Tuesday, June 24
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Final member of BTS completes military service, reuniting the K-pop supergroup for first time in three years (More) | Rapper Fat Joe accused of sexual assault and coercion by former hype man in new lawsuit (More)
> Jon Jones, considered to be one of the greatest mixed martial artists of all time, retires at age 37 (More) | Three people dead and more than 70 injured after fans fall from upper deck of Algeria soccer stadium (More)
> LSU tops Coastal Carolina to win Men's College World Series and its eighth NCAA baseball national title (More) | Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh becomes first switch-hitter to hit 30 home runs before the MLB All-Star Game (More)
Science & Technology
> Anthropic researchers find leading AI models used in corporate applications may resort to malicious behavior when threatened, including blackmail and leaking sensitive documents (More) | Generative AI explained (1440 Topics)
> Vera C. Rubin Observatory expected to release first images today from world's largest digital camera before launching 10-year survey; primary goals include study of dark matter and energy, the structure and evolution of the Milky Way (More) | Who was Vera Rubin? (More)
> Stem cell treatment effectively cures severe Type 1 diabetes in small clinical trial; 10 of 12 patients no longer needed insulin a year after a single infusion of zimislecel (More) | Diabetes explained (More)
> US stock markets close mixed Friday (S&P 500 -0.2%, Dow +0.1%, Nasdaq -0.5%) amid tensions in the Middle East (More)
> FedEx founder Fred Smith dies at age 80; Smith revolutionized the package delivery industry with air-ground system of hubs and spokes, leading the $54.1B company from its 1971 founding to 2022 (More) | See how he did it (More, w/video)
> The US and European Union reportedly approach deal to settle nontariff trade disputes, including on deforestation, treatment of US tech companies (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Heat wave covers central and eastern US with temperatures expected to exceed 90 degrees for 170 million Americans (More) | North Dakota tornado kills at least three people (More)
> Pro-Palestinian activist and Columbia University graduate Mahmoud Khalil is released from ICE detention after federal judge finds the legal US resident did not pose a flight risk; Department of Homeland Security says it will appeal (More)
> Hot air balloon fire in Brazil kills eight people; pilot and 13 passengers survive with injuries (More) | India says it will never restore water treaty with Pakistan following conflict in May; treaty provided water for 80% of Pakistan’s farms (More)
Living
Do you live in the past... the present... or the future?
I would suggest to you that most of us live in the present and sometimes get the shoebox out that holds the photos of the past and sift through them to remember what went well.
When we look at the past through photos or throughout memories, we are tainted by what we think we remember, not the reality of what actually happened.
This is true for horrific memories as well. The heart of this horrific memory is REAL and AUTHENTIC, but the details that surround it, fade or grow with time; if they grow, they are typically distorted to make them worse than they were.
Because we inflate these memories, we tend to forget them or minimize their authenticity to better cope with our present behavior.
My bad memories of my childhood are hardly worth thinking about now and when I do, they are neutral in their mental impact on my consciousness... when that happens, they are no longer worth thinking about.
As far as the future is concerned, none of us know what is going to happen TWENTY YEARS FROM NOW, but we are all smart enough to PLAN FOR several contingencies.
It is this planning and the re-evaluation of this planning that MIGHT, when the future gets here that SAVES OUR LIVES both financially and mentally.
SO...
- thrive in the present
- reflect on the past cautiously and carefully
- plan for the future
- live everyday as if it is your last
Deadly fungus that can "eat you from the inside out" is quickly spreading around the world
Imagine inhaling hundreds of invisible spores every day. Most float in and out of our airways without leaving a trace. Yet some of those spores belong to molds that don’t respect boundaries.
Many fungus species will infect lungs, spoil crops, and disrupt ecosystems all at the same time. In short, they can wreak massive havoc and leave death in their wake.
Most molds and fungi are helpful, but some fungus and mold will jump from hospital wards to honeybee hives, and the line between helpful recycler and harmful invader grows blurrier each year.
Monday, June 23
Headlines
Anadolu/Getty Images
Robert Reich
Centralize even more power and curtail even more civil liberties
Friends,
One of my goals in writing this letter to you every day is to alert you to dangers to our democracy so you can alert others, who then alert others, and by this means we enlarge and strengthen our bulwark against the tide of fascism.
Wars pose particular challenges to democracy because nations at war often become more xenophobic and willing to give those in power extra leeway to protect the homeland. That’s an underlying danger in Trump’s war with Iran.
