Sunday, February 22, 2026

Weekend Funny: The Onion - Trump Suffers Setback Unrelated To Child Rape

This was funny/not funny all at once.

Who knew that the United States would decline so precipitously in such a short amount of time that a blatantly corrupt and incompetent president would go to increasingly extreme lengths, simply to distract from serious wrongdoings involving apparently his raping children and being mentioned tens of thousands of times on the Epstein List?

Yet, here we are.

Anyway, yes, Trump's Supreme Court defeat recently (they voted against his ability to impose tariffs) would seem almost like a welcome distraction and relief from the focus on Trump being so prominently mentioned in the Epstein Files.

Below is the link to the story.

Enjoy.



Weekend Funny: The Onion - Trump Suffers Setback Unrelated To Child Rape  Published:  February 20, 2026

https://theonion.com/trump-suffers-setback-unrelated-to-child-rape/

Trump Suffers Setback Unrelated To Child Rape - The Onion

February 22nd: This Day in History

 


Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!

On this day in 896, Pope Formosa crowned King Arnulf of Karinthie/French emperor. In 1071 on this day, the Battle of Cassel was fought, when Robert I the Frisian defeated Arnulf III/I. Simon de Brion was elected Pope Martinus IV on this day in 1281. On this day in 1288, Girolamo Masci was elected Pope Nicolas IV. In 1300 on this day, Pope Boniface VIII delegated degree. Jews were expelled from Zurich, Switzerland, on this day in 1349. French King Charles VIII entered Naples to claim the crown on this day in 1495. In 1561 on this day, William of Orange was appointed Viceroy of Burgundy/Charolais. On this day in 1630, Native Americans introduced the pilgrims to popcorn. Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems was published on this day in 1632. On this day in 1819, the U.S. acquired Spanish Florida, after Spanish minister Do Luis de Onis and U.S. Secretary of State John Quincy Adams signed the Florida Purchase Treaty, in which Spain agreed to cede the remainder of its old province of Florida to the United States. On this day in 1968 during the American war in Vietnam, the Tet Offensive ended.  


Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:

 On this day in 896, Pope Formosa crowned King Arnulf of Karinthie/French emperor.

 In 1071 on this day, the Battle of Cassel was fought, when Robert I the Frisian defeated Arnulf III/I. 

 Simon de Brion was elected Pope Martinus IV on this day in 1281.

 On this day in 1288, Girolamo Masci was elected Pope Nicolas IV.

 In 1300 on this day, Pope Boniface VIII delegated degree.

 Jews were expelled from Zurich, Switzerland, on this day in 1349.

 French King Charles VIII entered Naples to claim the crown on this day in 1495.

 In 1561 on this day, William of Orange was appointed Viceroy of Burgundy/Charolais.

 On this day in 1630, Native Americans introduced the pilgrims to popcorn.



Replica of the statue of Galileo Galilei outside of Carnegie Museums of Natural History

 Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems was published on this day in 1632.


 1656 - New Amsterdam granted a Jewish burial site

 1744 - Battle at Toulon: English-French & Spanish fleet

 1746 - French troops conquer Brussels

 1746 - Jakobijnse troops vacate Aberdeen

 1774 - British House of Lords rules authors do not have perpetual copyright

 1775 - 1st US joint stock company (to make cloth) offers shares at 10 cents

 1775 - Jews expelled from outskirts of Warsaw Poland

 1784 - 1st US ship to trade with China, "Empress of China," sails from NY

 1797 - The Last Invasion of Britain by the French, begins near Fishguard, Wales.


 1819 - Spain renounces claims to Oregon Country, Florida (Adams-OnĂ­s Treaty)

 On this day in 1819, the U.S. acquired Spanish Florida, after Spanish minister Do Luis de Onis and U.S. Secretary of State John Quincy Adams signed the Florida Purchase Treaty, in which Spain agreed to cede the remainder of its old province of Florida to the United States.    Spanish colonization of the Florida peninsula began at St. Augustine in 1565. The Spanish colonists enjoyed a brief period of relative stability before Florida came under attack from resentful Native Americans and ambitious English colonists to the north in the 17th century. Spain's last-minute entry into the French and Indian War on the side of France cost it Florida, which the British acquired through the first Treaty of Paris in 1763. After 20 years of British rule, however, Florida was returned to Spain as part of the second Treaty of Paris, which ended the American Revolution in 1783.    Spain's hold on Florida was tenuous in the years after American independence, and numerous boundary disputes developed with the United States. In 1819, after years of negotiations, Secretary of State John Quincy Adams achieved a diplomatic coup with the signing of the Florida Purchase Treaty, which officially put Florida into U.S. hands at no cost beyond the U.S. assumption of some $5 million of claims by U.S. citizens against Spain. Formal U.S. occupation began in 1821, and General Andrew Jackson, the hero of the War of 1812, was appointed military governor. Florida was organized as a U.S. territory in 1822 and was admitted into the Union as a slave state in 1845.  
1821 - Spain sells (east) Florida to United States for $5 million

 1825 - Russia & Britain establish Alaska-Canada boundary

 1828 - Russia & Persia sign Peace of Turkmantsjai


Charles Darwin

 1835 - HMS Beagle/Charles Darwin leave Valdivia Chile

 1836 - Dutch garrison evacuates fort Du Bus New Guinea

 1847 - Battle of Buena Vista: US troops beat Mexican army

1854 - 1st meeting of Republican Party (Michigan)
1856 - 1st national meeting of Republican Party (Pittsburgh)
1858 - Dion Boucicault's "Jessie Brown," premieres in NYC
1860 - Organized baseball played in SF for 1st time
1860 - Shoe-making workers of Lynn Ms, strike successfully for higher wages

 1861 - On a bet Edward Weston leaves Boston to walk to Lincoln's inauguration

 1864 - -27] Battle at Dalton Georgia

 1864 - 2nd/last day of Battle of Okolona, MS
Naturalist Charles DarwinNaturalist Charles Darwin 



 1864 - Skirmish at Calfkiller Creek (Sparta) Tennessee



A statue in Flemington, New Jersey, honoring veterans of the American Civil War.


 1865 - Battle of Wilmington, NC (Fort Anderson) occupied by Federals
1865 - Tennessee adopts a new constitution abolishing slavery
1872 - 1st national convention of Prohibition Party (Columbus Ohio)
1876 - Johns Hopkins University opens
1878 - Greenback Labor Party forms (Toledo Ohio)
1879 - 1st 5 cent & 10 cent store opened by Frank W Woolworth (Utica NY)
1882 - With 120 miles James Saunders wins NYC's 24 hour race & $100 prize

 1882 - The Serbian kingdom is refounded.

