Planet Seattle

Page updated: 05-27-2026 3:05 PM (Seattle), 05-27-2026 6:05 PM (NewYork)
Tattoo on Jacob Baker’s face. (Photo courtesy: Hawai‘i Police Department)

USA Crises of Trust: From Politics to Security and Justice

05-27-2026 2:06 PM
The images that arise from reading three news pieces at first glance seem unrelated: the scandal-plagued Democratic primary campaign of Graham...
A 75-year-old man who was struck while riding his motorized scooter in what Vancouver police say was a

NEIGHBORS Vancouver Tragedies and Mysteries: News Digest

05-27-2026 1:04 PM
The digest presents three key stories from Vancouver: a tragic collision involving an elderly man in a motorized wheelchair, provincial officials...
The dynamic Habitats at Home display garden, just inside the entrance to Bellevue Botanical Garden, was created by WSU Extension King County Master Gardeners with financial support from King Conservation District.  (James Gagliardi)

SEATTLE New Bellevue Garden Becomes Pollinator Paradise

05-27-2026 12:04 PM
At the new "Habitats at Home" display garden at Bellevue Botanical Garden, flowers take center stage — and there are an incredible number of them....
Orchard workers pick Cosmic Crisp apples at Thornton Farms in Tonasket on Oct. 2, 2025. (Kevin Clark / The Seattle Times)

SEATTLE Farm bill favors fruits and vegetables, but Senate battle looms

05-27-2026 10:05 AM
The U.S. House-passed farm bill directs nearly $1 billion toward supporting "specialty crops" — fruits, vegetables, nuts and berries. For Washington...

EVENTS Seattle Events: Week of May 27, 2026

05-27-2026 9:09 AM
We have a busy week of events across the Seattle area — from the musical Grease in Everett and the HONK! Fest West street parade to a cabaret...

EVENTS Advance Calendar: Events June 26–July 26, 2026

05-27-2026 9:03 AM
For advance planning — a selection of major concerts, MLB games and World Cup matches taking place in the Seattle area and nearby venues from June 26...
Kerry Sheron, 69, died Sunday night after the assault Wednesday in the San Diego-area city of Escondido.

USA Violence, Polarization and the Fragility of the Democratic Fabric

05-27-2026 8:06 AM
In three seemingly very different stories – the killing of a veteran in California, intensive Israeli strikes on Nabatieh in southern Lebanon, and an...
Tim Wheeler, Margo Polley and Peter Stedman navigate through the dense and thick Doc Holliday forest west of Port Angeles. Private donations will preserve 2 acres that had been slated for logging. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times, 2024)

SEATTLE Donations Saved an Ancient Forest in Washington State

05-27-2026 6:05 AM
The Olympic Peninsula Forest Defenders coalition raised $32,000 from 325 donors in just four days to prevent the logging of two acres of century-old...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, WA

05-27-2026 5:06 AM
Today, 05/27, Seattle will see partly cloudy skies with brief rain showers. High around 66°F during the day and 54°F at night. Wind southeast at 7...

Seattle

A person walks along a path at Magnuson Park near the public art installation “The Fin Project: From Swords Into Plowshares” by John T. Young. Ninety-nine percent of Seattleites are within a 10-minute walk of a park. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)

Seattle in US Parks Top Ten: the Cost of Green Success

05-26-2026 10:05 PM
Seattle has ranked among the top ten U.S. cities for park quality for the sixth year in a row. According to ParkScore 2024, the city is eighth among...
KIRO 7 Now

Factory Explosion and Meta Layoffs: News Digest

05-26-2026 6:10 PM
A tragedy at a pulp mill in Washington: an explosion left one dead and nine injured, while Meta is cutting nearly 1,400 jobs in the region as it...
Southbound Interstate 5 traffic crawls near Northgate on April 30 in Seattle. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

Road deaths in Washington fall again but remain above pre-pandemic levels

05-26-2026 3:04 PM
In 2025, 659 people were killed in traffic crashes on Washington state roads — more than 10% fewer than the year before (737) and substantially below...

