SEATTLE Incidents in the US: From Slope to Stadium
Overview of recent events in the US: a skier miraculously rescued at a Washington resort, the Tampa Bay Lightning prepare for a road game in Seattle, and a suspect in a post–Super Bowl shooting in San Jose has been arrested.
Rescue on the slope: skier miraculously avoided death under nearly a meter of snow at Summit at Snoqualmie
This incident at a popular ski resort serves as a stark reminder that danger can lurk not only in the backcountry but also on groomed runs. The story of a skier who...
Open article

USA Liberty, Security and Trust: How Society Seeks a Balance
The stories behind three very different pieces of reporting at first glance seem unrelated: the mysterious disappearance of Nancy Guthrie in Tucson,...

NEIGHBORS Vancouver: festival, storm and court
Debate over bringing back the Lapu-Lapu festival after the tragedy, preparations for a powerful storm, and the conclusion of a years-long court...

SEATTLE Fuel Prices and Basketball's Return
In Seattle, gasoline prices have surged sharply due to tensions in the Middle East, and the NBA may vote on bringing the SuperSonics back to the...

EVENTS What Not to Miss in Seattle: March 15–21, 2026
The week of March 15–21 in Seattle promises to be full: from intimate jazz at Jazz Alley and big pop and rock shows at Climate Pledge Arena and the...
USA War of New Technologies: How Drones, Data and Logistics Are Changing the Iran Conflict
A late-winter storm in the U.S., record snowfall across the Midwest and local NFL drama may seem like disparate news — from the CBS weather roundup...
REACTIONS States Under Fire: How Japan, France and Australia Discuss Today's America
American policy has once again become the main foreign-policy backdrop for news in Japan, France and Australia — but not as an abstract superpower,...

SEATTLE Water Rescue and Hockey Battles
News roundup: a neighbor's heroic act saving a child from a lake, and key NHL matchups involving Seattle teams.
Neighbor rescues child from Shelton...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, WA
For today, 3/16, Seattle is expected to be cloudy with some clearing. The high will be around 55°F, and the low will drop to about 46°F. Winds will...

WORLD Venezuela Targets Global Markets with Its Premium Cocoa
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez instructed Minister of Foreign Trade Koroómoto Godoy to immediately step up efforts to find and...
Seattle

Weekend Sports Roundup
Seattle teams had a tense weekend: the Kraken prepare for a tough game, and women’s club Reign earned a hard-fought win in the season...

Sports and Celebration in Seattle
News roundup: the women's hockey club Seattle Torrent lost on the road, and the city celebrated St. Patrick's Day in style with a new waterfront...

Seattle Sports and Stars
Overview: astronomical spring in West Seattle, start of the NWSL season and a sports awards ceremony.
West Seattle welcomes spring 2026: sunset...

Family saga: How The Seattle Times survived the press crisis
Frank Blethen spent four decades leading The Seattle Times with a single goal: to keep the paper alive at any cost. To finance journalism, he sold...

Pink Salmon Wins the Climate Race, Threatening Other Fish
In a changing climate, pink salmon, the smallest of the Pacific salmon, has become an unexpected "winner." Its numbers in the northern Pacific have...

Seattle: offices to housing, cherry blossoms and snowy chaos
In Seattle, plans to convert vacant office space into housing are being discussed as a solution to the housing crisis. The peak bloom of the...

Seattle: history and sports
The Seattle Historical Society is preparing a new exhibit and a charity gala dinner. The Seattle Seahawks re-signed wide receiver Rashid Shaheed to a...

Seattle: staffing compromise and hate-crime sentence
In Seattle, the mayor revised her appointment for the head of the city’s electric utility under pressure from the city council and unions. A court...

New law will ease education access for vulnerable youth in Washington
Washington Governor Bob Ferguson, who previously served as the state attorney general from 2013 to 2024, is preparing to sign a law that will...
Neighbors

British Columbia: allergies, rain and market downturn
In British Columbia the allergy season started early and aggressively due to a warm winter and climate change. The coast is expecting several days of rain from an atmospheric river, which could cause localized flooding. At the same time, the province’s housing market is experiencing a downturn: in February sales and average prices fell in almost every region.
Allergy season in British Columbia is becoming harsher
If you’ve been sneezing, coughing and dealing with a scratchy throat in recent...

