Wednesday, March 12
At A Glance
Why honey never expires—really.
Eighty-five women who made history.
The tale of Nikola Tesla's "mind-controlled" boat.
Visualizing the best age to take Social Security.
How do two-way mirrors work?
The 100 best sports moments in the last 25 years.
Vegetable-playing orchestra wins world record.
The octopus that takes drastic measures to survive mating.
Clickbait: The hologram doctor will see you now.
SNACKS
We analyzed dozens of ultra-processed snacks. These are the healthiest options.

(Linnea Bullion for The Post)
Eating better snacks can have a positive impact on your health.
By Anahad O’Connor
Read more
Robert Reich
Mar 11
Friends,
From time to time, I bring you views from outside the United States on what we are enduring here. The following is an English translation of a speech made last week by by Claude Malhuret, a French senator who is largely unknown outside France. Malhuret’s words are chillingly relevant to what is now happening in the United States.
Europe is at a critical turning point in its history. The American shield is slipping, Ukraine risks being abandoned, Russia strengthened.
Washington has become the court of Nero, an incendiary emperor, submissive courtiers, and a jester high on ketamine in charge of purging the civil service.
This is a tragedy for the free world, but it is first and foremost a tragedy for the United States. Trump’s message is that there is no point in being his ally since he will not defend you, he will impose higher tariffs on you than on his enemies and will threaten to seize your territories while supporting the dictatorships that invade you.
The ‘king of the deal’ is showing what the art of the deal is on his stomach. He thinks he will intimidate China by lying down in front of Putin, but Xi Jinping, seeing such a submissiveness, is probably accelerating preparations for the invasion of Taiwan.
Never in history has a US President capitulated to the enemy. Never has any one of them supported an aggressor against an ally, trampled on the US Constitution, issued so many illegal executive orders, dismissed judges who could have prevented him from doing so, dismissed the military senior staff in one fell swoop, weakened all checks and balances, and taken control of social media.
This is not an illiberal drift, it is the beginning of the confiscation of democracy. Let us remember that it took only one month, three weeks and two days to bring down the Weimar Republic and its Constitution.
I have faith in the strength of American democracy, and the country is already protesting. But in one month, Trump has done more harm to America than in four years of his last presidency. We were at war with a dictator, now we are fighting a dictator backed by a traitor.
Eight days ago, at the very moment that Trump was rubbing Macron’s back in the White House, the United States voted at the UN with Russia and North Korea against the Europeans demanding the withdrawal of Russian troops.
Two days later, in the Oval Office, the military service shirker was giving war hero Zelensky lessons in morality and strategy before dismissing him like a groom, ordering him to bend or resign.
Tonight, he took another step into infamy by stopping the delivery of weapons that had been promised. What to do in the face of this betrayal? The answer is simple: confront it.
And first of all, let’s not be mistaken. The defeat of Ukraine would be the defeat of Europe. The Baltic States, Georgia, Moldova are already on the list. Putin’s goal is to return to Yalta, where half the continent was ceded to Stalin.
The countries of the South are waiting for the outcome of the conflict to decide whether they should continue to respect Europe or whether they are now free to trample on it.
What Putin wants is the end of the order put in place by the United States and its allies 80 years ago, with as its first principle the prohibition of acquiring territory by force.
This idea is at the core of the United Nations, where today Americans vote in favor of the aggressor and against the attacked, because the Trumpian vision coincides with that of Putin: a return to spheres of influence, the great powers dictating the fate of small countries.
“Give me Greenland, Panama, and Canada. You can get Ukraine, the Baltics, and Eastern Europe. He can get Taiwan and the China Sea.”
In the dinners of the oligarchs of the Gulf of Mar-a-Lago, they call this “diplomatic realism.”
So we are now standing alone. But the idea that Putin cannot be confronted is false. Contrary to the Kremlin’s propaganda, Russia is in bad shape. In three years, the so-called second largest army in the world has managed to grab only crumbs from a country three times less populated.
