SEATTLE Seattle: Prosecutor Fired, Two Tragedies in Fires
The Trump administration fired a prosecutor appointed by judges, escalating a conflict between branches of government. In Judkins Park, a 60-year-old man died in a fire, and in Fremont a three-story house caught fire, requiring a second-alarm call.
Trump Administration Fired a Seattle U.S. Attorney Minutes After He Was Appointed by Federal Judges
The standoff between the Trump administration and the judiciary over the appointment of federal prosecutors reached a new level. On Wednesday morning,...
Open article

EVENTS World Cup Week in Seattle: July 17 and Beyond
Seattle, July 17, 2026 — A guide to FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: what just happened, which fan zones are still open, and where to go for soccer...

EVENTS Seattle from July 16: concerts in parks, festivals, and outdoor movies
Summer in Seattle is in full swing: starting July 16, the city and the surrounding area offer several ways to spend the evening—everything from...

EVENTS Seattle events calendar for August—September 2026: dates to make it all
This lineup is for planning ahead, based on dates starting July 16, 2026: you’ll find preseason NFL and MLB games at Lumen Field and T-Mobile Park,...

USA 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...

SEATTLE Seattle: Business, Justice and Politics
Today’s roundup: Pressed Juicery closes its only Seattle location due to changing consumer habits; an unsolved 1999 killing resurfaces for both the...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, July 16, Seattle is expected to be mostly cloudy with occasional brief showers (80% chance). The high will be 72°F and the low 55°F. Winds...

WORLD 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...

WORLD US airstrikes reach Tehran: escalation in Iran
The United States has significantly expanded the scale of airstrikes on Iran, for the first time since the end of the previous conflict striking the...

SEATTLE Trump Fires Court-Appointed Prosecutor, Judge Doesn’t Close Denny Blaine Nude Beach
In a digest: President Trump immediately fired a court-appointed Seattle prosecutor, escalating tensions between the executive and judicial branches....
Seattle

Homelessness in Ballard and a Prosecutor Crisis in Seattle
Today’s digest covers two sharp issues: a protracted homeless crisis in the Ballard area, where the cycle of camp move-outs does not solve the...

Seattle expands utility discount program for low-income residents
The Seattle City Council unanimously approved an expansion of the utility discount program, which will take effect next year. About 31,000 new...

Record June, 4.5% Inflation and Utility Relief: Seattle Digest
Last June in Seattle turned out to be one of the warmest on record, with an unusual cool spell at the end. Inflation in the region jumped to 4.5%,...
Transit, parasites and the Sonics: Seattle news roundup
Seattle discussed renewing its transit funding program with Saka amendments, normal summer cases of cyclospora emerged without a spike, and the NBA...

Seattle: Prices are rising, fires are raging
Residents in Seattle are in a “survival mode” due to high inflation and the high cost of living, selling homes and cutting back on food. Meanwhile,...
Seattle: crisis, record deal, and a fire
Seattle residents are selling homes due to rising prices and inflation. The NFL club the Seattle Seahawks was sold in a record $9.6 billion deal, and...

Seattle: Inflation, the Seahawks sale, and Mariners troubles
High inflation is changing locals’ habits, the NFL club is sold to investors, and the baseball team is looking for ways to improve.
Life in Seattle...

Seattle at the Center of Sports News: Seahawks Sale, Hancock Injury, and Mariners’ Draft
Top moments from Seattle sports: the Seahawks’ record $9 billion sale could reshape the team; Mariners pitcher Emerson Hancock avoided a serious...
Spain in the Final, a Tiny House for $425k, and a Fire in Seattle
Spain’s national team beat France (2-0) and reached the final of the 2026 World Cup. In Seattle, a mini-home is being sold for $425,000 with a unique...
Neighbors

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...

British Columbia Hotels Named Best, Nurse Strike Backed, and Rescue
In brief: four hotels in British Columbia made Travel + Leisure’s list of Canada’s best city hotels; police patrolling the waters during the World Cup saved 11 people from an overturned canoe off West Vancouver; and well-known influencer Nurse Blake backed striking nurses in the province, who are calling for improved working conditions.
Travelers Choose British Columbia: Four Province Hotels Named the Best in Canada
Each year, Travel + Leisure publishes its prestigious World’s Best Awards, and...

Crash, picket and an island: British Columbia news digest
A fatal crash on the Sea to Sky highway tied up traffic, Vancouver nurses took to picketing, and the price of a private island dropped by $150,000.
Sea to Sky crash in British Columbia: fatal collision leaves thousands stuck in traffic
A tragedy on one of Canada’s most scenic—but also most dangerous—roads has again brought safety concerns back to the spotlight. On Sunday, on the Sea to Sky Highway connecting Vancouver to the Whistler ski resort, there were two collisions, one of which resulted...

