NYC Mayor’s Office Streamed live 16 hours ago Mayor Mamdani Delivers Delivers Address Marking America’s 250th Birthday July 3, 2026
Mayor Mamdani Delivers Address Marking America’s 250th Birthday
AMERICA’S 250th: Are we happy?
Marianne Williamson Jul 3, 2026 This year should be a mindful, not a mindless celebration Subscribe to Marianne’s Substack: MarianneWilliamson.Susbtack.com
On Hannah Arendt: A Conversation with Writer E.A. Hanks
Marianne Williamson Jul 2, 2026 E.A. Hanks joins Marianne to talk about Hannah Arendt, the philosopher who saw fascism coming in Germany before it arrived. She names what many of us are feeling about the moment in which we live. EA Hanks’ Substack EAHanks.Substack.com Subscribe to Marianne’s Substack: MarianneWilliamson.Susbtack.com
- Google AI Overview
The quote “At least I am not innocent, no one can accuse me of that” comes from Hannah Arendt’s reflections on her arrest by the Gestapo in Berlin in 1933. [1, 2, 3]
The Historical Event
Following the Reichstag fire in early 1933, the Nazi regime began mass illegal arrests of political opponents. Distressed by how quickly German intellectuals conformed to the regime, Arendt refused to be a passive bystander. She agreed to clandestinely gather data on official anti-Semitic propaganda for Kurt Blumenfeld and the Zionist Organization of Germany. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Her illegal research was discovered, leading to her arrest and eight-day imprisonment by the Gestapo. After successfully securing her release, she immediately fled Germany. [1, 2, 3]
The Meaning Behind the Words
Arendt later recounted the satisfaction she felt during her arrest. Her full recollection states: [1]
“I immediately knew: Jews could not remain. However, I did not leave peacefully. … I thought ‘at least I did something! At least I am not innocent!'” [1]
In this context, Arendt uses “innocence” with a sharp, ironic bite: [1]
- Innocence as Passivity: To Arendt, being “innocent” under a tyrannical regime meant you had done nothing to oppose it. Passive innocence was equivalent to compliance, cowardice, and looking away. [1, 2]
- Guilt as Action: By breaking the law to conduct counter-propaganda, she intentionally stripped herself of legal “innocence” in the eyes of the Third Reich. [1, 2]
- Political Responsibility: The quote highlights her core belief in personal and political responsibility. She took pride in the fact that the state recognized her as an active threat, proving she had exercised her moral agency instead of falling into line. [1, 2, 3]
To read more about her life and activism during this period, you can look through her archived collection at the Library of Congress or explore biographical materials provided by the Hannah Arendt Center. [1]
Buridan’s ass
- Google AI Overview
Buridan’s donkey (or Buridan’s ass) is a philosophical thought experiment about a hypothetical donkey that is equally hungry and thirsty, placed exactly halfway between a pile of hay and a pail of water. Because the animal cannot rationally choose between the two equally good options, it starves and dies of thirst. Wikipedia
The dilemma illustrates the paralyzing effects of indecision and is used to critique theories of free will and moral determinism. If a purely rational agent requires a concrete, logical reason to make a choice, and all options are perfectly balanced, the agent is left paralyzed. Wikipedia +2
The Origins
Named after the 14th-century French philosopher Jean Buridan, the paradox was actually created by his critics to satirize his views on moral determinism. Buridan argued that a person faced with two equal choices should suspend judgment until circumstances change, as the will cannot break the deadlock
His critics pushed this idea to its extreme—arguing that, under this logic, a creature faced with identical choices would inevitably starve. Wikipedia +2
The roots of the concept go even further back:
- Aristotle: Proposed an early version involving a man who is equally hungry and thirsty and stuck between food and drink.
