Saturday, July 4, 2026
El NiĂąo is 'strengthening rapidly,' forecasters warn (Yahoo News) El NiĂąo has formed in the Pacific Ocean and is expected to intensify in the coming months, meteorologists say. "El NiĂąo conditions are already underway and are forecast to strengthen rapidly into a strong event, as accurately anticipated by WMO forecasts," said WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo. "This will intensify the chances of drought and heavy rainfall and the risk of heatwaves on land and marine heatwaves in many regions of the world."
Bar pregnant foreigners from entering US? Trump allies considering all options after Supreme Court defeat. (Politico) President Donald Trump lost his decade-long bid to end birthright citizenship, but the administrationâs zeal to curtail illegal immigration is far from overâinstead, itâs being redirected into policies targeting women who come to the U.S. to give birth so their child will automatically be a citizen. In the hours after the Supreme Court defeat, White House aides and allies discussed a number of policy options, according to two administration officials and several others close to the administration. Suggestions range from prosecuting organizations or individuals involved in âbirth tourism schemesâ or women already in the country for fraud to barring entry of pregnant women entirely. The immediate discussions reflect the administrationâs determination to project momentum on one of the presidentâs signature priorities despite the Supreme Court setback.
Crowded planes and airports set records, straining the U.S. aviation system (NPR) If youâre flying across the country this Fourth of July weekend, youâre in good company. The biggest holiday of the summer is expected to set travel records again, with the Transportation Security Administration preparing to screen more than 18 million travelers at U.S. airports over the next week. U.S. airlines are carrying more passengers than ever, even while operating fewer flights than they did 20 years ago. Theyâre flying bigger planes while filling more seats on each one, and thatâs testing the limits of the aviation system. Thereâs broad agreement that the nationâs air traffic control system has not kept pace with growing demand. The system is thousands of controllers short of full staffing. Even the head of the FAA says the aviation system has âreached its limits.â At an aviation industry conference in May, administrator Bryan Bedford said the FAA needs to do more than just replace aging equipment. âIf we just remove all the â70s, â80s and â90s technology and replace it with 21st century digital tech, weâll have a really super reliable system,â Bedford said. âBut all of the inefficiencies that are essentially designed into the current system, that will be unchanged.â
Man Rescued 8 Days After Quake, a Ray of Joy in Stricken Venezuela (NYT) Eight days after two earthquakes devastated Venezuela, rescuers on Thursday pulled a 44-year-old man alive from the rubble of a collapsed basement, providing a rare moment of hope after a week of desperation. His name was HernĂĄn Gil, and his rescue came as both the death toll and criticism of the governmentâs response to the disaster mounted in a country whose institutions have been decimated by years of economic crisis. The toll reached 2,295 on Wednesday, according to the Venezuelan government and is expected to rise.
NHS to reward people who walk 30 minutes a day (BBC) Getting your steps in has long been linked to better healthâand for the first time the NHS is to start giving people rewards for doing exercise. Early next year, NHS England will launch a "marathon a month" challenge, asking people to walk for around 30 minutes a day. Those who do it every day will hit roughly 26 miles a monthâthe distance of a marathon. Users will be able to log their walks online, or through their phone or smartwatch. And the NHS says those who complete the challenge will then be eligible for rewardsâwhich could include incentives and discounts.
Denmark Has a Big Fourth of July Party. This Year, the U.S. Is Uninvited. (NYT) Every year for the past century, in the green hills of rural Denmark, thousands of Americans and Danes come together to celebrate the Fourth of July. The gathering is billed as the largest Fourth of July celebration outside the United States, and partygoers decked out in the Stars and Stripes sing American songs, eat hot dogs and, because this is Denmark after all, down Danish beer and aquavit. This year itâs going to be a little different. Organizers are expecting the smallest crowd ever. Some locals say they are sitting it out. And the American government has been uninvited, something that has never happened before and in the past would have been unthinkable. President Trumpâs threats to take over Greenland, a Danish territory, have soured the mood. His obsession with Greenland has hijacked what used to be a very tight Danish-American relationship.
The far-right Alternative for Germany is buoyant as it eyes a slice of power in regional elections (AP) The far-right Alternative for Germany is in a buoyant mood as it holds a convention this weekend. It is capitalizing on the unpopularity of a government thatâs trying to reform the sluggish economy, and eyeing promising prospects of power in an eastern region this fall. In last yearâs national election, AfD achieved the best showing by a far-right party since World War II. Its second-place finish left it as the biggest opposition party nationally and the strongest political force in Germanyâs formerly communist east. Its support has since climbed above the 20.8% it won then, with recent assessments putting it in first place. Weidel said recently that â2026 is a year of destiny for AfD.â Mainstream parties say they wonât work with it, a stance often known as a âfirewall.â âAfD is standing before the gates of power, to some extent,â said Albrecht von Lucke, a political expert who edits the magazine Blätter fĂźr deutsche und internationale Politik.