1887 - Union Labor Party organized in Cincinnati
1888 - John Reid of Scotland demonstrates golf to Americans (Yonkers NY)




 1889 - US President Cleveland signs bill to admit Dakotas, Montana & Washington state to the union

1892 - "Lady Windermere's Fan" by Oscar Wilde premieres at St James (London)
1892 - Manitoba Rugby Football Union forms
1898 - Black postmaster lynched, his wife & 3 daughters shot in Lake City SC
Writer/Poet Oscar WildeWriter/Poet Oscar Wilde 1900 - Battle at Wynne's Hill, South-Africa (Boers vs British army)
1900 - Hawaii became a US territory
1903 - Due to drought the US side of Niagara Falls runs short of water
1904 - The United Kingdom sells a meteorological station on the South Orkney Islands to Argentina, the islands are subsequently claimed by the United Kingdom in 1908.
1906 - Black evangelist William J Seymour arrives in LA Calif
1907 - 1st cabs with taxi meters begin operating in London
1907 - Leonid N Andreyev's "Zhizn Cheloveka," premieres in St Petersburg
1909 - Great White Fleet, 1st US fleet to circle the globe, returns to Va

 1912 - J Vedrines makes 1st airplane flight over 100 mph-161.29 kph

1913 - Lowell HS, SF opens (on its 1st campus)
1915 - Germany begins "unrestricted" submarine war
1917 - German Navy torpedoes 7 Dutch ships

 Feb 22, 1917: Mussolini wounded by mortar bomb  On February 22, 1917, Sergeant Benito Mussolini is wounded by the accidental explosion of a mortar bomb on the Isonzo section of the Italian Front in World War I.    Born in Predappio, Italy, in 1883, the son of a blacksmith and a teacher, Mussolini was well-read, largely self-educated and had worked as a schoolteacher and a socialist journalist. He was arrested and jailed for leading demonstrations in the Forli province against the Italian war in Libya in 1911-12. The editor of Avanti!, the Socialist Party newsletter in Milan, Mussolini was one of the most effective socialist journalists in Europe. In 1912, at the age of 29, he took the reins of the Italian Socialist Party at the Congress of Reggio Emilia, preaching a strict Marxist socialism that prompted Vladimir Lenin to write in a Russian publication that The party of the Italian socialist proletariat has taken the right path.    Mussolini early on denounced the Great War, which broke out in 1914, as an imperialist conflict; he later reversed his position and began to advocate Italian entrance into the war on the side of the Allies. He left the Socialist Party in 1915 over its neutrality, believing that Italian participation in the Great War would boost its claims on recovered territory in Austria-Hungary after the war. Enlisting in the army, Mussolini was sent to the front at Isonzo, on the eastern end of the Italian Front near the Isonzo River, after Italy's long-awaited entrance into the war in May 1915.    The mortar bomb that exploded during a training exercise on February 22, 1917, killed four of Mussolini's fellow soldiers. He escaped alive, but spent six months in the hospital, where 44 fragments of shell were removed from his body. Discharged from the army after his release from the hospital, Mussolini headed back to Milan, where he started his own newspaper, Il Popolo d'Italia (The People of Italy), in which he published articles attacking those in Italy who voiced anti-war sentiments.    In the immediate post-war period, Mussolini and a group of fellow young war veterans founded the Fasci di Combattimento, a right-wing, strongly nationalistic, anti-Socialist movement named for the fasces, the ancient Roman symbol for discipline. Fascism grew rapidly in the 1920s, winning support from rich landowners, the army and the monarchy; the growing strength of Mussolini and his now notorious black-shirt militia led King Vittorio Emmanuel III to invite the charismatic leader to form a coalition government in 1922. By 1926, Benito Mussolini, now known as Il Duce, had consolidated power for himself, transforming Italy into a single-party, totalitarian state that would later, alongside Japan and Adolf Hitler's Germany, return to the battlefield against the Allies in the Second World War.






 1918 - Germany claims Baltic states, Finland & Ukraine from Russia

1920 - 1st artificial rabbit used at a dog race track (Emeryville California)
1922 - Congress authorizes Grant Memorial $1 gold coin
1923 - 1st successful chinchilla farm in US (Los Angeles California)
1923 - Transcontinental airmail service begins
1927 - ARC soccer team forms in Alphen on the Rhine
1927 - Baruch Spinosa's house of mourning opened as a museum
1928 - 1st solo England to Australia flight lands (Bert Hinkler)
1932 - Purple Heart award reinstituted
Nazi Politician Hermann GoeringNazi Politician Hermann Goering 

1933 - Hermann Goering forms SA/SS-police, shoots 40-50
1934 - "It Happened One Night," opens at NY's Radio City Music Hall
1935 - Airplanes are no longer permitted to fly over the White House
1936 - Construction on Ypenburg Neth airport begins
1939 - Netherlands recognizes Franco regime in Spain
1940 - Finnish troops vacate Koivisto island
1940 - German air force sinks 2 German destroyers, killing 578
1941 - Arthur "Bomber" Harris becomes British Air Marshal
1941 - German assault on El Agheila Libya
1941 - IG Farben decides building Buna-Werke in Auschwitz Concentration Camp

 1941 - Nazi SS begin rounding up Jews of Amsterdam

1941 - Paul Creston's 1st Symphony, premieres
1941 - Roy Harris' "Ballad of a Railroad Man," premieres




 1942 - World War II: President Franklin Roosevelt orders General Douglas MacArthur out of the Philippines as American defenses collapse


1943 - Members of White Rose are executed in Nazi Germany.
WW2 General Douglas MacArthurWW2 General Douglas MacArthur 1944 - US 8th Air Force bombs Enschede, Arnhem & Nijmegen by mistake/800+ die
1945 - Arab League forms (Cairo)
1945 - British troops take Ramree Island, Burma
1945 - Canadian 3rd Division occupies Moyland
1948 - Arabs bomb attack in Jerusalem, 50 die
1950 - Brockway & Weinstock publish "Men of Music" (rev ed)
1955 - British aircraft carrier Ark Royal sets sail
1956 - 1st British soccer match at Kunstlicht: Portsmouth vs Newcastle United
1956 - Elvis Presley's 1st hit in Billboard's top 10: "Heartbreak Hotel"
1957 - Jockey Ted Atkinson, 3,500th win
1957 - Walter O'Malley says Dodgers may play 10 exhibitions in California in 1958
1958 - "Portotino" closes at Adelphi Theater NYC after 3 performances
1958 - Australian swimmer Jon Konrads sets 6 world records in 2 days
1958 - Egypt & Syria form United Arab Republic (UAR)
1958 - Indonesian air force bombs Padang, Sumatra/Menado, Celebes
Singer & Cultural Icon Elvis PresleySinger & Cultural Icon Elvis Presley 1959 - 1st Daytona 500 auto race-Lee Petty wins (135.521 MPH)
1962 - Wilt Chamberlain sets NBA record with 34 free throw attempts


    


 1963 - Beatles begin their own music publishing company (Northern Songs)

 1964 - Beatles arrive back in England after their 1st US visit


 1965 - USSR launches Kosmos 57 into earth orbit (Voskhod Test)

The flag of the USSR (Soviet Union)

 1966 - Soviets launch Kosmos 110 with Veterok & Ugolek, 1st 2-dog crew

1967 - Barbara Garson's "MacBird," premieres in NYC
1967 - Sling-shot goal post & 6' wide border around field are standard in NFL
1967 - 25,000 US & S Vietnamese troops launched Operation Junction City, offensive to smash Viet Cong stronghold near Cambodian border

 1968 - Rock group Genesis release their 1st record "Silent Sun"




 On this day in 1968 during the American war in Vietnam, the Tet Offensive ended.  The American war effort in Vietnam was hit hard by the North Vietnamese Tet Offensive, which ended on this day in 1968. Claims by President Lyndon Johnson that the offensive was a complete failure were misleading. Though the North Vietnamese death toll was 20 times that of its enemies, strongholds previously thought impenetrable had been shaken. The prospect of increasing American forces added substantial strength to the anti-war movement and led to Johnson's announcement that he would not seek re-election.