Three Oregon islands up for auction at the price of an apartment

05-26-2026 12:04 PM
An unusual listing has appeared on the real estate market: timber company Roseburg Forest Products has put three islands totaling 20 acres (about 8...
Neil Molenaar of East Wenatchee sits with his dog Chloe aboard the MV Puyallup state ferry from Bainbridge Island to Seattle. (Bettina Hansen / The Seattle Times, 2014)

Pets officially allowed on Washington State ferries

05-26-2026 10:04 AM
Starting the Memorial Day weekend, furry companions can travel with their owners in some passenger areas of Washington State Ferries. The agency...
This Planned Parenthood clinic in Seattle is among those in many states now offering abortion pills for people to have on hand should they later need them. The initiative builds on efforts to increase access amid legal challenges that have reached the Supreme Court. (Jennifer Buchanan / The Seattle Times)

Washington Planned Parenthood: Abortion Pills Before Pregnancy

05-26-2026 6:11 AM
A new service from Planned Parenthood, launched last week in Washington and Hawaii, allows people to pre-order medication for a medical abortion...
The barricades are made of soil, chunks of concrete, metal, and other debris.

Desperate Measures: Seattle Residents Build Barricades Against Gunfire

05-26-2026 6:11 AM
Residents of Seattle’s troubled neighborhoods, fed up with endless shootings and inaction from authorities, are blocking streets themselves with...
Shoppers walk in the upper street level of Pike Place Market. (Karen Ducey / The Seattle Times, 2022)

Pike Place Market to allow alcohol "Sip and Stroll" this summer

05-26-2026 6:10 AM
Seattle's historic Pike Place Market is launching a pilot "Sip and Stroll" program that will allow visitors to buy alcoholic beverages at 24...
Tina Matz, left, and her mother Joanne Matz visit the grave of Tina’s grandfather, Vernon Easterlin Sr., a survivor of the Battle of the Bulge, after flags were set out Thursday in advance of Memorial Day to honor veterans who have passed, at Tahoma National Cemetery in Kent. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)

Remembering the Fallen on Memorial Day in Washington State

05-26-2026 6:10 AM
Tina Matz and her mother Joanne Matz visited the grave of Tina’s grandfather, Vernon Easterling Sr., a Battle of the Bulge veteran, on Thursday at...

Neighbors

A swimmer stands along the shoreline at Whytecliff Park in West Vancouver, B.C., on Thursday, July 18, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/ Tijana Martin

Tragic Week for Divers in British Columbia

05-26-2026 1:04 PM
Fatal scuba deaths, Kelowna’s culinary recognition and a bear attack in Squamish — the top British Columbia news of the past few days. Tragic week off British Columbia’s coast: second diver dies during a dive in days Over the past several days there have been two fatal incidents involving scuba diving off the coast of British Columbia. Last Sunday, at about 1:30 p.m. local time, West Vancouver police received a report of a diver in distress near Whytecliff Park. Despite the prompt response from...
A man has died while scuba diving off West Vancouver, in the second such death in British Columbia waters in less than a week.

Tragedies and Scandals: British Columbia News Digest

05-25-2026 1:04 PM
Two divers died off the province’s coast in a week, the Squamish First Nation denies a fake land-claim letter, and Vancouver hotels sit empty ahead of the 2026 World Cup blamed on poor PR. Tragedy off Canadian shores: second diver dies in British Columbia in a week A second diving-related tragedy in as many days occurred in the waters of British Columbia. This time the victim was a 50-year-old man who died while diving off West Vancouver. The incident took place in the area of the popular...
Members of the BC Nurses' Union rally in Downtown Vancouver on Thursday April 30, 2026. (CityNews Image)

Vancouver news digest: from nurses' strike to cultural events

05-24-2026 1:03 PM
British Columbia nurses reached a tentative agreement with the government, avoiding a strike. A missing Vancouver actor was found dead; police suspect homicide. The last week of May in Vancouver promises 20 bright events: from The Black Keys concert to a shrimp festival. British Columbia nurses and the provincial government reach tentative agreement The British Columbia Nurses' Union (BCNU) announced a tentative agreement with the provincial government after several months of tense...
VANCOUVER, BC., October 25, 2023 - Don Taylor during a ceremony inducting him into the BC Hall Sports Hall of Fame in Vancouver, B.C., on October 25,, 2023. 

(NICK PROCAYLO/POSTMEDIA)

10102670A [PNG Merlin Archive]

Championship Shame and a Seal's Rescue: British Columbia News

05-23-2026 1:06 PM
In the digest: The B.C. Sports Hall of Fame is closed during the World Cup, drawing journalists' ire; a touching rescue story of a seal pup named "The Survivor"; and the opening of a unique Indigenous-led housing complex in Vancouver with 248 units. Shame and missed opportunity: B.C. Sports Hall of Fame closed during the World Cup While the world’s attention is on Vancouver and the city’s streets are filled with soccer fans from every continent, the local B.C. Sports Hall of Fame found itself...
The Cambie Street Bridge in Vancouver on May 21, 2026. (CityNews image)

Canadian Digest: Bridges, Tourism and Resources

05-21-2026 1:05 PM
A roundup of news about a major $200-million seismic upgrade to Vancouver’s Cambie Street Bridge, the revocation of a license from a rogue travel agency in British Columbia, and Prime Minister Carney’s visit to the province to discuss advancing the resource economy amid energy disputes. Under the shadow of seismic safety: Vancouver bridge to receive $200 million for strengthening Vancouver, British Columbia, provincial, and federal governments, together with transit agency TransLink, announced...
Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks beside B.C. Premier David Eby in Vancouver, on Wednesday, May 20, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ethan Cairns

Canada: Pipeline Dispute as a Test of Unity

05-20-2026 1:07 PM
Prime Minister of Canada Mark Carney and British Columbia Premier David Eby have begun talks on building a new oil pipeline in exchange for economic and environmental guarantees, seeking a compromise between Alberta’s interests, environmental protection and Indigenous rights. Carney and Eby meeting: Pipeline as a test of Canada’s unity Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and British Columbia Premier David Eby agreed to begin talks on the province’s economic priorities and Ottawa’s role in...
A lawyer who isn't involved in the case said he would prefer to see neighbours speak to each other over trees and hedges, rather than drag each other to court.

Neighbourhood Wars and Celebrity Life in British Columbia

05-19-2026 1:06 PM
A roundup of news from British Columbia: a legal dispute between owners of a luxury mansion over a removed hedge, the Smashing Pumpkins touring Canada, and the home of a How I Met Your Mother star tucked into the wilderness. Neighbourhood war on the "Golden Mile": owners of a $24M mansion sue over removed hedge A serious dispute has erupted between neighbours in Vancouver’s prestigious Point Grey neighbourhood that could turn into a multimillion-dollar court case. Israel and Elaine Shafran, who...
First positive case of hantavirus in B.C. is a low risk to public. (CityNews)

Hantavirus in British Columbia: first case and new challenges

05-18-2026 1:05 PM
A first case of the Andes hantavirus has been confirmed in British Columbia in a passenger from a cruise ship, but authorities say there is no public threat. Against this backdrop, Vancouver is preparing for a busy week of concerts, festivals and sporting events. Meanwhile, Major League Soccer’s Vancouver Whitecaps are threatening to move to Las Vegas, and the B.C. Lions are negotiating their future at BC Place. First confirmed hantavirus case in British Columbia: no public threat The province...

USA

Video. Catch up with the most important stories from around Europe and beyond this May 26th, 2026 - latest news, breaking news, World, Business, Entertainment, Politics, Culture, Travel.

Infrastructure Vulnerability: From Europe's Water to US Plants and Politics

05-26-2026 2:06 PM
The modern world increasingly reveals how fragile the systems we rely on every day are: water, energy, industry, elections, democratic institutions. Stories from different countries and sectors — from Euronews’s environmental project about water in Europe to the tragedy at a paper mill in Washington state and the political conflict over redistricting in South Carolina — at first glance seem unrelated. But viewed more broadly, a common thread emerges: infrastructures that are supposed to provide...
Coverage of the latest local and national news of the day, plus detailed and timely updates on breaking news and weather provided by the 13News Team.

Fragile Minds Under Pressure: How Fear, Fame and "Wellness" Become Threats

05-25-2026 8:07 AM
Stories from different news sources at first glance seem unrelated: a local WTHR report about daily news and weather, a detailed Fox News piece about a "wellness cult" that Game of Thrones actress Hannah Murray says she joined, and a local crime report from WRAL about a North Carolina man who, under the influence of drugs, believed his house was being broken into and began shooting while children were present. But viewed more broadly, a single theme runs through these texts: the fragility of...
As of 8:40 p.m. Saturday, fire progression has stopped and the fire has been 100% lined, according to the Spokane County Fire District 3.

