Good News for Humankind
Your daily spark of possibility
The world is changing — for the better, and in real, indisputable ways. Climate breakthroughs. Justice wins. Scientific discoveries. From people you’ve never heard of. In places you wouldn’t expect.
Every weekday, I send a piece of good news from around the world — not to sugarcoat reality, but to remind you that change is possible.
Every weekday morning at 7am. Or sign up for the weekly digest.
What Readers Are Saying
It restores my faith that homo sapiens sapiens, even if not in everything and always, deserves the name it has given itself.
Peter is all passion. He’s spent years working toward the greater good by helping his readership and community becoming the best version of themselves. His thoughtfully curated positive news stories stem from his genuine and effortless capacity to empathize. You’re an inspiration, Peter. Thank you!
Good News daily restores my faith in humanity and in Universal Source; I’ve shared this newsletter with family and friends and we love it! Hurray for Peter’s inspiration and generosity! So grateful.
I forward this to friends who need a remedy for despair.
Good News for Humankind has been a crack of light in my inbox for years because it provides a some counter balance to the dystopian info-tsunami that passes for news from other sources.
The Latest Good News
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2026 C.E.
May 13
Asiatic wild asses, known as khulan, are roaming eastern Mongolia again after more than 60 years away, with hundreds now recorded crossing the Trans-Mongolian Railway into habitat they had vanished from. The turnaround began with a simple experiment: conservationists and government partners opened fence-free stretches of railway and watched to see what would happen. Animals crossed, trains kept running safely, and in May 2025 a monitored passage corridor was made official near the China-Mongolia...
2026 C.E.
May 13
Trachoma has officially been eliminated as a public health concern in Australia, making it the 30th country to defeat the world's leading infectious cause of blindness. The win took nineteen years of patient work in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, where the disease quietly persisted long after vanishing from cities. What made the difference wasn't a miracle drug — it was Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organizations leading the response, paired with better housing,...
2026 C.E.
May 13
Newborn babies with malaria finally have a medicine made just for them. Coartem Baby, a cherry-flavored tablet that dissolves into breast milk or water, just earned World Health Organization prequalification — a green light that opens the door to public health systems across sub-Saharan Africa. For decades, doctors had to guess at doses using drugs built for older children, even as research showed infants were getting infected too. Ghana has already begun rolling it...
2026 C.E.
May 12
Little free pantries across Seattle quietly move an estimated 4 million pounds of food a year — more than the state's largest food bank — and a new University of Washington app called PantryMap is helping that grassroots web run smarter. Users can check stock levels, post wish lists, and log donations in real time, while four pilot pantries now use privacy-preserving sensors that track weight and door activity without any cameras. Volunteers are...
2026 C.E.
May 12
Electric concrete mixers are quietly rewriting what "hard to electrify" really means — and in China, they're on track to make up roughly 70% of new mixer sales in 2025, up from under 2% just four years earlier. The reason is refreshingly simple: these trucks return to the same batching plant every shift, so charging infrastructure can live right where the work begins and ends. In early 2026, Chinese buyers chose pure electric over...
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