SEATTLE Cowlitz Tribe’s tuition assistance changes lives across generations
Rosalie Fish, preparing to enroll at the University of Washington — a major research university in Seattle with strong programs in engineering, medicine and the sciences — faced the high cost of tuition. Athletics covered her first two years of college, but the four-year program was still out of reach. A generous Cowlitz Tribe assistance program helped her not only earn her bachelor’s degree, but later pay for a master’s in social work. “I could focus on my studies, not on how to make ends...
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WORLD US Diplomat Denied Talks With Iran Were Derailed in Switzerland
Contrary to reports from several media outlets, US-Iranian talks in Swiss Burgenstock have not been interrupted, a US State Department representative...

USA 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...

NEIGHBORS 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...

SEATTLE Losses We Rarely Mourn
We’re used to thinking that grief is only about death. But in fact, we mourn not only people, but also our dreams, plans, and whole imagined versions...

SEATTLE West Seattle beaches reopen after sewage spill
The King County Department of Health has lifted warnings for beaches near Constellation Park and the viewing area at Charles Roychi Sr. Overdue...

EVENTS Seattle from June 21: a week-ahead events roundup
The week beginning June 21, 2026 in Seattle and the surrounding area promises a packed mix of events: from concerts and street performances to food...

EVENTS Seattle Event Schedule: June 21 to August 2026
This roundup is for advance planning: starting June 21, 2026, you can look forward to major sports and cultural events in Seattle and the surrounding...

OPINIONS Seattle's World Cup Week: What's Happening on June 21, 2026 and What's Coming Next
Seattle, June 21, 2026 — A guide to FIFA World Cup 2026 in Seattle: match recaps, what's on at Seattle Stadium next, and where to catch the action...

USA Power, Media and Sport Amid a Big American Summer
If you look at these three pieces together, they don’t add up to a random selection of news items, but rather to a fairly precise portrait of the...
Seattle

U.S. men’s national team’s goal sparked seismic activity at Seattle stadium
Nearly 67,000 fans at Lumen Field in Seattle turned the World Cup match between the United States and Australia into a full-blown commotion. Their...

Apprenticeship in Washington State: everything you need to know to launch your career
Over the past ten years, the number of apprentices in Washington has grown by more than 70%—and this isn’t accidental. The apprenticeship model is...

Sport and the World Cup: stars at the finals, a Mercury win, and a fire in LA
Today’s roundup includes three stories from the United States: a women’s World Cup match in Seattle that drew sports and political stars; Phoenix...

U.S.–Australia World Cup ticket prices fall, but still sting
With less than three hours until the U.S. plays Australia at a stadium in Seattle, the lowest ticket price is $1,447, according to TicketData.com....

Juneteenth at the World Cup: how Seattle marked freedom and football
On Friday, June 19, two major events unfolded side by side in Seattle: the group-stage match at the FIFA World Cup between the United States and...

Seattle on a football high: The U.S. beats Australia
On Friday, Seattle became the epicenter of a football celebration: the United States men’s national team defeated Australia 2-0 at Lumen Field at...

Seattle emergency services increase coverage for World Cup match
After a record-hot Monday, when the number of hospital calls in Seattle during World Cup soccer celebrations rose by 15%, American Medical Response...

Record dim sum party: 830 people in Seattle make history
On Thursday afternoon, Seattle officially set a new Guinness World Record — the largest dim sum party. At the event, held in the city’s Chinatown —...
Sports Day in Seattle: Soccer, Traffic, and Baseball
In Seattle, a USA–Australia soccer match took place with a large parade and transportation headaches, and the Mariners made a roster change that...
Weather

🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, June 21, in Seattle it will be mostly sunny and pleasant—an excellent day for outdoor activities to celebrate Father’s Day. The high will be +24°C, the low +14°C. Winds will be northwest at 11 km/h. The UV index is very high (9)—sun protection is recommended. Sunrise is at 5:11 am, sunset at 9:11 pm, with 16 hours of daylight. The moon is in the first quarter. Air quality is poor (AQI 52); sensitive people should spend less time outdoors. Pressure and humidity aren’t provided in the...
Neighbors

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...

Canada Riding a Wave of Events: World Cup, Strikes and Heat in Vancouver
The spotlight is on three key topics: a successful World Cup kickoff in Vancouver on natural turf, a large-scale strike by Metro Vancouver infrastructure workers, and a forecast of potentially record heat in the region.
Australia Praises BC Place Pitch: "Perfect Playing Conditions"
The natural grass pitch installed at BC Place in Vancouver for the FIFA World Cup received high marks from world-class players after passing its first test in a group-stage match. On Saturday Australia earned a...

