SEATTLE Seattle: A Night of Shootings and a Spike in Firework Injuries
Overnight in South Seattle, six people were injured in three shootings. At the same time, during the July 4 celebrations, the number of people hurt by pyrotechnics topped 68—among them, three children from Kent suffered serious injuries after an exploding firecracker.
Six People Injured in Three Overnight Shootings in South Seattle
Last night in Seattle was marked by a series of three shootings that occurred in the city’s southern neighborhoods. According to police, a total of six people were...
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USA The Fragility of Systems Under Pressure
At first glance, these three news stories seem completely different: one is about a scandal in an election campaign in the U.S. state of Maine,...

NEIGHBORS British Columbia: strike, a nonstop swim, and orcas
Metro Vancouver is on strike, a woman is preparing a record-setting swim across Okanagan Lake, and orcas were spotted in Vancouver Harbour.
Metro...

SEATTLE Seattle: Shooting at SODO, Fate of Route 99 and World Cup Match
Shooting at the SODO station leaves one injured. Plans are being considered to remove Route 99 from South Park. Seattle hosts the 2026 World Cup...

EVENTS Seattle World Cup Week: what’s happening on **July 7, 2026** and what’s next
Seattle, July 7, 2026 — A guide to the FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: how the final match at Seattle Stadium wrapped up, where to watch the...

EVENTS July 2026 in Seattle: what to do starting July 6
Summer in Seattle in July 2026 doesn’t just come to life—it seems to speed up: from major sports matches and music premieres to city fairs, street...

EVENTS Events in August 2026: planning from July 6
This is a roundup for advance planning for the coming weeks and all of August 2026, starting from the temporary window of July 6, 2026. The schedule...

USA When Decisions and Rules Lose Trust
In almost all the stories presented — from a royal scandal in London to a football dispute at the World Cup and to threats to health amid extreme...

SEATTLE Record Office Emptiness, Soccer, and Injuries in Seattle
Today’s digest covers a dramatic downturn in Seattle’s office market, with nearly 37% vacancy and the emergence of “zombie towers”; a wave of...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, July 6, in Seattle, you can expect mostly sunny skies with a few clouds. The high temperature will be 81°F, with a low of 55°F. The wind will...
Seattle

Kayaker Rescued, Sam’s Tavern Reopens, and Fireworks Injuries
Today’s Seattle roundup covers three major developments: the on-scene rescue of a kayaker off the coast of Alki Beach thanks to the help of...

Seattle: Soccer, Baseball, and the Future of the Mariners
A roundup of Seattle’s top sports headlines: the U.S. men’s team’s historic World Cup 2026 Round of 16 match vs. Belgium, a dominant Mariners run of...

Tragedies and hypocrisy: a US news digest
National Guardsmen in Memphis shot and killed a young man; in Tacoma, two died in a motorcycle crash; in Seattle, criticism is growing over cosmetic...

Seattle in the spotlight: sports and citizenship
Today’s digest looks at events in Seattle: a historic USA–Belgium football match at the 2026 World Cup, a marquee baseball game between the Mariners...

False bomb threat triggers evacuation of Woodland Park Zoo
On Friday morning, Seattle’s Woodland Park Zoo received an anonymous message about a bomb being planted. Shortly after a call came in at about 11...

Seattle News: Mariners Adjust Strategy as City Prepares for Anniversary Fireworks
The Mariners are abandoning a risky plan involving two starting pitchers due to workload—an approach that has their rotation leading MLB in innings....

Seattle Sports: Baseball stars and football hype
In today’s roundup: Randy Arozarena makes the MLB All-Star Game for the third time, showing a more mature approach; the United States men’s soccer...
Seattle: 252 new citizens on Independence Day — and a Mariners blowout
On the day marking the 250th anniversary of the United States, 252 immigrants from 55 countries became citizens at a ceremonial event in Seattle....

Paid parking, Trump’s crypto coin and Pochettino’s baseball
In today’s digest: Seattle officials are once again discussing paid parking in West Seattle Junction, nearly a million investors have lost billions...
Neighbors

British Columbia: strike, missing person and football triumph
Vancouver nurses have announced picketing due to staffing shortages. Police are searching for a woman whose car was found on a ferry. Switzerland’s national team advanced to the Round of 16 at the World Cup.
British Columbia nurses announce picket outside Vancouver hospital: strike escalation
The British Columbia Nurses’ Union (BCNU) announced that it will begin picketing Vancouver General Hospital starting Tuesday at 5:30 a.m. local time. It is the first time since 1989 that nurses have taken...