British Columbia News
Overview: the province's housing market is slumping, Taylor Swift fans will get refunds for obstructed-view tickets, and Vancouver's Filipino community prepares for Lapu‑Lapu Day — the first since the 2025 tragedy.
British Columbia housing market slips in February
Overview: British Columbia's housing market continued to show signs of weakness, according to February 2026 data. Sales fell in nearly every region of the province, and average prices also declined, indicating a continued difficult...

Nature and Climate: British Columbia News
A great white shark has been recorded in British Columbia, indicating shifts in habitat range. A powerful storm left thousands without power. The region has also detected a bat-killing fungus.
Great white shark off Vancouver: what does Kara’s visit mean?
A unique visitor — a great white shark named Kara — was recorded in waters off the coast of British Columbia, near Vancouver. This is the first documented case of a tracked great white in the region, drawing interest from scientists and marine...

Vancouver news: assaults and a shark
In Vancouver, a man accused of a series of apparently unprovoked attacks on women will face court. At the same time, scientists are tracking a great white shark off the coast of Vancouver Island, emphasizing the scientific value of the sighting rather than reasons for alarm.
Suspect in series of attacks on women in Vancouver to appear in court
A man has been arrested in Vancouver, accused of a series of seemingly unprovoked attacks on unfamiliar women in the downtown core. Police released a...

Vancouver: politics, housing and snow
Vancouver news: journalist Frances Bula is running for office, authorities are closing problematic SRO hotels, and the region was hit by an unexpected snowfall.
Well-known journalist Frances Bula runs for Vancouver city council
An interesting development is brewing in Vancouver politics: one of the most respected and well-informed journalists who has covered municipal affairs for decades has decided to run for a seat on city council herself. After more than thirty years of observation, Frances...

Vancouver: snow, sports and new police recruits
News from Vancouver: snowfall forecast, opening of police training centres, and a packed events schedule for the week.
New police training centres in Vancouver and Victoria: response to rising demand
British Columbia authorities have announced the opening of two new training centres for police recruits in Vancouver and Victoria. The decision was driven by a significant increase in demand for recruits from police services across the province. The initiative is intended to strengthen the staffing...

Vancouver: Diaspora, Home and Champions
Vancouver residents are experiencing an escalation in the Middle East, a unique floating home is up for sale off the island’s coast, and the women’s soccer club Rise has received a prestigious award.
Fear and hope: how Vancouver’s diaspora is coping with the escalation in the Middle East
As the world watches the widening conflict in the Middle East, for Vancouver’s Lebanese and Iranian communities this is more than news — it’s a personal tragedy and deep anxiety for the fate of loved ones. The...

British Columbia News
British Columbia authorities have opened new police academies in Vancouver and Victoria to address staffing shortages. The women's soccer club Vancouver Rise FC received the prestigious Best of BC sports award for winning the inaugural season of the Northern Super League.
New police academies in Vancouver and Victoria: a response to big-city challenges
British Columbia authorities are taking decisive steps to bolster municipal police staffing by approving the creation of two new training...

Events in British Columbia
The sale of an off-grid estate, a warning of a financial crisis for condo owners, and a bright fireball over Vancouver — the region's top stories.
Off-grid private family compound in British Columbia for sale for under $4 million
In a world where digital connectivity and urban bustle have become the norm, some seek refuge in places where silence speaks louder than words. One such place is the private compound "Safe Harbour" on Charlotte Lake in a remote area of British Columbia, listed for sale...
USA

Fragile Security: Living in a World of Local Emergencies and Widespread Anxieties
Each of the three pieces describes not just an isolated incident but a small fragment of the broader backdrop of contemporary life: from a street shooting to a meningitis outbreak on a university campus to the daily routine of a reporter who drives along the coast and turns other people’s fears into news. Taken together, they do not tell the story of three separate places so much as a single picture: our everyday life is increasingly infused with the sense of fragile security, and the role of...

Vulnerability in an Era of Technology, Markets and Geopolitics
Three seemingly unrelated stories — the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie in Arizona, the purchase of investment bank Eastdil Secured by Savills, and a U.S. airstrike on Iran’s oil hub Kharg — in fact tell one story. It is a story about how deliberate targeting, complex technologies and competing interests shape a new sense of vulnerability: in private life, in markets and in international politics. These cases show that “security” no longer exists as something separate: it is interwoven with the...

