Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Reading archive 2025-09-29

Is Trump keeping all his promises? This MAGA couple doesn’t think so.: Eight months into his second term, the president is facing some difficulties living up to the high expectations of his supporters.

Trump’s shutdown plans: Mass layoffs, deregulation, military deployments: The White House’s call for mass layoffs in a looming shutdown tracks with past administration efforts to defang much of the federal government.

Who is Lindsey Halligan, the interim U.S. attorney prosecuting James Comey?: Before she was sworn in Monday as an interim U.S. attorney, Halligan, a 36-year-old former White House aide, had no prosecutorial experience.

Elon Musk’s latest power grab points in a clear direction: His SpaceX deal could fundamentally alter the relationship between a state and its citizens. - "When citizens can communicate through networks that operate from international space, traditional regulatory tools become obsolete. Britain’s Online Safety Act, for example, requires platforms to remove harmful content and cooperate with regulators. But how do you enforce compliance when platforms can route traffic through orbital networks that bypass British infrastructure entirely?"

Surface-to-air missiles and deadly drones spread on Sudan’s battlefields: Fighters now possess antiaircraft weapons that could threaten civilian air traffic and what appears to be a Chinese surface-to-air missile system, experts said. - "'In 10 years, American and European leaders are going to regret their inaction on Sudan,' said Justin Lynch, the managing director of Conflict Insights Group. 'A failed state on the Red Sea that is awash with predatory Islamist militias, advanced weapons and genocidal leaders will imperil the region for generations.'"

FBI searches for motive after gunman kills 4 at Michigan church: Authorities said the suspect was killed after police exchanged gunfire with him. The FBI is investigating the incident as “an act of targeted violence.”

A government shutdown could start Wednesday. Here’s what to know.: The Trump administration and Democrats in Congress are at an impasse over how to pass new federal funding laws.

At 50, ‘The Rocky Horror Picture Show’ still brings the misfits together: The campy cult classic has been the world’s favorite midnight movie for a half-century, and it’s not going anywhere. - "Ever since a particularly animated midnight screening of the movie at Greenwich Village’s Waverly Theater on Labor Day weekend in 1976, a night at the 'Picture Show' equals a visit to another reality. All because a viewer named Louis Farese yelled 'Buy an umbrella, you cheap bitch!' at Janet as she crooned 'Over at the Frankenstein place/ There’s a light' (in a rainstorm, with a newspaper draped over her head)."

Trump set to bail out Argentina, irking some in ‘America First’ camp: The Trump administration is set to provide a $20 billion financial lifeline to Argentina, a move that has sparked controversy among some of his supporters.

Anacostia Starbucks closure stings, even as some see a neighborhood ‘renaissance’: The Anacostia location, which generated excitement when it opened in 2020 in an underserved D.C. neighborhood, is one of hundreds of Starbucks closing nationwide.

Friday, September 26, 2025

Reading archive 2025-09-25

Trump, Kimmel and the upside of ignoring big-government coercion: Progressives untroubled when the Biden administration was throwing its weight around might be having an epiphany. [ed. note: embarrassing, it's not the same thing]

Russia hits back at Trump after his abrupt swing toward Ukraine: Trump’s statement that Ukraine could retake all of its territory lost to Russia with NATO’s help was a dramatic change in U.S. rhetoric on the war.

Virginia governor’s race puts ‘they/them’ back on the ballot: Republican Earle-Sears’s campaign sees votes in transgender issues. But have voters moved on?

A frustrated Sen. Van Hollen urges Democrats to take bigger risks: Finding Democrats’ response to Trump’s presidency lacking, the Maryland senator has emerged as a surprising advocate for stronger stands on politically risky issues like the war in Gaza and illegal immigration.

This therapy for chronic back pain can be surprisingly effective A personalized approach that uses physical and psychological coaching may help some people manage their chronic, disabling pain. [ed. note: "cognitive functional therapy"]

Wall Street bets against Trump on tariff refunds, while importers suffer: Some investment firms are so confident that the Supreme Court will strike down some of Trump’s tariffs that they are buying the rights to refunds.

