Events
An unidentified female dynasty is revealed in a tomb with the biggest collection of beads in the world.
The Montelirio Tholos Tomb is a vaulted building located beneath the present-day town of Valencina de la Concepción in Southwestern Spain that has the remains of residents who lived there between 2875 and 2635 BCE.
By Francis Dami25 days ago in History
The Quiet Collapse of Global Arms Control
The Quiet Collapse of Global Arms Control For decades, arms control agreements helped prevent the world’s most powerful weapons from spiraling out of control. Treaties limited nuclear stockpiles, increased transparency, and built fragile trust between rival states. Today, that system is quietly unraveling—and its collapse may define the next era of global insecurity.
By Wings of Time 25 days ago in History
The Red Sea Crisis and the Fragility of Global Trade
The Red Sea Crisis and the Fragility of Global Trade The Red Sea has quietly become one of the most critical pressure points in global affairs. Once seen mainly as a commercial shipping route connecting Asia, Europe, and Africa, it is now a zone of rising military tension, disrupted trade, and geopolitical rivalry. What happens in this narrow stretch of water is no longer a regional issue—it is reshaping global economics and international security.
By Wings of Time 25 days ago in History
The Quiet Rise of Global Militarization
The Quiet Rise of Global Militarization Across the world, governments are increasing military spending, expanding defense industries, and modernizing weapons systems—often without openly acknowledging why. There are no formal declarations of war, no mass troop mobilizations, and no clear enemy named in many cases. Yet behind the scenes, a quiet shift is taking place. Global militarization is rising, not loudly, but steadily, reshaping international relations in ways that may define the coming decades.
By Wings of Time 25 days ago in History
The Fall of Tibet to a Communist State: History, Causes, and Consequences
The incorporation of Tibet into the People’s Republic of China (PRC) after 1950 was not a single event but a complex process involving military force, political negotiation, ideological conflict, and long-lasting resistance. Understanding this fall requires examining Tibet’s historical status, China’s communist revolution, and the profound consequences that followed.
By Say the truth 25 days ago in History
The Dalai Lama: Life, Teachings, and Global Influence. AI-Generated.
Early Life and Recognition The 14th Dalai Lama was born on July 6, 1935, in a small farming village called Taktser in northeastern Tibet (present-day Qinghai Province, China). His birth name was Lhamo Dhondup. Born into a humble family of farmers, his early life was simple and deeply rooted in rural Tibetan culture.
By Say the truth 25 days ago in History
Martin Luther King's 'I Have a Dream' Speech: Things People Still Don't Know
Former President Ronald Reagan declared the third Monday in January to be Martin Luther King Jr. Day to celebrate the slain civil rights activist. Had he lived, he would be celebrating his birthday at age 97 on January 15, 2026, but he was assassinated at the young age of 39 on April 4, 1968.
By Margaret Minnicks25 days ago in History
Why August Wilson’s Joe Turner’s Come and Gone Feels Urgent on Today’s Broadway Stage by NWO Sparrow
Why August Wilson’s vision of identity and movement resonates in today’s political climate by NWO Sparrow Joe Turner’s Come and Gone returns with urgency, reflection, and cultural weight
By NWO SPARROW26 days ago in History
Antarctica Map
Antarctica is the coldest, driest, and windiest continent on Earth. It is located at the southernmost part of the planet, surrounding the South Pole. Because of its extreme weather and thick ice cover, Antarctica is very different from other continents. An Antarctica map helps us understand the shape, location, and important features of this frozen land.
By Farhan Sayed27 days ago in History
Where the Pulse Ends
© 2026 Sai Marie Johnson The humidity in the city didn’t just hang; it leaned. It was a thick, stagnant soup of diesel exhaust, ozone, and the metallic tang of blood that drifted from the "Compliance Zones." Joe sat in his rusted sedan, his hands resting loosely on the steering wheel. He wasn't gripping it. He wasn't angry. Anger was a chemical spike, a biological inefficiency. Joe was simply... focused.
By Sai Marie Johnson27 days ago in History










