Pollitify :: Find Events, Organize, Change

Pollitify is your one stop source for grass roots activism. We list events near you as well as offering you a suite of software tools for creating and organizing political protests. If reasoning by analogy works for you, you can think of us as Mobilize with the difference that not only are we free but we also offer you the tools for putting on protests not just promoting an event.

Upcoming Events in the Next Week

No Events for Your Query

We're sorry but there weren't any events for your query. Please try broadening your search. Also -- this could be us -- Pollitify is just getting started and, shocking, I know, there can at times be ahem software bugs. We are also still tirelessly scouring the Internet for more sources of events. Please check back later this week when you will be able to submit your own events.

If you just want to see functionality then please try searching for Indiana as the state. We are an Indiana company and events in Indiana always seem to show up first (at least for now).

September 2025

SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
31
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
1
2
3
4

Suggest an Event

Want an event to appear here? Just fill the form below. A couple of notes:

  • Free. Adding an event is free. Of course it is free, we are pro democracy and we believe that the more grass roots events there are, the faster we achieve our shared goal: overthrowing fascism in America.
  • Mobilize. Have a mobilize url for your event? Just drop it in the field below and we will automatically add the right information.
  • Fast. To prevent spam, when you add an event without having an account, we do review the event before making it live but we're striving to get events up the same day.

Thank you for adding your event. Every event, whether a protest, a rally, a march or something else takes us closer to our goals.

Team Pollitify
The protest nerds behind this software

 


I want to add an event by:

Filling Out a Form

Adding Your Mobilize Url

Pasting in the Text I was Going to Post on the Web

Uploading my Event Flier so You Can Do the Work for Me

Adding All Your Events At Once by Importing Your Google Sheet

0 0 0

Trump threatens Chicago with "Department of WAR" ahead of planned crackdown (Justin Kaufmann/Axios)

Justin Kaufmann / Axios:
Trump threatens Chicago with “Department of WAR” ahead of planned crackdown  —  President Trump on Saturday threatened to unleash “the Department of WAR” on Chicago in a Truth Social image evoking the film “Apocalypse Now.” … - The text on the image says “Chipocalypse Now.”

2025-09-06 23:10:01 UTC

Axios

0 0 0

RFK. Jr's family members say he is a 'threat' to Americans' health and call for his resignation (Associated Press)

Associated Press:
RFK.  Jr's family members say he is a ‘threat’ to Americans' health and call for his resignation  —  Members of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s family are calling for him to step down as health secretary following a contentious congressional hearing this past week, during which the Trump Cabinet …

2025-09-06 23:10:01 UTC

Associated Press

0 0 0

DOJ says names of two associates Epstein wired $100k and $250k to should stay secret (Tom Winter/NBC News)

Tom Winter / NBC News:
DOJ says names of two associates Epstein wired $100k and $250k to should stay secret  —  The Justice Department request came after NBC News asked a federal judge to unseal the names of two people Epstein paid and helped protect from prosecution.  —  The Justice Department on Friday asked …

2025-09-06 21:35:00 UTC

NBC News

0 0 0

The Trump Administration Wants Your Voter Registration Data. Why? (Matt Cohen/Democracy Docket)

Matt Cohen / Democracy Docket:
The Trump Administration Wants Your Voter Registration Data.  Why?  —  In recent weeks, the Department of Justice (DOJ) has doubled down on its sweeping bid to wrangle private voter data from states — including by threatening legal action.  —  The department has received a range of responses …

2025-09-06 21:30:01 UTC

Democracy Docket

0 0 0

Trump claims Chicago is 'world's most dangerous city'. The four most violent ones are all in red states (George Chidi/The Guardian)

George Chidi / The Guardian:
Trump claims Chicago is 'world's most dangerous city'.  The four most violent ones are all in red states  —  Jackson, Birmingham, St Louis and Memphis had the highest murder rates in 2024 - all are Republican-led states  —  As Donald Trump threatens to deploy national guard units to Chicago and Baltimore …

2025-09-06 20:35:00 UTC

The Guardian

0 0 0

Settlement Talks Stall Between Harvard and the Trump Administration (New York Times)

New York Times:
Settlement Talks Stall Between Harvard and the Trump Administration  —  One major reason is said to be an emerging divide within the administration over whether the current framework is too favorable to Harvard.  —  Negotiations between Harvard University and the White House have stalled …

2025-09-06 19:40:01 UTC

New York Times

0 0 0

U.S. Open Orders Broadcasters to Censor Reactions to Trump (Ben Rothenberg/Bounces)

Ben Rothenberg / Bounces:
U.S. Open Orders Broadcasters to Censor Reactions to Trump  —  NEW YORK — Following up on the earlier news first reported by Bounces about Rolex's invitation, I have further new information to report about the planning around presenting President Donald Trump's appearance at the U.S. Open.

2025-09-06 19:00:02 UTC

Bounces

0 0 0

Grand Juries in D.C. Reject Wave of Charges Under Trump's Crackdown (Alan Feuer/New York Times)

Alan Feuer / New York Times:
Grand Juries in D.C. Reject Wave of Charges Under Trump's Crackdown  —  The persistent rejections suggest that the grand jurors may have had enough of prosecutors seeking harsh charges in a highly politicized environment.  —  In the three weeks since President Trump flooded the streets …

2025-09-06 18:30:01 UTC

New York Times

0 0 0

West Point alumni group cancels award ceremony for Tom Hanks (Dan Lamothe/Washington Post)

Dan Lamothe / Washington Post:
West Point alumni group cancels award ceremony for Tom Hanks  —  The decision follows a series of political controversies involving the Trump administration that have rattled the prestigious military institution.  —  Just now  —  The alumni association at the U.S. Military Academy …

2025-09-06 17:10:00 UTC

Washington Post

0 0 0

This Week in Democracy – Week 33: Trump Loses in Court. Again

Trump outside the White House. Photo by Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

Federal judges dealt Donald Trump a series of blows this week on everything from his fight against Harvard to his move to cut nearly $5 billion in foreign aid to his administration’s plans to deport migrant children in the dead of the night.

It’s always refreshing to see at least the lower court judges push back on Trump and his illegal and authoritarian madness. But even so, the losing streak has not slowed down Trump and his allies’ efforts to harm democracy, undermine the Constitution, hurt free societies worldwide, and put Americans’ health at risk.

From ordering an unauthorized military strike on an alleged drug boat and escalating tensions with Venezuela to threatening another Democratic-led city with a possible National Guard deployment, here’s what Trump did this week that underscores the growth of authoritarianism in his second term:

Saturday, August 30

  • On Truth Social, Trump said he will sign an executive order to make voter ID mandatory for elections, a move he cannot legally make without Congress changing election laws. He also repeated calls to ban mail-in voting for most Americans and for the use of “PAPER BALLOTS ONLY!!!”

  • The New York Times reported that Trump pushed Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for a Nobel Peace Prize nomination after the president took credit for a ceasefire between India and Pakistan during a June phone call. Modi pushed back on Trump’s claims, saying the ceasefire was directly settled by the two countries, and refused to engage in a dialogue about the Nobel Peace Prize. Weeks later, Trump began imposing substantial tariffs on India.