British Columbia: strike, a nonstop swim, and orcas
Metro Vancouver is on strike, a woman is preparing a record-setting swim across Okanagan Lake, and orcas were spotted in Vancouver Harbour.
Metro Vancouver parks strike: more than 100 workers walk out indefinitely
Over the weekend, more than 100 Metro Vancouver regional park employees announced an indefinite strike, stopping cleaning, repairs, trail maintenance, and first-aid services for visitors. As reported by CBC News, the union representing workers (Greater Vancouver Regional District...
USA

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...

Crossroads Crisis: War, Nuclear Blackmail, and the Loss of an Ally
Amid a sharp escalation around Iran and the Strait of Hormuz, another development in American politics has further intensified a sense of instability: Senator Lindsey Graham, one of the most prominent hardliners toward Tehran and a close ally of Donald Trump, has died. Taken together, these headlines form a single picture: the Middle East is once again at a point where military strikes, threats to sea lanes, energy security, and U.S. domestic politics intertwine almost inseparably. The story is...

When News Becomes a Signal System
Taken together, these three pieces say less about death, the economy, or marine predators in isolation than about how society responds to sudden, symbolically powerful events: the loss of a legend, the possible removal of a political barrier, and the rise in visible threats along the coast. In each case, there is a moment when a private fact moves beyond a private story and begins to change how people behave, what the state talks about, and what society expects. The death of Bonnie Tyler from...

When Risk Becomes Spectacle
At first glance these three pieces seem almost unrelated: the death of an actor whose image became a symbol of emergency care on television; an annual ranking of the NFL’s best left and right tackles; and the dangerous bull run in Pamplona. But look closer and they share one theme—human confrontation with risk, discipline, and physical vulnerability. Each story is about professions and rituals where the body, courage, and split-second decisions determine the outcome: whether you’re a rescuer, a...

How alliances, reputations and agenda control are shifting
Several materials—quite different in genre and scope—converge on the same theme in today’s public life: status no longer guarantees stability, and old connections—political, editorial, or family and institutional—have to be constantly reaffirmed. In one case, you can see this in the overhaul of The New York Times Company’s news infrastructure, where it strengthens its breaking news team to work “around the clock.” In another, it’s John Fetterman moving further away from the left-populist...
Pressure, Safety and Priorities: What These News Stories Have in Common
If you look at these three reports together, it becomes clear that they share one key theme: in the United States, very different—but equally significant—processes are unfolding at the same time, all centered on protecting core systems: maritime logistics, school education, and public safety. At one level, it’s geopolitics and the risk to shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. At another, it’s an attempt to invest in literacy and school support in Michigan. And third, it’s an emergency incident...
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...

War, NATO and Iran: how the US is reshuffling the balance of power
The world increasingly looks at US foreign policy through the lens of risks and consequences: in some places it is seen as a driver of conflict, in...
World

Response Signal and Alarm: Reaction to U.S. Pressure on Iran
Amid new steps by Washington toward Iran, international assessments are quickly taking on a warning edge: the focus is not only on possible retaliatory measures, but also on the very nature of the U.S. course in the Trump era—ranging from pressure to strategic calculations and accusations of provoking escalation. The question is how U.S. actions are perceived: as an attempt to impose decisions, as a signal for an unavoidable confrontation, or as a factor that could draw new parties into the...

Tehran Attacked U.S. Targets in Three Middle East Countries
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) announced on Wednesday that it had carried out drone strikes on U.S. military sites in the Middle East. In a statement, Iran’s armed forces said the attack targeted the Al Azraq airbase in Jordan, where F-18 fighter jets and other U.S. equipment are based. Reports say there were two waves of strikes on the base, while the Pentagon has not yet officially commented.
Alongside the attacks on Jordan, the situation worsened in Bahrain and Kuwait. In...

U.S
14 U.S. Democratic congressmen, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Rashida Tlaib, sent a letter to President Trump demanding that he remove economic sanctions against Venezuela so the country’s government can use oil revenues for rebuilding after a series of earthquakes that struck on June 24. Copies of the request were also sent to Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. According to official figures, the disaster killed 4,561 people, injured 16,740, and left...

US and Iran: a new conflict in the Strait of Hormuz paralyzed shipping
Tensions between the United States and Iran have sharply flared up again in the area of the Strait of Hormuz after a memorandum of understanding brokered by Qatar and Pakistan quickly collapsed. While the agreement had temporarily halted hostilities and opened the way for political talks, a dispute over control of shipping through the strait has led to a new exchange of strikes. The escalation was felt immediately in the number of vessels passing through and the volume of oil being transported,...

Anxiety over the U.S. course, escalation around Iran, and the impact on the world
Against the backdrop of discussions of a tougher—and at times unpredictable—line from the United States during the Trump era, both disputes and concern are mounting: at the center of attention are moves, critics say, that could increase tension in the region and raise the risk of a conflict involving Iran. The discussion is not only about political signals, but also about potential consequences for trade and the economy—from fears linked to the situation near the Strait of Hormuz to reactions...

