- Bill of Rights Freedoms
- Military power
- Our Democratic Republic
- Our Education
- Our Healthcare
- Economic Prosperity
- Dream of becoming wealthy
- Law Enforcement
- Home Ownership
- Easy mobility
- Entertainment
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- Retirement
Sunday, July 20
America
Teaching a Kid to Think Like a Genius
I watched a boy in my third-grade class adjust his catapult's arm for the fifth time as he measured distances and recorded numbers on his data sheet. This was a personalized learning project, a time dedicated to intrinsic curiosity.
I realized he was doing exactly what Leonardo da Vinci did 500 years ago in a basement laboratory in Milan. Leonardo would dig up cadavers, and then trace muscular structures while his incomplete Last Supper fresco waited upstairs.
Saturday, July 19
Headlines
Brandon Bell/Getty Images
The GENIUS Act is the law of the land. President Trump signed the bill into law yesterday, setting up a framework for regulating stablecoins—digital currency pegged to traditional assets—that are linked to the US dollar. It’s a big win for the crypto industry, and Trump said it was a “giant step to cement American dominance of global finance and crypto technology.” The law could help push stablecoins into the mainstream, and major companies like Walmart and Amazon have been said to be considering launching their own.—ARRobert Reich
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| landmark’s Nuart Theater in Los Angeles, California |
Extended Run!
The Last Class film is also spreading to more theaters
Friends,
I’m delighted to tell you that The Last Class film, about my final semester teaching my 800-student undergraduate course at UC Berkeley, is now playing in 46 theaters in 20 states (and the film team is adding more screenings to the list each day).
Due to all of you showing up to see it, seven theaters in six states have just extended their run of the film for another week:
Ciné Athens in Athens, GA, now thru Thurs, July 24
Rialto Cinemas Elmwood in Berkeley, CA now thru Thurs, July 24
The Quad Cinema in Greenwich Village, NY, now thru Thurs, July 24
Kentucky Theatre in Lexington, KY, now thru Thurs, July 24
Salem Cinema in Salem, OR, now thru Thurs, July 24
The Grand Cinema in Tacoma, WA, now thru Thurs, July 24
Landmark’s Nuart Theatre in West Los Angeles, CA now thru Thurs, July 24
People tell me it’s an uplifting and optimistic film at a very dark time in our history. It’s about the next generation — their energy, excitement, and enthusiasm — and their hopes for the future.
Should you wish to have a look, here’s the trailer.
At A Glance
Bookkeeping
> $245,300: How much Fyre Festival sold the rights to its brand for on eBay.
> 749 miles: Longest journey by an EV on a single charge, set by Lucid Motors.
> 40: The number of birthday freebies a man secured on his 38th birthday.
Browse
> Snoop Dogg becomes co-owner of Welsh soccer team.
> Legacy of the Appalachian Trail’s first female solo hiker.
> UNESCO just added 26 new World Heritage sites.
> Neanderthals may have had family recipes.
> Inside a movement to help nature through music.
Listen
> Journaling as a strategy to unlock creativity.
> How AI is shaking up the legal industry.
Watch
> The entire history of English in 22 minutes.
> Explaining the golden ratio.
> Why AriZona iced tea is always 99 cents.
Long Read
> Marriage is about learning to braid the bitter with the sweet.
> How a hunter-gatherer community in Central Africa raises parents.
Best of the Week: Girl's note to home residents found on empty toilet paper roll.
Historybook: Inventor and businessman Samuel Colt born (1814); First US women’s rights convention held (1848); Maurice Garin becomes first winner of Tour de France (1903); Sports journalist Stuart Scott born (1965); First GPS signal transmitted (1977).
