SEATTLE Green Card Upheaval: What Trump's New Rules Mean for Washington
The Trump administration’s Friday morning announcement that green card applicants already in the U.S. must now leave the country to apply sent shockwaves through the immigration community. Immigration attorneys in Seattle — one of the main magnets for foreign professionals — were suddenly at the center of the storm, scrambling to gauge the scale of the change. “This is probably the most radical thing they could have done,” said Tahmina Watson, a Seattle immigration lawyer, predicting a sharp...
Open article


USA Everyday Emergencies and Our Vulnerability: From Wildfires to Street Violence
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...

NEIGHBORS Vancouver news digest: from nurses' strike to cultural events
British Columbia nurses reached a tentative agreement with the government, avoiding a strike. A missing Vancouver actor was found dead; police...

SEATTLE Trans Rights March Held in Seattle
A few hundred activists gathered Saturday at Cal Anderson Park on Capitol Hill — a site with deep symbolic significance for the LGBTQ community. The...

EVENTS What's happening in Seattle May 24–31
The week of May 24–31 promises to be busy: from intimate tributes and cozy candlelit concerts to large outdoor amphitheater shows and open‑air...

USA Security, Violence, and Political Tension in Today's America
The American information space, even when viewed through these three seemingly unconnected news items, forms a rather grim but coherent picture: a...

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

SEATTLE Pacific Place in Seattle to Become "Soccer House" for the 2026 World Cup
The Seattle organizing committee announced that the Pacific Place shopping center will become a free fan zone for the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup. From...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10 days weather forecast for Seattle, WA
Today, 05/24, Seattle will be mostly cloudy with some clearing. The temperature will warm up to 72°F, a couple of degrees above the climatological...

WORLD Venezuela Strengthens Epidemiological Surveillance over Ebola Outbreak in Africa
Venezuela immediately activated public health safety mechanisms after the World Health Organization declared the outbreak of the Bundibugyo variant...
Seattle

Tens of Thousands Gather for Sikh Parade in Kent
On Saturday, the city of Kent, located about 15 miles south of Seattle, became the center of a vibrant Sikh celebration: tens of thousands of people...

Incidents in the US: Shooting at the White House, raids and nightclub gunfire
A series of high-profile incidents in the US: a shooting at the White House that resulted in the suspect being killed, a congressman drawing...

Assembly: New Seattle Art Fair to Challenge the Giant
Two leading Seattle galleries, Traver Gallery and Greg Kucera Gallery, have announced the launch of a new art fair called Assembly, running July...
New electricity rate in Seattle: costly in the evening, cheap at night
As of May 4, Seattle residents can opt into a new "Time of Use" rate plan from the municipal utility Seattle City Light. Unlike investor-owned...

Tukwila early learning center combines education and mental-health support
A new education center opened in Tukwila, south of Seattle, aiming to revolutionize early childhood care. Voices of Tomorrow Center for Learning and...

Bill for Permanent Daylight Saving Time Advances
The U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee on Thursday approved the "Sunlight Protection Act," which would make daylight saving time permanent for...

Washington Ferries: What to Expect Memorial Day Weekend
The summer season, which unofficially begins this weekend on Memorial Day, traditionally becomes the busiest time for the Washington State Ferries...

Weekly News: Fires, Explosions and Weather Surprises
Summary of key events: in Seattle firefighters rescued a cat during a two-alarm blaze, an explosion at a New York shipyard left victims, and cool...

Families urge opening of dormant Vancouver psychiatric center
In Vancouver, Washington, the modern Brockmann psychiatric center, completed at a cost of $42 million, sits empty without a single patient. A year...
Neighbors
![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]](https://smartcdn.gprod.postmedia.digital/theprovince/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/0523-col-hall-1.jpg)
Championship Shame and a Seal's Rescue: British Columbia News
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...

Canadian Digest: Bridges, Tourism and Resources
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...

