WORLD Unequal Protection: Arab Communities in Israel Lack Shelters
In Israel there is a deep disparity in ensuring citizens' safety during rocket attacks, with the Arab population suffering significantly more than the Jewish population. As Israeli writer Ilan Amit notes, nearly half (46%) of the country's Arab citizens do not have access to protected bomb shelters, putting them in direct danger. This humanitarian and infrastructural problem is especially acute in the Bedouin villages of the Negev desert region, where the crisis in protecting the civilian...
Open article


SEATTLE Court limits tear gas use near ICE building in Portland
A federal judge in Oregon has issued a preliminary injunction restricting federal officers from using tear gas during protests near the Immigration...

SEATTLE Seattle: Weekend Events and Housing Market
The weekend in Seattle is packed with events from Comic-Con to a festival of colors. The war in the Middle East has pushed mortgage rates back up,...
REACTIONS Washington Under Fire of Expectations: How Ukraine, India and Israel See the Same Thing...
In early March 2026, conversations about the United States in Kyiv, New Delhi and Jerusalem unexpectedly converge on one point — the White House of...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-day Weather Forecast for Seattle, WA
Today, 3/07, in Seattle expect partly cloudy skies with some sunshine. Temperatures will be comfortable: around 55°F during the day, dropping to 41°F...

WORLD Escalation of strikes on Iran: mounting losses and concerns
A series of powerful explosions occurred in Iran's capital Tehran and in several other cities, including Ahvaz and Saqqez in the southwest of the...

SEATTLE Washington governor backs tax on millionaires
Washington state Governor Bob Ferguson announced he is prepared to sign a bill to introduce a new income tax on residents whose annual earnings...

NEIGHBORS Events in British Columbia
The sale of an off-grid estate, a warning of a financial crisis for condo owners, and a bright fireball over Vancouver — the region's top...

SEATTLE Washington bans forced microchipping of employees
The Washington State Legislature unanimously approved a law prohibiting employers from requiring, offering, or encouraging the implantation of...

SEATTLE Seattle to invest billions in Skagit hydropower and river restoration after century-old...
Seattle's utility Seattle City Light, a municipal utility owned by the city and accountable to its government, has agreed to invest about $4 billion...
Seattle

Court upholds couriers' rights in Seattle; new rules remain in effect
A U.S. federal appeals court has upheld the legality of Seattle’s rules protecting the rights of drivers and couriers who work through platforms like...

Washington energy-saving programs: paying customers to reduce usage
State utilities in Washington are rolling out innovative programs designed to ease strain on the grid during peak demand periods. These initiatives,...

Seattle: Vandalism, Offices and Shelters
In Seattle, a drunken vandal with a knife was arrested, Amazon is cutting office space, and the mayor is pushing to speed up the creation of 1,000...

Zahilay strengthens financial oversight in King County after grant scandal
King County Executive Girmay Zahilay, the county’s highest elected official and chief administrator, announced the creation of a new internal auditor...

Ferry Walla Walla returns to service after hard landing
The ferry Walla Walla, which made a hard landing in the Port of Edmonds Wednesday morning, sustained damage that led to the cancellation of several...

Seattle rains will bring long-awaited snow to the mountains
Seattle residents can expect gloomy, rainy weather with occasional downpours through at least Sunday. Temperatures will remain close to seasonal...

Eastside light rail resumes service after daylong outage
After nearly a daylong interruption caused by a power outage, Sound Transit restored service on its Line 2 light rail Wednesday morning. The...

Bill Banning Masks for Police Passes Washington House
The Washington state House of Representatives approved a bill that would bar law enforcement officers from concealing their faces during routine...

Starbucks and Seattle: new offices and homelessness fight
Starbucks is expanding its footprint by opening a corporate office in Nashville while keeping its headquarters in Seattle. Meanwhile, Seattle’s mayor...
Events

Seattle events roundup: March 6–12, 2026
The week of March 6–12 around Seattle promises to be busy: from intimate concerts and free symphony performances to large-scale festivals — Emerald City Comic Con and Tacoma Beer Week — family fairs and premieres at the city's top theaters. The lineup includes atmospheric Candlelight evenings, food and wine tours, Lunar New Year street celebrations and big shows at Climate Pledge Arena, as well as free art-walk evenings and short-film screenings. Plan your evenings in advance — many popular...
Neighbors

Vancouver: meteor, metal and a Bruno Mars record
In Vancouver a meteor flew at roughly 100 times the speed of sound, local metal bands are competing for a slot at Wacken, and Bruno Mars set a record by adding a fifth show at BC Place.
Meteor over Vancouver: a cosmic visitor traveling about 100 times the speed of sound
A thrilling cosmic show played out over the night sky of British Columbia that had both witnesses and scientists talking. A bright flash lighting the horizon and a booming sonic thump that shook houses turned out to be the...

