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

Today, March 3rd

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

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.
March 3: A State Joins, An Anthem Adopted, A Beating Captured
March 3: The Worm Moon Bleeds Red

Today, March 3rd

March 3: The Worm Moon Bleeds Red

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.
March 3: The Worm Moon Bleeds Red

02 March

March 2: A Trade Banned, A Monster Unleashed, 100 Points Scored

March 2: A Trade Banned, A Monster Unleashed, 100 Points Scored When boundaries are pushed—in law, in imagination, and in human performance March 2 has witnessed three moments when America confronted its limits—moral, creative, and physical. A nation took its first legislative step toward ending the horror of the slave trade while allowing slavery itself to continue, filmmakers created a cinematic spectacle that would define blockbuster entertainment for generations, and an athlete achieved a scoring feat so extraordinary it has stood untouched for over six decades. Together, these events reveal how progress, artistry, and excellence each push against what seemed possible yesterday. The Trade Ends, The System Endures On March 2, 1807, President Thomas Jefferson signed into law the Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves, which would take effect January 1, 1808—the earliest date allowed under the Constitution. The legislation made it illegal to bring enslaved people into the United States from abroad, closing American ports to the transatlantic slave trade that had forcibly transported hundreds of thousands of Africans across the Middle Passage. For abolitionists, it represented hard-won progress. For the enslaved, it offered little immediate relief—the law did nothing to free anyone already in bondage or to prevent the domestic slave trade that would continue to tear families apart for another six decades. The act's passage revealed the contradictions at America's founding. Jefferson himself owned over 600 enslaved people during his lifetime, even as he signed legislation curtailing the institution. The law proved difficult to enforce—illegal importation continued through smuggling, particularly into southern ports. More fundamentally, ending external supply didn't weaken slavery; it strengthened the domestic trade as prices for enslaved people rose and breeding became more profitable. The Upper South increasingly became an exporter of human beings to the expanding cotton plantations of the Deep South. The 1807 act demonstrated that incremental reform could coexist with fundamental evil. America had closed one avenue of the slave trade while leaving intact the system that made such trade profitable. It would take civil war, not legislation, to finally end what the Constitution's framers had been unwilling to prohibit outright.   Congress closed American ports to the slave trade while leaving slavery itself untouched Beauty and the Beast One hundred twenty-six years later, on March 2, 1933, audiences packed Radio City Music Hall for the premiere of King Kong, a film that would revolutionize cinema and create a cultural icon that endures nine decades later. Directors Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack combined stop-motion animation, rear projection, and miniature sets to bring to life a 50-foot gorilla who falls tragically in love with a human woman. The technical wizardry was unprecedented—Kong fighting dinosaurs on Skull Island, scaling the Empire State Building while swatting at biplanes—but the film's power came from something deeper: sympathy for the monster. Kong wasn't simply a threat to be destroyed; he was a magnificent creature torn from his world and exploited for profit, meeting his doom atop New York's newest skyscraper. "It was beauty killed the beast," declares his captor in the final line, but the film suggests otherwise—it was greed, spectacle, and civilization's arrogance that killed him. King Kong arrived during the Great Depression, when Americans themselves felt powerless against forces beyond their control. The film gave them a monster who was simultaneously terrifying and pitiable, powerful and vulnerable. It established templates that countless films would follow: the sympathetic monster, the damsel in distress, the spectacular final showdown atop an iconic structure. King Kong proved that cinema could create entire worlds, evoke complex emotions, and birth legends that would outlive everyone who made them. At Radio City Music Hall, a cinematic legend was born that would captivate generations ❦ The Night Wilt Scored 100 On March 2, 1962, twenty-nine years after Kong's premiere, Wilt Chamberlain walked onto a basketball court in Hershey, Pennsylvania, and proceeded to rewrite what was possible in a single game. Playing for the Philadelphia Warriors against the New York Knicks before just 4,124 fans, the 7-foot-1 center scored 100 points—a feat so extraordinary that no player in the six decades since has come within 19 points of matching it. Chamberlain made 36 of 63 field goal attempts and 28 of 32 free throws, dominating so completely that his teammates spent the game's final minutes doing everything possible to get him the ball. No video footage exists of the game—it wasn't televised, and the arena had no film crew—leaving only grainy photographs, radio accounts, and the stat sheet as evidence. That absence somehow enhances the legend, making the 100-point game feel almost mythical. Chamberlain himself would score 70 or more points five other times that season alone, yet this night stood apart. The round number gave it narrative perfection; the achievement seemed to represent not just athletic dominance but the outer limit of individual performance. Basketball has evolved dramatically since 1962—better athletes, superior training, more sophisticated strategies—yet Chamberlain's record remains untouched. It stands as testament to a moment when one athlete so thoroughly dominated his sport that he pushed the boundaries of what we believed humanly possible, creating a standard that may prove eternal.   On a Pennsylvania court, an athlete achieved what remains the pinnacle of individual dominance

