SEATTLE 80-km Funeral Motorcade Honors Victims of Longview Industrial Disaster
On Saturday in Washington state, a nearly 80-kilometer funeral motorcade transported the bodies of nine workers killed in a chemical accident in Longview to the Cowlitz County morgue. The procession traveled along Interstate 5 — the main transportation artery of the U.S. West Coast, linking states from Canada to Mexico — beneath an overcast sky. For the Seattle region and the state of Washington as a whole, this highway is a key route for moving people and goods, and holding a funeral...
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NEIGHBORS World Cup Economy and Life in Vancouver
In today's digest: experts question the economic benefits of the 2026 World Cup in Vancouver, a touching squirrel rescue in British Columbia, and...

SEATTLE From a Lake City Kid to the Coach of a $1 Billion Sounders
Brian Schmetzer, head coach of the Seattle Sounders — a club now approaching a $1 billion valuation — embodies the rapid rise of soccer’s popularity...

EVENTS Top Seattle-Area Events — June 7–13, 2026
This week in Seattle looks busy: from big summer concerts at Chateau Ste. Michelle and open-air gastro cruises on the bay to street festivals,...

EVENTS Preview Calendar: July 10–August 6, 2026
This roundup is compiled to help you plan your summer outings to concerts, sporting events and festivals around Seattle—from intimate performances at...

USA The Fragility of Normal: When the Familiar World Suddenly Breaks
Sometimes very different news items — about a football club moving, the death of a beloved actor, and a shooting at a city festival — unexpectedly...

SEATTLE World Cup: 'A shot in the dark' for Seattle, but businesses hopeful
Pacific Place mall, located in the heart of Seattle, faced a mass exodus of tenants and a drop in foot traffic after the pandemic. This symbol of the...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, WA
Today, 06/07, Seattle will be cool and overcast with moderate wind. High around 63°F, low around 54°F. Humidity is high, increasing the damp feel. UV...

WORLD Delcy Rodríguez Discussed Investment Opportunities in Venezuela with ESSAR
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez held a meeting in Mumbai with the leadership of the Indian corporation ESSAR to assess opportunities...

WORLD Escalation in the Persian Gulf: US and Iran Exchange Strikes
Activity of the US Air Force surged over the Persian and Gulf of Oman after US Central Command announced the destruction of two Iranian drones that...
Seattle

Seattle paints Space Needle like giant soccer ball for 2026 World Cup
Seattle is fully swept up in FIFA men's World Cup fever, and it’s visible even from the sky. The iconic Space Needle, the city’s main symbol, has...

Weather and Sports: Seattle News
In today’s roundup: Saturday storms give way to calmer Sunday, the Detroit Tigers rout the Mariners, and catcher Mitch Garver sold his Bellevue home...

Heat in Seattle Could Coincide with World Cup Match
Seattle is preparing for its first men's 2026 World Cup match (Egypt vs. Belgium) on June 15, and the city could see its first heat wave of the year...

Seattle light rail sets U.S. record: 155,000 riders a day
The Sound Transit light rail system in April 2025 became the busiest in the United States, surpassing Los Angeles, Boston and San Diego. Daily...

Generous $25M Gift: Scholarships for Rural Doctors at the University of Washington
The University of Washington School of Medicine received a historic $25 million donation from philanthropists Bill and Caroline Franke and their...

World Cup Unites Dreams of Seattle’s African Diaspora
Oscar Singini, a 32-year-old certified nursing assistant from Everett — a city about 40 miles north of Seattle that is a significant center for the...

Chemical incident in Longview: cleanup complete, water safe
Environmental cleanup after a major caustic chemical leak at the Nippon Dynawave paper mill in Longview, Washington, has reached a key milestone....
Seattle roundup: heat concerns and sports losses
Today in the news: Seattle is bracing for a possible heat wave up to 32°C — meteorologists are warning but reassuring that a repeat of the 2021 heat...

Portland cat makes CVS his home; neighbors fight to keep him happy
An unusual fight over the rights of a local landmark — a 19-year-old cat named Nutmeg — has unfolded in Portland’s Sellwood neighborhood. This...
Neighbors

Vancouver News: From 3D-Printed Guns to Luxury Real Estate
Today’s digest covers high-profile Vancouver stories: a local man facing trial over an arsenal of 3D-printed weapons and drugs, the opening of a new $183-million amphitheatre at the PNE, and a unique Bowen Island mansion that has dropped $13 million in price.
Federal charges: Vancouver man to face court over arsenal of 3D-printed guns and drugs
The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) has laid 21 charges against a Vancouver resident following an operation conducted last summer. According to CTV...

