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March 12: Scouts Founded, Salt March Begins, Women Ordained

Today, March 12th

March 12: Scouts Founded, Salt March Begins, Women Ordained

March 12 has witnessed three distinct expressions of expanding possibility. An organization was born that would teach generations of American girls that they were capable of more than society expected. A revolutionary leader began a 240-mile walk to the sea that would help topple an empire through the simple act of making salt. And a church that had excluded women from its priesthood for centuries finally opened its doors, allowing women to lead worship and administer sacraments. Together, these moments remind us that change often begins with someone deciding that the old rules no longer apply, that barriers exist to be challenged, and that institutions can evolve when enough people demand it.
March 12: Scouts Founded, Salt March Begins, Women Ordained
March 12: When Nations Take Their Ball and Go Home

Today, March 12th

March 12: When Nations Take Their Ball and Go Home

Iran's Minister of Sport and Youth, Ahmad Donyamali, declared on March 11 that his country's national soccer team would not compete in this summer's FIFA World Cup. "Given that this corrupt government has assassinated our leader and created extreme insecurity, we cannot participate in the World Cup," Donyamali said in remarks broadcast on Iranian state television. "The players have no safety, and the conditions for participation simply don't exist." Iran had been scheduled to play all three of its group stage matches on American soil — in Los Angeles and Seattle — making the announcement a collision of sport, war, and geopolitics unlike anything the World Cup has witnessed in the modern era.
March 12: When Nations Take Their Ball and Go Home

11 March

March 11: A Blizzard Buries, A Play Breaks Through, A Wave Overwhelms

March 11: A Blizzard Buries, A Play Breaks Through, A Wave Overwhelms When nature's fury paralyzed cities, art challenged barriers, and catastrophe reshaped nations March 11 has witnessed humanity confronting forces beyond its control—whether nature's overwhelming power or entrenched social barriers. A blizzard that buried the Northeast demonstrated how quickly modern infrastructure could collapse before elemental fury. A play about a Black family pursuing dignity in 1950s Chicago shattered theatrical conventions and forced white audiences to see lives they had long ignored. And an earthquake and tsunami triggered a nuclear catastrophe that revealed the terrifying vulnerability of technology we had deemed safe. Together, these moments remind us that progress is fragile, that breaking barriers requires courage, and that nature operates on scales that humble human ambition. The Great White Hurricane On March 11, 1888, the Blizzard of 1888 began its four-day assault on the northeastern United States, paralyzing major cities and killing over 400 people. The storm arrived with little warning—meteorology was still primitive, and forecasters predicted rain, not catastrophe. Instead, a perfect convergence of weather systems delivered hurricane-force winds, temperatures plunging to near zero, and snowfall measured in feet rather than inches. New York City received 21 inches; Troy, New York, got 55 inches. Wind gusts exceeded 80 mph, sculpting drifts up to 50 feet high that buried entire buildings. People froze to death within sight of their homes, disoriented by whiteout conditions. The blizzard exposed how vulnerable "modern" cities remained to nature's fury. Telegraph lines collapsed under ice, severing communication. Trains couldn't move; some passengers were trapped for days without heat or food. Streets became impassable canyons of snow. Fire departments couldn't respond to blazes. Hospitals ran short of supplies. The storm killed farmers checking on livestock, travelers caught between destinations, and city dwellers who ventured outside thinking they could manage a short walk. The disaster spurred infrastructure changes—New York began burying power and telegraph lines underground, and cities improved their emergency response systems. The Blizzard of 1888 demonstrated that no amount of industrial progress could insulate humans from elemental forces, that nature retained the power to reduce the most advanced civilization to helplessness in a matter of hours.   The Great White Hurricane buried cities in snow and exposed civilization's fragility A Dream Deferred Seventy-one years later, on March 11, 1959, Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun opened at Broadway's Ethel Barrymore Theatre, making Hansberry the first Black woman to have a play produced on Broadway. The title came from Langston Hughes's poem asking what happens to "a dream deferred"—does it dry up like a raisin in the sun, or does it explode? The play follows the Younger family, cramped in a Chicago tenement, as they grapple with how to spend a $10,000 insurance check. Each family member has different dreams: Mama wants to buy a house with a yard; her son Walter wants to invest in a liquor store; daughter Beneatha wants to become a doctor. Their aspirations collide with racism, poverty, and conflicting visions of dignity. The play was revolutionary not just for its predominantly Black cast but for presenting Black life with complexity, humor, and dignity rarely seen on mainstream stages. White audiences were forced to recognize Black Americans as fully human—with dreams, frustrations, pride, and internal conflicts that had nothing to do with white people. The production was a critical and commercial success; Sidney Poitier, Ruby Dee, and Claudia McNeil delivered performances that proved Black actors could carry Broadway. A Raisin in the Sun won the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award for Best Play, making Hansberry the youngest American and first Black playwright to receive the honor. The play endures because it captured universal themes—family loyalty, generational conflict, the cost of deferred dreams—through the specific experience of Black Americans navigating a society built to limit them. Hansberry died of cancer at 34, but her play continues to remind audiences that dreams deferred don't disappear; they simmer, waiting for their moment. On Broadway, a play about deferred dreams shattered barriers and forced recognition ❦ When the Earth Shook On March 11, 2011, fifty-two years after A Raisin in the Sun's premiere, a magnitude 9.0 earthquake struck off Japan's northeastern coast at 2:46 p.m. local time. The most powerful earthquake in Japanese history, it lasted six minutes and was felt across the country. But the quake was merely prologue. Forty minutes later, tsunami waves up to 130 feet high slammed into the coast, overwhelming seawalls built to withstand smaller tsunamas. The waves traveled up to six miles inland, destroying entire towns, killing nearly 20,000 people, and triggering a catastrophe at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant that would become the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl. The tsunami flooded Fukushima's backup generators, disabling cooling systems for the reactor cores. Without cooling, temperatures soared, producing hydrogen gas that triggered explosions in three reactor buildings. Radioactive materials leaked into the air and ocean. Over 150,000 residents evacuated; some areas remain uninhabitable today. The disaster revealed that redundant safety systems could all fail simultaneously when nature exceeded design parameters. Japan, one of the world's most technologically advanced nations, discovered that some risks can't be engineered away. The earthquake and tsunami killed thousands through drowning and building collapse; the nuclear disaster added long-term contamination, economic devastation, and profound questions about humanity's relationship with technology. The Fukushima disaster joined Three Mile Island and Chernobyl as cautionary tales about nuclear power's promise and peril. It demonstrated that the same forces that built Tokyo's skyscrapers and generated electricity through nuclear fission remain subject to tectonic plates that care nothing for human achievement. When the earth moves, civilization trembles.   An earthquake and tsunami overwhelmed Japanese coastal defenses, triggering nuclear catastrophe

11 March

March 11: The Minefield at the World's Throat

March 11: The Minefield at the World's Throat Iran has begun laying naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz — the 21-mile chokepoint through which one-fifth of the world's oil supply flows — echoing a dangerous chapter of history not seen since the 1980s Tanker War. On March 10, 2026, U.S. intelligence confirmed that Iran had begun seeding the Strait of Hormuz with naval mines — the world's most consequential waterway, barely 21 miles wide at its narrowest point, through which roughly 20 percent of global crude oil supply passes every day. The revelation, first reported by CNN citing two people familiar with intelligence reporting, immediately triggered a U.S. military response: within hours, American forces destroyed 16 Iranian mine-laying vessels near the strait. The development marks a profound escalation in the twelve-day-old war between the United States, Israel, and Iran — and resurrects a form of maritime warfare with deep and dangerous historical roots. An Ancient Weapon Returns to a Modern Crisis Intelligence sources told CNN that only a few dozen mines had been laid as of Tuesday, but the threat is far from contained: Iran is estimated to still possess 80 to 90 percent of its small mine-laying craft, with stockpiles believed to range between 2,000 and 6,000 naval mines of Iranian, Chinese, and Russian manufacture. U.S. Central Command's chairman, General Dan Caine, confirmed that American forces were actively hunting mine-laying vessels and targeting mine storage facilities across Iran. President Trump, posting on Truth Social, demanded the mines be removed "IMMEDIATELY," and threatened consequences "at a level never before seen" if they were not. Thirteen minutes later, he announced the destruction of ten mine-laying boats, with more strikes to follow. The historical echoes here are impossible to ignore. During the Tanker War of the 1980s — the naval phase of the larger Iran-Iraq War — Iran laid mines throughout the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, attacking more than 160 merchant vessels over seven years. In 1988, a single Iranian mine, a World War I-era device costing a fraction of what it threatened to destroy, struck the USS Samuel B. Roberts and nearly sank the frigate — prompting the U.S. to launch Operation Praying Mantis, one of the largest American naval engagements since World War II. That episode ended with the destruction of a significant portion of Iran's navy in a single day. Today, history is rhyming in the same narrow waters.   The Strait of Hormuz — barely 21 miles wide at its narrowest — has been the pivot point of global energy security for decades. In 2026, it became a minefield. Naval mines are among the oldest and most asymmetric weapons in warfare — inexpensive to deploy, extraordinarily difficult to clear, and capable of stopping ships worth hundreds of millions of dollars. Research by the Strauss Center at the University of Texas found that mines have been responsible for 77 percent of U.S. ship casualties since 1950. With nearly 15 million barrels of crude per day now effectively stranded in the Persian Gulf and oil prices swinging wildly between $80 and $110 per barrel, the Strait of Hormuz has become the fulcrum on which the global economy balances. What happens in those 21 miles of water in the coming days will shape energy markets, geopolitical alignments, and the final chapter of a war that has already redrawn the map of the Middle East.

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