Fragile Security: When Tragedy, Rescue and War Converge in One Day
In three news stories that at first glance seem unrelated, a common theme emerges: the idea of security as something both vital and extremely fragile. A terrorist attack at the University of Virginia, the happy return of a missing child after six years, and the crash of a U.S. military refueling plane in Iraq — three different narratives in which the state, security forces, individuals and chance fight for human lives in different ways. Together they form a mosaic yet coherent picture of how...

Between War and Leisure: How States Rethink Security
At first glance, there is nothing linking tensions around Iran, the deaths of U.S. service members, and how the resort city of Miami Beach is reworking rules for students on spring break. But beyond the headlines the same theme runs through all these pieces: how states and local authorities learn to balance hard security with normal life, strength with openness, deterrence of threats with maintaining appeal for allies, residents, tourists and business. This is a story about how the world lives...

The Logic of "World News": From the Savills Deal to the Strait of Hormuz
In three seemingly unrelated news items — a major takeover in global real estate, the tragic death of a skier in Oregon, and a stark statement by Iran’s new supreme leader — the same underlying narrative repeats: how modern world vulnerability is arranged, when local events instantly become global and vice versa. Financial deals, human tragedies and geopolitical shocks are elements of a single system in which infrastructure, risk and trust play key roles.
An article about Savills’ purchase of...

Vulnerability as the New Normal: From the Strait of Hormuz to Los Angeles
The mosaic of these, at first glance disparate, storylines — Iran’s struggle for influence over the Strait of Hormuz, FBI warnings about possible drone attacks on California, and extreme heat in Southern California — forms one larger narrative. It is a story about how quickly and radically the very nature of vulnerability is changing: cities, states, and entire regions are simultaneously under pressure from geopolitical risks, new military technology, and climatic anomalies. Political decisions...

War, Security and Responsibility: From Tehran to Beverly Hills
At first glance, there seems to be nothing in common between the intense US–Israel war against Iran and the seemingly local case of shots fired at Rihanna’s house in Los Angeles. But viewed more broadly, a single key theme runs through all the materials: how modern societies try to protect people's security — and how often that “protection” turns into a threat to the very people it is supposed to safeguard. From massive missile strikes and “black rain” over Tehran to an AR-15 at the gates of a...

A World at the Breaking Point: From Major War to Private Tragedy and Abnormal Heat
In news items that at first glance seem unrelated, a single line emerges: the fragility of human security. A large-scale war capable of destabilizing a whole region and global markets; a private family drama that depends on surveillance cameras and the internet; “just the weather,” which in reality becomes part of an alarming climate trend. Together these stories show how much our everyday life depends on vulnerable systems — political, technological, environmental — and how quickly the...

Fragility of Security: From a Missing Grandmother to Wars and Deportations
The stories underlying these news items at first glance seem unrelated: the disappearance of 84‑year‑old Nancy Guthrie in Arizona, the UN’s findings on the forcible deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia, Donald Trump’s remarks about a war with Iran and the resulting oil price fluctuations. Together they form a broader narrative about how fragile security is — personal, national, and global — and how information and power structures affect our ability to feel safe and understand what is...
Reactions
How the World Sees America Today: War with Iran, Oil and New Cracks in Relations
In March 2026 the discussion of the United States abroad refocused on war — this time on the large-scale air campaign by the US and Israel against...
How the World Argues About the U.S.: Venezuela, Iran and "Trump's Return" in the Mirror of Germany,...
In early March 2026, global discussion of the United States once again concentrated on power, war and Washington’s unilateral decisions. In German,...
World reactions to the escalation between the US and Iran
International media increasingly read the rising tension between the US and Iran not merely as a local escalation, but as a risk of the conflict...

How the World Sees America Today: Trump's Iran War, Oil and a New Rift
In early March 2026, outside the United States Washington is talked about not so much in terms of "democracy versus authoritarianism" as in the...

Imperial Trap: US, Iran and the Cost of Strategic Overreach
Analysts and commentators from Turkey and Saudi Arabia increasingly describe Washington’s current policy toward Iran as a manifestation of imperial...
How the world outside the US debates Washington: Iran, Ukraine and the "weary hegemon" through Turkey's...
In early March 2026, discussions about the United States in Ankara, Kyiv and Beijing revolve around a single cluster of topics: the US and Israel’s...

"Washington in the Crosshairs: How Germany, China and Russia Debate the New U.S
In March 2026, discussions about the United States in Berlin, Beijing and Moscow unexpectedly converged sharply around a single set of themes: the...