1969 - Barbara Jo Rubin becomes 1st female jockey to win at a major US track
1970 - "Charles Aznavour" closes at Music Box Theater NYC after 23 perfs
1971 - Lt Gen Hafiz al-Assad becomes President of Syria
1972 - Khalifa bin Hamad Al Thani becomes Amir & Prime Minister of Qatar
1972 - President Nixon, meets with Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai in Beijing
1973 - US & China agree to establish liaison offices in Beijing & Wash DC
1974 - Ethiopian police shoot at demonstrators
1976 - Kathy Whitworth wins LPGA Bent Tree Golf Classic
1978 - 2 tankers with propane gas explode killing 15 at Waverly, Tenn
1979 - Billy Martin named manager of Oakland A's
1979 - Cleveland Metroparks Zoo's Primate & Cat Building is dedicated
1979 - St Lucia gains independence from Britain


 1980 - Afghanistan declares martial law



Flag of the Olympics

 1980 - USA beats USSR in Olympic hockey 4-3 en route to a gold medal



1981 - Amy Alcott wins LPGA Bent Tree Ladies Golf Classic
1982 - NYC Mayor Koch announces he will run for NY governor (unsuccessful)
1983 - Harold Washington wins Chicago's Democratic mayoral primary
1983 - Hindus kill 3000 Moslems in Assam, India
1983 - Vladimir Salnikov (USSR) sets 1500m free style swimming record
1984 - Brothers Anton & Peter Stastny score 8 pts each for NHL Quebec
1986 - Start of the People Power Revolution in the Philippines.
1987 - Bruno Marie-Rose runs world record 200m indoor (20.36 sec)
1988 - Bonnie Blair skates world record 500m (39.10 sec)
1989 - Fins ministry of Public health installs sex vacation to thwart stress
1989 - NY Lotto pays $26.9 million to one winner (#s are 1-5-12-19-44-50)
Physicist Stephen HawkingPhysicist Stephen Hawking 1989 - UK physicist Stephen Hawking calls Star Wars a "deliberate fraud"
1989 - US authors demonstrate against Iranian death treats against Salman Rushdee, author of "Satanic Rituals"
1989 - 31st Grammy Awards: Don't Worry Be Happy, Faith, Tracy Chapman
1989 - 1st Spanish commercial on network TV (Pepsi-Cola-CBS Grammy Award)
1990 - 1st day India v NZ cricket at Auckland NZ 5-78 at lunch, 9-387 stumps
1991 - Bush & US Gulf War allies give Iraq 24 hrs to begin Kuwait withdrawal
1991 - Kelli McCarty, 21, (Kansas), crowned 40th Miss USA
1991 - Test Cricket debut of Sanath Jayasuriya, vs NZ at Hamilton
1992 - "Park Your Car in Harvard Yard" closes at Music Box NYC
1992 - Barry Diller resigns as CEO of Fox
1992 - Lisa Walters wins LPGA Itoki Hawaiian Ladies Open Golf Tournament




 1992 - Rockers Kurt Corbin (Nirvana) & Courtney Love (Hole), wed


1993 - Vinod Kambli scores 224 v England at Bombay, 411 balls, 23 fours
1994 - "Les Miserables," opens at Chunichi Theatre, Nagoya




Flag of Algeria

 1995 - Algiers police kill at least 99 prison rioters


Singer-Songwriter Courtney LoveSinger-Songwriter Courtney Love 1995 - Steve Fossett completes 1st air balloon over Pacific Ocean (9600 km)
1996 - "Bus Stop" opens at Circle in Sq Theater NYC for 29 performances
1996 - Actress Halle Berry files for divorce from David Justice
1996 - STS 75 (Columbia 19), launches into orbit
1997 - Annika Sorenstam wins LPGA Cup Noodles Hawaiian Ladies Open
1998 - "King & I," closes at Neil Simon Theater NYC after 781 performances


 1998 - 18th Winter Olympic games close at Nagano Japan
2002 - Angolan political and rebel leader Jonas Savimbi is killed in a military ambush.
2006 - At least six men stage Britain's biggest robbery ever, stealing £53m (about $92.5 million or 78€ million) from a Securitas depot in Tonbridge, Kent.


The flag of New Zealand

 2011 - An earthquake measuring 6.3 in magnitude strikes Christchurch, New Zealand, killing 181 people



Flag of Argentina

 2012 - Train crash in Buenos Aires, Argentina, kills 50 and injures hundreds



 2013 - 29 people are killed and 150 are injured by by 3 Syrian army missiles in Aleppo

 2013 - 13 Chadian soldiers and 65 Muslim insurgents are killed in conflict in Northern Mali

 2013 - The UK's credit rating is downgraded from AAA to AA1 by Moody's Investors Service







1630 - Quadequine introduced popcorn to English colonists at their first Thanksgiving dinner.   1784 - "Empress of China", a U.S. merchant ship, left New York City for the Far East.   1819 - Spain ceded Florida to the United States.   1855 - The U.S. Congress voted to appropriate $200,000 for continuance of the work on the Washington Monument. The next morning the resolution was tabled and it would be 21 years before the Congress would vote on funds again. Work was continued by the Know-Nothing Party in charge of the project.   1859 - U.S. President Buchanan approved the Act of February 22, 1859, which incorporated the Washington National Monument Society "for the purpose of completing the erection now in progress of a great National Monument to the memory of Washington at the seat of the Federal Government."   1860 - Organized baseball’s first game was played in San Francisco, CA.   1865 - In the U.S., Tennessee adopted a new constitution that abolished slavery.   1879 - In Utica, NY, Frank W. Woolworth opened his first 5 and 10-cent store.   1885 - The Washington Monument was officially dedicated in Washington, DC. It opened to the public in 1889.   1892 - "Lady Windermere's Fan", by Oscar Wilde, was first performed.   1920 - The first dog race track to use an imitation rabbit opened in Emeryville, CA.   1923 - The first successful chinchilla farm opened in Los Angeles, CA. It was the first farm of its kind in the U.S.   1924 - U.S. President Calvin Coolidge delivered the first presidential radio broadcast from the White House.   1954 - ABC radio’s popular "Breakfast Club" program was simulcast on TV for the first time.   1969 - Barbara Jo Rubin became the first woman to win a U.S. thoroughbred horse race.   1973 - The U.S. and Communist China agreed to establish liaison offices.   1984 - The U.S. Census Bureau statistics showed that the state of Alaska was the fastest growing state of the decade with an increase in population of 19.2 percent.   1994 - The U.S. Justice Department charged Aldrich Ames and his wife with selling national secrets to the Soviet Union. Ames was later convicted to life in prison. Ames' wife received a 5-year prison term.   1997 - Scottish scientist Ian Wilmut and colleagues announced that an adult sheep had been successfully cloned. Dolly was actually born on July 5, 1996. Dolly was the first mammal to have been successfully cloned from an adult cell.   2002 - In the Philippines, An MH-47E Chinook helicopter crashed into the ocean. All 10 men aboard were killed.



1371 Robert II succeeded to the throne of Scotland, beginning the Stuart dynasty. 1819 Spain ceded Florida to the United States. 1879 Frank Winfield Woolworth opened his first "Five Cent Store" in Utica, New York. 1924 Calvin Coolidge made the first presidential radio broadcast from the White House. 1935 Airplanes were no longer permitted to fly over the White House. 1980 In a major upset, the U.S. Olympic hockey team defeated the Soviets 4–3 at Lake Placid, N.Y.

The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/feb22.htm


http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Carl Sagan Once Illustrated the Fourth Dimension With a Sliced Apple

 

Bust of Carl Sagan


Almost half a century ago, popular American scientist and famous personality Carl Sagan explained the concept of a forth dimension using a sliced apple.

Sometimes, I really miss Carl Sagan. He hosted science shows - most famously Cosmos - decades ago, while I was a kid. He had this fascinating and distinctive way of talking, which appealed to me. He seemed friendly and informative. All of that was enjoyable to me at the time. Yet it was probably better for my fertile young imagination than I even realized at the time. 

