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March 5: Blood on Snow, A Tyrant Dies, A Probe Flies Past Giants

Today, March 5th

March 5: Blood on Snow, A Tyrant Dies, A Probe Flies Past Giants

March 5 has witnessed three moments when the course of history pivoted—through violence in a Boston street that would help birth a nation, through the death of a dictator whose passing released millions from fear, and through a spacecraft's flyby of Jupiter that revealed alien worlds beyond anything imagination had conceived. Each event reminds us that history turns on such moments: when crowds confront power, when tyrants fall, when humanity reaches beyond its planetary cradle to touch the cosmos.
March 5: Blood on Snow, A Tyrant Dies, A Probe Flies Past Giants
March 5: The Chokepoint That Could Shake the World

Today, March 5th

March 5: The Chokepoint That Could Shake the World

At its narrowest, the Strait of Hormuz is just 21 miles wide — a sliver of water between the Iranian coastline and the shores of Oman and the UAE that is, mile for mile, the most economically consequential stretch of ocean on Earth. On a normal day, roughly 20 million barrels of oil pass through it, representing approximately one-fifth of the world's entire daily petroleum consumption. Today, on the sixth day of the U.S.-Israel war on Iran, it is effectively closed. More than 200 tankers, cargo vessels, and liquefied natural gas carriers sit anchored in the Persian Gulf, unable or unwilling to move. A container ship was attacked and disabled while attempting transit Wednesday. Iran's Revolutionary Guard has broadcast warnings on maritime radio frequencies that any vessel attempting passage does so at its own peril. The world's largest shipping firms — Maersk, Hapag-Lloyd, CMA CGM — have suspended all transits until further notice.
March 5: The Chokepoint That Could Shake the World

04 March

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

March 4: A Constitution Lives, A President Promises, A Story Triumphs Three moments when resilience took form—in governance, in leadership, and in literature 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. We the People Takes Effect On March 4, 1789, the first Congress convened under the newly ratified Constitution, transforming a theoretical framework into a functioning government. The date was supposed to be the official start of the new government, though in practice it took weeks for enough members to arrive in New York City to form a quorum. The Articles of Confederation, which had governed since 1781, officially ceased to exist, replaced by a document that created a stronger central government while attempting to preserve state sovereignty and individual liberty. The Constitution's framers had gambled that they could balance these competing demands—and that first congressional session would test whether their elaborate system of checks and balances could actually work. The Constitution's activation represented a leap of faith. No one knew if this experiment in federal republicanism could survive, if the states would truly subordinate themselves to national authority, or if the delicate compromises that had enabled ratification would hold under the pressures of governance. That first Congress faced immediate challenges: establishing executive departments, creating a federal court system, raising revenue, and addressing demands for a Bill of Rights. The fact that the Constitution not only survived but adapted and endured speaks to both its structural flexibility and the determination of those early leaders to make it work. March 4 remained Inauguration Day for 144 years, until the 20th Amendment moved it to January 20. But this first March 4 was the beginning—when "We the People" stopped being an aspiration and became a government.   In New York, words on parchment became a living government The Only Thing to Fear One hundred forty-four years later, on March 4, 1933, Franklin Delano Roosevelt took the oath of office as the 32nd president, facing a nation in economic collapse. One in four Americans was unemployed. Banks were failing. Farms were being foreclosed. The previous president, Herbert Hoover, had seemed paralyzed by the crisis. Roosevelt, by contrast, projected confidence from his first words: "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself—nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance." It was a message the country desperately needed to hear, delivered by a man who had overcome polio to lead his nation through its darkest economic hour. Roosevelt's first hundred days unleashed a flurry of legislation that fundamentally redefined the federal government's role in American life. The New Deal created jobs programs, banking regulations, social insurance, labor protections, and a social safety net that would endure for generations. Critics called it socialism; supporters called it salvation. Roosevelt himself called it pragmatism—trying different approaches until something worked. He would be elected to an unprecedented four terms, leading America through both the Depression and World War II before his death in office in 1945. His inaugural address on that cold March day in 1933 did more than promise action; it restored something intangible but essential—hope. Roosevelt understood that economic recovery required psychological recovery first, that a nation paralyzed by fear needed someone who refused to be afraid. A president promised a nation there was nothing to fear but fear itself ❦ Man Against the Sea On March 4, 1952, nineteen years after Roosevelt's inauguration, Ernest Hemingway completed The Old Man and the Sea, a deceptively simple novella that would become his most celebrated work. The story follows Santiago, an aging Cuban fisherman who hasn't caught a fish in 84 days, as he hooks an enormous marlin and struggles for three days to bring it in. The fish is larger than his boat. Santiago respects the creature he's trying to kill, speaking to it as an equal: "Fish, I love you and respect you very much. But I will kill you dead before this day ends." When sharks devour the marlin on the journey home, Santiago arrives with nothing but a skeleton—victory and defeat intertwined. Hemingway wrote the novella in just eight weeks at his home in Cuba, channeling decades of experience with the sea and his characteristic spare prose style into a meditation on courage, endurance, and grace under pressure. Santiago loses his prize but maintains his dignity; he is beaten but not destroyed. "A man can be destroyed but not defeated," Hemingway wrote, expressing a philosophy that applied equally to his aging fisherman and to the author himself, who was struggling with his own physical decline. The Old Man and the Sea earned Hemingway the Pulitzer Prize in 1953 and contributed to his Nobel Prize in Literature the following year. The novella's power lies in its universality—Santiago's struggle is everyone's struggle, the eternal human effort to prove worth in the face of indifferent nature and inevitable decline. Like the Constitution that endured and Roosevelt who persevered, Santiago demonstrates that resilience isn't about winning; it's about refusing to surrender.   In Cuban waters, Hemingway found the eternal story of struggle and dignity

