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Thursday, June 18, 2026

WHEN THE MUSIC PLAYS AND THE TEARS FALL: A DAY AT THE OBAMA PRESIDENTIAL CENTER


WHEN THE MUSIC PLAYS AND THE TEARS FALL: A DAY AT THE OBAMA PRESIDENTIAL CENTER


A witty, warm, and wonderfully nostalgic dispatch from someone who has been watching presidents since before it was fashionable to be exhausted by them.

There are moments in American life when history stops being a textbook and becomes a feeling — something that rises in your chest, blurs your vision, and makes you reach for a tissue you swore you didn't need. The official dedication ceremony Obama Presidential Center on Chicago's South Side on June 18th, 2026 because of course it was — was one of those moments. And if you watched it and didn't feel something, I'd gently suggest checking your pulse.

Let's set the scene: Jackson Park, Chicago. A stunning 225-foot tower rising over the South Side like a monument to audacity. Stevie Wonder closing the show with Higher Ground. Jennifer Hudson singing the national anthem with the kind of voice that makes you feel personally forgiven for your sins. Bruce Springsteen. John Legend. Common. U2’s "City of Blinding Lights" also became famously associated with his political journey and initial campaign.The Roots warming up the crowd like they were born to do exactly this.

And then — on that stage — sat a row of men who collectively shaped the last thirty years of American life.

Bill Clinton, the man who rode into the White House on the wings of Fleetwood Mac's Don't Stop (Thinking About Tomorrow) — a song so perfectly chosen it practically wrote his presidency for him. Slick Willy. The political genius from Arkansas who balanced the budget, charmed the world, and then made the most expensive personal decision in the history of human intimacy. We know what is is, Bill. We always did. But there he sat, silver-haired and smiling, and the nostalgia hit like a freight train.

George W. Bush, who tried — genuinely tried — and whose PEPFAR program saved millions of lives in Africa in ways that history has been criminally slow to credit. A decent man who had the misfortune of a very indecent co-pilot named Cheney whispering about weapons that weren't there. He also gave us No Child Left Behind, which turned American schools into standardized testing factories and launched an entire generation of education advocates into righteous fury. So, thanks for that, George. Truly.

Joe Biden, the Scranton kid who waited his entire political life for a moment that arrived perhaps a decade too late — and who still managed to pass the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the CHIPS Act, and finally made Medicare negotiate drug prices like every other civilized nation had been doing for years. Watching Joe on that stage was complicated, the way watching a beloved coach at his retirement ceremony is complicated. You're proud. You're grateful. And you're quietly heartbroken about the timing.

The Name That Was Not Spoken

You noticed it too, didn't you?

Like Lord Voldemort in the Harry Potter universe — the name that shall not be spoken — there was a conspicuous, thunderous, magnificent absence on that stage. The contrast between what was assembled in Jackson Park and what currently occupies the Oval Office was so stark, so vivid, so present in its very absence, that it didn't need to be named. The ceremony named it anyway, in the only language that matters: hope.

Michelle Obama said it plainly: "Hope is all we have." And she said it in a way that made it sound not like a consolation prize, but like a battle cry.

Barack and Michelle — The Ones Who Made Policy Disagreement Feel Personal

Here is the complicated truth about Barack Obama, delivered with full affection: he was the president whose policy failures hurt precisely because his personal qualities were so exceptional. Race to the Top. The embrace of charter schools. The drone strikes. The Espionage Act prosecutions. These were real disagreements, argued loudly by people who loved the man delivering them — which is, incidentally, exactly how democracy is supposed to work.

But standing in Jackson Park, watching him speak about arriving in Chicago in 1985 in a "janky used car" with all his worldly possessions stuffed in the trunk — a 23-year-old who couldn't see out his rearview mirror and didn't know a soul in the city — it was impossible not to feel the full weight of what this moment represented.

He built his center here. In the community that made him. On the South Side that shaped him. Deliberately planted in a historically underserved neighborhood as an act of intentional investment. That's not nothing. That's actually everything.

And Michelle? She walked to that podium, looked directly at her husband, and said "Barack, you gotta look at me" — and proceeded to make him cry in front of the entire world. Which, honestly, is the most powerful thing anyone has done on a public stage in years.

Two Women Who Could Have Been on That Stage

You saw them too — didn't you?

One on the stage. One in the front rows of the audience. Two women who, in a slightly different version of this timeline, might have been standing at that podium in a very different capacity. History is sometimes generous. Sometimes it is not. But they were there — present, powerful, and undeniable — and the crowd knew exactly what it was seeing.

The Long Moral Arc, Bending Forward

Here is what a lifetime of watching presidents teaches you: every one of them is a ledger. Credits and debits. Courage and cowardice. Vision and blindness, all bound together in one complicated human being handed the most impossible job on earth.

