SEATTLE July 4 Parade and the 2026 World Cup: Seattle updates
Seattle is getting ready for a children’s parade for Independence Day, as well as an influx of fans for the 2026 World Cup matches. It has been revealed that Trump and Vance will not attend the U.S.–Belgium World Cup game.
July 4 Independence Day children’s parade in West Seattle: what to know
Only two days remain until one of the most beloved events in the Admiral area— the Independence Day children’s parade organized by the Admiral District Association. This year, hundreds of young residents...
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USA Vulnerability to risk: from heat and fires to the fragility of public spaces
The first summer weeks in the US and beyond are forming a picture in which several different events are being pulled under the same umbrella: how...

SEATTLE Seattle: Anthropic expands, and World Cup tickets set records
Anthropic has leased 113,000 square feet in Seattle as it prepares for an IPO and expands its headcount. Meanwhile, the U.S. national team will play...

EVENTS Seattle’s World Cup Week: What’s Happening July 3, 2026 and Beyond
Seattle, July 3, 2026 — A quick guide to the FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: what’s changed over the last 24 hours, where to watch matches, and which...

EVENTS July Events in Seattle: Kickoff July 2, 2026
July in Seattle begins bright and varied—from free museum days and art walks to themed scavenger-hunt parties and outdoor movie screenings. Right in...

EVENTS Events calendar: August 2 to 31, 2026 in Seattle
To make planning easier in advance, we’ve put together an events lineup for the period from August 2 to 31, 2026: from baseball games and NFL...

USA When an amusement ride, a disappearance and an explosion are about the same thing
At first glance, these three stories have nothing to do with each other: in New Jersey, a new giant amusement ride is being built; in the US,...

SEATTLE Seattle: Declined Charges, an Unsolved Killing, and an Arrest for Human Trafficking
In today’s digest: a prosecutor has again declined to pursue charges against a teacher from the Edmonds School District in a student sexual abuse...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, WA
Today, July 2, in Seattle, expect mostly cloudy and cool conditions. The high temperature will be 64°F, with a low of 57°F. The wind will be from the...

WORLD Psychological Warfare: Venezuela Warned of a Disinformation Campaign Amid the Disaster
Óscar Schemel, president of the Venezuelan research company Hinterlaces, said that the country has launched a targeted disinformation and...
Seattle

Seattle News Digest: Soccer and Copper Theft
The U.S. men’s soccer team will face Belgium in the Round of 16 of the 2026 World Cup in Seattle. Meanwhile, police arrested a man who was stealing...

Seattle: baseball trump cards, a football diaspora, and a traffic jam apocalypse
In today’s roundup: the Mariners could use an abundance of starting pitchers to bolster the bullpen; Seattle’s Senegalese diaspora is backing the...

Reforming Homeless Aid—and the Mariners’ Dilemma
Seattle and King County are overhauling the homeless-services system, taking control of the money away from KCRHA over violations. Analysts are...

Seattle’s Football Triumph and a Pitcher’s Kindness
Seattle has been named the best city in the United States for the 2026 World Cup thanks to thoughtful infrastructure and record ridership. The city...
Seattle: Native culture at the World Cup, weather, and baseball
Today’s roundup is about Seattle: the World Cup for the first time incorporates Coast Salish Indigenous culture, Wednesday’s weather forecast...
Seattle News: Charity, Safety, and Housing
In the roundup: Mariners pitcher Bryan Woo helps a children’s hospital; the City Council approved street closures on Aurora Avenue and a reform of...

Mariners problems: a slump of stars and transfer ideas
In today’s roundup: key Seattle players have stopped showing their best baseball, the team is considering acquiring George Springer despite a weak...

Seattle: Art Clouds and a Hot-Dog Crown
An installation called Clouds of Belonging transformed the plaza outside King Street Station, and Seattle’s cream-cheese hot dog was named the best...

Seattle Digest: Injuries, Bat Attack, and World Cup Disappointment
The Mariners’ general manager updates the recovery of four players, a viral video in Seattle shows a bat attack at a pride event, and the World Cup...
Neighbors

World Cup in Vancouver: Restaurants up, hotels down
Restaurants and bars in Vancouver are seeing record revenue thanks to Canada’s national team matches, but hotels and shops on Granville Island are facing a drop in demand due to high prices and the way fans are spread across the region. Provincial authorities, despite an uneven impact, are forecasting a long-term tourism boom and are already building mini-fields as a legacy of the tournament.
Vancouver’s World Cup promises an economic boom—but delivers uneven results
British Columbia is...

