Bookmark this page or set it as the homepage for your web browser, and check it daily for up-to-date, independent, nonprofit news.
Democracy Now!
- Aliya Rahman v. DHS: Disabled Woman Dragged from Car Files Claim over Violent Arrest in Minneapolis
Aliya Rahman, a Minneapolis resident who was violently detained by ICE officers in January during “Operation Metro Surge,” filed a federal tort claim against the Department of Homeland Security on Thursday, claiming the agency used excessive force and violated her rights. Rahman was never charged with any crime. “They battered Aliya. They assaulted Aliya. They were negligent in their medical care for Aliya,” says Jessica Gingold, one of Rahman’s attorneys. “All of those things are illegal, and this is our tool for making sure that they have to pay for that.” Aliya Rahman was on her way to a doctor’s appointment when her route was blocked by ICE vehicles. Rahman’s window was smashed, and she was violently pulled out of her […]
- Rami Khouri: U.S. & Israel Were "Forced into Two Ceasefires" as Regional Balance of Power Shifts
“We’ve seen now, in the last six weeks, Iran and Hezbollah almost single-handedly checking — not defeating, but checking — the two biggest military powers in the region, which is the U.S. and Israel,” says Rami Khouri. Khouri says the U.S. and Israel have been “forced into” ceasefires in Iran and Lebanon. This is all a sign “of the evolving balance of power across the region” and demonstrates that Iran’s Axis of Resistance “is still effective.” Khouri is a Palestinian American journalist and public policy fellow at the American University of Beirut.
- Report from Beirut: Israel-Lebanon Ceasefire Met with "Cautious Optimism"
A 10-day ceasefire has begun in Lebanon. The news is being celebrated across the country, but major questions remain over what happens next. President Trump announced the deal between Israel and Lebanon on Thursday. Hezbollah, which is not a party to the agreement, says it will observe the ceasefire. The Israeli military is occupying a large swath of southern Lebanon, about 10% of the country. Early on in the current war, the Israeli military announced the intention to create a “security zone” from the Lebanese-Israeli border all the way to the Litani River, 20 miles north of the border. Many in the country are questioning whether Israel will abide by the ceasefire, says Beirut-based journalist Kareem Chehayeb. Israel continued […]
- As Iran Reopens Strait of Hormuz, Are U.S. & Iran Near Deal or Renewed Fighting?
President Trump on Thursday repeated his claim that a deal to end the war on Iran is “very close” and that direct talks with Iran could resume in Pakistan as soon as this weekend. Despite the claims, the Pentagon is surging thousands of additional troops to the Middle East, including an additional 6,000 sailors and aviators joining the USS George H.W. Bush aircraft carrier battle group. Around 4,200 others with the Navy and Marines are expected to arrive near the end of the month. Ali Vaez, Iran project director at the International Crisis Group, says “we might be, at some point, returning to a hot war” because the Iranians, too, have “preserved a degree of retaliatory capacity.” The main question on the negotiating table is […]
- Headlines for April 17, 2026
Israel Agrees to 10-Day Ceasefire in Lebanon After U.S.-Brokered Talks, Israelis in Tel Aviv Protest Settler Violence After High Court Lifts Wartime Ban on Gatherings, House Votes 213-214 to Reject War Powers Resolution as Trump Claims Deal with Iran Is “Very Close”, Ukraine Strikes Black Sea Oil Refinery as Russian Attacks Kill 17, Progressive Democrat Analilia Mejía Wins Special Election for New Jersey House Seat, House Temporarily Extends FISA’s Mass Surveillance Powers in Late-Night Vote , House Votes to Extend Deportation Protections for 330,000 Haitian Immigrants, Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons, Who Oversaw Mass Deportation Efforts, to Resign in May, Minnesota Prosecutor Brings Assault Charges Against ICE Agent Who Pointed […]
Fair Observer
- The Pope, the President and His Three Apostles
Throughout four centuries of the office’s history, the Devil’s Advocate assumed the task of carefully and thoroughly unearthing the kind of evidence that could call into question a dossier for canonization. No dramatic courtroom antics. Basically, detective work. It’s a bit like the editorial task of a crowd-sourced journal like Fair Observer. People with a… Continue reading The Pope, the President and His Three Apostles The post The Pope, the President and His Three Apostles appeared first on Fair Observer.