  • ICE is set to gain access to spyware from the Tel Aviv-based company Paragon after the Trump administration reinstated its contract, which had been dropped by President Joe Biden. The spyware is designed to hack phones and both read and record private, encrypted messages. It has reportedly been used to target activists and journalists in Europe.

    Subscribe now

Sunday, August 31

  • A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration from deporting approximately 600 unaccompanied Guatemalan children back to their home country, while some of the children were already on planes ready for takeoff to Guatemala.

  • On Truth Social, Trump urged ABC News to fire commentators Donna Brazile and Chris Christie, calling Brazile “dumb as a rock, and a liar.” Trump also said the network should “pay me more!!!,” citing its $16 million libel settlement with the president in 2024.

  • Trump also baselessly warned that the US would, in many ways, “become a Third World Nation, with no hope of GREATNESS again,” if last week’s ruling by a federal appeals court, which found most of the president’s tariffs to be illegal, isn’t “immediately cancelled!”

  • The Trump administration suspended nearly all types of visitor visas for Palestinian passport holders.

  • Meanwhile, the Washington Post reported on a post-war plan, devised by a group of Israelis, circulating within the Trump administration that would ethnically cleanse Gaza and turn the enclave into a tourism resort and high-tech manufacturing and technology hub, complete with the “Elon Musk Smart Manufacturing Zone,” the “MBS Ring,” and “Trump Riviera and Islands.” Under the plan – dubbed the GREAT Trust proposal – Palestinians who leave Gaza will be offered $5,000 and subsidies to cover one year of food costs and four years of rent in another country. As Zeteo contributor Diana Buttu noted, that pales in comparison to what Israeli settlers received when Israel evacuated them from Gaza in 2005.

Monday, September 1

  • On Truth Social, Trump announced that he will give former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Giuliani, who previously served as Trump’s personal lawyer, helped lead Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election. He was disbarred by a New York state appellate court in 2024 and reached a settlement with two Georgia election workers he defamed.

  • The New York Times reported that nearly 450,000 federal employees were stripped of their union protections in August due to Trump’s executive orders terminating their collective bargaining agreements.

  • Nine former directors at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) penned an op-ed in the Times warning that Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is “endangering every American’s health,” and adding that his actions are “unlike anything we had ever seen at the agency and unlike anything our country had ever experienced.”

    Subscribe now

Tuesday, September 2

  • Trump authorized a military strike on a boat in the Caribbean that his administration alleges was occupied by 11 members of the Tren de Aragua gang who were transporting drugs from Venezuela. The strike, which Trump said killed all 11 on board, took place without congressional approval and may have violated international human rights and maritime law. It remains unclear under what US legal or constitutional authority Trump took action or how the military determined that the individuals aboard the vessel were Tren de Aragua members. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth later said the military will keep assets in the region and strike anyone “trafficking in those waters who we know is a designated narco terrorist.”

  • A federal judge ruled that Trump’s deployment of the military to Los Angeles violated the Posse Comitatus Act, which prohibits the army from performing domestic law enforcement actions without authorization from Congress. While the judge noted that it’s legal to deploy the officials to protect federal property, he said that Trump is using the military as a “national police force with the President as its chief.”

  • A federal appeals court blocked the Trump administration from rapidly deporting Venezuelans accused of being in a gang under the Alien Enemies Act, finding there was no “invasion” or “predatory incursion” to do so, which is required under the 1798 wartime law.

  • The House Oversight Committee “released” more than 33,000 documents from the Epstein files, but they appeared to contain information already in the public domain, with Democrats saying 97% of them weren’t new.

  • The Wall Street Journal reported that the Trump family earned as much as a $5 billion windfall after Trump’s venture, World Liberty Financial, opened trading of a new cryptocurrency. This likely makes the venture the Trump family’s most valuable asset, worth more than their property portfolio.

  • A federal appeals court ruled that the Trump administration can move forward with the termination of more than $16 billion in grants authorized by the Biden administration for non-profit organizations to fight climate change.

    Give a Zeteo Gift Subscription

  • The Department of Homeland Security said it would offer to pay the salaries and benefits of state and local police officers in jurisdictions that join a program to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement. The offer also includes up to 25% of an officer’s salary in overtime costs, along with performance-based bonuses for agencies in the program.

  • A federal appeals court reinstated a Biden appointee to the Federal Trade Commission, finding that Trump didn’t demonstrate “inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office” when he fired her in March.

  • The Washington Post reported that Hegseth plans to reassign up to 600 military lawyers to serve as temporary immigration judges after a request for assistance from the Department of Homeland Security. The move has raised concerns, including from one person involved in the planning of their reassignment, who says officers may not have experience or would receive insufficient training for immigration court proceedings, including deportation hearings.

  • A group of 85 top climate scientists warned that a recent climate assessment by Trump’s energy department “fails to adequately represent the current scientific understanding of climate change,” adding that, “No attempt appears to have been made to balance the points of view” by members working on the assessment. The scientists also said that the group “appears to have been personally recruited by the Secretary of Energy to advance a particular viewpoint favored by DOE leadership.”

  • AP reported that the Trump administration is requiring parents trying to reunite with their children who entered the US alone to attend identification checks where they may be questioned by immigration officers, according to a July policy memo. Legal advocacy organizations have said the move has led to some of the parents being arrested.

  • Speaking to reporters, Trump said he will be sending federal law enforcement to both Chicago and Baltimore, but didn’t specify a timeline for the deployment. Trump also said that many of the people arrested as part of his DC crackdown on crime were “born to be criminals.”

  • DC Mayor Muriel Bowser, a Democrat, issued an executive order to provide indefinite coordination with federal law enforcement. As the Washington Post writes, the order “may quell any showdown over what happens” when Trump’s 30-day federal takeover expires next week.

  • Republican Rep. Thomas Massie introduced what’s known as a discharge petition in an effort to force a vote on the release of the Epstein files. The measure must receive 218 signatures to succeed. A White House official later told NBC News in an email that Republicans deciding to sign on to the “attention-seeking” petition “would be viewed as a very hostile act to the administration.”

  • Republicans on the House Rules Committee voted against an amendment that would require the speaker to hang a commemorative plaque for police officers who protected lawmakers during the Jan. 6 insurrection, even though the plaque was commissioned by Congress more than three years ago.

  • The non-profit whistleblower and advocacy organization, Government Accountability Project, sent a letter to lawmakers and oversight agencies to call for investigations into the “illegal retaliation” by the Trump administration against more than 30 FEMA employees, who were suspended and put on paid leave after signing an open letter warning Congress about issues at the agency. The letter said the suspensions “blatantly violate the federal laws protecting whistleblowers” and asked lawmakers to reinstate the affected employees.

    Share

  • NPR reported that the US Citizenship and Immigration Services issued a new policy last week that bans nongovernmental groups like the League of Women Voters from registering new voters at naturalization ceremonies, in a move the League’s CEO calls “an attempt to keep new citizens from accessing their full rights.”

  • CNN reported that the Trump administration is expected to extend its military orders to keep National Guard troops who were deployed to DC in the area through December to ensure the service members receive benefits, which require them to participate in active orders for more than 30 days.

  • Attorney General Pam Bondi issued several immigration rulings setting new precedents for immigration judges across the country, which will limit asylum for immigrant families targeted by gangs, along with victims of domestic violence.

