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March 4: A Constitution Lives, A President Promises, A Story Triumphs

Today, March 4th

March 4: A Constitution Lives, A President Promises, A Story Triumphs

March 4 has witnessed three distinct expressions of human determination to endure and prevail. A fragile constitution transformed from parchment into living government, a president faced national despair with unshakeable optimism, and a writer captured the eternal struggle between man and nature in spare, powerful prose. Each moment reflects a fundamental truth: that resilience—whether of institutions, leaders, or art—requires both strength and flexibility, the courage to face overwhelming odds and the wisdom to know that dignity lies not in victory but in the struggle itself.
March 4: A Constitution Lives, A President Promises, A Story Triumphs
March 4: Apple's Big Week Comes to Life

Today, March 4th

March 4: Apple's Big Week Comes to Life

There was no darkened auditorium. No dramatic music swelling under a single spotlight. No Steve Jobs-style entrance. Instead, Apple spent the first week of March 2026 doing something it has rarely done in its half-century of product launches: spreading the spectacle across three days, three continents, and a rolling series of press releases, short videos, and invite-only hands-on sessions. By the time media gathered in New York, London, and Shanghai this morning for the culminating "Apple Experience" event, the company had already unveiled the iPhone 17e, the iPad Air M4, the MacBook Air M5, the MacBook Pro M5, and new Studio Displays — a product blitz that CEO Tim Cook had telegraphed only with the words "big week ahead."
March 4: Apple's Big Week Comes to Life

03 March

March 3: A State Joins, An Anthem Adopted, A Beating Captured

March 3: A State Joins, An Anthem Adopted, A Beating Captured Three moments that defined America—through expansion, through symbols, through reckoning with injustice March 3 has witnessed America at different stages of defining itself. A territory scarred by conflict became a state, expanding the union southward. A song about resilience in war became the official expression of national identity. And a brutal beating captured on video forced the nation to confront uncomfortable truths about race, power, and accountability. Together, these moments reveal how nations are built—through territorial growth, symbolic unity, and the painful exposure of injustice that ideals alone cannot erase. The Peninsula Becomes a State On March 3, 1845, Florida became the 27th state admitted to the Union, culminating a complex journey from Spanish colony to American territory to statehood. The United States had acquired Florida from Spain in 1819 through the Adams-Onís Treaty, but territorial status lasted over two decades as the federal government waged brutal wars against the Seminole people who refused to be removed from their ancestral lands. By 1845, American settlers had flooded the peninsula, establishing cotton and sugar plantations worked by enslaved people. Florida's admission came as part of the delicate political calculus that maintained sectional balance—it entered as a slave state alongside Iowa, which entered as a free state. Florida's statehood represented more than territorial expansion; it was the culmination of Indian removal, settler colonialism, and the spread of slavery into new regions. The Seminole Wars had been among the costliest Indian conflicts in American history, both in lives and treasure, yet the federal government pursued them relentlessly to clear land for settlement. The state's admission carried the seeds of future conflict—within sixteen years, Florida would secede and join the Confederacy, sending thousands to fight for slavery's preservation. The peninsula that generations of Spanish colonizers had struggled to control became an American state through violence, displacement, and the extension of an institution that would nearly tear the nation apart. Statehood brought political representation and economic opportunity for white settlers while foreclosing futures for the Seminoles and enslaved people who had no voice in the decision.   A territory born from conflict and displacement became the 27th star on the flag Rockets' Red Glare Made Official Eighty-six years later, on March 3, 1931, President Herbert Hoover signed a congressional resolution making "The Star-Spangled Banner" the official national anthem of the United States. The song had been the de facto anthem for decades, played at military ceremonies and patriotic occasions since the Civil War, but it lacked official status. The lyrics, penned by Francis Scott Key during the War of 1812 while watching the British bombardment of Fort McHenry, celebrated the American flag still flying after a night of shelling. Set to the tune of a popular British drinking song, it combined martial triumph with relief at survival—a nation emerging from attack with its symbols intact. The anthem's adoption wasn't without controversy. Critics noted its difficult vocal range, its focus on war rather than ideals, and its lesser-known verses that included troubling references. Yet supporters argued it captured something essential about American identity—resilience under fire, determination to endure, and the symbolic power of the flag itself. The song asks a question rather than making a declaration: "O say does that star-spangled banner yet wave?" It's a query born from uncertainty, from a moment when the nation's survival wasn't guaranteed. That questioning spirit, coupled with affirmation that yes, it still waves, gave America an anthem rooted in tested endurance rather than abstract idealism. In 1931, as the Great Depression deepened, that emphasis on surviving adversity perhaps resonated more than anyone anticipated. A song about surviving bombardment became the official voice of a nation ❦ The Video That Changed Everything On March 3, 1991, sixty years after the anthem's adoption, George Holliday stepped onto his apartment balcony with a new video camera and recorded something that would shock the nation. Los Angeles police officers were beating Rodney King, a Black motorist they had pulled over after a high-speed chase. For 81 seconds, Holliday's camera captured four officers striking King with batons over 50 times while he lay on the ground, with more than a dozen other officers standing nearby without intervening. The footage was raw, brutal, and undeniable—visual evidence of the kind of police violence that Black Americans had reported for generations but that white America had often dismissed or ignored. The video became a cultural earthquake. It aired on television stations nationwide, forcing Americans to confront what many had refused to believe: that police brutality wasn't aberration but pattern, that the justice system treated people differently based on race. When a jury acquitted the officers a year later despite the video evidence, Los Angeles erupted in riots that left 63 dead and exposed deep wounds in American society. The Rodney King beating marked the beginning of a new era—one where technology could capture and distribute evidence of injustice faster than institutions could suppress or explain it away. The video didn't solve police brutality; three decades later, similar videos continue to emerge with tragic frequency. But it made denial harder, shifted public discourse, and demonstrated that seeing, truly seeing, was the necessary first step toward accountability and change.   From an apartment balcony, a video camera captured what would change a nation's conversation