Everyday Emergencies and Our Vulnerability: From Wildfires to Street Violence

05-24-2026 2:05 PM
What often lands in the "Breaking news" section usually looks like a set of unrelated local stories: here — a brush fire in a rural area, there — a fatal stabbing in a residential neighborhood, somewhere else — a brazen theft from a small restaurant. But when you look at those reports together, as in the notes about the fire near Cheney, Washington on krem.com, the fatal stabbing in Grand Rapids on WZZM13 and the theft at Pig Candy BBQ on WLWT, a more coherent picture emerges. All of these...
A police cordon outside the White House complex on Saturday.Alex Brandon / AP

Security, Violence, and Political Tension in Today's America

05-24-2026 8:05 AM
The American information space, even when viewed through these three seemingly unconnected news items, forms a rather grim but coherent picture: a country where anxiety about security has become an everyday backdrop — from the perimeter of the White House to a provincial Walmart in Florida and street‑level politics from New York to Alabama. The main throughline here is the combination of a real rise in violence risk, political polarization and mistrust, which pushes authorities to tighten...
Police and SWAT teams are responding to an incident in Donora.

Fragile Security: How Emergency Services Respond to Technical and Violent Threats

05-23-2026 2:05 PM
The incident with a failing chemical tank in Orange County and the parallel reports of a SWAT team storming a house in a small Pennsylvania town seem like stories from different worlds. In reality they are united by one thing: how modern societies live in a state of constant crisis readiness, where any infrastructure error or isolated violent incident can, within minutes, become a threat to thousands of people and requires complex coordination among emergency services, authorities, and experts....
Police said that Caleb Vazquez was “involved in suspicious behavior idolizing Nazis and mass shooters,” according to court documents filed in January 2025.

Global Events as a Mirror of Hopes, Fears and Memory

05-23-2026 8:04 AM
In three at-first-glance unrelated stories — the America’s Cup regatta in Naples, the attack at a San Diego mosque, and the death of rapper Rob Base — a single common thread emerges: how mass events and the media environment shape society, amplifying both constructive and destructive impulses. It’s about what we create around us: physical spaces (cities, waterfronts, sports arenas), digital spaces (online platforms, social networks), and cultural spaces (music, collective memory). Through...
We're following breaking news out of Michigan City.The Police Department confirms to WSBT 22 that a shooting happened inside Franciscan hospital around 7:15 AM

Violence, natural disasters and the question of risk predictability

05-22-2026 8:05 AM
Stories from three news items at first glance seem unrelated: a shooting at a hospital in Michigan City, the acquittal of a school administrator in Virginia after a six‑year‑old shot a teacher, and NOAA’s seasonal hurricane forecast. But they all effectively speak about the same thing: how society tries to manage risk — whether human violence or the force of nature — where predictability ends and randomness begins, and what the limits of institutional and individual responsibility are. The...
Trump Says Ballroom To Include Military Hospital, Research Site

How "Breaking News" Works: Power, Tragedy, and the Reporter in an Age of Constant Crisis

05-19-2026 2:06 PM
In three texts that at first glance seem unrelated — about Donald Trump's unprecedented tax deal with federal authorities in the NBC News piece, about a pedestrian killed by a garbage truck in Keene, New Hampshire, in a report by MyKeeneNow, and about the new breaking‑news reporter at the Raleigh News & Observer in the News & Observer column — a single theme emerges. It’s not just “what happened,” but how the breaking‑news ecosystem is organized: how such stories are formed, how journalists...
Co-owner says the $2 million negotiated price will not be enough for him to reopen the haunted attraction.

Fragile Boundaries: Public Spaces Becoming Arenas of Conflict

05-19-2026 8:07 AM
Stories about a popular monkey at a Japanese zoo, a cult horror attraction in Springfield, Missouri, and a new turn in the Jeffrey Epstein case in Surrey, England, may at first seem unrelated. But if viewed not as isolated episodes but as symptoms of the same trend, a coherent picture emerges: society is painfully rethinking where the boundaries of acceptable behavior in public spaces lie, who controls them, and how to respond when those boundaries are breached — physically, legally, or...

Reactions

India joins US-led 'Pax Silica' alliance to bolster AI and critical minerals supply chains

“America Again at the Center of Others’ Debates”: How Brazil, India and Japan Discuss the US...

05-26-2026 5:04 PM
In Brazil, India and Japan, the United States simultaneously appears as an ally, a source of risk, and the main reference point that countries try to...

How the world views America today: war with Iran, Ukraine and "fatigue with the US" in Europe and the...

