Planet Seattle

Page updated: 05-05-2026 11:34 PM (Seattle), 05-06-2026 2:34 AM (NewYork)
A man is accused of luring a girl away from a bus stop and into a wooded area of Seattle’s Northgate neighborhood Monday, where he allegedly sexually assaulted her. (Nicholas Deshais / The Seattle Times, 2025)

SEATTLE Seattle: From a Sporting Celebration to Troubling Crimes

05-05-2026 6:07 PM
Today's news roundup covers three high-profile events in Seattle: the city's large-scale preparations for the 2026 World Cup, and shocking attacks on...
Trump'ın eleştiri yağmuru, Merz'in pazartesi günü ABD'nin İran yönetimi tarafından 'aşağılandığı' yönündeki yorumlarına yanıt olarak geldi. #EuropeNews

REACTIONS Strait and Blockade: How the US–Iran War Shapes Views in Germany, Turkey and South Africa

05-05-2026 5:10 PM
American policy has again become both the main irritant and a guidepost: the war of the US and Israel against Iran, the naval blockade and the crisis...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, Washington

05-05-2026 4:37 PM
Today, 05/05, Seattle will be mostly cloudy with some clearing and a slight chance of rain. High around 59°F, low around 46°F. Northwest wind 4–7...
عملة مثل

WORLD US froze $340M in cryptocurrency linked to Iran

05-05-2026 4:06 PM
The US government has frozen more than $340 million in cryptocurrency belonging to the Central Bank of Iran in recent weeks. The funds were held as...
The downtown Seattle skyline is seen behind rows of houses in West Seattle. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)

SEATTLE Have you bought a home in West Seattle? Tell us your story

05-05-2026 3:04 PM
The Seattle Times editorial team is preparing a series about West Seattle neighborhoods — a key part of the Seattle-area housing market. We are...
The search continues for Craig Berry, days after authorities alleged he shot his wife and fled into a wooded area. He is believed to have

USA Violence, News, and Society: How We Report Shootings

05-05-2026 2:05 PM
The stories behind three different news items may at first seem unrelated: a local manhunt in rural Tennessee, an internal front-office shakeup at...
More grey whales have washed up dead off the west coast of Vancouver Island, bringing the total to seven found dead.

NEIGHBORS Whale Deaths and Vancouver's Economy

05-05-2026 1:05 PM
Off the coast of Vancouver, seven dead gray whales have been found due to starvation linked to climate change. In response to the opioid crisis, a...
Chris Reykdal, the state superintendent of public instruction, is photographed at his offices in Olympia on March 7, 2024. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)

SEATTLE Washington superintendent fights to preserve pre-K

05-05-2026 12:06 PM
After state lawmakers cut funding for the Transition to Kindergarten (TK) program during the current session, the state’s superintendent of public...
Joe Nguyen, Director of the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce, photographed in Seattle on Wednesday, March 17, 2026. (Karen Ducey / The Seattle Times)

SEATTLE Former Progressive Tax Advocate to Lead Seattle Chamber of Commerce

05-05-2026 10:06 AM
When a recruiter last fall offered Joe Nguyen the job of CEO of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, he was so stunned he asked, “Do you know who I am?”...

Seattle

FILE – Mifepristone tablets sit on a table at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Ames, Iowa, July 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)

U.S. Supreme Court temporarily restores access to abortion pills

05-05-2026 6:05 AM
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday temporarily reinstated unrestricted access to mifepristone — one of the main drugs used for medication abortion. The...
Trevor Sturt talks about neighborhood flooding in Auburn near the Green River on Dec. 15, 2025. The Seattle Times staff was named a Pulitzer Prize finalist Monday for breaking news coverage of the catastrophic, historic flooding. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)

Pulitzer Prize: The Seattle Times Finalist for December Flood Coverage

05-04-2026 10:05 PM
The newsroom of The Seattle Times was named a finalist for the 2024 Pulitzer Prize in the Breaking News Reporting category for its coverage of the...
KIRO 7 Now

