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Democracy Now!
- Trump Family Businesses Rake in $4 Billion After His Reelection with Focus on AI, Crypto & Nuclear
Ventures launched by the Trump family since Donald Trump’s reelection have generated at least $4 billion in proceeds and paper wealth for the Trump family. With investments across sectors like real estate, hospitality, media, cryptocurrency and more, the Trumps are “increasingly integrating their business empire” into the wider U.S. economy, says David Uberti, who has been reporting on the family’s self-enrichment for The Wall Street Journal. The coupling of Trump’s economic and political influence is raising major questions about conflicts of interest. “You have all of these different business interests in different areas in which the government regulates,” and this “proximity to power may help along some of these deals […]
- Chevron Stocks Surge After Trump Vows to "Take Back" Venezuela's Oil After U.S. Attack
The share prices of U.S. oil companies surged following the Trump administration’s attack on Venezuela and abduction of its president, Nicolás Maduro. In public statements, Trump has been clear about his desire to reassert U.S. corporate control over Venezuela’s nationalized oil industry. Now with Trump’s show of force over Venezuela’s political sovereignty, many investors see the potential for a similar overpowering of the socialist country’s economic independence. However, notes financial reporter David Uberti, it won’t be so easy for Wall Street to make a profit. In addition to upgrading Venezuela’s “decrepit” oil-producing infrastructure, “they have to push for more appetite for oil around the world.”
- "Imperial Laboratory": Alexander Aviña on the "Donroe" Doctrine & U.S. Intervention in Latin America
The share prices of U.S. oil companies surged following the Trump administration’s attack on Venezuela and abduction of its president, Nicolás Maduro. In public statements, Trump has been clear about his desire to reassert U.S. corporate control over Venezuela’s nationalized oil industry. Now with Trump’s show of force over Venezuela’s political sovereignty, many investors see the potential for a similar overpowering of the socialist country’s economic independence. However, notes financial reporter David Uberti, it won’t be so easy for Wall Street to make a profit. In addition to upgrading Venezuela’s “decrepit” oil-producing infrastructure, oil companies must push for a greater share of the energy marketplace, just as […]
- "It's All About the Oil, Stupid!": Mehdi Hasan on Trump Attacking Venezuela & Kidnapping Maduro
Zeteo's Mehdi Hasan outlines Donald Trump's “Donroe Doctrine,” a throwback foreign policy exemplified by the Trump administration’s shocking intervention in Venezuela. With his claims of U.S. sovereignty over nations in the Western Hemisphere, “Trump’s basically saying, 'Well, this is ours, and China, Russia can have their spheres of influence.' And it is very 19th-century-esque. ’Let’s divide up the world between the powers.’” This orientation is a major shift from U.S. foreign policy of recent decades, such as the 2003 invasion of Iraq, when interventionist actions were framed around ideological motivations, explains Hasan. “They said it was WMDs. They said it was democracy. They said it was al-Qaeda. They at least […]
- Headlines for January 6, 2026
Nicolás Maduro and Cilia Flores Plead “Not Guilty” to Drug and Weapons Charges in U.S. Court, Venezuelan VP Delcy Rodríguez Sworn In as Interim President, U.S. Assault on Venezuela Condemned by Allies and Adversaries Alike at U.N. Security Council, Grand Rapids Police Arrest Protest Antiwar Organizer on TV After She Condemns Trump, WSJ: Trump Tipped Off Oil Executives a Month Before U.S. Attack on Venezuela, Venezuelan Opposition Leader Machado Says She Plans to Return to Venezuela, Danish Prime Minister Warns U.S. Attack on Greenland Would Mean the End of NATO, Israel Launches Airstrikes in Lebanon, Claiming to Target Hezbollah and Hamas, U.S. Drops the Number of Vaccines Recommended for Every Child, Democrats Demand Speaker Johnson […]
Fair Observer
- The US Invades A Latin American Country — Again
I woke up Saturday morning to the shocking news that US President Donald Trump had ordered the US invasion of Venezuela and the removal of its unanimously declared illegitimate president, Nicolás Maduro. I was nearly incredulous when I saw the news. I say nearly only because in the lead-up to Maduro’s removal, Trump had given… Continue reading The US Invades A Latin American Country — Again The post The US Invades A Latin American Country — Again appeared first on Fair Observer.
- How Did the Earth Get Its Oceans?
“Imagination is more important than knowledge.” — Albert Einstein. Many theories abound concerning the origin of Earth’s oceans, which cover more than 70% of Earth’s surface. An array of scientific theories exists, including outgassing, comet and asteroid bombardment, volcanic activity and other possibilities during the first approximately two billion years of Earth’s ~4.6 billion-year history.… Continue reading How Did the Earth Get Its Oceans? The post How Did the Earth Get Its Oceans? appeared first on Fair Observer.
- FO° Talks: Can Japan and South Korea Shape the Indo-Pacific as US–China Rivalry Intensifies?
Haruko Satoh, a geopolitical analyst at the Osaka School of International Public Policy, and Jaewoo Choo, a renowned professor on China at Kyung Hee University in Seoul, South Korea, revisit a 2024 Osaka conference roundtable (Asian Political and International Studies Association) supported by the Korea Foundation to reassess Japan–South Korea cooperation as the regional premise… Continue reading FO° Talks: Can Japan and South Korea Shape the Indo-Pacific as US–China Rivalry Intensifies? The post FO° Talks: Can Japan and South Korea Shape the Indo-Pacific as US–China Rivalry Intensifies? appeared first on Fair Observer.
Anthropocene
- The perverse dilemma of reef recovery: Less fish now, more food later.
Scientists say coral fisheries could sustainably provide thousands of additional meals per square kilometer. But it requires sacrifice from communities that already have little to spare.
- The strange new economics of negative electricity pricing
As clean energy surges, utilities that once urged restraint may sometimes need to reward households for using electricity—reshaping how virtue, value, and consumption collide.
Black Agenda Report
- Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Rejects, Condemns, and Denounces
Venezuela's statement categorically denounces U.S. action as criminal aggression, framing the nation's resistance as a legitimate defense of sovereignty against imperialism.
- Venezuela 2025: Black Agenda Report Special Issue
Black Agenda Report Special Issue on Venezuela.
- Venezuela, Even More Than Palestine, Is the Linchpin of a Consistent Radical Left in The Era of Global Neofascism Led by the U.S.
Solidarity with Palestine tests morality, but solidarity with Venezuela tests politics. The recent U.S. intervention demands a radical left move beyond symbolic outrage to a material confrontation with its own state.
The Guardian
- How a US takeover of Greenland would undermine Nato from within
The alliance has no provision for the previously unthinkable: one of its members turning on anotherThe idea that one Nato country could attack another – a US invasion of Greenland – is so alien that the most famous article in Nato’s founding treaty does not distinguish clearly what would happen if two of its members were at war.Article 5, the cornerstone of mutual protection, dictates that “an armed attack against one or more” in Europe or North America shall be considered “an attack against them all”. Simple enough if the military threat comes from Russia, but more complicated when it comes from easily the alliance’s most powerful member. Continue reading...
- Trump calls Venezuela strikes ‘amazing’ and teases meeting with oil executives after ousting Maduro – live
US president calls the Caracas operation ‘brilliant tactically’ and ‘an incredible thing’ and says deposed leader Nicolás Maduro is a ‘violent guy’From elation to frustration: Trump snub wrongfoots Venezuela’s oppositionMy colleague Sibylla Brodzinsky has reported on the relationship between the US and Colombia, home to significant oil reserves. Here is an extract from her story:Colombia has long been a close partner of the US in the fight against drug trafficking and enjoyed bipartisan support in Washington but relations have soured dramatically since Trump came to office.Colombia’s narcotics trade is largely controlled by illegal armed groups such as the Gulf Clan, the National Liberation Army (ELN) and dissident […]
- George Conway, a former anti-Trump Republican, to run for Congress as a Democrat
Conway, a conservative lawyer and ex-husband of Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway, is vying for a New York district seatGeorge Conway, the former Republican turned Donald Trump critic and ex-husband of the US president’s 2016 campaign manager and senior aide Kellyanne Conway, is running for Congress.Conway, a conservative lawyer who helped start the Lincoln Project, a prominent anti-Trump group of Republicans, launched his bid as a Democrat seeking to represent New York’s 12th congressional district, in what will be a crowded field of contenders. Continue reading...