British Columbia: nurses strike, condo buyouts, and home prices fall
In this edition: B.C. nurses step up their protest with a picket at the province’s largest hospital; the government buys unsold condos for affordable housing, but developers criticize the plan; Fraser Valley home prices are down 26% from the 2022 peak, and the market remains sluggish due to high interest rates.
B.C. nurses escalate strike: picket planned at Vancouver General Hospital
The British Columbia Nurses’ Union (BCNU) says it plans to hold a picket at Vancouver General Hospital (VGH) on...

British Columbia and Canada Agreements: Housing, Infrastructure, Environment
The governments of British Columbia and Ottawa have struck a series of agreements: buying unsold condos to create affordable housing, a multi-billion-dollar deal to develop ports with a ban on oil tankers, and a framework for developing Vancouver Island.
Eby compares the condo purchase plan to a “liquidation sale”: government buys unsold housing below construction cost
British Columbia Premier David Eby and Prime Minister Mark Carney announced a sweeping program to buy unsold condos and turn...

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

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

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

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

Sport, endurance and risk: how the body and the elements rewrite the script
At first glance, these three pieces of news seem almost unrelated: Serena Williams is forced to withdraw from the Wimbledon doubles tournament due to a knee injury, Kelsey Pfendler—a California rafting guide—sets a record by crossing the Pacific Ocean alone, and a live Fox News broadcast with Bret Baier is interrupted by a hailstorm warning. But if you zoom out, all three stories say the same thing: even the most prepared people—athletes, travelers, journalists—remain subject to physical...

America Between Fear, a Record, and a Celebration
In three very different news stories — about a shooting in Hampton, about a record-breaking solo crossing of the Pacific, and about a celebratory fireworks show in Washington — a single common thread unexpectedly emerges: how people and society live through the limits of what they can do. In some places, that limit is tied to violence and anxiety; in others, to physical and psychological endurance; and in still others, to the technological and symbolic scale of a national holiday. In one case,...

America as a Stage for Testing and Self-Assertion
The American news gathered in these three pieces, at first glance, is about completely different events: a festive Independence Day program in Washington, a large-scale patriotic project by an artist, and a solo ocean swim that ended with a historic record. But if you look more closely, all three texts are about the same thing—how, in the United States today, national identity is lived not only as an abstract idea, but as public action, spectacle, and a personal challenge. Here, patriotism,...

Breaking Point: How Infrastructure Holds Up Under Strain
Perhaps the main shared thread across these three pieces isn’t simply breaking news from different sectors, but a story about how large systems respond to pressure, crisis, and the need to rebuild. In one case, it’s healthcare: Epic is preparing for the departure of one of its key leaders, yet it’s showing a level of resilience rarely seen in the industry and a long planning horizon. In another, it’s transportation infrastructure—brought to an instant stop by an accident on I-71/75 in northern...

When history, heat and distrust become a test for society
Three different reports — about a protest by Venice residents in Los Angeles, about record heat across the Washington region, and about a rare copy of the Declaration of Independence found in a British archive — at first glance seem almost unrelated. But on closer inspection, they are united by one big theme: how communities endure a moment of strain when the usual order breaks down, forcing people to redefine who they can trust, what they must fight for, and what they consider a shared...

Vulnerability to risk: from heat and fires to the fragility of public spaces
The first summer weeks in the US and beyond are forming a picture in which several different events are being pulled under the same umbrella: how easily modern infrastructure, public safety, and even sporting ambition prove vulnerable to physical wear, extreme conditions, and the human factor. On one end is the scandal over damage to the Reflecting Pool at the Lincoln Memorial, where the dispute is about not only who damaged what, but also how the condition of symbolic sites is being...

When an amusement ride, a disappearance and an explosion are about the same thing
At first glance, these three stories have nothing to do with each other: in New Jersey, a new giant amusement ride is being built; in the US, investigators are still probing a mysterious disappearance of an elderly woman; and in central Damascus, an explosion has occurred. But if you look more closely, all three are bound by a single theme—living in a state of uncertainty, when society is simultaneously waiting for a spectacle, searching for answers, and trying to maintain a sense of control...
Love, Risk and a Symbol of New York
On the summit of the Empire State Building, several storylines converged in the space of a single day: a brazen breach at one of the world’s most recognizable skyscrapers, a public demonstration carrying an anti-establishment message, an unexpected engagement at nearly 500 meters, and an immediate police response. The story, reported by CBS News, NBC News and briefly by CNN, reads at once like a city incident, a performance, and an extremely risky act. But if you look past the flashy image, the...

