Good News in History, March 31 - Good News Network

Good News in History, March 31 - Good News Network
📅 2025-04-03

42 years ago today, Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life was released in the United States to modest box office success and enormous cult acclaim. Less of a continuous film like the comedy troupe’s previous Life of Brain, and Monty Python and the Holy Grail and more of a collection of sketches, The Meaning of Life is divided into various chapters of a human life, but begins when six fish in a restaurant fish tank watch one of their friends get taken for dinner and start wondering “what’s it all for?” READ more about this hilarious film from the comedy masters
 (1983)

The Meaning of Life theatrical release poster – fair use

The Meaning of Life contains some sketches that would go on to be famous in their own right, including “Mr. Creosote,” the giant French restaurant patron who explodes after eating a “wafer-thin mint.” There’s also the section entitled “Live Organ Transplants,” where paramedics manage to convince a live woman to donate her liver after Eric Idle emerges from a refrigerator and sings “The Galaxy Song” about how insignificant an individual planet, much less human life, really is.

A short film was put into The Meaning of Life called the “Crimson Permanent Assurance” wherein a small London accounting firm turns their 20-storey building into a pirate ship and begins to raid merchant banks in another financial center.

At the conclusion of the film, a man who was previously executed is led by the Grim Reaper to heaven which is a Vegas-style lounge where every day is Christmas. At one point, a waiter delivers the comedy troupe’s keynote philosophy tidbit before admitting she is a terrible racist.

“It’s nothing very special, really. Try and be nice to people, avoid eating fat, read a good book every now and then, get some walking in, and try and live together in peace and harmony with people of all creeds and nations”.

MORE Good News on this Date:

34 years ago today, the Warsaw Pact officially disbanded, ending the military build-up and stand-off between European communism and European democracy. As many of the communist leaders had already been overthrown by their populations, the dissolution of the pact was more of a formality than a revolution, and even before it was disbanded member states were already cooperating with the West in the invasion to liberate Kuwait during the First Gulf War.

The Presidential Palace in Warsaw where the Warsaw Pact was signed in 1955. Adrian Grycuk CC 3.0. SA-BY

De jure, the eight-member countries of the Warsaw Pact pledged the mutual defense of any member who would be attacked, but de facto, the Pact was a direct reflection of the USSR’s authoritarianism and undisputed domination over the Eastern Bloc. To wit, the largest military action the Warsaw Pact ever engaged in collectively was the invasion of a Pact member: Czechoslovakia, in 1968.

Hungary tried to depart the pact ten years before this and was also invaded and brutally ‘corrected’ by the Soviet Union. In 1968, just 30 days after the invasion of Czechoslovakia, Albania exited the Pact for obvious reasons.

So one can see that the true nature of the Warsaw Pact was exactly like all constructions of communist, socialist, and central planning ideologies—a lie and mirage meant to institute totalitarian control. (1991)

629 years ago today, RenĂ© Descartes was born. The French philosopher contributed vitally to the development of the Western philosophical canon, even if he would later be proven somewhat wrong. His deduction, Latinized as “cogito, ergo sum,” in his book Discourse on the Method has become widely recognized as the cornerstone of thought that launched the Age of Rationalism. It means “I think, therefore I am.”

Rene Descartes by Frans Hals

Descartes referred to his philosophic method as “methodological skepticism” or Cartesian doubt: he rejected any ideas that can be doubted and then re-establishes them in order to acquire a firm foundation for genuine knowledge. Descartes built his ideas from scratch which he does in The Meditations on First Philosophy. He relates this to architecture: the topsoil is taken away to create a new building or structure. Descartes calls his doubt ‘the soil,’ and the new knowledge ‘the buildings.’

Using Cartesian doubt, cogito, ergo sum establishes that if one doubts they really exist, that act of doubting is, in and of itself, evidence of the fact that they do. Cartesian theory at large tackled the concept of mind-body dualism: how are the two separate and how are they conjoined? His conclusion is that there are two kinds of matter—thinking matter and non-thinking matter.

