a seemingly endless “forever war” — a protracted conflict without a clear political strategy from Washington. After a temporary ceasefire agreement fell apart, hostilities resumed with renewed force, and the lack of a diplomatic exit only heightens the risks.
According to The...

Venezuela increases oil output and negotiates with the United States
Venezuela’s President Delcy Rodríguez said that the country’s economy has begun to show the first concrete signs of recovery. In an interview, she noted that oil production has again reached 1.2 million barrels per day, while exports exceed 900,000 barrels daily. By the end of 2026, even before new energy agreements are implemented, the government expects to reach a level of around 1.4 million barrels per day. Talks are currently under way on 30 contracts with international companies that will...

Iran at a Crossroads: Diplomacy or Military Power in the Dispute Over the Strait?
In Iran, internal disagreements are intensifying over a recently signed memorandum of understanding with the United States and the future of the Strait of Hormuz. The dispute is unfolding amid the continued military escalation between Tehran and Washington. Inside the country, two camps have clearly taken shape: one is betting on diplomacy and locking in the understandings, while the other adheres to hardline military approaches. As analyst Abdel Kader Faez notes, the growing role of the...

Debates About Trump and the Future Role of the United States
Discussions surrounding Donald Trump and the upcoming presidential elections in the United States in today’s coverage sound like more than just talk about one country’s politics. They also reflect, according to many commentators, broader signs of instability that may be affecting the entire American system. Against this backdrop, doubts about the resilience of the electoral process stand out, as do discussions of the risks of escalation in foreign policy and questions about how the United...

The US expands its map of targets in Iran: from the coast to nuclear sites
The US-Iran standoff has entered a new phase: Washington is gradually widening the geography of strikes on Iranian territory. If at first the attacks were focused on the southern coast near the Strait of Hormuz, they are now increasingly hitting targets deep inside the country. At the same time, the nature of the targets is changing as well — shifting from direct US military-sea capabilities to pinpoint attacks on the logistical and economic infrastructure that supports Tehran’s military...

Cabello accuses Western media of an information war after the tragedy
Diosdado Cabello, head of Venezuela’s ruling party, said that after the June 24 tragedy, the worst representatives of Western opposition media arrived in the country. According to him, these journalists deliberately “pick at the wounds of the Venezuelan people,” violating all ethical standards and fabricating false stories. Cabello stressed that their only goal is to cause damage, and that most of them have already left Venezuela in disgrace.
The socialist leader admitted that it is personally...
Knowledge
A wall in the middle of the road: how one concrete structure changed the lives of thousands of...
Imagine that every year you have to walk home the same way—through the forest, across the river, past old trees. You know the route by heart, the way your mother, your grandmother, and your great-grandmother do. And then one day, right in the middle of the road, someone builds a huge concrete wall. And says, “Don’t worry—we built a small stairway on the side.” That’s roughly what happened to Seattle’s salmon more than a hundred years ago, in 1917.
What are locks, and why were they built
In...

Neighbors Who Didn’t Abandon Each Other: The Real Story of the Battle for Seattle
When you hear the words “Battle for Seattle,” you immediately imagine something out of a movie: cannons, ships, heroic soldiers. And yes—some of that really happened. But the real story—one that is almost never told—is completely different. It’s the story of how a tiny town survived not because of an army, but because of friendship and trust among people who, it seemed, had no reason to be friends at all.
A Town the Size of a School
Picture January 1856. Seattle isn’t a vast modern city with...

The Tower Built by People Who Couldn’t Vote
In Seattle’s prettiest park stands a tall brick tower. If you climb its spiral staircase — with 106 steps, no less — you can see the whole city at a glance: mountains, the bay, rooftops stretching as far as the eye can see. Tourists photograph it every day. But almost nobody knows exactly who built it — and what courage it took to do it.
The Park, the Tower, and a Great Thirst
In the early 1900s, Seattle was growing fast. Every month, thousands of new residents arrived in the city — people...

How Orcas Became Stars—and Why It Almost Cost Them Their Lives
Imagine living with a large, close-knit family—your mom, your grandmother, your brothers and sisters. You eat together, play together, talk in your special language. And then one day boats arrive—and half your family is taken away somewhere far off. Forever. That’s exactly what happened to the orcas of Puget Sound in Washington State more than fifty years ago. And the most surprising part is that people did it out of love—though that love turned into a great tragedy.
A Family That Never Breaks...

Vegetable garden under a lamp: how Vietnamese families rebuilt their kitchen in rainy Seattle
Imagine that one day you had to leave very far away — so far that your mom or grandma’s favorite food simply stopped existing. Not because it was banned, but because the grass used to make it doesn’t grow in the new country. That’s what happened to thousands of Vietnamese families who arrived in Seattle after the war — and they found a solution worthy of true engineers.
When the favorite soup stayed on the other side of the ocean
After the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, many families were...

The mother who wouldn’t let go: the story of an orca and the people who loved her
Imagine you’re swimming in a cold ocean, carrying something extremely precious on your nose—seventeen days straight, without stopping. That’s what an orca named Tahlequah did in the summer of 2018. She had lost her newborn calf and refused to let it go. Scientists watching her cried right in their boats. And once the rest of the world learned about it, it finally understood: something is seriously wrong with the orcas of Puget Sound.
An orca with a name and a personality
Tahlequah has an...

Street Learns to Be Quiet: How Seattle Turned Ordinary Alleys into a Bike Paradise
Imagine riding your bike along an ordinary neighborhood street. Cars are still there, but there are far fewer of them now, and they drive slowly—as if they understand this isn’t their place. Bright green bike symbols are painted on the asphalt, special signs stand at intersections, and short posts in the middle of the road make it harder for cars to cut through. You feel safe. This is exactly what “Neighborhood Greenways” look like in Seattle, a city on the shores of the Pacific Ocean. And the...
Tracks Under Asphalt: How Seattle Lost Its Most Honest Transport — and Still Searches for It
Imagine that one morning you step outside and see, right there on the street, a red railcar rolling along—jingling and catching the light. It stops at every corner, the doors open, and everyone gets on: fishermen after a night shift, schoolgirls with backpacks, grandmothers with baskets, workers in grimy jackets. The fare is almost nothing—just a few cents. Nobody is left on the street. The tram carries everyone. That’s what Seattle looked like a hundred years ago. And then the tram...

After the Battle: Girls, a Garden, and the Chief’s Daughter
When people talk about the Battle of Seattle, they usually remember cannons, a ship, and soldiers. But the morning after the fighting—when the smoke lifted over the bay—something else happened instead. Something quiet, almost unnoticed, yet very important. Women and children went out to the shore. They brought buckets, shovels, and seedlings. And they began cleaning up.
What happened in January 1856
On a January night in 1856, the small settlement of Seattle found itself at the center of a real...