- Doug LaMalfa, California Republican congressman, dies aged 65
LaMalfa’s death cuts the House Republican majority to 218-213, tightening GOP control for passing billsDoug LaMalfa, a California Republican who represented the state’s rural northern region in the House and was known for his work on water and forestry policy, has died at age 65, according to statements from Republican officials.LaMalfa, a fourth-generation rice farmer who previously served in the California state legislature, was in his seventh term representing California’s first congressional district. He sat on the House agriculture, natural resources, and transportation and infrastructure committees. No cause of death has been announced. Continue reading...
- Elon Musk is moving back into politics. Can’t he take up a new hobby instead? | Arwa Mahdawi
It didn’t go very well for him last time, but the tech billionaire seems to have abandoned his plans for a third party and has renewed his bromance with the president “You know, I’ve generally found that when I get involved in politics, it ends up badly,” Elon Musk mused on Nikhil Kamath’s podcast in November.Oh, we know, Elon, we most definitely know. The world is still reeling from the tech billionaire’s little experiment in politicking last year. Musk’s “department of government efficiency” (Doge) slashed federal jobs, dismantled foreign aid programmes and left a trail of chaos in its wake. It’s not clear whether any taxpayer money was saved, but experts are warning a lot of lives will be lost. By one calculation, […]
The Marshall Project
- Who’s in Ohio’s Psychiatric Hospitals, How Did They Get There and When Do They Get Out?
Criminal defendants are overwhelming an understaffed state mental health system that, a few years ago, served thousands more patients.
Aeon
- Children’s game: pau de sebo
In a town park in Portugal, prizes dangle just out of reach up a greasy pole. How will the local teens manage to get them?- by Aeon VideoWatch on Aeon
Unicorn Riot
- Cop City RICO Cases Dismissed Years After 61 Activists Charged as Criminal Conspiracy
Atlanta, GA – Racketeering charges against 61 people indicted as co-conspirators in the Stop Cop City movement were dismissed yesterday, marking a significant victory for those facing prosecution in the years after the movement’s peak. The dismissal comes after more than two years of attempted… The post Cop City RICO Cases Dismissed Years After 61 Activists Charged as Criminal Conspiracy appeared first on UNICORN RIOT.
The Conversation
- Today Venezuela, tomorrow Iran: can the Islamic Republic survive a second Trump presidency?
Perhaps no one outside of Venezuela should care more about the US invasion and capture of President Nicolás Maduro than the Islamic Republic of Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei.
- Why 2026 could see the end of the Farm Bill era of American agriculture policy
Farm bills – famously complex legislative and spending balances between farm subsidies, food assistance, conservation and more – have tended to be passed about every five years since 1933.
- How facial recognition for bears can help ecologists manage wildlife
Recent advances in computer vision and other types of artificial intelligence offer an opportunity for facial recognition to apply to bears and other animals.
- New federal loan limits will worsen America’s nursing shortage and leave patients waiting longer for care
The 2025 tax and spending law lowers the federal loan borrowing limits for nursing students, raising the up-front costs of nursing school.
- Viral outbreaks are always on the horizon – here are the viruses an infectious disease expert is watching in 2026
Viral infections are on the rise and spreading across the globe.
Inter Press Service
- Bombing and Ballots, Myanmar’s Contentious Election
With thousands of civilians killed in years of civil war and over 22,000 political prisoners still behind bars, no one was surprised that early ...
- Lost Opportunities to Halt Rising Military Spending
The United Nations issued a year end Fact Sheet: Rising global military expenditures, starkly illuminating that last year’s record high of $2.7 trillion in ...
- Trump De-dollarisation Accelerant
While US President Donald Trump has blamed the BRICS and foreign investors for de-dollarisation, his rhetoric, actions and policy measures are mainly responsible for ...
Sludge
- House Dems Gave Millions in ‘Dark Money’ to AIPAC-Linked 314 Action
314 Action is one of the groups that AIPAC diverted its PAC money through in 2024.
Yale Environment 360
- Plagued by Flooding, an African City Reengineers Its Wetlands
As climate change and urbanization intensify flooding in Rwanda, the capital of Kigali has embraced nature-based solutions. The city is restoring and reshaping 18,000 acres of degraded wetlands, planting native species to filter and slow runoff, and enhancing biodiversity.Read more on E360 →
Inside Climate News
- How Trump Derailed a NOAA Pioneer’s Move From Climate Impacts to Solutions
After spending the first 16 years of her federal government career focused on the impacts of climate change, Libby Jewett hoped to wrap up her time at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration working on solutions. So in 2023, the marine ecologist gave up her post as the founding director of NOAA’s ocean acidification program,
- The Loosely Regulated Petrochemical Barge Industry Is Commandeering a Texas River
This article was originally published by Public Health Watch, a nonprofit investigative news organization. Find out more at publichealthwatch.org. SAN JACINTO RIVER, Texas—Over the past 30 years, federal and state agencies in Texas have allowed hundreds of oil and chemical barges to amass in a once-tranquil section of the San Jacinto River, just east of Houston.
Amnesty International
Grist
- Why forcing people to go green can backfire
A new study reveals a conundrum for climate policy: People hate it when you tell them what to do.
- Trump says he’ll unleash Venezuela’s oil. But who wants it?
As oil prices fall and demand nears a peak, exploiting Venezuela’s heavy crude reserves won’t be as easy as Trump thinks.
- The biggest climate migration problem may be that there’s not enough of it
In his new book, Julian Hattem explores how migration can be a climate solution — not just for those who are able to move, but for their home communities as well.
Truthout
- Trump Thanks “MISTER TARIFF” on Truth Social, Claiming US Economy Is Improving
Polling shows a majority of Americans give Trump negative ratings on his handling of the economy and inflation.
- Analysts Warn Venezuela Invasion Could Empower Trump to Take Actions Elsewhere
The US’s first unilateral invasion in South America is Trump's testing ground for military supremacy in the region.
- Miller Says “Free World” Depends on US Ability to Take Over Other Countries
“Greenland should be part of the United States,” Miller told CNN. “That is the formal position of the US government.”
Labor Notes
- 2025 in Review: Stark Battle Lines, Big Potential
Already before Donald Trump was inaugurated in January, there were dire omens. Poultry workers reported that their supervisors were using Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric to divide workers up—allowing white workers bathroom breaks but denying them to Hispanic workers. “The more people are afraid to organize, the more the bosses will take advantage to create worse working conditions,” wrote Magaly Licolli of the worker center Venceremos in January.
The World – PRI
- Things you might have missed
Hosts Carolyn Beeler and Marco Werman catch you up on headlines in the news you may have missed.
- Highlights from the EU gathering
Representatives from more than 30 countries met in Paris today, calling themselves the "coalition of the willing." The goal was to make concrete plans for Ukrainian security. French and German leaders each pledged to provide troops as part of a multi-national force to provide assurances for a desired ceasefire. Hosts Marco Werman and Carolyn Beeler have more.
- Garbage workers' union takes a stand for a full year
In January 2025, garbage workers — called bin workers in the UK — began taking industrial action in the city of Birmingham. In March, an all-out strike kicked off. Since then, tens of thousands of tons of garbage have piled up on the streets, attracting vermin. Pest control businesses in Birmingham say this has been their busiest year on record. The World's Europe Correspondent Orla Barry has […]
19th News
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