“Giants” Move, Housing Deal and Search Off Vancouver’s Coast
The Vancouver Giants are relocating to Surrey with a new 10,000-seat arena; British Columbia developers are skeptical about the Carney-Eby housing deal to reduce development fees; and a search continues off the coast of Vancouver for six people who went missing after four were rescued.
Vancouver Giants Move to Surrey: 10,000-Seat Hockey Arena
The Western Hockey League (WHL) Vancouver Giants are preparing for another move — this time to Surrey, one of the fastest-growing cities in British...

Shipwreck off British Columbia and earthquake in Venezuela
Search operations off British Columbia have been paused for six people missing after the charter vessel crash. Meanwhile, a Vancouver man is helping victims of the earthquake in Venezuela.
Search for six missing after charter boat sinks off B.C. coast is suspended
Rescue operations off British Columbia, where a charter fishing vessel sank last week, have been temporarily suspended. As reported in a CTV News story, six people are still listed as missing, and authorities made the difficult...

Vancouver News Digest: Protests, Soccer on the Mountain, and Canada Day
In today’s digest: Vancouver residents are protesting the construction of AI data centres over environmental risks; football fans combined watching a match involving the England national team with panoramic views from Grouse Mountain; and a guide to free Canada Day 2026 events across Metro Vancouver — from fireworks and drone shows to concerts and inclusive programming.
Protest in Vancouver: Hundreds took to the streets against AI data-centre construction
Last Saturday in Vancouver, a major...
BC: condo buybacks and teenage door vandalism
British Columbia’s premier clarified details of a program to buy unsold homes for rent-to-own, insisting it isn’t a bailout for developers. Meanwhile in Nanaimo, teenagers are terrorizing a neighborhood as part of a dangerous challenge—kicking in doors, frightening residents, and causing damage.
British Columbia weighs a questionable deal to buy up unsold condominiums
British Columbia Premier David Eby offered unexpected clarifications about a proposed government program to buy unsold condos...

Vancouver Digest: Housing, Festivals and a Route to the Fjords
The government is buying up empty condos, the city kicks off an Afro-music festival, FIFA World Cup broadcasts and a ’90s retrospective, and builders are pitching a new highway to Prince Rupert that could take just 8 hours.
Mark Carney Plans to Buy Unsold Condos in Vancouver: Lifeline or Developer Subsidy?
The Government of Canada and the province of British Columbia have decided to tackle two problems at the same time: a shortage of affordable housing and a growing volume of vacant newly built...

British Columbia: housing, football and a stadium
In the digest: a controversial program to buy out vacant condos in British Columbia, a football fan march in Vancouver ahead of Canada vs Switzerland, and an explanation of why the BC Place Vancouver stadium kept its name for the 2026 World Cup.
Canada’s federal government will buy 2,200 vacant condos: a market rescue or a developer subsidy?
Prime Minister of Canada Mark Carney and the Premier of British Columbia David Eby announced a joint program to buy thousands of vacant units from private...

Vancouver Digest: Flares, Mortgages and Canada Day
Two fans received a one-year ban for flares at BC Place, while more than 80% of Vancouver residents’ income goes to housing—but they’re in no hurry to leave. And on Canada Day, Metro Vancouver residents can expect fireworks in the suburbs.
Two fans banned for a year at BC Place for flares during Egypt vs. New Zealand match
Vancouver saw an incident that highlighted differences in football culture across countries. During a friendly match between the national teams of Egypt and New Zealand at BC...
USA
Love, Risk and a Symbol of New York
On the summit of the Empire State Building, several storylines converged in the space of a single day: a brazen breach at one of the world’s most recognizable skyscrapers, a public demonstration carrying an anti-establishment message, an unexpected engagement at nearly 500 meters, and an immediate police response. The story, reported by CBS News, NBC News and briefly by CNN, reads at once like a city incident, a performance, and an extremely risky act. But if you look past the flashy image, the...

Верховный суд, города и цена риска
If you look at these three reports together, they seem very different: in Pittsburgh, a contractor was killed in a fall from a ladder; in Atlanta, police are investigating a death at a home in Buckhead; and the U.S. Supreme Court issued a landmark ruling on birthright citizenship. But they share a common thread: in each case, a system—whether law, policing, or workplace safety rules—sets the boundaries of what is permissible and tries to deal with the consequences when those boundaries are...