Seattle: wave of violence and news errors

05-04-2026 6:06 PM
Today's digest covers alarming incidents in Seattle — brutal attacks on an elderly man and a downtown pedestrian — as well as a high-profile mistake...
A light rail train heads west from Bellevue to Mercer Island, top left, and Seattle, top center, during a practice run before the March 28 opening. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)

Light rail across Lake Washington experiences first failure

05-04-2026 3:04 PM
On Monday morning, Line 2 light rail across Lake Washington experienced its first major failure since opening on March 28. A two-car train with 21...
A lone sailboat in docked Friday afternoon at Gene Coulon Memorial Beach Park in Renton. (Kevin Clark / The Seattle Times)

Seattle faces a week of warmth, with gradual cooling ahead

05-04-2026 12:04 PM
If Sunday felt a bit hot, get ready for another warm week: Monday in Seattle will be clear again and reach up to 27°C (80°F), promises National...
Sunil Nanjappa Ganesh Murthy, top center, a software developer at Microsoft, helps Samson Tsimbalyuk during an AI class at the Bellevue Boys & Girls Club in December. The class is part of the Microsoft Elevate Washington initiative, which has now issued $75,000 grants to 10 Washington school districts to explore ways that AI may help solve school challenges. The move comes amid debates about the impact of AI use in broader society and in schools. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times, 2025)

Washington school districts launch AI pilots with Microsoft support

05-04-2026 10:06 AM
Ten Washington state school districts have joined an 18-month Microsoft Elevate Washington program — giving them access to world-class financial and...
KIRO 7 Now

Seattle News: Schools, Police and Sports

05-04-2026 6:07 AM
In this roundup of Seattle news: schools impose strict phone limits, a SWAT police operation ends with no arrests, and the Seahawks experiment with...
People are out on the waters of Lake Union as summerlike temperatures head into the high 70s, Sunday afternoon in Seattle. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)

Seattle breaks Sunday temperature record amid spring heat

05-03-2026 10:05 PM
On Sunday in Seattle, the temperature reached 27 degrees Celsius (81°F) around 3 p.m. and held at that level into the evening, beating the previous...
KIRO 7 Now

Seattle weather, sports and Seattle stories

05-03-2026 6:06 PM
Welcome to Seattle news: the long-awaited cooldown after the heat, the story of Storm coach Sonia Raman that began with an accident, and the Mariners...

Events

Seattle and Surroundings: Events May 5–11, 2026

05-05-2026 9:04 AM
This week Seattle offers a packed lineup for every taste — from jazz and electronic concerts and major sporting events to opera, contemporary dance, and family festivals. On Friday, May 5 you can choose between pianist Hiromi at the Moore Theatre, a Seattle Mariners home game at T-Mobile Park, and a lecture by Neil deGrasse Tyson at the Paramount; over the weekend there are flower festivals and street fairs, a drone show at Marymoor Park, theater series and Thursday museum free days. Seasonal...

Neighbors

The Mount Underwood wildfire seen burning near Port Alberni, B.C. on Aug. 21, 2025. (BC Wildfire Service Image)

Wildfires and Abnormal Heat Sweep British Columbia

05-04-2026 1:05 PM
British Columbia has faced an early start to fire season: more than ten new wildfires ignited over the weekend, two of them burning on Vancouver Island. The anomalous heat shattered 126-year-old temperature records, exceeding climate normals by 10–15 degrees. Officials cite human activity as the main cause of the ignitions amid severe drought. More than ten new wildfires ignited in British Columbia over the weekend At least ten new fire ignitions were recorded over the past weekend in the...
The house has been for sale for a couple of years. In 2024, it was listed for $2.999 million.

Fairy Tale and Heat: Unusual British Columbia News

05-03-2026 1:05 PM
A unique fairy-tale house with a tragic history is being sold at a discount in the mountains of British Columbia, and Metro Vancouver is preparing for record May heat up to 35°C. Meanwhile, the first weekend of the month promises to be busy: from a night market and baseball to congee and a documentary film festival. A European fairy-tale house lost in the mountains of British Columbia: price falls In the picturesque mountains of British Columbia, far from civilization, sits a house that looks...
Book Lovers House is selling for $2.2 million.

