Grim 18th-century-style oil painting of Trump as a crowned king on a throne, overseeing a joyless military parade of tanks and unhappy American soldiers.

The Last Constitutional Moment: America Chooses Between Kings and Democracy

On June 14, 2025, more than 2,000 protests are taking place across all 50 U.S. states in a nationwide event called “No Kings Day”. The demonstrations, organized by a coalition of over 150 groups including Indivisible and the ACLU, directly counter President Trump’s $45 million military parade and protest the policies of his second term. Organizers describe the mobilization as “the largest single-day, peaceful protest in recent American history”. The central message, captured on signs reading “He was elected president NOT KING,” is a direct response to President Trump’s recent embrace of monarchical rhetoric. In Philadelphia, one of the major demonstration sites, Pennsylvania criminal lawyer Holly Feeney stated her reason for marching: “I am just appalled at the lawlessness of this administration. Disappearing people is what authoritarian governments do, not democratic republics”. ...

Clippy appears in a Windows 95 pop-up saying, 'I see you’re trying to focus on something without interruption. Can I help?' in retro pixelated style.

The Rise and Fall of Clippy: From Microsoft's Bold Vision to Internet Legend

I still remember the first time Clippy popped up on my screen. There I was in early 1997, a few years into my IT career, wearing my cheap suit and gaudy tie as young office techies had to do back then, writing documentation for some consulting project. In the middle of all this arbitrary workplace formality, a cartoon paperclip suddenly materialized on my screen like some kind of malware attack, complete with those unmistakable eyebrows, asking if I needed help writing a letter. There was nothing like it at the time—it was simultaneously curious and deeply unsettling. My immediate reaction? “Get lost, paperclip.” ...