Trump administration rehires hundreds of federal employees laid off by DOGE - "The General Services Administration has given the employees — who managed government workspaces — until the end of the week to accept or decline reinstatement, according to an internal memo obtained by The Associated Press. Those who accept must report for duty on Oct. 6 after what amounts to a seven-month paid vacation, during which time the GSA in some cases racked up high costs — passed along to taxpayers — to stay in dozens of properties whose leases it had slated for termination or were allowed to expire."

US border patrol collected DNA from thousands of US citizens for years, data shows: CBP officers took DNA samples from about 2,000 citizens, some as young as 14 and many who never faced criminal charges, new analysis shows

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Reading archive 2025-09-23 pt 2

Democrats think they can win a government shutdown. That's a lousy bet.: While there are reasonable arguments for a shutdown, it’s a fight Democrats would most likely lose.

Why Democrats are making Obamacare central to their shutdown strategy: Democratic leaders have given Republicans an ultimatum on support for federal funding to avoid a government shutdown.

Trump’s tariffs, deportations and climate change are making groceries more expensive

World’s first AI-designed viruses a step towards AI-generated life: Scientists used artificial intelligence to write coherent viral genomes, using them to synthesize bacteriophages capable of killing resistant strains of bacteria.

Black Christians confront Charlie Kirk’s religious legacy: Conservative evangelicals’ embrace of Charlie Kirk’s legacy is forcing some Black Christians to reconcile the activist’s divisive comments on race with the Christian values of tolerance and empathy.

Why Democrats are holding firm on conditions ahead of shutdown: The minority party is using its limited leverage, hoping to convince Americans that GOP spending priorities are the real danger.

The chilling reason the military is silent now: This is what happens when you purge the JAGs.

Harris book draws blowback from Shapiro, Buttigieg. Here’s what’s in it.: The same people criticizing what she said about them in her new book about the 2024 campaign could be among those she faces in 2028 if she runs again.

Man charged with hate crime in killing of trans woman in D.C.: Edgar Arrington, 38, was arrested in North Carolina last week in connection with the killing of a 28-year-old transgender woman. - "A tipster told investigators the shooter had tried to 'holler' at Johnson, then became enraged upon learning she was transgender, court records show. One witness recalled overhearing someone telling Johnson “no disrespect but you are a male” in the moments before her death, while another said the gunman hurled homophobic slurs at Johnson before shooting her."

D.C. changes tenant laws to spur investment in affordable housing: The D.C. Council passed a law tightening eviction laws and overhauling the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act, all intended to attract housing investment.

Senators call on Congress to roll back flights at National Airport: Citing Washington Post reporting, Sens. Mark R. Warner and Tim Kaine say cutting the number of flights could reduce safety risks.

Eleanor Holmes Norton faces mounting pressure to retire: Donna Brazile, a veteran political strategist and close confidante of D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, joined a growing chorus calling on the 88-year-old not to seek another term in Congress.

House votes for D.C. police chases, against city’s input on judges: The bills passed — one with bipartisan support — despite universal opposition among top D.C. elected officials as the GOP tightens its grip on the nation’s capital.

Reading archive 2025-09-23 pt 1

The Age of Corporate Capitulation Won’t Work: Donald Trump came for Jimmy Kimmel. Disney folded immediately. It’s not just bad morals. It’s bad business. - "With the exception of Paramount, which was recently sold to an owner aligned with that machine, each of these institutions would have been better served by fighting back. Not only because it was the right thing to do, but because it’s more likely to work. The Trump presidency is built on projecting an air of absolute power, but it’s deceptively weak in many ways. Trump is the most unpopular president of this century. His polling, by any normal standard, is terrible. His coalition of right-wing influencers has fractured over the Epstein files and conspiracy theories linking Israel to Kirk’s killing. Trump is elderly, seemingly in poor health, and increasingly out of touch. His cult of personality is the only thing holding his frayed administration together. 

