Sunday March 1, 2026


March 1, 1969


Javier Bardem - Videos - Filmography


We live in a world of denial, and don't know what the truth is anymore.



More Birthdays and News




February 28, 2026


US and Israel Attack Iran



The Ayatollah Khamenei is dead


This reads like an announcement by a Herald or Town Crier in a novel.


My visual is the White Rabbit in Alice in Wonderland.



How and why Trump started a war with Iran at this time will create endless speculation and political chaos at home and abroad. Some will call it another diversion from the Epstein files. Others will compare him to a dictator. Trump only does things if something is in it for him. Is it a Nobel Prize? Maybe. It's always about money and power for him. Are the major power players in the Middle East - those who want Iran off the game board - conspiring with Trump? To be determined ...


The Middle East Machine


It's only a fantasy that dictatorships and monarchies - dating from ancient times and algorithms - will ever end. Hierarchies are part of the equation. You can overthrow a government, but if there's no blueprint for what follows, retaliation drives the gears of the machine.


Since the 1979 revolution reshaped the nation's political and religious structure, Iran's leadership has maintained a system rooted in clerical authority and centralized control. While supporters view it as a defense of sovereignty and cultural identity, critics contend that it has limited political freedoms, restricted dissent, and isolated the country economically and diplomatically.


Calls for reform have surfaced repeatedly over the years - from student protests to nationwide demonstrations sparked by economic hardship and social restrictions. Many younger Iranians, connected to the world through technology and social media, have voiced aspirations for greater personal freedom, expanded civil rights, and stronger integration with the global community.


As events unfold in this timeline, the world watches a region once again at a crossroads between conflict and change - confrontation and evolution. Time for the people of the Middle East to come out of the dark ages and into the light.


Women: Freedom - in education and career, from male control, and how they choose to dress


Gender: sexual orientation recognized for all


Religion: Most people across the world believe there is one god for all - one source of creation. If such an entity were to exist, he or she would not wish to be worshiped but to allow his or her human creation to be free. Some believe Gods protect humanity - not true. They will not return when the simulation ends. Never, ever, worship a mythological god. Human programming dictates people spend much of their lifetime questing for answers about who they are and why there are here. Answer: We exist in an experiment set in linear within a simulation. It had a beginning - perhaps in the Middle East - that is now coming to its end.


Extraterrestrial influences: UFOs monitor Earth to ensure humans don't destroy the planet before the algorithm ends. How do UFOs fit into today's scenario - especially as they are frequently seen near military bases and nuclear power plants? Time will tell. After Russia invaded Ukraine - many UFOs were seen remembering that Chernobyl is in northern Ukraine.


For many across the Middle East, this moment feels like a crossroads - a chance to move beyond decades of repression, conflict, and ideological rigidity, and toward a future defined by opportunity, human rights, innovation, and global partnership. The call is not for cultural erasure, but for evolution - for governments to reflect the will of their people, for societies to balance tradition with progress, and for individuals to step into a new era shaped by openness rather than fear.


The Middle East - often depicted as the Cradle of Civilization - is shifting as the Human Experiment in emotions evolves out of existence.


The quest for answers is eternal. Even when humans know they'll never find the answers - they feel guided to keep asking questions as if it all mattered - or else they wouldn't keep going at all in ...


The Illusion of Time





Time and Emotions


Sunday March 8, many places return to Daylight Saving Time. This should lighten your mood if you suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder - a.k.a. SAD - part of the 'depression umbrella'.


We all know that reality and the 'human experiment in emotions' aligns with the concept of linear time - you can't have one without the other.


Feelings allow everything to seem real but also cause confusion. You are who you are - trying your best to make sense of reality and your place in it. If you understand the simulation - and that we are all DNA programmed to everything we do - then you'll never wonder - you'll just live it.


Your soul is forever influenced by the many aspects of itself experiencing in places you don't even know exist - along with your programming in this little speck of reality. Location: Physical Earth. Timeline: 21st Century - as humans are taught to mark events with their timepieces.


If you're feeling lost and confused about what to do next - never forget that your destiny "is" set in stone, therefore the next part of your journey will be shown to you no matter what.


The one thing we all have in common is that a final destiny in this - simulation, narrative, story of reality, illusion - is unfolding, and therefore all roads are going to lead you to that end. Tick Tock!




March 1, 2026



World Book Day


Read a book. Write a book. Download a book. Listen to a book.