Week Digest: From Book Paradise to Football Battle

05-02-2026 1:07 PM
This week’s news covers unique real estate, a sports team facing relocation, and preparations for Vancouver’s major marathon. A Home for Book Lovers: Unique Off-Grid Estate on Sidney Island Listed for $2.2 Million On Sidney Island, off the coast of the eponymous town in British Columbia, a distinctive property has come to market — the "Book Lovers House." This unique residence, designed by Blue Sky Architects in 2007, was originally conceived as a retreat for those who want to enjoy reading...
Buyers have been found for four properties that used to be home to Hudson's Bay department stores, including Vancouver's Granville Street location.

News Digest: Seals, Sharks and Sales

05-01-2026 1:05 PM
In today's edition: buyers for Hudson's Bay buildings, the mysterious shark Kara off British Columbia, and a seal pup rescued from fishing gear. Despite collapse, buyers emerge for iconic Hudson's Bay buildings in downtown Vancouver, Calgary and Ottawa According to recently filed court documents cited by CBC News, buyers have been found for four properties formerly occupied by Hudson's Bay department stores. These are real estate assets owned by a joint venture of the bankrupt retailer and its...
Provincial leaders have firmly rejected the idea of transferring the control of operating BC Place Stadium to the Vancouver Whitecaps FC.

Crisis and Innovation: What's Happening in BC Today

04-30-2026 1:05 PM
The Government of British Columbia has rejected transferring BC Place stadium to the Vancouver Whitecaps soccer club and is demanding a clear plan from MLS to save the team. In the southern part of the province residents witnessed a rare meteor, and in Vancouver developers are finding a way out of the crisis through partnerships with nonprofit and public entities. British Columbia premier rules out handing BC Place to the Vancouver Whitecaps Recent media reports hinted that the Government of...
“It’s horrific,” said BC Conservative interim leader Trevor Halford. The fact of the matter is that the province is operating like a slum landlord.”

Week in British Columbia: flood, beach and breakdown

04-29-2026 1:06 PM
In today’s digest: the owner of a Vancouver nightclub accuses authorities of slum-style landlordship after another flood from provincial social housing; San Josef Bay on Vancouver Island was named one of North America’s best beaches; and elevators on a BC Ferries vessel went out of service temporarily, causing inconvenience for passengers. Vancouver nightclub owner accuses authorities of slum-style landlordship after another flood Alan Goodall, owner of the Aura bar on Granville Street in...
British Columbia is expanding its early resolution process for family disputes to all provincial court locations along the central coast, B.C.'s Interior and Vancouver Island starting Friday.

British Columbia: Vancouver and Province News

04-28-2026 1:05 PM
Expanding family mediation, the "Vancouver Whitecaps" MLS crisis and a lottery drama over half a million dollars shape the province's agenda. Expansion of family dispute early-resolution program in British Columbia British Columbia is continuing its move toward out-of-court mechanisms for resolving family disputes. As of May 1, 2026, the early resolution program, which previously operated as a pilot in Victoria, will officially expand to all provincial courts on the central coast, in the...
The B.C. Securities Commission is seeking to ban a Vancouver woman from the province's capital markets after she was found liable for fraud in the U.S.

Vancouver News Digest: events, safety and law

04-27-2026 1:04 PM
A roundup of top news from Vancouver and British Columbia: a lineup for the May long weekend, a large-scale securities fraud, and new measures to combat armed violence in the province. Weekend ideas in Vancouver: things to do April 27–May 3 A new month begins, bringing a host of vibrant events in Vancouver. From April 27 to May 3 the city offers dozens of options for entertaining activities — from documentary films and live music to craft markets and unique culinary experiences. In this...
Work to widen Highway 1 through the Fraser Valley continues, and drivers are warned of overnight closures of a busy exit in April and May.