Wednesday, September 3

  • The New York Times reported that Trump’s advisers have discussed offering positions in the administration to New York City Mayor Eric Adams and the city’s Republican mayoral candidate Curtis Sliwa in an effort to help former Governor Andrew Cuomo defeat frontrunner and Democratic nominee Zohran Mamdani in November’s general election. Politico later reported that Adams, who met with Trump’s team in Florida earlier this week, was offered a position at the US Department of Housing and Urban Development.

  • During a press conference where survivors of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell’s abuse called on lawmakers and the Justice Department to release the entirety of the files related to the sex traffickers, survivor Lisa Phillips announced that the group would create a confidential list of Epstein associates on their own if the government doesn’t take action, saying, “We will confidently compile the names we all know were regularly in the Epstein world.”

  • The Trump administration filed an emergency appeal with the Supreme Court to reverse a lower court’s ruling that found the majority of the president’s tariffs illegal, claiming in the filing that tariffs “are promoting peace and unprecedented economic prosperity" and warning that a failure to allow them to move forward “would expose our nation to trade retaliation without effective defenses and thrust America back to the brink of economic catastrophe.” The administration also filed a motion to expedite the case.

  • More than 1,000 current and former Department of Health and Human Services employees signed a letter calling for RFK Jr. to resign, saying he “continues to endanger the nation’s health.” They say if Kennedy doesn’t resign, Trump and Congress should appoint a new secretary, “one whose qualifications and experience ensure that health policy is informed by independent and unbiased peer-reviewed science.”

  • AP reported that Trump is expected to ask the Supreme Court to overturn a jury decision in a civil lawsuit that found him liable for sexually abusing writer E. Jean Carroll, along with defamation, according to a filing last week that saw his lawyers ask the Supreme Court to extend a deadline for challenging the verdict to mid-November as Trump “intends to seek review” of “significant issues” related to the trial and an appeals court upholding the decision. In response, Carroll’s lawyer said, “We do not believe that President Trump will be able to present any legal issues in the Carroll cases that merit review” by the Supreme Court.

  • The House voted to toss a censure resolution against Democratic Rep. LaMonica McIver, which would have also resulted in her removal from the Committee on Homeland Security. McIver was charged in May with assaulting and interfering with ICE agents at an immigration detention facility in New Jersey. She has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

  • House Republicans voted to establish a new subcommittee tasked with another investigation of the Jan. 6 insurrection.

    Visit Zeteo's Merch Store

  • The Washington Post reported that a senior Justice Department official recently tried to gain access to voting equipment used by two Republican clerks in Missouri during the 2020 presidential election, a request the outlet called “unusual.”

  • The Post also reported that the top vaccine regulator at the Food and Drug Administration, who is an ally of RFK Jr., is requiring new clinical trials before allowing pharmaceutical companies to claim that getting multiple respiratory virus vaccines, including for COVID-19 and the flu, is safe and effective, despite long-standing guidance encouraging multiple immunizations at the same time.

  • The Trump administration terminated the Temporary Protected Status of nearly 270,000 immigrants from Venezuela who enrolled in a 2021 program under the Biden administration, and encouraged them to self-deport from the US or risk facing deportation proceedings.

  • Trump suggested that he may deploy National Guard troops to New Orleans, a blue city in the red state of Louisiana.

  • Trump renewed his threat to revoke Rosie O’Donnell’s US citizenship – a move he legally cannot do. Trump’s Truth Social post was shared by the official White House Twitter account along with a distorted photo of his prominent critic.

  • The Department of Homeland Security opened a new immigration detention facility at the notorious Louisiana State Penitentiary, known as Angola, where 51 immigrants have already been taken into custody. Angola, the largest maximum-security prison in the US, was built on the grounds of a cotton plantation, and individuals incarcerated there are forced to work in the fields in extreme heat for as little as pennies an hour and face punishment if they refuse to work.

    Subscribe now

  • A federal judge blocked the Trump administration from freezing over $2 billion in federal research grants from Harvard University, calling the move illegal and accusing the administration of using “antisemitism as a smokescreen for a targeted, ideologically-motivated assault on this country’s premier universities.”

  • A federal judge blocked the Trump administration from canceling $4.9 billion in foreign aid that had been appropriated by Congress, thwarting the president’s attempt to use a “pocket rescission” to claw back the funding. In his decision, the judge ordered the release of $11.5 billion in funds that are set to expire at the end of the month.

  • US Citizenship and Immigration Services director Joseph Edlow said the Trump administration is planning to make the US citizenship test harder, calling the current test “just too easy.”

  • Army Secretary Dan Driscoll extended orders for National Guard troops to remain on active duty in DC until Nov. 30, though Trump could still terminate the mission earlier.

Thursday, September 4

  • Reuters reported that current and former FBI employees are concerned that Trump’s use of agents in his DC law enforcement takeover is exposing the agency’s fleet of unmarked cars, which could compromise its national security and surveillance work.

  • The Wall Street Journal reported that Trump’s Justice Department launched an investigation into Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook, following two criminal referrals for alleged mortgage fraud by the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The investigation, which has already resulted in the issuing of subpoenas, is being led by Trump’s “weaponization czar” and DOJ special attorney Ed Martin, who sent a letter to Fed chair Jerome Powell last month calling for him to fire Cook. In response, her lawyer noted that questions over how she described her properties aren’t fraud, “but it takes nothing for this DOJ to undertake a new politicized investigation, and they appear to have just done it again.”

  • The recently fired CDC director, Susan Monarez, penned an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal warning that while she lost her job, “America’s children could lose far more,” noting that she was directed to preapprove recommendations from a vaccine advisory panel “filled with people who have publicly expressed antivaccine rhetoric” without reviewing them. She added, “The CDC can’t fulfill its obligation to the American people if its leader can’t demand proof in decision-making.”

    Share

  • ProPublica reported that three members of Trump’s Cabinet – Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin – have claimed more than one primary residence on mortgage applications, the same practice Trump has targeted political enemies over. In a statement, a White House spokesperson called the report “another hit piece” and claimed the Cabinet members “have followed the law” and are “fully compliant with all ethical obligations.”

  • In a press release, the US Citizenship and Immigration Services announced that it’s adding law enforcement agents for the first time. Their tasks will include making arrests, carrying firearms, and executing search and arrest warrants for immigrants who “violate America’s immigration laws.”

  • The Pentagon approved the use of a Chicago-area Navy base as a hub for the Department of Homeland Security as part of its crackdown on undocumented immigrants. The base could also be used to house National Guard troops or military members if Trump deploys them to the city.

  • The president of Northwestern University announced that he would resign following the Trump administration’s freezing of nearly $800 million in research funding, calling for the school to preserve “academic freedom, integrity, and independence.”

  • New York Attorney General Letitia James filed a notice of appeal in an effort to reverse an August ruling and reinstate a roughly $500 million fine against Trump in his civil fraud case.

  • Secretary of State Marco Rubio placed new sanctions on three Palestinian non-governmental organizations that have participated in efforts by the International Criminal Court to investigate Israel’s war crimes in Gaza, saying in a press release that the department “will actively oppose actions that threaten our national interests and infringe on the sovereignty of the United States and our allies, including Israel.”

