SEATTLE Washington Ferries Celebrate 75 Years: Gifts and DJs Onboard
Washington State Ferries (WSF) is celebrating its 75th anniversary on Monday with a full slate of passenger festivities. In honor of the anniversary, a special WSF flag will be raised atop the Space Needle, and landmarks such as the Seattle Great Wheel and the floating bridge on State Route 520 will be specially lit. The ferries themselves will be decked with celebratory flags throughout June, creating a festive atmosphere in the harbor.
Many free surprises are planned for riders: stickers will...
Open article


USA 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...

NEIGHBORS 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,"...

SEATTLE Wild Waves water park to make way for warehouse complex
Instead of the water slides and attractions that for decades delighted visitors near Seattle, nearly 93,000 square meters of industrial warehouse...

EVENTS Top Seattle-Area Events — June 26–28, 2026
This weekend the Seattle area turns into a festival map: from blind dining experiences and oyster-and-wine tastings to historical and pirate strolls,...

EVENTS July 2026 Plan: Events from July 1–31
This roundup is compiled for preliminary planning of your entertainment in Seattle and surrounding areas in July 2026: key sports matches, major...

USA 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...

REACTIONS The World Through Washington's Prism: How Japan, India and France View the US
In early summer 2026 the United States for the rest of the world is no longer simply a "superpower" or "leader of the free world," but a blend of the...
SEATTLE Scandals and Sporting Triumphs: Seattle Digest
Overview of current news from Seattle: Mayor Katie Wilson finds herself at the center of a new scandal over an ill‑advised joke about a millionaire...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-day weather forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, Monday 6/1, Seattle will be mostly cloudy with some clearing. Daytime temperature will be around 63°F, which is a bit cooler than usual for...
Seattle

Western Washington braces for hottest day of the year
Residents of western Washington can expect what is likely the hottest day so far this year on Tuesday: thermometers in the Puget Sound region (the...

Seattle Mariners Dominate on Offense and Defense
The Seattle Mariners notched their sixth straight win, completing a series sweep of Arizona in a dramatic 10th inning. Meanwhile, the Seattle City...

Canceled festival in Seattle: businesses versus a pedestrianized avenue
A block party planned for this Saturday on University Avenue in Seattle — known locally as “The Ave” — was canceled just eight days before it was to...

Hidden history of mining towns along the Coal Creek Trail
Walking the Coal Creek Trail in Bellevue, Washington, today you can enjoy dense forests of mossy trees and ferns, but few realize that a century ago...

Behind the Soccer Lights: Seattle's Soul Beats on Public Fields
In 15 days millions of fans will turn their attention to Seattle, where six matches of the 2026 men's World Cup will be played at Lumen Field — a...

Tragedy at Longview plant: 11 dead, community mourns
On Saturday, rescuers recovered the body of the final missing worker — the ninth person unaccounted for at the site of the Nippon Dynawave Packaging...

Seattle week roundup: festival, soccer and baseball
HONK! Fest West turned the city streets into a stage, the Washington Spirit beat the Seattle Reign in a dramatic NWSL match, and four Mariners are in...

Run, Weather and Sports: Seattle Digest
Latest news from West Seattle: the upcoming Loop the ‘Lupe 2026 race, a sharp weather shift from warm to cool, and Nolan Teasley leaving the Seattle...

Sports Digest: Dominant Wins and Historic Records
Today's edition is dedicated to standout events in the sports world: Toronto Tempo’s rout of the Seattle Storm, a phenomenal month of home runs from...
Neighbors

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...

Vancouver Tragedies and Mysteries: News Digest
The digest presents three key stories from Vancouver: a tragic collision involving an elderly man in a motorized wheelchair, provincial officials debunking rumours of evicting unhoused people ahead of the 2026 World Cup, and the mysterious death of a woman kayaker whose identity investigators are trying to determine using pollen analysis.
Tragedy in Vancouver: elderly man dies after being struck by car, police consider mental health angle
A dramatic story is unfolding in Vancouver, Canada, one...

Tragic Week for Divers in British Columbia
Fatal scuba deaths, Kelowna’s culinary recognition and a bear attack in Squamish — the top British Columbia news of the past few days.
Tragic week off British Columbia’s coast: second diver dies during a dive in days
Over the past several days there have been two fatal incidents involving scuba diving off the coast of British Columbia. Last Sunday, at about 1:30 p.m. local time, West Vancouver police received a report of a diver in distress near Whytecliff Park. Despite the prompt response from...

Tragedies and Scandals: British Columbia News Digest
Two divers died off the province’s coast in a week, the Squamish First Nation denies a fake land-claim letter, and Vancouver hotels sit empty ahead of the 2026 World Cup blamed on poor PR.
Tragedy off Canadian shores: second diver dies in British Columbia in a week
A second diving-related tragedy in as many days occurred in the waters of British Columbia. This time the victim was a 50-year-old man who died while diving off West Vancouver. The incident took place in the area of the popular...

