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May 9: Yesterday's Enemy, Today's Ally; The Pill Changes Everything; A Leader Lost to Terror

Today, May 9th

May 9: Yesterday's Enemy, Today's Ally; The Pill Changes Everything; A Leader Lost to Terror

The world that existed on May 9 in three different years looks, in each case, fundamentally different from the one that preceded it — not because of a single dramatic rupture, but because of decisions made, pills approved, and lives lost that reset the terms on which the future would be negotiated. A nation that had plunged Europe into its worst catastrophe was welcomed into the Western defense alliance a decade later. A small white tablet approved by a federal agency gave women a form of reproductive autonomy that no previous generation had possessed. And a former prime minister, held for fifty-five days in a hidden room by political extremists, was found in the trunk of a car in Rome, dead — a reminder that democracy's enemies do not always come from outside its borders. Three different kinds of change, on the same date, in three different decades, each one irreversible.
May 9: Yesterday's Enemy, Today's Ally; The Pill Changes Everything; A Leader Lost to Terror
May 9: What's Missing from the Parade

Today, May 9th

May 9: What's Missing from the Parade

Today, May 9, 2026, Russian troops will march across Moscow's Red Square in the 81st annual Victory Day parade — the ceremony that commemorates the Soviet Union's defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945 and that has served, for the quarter-century of Vladimir Putin's rule, as the Kremlin's most powerful annual demonstration of military strength and nationalist purpose. This year, the tanks will not roll. The missiles will not pass. The armored personnel carriers, the Iskander ballistic systems, the heavy flamethrowers — none of them will appear. Russia's Defense Ministry cited the "current operational situation" in Ukraine. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov blamed the threat of "terrorist activity." Analysts and defense researchers said what everyone already understood: Russia is afraid of Ukrainian drones, afraid of what they might hit, and no longer able to project the image of invulnerability that Victory Day was built to convey. Mobile internet service has been cut off across Moscow to prevent drone navigation. This is the first time since 2007 that Red Square has hosted a Victory Day parade without military vehicles — and the first time in Putin's Russia that the choice was not made by design, but by fear.
May 9: What's Missing from the Parade