  • The acting deputy chief of a Justice Department unit was caught on a hidden camera by the far-right O’Keefe Media Group saying that the government will “redact every Republican” from a list of Epstein associates and “leave all the liberal, Democratic people in those files.” He also said Ghislaine Maxwell was transferred to a minimum-security prison in an effort to offer “her something to keep her mouth shut.” In a statement, the official said his comments were based on “what I’ve learned in the media and not from anything I’ve done at or learned via work.” On Twitter, a DOJ spokesperson said the official’s comments “have absolutely zero bearing with reality and reflect a total lack of knowledge of the DOJ’s review process.”

  • Trump filed an emergency appeal with the Supreme Court to block the reinstatement of a Biden-appointed Federal Trade Commission member and let her termination proceed while the legality of the move is challenged in court.

    Subscribe now

  • Multiple outlets reported that the Justice Department is considering banning trans people from owning firearms by designating being trans as a mental illness that could disqualify someone from possessing a firearm under existing regulations.

  • A federal appeals court temporarily authorized the continuation of operations at the Florida immigration detention facility known as “Alligator Alcatraz” until a lower court makes a final decision in the case.

  • The Financial Times reported that the Trump administration is expected to halt security assistance programs for some European countries, including one designed to train and arm militaries in Eastern Europe that would be on the frontline of any conflict with Russia.

  • Trump’s Justice Department sued the city of Boston and Mayor Michelle Wu over sanctuary policies it calls an “intentional effort to obstruct” the enforcement of federal immigration laws.

  • DC sued the Trump administration to block the president’s federal law enforcement takeover, arguing the deployment of out-of-state troops violates the Constitution and federal law, writing in the lawsuit, “No American jurisdiction should be involuntarily subjected to military occupation.”

  • A federal appeals court temporarily lifted a judge’s order restricting the Trump administration’s use of National Guard troops in Los Angeles as the president appeals the ruling.

  • In a court filing, the Trump administration warned that the government will seek to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia back to El Salvador if his attempt to open an asylum case in the US is successful, arguing the move would nullify an earlier ruling meant to prevent him from being sent back to his home country.

  • PBS laid off 34 employees due to Trump’s defunding of the public broadcaster.

Friday, September 5

  • The New York Times reported that Trump advisers are working on a plan to nominate New York City Mayor Eric Adams to be the US ambassador to Saudi Arabia if he drops out of the upcoming mayoral election. In a statement, Adams said, “While I will always listen if called to serve our country, no formal offers have been made” for a position in the Trump administration and that he is still running for re-election.

  • The Times also reported that in 2019, during Trump’s first term, the president greenlit a top secret operation which sent a team of Navy SEALs to North Korea to plant an electronic device in an effort to intercept the communications of Kim Jong-Un. The mission was unsuccessful after the SEALs killed a boat crew of unarmed civilians and sank their bodies. The Trump administration never told Congressional leaders about the operation, potentially violating federal law.

  • Trump went on an unhinged rant on Truth Social about the Epstein scandal, which he once again blamed on Democrats who “only brought [it] back to life … because they are doing so poorly.” He claimed that Democratic lawmakers “don’t care about the victims,” calling the controversy around the Epstein files “merely another Democrat HOAX … in order to deflect and distract” from Trump’s success.

    Donate to Zeteo

  • Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp announced that the Georgia National Guard is deploying approximately 300 troops to DC to assist with Trump’s federal law enforcement takeover.

  • The US ordered the deployment of 10 F-35 fighter jets to Puerto Rico to assist with military operations against drug cartels in the Caribbean.

  • A federal judge blocked the Trump administration from ending the Temporary Protected Status of more than one million people from Haiti and Venezuela.

  • Trump signed an executive order to make the Department of War the secondary title for the Department of Defense, a move that gets around Congressional approval to formally rename a federal agency.

  • He also signed another executive order that would establish a designation for state sponsors of wrongful detention, which will allow the US to punish countries for illegally detaining US citizens or taking them hostage.

  • Speaking to reporters, Trump responded to Venezuela flying jets over US ships, saying, “If they put us in a dangerous position, they will be shot down.”

  • He announced that the US will host the G20 summit in 2026 at his resort in Miami, where the attendees will be billed at cost.

  • Trump once again called for the release of Tina Peters, a former county clerk in Colorado who was convicted of several charges after using someone’s security badge to allow an associate of Trump ally and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell to access county election equipment following the 2020 presidential election. While Trump added that his administration is “going to do something” about it, the president isn’t able to pardon individuals convicted of state charges.

  • Fox reported that ICE sent an email to Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s lawyers to notify them that the agency now plans to deport him to Eswatini based on his fear of prosecution or torture, a claim ICE says “is hard to take seriously.”

  • “Take it down today, right now!” Trump ordered the removal of the White House Peace Vigil tent, ending a 44-year protest against nuclear weapons and war, after a far-right journalist told him it had become an “eyesore” and “anti-Trump.”

Did you miss previous weeks? Catch up here.


Subscribe to Zeteo to make sure you get ‘This Week in Democracy’ in your inbox every week.

If you are already a Zeteo subscriber but would like to increase your support for our accountability journalism in this era of Trump and authoritarianism, please do consider a donation, too.

2025-09-06 17:01:42 UTC

0 0 0

The Jeffrey Epstein cover-up is an affront to US democracy (Rebecca Solnit/The Guardian)

Rebecca Solnit / The Guardian:
The Jeffrey Epstein cover-up is an affront to US democracy  —  Democracy means a society and system in which everyone's rights matter.  Rapists count on this being untrue - and Trump is proving them right  —  Rape is a crime against democracy in the most immediate sense of equality between individuals …

2025-09-06 16:45:00 UTC

The Guardian

0 0 0

Miami Herald, New York Times seek to unseal records on Jeffrey Epstein's estate (Julie K. Brown/Miami Herald)

Julie K. Brown / Miami Herald:
Miami Herald, New York Times seek to unseal records on Jeffrey Epstein's estate  —  The Miami Herald has joined an effort by The New York Times asking a judge to unseal financial records from Jeffrey Epstein's estate in the U.S. Virgin Islands.  —  The records — written …

2025-09-06 16:15:00 UTC

Miami Herald

0 0 0

Pluralistic: Stock buybacks are stock swindles (06 Sep 2025)

Pluralistic: Stock buybacks are stock swindles (06 Sep 2025)

2025-09-06 15:51:17 UTC

06 Sep 2025

0 0 0

Makary on reports of RFK Jr. linking Tylenol, autism: 'We're still in our discussions' (Ashleigh Fields/The Hill)

Ashleigh Fields / The Hill:
Makary on reports of RFK Jr. linking Tylenol, autism: 'We're still in our discussions'  —  Food and Drug Administration (FDA) commissioner Marty Makary on Friday said the agency has not finalized a forthcoming report about autism after the Wall Street Journal reported Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr …

2025-09-06 15:05:02 UTC

The Hill

0 0 0

Pentagon officials fume over Trump's Department of War rebrand (Politico)

Politico:
Pentagon officials fume over Trump's Department of War rebrand … “This is purely for domestic political audiences,” said a former defense official.  “Not only will this cost millions of dollars, it will have absolutely zero impact on Chinese or Russian calculations.