02 March

March 2: A World Transformed Overnight

March 2: A World Transformed Overnight The death of Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in a joint U.S.-Israeli military operation has set off a regional crisis whose consequences are only beginning to unfold — and whose place in history is already beyond doubt. In the predawn hours of February 28, 2026, a coordinated U.S.-Israeli military operation — codenamed Operation Roaring Lion by Israel and Operation Epic Fury by the Pentagon — struck dozens of targets across Iran simultaneously. By morning, Iranian state media confirmed what officials in Washington and Jerusalem had already announced: Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who had led the Islamic Republic for 37 years as its Supreme Leader, was dead. In a single night, the geopolitical architecture of the Middle East — built on assumptions about deterrence, proxy conflict, and the inviolability of sovereign leadership — was shattered. A Pivot Point Decades in the Making The strikes did not arrive without context. The road to February 28 ran through decades of confrontation: the 1979 Islamic Revolution that installed the theocratic government Khamenei would come to lead; the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s; the decades of proxy conflict waged through Hezbollah, Hamas, and militias across Iraq and Syria; the repeated crises over Iran's nuclear program; and, most recently, the twelve-day Israel-Iran war of June 2025 and the violent suppression of mass protests inside Iran in January 2026, which the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps conducted against its own civilians. The strikes targeted not only Khamenei but a gathering of Iran's senior defense and security leadership — killing the army chief of staff, the defense minister, the head of the Revolutionary Guard, and a senior national security adviser in a single operation. Some 200 Israeli fighter jets participated in what the Israeli military described as the largest military flyover in its history, while U.S. Navy ships fired precision Tomahawk missiles at hundreds of targets, including Iran's ballistic missile infrastructure and nuclear facilities. Iran's response was swift and broad. Within hours of the strikes, Tehran launched waves of ballistic missiles and drones at Israel and at U.S. military installations across the Persian Gulf — hitting targets in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Jordan. International airports in Dubai and Abu Dhabi were struck. The port of Jebel Ali, one of the world's busiest, caught fire from aerial debris. In Israel, an Iranian ballistic missile killed at least six people in the city of Beit Shemesh. Three American service members were killed in the attacks on U.S. bases — the first confirmed U.S. combat deaths of the conflict. Iran declared forty days of national mourning for Khamenei and vowed further retaliation. Iran's internet connectivity collapsed to roughly four percent of normal levels as the government imposed a near-total blackout. In St. Peter's Square, Pope Leo XIV — the Catholic Church's first American pope — called on all parties to halt what he described as a "spiral of violence" before it became "an irreparable chasm."   Smoke rises over Tehran in the hours following the joint U.S.-Israeli strikes of February 28, 2026 — an image that will define a turning point in modern Middle Eastern history. Historians will debate the decisions that led to this moment for generations. The death of a head of state in a military operation is among the rarest and most consequential events in international affairs — a category that includes the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914, the killing of Admiral Yamamoto in 1943, and the U.S. strike that killed Osama bin Laden in 2011. Each reshaped the world that followed it in ways that were impossible to fully predict in the immediate aftermath. What is already clear, as of March 2, 2026, is that the rules and assumptions governing the Middle East for nearly half a century have been fundamentally disrupted. Iran faces a leadership vacuum with no publicly named successor to Khamenei, a government under military assault, and a population that has spent weeks in open protest against its own rulers. The region — and the world — is waiting to see what comes next.

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