Tuesday, March 25
Robert Reich
The Big Chill
Friends,
I was talking yesterday to a friend who’s a professor at Columbia University about what’s been happening there. He had a lot to say. When he needed to run off to an appointment, I asked him if he’d text or email me the rest of his thoughts. His response floored me. “No,” he said. “I better not. They may be reviewing it.”
“Who’s ‘they’?” I asked, suddenly worried.
“They! The university! The government! Gotta go!” He was off.
My friend has never before shown signs of paranoia.
I relate this to you because the Trump regime is starting to have a chilling effect on what and how Americans communicate with each another. It is beginning to create mass paranoia, which is exactly what Trump intends.
The chill affects the four pillars of civil society — universities, science, the media, and the law.
Start with America’s major universities. Columbia’s capitulation to Trump’s demands that the university identify every demonstrator and put its department of Middle Eastern studies under “receivership” — or else lose $400 million in government funding — is chilling communications there.
The Trump regime also “detained” a Columbia University graduate student and green card holder without criminal charges merely for participating in protests at the school. The regime’s agents have also entered dorms with search warrants and announced the “removal” of two other students who participated in such protests.
Other major universities are on Trump’s target list.
Now, consider science. Trump has mounted a direct attack on the three biggest funders of American science — the Centers for Disease Control, National Institutes of Health, and National Science Foundation.
At A Glance
A visual explainer of how Medicaid works.
See cherry blossom trees begin to bloom in Washington, DC.
Beware of the highway toll text message scam.
Cleaning products you should never mix—and why.
How often you should wash your feet.
Colorful birds you may not know existed.
Bundled-up cat enjoys snowy sled ride. (w/video)
YouTubers attempt to walk the UK in a straight line.
Clickbait: Goat helps kangaroo escape from owner.
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Sweet 16 set for NCAA men's basketball tournament; see complete bracket (More) | ... and women's Round of 32 wraps today; see latest schedule (More)
> George Foreman, two-time world heavyweight boxing champion, Olympic gold medalist, and entrepreneur, dies at 76 (More) | Sports world reacts to Foreman's death (More)
> Conan O'Brien, comedian and five-time Emmy winner, becomes 26th recipient of prestigious Mark Twain Prize for American Humor (More)
Science & Technology
> Joint studies from OpenAI and MIT Media Lab find higher use of ChatGPT may correspond with increased loneliness and higher emotional dependence on the chatbot (More) | Everything you need to know about OpenAI (1440 Topics)
> Archaeologists discover over 3,000-year-old Egyptian tomb believed to belong to a pharaoh during the less-known Abydos Dynasty; discovery is second of its kind this year (More) | Learn more about ancient Egypt (1440 Topics)
> Study finds carbon absorbed by the land—about one-third of all carbon emissions—is mainly stored in nonliving pools like soils and sediments, allowing the carbon to remain sequestered 10 to 100 times longer than in living plants (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close higher Friday (S&P 500 +0.1%, Dow +0.1%, Nasdaq +0.5%); S&P 500 and Nasdaq snap four consecutive weeks of declines (More)
> Ticket reseller StubHub files for initial public offering; reports net loss of $2.8M on revenue of roughly $1.8B for 2024, compared with a $405M profit on $1.4B in revenue for 2023 (More) | What are IPOs? (1440 Topics)
> Tesla vehicles from model year 2017 or newer accounted for record 1.4% of all vehicles traded in this month through March 15, up from 0.4% in the same period last year, per analysis from national car shopping site Edmunds (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> South Korean court overturns impeachment of Prime Minister Han Duck-soo, reinstating him as acting president (More) | Turkish court formally arrests and orders jailing of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoÄŸlu—President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's rival—pending outcome of corruption trial (More)
> Department of Defense personnel may be subjected to polygraph tests amid new investigation into alleged leaks at the Pentagon, according to internal memo (More) | President Donald Trump announces $20B contract with Boeing for new F-47 fighter jet (More) | IRS reportedly nearing agreement to verify whether ICE officials have correct address for people expected to be deported (More)
> Israeli airstrike in Gaza's southern city of Khan Younis kills Hamas political leader Salah Bardawil; Gaza death toll passes 50,000, per Hamas-run Health Ministry (More) | Israel strikes Lebanon after Hezbollah fires rockets into Israel; exchange considered worst violence since November (More)
Education
Throughout my entire life, I have always heard that KNOWLEDGE IS POWER...
But how does KNOWLEGE relate to EDUCATION?
Does KNOWLEGE = EDUCATION?
It is true that the education that you learn in high school and how well you learn it, gets you into higher education. The more you know the better high education school you can enter.
What happens after college?
During my 45-year career, NOT ONE EMPLOYER looked at the grades that I earned in college - all they wanted was a copy of my transcript for their files. Several times my employer was HIGHER EDUCATION.
So... in my instance, can I say that knowledge is power from an educational standpoint?
Not really.
However, if we say that KNOWLEDGE DOES NOT EQUAL EDUCATION and then that KNOWLEDGE IS POWER... then, that phrase just might be more accurate.
Knowledge is one's understanding of how to use education to achieve power through that knowledge.
In other words, RESULTS...