US Supreme Court and a New Conservative Line
The court rulings discussed in these materials may, at first glance, appear to cover separate topics — citizenship by birth, rules for campaign financing, and the participation of transgender athletes in women’s sports. But if you look at them more broadly, they share a single overarching storyline: the US Supreme Court is becoming increasingly active as an arbiter in the country’s most acute cultural and political conflicts. And its conservative majority is not merely interpreting the law — it...

A turning point, a decisive moment, and the price of the final round
If you look at these three pieces together, they unexpectedly form a single overarching story about how climaxes always look different, yet they always demand absolute composure. In one case, it’s a historic farewell to a venue that had lasted 132 years; in another, it’s a last-minute goal that moves a football match into a new phase of the tournament; in the third, it’s no longer a sporting climax but a geopolitical one, where any mistake can trigger escalation between states. In all three...

Courts, Power and Elections: How the US Fights Over the Limits of Democracy
At first glance, we have three separate topics: the powers of the US president, the rules for counting mail-in ballots, and Europe’s water agenda. But if you look more closely, all three pieces are really about the same thing—how modern institutions are trying to strike a balance between political power and the rules meant to restrain that power. In one case, it’s about the independence of the Federal Reserve; in another, it’s about the fairness and administration of elections; and in the...

When Temperature Becomes the Factor, Not the Background
In all three pieces—on deadly heat in Europe, on the uncertainty surrounding Bishop Dyer in MLW, and on Brandt Clarke’s contract with the Los Angeles Kings—the same logic of modern public events comes to the fore: any meaningful system, whether public health, a sports league, or a hockey club, must respond to pressure that changes the rules of the game. In the first case, it is literal climate stress already driving higher mortality and infrastructure failures; in the second and third, it is...

Extreme Weather and the Vulnerability of Systems
Almost all the items in the roundup, despite their different geographies and formats, converge on one big story: how natural and man-made shocks quickly turn into a crisis for people, infrastructure and authorities when the scale of the event exceeds the capacity of an ordinary response. Earthquakes off the coast of Venezuela, a wave of destructive heat in Europe, and even local incidents like fires, shootings or road accidents in Pennsylvania all show the same logic: modern society is often...
![Children cool off in a fountain in front of Berlin Cathedral as temperature rise in Berlin, Germany [Ebrahim Noroozi/AP]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/ap_6a3f79181a87f-1782544664.jpg?resize=770%2C513&quality=80)
Fragile agreements and the cost of breaking them
The most noticeable common thread across the provided materials is the theme of the vulnerability of international security systems—when formal arrangements, routes, ceasefire regimes, and technical rules suddenly cease to act as a constraint and instead become only a thin layer over an already heated conflict or crisis. In one case, it is the military confrontation around the Strait of Hormuz, where mutual accusations between the United States and Iran instantly turn into strikes,...

Power, Security, and the Cost of Mistakes
Nearly all three news stories, despite their outward lack of similarity, revolve around the same theme: how state power handles security matters—national, criminal, and political—and what happens when institutions either try to reassert control or, conversely, show that it is malfunctioning. In one case, it concerns former U.S. national security adviser John Bolton, who pleaded guilty to improper handling of classified information; in another, the premature release of Tydrick Davis in Texas and...
Reactions

Reactions to the U.S. line on Iran and the Middle East
The world continues to assess how exactly the United States is shaping its policy toward Iran and the overall level of tension in the Middle East: in...

US Escalation and the Threat of Conflict Expanding With Iran
The focus is on new strikes and the growing standoff between the United States and Iran. Most coverage frames what is happening as a worrying...

How South Africa, Russia and India are discussing Trump’s America: from aid and tariffs to war...
In recent days and weeks, attention in South Africa, Russia and India on the United States has focused not on some abstract “American agenda,” but on...