World Eyes Washington Warily: How Australia, India and South Korea Are Discussing Today's...
In recent weeks the topic of the United States has again taken center stage in discussions from Canberra to New Delhi and Seoul, but almost...

Washington under Fire: How Turkey, India and Brazil View the New US War
In recent weeks, in the foreign-policy pages of Turkey, India and Brazil, the United States almost always appears in the same context: war and oil....
World

Trump Accuses Media of Spreading Fakes About War with Iran
Former US President Donald Trump launched a sharp attack on the mass media, accusing them of spreading "misleading" information. In his statements on the Truth Social platform he claims that Iran is using artificial intelligence as a new weapon of disinformation, creating and distributing fake images and video clips of military operations. Among the fakes, Trump says, are footage of attacks by small boats, strikes on tanker aircraft and on American ships.
Trump said that some US media knowingly...

Israel Told US of Critical Interceptor Shortage
According to reports from American sources, Israel has encountered an acute shortage of systems for intercepting ballistic missiles. Tel Aviv officially notified Washington of a "significant shortage" of interceptor weapons. This situation has arisen amid Israel's ongoing military operations against Iran and Lebanon, which are accompanied by intense exchanges of rocket and drone strikes.
The American administration, it is reported, has been aware of problems with Israel's missile-defense...

Venezuela's historic win over Japan in the World Baseball Classic
In an exciting World Baseball Classic quarterfinal, Venezuela met Japan for the first time in the tournament's history and claimed an impressive 8–5 victory. The game began with a historic moment when Ronald Acuña Jr. hit a home run in the very first inning, immediately answered by Japan's star batter Shohei Ohtani — the first time in the tournament's history that both teams hit home runs in their first at-bats. Although the Japanese took a 5–2 lead after a home run by Shota Morishita, the...

Death of U.S. Soldiers in Iraq Forces U.S. to Evacuate Citizens
The United States has released the names of six service members who died in the crash of a refueling aircraft in western Iraq. The Pentagon confirmed the deaths of John Kleiner (33), Ariana Savino (31), Ashley Bright (34), Seth Koval (38), Kurtis Angst (30) and Tyler Simmons (28). The incident occurred amid rising tensions in Iraq and the wider region, prompting Washington to urgently call on its citizens to leave the country.
The total number of U.S. service members killed since the war...

Seven reasons why Trump's victory over Iran is only an illusion
CNN analysts cast doubt on recent US President Donald Trump's claim of victory in the conflict with Iran, calling it premature and detached from reality. Experts say the situation in the region is becoming increasingly complex and gradually slipping out of control, making any triumphant rhetoric politically convenient but objectively untenable. Any comprehensive look at events shows that the US is still far from a real victory.
One key reason is the very nature of a multifaceted conflict in...

Venezuela and Colombia Agree on New April Summit
Vice President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez and President of Colombia Gustavo Petro have agreed to hold a bilateral summit on April 23–24 in Maracaibo. This will be the second attempt at a meeting after previous talks scheduled in the border city of Cúcuta were canceled due to "insurmountable circumstances." A Colombian delegation led by the ministers of defense, trade, and energy visited Caracas to prepare for this important event, aiming to prevent a breakdown of the renewed bilateral agenda...

Escalation: Iran and the US Exchange Strikes and Statements
Iranian armed forces made a series of loud statements, claiming they put the US aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln out of action and forced it to withdraw. At the same time, local sources report tragic consequences from strikes on Iranian territory: an attack on the village of Hezab in the west of the country killed a family of six, including an infant, and wounded seven others. There are also reports of strikes on a residential building in the city of Iwan and on industrial facilities in the...

Conflicting Claims About a U.S. Aircraft Carrier in the Persian Gulf
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) of Iran said early Friday that its forces struck the U.S. aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln with missiles and drones, causing the ship "significant damage" and forcing it to return to the United States. However, U.S. military officials immediately and categorically denied the report. A spokesman for U.S. Central Command said the IRGC's claims are false and confirmed that the carrier continues to carry out its mission in the region as part of the...