Vancouver News Digest: roads, education and soccer protest

04-26-2026 1:04 PM
Today's edition covers three key stories: overnight closures on Highway 1 due to construction, an international university fair, and a "Save the Caps" fan protest at B.C. Place. Highway 1 ramp closures: Metro Vancouver drivers face nighttime disruptions for weeks Spring works to widen Highway 1 through the Fraser Valley are entering an active phase, and drivers should prepare for traffic pattern changes starting as soon as this coming weekend. The British Columbia government has announced...

USA

A teen and a 32-year-old woman drowned in different parts of the state on Friday and Saturday, according to local officials.

Fragile security: how a changing reality alters our sense of risk

05-03-2026 2:05 PM
The everyday picture of safety increasingly diverges from reality. People die at sea in Florida in a relatively "ordinary" storm, regions in the Pacific Northwest break temperature records in May, and in Arizona a large-scale, high-tech operation has been unable for months to find a missing elderly woman. These news items outwardly seem unrelated — extreme weather in Florida in an NBC News piece, the mysterious disappearance of Nancy Guthrie in Arizona in a Yahoo report, and anomalous heat...
Trump told reporters he considers seeking congressional authorization under the War Powers Act

War, law and perception: who decides when a war is over

05-03-2026 8:05 AM
At first glance the materials presented seem unrelated: some discuss a U.S. and Israeli war against Iran and strikes on Lebanon, others concern constitutional disputes in Washington over the president's powers, and a third recounts a touching episode with Joel Embiid and his son on a basketball court. But all these stories share one common and very contemporary theme: who has the right to declare “that’s it, the war is over” — and how that decision affects law, policy and human reality. An Al...
Friday marked exactly three months since Nancy Guthrie, the mother of

People’s Vulnerability to Large Systems: From Missing Persons to Airline Collapse

05-02-2026 2:04 PM
The stories behind the headlines at first glance seem unrelated: the disappearance of an elderly woman, the technical procedure of redrawing electoral districts in Alabama, and the sudden collapse of a major budget airline in the U.S. But viewed more broadly, these narratives share a common theme: how an individual can be almost helpless in the face of large systems — whether law enforcement, the state apparatus, or the airline market. And how the state tries (or claims to try) to soften the...
Flights were cancelled and Spirit's check-in desks sat empty at airports on Saturday morning, with little help on hand for travelers figuring out what to do next.

Lessons in Vulnerability: From Spirit Airlines' Collapse to a Blow Against Telemedicine

05-02-2026 8:05 AM
Stories about an airline's collapse and restrictions on accessing abortion via telemedicine may seem unrelated at first. But read not as isolated news items but as a single slice of the U.S. political‑economic reality, and one theme emerges: how government decisions and institutions treat vulnerable groups — those who fly only on the cheapest fares, and those who can obtain a safe abortion only via telemedicine and the mail. In both cases the language invoked is formally about “law,”...
The Brantley County Sheriff’s Office is asking residents to be patient as they return home and not to do anything that would affect damage assessments by officials.

Vulnerability in the Face of Disaster: From Wildfire to Digital Looting

05-01-2026 2:06 PM
When you read about a wildfire in rural Georgia, the brutal murder of two graduate students in Tampa, and the digital "plundering" of a deceased race car driver's accounts, it feels like entirely different worlds. But look more closely and a common thread runs through these stories: how people and institutions confront catastrophe—natural or human—and what happens in the most vulnerable hours and days afterward. It's not just about destruction and death, but about how protection is organized,...
A Life Flight helicopter takes off to rush an employee to the hospital. Another employee died at the scene despite life-saving efforts.