01 January

March 3: The Worm Moon Bleeds Red

March 3: The Worm Moon Bleeds Red Tonight, Earth's shadow swallows the full Worm Moon in the last total lunar eclipse for nearly three years — turning the sky's brightest object a deep, coppery red for nearly an hour. In the predawn hours of March 3, 2026, something ancient and dependable is unfolding in the sky above North America: the full Worm Moon — March's traditional full moon, named for the earthworms that emerge as winter loosens its grip — is passing through Earth's shadow and turning the color of ember. Tonight's total lunar eclipse, the last one visible from this part of the world until 2029, will hold the Moon in deep crimson totality for nearly 59 minutes, offering one of the most accessible and visually dramatic sky events of the decade to billions of people across North America, the Pacific, Australia, and East Asia. All of Earth's Sunrises, Painted on the Moon The mechanics of a blood moon are among the most beautiful in all of astronomy. When Earth slides between the Sun and the Moon, it casts a vast cone of shadow into space — but it does not go dark. Earth's atmosphere, wrapping the planet like a thin luminous skin, bends and scatters sunlight around the edges of the globe. The shorter blue wavelengths scatter away; the longer red and orange wavelengths bend inward, flooding Earth's shadow with the combined light of every sunrise and sunset happening simultaneously around the planet. The Moon, bathed in this refracted glow, turns a deep copper-red — its exact shade determined by how much dust, smoke, and cloud hangs in Earth's atmosphere at the moment of totality. Tonight, totality begins at 6:04 a.m. EST (5:04 a.m. CST / 4:04 a.m. MST / 3:04 a.m. PST), reaching its deepest crimson at 6:33 a.m. EST, before the Moon begins its slow emergence from shadow at 7:03 a.m. EST. For West Coast observers, the entire sequence unfolds in dark, pre-dawn sky with time to spare. East Coast viewers will catch the opening of totality low on the western horizon as twilight brightens — a rare and striking sight. Humanity has watched blood moons with awe since long before anyone understood what caused them. Ancient Mesopotamian astronomers recorded lunar eclipses as omens of dynastic change. Christopher Columbus, stranded in Jamaica in 1504, used a predicted lunar eclipse to frighten the local Arawak population into resupplying his crew — one of history's most audacious exploitations of astronomical knowledge. In the 19th century, careful observations of lunar eclipses helped scientists measure the precise size and shape of Earth's shadow, contributing to a growing understanding of the solar system's geometry. Tonight's eclipse belongs to Saros Series 133, a 71-eclipse cycle that has been generating lunar eclipses since 1557 and will continue until 2639 — a thread of celestial clockwork connecting tonight's blood moon to generations of skywatchers stretching back nearly five centuries and forward nearly seven more.   During tonight's total lunar eclipse, the Moon takes on the light of every sunrise and sunset on Earth simultaneously — a phenomenon that has captivated human observers for thousands of years. No special equipment is needed — a blood moon is one of the few celestial events that rewards the naked eye as much as any telescope. Step outside, face west in the hour before sunrise, and look up. The Moon will be in the constellation Leo, glowing an impossible red above the horizon. For those who miss it or face cloudy skies, the next total lunar eclipse won't come until New Year's Eve 2028. Tonight's event is also notable for an astronomical curiosity: as Earth's shadow dims the Moon's brilliance, the surrounding stars of Leo will emerge in unusual clarity — and in a rare occurrence noted by astronomers, the Moon will briefly occult the faint galaxy NGC 3423, a deep-sky object normally invisible during a full moon. The universe, as always, offers more than one reason to look up.

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