- Al-Ghazali: A 12th-century Persian philosopher used a similar story involving a man caught between two identical dates. Wikipedia +2
In Modern Context
Today, the concept is frequently applied to psychology, behavioral economics, and daily life to describe the phenomenon of “analysis paralysis.” When faced with too many equally attractive options (like identical breakfast cereals at the grocery store or multiple great job offers), people often become so overwhelmed trying to determine the absolute optimal choice that they make no decision at all. YouTube·In Search of Self +1
For a deeper dive into how this logical paradox translates to modern decision-making struggles and how it can be used to understand human psychology:
July Astrology Forecast 2026
The Astrology Podcast Jun 29, 2026 Monthly Astrology Forecasts A deep dive into the astrology forecast for July 2026, with astrologers Chris Brennan and Austin Coppock. The month opens on highly unstable ground, dominated by a volatile Mars-Uranus conjunction that threatens sudden, unpredictable shifts and explosive turns. This erratic energy is ruled by a newly stationary retrograde Mercury, which has just backed away from a conjunction with Jupiter. This combination sets the stage for logistical snafus, technological difficulties, and widespread delays right out of the gate. Jupiter, having just entered Leo at the end of June, begins to form a tense opposition with Pluto that goes exact around the middle of the month. This highlights major power struggles and the tension between truth and control. This opposition is part of a much larger, momentous pattern of simultaneous outer planet alignments peaking this month. As Uranus completes its first exact trine with Pluto, these planets lock into a complex basket configuration alongside Jupiter and Neptune. This heavy planetary geometry indicates that significant precursor events are unfolding in the background, particularly surrounding rapid technological or military innovations. We finally see a more positive shift in the astrological weather during the second half of the month. Mars applies to a stabilizing, constructive sextile with Saturn, helping to ground the earlier chaos. Mercury stations direct, clearing up miscommunications, and the Sun makes its triumphant ingress into Leo to form an auspicious conjunction with Jupiter. This cazimi brings a much needed wave of radiant, showy warmth and outward confidence, despite an opposition with Pluto. However, a lingering Venus-Mars square operating in the background introduces an unwelcome element of creative friction and tension in partnerships, pitting the forces of unification against the drive to sever and divide. This late July window ultimately serves as a temporary lull, and a calm before the storm. By early August, we swiftly transition into eclipse season, bringing weighty major endings and beginnings to the forefront, just as Venus enters the shadow sign of its upcoming retrograde phase. This is episode 541 of The Astrology Podcast. United Astrology Conference https://uacastrology.com Austin’s Website https://austincoppock.com Timestamps 00:00:00 Introduction 00:00:53 July Astrology Quick Overview 00:03:57 News Segment Begins 00:04:51 Venus-Jupiter Conjunction Stories 00:05:13 First Trillionaire 00:08:49 Spielberg Disclosure Day 00:13:45 Marriages 00:16:25 Iran-US peace deal 00:20:31 Zelda Remake 00:22:07 Beer Shortage 00:24:04 Venus-Pluto Opposition 00:26:50 Mars-Uranus Stories 00:27:06 Venezuela Earthquakes 00:29:47 AI Companies Authorized 00:35:03 Lebanon agreement 00:36:17 Nuclear news on Mars ingress 00:38:36 Wrapping up news segment 00:41:43 United Astrology Conference 00:46:04 July Forecast Begins 00:47:06 Mars-Uranus Conjunction 00:59:34 Mercury Retrograde 01:02:11 Outer planet alignments 01:09:07 Jupiter-Pluto opposition 01:25:23 Sequential breakdown of the month 01:25:46 July 1: Mars-Uranus Overview & Sun-Saturn Square 01:26:55 July 7: Neptune Stations Retrograde in Aries 01:29:45 July 9: Venus Enters Virgo 01:31:33 July 12: Mercury Retrograde Cazimi 01:33:08 July 14: New Moon in Cancer 01:35:58 July 15-18: Uranus Sextile Neptune & Trine Pluto 01:39:35 July 19: Mars Sextile Saturn 01:41:21 July 20-21: Jupiter-Pluto Opposition & Outer Planet Aspects 01:50:54 July 22-23: Sun Enters Leo & Mercury Stations Direct 01:51:52 July 24: Venus Sextile Mercury 01:54:44 July 25: Neptune-Pluto Sextile 01:55:04 July 26: Saturn Stations Retrograde & Lunar Nodes Shift Signs 01:57:33 July 27: Sun Opposes Pluto 01:58:55 July 28: Venus Square Mars 02:02:29 July 29: Sun-Jupiter Cazimi & Full Moon in Aquarius 02:04:31 Electional Chart for July 02:07:42 Wrapping Up 02:17:39 Credits
Federico Faggin: “It starts with ontology!”
