Wednesday March 4, 2026


March 4, 1954 - January 30, 2026


Catherine O'Hara - Videos - Filmography


Catherine O'Hara Won Actor Award for 'The Studio' Posthumously and Earns Huge Standing Ovation Sunday at SAG-AFTRA's Actor Awards



More Birthdays and News




Do You Believe The World Is Ending?


End-of-world scenarios or algorithms - no matter how you envision them - are only a small fraction of the closing of the simulation - which is what's actually happening. Understanding humanity's place in all of it has become part of mainstream consciousness. Everything you've ever believed about creation and the end is all part of an illusion. For all we know it may have happened already and we are just catching up to it in physical reality.



Study reveals how end-of-world beliefs shape Americans' response to global threats   PhysOrg - March 3, 2026


In an era of climate anxiety, geopolitical tensions and rapidly advancing artificial intelligence, apocalyptic thinking is no longer confined to the fringes of society. Belief in the end of the world is surprisingly common across America, and it's significantly influencing how people interpret and respond to the most pressing threats facing humanity.


Apocalyptic thinking isn't reserved for radical or fringe movements. These beliefs are held widely across diverse populations, and they have real consequences for how we confront global risks. Read More...



The Trump Factor


Trump is the prefect character (insert) to bring about the closing chapters of the simulation. Never being held accountable for his actions - he is the perfect vehicle to create end-time chaos at home and abroad.


Promises made - promises broken by someone who tells people what they want to hear. Rhetoric filled with lies and distractions that only those aligned with him will find believable - although that number appears to be dwindling along with the Republican stronghold over the Senate in this midterm election year.


Bipolar behavior by a man emotionally and intellectually challenged - with obvious health issues and senior moments - as Trump approaches 80.


How and why Trump started a war with Iran will create endless speculation and political chaos at home and abroad. Some will call it another diversion from the Epstein files and the economy. Others will compare him to a dictator - aligning himself with the worst-of-the-worst in the past.


His quest for power is leading the world down the path to larger more unpredictable conflicts with human costs and global consequences. Many will wonder if this is the start of World War III as the conflict grows - alliances already drawn.


Rarely held accountable - Trump is incapable of seeing the consequences of his actions. His programming, is, and has always been different - leading up to events today and an uncertain destiny for all.


Nothing good will come from this war which on many levels is a wake-up call about end times.


Trump doesn't do anything unless there's something in it for him. Does he expect a Nobel Peace Prize? Are the major power players in the Middle East - those who want Iran off the game board - conspiring with him? The answers will probably never be known to the public as the war spirals across the Middle East with global repercussions and no one is immune to the consequences.


Remember this all began in Mercury Retrograde so expect major issues linked to all things having to do with Transportation and Communication.



2026 Conflict in Iran (Ancient Persia)


2026 War in Iran



The Ayatollah Ali 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.



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 - aka orbs of light - 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. Videos must be captured in daylight rather than at night, when they could be misinterpreted moving flares or aerial interceptions of missiles and drones.


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





March 3, 2026 - Purim


Purim takes us to Ancient Persia - known today as Iran.


The storyline includes my partner Zoroaster (Z) the Persian Prophet.



Continuing the bloodline takes us to the Anunnaki (Creation).



Image below includes the Tree of Life Geometry, Kabbalah and other symbolism.


Ellie morphing into her Anunnaki persona.


I have also changed during some of my classes and workshops in the past. ET connections come easy for me.


The former DNA ancestry website "23andme" took my bloodline back to ancient Persia.




Astronomy in the News


Astronomy Index


Listen to Jupiter's Powerful Auroras and Saturn's Rings in NASA's Latest Audio Experience!


NASA Announces Major Change to Plans For Putting Humans on The Moon


Asteroid Ryugu samples offer new insights into early solar system magnetism


NASA's MAVEN detects first evidence of lightning-like activity on Mars


The stars that lit up the early Milky Way





Physics in the News


Physics


Physicists Finally Observe a 50-Year-Old Theory Come to Life in a 2D Crystal


Scientists May Have Found the 'Holy Grail' of Quantum Computing


Einstein Meets Quantum Mechanics - And the Results Are Surprising


A newly derived 'q-desic' equation suggests that quantum effects may subtly alter particle trajectories across the universe.


