In the sense that the arsonist who has set the building on fire has been stopped from also lighting a wooden bucket on fire right now, sure, positive news.
On Wednesday, June 17th the Senate passed the Saving the OOI Act with unanimous consent. This bill prohibits dismantling the OOI. The bill had not yet passed the House.
For those unfamiliar, this implies they would have been able to override a presidential veto, so the administration backtracking is just saving the president the embarassment of a defiant congress/disunified party.
Trump cares about winning, and appearing invincible, a lot. That’s why in close races, he only endorses near the end when he’s sure who’s going to win.
When Trump vetoed a drinking water project for Colorado that had passed both the House and Senate by unanimous consent they failed to override it. Don’t underestimate how afraid Republicans in Congress are of angering Trump.
The only small catch is that NSF did not acknowledge it was illegally withholding funds Congress authorized for the array. And so who knows what might change in the future.
Still Congress seemed willing to pressure the administration on the issue and was about to pass a law directly earmarking the project.
The context behind this is head of OMB Russell Vought thinks impoundments - not paying out congressionally authorized funds - is constitutional. So this seems like a legitimate retreat on one of many impoundment issues. It required real pressure from Congress as they try to harden appropriations against an OMB willing to use almost every tactic to not disburse funds.
But impoundment issues persist in NASA and other science agencies in particular.
Still, it’s a hopeful sign that the constitutional system is not broken completely
I ran into this lovely cross-survey paper three months ago, and was so thankful: an amazing incredible view of reality, a depth of understanding. It was such a horror to think of ripping up such amazing science!
Past, present and future of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation
Josep L. Pelegrí
Avicebron | a day ago
GolfPopper | a day ago
bnm04 | a day ago
63 | a day ago
daveguy | a day ago
tedd4u | a day ago
Terr_ | a day ago
ornornor | a day ago
tomhow | a day ago
emsign | a day ago
colechristensen | a day ago
What it feels embarrassment about doesn't necessarily have much to do with what a normal healthy adult would feel embarrassment about.
Think of him like an emotionally damaged child.
tzs | a day ago
throw0101a | a day ago
Or his armed insurrectionists^W supporters.
cadamsdotcom | a day ago
This seems to be good news without a catch. Am I missing something?
fnordpiglet | a day ago
Johnny_Bonk | a day ago
enraged_camel | a day ago
adonovan | a day ago
softwaredoug | a day ago
Still Congress seemed willing to pressure the administration on the issue and was about to pass a law directly earmarking the project.
0ckpuppet | a day ago
arjie | a day ago
ggm | a day ago
softwaredoug | a day ago
But impoundment issues persist in NASA and other science agencies in particular.
Still, it’s a hopeful sign that the constitutional system is not broken completely
dang | a day ago
U.S. pulling ocean sensors a 'shock' for Canadian research as El Niño nears - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48560847 - June 2026 (271 comments)
U.S. to dismantle system tracking Atlantic currents that are at risk of collapse - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48392232 - June 2026 (487 comments)
r721 | a day ago
dang | 16 hours ago
jauntywundrkind | a day ago
Past, present and future of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation Josep L. Pelegrí
https://doi.org/10.3989/scimar.05592.109
alfienightshift | a day ago