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

How People Abroad View the United States: Independence, Trump, and the Theatricality of...
While at home the United States is marking yet more anniversaries of Independence Day, abroad attention often shifts not to the details of programs...
Ally anxiety and the reshuffling of strategies amid the changing role of the United States
A series of reports about reworking ties with Washington paints an overall picture of cautious concern and pragmatic course corrections. Allies are...

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

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

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

Why Venezuelan institutions are letting the country down
In Venezuela, there has long been a habit of blaming the state for all the country’s troubles. But the problem runs deeper: many private institutions—professional associations, trade chambers, unions, opposition parties, and even non-governmental organizations (NGOs)—copy the same flaws as the authorities. Their leaders remain in place without change, elections are held only in form, staff and ideas are hardly ever renewed, and the organizations often serve merely as tools to obtain privileges...

Oman route through the Strait of Hormuz: a test of resilience
In recent days, the Oman route in the Strait of Hormuz has moved into the stage of practical trials: dozens of vessels began using it despite Tehran’s open dissatisfaction, which insists on coordinating all transits through the strait. Against the backdrop of fears that, without agreement with Iran, vessel safety cannot be guaranteed, many ships have started reconsidering their routes between the Iranian and Omani zones. According to data collected by Al Jazeera’s analytical division via the...

Trump’s Patriotic Spectacle Against the Backdrop of America’s 250th Anniversary
The anniversary of the United States on a 250-year scale is turning into a stage for a battle over meanings: some see what is happening as a demonstration of strength and national unity, while others view it as the harsh politicization of a holiday and an opportunity for criticism. The focus is on how Trump turns the celebration into a theatrical proof of the “greatness of America,” framing his message with symbols, rhetoric, and an atmosphere of confrontation, where tough language about the...

Funerals for Khamenei and the Hormuz crisis: Iran in the spotlight
Large-scale funerals for Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei are continuing, taking place amid serious political tension both inside the country and beyond its borders. Tens of thousands of Iranians are streaming into Tehran’s spacious prayer hall to bid farewell to the late leader. The ceremonies, which began on Friday, will run until 9 July. Mourners carry portraits of Khamenei, his son, and his alleged successor Mojtaba Khamenei; many are dressed in black and wrapped in Iranian flags. In this...

Venezuela's government denies false information about organ seizure from an Indian sailor
Venezuelan authorities officially denied the false information spread by journalist Maibort Pety about alleged organ seizure from an Indian citizen in Caracas. In a statement published on social media, it is stressed that the sailor Rakesh Chauhan did not die during the seismic event on June 24, and that his body was not handled by state agencies—fully absolving the government of responsibility for rumors about illegal medical procedures.

Iran bids farewell to Khamenei: $30 million for the funeral and signals to the world
Tehran is preparing for an unprecedented, on a massive scale, send-off ceremony for the late Supreme Leader of Iran, Ali Khamenei. The mourning events are expected to draw between 20 and 30 million people. The authorities are seeking not only to organize a mass procession, but also to turn it into a powerful demonstration of political and military unity. According to Al Jazeera’s correspondent, these funerals have temporarily frozen international negotiations, but the political subtext remains...

US-Iran Memorandum: Early Progress and Unresolved Contradictions
Several weeks have passed since the announcement of the US-Iran memorandum of understanding on June 17, and its implementation is moving forward, albeit with extreme caution. Early results are already visible on the ground: the ceasefire regime is being observed, there have been no reports of large-scale military clashes, the Strait of Hormuz has been reopened to navigation, and the “risk premium” on oil markets has fallen. In addition, the sides have established a permanent negotiation...

Venezuela opposition strategy: Criticism of Trump and an appeal to Latin American voters
Spanish journalist Javier Negre said that the team of Venezuela’s opposition leader María Corina Machado has instructed its supporters and social media influencers to intensify criticism of Donald Trump’s administration. According to him, the goal of this campaign is to warn the White House: if Washington does not provide decisive support for Machado’s return to active political life, it could prove costly for Republicans in the upcoming midterm elections in November.
In his address to Latin...

