Monday, September 29
Headlines
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Robert Reich
Trump’s increasingly bizarre behavior can no longer be attributed to a calculated “strategy.”
Friends,
Over the weekend, on his Truth Social, Trump shared a video purporting to be a segment on Fox News — it wasn’t — in which an AI-generated, deepfaked version of himself sat in the White House and promised that “every American will soon receive their own MedBed card” that will grant them access to new “MedBed hospitals.”
What?
Believers in the “MedBed” conspiracy theory think certain hospital beds are loaded with futuristic technology that can reverse any disease, regenerate limbs, and de-age people. No one has an actual photo of these beds because they don’t exist.
Trump also posted (again, without any basis in fact) that the FBI “secretly placed … 274 FBI Agents into the Crowd just prior to, and during” the January 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol, during which they were “probably acting as Agitators and Insurrectionists.”
At A Glance
The people who eat 100-year-old military rations.
Revisiting the first zeppelin trip around the world.
How Hollywood helped finance World War I.
Several time zone disputes throughout history.
Egyptian wrestler pulls a ship using his teeth.
Why the world's oldest person is often a woman.
... and learning from the DNA of a 117-year-old.
Kindergarten asks parents to pay up for kids' art.
Clickbait: Meet AI actress Tilly Norwood.
Historybook: John D. Rockefeller becomes world’s first billionaire (1916); Pope John Paul II is first pope to visit Ireland (1979); Stacy Allison becomes first American woman to climb Mount Everest (1988); Basketball star Kevin Durant born (1988).
In The NEWS
A brief look at recessions
Stemming from the Latin word “recessus” (meaning “a retreat”), recessions are sustained periods of declining activity in a country’s economy. During a recession, unemployment rises while economic output falls across a large swath of industries. Recessions are inevitable in modern economies, with one occurring about every six to seven years.
One common definition of a recession is when a country logs two consecutive quarters of shrinking gross domestic product, but in practice, these economic phenomena are more complex.
The US has been through 34 recessions since 1854, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research. But over time, they’ve become both shorter and less frequent. Since 1980, the US has only experienced six recessions.
... Read our full deep dive on recessions here.
Also, check out ...
> Amid market downturns, some let their roots grow out—so-called "recession blondes." (More)
> The eight people who decide whether the US is in a recession. (More)
> Visualizing the trends of recessions and recoveries over 150 years. (More)
Figaro! Figaro! Figaro!
Opera, explained
Opera (derived from the Italian word for “artistic work”) is an art form that shares narratives through singing and music. The style was born in 16th-century Florence at the end of the Italian Renaissance. In the 1600s, it spread to other parts of Europe and took different shapes and styles for centuries (listen to operatic singing).
Operas and musicals are often incorrectly conflated. Operas emphasize music, rather than lyrics and dialogue, to serve the storytelling. The message transcends language in opera, exemplified by how operas are often performed in languages foreign to their audiences.
While cost barriers and a changing cultural landscape have mostly sidelined opera today, it remains culturally relevant in modern television, movies, and sports coverage that continue to use its iconic melodies.
... Read our full deep dive on opera here.
Also, check out ...
> Why Mozart's "The Marriage of Figaro" was so controversial. (More)
> Everything you need to know about opera etiquette. (More)
> Understanding the economic hardships opera faces. (More)
We Have Been Given LIFE
As we enter the last couple of days of September 2025, I am reminded that time seems to move faster as we get older which is good sometimes like when you have an upset stomach or nothing seems to be going right...
But, each day is a blessing of sorts, in the sense that you are above ground and will soon not be, so regardless of the day being good or bad, one should take advantage of it...
Earlier I read where some billionaires are investing heavily in items they think will extend their lives... while also investing heavily in research that will extend the lives of human beings. Maybe they gain five to ten years of additional life and can use that time to double or triple their net worth... THEY WILL STILL DIE...
For me, money does not provide me with happiness; it provides me with opportunities to have what I never thought I would have or see, but that is not necessarily happiness.
Happiness is illusive to most Americans and Global citizens; the exception being the HINDU MONKS who see happiness as finding enlightenment.
Look at it another way...
Our religious God and Jesus never spoke of wealth is the sense of it being what one should seek during their lives...
WHY???
Do our religious beliefs not see becoming wealthy as something we should strive for?
And yet, lots of wealthy people thank God for giving them the money.
Why do they not thank Jesus too?
For me, I see our religious faith and seeking wealth as being mutually exclusive and one does not beget the other... if it does, it is just coincidence...
None of those wealthy people share their wealth with poor people to the extent they would redistribute 80% of their wealth...
They may share 1-2%...
This posting started out focusing on time and it is time that I want to end with.
Time equals life.
Life is precious.
One should accept the life that one has been given as that gift has been given for a reason that you may never discover in your lifetime.
Use nature as an example as to how you should live your life.
It's just a metaphor.
A New Quest for Consciousness
In the 10 minutes before the official start of class, Professor Anne Harrington (abive) somehow managed to cover descriptions of Gilbert Ryle’s classic “category mistake” critique of mind-body dualism, Richard Feynman’s self-experimentation on falling asleep, and the layout of her course’s Canvas site.
In the 10 minutes before the official start of class, Professor Anne Harrington ’82 somehow managed to cover descriptions of Gilbert Ryle’s classic “category mistake” critique of mind-body dualism, Richard Feynman’s self-experimentation on falling asleep, and the layout of her course’s Canvas site. There was no clear beginning of the class, it seemed, only the seamless transition from casual conversation to formal lecture. Like its subject — consciousness — the boundaries of the class were amorphous.









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