08 May

May 8: Born to Lead, The Day the Guns Went Silent, Betty White's Greatest Role

May 8: Born to Lead, The Day the Guns Went Silent, Betty White's Greatest Role A Missouri farmer's son, a continent's relief, and a comedian who proved that the best careers have no expiration date History arranges its coincidences with occasional flair. May 8 is a date that offers one of the most striking: the man born in Lamar, Missouri, on this day in 1884 would grow up to be the president who announced to the world, on this same date sixty-one years later, that the war in Europe was over. Harry Truman's birthday and V-E Day share a calendar square in a way that the historical record does not always manage to make so tidy. The third story May 8 carries is tidier still — an eighty-eight-year-old comedian who showed up on a Saturday night in New York and reminded the television industry, with characteristic understatement, that she was still the best in the room. The Man from Lamar On May 8, 1884, Harry S. Truman was born in a small frame house in Lamar, Missouri — a town of fewer than a thousand people in the southwestern corner of the state. His father was a mule trader and farmer; his mother was a woman of strong opinions and stronger will whose influence on her son was evident in his directness, his stubbornness, and his lifelong indifference to the opinions of people he had decided were wrong. Truman did not attend college, a distinction that makes him one of only a handful of twentieth-century presidents without a university degree. He failed at farming and at haberdashery before entering Missouri politics through the Kansas City machine of Tom Pendergast, a patron whose corruption was eventually his undoing and whose support was the vehicle through which Truman reached the United States Senate. He arrived in Washington in 1934 widely dismissed as a machine politician of no particular distinction. By 1944, he had earned sufficient respect to be chosen as Franklin Roosevelt's running mate. Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945 — eighty-two days into his fourth term — and Truman became president without having been meaningfully included in the administration's most consequential decisions. He had not been told about the Manhattan Project. He had not been fully briefed on the diplomatic arrangements with Stalin. He inherited the final months of the most destructive war in human history and the opening of the Cold War that followed it, and he navigated both with a decisiveness that surprised those who had underestimated him. The decision to use atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki — among the most consequential and most debated choices any president has ever made — was his within months of taking office. The Marshall Plan, NATO, the Berlin Airlift, the recognition of Israel, the integration of the armed forces by executive order — each was a Truman initiative, executed with the matter-of-fact resolve of a man who had decided that the job required decisions and that the job was his. He left office in January 1953 widely unpopular and died in 1972 having been substantially rehabilitated by history. The sign on his desk — "The Buck Stops Here" — was not a boast. It was a description.   A president at his desk — the man from Lamar who inherited a world war and a cold one, and made the decisions that neither could wait for. V-E Day On May 8, 1945 — Harry Truman's sixty-first birthday — the president announced to the nation and the world that Germany had surrendered unconditionally, ending nearly six years of war in Europe. The formal surrender had been signed in Reims, France, in the early morning hours of May 7; the announcement was coordinated with the Allied governments and timed to coincide with celebrations in London, Washington, and Moscow. In cities across the Allied world, people poured into the streets in a spontaneous outpouring of relief that witnesses described as unlike anything they had seen in their lives — not the frenzied celebrations of a victory won, exactly, but the exhale of people who had been holding their breath for years and had finally been told they could stop. In London, crowds gathered outside Buckingham Palace; in New York, Times Square filled with strangers embracing; in Paris, the boulevards that had been occupied by German soldiers for four years were suddenly full of French citizens who had survived to see them liberated. For Truman, the day carried a personal dimension that he acknowledged in his diary: it was his birthday, and the gift the date brought him — the end of the European war — was one he shared with the survivors of a conflict that had killed an estimated 70 to 85 million people. But V-E Day was not the end of the war. Japan had not surrendered; the Pacific theater continued, and the decisions about how to end it — including the use of atomic weapons — still lay ahead. Truman's birthday joy was real and genuine, and it was also partial: the president who received the news of Germany's surrender on May 8 knew that the war he had inherited from Roosevelt would require more of him before it was truly over. The guns had gone silent in Europe. In the Pacific, they had not. Times Square on V-E Day — the exhale of a city, and a world, that had been holding its breath for six years. ❦ Still Here On May 8, 2010, Betty White hosted Saturday Night Live at the age of eighty-eight, becoming the oldest person ever to host the program and delivering what many critics considered one of its finest episodes in years. White had not volunteered for the assignment; the hosting gig had been generated by a Facebook campaign organized by fans who had gathered more than half a million signatures demanding that NBC give her the job. The network complied, the writers delivered material calibrated to White's particular genius for the deadpan subversion of her own wholesome image, and White — who had been a working entertainer since the 1940s and had won Emmy Awards across six decades — arrived at Studio 8H and performed as though she had been waiting for the invitation her whole career. Her monologue, her sketches, her timing: all of it was that of a comedian at the height of her powers, in a medium she had been navigating since before most of the show's writers were born. The May 8, 2010 episode was both a cultural event and a kind of rebuke to the entertainment industry's assumptions about age and relevance. White had spent decades being celebrated as a beloved figure — which is a way of being sidelined with kindness — and the SNL hosting appearance, followed by a starring role in the film The Proposal and a new sitcom, Hot in Cleveland, constituted one of the more remarkable late-career resurrections in American entertainment. She had been a television pioneer since the early days of the medium, a game show panelist of legendary wit, a sitcom actress of two iconic characters — Sue Ann Nivens on The Mary Tyler Moore Show and Rose Nylund on The Golden Girls — and a public personality whose warmth and comic timing had remained essentially undimmed across seven decades of professional life. She died on December 31, 2021, eighteen days before what would have been her hundredth birthday. The Facebook campaign that put her on SNL at eighty-eight was correct in its essential assessment: Betty White was exactly as good as advertised, and the television industry had not been paying sufficient attention.   The SNL stage at 30 Rock — where an eighty-eight-year-old comedian showed up and reminded everyone why she was still the best in the room.

08 May

May 8: The Virus Without a Name

The Virus Without a Name A cruise ship in the Atlantic. A rare virus from South America. Three dead, passengers from 23 countries tracked across four continents. And a story that begins not at sea, but in the desert of the American Southwest in 1993. This morning, the Dutch-flagged cruise ship MV Hondius is sailing toward the Canary Islands carrying more than 140 passengers and crew, one unburied body, and a confirmed outbreak of hantavirus that has killed three people and triggered a coordinated public health response across four continents. The World Health Organization has confirmed eight cases — five confirmed, three suspected — linked to the Andes virus, a strain of hantavirus that circulates in South America and is the only known hantavirus capable of spreading between people. Health authorities in at least 23 countries are tracking former passengers. In the United States, authorities in Arizona, California, Georgia, Virginia, and Texas are monitoring Americans who were aboard the vessel; none have shown symptoms. The CDC has classified the event as a Level 3 emergency response. The WHO says the risk to the wider public remains low. And the story of how scientists know that — how they know what hantavirus is, what it does, and how to contain it — begins not in a South American river valley but in a canyon in New Mexico, 33 years ago. What the Desert Taught Us In May 1993, a young Navajo couple died within days of each other in the Four Corners region of the American Southwest — the place where Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah meet — from what appeared to be sudden, catastrophic respiratory failure. They were young and healthy. Their deaths were baffling. Medical investigators from the Indian Health Service, the New Mexico Office of Medical Investigations, and the CDC converged on the region and quickly found other cases with identical symptoms: a sudden fever, muscle pain, then a precipitous collapse into acute respiratory distress. Before 1993, hantaviruses were known to science, but only in Asia and Europe, where they caused a different disease — hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome. What was killing young, healthy people in the American desert was something new. Working with astonishing speed, a collaborative team of federal, state, and local scientists identified the culprit within weeks: a previously unknown hantavirus, carried by the western deer mouse, Peromyscus maniculatus. They named it the Sin Nombre virus — the virus without a name — and the disease it caused hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, or HPS. Of the 48 confirmed cases nationwide that year, 27 people died. The fatality rate was 56 percent. The scientific detective work that followed the 1993 outbreak is one of the great examples of public health infrastructure working as it should. Researchers identified the deer mouse as the reservoir, established transmission routes — inhalation of contaminated rodent droppings, urine, or saliva — and determined that the Sin Nombre virus, unlike the strain now circulating on the Hondius, did not spread between people. From 1993 to 2023, the CDC detected 890 cases of hantavirus in the United States, of which 35 percent resulted in death. Surveillance systems built after 1993 tracked the virus's spread and mapped its reservoirs. When subsequent research turned up evidence of hantavirus antibodies in indigenous communities in Paraguay and Argentina in 1998, scientists were already looking — because the Four Corners outbreak had taught them to. The Andes strain identified on the MV Hondius is the direct descendant of that research lineage: a virus discovered because a young couple in New Mexico died mysteriously in the spring of 1993, and because the scientists who responded to their deaths built the tools that allowed the world to recognize, name, and respond to what is happening in the Atlantic today.   In 1993, public health investigators converged on the Four Corners region of the American Southwest after a young Navajo couple died within days of each other from an unknown respiratory illness — and discovered a new virus that science had never seen in the Western Hemisphere. The MV Hondius is expected to dock in Tenerife this weekend, where its remaining passengers will finally disembark after more than a week at sea under precautionary measures. The investigation into how the outbreak began — most likely tracing back to a four-month birdwatching trip through Argentina and Uruguay taken by the Dutch couple who were among the first to die — will continue for months. Argentina is capturing and testing rodents along the route the couple traveled. Pakistan's foreign ministry is working the phones on a different crisis entirely. Somewhere in five American states, former passengers are checking their temperatures and waiting. And in the background of all of it is the network of surveillance, science, and institutional memory built in the wake of an outbreak that killed 27 Americans in the summer of 1993 — people whose names are not remembered, but whose deaths produced the knowledge that is protecting the world right now. That is what public health looks like when it works: not the crisis, but the long, quiet labor that comes before and after it.

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