The Cost of Mistakes: Managing Risk from a Ski Lift to the NFL

05-01-2026 8:05 AM
Stories from two seemingly disparate worlds — the Mt. Hood Ski Bowl resort in Oregon and the NFL’s Cleveland Browns — unexpectedly converge on one theme: how society and organizations respond to risk, accidents, and uncertainty, and what happens when the cost of error becomes too high to ignore. The tragedy on a chairlift and the protracted saga around quarterback Deshaun Watson are not just news items but two mirrors showing how management, accountability, and attempts to regain control after...
(Update: adding video, statement from Culver School District Office) CULVER, Ore. (KTVZ) -- Former Culver teacher, Nathan Barber, has received a public reprimand and two years of probation from the Teacher Standards and Practices Commission. This action follows a misconduct report from the Culver School District and Barber's subsequent resignation from his teaching position. The

Vulnerability and Security: How Crises of Different Scales Expose Systemic Weaknesses

04-30-2026 8:04 AM
Events from three seemingly unrelated news items — a major crash on a highway in New York, allegations of professional misconduct by a teacher in a small Oregon school district, and rising military and political tension around Iran, Israel and the Strait of Hormuz — actually form a coherent picture. All of these stories concern the collision between everyday human vulnerability and how prepared institutions are — from local police and school administrations to international diplomacy and...
The court agreed with Republicans that the congressional map Louisiana drew is a racial gerrymander but stopped short of a broader ruling on the Voting Rights Act.

US Supreme Court, Race and Power: How One Ruling Redraws the Political Map

04-29-2026 8:05 AM
Seemingly modest Supreme Court decisions sometimes reshape real politics far more than high-profile elections. The story about Louisiana’s congressional map is one such case. Formally, it’s about technicalities of racial gerrymandering and the interpretation of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. In substance, it’s about how much the idea of racial-minority representation still functions in American democracy and who will control Congress in the coming years. Against this backdrop, even baseball news —...
The UEA withdraw from OPEC, a cartel of major oil-producing nations that coordinates production policies to influence global oil supply and prices, will be effective from May 1.

Force, Implication, and the Fragility of U.S. Institutions

04-28-2026 2:05 PM
In three, at first glance unrelated, narratives — war with Iran and an energy crisis, a new criminal case against James Comey over an Instagram post, and the fight over funding the Secret Service amid an assassination attempt on Donald Trump — a common thread emerges. It is the turning of politics into a perpetual state of emergency, where security apparatuses, the justice system, freedom of speech and even global energy flows are woven into personal and partisan conflicts centered on the...

Reactions

تتصاعد التوترات في مضيق هرمز مع دخول العملية الأمريكية “مشروع الحرية” يومها الثاني، وسط محاولات من واشنطن لفرض واقع “الفتح الجزئي” للممر المائي.

How the World Sees America at the Oil Throat: Hormuz, Blockade and a New Frontier of U.S

05-05-2026 7:04 AM
In early May 2026 the image of America abroad is being shaped again not by elections or culture, but by guns and tankers. In Saudi Arabia, Germany...
COLUMN. Tehran believes Trump needs a deal; Washington thinks the Islamic Republic cannot survive without one, explains Alain Frachon in his column for Le Monde.

How the World Sees Trump's America: War with Iran, Ukraine, and a Narrowed Room for Maneuver

05-04-2026 5:08 PM
Since the start of the US and Israeli war with Iran and against the backdrop of the continuing war in Ukraine, America has once again become the main...
도널드 트럼프 대통령이 2026년 3월 31일(현지시각) 워싱턴 백악관 집무실에서 행정명령에 서명한 후 기자들의 질문에 답하고 있다. AP=연합뉴스

America in the Crosshairs: How Korea, South Africa and Turkey Interpret US Foreign Policy

05-04-2026 7:07 AM
In early May 2026, talk of America in Seoul, Pretoria and Ankara almost always comes down to one thing: that Washington is once again actively and...
Der Bundeskanzler kritisiert US-Präsident Trump scharf für Iran-Strategie. Dieser hatte Deutschland zuvor direkt wegen fehlender Nato-Hilfe attackiert.

When Washington Loses "Natural Leadership": How Germany, Brazil and South Korea See It Now

05-03-2026 5:12 PM
A perspective from outside the United States today increasingly coalesces around the same thesis: America has become a key source of instability, yet...
COLUMN. Since the start of the conflict in the Middle East, the specter of powerlessness has affected many countries, and what was supposed to be a regional war has become a global crisis, writes Le Monde columnist Gilles Paris.