01 January

March 4: Apple's Big Week Comes to Life

March 4: Apple's Big Week Comes to Life With hands-on media events opening today in New York, London, and Shanghai, Apple caps a historic three-day product blitz — and rewrites its own playbook for how the world's most valuable company launches its devices. 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." From One More Thing to One Big Week The Apple product launch has always been a cultural event as much as a commercial one. When Steve Jobs took the stage at the Macworld Expo in January 1984 and pulled the original Macintosh from a bag, letting it speak for itself to a thunderstruck audience, he established a template that would define technology marketing for the next four decades. The Jobsian keynote — theatrical, secretive, meticulously staged — became the gold standard of product unveilings, imitated by every major tech company from Samsung to Microsoft to Google. Apple refined the formula for decades: the sealed auditorium, the reality distortion field, the famous "one more thing." Even after Jobs's death in 2011, Tim Cook preserved the essential structure, moving the keynote to Apple Park's Steve Jobs Theater in 2017 and adding the live-streaming audience of millions that turned each event into a global television moment. This week, Apple quietly dismantled that formula — replacing the single theatrical event with a three-day rolling launch culminating in simultaneous hands-on press experiences across three global cities. It is the most significant structural change to an Apple launch since Jobs walked onstage in 2007 and introduced the iPhone. The products themselves underscore how much Apple's ambitions have expanded. The iPhone 17e, priced at $599 with Apple's A19 chip and MagSafe — a feature previously reserved for premium models — signals Apple's commitment to making its most advanced technologies accessible at lower price points. The MacBook Air M5 and MacBook Pro M5 Pro and M5 Max extend Apple Silicon's remarkable run: since the company abandoned Intel processors in 2020, its Mac lineup has posted performance gains that analysts once considered implausible for a consumer laptop brand. The new Studio Displays round out a product week that touches nearly every major category Apple serves. Together they represent something Apple has long understood and its competitors have long struggled to replicate: the ability to make the routine feel historic, and the upgrade feel inevitable.   Apple's March 2026 product week introduced a new format for its launches — dispensing with the traditional keynote in favor of a multi-day, multi-city rollout that reflects the company's global scale. Future technology historians will likely mark this week as a pivot point — not just for the products Apple released, but for how it released them. The company that invented the modern product launch has now reinvented it again, trading the spectacle of a single moment for the sustained momentum of a week-long news cycle. Whether the "Apple Experience" format becomes permanent or proves a one-time experiment, the underlying truth it reveals about Apple in 2026 is unmistakable: this is a company so large, so global, and so prolific that no single auditorium can contain its ambitions. Steve Jobs once said that the most powerful person in the world is the storyteller. Apple, four decades into its story, is still finding new ways to tell it.

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