British Columbia News: Fitness, Economy and Crime
Fresh news from British Columbia: Burnaby has been named Canada’s fittest city, the labour market showed solid growth in May despite global challenges, and a Vancouver resident faces 21 charges after an arsenal and drugs were found in his home.
The fitness city: who beat Vancouver for healthiest residents
When it comes to healthy living in Canada, many immediately think of Vancouver — a city where jogging along the seawall and sunset yoga have become almost a religion. However, a recent study...

Vancouver economy and society: investment, crisis and celebration
Half a million dollars to create 25 jobs, anxiety over the suspension of an overdose prevention site, and free events for seniors — key developments of the day in Vancouver.
Investment in manufacturing: how half a million dollars create new jobs in Vancouver
The Government of British Columbia has announced nearly $500,000 in funding from the BC Manufacturing Jobs Fund to support two manufacturing projects in the Lower Mainland region. These investments are aimed at expanding the capacity of...

British Columbia: taxes, ferries and whistleblower payouts
Several notable events in British Columbia: Lululemon founder Chip Wilson won a court case, lowering the assessed value of his mansion by $18 million; the regulator paid a whistleblower $25,000 for the first time; and BC Ferries is introducing a temporary five-percent fare surcharge because of rising fuel costs amid the Middle East conflict.
Lululemon founder’s Vancouver mansion knocked down $18 million in assessments
Canadian billionaire and creator of the well-known athletic apparel brand...

Vancouver: taxes, FIFA and "super-adequacy"
Overview of Vancouver's top stories: a court reduced the assessed value of lululemon founder's mansion by $18 million due to "super-adequacy," British Columbia released a new $729 million World Cup budget, and fans are complaining about opaque FIFA ticket sales.
Billionaire Chip Wilson's mansion assessment cut by $18 million: how the appeals panel revised the value of the Vancouver "Golden Mile" home
In Vancouver's luxury real estate world, a notable development occurred: the independent...

Crisis and Recognition: News from Vancouver
A roundup of key events from Vancouver: an attack on a residence, a housing market crisis and international recognition for local restaurants.
Molotov cocktail attack on North Vancouver home: family in panic, police probing motive
One Tuesday evening, a peaceful family life in North Vancouver nearly ended in tragedy. An unknown assailant threw a lit bottle containing an incendiary mixture — a so-called Molotov cocktail — through a window of their home, which is in a four-unit building....

Metro Vancouver: Transit on the Brink of Collapse and a Busy Weekend
Transportation scandal, dangerous driving and festival listings — a digest of news from Vancouver. Transit workers have voted to authorize a possible strike, a driver was caught speeding and impaired, ruining a camping trip, and the city is preparing for a busy weekend with dragon boat races and food events.
Metro Vancouver Transit Workers Nearly Unanimously Authorize Strike
Transit workers across Metro Vancouver made a powerful statement by voting nearly unanimously to authorize a strike. This...
USA

How language and the idea of norms are changing: from laws to sports and radio
Modern news—even when stories seem entirely unrelated — a bill to replace the words “mother” and “father” in New York, a change of the “voice” on a popular NPR radio show, and Detroit receiver Kendrick Law’s ACL injury in the NFL — actually tell the same fundamental story: how society redefines familiar roles and the words it uses to describe reality. Through language and symbolic figures — “mother” and “father,” the “voice of the show,” the “franchise player” — we negotiate what counts as...

Safety, law and vulnerable people: what three recent news stories are saying
All three news items, taken from different cities and even different states in the U.S., at first glance describe unrelated events: a killing at an Atlanta metro station, a double homicide in a Florida shooting, and a contested revision of an “anti‑camping” law in Colorado. But viewed together, a common thread emerges: how federal and local authorities balance providing security with treating vulnerable groups — transit riders, residents of low‑income neighborhoods, the homeless. That balance...