Interest rates at 25 percent, the collapse of foreign exchange and gold reserves, the demographic collapse, all show that [Russia] is on the brink of the abyss. The American helping hand to Putin is the biggest strategic mistake ever made in a war.
The shock is violent, but it has a virtue. Europeans are coming out of denial. They understood in one day in Munich that the survival of Ukraine and the future of Europe are in their hands and that they have three imperatives.
Accelerate military aid to Ukraine to compensate for the American abandonment, so that it holds out, and of course to impose its presence and that of Europe in any negotiation.
This will be costly. It will be necessary to end the taboo of using frozen Russian assets [and] circumvent Moscow’s accomplices within Europe itself by a coalition of only the willing countries, which includes, of course, the United Kingdom.
Second, demand that any agreement be accompanied by the return of kidnapped children, prisoners and absolute security guarantees. After Budapest, Georgia and Minsk, we know what agreements with Putin are worth. These guarantees require sufficient military force to prevent a new invasion.
Finally—and this is the most urgent because it is what will take the most time—we must build a European defense, too-long neglected to the benefit of the American umbrella since 1945 and scuttled since the fall of the Berlin Wall.
It is a Herculean task, but it is on its success or failure that the leaders of today’s democratic Europe will be judged in the history books.
Friedrich Merz has just declared that Europe needs its own military alliance. This is a way to recognize that France has been right for decades in arguing for strategic autonomy.
It remains to build it.
It will be necessary to invest massively, strengthen the European Defense Fund outside the Maastricht debt criteria, harmonize weapons and munitions systems, accelerate the entry into the [European] Union of Ukraine, which is today the leading European army, rethink the place and conditions of nuclear deterrence based on French and British capabilities, relaunch the anti-missile defense and satellite programs.
The plan announced yesterday by Ursula von der Leyen is a very good starting point. And much more will be needed.
Europe will only become a military power again by becoming an industrial power again. In a word, the Draghi report will have to be implemented. For good.
But the real rearmament of Europe is its moral rearmament.
We must convince public opinion against war weariness and fear, and especially in the face of Putin’s cronies, the far right and the far left.
They argued again yesterday in the National Assembly, Mr Prime Minister, before you, against European unity, against European defense.
They say they want peace. What neither they nor Trump say is that their peace is capitulation, the peace of defeat, the replacement of “de Gaulle Zelensky” by a “Ukrainian Pétain” at Putin’s beck and call. The peace of the collaborators who have refused any aid to the Ukrainians for three years.
Is this the end of the Atlantic Alliance? The risk is great.
But in the last few days, the public humiliation of Zelensky and all the crazy decisions taken during the past month have finally made the Americans react.
Polls are falling. Republican lawmakers are being greeted by hostile crowds in their constituencies. Even Fox News is becoming critical.
The Trumpists are no longer in their majesty. They control the executive, Congress, the Supreme Court, and social networks.
But in American history, the defenders of freedom have always prevailed. They are beginning to raise their heads.
The fate of Ukraine is being played out in the trenches, but it also depends on those in the US who want to defend democracy, and here on our ability to unite Europeans, find the means for their common defense, and make Europe the power it once was in history and that it hesitates to become again.
Our parents defeated fascism and communism at great cost.
The task of our generation is to defeat the totalitarianisms of the 21st century.
Long live free Ukraine, long live democratic Europe.
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Michelle Obama and her brother, former college basketball coach Craig Robinson, launch "IMO" podcast, produced by Obama's media company Higher Ground (More)
> UEFA Champions League knockout stage second leg kicks off today; see full schedule and storylines (More) | Stephen Curry takes assistant general manager role for men's and women's basketball at his alma mater, Davidson College (More)
> Grammy-winning rapper Doechii named Billboard’s 2025 Woman of the Year (More) | Los Angeles district attorney withdraws request to reduce sentencing in high-profile Menendez brothers murder case (More)
Science & Technology
> NASA to eliminate the agency's office of the chief scientists and other roles as part of Trump administration's reduction in force (More)
> Analysis questions Microsoft's recent announcement of a quantum computer relying on exotic Majorana particles, arguing the test used to confirm performance was insufficient (More) | See previous write-up (More)
> New study suggests megalodons—a prehistoric shark considered to be one of the largest predators in history—grew up to 80 feet long, weighed 94 tons, and was shaped like a blue whale (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets slide (S&P 500 -2.7%, Dow -2.1%, Nasdaq -4.0%); Nasdaq records worst day since 2022 as tariff policies worry investors over health of US economy (More) | Tesla shares fall over 15% in steepest drop since 2020 (More)
> Mortgage giant Rocket Companies to acquire digital real estate brokerage Redfin and take it private for $1.75B; Redfin shares close up nearly 68% on the news (More)
> Nirvana Insurance secures $80M in Series C funding, valuing the AI-driven commercial trucking insurer at $830M (More) | Venture capital 101 (1440 Topics)
Politics & World Affairs
> Senate confirms former Oregon Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer (R) to lead the Labor Department (More) | House to vote today on stopgap funding bill ahead of Friday shutdown deadline (More) | US secretary of state says 83% of USAID programs will be cut (More) | Judge blocks deportation of Palestinian student who led Columbia University protests against Israel, pending ruling on petition; student has lawful permanent residency in the US (More)
> Cargo ship carrying toxic chemicals crashes with US oil tanker in the North Sea off England's east coast; cause of fiery collision unknown, 37 people from both vessels brought ashore alive (More)
> Guatemala's Volcano of Fire erupts, forcing 300 families to evacuate and putting another 30,000 at risk; the volcano, about 33 miles from Guatemala's capital, is one of the most active in Central America (More) | See photos (More)
Lifestyle Change
- We recently downsized our home so we would not have so much to maintain
- We don't purchase new clothes unless we NEED them
- We don't go out to eat except once a week
- We don't go on expensive vacations
- We don't drink alcohol or smoke cigarettes
The Quantum World Isn't so Weird?
Down at the level of atoms and electrons, quantum physics describes the behavior of the very smallest objects. Solar panels, LED lights, your mobile phone and MRI scanners in hospitals: all of these rely on quantum behavior. It is one of the best-tested theories of physics, and we use it all the time.
On the face of it, however, the quantum realm is extraordinary: Within it, quantum objects can be “in two places at once”; they can move through barriers; and share a connection no matter how far apart they are. Compared to what you would expect of, say, a tennis ball, their properties are certainly weird and counterintuitive.
But don’t let this scare you off! Much of quantum physics’ odd behavior becomes a lot less surprising if you stop thinking of atoms and electrons as minuscule tennis balls, and instead imagine any “quantum object” as something like a wave you create by pushing your hand through water. You could say that, at small scales, everything is made of waves.
In the spirit of demystifying quantum behavior, here are three key types of “weird” quantum phenomena that normal water waves can do just as well, and the one thing that sets the quantum world apart. READ MORE...
Tuesday, March 11
At A Glance
Is ranch dressing a liquid or solid? It's neither.
The wealth-building plan used by doctors and lawyers.
Humans struggle to accurately read dogs' emotions.
Visualizing the world's top 20 most walkable cities.
The woman who invented the dishwasher.
San Francisco's most unforgettable TV ad.
Clickbait: Your clothes could soon charge your phone.
