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May 10: The Golden Spike, Churchill Takes the Wheel, A Partial Reckoning in Beijing

Today, May 10th

May 10: The Golden Spike, Churchill Takes the Wheel, A Partial Reckoning in Beijing

Leadership arrives in different forms on different May 10s: in the driving of a ceremonial spike into Utah ground, completing a railroad that stitched a continent into a nation; in the appointment of a sixty-five-year-old politician who had been warning of exactly this catastrophe for years and was finally being handed the tools to address it; and in the quiet release of 211 prisoners by a government that had imprisoned thousands, offering a gesture calibrated to satisfy international critics without acknowledging what it had done. Three kinds of historical action — monumental, defiant, and grudging — each one telling its own story about what leadership looks like when the stakes are highest, and what accountability looks like when a government would rather not provide it.
May 10: The Golden Spike, Churchill Takes the Wheel, A Partial Reckoning in Beijing
May 10: The Holiday She Tried to Kill

Today, May 10th

May 10: The Holiday She Tried to Kill

Today, May 10, 2026, Americans will spend an estimated $35 billion on their mothers — on flowers, brunches, greeting cards, jewelry, spa days, and everything in between. It is the third-largest card-giving occasion of the year. Florists will sell roughly three-quarters of all celebrants their traditional bouquets. And somewhere in the history of all this commercial enthusiasm is a woman named Anna Jarvis, who never married, never had children, spent her entire personal fortune fighting this holiday she created, and died penniless in a sanitarium in Pennsylvania in 1948 — with her medical bills, according to legend, paid by the florists she had devoted her later years to destroying. The story of Mother's Day is one of the most bittersweet origin stories in American history: a daughter's pure act of love, transformed into exactly what she feared most, by the very forces she tried hardest to resist.
May 10: The Holiday She Tried to Kill

09 May

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

May 9: Yesterday's Enemy, Today's Ally; The Pill Changes Everything; A Leader Lost to Terror A date of transformation — in how nations relate to one another, how women relate to their own lives, and how far political violence is willing to go 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. From Rubble to Alliance On May 9, 1955 — exactly ten years after V-E Day — West Germany was formally admitted to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, completing one of the most remarkable political rehabilitations in modern history. A decade earlier, Germany's cities had been rubble, its government dissolved, its territory divided among four occupying powers, and its name synonymous with a war that had killed tens of millions of people and a genocide that had murdered six million Jews and millions of others. The idea that this same country would, within a decade, be welcomed as an equal partner into a Western military alliance was not obvious — it required the overcoming of profound grief and suspicion among former Allied nations, particularly France, and a deliberate, sustained effort by West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer to anchor the new Federal Republic to the democratic West through institutions, treaties, and the frank acknowledgment of German guilt. The strategic logic was cold and clear: the Soviet Union now occupied Eastern Europe and had stationed hundreds of thousands of troops in East Germany. NATO needed West German territory, West German soldiers, and West German industrial capacity to credibly deter Soviet expansion westward. France, which had been invaded by Germany twice in living memory and had insisted at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference on terms designed to permanently weaken its neighbor, swallowed its objections — partly through the creation of the Western European Union as a simultaneous framework that placed West German rearmament under multilateral oversight. West Germany joined NATO on May 9, 1955; the Soviet Union responded by forming the Warsaw Pact five days later. The Cold War's European architecture — two armed alliances facing each other across the Iron Curtain — was now complete. That West Germany stood firmly on the Western side of that line, and would remain there for the next thirty-five years until reunification, was among the defining facts of the postwar order.   West Germany joins NATO, May 9, 1955 — ten years after V-E Day, yesterday's enemy takes its place in the Western alliance. The Pill On May 9, 1960, the United States Food and Drug Administration approved Enovid — a combined oral contraceptive developed by chemist Carl Djerassi and gynecologist John Rock, and manufactured by G.D. Searle & Company — as the first birth control pill available for commercial prescription in the United States. The FDA's approval was technically limited to the treatment of menstrual disorders, a regulatory framing that reflected the political and social sensitivities surrounding contraception in 1960; within a year, Enovid had been approved explicitly for contraceptive use, and within five years more than six million American women were taking it. The pill's development had been financed in significant part by Margaret Sanger and heiress Katharine McCormick, both of whom had spent decades fighting for women's access to reliable contraception and who lived long enough to see the pill approved — Sanger died in 1966, McCormick in 1967. The cultural consequences of the pill's approval on May 9, 1960, are almost impossible to overstate — and are still unfolding. For the first time in human history, women had access to a highly reliable, woman-controlled method of preventing pregnancy that was separated from the act of sex itself. The implications reached into every domain of women's lives: educational attainment, career planning, the timing and spacing of children, the negotiation of relationships, the understanding of female sexuality as something independent of reproduction. The relationship between the pill's approval and the feminist movements of the 1960s and 1970s is complex — the pill was in some respects both a product of and a catalyst for changing ideas about gender and autonomy — but the directional connection is clear. A woman who could reliably determine when she became a mother had a different relationship to every other choice in her life. The small white tablet approved by the FDA on this date in 1960 did not create that possibility from nothing. It made it real, at scale, for the first time. A 1960s American pharmacy — where a newly approved prescription changed the terms of women's lives in ways that are still being understood. ❦ The Years of Lead On May 9, 1978, the body of Aldo Moro — five-time Prime Minister of Italy, leader of the Christian Democracy party, and the country's most prominent political figure — was found in the trunk of a red Renault parked on Via Caetani in Rome, equidistant between the headquarters of the Christian Democrats and the Italian Communist Party, a placement that investigators concluded was deliberate. Moro had been kidnapped fifty-five days earlier, on March 16, 1978, when Red Brigades terrorists ambushed his motorcade in Rome, killing his five bodyguards and seizing him in broad daylight in one of the most audacious political kidnappings in European history. The Red Brigades — a far-left armed group that believed parliamentary democracy was a facade for capitalist oppression — demanded the release of imprisoned comrades. The Italian government, under intense pressure from allies including the United States and the Vatican, refused to negotiate. The fifty-five days of Moro's captivity were an agony for Italy — a country already convulsed by what became known as the anni di piombo, the "Years of Lead," a period of political violence from both the far left and far right that had claimed hundreds of lives through the 1970s. Moro wrote letters from captivity to government colleagues pleading for his life; they were largely dismissed as written under duress. His murder on May 9 — the method was never conclusively established; multiple shots at close range — provoked a national trauma whose reverberations shaped Italian politics for decades. The Red Brigades had intended to demonstrate the weakness of the Italian state. What they demonstrated instead was its resilience: the government did not fall, the institutions held, and the brigades were systematically dismantled by law enforcement in the years that followed. Moro's death, however, left a question that Italy has never fully answered — about what might have been possible had the politician who had spent his career trying to build a broad democratic coalition lived to pursue it.   A Roman street on a gray morning — the setting where Italy confronted what political extremism, unchecked, is finally willing to do.