More recently, philosophers and neurologists like Jonathan Haidt, Daniel Kahneman, and Iain McGhilchrist have shown that the establishment of thinking as the fundamental character of conscious matter errs, in that most human cognition is not a rational deduction but an emotional, intuitive, response based firstly on the perceptions of possible interactions with matter. Fascinating stuff. (1596)

23 years ago today, tennis ace Andre Agassi claimed his 700th career match victory in nothing less than the final of the Miami Open, also called the Key Biscayne, or the Miami Masters, the largest tournament outside of the Grand Slam titles. 2002 began under stormy clouds and disappointment for Agassi, as injury forced him to skip the Australian Open, where he was a two-time defending champion. He recovered to beat Roger Federer in a 4-set final to claim number 700, as well as his 5th Miami Open title.

Andre Agassi at the 2011 Champions Shootout – CC 2.0. Shinya Suzuki

Only 18 Open-Era men’s singles athletes have passed 700 wins, and the victory was Agassi’s 52nd tournament win and his 13th master series victory. The Miami Masters were a rich vein for Agassi in his career, and he holds records for the most Miami Masters finals (8) most match wins (61), and longest consecutive winning streak across the series (19). WATCH highlights from the match 
 (2002)

Happy Birthday to the Jedi Master Ewan McGregor, who turns 54 years old today. Born in Scotland, the actor rocketed to international fame in 1999, playing a young Obi-Wan Kenobi in the first Star Wars prequel, Episode I, The Phantom Menace. He played the Jedi again in the succeeding Star Wars sequels Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith.

Georges Biard, CC license

His performance in the romantic drama Moulin Rouge! earned McGregor his first Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor—and 11 years later (2012) he earned a second nomination for Salmon Fishing in Yemen.

In 2020, he was featured on the Smithsonian Channel as the narrator of Stormborn, a docu-series that followed animals battling the elements along the coast of McGregor’s homeland of Scotland, as well as Iceland and Norway.

He eventually starred as Obi-Wan in a fictional biopic sort of program called Obi-Wan Kenobi. McGregor, who is also an executive producer on the project, co-starred once again with Hayden Christensen who returns in the role of Anakin Skywalker, the young Darth Vader.

Available exclusively on Disney+, the story begins 10 years after the dramatic events of their last meeting when Kenobi watched his best friend and Jedi apprentice, Anakin, turn to the dark side. WATCH a teaser trailer
 (1971)

And, on this day in 1927, CĂ©sar ChĂĄvez, the civil rights hero and labor leader of one of the most abused and exploited groups in America, was born.

He co-founded the National Farm Workers Association in 1962 to help migrant workers—and like Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., was a spiritual figure and crusader for nonviolent social change, using peaceful tactics such as fasts, boycotts, strikes and pilgrimages. When he died in 1993, at age 66, more than 50,000 marched in his funeral under a hot California sun. A migrant worker himself, education was always a priority for Chávez because, after eighth grade, he had to leave school to work in the fields to support his family. Chávez had great intellectual curiosity, was self-taught, and read widely throughout his life on many topics. His birthday today is a holiday in eight states.

Happy 90th Birthday to Herb Alpert, the musician and modern artist who is best known for the music of his Tijuana Brass band. He had five No.1 albums, sold 72 million records worldwide, and won nine Grammy Awards—including one for a recent album in 2013.

Receiving the National Medal of Arts in 2013 at the White House

He is the “A” in A&M Records, which he co-founded, and he has given away more than $54 million to arts programs and environmental campaigns. (1935)

And, on this day in 1949, the RCA Victor company introduced the 45-rpm record, an advancement that had taken almost a decade to develop. The 7-inch single was designed to offer better fidelity and longer playing time than the 78-rpm record currently in use. Most importantly, using the new record players, listeners could stack the disks, and hear up to ten records in a row with “speedy, silent, hardly noticeable changes,” as the advertisements boasted. The music system was designed to compete with the Long Playing records (LPs) introduced by Columbia a year earlier. The ‘45s’ became a staple in jukeboxes and homes for decades to come.

And on this day in 1948, the US Congress passed the Marshall Plan to rebuild war-torn Europe after World War II. Recognizing the need for economic stability on the continent, former Army Chief of Staff George Marshall responded to the high unemployment and food shortages with an initiative that provided $13 billion in aid to 18 European countries and gave each country a role in creating its own plans for recovery. When the funding ended four years later, the economy of every participant state had surpassed pre-war levels by 25-35%. Five years after its launch, Marshall received a Nobel Peace Prize for his good-deed foreign policy. WATCH a video


For more details check the original news.
📈 ROBOTFX MetaTrader Expert Advisors and Indicators to maximize profits and minimize the risks

More Good News from Good News Network

Kazakhstan Efforts to Restore Last Wild Equine Species Receive Huge Boost of 150 Horses

With the imminent arrival of 150 Przewalski’s horses to the Kazakh steppes, the future of the world’s last non-domesticated horse species is poised to bolt. Following up on a successful introduction of 5 mares and 2 stallions from Berlin and Prague, Hungary’s Minister of Agricul...