Political Nervousness and Security: How the U.S. Enters the Election Cycle
American politics and public safety today are intertwined far more tightly than a quick glance at isolated news items suggests. Local primaries in Iowa, a fierce race for Los Angeles mayor and a tense hostage standoff in Bakersfield, California — all described in pieces from NBC News, KCII Radio and the NBC News report on the Bakersfield hostage situation (https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/bakersfield-bomb-threat-chase-rcna348174) — together form a picture of a country entering a new...
![MILTON-FREEWATER — The last drive-in movie theater in Eastern Oregon is under new ownership. Mike and Lorie Spiess and family announced on Facebook they have sold the M-F Drive In […]](https://eastoregonian.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/7/2026/06/Moviegoers-park-March-31-2023-in-front-of-the-big-screen-on-the-opening-day-of-the-M-F-Drive-I.jpg?w=500)
Power, Media, and Community: How Institutions of Trust Are Changing
All three stories — the appointment of Bill Pulte as acting director of national intelligence, the expansion of KUT News’s investigative team in Texas, and the sale of the last drive‑in in Eastern Oregon — don’t seem connected at first glance. Together they show how, in the U.S., large federal institutions, local media, and community spaces are changing at the same time. The common thread in all three pieces is the struggle for control over channels of information and for trust in those who...

Fragile Security: From Global Straits to City Streets
The world that emerges from these reports looks, at first glance, fragmented: geopolitical tension around the strategic Bab el-Mandeb strait in a CNN piece, the signing of a promising Russian goalie by NHL club the Colorado Avalanche in a Yahoo Sports article, and a tragic shooting on the streets of Louisville in a WLKY report. But if you look not at genre but at substance, all three stories converge on one theme: the fragility of security and how different societies and systems try to manage...

Vulnerability to Violence: From Global Conflict to Local Crime
Each of the three news stories, at first glance, describes completely different events: the standoff between Iran and the United States amid Israel’s war in Lebanon, a wave of car break-ins in Maryland, and the discovered remains of a missing national laboratory employee in New Mexico. Yet all three strikingly illuminate a single common thread: how modern society lives under increasing instability and perceived vulnerability — from geopolitics to everyday life and personal safety. Through these...
Unexpected Events and the Fragility of Predictability in News
News from very different spheres — a traffic incident in Indiana, a personnel shakeup in the Premier League, and a sharp diplomatic move by the United States toward Iran — at first glance seem unrelated. But on closer inspection they share a theme: suddenness and the fragility of human expectations. In each case we see how the usual course of things is instantly broken — whether it’s a travel plan on a highway, long‑term strategies of top clubs, or the complex architecture of peace talks. This...

The Cost of a Record: How We Tell Stories of Human Effort and Risk
In three seemingly unrelated news items — a historic decathlon day in Götzis, the kickoff of a Senate campaign in Massachusetts, and tragic crime reports from Virginia and North Carolina — a single theme emerges clearly. It's how society evaluates and describes intense human effort and the price people pay in pursuit of results or in the line of duty. Records and points, percentages of delegate votes, bullets stopped by a ballistic vest — these are different measures of the same reality: the...

Courts, Power, and Oversight: How U.S
In three, at first glance different, stories — about renaming the Kennedy Center, halting a multibillion-dollar "anti-weaponization" fund, and a journalism award for reporting on prominent cases — a single thread runs through: a struggle over the limits and rules of power in American democracy. Federal judges, journalists, and civil-rights organizations are engaged, in different ways but essentially the same task: trying to prevent political interests from supplanting law, institutions, and...
Reactions
How the US Is Viewed Today from Tokyo, Canberra and Kyiv
The American agenda has again become so dense globally that separate storylines — from the war in the Middle East to military artificial intelligence...

How the World Sees America Today: Ally, Risk-Taker, and System-Forming Power
In early June 2026, discussions about the United States in foreign media and expert circles resemble a polyphonic chorus: different countries hear...

Alliance Under Pressure: How Seoul, Jerusalem and Kyiv See Today's America
In early June 2026 the United States is simultaneously at war with Iran, balancing between China and its allies in Asia, arguing with Congress over...

Washington Between War and Truce: How America Irks Ukraine, Russia and South Africa
In an impressive span of just a few months, the United States has again found itself at the center of international debate — but no longer as a...
Allies, Rivals and Targets: How South Korea, Brazil and Russia View the US Now
In early June 2026 the United States simultaneously appears to the world as a military superpower, the nervous center of the global economy, and a...

The World Watches Washington: Brazil, Germany and Russia on Trump’s US
In early summer 2026 the United States in the foreign agenda looks simultaneously like a superpower waging a war in the Middle East, a country...

How the World Disputes Washington: Ukraine, Turkey and Brazil on US Foreign Policy
In early June 2026 the United States is simultaneously present in almost all of the world's key crises — from the war in Ukraine to the conflict with...

