SEATTLE Rescued turtles returned to the wild in the Columbia River Gorge
The Oregon Zoo, with the help of volunteers and conservation specialists, released 22 endangered northwestern pond turtles back into the Columbia River Gorge. The area offers ideal habitat for them: a warm climate, rocky banks for nesting and slow-moving stretches of river with abundant aquatic vegetation. The region links Washington and Oregon, creating a corridor for migration and population recovery — bald eagles, salmon, North American beavers and rare plants live here, making the gorge a...
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NEIGHBORS Vancouver incidents and life: crash, housing privacy and the Whitecaps
Today's news from Vancouver covers three key topics: a serious crash involving a police vehicle that left an elderly man critically injured; a ruling...

SEATTLE Washington cuts "boarding" of children in hospitals due to lack of psychiatric care
A new report published by the office of the governor of Washington state shows a significant improvement in the situation of hospitalizing children...

EVENTS Seattle Listings: Top Events May 15–21, 2026
A new week in Seattle promises a packed cultural program: from big concerts and musicals downtown to street festivals and family celebrations in...

USA Vulnerability and Control: How We Respond to Different Threats
Events happening in different parts of the world may at first seem unrelated: a domestic dispute involving a sharp instrument in a small American...

REACTIONS How the World Sees Washington: Views from Brazil, Saudi Arabia and Israel
The United States remains the nervous center of global discussions — not only because of its own internal crises, but also due to the constant...

SEATTLE New Trader Joe's to Open in Woodinville on Friday
The first Trader Joe's in the city of Woodinville, located at 14035 N.E. Woodinville Duvall Road, will open this Friday. For locals this is a...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, 05/15, in Seattle it is mostly sunny and warm. High around 75°F, low around 59°F. Humidity is moderate, wind from the northeast at 4 mph. UV...

WORLD John Barrett Discussed Power Grid Restoration with Venezuelan Authorities
Acting chargé d’affaires of the United States John Barrett held a meeting with Venezuelan officials dedicated to plans for restoring the national...

WORLD Trump Leaves Beijing with China's Promises on Iran
President Donald Trump’s visit to Beijing concluded with loud statements about agreements reached with Chinese President Xi Jinping. According to...
Seattle

New Live Nation concert venue to open in Seattle near T-Mobile Park
Live Nation has teamed up with the owners of the Seattle Mariners — the Major League Baseball (MLB) club whose home field is T-Mobile Park in the...

Texas Prepares for 600th Execution Amid Disputes Over Intellectual Disability
Today’s digest covers two main stories: a dramatic case in Texas where the state is set to carry out its 600th execution despite expert findings of...

Two outsiders lead fundraising in Washington state’s legislative race
In Washington state, two political newcomers have unexpectedly become the fundraising leaders in the race for the state legislature. Megachurch...

Seattle among top five fastest-growing US cities
Seattle continues to grow steadily, even though the boom of the 2010s, when it was the fastest-growing large city in America, is behind it. According...

Two new ways to travel Puget Sound this summer
This summer residents and visitors of Seattle and the surrounding area will have two new routes by water and air. From June 4 through Sept. 8,...

100 Days of Ben Shuldiner: Visiting All Schools and Ambitious Promises
On Monday it reached 100 days since Ben Shuldiner was appointed superintendent of Seattle Public Schools (SPS). A former New York high school...

Rainy Return: Weather in Seattle Cools Off
After a stretch of warm, sunny days, a change is coming to Seattle: meteorologists from the National Weather Service warn of returning rain and...

Conservative group in Washington accused of hiding political advertising
The election-finance watchdog Washingtonians for Ethical Government filed a complaint against the conservative political committee Let’s Go...

Three Sisters: why the Oregon volcano won't kill 200,000 people
Social media has been flooded with frightening videos: "Three Sisters caldera is cracking! 213,072 Americans in the death zone!" The creators of...
Neighbors

Vancouver: Tragedy, Sport and Real Estate
Today's digest brings together three important stories from British Columbia: a woman's tragic fall from the Granville Street Bridge has sparked public outrage and calls for safety barriers; the Vancouver Whitecaps soccer club is fighting to survive with support from politicians and Indigenous nations; and a unique real estate listing — a home with a private golf course — is on the market for $1.68 million.
Tragedy on the Granville Bridge: Police watchdog probes woman's fall as public demands...

