With all the bad news this week out of the current administration, here's some good news
The West Ada School District made national headlines recently when administrators ordered a school teacher to remove signs containing welcoming messages from her classroom.
A federal judge blocked Elon Musk’s DOGE from accessing people’s private data at the Education Department, the Treasury Department, and the Office of Personnel Management.
The Social Security Administration abruptly backed off planned cuts to phone services for disabled and some elderly Americans applying for benefits amid an uproar from advocates.
A D.C. federal judge rejected the Trump administration's request to lift his previous order preventing the use of the Alien Enemies Act to deport hundreds to a Salvadoran labor prison without due process. The block remains in place.
More than 175 years after their reservation in Illinois was illegally sold at auction, the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation is now in line to get their land back.
New Hampshire Republicans staged a hasty retreat on their plans to shutter the New Hampshire State Library after a wave of outrage and anger from constituents.
The Healey-Driscoll Administration has implemented two standing orders allowing approximately 500,000 eligible Massachusetts residents to obtain free over-the-counter birth control pills and prenatal vitamins.
A Republican bill to allow guns on college campuses (known as campus carry] FAILED in the Florida Senate. Two Republican colleagues were absent from the meeting, and another voted no with Democrats.
The American Association of University Professors and the American Federation of Teachers are suing the Trump administration on behalf of their members for "unlawfully cutting off $400 million in federal funding" to "force Columbia University to surrender its academic independence."
Education advocacy groups and unions filed two lawsuits challenging President Donald Trump's executive order to dismantle the Department of Education.
A federal judge ruled that a Columbia University student who took part in campus protests against Israel's military offensive in Gaza cannot be detained as she fights orders for her deportation.
FLIP! In South Carolina Peter Smith, Jr. won a special election for Dorchester County Council District 1 in a solid Trump district BLUE!
FLIP! Democrats won TWO special elections in Pennsylvania—one they were expected to win and one, a State Senate seat, in a R+23 district! WOW!
To help protect shrinking coastal wetlands, a new conservation effort is preserving two salt marshes in Nova Scotia.
The village of Pinecrest in Florida has launched an effort to convert food scraps into nutrient-rich compost that will be delivered to the Miccosukee Tribe in the Everglades which, for starters, plans to use it in a community garden.
In an exciting new announcement, the New Zealand Electricity Authority predicted that their electricity grid will be 100% renewable by 2040.
California added more than 26,000 EV chargers in the last six months.
The UK announced plans to plant 20 million trees, creating 2,500 hectares of new woodland area.
Yellowstone's iconic bison herds have merged into a single entity after 100 years of wandering the park.
A federal judge temporarily blocked Texas A&M University System from enforcing a ban on drag shows being held at its special event venues.
The most innovative companies in corporate responsibility—like Cisco, Land O’Lakes, Delta, Toyota, and even the board game Catan—are finding ways to make new advances in business for good. Very encouraging!
Renewable energy capacity around the world surged last year — particularly in the U.S. and China. New data shows that renewables, such as wind, solar, geothermal, and hydroelectric power sources are growing at far faster rates than traditional power sources such as coal and natural gas.
The Supreme Court upheld Biden-era federal regulations on “ghost guns.” Huge.
James Boasberg, the judge Trump and Republicans are trying to impeach, was assigned to the Signal-gate case.
Trump got ridiculed for demanding that a portrait of him hung in the Colorado statehouse be taken down because he thought it was unflattering.
Protests and boycotts are working. Tesla's sales are plummeting world-wide.Also? Target has lost 5 million customers, while COSTCO has gained 7 million. Keep up the pressure.
The government watchdog group American Oversight is suing Pete Hegseth and several other top Trump officials, claiming their use of Signal's disappearing messages function is a clear breach of the Federal Records Act.
A new Navigator poll finds that views of Trump’s tariff plan are becoming increasingly negative, with tariffs being a top driver for those disapproving of Trump's economic handling.
In related polling news, ratings of Trump’s overall job approval and handling of the economy are now both underwater, with a majority of Americans disapproving of his economic handling for the first time.
There are Indivisible groups now in Dublin, Ireland, and Ottawa Canada! WOW!
Airline travel between Canada and the US is “collapsing” amid Trump’s tariff war, with flight bookings between the two countries down by over 70%, newly released data suggests.