Vancouver news digest: from nurses' strike to cultural events
British Columbia nurses reached a tentative agreement with the government, avoiding a strike. A missing Vancouver actor was found dead; police suspect homicide. The last week of May in Vancouver promises 20 bright events: from The Black Keys concert to a shrimp festival.
British Columbia nurses and the provincial government reach tentative agreement
The British Columbia Nurses' Union (BCNU) announced a tentative agreement with the provincial government after several months of tense...
![VANCOUVER, BC., October 25, 2023 - Don Taylor during a ceremony inducting him into the BC Hall Sports Hall of Fame in Vancouver, B.C., on October 25,, 2023.
(NICK PROCAYLO/POSTMEDIA)
10102670A [PNG Merlin Archive]](https://smartcdn.gprod.postmedia.digital/theprovince/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/0523-col-hall-1.jpg)
Championship Shame and a Seal's Rescue: British Columbia News
In the digest: The B.C. Sports Hall of Fame is closed during the World Cup, drawing journalists' ire; a touching rescue story of a seal pup named "The Survivor"; and the opening of a unique Indigenous-led housing complex in Vancouver with 248 units.
Shame and missed opportunity: B.C. Sports Hall of Fame closed during the World Cup
While the world’s attention is on Vancouver and the city’s streets are filled with soccer fans from every continent, the local B.C. Sports Hall of Fame found itself...
USA
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...

Justice, Politics and Violence: How Private Conflicts Blend with State Power
The stories described in pieces by NBC News, Sky News and WTAE at first glance seem entirely different: a criminal probe tied to a lawsuit against Donald Trump, an exchange of strikes between the US and Iran in the Strait of Hormuz, and a workplace dispute in Pennsylvania that ended in a killing. Yet all three reveal a common thread: how conflicts — from interpersonal to geopolitical — turn into violence, and how the justice system and state institutions function (or fail to) at those...

Crises of Trust: From Politics to Security and Justice
The images that arise from reading three news pieces at first glance seem unrelated: the scandal-plagued Democratic primary campaign of Graham Platner in Maine, a manhunt for a suspected killer in Hawai‘i, and an industrial disaster at a chemical plant in Louisville. But looking beyond the facts to the meaning, all three stories form a single narrative — about a crisis of trust in the institutions that are supposed to protect us: political parties, the courts, the police, industrial firms and...

Violence, Polarization and the Fragility of the Democratic Fabric
In three seemingly very different stories – the killing of a veteran in California, intensive Israeli strikes on Nabatieh in southern Lebanon, and an intraparty Democratic fight in Texas – a common thread emerges: political violence and extreme polarization as means of pressure and power struggle. These narratives unfold at different scales – from the entrance of a private home to an entire region and from a Houston neighborhood to the international stage. But in each case you can see how...

Infrastructure Vulnerability: From Europe's Water to US Plants and Politics
The modern world increasingly reveals how fragile the systems we rely on every day are: water, energy, industry, elections, democratic institutions. Stories from different countries and sectors — from Euronews’s environmental project about water in Europe to the tragedy at a paper mill in Washington state and the political conflict over redistricting in South Carolina — at first glance seem unrelated. But viewed more broadly, a common thread emerges: infrastructures that are supposed to provide...

Fragile Minds Under Pressure: How Fear, Fame and "Wellness" Become Threats
Stories from different news sources at first glance seem unrelated: a local WTHR report about daily news and weather, a detailed Fox News piece about a "wellness cult" that Game of Thrones actress Hannah Murray says she joined, and a local crime report from WRAL about a North Carolina man who, under the influence of drugs, believed his house was being broken into and began shooting while children were present. But viewed more broadly, a single theme runs through these texts: the fragility of...

Everyday Emergencies and Our Vulnerability: From Wildfires to Street Violence
What often lands in the "Breaking news" section usually looks like a set of unrelated local stories: here — a brush fire in a rural area, there — a fatal stabbing in a residential neighborhood, somewhere else — a brazen theft from a small restaurant. But when you look at those reports together, as in the notes about the fire near Cheney, Washington on krem.com, the fatal stabbing in Grand Rapids on WZZM13 and the theft at Pig Candy BBQ on WLWT, a more coherent picture emerges. All of these...
Reactions
After Hormuz: Saudi Arabia, Germany and Japan Reevaluate America
At the end of May 2026, the United States again found itself at the center of global news feeds — not so much as an unquestioned leader as a source...
Between Support and Suspicion: How Brazil, Japan and Ukraine View the U.S. Today
News from Washington reaches different parts of the world through different prisms, but in Brazil, Japan and Ukraine the U.S. is currently discussed...