"This is not, in other words, a regime too powerful to be resisted; it’s only playing one on TV. Speed and the appearance of inevitability are its strongest allies. Anything that slows it down or exposes its limitations is a threat. Any resistance that articulates a case against it openly and publicly is another threat. It can’t risk looking bogged down, looking constrained, or looking like it’s forced to plead a case. The moment that paper-thin perception of invincibility fails, the whole bogus facade becomes in danger of collapse. This is why Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker’s full-throated assault on Trump’s plan to send federal troops into Chicago seemed to genuinely rattle the administration, which has mostly responded with avoidance. It’s why even the tepid resistance Harvard has offered to Trump’s attempts to force it to submit to him has left it in a stronger position than its more subservient peers."

Threatened by Trump, Canada tries to make up, team up with Mexico: Canadians mused last year about a U.S.-Canada trade deal that cut out Mexico. Prime Minister Mark Carney is visiting President Claudia Sheinbaum to mend ties.

I’m a former creationist. Here’s why ‘follow the science’ failed.: The moment I finally admitted that Darwin was right didn’t feel liberating. It felt like grief.

An exemplary survey of race portends trouble for the Smithsonian: President Donald Trump singled out “The Shape of Power” for criticism, but the show was a success.

One of the rarest birds in the world finds a city sanctuary in Hong Kong

He got an entire country running on clean energy. Can he do it again?: Ramón Méndez Galain helped Uruguay decarbonize its grid in just five years, with 98 percent of its energy coming from renewable sources.

Solar tax credits are ending. Here’s why that could be good for solar.: It could force the industry to address the issues that have made installing solar more expensive in the U.S. than elsewhere in the developed world.

D.C. firefighter shot, says he gave up on 911 and called his own station for help: He survived, with a bullet still in his chest, after others who heard the gunfire called 911 and medics arrived. A 17-year-old suspect has been charged as an adult.

A shutdown would give Trump more power over federal spending: Congress is racing toward a government shutdown deadline, and Democrats worry the White House could have more control over spending either way.

The U.S. promised fliers better passenger rights. What happened?: The Transporation Department has rescinded a proposal to expand compensation for flight cancellations and significant delays.

How a complete stranger tried to steal my dead father’s home: In the midst of my grief, I learned I was also the victim of deed fraud.

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Reading archive 2025-09-17

A seamlessly unserious president: Damage from Trump’s protectionism mounts domestically as danger abroad rises. - "Before Alaska, Trump threatened Russia with 'very severe consequences' unless it took certain steps toward a Ukraine settlement. When Russia took none of them, and suffered no consequences, Trump emitted another gust of bluster: He would put a recalcitrant Russia in a 'rough situation.' It is probable that Putin yawned when, last Friday, Trump said his patience was 'running out fast” and 'we’re going to have to come down very, very strong.'"

The GOP cut parts of Obamacare. Now it’s at the center of a funding fight.: Democrats are asking for restored health care subsidies and funding in exchange for their support, but Republicans are daring them to risk a shutdown over the issue.

D.C. police shoot, kill man they say ran at them while holding knives: The man’s parents called officers to their Northwest Washington home. Police said the man was acting “erratic.”

D.C.’s $3.7 billion Commanders stadium deal to face final vote today: The D.C. Council is debating potential adjustments to the massive plan to redevelop the old RFK Stadium site, some of which the Commanders expressed “deep concern” about.

Warming your feet can be as effective as sleep aids for faster sleep: Your new mantra: Heat your feet to get better sleep.

‘More Hawkish Than When I Arrived’: A View From Inside China - "Second, 'our allies are our superpower,' Burns said. This is America's decisive asymmetric advantage. China has 14 neighbors and no treaty allies, save one with North Korea. The U.S. has a formidable network of powerful democracies in the Indo-Pacific and Europe who share its concerns. 

"As Burns noted, when the U.S. adds the power of its alliance system to its own, America is 'significantly more powerful' than China. Antagonizing friends in Japan, South Korea, or Europe with punitive tariffs isn't tough—it's a 'strategic mistake,' as Burns put it, that weakens the U.S.’s hand against its primary competitor."

Four Bipartisan Efforts That Could Become Law: Checking in on across-the-aisle legislating.

The real enemy of democracy sneaked up on me: I used to be a cautious optimist, but social media has changed our politics for the worse.

Anti-Trump influencers flood the White House’s new TikTok account: The rocky rollout of the president’s official presence on the social platform showcases the challenges he faces among younger people online, even as he says he’s nearing a deal to get it sold to U.S. owners.

Bill Cassidy cast the key vote for RFK Jr. What is he thinking now?: The GOP senator has invited Susan Monarez, the former CDC director, to testify on Wednesday about her concerns that Kennedy is threatening vaccine access in America.

Britain and France’s debt crises are bad. America’s will be worse.: Washington’s fiscal failings mirror Europe’s economic mess. - "America’s economy, workforce and tax code are not equipped to finance the expanding Social Security and Medicare shortfalls. France and Britain are at least debating solutions. The U.S. continues to slash taxes, add benefits and ignore unfathomable budget deficits. Yet the laws of math and economics always win eventually, and Americans are dangerously ill-prepared for what is coming."

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Reading archive 2025-09-16

Poland rebuffs Trump, saying Russian drone incident wasn’t a mistake: President Donald Trump said violations of Poland’s airspace “could have been a mistake,” but NATO said it was starting a new initiative, Eastern Sentry, regardless of Russia’s intent.

The case for letting kids out of our sight: Children’s room to roam independently was once measured in miles. Today, it’s often in feet. Here’s what they’re losing and what we can do about it.

National park to remove photo of enslaved man’s scars: The Trump administration is ordering the removal of information on slavery at multiple national parks in an effort to scrub them of “corrosive ideology.”

Wars of deception are coming for America. It isn’t ready. Costly, outdated weapons are no match for cheap drones and high-tech misdirection. - "This came into focus last week when a wave of 19 Russian drones crossed into Polish airspace. The drones were reportedly of the Gerbera type, which cost as little as $10,000 each and thus are often used as decoys to misdirect and overwhelm Ukrainian air defenses. To face them, NATO needed a response force of two Dutch F-35 and two Polish F-16 fighter jets, backed by a Polish Saab 340, an Italian AWACS early-warning jet and a mix of helicopters, costing over half a billion dollars in total. They then shot down just four of the nineteen drones with AMRAAM missiles, each costing over $1.6 million."

Why Trump wants companies to report earnings less frequently

Scoop: Netanyahu spoke to Trump before Israel bombed Qatar

The case for letting kids out of our sight: Children’s room to roam independently was once measured in miles. Today, it’s often in feet. Here’s what they’re losing and what we can do about it.

Endorsing Mamdani shows Democrats are ‘spineless’: Democrats don’t know what they stand for.

Reading archive 2025-09-15

The Beginning of the End of NATO: This is when the world finds out whether the United States remains committed to Europe’s defense.

Russia Is Losing the War—Just Not to Ukraine: A war meant to catalyze national revival has instead become a case study in national self-harm. [ed. note: a hopeful read]

Will Israel Destroy Trump’s Greatest Foreign-Policy Achievement?: The Abraham Accords rested on a commitment that the Israeli settler right wants to break.

The Era of Step-on-a-Rake Capitalism: Trumponomics isn’t about economics. It’s about creating pain and demanding tribute. - "Some of his initiatives are pure Ronald Reagan, such as his corporate-income tax cuts and deregulation efforts targeted at oil and gas. Some of his interventions would impress a Democratic Socialists of America chapter, such as demanding a public stake in Intel, requesting 15 percent of revenues from Nvidia's chip sales to China, and securing a 'golden share' of U.S. Steel to retain veto power over its decision making. As for the rest of Trump's economic policy, it is a hodgepodge of 19th-century mercantilism, developing-world authoritarianism, and extremely online weirdness. The U.S. tariff rate stands near a 100-year high. When Trump isn't firing the statisticians who calculate unemployment, he's waging war against the independent central bank or posting about the fierce urgency of corporate-logo design."