Nord Stream blast ordered by Ukraine, say German prosecutors (DW) Ukrainian state authorities were behind the 2022 sabotage of the Nord Stream gas pipelines linking Russia with Europe, German prosecutors said on Thursday. In a statement detailing the charges brought against suspect Serhii K. on Wednesday, prosecutors said that he and six accomplices had acted âon the orders of state authorities in Ukraine.â According to prosecutors, K., now 50, was an âofficer in the Ukrainian armyâ at the time of the operation, and his accomplices were also âmilitary personnel.â Prosecutors said the plan was to âdestroy the Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2 pipelinesâ with the objective of âpermanently halting gas supplies via the pipelines and preventing Russia from using the revenue from natural gas trade to finance its war efforts.â Germany is one of the biggest military backers of Ukraine in its battle against the ongoing Russian invasion, making the incident potentially diplomatically awkward. Before the war, Germany covered a considerable part of its energy needs with fuel and gas from Russia.
Troop Casualties in Ukraine War Top 2 Million, Study Finds (NYT) More than two million Russian and Ukrainian troops have been killed or wounded in the four years that Russia has been waging war against its neighbor, according to a new study, a bleak milestone as Russiaâs assault grinds on. The study, published on Wednesday by the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, said Russia has borne the heavier toll, with 1.4 million troops killed or wounded since February 2022, when Russia invaded Ukraine. Of that total, 450,000 were killed, a number that is four times greater than U.S. fatalities in all wars combined since World War II. Ukrainian forces have suffered 525,000 to 625,000 casualties, including 125,000 to 150,000 deaths, the study said. Officials cautioned that casualty figures have been difficult to estimate throughout the war because Moscow is believed to routinely undercount its war dead and injured, and Ukraine does not disclose its official figures. The study relied on casualty figures from American and British government estimates, among other sources.
China tells its ethnic minorities to integrate or face consequences with sweeping new unity law (CNN) For years, Chinese leader Xi Jinping has pushed ethnic minority groups like Tibetans and Uyghurs to adopt an identity rooted in Chinese nationality and allegiance to the ruling Communist Party. Now, that push has been codified into a sweeping new law that reaches into classrooms, neighborhoods and homesâand gives Beijing the right to target people outside of its borders that it believes violate its rules. The statute, officially known as the Ethnic Unity and Progress Promotion Law, came into effect on July 1. It bans acts that âundermine ethnic unity or create ethnic divisionâ among Chinaâs 56 officially recognized ethnicities, which include a Han Chinese majority that makes up over 90% of the countryâs 1.4 billion people. Under the new rules, schools and government agencies must use Mandarin Chinese as their primary language; classrooms must ensure that their curriculum âforges a strong sense of the community of the Chinese people,â and all parents must guide children to âlove the Chinese Communist Party and the Chinese people.â Organizations and individuals outside mainland China that âundermineâ ethnic unity or âcreate ethnic divisionâ will also be held liable, the law saysâa broad-based stipulation that critics say will impact activism, research and discussion of ethnic minority issues globally.
Sailors Are Still Stuck in The Gulf Despite Iran War Ceasefire (Bloomberg) At anchor in the Persian Gulf, Abhijit Chopra found out about the US-Iran peace deal when his phone lit up with messages from family and friends. The captain of a crude oil tanker, he had to temper his excitement. There were no signs of celebration from nearby vessels, and no ships making haste towards the Strait of Hormuz. Chopra and his 21-strong crew have been trapped since the war began in late February. At the beginning, they struggled with fear and uncertainty, which ebbed into boredom and a constant battle not to let negative thoughts set in. For more than 120 days they have waited, dining together and bonding by singing old Hindi songs at karaoke. Some 8,000 seafarers are still waiting for a chance to sail out of the Strait of Hormuz.
PCUSA, American Academy of Religion call Gaza war a genocide (Religion News Service) The largest Presbyterian denomination in the United States voted Tuesday evening (June 30) to recognize Israelâs war in Gaza as a genocide, two days after the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) unanimously voted to divest from Palantir Technologies and General Electric Aerospace over technologies used in the war. Tuesdayâs vote at the denominationâs General Assembly in Milwaukee passed 454-15 and called for Presbyterians to also lobby Congress for an arms embargo against Israel and to boycott Israeli products that contribute to the war. Additionally, the American Academy of Religion adopted a Resolution in Solidarity with Gaza last week condemning the Israeli government for the war in Gaza, calling it a genocide. The association of religious studies scholars that boasts 6,000 members worldwide referred to the war at its Annual Business Meeting in Atlanta as a âscholasticide,â or an âintentional effort to comprehensively destroy the Palestinian education system.â The motion was approved by 98% of members, according to a news release. The religious organizationsâ resolutions add to growing criticism accusing Israel of committing genocide in Gazaâa claim Israel has repeatedly denied.