Strike and Heat: What Awaits Vancouver
Vancouver faces a triple challenge: a municipal workers' strike is disrupting infrastructure services, an extreme heat wave is forcing water conservation due to critical repair work, and at the same time cross-border rail service to the U.S. is improving with new measures on the train route.
The route from Vancouver to Seattle is shorter: what's changed on the Amtrak route
The train trip from Canadian Vancouver to American Seattle has become slightly faster, which is especially important now as...

Vancouver: Bankruptcy, World Cup and Pet Rescue
In the latest Vancouver news roundup: developer Helen Chan Sun declared bankrupt while in jail; the 2026 FIFA World Cup kicked off with Australia vs. Turkey and Science World was transformed; and a touching story of stolen dogs and cats reunited with their owners after a suspect was arrested in British Columbia.
Vancouver developer Helen Chan Sun declared bankrupt while jailed for contempt of court
Recent weeks have been a true ordeal for Helen Chan Sun, once a multimillionaire and a notable...
USA

Roads, heat and the price of mistakes: common lessons from three stories
If you look at these three stories together, they’re united not by the subject as such, but by a deeper narrative: infrastructure, safety, and the human and managerial cost of underestimating risks. One article is about deadly heat on trails in Grand Canyon and how the natural environment can quickly become a threat to life. Another is about a crime committed during an ordinary taxi ride, and how the law-enforcement system unravels the consequences of violence. In the third, Iowa’s...

Tragedy on the North Side and the Role of Public Memory
Nearly all of the sources here discuss things that, in different ways, shape public memory: one piece about the death of James Burrows, a man who defined American television comedy for decades, others about a dramatic incident in San Antonio where violence, police work, and the fates of bystanders collided. At first glance, these are very different stories, but they share one theme: how society records the events and people who leave a mark—either in culture or in the day-to-day life of a city....

Land and Fire Conflicts: How Infrastructure Becomes a Flashpoint
Stories from Richmond, Virginia, and rural Oregon might seem completely different: in one case, a high‑profile federal defamation suit between a developer and the owner of a Minor League Baseball club; in the other, fires near a solar farm, a highway, and an RV campground. But underlying all these events is the same theme: how pieces of modern infrastructure (stadiums, commercial real estate, solar panels, roads, recreation areas) become arenas not only of economic competition but of legal and...

Fragile security: how sudden violence and the elements reshape everyday life
Each of the three reports from different parts of the U.S. — a nighttime storm in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana; a deadly crash involving cyclists in California; and a manhunt for a shooter in Maryland — may at first seem unrelated. Together, however, they form a very familiar picture: the ordinary, seemingly stable routines of daily life can be shattered at any moment — by nature, human recklessness, or intentional violence. People go to work, ride bikes along the ocean, attend university, and...

Fragility of Big Plans: Elections, Disasters and Sport as a Mirror of Uncertainty
In all three stories — from the Georgia primaries to a wildfire near Spokane and the injury of a Tour de France star — there seems at first glance to be nothing in common. Political intrigue in the American South, a local tragedy in the U.S. Northwest, and a decision by a European cycling team look like plots from different worlds. But viewed more broadly, they form a single narrative about how fragile even the most carefully laid plans become when confronted with reality — political, natural,...

The Fragility of Modern Infrastructure and the Cost in Human Lives
Three seemingly unrelated news items — the death of musician Oliver Tree in a helicopter crash in Brazil, a serious road accident in Nashua, and a large-scale dredging project at the Port of Santos — actually form a single story. It is a story about how the modern world pushes for speed, volume, and scale in the movement of people and goods, while the price of an error or technical failure remains invariably high. The same systems that bring economic growth and global mobility also create new...
Power, Risk and Trust: How Different Crises Expose a Single Problem
Stories about the crash of a strategic bomber, the president’s frenetic trading activity on the stock market, and a regional TV station winning an Emmy for coverage of a church shooting may at first seem unrelated. Together, however, they form a cohesive picture of how society today tests and rethinks trust in those who manage risk: the military, politicians, financial managers and journalists. In all three accounts the central question becomes: who controls the danger, who controls information...

Fragility of Security: From Missouri Skies to the Strait of Hormuz
Three news items that at first glance seem completely different actually tell a single story about how fragile security remains in the modern world and how unbearably high the price of mistakes can be. A skydiving plane disaster in Missouri near a small airfield, and almost simultaneously — reports about the end of the U.S. and Israeli war with Iran and an agreement to cease fire and reopen the Strait of Hormuz in pieces from NBC News and Al Jazeera — are different scales of the same dramatic...
Media, Power and Reputation: How Public Stories Become "Narratives"
When you read news items that at first glance seem unrelated — a local shooting at a mall in South Carolina, Tyra Banks’ lawsuit against Netflix, and a political dispute over Donald Trump’s name at the Kennedy Center — it appears to be just a chaotic stream of events. But viewing them as parts of a single picture reveals an important theme: how the modern media environment turns incidents and people into "narratives," shapes reputation and politics, and influences public perception far more...
Reactions

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...