More recently, I remember seeing Carl Sagan honored while I was working at Rahway Pubic Schools, particularly the high school. Sagan graduated from this high school - I believe from the actual, physical building that the high school is still housed in - back in 1951. It made me reminisce about him, and I began to explore some of his television programs, at least the ones that were and/or are available on Youtube. 

Now, here's the thing: I am not a scientist. When I look out into the skies at night and see the stars, I think about some of the things that I have heard about other planets and stars and galaxies and black holes and the universe. Sometimes, I look at the moon, and remember the history, and particularly the video clips of when Kennedy's goal o us reaching the moon and bringing men safely back to Earth safely, which surely was one of the finest hours for the United States, and even of humanity. It was an undeniable triumph. Still, I do not have much of a capacity to actually understand science. So all I know is what television personalities like Carl Sagan and Neil deGrasse Tyson and Bill Nye say, and the few clips that I have seen of scientists of the past, particularly Copernicus and Galileo and Darwin and Einstein. I even tried to read a couple of Stephen Hawkings books (and technically, I guess I did), but only understood the very beginning of it, his introduction. 

The thing is, science seems to not be overly valued today. Oh, people love certain things that science and technology have brought us, particularly all of the modern conveniences that it made possible. Certainly, they also like medications that have helped to make us healthier. But then many of these same people who love that aspect of science and technology then turn around and deny the legitimacy of scientists when they talk about things like evolution and especially climate change.

Man, we could use more famous personalities like Carl Sagan in our celebrity obsessed culture, which tends to focus on garbage and outward appearances, while lacking any serious substance.

Anyway, I ran into this article (see link below) and thought it would be worth sharing here.

Enjoy.




46 years ago, Carl Sagan beautifully explained the fourth dimension using a sliced apple Carl Sagan was the Mister Rogers of complex scientific concepts. Tod Perry Upworthy Staff 02.09.26

https://www.upworthy.com/carl-sagan-beautifully-explained-the-fourth-dimension-using-a-sliced-apple-ex1?fbclid=IwY2xjawQE0BdleHRuA2FlbQIxMABzcnRjBmFwcF9pZBAyMjIwMzkxNzg4MjAwODkyAAEeAg-7zENbNm--KuXLMtuxlKQSC93xaIS09QKc2URBuH6HNPp-rlmnCw4YjAE_aem_986KM4xoWKi2q0oOEu5onA

46 years ago, Carl Sagan beautifully explained the fourth dimension using a sliced apple - Upworthy

Today is the Chinese New Year - 2026 is the Year of the Fire Horse




Meant to publish this a few days ago, but never quite got around to it. 

Yet, this is just a few days later. Also still well within the period of  celebration, which is 15 days. So it still seemed fitting.

So here is my post on this Chinese New Year:




Happy Chinese New Year! 

The Chinese New Year is also known as the Spring Festival in China, and it is celebrated in numerous countries in eastern Asia, as well as by people in Asian communities throughout the world. 

Yes, today is the celebration of the turning of the traditional lunisolar Chinese calendar. I have been hearing on the radio (NPR) as well as on social media that the streets of cities throughout China are empty right now, as people return to their rural hometowns to be with their families for this special holiday season.

This new year is the Year of the Fire Horse. The Fire Horse is associated with hard work, bravery, and resilience. 

Last year was the Year of the Snake.. 

Celebrations traditionally run from the evening before the first official day of the Chinese New Year, and go to the Lantern Festival, which falls on the 15th day of the first calendar month.




Has Humanity Already Lost the Battle on Climate Change? One Famous Scientist Says Yes

 



The old button from the Environmental Club days which I just happened to find on Earth Day! It is a little beat up (particularly the ends of the ribbon), but no worse for the wear, I think. And it is one of the few items that I have left from those days, so it carries a lot of great memories for me! Nothing Changes Until You Do!




Noted scientist David Suzuki declared just last year that humanity has lost the battle to climate change.

Now, we are going to have to watch the full ramifications of this grim reality in the coming years and decades and centuries, always assuming we actually survive long enough to see it (which does not necessarily a given at this point).

The truth is that we have had plenty of warning. For decades, scientists have been warning humanity of the dangers of not addressing, much less taking seriously, the threat from climate change. Yet they were met either with skepticism and/or indifference.

And nowhere did this science meet with more cynicism and indifference than right here in the good ol' U. S. of A. 

Seriously, this has been a long, long battle. I remember first hearing about climate change as a child, back in the late 1980's. It was through rock musician Sting, who was on a talk show (I think it was Donahue), talking about his experiences in the Amazon rainforest. It was the first that I had really heard of this issue, and I asked my father. He explained what it was and what the threat was. It seemed amazing to me that most people did not take this threat seriously. Back then, most people would literally laugh at the idea of global warming/ climate change. In fact, some mostly ignorant people are still laughing, or at least scoffing at the very idea.

Not sure if you could call me an environmental activist. However, I tried to become involved on a small level. I joined my high school's Environmental Club. With them, I went around collecting recyclables from each classroom each week, participated in a cleanup of the town streets one weekend, and even attended a United Nations Global Youth Forum in 1992. I followed the news at the time, and remember the George H. W. Bush presidency not signing on at the Rio Climate Conference, sympathizing with protesters who had posters reading "Your Embarrassing U.S."

In time, I also joined the Environmental Club at Bergen Community College. Was elected Secretary, then Vice-President, and eventually became the President. We engaged in a lot of activities, particularly Earth Day. While there, I met climate skeptics, who at that time were still laughing at the ridiculous idea that human beings might impact the climate. 

When did people stop laughing?

Probably early in the 20th century. Right around the time of Hurricane Katrina, which was months after the enormous tsunami. We also began to see record hot stretches in places not used to it. That was just the beginning, but it seemed to me that people began to be swayed more towards believing that there might really be something to this "global warming" or "climate change" stuff. 

Yet, it was not enough to get enough high-ranking government officials to take action. There were tons of skeptics still in the highest offices of the marbled halls of Washington. We Americans just kept voting these people in, time and time again. Maybe the polls showed that something like seventy percent of Americans believed in climate change, but you would never know it by who we elected into the most prominent national offices.

Now we have someone in the Oval Office who outright suggested that climate change is a Chinese hoax. He just gutted environmental protections that limited how much carbon gases could be released into the air, to the delight of big polluters. As if we needed still more carbon emissions to accelerate the process of global warming. 

Meanwhile, China leapfrogged the United States as the biggest polluter in the world, and India has also caught up in a hurry. Other nations take relatively mild action, but it is not nearly enough. Indeed, I can believe it when David Suzuki suggests that humans have already lost the battle with climate change.

And now, with record hot years being the new trend, with mor extreme weather patterns and storms in some regions and record droughts in others also already being the new normal, it seems like we will have to sit and wait to see what all of this is going to ultimately lead to.

But one thing you can't say is that we were not warned. We just did not want to bother to listen while we still could. 

Now, already a prominent scientist says it's too late. And I am afraid that he might be right.



 I Didn't Want to Make This Video.  by Astrum Earth

https://youtu.be/JLubu0orxPw?si=phnmFFBAanlLQOIH

https://www.youtube.com/watch?si=phnmFFBAanlLQOIH&v=JLubu0orxPw&feature=youtu.be

February 21st: This Day in History

 



Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!