Canada: Pipeline Dispute as a Test of Unity
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...

Neighbourhood Wars and Celebrity Life in British Columbia
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...

Hantavirus in British Columbia: first case and new challenges
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...

British Columbia News Digest: resort, AI and basketball
Today's edition covers three key topics: the sale of a remote mountain resort for the price of a modest Vancouver house, the BC Greens' call for a moratorium on building AI data centres over environmental risks, and the Vancouver Bandits' loss to the Edmonton Stingers.
Batnuni Lake Resort: remote BC lake resort selling for the price of a cheap Vancouver house
Real estate sometimes produces surprising contrasts: for example, when the price of an entire mountain resort is comparable to the cost...

Vancouver: health threat, real estate and the fate of soccer
Today in the digest: an unusual real estate offer — a resort for the price of a Vancouver apartment; experts warn of a measles outbreak risk during the FIFA World Cup; and government, First Nations and business leaders unite to keep the Whitecaps from moving to Las Vegas.
A whole resort in Canada is for sale for the price of an old Vancouver apartment
An unusual listing has appeared on British Columbia’s real estate market: for $1.1 million you can buy not just a house but a fully operating...

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 to keep short‑term rental addresses private despite a long campaign by an activist; and a coalition of city, provincial and Indigenous leaders working to keep the Whitecaps soccer club in the city.
Police‑involved crash closes Vancouver street: elderly man critically injured
Early Friday morning in Vancouver's West End, a serious crash involving a...
USA

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

Global Events as a Mirror of Hopes, Fears and Memory
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...

Violence, natural disasters and the question of risk predictability
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...

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

Fragile Boundaries: Public Spaces Becoming Arenas of Conflict
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...
Fragile security in a world where anything can go viral
Stories from a Japanese zoo about a monkey called Punch, a canceled U.S. strike on Iran, and an air show in Idaho at first glance seem unrelated. But viewed together, a common theme emerges: security as a constantly disrupted and rebuilt balance between risk, public attention, and the responsibility of individuals and institutions. This is an account of how the modern world responds to threats — from a prankster in a smiley-mask to the prospect of war and an air disaster in front of...

Violence, Sport, and the Fragility of Human Security
In this compilation of seemingly disparate pieces — two crime reports from Pennsylvania and a sports recap of the University of Kansas softball season — a common theme unexpectedly emerges: how quickly normal, everyday life turns into a situation of grave danger, and how people respond. In some stories this is an escalation of conflict to shootings and stabbings; in another, it is a sporting contest where a one- or two-game effort erases the result of a record-breaking season. Everywhere the...
![Nepali mountaineers Kami Rita Sherpa and Lhakpa Sherpa visit the statues of Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary to mark the 11th International Everest Day in Kathmandu on May 29, 2018 [Prakash Mathematics/AFP]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/AFP__20180529__15F801__v1__HighRes__NepalMountaineeringEverestAnniversary-1779008045.jpg?resize=770%2C513&quality=80)
Leaders, Heroes and Victims: How We Choose Those Who Manage Risk and Fate
In three seemingly unrelated news items — about intra‑party elections in Fatah and the son of Mahmoud Abbas, about a fatal crash in Pennsylvania, and about record ascents by sherpas on Everest — a common thread unexpectedly emerges: how societies and individuals manage risk, power and responsibility. From political succession amid war and weakening legitimacy, to everyday vulnerability on the road and extreme sports turned industry — the same question repeats everywhere: who makes decisions for...

Power, Violence and Legitimacy: How States Fight for Control
Three seemingly unconnected stories — a US-Nigerian special operation against ISIS, a local shooting in Wyoming, and a dispute between Virginia Democrats and the US Supreme Court over redistricting — actually describe the same line of tension: how the modern state asserts and defends its monopoly on violence and political control. Through fighting terrorism, responding to street violence at home, and legal battles over election rules, different levels of authority confront one basic question:...
Reactions
How the World Sees America: war with Iran, Ukraine and fatigue with Trumpism
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...