Your life story is your book. Let it mean something.






Women's History Month


Honors the contributions of women to events in history and contemporary society


Women's Files on Crystalinks




Remembering Neil Sedaka


March 13, 1939 - February 27, 2026


Neil Sedaka, the singer-songwriter behind dozens of hits of the 1960s and '70s, dies at age 86


Neil Sedaka - Videos - Discography


I salute those who stand up for what they believe in.


Neil Sedaka was four years older than me. We grew up in neighboring areas of Brighton Beach and Manhattan Beach in Brooklyn, New York. We both went to Lincoln High School though Neil graduated before I entered my freshman year so we never really knew each other.


In 1957, Neil Sedaka launched his professional solo music career as a singer-songwriter and pianist, marking the beginning of a prolific career that defined the early pop-rock era. Neil Sedaka was an original member of the group that became known as The Tokens.


He formed the group in 1955 at Brooklyn's Abraham Lincoln High School, initially known as the Linc-Tones, before leaving in 1957 to pursue a solo career, prior to their 1961 hit "The Lion Sleeps Tonight". Following the success of his group he signed as a solo artist and released his debut recordings, including "Laura Lee" and "Snowtime" on Decca Records in 1957. Neil Sedaka was on his way to becoming a superstar.


The spring of 1957 brought major changes for me as I finished my freshman year and destiny began to unfold on many levels. That spring Lincoln High had a dance - possibly a freshman dance. Neil returned to play piano and judge the dance contest, which I entered. To this day I can still see him sitting at the piano playing and singing.


When the music stopped, there was that suspended moment before the winning couple was announced. You got it! My dance partner and I had won.


But what stayed with me far longer than the applause were Neil's words. In front of everyone, he looked at me and said, "You're beautiful. You're destined to fame." Of course I was faltered but it was a moment that catalyzed my destiny - one of many that would follow - and the beginning of my journey as told to me on the UFO three years earlier.


With Neil's passing today, I find myself returning to that spring night in Brooklyn - to the music, the applause, and the quiet knowing that sometimes destiny announces itself in the most extraordinary ways.




Astronomy in the News


Astronomy Index


Astronauts Are Taking 10-Year-Old Cameras to the Moon, Heres Why New Tech Didn't Make the Cut


Six planets are linking up in the sky at the end of February, and most will be visible to the naked eye. The planets aren't in a straight line, but are close together on one side of the sun.


The sun just experienced its first 'spotless days' in 4 years but we're not in the clear yet


ALMA reveals Milky Way's core in largest-ever mosaic, tracing cold gas filaments


The radio 'howl' of a lightning-like discharge has been detected at Mars for the first time


Chinese Spacecraft Damage Revealed to Be Far More Serious Than Previously Announced


Farming on the moon or Mars? How recycled sewage could turn regolith into crop soil


Auroras on Ganymede and Earth share striking similarities


NASA's Mike Fincke identified himself Wednesday as the astronaut whose medical condition prompted the space agency's first medical evacuation


Quakes on The Moon Are Far More Widespread Than We Realized


Chinese astronauts describe moment a crack was discovered on Shenzhou-20 spacecraft


Apollo moon rocks reveal lunar magnetic field was briefly stronger than Earth's


Jupiter's Galilean moons may have gained life's building blocks at birth


Surprise solar eruptions on sun's far side validate new forecasting method


Astronomers inspect ultraluminous X-ray pulsar's magnetic field evolution in the Whale galaxy


6 planets will parade across the night sky at the end of February


Ancient Dusty Galaxies Discovered at the Edge of the Universe Rewrite Cosmic History


Mars' Missing Water Mystery Takes an Unexpected Turn


The Moon Is Still Shrinking and Scientists Just Found New Moonquake Zones


Changes to One of The Largest Known Stars May Signal Destruction


Why the outer solar system is filled with giant cosmic 'snowmen'





Physics in the News


Physics


Why you can't tie knots in four dimensions


Spinning Plasma Solves a Long-Standing Fusion Reactor Mystery


Diamond owl swoops in with new method to keep electronics cool





Chemistry in the News


Chemistry


A blue light activated iron catalyst just replaced rare metals and achieved a major first in drug synthesis


Nano-cage removes up to 98% of PFAS in tap water tests


Raincoat no longer waterproof? A textile scientist explains why - and how to fix it


