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Tuesday, October 21, 2025

ARS HUMANA / WHY THE NINES ARE SO HISTORICAL

 


[Original Essay by PillartoPost.org]--To be "dressed to the nines" is to be turned out with obsessive care, finished to perfection. The phrase goes back to eighteenth-century Scotland, when "to the nines" meant "to the highest degree." It's a tidy metaphor for the way history piles up, polishing a decade until its final year shines--or cracks--and a new one steps into the light. 

For our purposes, one observation makes 1979 perhaps the most amazing year so far: The genesis of the Information Era because 1979 was the last year of the analog era. After that, the world began to recompose itself on silicon, not steel. 

 By the mid-1980s, the personal computer had left the lab bench, and household routine found new electrical habits. Marking 1979 this way sharpens the pattern. Years that end in nine often feel like thresholds because they're where a decade's energy--its appetites, technologies, resentments, and experiments--either culminates or explodes. 

Consider the sequence, the ways the nines keep showing up as hinge points you can touch, taste, or hold in your hand. 

--1789 brought the French Revolution, which remade politics and manners across Europe. 

--1809 gave us the birth of Abraham Lincoln in Kentucky; a century later, in 1909, his face went into every American palm when the Lincoln cent debuted, the first U.S. coin to carry a president's likeness. 

--1849 pulled a continent west with gold fever. 1869 welded oceans together as the transcontinental railroad joined the American coasts and the Suez Canal opened to the world. 

--1899 gave us aspirin, Bayer's new medicine that became the first mass-market pharmaceutical and changed the way pain and fever were treated everywhere. The twentieth century's nines were no less dramatic. 

--1919 breathed new borders and fresh grievances into Europe after the Great War. 

--1929's Wall Street crash plunged economies into ruin. 

--1939 ignited the Second World War. 

--1949 set the Cold War's architecture--NATO on one side, the People's Republic of China on the other. 

--1959 was a cultural coda: Chevrolet's extravagant tailfins marked the end of yearly motor-car theatrics. 

--1969 moved the human species off its ordinary stage with the moon landing and Woodstock, a literal and figurative leap. Then comes the pivot: 

--1979, the last full year the world could still, with a straight face, call itself analog. After that, microchips and software replaced levers and ink. 

--1989 tore down the Wall in Berlin. 

--1999 gave us Y2K jitters and the height of the dot-com bubble. 

--2009 blended the inauguration of Barack Obama, a symbolic global moment, with the accelerating rise of smartphones and social media, tools that now shape how publics gather and how commerce spreads. 

2019 closed the arc with protests across global cities and, almost unnoticed, the first cases of a virus in Wuhan that would infect the world and define the decade to come. We still call it Covid-19.

There is no mystical rule about the digit nine. It is, however, a useful seam through which to read history. It is part coincidence, part human habit--we like round numbers and tidy chapter endings. 

End of an era 1959 Chevrolet

But when you pull the thread you find not just politics but everyday artifacts: the penny in your pocket, the aspirin bottle in the cabinet, the Chevrolet with its last extravagant fins, the typewriter that gave way to a keyboard, the phone that gave way to the screen in your hand. Those small things matter because they shape how people live. 

That is why the nines look less like numerology and more like a ledger of consequence aka watershed years.

 

Monday, October 20, 2025

MONDAY MEDIA / SUPERMOON SHOTS

 

The Harvest Supermoon sets in the clouds behind the city landmark, a weather vane in the form of an angel fixed atop a spire of the Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral in St. Petersburg, Russia, early Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Dmitri Lovetsky) 

Things are so hot on planet Earth lately. Let's look to the sky for some peace. 

GUEST BLOG / By The Associated Press--October’s supermoon — a phenomenon when the moon is closest to Earth, making it appear larger and brighter — is the first of three this year. The subtle difference can be observed without special equipment if skies are clear. This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors is worthy of a National Geographic Magazine spread. 

Over the Harbor Freeway, Los Angeles, Monday, Oct. 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong) 

Rising behind the Statue of Liberty and the Brooklyn skyline, Monday, Oct. 6, 2025, in Jersey City, N.J. (AP Photo/Adam Gray) 

Supermoon rises behind spires of the Duomo gothic cathedral, in Milan, Monday, Oct. 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) 


Tower Bridge, Monday, Oct. 6, 2025, in London. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson) 

Over San Francisco Bay and behind the Bay Bridge as seen from
Alameda, Calif., Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez)