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Democracy Now!

  • “Lies, Gaslighting and Maligning”: Rep. Adelita Grijalva Boycotts Trump's Speech

    “I couldn’t in good conscience sit there and listen to Trump go on and on with what we knew was going to be hours of lies, gaslighting and maligning the very people that I represent,” says Congressmember Adelita Grijalva on her decision to skip Tuesday’s State of the Union address. “There was no attempt to bring the country together.”

  • Jailed for “Standing Up”: DHS Assault Victim Aliya Rahman Arrested at State of the Union Address

    We speak with Minneapolis resident Aliya Rahman, who attended Tuesday’s State of the Union address as a guest of Congressmember Ilhan Omar. Rahman was removed from the chamber Tuesday and spent several hours in jail following what she describes as an aggressive arrest by Capitol Police — all for silently challenging Trump during the speech. “There are only two things you can do at the State of the Union, and they are sit down and stand up,” says Rahman. “I was arrested for standing up.” Rahman, a U.S. citizen, was violently dragged out of her car and detained by federal immigration officers last month and later released without charge.

  • Rep. Summer Lee on Boycotting Trump Speech, Jesse Jackson, Voting Rights, “Endless Wars” & More

    Many Democratic lawmakers boycotted Tuesday’s State of the Union address to attend alternative events, including our guest Congressmember Summer Lee of Pennsylvania, who gave the Working Families Party response to President Trump. “The president is disgraceful, and I don’t think it’s worth our time to give him an audience,” says Lee, who encourages opponents to keep challenging his falsehoods. “When you take away the lie, there is no foundation for President Trump.” Lee also challenges Trump’s claims about non-citizen voting, which experts say is exceedingly rare, and the decision by Republican House leadership to deny honors to the late Reverend Jesse Jackson at the Capitol following the civil rights icon’s death.

  • Nobel Prize-Winning Economist Joseph Stiglitz Slams Trump’s Myths About Tariffs, Affordability

    Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz responds to Donald Trump’s State of the Union address on Tuesday, when the president repeatedly touted his tariffs as saving the country money and boosting the economy. Stiglitz says Trump’s “lies” about tariffs can’t erase the truth about how they have raised costs for most U.S. residents. “It is estimated the average family is paying somewhere between $1,000 and $1,700 in extra money because of the tariffs,” says Stiglitz. “His policies have failed.”

  • “You Have Killed Americans," "Black People Aren't Apes": Democrats Protest Trump's State of the Union

    President Donald Trump on Tuesday delivered the longest State of the Union address in modern history, speaking for nearly two hours as he claimed the United States is entering a “golden age” under his leadership. Trump spent much of his speech touting his economic policies and his administration’s immigration crackdown. We play excerpts from Trump’s address as well as responses to it from different Democratic lawmakers, many of whom skipped the speech to attend alternative events.

Fair Observer

  • Trump and German Rearmament: Sowing the Seeds of Upheaval in Europe

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 triggered Germany’s Zeitenwende, which can be translated as a historic turning point. Then-Chancellor Olaf Scholz put it in motion as a response to Germany’s need to adapt to the changing European geopolitical landscape. This policy included a €100 billion special fund for defense and a pledge to long-term military… Continue reading Trump and German Rearmament: Sowing the Seeds of Upheaval in Europe The post Trump and German Rearmament: Sowing the Seeds of Upheaval in Europe appeared first on Fair Observer.

  • Europe’s Leaders Should Derive Reserved Comfort From Rubio’s Munich Speech

    Munich has long been the transatlantic family’s annual therapy session — part reassurance ritual, part strategic stock-taking, part crafting a path forward. When US Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke at the Munich Security Conference, his tone offered useful insight about the possible trajectory of US–Europe relations under the second Trump administration. He reaffirmed the… Continue reading Europe’s Leaders Should Derive Reserved Comfort From Rubio’s Munich Speech The post Europe’s Leaders Should Derive Reserved Comfort From Rubio’s Munich Speech appeared first on Fair Observer.

  • FO Talks: Josef Olmert on Why a US Strike on Iran Now Seems Inevitable

    Editor-in-Chief Atul Singh and Josef Olmert, a former Israeli government official and Middle East scholar, examine whether the US and Iran are drifting toward war after the Operation Midnight Hammer strike on Iranian nuclear facilities in June 2025. Was last summer a warning shot, or merely the first act in a larger confrontation? In Olmert’s… Continue reading FO Talks: Josef Olmert on Why a US Strike on Iran Now Seems Inevitable The post FO Talks: Josef Olmert on Why a US Strike on Iran Now Seems Inevitable appeared first on Fair Observer.

Anthropocene

Black Agenda Report

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The Guardian

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The Marshall Project

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Aeon

  • Love immortal

    In pursuit of defeating death, Alan has dedicated his life to cryonics. He hopes to be defrosted together with his wife- by Aeon VideoWatch on Aeon

Unicorn Riot

  • Rojava Pushed to the Brink as Syrian Government Advances

    The Syrian government initiated a full-scale invasion of Rojava, starting with the Kurdish-dominated neighborhoods of Sheikh Maqsood and Ashrafiyah in Aleppo city. The post Rojava Pushed to the Brink as Syrian Government Advances appeared first on UNICORN RIOT.

The Conversation

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Inter Press Service

  • International Women’s Day & 70th Session of the UN Commission on the Status of Women

    International Women’s Day 2026 comes at a defining moment: Women and girls have never been closer to equality, and never closer to losing it. Legal protection against domestic violence has expanded in many countries. Yet, the rights of women and girls are being rolled back in plain sight, and across the world, women still do

  • Will Palestine Preside Over the Next UN General Assembly?

    The 193-member General Assembly, the highest-ranking policy-making body at the United Nations, is most likely to elect Palestine as its next President in an unprecedented move voting for a “non-member observer state”—a state deprived of a country to represent. The Secretariat has received three nominations for the position of President of the General Assembly beginning

  • Why Tenure Reform Is Key to Curbing Land Degradation

    Máximo Torero is chief economist of the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization in Rome

Sludge

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Yale Environment 360

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Inside Climate News

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Amnesty International

Grist

Truthout

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Labor Notes

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The World – PRI

  • Australia weighs return of families with suspected ISIS ties

    Australia is debating whether or not to allow 34 Australian women and children suspected of links to ISIS fighters to return home. The group recently obtained Australian passports, so officials are legally required to repatriate them. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese adamantly opposes the group's return, saying, “If you make your bed, you lie in it.” Host Marco Werman speaks with […]

  • Lessons from Uruguay's energy transition

    The small South American country of Uruguay is an energy transition success story. Once importing most of its fuel, the country now generates almost all of it's electricity from renewable resources. The transformation is thanks to one man, Ramón Méndez Galain, who served as the country's National Director of Energy from 2008 to 2015. He spoke with The World's Host Carolyn Beeler about how this […]

  • Could a war with Iran turn into a wider regional conflict?

    The US has significantly ratcheted up its military presence in the Middle East in recent weeks. It has sent two aircraft carriers, as well as ships, jets and other assets, as a show of force toward the Iranian government. The two sides are set to meet for nuclear talks tomorrow, but as the escalations continue, The World’s Shirin Jaafari looks at what Iran could do to retaliate.

19th News

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