Three high profile law firms, Keker, Van Nest & Peters, Jenner and Block, and Wilmer Hale, are finally standing up to Trump.
A federal judge said he will order the Trump administration to preserve records of a text message chat in which senior national security officials discussed sensitive details of plans for a U.S. military strike against Yemen’s Houthis.
The federal judiciary has established a task force to consider how to protect judges targeted by Trump after they issued rulings against the administration. It is operating under “the direction of the Judicial Conference, a policymaking body led by Chief Justice Roberts.”
Republicans withdrew the nomination of GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik to serve as US Ambassador to the United Nations because they’re afraid of losing her seat—and maybe even seats in Florida!
Senator Susan Collins has joined Democrats in the Senate to challenge Trump's cuts to congressional spending.
California State Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas (D-Hollister) and 57 Democratic Assemblymembers announced that they would stop communications from official state accounts on X.
A local official in New York rejected Texas' effort to enforce a $100,000 judgment against a New York doctor accused of sending abortion pills to the state.
The Vancouver Auto Show broke attendance records after banning Tesla.
U.S. officials went door-to-door in Greenland to find anyone who wanted to be visited by the Vances. They found no one.
A federal judge ordered a Colorado school district to return 19 banned books to libraries.
Local library patrons, with help from the ACLU, are suing officials in South Carolina’s most populous county for systematically purging literature by and about LGBTQ people from its public library collection.
From December to now, consumer confidence in Trump’s ability to bring down energy costs dropped by 9 points.
Residents of Paris voted to pedestrianize 500 more streets in the city as part of the local government’s efforts to reduce the use of cars and improve air quality.
A federal judge granted a preliminary injunction blocking efforts to shut down the CFPB.
Florida Congressional candidate Gay Valimont went on Fox News to talk outside of the bubble about why Republican voters should support her.
Indiana Rep. Victoria Spartz held three Town Halls and was roundly booed and jeered in all of them.
There were four Republican-backed extreme constitutional amendments on the ballot in Louisiana yesterday. The voters REJECTED them all (in a state Trump won by 22 points in November).
Beto O’Rourke teamed up with Tim Walz to have a town hall meeting in the Houston, Texas area.
A federal judge blocked Elon Musk’s DOGE from accessing people’s private data at the Education Department, the Treasury Department, and the Office of Personnel Management.
The Social Security Administration abruptly backed off planned cuts to phone services for disabled and some elderly Americans applying for benefits amid an uproar from advocates.
A D.C. federal judge rejected the Trump administration's request to lift his previous order preventing the use of the Alien Enemies Act to deport hundreds to a Salvadoran labor prison without due process. The block remains in place.
More than 175 years after their reservation in Illinois was illegally sold at auction, the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation is now in line to get their land back.
New Hampshire Republicans staged a hasty retreat on their plans to shutter the New Hampshire State Library after a wave of outrage and anger from constituents.
The Healey-Driscoll Administration has implemented two standing orders allowing approximately 500,000 eligible Massachusetts residents to obtain free over-the-counter birth control pills and prenatal vitamins.
A Republican bill to allow guns on college campuses (known as campus carry] FAILED in the Florida Senate. Two Republican colleagues were absent from the meeting, and another voted no with Democrats.
The American Association of University Professors and the American Federation of Teachers are suing the Trump administration on behalf of their members for "unlawfully cutting off $400 million in federal funding" to "force Columbia University to surrender its academic independence."
Education advocacy groups and unions filed two lawsuits challenging President Donald Trump's executive order to dismantle the Department of Education.
A federal judge ruled that a Columbia University student who took part in campus protests against Israel's military offensive in Gaza cannot be detained as she fights orders for her deportation.
FLIP! In South Carolina Peter Smith, Jr. won a special election for Dorchester County Council District 1 in a solid Trump district BLUE!
FLIP! Democrats won TWO special elections in Pennsylvania—one they were expected to win and one, a State Senate seat, in a R+23 district! WOW!
To help protect shrinking coastal wetlands, a new conservation effort is preserving two salt marshes in Nova Scotia.
The village of Pinecrest in Florida has launched an effort to convert food scraps into nutrient-rich compost that will be delivered to the Miccosukee Tribe in the Everglades which, for starters, plans to use it in a community garden.
In an exciting new announcement, the New Zealand Electricity Authority predicted that their electricity grid will be 100% renewable by 2040.
California added more than 26,000 EV chargers in the last six months.
The UK announced plans to plant 20 million trees, creating 2,500 hectares of new woodland area.
Yellowstone's iconic bison herds have merged into a single entity after 100 years of wandering the park.
A federal judge temporarily blocked Texas A&M University System from enforcing a ban on drag shows being held at its special event venues.
The most innovative companies in corporate responsibility—like Cisco, Land O’Lakes, Delta, Toyota, and even the board game Catan—are finding ways to make new advances in business for good. Very encouraging!
Renewable energy capacity around the world surged last year — particularly in the U.S. and China. New data shows that renewables, such as wind, solar, geothermal, and hydroelectric power sources are growing at far faster rates than traditional power sources such as coal and natural gas.
The Supreme Court upheld Biden-era federal regulations on “ghost guns.” Huge.
James Boasberg, the judge Trump and Republicans are trying to impeach, was assigned to the Signal-gate case.
Trump got ridiculed for demanding that a portrait of him hung in the Colorado statehouse be taken down because he thought it was unflattering.
Protests and boycotts are working. Tesla's sales are plummeting world-wide.Also? Target has lost 5 million customers, while COSTCO has gained 7 million. Keep up the pressure.
The government watchdog group American Oversight is suing Pete Hegseth and several other top Trump officials, claiming their use of Signal's disappearing messages function is a clear breach of the Federal Records Act.
A new Navigator poll finds that views of Trump’s tariff plan are becoming increasingly negative, with tariffs being a top driver for those disapproving of Trump's economic handling.
In related polling news, ratings of Trump’s overall job approval and handling of the economy are now both underwater, with a majority of Americans disapproving of his economic handling for the first time.
There are Indivisible groups now in Dublin, Ireland, and Ottawa Canada! WOW!
Airline travel between Canada and the US is “collapsing” amid Trump’s tariff war, with flight bookings between the two countries down by over 70%, newly released data suggests.
Three high profile law firms, Keker, Van Nest & Peters, Jenner and Block, and Wilmer Hale, are finally standing up to Trump.
A federal judge said he will order the Trump administration to preserve records of a text message chat in which senior national security officials discussed sensitive details of plans for a U.S. military strike against Yemen’s Houthis.
The federal judiciary has established a task force to consider how to protect judges targeted by Trump after they issued rulings against the administration. It is operating under “the direction of the Judicial Conference, a policymaking body led by Chief Justice Roberts.”
Republicans withdrew the nomination of GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik to serve as US Ambassador to the United Nations because they’re afraid of losing her seat—and maybe even seats in Florida!
Senator Susan Collins has joined Democrats in the Senate to challenge Trump's cuts to congressional spending.
California State Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas (D-Hollister) and 57 Democratic Assemblymembers announced that they would stop communications from official state accounts on X.
A local official in New York rejected Texas' effort to enforce a $100,000 judgment against a New York doctor accused of sending abortion pills to the state.
The Vancouver Auto Show broke attendance records after banning Tesla.
U.S. officials went door-to-door in Greenland to find anyone who wanted to be visited by the Vances. They found no one.
A federal judge ordered a Colorado school district to return 19 banned books to libraries.
Local library patrons, with help from the ACLU, are suing officials in South Carolina’s most populous county for systematically purging literature by and about LGBTQ people from its public library collection.
From December to now, consumer confidence in Trump’s ability to bring down energy costs dropped by 9 points.
Residents of Paris voted to pedestrianize 500 more streets in the city as part of the local government’s efforts to reduce the use of cars and improve air quality.
A federal judge granted a preliminary injunction blocking efforts to shut down the CFPB.
Florida Congressional candidate Gay Valimont went on Fox News to talk outside of the bubble about why Republican voters should support her.
Indiana Rep. Victoria Spartz held three Town Halls and was roundly booed and jeered in all of them.
There were four Republican-backed extreme constitutional amendments on the ballot in Louisiana yesterday. The voters REJECTED them all (in a state Trump won by 22 points in November).
Beto O’Rourke teamed up with Tim Walz to have a town hall meeting in the Houston, Texas area.