America in the Crosshairs: Germany, Ukraine and Japan Debate the US Role
Today, outside the United States, discussions are not about one or two headline episodes but about a knot of issues in which Washington has become...
![US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meet at Mar-a-Lago, Trump's resort, in Palm Beach, Florida, on December 29, 2025 [Jonathan Ernst/Reuters]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/2025-12-29T223347Z_1840689475_RC2KQIAV30GG_RTRMADP_3_ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS-TRUMP-NETANYAHU-1772474025.jpg?resize=770%2C513&quality=80)
How the world reads Washington: Israel, Australia and Ukraine on a new phase of American power
In mid‑June 2026 the United States again finds itself at the epicenter of global debate — but this time not only as a "hegemon," rather as the...

How the World Sees America Now: Germany, Japan and Israel Debate Trump
The American agenda is once again dominating the planet’s information airwaves, but the set of questions being asked in Berlin, Tokyo and Tel Aviv...

How the World Argues with America: Brazil, Saudi Arabia and Australia
In June 2026, discussion of the United States in the foreign press and among experts noticeably shifted: the foreground is no longer the abstract...
World

In Venezuela, people’s voting is being expanded: condominium boards will join the national...
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez announced that the second National People’s Consultation will take place on July 12, 2026, and for the first time it will include not only community councils, but also condominium boards across the country. This innovation is intended to broaden the territorial and social reach of the citizen direct-participation mechanism. According to Rodríguez, during the voting, residents will directly determine the allocation of public funds, based on...

Preliminary U.S.-Iran talks begin in Switzerland with Qatar and Pakistan mediating…
On Sunday, technical consultations began in Switzerland between U.S. and Iranian delegations, with representatives of Qatar and Pakistan also taking part. The meetings are intended to lay the groundwork for a new round of talks connected with implementing the memorandum of understanding on the cessation of hostilities.
According to Pakistan’s state television, the technical sessions involving members of the four countries’ delegations may continue until Monday. Switzerland’s foreign ministry...

Iran closes the Strait of Hormuz and demands guarantees ahead of talks with the United States
The diplomatic channel between Washington and Tehran remains open despite rising tensions. On Sunday, technical consultations mediated by Pakistan and Qatar were scheduled to take place in Burgenstock, Switzerland. The Iranian delegation has already flown to Switzerland, while from the U.S. side special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner arrived in the region. However, due to escalation in Lebanon, the precise start date of the meetings remains in doubt.
The Iranian delegation has been given...

259 Venezuelans returned home from the United States on a repatriation flight
On Friday, June 19, Venezuela received the 162nd flight of the “Vuelta a la Patria” (Return to the Homeland) program, with 259 citizens from the United States—206 men, 35 women, 10 boys and 8 girls. The aircraft landed at Simón Bolívar International Airport in Maiquetía, where everyone was welcomed with dignity and according to all protocols to ensure a happy reunion with their families. In total, since the start of the program, more than 28,000 Venezuelans have already returned to their...

Egypt: the roots of popular support for Iran against Israel and the United States
Anti-American and anti-Israeli sentiments in Egyptian society are not a spontaneous reaction to current events, but the result of decades of historical, cultural and political experience that has shaped a collective mindset. Hostility toward Israel goes back to collective memory, where it is seen as an “historical enemy,” and it is also linked to an acute sense of sovereignty and rejection of outside interference. To understand this mood, one must take into account the contexts that reproduce...

World reaction to Donald Trump’s personal diplomacy
Once again, the international agenda is being discussed not so much around specific U.S. decisions as around the style of Donald Trump’s personal diplomacy—and how his sharp remarks are received abroad. In many publications, the emphasis is on irritation, mockery, and outright rejection by foreign leaders, who publicly distance themselves from his statements and thereby intensify the sense that relations between countries are unpredictable. A separate theme in this line of thinking is his...

The US and Iran postpone meeting: logistics and political tensions
On Friday, the White House announced the postponement of the long-awaited round of talks between the United States and Iran that was due to take place in the Swiss resort of Burgenstock. The official reason cited was “logistical difficulties,” but the Axios portal, citing sources, reported additional problems related to the travel of the Iranian delegation and rising tensions in Lebanon. From the very beginning, the situation had been murky: Al Jazeera correspondent in Washington, Murad Hashim,...

Reuters: US expands Citgo protection, eases telecom and Conviasa restrictions
The US administration on Thursday issued two new general licenses related to Venezuela that permit certain transactions in the telecommunications and postal services sectors, as well as the supply of goods and services for the state airline Conviasa. In addition, a third license extends an exception protecting the Venezuela-owned refinery Citgo Petroleum. These measures, published by the US Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), are part of carve-outs within the...

Vance lashes out at Israel over criticism of Iran deal
U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance publicly and unusually sharply criticized Israeli officials for their negative reaction to Washington’s preliminary agreement with Tehran. He called the Israeli side’s behavior a “strange panic” and “hysteria,” reminding Benjamin Netanyahu’s government that two-thirds of Israel’s defensive armaments are produced in the United States and paid for by American taxpayers. These remarks mark a rare instance of open conflict between allies accustomed to settling...
Knowledge

Words That Survived a Whole Battle: The Story of Chief Seattle
Have you ever wondered what real story lies behind every city name? Seattle is one of the best-known cities in America. It’s a rainy

People Who Saved the River by Simply Stopping Work
Imagine this: you work at a huge factory that smells of fish, your hands are constantly wet and cold, and outside the window a beautiful river flows—yet there are almost no fish left in it. That’s what life looked like for Filipino workers in salmon canneries in the U.S. state of Oregon in 1933. And when they decided to stop and say “no,” they didn’t just save themselves—they helped save the river.
Who were Filipino workers, and why did they come so far?
In the early 20th century, thousands of...
Fish That Remember the Way Home: How a Small Window Changed a Big City
Imagine you’re sailing very far from home — so far that all around you is only the endless ocean. Years pass. And then, suddenly, you know exactly where to go to return to the very spot where you were born. Not just back to your city — but to your street, to your house. This is exactly what salmon are able to do as they pass through the Ballard Locks in Seattle. And this discovery — made in part by ordinary schoolchildren — changed the way the entire city thinks about its rivers.
A Door Between...

A city under a city: how Seattle hid an entire street underground
Imagine walking down an ordinary street, going into a shop for ice cream — and then realizing that right under your feet there’s another street. With old storefronts, sidewalks, and even doors that nobody had opened for more than a hundred years. That’s exactly how Seattle is: a city with a secret lower level.
The fire that changed everything
In 1889, Seattle suffered a real disaster. A carpenter accidentally knocked over a kettle of hot glue, and a fire broke out. Wooden buildings caught fire...

The Troll Who Befriended an Entire City: How One Sculpture Changed Everything
Imagine a dark, dirty place under a massive bridge—somewhere nobody wanted to go. It was scary, unpleasant, and dangerous. Now imagine that a giant troll lives there, and that every resident in the neighborhood absolutely adores him: they bring him gifts and take photos next to him, like he’s an old friend. That’s exactly what happened in Seattle, in the Fremont neighborhood, where the famous Troll under the Aurora Bridge appeared in 1990. And this story isn’t just about a sculpture. It’s a...

The Magic Penny: How One Percent Turned Trolls into Gold
Imagine a city has 100 rubles to build a new school. And someone says: “Let’s spend one ruble not on bricks, but on something beautiful — a statue, a mosaic, or a fountain.” Sounds odd, right? Why spend money on decorations when you could buy more desks or computers? But here’s the surprising part: in the American city of Seattle they’ve been doing exactly that for fifty years. And that one cent out of a dollar has turned into real magic that transformed whole neighborhoods and made people...

Hidden treasures: how wooden doors taught architects to keep memory
Imagine you had to leave your home in a hurry and didn’t know when you would return. What would you take with you? What would you hide to preserve? That’s how Japanese families in Seattle felt in 1942, when the government forced them to leave their homes and move to special camps far from the city. But some of them did something remarkable: they hid parts of their houses so they could find them again one day.
A neighborhood that vanished overnight
There was a whole neighborhood in Seattle where...

Giant Cowboy Boots That Taught a Neighborhood to Dream Again
In one Seattle neighborhood stand enormous cowboy boots as tall as a two-story house. Nearby is a giant cowboy hat that once sheltered a gas station. These strange sculptures tell an astonishing story of how an entire neighborhood transformed from a sad, empty place into a vibrant space full of artists, musicians, and dreamers. The story shows how decisions made many years ago create problems today — and how people find creative ways to solve them.
A neighborhood that made things
Georgetown is...

Bookstores That Turned Kids into Keepers of Memory
Imagine your grandmother telling an amazing story about how her family moved to a new city, or about how to cook a special dish whose recipe was passed down through generations. Now imagine that story might disappear forever because no one recorded it. That’s what happened to thousands of stories in Seattle—until small bookstores figured out how to turn ordinary children into real "memory detectives." And it all happened thanks to simple technology and kind hearts.
When big stores nearly beat...
Opinions

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...