Shelved Movie ‘Wile E. Coyote vs. Acme’ Will Finally Hit Screens with a Hilarious Plotline

Few in America will likely be aware that a critically acclaimed live-action/animated Looney Tunes movie starring Wile E. Coyote was wholly made, but then shelved by Warner Bros. studios. But, after a raucous outcry from the creative team who fell in love with the project and spent months bringing...

Mausoleum with Gladiator’s Epitaph Discovered in Imperial Roman Colony in Southern Italy

In the southern Italian region of Campania, excavations in a known Roman colony called Liternum have uncovered a necropolis of substantial historic interest containing a gladiator’s tomb bearing an inscription in his honor. One of the most romanticized of all ancient warrior societies, the ...

Stir Stick to Detect if Your Drink Is Spiked Developed by Chemists Hoping to See Them on Every Bar Top

After 12 years of research and development, a team of Canadian chemists has created what could be the ultimate tool for detecting if your drink has been spiked. More discreet and accurate than anything else on the market, the simple, innocuous-looking drink stir comes with a tip that will change ...

Good News in History, April 2

111 years ago today, Sir Alec Guinness was born, an English actor who would become one of the greatest in a generation who transitioned from theater to film following the Second World War. During the 50s and 60s he experienced great success as Col. Nicholson in The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)...

49-Year-old Becomes First Blind Woman to Swim English Channel: ‘Nothing is Impossible’

A Paralympic gold medalist has become the first blind woman to swim across the English Channel, and she finished under time. She said that being blind has left her feeling “isolated,” but thanks to swimming, she has a “newfound confidence” and hopes her feat “inspires others”. 49-year-old M...

6 Expert Parenting Tips for Getting Closer to Your Kids–Try Changing Up These Routines

A therapist has revealed six parenting tips for building a stronger connection with your child. Melinda O’Neil, 37, an associate licensed Professional Clinical Counselor in Pleasanton, California, has been a therapist for one year and child counselor for seven. O’Neil—also the mom of a six-year-o...

How Valerie the Weiner Dog Survived 18 Months in the Australian Bush to Make it Home

On an island south of Adelaide, a strange creature has been seen creeping through the bush. A long cylindrical body and long snout flanked by floppy ears are dead giveaways. But this wiener dog named Valerie isn’t lost anymore. After almost 18 months of living wild on Kangaroo Island, local...

‘Change Has Been Amazing’ For Depleted Mountain: with New Vegetation Comes Deer, Pumas, Andean Bears

High along the peaks and ridges of the mountains in Ecuador, a 25-year-long conservation program is bearing succulent fruit in the form of cleaner water and abundant wildlife. Established in the year 2000, Quito’s fund for the protection of water has allowed a critical South American ecosys...

Good News in History, April 1

49 years ago today, the Apple Computer company was founded by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne to sell their ground-breaking Apple I personal computer kits. Their startup is now the most valuable company in the world, becoming the first publicly-traded company to be valued at $1 trilli...

Presumed Extinct: World’s Smallest Otter Found in Busy Nepal River After 186 Years without a Sighting

Though officially classified as vulnerable, no credible sighting of the Asian short-clawed otter, the smallest species of its kind, has been made in almost 200 years. So when forestry officials in Nepal found an injured, juvenile otter at the confluence of two major rivers last November, they nev...

In East Africa, Rats Have Prevented 400,000 New Cases of Deadliest Infection Using Their Super Sense of Smell

For most people, a rat is at best an unwelcome guest, and at worst, the target of immediate extermination. But in a field clinic in Tanzania, rats are colleagues—heroes even. Far from a trash bin-dwelling NYC street rat, the African giant pouched rat is docile, intelligent, easier to train than s...

Girl Joins Mensa at 13 After Scoring Higher Than Albert Einstein–Even with No Exam Prep

A 13-year-old girl has been invited to join the Mensa society after getting the maximum score on the IQ test—higher than Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking. Sofia Kot Arcuri has been accepted into the club after achieving 162, the highest possible score for a girl of her age. Proud mom Cecylia K...