Why you can't tie knots in four dimensions





Chemistry in the News


Chemistry ~ ~ Metallurgy ~ ~ Minerals


Scientists Create Powerful New Form of Aluminum That Could Replace Rare Earth Metals


South Africa: At 2.7 Billion Years Old, This Mountain Holds 40% of All Gold Ever Mined and Still Holds Half a Trillion Dollars


Geologists Discover One of the World's Largest Supergiant High-Grade Gold Deposits, Worth $83 Billion





Technology in the News


Artificial Intelligence ~ ~ Technology


China Builds World's First Flying Power Station Harvesting Wind Energy 6,560 Feet Above Earth


ESA Unveils Euro100 Million Funding to Integrate Satellite and Mobile Networks for Global Connectivity


Next-generation memory material has the surprising property of shrinking when heated


s World's Smallest QR Code Is So Tiny It's Invisible to The Human Eye





Simulation Theory in the News


Simulation Theory ~ ~ Consciousness


A physicist proposes that consciousness is the fundamental basis of reality, with matter and spacetime emerging from it





Brain in the News


Brain Index


Frequently Distracted? Blame It on This Secret Brain Rhythm


It's Not Just Your Back: Chronic Pain Rewires How the Brain Hears


Brain Blood Flow May Predict Alzheimer's Risk Before Memory Loss


FDA-Approved Seizure Drug May Stop Alzheimer's Before It Starts


AI reveals hidden chemical changes across the Alzheimer's brain


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





Health in the News


Health Files ~ Alternative Healing


Microbes That 'Disarm' Peanut Allergy Proteins Discovered in Mouth And Gut


Universal Vaccine Blocks Viruses, Bacteria, And Allergies With a Nasal Spray


Scientists Discover New Evidence a Common Virus Helps Trigger MS


Does sparkling water hydrate as well as regular water? Here's what the fizz can do


Rare Form of Dementia Causes Man to Fall in Love With One Sound


Medical Chatbots Are Coming. Here's What You Need to Know Before Using One.


Left-handed people may have a psychological edge in competition


New iron nanomaterial wipes out cancer cells without harming healthy tissue





Planet Earth In the News


Planet Earth Index


Dense Saharan dust reaches Spain, France and Italy, reducing air quality and visibility


Research shows 41 US states are getting warmer, all in slightly different ways


The sea is higher than we thought and millions more are at risk, study finds


We Finally Know What Tore a 500-Km 'Grand Canyon' Into The Atlantic Seafloor


Switzerland Just Lost 3% of Its Glacier Ice in a Year As the Alps Heat Up


s Ancient Hot Springs Reveal How Life Survived on a Toxic Early Earth


Atacama surprise: The world's driest desert is teeming with hidden life





Archaeology in the News


Archaeology


Humanity's Oldest Geometry Was Carved Into Ostrich Eggs 60,000 Years Ago


Lady of Elche: A 2,400-year-old bust of a mysterious 'highborn' woman from pre-Roman Spain


Maize may have more importance in pre-European Michigan than previously thought


Arrowhead marks found in Central Asia could prove the existence of Homo sapiens 80,000 years ago


The Maya engineering paradox: Masters of water, prisoners of mercury


Charred pot residues reveal prehistoric Europeans' surprisingly complex cuisines


Claims of 'rediscovered' Michelangelos unsettle Renaissance experts


Stone Age woman was buried like a man, revealing flexible gender roles 7,000 years ago in Hungary


Neanderthal DNA Is Missing From Our X Chromosome. This Could Be Why.


Tiny Purgatorius fossils in Denver Basin hint at early primate spread southward


Newly excavated Maya wetland settlement shows the civilization's adaptation to changing climate


Ancient DNA reveals life and death of Late Bronze Age in Central Europe





Rock Art in the News


Petroglyphs, Pictograms, Geoglyphs


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





Paleontology in the News


Paleontology Index


Researchers Found 24 Tracks in a Polar Region, Revealing How Dinosaurs Rocked a Frozen World 128 Million Years Ago


Life Rebounded Astoundingly Fast After the Dinosaur-Killing Asteroid, Study Finds


Brazilian fossil site yields smallest rhynchosaur fossil ever recorded