Through Washington's Lens: South Africa, India and Russia on the New US Era

05-03-2026 7:14 AM
At the end of April and the beginning of May 2026, conversations about the United States in South Africa, India and Russia focus on three major...
The facts about AUKUS tell a story of remarkable progress, writes Defence Industry Minister Pat ...

"America That Is Changing": How South Africa, Australia and France View Today's U.S.

05-02-2026 5:03 PM
In early May 2026 the conversation about the United States outside its borders sounds very different from what it did ten years ago. In the South...
США не планируют продлевать временное выведение из-под санкций российской нефти и нефтепродуктов

How the World Sees America: Hormuz, Oil and US "New Isolationism"

05-02-2026 7:07 AM
In early May 2026, the image of the United States in foreign press is again assembled as if from shards: a military blockade of Iran and the...
في وقت تبحر فيه القوة الضاربة للبحرية الأمريكية نحو مياه الخليج في إستراتيجية “حافة الهاوية” لردع إيران، تجد إدارة الرئيس الأمريكي دونالد ترمب نفسها في مواجهة احتقان داخلي غير مسبوق.

America in the Crosshairs of Three Capitals: How Saudi Arabia, India and Russia View the U.S

05-01-2026 5:08 PM
Today's conversations about the U.S. in Riyadh, New Delhi and Moscow bear surprisingly little resemblance to the debates familiar to an American...
Sinking of IRIS Dena - Wikipedia

How the World Responds to Washington: Three Countries, Three Perspectives, One Anxiety

05-01-2026 7:08 AM
Around the United States a dense cloud of foreign reactions is gathering again, but if you look not from Washington, but from New Delhi, Pretoria or...

World

39b8c280-6786-4927-b029-b2ee179d9518.jpeg

Venezuela: full supply and record regional growth

05-05-2026 4:06 AM
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez stated that the country is fully supplied with goods across its territory and presented optimistic economic forecasts. According to the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), the country's GDP is expected to grow by 6.5% in 2026, which would be the highest rate in the region. Rodríguez noted that in the first quarter the availability of products on store shelves increased by 9%, and domestic consumption over the first four...
محمد باقر قاليباف أكد أن الولايات المتحدة وحلفاءها عرّضوا أمن الشحن ونقل الطاقة للخطر (الأناضول)

Iran warns of new escalation in the Strait of Hormuz

05-05-2026 3:06 AM
Speaker of the Iranian parliament Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf stated that the United States and its allies have violated the ceasefire regime and established a blockade of Iranian ports, endangering the safety of maritime shipping and the transport of energy carriers. In a post on the social network X he emphasized that a new situation is forming in the Strait of Hormuz, and that maintaining the current state of affairs is becoming unsustainable for Washington. His statement came amid rising...
Война в Иране выявляет пределы военной мощи США и ускоряет более глубокий кризис: эрозию их способности поддерживать мировой порядок.

Latin America Alarmed: Trump's "Proyecto Libertad" and Strait of Hormuz Tensions

05-04-2026 7:06 PM
News from Venezuela portrays "Proyecto Libertad" as a new phase in American maritime policy: a plan to escort ships under U.S. leadership raises questions about budget spending, the militarization of diplomacy, and the risks of escalation amid the conflict between the U.S., Israel, and Iran. Commentators note that the operation is more likely to sharpen than to calm the situation in the Persian Gulf: pressure on trade routes, coercion of other navies to alter course, and the threat of strikes...
أسعار النفط ظلت مدعومة بفعل استمرار التوتر بين واشنطن وطهران (الفرنسية)

Oil surges after Trump's promise to unblock the Strait of Hormuz

05-04-2026 4:06 PM
Oil prices jumped sharply on Monday after US President Donald Trump announced the launch of "Operation Freedom" to free vessels blocked in the Strait of Hormuz. The statement heightened geopolitical concerns and pushed prices above the psychological $100-per-barrel mark. Brent futures climbed 6% to $114, while the US benchmark WTI rose 3.17% to $105.2 a barrel. The market reacted immediately, reversing the previous session's losses. Trump wrote on his social network "Truth Social" that the US...
Luis Vicente León