How the World Argues with America: Trump’s Beijing Visit, the War with Iran, and New Fault...
May–early June 2026 made the United States the focal point of intense debates in Asia and Latin America — but not in Washington’s usual role as the...
How the World Sees America: Germany, South Korea and South Africa Facing the New USA
Several debates are converging around the United States in early summer 2026, and in each country they sound different. In Berlin they argue about...
World

Latin American Alarm Over Trump's Foreign Policy
Venezuelan and regional media increasingly view Donald Trump’s foreign policy as a factor of instability and potential destabilization in Latin America. His hard line on Iran is seen not as an isolated episode but as part of a broader pattern of intervention — from legal pressure and diplomatic maneuvers to influence over elections and the internal politics of neighboring countries. Commentators warn that such approaches can simultaneously strengthen allies and undermine security in Mexico,...

Israel Begins Talks with U.S. on New Military Agreement
Israel has officially begun preliminary talks with the administration of President Donald Trump on creating a fundamentally new long-term security framework to replace the existing 2016 memorandum, which expires in 2028. This is not merely about extending financial aid, but about a strategic reassessment of the relationship prompted by the recent war with Iran and scenarios of multi-domain conflict. Tel Aviv seeks to use battlefield experience to secure a more resilient and comprehensive...

Human Rights Coalition Calls for Amnesty for Military
The director of the Human Rights Coalition, Alonso Medina Roa, called for the Amnesty Law to be applied to servicemembers detained for political reasons and demanded political will from the Supreme Court and the National Assembly for a transparent overhaul of the judicial system. He emphasized the need to speed up judicial proceedings and to extend amnesty to all citizens, stating that prisoners cannot be divided by party affiliation and that the release of all political prisoners is necessary...

Iran and Lebanon Exchange Sharp Remarks
A spokesperson for Iran’s Foreign Ministry, Ismail Baghaei, drew the ire of Lebanese President Michel Aoun with a tweet in the Lebanese dialect that caustically mocked the leader’s loyalties. The post appeared after Aoun’s interview with CNN, in which he openly criticized Tehran. This sharp exchange between the two capitals reflects growing regional tensions that have already moved beyond routine diplomacy.
In the CNN interview, Aoun accused Iran of using Lebanon as a “bargaining chip” in its...

Trump: US does not need a deal with Iran to access uranium
President Donald Trump said his country "does not need a deal with Iran to obtain enriched uranium," stressing that Washington is already able to access it. He downplayed Iran's ability to stop the US, saying, "I don't think they can stop us if we want to." According to Trump, there is currently no need to do so because the uranium was "buried" after storage sites were bombed during the past forty days of the war. He also revealed that the US monitors Iranian nuclear sites from space,...

Acting President of Venezuela met with the U.S. Ambassador to India
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez held an introductory meeting in New Delhi on June 4 with the U.S. Ambassador to India, Sergio Gor. The event took place during the second day of Rodríguez’s working visit to the Asian country and was devoted to discussing progress in bilateral relations between Venezuela and the United States. This meeting marks a new phase of constructive dialogue based on mutual respect and cooperation, which is especially significant against the backdrop of a...

Illusion of victory: both the US and Iran incur growing losses
According to analyst Sanam Vakil, both Washington and Tehran are behaving as if they are prevailing in the ongoing confrontation, but the facts indicate the opposite: both sides are incurring increasingly palpable political, economic and strategic costs. The author emphasizes that the notion that time is working in favor of one side or the other is mistaken, since both players are effectively losing both domestically and regionally. The key conclusion is that the current situation is not a...

Latin American pushback: a region growing weary of Washington's pressure
In Latin American capitals there is a growing sense that the United States is returning to a policy of intervention and sanctions personified by Donald Trump, and this is provoking an active reaction from regional leaders. Cuba and Mexico loudly condemn "interventionism" and economic restrictions, Brazil and other countries try to defend strategic autonomy on security and trade issues, and public debates reveal a split between desires for national sovereignty and the inevitable influence of the...

Iran struck Kuwait and Bahrain
In a dangerous escalation, Iran retaliated for recent US strikes on its territory by attacking Kuwait and Bahrain. According to a military expert, this came as a surprise because it had been expected that Tehran would strike American ships and aircraft blocking its ports. This move changed the dynamics of the conflict and was called extremely risky.
Knowledge

A Teriyaki Not Found in Japan: How Immigrant Parents Created Seattle's Favorite
Imagine you arrived at a new school where nobody speaks your language, and the only thing in your backpack is what you do best. That's how Japanese families who came to Seattle in the 1970s felt. Many of them couldn't find work — their degrees weren't recognized, English was difficult, and good jobs went to others. But they had something special: they knew how to cook. And so these moms and dads did something that changed the whole city — they invented a food that hadn't existed anywhere in the...