250 Years of the U.S.: the Nuclear Challenge and the Path to Survival
The United States is preparing to mark the 250th anniversary of independence— the longest-lasting attempt at republican rule in modern history. Yet behind the celebratory narrative lies a deep historical contradiction: the rhetoric of freedom and equality sharply contrasts with the genocide of Indigenous peoples carried out before the country was founded and with repressive practices afterward. The text recalls that “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” coexisted with an economy built...
Knowledge

A Log Road and a Table Where No Outsiders Sat
Imagine a road that wasn’t built from stone or asphalt—it was laid out of massive, grease-smeared logs so that the cut trees could slide straight to the sea. This road existed in Seattle more than 150 years ago, and for a long time the city tried to forget it. But when historians and archaeologists started digging—literally, with shovels—they uncovered something unexpected: on this slick, tar- and resin-smelling street, something rare and very important once took place.
A Road Where Trees Were...

The bridge that floats: how hard times gave Seattle a miracle
Imagine a bridge that doesn’t sit on the bottom of a lake, but simply… floats. Like a giant raft. Like a massive little ship you can drive across. It sounds like something out of a fairy tale—but such bridges really do exist in Seattle, and their story didn’t begin with a grand invention. It began during a very difficult time, when many people lost their jobs and didn’t know what to do next.
When everything fell apart
In 1929, a major disaster struck America. It’s called the Great Depression....

Forest by the Castle: Who Lived There Where You Can’t Go Now
Imagine a vast forest — larger than more than one hundred thousand football fields. It is home to bears, eagles, elk, and salmon. Clean rivers run through it, and trees rise higher than any house. And the strangest part: almost nobody is allowed to enter. A lock hangs on the gate. Guards watch over the paths. The forest exists right next to a major city — Seattle — but most residents have never seen it. It’s called the Cedar River watershed. And it has a secret that, for a long time, nobody...

Mayor of Boards: How People Without Homes Invented Their Own Rules—and Changed Seattle Forever
Imagine that one morning your family lost everything: your home, your money, your job. And it wasn’t just one family—it happened to thousands of people in the same city at once. What do you do? You can give up. Or you can take old planks, rusty sheets of metal, and scraps of tarpaulin and build an entire new city. That’s exactly what Seattle residents did in the 1930s. And what they came up with changed the city forever.
When Money Disappeared for Everyone at Once
In 1929, the United States...

The Biggest Kit: How Neighborhood Homes in Seattle Arrived by Mail
Picture this: you open a thick catalog—almost like a toy catalog—and choose yourself a home. Not a picture of a house, not a fantasy about having a home, but a real house. You tick the box next to the one you like, mail in your money, and within a few weeks a freight train pulls up to your street. From the cars, massive crates are unloaded. Inside are all the parts of your future house: boards already cut to exact size, windows, doors, nails, an instruction manual. All that’s left is to...

A forest you can’t see from the shore
If you stand on the Seattle waterfront and look out over Elliott Bay, you can only see gray-green water and a few gulls. But put on a mask and dive, and you’ll find a real forest. Only the trees aren’t oaks or firs—they’re enormous kelp plants that grow up ten to fifteen meters, sway in the currents like grass in the wind, and hide hundreds of different creatures inside. This forest nearly disappeared a hundred years ago. And then it came back—not because scientists in labs brought it, but...

Магазин, где можно залезть на гору прямо у кассы
Imagine this: you walk into a store to buy a backpack — and suddenly you see, right in front of you, a real cliff. Not a picture, not some toy little hill, but a huge stone wall as tall as a six-story building, which people are climbing right now. Next to it there’s a cycling path with bumps and turns, where you can ride a bicycle even before you’ve bought it. This isn’t an amusement park. It’s a store in Seattle called REI. And it’s set up in such an unusual way for one very important reason:...

The Club That Kept the City From Forgetting Itself: How Seattle’s Music Halls Became Keepers of...
Представь: ты живёшь в городе, где есть маленький музыкальный клуб на твоей улице. Там каждую пятницу выступают живые группы, соседи заходят выпить чаю, а на стенах висят самодельные афиши. Кажется, что это просто клуб — ничего особенного. Но в Сиэтле учёные и экономисты выяснили кое-что удивительное: когда такой клуб закрывается, вместе с ним начинает умирать целый квартал. А когда он остаётся — квартал живёт, дышит и даже становится зелёнее.
When grunge made the city famous—and brought...

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