World Cup Preparations and the Whitecaps Crisis
In the digest — updates to BC Place for the 2026 World Cup, the British Columbia premier’s stance on AI risks following the Tumbler Ridge tragedy, and pivotal talks to save the Vancouver soccer club involving government and Indigenous leaders.
Getting ready for the World Cup: BC Place transformed for the 2026 tournament
A month before the start of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, British Columbia Premier David Eby unveiled the upgrades made to BC Place. One key change was the installation of a hybrid...

Vancouver: AI race, energy and housing affordability
Today's digest covers three key topics: building "sovereign" AI data center clusters in British Columbia, the premier's recognition of AI's dual nature as both threat and opportunity, and Vancouver's ranking as one of Canada's least affordable cities to buy a home.
Plan to create a "sovereign" cluster of AI data centers in Kamloops and Vancouver
The federal government of Canada and telecom giant Telus announced a partnership to establish a network of several data centers in British Columbia for...

Vancouver: from an unusual crash to new wildfires
Today's news from Vancouver and British Columbia cover three main events: an unusual motorcycle crash that left the bike hanging from a traffic light, a drop in home sales on the housing market, and two new lightning-caused wildfires.
Motorcycle stuck in a traffic light: an unusual crash in Vancouver
An attention-grabbing traffic collision occurred in the Metro Vancouver area, drawing notice not only from police but also from local residents. As a result of the crash, a motorcycle ended up...

British Columbia Incident News Digest
A roundup of incidents in British Columbia: an investigation into police use of force at a SkyTrain station, a personal watercraft striking a gray whale, and an unusual crash that left a motorcycle stuck on a traffic light.
Vancouver probe into use-of-force incident at SkyTrain station: civilian watchdog seeks witnesses
The Independent Investigations Office of British Columbia (IIO) has asked the public to help gather information about an incident that took place Wednesday evening near the...

Ceremonies and Incidents in Vancouver
This digest collects news about the honoring of family physicians in British Columbia, a scandal over payment for a brief meeting of politicians, and a large power outage on Vancouver’s East Side.
Family physicians of British Columbia honored in Vancouver: recognition of service in difficult times
On Friday, May 8, an annual awards ceremony dedicated to family physicians of British Columbia took place in downtown Vancouver. The event, covered by CTV News, served as an important reminder of the...

Whitecaps and Vancouver rental market: main news from Vancouver
In the latest news: the Vancouver Whitecaps are opening the upper bowl of their stadium due to high demand, a local investor group plans to bid to buy the team, and rental prices in Vancouver have fallen more than in any other major Canadian city.
Whitecaps return: BC Place upper bowl to open due to demand
The Vancouver Whitecaps announced the opening of BC Place’s upper bowl for the match against Los Angeles FC on August 1, citing strong ticket demand. According to the club’s press release,...

Scandals and Oddities in British Columbia
Today's digest: local investors are preparing a counteroffer to buy the Whitecaps to keep the club in Vancouver; police arrested a repeat offender who tried to flee on a homemade go‑kart at an "incredibly low speed"; a former Vancouver mayor said federal investigators are probing a BC cabinet minister over suspected cooperation with China.
BC-based potential buyers preparing counteroffer to acquire Vancouver Whitecaps
The past few weeks have been a real test for Vancouver Whitecaps fans: news...

British Columbia Under Pressure: Drunk Drivers, Top Restaurants and the DRIPA Crisis
Today's digest covers three key stories from British Columbia: the arrest of a truck driver for impaired and speeding driving on the highway, 14 Vancouver restaurants honored in the prestigious Canada's 100 Best list, and a wave of business pullbacks amid uncertainty around the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA).
North Vancouver trucker arrested for speeding and impaired driving
The British Columbia Highway Patrol reports an incident that could have become a real...
USA

Everyday Surprises: How We Encounter Rare Events
Sometimes the news arranges itself so that there doesn’t seem to be a single unifying theme: a fishing line with a record catfish in Florida, an electrical fire on the tracks at New York’s Penn Station, corporate negotiations between giants of the food industry, and technological innovations in the texture of protein bars. But if you look at them not as disconnected facts but as reflections of how modern life is organized, an interesting story emerges: we live in a world where extremely rare,...

Security Under Pressure: From Local Incidents to a Crisis of the Rule of Law
Stories that at first glance seem unrelated — a false bomb threat at a Pittsburgh-area supermarket, a patient attacking a medic in an ambulance, and the turbulent chronicle of Donald Trump’s second term — are in fact linked by one thread. It is the growing tension around the notion of “security” and how authorities, institutions, and individuals deal with it: where it is genuinely provided, where it is used as a political tool, and where it becomes a convenient justification for undermining the...