Venezuelan expert: elections possible only through negotiations and without revenge

05-04-2026 4:08 AM
Economist and political scientist Luis Vicente León said that holding elections in Venezuela is possible provided there is a prior political agreement that will create constitutional institutionalism and prevent a "zero-sum game" scenario where one side wins everything and the other loses everything. León emphasized that this process should not be perceived as coercion or an act of revenge, since history shows that revenge destroys more than it resolves, and he called for viewing the period...
سفينة حاويات تعبر مضيق هرمز (أسوشيتد برس)

Iran Says It Controls the Strait of Hormuz and Warns the US

05-04-2026 3:06 AM
The military headquarters "Khatam al-Anbia" in Iran has officially announced that Iranian forces will ensure security in the Strait of Hormuz, stressing that "any passage through the strait must be coordinated with them under any circumstances" and that "there will be no passage through Hormuz without coordination." The statement warns that any foreign forces, particularly US military forces, will be attacked if they approach the strait, and that "any hostile actions by the US will destabilize...
الرئيس الأمريكي دونالد ترمب (أسوشيتد برس)

Trump Notifies Congress of End to Hostilities with Iran

05-03-2026 4:07 PM
U.S. President Donald Trump sent an official letter to Congress stating that the "hostile actions" with Iran, initiated under "Operation 'Epic Fury'," are "ended." The statement sparked heated political and media debate in Washington. The message was sent after the expiration of the 60-day period prescribed by the War Powers Resolution of 1973, and it has generated disagreements over its interpretation and its impact on the powers of the president and Congress. Reactions ranged from those who...
CIJ

Venezuela to Attend ICJ Hearings on Esequibo, Denies Jurisdiction

05-03-2026 4:05 AM
Venezuela announced that it will participate in hearings at the United Nations International Court of Justice (ICJ) concerning the territorial dispute with Guyana over the Esequibo region, but emphasized that it does not recognize the court's jurisdiction and will not accept any of its decisions as binding. In an official statement, the government explained that participation in the hearings is not an act of consent to the ICJ's competence, but an opportunity to present to the international...
أثر إغلاق مضيق هرمز على الملاحة العالمية، فأصبحت مئات الناقلات وسفن الشحن تبحث عن ممرات آمنة، مسجلة مسافات أطول وتكاليف أعلى وأيام انتظار أمام قناة بنما.

Panama Canal rescues world trade after Strait of Hormuz blockade

05-03-2026 3:05 AM
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz due to a US-Israeli military operation against Iran has caused chaos in global shipping. Hundreds of oil tankers and cargo ships have been forced to urgently seek alternative safe routes, leading to a sharp increase in distances, transit times and transport costs. As a result, global supply chains have been disrupted and shipping companies have faced unprecedented logistical difficulties. In this context the Panama Canal has become the main alternative route,...

Knowledge

Kingdome construction, circa 1973 | Series 1608, Department … | Flickr

Grandfather's Secret Under the Dome — How Builders from Around the World Made a Team's Home

05-05-2026 11:33 PM
Imagine: you’re sitting in the stands of a huge stadium, cheering for your football team, and then you learn that your grandfather helped build that very stadium with his own hands. That’s what happened to many children in Seattle when their parents told them the story of the Kingdome — the first home of the Seahawks. But the most remarkable thing about this story isn’t the stadium’s size (though it was huge!), it’s that it was built by people who came from all over the world, each bringing...
You Can Explore The Inside Of These Seattle Floating Homes This Weekend For The First Time In Years

Floating Homes That Children Saved from Disappearing

05-05-2026 11:03 AM
Imagine a street where, instead of asphalt, there is water, and houses rock on the waves like cradles. In Seattle there are such unusual neighborhoods where people have lived in houseboats for more than a hundred years. But once these remarkable floating homes nearly vanished forever — and they were saved by ordinary families with children who simply didn't want to lose their special world. When Houses Learned to Float In the early 1900s, people in Seattle wanted to own a home but didn't have...
Photographing the 'Creek of Hope' | Encyclopedia of Puget Sound