British Columbia: From Meteor to Jackpot
A bright meteor streaked over British Columbia, causing booms and tremors. In Vancouver, an agreement recognizing Indigenous rights was signed without threatening private property. And in Quesnel, the holder of a $46-million lottery ticket has still not come forward.
Bright flash and boom: a large meteor flew over British Columbia
An impressive cosmic show played out in the night sky over British Columbia’s southern coast, startling many residents. The bright flash and the subsequent powerful...

Nature and Rights: British Columbia News
In British Columbia, hundreds of sea lions are waiting for herring to spawn on a beach, Canada has recognized the land rights of the Musqueam people, and an extensive natural event has begun off the coast — the herring spawn.
Unexpected visitors: hundreds of sea lions take over a Vancouver Island beach
An unusual and noisy spectacle unfolded on a beach of Vancouver Island: hundreds of California sea lions have taken over the shore in the Deep Bay area, opposite Denman Island. This mass...

British Columbia News
The court approved a settlement with the Vancouver Whitecaps. Libraries are helping a small town cope with tragedy through books. A former prison gatehouse in Vancouver is for sale at a $500,000 discount.
British Columbia court approves class-action settlement against Vancouver Whitecaps
In the Canadian province of British Columbia, a court approved a settlement in a class-action lawsuit filed against the Vancouver Whitecaps soccer club. This decision brings an end to a lengthy legal process,...

Events in British Columbia
In British Columbia the Iranian diaspora celebrates after the death of Iran’s supreme leader, the provincial government announces a minimum wage increase, and police charge a suspect in a series of women’s abductions in the Metro Vancouver area.
Death of Iran’s supreme leader: jubilation and mixed emotions in Vancouver’s diaspora
On Saturday David Lam Park in Vancouver rang with loud shouts of celebration. Thousands from the local Iranian community gathered after reports that Iran’s supreme...

Vancouver: prison, heroes and a criminal
In Vancouver, historic prison gates are on sale with a half-million discount, Indigenous teens are training as firefighters, and an influencer is accused of human trafficking.
Former British Columbia Pen: historic gatehouse price cut by $500K
In New Westminster, a suburb of Vancouver, an unusual real estate listing has come up for sale — the historic gatehouse of the former provincial penitentiary. This unique lot, whose price was just reduced by $500,000, is drawing attention not only from...

British Columbia: records and challenges
In British Columbia a record cruise season is expected to provide a major economic boost. At the same time the region is experiencing extreme weather contrasts, and preparations for the FIFA World Cup have exposed a crisis in access to medical care for Indigenous peoples.
Record cruise season in British Columbia: an economic lifeline
After a dip last year, Vancouver’s cruise industry is gearing up for a record-breaking 2026 season that is expected to be a powerful stimulus for the local...

Vancouver: Crime, Culture and Conflict
Overview of news from Vancouver and British Columbia: a suspect in a series of abductions of women has been arrested, the city offers a packed cultural weekend program, and a report exposes a crisis in police relations with Indigenous peoples over cultural misunderstanding.
Suspect in series of abductions to face charges in British Columbia
In the Canadian province of British Columbia, charges have been laid against a man suspected of a series of attacks on women in the Metro Vancouver area....

British Columbia: scandals, architecture and policing
News from the Canadian province: a parliamentary scandal, a Frank Lloyd Wright–style house, and a breakdown in police collaboration with Indigenous peoples.
Unparliamentary conduct: B.C. legislative speaker rebukes MLAs for chaos in the chamber
Parliamentary debates are meant to be an arena for intellectual contest and problem‑solving, but sometimes they resemble a schoolyard spat. That appears to have been the case in the Legislative Assembly of the Canadian province of British Columbia, where...
USA

Vulnerability in the Age of Connectivity: How Different Crises Expose One Problem
The world we live in is bound by invisible networks — from home Wi‑Fi to maritime oil routes and global media platforms that shape public attention. At first glance, the disappearance of an elderly woman in Arizona, a stock market crash amid war with Iran, and the return of a women's basketball star to the international stage seem like completely separate events. But looking closer, a common thread runs through all these stories: the vulnerability of modern societies that depend on complex...