The Fragility of Fame: When Public Success Doesn't Guarantee Protection
Almost nothing seems to connect, at first glance, the protagonist of a sensational court case, Alex Murdaugh, NBA player Brandon Clarke, and MLB outfielder Alek Thomas. Different fields, different fates, different scales. But the stories told in an NBC News piece about Murdaugh's overturned conviction (NBC News), a Yahoo Sports obituary on Clarke's death (Yahoo Sports), and a short Arizona Sports note about Thomas being traded to the Dodgers (Arizona Sports) actually form a single narrative....

Responsibility and Risk: How We Experience Disasters and Crises
Three news items that at first glance seem unrelated: the collapse of a Baltimore bridge after a collision with a cargo ship, a house fire in Iowa, and rising inflation in the United States amid a war in Iran. Look more closely, and a single thread runs through all of them: society increasingly confronts the consequences of managerial failures, technological and economic risks, and the same questions arise each time — who is accountable, could it have been prevented, how to compensate the...

Courts, Maps and Power: How Redistricting Is Rewriting U.S. Democracy
American fights over the redrawing of electoral districts have long moved beyond a technical issue and turned into a struggle over the very architecture of power. Three pieces taken together reveal the same line of conflict: who ultimately shapes the political landscape — voters, state legislatures, or the courts, above all the U.S. Supreme Court. The stories from Virginia and South Carolina, reported by NBC News, ABC News and Fox News, are not a set of local episodes but part of a vast...
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Politics, Courts and Markets: How the US Lives in Constant Stress
In three pieces that at first glance seem unrelated — about the assassination attempt on Donald Trump at a journalists’ gala dinner, his public attack on Supreme Court justices over a tariff ruling, and why the war in Iran has not yet broken the global economy — a single common thread emerges. It’s about how high‑intensity politics, personalized power and a “presidential center of the universe” affect institutions: from the Department of Justice and the Supreme Court to global markets. Taken...
The Cost of Security: From Geopolitics to the Delivery Room
Three news stories that at first glance seem unrelated revolve around the same theme: the cost of security and how society and the state manage violence, risk, and the protection of people. In one case it's high politics and the prospect of peace between the US and Iran; in another, an officer’s split‑second decision in a supermarket; in the third, the hidden but persistent violence of spending systems that determine the health and lives of mothers and children in the United States. Together...

Vulnerability and Risk: How Security Operates Differently in Modern America
Three news items that at first glance seem unrelated unexpectedly reveal a common theme: how people confront risk, violence and vulnerability — and how the security system responds, whether through the courts, road services or police. From the high‑profile story about NFL star Tyreek Hill to a fatal crash in Florida and a shootout with a fugitive in Nebraska — each story is about the fragility of the human body, trust (and distrust) in institutions meant to protect us, and how society turns...

Scandals, Crises and Shifts: How Modern Risk-Management Logic Works
In three stories that at first glance seem unrelated — the courtroom case involving NFL star Tyreek Hill, the Pine Mountain wildfire in Oregon, and the strategic pivot of Rockstar Energy Husqvarna’s factory racing team — one common theme unexpectedly emerges: how organizations and public figures manage risk when things go off-script. From athletes’ private behavior to a burn that escaped its planned boundaries, and to the restructuring of a major brand’s racing program, we see attempts to...
Reactions

How the World Sees Trump's America: China Visit, Iran War, and a Country That Lost Its Halo
In mid‑May 2026 much of the world’s attention has again turned to the United States — not so much to Washington’s specific decisions as to how those...

How the US Is Becoming "Problem No
In recent months the picture of how the US is written about and debated in New Delhi, Seoul and Kyiv has noticeably changed. For an observer who...

How the world talks about the US today
In mid‑May 2026, discussion of the United States in leading media spaces of China, Saudi Arabia and Germany revolves almost entirely around a trio of...
Washington in Focus: How Ukraine, Israel and China Are Rereading America's Role Today
A dense information cloud is gathering again around the United States, and this time its outlines are especially clear from Kyiv, Jerusalem and...
America as a Source of Instability: How Germany, South Korea and China View the U.S
In early May 2026, the headlines of leading global outlets almost always feature the United States not as a predictable “anchor” of the world system,...