The US as a common nerve: why China, South Africa and Turkey are arguing about Washington
At the end of June 2026, an international debate about the United States in three very different countries unexpectedly converged around the same...
![Дональд Трамп, президент США [Фото из материалов UPI, Yonhap News. Запрещена перепродажа и использование из базы данных]](https://img2.yna.co.kr/photo/etc/up/2026/03/17/PUP20260317013301009_P4.jpg)
The US steps up competition and limits its own flexibility
In today’s US coverage, American policy appears not merely as a set of decisions inside the country, but as a tool for reshaping the balance of power...
World

US Navy helicopter incident: missing service member searched for in the Arabian Sea
On the night of July 1, an emergency landing of an MH-60S Sea Hawk helicopter in the Arabian Sea took place. The aircraft belongs to the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush. According to the US military command, one of the four crew members is listed as missing, while the other three were injured; their condition is stable. At the same time, it is stressed that there are no preliminary signs of hostile action.
The US Fifth Fleet’s ships are currently actively searching for the missing service...

Rift in the White House: How Washington Is Dividing Talks on Iran and Lebanon
Two opposing camps have formed inside the U.S. administration, viewing the negotiating tactics with Iran and Lebanon differently. As the daily Maariv reports, citing a source close to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the first camp is led by Vice President J.D. Vance, and includes special envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner. The second camp is led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who is closely coordinating with Israeli politician Ron Dermer, recently returned by Netanyahu to the...

Aftershock activity in Venezuela is easing, but the risk remains
After two strong earthquakes on June 24, Venezuela has seen a steady decline in both the frequency and magnitude of aftershocks. According to the authorities, as of June 29 there were 689 seismic events recorded. The number of aftershocks has fallen from 86 per day to 30, confirming that subsurface activity is gradually dying down. However, government representative Jorge Rodríguez stressed that this does not mean the threat has been fully lifted: the number and strength of aftershocks are...

US and Iran Technical Talks in Doha: Qatar and Pakistan as Intermediaries
Indirect technical consultations between the United States and Iran have begun in the capital of Qatar. As Reuters reports, citing informed sources, Doha and Islamabad play a key role in organizing the dialogue. The meetings are taking place amid a fragile peace and complicated relations between the two countries, and their holding has become possible thanks to sustained multilateral diplomacy.
On Tuesday, Qatar’s prime minister and foreign minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdel Rahman Al Thani,...

The US and Iran Prepare for Technical Talks in Doha Amid Disagreements
US President Donald Trump said that the US delegation is already preparing to fly to Doha to take part in Tuesday’s talks with Iran focused on the technical details of a memorandum of understanding. At the White House, officials said the meeting could prove “important,” though its exact agenda has not yet been disclosed. Administration spokesperson Caroline Leavitt added that special envoys Stephen Witkoff and Jared Kushner will travel to Qatar this week for senior-level...

Venezuela Creates Headquarters to Tackle the Aftermath of Earthquakes
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez announced the creation of a special headquarters to coordinate the construction of housing and set up temporary camps for families affected by the recent earthquakes. Interdisciplinary teams—bringing together engineers, architects, and technical specialists—are already working in several towns and cities in the states of La Guaira and Miranda, as well as in Caracas. To quickly assess the condition of buildings, a “structural traffic light” system...

Morocco pulls off a shock win over the Netherlands to become the main favorite for the 2026 World...
A sensational victory by the Morocco national team over the Netherlands in the 2026 World Cup match has sparked widespread interest in international media: now “Atlas Lions” are no longer seen as just a “dark horse” of the tournament. Experts and journalists unanimously acknowledge that the Moroccan team has turned into one of the main contenders for the championship, displaying top-class football and an incredible will to win.

The U.S. as a “global crisis-actor”: aid, military decisions and interference
A series of publications depicts the United States not as a bystander, but as an active player that responds to international crises along several tracks at once: through aid deliveries, the deployment of military and administrative resources, and through diplomatic and political actions that can shift the balance of power. The focus is not only on the fact of response, but also on how external and regional media assess American capabilities, motives, and the degree of influence in situations...

Oil rises, gold falls amid Iran-U.S. standoff
Global markets kicked off the week with sharp, mixed moves: oil rose amid worries about the security of shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, while gold, by contrast, fell on expectations of further tightening of U.S. monetary policy. The focus is on yet another escalation between Washington and Tehran, which has cast doubt on the fragile ceasefire that had been in place for the past few months.
Brent oil futures rose by nearly 1% to $73.27 per barrel, while U.S. light crude WTI gained 1.2%,...
Knowledge

The Tram That Slept Under Asphalt: How Seattle Lost Clean Air — and Found It Again
Imagine that one day you buried your favorite toy in the garden, forgot about it, and then—sixty years later—someone dug up the earth and found it. Something like that happened in Seattle. Only instead of a toy, it was trams. And instead of a garden, it was the whole city.
A City Where Trams Sang
More than a hundred years ago, Seattle was a special kind of city. Trams glided along its streets—quiet, smooth, almost like boats. There were a lot of them: by 1910, more than two hundred miles of...

