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The Guardian Today US
News
Minnneapolis wakes to aftermath of Catholic school shooting
Minnesota  
Minnneapolis wakes to aftermath of Catholic school shooting
Officials say critically injured people expected to survive after attack that killed two children during mass
Trump administration  
CDC erupts in chaos after ousted chief Susan Monarez refuses to resign
Ukraine  
Russian missile and drone attack on Kyiv kills at least 14 people
International criminal court  
Second woman accuses ICC chief prosecutor Karim Khan of sexual misconduct
Donald Trump  
Trump serious about pursuing a third term, Gavin Newsom warns
In focus
Where have all the crabs gone? How development is squeezing out southern Malaysia’s sea people
Environment  
Where have all the crabs gone? How development is squeezing out southern Malaysia’s sea people
In the waters of the Johor strait, Indigenous communities are struggling to survive as nearby cities expand and fishing stocks dwindle
Indonesia  
In Prabowo’s Indonesia, the military is quietly creeping back into civilian life
UK politics  
The Farage season: with its rivals away, Reform basks in summer headlines
Features
‘It’s a warning, set to a dance beat’: Jon Batiste on his new song urging climate action 20 years after Katrina
Jon Batiste  
‘It’s a warning, set to a dance beat’: Jon Batiste on his new song urging climate action 20 years after Katrina
The global music star, whose home town of New Orleans was devastated by the hurricane in 2005, says ‘people power’ can change the world
Streaming  
Bland, easy to follow, for fans of everything: what has the Netflix algorithm done to our films?
Opinion
Unhinged tweets and absurd self-promotion? Two can play at that game
Unhinged tweets and absurd self-promotion? Two can play at that game
Taylor Swift’s romantic travails were the soundtrack to mine. What does her engagement mean for fans’ love lives?
Sports
US Open  
‘She said I had no education’: Ostapenko and Townsend argue after match
‘She said I had no education’: Ostapenko and Townsend argue after match
NFL  
Nate Landman on life as an African player: ‘People don’t believe me at first’
 

Betsy Reed

Editor, Guardian US

Person Image

At this dangerous moment for dissent

I hope you appreciated this newsletter. Before you move on, I wanted to ask if you could support the Guardian at this crucial time for journalism in the US.

When the military is deployed to quell overwhelmingly peaceful protest, when elected officials of the opposing party are arrested or handcuffed, when student activists are jailed and deported, and when a wide range of civic institutions – non-profits, law firms, universities, news outlets, the arts, the civil service, scientists – are targeted and penalized by the federal government, it’s hard to avoid the conclusion that our core freedoms are disappearing before our eyes – and democracy itself is slipping away.

In any country on the cusp of authoritarianism, the role of the press as an engine of scrutiny, truth and accountability becomes increasingly critical. At the Guardian, we see it as our job not only to report on the suppression of dissenting voices, but to make sure those voices are heard.

Not every news organization sees its mission this way – indeed, some have been pressured by their corporate and billionaire owners to avoid antagonizing this government. I am thankful the Guardian is different.

Our only financial obligation is to fund independent journalism in perpetuity: we have no ultrarich owner, no shareholders, no corporate bosses with the power to overrule or influence our editorial decisions. Reader support is what guarantees our survival and safeguards our independence – and every cent we receive is reinvested in our work.

The Guardian’s global perspective helps contextualize and illuminate what we are experiencing in this country. That doesn’t mean we have a single viewpoint, but we do have a shared set of values. Humanity, curiosity and honesty guide us, and our work is rooted in solidarity with ordinary people and hope for our shared future.

It has never been more urgent, or more perilous, to pursue reporting in the US that holds power to account and counters the spread of misinformation. Can you spare just 37 seconds now to support our work and protect the free press?

We value whatever you can spare, but a recurring contribution makes the most impact, enabling greater investment in our most crucial, fearless journalism. We’ve made it very quick to set up, so we hope you’ll consider it. Thank you.

 
Culture
In pictures  
Michael Caine, Bowie and more: David Bailey’s iconic pin-ups
Michael Caine, Bowie and more: David Bailey’s iconic pin-ups
Music  
Blood Orange: Essex Honey review – an exquisitely eclectic portrait of grief
Lifestyle
Life and style  
Meet the water sommeliers: they believe H₂O can rival wine – but would you pay $20 a bottle?