You’re looking at something historically and scientifically astonishing. It is what remains of an astronomical observatory built 600 years ago – in 1420 – by a Sultan in Central Asia who loved science and mathematics more than war and conquest.
It was in Samarkand, the most fabled oasis of the Silk Road, that Sultan Ulugh Beg built his circular observatory, three stories high of white marble. All that’s left today is part of the underground sextant that you see in the photo.
For the full story of what he achieved, with many more photos, click on The Sultan Astronomer in TTP I wrote in 2020.
This Glimpse is to whet your appetite to learn about this amazing Sultan and his scientific achievements.
The magnificent Sher-Dor Madrassa, built in the early 1600s, is part of the Registan public square complex of the ancient Silk Road oasis of Samarkand. What’s fascinating is the mosaic depiction of living beings on either side of the arch – a tiger and on its back a rising sun deity with a human face. This is honoring the pre-Islamic history of Samarkand that goes back almost 3,000 years.
It was centuries old when Alexander conquered it in 329 BC. For a thousand years as Central Asia’s great entrepot on the Silk Road between China and the Mediterranean, it was a cosmopolitan center for Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Zoroastrianism, and Nestorian Christianity. Incorporated into the Islamic world in the 700s, sacked by Genghiz Khan in 1220, rebuilt by the time Marco Polo in 1272 described it as “a large and splendid city,” Tamerlane made it his capital in 1370.
The World Cup has brought real excitement to these American shores, and not just in the form of soccer, but in the innocent, wide-eyed discoveries of European tourists experiencing the United States for the first time.
Here are some of their most surprising discoveries:
Football is actually called "soccer": All this time, they were calling it by the wrong name.
Americans prefer a sport called "baseball" where no one kicks anything: How can you have a sport with no kicks?
It's surprisingly difficult to be stabbed by a Muslim: You can find it on any street corner in the UK or Paris
The police won't raid your house if you share a meme: Go ahead and be funny, Europeans.
Currency is not multicolored and the size of a manila envelope: You can actually fit it in your pocket.
Americans are even fatter than expected: Given the abundance of delicious food, it's no surprise.
Trump is not actually out on the streets murdering minorities: The BBC has been lying this whole time.
No one has heard of many small European countries: Most Americans just assume Moldova is a prescription drug to fight plaque psoriasis.
Americans don't take six-hour lunch breaks or have a designated nap time: What are they, machines?
There are designated places where highly trained professionals will clean your teeth: What type of sorcery is this?
There's a strange concept here called "liberty": This is likely a reference to an old wooden ship from the Civil War.
Knight Rider isn't real: This is among the most disappointing revelations.
Everyone hates Meghan Markle here, too: Maybe America has more in common with the rest of the world than previously believed.
America is truly the greatest country on earth. What do you think a foreigner would find most appealing about the United States? Let us know in the comments.
There’s a story about Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919), then the world’s richest man, being visited by a socialist who berated his wealth saying it should be divided equally among everyone. Whereupon he asked his secretary for the current value of his fortune and looks up the world’s population. He divides the former by the latter, and instructs his secretary to prepare a check for the socialist’s “fair share” of his money. Carnegie signs and hands a check made out to the socialist in the amount of 16 cents.
So it is with Elon Musk being hammered by socialist dweebs like Bernie Sanders and Pocahontas Warren. If you divide his $1 trillion by the world’s 8 billion, each would get $125. So enjoy Australia’s Sky News host James Macpherson eviscerating the envious meltdown of Sanders & Warren over Elon:
Revolutionized a dozen major industries. Saved America by buying Twitter to save free speech, arguably making him US’ greatest patriot alive today. Creating a better future for humanity in so many ways. Congratulations to history’s first trillionaire, Elon Musk!
We have a marvelously informative and enjoyable HFR for you here – jump right on in. And please let me know your thoughts on the Forum. No need to be shy – you’re among friends!!
