Press "Enter" to skip to content

Posts published in “U.S.”

Officials estimate $125 million in Western Alaska storm damage so far, and a long road to recovery

The Alaska Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management director updated lawmakers, and outlined a “significant cleanup mission” planned for this summer. Rep. Nellie Jimmie, a Democrat from Toksook Bay, broke down in tears recounting her experience there the night ex-Typhoon Halong made landfall on the west coast of Alaska in October.  “We didn’t sleep the whole night, and this was the first time I’ve ever felt so helpless, where I knew I couldn’t protect my own daughter,” she told fellow lawmakers at a joint hearing with the House Tribal…

US elites prescribe wrong medicine for political disease

In January 2026, the death of Renée Good, a mother of three in Minneapolis, by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent, and the subsequent fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old nurse, by federal agents, sparked outrage and protests within the US.  Nobel laureate Daron Acemoglu of Massachusetts Institute of Technology swiftly diagnosed the malady in a Project Syndicate piece. This could be “a turning point,” he declared. The killings represented “a key distinguishing feature of authoritarian governments” – the ability to deploy excessive force against opponents. The Trump…

Push for de-dollarization reflects economic reality, not ideology

Few ideas in global finance generate as much anxiety as de-dollarization. To some Western observers, any attempt to reduce reliance on the US dollar is automatically framed as a political challenge to American power. Yet for much of the developing world, the conversation is far less ideological and far more practical.  The push to diversify global payment systems and promote the use of local currencies is not about confrontation; it is a response to economic realities that many countries have lived with for decades. The dominance of the dollar has…

The ‘Board of Peace’ cannot replace the United Nations

On Thursday, US President Donald Trump once again turned on the klieg lights by launching a new major international initiative – the “Board of Peace.” Though this multilateral body is supposed to start with managing the post-conflict restoration and future development of the Gaza Strip, many argue that its real goal has a larger scale and might reflect the US president’s ambition to find an efficient alternative to the UN, which he shows no respect for. If the pilot Gaza project turns out to be a success story, this model…

377 San Diegans died by suicide in 2024, rate up 3% from prior year

A total of 377 San Diegans took their lives in 2024, a 3% increase in the suicide rate from the previous year, according to a report released Tuesday by the county’s Suicide Prevention Council. The number of suicides in San Diego County is a decrease from 8% in 2016 and 4% from 2020. The council’s 2025 Report to the Community provides an overview of deaths from suicide, emergency department visits from suicide attempts and data from people who have thought about, considered or have planned suicide. “The data we are…

Ohio lawmakers introduce bills to limit school vouchers, ban 17 year olds from getting married

Ohio lawmakers have introduced several bills since going on winter break — including ones that would limit which families can receive school vouchers, make Election Day a state holiday, and ban 17-year-olds from getting married.  The Ohio Senate was scheduled to return this week, but session and all committees were cancelled because of weather. The Ohio House will come back in February. Ohio’s 136th General Assembly is just past its halfway point, as the lawmakers operate on two-year cycles. Bills have until the end of 2026 to pass or else they…

Minnesotans mourn Alex Pretti, man killed by Border Patrol agent

More than 1,000 people gathered for a vigil and rally Saturday night at Whittier Park in Minneapolis to mourn Alex Pretti, the man who was shot and killed by a Border Patrol agent. After the vigil, demonstrators marched in subzero temperatures to the site where Pretti was killed on Nicollet Avenue, south of 26th Street. The site of the shooting has been turned into a makeshift memorial of candles and flowers, less than 2 miles away from the memorial in the Powderhorn neighborhood made for Renee Good on January 7,…

Tens of thousands gather in downtown Minneapolis for ‘ICE Out’ day

Tens of thousands of Minnesotans marched in downtown Minneapolis Friday in a negative 30 degree windchill to protest the federal government’s continuing surge of immigration enforcement — demanding civil rights and a withdrawal of the 3,000 officers sent here by the administration of President Donald Trump. The demonstration took place on “ICE Out of Minnesota: Day of Truth & Freedom,” ageneral strike supported by Minnesota unions, progressive faith leaders and community activists. Proponents encouraged all Minnesotans to stay home from work, school and refrain from shopping — disruptions of normal…

Trump to block foreign aid for transgender care, Vance tells anti-abortion rally

WASHINGTON — The Trump administration plans to expand a policy that blocks foreign aid dollars from going to organizations that discuss, refer or perform abortions to also include groups that address transgender health care or have policies on diversity, equity and inclusion, Vice President JD Vance said Friday. “We’re expanding this policy to protect life, to combat DEI and the radical gender ideologies that prey on our children. And with these additions, the rule will now cover every non-military foreign assistance that America sends,” Vance announced at the March for…

States, cities are hard-pressed to fight violent ICE arrest tactics

U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has defended many recorded violent incidents as legitimate uses of force. State leaders who want to curb the increasingly violent arrest tactics of immigration enforcement agents in Minneapolis and elsewhere are struggling to push back. They’ve promised civil rights legislation that could offer alleged victims another route to courts, ordered up official tribunals to gather video and other records, or asked cities to refuse requests to cooperate with raids. But for the most part, states looking for concrete ways to push back find themselves…