Power, Symbols and Responsibility: How Leadership Is Changing
Stories about the death of legendary coach Lou Holtz, the high‑profile trade of defenseman Colton Parayko in the NHL, and the U.S. Justice Department quietly shelving an investigation into Joe Biden’s use of an autopen may at first seem unrelated. But viewed as links in a single chain, a common theme emerges: what it means to be a leader today and how expectations, symbols, reputation and political struggle form around that status. Sports clubs and state institutions essentially face similar...
Fragile security: from major war to personal tragedies
At the heart of all three news items is a single theme: how the sense of security changes when the familiar order collapses — whether due to a large war, a local crisis, or a personal tragedy. These are stories of different scales — from Donald Trump’s claim of massive strikes on Iran, through widespread disruptions in the global aviation system, to the disappearance of 84‑year‑old Nancy Guthrie. Yet they all show how thin the line is between normal life and chaos, and how societies,...

Fragility of Security: From Local Tragedies to Global Crises
In three seemingly unrelated pieces — a report about a body found in Oshkosh, a Euronews video segment on Europe’s water crisis, and news of a crypto crash following strikes by the US and Israel on Iran — a common thread unexpectedly emerges. It is the theme of vulnerability: vulnerability of people, ecosystems, financial markets and, more broadly, of our accustomed sense of security. If these events are viewed not as isolated episodes but as elements of a single larger context, a logic becomes...

Everyday Gun Violence: One Country, Different Scenes
American news about shootings long ago stopped being seen as isolated tragedies and read like a daily chronicle of the same crisis. In three seemingly unrelated stories — a nighttime shootout in Wilkinsburg, a mass shooting outside a bar in Austin, and a murder followed by suicide at an Alabama hospital — the same motif repeats: ordinary, peaceful settings turn into battlefields in seconds, and people who came to relax or to receive care suddenly become targets. These accounts, published among...
Responsibility and Power: How We Learn to "Break the Vicious Cycle"
In three seemingly unrelated stories — the criminal case against the parents of a school shooter in the U.S., strikes by the U.S. and Israel on Iran, and the contract extension for the manager of the St. Louis Cardinals baseball club — a common theme unexpectedly emerges: the search for new forms of accountability where old rules no longer work. From criminal law to international security to sports team management, the same questions arise everywhere: who is actually responsible for the...

Fragile Security: From Wildfires to Shootings and Information Fakes
Everyday security increasingly resembles something unstable and uncontrollable. It turns out to be simultaneously vulnerable to natural forces, human violence, and manipulations in the information space. In three seemingly unrelated stories — about a large natural fire in Florida, a fatal shooting at a bar in downtown Austin, and a fake “news” post claiming the death of Iran’s supreme leader in the name of a major media outlet — the same thread appears: we live in a world where risk becomes the...

US–Israel Strike on Iran Turns into a "Chosen" War with Global Costs
The US-Israeli military operation against Iran, reported simultaneously by American and international media, is not merely another escalation in the Middle East. Taken together, its features make it look like a deliberately chosen “war by choice,” lacking a clearly defined end goal but carrying colossal risks: from a regional conflagration to a global energy shock and the erosion of international law. Through the prism of multiple sources — from the Associated Press piece for WSB-TV (wsbtv.com)...

Power, Law and Opacity: From Columbia Campus to Epstein and the Bears Stadium
In all three pieces, which at first glance seem unrelated, the same theme emerges: how government and quasi-government structures use (and sometimes abuse) power amid weak transparency and the substitution of real public accountability with formal procedures. The story of a Columbia University student's detention, the political context of investigations into Jeffrey Epstein's ties to powerful figures, and the behind-the-scenes pushing of a controversial infrastructure project for the Chicago...
Reactions

How the US looks from Kyiv, Moscow and Seoul: war, Iran and Trump's election through foreign...
In early March 2026, in three very different capitals — Kyiv, Moscow and Seoul — the United States is written about a lot, emotionally and almost...
The World Watches Washington: Australia, Japan and Brazil React
In recent days the United States has again become the center of global discussions — but this time not because of elections or domestic polarization,...
Worlds on Both Sides of Washington: How Germany, France and Brazil Argue About a New US Use of...
In early March 2026, debate about the United States in leading media in Europe and Latin America unexpectedly coalesced around one big theme: a...
US Between War with Iran, Ukraine Talks and Tech Competition: How India, Russia and...
Over the past days, in Indian, Russian and Ukrainian debates the United States has almost everywhere become the center of three concurrent...

Washington Under Fire: How the US–Israel War with Iran Reframes Calculations in Kyiv, Jerusalem and...
What a week ago still looked like a "regional flare‑up" is now being perceived in Ukraine, Israel and Saudi Arabia as a new stage in the global power...