Trump has already tried to use three pretexts to usurp power — terrorism, national emergency, and war itself — to justify his mass deportations, universal tariffs, and consolidations of power. And he has tried to use these to gain legal legitimacy under laws that give presidents additional power when the nation is threatened.
At A Glance
Telegram's CEO to give $14B fortune to his 100+ children.
Gorgeous images of Earth from space.
Photos of 2,500 revelers at Great Masked Ball in Versailles.
Never-before-seen Picasso ceramics auctioned for $332.4K.
... and Alan Turing's scientific papers sell for $625K.
How volcanoes shape planet Earth. (via YouTube)
Ducklings leap off bridge to mother in viral video.
Learn about the man who preserved over 17,000 folk songs.
Clickbait: When life gives you glass bottles make an Airbnb.
In The NEWS
Breaking down SCOTUS
The Supreme Court of the United States is the highest authority in the country's judicial system, standing alongside the executive and legislative as a coequal branch of government (see 101).
The main role of the court is to interpret the US Constitution and ensure that laws and policies align with it. The court also resolves legal disputes involving the federal government's authority and serves as the final appellate body, reviewing decisions from lower federal and state courts, that is, hearing appeals.
The Supreme Court consists of nine justices—one chief justice and eight associate justices—a number that has remained unchanged since the Judiciary Act of 1869 (the number of justices can be changed through an act of Congress). Justices are nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate, serving lifetime appointments. As of 2025, 116 people have held the position of justice. See current justices here.
The Supreme Court has delivered landmark decisions that have significantly influenced the nation's legal and social landscape (see table of laws ruled unconstitutional).
... Read our full write-up on the court here.
Also, check out ...
> The only criminal trial in the Supreme Court's history. (More)
> Why Supreme Court nominations have become so bitter. (More)
> Why SCOTUS justices serve for life. (More)
The Hubble Telescope, 101
For the last three decades, NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has served as the pinnacle of space-based observation—generating unprecedented images of the universe and rewriting textbook theories on black holes, dark matter, exoplanets, and more. The observatory is named after Edwin Hubble, the astronomer who first revealed and classified galaxies other than our own.
The telescope was released from the space shuttle Discovery’s cargo bay into low Earth orbit on April 25, 1990, 320 miles above Earth’s surface. Since becoming operational, Hubble has made more than 1.6 million observations, making it NASA’s most productive mission ever. For years, it was serviced regularly via space shuttle missions.
Hubble is expected to reenter and burn up in Earth’s atmosphere sometime in the mid-2030s, far surpassing its original 15-year mission and inspiring a new generation of space-based observatories.
... Read our full explainer on the Hubble here.
Also, check out ...
> The time Hubble witnessed a comet hit Jupiter. (More)
> Investigate the cosmos in this Hubble-based interactive. (More)
> The story behind Hubble's first photo. (More)
Broken Window Glass Theory
The broken window glass theory is an economic theory that says there are positive outcomes when a pane of glass in a storefront, for example, is broken.
Let me explain,
A criminal breaks the window of a storefront in order to steal some merchandise inside. The cost of replacing that window is a business expense that could be labeled vandalism. The store owner hires a handyman to replace that window so new wages for the handyman. The handyman must buy supplies at a local hardware store so new revenue for that store. The handyman has to buy himself lunch the day the work is done, so the restaurant has new revenues as well and that restaurant had to buy supplies and hire people.
So that alone causes an econ0mic impact that before the window was broken may never have taken place.
Using this same theory, we can now speculate that every time something similar happens it will result in a positive economic impact. Something similar could be:
- Hurricane damage
- Wildfire damage
- Flood damage
- Court room expenses (electricity, heating, air)
- Reporters/camera people
- Security guards
- Legal fees/investigators
- Taxis/gasoline/electric batteries
- Restaurants/people/supplies
- Coffee purchases
- Opportunity costs
New Calculations Shake Foundations of the Big Bang Theory
New findings from the University of Bonn challenge the assumptions of the standard cosmological model.
The faint “afterglow” that fills the universe has long been one of the most important clues supporting the Big Bang theory. Known as cosmic microwave background radiation, this ancient light not only serves as a snapshot of the early universe, but also helps scientists understand how the very first galaxies came to be.
Now, a team of researchers from the Universities of Bonn, Prague, and Nanjing is challenging what we thought we knew. Their new calculations suggest that the strength of this background radiation may have been significantly overestimated. If their findings are confirmed, it could force scientists to rethink some of the most fundamental ideas in modern cosmology.


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