On this day in 362, Athanasius returned to Alexandria, Egypt. In 1173 on this day, Pope Alexander III canonized Thomas Becket Archbishop of Canterbury. In 1245 on this day, Thomas, the first known Bishop of Finland, was granted resignation after having confessed to torture and forgery. The trial against Joan of Arc began in England on this day in 1431. In 1440 on this day, the Prussian Confederation was formed. Philip II routed Cardinal Granvelle to Franche-Comte on this day in 1564. On this day in 1574, the Spanish garrison of Middelburg, Netherlands, surrendered. In 1583 on this day, Groningen, Netherlands, began using the Gregorian calendar. Following the death of Feodor I, Boris Godunov was crowned Czar of Russia on this day in 1598. On this day in 1613, Michael Romanov, son of Patriarch of Moscow, was elected Russian Czar. Michiel A de Ruyter was appointed Lieutenant-Admiral-General of the Dutch fleet on this day in 1673. In 1675 on this day, Prince Willem III was appointed Viceroy of Gelderland. John Wilkes was thrown out of the English House of Commons for "Essay on Women" on this day in 1764. On this day in 1795 (Year III) during the French Revolution,  the Constitution of  France proclaimed freedom of worship and the separation of church and state. However, the law that legalized public worship in 1795 also paradoxically placed some serious restrictions on religious practices. On this day in 1848, The Communist Manifesto, written by Karl Marx with the assistance of Friedrich Engels, was published in London by a group of German-born revolutionary socialists known as the Communist League. On this day in 1916 during World War I, the Battle of Verdun began, and would ultimately cost one million casualties. On this day in 1918 during World War I, Allied troops of British and Australian forces captured Jericho. On this day in 1965, Malcolm X was assassinated in New York City. In what was considered an amazing turn of events on this day in 1972, American President Richard Nixon arrived in China, taking the dramatic first step toward normalizing relations with the communist People's Republic of China (PRC) by traveling to Beijing for a week of talks. In 1989 on this day, U.S. President George H.W. Bush called Ayatollah Khomeini's death warrant against "Satanic Verses" author Salman Rushdie "deeply offensive to the norms of civilized behavior." On this day in 2012, Eurozone finance ministers reached an agreement on a second, 130-billion bailout for Greece to help with the country's debt crisis.

           

Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:

 On this day in 362, Athanasius returned to Alexandria, Egypt. 

 In 1173 on this day, Pope Alexander III canonized Thomas Becket Archbishop of Canterbury.

 In 1245 on this day, Thomas, the first known Bishop of Finland, was granted resignation after having confessed to torture and forgery.






Statue of Joan of Arc in QuĂ©bec (above) and Philadelphia (below)




 The trial against Joan of Arc began in England on this day in 1431.

 In 1440 on this day, the Prussian Confederation was formed. 

 Philip II routed Cardinal Granvelle to Franche-Comte on this day in 1564.

 On this day in 1574, the Spanish garrison of Middelburg, Netherlands, surrendered.

 In 1583 on this day, Groningen, Netherlands, began using the Gregorian calendar.

 Following the death of Feodor I, Boris Godunov was crowned Czar of Russia on this day in 1598. 

 On this day in 1613, Michael Romanov, son of Patriarch of Moscow, was elected Russian Czar, beginning the Romanov imperial line.

 Michiel A de Ruyter was appointed Lieutenant-Admiral-General of the Dutch fleet on this day in 1673.

 In 1675 on this day, Prince Willem III was appointed Viceroy of Gelderland.

 John Wilkes was thrown out of the English House of Commons for "Essay on Women" on this day in 1764.

1777 - English ambassador Joseph Yorke demands dismissal of Governor John de Graaff for saluting US flag

1782 - US congress resolves establishment of a US mint

1792 - Congress passes Pres Succession Act




Le Drapeau Tricolore (Tricour Flag) which was a product of the French Revolution, and which remains the national flag of France to this day.

 
 On this day in 1795 (Year III) during the French Revolution,  the Constitution of  France proclaimed freedom of worship and the separation of church and state. However, the law that legalized public worship in 1795 also paradoxically placed some serious restrictions on religious practices. 



 1797 - Trinidad, West Indies surrenders to British


 1804 - 1st locomotive, Richard Trevithick's, runs for 1st time, in Wales


 1828 - 1st American Indian newspaper in US, "Cherokee Phoenix," published

 1842 - 1st known sewing machine patented in US, John Greenough, Wash DC

 1846 - 1st US woman telegrapher, Sarah G Bagley, Lowell, Mass


 On this day in 1848, The Communist Manifesto, written by Karl Marx with the assistance of Friedrich Engels, was published in London by a group of German-born revolutionary socialists known as the Communist League. The political pamphlet--arguably the most influential in history--proclaimed that "the history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles" and that the inevitable victory of the proletariat, or working class, would put an end to class society forever. Originally published in German as Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei ("Manifesto of the Communist Party"), the work had little immediate impact. Its ideas, however, reverberated with increasing force into the 20th century, and by 1950 nearly half the world's population lived under Marxist governments.    Karl Marx was born in Trier, Prussia, in 1818--the son of a Jewish lawyer who converted to Lutheranism. He studied law and philosophy at the universities of Berlin and Jena and initially was a follower of G.W.F. Hegel, the 19th-century German philosopher who sought a dialectical and all-embracing system of philosophy. In 1842, Marx became editor of the Rheinische Zeitung, a liberal democratic newspaper in Cologne. The newspaper grew considerably under his guidance, but in 1843 the Prussian authorities shut it down for being too outspoken. That year, Marx moved to Paris to co-edit a new political review.    Paris was at the time a center for socialist thought, and Marx adopted the more extreme form of socialism known as communism, which called for a revolution by the working class that would tear down the capitalist world. In Paris, Marx befriended Friedrich Engels, a fellow Prussian who shared his views and was to become a lifelong collaborator. In 1845, Marx was expelled from France and settled in Brussels, where he renounced his Prussian nationality and was joined by Engels.    During the next two years, Marx and Engels developed their philosophy of communism and became the intellectual leaders of the working-class movement. In 1847, the League of the Just, a secret society made up of revolutionary German workers living in London, asked Marx to join their organization. Marx obliged and with Engels renamed the group the Communist League and planned to unite it with other German worker committees across Europe. The pair were commissioned to draw up a manifesto summarizing the doctrines of the League.    Back in Brussels, Marx wrote The Communist Manifesto in January 1848, using as a model a tract Engels wrote for the League in 1847. In early February, Marx sent the work to London, and the League immediately adopted it as their manifesto. Many of the ideas in The Communist Manifesto were not new, but Marx had achieved a powerful synthesis of disparate ideas through his materialistic conception of history. The Manifesto opens with the dramatic words, "A spectre is haunting Europe--the spectre of communism," and ends by declaring: "The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win. Workers of the world, unite!"    In The Communist Manifesto, Marx predicted imminent revolution in Europe. The pamphlet had hardly cooled after coming off the presses in London when revolution broke out in France on February 22 over the banning of political meetings held by socialists and other opposition groups. Isolated riots led to popular revolt, and on February 24 King Louis-Philippe was forced to abdicate. The revolution spread like brushfire across continental Europe. Marx was in Paris on the invitation of the provincial government when the Belgian government, fearful that the revolutionary tide would soon engulf Belgium, banished him. Later that year, he went to the Rhineland, where he agitated for armed revolt.    The bourgeoisie of Europe soon crushed the Revolution of 1848, and Marx would have to wait longer for his revolution. He went to London to live and continued to write with Engels as they further organized the international communist movement. In 1864, Marx helped found the International Workingmen's Association--known as the First International--and in 1867 published the first volume of his monumental Das Kapital--the foundation work of communist theory. By his death in 1884, communism had become a movement to be reckoned with in Europe. Twenty-three years later, in 1917, Vladimir Lenin, a Marxist, led the world's first successful communist revolution in Russia.           