The Influencer FBI: The skill set required to succeed online may not always translate to effective law enforcement. - "Patel has presided over a bureau that is strapped for resources and hemorrhaging expertise. According to a recent analysis by the Cato Institute, roughly one in five FBI agents has been shifted from their previous position to aiding ICE with immigration enforcement, a change that can't help but affect the FBI's ability to carry out other crucial work. It's far too early to say whether this shake-up will turn out to have degraded the bureau's ability to find Kirk's killer, or to have prevented the shooting from occurring in the first place. But the agency is not in fighting form."

This centuries-old pest is thriving like never before: A rat census is the first step in combatting them.

AI extremists are peddling science fiction: AI realism embraces humility and a basic truth: Technologies succeed when they improve lives.

Who was arrested in Trump’s D.C. crime emergency? We analyzed 1,273 records.: Arrests involving federal officers occurred in all eight city wards, but have been concentrated in the city’s poorest, least White and most crime-riddled neighborhoods. - "In some recent instances in D.C., stops initiated for nonviolent offenses recovered weapons from people who previously committed armed violent crimes, court records show. Federal officers patrolling Congress Heights spotted an Audi with tinted windows and without a front tag. They reported finding a stolen gun in the car, whose driver had been released last year from prison after being convicted of murder."

Boosted by summits in Alaska and China, Putin moves against Europe, Ukraine: Russia has been emboldened in its strategy of splitting the U.S. from Europe while pushing ever harder to gain a military victory in Ukraine.

Stephen Colbert’s ‘Late Show’ wins two Emmys after cancellation: The show received the award for outstanding talk series just two months after it was canceled.

Why is TikTok dangerous? Consider this scenario.: The White House is weighing another reprieve. Every day the app continues operating is a threat. - "Imagine the following scenario. China decides to attack Taiwan, and, fearing the United States will come to Taiwan’s aid, launches preemptive strikes against American targets overseas. In the United States, Chinese operators launch drone attacks from secret bases located on more than 380,000 acres of farmland China has purchased. As the government considers its options, the 170 million American TikTok users open their feeds to thousands of bots disguised as people, rattling off anti-American propaganda; encouraging young students desperate for meaning to fight their own government; and spreading disinformation at such a rapid rate that it is impossible to discern fact from fiction."

Poland calls for NATO-backed no-fly zone over Ukraine: Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said shielding Ukraine from Russian drone attacks would protect the rest of Europe, too, amid concerns over the war’s spread.

This new fee proposal could upend American innovation: The Trump administration should scrap a proposal that would squeeze patent holders. - "Large corporations with global operations might be able to absorb the cost. A two-person start-up in Omaha or Cleveland probably wouldn’t. Saddling them with higher patent taxes would indicate to entrepreneurs that America no longer has their back. The new levy would pile onto innovators without improving patent quality or reducing application backlogs. This proposal presents a shortsighted revenue grab that undermines the trust and predictability innovators depend on." [ed. note: patents currently require a single flat fee; Commerce Department proposal would annually charge 5% of patent's assessed value]

Things felt off at this year’s Emmy Awards: ″The Studio" won, “The Bear” lost, and everyone carefully avoided mentioning what “Adolescence” was actually about.

As federal workforce shrinks, these Washingtonians are boosting their resumes with AI skills: Decimation and dissatisfaction in the local labor pool sparked this experiment through the public library system.

Thursday, September 11, 2025

Reading archive 2025-09-11

SNL revamps its roster. Meet the show’s five new cast members.: Ben Marshall, Veronika Slowikowska, Tommy Brennan, Jeremy Culhane and Kam Patterson are joining SNL after several cast members left.

A $1.4 billion Powerball win sounds life-changing. Here’s the catch.: Sudden wealth might seem like a dream come true, but it can’t shield you from poor choices.

Where there’s no sign of the National Guard in D.C.: In Southeast Washington, residents aren’t seeing Trump’s federal forces.

This campaign will help you go electric before federal tax credits end: As the GOP kills incentives, Rewiring America is offering free online tools and weekly calls to get more clean energy and efficient appliances into homes.

Florida’s fix for its struggling insurance market hurt homeowners, data shows: Florida enacted legal changes meant to curb insurance litigation, but the number of lawsuits filed by policyholders has stayed high — topping all other states. - "When the market hits a low point, like it did after the coronavirus pandemic, insurance companies have a system, he said: 'They raise rates, tighten underwriting and blame consumers; they say it’s all about litigation. It’s happened so many times.' 

"''That’s their business cycle, and there’s a political cycle that goes with it,' he said."

House GOP advances bills to remove elected D.C. AG, overhaul justice policies: The action came the day Trump’s 30-day control of D.C. police is set to expire, as the end of one home-rule crisis for city officials marked the beginning of another.

What’s behind Putin’s incursion in Poland: If President Donald Trump won’t punish Russia’s latest provocation, Congress must.

Stagflation concerns rise with increased inflation and jobless claims: The consumer price index rose in August at a 2.9 percent annual rate, up from July. Weekly jobless claims rose to the highest level since 2021, as the labor market weakens.

Reading archive 2025-09-11

‘Prolific alien invaders’ threaten waters in the West: Zebra mussels are now in the upper Colorado River system, and the minuscule mollusks can wreak massive damage. - "The mollusks’ westward sweep recently crossed a feared Rubicon when Colorado discovered zebra mussels in its portion of the Colorado River system, an imperiled lifeline to 40 million people. 'This news is devastating,' a water manager on the state’s arid western side said. 'From irrigation to drinking water, the ramifications cannot be underestimated or overstated.'"

Poland downs drones in its airspace, becoming first NATO member to fire during war in Ukraine

National Guard documents show public ‘fear,’ veterans’ ‘shame’ over D.C. presence: Internal documents reviewed by The Post show how domestic missions rooted in politics risk damaging Americans’ trust in the military. - "In another update, the Guard indicates troops 'continue efforts to restore and beautify public spaces across the District” and have “cleared 906 bags of trash, spread 744 cubic yards of mulch, removed five truckloads of plant waste, cleared 3.2 miles of roadway, and painted 270 feet of fencing.' 

"Those statistics may be among the most consequential takeaways of Trump’s use of the military in D.C., Dempsey said, and should prompt scrutiny of whether this mission was ever necessary in the first place.

 "'That is such a suboptimal use of military training that we should all be asking, 'Why are they here?'' Dempsey said. 'If they’re picking up trash, they’re not here for a security emergency. There’s no clearer metric than that.'"

I’ve battled backyard wasps for two years. Guess who won?: I’ve tried pesticides both natural and synthetic, as well as DIY remedies, but nothing has worked. So I turned to the experts for advice. - "'I wish organic insecticides were safe and more effective, but the truth of the matter is, snake venom and ricin are organic, and both are highly deadly,' Lamp’l says. Vinegar can be lethal to frogs, toads and lizards, he adds. 'Organic gives people peace of mind, but it’s really a misconception.'

...

"'People think anything laboratory-made is bad and anything natural is good, but that’s not necessarily true,' Brown says. 'Water is a chemical, and naturally derived products from plants like pyrethrins are chemicals too. A pesticide is a pesticide, whether it’s made in a laboratory, comes from a plant, or is soap and water.'"

Democrats fight over how to defeat Republican Sen. Susan Collins: The emerging Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate in Maine embodies a stark choice in a party trying to remake itself.

On the brink of a devastating canal collapse, a GOP district waits for Trump’s help: In an era of federal staffing and spending cuts, a small Washington state irrigation district is desperate for a lifeline.

Texas’s Pete: James Talarico is young, well spoken, and eager to talk with Republicans—exactly what some Democratic dreamers think they need to finally turn the state blue.

Just How Bad Would an AI Bubble Be?: The entire U.S. economy is being propped up by the promise of productivity gains that seem very far from materializing. - "Generative AI would not be the first tech fad to experience a wave of excessive hype. What makes the current situation distinctive is that AI appears to be propping up something like the entire U.S. economy. More than half of the growth of the S&P 500 since 2023 has come from just seven companies: Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla. These firms, collectively known as the Magnificent Seven, are seen as especially well positioned to prosper from the AI revolution.

...

"Many experts believe that a major reason the U.S. economy has been able to weather tariffs and mass deportations without a recession is because all of this AI spending is acting, in the words of one economist, as a "massive private sector stimulus program." An AI crash could lead broadly to less spending, fewer jobs, and slower growth, potentially dragging the economy into a recession. The economist Noah Smith argues that it could even lead to a financial crisis if the unregulated "private credit" loans funding much of the industry's expansion all go bust at once."

The Abundance Delusion: I mean, what even is a Democrat at this point? - "Wonks who value the existence of the subway understand that more revenue-like, say, the millions of dollars annually that come from rider fares-means more resources for ride improvement and policing, which increases ridership, which in turn keeps the entire system alive. More honest wonks will even admit that a slight barrier of entry improves the ride dramatically for most people. But the far left fundamentally does not care about this. Ideologically, its adherents do not believe that an amazing transit system that only an overwhelming majority of people can afford is preferable to a grossly degraded system that everyone, technically, can access. This belief extends to roads, housing, schools, everything." [ed. note: a glimmer of a compelling argument in what otherwise boils down to "you need an authoritarian to get things done"]

The Epstein Letter Is Real, and It’s Bad: The president’s initial strategy of denying that the document exists leaves him with few options now that it has been made public.

Fear of Losing the Midterms Is Driving Trump’s Decisions: The specter of investigations and impeachment has fueled many of the president’s most dramatic actions.

New York NIMBYs Turn Against Democracy: Local lawmakers want to preserve their power to block housing. Does what voters think matter at all? - "An official at the city's Department of Housing Preservation & Development noticed that the members of one Queens community board habitually asked residents testifying at its meetings how long they had lived in the neighborhood, especially if they appeared to be of a different race or social standing. As a result, newcomers were implicitly discouraged from attending any meetings at all."

Kamala Harris explains why it wasn’t her fault: In an excerpt from her new memoir, she casts plenty of blame, including at the Biden White House. - "The Atlantic published an excerpt from Harris’s memoir on Wednesday morning, and the section suggests that the subtitle of her forthcoming book should be 'Why Nothing that Happened Last Year Was My Fault.'"

FBI leaders allege in lawsuit they were unlawfully fired over political loyalty: The former acting director says a Trump administration official asked a series of questions, including “Who did you vote for?”

FBI leaders allege in lawsuit they were unlawfully fired over political loyalty: The former acting director says a Trump administration official asked a series of questions, including “Who did you vote for?”

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Reading archive 2025-09-09

DC’s Tree Laws Should be Protections, Not Suggestions

Even untouched ecosystems are losing insects at alarming rates, new study finds - "The findings address a critical gap in global insect research. While many reports of insect declines focus on habitats altered by human activity, few examine populations in relatively pristine areas. This study demonstrates that dramatic losses can occur even where direct human impacts are minimal, suggesting climate change may be a key driver."

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Reading archive 2025-09-08

LGBTQ+ pilgrimage to Rome could test Pope Leo on gay Catholics: Under Pope Francis, the Vatican approved an improbable LGBTQ+ pilgrimage, but the views of Leo XIV, on an issue that has long divided the Catholic church, are not yet clear.

I gave this popular D.C. restaurant zero stars in 2016. Has it improved?: Our food critic returns to the scene of a culinary crime — Founding Farmers — for a pulse check.

Meet the Rugged Guys of the 2026 midterms: They’re bearded, tattooed veterans, and they’re running for Senate. Could they help break the GOP’s grip on Washington?

Here’s a source for critical minerals — hiding in plain sight: The federal government should invest in ways to recover what mines are already producing. - "Every year, metal mines in the U.S. excavate and process millions of tons of rock to extract a handful of primary metals, such as copper, iron, gold, silver, zinc, nickel and molybdenum. The rock is ground into tiny particles and processed with chemicals or heat; then the leftovers are dumped into waste sites. This potentially toxic material must be stored and monitored in perpetuity. 

"Today, most mining operations extract just a small percentage of what is in the rock: copper at about 0.5 percent, gold at around 0.0001 percent. Everything else is left unrecovered, including critical minerals that the American economy desperately needs, such as rare earths, gallium, germanium, nickel and cobalt. 

"But there’s a better way: It’s possible to extract more critical minerals during the process, like squeezing more juice out of a lemon before throwing it away. Doing so would provide domestic resources and leave behind cleaner, more stable waste that is easier to repurpose."

Critics say she’s appeasing Trump. D.C.’s mayor says she’s out to win." Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) believes her order establishing long-term cooperation with federal authorities has staved off an extended White House takeover of D.C. police. Some say she should have pushed back.

What Russia and Ukraine each think happens next in the war: Windows into each side’s strategies make one thing clear: The fighting is probably far from over.

The U.S. could tumble into recession before seeing Trump’s promised golden age: The U.S. economy is at risk of entering a recession before President Trump’s promised golden age, with weak job growth and high inflation blamed on his policies.

Aging homes are crumbling across the U.S. Should government pay to fix them?: The average age of a U.S. home is now 40 years old. Homes tend to be the oldest in the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic states and along the Appalachian Mountains.

Friday, September 5, 2025

Reading archive 2025-09-04

House GOP weighing bills to remove elected D.C. AG, overhaul justice policies: The 14 proposals would usher in some of the most intense interventions in the city’s justice system since the federal government took over many of its functions in the 1990s.

House Republicans form new subcommittee to probe Jan. 6: Lawmakers slipped a resolution into a rule on the House floor that would establish the controversial subcommittee.

At D.C. Superior Court, a system up at all hours under Trump’s order: With nearly everyone arrested getting charged, the city’s courthouse is often packed and running past its typical closing time.

D.C. can predict who will get into car crashes but can’t stop them: Warning the owners of cars caught on camera repeatedly that they were courting danger did not change behavior.

The labor shortage is worsening. Iron cards are the answer.: A work-to-citizenship path for immigrants could supplement American workers. - "We need a fast, pragmatic fix that honors American labor, protects wages and actually delivers. My proposal is the 'iron card,' a 'gold card' for the working class. It would be a targeted, service-based pathway that recruits and trains immigrants to fill critical infrastructure jobs while investing in American trainees alongside them. If immigrants swore an oath to serve where assigned, passed background and safety checks, completed five years of verified service on priority projects and kept taxes current, they would be fast-tracked to permanent residency and citizenship."

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Reading archive 2025--09-02

Trump and Smithsonian secretary meet as White House increases museum pressure: The Trump administration has called for changes across the institution. On Thursday, its head, Lonnie G. Bunch III, joined the president for lunch.

Bowser welcomes federal law enforcement presence indefinitely: Bowser issued an executive order Tuesday requiring local coordination with federal law enforcement “to the maximum extent allowable by law within the District.” The order gives no expiration date.

Forget YIMBY. The housing shortage could disappear on its own.: Demographic shifts and construction surges are likely to resolve the housing crisis without federal intervention.

Bill Belichick’s college debut was a spectacle. Then the game kicked off.: Even a fawning friends-and-family presentation couldn’t save the coach’s first game at North Carolina.

The MAGA kids are not all White: A new generation of young, Black conservatives is trying to gain sway within Trump’s GOP. They have some ideas for how to keep the party going. - "Raven Schwam-Curtis, a Chicago-based creator who was part of a cadre of influencers attending the Democratic National Convention last year, sees figures like DuRousseau and Pearson as using the subversiveness of being Black and Republican to position themselves as the new cool kids. 'What they’re doing is the equivalent of 'We’re not like the other girls,'' she says, making it clear she’s opposed to their message. 'It’s essentially a rebranding of the hipster thing: 'Most Black people vote for Democrats, but I’m voting for Republicans, and here’s why you should listen to my deviation from the norm, because, actually, you’ve been duped.''"

A red state community bet on carbon capture. Trump is blocking it.: Amid fierce global competition to dominate the industry’s future, the Trump administration puts U.S. companies in a bind. - "Cement manufacturing also is one more sector where the United States has been in an innovation race with China, with both countries vying to invent the technologies that will be used by cement makers of the future. The abrupt cancellation of major projects in the U.S., industry experts say, plays into China’s hands."

Life Has Gotten Surreal in China: The state is ever more insistent on a reality at odds with people’s experience. That’s not a good sign for progress.