KNOWLEDGE = POWER = RESULTS
Gravity is the spawn of entropy
For centuries, scientists have been trying to unify two fundamental theories – Einstein’s general theory of relativity, which describes gravity and cosmic scales, and quantum mechanics, which governs the world of particles. But their incompatibility remains one of the unsolved problems of modern physics. The breakthrough may come from a new concept of quantum gravity, which arises from entropy – chaos in a system. This idea not only brings us closer to a “Theory of Everything” but also offers a solution to the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy, which make up 95% of the Universe. The study is published in the journal Physical Review D.
Monday, March 24
Robert Reich
Friends,
Let’s say you don’t like what the Trump administration is doing, or you don’t like Trump. You express these views on Facebook, TikTok, and Instagram.
You take a two-week vacation in France. When you try to return to the United States, U.S. immigration agents arrest you. They detain you in solitary confinement. They don’t let you contact your family. They don’t let you contact a lawyer. Then they send you to a brutal prison in El Salvador.
But wait! You scream over and over. You can’t do this! I’m an American citizen!
Your screams have no effect.
Sound far-fetched? Recently, a French scientist was prevented from entering the United States because U.S. Border Patrol agents had found messages from him in which he had expressed his “personal opinion” to colleagues and friends about Trump’s science policies.
In another case, immigration agents detained Dr. Rasha Alawieh, a kidney transplant specialist and professor at Brown University who was trying to return to the United States after visiting relatives in Lebanon.
At A Glance
The best time to sell your house based on where you live.
Waymo tops world's 50 most innovative companies.
See Vrbo's most remarkable vacation rentals.
Swiss town's doctors prescribe free museum visits.
Watch actors in 1984 audition for "Back to the Future."
Twitter's 560-pound, 12-foot-tall logo sells for $34K.
"World's ugliest animal" is New Zealand's Fish of the Year.
Clickbait: Influencer rents robot to cook, clean, and go on dates.
Birds and Bees

What plants attract what pollinators? It’s a question conservationists ask when considering where to reintroduce rare plants, as they want to do so in regions that can also sustain the necessary pollinators. This page compiles a vast database of plant-pollinator interactions. Pretend you're a conservationist and click around to explore pollinators.
A list of pollinator-friendly native plants

You can help revitalize pollinator populations by planting native plants in your backyard, whether urban, rural, or suburban. Some plants provide the flowers (and their pollen and nectar), while others act as nests or hosts for key pollinators like caterpillars and bees. Explore these regional guides to learn which plants will grow well in your area here.
The bees getting hooked on caffeine
Caffeine gives honeybees a kick too! Bees are three times more likely to remember a flower if its nectar contains caffeine. Plants want pollinators to keep coming back, so the finding suggests that some plants, like Citrus and Coffea species, evolved to include caffeine in their nectar. Check out how this has impacted plant evolution here.
How agriculture can actually help pollinators
Poet and nonfiction writer Heather Swan meditates on how agriculture has evolved to be harmful to pollinators–from the use of pesticides to monocropping–and what farmers can do to reverse course. Her findings unfold alongside her travels to a handful of farms, some entrenched in harmful practices and others actively trying to be better stewards. Read more here.
The rising phenomenon of kidnapping bees
Pollinating California’s almond farms requires far more bees than naturally live in the area, causing demand for domesticated honeybees to skyrocket. The typical cost of a hive shot from $35 to $200 in just a few years. This newfound money in pollination has incentivized some to steal hives in the dark of night. Read more about "hive crime" here.
The threat honeybees pose to native bees
Commercial beekeepers are increasingly breeding honeybees on public lands, raising concerns among environmentalists that they’ll compete with and introduce new diseases to already threatened native pollinator populations. But beekeepers say they’re running out of space. Read about the tensions between honeybees and native bees here.
Universe & Life
What if the universe was alive?
It was sentient... able to perceive or feel things?
We measure sentience relative to ourselves... what is it like for a human being to perceive and feel.
- we hear
- we see
- we taste
- we smell
- we feel
- we fear
- we think
- we hurt
- we love
- we bleed
Are they aware of what they are doing?
Does dark energy and dark matter give the universe its LIFE somehow... like human blood and the oxygen, we breath?
Does the universe somehow breathe in dark energy?
What if GOD is the sum total of the universe?
God = the universe
The universe = God
Maybe each of our bodies is a miniature universe...
All Life on Earth Comes From One Single Ancestor.
Life on Earth had to begin somewhere, and scientists think that “somewhere” is LUCA—or the Last Universal Common Ancestor. True to its name, this prokaryote-like organism represents the ancestor of every living thing, from the tiniest of bacteria to the grandest of blue whales.
While the Cambrian Explosion kickstarted complex life in a major way some 530 million years, the true timeline of life on Earth is much longer. For years, scientists have estimated that LUCA likely arrived on the scene some 4 billion years, which is only 600 million years after the planet’s formation.
But a study from an international team of scientists pushes that timeline back even further to some 4.2 billion years ago, while also discovering some fascinating details about what life for LUCA might’ve been like. The results of the study were published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution.




