People Who Made Friends in the Food Line (and Changed the Rules for a Whole City)
Imagine working all day, helping people, trying your best — but when you get home you still don't have enough money to buy decent food for your children. Sounds unfair, right? That’s how thousands of people in Seattle lived: working in fast-food restaurants, stores, and hotels. They cooked burgers for others but ate the cheapest noodles themselves. They cleaned hotel rooms but rented tiny spaces where barely a bed would fit. And one day these people decided: enough. They came together and...

Two sister cities that swapped secrets (and grew stronger together)
Imagine you have a friend who lives in another country. She’s great at ice skating, and you’re good at drawing. One day she falls and breaks her leg, and you help her learn to draw while she can’t skate. When she recovers, she teaches you her best tricks on the ice. That’s roughly what two big cities did — Seattle in the U.S. and Kobe in Japan. Only instead of skating and drawing, they exchanged knowledge about how to build houses and ship ports.
This story began on the most terrible morning in...
The park that kept its rusty towers (and taught the world to love old factories)
Imagine a big factory in your city closed down. The land around it is poisoned, huge rusty pipes jut into the sky, everything looks scary and filthy. What will adults do? Of course, they’ll tear it all down and build something new and clean! But in Seattle one architect said, "Wait! What if we leave those rusty towers and turn them into... a work of art?" Everyone thought he was crazy. Today that park with rusty pipes is one of the city's most beloved places, and his idea changed how cities...

An Island Made of Sawdust: How Seattle Built Ships and Lost Its Salmon
Imagine your city decided to build an entire island in one year. Not a small picnic isle, but a huge piece of land the size of 500 football fields! That’s exactly what Seattle did during World War I. But this story isn’t only about how quickly people can build. It’s about how one decision can change nature for a hundred years—and how we’re still trying to fix what seemed like a good idea to our great-grandparents.
When the city urgently needed ships (and forgot to ask the fish for...

Mothers Who Couldn't Vote but Saved a Whole Forest: How Seattle Residents Came Up with Protecting a...
Imagine that every time you drink tap water you could get sick. Seriously sick — so sick you’d be bedridden for weeks with a high fever. And the doctors in your city don’t know how to cure you. That’s how children in Seattle lived in the late 1800s. Their water was filthy, and people were dying from it.
But then something remarkable happened. Ordinary city residents — engineers, housewives, shopkeepers — came up with a solution no one in America had tried before. They decided to protect an...

Foam cave under the city: how Seattle engineers filled a tunnel with millions of white blocks
Imagine a huge empty cave suddenly appeared under your house. What would you do? That’s exactly the problem Seattle engineers faced when they demolished an old roadway called the Alaskan Way Viaduct. And the solution they found sounds like something out of a sci‑fi movie: they filled that cave… with foam.
This is the story of how sometimes the trickiest problems require the most unexpected solutions, and how an entire city learned to turn old scars into new treasures.
The road that kept the...

The troll who turned a scary spot into a beloved landmark
Imagine a dark place under a bridge that’s frightening even by day. Trash, broken glass, strange people hiding there. That’s what it was like under the Aurora Bridge in Seattle’s Fremont neighborhood. Parents forbade their children from going there, and adults walked around the place. But one day ordinary neighbors decided: enough being afraid! They came up with a way to turn the scariest spot in the neighborhood into something everyone would want to see. Their idea was so unusual that people...

A Spiral You Can Walk Through All Human Knowledge (and Why Engineers Feared People Would…)
Imagine you walk into a library and in front of you is a huge spiral, like a snail’s shell, but the size of a four-story building. You start walking up it, and the books around you change: first about animals, then about space, then about art, then about history. You walk and walk, and in one stroll you can pass every book in the library — more than 780,000! No stairs to climb, no elevator to find. Just walk, and the world of knowledge unfolds before you like a magical ribbon.
Such a spiral...
Opinions

Trump's New Spy Chief and the Logic of Retribution. What Could Go Wrong?
The job of Director of National Intelligence was designed to be, above everything else, boring in a specific way. After the catastrophic intelligence...

The Stopwatch Stops: How *60 Minutes* Came Apart
On the first Monday in June, the most respected newsroom in American television held a staff meeting that felt less like a planning session than a...

The Long Resistance: How a Country in Opposition Learned to Stay
Sixteen months into Donald Trump's second term, something has shifted — not the anger, but where it lives.
In St. Paul, Minnesota, on a Saturday...