America, Israel, Iran: a war seen differently
At the end of February — beginning of March 2026 the world suddenly found itself at a point many experts had long foreseen in their worst-case...

Trump, Donbass and Tariffs: How the World Debates U.S. Leadership
At the turn of February and March 2026, America once again found itself at the center of other countries’ debates, although within the United States...
How the World Sees Trump’s America: Ukraine, Greenland and a New Balance of Power
At the start of 2026, the United States again became the central stage for political debates far beyond Washington, but how the events are viewed in...

The World Through Washington's Prism: How Turkey, Russia and Australia See the US Today
At the end of February 2026, the United States simultaneously appears as the main military actor, a key trading partner, and a source of systemic...
World

US and Venezuela Agree to Restore Diplomatic Relations
The United States and Venezuela have reached an agreement to restore diplomatic and consular relations, which is expected to facilitate joint efforts to strengthen stability, support economic recovery, and advance political reconciliation in the country. Washington expressed its commitment to assist the Venezuelan people as part of a gradual process aimed at creating conditions for a peaceful transition to a democratically elected government, while Venezuela's Foreign Ministry said it was...

Iran shifts tactics in the war, turning to stealthier missiles
On the sixth day of the conflict between Iran on one side and Israel and the United States on the other, Tehran began to change its military tactics. According to expert analysis, Iran has been striking less frequently and increasingly relying on solid-fuel missiles such as the Imad-1, Zolfikar and Khorramshahr-4. These missiles are harder to detect because they do not require lengthy preparation at the launch site, unlike liquid-fuel counterparts. Military analyst Brigadier General Nidal Abu...

U.S. Authorities Claim Major Successes in War Against Iran
The United States and Israel are conducting large-scale military operations against Iran that began last week. U.S. President Donald Trump said that operations carried out jointly with the Israelis are proceeding faster than planned and are delivering a crushing blow to Tehran's military capabilities. According to him, Iran's missile capabilities and 24 Iranian ships were destroyed over the past three days.
Trump did not limit himself to military statements, moving on to direct appeals aimed at...

US and Venezuela Discuss Joint Oil, Gas and Mining Projects
High-ranking representatives from the United States and Venezuela held talks in Caracas aimed at restoring cooperation in key economic sectors. U.S. Secretary of State Doug Burgum and Acting President of Venezuela Delsi Rodríguez discussed plans to bring American companies back into the country to operate in the oil, gas, and critical minerals sectors. The Venezuelan side, for its part, pledged to reduce bureaucratic barriers to facilitate new investment and create additional jobs.
Venezuela...

Escalation in the Persian Gulf: US and Israel Strike Iranian Fleet
American and Israeli military strikes have shifted the focus to Iran’s naval capabilities after US President Donald Trump announced provision of military escort to oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz. The move reflects Washington’s concern over Iranian threats affecting global navigation and energy flows. In response to Tehran’s threats to close the strategic strait, the allies began concentrated attacks on Iran’s naval assets.
There are reports of significant strikes against the Iranian fleet....

Digital Darkness: One Attack That Disabled Iran and Disoriented Ships
On the morning of 28 February 2026 a resident of Tehran opened a navigation app and found it showing his location 900 kilometers to the south. Soon after he lost all connectivity—Internet access and the ability to send messages. He did not know that minutes earlier a missile strike on a school in Minab had taken 165 lives, because all information channels were cut off for him. What millions of Iranians experienced that morning was not a scene from science fiction but a large-scale digital...

Venezuela 60 days after the change of power: unanswered questions
Two months after the events that changed Venezuela’s political landscape, journalist Vladimir Villegas analyzed the ongoing uncertainty in the country. He noted that the time elapsed since the detention of President Nicolás Maduro is insufficient to answer the key questions troubling society. Villegas emphasized that the legal status of Maduro’s absence — whether temporary or permanent — directly affects the need for and timing of new elections. The main question, in his view, is whether the...

From Sarcasm to War: Criticism of Trump's Escalation Against Iran
In a sardonic article, British author John Criss lampoons the exaggerated praise that Western countries might lavish on Donald Trump in pursuit of the Nobel Peace Prize. In an ironic tone, the author presents absurd scenarios—such as sending official delegations to Norway and creating golden statues—to underscore how some parties might disproportionately reward the former US president, elevating him to an almost divine status.
However, the tone shifts sharply when Criss points to a dramatic...