- FO Talks: How Nationalism, the Monarchy and Cambodia Shaped Thailand’s 2026 Election
Fair Observer’s Video Producer Rohan Khattar Singh speaks with Professor Paul Chambers about Thailand’s general election, held February 8, 2026. It delivered a decisive victory for conservative forces led by Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul and his Bhumjaithai Party. The result now reshapes the country’s political landscape, as nationalism, rural mobilization and institutional power outweigh… Continue reading FO Talks: How Nationalism, the Monarchy and Cambodia Shaped Thailand’s 2026 Election The post FO Talks: How Nationalism, the Monarchy and Cambodia Shaped Thailand’s 2026 Election appeared first on Fair Observer.
- Germany’s Return to Conscription Is Not a Mistake; It’s an Obligation.
Germany is finally waking up to a harsh reality: In a world of revisionist powers and wavering alliances, a rich democracy at the heart of Europe cannot afford to be militarily weak. Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, too many Germans have lived in denial and behaved as if history had ended. Defense spending… Continue reading Germany’s Return to Conscription Is Not a Mistake; It’s an Obligation. The post Germany’s Return to Conscription Is Not a Mistake; It’s an Obligation. appeared first on Fair Observer.
Anthropocene
- The world is sitting on $7 billion of wasted fertilizer
Researchers mapped the production of human and animal waste across the US and matched it against crop nutrient demand. The numbers work. The logistics don't. Can we fix that?
- This is junk science, in the best possible sense
A Cambridge team has discovered that two stubborn waste problems—spent lead-acid batteries and hard-to-recycle polymers—can be made to solve each other, with sunlight doing most of the work.
Black Agenda Report
The Guardian
The Marshall Project
- A Prison Barber Class That Makes Men Learn Box Braids, Wet Sets and Other Women’s Styles
At New York’s Green Haven lockup, student barbers must overcome their machismo — and annoyance — to sharpen their craft.
Aeon
- Evolution of Paris
The evolution of Paris across millennia – from Celtic fishing village to world capital – in three animated minutes- by Aeon VideoWatch on Aeon
Unicorn Riot
- Vigil at Controversial Parking Ramp Site after Fatal Accident Kills Three Workers
The mood was somber among a group of parking ramp opponents and local media on a corner of Grays Ferry Avenue. A parking ramp under construction suddenly crumbled the day before, killing three union steel workers. The post Vigil at Controversial Parking Ramp Site after Fatal Accident Kills Three Workers appeared first on UNICORN RIOT.
The Conversation
- Cannabis sales and use are high in Michigan – but federal law means research lags behind
Researchers are anxiously awaiting government action on rescheduling cannabis.
- One-way attack drones: Low-cost, high-tech weapons ‘democratize’ precision warfare
One-way attack drones have changed the face of the Russia-Ukraine war and give Iran a boost in countering US and Israeli forces.
- Students expect their university will mishandle sexual misconduct, if they ever report it
Students guessed how their school would handle sexual misconduct based on how their university had previously responded to anti-LGBTQ+ incidents and other kinds of harm.
- Seeing women govern encourages support for women in politics – with no apparent backlash among men
After the main Namibian party started alternating candidates between men and women, female representation in the National Assembly nearly doubled.
- Christian satellite TV has broadcast evangelical faith – and end-times prophecies – into Iran for decades
Satellite television has been a key tool for evangelical churches to reach Christians and potential converts in Iran.
Inter Press Service
- The Grocery Bill Is Calm – The AgriFood System Is Not
Máximo Torero Cullen is Chief Economist of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
- Global Shocks Push Geoeconomics to the Center Stage at Foreign Policy Forum
As war in the Middle East ripples through global markets, policymakers, economists, and industry leaders gathered in Washington this week to agree that economics is no longer separate from geopolitics. It is now its core instrument. At the Geoeconomics Forum hosted by Foreign Policy alongside the Spring Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World
- Africa’s Future Depends on Innovation, Data, and Frontier Technologies
Across the continent, GDP has risen on the back of more workers, more capital and a commodity super-cycle, rather than through genuine gains in productivity and innovation. Too little labour has moved out of subsistence agriculture into higher-productivity manufacturing and modern services. As the recent Africa Business Forum in Addis Ababa drew to a close,
Sludge
- Spouse of Intel Committee Member Makes Timely Quantum Stock Purchase
MAGA Rep. Greg Steube’s spouse bought stock last month in a quantum computing company whose share price boomed when it reached a technical milestone and was awarded a defense contract.
Yale Environment 360
- Zambia Under Pressure to Clean Up Shuttered Lead Mine Poisoning Town
Three decades after one of the largest lead mines in the world closed down, people in Kabwe, Zambia, are still dealing with the aftermath. Facing pervasive lead contamination that continues to endanger their children, families in Kabwe, with a coalition of human rights groups, are calling on the African Union to force Zambia to clean up the site.Read more on E360 →
Inside Climate News
- Pollution Persists in the Florida Everglades Despite 40-Year Restoration Effort, Report Says
Florida’s fragile Everglades are not on track to meet a new water quality standard set to take effect next month, even after nearly 40 years of costly restoration work aimed at addressing pollution in the river of grass, according to a new report. The Water Quality Based-Effluent Limitation (WQBEL) is designed to measure nutrient pollution
- To Battle Climate Change, a Baltimore Church Turns to Nature
BALTIMORE—Every drop of rain rushing over pavement is a dilemma, picking up pollution and sweeping it into streams. And in this low-lying city on the water, it doesn’t take much to trigger flooding. But around one Northeast Baltimore church, plenty of raindrops slow down. Faith Presbyterian Church planted a 200-square-foot rain garden and converted part
Amnesty International
Grist
- Deep-diving robots help crack the mystery of Antarctica’s vanishing sea ice
A decade ago, southern sea ice suddenly and dramatically declined. Scientists say the culprit was a 'very violent release' of deep, pent-up heat.
- American farmers bet on solar. Then Trump changed the rules.
We tracked how the collapse of federal rural energy support is ending solar projects across farm country — and costing some developers millions they'll never get back.
- Ask a Climate Therapist: Why should I plan for my future when I feel we don’t have one?
Licensed therapist Leslie Davenport offers advice to a young reader staring down a world of uncertainty.
Truthout
Labor Notes
- Starbucks Is Bargaining Backwards, Baristas Say
Union baristas are finally back to the negotiating table with Starbucks, but the workers charge that rather than progressing, the company is reopening already agreed-upon issues. “They're trying to move backwards on issues we've already settled instead of settling the few that we have left,” said Mina Leon, a barista in downtown Manhattan who struck for two months to get the company back to the table.
The World – PRI
- Iran war tests Tehran's relationship with Beijing
US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said today that he received assurances from China that it is not supplying Iran with weapons. This follows a CNN report last week that US intelligence found evidence of China planning to send Iran defense system transfers. To understand the strategic ties between Iran and China, Host Marco Werman speaks to Ahmed Aboudouh, an associate fellow at Chatham House […]
- Japanese are working around the law requiring couples to have the same last name
A law in Japan requires that couples officially have the same last name. But dating companies and even whole towns are helping make it easier to "hack" the law. Hosts Marco Werman and Carolyn Beeler explain.
- Northern Nigerians react to US accusations of Christian genocide
On Christmas Day last year, the US launched a missile strike in northern Nigeria to counter what some have called a “Christian genocide.” That military action, and a newly proposed bill in the United States House of Representatives calling for possible sanctions against some leaders, including a prominent governor, have raised questions in Nigeria about what US involvement would mean. Ricci […]
19th News
Trustworthy Media is a news aggregator with headlines from 300+ independent media sources all in one place, updated throughout the day. Corporate media can’t be trusted to report fairly on movements for social and environmental justice, so we feature only independent, nonprofit, community-based journalism.


















