WORLD Delcy Rodríguez urged the private sector to self-supply electricity
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez appealed to manufacturers and private-sector entrepreneurs to increase their own electricity generation amid a record rise in national demand. Speaking at the XII National Poultry Congress in Caracas, she noted that a historic peak in consumption has been recorded over the past nine years, linked both to an improving economic situation in the country and to extreme weather conditions caused by abnormal heat. Rodríguez stressed the need for the...
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WORLD Secrets of Power in Iran: Who Really Rules After Khamenei’s Death
The Trump administration found itself confused by uncertainty over who is making key decisions in Iran. U.S. intelligence indicates that the new...

SEATTLE Record gas prices: an unexpected boost for Spokane tourism
When the average price per gallon of gas in Spokane, Washington, hit $5.30, the Roberts family realized they could no longer afford a trip to...

SEATTLE Ferry system troubles and seal incident: Seattle news digest
In today's edition: Washington's governor sounds the alarm over a ferry system crisis that needs urgent federal help; a tourist from Seattle was...

REACTIONS World Through Washington's Prism: Saudi Arabia, China and France Debate America
In early May 2026 the United States again finds itself at the center of a global discussion — not as a confident "world sheriff," but as a source of...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, 5/08, Seattle will see partly cloudy skies. Temperatures will be around 75°F during the day and 59°F at night. Wind will be southeast at about...

WORLD Washington and Tehran Diverge in Assessments of the Strait of Hormuz Crisis
The United States and Iran offer directly opposing interpretations of recent military incidents in the Persian Gulf. The American administration...

SEATTLE Flooding in Stehekin: Battle for a Road and the Future of a Remote Community
For many years the isolated community of Stehekin, at the northern tip of Lake Chelan in the Lake Chelan National Recreation Area, drew visitors with...

USA Scandals, Crises and Shifts: How Modern Risk-Management Logic Works
In three stories that at first glance seem unrelated — the courtroom case involving NFL star Tyreek Hill, the Pine Mountain wildfire in Oregon, and...

NEIGHBORS Whitecaps and Vancouver rental market: main news from Vancouver
In the latest news: the Vancouver Whitecaps are opening the upper bowl of their stadium due to high demand, a local investor group plans to bid to...
Seattle

Spring travel boom causes chaos at Multnomah Falls parking lot
The spring travel season is in full swing, and the state's tallest waterfall is once again facing major traffic problems. The parking lot at...

Where Washington residents are going and where newcomers come from
Before the pandemic, Washington state’s population growth was rapid — during the 2010s the population increased by nearly a million. However, after...

I-5 repairs in Seattle change driving habits
It has been several months since major repairs began on the Ship Canal Bridge on Interstate 5 in Seattle, and drivers are gradually moving past the...

Seattle Scandal and Community News
Digest of Seattle news: City Council President Joy Hollingsworth faces accusations of a “black budget” and is dodging questions, West Seattle...

AI children's content threatens brain development — YouTube inactive
According to a new investigation by The New York Times, up to 40% of the videos YouTube recommends to children are now generated by artificial...

Seattle hotels disappointed by weak demand for the 2026 World Cup
Seattle hotel owners are frustrated: bookings for the upcoming 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup, which kicks off June 11, have fallen far short of...

Free Seattle waterfront shuttle returns and expands for World Cup
This summer Seattle is bringing back a free waterfront shuttle — with some important changes. Because the city will host matches for the 2026 FIFA...

Why gasoline prices differ by state in the US
Gasoline prices in the United States have jumped roughly 50% since the start of the military conflict with Iran on Feb. 28, but the national average...

Tax-war veteran warns: wealthy tax can't be repealed
Tim Eyman, a political activist from Washington state who for more than two decades has been pushing tax-limiting initiatives through the citizens’...
Events

Seattle events roundup: week of May 8, 2026
This week in the Seattle area promises a packed schedule: from a wine train in Snoqualmie and a drone show in Redmond to premieres at Meany Center, theater and opera downtown, the large SIFF film festival, and many street fairs, art routes and food tours across neighborhoods. There are family activities — from studio tours on Camano and Vashon to children’s ballets and small-town festivals; for sports fans — home games for the Mariners and Sounders; and evenings with cabaret, beer tastings and...
Neighbors

Scandals and Oddities in British Columbia
Today's digest: local investors are preparing a counteroffer to buy the Whitecaps to keep the club in Vancouver; police arrested a repeat offender who tried to flee on a homemade go‑kart at an "incredibly low speed"; a former Vancouver mayor said federal investigators are probing a BC cabinet minister over suspected cooperation with China.
BC-based potential buyers preparing counteroffer to acquire Vancouver Whitecaps
The past few weeks have been a real test for Vancouver Whitecaps fans: news...

British Columbia Under Pressure: Drunk Drivers, Top Restaurants and the DRIPA Crisis
Today's digest covers three key stories from British Columbia: the arrest of a truck driver for impaired and speeding driving on the highway, 14 Vancouver restaurants honored in the prestigious Canada's 100 Best list, and a wave of business pullbacks amid uncertainty around the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA).
North Vancouver trucker arrested for speeding and impaired driving
The British Columbia Highway Patrol reports an incident that could have become a real...

Whale Deaths and Vancouver's Economy
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 new overdose prevention site is opening in the downtown core. A study found that Metro Vancouver has become a global hub for the mining industry, supporting 12,300 jobs and generating $3.5 billion in economic impact.
A tragic spring: seven gray whales found dead off Vancouver's coast
Since the start of the year, seven dead gray whales have been found...

Wildfires and Abnormal Heat Sweep British Columbia
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...

Fairy Tale and Heat: Unusual British Columbia News
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...

Week Digest: From Book Paradise to Football Battle
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...

News Digest: Seals, Sharks and Sales
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...

Crisis and Innovation: What's Happening in BC Today
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...

Week in British Columbia: flood, beach and breakdown
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...
USA

Courts, politics and the "rules of the game": how legal rulings reshape U.S. politics
Across different corners of American life — from congressional districts in Virginia to tariff policy in Washington and even road conditions in Pennsylvania — a single theme runs through: how much people's fates and those of entire parties depend on how courts and authorities interpret procedures and laws. In the news about the blocking of Virginia’s new congressional map, the finding that Donald Trump’s global tariffs are unlawful, and local decisions in Pennsylvania, we see the same...

Violence, media and spectacle: how tragedies become content
All three stories — about a veteran shooter in Tennessee, teenagers “speedrunning” into Scientology churches, and the Pulitzer-winning Star Tribune coverage of the shooting in a Minneapolis Catholic church — may seem unrelated at first. But they are united by how violence, threat and religious spaces become part of the spectacle: for some, on social networks; for others, in news feeds. And at the same time — by how differently media and society handle (or fail to handle) those scenes: sometimes...

Violence, News, and Society: How We Report Shootings
The stories behind three different news items may at first seem unrelated: a local manhunt in rural Tennessee, an internal front-office shakeup at the Chicago Bulls, and a professional journalism award for coverage of a mass shooting in Minneapolis. But look closer and a single thread runs through them: how contemporary media and institutions respond to violence, crises, and threats, and what that reveals about the condition of society. Attention to shootings—from intrafamilial to mass, from...

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

War, law and perception: who decides when a war is over
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...
People’s Vulnerability to Large Systems: From Missing Persons to Airline Collapse
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...

Lessons in Vulnerability: From Spirit Airlines' Collapse to a Blow Against Telemedicine
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,”...
Vulnerability in the Face of Disaster: From Wildfire to Digital Looting
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,...

The Cost of Mistakes: Managing Risk from a Ski Lift to the NFL
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...
Reactions
The World Looks to Washington: How Australia, South Africa and Saudi Arabia Rethink the US
In early May 2026, the image of the United States abroad looks much less monolithic than Washington is used to believing. Donald Trump’s return to...

Washington in the Crosshairs: How India, Japan and Saudi Arabia Are Rereading America Today
In early May 2026, the United States again finds itself at the center of foreign newspapers’ pages — but far from only as the “leader of the free...

How "Project Freedom" Turned the U.S
The clash between the U.S. and Iran over the Strait of Hormuz and Donald Trump's launch of Operation Project Freedom is the main new prism through...

How the World Sees America Today: Ukraine, France and Israel
In early May 2026 the image of the United States in the international press increasingly resembles less the old stereotype of a “pillar of stability”...

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

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

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

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

When Washington Loses "Natural Leadership": How Germany, Brazil and South Korea See It Now
A perspective from outside the United States today increasingly coalesces around the same thesis: America has become a key source of instability, yet...
World

Trump's energy policy accelerates investments in Venezuela
Jarrod Agen, Executive Director of the U.S. National Council for Energy Dominance, said that the Trump administration's policy is actively encouraging American oil and gas companies to make major investments in Venezuela. At a White House meeting with representatives of leading energy corporations, including Chevron and Exxon, Agen directly urged them to develop the world's largest oil reserves in that South American country. According to him, Exxon has already begun operations and is sending...

U.S.-Iran Clash in the Strait of Hormuz: Mutual Accusations
On Thursday a dangerous escalation occurred in the Strait of Hormuz: the United States and Iran exchanged accusations of initiating hostilities. The incident became a serious test for the ceasefire regime that has been in effect for a month. Tehran later said the situation had normalized, while Washington emphasized that it did not seek escalation but acted in self-defense. Both sides presented conflicting accounts of who started the confrontation and issued threats and promises of...

Trump optimistic: nuclear deal with Iran "very likely"
US President Donald Trump said that reaching an agreement with Iran that would end the conflict in the Middle East is "very likely." He confirmed that Washington held "very productive talks" with Tehran over the past 24 hours. At the same time, Trump warned that if no agreement is reached the US will be forced to "return to intense bombing." The American leader also stressed that any agreement must include a commitment from Iran not to operate underground nuclear facilities, denying rumors that...

Diosdado Cabello announces second phase of national mobilization
The secretary-general of the ruling United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), Diosdado Cabello, announced the launch of a second phase of mobilization activities following the conclusion of the so-called national pilgrimage. The new phase will focus on collecting proposals and initiatives from organized structures of civil society, including professional guilds and social groups. According to the politician, these meetings are aimed at systematizing the ideas of the Venezuelan people to form...

US and Iran: frozen billions and terms of a deal
The confrontation between Washington and Tehran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution has gone beyond politics, affecting the economy and culture. One of the key instruments of pressure has been the huge sums of Iranian assets frozen by the US under sanctions. With the start of the latest war, talks have resumed about the possible lifting of these restrictions as part of a deal. President Donald Trump promised to lift sanctions in exchange for signing an agreement, and according to Axios, a future...

Global internet shutdown in Iran paralyzes economy
The decision to impose a nationwide internet shutdown in Iran has fundamentally altered the country’s economic activity. War intersected with the fragility of the economic structure, placing entire sectors under sudden restrictions that disrupted market processes and disorganized accustomed workflows dependent on digital communications. According to an Al Jazeera report by Amer Lafy, the internet outage directly affected the details of production and trade, forcing thousands of companies to...

Venezuela and the Red Cross Confirm Humanitarian Principles
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez held a meeting with the head of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, Kate Forbes, during which the parties discussed a joint work program and technical projects within the republic, guided by the principles of neutrality, impartiality and independence. This meeting was part of efforts to adhere to international humanitarian law and to unite efforts to protect life based on universal humanitarian values.

Axios: US and Iran Close to Deal to End War
According to US officials and informed sources, the White House believes it is one step away from signing a one-page memorandum of understanding with Iran that would end the war and create a basis for more detailed negotiations on the nuclear program. Tehran is expected to respond to the key points within the next 48 hours, and this is the closest the parties have been to a deal since the start of the conflict, Axios reports.
Under the draft memorandum, Iran agrees to temporarily halt uranium...

US froze $340M in cryptocurrency linked to Iran
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 digital assets on several platforms, but the Donald Trump administration, through the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), was able to block and seize them. The success of the operation is explained by the fact that the assets were in the USDT stablecoin issued by Tether — an American corporation subject to US law.
Iran chose a not particularly...
Knowledge

The Girl Who Washed Dishes to Hear the Saxophone
Imagine you desperately want to learn to play the saxophone. You hear that magical music every evening coming from a club down the street. But you aren't accepted into music school. Not because you lack talent, but because there are unfair rules about who can study and who cannot. That’s how many children in the Jackson Street neighborhood of Seattle lived in the 1930s–1950s.
At that time, segregation existed in America — people were separated by skin color. African American children were...

Trams the city hid on the bay floor
Imagine you’re playing on the shore and suddenly find strange metal tracks in the sand leading straight into the water. Where do they go? Why are they there? That’s exactly how children in Seattle accidentally uncovered one of the city’s most astonishing and sorrowful secrets in the 1980s. It turned out that for decades old streetcars lay on the bottom of Elliott Bay and Lake Union — whole cars that once carried people through the streets and were later simply thrown into the water like...

Children Who Gave the Forest a Future: How One Family's Move Saved a City's River
Imagine that one day your family must move out of the house where you were born. Not because you want to, but because your forest and your river are needed by thousands of other people. That is what happened to the children who lived in the forests along the Cedar River more than one hundred and thirty years ago. Their story is about how sometimes a small sacrifice becomes a huge gift for the future.
When a whole river was needed by the city
In the 1880s Seattle was growing so fast it seemed...

The Machine That Taught Doctors to Choose Between Lives
Imagine your body is a large house, and the kidneys are the cleaners who remove all the trash from your blood every day. But what if the cleaners suddenly stopped working? Until 1960 in Seattle, USA, that meant a person would simply die within a few weeks. Doctors could do nothing. Parents sat at the bedsides of sick children and just waited. But one doctor named Belding Scribner decided that this should not be the case. He created a machine that changed not only medicine but also made people...

Mothers-Detectives Who Taught Buildings to Dance During Earthquakes
Imagine you are sitting at your school desk and suddenly everything around you starts to sway. Books fall from shelves, the chandelier rocks like a swing, and the teacher shouts, "Under the desks, quickly!" That's exactly how children in Seattle felt in the spring of 1949 when a strong earthquake struck. Many buildings cracked, some collapsed, and the city's residents realized something had to change. But who could have guessed that a few years later ordinary mothers, teachers and even...
The Women Who Tamed the Saloon with the Scariest Name
Imagine this: you’re walking down a dusty Main Street in a Wild West town and suddenly you see a sign reading “Bucket of Blood.” Scary, right? Must’ve been terrible things going on in there! But the real story of that saloon is nothing like the movies. And the most surprising part — it wasn’t cowboys with revolvers who changed the place, but ordinary women who decided their town needed something better.
How the scariest name came about
In the 1880s, an ordinary saloon opened in the small town...

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

Floating Homes That Children Saved from Disappearing
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...

Kids-Detectives Who Saved the Salmon in the Big City
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...