The ones who made us weep with pride were not without their failures. The ones who made us weep for other reasons were not without their contributions. That is the messy, unresolved, deeply American truth of it all.

But sitting with that stage full of former presidents — listening to Barack Obama remind us that democracy is "our greatest inheritance" and Michelle Obama insist that "hope is all we have" — something shifted. The long moral arc, as Dr. King described it, doesn't bend on its own. It bends because people show up. They argue loudly. They vote faithfully. They hold the powerful accountable — especially the ones they love.

The Obama Presidential Center opens on Juneteenth. That is either the most intentional piece of symbolism in modern American history, or the most perfectly American coincidence imaginable.

Either way — the music played, the tears fell, and some of us remembered why we started caring in the first place.

Watch It Yourself — You Won't Regret It

Don't take my word for any of this. Watch the ceremony. Read the speeches. Let Stevie Wonder close it out for you.



MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JUNE 18, 2026

 

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JUNE 18, 2026

Today's top news stories for June 18, 2026, focus heavily on a major diplomatic breakthrough between the US and Iran.

U.S. NEWS

  • US-Iran agreement signed, reopening the Strait of Hormuz, lifting the naval blockade on Iranian ports, and initiating sanctions relief talks. This is seen as a key de-escalation after months of conflict, with gas prices dropping below $4/gallon in relief.
  • Skydiving plane crash in Missouri kills 11 passengers and a pilot; survivor stories and questions about extreme sports safety emerge.
  • California billionaire tax proposal qualifies for the ballot (wealth tax on high earners).
  • Presidents gather for Obama's long-awaited presidential center in Chicago.
  • Controversy Over "Operation Metro Surge": Human Rights Watch released a blistering 180-page report detailing widespread human rights violations, racial profiling, and unlawful detentions during the Trump administration's deployment of federal immigration agents to Minnesota between late 2025 and March 2026.

  • U.S. and Iran Sign Initial Deal: The White House defended a preliminary agreement aimed at ending recent hostilities and reopening the critical Strait of Hormuz. Critics from both parties are already pushing back, arguing the deal simply reverts to a volatile pre-war status quo.

  • Pentagon Chief Lashes Out at NATO: Speaking in Brussels, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced a sweeping six-month review of American forces in Europe, lambasting European allies for denying U.S. forces airspace and base access to launch operations against Iran.

POLITICS

  • Trump administration's Iran MOU faces GOP resistance on Capitol Hill despite the signing; debates over filibuster, intelligence nominees (e.g., Bill Pulte), and broader foreign policy rifts.
  • Ongoing DOJ actions under Trump, including targeting perceived political enemies and shifts in federal oversight.
  • Midterm election-year tensions, including voter roll audits and investigations.

WORLD AFFAIRS

  • US-Iran deal provides economic lifeline to Iran with minimal initial concessions; oil prices fall, China/Russia welcome progress, but skepticism remains about long-term peace and Israel's continued actions in Lebanon.
  • Major Ukrainian drone barrage hits Moscow region (oil refinery and more), escalating strikes on Russian territory; airports disrupted.
  • Taiwan's president expresses trust in Trump for arms sales amid China tensions.
  • 2026 FIFA World Cup Dynamics: The expanded 48-team tournament enters its eighth day of play across North America. World leaders, including Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (joining B.C. Premier David Eby in Vancouver), are utilizing the matches for high-profile bilateral meetings alongside the Canada-Qatar game.

  • ASEAN Pushes for Unified AI Framework: In Jakarta, Indonesia’s Minister of Communication and Digital Affairs called on Southeast Asian nations to urgently develop a shared artificial intelligence governance framework to prevent a widening digital divide in the region.

EDUCATION

  • US Department of Education continues shifts, including partnerships for disabilities programs, civil rights enforcement, and returning more authority to states (e.g., Indiana waiver).
  • Ongoing K-12 and higher ed discussions around professional development, school safety, and end-of-year activities; some local/regional stories on charters, admissions (e.g., NYC 2-K program), and funding.
  • Broader policy talks on federal grants, accessibility, and student data collection.
  • Federal Education Programs Outsourced: The U.S. Department of Education finalized 14 interagency agreements, shifting core operational duties to other departments. Notably, the Treasury Department is now assuming operational responsibility for the federal student loan portfolio and default collections, while HHS and the Department of Labor take over major K-12 student support and low-income district programming. Critics warn this splinters federal oversight.

  • Title IX Enforcement Escalates: The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights issued strict Letters of Impending Enforcement Action to multiple school districts in Kansas and initiated a major discrimination probe into the Cherry Creek School District in Colorado.

