Saturday, October 18
Headlines
Win McNamee/Getty Images
Robert Reich
Reform the Insurrection Act
Friends,
With No Kings rallies occurring across America tomorrow, and the Trump administration’s unhinged reaction to them on full display, it’s never been more important for Congress to reform the Insurrection Act. Please contact Congress and demand action immediately.
Donald Trump — the man who incited a violent insurrection against the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, and has pardoned those who attacked our democracy — is now calling peaceful protesters “insurrectionists” and threatening to use military force against them.
The Insurrection Act, a 200-year-old law, gives presidents near-limitless power to deploy troops on U.S. soil with almost no oversight. It was meant for true emergencies. But as written, it’s an open invitation for abuse — allowing any president to send armed forces into American cities under almost any pretext. I fear Trump is about to seize that power.
At A Glance
Bookkeeping
> $3.9B: How much Americans are expected to spend on Halloween treats.
> 14.4: Divorces per 1,000 married women in 2023, down from 22.6 in 1980.
Browse
> Which cars birds are most likely to poop on.
> You might want to clean your showerhead.
> Honeycrisp apples are a farmer's nightmare.
> Why Oct. 5-14, 1582, never existed.
Listen
> These are unusually innovative times, says a Nobel laureate.
> 1440 Explores: Subscribe to our new podcast to learn about the birth of credit cards and why humans drink alcohol. Next episode—on ghosts—drops Oct. 30. (Apple | Spotify | YouTube).
Watch
> Why the US Northeast gets more rain on the weekends.
> How to build a Chinese typewriter.
> Three steps to making someone fall in love.
Long Read
> Think twice before trusting a wine connoisseur.
> How phones are flattening our friendships.
> Robot Figure 03 is gearing up to do your dishes.
Most Clicked This Week: Simple steps to help prevent dementia.
Historybook: "Moby-Dick" is first published (1851); The US formally took possession of Alaska from Russia (1867); Thomas Edison dies (1931); Astronauts Jessica Meir and Christina Koch conduct first all-female spacewalk (2019); Former Secretary of State Colin Powell dies (2021).
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Ace Frehley, Kiss cofounder and Rock & Roll Hall of Famer, dies at age 74 after suffering injuries from a fall last month (More)
> Former boxing champ Ricky Hatton's September death ruled a suicide (More) | Over 1 million tickets already sold for 2026 FIFA World Cup set to be hosted in the US, Canada, and Mexico (More)
> Spotify partners with Sony, Universal Music Group, and other major music companies to develop AI music products and tools (More)
Science & Technology
> Microsoft rolls out artificial intelligence-focused upgrades to Windows 11 operating system, including enhanced voice chat features (More)
> Neuroscientists pinpoint astrocyte brain cell as key to converting emotional experiences into long-term memories; finding could inform future treatments for memory-related conditions such as PTSD and Alzheimer's (More)
> Researchers discover female stinkbugs store and coat their eggs with fungi to ward off parasitic wasps—a rare symbiotic relationship in which fungi act as a physical, rather than chemical, defense (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close down (S&P 500 -0.6%, Dow -0.7%, Nasdaq -0.5%) over concerns of loan losses at regional banks (More) | Oil prices drop to lowest level since February 2021 (More)
> Nestlé shares close up 9%—biggest one-day jump since 2008—after company says it will cut 16,000 jobs worldwide (More) | US tariffs to cost global businesses at least $1.2T this year, with most costs passed on to consumers, per new analysis (More)
> Harvard University's endowment grows 11.9%, up from 9.6% a year earlier, to nearly $57B for the fiscal year ending June 30; data comes amid federal funding pressures (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> President Donald Trump says he will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Budapest in the coming weeks; announcement comes after the leaders engage in a roughly two-hour phone call ahead of Trump's meeting today with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy (More)
> National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration issues 2025-26 weather forecast, anticipating hotter and drier-than-average weather for southern and eastern US, wetter and colder conditions for northern states (More)
> French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu survives no-confidence votes after suspending government's pension reforms, earning support from the country's Socialist Party (More) | See previous write-up (More)
A Cancer/Health Update
Human Remains in Antarctica Just Shattered Everything We Thought We Knew About Early Exploration
A groundbreaking discovery in Antarctica has unveiled the oldest known human remains on the continent, prompting a reevaluation of historical timelines and raising intriguing questions about early human exploration in one of the Earth's most inhospitable environments.
The discovery of the oldest human remains in Antarctica has prompted a re-evaluation of human history on the remote and icy continent. This find, initially made in the mid-1980s on Yámana Beach, introduces a narrative of ancient exploration and resilience.
The remains, thought to be from a young woman who lived in the early 19th century, suggest that human contact with Antarctica may have occurred much earlier than previously acknowledged. This revelation not only challenges established timelines but also evokes curiosity about the human capacity for survival in harsh environments.
Friday, October 17
Wonderings 14
Time
We exist (for the time being - no pun intended) inside the concept of spacetime which is represented by our 3-Dimensional (width, length, depth) lives plus the passing of time that always seems to move forward.
As a result, we have the:
- past
- present
- future
And,
all of this seems pretty straight forward until one asks the question, when do these times begin and end?
Looking back, we can clearly see that the past is in the past and looking forward, we can clearly see that the future has not happened yet.
But,
look at these three more carefully, we can see that it is not so much straight forward.
We are in the past until the present happens but how does one delineate between the two; similarly, we are in the present until the future happens, but again, how does one delineate between the two.
- Does the past last longer than the present?
- Does the present last longer than the future?
As soon as I type my first letter onto this online posting format, I have moved into the future...
And, as soon as I type the second letter, I have moved into the future, which instantly becomes the present until the third letter is typed.
However, my mind is already in the future because I know what I am going to write next, therefore, that future knowledge is somehow taking place in the present which is the future's past.
The movement of time is fluid; it has no breaks, no pauses, no moments of reflection or clarity, it simply continues to move forward, leaving us forever caught in the conundrum of which time frame are we really operating in... especially when it all seems like the present to us.









.jpg)




.png)