Amrit Sandhu ???????? Jul 1, 2026 Inspired Evolution Podcast ???????? Federico Faggin, the inventor of the microprocessor, through decades of quantum physics research, a mystical experience of blinding white light in 1990, and turning the foundations of science on their head, seems to have cracked the code to consciousness — revealing that materialist science has been solving the wrong problem for 100 years. In this episode, Federico shares the framework that’s rattling mainstream physics: consciousness and free will are not products of the brain, but the foundation from which reality itself emerges. Not a metaphor. Not a religious myth. An ontological reversal that resolves the deepest paradoxes of quantum mechanics — including why the wave function collapses, and why even God cannot predict the future. We go deep into what Federico believes is actually happening beneath the surface of reality — the “seiety” that experiences life through your body, why AI cannot be conscious even though it sits on conscious fields, and why love might literally be the force of gravity. This may just be one of the most important scientific conversations of our time. Do you believe consciousness lives in the brain — or is the brain just an instrument the deeper field uses to know itself?
Word-built world: Comstock Lode

Mining on the Comstock, 1876 Art: T.L. Dawes
A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg
Comstock Lode
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: A rich supply or source, especially one that seems inexhaustible.
ETYMOLOGY:
After Henry T.P. Comstock (c. 1820-1870), a prospector whose name is attached to the rich silver-and-gold deposit discovered in 1859 near what is now Virginia City, Nevada. Earliest documented use: 1866.
NOTES:
The California Gold Rush began in 1848-49; about a decade later, Nevada had its own silver rush. In 1859, prospectors uncovered a rich silver-and-gold deposit near what became Virginia City. It drew a rush of prospectors, led to large-scale mining, and helped Nevada become known as the Silver State.
Henry Comstock was not the heroic discoverer the name might imply. He was one of the early claim holders around the site, and the lode wound up with his name. A reminder that history, like mining, sometimes rewards whoever is standing nearest the shiny thing.
The phrase Comstock Lode is sometimes shortened to the Comstock. Not to be confused with comstockery, from Anthony Comstock, a different Comstock with a different lode of censoriousness.
See also Golconda.
USAGE:
“There was only light, and light is intangible. You cannot slice off an inch of the spectrum and put it in your pocket. The people who had come to exploit this Comstock Lode of the miraculous, found themselves painfully frustrated.”
Aldous Huxley; Adonis and the Alphabet and Other Essays; Chatto & Windus; 1956.
What ‘Common Sense’ Tells Us About the U.S.
On the 250th, Kings Still Don’t Belong—Not in Name, Not in Spirit
by Don H. Doyle June 29, 2026 (zocalopublicsquare.org)

On the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, most Americans will celebrate the revolutionary manifesto as the culmination of a long-simmering rebellion against King George III. But until only a few months earlier, the colonists blamed Parliament for odious British measures they simply wanted to reform. Beginning January 10, 1776, all of that changed with the publication of a brief pamphlet, authored by an anonymous Englishman. That pamphlet, “Common Sense,” reframed the colonists’ dispute with Parliament over taxes and imperial authority into a radical revolution against King George III and against monarchy itself.
For fear of being hanged as a traitor, Thomas Paine did not reveal himself as the “Common Sense” author until three years later. Born in England in 1737 into a Quaker family, Paine had schooled himself in the Enlightenment philosophy of natural rights and the social contract. While working as a tax collector, he penned petitions for better pay and working conditions for his fellow excise officers, which cost him his job. In London, he met Benjamin Franklin, who urged him to take his polemical talents to America, and wrote the letter of introduction that secured Paine a job as an editor and author at The Pennsylvania Magazine.