2025-09-06 13:25:00 UTC

Politico

0 0 0

RIP Mercury, Hello Retrograde! How Administrators Failed to Stop the Presses at The University of Texas-Dallas

It would have been easy for the small team of student journalists at The University of Texas at Dallas to just crash. Administrators had been throwing obstacles in front of them since October 7. But the students forged a new path. A path riddled with craters, bumps, and sometimes stars. And as for administrators…

“University administrators are not competent. They are career bureaucrats. … They’re not there because they are the best in their field. They’re there because they had good political maneuverings to get into their position. … They’re there because they make the school look good sometimes. So if there is pressure on you, it’s not because they know the law. It’s not because you did something wrong. …They will do their violations and they will move on. You’re just another student to them unless you stand up for yourself. And I think we really show that you can stand up for yourself and be successful.”

That’s a quote from Gregorio Olivares Gutierrez, editor-in-chief of The University of Texas at Dallas’s first guerilla newspaper, The Retrograde.

Maria Shaikh is the editing manager. 

Shaikh is an undergraduate student at The University of Texas at Dallas, — which she and Gutierrez frequently abbreviate to UTD — in her final year studying biochemistry. She became interested in student journalism during her first semester, when the school newspaper was covering a series of bizarre tragedies surrounding students and alum. Noticing the expertise and care the paper put into discussing these crimes, Shaikh decided to apply — starting as a copy editor before moving up in the editorial team. Gutierrez joined the local paper for similar reasons. He’s currently in his third year, studying political science and philosophy as a pre-law student. 

The paper they had both joined was called the Mercury. 

The Mercury had been the official paper of The University of Texas at Dallas since 1980. When Gutierrez joined their staff, the Mercury had been delving into investigative journalism. 

“The first thing that they asked me to work on was reaching out to the people on the sex offenders registry on campus,” said Gutierrez, “… I learned a lot about that, just how that operates on campus. Then I covered a car crash where someone just drove their car right through an apartment building on campus. I got to walk onto the crime scene, allegedly snuck under police tape to go and get closer pictures.”

By the middle of the fall semester, Gutierrez was part of the editorial team — and the Mercury faced its first hurdle. 

“We had some Spirit Rocks on the university that students would spray paint. They’d been doing it for decades. I think they put them there in the early 2000s. They’d been there for over 20 years for a variety of different causes,” said Gutierrez. 

The rocks had been a space for students to share their political opinions, however controversial. Students thought it would be no different when it came to Palestine/Israel. 

On Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas fighters attacked southern Israel, killing more than 1100 people and taking roughly 250 people hostage

Israel began an unwavering bombing of Gaza, killing journalists, aid workers, and an enormous amount of civilians — many of whom are children, and destroying the majority of Gaza’s infrastructure, including hospitals and schools. Two years later, the military offensive remains ongoing, and has been characterized by both Human Rights Watch and leading scholars as a genocide

In the early days of Israel’s attack, people across the country protested, many calling for an immediate ceasefire. For students at The University of Texas at Dallas, this manifested in painting messages on the Spirit Rocks. 

“It was all very peaceful. At one point, the university sent out an email commending everybody on how the political conversation on the rocks was going peacefully,” said Shaikh. 

“We had students expressing support for Zionism. We had students expressing support for Palestine’s liberation. And they were going back and forth,” said Gutierrez. 


But some of the graffiti began to attract attention, including one piece of graffiti where students had painted: “Zionism = Nazism.”

Photo by Katherine Ho, Courtesy of the Mercury 

Zionist students painted: “We Are Winning.”

Over Thanksgiving Break, the administration had the rocks removed. They justified the removal in an email, claiming the rocks were being used for “extended political discourse.”

The university had previously emphasized their openness to diversity of opinion, belief, and identity; and their respect for student journalism. But with the removal of the Spirit Rocks, things began to change. 

“It symbolizes UTD beginning its censorship regime on campus,” said Gutierrez.

“Let’s just get rid of this long standing forum of free expression,” Gutierrez continued, “and then after that, what do we see? We see protests get cracked down. We see student expression limited. Students are now banned from using chalk on campus.”

“A conditional ban,” Shaikh chimed in, as the ban is only enforced on students chalking in favor of Palestine. According to Shaikh and Gutierrez, far-right Christian groups have been chalking on campus since the ban, without any repercussions. 

“This is not in any of our policy either. This is a guideline that is not publicly available until you violate it. And that’s the kind of stance that UTD has really adopted…” Gutierrez continued. “They’re still doing their PR response to the people who reach out to them whenever this issue comes up again, saying, ‘we love student expression, we love student journalism.’ But their actions since the Spirit Rock removal have screamed the opposite.”

News agencies outside of the school began to take notice. 

The Foundation of Individual Rights and Expression used the Mercury’s coverage of the Spirit Rocks’ removal to critique the university as a clear violation of the First Amendment. State-wide news agencies picked up the story too, including the Dallas Observer and the Texas Tribune, citing the Mercury in their stories. 

The school responded by telling administrators not to speak directly to the Mercury anymore, a ban that Shaikh and Gutierrez only found out about when they attempted to cover a routine piece on the school food pantry. 

“[W]e met a level of resistance that had hitherto been non-existent. It wasn’t just ‘Don’t talk to us, go to the office of communications.’ It was ‘You may not talk to us.’ ‘We will not do anything with you,’” said Gutierrez. 

Interviewing university staff became nearly impossible after that, with staff directing them to the Office of Communication for comment on any article. 

But things hit a thundering crash with the creation of the “Gaza Liberation Plaza” on May 1, 2024. 

Students gathered on Chess Plaza, dawned with food, signs, and makeshift walls, with over 100 students joining throughout the day. The encampment at The University of Texas at Dallas came as a wave of encampments swept the country. 

But no sooner was it built up, that it was violently taken down. 

12 hours after the encampment began, the cops showed up. 

“May 1, there has never been anything like it. Over 60 police officers from over five different agencies, including the DPS of Texas coming in with full riot gear with snipers posted. That has never happened on campus before, and it hasn’t happened since,” Gutierrez said. 

Photo by Surjaditya Sarkar, Courtesy of the Mercury 

And the Mercury was there to cover everything, from the start of the encampment in the early morning, to its violent demolition by 4 p.m. 

“We now had to write another story,” Gutierrez confirmed, “because the police had violently raided the encampment and fully dispersed it with armored vehicles, tear gas launchers, riflemen, snipers on the roof, police helicopters flying around. It was very, uh I guess, reminiscent of Brown Shirts in Italy or the Nazi SS just walking in, rounding up peaceful people, violently removing them, putting them in armored vans. So it was an exciting first day for us as journalists.” 

Gutierrez called it their “first day” because May 1, 2024, was their debut in upper management. 

It was Shaikh’s first day as the managing editor of the Mercury, and Gutierrez’s first day as editor-in-chief — and it was during this major event, that they had to hold the reins of the student paper for the first time. 

The Mercury documented the encampment to its conclusion. Police violently destroyed the encampment, and arrested 21 people including students, professors, and community members, using force. The Mercury even waited outside the jailhouse, with some student reporters choosing to sleep outside the jail holding those arrested from the encampment. By May 20, 2024, the Mercury published the Protest Issue, an all-inclusive special edition. 

And the crackdowns kept coming —  two days after they released the Protest Issue, Jonathan Stewart, the Mercury’s advisor, was demoted; ostensibly due to a lack of oversight during the May 20 Protest Issue. No procedure was cited for his demotion. And their new advisor, Jenny Huffenberger, accused Shaikh and Gutierrez of journalistic malpractice. 

“I am told…that my head is next on the chopping block” says Gutierrez, referring to a conversation between him and his demoted advisor. 

And it was. By the beginning of the next semester, Gutierrez was fired. 

The firing came after numerous attempts by Shaikh and Gutierrez to get the school on the record for their conduct during the month of May. The administration refused to comment. Frustrated, Shaikh and Gutierrez filed a public records request for documents relevant to the school’s handling of pro-Palestinian protests between April 29, 2024 and May 3, 2024. A decision the Mercury was advised against taking, as it might anger the administration. 

So in July 2024, they filed a public records request. In response, the school levied a $9,000 fee for obtaining the records; reduced to approximately $3,000 after negotiation. The students fundraised, and the records are now theirs. 

But the fight was only beginning. By the beginning of the next semester, things became worse. 

On Sept. 14, 2024, Gutierrez was fired. He filed an appeal with the Student Media Operating Board, citing numerous violations of the Student Media Bylaws. But despite his attempts, the Board refused to reinstate him.

And the Mercury went on strike, refusing to publish non-strike related material until their demands were met.

Reinstate Gutierrez as editor-in-chief immediately, amend the student media bylaws so they cannot be egregiously used and twisted to penalize students with no real evidence or due process ever again, and democratize the way the editor-in-chief of the Mercury is chosen,” said Shaikh.. 

But instead of reinstating him, the administration had other plans. On Oct. 1, 2024, the Board fired everyone at the Mercury, leaving the newspaper without staff. 

This mass firing came in the wake of soaring readership. Readership of the printed issue is gauged by the rate at which readers pick up the newspaper at kiosks around campus. The pickup rate before Shaikh and Gutierrez took over was, on average, 60%, according to documentation they’d inherited. After taking the reins of the Mercury in May 2024, the paper’s popularity grew in double digits. 

“Our first issue, the May 20 issue, had a 99% pick-up rate. Our second issue, which was in the middle of the summer, notoriously low, had a 95% pick up rate. Our issue when we were back on campus, 98% pickup rate. And those were the three issues we had prior to the strike issue. The strike issue had a 100% pickup rate,” commented Shaikh. 

They did not want to see their work go to waste. 

“We’d agreed pretty much since the day we went on strike that if the [administration] does not meet our demands, we do not want to stop doing journalism,” recalled Shaikh. 

“We went ahead and we launched the Retrograde. We got the website built and we were posting by the thirty-first of September,” Shaikh continued, “ … So the September 16 issue was our Strike Issue and we didn’t miss a single cycle. We were right on top of it, publishing two weeks later, just as the Retrograde.”

“After that, our student government passed a series of resolutions recognizing us as the official student newspaper on campus and that so long as strike demands were not met, they would not recognize a Mercury if it was reformed as a scab paper,” said Shaikh. 

The resolutions cemented the Retrograde the unofficial official newspaper of The University of Texas at Dallas. 

Since then, the Retrograde has continued to grow, publishing online bi-weekly. While they cannot afford to print every issue, they continue to sell advertisement space and print when it’s most effective. 

It hasn’t been easy. When they worked for the Mercury, student journalists received monthly stipends and payments per story. Today, the Retrograde relies on crowdsourcing and Patreon. 

“We’re doing what feels like objectively more work because now we have to worry about finances, filing as a 501c3 and all that other legal stuff, as well as like actually procuring advertisements … And while it’s a great challenge … I love having editorial control and you know, just being free from the whims of the administration. Even despite all the hard work it takes, it’s so, so worth it. I don’t regret it at all,” said Shaikh. 

Since then, the administration has tried repeatedly to impede the Retrograde — from demanding that Shaikh and Gutierrez return the Mercury’s old social media page to lambasting the paper during cross-department meetings. According a recording from the students provided to Unicorn Riot, Gene Fitch, the head of Student Affairs, opened the April 23, 2025 meeting of the Committee on Student Media by accusing the Retrograde of a “smear campaign” via a “barrage of articles and emails that have attempted to criticize and vilify those associated with student media.” While the Retrograde was not directly named in the quote, the allusion to the guerilla run paper was obvious to Shaikh and Gutierrez. 


“Every time they have an opportunity to, they do some insane thing, [some] clear violation of the first amendment. And it’s just all part of like making sure that we’re not successful,” said Gutierrez.

But the Retrograde consulted with lawyers and support groups at every turn. 

“As the Retrograde, we took the social media for ourselves,” Shaikh said, “after consulting with different lawyer people at the Student Press Law Center to just get an insight into how Texas property law works. Whoever created the social media is the original owner of it. That was made by a student. Whenever they transferred it to another student, that was the new owner. So because it was made by a student and passed by students, it was ours.” 

Today, the Retrograde’s social media has crossed 5,000 followers and exceeded a million views. 

And the Mercury? Since firing their entire staff in 2024, they have not published anything. While there are rumors that Student Media has hired new leadership for this fall, the future of the former school paper remains uncertain.  

For now, the Retrograde has become the newspaper of point for The University of Texas at Dallas. 

And perhaps that speaks to the power of students. 

“Administrators think that we are children in a very literal sense. They do not think that the average college student has the ability to stand up to them, to question what they’re saying … to talk to lawyers, to talk to the press, to talk to mentors outside of the university. And because of that, they have grossly underestimated us so far, and they continue to. They have made a lot of mistakes so far, and they continue to. Frankly that is the best tool at our disposal, being able to always have the upper hand by virtue of always being underestimated,” said Shaikh. 

Shaikh is in her final year at the university. In addition to her work as the editing manager at the Retrograde, she was recently elected president of the Texas Intercollegiate Press Association. As the new president, she plans to promote hard-hitting student journalism across the state. Why? She believes school newspapers play an irreplaceable role in local journalism, often publishing news at a professional level for towns and cities that otherwise would not have a paper. 

Gutierrez is in his third year at the university and will continue on as the Retrograde’s editor-in-chief. 

Cover image by Aeffia Feuerstein


Please consider a tax-deductible donation to help sustain our horizontally-organized, non-profit media organization: supportourworknew

Follow us on X (aka Twitter), Facebook, YouTube, Vimeo, Instagram, Mastodon, Threads, BlueSky and Patreon.

The post RIP Mercury, Hello Retrograde! How Administrators Failed to Stop the Presses at The University of Texas-Dallas appeared first on UNICORN RIOT.

2025-09-06 12:32:40 UTC

0 0 0

Labor Market Stalled This Summer, With August Data Adding to Slowdown (Lydia DePillis/New York Times)

Lydia DePillis / New York Times:
Labor Market Stalled This Summer, With August Data Adding to Slowdown  —  Employers added 22,000 jobs in August.  Revised data also showed that employment fell by 13,000 jobs in June, the first net loss since December 2020.  —  After persevering through years of high interest rates …

2025-09-06 10:15:01 UTC

New York Times

0 0 0

Kennedy Center ticket sales take a nosedive after Trump takeover (Richard Luscombe/The Guardian)

Richard Luscombe / The Guardian:
Kennedy Center ticket sales take a nosedive after Trump takeover  —  Prestigious Stuttgart Ballet likely to face 80% empty seats at DC's premier arts venue as audiences ‘vote with their feet’  —  Ticket sales at the Kennedy Center have continued to plummet following Donald Trump's takeover …

2025-09-06 02:25:01 UTC

The Guardian

0 0 0

Trump breaks from RFK on vaccines: "Pure and simple, they work" (Herb Scribner/Axios)

Herb Scribner / Axios:
Trump breaks from RFK on vaccines: “Pure and simple, they work”  —  President Trump said he's supportive of vaccines on Friday, breaking with Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. … - “I think you have to be very careful when you say that some people don't have to be vaccinated,” …

2025-09-06 01:25:01 UTC

Axios

0 0 0

President Trump signs order to rename the Defense Department as the Department of War (Jason Breslow/NPR)

Jason Breslow / NPR:
President Trump signs order to rename the Defense Department as the Department of War  —  President Trump signed an executive order on Friday to give the Department of Defense a new name: the Department of War.  —  The change returns the department to a name that it carried for much of its history …

2025-09-05 23:30:01 UTC

NPR

0 0 0

Next year's G20 summit will take place at Trump property in Miami (Ben Johansen/Politico)

Ben Johansen / Politico:
Next year's G20 summit will take place at Trump property in Miami … Trump insisted that he will not personally profit from it.  —  The president has signaled that he may skip this year's summit, which is taking place in South Africa this November.  “Maybe I'll send somebody else because I've …

2025-09-05 23:05:01 UTC

Politico

0 0 0

US deploying stealth fighter jets to Caribbean for drug fight as tensions with Venezuela rise, sources say (Reuters)

Reuters:
US deploying stealth fighter jets to Caribbean for drug fight as tensions with Venezuela rise, sources say  —  The United States has ordered the deployment of 10 F-35 fighter jets to a Puerto Rico airfield to conduct operations against drug cartels, sources say, adding more firepower …

2025-09-05 21:55:01 UTC

Reuters

0 0 0

Exclusive: Bill Pulte accused Fed Governor Lisa Cook of fraud. His relatives filed housing claims similar to hers (Reuters)

Reuters:
Exclusive: Bill Pulte accused Fed Governor Lisa Cook of fraud.  His relatives filed housing claims similar to hers  —  Close relatives of the federal official who has accused a Federal Reserve governor of improperly claiming primary residence on two properties have declared the same status …

2025-09-05 21:55:01 UTC

Reuters

0 0 0

Judge blocks Trump administration's ending of legal protections for 1.1M Venezuelans and Haitians (Janie Har/Associated Press)

Janie Har / Associated Press:
Judge blocks Trump administration's ending of legal protections for 1.1M Venezuelans and Haitians  —  A federal judge on Friday blocked the Trump administration from ending temporary legal protections that have granted more than 1 million people from Haiti and Venezuela the right to live and work in the United States.

2025-09-05 21:35:01 UTC

Associated Press

0 0 0

Trump orders return to the US 'War Department' (Phil Stewart/Reuters)

Phil Stewart / Reuters:
Trump orders return to the US ‘War Department’  —  U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Friday to rename the Department of Defense the “Department of War,” reverting to a title it held until after World War Two when officials sought to emphasize the Pentagon's role in preventing conflict.

2025-09-05 21:05:00 UTC

Reuters

0 0 0

State Rep. James Talarico to jump in Texas Senate race (Adam Wren/Politico)

Adam Wren / Politico:
State Rep. James Talarico to jump in Texas Senate race … Democrats have long hoped to flip the Lone Star state, which has at times seemed tantalizingly within reach.  But President Donald Trump won the state by more than 13 percentage points in 2024, a far wider margin than his other two single-digit victories in the state.

2025-09-05 20:45:01 UTC

Politico

0 0 0

US added just 22,000 jobs in August, continuing slowdown amid Trump tariffs (Lauren Aratani/The Guardian)

Lauren Aratani / The Guardian:
US added just 22,000 jobs in August, continuing slowdown amid Trump tariffs  —  Latest report also contained more bad news - the US lost 13,000 jobs in June, according to the latest survey  —  The US jobs market stalled over the summer, adding just 22,000 jobs in August and continuing …

2025-09-05 19:35:00 UTC

The Guardian

0 0 0

U.S. economy adds only 22,000 jobs as labor market stalls (Courtenay Brown/Axios)

Courtenay Brown / Axios:
U.S. economy adds only 22,000 jobs as labor market stalls  —  Hiring stalled again in August, with the labor market adding just 22,000 jobs, as the unemployment rate ticked up to 4.3%, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said on Friday. … - The report shows that July job gains were revised slightly higher …

2025-09-05 19:25:00 UTC

Axios

0 0 0

Did the President's Strike on Tren de Aragua Violate the Law? (Scott R. Anderson/Lawfare)

Scott R. Anderson / Lawfare:
Did the President's Strike on Tren de Aragua Violate the Law?  —  By applying the tools of war to civilians, the Trump administration is entering unprecedented—and deeply problematic—legal territory.  —  S_R_Anders  —  sranderson.bsky.social  —  Meet The Authors

2025-09-05 19:15:01 UTC

Lawfare

0 0 0

Top DOJ Official Spills Epstein Cover-Up Plans to Honeytrap (Catherine Bouris/The Daily Beast)

Catherine Bouris / The Daily Beast:
Top DOJ Official Spills Epstein Cover-Up Plans to Honeytrap  —  PLAYED DATE  —  Pam Bondi's acting deputy chief was filmed bragging to a date about the department's plans to alter the Epstein files.  —  A senior official in the Department of Justice was caught in a honeytrap scheme bragging …

2025-09-05 19:05:02 UTC

The Daily Beast

0 0 0

South Koreans Swept Up in Immigration Raid at Hyundai E.V. Plant in Georgia (New York Times)

New York Times:
South Koreans Swept Up in Immigration Raid at Hyundai E.V. Plant in Georgia  —  They were among nearly 500 workers apprehended at a construction site for a South Korean battery maker, officials said.  The episode prompted diplomatic concern in Seoul.  —  Immigration authorities arrested hundreds …

2025-09-05 18:50:00 UTC

New York Times

0 0 0

South Koreans Swept Up in Immigration Raid at Hyundai E.V. Plant in Georgia (New York Times)

New York Times:
South Koreans Swept Up in Immigration Raid at Hyundai E.V. Plant in Georgia  —  They were among nearly 500 workers apprehended at a construction site for a South Korean battery maker, officials said.  The episode prompted diplomatic concern in Seoul.  —  Immigration authorities arrested hundreds …

2025-09-05 18:50:00 UTC

New York Times

0 0 0

Weak summer labor market flashes warning signs for the economy (Lauren Kaori Gurley/Washington Post)

Lauren Kaori Gurley / Washington Post:
Weak summer labor market flashes warning signs for the economy  —  Employers added 22,000 jobs in August but shed jobs in June for the first time since the pandemic.  —  just now  —  The U.S. labor market created few jobs in August and shrank earlier in the summer, a first since the pandemic …

2025-09-05 18:15:03 UTC

Washington Post

0 0 0

Trump Has Successfully Tanked the American Labor Market (Rolling Stone)

Rolling Stone:
Trump Has Successfully Tanked the American Labor Market  —  The president's disastrous tariffs and mass deportation campaign are wrecking the economy … The federal government released another weak jobs report Friday, after the previous poor jobs report resulted in Trump lashing out and firing the Commissioner of Labor Statistics.