09 May

May 9: What's Missing from the Parade

The Parade That Told the Truth Today is May 9 — Victory Day in Russia. For the 81st time, troops will march across Red Square. For the first time in nearly 20 years, there will be no tanks, no missiles, and no military vehicles. The absence says more than the parade ever did. 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. What May 9, 1945 Actually Looked Like The original Victory Day — May 9, 1945 — arrived one day after Nazi Germany signed its unconditional surrender in Berlin, timed to Moscow's time zone. The Soviet Union had lost an estimated 27 million people in the war — soldiers, civilians, victims of famine and disease and industrial massacre — a scale of suffering that remains almost impossible to comprehend. The first Victory Parade on Red Square was held on June 24, 1945, six weeks after the surrender, and it was an expression of something genuine: the exhausted, enormous pride of a people who had survived the unsurvivable. Soviet Marshal Georgy Zhukov rode a white horse across Red Square as German regimental standards — captured Nazi battle flags — were thrown at the base of Lenin's Mausoleum. The ceremony was raw with real history. The Soviet Union that emerged from World War II was a superpower in the most literal sense: a nation that had absorbed the worst assault in the history of modern warfare and had broken it. Victory Day was its most sacred reckoning with that fact. What followed, across the Soviet decades and into Putin's Russia, was the transformation of that raw historical moment into something else — a political instrument, a propaganda pageant, a demonstration of the military hardware that the memory of 1945 was used to justify. The parades were held annually through 1945 to 1965, then suspended for 25 years, then revived once for the 40th anniversary, then suspended again, then brought back with full military spectacle by Putin in 2008 — the same year Russia invaded Georgia. Since then, they have grown progressively larger and more elaborate: thousands of troops, columns of tanks and intercontinental ballistic missiles, fighter jets trailing colored smoke, the implicit message always the same. We are still the nation that defeated fascism. We are still that powerful. Do not forget what we are capable of. Last year, 27 heads of state watched as Xi Jinping sat beside Putin while Russian and Chinese soldiers marched together and Iskander missiles rolled past the Kremlin walls. This year, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico is among the few foreign leaders expected to attend. The Iskanders are needed elsewhere.   The original Victory Parade on Red Square, June 24, 1945: Soviet Marshal Georgy Zhukov rode a white horse as captured Nazi battle flags were thrown at the base of Lenin's Mausoleum. Eighty-one years later, the parade that commemorates that moment has been stripped of its weapons — not by choice, but by necessity. There is a particular historical irony in what Red Square will look like today. Putin has spent 25 years using May 9 to argue that Russia is the rightful heir to Soviet greatness — that the nation which defeated Hitler's armies is the same nation whose power and interests must be respected by the world. The parade was the annual proof of concept, the hardware rolling past the Kremlin as the argument made visible. Today, the hardware is absent, and the argument is harder to make. A Ukrainian drone hit a high-rise building seven kilometers from Red Square last week. Mobile internet is dark across the capital. The president, according to reports from Russian intelligence sources cited by international media, has been living in a bunker since March. The men marching today across Red Square are the heirs of the soldiers who threw those Nazi battle flags at Lenin's feet in 1945. What those soldiers defeated was real, and their sacrifice was real, and May 9 was once, genuinely, a day of reckoning with something true. Today, the parade that was built to project power is projecting something else — and the whole world can see it.

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