Venezuela and Repsol strengthen cooperation in the oil and gas sector
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez signed strategic agreements with the Spanish energy company Repsol. The aim of these arrangements is to revive the national oil and gas sector and attract foreign investment. Repsol, which has been operating in the country for more than 30 years, confirmed its interest in taking an active role in developing a sector that is key for Venezuela. The agreements are the result of constructive dialogue between the government and energy...
Knowledge

Brewers Who Accidentally Taught the World What "Cool" Looks Like
Have you ever noticed that many cool cafés, offices, and restaurants look like old factories? Exposed brick walls without wallpaper, pipes under the ceiling, a concrete floor, large windows, and wooden tables. This style is so popular now that architects deliberately make new buildings look like old factories. But where did this trend come from? It turns out it was accidentally invented by poor brewers in Seattle 40 years ago — and they did it not to be fashionable, but simply because they...

Women Who Taught Homes to Raise Children
In the early 1900s, unusual women walked the streets of Seattle with tape measures, notebooks, and determined faces. They peered into house windows, knocked on doors, and asked a strange question: "Is there a place in your home where a child can daydream?" These women were neither police nor teachers. They were architectural activists, and they had a bold idea: a home can raise children as well as parents and school can.
Today, when you walk through Seattle neighborhoods like Ballard, Fremont,...

Bookstores That Taught Readers to Plant Trees: How Seattle Turned Reading into Action
Imagine a city that is home to Amazon’s headquarters — the giant company that sells books online and because of which thousands of traditional bookstores closed across America. Now imagine that in this very city small bookstores not only survived but became stronger than ever. And most surprisingly, they turned into places where people didn’t just read about nature, they began to protect it for real. This is the story of how bookstores in Seattle became "greenhouses for ideas," where pages read...

The Cop Who Became a "Good Bootlegger": How a Former Lawman Taught Seattle That Even...
Imagine: the dead of night, the foggy waters of Puget Sound near Seattle, and dozens of fast boats slipping across the dark water. On board are thousands of bottles of whiskey, rum, and gin. The boats follow secret routes, captains exchange coded messages over the radio, and trucks with their headlights off wait on shore. This is not a scene from an adventure film — it's the real story of 1920s Seattle, when one man turned alcohol smuggling into a vast business. And most surprising of all: that...

The Team Stolen Overnight: How a Betrayed City Learned Not to Trust Promises
Imagine your favorite teacher promised to stay at your school forever, then one day simply disappeared because another school offered her more money. That’s roughly how Seattle residents felt in 2008 when their basketball team, the SuperSonics, left town after 41 years together. But the worst part wasn’t just that the team left — it was that the new owner had planned it from the start, despite solemnly promising the opposite. This story of a stolen team still teaches America an important...

Two Ideas of Wealth That Clashed in Battle: How a Debate Over What It Means to Be "Rich"...
Imagine you and your best friend found a clearing full of apple trees. You think, "Let's pick as many apples each year as we need and share with the neighbors!" Your friend says, "Let's cut down all the trees, sell the timber and the apples, buy something of our own with that money, and build a house here just for ourselves!" Who is right? It's not a simple question, is it? Now imagine that such an argument sparked a real battle. That's what happened in Seattle in 1856, and the consequences are...

A City Within a City Where the Homeless Elected Their Mayor
Imagine you had lost everything: your home, your job, your money. Imagine that this had happened not just to you but to thousands of others around you. What would you do? In the 1930s, during the Great Depression, when many Americans were left without work or shelter, Seattle residents did something remarkable. They built their own city from what they could find, created a government, elected a mayor and set rules. This city was called Hooverville, and its story shows that even when people have...

A Market Where Cracks Make Things Pricier
Imagine you have a favorite mug with a small crack. Your mom says to throw it away and buy a new one. But you know: that crack appeared the day you and your grandmother baked cookies, and the mug fell but didn’t break. The crack is part of the story. In a regular store you couldn’t sell that mug. But there’s one place in Seattle where cracks, scratches, and scuffs make things more expensive, not cheaper. That place is the Fremont Sunday Market, and its story shows how a group of artists and...

Grandmas' Bubbles That Taught Seattle to Brew the Best Beer in America
Imagine your grandmother can work a kind of magic in the kitchen. She puts cabbage into a jar, adds salt and water, and after a few days tiny bubbles begin to appear. The cabbage turns into something sour and delicious. It's not a trick — it's fermentation, when invisible living beings (bacteria and yeast) turn one food into another. And that very knowledge helped a group of immigrants build what Seattle is most proud of today — its famous small breweries.
In the 1970s and 1980s thousands of...