 1853 - US authorizes minting of $3 gold pieces

 1857 - Congress outlaws foreign currency as legal tender in US
1857 - US issues flying eagle cents
1858 - Edwin T Holmes installs 1st electric burglar alarm (Boston, Mass)
1861 - Navaho indians elect Herrero Grande as chief

 1862 - Confederate Constitution & presidency are declared permanent

 1862 - Texas Rangers win Confederate victory at Battle of Val Verde, NM




A statue in Flemington, New Jersey, honoring veterans of the American Civil War.



 1864 - -22] Battle at Okolona, Mississippi

1864 - 1st US Catholic parish church for blacks dedicated, Baltimore
1866 - Lucy B Hobbs (Taylor) becomes 1st US woman to earn a DDS degree
1874 - Benjamin Disraeli replaces William Gladstone as English premier
1874 - Oakland Daily Tribune begins publication
British Prime Minister William GladstoneBritish Prime Minister William Gladstone 1878 - 1st telephone book issued, 50 subscribers (New Harbor, Connecticut)
1882 - NYC's 24 hour race begins, winner with most mileage in 24 hours
1883 - 2nd French government of Ferry begins
1885 - Washington Monument dedicated (Wash DC)
1887 - 1st US bacteriology laboratory opens (Brooklyn)

 1887 - Oregon becomes 1st US state to make Labor Day a holiday





Bust of Abolitionist Frederick Douglass

 1895 - NC Legislature, adjourns for day to mark death of Frederick Douglass



 1902 - Dr Harvey Cushing, 1st US brain surgeon, does his 1st brain operation

1903 - Cornerstone laid for US army war college, Washington, DC
1904 - National Ski Association forms in Ishpeming Mich
1907 - SS Berlin sinks off Hoek van Holland Neth (142 dead)
1909 - John Galsworthy's "Strife," premieres in London
1910 - John Galsworthy's "Justice," premieres in London
1911 - Gustav Mahler conducts his last concerto (Berceuse élégique)
1914 - White Wolf troops attack Zhanjiang China
Abolitionist Frederick DouglassAbolitionist Frederick Douglass 

 1915 - 20th Russian Army corps surrenders

 1915 - World's Fair in SF opens





A war monument in Champlitte, France

 On this day in 1916 during World War I, the Battle of Verdun began in France. The battle would prove to be the longest, as well as one of the bloodiest, of the war, finally ending months later on December 18, 1916 with a French victory over Germany. 

On this day in 1916 during World War I, the Battle of Verdun began, and would ultimately cost one million casualties. At 7:12 a.m. on the morning of February 21, 1916, a shot from a German Krupp 38-centimeter long-barreled gun—one of over 1,200 such weapons set to bombard French forces along a 20-kilometer front stretching across the Meuse River—strikes a cathedral in Verdun, France, beginning the Battle of Verdun, which would stretch on for 10 months and become the longest conflict of World War I.    By the beginning of 1916, the war in France, from the Swiss border to the English Channel, had settled into the long slog of trench warfare. Despite the hard conditions in the trenches, Erich von Falkenhayn, chief of staff of the German army, believed that the key to winning the war lay not in confronting Russia in the east but in defeating the French in a major battle on the Western Front. In December 1915, Falkenhayn convinced the kaiser, over the objections of other military leaders such as Paul von Hindenburg, that in combination with unrestricted submarine warfare at sea, a major French loss in battle would push the British—whom Falkenhayn saw as the most potent of the Allies—out of the war.    The chosen mark of Falkenhayn's offensive was the fortress city of Verdun, on the Meuse River in France. The city was selected because in addition to its symbolic importance—it was the last stronghold to fall in 1870 during the Franco-Prussian War—it was possible to attack the fortress city from three sides, which made it a good strategic target.    Ignoring intelligence that warned of a possible German attack in the region, French command had begun in 1915 to strip its forces at Verdun of the heavy artillery essential to defensive warfare, choosing instead to focus on an offensive strategy masterminded by General Ferdinand Foch, the director of the army's prestigious War College, and dubbed Plan XVII. Thus the German attack of February 21 caught the French relatively unprepared.    From the beginning, the Battle of Verdun resulted in heavy losses on both sides. Falkenhayn famously admitted that he did not aim to take the city quickly and decisively, but to bleed the French white, even if it meant an increased number of German casualties. Within four days of the start of the bombardment on the Meuse, the French forward divisions had suffered over 60 percent casualties; German losses were almost as heavy.    After a few quick German gains of territory, the battle settled into a stalemate, as casualties swiftly mounted on both sides. The newly promoted French commander in the region, Henri-Philippe Petain, was determined to inflict the maximum amount of damage on the German forces, famously pledging to his commander-in-chief, Joseph Joffre, that, They shall not pass.    By the latter half of 1917, German resources were stretched thinner by having to confront both a British-led offensive on the Somme River and Russia's Brusilov Offensive on the Eastern Front. In July, the kaiser, frustrated by the state of things at Verdun, removed Falkenhayn and sent him to command the 9th Army in Transylvania; Paul von Hindenburg took his place. Petain had been replaced in April by Robert Nivelle, who by early December had managed to lead his forces in the recapture of much of their lost territory. From December 15 to 18, the French took 11,000 German prisoners; on December 18, Hindenburg finally called a stop to the German attacks after ten long months. With a German death toll of 143,000 (out of 337,000 total casualties) and a French one of 162,440 (out of 377,231), Verdun would come to signify, more than any other battle, the grinding, bloody nature of warfare on the Western Front during World War I.            


 1917 - British Mendi sinks off Isle of Wight, 627 die

 1917 - Train near Chirurcha Romania catches fire & explodes; 100s die


 On this day in 1918 during World War I, Allied troops of British and Australian forces captured Jericho.     On the morning of February 21, 1918, combined Allied forces of British troops and the Australian mounted cavalry capture the city of Jericho in Palestine after a three-day battle with Turkish troops.    Commanded by British General Edmund Allenby, the Allied troops began the offensive on Tuesday, February 19, on the outskirts of Jerusalem. Despite battling adverse weather conditions and a determined enemy in the Turks, the Allies were able to move nearly 20 miles toward Jericho in just three days.    On the morning of February 21, it was apparent that the Turkish line had been broken, and the Allied forces entered the holy city of Jericho without much resistance at just after 8 a.m. Upon realizing they had lost control of the city, Turkish troops chose to retreat rather than fight. During the three-day battle, Allied troops captured 46 Turkish prisoners.    The capture of Jericho proved to be an important strategic victory for the Allies, who now controlled some of the most important roads in the region, including the main road to the coast and the mountain highway leading to Jerusalem, and had reached the northern end of the Dead Sea, the lowest point on earth at 1,290 feet below sea level.

 1918 - The last Carolina parakeet dies in captivity at the Cincinnati Zoo.

 1919 - German National Meeting accepts Anschluss: incorporation of Austria

 1919 - Revolutionary strike in Barcelona

 1920 - Darius Milhaud & Jean Cocteau's ballet, premieres in Paris

 1921 - Constituent Assembly of the Democratic Republic of Georgia adopts the country's first constitution.

 1922 - Airship Rome explodes at Hampton Roads Virginia; 34 die

 1922 - Great Britain grants Egypt independence

1922 - WHK-AM in Cleveland OH begins radio transmissions
1923 - Andre Charlot's musical "Rats," premieres in London
1925 - 1st issue of "New Yorker" magazine published

 1925 - Mass meeting of SPD's Reichsbanner Black-Red-Gold in Magdeburg

1931 - Alka Seltzer introduced


 1932 - Andre Tardieu becomes premier of France

 1932 - Camera exposure meter patented, WN Goodwin

 1934 - Nicaraguan patriot Augusto Cesar Sandino assassinated by Natl Guard

 1937 - Initial flight of the first successful flying car, Waldo Waterman's Arrowbile.



