The US labor market continues to fly high, with a report of 213,000 new jobs in June. We wondered: To what degree is that making the minimum-wage job obsolete?
Today news-watchers鈥 heads pivot to Asia: a 鈥溾 kickoff against China, a delegation on Kim Jong-un鈥檚 action (or inaction) on nukes.
Next week, the US president heads to Brussels (for NATO), and to London. is in the forecast, as are some high-profile .
And US immigration policy still roils. On July 4, a Congolese immigrant-activist聽 to protest the tactics of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, a move that seemed heavy with poignancy but that mostly played out in media reports as a dangerous annoyance.
People keep referencing the summer of . It鈥檚 worth a look back. Fifty years ago today 鈥 eight days after he signed the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 鈥 President Lyndon B. Johnson went to El Salvador for a summit with heads of state, including those from the Northern Triangle countries that are now the major source of migration. He plumped the legacy of President Franklin Roosevelt鈥檚 鈥済ood neighbor鈥 doctrine in a . (Calls still go out today for with that region.)
There, as at home, Johnson was met with protests against the war in Vietnam.
The clenched fists of that summer make statue-climbing and anti-Trump balloons look tame by comparison.
Is there a right course of action for people interested in universal well-being?
Today much of it revolves around one particularly potent tool available to all citizens: getting involved in elections 鈥 and not just through vote-casting, though immigration is likely to be a for both parties in the midterms.
Protest today often takes the form of deliberate action to own a share of control. First-generation Americans in greater numbers. to protect their interests. And women are in state legislatures. There鈥檚 power in participation.
Now to our five stories for your Friday.聽