News and Views on the Global Stage....

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Jefferson and Adams: July 4th Marks 200th Anniversary of Their Deaths

In the early afternoon of July 4, 1826, as church bells rang across America to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of independence, John Adams lay dying in his bed in Quincy, Massachusetts. The ninety-year-old former president had been slipping in and out of consciousness for days. Outside, the town was preparing for a grand jubilee—parades, speeches, cannon fire—to mark the half-century since the Declaration of Independence had been signed. Adams had been invited to attend the festivities, but his body had finally betrayed him. He could barely speak. Around five o’clock in the afternoon, witnesses reported that Adams stirred. His lips moved. Those gathered around his deathbed leaned in close to catch his final words. What they heard was a whisper, barely audible: “Thomas Jefferson survives.” Then he was gone. It was a beautiful sentiment—a dying man’s thoughts turning to his old friend and rival, the co-architect of American independence. Adams seemed to take comfort in the idea that Jefferson, at least, would live on to see this golden anniversary, to witness what their revolution had become. But Adams was wrong. Five hundred miles to the south, at Monticello in Virginia, Thomas Jefferson had died that same morning around ten o’clock.

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It’s World UFO Day: Roswell Celebrates 79 Years Since the Famous Crash Landing

World UFO Day, celebrated globally on July 2nd, holds an incredibly literal and cultural connection to Roswell, New Mexico. The date itself directly commemorates the infamous 1947 Roswell Incident, when a mysterious object crashed on a ranch outside of town, prompting decades of conspiracy theories, pop culture phenomena, and government investigations. In Roswell—widely considered the “UFO Capital of the World”—the day represents a unique intersection of scientific curiosity, local pride, and vibrant, campy celebration. The Meaning of the Day For enthusiasts, researchers, and the community of Roswell, World UFO Day carries a few distinct meanings: Commemorating History: It marks the anniversary of the July 1947 crash. While the U.S. military eventually concluded the debris was from a classified, high-altitude nuclear test surveillance project (Project Mogul), the incident birthed the modern era of ufology and alternative theories. Advocating for Disclosure: For serious ufologists, the day is used to foster respectful debate, push back against the historical stigma of reporting sightings, and demand that governments declassify hidden records regarding Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAPs). Celebrating the Unknown: For skeptics and believers alike, it serves as an open invitation to look up at the night sky, embrace human curiosity, and contemplate the mathematical and

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Futbol
My Take

Confessions of a Soccer, er, Futbol Naïf

Prior to this year’s FIFA World Cup, being held here in North America, I think I’d spent about five minutes trying to watch what we Americans call soccer. Each time that I gave it a try, I came away thinking, “Gawd, how boring! How could anyone watch this crap?” Now that I’ve been properly exposed, I actually find the matches rather compelling, especially when the USA team plays, as it did last night. What’s even more exciting than the game, however, are the crowds that gather. Literally, the fans both inside and outside the arena — and even in distant outdoor viewing locations — look to have achieved some sort of world unity. You even hear fans chanting, “USA, USA, USA,” who probably hate Donald Trump’s guts (as if they’ve ever bothered to actually examine his policies). This is not to say that, once FIFA madness is over and done with, I’ll look forward to further matches. Probably not. I’ll just stick to MLB, NFL, and WNBA. But for a moment in time, the FIFA World Cup is the most dramatic, exhilarating spoting event I’ve ever watched.

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Revolution
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American, French Revolutions Took Different Paths in the 18th Century

History often treats the American and French Revolutions as twin siblings of the Enlightenment—born from the same philosophical womb, nurtured by the same ideals of liberty and human rights, and destined to reshape the modern world. This narrative is seductive but fundamentally misleading. While both revolutions emerged from 18th-century Enlightenment thought and sought to overthrow tyrannical rule, they were not variations on the same theme. They were entirely different species of political transformation. The American Revolution was a conservative war for political independence fought against a distant power, designed to preserve existing liberties. The French Revolution was a radical, totalizing restructuring of society from within, designed to obliterate the past and forge a new human order. Understanding why these revolutions diverged so dramatically—and why one produced a stable republic while the other descended into terror and dictatorship—reveals essential truths about the nature of revolutionary change itself. The Core Motive: Political Separation vs. Social Re-engineering The first and most fundamental difference lies in what each revolution sought to accomplish. The American Revolution was primarily a war of political secession. The colonists did not seek to demolish British society, rewrite its laws, or reimagine its social hierarchy. They believed they were British

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So Much for the Separation of Bank and State

President Trump pocketed $2.2 billion in 2025, with $1.4 billion coming from a cryptocurrency firm he opened with his sons. And here, all along I thought crypto had been tanking for the past year. That’s the catch. If you market crypto, you make money whether the buyers do or not. Bingo — billions! (I also see Trump on TV all the time promoting watches, Bibles, and you name it, with his name or signature on everything.) What’s interesting is that having a crypto business can open the door to bribes. Now, if you’re president, no one can transfer $1 million into your bank account without raising red flags. But if you sell crypto and someone wants to earn some favors from you, all they have to do is buy, buy, buy. Not saying that’s what the Trumpster did, but the interesting thing is that only the president and vice-president, among all federal officeholders, are exempt from having business and/or financial interests outside of office. Even JD Vance made $7.5 million in 2025, due to his publishing genius. Former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi — poor woman — had to share her insider secrets with her husband to win in

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Declaration
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Thomas Jefferson and the Document That Changed the World

Picture a young man, just 33 years old, sitting alone in a second-floor rented room in Philadelphia during the sweltering heat of June 1776. Thomas Jefferson has locked himself away in his lodgings at Market and Seventh Street—a modest space in what’s now known as the Graff House—with a peculiar wooden writing desk of his own design balanced on his lap. Over the next 17 days, he will craft one of the most consequential documents in human history. But here’s the thing: Jefferson wasn’t trying to be revolutionary in his thinking. As he later admitted, his goal was simply to provide an “expression of the American mind”—to put into words what many colonists were already feeling but hadn’t quite articulated. He wasn’t inventing new philosophy. He was synthesizing, borrowing, and elevating ideas that were already in the air. The Ingredients of Revolution Jefferson didn’t have a massive research library with him in Philadelphia. He couldn’t Google “how to justify revolution” or pull up Wikipedia articles on political theory. Instead, he relied on something more powerful: years of voracious reading that had built a vast mental library of classical philosophy, legal precedent, and Enlightenment thought. The Philosopher’s Blueprint Jefferson’s deepest intellectual

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Canada Opens Bridge to Nowhere, Thanks to Trump

The Gordie Howe Bridge — named after Canada’s hockey great — connects Windsor, Ontario, with Detroit, Michigan. Financed completely by Canada, the bridge now sits idle because Donald Trump says he wants part of the action — for the U.S., of course. The shutdown has Michigan politicos blaming Trump’s involvement with the proprietors of the current Canada-Michigan bridge. The Moroun family, owners of the decrepit Ambassador Bridge, reportedly made a $1 million donation to a Trump PAC. Meanwhile, Trump says the Gordie Howe Bridge stands to make “astronomical” sums from tolls, and the U.S. should have 50 percent ownership, though we paid zero for its construction. The president has now tied the opening of the bridge to negotiations for the renewal of the USMCA, the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement on trade. His administration is using the bridge as a bargaining chip to push Canada for major concessions on unrelated trade friction points, including: Canadian tariffs on U.S. dairy products. The absence of U.S. steel in parts of the bridge’s early construction phases. The placement of American alcohol products on Ontario retail shelves. My View: If Trump wants 50 percent of the revenue, he should reimburse Canada for 50 percent of the

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