Flag of Spain

 1937 - The League of Nations bans foreign national "volunteers" in the Spanish Civil War.


 1939 - Belgian government of Pierlot forms

 1941 - Omar Bradley is promoted to the rank of brigadier general

 1943 - Dutch RC bishops protest against persecution of Jews


 1943 - German offensive at Western Dorsalgebergte Tunisia

1944 - "War As It Happens" news show premieres on NBC TV (NYC only)

 1945 - Archbishop De Jong calls for help with war casualties

 1945 - British Army captures Goch
1945 - US 10th Armour division overthrows Orscholz line
1946 - Anti-British demonstrations in Egypt
1947 - 1st broadcast of 1st US TV soap opera "A Woman to Remember"
1947 - 1st instant developing camera demonstrated in NYC, by E H Land
1947 - Whipper Billy Watson beats Bill Longson, to become wrestling champ
1948 - NASCAR is incorporated.

1951 - SC House urges "Shoeless Joe" Jackson be reinstated



 1952 - Bangladesh Martyrs Day (martyrs of Bengali Language Movement)
1952 - Dick Button performs 1st figure skating triple jump in competition
1953 - "Maggie" closes at National Theater NYC after 5 performances
1953 - F Crick & J Watson discover structure of DNA-molecule
1953 - Longest collegiate basketball game (6 OTs) Niagara beats Siena 88-81
1957 - Dodgers (Fort Worth) & Cubs (LA) "trade" minor league franchises
1958 - "Portotino" opens at Adelphi Theater NYC for 3 performances
1958 - Egypt-Syria as UAR elect Nasser president (99.9% vote)
1960 - Fay Crocker wins LPGA Lake Worth Golf Open
1961 - Friedrich Durrenmatt's "Die Physiker," premieres in Zurich

 1961 - Gabon adopts constitution
1961 - Mercury-Atlas 2 reentry Test reaches 172 km

 1962 - Minister De Pous confirms natural gas reserves in Groningen Neth
1963 - US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site


    


 1964 - UK flies 24,000 rolls of Beatle wallpaper to US


 On this day in 1965, Malcolm X was assassinated in New York City. Malcolm X, an African American nationalist and religious leader, is assassinated by rival Black Muslims while addressing his Organization of Afro-American Unity at the Audubon Ballroom in Washington Heights.    Born Malcolm Little in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1925, Malcolm was the son of James Earl Little, a Baptist preacher who advocated the black nationalist ideals of Marcus Garvey. Threats from the Ku Klux Klan forced the family to move to Lansing, Michigan, where his father continued to preach his controversial sermons despite continuing threats. In 1931, Malcolm's father was brutally murdered by the white supremacist Black Legion, and Michigan authorities refused to prosecute those responsible. In 1937, Malcolm was taken from his family by welfare caseworkers. By the time he reached high school age, he had dropped out of school and moved to Boston, where he became increasingly involved in criminal activities.    In 1946, at the age of 21, Malcolm was sent to prison on a burglary conviction. It was there he encountered the teachings of Elijah Muhammad, the leader of the Nation of Islam, whose members are popularly known as Black Muslims. The Nation of Islam advocated black nationalism and racial separatism and condemned Americans of European descent as immoral "devils." Muhammad's teachings had a strong effect on Malcolm, who entered into an intense program of self-education and took the last name "X" to symbolize his stolen African identity.    After six years, Malcolm was released from prison and became a loyal and effective minister of the Nation of Islam in Harlem, New York. In contrast with civil rights leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X advocated self-defense and the liberation of African Americans "by any means necessary." A fiery orator, Malcolm was admired by the African American community in New York and around the country.    In the early 1960s, he began to develop a more outspoken philosophy than that of Elijah Muhammad, whom he felt did not sufficiently support the civil rights movement. In late 1963, Malcolm's suggestion that President John F. Kennedy's assassination was a matter of the "chickens coming home to roost" provided Elijah Muhammad, who believed that Malcolm had become too powerful, with a convenient opportunity to suspend him from the Nation of Islam.    A few months later, Malcolm formally left the organization and made a Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca, where he was profoundly affected by the lack of racial discord among orthodox Muslims. He returned to America as El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz and in June 1964 founded the Organization of Afro-American Unity, which advocated black identity and held that racism, not the white race, was the greatest foe of the African American. Malcolm's new movement steadily gained followers, and his more moderate philosophy became increasingly influential in the civil rights movement, especially among the leaders of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee.    On February 21, 1965, one week after his home was firebombed, Malcolm X was shot to death by Nation of Islam members while speaking at a rally of his organization in New York City.             



 1966 - Indonesia's president Sukarno fires General Nasution

 1968 - 150,000 demonstrate against leftist students in West-Berlin

1968 - Baseball announces a minimum annual salary of $10,000
1969 - 1st launching of heavy N-1 rocket at Baikonur Kazachstan (explodes)
Baseball Player Ted WilliamsBaseball Player Ted Williams 1969 - Ted Williams signs 5-year contract to manage Wash Senators
1970 - Jackson 5 make TV debut on "American Bandstand"
1970 - Pathet Lao conquerors Xieng Khuang & Muong Suy
1971 - Ruth Jessen wins LPGA Sears Women's World Golf Classic
1971 - Series of tornadoes cuts through Miss & La killing 117
1971 - The Convention on Psychotropic Substances is signed at Vienna.
1972 - Michael Weller's "Moonchildren," premieres in NYC

 In what was considered an amazing turn of events on this day in 1972, American President Richard Nixon arrived in China, taking the dramatic first step toward normalizing relations with the communist People's Republic of China (PRC) by traveling to Beijing for a week of talks. Nixon's historic visit began the slow process of the re-establishing diplomatic relations between the United States and communist China.    Still mired in the unpopular and frustrating Vietnam War in 1971, Nixon surprised the American people by announcing a planned trip to the PRC in 1972. The United States had never stopped formally recognizing the PRC after Mao Zedong's successful communist revolution of 1949. In fact, the two nations had been bitter enemies. PRC and U.S. troops fought in Korea during the early-1950s, and Chinese aid and advisors supported North Vietnam in its war against the United States.    Nixon seemed an unlikely candidate to thaw those chilly relations. During the 1940s and 1950s, he had been a vocal cold warrior and had condemned the Democratic administration of Harry S. Truman for "losing" China to the communists in 1949. The situation had changed dramatically since that time, though. In Vietnam, the Soviets, not the Chinese, had become the most significant supporters of the North Vietnamese regime. And the war in Vietnam was not going well. The American people were impatient for an end to the conflict, and it was becoming increasingly apparent that the United States might not be able to save its ally, South Vietnam, from its communist aggressors. The American fear of a monolithic communist bloc had been modified, as a war of words—and occasional border conflicts—erupted between the Soviet Union and the PRC in the 1960s. Nixon, and National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger saw a unique opportunity in these circumstances—diplomatic overtures to the PRC might make the Soviet Union more malleable to U.S. policy requests (such as pressuring the North Vietnamese to sign a peace treaty acceptable to the United States). In fact, Nixon was scheduled to travel to meet Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev shortly after completing his visit to China.    Nixon's trip to China, therefore, was a move calculated to drive an even deeper wedge between the two most significant communist powers. The United States could use closer diplomatic relations with China as leverage in dealing with the Soviets, particularly on the issue of Vietnam. In addition, the United States might be able to make use of the Chinese as a counterweight to North Vietnam. Despite their claims of socialist solidarity, the PRC and North Vietnam were, at best, strongly suspicious allies. As historian Walter LaFeber said, "Instead of using Vietnam to contain China, Nixon concluded that he had better use China to contain Vietnam." For its part, the PRC was desirous of another ally in its increasingly tense relationship with the Soviet Union and certainly welcomed the possibility of increased U.S.-China trade.