ECONOMY

  • Oil prices drop sharply following the US-Iran breakthrough and Strait of Hormuz reopening.
  • Fed turns more hawkish in recent projections, spurring bets on rate hikes; mixed Asian market reactions.
  • Positive moves in banking (e.g., capital boosts) and relief on certain taxes in various markets; gas price relief in the US.
  • Fed Drops "Forward Guidance": In his first policy meeting as Federal Reserve Chairman, Kevin Warsh kept interest rates steady at $3.50\% \text{ to } 3.75\%$. Stripping away traditional forward guidance, Warsh announced that future rate shifts will strictly be on a "data-dependent basis." Wall Street closed lower on projections that nine of nineteen Fed officials still foresee another hike before the end of 2026.

  • Economic Approval Hits Record Low: A new PBS/NPR/Marist poll shows public approval of the administration’s economic strategy has dropped to $33\%$, with $60\%$ of Americans expressing disapproval—marking the lowest numbers since tracking began on this metric.

TECHNOLOGY

  • AI and robotics developments prominent (e.g., robotaxi pilots, AR apps like Pixi, Waymo recalls).
  • Ongoing US policy on AI innovation/security, export controls, and tech restrictions (e.g., involving Anthropic, DeepSeek).
  • Broader tech events and concerns around social media, cybersecurity, and innovation at forums like VivaTech/G7 side discussions.
  • Infrastructure Cybersecurity Mega-Deal: Tech consulting giant Accenture announced the acquisition of a majority stake in industrial cyber-defense firm Dragos, alongside total acquisitions of runZero and NetRise. The massive consolidation aims to create an end-to-end security platform for power grids, pipelines, and data centers amid rising AI-driven threats.

  • AI Buildout Drives Historic Exports: Economic data out of Singapore confirms that an "unprecedented" global rush for AI infrastructure hardware drove the nation's sharpest non-oil export surge in over two decades.

HEALTH

  • VRBPAC/FDA advisory meeting on Moderna's mRNA influenza vaccine for older adults.
  • Broader discussions on uninsured rates (slight rise in 2024), healthcare costs/transparency, AI in care delivery, and post-acute care.
  • Conferences and policy on quality measurement, veterans' care, and public health workforce issues.
  • Healthcare Affordability Hits 5-Year Low: A new West Health-Gallup index revealed that less than half of Americans ($49\%$) are now considered "Cost Secure" regarding medical care and prescriptions. Spending on U.S. healthcare surged to $5.3 \text{ trillion}$, growing at more than double the rate of standard inflation.

  • HHS Overhauls Behavioral Health Funds: HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced a new $\$700 \text{ million}$ funding package targeting mental illness, addiction, and homelessness. The new "STREETS" program redirects funds into coordinated, street-based care systems, explicitly barring grantees from using traditional "Housing First" or harm-reduction models.

SPORTS

  • FIFA World Cup 2026 in full swing with daily matches (e.g., England vs. Croatia coverage), fan/pricing stories, and team rosters.
  • NBA: Knicks championship parade (with heavy security); player movement news (e.g., Trae Young).
  • Golf: U.S. Open purse and preparations; MLB and other ongoing leagues.
  • World Cup Captures Global Attention: Day 8 of the FIFA World Cup features a four-match slate spanning fields across the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, driving massive international streaming and broadcast numbers.

  • MLB Divisional Showdown: In baseball, the AL-East leading New York Yankees host the AL-Central leading Chicago White Sox at Yankee Stadium tonight. Despite losing Aaron Judge to a rib injury, the Yankees look to extend a four-game winning streak against a Chicago team struggling on the road.

The US-Iran deal dominates global and economic headlines today, with ripple effects across categories. News can evolve quickly—check reliable sources for updates.


EDUCATION SPECIAL

TOP US EDUCATION NEWS TODAY
TOP WORLD EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

Here are the major education news headlines making waves today, June 18, 2026, both domestically and internationally.

🇺🇸 TOP US EDUCATION NEWS

1. Education Department Decoupled: Massive Offloading of Civil Rights & Special Ed Sparks Backlash

The Trump Administration’s "Returning Education to the States" campaign has reached a critical flashpoint. As of this week, the U.S. Department of Education has finalized 14 interagency agreements, effectively outsourcing core federal oversight to other agencies.

  • The Changes: The Office for Civil Rights (OCR) is transitioning heavily to the Department of Justice (DOJ), while the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services is shifting program management toward the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Additionally, the Treasury Department is assuming operational control over the federal student loan portfolio and default collections.

  • The Pushback: While Secretary Linda McMahon champions these moves as essential steps to dismantle Washington bureaucracy and restore local control, advocates and families of children with disabilities are sounding the alarm. Civil rights groups argue that fracturing oversight across distinct federal agencies will create massive bureaucratic chaos, bury families in red tape, and weaken critical federal protections against bullying and discrimination.

