Perspectives
The Black Tag Lady of 9/11. Content Warning.
On September 11, 2001, emergency medical specialist Ernest Armstead worked in the plaza between the Twin Towers. Surrounded by chaos, he moved from victim to victim, marking each with triage tags. Green meant minor injuries. Yellow meant serious but stable. Red meant critical. Black meant dead or soon to be.
By Brandon Brasson4 months ago in History
Sacred and profane in Mircea Eliade's theory - Alexis karpouzos
In Mircea Eliade’s thought, religion is seen as a universal and fundamental aspect of human existence, characterized by the experience of the sacred and the profane. Eliade believed that religion originates from an irreducible experience of the sacred, which is common to most human beings. This experience seeks outward cultural expression in myths and rituals. He emphasized that religious phenomena must be understood as uniquely and irreducibly religious, expressing meaning on a religious plane of reference.
By alexis karpouzos4 months ago in History
The Final Dance of the Spy: A Confession in the Shadows. AI-Generated.
The morning light, even here in Vincennes, has a sharp, indifferent quality. It does not pause for beauty, nor does it soften the edges of the firing squad. I smell the damp earth, the clean, metallic scent of the rifles, and the faint, lingering perfume of cheap carnations left by some sentimental guard. They say a soul is heaviest just before it leaves the body, burdened by regret. They do not know Mata Hari. I feel light. Lighter than the silk robes I used to shed on stage.
By Abel Green4 months ago in History
Fads Gone Wrong: When America Threw Elbows for Toys, Trinkets, and Sauce
Fog Horn Blast 🚨 Every few years, a shiny new obsession descends on America and flips a switch in our brains labeled MUST… HAVE… NOW. Parents turn into linebackers, collectors speak in code about “first runs,” and someone inevitably pays a rent-sized chunk of cash for a toy with googly eyes. This isn’t a list of fads, we all remember those. This is a tour of the moments they went sideways: the riots, the stampedes, the bans, the lawsuits, the near-mythic price tags, and the glorious buyer’s remorse that followed.
By The Iron Lighthouse4 months ago in History
The Top 10 FBI’s Most Wanted Fugitives (Who Almost Got Away)
Fog Horn Blast 🚨 The FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list is the Mount Olympus of American outlaw-dom. Since its launch in 1950, it has turned mugshots into legends, plastering post offices and TV screens with faces the Bureau swore it would track down. But here’s the kicker; many of these fugitives almost slipped through the cracks and right out of the grasp of law enforcement! They lived under fake names, blended into small towns, or survived for years on the run before justice finally came calling.
By The Iron Lighthouse4 months ago in History
TAKING AIM: THE RISE AND FALL OF EMPIRES - WHAT CAN WE LEARN TODAY . AI-Generated.
THE RISE AND FALL OF EMPIRES: LESSONS WE CAN LEARN TODAY Join us for an intriguing history of empires, their rise, their influence and their demise, as well as lessons for the present day. Find out how ancient civilizations can help inform modern societies, governments and each one of us, to make better futures.
By Zest Zone"4 months ago in History
A Light That Shone from the Soil
Today, on the blessed occasion of Defence Day of Pakistan (6th September), I was honored to visit the shrine of my hero, the pride of Swabi and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the great son of Pakistan, Captain Colonel Sher Khan Shaheed (رحمۃ اللہ علیہ), in my own village. For me, this was a matter of immense pride. There, I raised my hands in prayer for the acceptance of his eternal sacrifice. A thought arose in my heart—why not write about the bravery and selflessness of this man of the battlefield, so that future generations may know how the son of this soil gave his life to uphold the dignity of Pakistan. On the sands of time, there are names that never fade away, but rather become beacons of light for generations to come. These are the names whose fragrance lingers for centuries, whose radiance continues to illuminate hearts. Among such names shines brightly the name of Colonel Sher Khan Shaheed (رحمۃ اللہ علیہ)—the crown of Pakistan’s forehead and the proud son of the soil of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, who offered the gift of his life and wrote golden words in the pages of history. Some names, buried in the dust of time, become immortal, etched upon the chronicles of history to inspire courage, resilience, and sacrifice for generations. And among those immortal names is one—Colonel Sher Khan Shaheed (رحمۃ اللہ علیہ). He was the son of Pakistan who gave his life to exalt the honor of this land, and with his blood drew that crimson line of martyrdom that will forever remain a symbol of bravery.
By Umair Ali Shah 4 months ago in History
Velask: The First Spark of World War 3
Velask: The First Spark of World War 3” Cold wind clawed at the edge of the Karakorum ridge, carrying ice and sand in equal measure. Dawn light crept weakly across the skyline, illuminating the jagged peaks in dull gold. Border guards in both Naryanov and Velask—once peaceful neighbors—watched through binoculars, breaths invisible in the razor-sharp air. Tension rippled in frozen lines, each soldier a living fuse.
By Wings of Time 4 months ago in History
America’s Most Notorious Prison Gangs. Content Warning.
Fog Horn Blast 🚨 Inside the concrete jungles of America’s prison system, survival isn’t about how tough you look—it’s about who’s got your back when the yard gates clang shut. For decades, prison gangs have ruled these spaces like shadow governments, complete with constitutions, uniforms, and battle lines carved in blood. Tattoos become passports. Colors define loyalty. A wrong look across the chow hall can be a death sentence.
By The Iron Lighthouse4 months ago in History