The World Watches Washington: How the US Frightens, Attracts, and Forces Adaptation
At the end of May 2026, discussions about the United States in leading media outlets in Japan, Turkey, and Germany are surprisingly consonant, even...

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

America in the Global Conversation: How Israel, China and Germany Debate Its Role
In several points around the world at once — from Jerusalem to Beijing and Berlin — the conversation about America has again become part of domestic...

"America at War and Withdrawing": how Germany, Russia and Ukraine debate the US's new role
At the center of current international debates about America three threads converge: the war of the US and Israel with Iran, the redistribution of...

How the World Disagrees with America: Russia, Brazil and India at Washington's Crossroads
In recent weeks news has reached various parts of the globe from Washington: US and Israeli strikes on Iran, tricky manoeuvres around trade in...
How the World Sees America Today: China, Germany and Israel
A dense ring of interpretations, fears and hopes is closing in on the United States again. The trigger was several Washington moves at once: Donald...
How the World Reads Washington: Saudi Arabia, India and Australia on America's New Phase
Debates about the role of the United States in the world have returned to the forefront — but if you look not from Washington, but from Riyadh, New...

Between War, China and Chips: How Ukraine, South Korea and Japan View the United States Today
The view of the United States from Kyiv, Seoul and Tokyo in spring 2026 is no longer the familiar story of a “global leader,” but a multi-layered mix...
World

US and Iran Close to a Deal; Pakistan Acts as Mediator
Talks between Washington and Tehran are showing "tangible progress," according to recent statements by senior officials. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, speaking in New Delhi, expressed hope that "the world will hear good news in the coming hours, especially regarding the Strait of Hormuz." He stressed that over the past 48 hours progress has been made in discussing a common framework that could resolve the crisis around this strategic waterway.
Pakistan played a key mediating role,...

Satellites detect 240 ships gathered near Strait of Hormuz
Satellite images taken in mid-May showed an unusual concentration of about 240 vessels in the waters of the Persian Gulf at the entrance to the Strait of Hormuz. The ships gathered near a line that Iran recently declared its new zone of control. Analysts note that such ship density in this strategically important maritime corridor has not been seen before, raising concerns for the safety of global shipping.
Iran officially announced the creation of a new maritime zone controlled by the...

Venezuela: number of released will exceed 500 people
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez announced that within the next few hours the number of people released under the Amnesty Law for Democratic Coexistence will exceed 500. This process began back in January, before the law came into force, and has already led to the release of 885 people. The law is aimed at strengthening national reconciliation and social peace, as well as providing the opportunity for political participation and reintegration into society for people prosecuted for...

US Intelligence Chief Resigns: Family Reasons or Political Split?
Tulsi Gabbard, Director of National Intelligence, announced her resignation, which will officially take effect on June 30. In a letter to President Donald Trump she explained her decision by saying she needs to care for her husband, who has been diagnosed with a rare form of bone cancer. While her statement expresses gratitude for the trust placed in her, many observers link her departure to growing disagreements with the president on key foreign-policy issues.
The main stumbling block was the...

Iran and the US continue exchanging messages via Pakistan
Tehran and Washington continue to exchange signals through the mediation of Pakistan, seeking to produce a framework agreement. According to ISNA, consultations are in full swing, but several remaining disagreements have not yet been resolved. Pakistani Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi remains in Tehran to continue meetings. According to the Iranian outlet Noor News, the correspondence is based on an Iranian proposal consisting of 14 points.
During his visit, Naqvi met with senior Iranian...

For Venezuelans, the Economy Matters More Than Elections
According to the latest study by Hinterlaces, 63% of Venezuelans believe that economic stability and the country's recovery should take priority over holding elections. Citizens think that it is first necessary to achieve sustained growth, improved well-being, and a reduction in political tensions, and only then create the conditions for fair and universally recognized electoral processes. In addition, external factors, such as unilateral coercive measures, in the majority view distort the...