1973 - Chicago Black Hawks, record 262nd NHL game without being shut-out

 1973 - Israeli fighters shoot Libyan aircraft down, killing 108  1973 - Israeli fighter planes shot down a Libyan Airlines jet over the Sinai Desert. More than 100 people were killed.   


Flag of Israel


 1974 - Israeli forces leave western Suez

1974 - Silver hits record $5.96½ an ounce in London


 1974 - Yugoslavia adopts constitution



 Ran into this image of John Lennon, and just thought it was cool, as well as appropriate for the day, given that Paul McCartney was in town (Syracuse, New York, June 2022). 

 1975 - John Lennon releases "Rock 'n' Roll" album



 1975 - John Mitchell, HR Haldeman & John D Ehrlichman sentenced to 2½-8 yrs  1975 - Former U.S. Attorney General John N. Mitchell and former White House aides H.R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman were sentenced to 2 1/2 to 8 years in prison for their roles in the Watergate cover-up.  



Musician and Beatle John LennonMusician and Beatle John Lennon 1976 - "Rockabye Hamlet" closes at Minskoff Theater NYC after 7 perfs
1976 - Cardinal Willebrands installed as archbishop of Utrecht
1977 - 74 Unification Church couples wed in NYC

 1979 - Japan launches Hakucho x-ray satellite & Corsa-B (550/580 km)


1980 - Hanni Wenzel is 1st Liechtensteiner to win Olymp gold (giant slalom)
1981 - "Yorkshire Ripper" Peter Sutcliffe, murderer of 13 women, captured
1981 - Charles Rocket clearly says "fuck" on Saturday Night Live

 1981 - Japan launches Hinotori satellite to study solar flares (580/640 k)

 1981 - NASA launches Comstar D-4

1982 - "Ain't Misbehavin'" closes at Longacre Theater NYC after 1604 perfs
1982 - "Little Me" closes at Eugene O'Neill Theater NYC after 36 performances
1982 - Beth Daniel wins LPGA Bent Tree Ladies Golf Classic
1983 - Donald Davis runs 1 mile backwards in 6 m 7.1 s
1983 - NBA San Diego Clippers begin a 29 game road losing streak
1985 - Evert van Benthem wins 13th Friese 11 city skateing race
1985 - Largest NBA crowd to date 44,970 (Atlanta at Detroit)
1985 - Tim Raines is awarded a $12 million salary for 1985 by arbitrator


 1986 - AIDS patient Ryan White returns to classes at Western Middle School


 1987 - Syrian army marches into Beirut


 1988 - Televangelist Jimmy Swaggert confesses his sins to his congregation
1989 - Pete Rose meets with Commissioner Ueberroth to discuss his gambling

 1989 - US bust Chinese ring, capture record 820 lbs heroin ($1B st value)
1989 - US capture record 820 lbs of heroin ($1 B street value)[dup]



Salman Rushdie's controversial novel, "The Satanic Verses

 In 1989 on this day, U.S. President George H.W. Bush called Ayatollah Khomeini's death warrant against "Satanic Verses" author Salman Rushdie "deeply offensive to the norms of civilized behavior."



1990 - 32nd Grammy Awards: Wind Beneath My Wings, Nick of Time wins
1991 - "Lost in Yonkers" opens at Richard Rodgers Theater NYC for 780 perfs
1991 - Neil Simon's "Lost in Yonkers," premieres in NYC



The flag of the USSR (Soviet Union)

 1991 - USSR announces Iraq agrees to a proposal to end Persian Gulf War US calls the plan unacceptable



1992 - Kristi Yamaguchi of US wins Olympic gold medal in women's fig skating
1993 - 43rd NBA All-Star Game: West beats East 135-132 (OT) at Salt Lake City
1993 - Sergei Bubka pole vaults world record indoor (6.15 m)
1995 - CFL's Sacramento Gold Miners become San Antonio Texans
1995 - RAF-pilot Jo Salter is 1st woman to fly in a tornado
1996 - Soyuz TM-23, launched into orbit
1997 - "Empire Strikes Back, special edition," premieres
1997 - STS 82 (Discovery 22) lands



 

The flag of India


 1999 - India's Prime Minister Atal Bihair Vajpayee concluded two days of meeting with Pakistan's Prime Minister Mohammad Nowaz Sharif.  



2004 - The first European political party organization, the European Greens, is established in Rome.


 2007 - Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi resigns from office. His resignation is rejected by the President of Italy, Giorgio Napolitano.



Flag of the European Union (EU)

 On this day in 2012, Eurozone finance ministers reached an agreement on a second, 130-billion bailout for Greece to help with the country's debt crisis.



 2012 - Yemen voters go to the polls for a presidential election where the only candidate on the ballot paper is vice-president Abd Rabbuh Mansur al-Hadi

 2013 - 83 people are killed and 250 are injured in a series of bombing attacks in Damascus, Syria

 2013 - 21 people are killed and 54 are injured in a bombing in Hyderabad, India




 

1804 - The first self-propelled locomotive on rails was demonstrated in Wales.   1842 - John J. Greenough patented the sewing machine.   1848 - The Communist Manifesto was published by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.   1858 - The first electric burglar alarm was installed in Boston, MA.   1866 - Lucy B. Hobbs became the first woman to graduate from a dental school. The school was the Ohio College of Dental Surgery in Cincinnati.   1874 - The Oakland Daily Tribune began publication.   1878 - The first telephone directories issued in the U.S. were distributed to residents in New Haven, CT. It was a single page of only fifty names.   1904 - The National Ski Association was formed in Ishpeming, MI.      1925 - The first issue of "The New Yorker" was published.   1932 - William N. Goodwin patented the camera exposure meter.   1943 - "Free World Theatre" debuted on the Blue network (now ABC radio).   1945 - "The Lion and the Mouse" was first broadcast on "Brownstone Theatre."   1947 - Edwin Land demonstrated the Polaroid Land Camera to the Optical Society of America in New York City. It was the first camera to take, develop and print a picture on photo paper all in about 60 seconds. The photos were black and white. The camera went on sale the following year.   1950 - The first International Pancake Race was held in Liberal, Kansas.   1965 - Malcolm X was assassinated in New York City at the age of 39 by assassins identified as Black Muslims.   1968 - An agreement between baseball players and club owners increased the minimum salary for major league players to $10,000 a year.     1988 - In Baton Rouge, LA, TV evangelist Jimmy Swaggart confessed to his congregation that he was guilty of an unspecified sin. He announced that he was leaving the pulpit temporarily. Swaggart had been linked to an admitted prostitute.   1995 - Chicago stockbroker Steve Fossett became the first person to fly solo across the Pacific Ocean in a balloon. He landed in Leader, Saskatchewan, Canada.    2000 - David Letterman returned to his Late Night show about five weeks after having an emergency quintuple heart bypass operation.   2003 - David Hasselhoff and his wife Pamela were injured in a motorcycle accident. The accident was caused by a strong gust of wind. Hasselhoff fractured his lower back and broke several ribs. His wife fractured her left ankle and right wrist.


 1878 The first telephone book was issued (New Haven, Conn.).1972 President Nixon became the first U.S. president to visit China. 1995 Steve Fossett became the first person to cross the Pacific Ocean solo in a balloon. 2002 It was confirmed that Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was dead, allegedly murdered by Islamic militants. 

The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/feb21.htm


http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory