SEATTLE Washington’s Private Colleges Shield Students From Cuts to State Aid
Jilma Dias-Demang, a student at Pacific Lutheran University (PLU), chose a small private college for its personal approach and proximity to home, where her sister, who has epilepsy, lives. A Washington College Grant—state aid for low- and middle-income residents—combined with grants from within the university fully covered her costs until it became clear that large cuts were coming to the state budget. The Washington College Grant is available to all residents regardless of whether they...
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SEATTLE Money lessons: why financial literacy should become mandatory
The article presents the author’s personal experience: when buying a prom dress, she almost opened a credit card just to get a 20% discount. But her...

EVENTS Seattle’s World Cup Week: What’s Happening on June 27, 2026, and What’s Next
Seattle, June 27, 2026 — A guide to the FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: the key takeaways from yesterday and today, the upcoming matches at Seattle...

EVENTS June Weekends in Seattle: What’s On from June 26
Starting June 26, Seattle and the surrounding area turn into a huge stage for culinary, sporting, and cultural experiences: from premieres and...

EVENTS What’s On from June 26: Where to Go in July–August 2026 in Seattle
This guide is made for early planning: from June 26, 2026, you’ll be able to get a head start on which concerts, sporting events, and shows to book...

REACTIONS 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...

SEATTLE King County, Washington, is on the verge of a historic demographic milestone
According to U.S. Census Bureau data for July 2025, the share of non-Hispanic white residents in King County (where Seattle is located) has fallen to...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, June 26, in Seattle it will be cloudy, with occasional light rain, and it will be windy. Daytime temperatures are around 66°F, and at night...

WORLD The US temporarily lifts sanctions on Venezuela to help earthquake victims
After devastating earthquakes that have killed more than 180 people in Venezuela, Washington has temporarily eased economic restrictions to allow the...

WORLD IAEA: readiness for inspections in Iran amid disputes over the Strait of Hormuz
The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Rafael Grossi, said his organization is fully prepared to begin technical work in Iran....
Seattle

Seattle: Street Closures and a New University President
In Seattle, officials are considering indefinite closures of problem streets to combat violence. For the first time, a woman — mathematician Maura...

Bosnia and Herzegovina Beat Qatar in Seattle to Reach the 2026 World Cup Playoffs
The Bosnia and Herzegovina national team secured a crucial victory over Qatar, 3-1, at a stadium in Seattle, finishing the group stage in third place...

Brandon Roy to Return as Garfield High School Basketball Coach
Seattle basketball legend and three-time NBA All-Star Brandon Roy is returning as head coach of the boys’ basketball team at Garfield High School....

Bosnians in Seattle Celebrate Historic World Cup Win: “We’re Still Here”
On Wednesday in Seattle, something local Bosnian Americans called “out of the body” happened: the Bosnia and Herzegovina national team thrashed Qatar...

8,000 Cups of Bosnian Coffee: Fans in Seattle Get Charged Up Ahead of the World Cup Match
On Tuesday evening, Bosnian fans gathered at Seattle Center, the plaza by the Space Needle — Seattle’s main landmark, built for the 1962 World’s Fair...

Stevie's Famous flagship pizzeria to open in Phinney Ridge on August 2
The long-awaited opening of a new Stevie’s Famous location in North Seattle is set for 11 a.m. on August 2—its largest space in the local chain to...

Seattle: CO2 leak, crackdown on crime and the 2026 World Cup
In today’s briefing: an emergency evacuation at a gas station due to a carbon dioxide leak, the city council discusses installing street barricades...

Washington to link carbon market with California and Quebec
On Thursday, officials in the U.S. state of Washington, California, and Canada’s Quebec province plan to officially cement an agreement to link their...

Washington’s attorney general opposed drilling in the Arctic Refuge
Washington Attorney General Nick Brown filed a friend-of-the-court brief supporting three lawsuits challenging the Trump administration’s decision to...
Neighbors

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...

Digest: football comeback, wildfires and refugees
Egypt’s national team secured a hard-fought victory over New Zealand in Vancouver. On Vancouver Island, two human-caused wildfires broke out. Ahead of World Refugee Day, stories of refugee success in Canada.
Egypt pulled off a historic comeback in Vancouver: 3-1 win over New Zealand
As part of a series of pre-season or friendly matches held in preparation for the World Cup, Egypt’s national team earned a dramatic win over New Zealand. The match took place in Vancouver and quickly became one of...

Canada beats Qatar at the World Cup, as whales return to the shores
Canada’s national team secured a historic 6-0 victory over Qatar at the home World Cup in Vancouver. At the same time, scientists are noting a rise in the whale population in coastal waters, including rare species.
Canada’s Triumph: Historic Win Over Qatar at the Home FIFA World Cup
The Canada men’s national soccer team has made its name in history by claiming the first ever win at the men’s World Cup. The group-stage match against Qatar, played on June 18, 2026, at BC Place Stadium in...

Water limits, football frenzy and elite real estate
Surrey backed away from regional water restrictions, sparking anger. Fans splurged huge sums on tickets for Canada’s historic win. The luxury real estate market is shifting from big cities to the suburbs.
Surrey defies Metro Vancouver water limits: what’s behind the decision?
The city of Surrey has found itself at the center of a controversy: it is the only municipality within the Metro Vancouver water district that refused to move to the third level of restrictions, staying on the second. As...

Vancouver: World Cup, Housing and a Possible Whitecaps Move
Canada’s World Cup win brings playoff matches closer to Vancouver; Karin and Eby announced a $3.2 billion plan to buy unsold condos; Premier Eby called a possible “Vancouver Whitecaps” move to Las Vegas a tragedy.
Canada’s World Cup win boosts the odds of playoff matches in Vancouver
Canada’s resounding group-stage win over Qatar at the FIFA World Cup not only brings the team closer to a historic trip to the knockout rounds, but also significantly increases the likelihood that fans in Vancouver...

World Cup in Vancouver: records, marches and a red city
Vancouver is experiencing a football boom: Australian fans nearly drained the bars on Granville Street, Canadian supporters are preparing a historic march to BC Place to back the national team in the match against Qatar, and the city is turning red.
Vancouver's Granville Street Bars Survive a World Cup Beer Tsunami: Aussie Fans Almost Drink the City Dry
The opening weekend of the FIFA World Cup in Vancouver brought a surge of business that no one could have fully anticipated, with one bar...

Incidents in Vancouver: investigations and infrastructure issues
Today's news touches on several key events in Metro Vancouver: an independent probe into the death of a man in police custody, a large power outage in the southern part of the city, and a full strike by 700 utility workers threatening parks and water treatment systems.
Death under mysterious circumstances: British Columbia's police watchdog investigates after man dies in cell
A new scandal involving police actions is unfolding in the Canadian province of British Columbia. The Independent...
USA

Realism Over Illusions: How War Is Redrawing the Persian Gulf
In the material presented, the focus is not so much on the war itself as on its consequences for the regional order: the Persian Gulf states are forced to rebuild relations with Iran, the United States, and even Israel—not based on trust, but on the need to reduce risks. The most meaningful and unifying thread here is the pragmatization of foreign policy in a crisis. It is this, above all, that helps explain why the six countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council perceive the U.S.-Iran...

When Institutions Retreat: TPS, the Courts, and the Limits of Power
This is not just another immigration dispute in the United States. It is a telling example of how today’s U.S. Supreme Court is defining the boundaries of judicial interference with decisions by the executive branch. Through the case over Temporary Protected Status for Haitian and Syrian immigrants, it becomes clear that the central story here is not only immigration itself, but the question of who ultimately decides who gets to stay in the country and who does not. The Supreme Court ruling,...

Cracks beneath the ground and cracks in politics
In all three pieces—on Washington, on NATO, and on an earthquake in Northern California—one and the same theme comes to the fore: how large systems respond to a sudden shock. It may be a military, diplomatic, or natural blow, but the logic behind it is surprisingly similar. Where there is tension, any disturbance instantly tests the strength of ties, the ability to coordinate, and readiness for the consequences. In one case, it is about fissures within U.S. politics around Iran and the...

System Pressure: From Catastrophe to Political Bargaining
NBC News and Action News Jax, though focused on different stories, converge on an important theme: institutions in the United States are today forced to act under extreme pressure—whether it’s the fallout from a natural disaster, conflict between branches of government, or an urgent infrastructure inspection after an accident. In each of these reports, it’s clear that the cost of a mistake rises sharply, and decisions are made not in calm mode, but under crisis oversight, public distrust, and...
![Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer characterised President Donald Trump's military actions in Iran as a 'historic blunder' [Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images via AFP]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/afp_6a3ae8ace4b3-1782245548.jpg?resize=770%2C513&quality=80)
Senate against Trump’s war with Iran
Taken together, all three pieces are not just another partisan sparring match in Congress, but a deeper dispute over who in the US has the right to decide questions of war and peace. For the first time in a long time, the Senate approved an Iran war powers resolution—an unusually clear rebuke to Donald Trump. Yet despite the symbolic weight of the move, it is unlikely to stop the US campaign against Iran itself: the White House will almost certainly veto it, and the document has no independent...

From Biofouling to Market Panic
At first glance, these three pieces are about entirely different things: oil tankers, a collapse in the technology market, and the death of music producer Clive Davis. But look a little deeper and they share one theme—how large systems depend on a small number of key people, pieces of infrastructure, and decisions, and how any disruption at a single point instantly spreads far beyond the original sphere. In one case, the world faces a physical bottleneck in the Strait of Hormuz, where even...

U.S. Politics as a Mirror of a Crisis of Trust and Power
If you look at these three pieces together, they form a fairly coherent picture: American politics and public life are increasingly living in a state of heightened polarization, where not only elections and the appointment of officials come to the fore, but also questions of legitimacy, trust in institutions, control of the public sphere, and the struggle over how events are interpreted. In one storyline, this shows up through the criminal case involving the death of Charlie Kirk and the legal...

When instinct is louder than noise
The common thread of these pieces is unexpectedly the same: in very different circumstances — at war, in a local public spat, in sport, and even in everyday life — the deciding moment is when a person either follows an inner impulse or yields to public pressure. In a New York Times report, this is evident through a photograph from Gaza, where the return of displaced Palestinians to the north after the announcement of a cease-fire is not just news, but a visual testament to fragile hope. In a...

Returning as a Form of Power
Taken together, these three news stories share one big theme: how public figures and institutions reassert their relevance through returning—back to the stage, back onto the court, and back to their city. Rod Stewart, despite his age and physical discomfort, continues to go out to meet the audience; Serena Williams, after years of absence, is back in major tennis; and the College National Finals Rodeo is locking in its long-running presence in Casper for another decade. In all three cases, it’s...
Reactions
![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...

U.S. Influence Under the Spotlight: Allies, Iran, and Disputes Over Diplomacy
Tensions around the United States are rising: how Washington applies force and conducts policy at home and abroad, how its approach to partners...

How Beijing, Ankara and Kyiv See the U.S. Today
In June 2026 the United States simultaneously represents a source of threat, a security guarantor and a key economic partner for many countries....

Venezuela and Turkey react to a possible US–Iran deal
Recent reports of a potential agreement between the United States and Iran have prompted a wave of commentary and political interpretation in...

How the World Argues About the US: Europe, the Gulf and China
In mid‑June 2026, foreign debates about the United States are concentrated on several overlapping threads. First, there is Washington’s foreign...

How the World Debates America: Russia, China and Turkey on US Foreign Policy
In mid‑June 2026, discussion of the United States in international media again reminds us that Washington remains the main "distribution center" of...
World

Deal with the United States did not stop bread prices from rising in Iran
The announcement of permission to sell Iranian oil for dollars and a partial unfreezing of frozen assets, brokered by Pakistan and Qatar, sparked hopes among Iranians for an imminent economic improvement. However, in practice, the first tangible result for ordinary people was not a drop in prices but a sharp surge. Consumers were surprised to find that the cost of bread in a number of provinces had jumped, shattering the recent optimism.
A 40-year-old Bahram at one of the bakeries said the...

Geologists in Venezuela warn of aftershocks after the earthquake
After a strong earthquake struck Venezuela on June 24, Feliciano De Santis, president of the Venezuelan Society of Geologists, said that repeated shocks of around magnitude 5 may occur in the coming days. Such aftershocks, he said, are common following major seismic events. The expert stressed that the earthquake was of natural origin and urged citizens to show solidarity and patriotism by helping everyone who needs support.

Iran’s IRGC Warned of the Danger of Sailing Outside Established Routes in the Strait of Hormuz
The naval forces of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) issued a sharp statement, threatening to take action against any vessels that attempt to cross the Strait of Hormuz outside routes agreed with Tehran. According to the Fars news agency, Iran believes that any alternative route announced without prior notification to the Iranian side is “categorically unacceptable and extremely dangerous.” IRGC representatives stressed that the only authorized and safe passage through the...

A Retaliatory Strike Against Trump’s Hard Line: From Iran to Spain and Venezuela
Spanish-language publications are once again focusing on Trump as a destabilizing factor: his statements and pressure are being interpreted not as deterrence, but as a confrontational strategy capable of provoking a global backlash. Different directions are in the spotlight—from rhetoric about Iran to the reaction in Spain and Venezuela, where U.S. foreign-policy moves are read as direct influence on their own security and political reality. The authors are trying to understand what lies behind...

Iran and the United States Trade Accusations in Talks in Switzerland
During a confidential meeting in Switzerland last Sunday, the phone of Mohammad-Baqir Qalibaf, speaker of the Iranian parliament, was out of reach. At the same time, U.S. President Donald Trump posted a threat on Truth Social that he would resume strikes against Iran if “Hezbollah” activity in Lebanon was not curbed. According to informed sources, one of Qalibaf’s aides conveyed the contents of the message to him, triggering a direct confrontation with U.S. Vice President JD Vance.
Qalibaf told...

Trump предложил включить нефть Венесуэлы в статистику США
US President Donald Trump put forward an unexpected initiative: he said that Venezuela’s oil production should be reflected in American figures, while at the same time praising a drop in the country’s average gasoline price by 60 cents per gallon. In his speech, the politician sharply criticized the previous administration of Joe Biden, particularly its foreign policy in the Middle East, and again used the derogatory nickname “Sleepy Joe.” Experts note that this proposal may be part of an...

Analysis
Key points:
- The United States and Iran are issuing conflicting statements about how the unfrozen $12 billion in Iranian assets can be used.
- Iran (central bank chief Hemmati) denies any obligation to buy goods specifically in the United States, but does not rule out such purchases if prices are competitive.
- The U.S. (officials including Vance and Walz, along with media reports) insists that the money will be used exclusively to buy American agricultural products and medicines under joint...

U.S. Sharp Line: How the Iran Response Reignited Debates About Washington’s Power
In the international arena, there is discussion about what a new dose of foreign-policy toughness associated with Trump has brought back to the center: the theme of Iran, security, and how the United States signals its willingness to apply pressure. Headlines emphasize the logic of “control through force”: according to the article’s authors, Washington links security issues with broader levers of influence and is increasing pressure on Tehran, prompting both retaliatory reactions and arguments...

Iran and the United States Agree on a Road Map: Results of Talks in Switzerland
Technical talks between Iran and the United States held in Switzerland with the mediation of Qatar and Pakistan have ended with the signing of an agreement on the basis for future dialogue. The parties agreed to establish four working groups, each tasked with addressing key issues: lifting sanctions, the nuclear program, restoring the economy and development, as well as mechanisms for monitoring and implementing commitments. This step sent an important signal that both sides are ready to...
Knowledge

Tire poison from the road: how Seattle-area streets nearly wiped out Puget Sound orcas
Imagine a massive black-and-white orca swimming in the cold waters of Puget Sound near Seattle. It’s hungry. It’s looking for salmon—its favorite food. But salmon are becoming rarer. And for a long time, no one could figure out why.
The culprit turned out to be… car tires. Yes—those same ordinary tires that rubber up vehicles on city streets.
A chain no one noticed
Puget Sound’s orcas are special. Scientists call them “southern residents,” and there are very few left—around seventy individuals....

People Who Invented YouTube Before YouTube: The Story of a Garage in Seattle
Imagine this: you’re seeing something important right in front of your eyes, but no one around you believes you—because television shows something completely different. That’s exactly what a group of ordinary people in Seattle faced back in 1999—and their answer changed the entire internet.
A Big Argument on the City Streets
In late November 1999, very important people came to Seattle—leaders from trade organizations across the globe. They were heading to a meeting called the “WTO...

A Home That Was Erased: How One Injustice Changed Entire Streets Forever
Imagine being sent to summer camp—not because you wanted to, but because someone decided you had to. And when you get back home, you find out your house is already someone else’s. Your toys are gone. Your bicycle is gone too. And nobody plans to return anything. That’s what happened to thousands of families in America more than eighty years ago—and the traces of that injustice can still be found on modern city maps.
What Happened to Japanese Families
In 1942, during World War II, the U.S....

The Secret of One Percent: How a Small Rule Made Seattle Richer
In 1973, Seattle passed a law that many people thought was strange—and even wasteful. The rule was simple: whenever the city spent money on construction—building a new school, bridge, library, or park—then it had to set aside one percent of that amount for art. One cent out of every dollar. Not more. Not less.
Many residents shrugged and asked, “Why spend money on paintings and sculptures when the city already has enough problems?” But years passed, then decades—and it turned out that this tiny...

A Hill That’s Gone: How a Washed-Away City Found a New Home
Imagine that one morning you wake up and learn that your home will be washed away by water. Not because of flooding, not because of a hurricane—simply because someone decided that a smooth road would be better built on that spot. That is exactly what happened to an entire hill in Seattle more than a hundred years ago. The hill was called Denny—and it was literally washed away with giant water hoses. But the most astonishing part of this story isn’t how the hill disappeared. It’s where the...

How Artists Awakened a Slumbering Neighborhood—and Helped the River Breathe Again
Imagine a street where instead of flowers there are rusted pipes, instead of birdsong there’s the roar of cars, and instead of the smell of baking there’s smoke from factory smokestacks. That’s what Seattle’s Georgetown neighborhood looked like more than a hundred years ago. But then something astonishing happened: artists came—and everything changed. Not all at once, not by magic, but slowly and for real. And even the river began to change along with the neighborhood.
When This Place Was...

Fifteen Dollars of a Dream: How Airport Cleaners Changed America
Imagine working every day—cleaning, cooking, carrying heavy bags—but still not having enough money even for food. That’s how thousands of people living near Seattle were living. But one day, they came up with something very smart. And it changed not only their lives, but the lives of millions of people across America. Most astonishingly, this story didn’t start with wealthy businessmen or famous politicians. It started with ordinary women with buckets and rags.
A small town with a big...

A Road of Logs That Rolled Kindness: How Lumberjacks Invented a Seattle That Cares...
Have you ever heard the phrase “to end up at the bottom”? In English, there’s a similar one—“Skid Row”—and people all over the world know it. But few people know that the expression was born in one specific place: in Seattle, on a real road of logs. And even fewer know that it was around this road that a tradition of caring for people first took root—one that still lives on in the city today.
The road the giants slid down
Picture a massive forest—so dense that the trees there are taller than a...

A train from the future that was too cold: the story of Moscow’s monorail
Imagine a train racing over the city on a thin rail—like it’s straight out of a science-fiction movie. Sounds magical, right? Exactly such a train appeared in Moscow in 2004. It was called a “transport of the future,” and people were very proud of it. But the future had one big problem—it wasn’t at all ready for a real Russian winter.
Where the idea of a magical train came from
Long ago, back in the middle of the last century, huge celebrations and exhibitions were held in different...
Opinions

Seattle's World Cup Week: What's Happening on June 25 and What's Coming Next
Seattle, June 25, 2026 — A guide to FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: where to watch, what to attend, and how to make the most of a historic week that...

Seattle's World Cup Week: What's Happening Now and What's Coming Next
Seattle, June 18, 2026 — A guide to FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: match recaps, the next Seattle Stadium fixtures, free fan celebrations around...

Seattle's World Cup Week: June 17, 2026
Seattle, June 17, 2026 — A guide to FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: yesterday's tournament action and today's outlook, the next ten days of matches...