Trade Wars, Geopolitics and a "Choice Without Choice"
Over the past weeks the United States has once again become a central topic for three very different regions of the world — South Africa, Brazil and...
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America in the Crosshairs: How South Korea, Saudi Arabia and Brazil Debate the US Role
In recent weeks America has again found itself at the center of animated debates in Seoul, Riyadh and Brasília. But this is no longer the old...

World reactions to US and Iran peace proposals: diplomacy on the brink
The situation around the American proposals regarding Iran has turned into a test of strength and trust: in Saudi Arabia and Germany the media agenda...

Europe Without the American Anchor: How France, Ukraine and Germany Debate the New US Role
In recent months the image of the United States in Europe seems to have blurred: the country that for decades was the "anchor" of the transatlantic...
World

Energy Geopolitics at the US–China Summit in Beijing
At the center of the upcoming meeting between US President Donald Trump and PRC Chairman Xi Jinping in Beijing is the issue of energy security. The main source of tension is the potential blockade of the Strait of Hormuz — a strategic route through which China receives about 55% of its crude oil and a quarter of its liquefied natural gas supplies. Disruptions to shipping have already triggered record increases in energy prices, which has hit the Chinese economy hard, since Beijing is the...

Venezuela rejects ICJ jurisdiction, demands talks with Guyana
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez has officially stated that the country does not recognize the jurisdiction of the UN International Court of Justice in the dispute over the Essequibo territory and insists on bilateral negotiations with Guyana under the 1966 Geneva Agreement. During the opening of an agricultural fair in Caracas, she presented a packet of documents, including maps, diplomatic correspondence and historical titles, which she said confirm the disputed region's...

Trump's Visit to China: Iran and Taiwan Take Center Stage
President Donald Trump's trip to Beijing did not lead to a significant rapprochement on Iran. Trump hoped to secure China's support to pressure Tehran to restore shipping in the Strait of Hormuz and to reach a comprehensive agreement, but China maintained a cautious stance. Although the official meeting took place in a friendly atmosphere, Beijing was clearly in no hurry to assume the role of mediator, focusing instead on its own priorities. The American side warned that any Chinese support for...

U.S. Intelligence: Iran Has Restored 90% of Its Missile Capacity
Contrary to public statements by the Donald Trump administration, secret intelligence obtained by The New York Times shows that Tehran has regained control of about 90% of its underground missile facilities across the country. Assessments prepared in early April, based on satellite imagery and advanced surveillance technologies, have raised serious alarm among senior officials in Washington, presenting the administration with a strategic dilemma amid a sharp shortage of critical U.S....

Delcy Rodríguez: We are proud to have defended Venezuela in The Hague
On Monday, acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez spoke at the International Court of Justice in The Hague, defending the country's territorial rights over the Essequibo region. She presented historical and legal arguments confirming Venezuela's sovereignty over this disputed territory. Rodríguez emphasized that the delegation is fulfilling its mandate to protect the integrity of the national borders, and expressed pride that Venezuela's voice was heard on the international stage.
This...

War with Iran Destroyed the Myth of US Protection — Analyst
At the height of the Iran–Israel confrontation, prominent Egyptian thinker and constitutionalist Muhammad Salim al-Awa offers his analysis of the conflict, arguing that the traditional equations of security in the Gulf and the Arab world are collapsing before our eyes. In his view, military action against Iran has finally dispelled the illusion of American patronage. The region may be on the verge of a complete restructuring of the geopolitical balance, where the maps of influence and military...

US–Iran Talks Reach Deadlock
An exchange of proposals and responses between Tehran and Washington continues, but the parties still cannot overcome disagreements on key issues, which is blocking the conclusion of a possible agreement. Details of this diplomatic standoff, including the content of the latest initiatives, regularly leak to media outlets close to one camp or another, creating a contradictory picture of the prospects for a settlement.

Venezuela Rejects Guyana's "Useless" Report to the International Court of Justice
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez called the report submitted by Guyana to the International Court of Justice on the Guyana-Essequibo territorial dispute "pernicious and useless." According to her, any court decision will not only fail to bring about a final settlement of the conflict but will also exacerbate disagreements between the parties, causing them to "dig in on their positions." Rodríguez emphasized that the only functioning mechanism remains the 1966 Geneva Agreement,...