How America Became a Trigger: Russia, South Africa and Brazil Rethink the US
In recent weeks the United States has again found itself at the center of other countries’ domestic agendas — not so much because of Washington...

How the world sees America today: elections, wars and "leadership fatigue"
At the turn of summer 2026, attention to the United States outside the country is once again focused not on the economy or technological...

Washington Between Tehran, Beijing and Brasília: How the World Sees Trump’s New America
At the end of May 2026, the United States again finds itself at the center of global disputes — not only as a military and economic superpower, but...
Washington Under Fire: How Russia, Israel and Saudi Arabia Debate the US Role
Since late February 2026 the United States has once again found itself at the center of global disputes — not so much because of domestic elections...
“America Again at the Center of Others’ Debates”: How Brazil, India and Japan Discuss the US...
In Brazil, India and Japan, the United States simultaneously appears as an ally, a source of risk, and the main reference point that countries try to...
How the world views America today: war with Iran, Ukraine and "fatigue with the US" in Europe and the...
By the end of May 2026, discussion of the United States around the world almost automatically boils down to three major storylines. The first is the...

Washington Between Tehran and Jerusalem: Allies Clash Over US War with Iran
Around the United States today a political orbit has once again formed: a US–Israel war with Iran, Donald Trump’s attempts both to finish off Tehran...
World

Investigation launched in Venezuela against five police officers for illegal search
The Office of the Attorney General of Venezuela has officially announced the start of a criminal investigation into five officers of the National Bolivarian Police (PNB). They are suspected of conducting an illegal search and of actions contrary to public ethics at an entertainment venue in the city of Barquisimeto, Lara state. The investigation has been assigned to the 21st Prosecutor’s Office of Lara state, which will work together with the 98th National Prosecutor’s Office, specializing in...

Iran Accuses US and Israel of Violating Ceasefire, Threatens Response
Tehran has officially blamed Washington and Tel Aviv for the collapse of the ceasefire agreement in Lebanon and the region. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei, at a press conference in Tehran, said that "the Zionist regime and the United States are violating the ceasefire" and warned that the Islamic Republic does not intend to back down from measures to protect its security and stability in the region.
Baghaei emphasized that the actions of the United States and Israel are not...

Iran and the US in a Fog of Talks: Distrust and Hard Terms
Indirect talks between Washington and Tehran aimed at ending the conflict have continued since February 28, but Iranian officials are skeptical of US intentions. Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said no agreement will be signed without fully securing "the rights of the Iranian people," and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi called media reports "mere conjecture," stressing that final outcomes remain unclear. Tehran continues to exchange texts with Washington, but a source in Iran noted...

Delcy Rodríguez met with coffee producers in Venezuela
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez held a meeting on Saturday with coffee farmers from the states of Portuguesa, Lara and Trujillo as part of the First Assembly of the Communal Coffee Plan 2026. She reported that in the 2025–2026 period coffee production in the country reached nearly 4 million quintals (about 184,000 tonnes). Of these, 1.8 million quintals were allocated for domestic consumption and 2.1 million for export. Rodríguez emphasized that coffee is one of the most important...

Iran at a Crossroads: Nuclear Doctrine in Question
Amid reports of progress in indirect talks with the United States and mounting American pressure on Iran to abandon its nuclear program, a heated debate is spreading through Iranian society. The central question worrying both elites and ordinary citizens now is whether Tehran should continue following its previous nuclear doctrine or whether it is time to change it radically. After recent military clashes it became clear that enriching uranium to high levels did not provide the expected...

Hegset Threatens Iran with Resumption of Strikes
US Defense Secretary Pete Hegset, at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, said Washington is prepared to resume military action against Iran if an agreement is not reached. He emphasized that the US has "sufficient stockpiles of weapons" and is "fully capable" of continuing the war, and that the defense-industrial base is being strengthened to increase ammunition production. Hegset noted that President Donald Trump is "patient" and seeks a "big deal" that guarantees Iran will not obtain...

Jorge Rodríguez announced fuel deliveries for Trujillo farmers
Chairman of the Venezuelan National Assembly Jorge Rodríguez announced the allocation of four tankers of diesel fuel for the agricultural sector of Trujillo state, starting May 30. This decision, made at the direction of Acting President Delcy Rodríguez, is intended to address the logistical problems of local producers. The fuel supply directly responds to requests from Governor Gerardo Márquez and workers’ associations, and will also speed up delivery of the harvest to markets across the...

Trump lifted the maritime blockade on Iran: a step toward a deal or a temporary concession?
President of the United States Donald Trump’s announcement that he was lifting the maritime blockade on Iran has sparked heated debate: is this the start of a political agreement or merely a temporary measure in ongoing negotiations? Washington presented the move as part of broader understandings that include reopening the Strait of Hormuz, ensuring freedom of navigation, and reaching an understanding on Tehran’s nuclear program. In response, Iran hastened to say there is no final agreement and...

Lessons of a Failed War: French Criticizes Trump's Iran Strategy
American writer David French sharply criticized Donald Trump's administration for waging a war with Iran, calling it "a visual lesson in how not to wage war." In his view, Washington, despite overwhelming military superiority, failed to achieve its strategic objectives. The picture that officials painted in the first weeks of the fighting proved misleading: they spoke of deafening victories and the complete humiliation of Tehran, while the reality on the ground was much more complicated.
French...
Knowledge

The City That Buried Itself (and Then Dug Itself Up)
Imagine you're walking down an ordinary street in downtown Seattle. Beneath your feet—another street. With old shops, sidewalks and even toilets. A whole city that lay in darkness for more than a century until one stubborn journalist decided to dig it up. And you know what? City officials at first thought he had lost his mind.
This is the story of how one disaster created two problems, then turned into a treasure that helped an entire neighborhood survive.
When Seattle burned to the ground and...

Concrete boxes that became homes for thousands: Seattle's debate
Imagine your city decided to throw away huge concrete boxes the size of a three-story house. Seems like junk, right? But in Seattle those boxes sparked a real dispute. Some said, “Sink them in the ocean!” Others shouted, “Don’t you dare! That’s someone’s home!” And you know what? Those “someones” turned out to be fish, crabs and starfish. The story of how old chunks of bridge became underwater cities taught people to see treasures where others see only trash.
Floating bridges (and why they’re...

Who Gets to Live? How a Seattle Dialysis Machine Changed Medicine
Imagine you have only three seats in a lifeboat, but a hundred people are drowning. Who do you save? A mother with a small child? A doctor who can save others later? Or simply the first three who manage to swim over? It’s the most terrible choice in the world. And in 1960 in Seattle ordinary people — not doctors, not scientists — were making exactly that choice every week. They decided who would live and who would die. And it changed medicine forever.
The miracle machine that created a horrible...
The restaurant that forgot to rotate: why engineers couldn't fix the city's most famous tower
Imagine your grandmother left you the recipe for the world’s best cake but wrote it like this: "add a bit of flour, bake until done." You try to bake the cake but don’t know how much "a bit" is or what "done" means. A similar problem confronted engineers in Seattle when they tried to repair the Space Needle — the city's most famous tower. Only instead of a cake, they had to fix a restaurant that rotates in the sky, and the instructions were written in a language modern engineers had almost...

The Library Everyone Hated — Until Kids Explained Why
Imagine your city is building a new library. But when it finally opens, half of the adults say, "Ugh, how ugly! It looks like a crushed box!" The other half shout, "This isn't a library at all, it's some kind of spaceship!" That's exactly how Seattle residents greeted their new Central Library in 2004. But only a few years later, the same building became the city's most beloved place. What happened? It turns out children understood the secret of this library before the adults did.
The architect...

The building that learned to breathe: how a glass library became the smartest in the world
Imagine a huge house of glass and steel, like a giant sparkling diamond in the middle of the city. You would expect such a building to consume enormous amounts of energy — cold in winter, hot in summer, and light pouring through the glass walls day and night. But the Seattle Central Library, opened in 2004, turned out to be the complete opposite: this glass building uses 30% less energy than building codes require. That's like constructing a home that saves as much electricity as 50 ordinary...

The park that's still healing: why you can't dig in Seattle's strangest park
Imagine your city decided to turn an old, rusty factory into a playground. Not tear it down and build something new, but leave all the pipes, towers and strange iron structures right where children play. Sounds crazy? That's what Seattle residents thought in 1975, when Gas Works Park opened — a place that changed Americans' ideas about what parks should be.
But this story is not only about bold design. It's about how a city tries to fix the mistakes of the past, and why some wounds take a very,...

The road that gave the world a sad word: how Seattle's loggers changed language
Imagine a huge log — so big that three people couldn't wrap their arms around it. Now imagine it sliding down a hillside, leaving a deep, dirty groove behind. That’s what Seattle’s very first “real” street looked like in the 1850s. It was called Skid Road — a road for sliding logs. And nobody then knew that, many years later, that name would become a sad word used around the world.
Henry Yesler and his slippery idea
In 1852 a man named Henry Yesler arrived in the tiny settlement of Seattle. He...

The Fish That Helped Save Thousands: The First Blood-Cleaning Machine
In 1962 a custodian named Frank noticed something strange. Every morning, when he took out the trash from the University of Washington hospital, he walked past a small stream that led to Lake Washington. And every morning he saw more and more dead little fish floating on the surface. Frank was not a scientist. He was not a doctor. But he was an observant person who loved nature. And he decided he had to tell someone about it.
What began with one person noticing dead fish turned into a story...
Opinions

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...