Paine arrived in Philadelphia in November 1774. He found not a united country with a common enemy but a fractious group of divided colonies, religious sects, and ethnic groups quarreling with the British Parliament and one another. Americans had been haranguing Parliament to rescind the new tariffs, taxes, and commercial regulations it had imposed on the colonies after Britain’s successful war against the French, which ended in 1763.
Most Americans perceived King George III as their “common father” and protector of his distant colonial subjects, not least against the British soldiers and customs collectors Parliament had sicced upon them. Americans celebrated the anniversaries of the king’s birthday and coronation even as the Sons of Liberty were arousing anger against His Majesty’s Parliament. New Yorkers showed their royalist sympathies by raising an equestrian statue of the king on Manhattan’s Bowling Green in 1770. (Six years later, on July 9, 1776, an angry mob tore down the statue and purportedly melted it down into ammunition.)
Less than three months after the Minutemen gave battle to British soldiers at Lexington and Concord in April 1775, the Second Continental Congress sent the “Olive Branch Petition” to King George III. The delegates swore loyalty and denied any intention of separation, if only His Majesty would protect them from Parliament’s unjust laws. King George III coldly refused to acknowledge his subjects’ plea, declared the colonies to be in open rebellion, and sent more troops to enforce British rule.
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With that, the colonists became resigned to war, but most remained uncertain if its goal was to be separation from Britain when, six months after King George III’s rejection of their olive branch, “Common Sense” appeared.
Paine saw beyond the quarrels over taxes, trade regulations, and colonial autonomy to envision a much grander conflict between the Old World’s anachronistic monarchical rule and the New World’s republican future. The main question he raised was not how King George III should rule the American colonies but why kings should rule at all.
Paine began by setting forth a careful argument assailing the absurdity and danger of hereditary power. Kings originated, as often as not, with the “principal ruffian of some restless gang … chief among plunderers,” he insisted. Likewise, the ridiculous notion that kingly wisdom and virtue would pass through bloodlines was mocked by nature itself, “by giving mankind an ass for a lion.” Monarchy had inflicted war, oppression, and misery everywhere, Paine argued. “Freedom hath been hunted round the globe. Asia, and Africa, have long expelled her—Europe regards her like a stranger, and England hath given her warning to depart.” By rejecting monarchical tyranny, he proposed, America would be the “asylum for mankind,” and a break with the past. “We have it in our power to begin the world over again,” he wrote.
These were heady aspirations, and Paine understood he was challenging deeply ingrained loyalties—or, as he put it, “a long habit of not thinking a thing wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being right.” His was an appeal to common sense, which would eventually prevail, for “time makes more converts than reason.”
“Common Sense” was the first and most influential outright call for American independence, and for rebellion against the king. It spread like wildfire: In 25 editions, with some 150,000 copies sold in a population of just 2.5 million, it was read aloud to great effect in taverns and shops throughout the colonies.
The colonial leaders who met in Philadelphia in July 1776 had read the pamphlet, too. Samuel Adams urged fellow delegates to read it and noted that “Common Sense” “has fretted some folks here more than a little.” John Adams wrote to his wife Abigail that “all agree there is a great deal of good sense, delivered in a clear, simple, concise and nervous Style.”
Thomas Jefferson, like John Adams, was convinced independence was the path forward even before his friend and fellow signer, Thomas Nelson, sent him a copy of “Common Sense.” Looking back on the declaration, Jefferson insisted that he, as its primary author, expressed the American mind; he never explicitly credited Paine or “Common Sense.” Still, Paine had enormous influence in converting Americans to the cause of independence, and the many agreements between the two documents is clear. The declaration, like “Common Sense,” placed blame for a “long train of abuses” squarely on the king, not Parliament: “The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States.” This tyrant, it concluded, “is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.”
The revolution that followed embedded a deep and enduring distrust of concentrated power unaccountable to the people. The new nation’s federal and state governments featured deliberately weak executives. The Articles of Confederation, the nation’s first constitution, eliminated the office of chief executive altogether.