[This Monday’s Archive was first in TTP on September 23, 2016. Obama’s execrable 8 years were finally coming to an end, and the Dems losing their minds over the possibility of Trump. Ten years later, again finally, both Europe and America are done with the world’s oldest war, with scores of mosques in Texas and an Islamofascist from Uganda running New York, with mass patriot protests all over Europe, now, against the Moslem invasion of their countries and the governments that allowed it. This time, at last, it’s time to finish the job.]
 TTP, September 23, 2016
Vienna, Austria. This is a particularly apt place to discuss the world’s oldest war. It’s been continuously running for almost 14 centuries, and it’s getting worse today.
First, however, let us note that Vienna has more history, beauty, charm, class, and friendly people than just about any city in Europe. It leaves Paris in the dust.
Just one example. Vienna was founded by the Romans as Vindobona in 15 BC on the south bank of the Danube. On March 17, 180 AD, Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius was in his ornate tent in the center of the Vindobona fortress, having just won a victory over marauding Germanic tribes.
For many centuries, the street in Vienna along the traditional location of that tent has been called Schwertgasse – Sword Street. That’s because on that day in 180, the Emperor’s son, Commodus, murdered his father with a sword thrust. In the movie, Gladiator, Commodus smothers him – but nonetheless, the movie depicts real history.
Aurelius to this day is revered by Austrians. That’s why there’s a huge statue of him in the courtyard of the Hapsburg Palace or Hofburg in the center of Vienna.
For the next thousand years, the people south of the Danube adopted and lived by Christianity, oblivious to the war that had emerged in the Middle East, Asia Minor, North Africa, and Spain between their fellow Christians and people calling themselves Moslems.
I have written about this issue before, but with the midterms approaching, I thought it bears repeating. It’s so very, very important.
STOP saying liberal.
STOP saying woke.
STOP saying progressive, Socialist, or Marxist.
Those words don’t appear on any ballot.
Not anywhere, unless you live in Vermont and Bernie Sanders is running.
The word that appears on election ballots is DEMOCRAT.
We need to be perfectly clear. Those who are causing most all of America’s serious problems are DEMOCRATS.
The vast majority of our political crises and problems are caused by people who either identify as Democrats or vote Democrat.
Once something is branded — whether positive or negative — it sticks. Like Super Glue, that label is hard to shake. Whenever you speak, write, or post, identify our political opponents as DEMOCRATS.
That’s why we must BRAND the Democrat Party as anti-God, anti-America, violent, and the party of Big Government, elite socialists and Marxists: because they are. If we do not define them, they will define themselves, deceitfully.
I think after 60 years of affirmative action, DEI, racial essentialism, and racial fixation—especially in the United States, but also throughout the Western world, in Europe, Australia, and the former British Commonwealth—we are seeing the consequences.
Let me point out that our adversaries, China, Russia, and other places around the globe, don’t have this racial essentialism because they believe it is innate to human nature. And when you encourage it, you get something like Rwanda, what’s going on now in Nigeria, or what happened in the Balkans.
The natural order of men and animals is that birds of a feather flock together. So, why would you encourage that instead of having assimilation, acculturation, and integration?
We’re suffering from tribal fatigue in the Western world.
Two theologies of work built two different worlds. One tends what it inherits. The other consumes it and moves on. The qanats of Persia tell you which is which.
In the dry interior of Iran there are tunnels older than Rome. The qanat is an underground aqueduct, dug by hand, that taps the water table high in the hills and carries it by gravity across dozens of miles to fields that see almost no rain.
No pumps. No electricity. Some of them have been running for three thousand years, irrigating the same ground, kept alive by the same unglamorous labor in every generation: clearing the silt, holding the gradient, keeping the access shafts open. UNESCO lists the survivors as world heritage, because a working qanat is one of the most elegant pieces of engineering the ancient world produced.
Most of them are silted now. Dry. The fields above them have gone back to dust.
Nobody bombed the qanats. No colonial power filled them in. They failed the way every inherited thing fails when the people who inherit it stop doing….