A Flash of Light Can Build and Erase Crystals Instantly


Tiny Bubbles Unlock a Powerful New Source of Blue Energy





Technology in the News


Artificial Intelligence


Metamaterials that can shrink and expand on their own



7,000 GPUs Simulate Quantum Microchip in Unprecedented Detail


AI Finds Life Shortening Hormone Disorder Using Only Hand Photos





Brain in the News


Brain Index


A Migraine Is Not Just a Headache: The 4 Distinct Stages Explained





Super-Agers in the News


Super-Agers ~ Senior Index


People who have razor-sharp minds in their 80s and 90s - known as SuperAgers - produce twice the number of young neurons as cognitively healthy adults and 2.5 times as many as people with Alzheimer's disease, a new study found




Health in the News


Health Files ~ Alternative Healing


New iron nanomaterial wipes out cancer cells without harming healthy tissue


Seasons likely to affect male fertility, study shows


Scientists create universal nasal spray vaccine that protects against COVID, flu, and pneumonia


Could This Hormone Replace Insulin? Scientists Revisit a Once-Ignored Diabetes Breakthrough


Is Your Child a Picky Eater? Here's One Thing to Try


Scientists Reverse Blood Stem Cell Aging by Rewiring the Cell's Recycling System


Scientists Discover DNA Is Already Organized Before Life Switches On


Obesity is linked to 1 in 10 deaths from infection worldwide - and scientists are still learning why


Simple blood test can forecast Alzheimer's years before memory loss


Stanford Scientists Cure Type 1 Diabetes in Mice Without Insulin or Immune Suppression





Planet Earth In the News


Planet Earth Index


86° in Greenland in Winter? Yes, It Happened ... And It Wasn't Caused by Global Warming


Antarctica just saw the fastest glacier collapse ever recorded


Antarctica's Cloud Mystery: Whats Really Floating Above the Ice?


Wildfire smoke linked to rise in violent assaults, 11-year study finds


Lab tests investigate how house fire emissions differ from forest fires


As the Planet Warms Nature's Engine Is Grinding to a Halt


Melting Antarctic Ice Disrupted Earth's Global Ocean Conveyor Belt


E-waste chemicals are appearing in dolphins and porpoises


Land plants began reshaping Earth 455 million years ago, scientists discover


Huge Giant 400-Year-Old Black Coral Stuns Marine Researchers in New Zealand




Bald Eagles in the News


Bald Eagles


Bald Eagle, Marooned on Ice Chunk in Hudson, Is Rescued by Police


Bald eagle rescued from Hudson River ice is doing better, but not out of the woods


Southern California's celebrity eagles Jackie and Shadow welcome new egg after ravens destroy first clutch




Rock Art in the News


Petroglyphs, Pictograms, Geoglyphs


67,800 Years Old: World's Oldest Rock Art Discovered in Indonesia





Archaeology in the News


Archaeology


Mysterious Stone in US Backyard Turned Out to Be an Archaeological Treasure


The Surprising Secret Behind an Ancient Andean Kingdom's Rise


40,000-year-old Stone Age symbols may have paved the way for writing, long before Mesopotamia


Ireland's rare Old Irish Goat turns out to be a 3,000-year-old survivor still roaming the hills today


A coffin holding a dead 'princess' fell from an eroded cliff over 100 years ago - archaeologists just solved a major mystery about her


Stone Age deceased dressed in spectacular feather and fur headgear, new research technique reveals


14,000-year-old ivory tools found in Alaska hint at how Clovis ancestors first arrived in the New World


These 40,000-Year-Old Marks May Be a Precursor to Writing


In 1940, a Boy Followed His Dog Into a Tree Hole and Found a 17,000-Year-Old Secret Cave Full of Ancient Art


Lost for 80 Years: WWII B-17 Bomber Discovered in the Baltic Sea


Ancient DNA Reveals Europe's Last Hunter-Gatherers Survived Thousands of Years Longer Than Expected


Archaeologists Uncover 1,000-Year-Old Gold-Filled Tomb on the Central American Isthmus


After Six Decades Underwater, A Diver Finally Locates the 66-Meter Shipwreck Lost in Storm





Paleontology in the News


Paleontology Index


Forget flatfooted lumbering T. rex. New research shows it walked on tiptoes


First plesiosaurian fossil discovered in Algeria fills a Cretaceous gap


Scientists Discover Unusual Long-Legged Ancient Crocodile From 200 Million Years Ago


Lost fossils reveal sea monsters that took over after Earth's greatest extinction