05-26-2026 7:04 AM
By the end of May 2026, discussion of the United States around the world almost automatically boils down to three major storylines. The first is the...
On the surface, Republican leaders remain staunchly pro-Israel. But a clear, generational shift is emerging, as younger conservatives have grown skeptical of U.S. aid to Israel and of Jewish political influence in the U.S.

Washington Between Tehran and Jerusalem: Allies Clash Over US War with Iran

05-25-2026 5:08 PM
Around the United States today a political orbit has once again formed: a US–Israel war with Iran, Donald Trump’s attempts both to finish off Tehran...
Source :Getty Images

How the World Debates America: Europe Cools, China Tallies the Costs of Hegemony, India Weighs a...

05-25-2026 7:11 AM
Around the United States a dense wave of international reactions is once again gathering — from concern to outright irritation, from pragmatic...
Mapa de los ataques aéreos en la Región Central deVenezuela.

Venezuela, Ukraine and the Gulf: How the World Sees the US's New Power Projection

05-24-2026 5:07 PM
Throughout the first months of 2026 the United States once again found itself at the center of global debate — but this time not because of trade...
先週末にイランとの協議が物別れに終わった直後、唐突にトランプ氏が打ち出したのはホルムズ海峡の“逆封鎖”。それによって何が起きているのか取材してきました。先週末の停戦協議の直後から、ホルムズ海峡では、…

America in the Crosshairs of Three Capitals: How Saudi Arabia, Japan and South Africa View the...

05-24-2026 7:04 AM
At the end of May 2026, the United States once again found itself at the center of foreign editorial pages — but the picture of how America is seen...

How the World Sees America: war with Iran, Ukraine and fatigue with Trumpism

05-23-2026 5:03 PM
The image of the United States in spring 2026 outside Washington is being shaped less by domestic debates in Congress than by the rumble of two wars...
U.S. President Donald Trump participates in a welcome ceremony with President Xi Jinping of the People’s Republic of China at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, May 14, 2026.Credit: Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok

The World Watches Washington: How the US Frightens, Attracts, and Forces Adaptation

05-23-2026 7:06 AM
At the end of May 2026, discussions about the United States in leading media outlets in Japan, Turkey, and Germany are surprisingly consonant, even...
U.S. President Donald Trump is greeted by Chinese President Xi Jinping during a welcome ceremony on May 14, 2026, in Beijing, China.Alex Wong/Getty Images

How the World Sees America Today: China, Australia and Israel Facing a New U.S

05-22-2026 5:10 PM
In recent weeks the United States has once again become the center of global discussion — not as an abstract “superpower,” but as a very active, at...

World

Venezuela's Supreme Court Expanded to 32 Judges

05-27-2026 4:09 AM
On Monday the Venezuelan government's official gazette published a law reforming the Supreme Court, increasing the number of its judges from 20 to 32. The Constitutional Chamber will now consist of seven magistrates, and each of the other five chambers will have five. National Assembly head Jorge Rodríguez said the expansion is intended to speed up consideration of accumulated cases and combat judicial delays. In connection with this, the Committee on Judicial Appointments has already been...
فريدمان اتهم ترمب بالفشل في التخطيط لحرب إيران والفشل في توقع نتائجها (أسوشيتد برس)

Trump on the Brink: Concessions to Iran or War's Failure

05-27-2026 3:06 AM
Thomas Friedman, in a column for the New York Times, poses two key questions about the US war against Iran: how many "bitter cups" will Donald Trump have to drink to end the conflict with minimal gain, and can he call that "repast" a sumptuous dinner? The author is not opposed to temporary concessions if they deprive Iran of about 1,000 kilograms of near-weapons-grade uranium. However, he warns that such a partial success would not be a perfect deal — it would only strengthen the regime and...
Дональд Трамп и Си Цзиньпин вместе поднимаются по нескольким ступеням и проходят через большие традиционные китайские ворота во время официального визита в Храм Неба в Пекине. Оба изображены в окружении сопровождающих и обрамлены тёмной архитектурой здания.