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Denver Nuggets' Nikola Jokić becomes first in NBA history to top 30 points, 20 rebounds, and 20 assists in a single game (More) | Myles Garrett becomes highest-paid non-QB in NFL history after signing four-year, $40M-per-year extension with the Cleveland Browns (More) | Buffalo Bills sign QB Josh Allen to six-year, $330M deal with the largest-ever guarantee of $250M (More)
> Art Schallock, three-time World Series champion, dies at age 100; Schallock held title of oldest living ex-MLB player until his death (More) | D'Wayne Wiggins, Grammy-nominated founding member of R&B group Tony! Toni! Toné!, dies of cancer at age 64 (More)
> "Ne Zha 2" tops $2B at Chinese box office, becoming first film to ever top $2B in a single market; the animated film is now sixth all-time at the global box office (More)
Science & Technology
> NASA delays SPHEREx and PUNCH mission launches to continue checking Falcon 9 lift vehicle; next potential launch date still to be determined (More) | See previous write-up (More)
> Security researchers uncover backdoor in the Chinese-made ESP32 microchip; in more than 1 billion devices worldwide, chip contains previously undocumented commands that can be used for attacks (More)
> Doctors combine AI learning algorithm and brain-computer interface to help paralyzed man control a robotic arm via thoughts (More) | Brain implants 101 (1440 Topics)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close up Friday (S&P 500 +0.6%, Dow +0.5%, Nasdaq +0.7%); gains cap volatile five-day stretch, S&P posts worst week since September (More)
> AI startup Firsthand raises $26M Series A funding, valuation not disclosed; company helps brand marketers and publishers use AI agents to interact directly with consumers (More) | Venture capital 101 (1440 Topics)
> Chinese consumer price index falls into negative territory, down 0.7% year over year last month (More) | Learn more about inflation, and how deflation affects an economy (1440 Topics)
Politics & World Affairs
> House Republicans unveil six-month short-term spending bill ahead of March 14 deadline to avoid a partial government shutdown; vote expected tomorrow, bill would head to Senate for approval (More) | Health Department offers roughly 80,000 federal workers $25K buyout (More) | See federal layoff tracker (More)
> Russian forces retake much of the Russian border province Kursk; Ukraine captured large swaths of the region during a surprise August offensive (More) | US, Russian, and European leaders to meet this week to continue talks toward ending the war (More)
> South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol released from detention ahead of impeachment trial; Yoon was arrested following a failed December attempt to impose martial law (More)
Military Service
When I graduated from high school, I was eligible to be drafted into the military unless I was enrolled in college. That would give me a four-year deferment but eventually I would have been drafted.
If I dropped out of college, which I did 5 semesters later, I was again eligible for the draft, so I enlisted in the US Navy Reserves which required me to serve two years on active duty and four years in the reserves. Two years of active duty was what would have been required if I had been drafted, so I figured, I had made a good deal.
The US military draft ended in 1973, and I was released from active duty in the summer of 1972.
The GI Bill gave me 4 years of college plus an allowance for being married and having a child.
All of that, for serving less than 24 months on active duty. I say less than 24 months because I received an early out of three months to go back to college.
It is my belief, right or wrong, that EVERYONE should spend TWO YEARS in the military and there should be no exemptions due to health, religious beliefs, or handicaps. There is something that can be done by everyone without being sent to a potential war zone.
In return for those two years, the government needs to give something back in return similar to the GI Bill of the Vietnam Era which paid for my 4 years of college.
Let's say something that's worth $5,000 to $10,000.
Of course, that amount of money won't even pay for one semester of college at today's prices. College tuition back in the late 1960s early 1970s was about $2500/year which also included room, meals, and books.
Every American should give two years out of their life to their country. There are numerous other countries that already require that two-year mandatory service.
Archaeologists Discover Intricately Decorated Tomb
Archaeologists have excavated an intricately carved and painted tomb in northern Egypt, and they think the 4,100-year-old burial chamber belonged to a prominent, multi-talented royal doctor: a physician who served ancient Egyptian kings as an expert in medicinal plants, dentistry and venomous bites.
A team of French and Swiss researchers discovered the tomb in Saqqara, the necropolis of the ancient capital city of Memphis, according to a statement from Egypt’s Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities. READ MORE...
Monday, March 10
Aliens are REAL!
U.S. Government Officials Have Admitted. ‘The Age of Disclosure' Director Dan Farah Wants You to Know There's More to the Story


