When You Board This Philadelphia Trolley, the Driver Makes Sure You Leave with A Smile – (WATCH)

It’s a wise man or woman who treats strangers with kindness because of the old maxim that you don’t know what kind of day they’re having. For Tracey Holms-Williams, a Philadelphia trolley operator, that’s more than just a maxim—it’s her Modus Operandi. Working for th...

Good News in History, March 31

42 years ago today, Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life was released in the United States to modest box office success and enormous cult acclaim. Less of a continuous film like the comedy troupe’s previous Life of Brain, and Monty Python and the Holy Grail and more of a collection of s...

Researchers Discover New Mechanism for Rapid Liver Regeneration to Restore Damaged Livers

Researchers at the National Cancer Research Centre in Spain (CNIO) have discovered a mechanism that is triggered just minutes after acute liver damage occurs—and it could lead to treatments for those with severe liver problems. The avenues for future treatments of liver damage include a diet enri...

Neighbors Celebrate 101st Birthday On the Same Day–Living Next Door to Each Other For 4 Decades

Two longtime English neighbors are celebrating their joint 101st birthday, born on the same day in 1924. Josie Church and Anne Wallace-Hadrill have lived side-by-side in Oxford since the 1980s, and the great-grans have celebrated their birthdays together for years. “I think life has gone quite qu...

76-Year-old Metal Detectorist Discovers Ultra-Rare Roman Coin After 6 Years of Searching in Farmer’s Field

A gold Roman coin believed to be the first of its kind ever found in Britain fetched thousands at auction after being unearthed by a devoted metal detectorist. Ron Walters finally struck gold after six years of searching the same farmer’s field near Dudley, West Midlands, every spring and a...

Boy Starts Nonprofit and Recycles 625,000 Batteries by Age 15 With Hundreds of Youth Joining in

When Nihal Tammana was just 10 years old, he heard a news report about a lithium-ion battery exploding at a waste disposal plant—and when he learned about the environmental risks of batteries being left in landfills, he decided to do something. Tammana started the nonprofit, Recycle My Battery, a...

Good News in History, March 30

Happy 80th Birthday to Eric Clapton, the blues-rock musician, singer, and songwriter that Rolling Stone magazine named the second greatest guitar player of all time. The British rocker was a founding member of the Yardbirds, Derek and the Dominos, and Cream, and produced huge hits like Layla, Cro...

Neptune’s Long-Hidden Auroras Are Captured for the First Time–While Revealing a New Mystery

NASA’s Webb Space Telescope was finally able to capture bright auroras on Neptune—the most distant planet in our solar system. “In the past, astronomers have seen tantalizing hints of auroral activity on Neptune, for example, in the flyby of NASA’s Voyager 2 in 1989,” said the space agency this w...

Hummingbird Chicks Observed for the First Time Pretending to be Caterpillars to Avoid Being Eaten

When Jay Falk and Scott Taylor first saw the white-necked Jacobin hummingbird chick in Panama’s dense rainforest, the bird biologists didn’t know what they were looking at. The day-old bird, smaller than a pinky finger, had brown fuzz all over its body. When Falk and Taylor walked closer to the n...

Dad Drove Around With 1M Lottery Ticket in His Car for 4 Months–Until He Needed Chips

A lottery player has been driving around with the EuroMillions winning ticket in his car for over four months, until it was so crumpled it was unscannable. Darren Burfitt finally claimed his jackpot after checking multiple tickets that had been left in his unlocked vehicle the entire time. He onl...

Your Weekly Horoscope from ‘Free Will Astrology’ by Rob Brezsny

Our partner Rob Brezsny, who has a new book out, Astrology Is Real: Revelations from My Life as an Oracle, provides his weekly wisdom to enlighten our thinking and motivate our mood. Rob’s Free Will Astrology, is a syndicated weekly column appearing in over a hundred publications. He is also the ...

Good News in History, March 29

154 years ago today, the Royal Albert Hall opened in London and quickly became one of the world’s most prestigious concert spaces. It hosts more than 390 shows in the main auditorium annually, including classical, rock and pop concerts, ballet, opera, film screenings with live orchestral ac...

Golden Amulets

Golden Luck Amulets, Protection Charms and Love Talismans.