Reactions of regional and global actors to US pressure and military moves

05-26-2026 7:06 PM
Venezuelan analyses link the current American sanctions, air strikes and Trump‑era strategies to a chain reaction in Latin America and beyond: from the strengthening of Cuban resilience under sanctions pressure to new diplomatic alignments around Iran and a rethinking of China’s stance on Cuba and Taiwan. Rather than viewing strikes and sanctions as isolated events, the authors emphasize their role as triggers for forming a new balance of power, in which countries seek ways to reduce dependence...
حاملة الطائرات الأمريكية

US aircraft carrier and destroyers spotted off Oman's coast

05-26-2026 4:05 PM
Satellite images taken on May 24 recorded a US Nimitz-class aircraft carrier and two Arleigh Burke-class destroyers in the northwestern Arabian Sea, near Oman's southern coast. Images from the European Sentinel-2 satellite show the carrier roughly 138 kilometers east of Salalah, with a visible wake at the time of capture. The two destroyers were positioned to the east, forming a compact naval formation along the Omani coast, indicating a continued US naval presence in the strategically...

Venezuela strengthens guarantees of citizens' rights through coordination of authorities

05-26-2026 4:04 AM
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez held a working meeting with Ombudswoman Égle González, focusing on the development and review of institutional plans to improve the quality of protection of citizens' rights. During the discussion, described as a "valuable exchange," social response mechanisms were clarified, with Rodríguez confirming that all state actions are based on human rights principles. The new strategies are aimed at renewing the operational capacity of the ombudsman's...
جهود دبلوماسية مكثفة لتذليل العقبات المتبقية والتي ما زالت تحول دون توقيع اتفاق بين أمريكا وإيران (شترستوك)

Uncertainty Surrounding US–Iran Interim Agreement

05-26-2026 3:05 AM
The timeline for announcing a temporary agreement between Washington and Tehran remains unclear, despite optimistic statements about an imminent accord. The presumed 60-day truce would include reopening the Strait of Hormuz, allowing Iran to export oil, and opening a negotiation track on the nuclear program. However, US President Donald Trump emphasized on his social network Truth Social that the blockade of Iranian ports and ships in the strait remains fully in place until the agreement is...
مسؤول أمريكي: الولايات المتحدة فهمت أن الزعيم الأعلى الإيراني مجتبى خامنئي أقر الإطار العام للاتفاق (الأوروبية)

U.S. and Iran Talks: 60-Day Truce on the Horizon

05-25-2026 4:06 PM
American sources report that talks between Washington and Tehran are approaching a final draft of a memorandum of understanding that would provide for a 60-day cessation of hostilities to create conditions for substantive negotiations. However, an official announcement and the details of the agreement have not yet been released. U.S. President Donald Trump, on his Truth Social platform, emphasized that the naval blockade of Iranian ports and ships in the Strait of Hormuz will remain fully in...
Delcy Rodríguez y Donald Trump

WSJ: Trump backs Delcy Rodríguez without demanding elections in Venezuela

05-25-2026 4:05 AM
An investigation by The Wall Street Journal revealed that Venezuela's acting president Delcy Rodríguez has become a key Washington ally under Donald Trump. According to the paper, she regularly meets with U.S. investors interested in the country's oil sector and receives direct praise from the U.S. president. This alliance provides Rodríguez with the necessary resources, institutional legitimacy, and political time to consolidate power while preserving many elements of the system built under...
وزير الخارجية الأمريكي ماركو روبيو: الولايات ​المتحدة ⁠ستتوصل إلى اتفاق ​جيد مع إيران أو تتعامل مع ‌هذا البلد

U.S. Secretary of State says agreement with Iran possible

05-25-2026 3:05 AM
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that an agreement with Iran to end the conflict could be reached as early as today, while emphasizing Israel’s right to self-defense. Leaving New Delhi, Rubio noted that news on the matter was expected last night and expressed hope that it would appear today. He confirmed that the U.S. is giving diplomacy every chance to succeed before considering alternative options. According to him, Washington will either reach a good agreement with Tehran or act "in...

Knowledge

Smith Tower - Seattle, Washington Editorial Stock Photo - Image of seattle, historic: 106770003

The Tower with a Secret Room Where Everyone Was Equal

05-26-2026 11:33 PM
Imagine you live in a city where the tallest building is only three stories. Then someone suddenly builds a 42-story tower! That’s what happened in Seattle in 1914, when Smith Tower opened. But the most surprising thing wasn’t the exterior — it was at the very top: a hidden magical room, a gift from the Chinese empress, where for the first time in the city’s history everyone — rich and poor, men and women, Americans and newcomers — could sit together and watch the clouds. The tower was meant to...
Bainbridge Island to Mark Japanese-American Wartime Internment - The New York Times