Global and Latin American Reactions to the U.S.–Iran Escalation
The escalation between the United States (and its allies) and Iran — strike drones, attacks on embassies, retaliatory strikes and the deaths of American soldiers — has provoked a wave of international criticism and concern that reflects not only the facts of the fighting but also political and cultural assessments of the Trump administration’s policy. Spanish-speaking and Venezuelan outlets discuss claims about the honesty and competence of U.S. leadership, debates over the need to inform...
Knowledge

The Fishermen Who Made the River Flow Their Way
If you look at a map of Seattle, the Lake Washington canal makes a strange bend. Instead of going straight, it curves, like a river that can’t decide where to flow. But this isn’t an engineering mistake. It’s the trace of a great battle — a battle between rich people who wanted to get richer and ordinary fishing families who simply wanted justice.
In the early 1900s Seattle was growing so fast it felt like an explosion. People needed a canal to connect Lake Washington to the sea — so boats...
Bells That Taught Neighbors to Befriend Each Other: How Immigrants Accidentally Invented Seattle’s...
Imagine you moved to a new town where you know no one, you speak a different language, and suddenly you urgently need to ask your neighbors for help. That’s what happened in Seattle in 1856, and what the immigrants came up with then changed the city forever.
A town where nobody understood anyone
In 1856 Seattle was a tiny settlement — only a few hundred people. But these people had come from everywhere: Germany, Ireland, Scandinavia, China. The Maynard family spoke English, the Plummers spoke...

A Road of Grease and Math: How Seattle's Loggers Made Trees Slide
Imagine you have to send a huge log down a steep hill that weighs more than five elephants. You have no machines, no cranes, not even horses that can help—the load is too heavy and too dangerous. What would you do? Engineers in Seattle in the 1850s came up with a solution that sounds like magic: they built a road that let the trees slide down on their own, like a giant slide. This road was called the Skid Road, and it was a true feat of engineering, even though it was made only of wood and......

The City That Accidentally Built Itself Twice: How Awkward Stairs Became a Treasure...
Imagine you're going to a shop for a new dress. You walk in, pick something pretty, but then the saleswoman says, "The shoes for that dress are on another floor. Go down the stairs over there." You go to the stairs and realize that it's not really a stairway but a tall wooden ladder, almost like the one your dad uses to change a ceiling light! And you need to climb down it in a long dress that trails on the floor. That's how Seattle residents shopped more than a century ago. And it all happened...

The Window Where a Million People Watch Salmon: How Engineers Accidentally Invented It
Imagine you’re looking through a window and huge fish are swimming right at eye level. Some are silvery and gleaming, others red as sunset. They swim with all their might against the current, and you can see every scale. It’s not an aquarium or a film—these are real wild salmon returning home. And it all happens because engineers, more than a century ago, solved a very difficult problem and accidentally created a place where people fall in love with fish.
In Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood...

How Fisherfolk Made Big Corporations Clean Up: Immigrant Families Saved a River
Imagine: your family moved to a new country after a war. You have almost no money, your English is poor, but there’s a river near your home full of fish. Your parents are glad — the family won’t go hungry. They catch fish, cook it for dinner, and everything seems fine. Then a doctor says the frightening words: “This fish is poisoned. Your children are getting sick from it.”
That’s exactly what happened to Vietnamese and Cambodian families who settled near the Duwamish River in Seattle in the...

A Club Run by Teens: How Thirteen-Year-Olds Saved Music for Underage Fans
Imagine: you’re thirteen, you love music, but all the concerts take place in bars where kids are not allowed. That’s how Seattle teenagers felt in the early 2000s. The city was famous for rock music, but after the grunge era ended, almost all the small clubs where emerging bands could play began to close. The remaining venues allowed only adults because they served alcohol. But a group of schoolkids decided this was unfair and did something few believed possible: they created and saved a music...

Store Where Shoppers Get Money Back: How a Hiking Club Accidentally Invented an Economy
Imagine you bought a backpack for 5,000 rubles, and a year later the store sent you a letter: "Thanks for shopping with us! Here’s 500 rubles back." Sounds like magic? But in America there’s a store that has operated exactly like that for almost 90 years. And the most interesting thing — this strange system saved thousands of families when the country hit economic trouble.
This story began in 1938, when a group of friends in Seattle who loved hiking grew tired of buying expensive gear. They...

Homes That Didn't Know What They Were: How Floating Home Residents Coined a Word
Imagine you live in a house that city officials consider... homeless. Not because you don't have a home, but because bureaucrats can't decide: is your house a boat or a building? And if they decide wrong, your family could be forced to leave. That's exactly what happened to hundreds of families in Seattle in the 1960s and ’70s, when floating homes on Lake Union became the center of a strange legal puzzle.
This is the story of how people invented an entirely new word to save their homes — and...