Trump Threatens to Destroy Iran’s Nuclear Site: Strikes and Talks
Tensions between Washington and Tehran have sharply escalated after US President Donald Trump warned that he would deliver a “cruel blow” to Iran’s nuclear site “Peakax Mountain” (Peakax Mountain), saying the attack could begin “as early as tonight.” However, in the same Oval Office address, he added that a diplomatic agreement “is still possible,” while American bombs have been heard in the region for a third night in a row, and Iranian ports are again blocked.
“Peakax Mountain” is located...

Chapter of Venezuela’s Central Bank: the country’s economy has withstood the earthquakes’ blow
Venezuela’s vice president for the economy and president of the Central Bank, Calixto Ortega, said at an economic council that after the earthquakes of June 24, the country’s production sector proved far more resilient than analysts had expected. He said that the oil industry and the entire industrial structure are operating normally, which confirms the economy is moving toward recovery. Ortega also outlined further steps to attract international investment and restructure the country’s public...

Escalation in the Persian Gulf: U.S. strikes and Iran’s retaliatory attacks
Early Tuesday morning, U.S. forces carried out a new series of strikes on Iranian military facilities that lasted five hours. According to Iran’s Fars agency, three members of the same family were killed in Hormozgan Province, and five explosions were heard in the city of Bandar Abbas. In response, the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) officially confirmed the end of this round of bombardments, saying the target was to reduce Tehran’s ability to attack maritime shipping.
According to a statement...

Anxiety Over U.S. Escalation With Iran and Risks for the Strait of Hormuz
Against the backdrop of new steps by Washington, an overarching political and economic signal of alarm is growing: many observers link the escalation around Iran and the Strait of Hormuz to the risk of a wider conflict. The focus is not only on military decisions, but also on fears that the administration’s hard line could destabilize the region and hit markets—intensifying anxieties about subsequent consequences for trade and the cost of energy. The emotional tone is fueled as well by talk...
Knowledge

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...

A house in a package: how whole homes were ordered by catalog in Seattle — and why the idea is...
Imagine opening a thick paper catalog—like an online store website, only without a screen—and picking out… an entire real house. Not a dollhouse, but one where people actually live. That’s exactly what many families in Seattle did a hundred years ago. And these homes still stand today on the city’s quiet streets—with wide verandas, wooden beams under the roof, and cozy front porches. These aren’t just pretty old houses. They’re an engineering marvel of their time. And most surprising of all:...

Bike Lanes That Were Hidden Under Asphalt
Imagine you’ve drawn a beautiful picture, and someone simply covers it with gray paint. Disappointing, right? But here’s what’s surprising: if the paint ever starts to peel, your drawing will show up again. That’s exactly what happened in the American city of Seattle. Only instead of a picture, there were bike lanes—and instead of paint, it was real asphalt.
How Seattle Fell in Love With Biking — and Then Forgot
Long ago, in the 1970s—about the time your grandparents were young—people in...

A burger with a story: how injustice taught one city to cook with kindness
Imagine that in your city there’s one special little cafe. There’s always a line—not because it’s expensive or trendy, but because it’s delicious, fast, and every worker genuinely smiles. That’s exactly what Dick's Drive-In became in Seattle. But few people know that the secret of its kindness is tied to a very sad story—and to people who, despite injustice, didn’t lose faith in the good.
A small restaurant with a big personality
Dick's Drive-In opened in Seattle in 1954. It was the idea of...
A Duck in a Tower Crane: How Nature Came Back to Where the Amazon Built
Imagine a duck. It wobbles from foot to foot, pauses, looks around—and then freezes right next to a massive construction crane. Around it, machines roar, workers in hard hats carry pipes, and it just stands there. Stares. As if checking: is it possible to live here?
That’s the kind of scene you could see in the South Lake Union area of Seattle, when Amazon arrived and began building its huge urban campus. Most people know this story as one about money, offices, and glass spheres. But there’s...

Whose hands built Amazon’s glass spheres?
Imagine you live in a cozy neighborhood where everyone knows everyone. Your mom buys bread from the neighbor, your dad plays dominoes with friends in the courtyard, and you know every crack in the sidewalk. Then one day big trucks arrive—and all of that disappears. Where your yard used to be, a huge glass building grows. That’s exactly what happened in Seattle’s South Lake Union neighborhood—and the story of the people who are no longer there turns out to be surprisingly tied to those who...

Fire gift: how a terrible catastrophe helped Seattle become better
Imagine you’re building a city out of LEGO. You build it for a long time—adding little houses, roads, shops... But then you notice you’ve made lots of mistakes: the roads are too narrow, the buildings are crooked, and overall it just doesn’t seem right. What do you do?
You can try fixing everything piece by piece—but that takes forever and it’s not fun. Or you can start over, this time building it the right way. Something like that happened in Seattle on June 6, 1889. Only instead of the people...