The Suitcase That Waited 70 Years: What’s Hidden in the Old Walls of Japantown

05-26-2026 11:04 AM
Imagine one morning you are told: you have a week to pack one suitcase and leave your home. You don’t know when you’ll return. Maybe in a month, maybe never. What will you take with you? That’s what happened to thousands of families in Seattle in the spring of 1942 — and that story still lives in the walls of one special neighborhood in the city. In Seattle’s old Japantown, now called the International District, there are buildings that remember that spring morning. They remember families...
Best Seattle Breweries for Seriously Good Craft Beers - The Emerald Palate

Brewers Who Broke the Main Rule of Business and Taught a City to Cooperate

05-25-2026 11:34 PM
In Seattle in the 1980s something strange and wonderful happened. People who opened small breweries did what seemed crazy: they began sharing their secret recipes with competitors. Imagine you invented the world’s best cookie recipe and then told every girl in class who also bakes cookies and sells them at the school fair. Sounds foolish? Many adults would think so. But Seattle’s brewers decided to try it — and a kind of magic happened that changed not only their city, but how people think...
How did a toxic site transform into a beloved Seattle park?

Families Who Turned Poison into Medicine: The Story of the Gas Works Workers

05-25-2026 11:04 AM
Imagine your parents working at a plant whose smokestacks belch black smoke, and you playing near huge rusty machines, not knowing the ground beneath your feet is poisoned. Now imagine that years later you and your friends decide to turn that dangerous place into a park where other children can play. This is the true story of immigrant families who built—and then saved—one of Seattle’s most unusual places: Gas Works Park. A plant that fed families and poisoned the soil In the early 1900s a...
The Underground Tour in Seattle - Bill Speidel's Underground Tour

The City Built Twice: Fountain Toilets and Unfair Stairs

05-24-2026 11:33 PM
Imagine living in a city where a toilet can suddenly turn into a fountain. Not a magical fountain from a story, but a very real one — dirty, smelly, and unpleasant. That’s how people in Seattle lived in the late 1800s. And this strange problem led to the city being rebuilt... twice. One on top of the other. Like a layered cake of streets, shops, and sidewalks. This is the story of how an attempt to solve one problem created many others, and how sometimes adults make decisions without...
Murals - John Osgood

The Building Saved by Paintbrushes: How Georgetown Residents Beat the Bulldozers

05-24-2026 11:04 AM
Imagine a huge old building where airplanes were once built. It has stood empty for years, paint peeling, windows broken. City officials say, "This building is ugly and useless, let’s demolish it!" And neighborhood residents reply, "Wait! Give us just one month." Then something incredible happens — hundreds of people show up with brushes and paint and turn dull gray walls into a giant art gallery. This is the true story of how ordinary people in Seattle’s Georgetown came up with an unusual way...
Front Porch - Seattle Department of Neighborhoods

Gardens That Taught Neighbors to Be Friends Again: How Children Turned Vacant Lots into City...

05-23-2026 11:33 PM
Once in Seattle there were whole blocks where people were afraid to speak to one another. But a few brave children decided the best way to make friends was to grow something beautiful together. This is the story of how ordinary gardens changed whole neighborhoods and turned places full of sadness and mistrust into true treasures now loved by all residents. When Homes Stopped Being Homes In 1942 something very unfair happened. The government forced all Japanese Americans living on the West Coast...
Chief Seattle | Frye Art Museum

The Girl Who Chose Peace Over War: A Story Seattle Almost Forgot

05-23-2026 11:03 AM
Imagine having to make the hardest choice of your life: to warn people of danger, even if it means going against your own family. That was the choice a girl about your age faced in 1856, when Seattle was a tiny settlement surrounded by forests where Indigenous peoples lived. Her name was Klickitat Suzie, and her story shows that sometimes the most important decisions in history are made not by generals or politicians, but by ordinary children who simply don't want people to suffer. Two worlds...
Seattle plans Westlake Park renovation ahead of FIFA World Cup | king5.com

A Park That Learned to Listen: How One Big Dispute Taught a City

05-22-2026 11:34 PM
In downtown Seattle there's a park that looks like an ordinary city square — with benches, fountains, and trees. But if you look more closely, you can notice something unusual: this park has no permanent fences, the benches can be moved, and in one corner there's a special stage that anyone can climb onto to say what they think. This park is called Westlake, and it has an amazing story about how cities learn from their mistakes. It all began in 1999, when thousands of people came to Seattle...