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> CBS will cancel "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert," retiring the franchise in May 2026, citing financial reasons; the program is the most-watched late night franchise on US broadcast television (More)
> Connie Francis, singer of "Stupid Cupid" and viral TikTok song "Pretty Little Baby," dies at age 87; Francis became the first woman in history to top the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1960 (More) | Bryan Braman, former Super Bowl-winning linebacker, dies of cancer at age 38 (More)
> The 2025 WNBA All-Star festivities kick off tonight with the three-point contest and skills challenge (8 pm ET, ESPN), followed by tomorrow's All-Star Game (8:30 pm ET, ABC); star Caitlin Clark will miss weekend with injury (More)
Science & Technology
> OpenAI debuts ChatGPT Agent that can control multiple applications on a user's computer to carry out complex tasks such as making purchases, planning trips, creating slide decks, and more (More)
> Surgeons perform world's first pediatric heart transplant using a technique that restarts the heart outside the donor's body; procedure saved the life of a 3-month-old patient, could increase organ donor pool by 20% (More)
> Researchers discover unique electrical patterns that occur as the brain transitions from sleeping to being awake; findings may help lead to new treatments for sleep disorders (More) | Breaking down the different stages of sleep (1440 Topics)
Business & Markets
> US House passes bill regulating dollar-pegged stablecoins, which now heads to President Donald Trump for signing; two House-passed bills governing regulatory oversight of digital assets and barring Federal Reserve from creating its own digital currency head to the Senate (More) | See previous write-up (More)
> US stock markets close higher (S&P 500 +0.5%, Dow +0.5%, Nasdaq +0.7%); S&P 500 and Nasdaq rise to records (More) | Mark Zuckerberg and Meta Platforms investors settle shareholder claims seeking $8B in damages over alleged Facebook privacy violations (More)
> Newsletter publisher Substack raises $100M at $1.1B valuation, achieving unicorn status (More) | AI coding startup Lovable also reaches unicorn status after raising $200M at a valuation of $1.8B (More) | What are unicorn startups? (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> President Donald Trump has been diagnosed with benign condition known as chronic venous insufficiency, White House press secretary reveals; the condition occurs when blood pools in the vein, restricting flow to the heart (More) | Department of Homeland Security reaches deal with Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to get access to data on 79 million Medicaid enrollees (More)
> House of Representatives slated to vote today on Senate bill to reduce $9B in federal spending on foreign aid and public broadcasting (More) | Republicans advance judicial nomination for former Trump lawyer, Democrats walk out (More)
> Israeli strike on Gaza church kills at least three people, wounds 10 others, including the priest; Israel says the strike was a mistake (More)
World War III
- Is this a possibility?
- Is this a good possibility??
- So that our country can be prepared.
- So that our companies can be prepared.
- Europe - because of the Russia/Ukraine war
- Middle East - because of the Israel/Iran (now Syria war
- South China Sea - because of China desire to control Taiwan
- NATO is preparing for war
- China/Russia are preparing for war
- USA is preparing for war
- Increase in price of gasoline
- Increase in the price of electricity
- Political blame game
- increased polarization
- Congress must declare war
- Supply shortages (food, building materials, computer chips)
- Heightened terrorist alerts
- Tourists' flights stopped to Europe, etc.
- Possibly a national draft again
NASA’s SpaceX Crew-11 to Support Health Studies for Deep Space Travel
NASA’s SpaceX Crew-11 mission is set to launch a four-person crew to the International Space Station later this summer. Some of the crew have volunteered to participate in a series of experiments to address health challenges astronauts may face on deep space missions during NASA’s Artemis campaign and future human expeditions to Mars.
The research during Crew-11 includes simulated lunar landings, tactics to safeguard vision, and other human physiology studies led by NASA’s Human Research Program.
Select crew members will participate in a series of simulated Moon landings, before, during, and after their flight. Using a handheld controller and multiple screens, the astronauts will fly through simulated scenarios created to resemble the lunar South Pole region that Artemis crews plan to visit. This experiment allows researchers to evaluate how different gravitational forces may disorient astronauts and affect their ability to pilot a spacecraft, like a lunar lander.
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