A City That Changed Outfits: How One Money Decision Transformed Seattle Streets
Imagine a room that can transform. In the morning, it’s a cozy coffee shop that smells of cinnamon. At noon, it becomes a studio where paintings are made. In the evening, it’s a small stage where a girl sings with a guitar. These magical rooms didn’t appear in Seattle by magic—they came from one very important money decision. And that decision changed not only people’s wallets, but the city’s streets themselves.
What Is a Minimum Wage and Why It Matters
Imagine you work in a café: washing...

The slippery road: how one street in Seattle gave the world a word for poverty
There are words that travel the world unnoticed. People in London, Tokyo, Moscow, and Buenos Aires say “skid-row,” and everyone understands: it’s the poorest, most run-down part of the city, where people live who simply didn’t get a break. But few people know that the word was born on just a single street in Seattle. A street where logs slid. And the story of that street is the story of how smart people devised a trap—almost impossible to escape.
Logs on sleds: what the first “slippery road”...

A River That Remembers Everything: The Story of One Family, One Fish, and a Big Injustice
Imagine you’re going fishing with your grandmother. The river glitters in the sunlight, the water looks clean, and your grandmother says her mother also fished here. You catch fish, bring it home, and make soup. Everything is just like always. Only no one told you that this fish shouldn’t be eaten. That poison is hidden in it. And that the warning about it was written only in English — a language your grandmother doesn’t know.
That’s exactly what happened to hundreds of families along the...

The Chair That Marries: A Secret at the Top of the Wild West’s Tallest Building
Imagine you’re riding an old elevator—wooden, creaky, with an iron grille instead of a door. The lift crawls upward, floor by floor, and you count them out loud. Five, ten, twenty, thirty-five... The doors open—and you step into a room that looks like a dream: a carved ceiling, little lanterns, an antique table, and just one chair by the window. And outside the window is all of Seattle, small and shining, like a toy city. This is the Smith Tower. And it has a secret.
The Man Who Wanted to Touch...

The Spiral They Tried to Remove: The Story of a Library and the Woman Who Defended It
Imagine a library where you can walk and walk along rows of bookshelves — and you never run into a staircase. The shelves don’t end. The books don’t stop. You simply move along a gentle incline, as if you’re climbing a very sloping hill, and all around you are thousands and thousands of books. This kind of place exists in Seattle. It’s called the “Book Spiral.” And it almost disappeared before it could even be built.
A Broken Staircase
In a typical library, books are arranged by a system —...

The Diamond Library: How One Building Taught the World to Read Differently
Imagine a building that looks like a giant diamond dropped from the sky right into the heart of the city. Its walls aren’t smooth and straight, but angular—like someone had stacked a massive crystal of glass and steel. Inside, there are brightly yellow halls, red staircases, and one long, long walkway that lets you move through all of human knowledge—from dinosaurs to space—without ever stopping. This isn’t a fairy tale and it isn’t science fiction. It’s a real library in Seattle, opened in...

The Green Necklace: How Two Brothers Designed Parks Seattle Still Wears
If you look at a map of Seattle from above, you can notice something unusual. Long green strips run through the streets, homes, and roads—almost as if someone had drawn a leaf-pattern onto the city. This isn’t an accident and it isn’t just good natural luck. It’s a plan more than a hundred years old—and it still works.
The Family That Invented Parks for Cities
It all began with one man named Frederick Law Olmsted Sr. In 1858, he came up with Central Park in New York—the vast green rectangle in...

Trail with a Hole: Seattle Cyclists Patched One Missing Link for 20 Years
Imagine a long, long trail that runs through the whole city—past lakes, forests, coffee shops, and old houses. By bike, scooter, or on foot, you can reach nearly anywhere along it. In Seattle, such a trail exists—it’s called the Burke-Gilman Trail. But for many years, it had one oddity: right in the middle, there was a gaping gap. As if someone was putting together a giant jigsaw puzzle and lost one piece. And it was that missing piece that residents fought for—over the course of more than...