2025-09-05 18:10:00 UTC

Rolling Stone

0 0 0

RFK Jr., HHS to Link Autism to Tylenol Use in Pregnancy and Folate Deficiencies (Wall Street Journal)

Wall Street Journal:
RFK Jr., HHS to Link Autism to Tylenol Use in Pregnancy and Folate Deficiencies  —  Kennedy's autism report, touted by Trump, will suggest that using the pain reliever during pregnancy may be linked to the developmental disorder  —  Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. plans to announce …

2025-09-05 18:05:02 UTC

Wall Street Journal

0 0 0

Pluralistic: Why Wikipedia works (05 Sep 2025)

Pluralistic: Why Wikipedia works (05 Sep 2025)

2025-09-05 17:53:49 UTC

05 Sep 2025

0 0 0

CBS News Agrees Not to Edit 'Face The Nation' Interviews Following Homeland Security Backlash (Brian Steinberg/Variety)

Brian Steinberg / Variety:
CBS News Agrees Not to Edit ‘Face The Nation’ Interviews Following Homeland Security Backlash  —  CBS News is giving up the power it has to hold “Face the Nation” interviewees to account.  —  The Paramount Skydance news unit said Friday it would cease editing taped interviews with newsmakers who appear on …

2025-09-05 17:05:00 UTC

Variety

0 0 0

The U.S. added only 22,000 jobs last month, showing cracks in the labor market (Scott Horsley/NPR)

Scott Horsley / NPR:
The U.S. added only 22,000 jobs last month, showing cracks in the labor market  —  The job market downshifted significantly over the summer.  —  U.S. employers added just 22,000 jobs in August, according to a report Friday from the Labor Department, while revised figures showed a net loss …

2025-09-05 15:30:02 UTC

NPR

0 0 0

Tech CEOs Praise Donald Trump at White House Dinner (Brian Barrett/Wired)

Brian Barrett / Wired:
Tech CEOs Praise Donald Trump at White House Dinner  —  At a White House dinner Thursday night, America's tech executives put on an uncanny display of fealty to Donald Trump.  —  The camera zooms too close to the president's face; the table at which the tech executives are seated seems far too long.

2025-09-05 15:25:00 UTC

Wired

0 0 0

The World No Longer Takes Trump Seriously (Tom Nichols/The Atlantic)

Tom Nichols / The Atlantic:
The World No Longer Takes Trump Seriously  —  At parades and in the halls of global power, America has been sidelined.  —  The leaders of Russia, China, and North Korea are not good men.  They preside over brutal autocracies replete with secret police and prison camps.

2025-09-05 15:25:00 UTC

The Atlantic

0 0 0

Is the Jobs Data Still Reliable? Yes, at Least for Now. (Ben Casselman/New York Times)

Ben Casselman / New York Times:
Is the Jobs Data Still Reliable?  Yes, at Least for Now.  —  When last month's jobs report showed unexpected weakness in the labor market, President Trump fired the head of the agency that produces the data and named a loyalist to run the department that produces those numbers.

2025-09-05 15:05:00 UTC

New York Times

0 0 0

Trump grows pessimistic about the prospect of ending the Russia-Ukraine war (NBC News)

NBC News:
Trump grows pessimistic about the prospect of ending the Russia-Ukraine war  —  Whirlwind peacemaking efforts last month appear to have stalled, and there's no sign that Putin and Zelenskyy will meet anytime soon.  —  WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has grown increasingly pessimistic …

2025-09-05 14:50:00 UTC

NBC News

0 0 0

Live Updates: U.S. Labor Markets Stalled This Summer, With August Data Adding to Slowdown (Lydia DePillis/New York Times)

Lydia DePillis / New York Times:
Live Updates: U.S. Labor Markets Stalled This Summer, With August Data Adding to Slowdown  —  Employers added only 22,000 jobs in August, and the unemployment rate rose slightly to 4.3 percent.  Revised data also showed that employment fell by 13,000 jobs in June, the first net loss since December 2020.

2025-09-05 14:40:01 UTC

New York Times

0 0 0

Tesla Offers Unprecedented $1 Trillion Pay Package to Musk (Dana Hull/Bloomberg)

Dana Hull / Bloomberg:
Tesla Offers Unprecedented $1 Trillion Pay Package to Musk  —  Tesla Inc. proposed a new compensation agreement for Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk potentially worth around $1 trillion, a massive package without precedent in corporate America.  —  The long-awaited proposal …

2025-09-05 14:20:00 UTC

Bloomberg

0 0 0

Hundreds Arrested in Immigration Raid at Hyundai Site in Georgia (Jiyoung Sohn/Wall Street Journal)

Jiyoung Sohn / Wall Street Journal:
Hundreds Arrested in Immigration Raid at Hyundai Site in Georgia  —  South Korea protests after Korean company workers are detained  —  Hundreds of people including South Korean workers were arrested in an immigration raid at a Hyundai Motor battery plant under construction in Georgia …

2025-09-05 13:35:00 UTC

Wall Street Journal

0 0 0

Talks Between Adams and Trump Adviser Center on Saudi Ambassadorship (New York Times)

New York Times:
Talks Between Adams and Trump Adviser Center on Saudi Ambassadorship  —  The discussions are said to be part of an effort to get Mayor Eric Adams to end his mayoral campaign in New York City, clearing a path for Andrew Cuomo.  —  Close advisers have been crafting a plan for President Trump …

2025-09-05 13:30:04 UTC

New York Times

0 0 0

GOP senators signal to Trump that Kennedy is on thin ice (Alexander Bolton/The Hill)

Alexander Bolton / The Hill:
GOP senators signal to Trump that Kennedy is on thin ice  —  Republican senators are sending clear signs of disapproval and unhappiness with Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., making it plain to President Trump that they want the administration to address the chaos …

2025-09-05 13:25:01 UTC

The Hill

0 0 0

Trump Administration to End Security Programs Protecting European Allies From Russia (Erica L. Green/New York Times)

Erica L. Green / New York Times:
Trump Administration to End Security Programs Protecting European Allies From Russia  —  Ending the longstanding program is expected to impact hundreds of millions of dollars that have gone toward countries that border Russia.  —  The United States will move to end support for a program …

2025-09-05 13:20:03 UTC

New York Times

0 0 0

How Stephen Miller is running Trump's effort to take over D.C. (Washington Post)

Washington Post:
How Stephen Miller is running Trump's effort to take over D.C.  —  The deputy White House chief of staff has emerged as a key enforcer of the D.C. operation in the month since Trump federalized the local police department.  —  Just now  —  From the head of the conference table …

2025-09-05 13:20:03 UTC

Washington Post

0 0 0

The overwhelming evidence that the Supreme Court is on Donald Trump's team (Ian Millhiser/Vox)

Ian Millhiser / Vox:
The overwhelming evidence that the Supreme Court is on Donald Trump's team … Last month, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dropped an inflammatory allegation on most of her colleagues. … Jackson labeled this decision “Calvinball jurisprudence with a twist.”

2025-09-05 13:05:01 UTC

Vox