2. "Ed-Flex" Expansion Reaches Historic High

In a parallel move to shrink federal footprint, the Department of Education announced that Florida and Illinois have been approved for the Ed-Flex program, bringing the total to a record 18 states. This authority permits State Education Agencies to wave specific federal statutory and regulatory rules (such as lifting rigid spending caps on Title funds) without waiting for federal approval, pushing financial control closer to local school boards.

3. Federal Crackdown on Title IX Non-Compliance

The federal government is maintaining a rigid stance on enforcement during these transitions. The Office for Civil Rights issued Letters of Impending Enforcement Action to three Kansas school districts and a Letter of Impasse to Kansas City Public Schools over ongoing Title IX violations, signaling aggressive regulatory pressure even amid structural shifts.

🌐 TOP WORLD EDUCATION NEWS

1. Global Ministers Confront the Practical Realities of AI Classroom Scale

Fresh off the 2026 Education World Forum in London, global education ministers have shifted the narrative on Artificial Intelligence from hyper-optimism to strict fiscal reality.

  • The Cost Barrier: While early AI models show massive promise for supporting teachers in complex multilingual environments, the financial reality is staggering. Emerging data shows that deploying basic adaptive AI models costs roughly $15 per child. For developing nations facing heavily constrained fiscal space, ministers noted this price point makes large-scale national implementation entirely impossible without deep international subsidy. The consensus is a hard pivot toward scale, capacity, and pragmatic cost-containment over tech-hype.

2. World Bank Approves $300 Million for Ghana Secondary Education

The World Bank has greenlit a major $300 million IDA financing package for Ghana's Secondary Education Transformation for Access, Relevance, and Results for Jobs (STARR-J) project. The massive investment targets the rehabilitation, expansion, and construction of learning spaces across 1,000 public secondary schools. A core mandate of the funding is to support 2.2 million students—explicitly prioritizing underserved rural communities and learners with disabilities—to handle the infrastructure strain caused by the country's expanded free secondary education policies.

3. Focus Shifts to Anti-Violence Systems in Schools

The Ministerial Taskforce on violence in and around schools took center stage at international talks this week. Led by African and European development leaders, there is a mounting, evidence-backed realization that pervasive classroom and community violence directly destroys foundational literacy outcomes. Global leaders are transitioning from mere "awareness campaigns" to integrating explicit anti-violence financing structures directly into national education budgets, viewing physical safety as an absolute prerequisite to academic recovery.


Iran live updates: Trump lashes out at critics, after Schumer calls war 'one of the biggest American disasters' - ABC News https://abcnews.com/International/live-updates/iran-live-updates-israel-withdraw-lebanon-katz-after/?id=133879236 

Controversial billionaire tax proposal declared eligible for the November ballot - Los Angeles Times https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-06-17/controversial-billionaire-tax-proposal-appears-destined-for-november-ballot 

How children became this city’s lead detectors - The Hechinger Report https://hechingerreport.org/how-children-became-this-citys-lead-detectors/ 

Not all California districts define English proficiency the same, holding many students back | EdSource https://edsource.org/2026/california-english-learner-reclassification/760402 

Big changes coming to student loans on July 1 : NPR https://www.npr.org/2026/06/18/nx-s1-5856432/big-changes-coming-to-student-loans-on-july-1 

How A.I. Apps Teach Students How to Cheat - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/18/us/ai-apps-students-cheat.html 

How Iran Could Benefit From Its Deal With the U.S., and an A.I. Arms Race in Schools - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/18/podcasts/the-headlines/iran-benefit-deal-us-and-artificial-intelligence-arms-race-schools.html 

This museum puts history within arms’ reach : NPR https://www.npr.org/2026/06/18/nx-s1-5835738/museum-blind-disability-america-250 

Before SpaceX IPO, Investors in China Secretly Acquired Stakes — ProPublica https://www.propublica.org/article/spacex-elon-musk-ipo-foreign-investors-china 

Silicon Valley’s 2028 playbook: Don’t talk about tech - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/18/tech-2028-playbook-00966488?utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=dlvr.it 

A win for clean energy or fossil fuels? The Iran war could lead to both. - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/18/clean-energy-fossil-fuels-iran-war-00965925 

How Trump's Anthropic move is testing the legal limits of tech restrictions - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/18/trump-anthropic-ai-export-controls-00966118 

Trump changes to SNAP took access away from 770,000 children - Salon.com https://www.salon.com/2026/06/18/trump-changes-to-snap-took-access-away-from-770000-children-partner/ 

Texas A&M, UT, Baylor and TTU rank among the best in the world in 2026 https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/education/2026/06/17/best-texas-universities-us-news-world-rankings-2026-ut-austin-texas-am/90562654007/ 

New York proposes competency-based diplomas for high school students | wgrz.com https://www.wgrz.com/article/news/education/new-york-launches-competency-based-diploma-system/71-1ffcdb31-a082-4664-a784-22839f411b2f