Republicans Cancel Vote on War with Iran Due to Lack of Quorum
Republican leaders in the U.S. House of Representatives unexpectedly cancelled a vote on a resolution requiring President Donald Trump to obtain congressional approval before starting a war with Iran. According to Fox News, the cancellation was related to quorum issues: the scheduled vote did not take place before members of the House left for official recess. Democrat Gregory Meeks said, "We definitely had the votes, and they knew it," hinting that Republicans feared defeat.
This move reflects...

Oil prices rebound amid uncertainty over US–Iran talks
Oil prices rose on Thursday after two days of sharp declines, supported by lingering uncertainty over a possible agreement between the United States and Iran. Brent futures gained $1.05 (1%) to $106.53 a barrel, while WTI rose $0.79 (0.80%) to $99.79. The gains followed losses of more than 5.6% on Wednesday after remarks by Donald Trump about progress in the talks, although he also threatened new strikes if Tehran does not agree to a deal.
Trump’s comments that the talks had entered a “final...

Diosdado Cabello: María Corina Machado's opposition sows hatred
The secretary-general of the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), Diosdado Cabello, said that the political actions of opposition leader María Corina Machado are aimed at spreading hatred. According to him, the opposition is trying to copy the format of the government's regional visits to create a false impression of mass support. Cabello emphasized that their rhetoric is based on confrontation and political hostility, while their real intentions are hidden behind a propaganda...
Knowledge

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

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

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

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

The city named after a man who asked them not to: Seattle’s mystery and the great battle for...
Imagine your city was named after you, but you never asked for it. More than that — you asked them NOT to. That’s exactly what happened with Seattle, and this strange story began with the Battle of 1856, which taught an entire city to think about names in a very particular way. So particular that even today, when you pick a username for a game or social network, you’re doing the same kind of thinking that Chief Seattle and his friend the doctor argued about more than 160 years ago.
The battle...

Artists Who Awoke Sleeping Giants: How Georgetown’s Old Factories Learned to Dream...
Imagine a huge brick building the size of an entire city block. Inside — giant pipes, rusted staircases, windows set high beneath the ceiling that let light pour in like in a fairy-tale castle. A hundred years ago machines thundered here and work bustled, then everyone left and the giant fell asleep. But one day artists came with paints and hammers — and began to wake it up.
This is the true story of Seattle’s Georgetown neighborhood, where old factories and mills turned into homes for art. But...

The restaurant that never changes because it knows the secret of happiness
Imagine a restaurant that looks exactly the same as it did 70 years ago. The same red-and-white buildings, the same hamburgers, the same prices on the board. No, it’s not a museum or a movie set. It’s Dick’s Drive-In — a fast-food chain in Seattle that accidentally taught an entire city a very important lesson: if you build a place for people the right way, you don’t have to keep rebuilding it.
But the most surprising thing isn’t the buildings. The most surprising thing is that the owners of...

Secret city beneath a city: how smugglers taught Seattle to hide what matters
Imagine that beneath your feet, right under the sidewalk you walk to school on, there is a whole other city. A city with corridors, rooms and secret doors. A city that almost no one knows about. In Seattle such a city really exists — and it has a very interesting story.
Almost a hundred years ago, in the 1920s, a very strange law was passed in America. It forbade people from making, selling, or even drinking any alcoholic beverages. This time was called Prohibition. Adults thought it would make...

Buy Bread for a Song: How One Market’s Rules Predicted the Future
Imagine you come to a market with a painting you made yourself and leave with a basket of apples and fresh bread. No money — just an exchange. Sounds like a fairy tale? But that’s exactly how the Fremont Sunday Market in Seattle worked (and still works!), which began in 1990 and accidentally invented the rules that now govern half the internet.
This is the story of how a group of neighbors from the city’s quirkiest neighborhood created a place where people could trade not only goods, but time,...