How can we remain the same country and culture when we can’t agree on much of anything?
Not merely on policy preferences or the usual disputes of democratic life, but on the most fundamental things — the meaning of words, the interpretation of laws, the basic facts of what is happening around us.
The foundation has not merely cracked; in many quarters, it is being jackhammered from below.
Laws long passed and enforced are now subject to interpretations so tortured and remote from their original intent that the men who wrote them would not recognize their own handiwork.
Terms once universally understood are now redefined mid-conversation, or worse, intentionally misunderstood as a weapon — deployed to wrong-foot the honest and reward the disingenuous.
Language, which is the shared medium of a civilization, has become a minefield. You cannot debate someone who will not agree on what the words mean, any more than you can play chess with an opponent who moves the pieces when you aren’t looking.
The effect on ordinary people has been profound. Reasonable men and women — the kind who hold jobs, raise families, pay taxes, coach Little League, and generally ask only to be left in peace — are shopworn and threadbare from the relentless mental assault. And sometimes it is not merely mental.
The ambient pressure at this moment has a grinding, exhausting quality that is not accidental.
Where do we find the energy to achieve big, long-term goals?
How can we persevere over time and through adversity to create something that requires a commitment of several years?
Simple. It has to matter to you.
Not just a little bit. It has to matter enough that you’ll see it through.
When someone calls me for coaching, once we’ve established the goals that they want to accomplish, one of the first questions I ask is “Why is it important for you to reach these goals?”
If the reason is something like, “My parents want me to…” or “My boss wants me to…” or “I’m supposed to…” I know we have some work to do before we get to the nuts and bolts.
Somebody else wanting us to do something is rarely a strong enough motivation to make changes in our lives. And reaching big goals usually requires making big changes.
Changing behavior, learning new skills, overcoming personal limitations – all take consciousness, time and willpower.
From the works of Durk Pearson and Sandy Shaw
June 18, 2026
Dedicated to the memory of Skye who was Durk Pearson
We’ll start with a direct quote from Durk and Sandy’s book, Life Extension:
In January of 1979, Sandy fell and broke her foot at the Gordon Research Conference on the Biology of Aging. She was taken to a local hospital, the foot was x-rayed, and Sandy received a pair of crutches.
Not wishing to hobble about on crutches any longer than necessary, Sandy began taking several grams a day of nutrients which are known to promote wound healing and bone repair, especially vitamin C and the amino acid arginine.
Arginine stimulates the release of growth hormone (GW) by the pituitary gland in the brain. GW is necessary for growth and repair.
Sandy took 10 grams per day of arginine. An unexpected side effect of the large doses of arginine was that Sandy lost about 25 pounds of fat and put on an estimated 5 pounds of muscle, even though she did not engage in strenuous exercise. Her exercises were measured, and the energy required should have used up about one ounce of fat!
April 22, 1990. This is my son Brandon, age six, happily atop a small pressure ridge of sea-ice at 90 North Latitude, the geographic North Pole. I started leading expeditions to 90N in 1978. This was my 12th, and the best weather there we’d ever had. A glorious day at the very top of our planet, and a glorious memory for both father and son.
The island of Madeira in the Atlantic some 320 miles west of Morocco was first discovered, uninhabited, by Portuguese explorers in 1418. It has been a part of Portugal ever since. In the 1600s it became renowned for its Madeira wine, with English wine makers settling there and exporting it to England and the American colonies. The English consul Charles Murray built a beautiful estate, “Quinta do Prazer”, Pleasure Estate, high above the capital of Funchal, which by the late 1800s was converted into the Monte Palace hotel.
Next to the entrance of The Red House, the Parliament of Trinidad and Tobago in the capital of Port of Spain, there is this marble inscription. It is clear that it is inspired by our 1776 Declaration of Independence and America’s founding principles. Trinidad’s population is 99% either Indian (from India), African, or a mix of the two. 64% are Christian, 21% Hindu, 6% Moslem, others undeclared – and all have these principles as a common bond between them.