That changed after the Constitutional Convention of 1787 created a strong president. Still, a system of checks and balances limited presidential powers. There were some futile efforts to invest the office with the aura of monarchy. Alexander Hamilton proposed that the president be elected for life. John Adams suggested that the president be addressed as “His Highness.” Such pretenses were quickly rejected. The United States would have no kings. Not in name, not in spirit. Two hundred fifty years later, it feels like common sense.
Don H. Doyle is the author of The Cause of All Nations: An International History of the American Civil War and The Age of Reconstruction: How Lincoln’s New Birth of Freedom Remade the World. He is the McCausland Professor of History Emeritus at the University of South Carolina.
Primary editor: Sarah Rothbard | Secondary editor: Eryn Brown
To Understand ‘America,’ Understand the Americas
U.S. Independence Is a Story of the Entire Western Hemisphere
by Arturo Chang July 2, 2026 (zocalopublicsquare.org)

As the United States reaches the 250th anniversary of its independence, the nation is still debating what defines the “American” tradition. Are we characterized by a particular set of institutions? Are we characterized by national borders? And perhaps in the broadest sense, what identities, communities, and cultures comprise the category of “America”? These questions evade simple conclusions, but they are particularly important for situating our current, divisive political moment. One way to make sense of these questions is to turn to a hemispheric, more pluralized understanding of the publics, imaginations, and politics that were at stake in the early years of U.S. independence.
“America” is not a nation-state. Geographically, it encompasses the lands and peoples that extend from the Yukon to Patagonia. Ideologically, “America,” or what one might call the project of “American political thought,” offers a similarly capacious tradition. The shared politics, cultures, and identities of America and its publics are most apparent at the peak of hemispheric solidarity, during the so-called the Age of Revolutions (approximately 1770–1850). During this period, dozens of anti-colonial movements emerged to rebel against European rule, reject notions of American inferiority, and ultimately call for the establishment of their own political projects. At the same time, an astounding array of communities—Indigenous, Creole, Pardo, Mestizo, as well as enslaved and recently emancipated peoples—all self-identifying as Americans, together built a tradition that sought to live beyond the conditions of colonization.
The U.S. Declaration’s account of inalienable rights became a prominent example to follow for other American movements, with its ideas proliferating throughout the hemisphere by way of the press, political manifestos, and the first constitutions. For instance, the language of liberty and happiness framed Mexican Revolutionaries’ 1813 Constitution of Chilpancingo, which granted citizenship to all Americans (people born in the “new world”) or to non-Americans who aligned with the project of anti-colonial resistance. Similar language would also appear in the “Declarations” of the Republic of Texas (1813), Cartagena de Indias (1811), and the United Provinces of South America (1816). As such, anti-colonial revolution in the Americas evolved as a shared project of popular liberation that stretched from Boston to Buenos Aires.
Shared sentiments associated with the Declaration, in turn, influenced the direction of 19th-century revolutionary U.S. politics. As historian Caitlin Fitz shows, many U.S. citizens understood themselves as part of the revolutionary efforts of their hemispheric “sister republics.” These connections manifested in songs, orations, poems, and plays like James Workman’s Liberty in Louisiana, which deployed comedy to simultaneously argue against Spanish rule in the region while celebrating the Louisiana Purchase of 1803. In the “borderlands” that today comprise Louisiana to California, in particular, national identities were not fully formed, and political rhetoric rarely operated within the constraints of state borders. This is reflected in the print activity of the region. Newspapers like El Misisipi (founded in New Orleans in 1808), for example, published in parallel Spanish and English columns to comment on events that cut across French, Spanish, and U.S. jurisdictions.
These points of exchange have been overlooked in favor of the simpler story of a nation-state that emerged and developed linearly and with little relation to parallel national projects. Nationalist histories are useful for retroactively concretizing the state as a perennial institution, but they do so at a cost. They evade the reality that cultural, social, and political practices and identities necessarily operated more freely. A more interesting history emerges when one takes seriously that early 19th-century nation-states were at best weak institutions with real concerns surrounding re-conquest. Americans throughout the hemisphere had a desperate need for regional allies and like-minded revolutionaries.
Take, for example, the little-known history of Mexican Texas. The first republic of Texas was founded in 1813 by Mexican citizen José Bernardo Gutiérrez de Lara. The militia which led to Texas independence—self-identified as the “Republicans of Nacogdoches”—received covert support from the James Madison administration, which hoped to expel colonial powers from the region, as well as direct aid from Caribbean and South American revolutionaries living in the U.S. who wanted to liberate their own communities. Gutiérrez de Lara traveled across the United States to recruit volunteers, meeting with prominent figures of the period such as future President James Monroe (secretary of state at the time), Louisiana Governor William C.C. Claiborne, and Cuban revolutionary José Álvarez de Toledo y Dubois.
The movement, however, was also driven by popular support among U.S. citizens who believed that the liberation of Mexico was directly important to the success of the Union. Regional newspapers celebrated Gutiérrez de Lara’s efforts. The Nashville Whig (1813), for example, encouraged U.S. Americans to “lend their aid” in liberating “another portion of the Western Hemisphere…from the bonds of European tyranny and oppression” and to help Mexico become “an empire among the nations of the earth.” As Fitz, the historian, shows, these appeals to mutual liberation would continue in the U.S. well into the 19th century. Celebratory gestures to Latin American revolutions would appear alongside 4th of July processions, parents named babies after Venezuelan Revolutionary Simón Bolívar, and the press published dedications to the “to the patriots of Mexico and South-America.”
Telling the story of independence grew more complicated as the U.S. made a turn toward empire, placing its relationship with Latin American allies in precarious standing. Cuban intellectual José Martí, for example, reflected on the ideological tensions symbolized by the United States as he worked toward Cuban independence while living in New York City in 1886, when the Statue of Liberty was being assembled there. In Fiestas de la Estatua de la Libertad, Martí wrote, “It is terrible, liberty, to speak of you for someone who is deprived of you.” For Martí, the political celebrations posed a political paradox: New York bustled with interest in the monument that would personify the United States’ best impulses—the “noise of triumph at rest.” But U.S. Americans didn’t consider the ways their nation’s expansion into Latin America took liberty away from other Americans who, until very recently, had been fellow travelers in the hemispheric project. “Darkness does not come from a rainy day, nor the gray of October,” he wrote, addressing the statue, “but of the dust, shadowed in death, that your carriage picked up on the way.”
It is perhaps unsurprising that, today, as the U.S. reflects on its history, themes such as revolution, empire, and “the people” remain at the center of the conversation—making returning to the hemispheric character of American emancipation all the more important. The semiquincentennial anniversary of the U.S. Declaration of Independence can help us think through all that undergirded North Americans’ break from colonial rule—rather than only considering the state that would eventually emerge. One way to begin is by recognizing that the “American tradition,” at its roots, operates far beyond the scope of the U.S. and its boundaries.
As historian David Armitage suggests, the Declaration was a genre-producing document that evolved alongside the public who saw themselves in it. That is, the Declaration—and its language of “equality” in “Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness” meant different things, to different people, both within the United States and across the world. Those people, and their communities, went on to transform this country’s young history. But Americans did not achieve those transformations through consensus; they were a result of conflict and contention. As celebrations of the 250th anniversary abound, it is worth deploying a broader story that embraces critique as a central catalyst of political change. One that opens possibilities for renewed understanding of the communities, cultures, and identities that make America.
Arturo Chang is assistant professor of political science at the University of Toronto. His research centers on popular movements, nation-building, racial and ethnic politics, and Indigenous politics. He is the author of A New World of Revolutions: Popular Imaginations and Movements Across the Americas.
Primary editor: Eryn Brown | Secondary editor: Sarah Rothbard
Nisargadatta Mahara on what happens to you

“Whatever happens, happens to you by you, through you; you are the creator, enjoyer and destroyer of all you perceive.”
~ Nisargadatta
Nisargadatta Maharaj was an Indian guru of nonduality, belonging to the Inchagiri Sampradaya, a lineage of teachers from the Navnath Sampradaya. Wikipedia
Born April 17, 1897, Mumbai, India
Died September 8, 1981 (age 84 years), Mumbai, India