Kids-Detectives Who Saved the Salmon in the Big City

05-04-2026 11:34 PM
Imagine you live in a huge city with skyscrapers and asphalt everywhere. And then you learn that right under your feet, in small streams hidden in pipes, real salmon are supposed to live — the same fish that make incredible journeys from the ocean to the mountains. But the salmon were disappearing, and nobody knew why. That's how one of Seattle's most remarkable detective stories began, with ordinary children and their neighbors as the main characters. The Mystery of the Vanishing Fish In the...
Seattle Central Library | Seattle, Baraque, Bibliothèque

A Library That Breathes: How a Glass House Learned to Protect Nature

05-04-2026 11:03 AM
Imagine a huge building of glass and steel that looks like a giant sparkling crystal in the middle of the city. But it’s not just a pretty box for books. It’s a library that can breathe, drink rain, and save energy better than many homes. And the most surprising thing — when the architects designed it, they listened to children who dreamed of reading under the clouds. In the early 2000s, residents of Seattle decided their old central library was too cramped and boring. They wanted something...
Pullman Porters and Maids | National Museum of African American History & Culture.

The Invisible Suitcase: How Railroad Porters Brought Seattle Its Most Important Cargo

05-03-2026 11:34 PM
Imagine a man who carries other people's suitcases every day, smiles when he's not noticed, and endures rudeness. But this man has a secret: in his own suitcase he hides something that will change an entire city. Not gold or jewels — but books, newspapers and ideas about making the world more just. This is the story of African American Pullman porters who helped build modern Seattle as we know it. Who the Pullman porters were In the early 20th century, when your great-great-grandmother was a...
5 Best Breweries In Seattle (2025)

Brewers Who Saved the Salmon: How a Love of Clean Water Changed Seattle

05-03-2026 11:04 AM
Imagine you set up a lemonade stand in your yard. Now imagine your lemonade became so popular that people started caring about the cleanliness of the river you use for water. Sounds like a fairy tale? But that's exactly how one of Seattle's most important stories began — the story of how small breweries changed not only what adults drink, but how an entire city relates to nature. When water became more important than money In the early 1980s, there were people in Seattle who were unhappy that...
Seattle Central Library the Books Spiral. The spiraling book storage following the Dewey Decimal ...

A Library That Heard Children's Dreams from the Past

05-02-2026 11:33 PM
Imagine writing a letter about the library of your dreams, hiding it in the wall of an old building, and 40 years later someone finds it — and your dream becomes reality. That’s exactly what happened in Seattle when builders were tearing down the old Central Public Library and found hidden messages from children of the 1960s. The new library, opened in 2004, turned out to be surprisingly close to what those children had imagined, even though the architects only learned about the letters after...
Vintage colorful wooden chairs on street flea market. Group of retro home wooden furniture on ...

Nighttime Rescuers of Things: How Treasure Hunters Changed a Whole City

05-02-2026 11:03 AM
Imagine you walk into a Sunday market and there’s a beautiful wooden chair for sale. For just a couple of dollars! But if you knew where that chair was last night, you’d be very surprised. Because just twelve hours earlier it had been in a trash bin, about to be taken to the landfill forever. This is a true story about how a group of ordinary people in Seattle’s Fremont neighborhood started a secret operation to rescue things. And how their nighttime adventures taught a whole city to think...
About - Seattle Giant Letters

The Children Who Wrote Peace: How Seattle Students Befriended a City Across the Ocean

05-01-2026 11:33 PM
Imagine you're sitting at a school desk and your teacher says, "Today we will write letters to children in Japan." It's 1957, just twelve years after World War II, when America and Japan had been enemies. Many adults are still angry and afraid of one another. But one teacher named Helen Suzuki decided that children could do what adults could not — build a bridge of friendship across an ocean. This is how one of the most unusual stories began: ordinary schoolchildren in Seattle helped their city...