Trump may declare victory in Iran, but selling it to the public is nearly impossible
American President Donald Trump is likely to declare victory in a war with Iran regardless of the actual outcome, but his main problem is convincing the public of the political justification for that conflict. His rhetoric swings from claims that "victory was achieved on the first day" to forecasts that fighting could drag on for "weeks or months." Despite official optimism, Americans are increasingly skeptical and worried about how the war will affect their daily lives.
The difficulty is...
Knowledge

Child detectives who helped the city decide the fate of a giant dome
Imagine the adults in your city arguing about something very important and expensive, unable to reach an agreement. Then a group of schoolchildren grabs notebooks and pens and decides, "We'll figure this out ourselves!" That's exactly what happened in Seattle in the late 1960s, when the city was deciding whether to build a huge domed stadium. This is the story of how a building many called a "terrible mistake" and a "waste of money" became a beloved place — and how, when it was demolished,...
Women Fishers Who Taught Engineers to Listen to Salmon
Imagine a huge gate for ships that almost blocked the way home for thousands of fish. That nearly happened in Ballard more than a century ago when the famous locks were built. But a group of immigrant women from Norway and Sweden noticed something the engineers with university degrees had missed. They knew a secret passed down in their families for generations: salmon always return home, and if you block their path the river will die.
This is the story of how knowledge brought in suitcases...

The Washerwoman Who Knew Secret Paths: How One Woman Saved Children from the Fire, and the City Forgot...
Beneath the streets of Seattle hides an entire ghost city. If you go down the special stairways in the city center, you can see old sidewalks, shop windows and doors that now sit several meters below ground. This underground world appeared after a massive fire in 1889 consumed nearly the entire city in a single day. But few people know that while the city burned, one woman—whose name almost no one remembered—saved many children’s lives simply because she knew all the secret passages between...

A Tram Named "Desire" That Sailed Across the Ocean to Restore a City's Dream
Imagine this: one day workers dig a hole in the center of the city to repair a water pipe. A shovel hits something metal — ding! The workers look down and see old rails hidden under the asphalt. Those rails had lain there for more than forty years, like a secret message from the past. This is how Seattle residents repeatedly found traces of their old streetcars — the transport that once was the heart of the city, then vanished, and now is returning. At the center of this story is one special...

Women Who Hid Flowers in Closets: The Secret Art Hidden in Ballard's Walls
Imagine moving into a new house and, when you open the door of an old cupboard, finding an entire garden of painted flowers inside—reds, blues, golds, twisted into astonishing patterns. The flowers are so beautiful they seem to glow in the dark. Then you realize: someone deliberately hid this beauty where almost no one would see it. This is not a fairy tale — these are real stories that still happen in Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood, when families renovate old homes and find secret art left by...

The Library That Taught Books to Live on a Magic Slide
Imagine you have so many books at home that every year you have to move them all to new shelves because new books keep appearing. Would you get tired of that? Now imagine a library that holds millions of books! That’s exactly the problem people in Seattle, USA, solved when they created a library that looks like a huge glass diamond and hides a secret inside: the books there never need to be moved.
This is the story of how one building changed not only the lives of books but also how people...

The women who operated "flying rooms": how women became pilots of the fastest elevators
Imagine you step into a small room, the doors close, and suddenly the floor beneath you begins to rise so fast your stomach tickles like on a swing. In a few seconds you’re lifted to the height of a twenty‑story building. In 1914, when Smith Tower was built in Seattle, this felt like real magic. But the most surprising thing wasn’t the elevators themselves — it was who operated them: young women known as "elevator girls." They became the first female operators of complex machinery on the West...
The girl who taught adults to listen: how students helped decide on a new stadium
In 1995 a ten-year-old girl named Sara stood before a room full of adults in suits, her hands trembling so much that the sheet with her speech rustled like autumn leaves. She had come to Seattle’s city council building to tell the decision-makers why the city needed a new stadium. But Sara was not alone — twenty-three of her classmates from Madison Elementary had come with her. What they did that day changed how adults thought about building a stadium for the Seahawks.
How it began: a teacher...

Secret drawings that taught cities to grow food on roofs
Imagine you found a dusty box of children's drawings in an old house. But these weren't just pictures — they were real instructions for growing vegetables in a special way so the soil would never get tired. Those drawings kept a secret for seventy years that today helps entire cities! And the drawings were made by children who were once forced to leave their homes simply because their families had Japanese names and faces.
Farmers who knew how to talk to the soil
Before 1942 in California, on...