Kosovo's Sovereignty: A Modern [Deep Dive] - February 17th, 2026
[00:00] Thatcher Collins: Hello and welcome to the program.
[00:02] Thatcher Collins: Today, on Deep Dive, we are examining a date that marks a significant redrawing of the
[00:08] Thatcher Collins: world map, both in terms of modern geopolitics and ancient geology.
[00:14] Thatcher Collins: It is February 17th, and we have quite a bit to unpack.
[00:19] Thatcher Collins: And it is a pleasure to be here.
[00:20] Thatcher Collins: Our focus today spans from the legal declarations that shape the Balkans in the 21st century
[00:27] Thatcher Collins: to the scientific discovery of a hidden continent and the legacies of individuals who rose to the heights of power and fame.
[00:35] Thatcher Collins: It is really a testament to how much can happen on a single calendar day, Thatcher.
[00:40] Thatcher Collins: Right.
[00:41] Thatcher Collins: As we look at the calendar for February 17th, the year 2008 stands out as a massive turning point for European diplomacy.
[00:50] Thatcher Collins: Right.
[00:50] Thatcher Collins: This was the day Kosovo officially declared its independence from Serbia,
[00:55] Thatcher Collins: an event that sent shockwaves through the international community.
[00:59] Victor Hale: It certainly did.
[01:01] Victor Hale: This was not a sudden decision, but rather the culmination of a decade of intense conflict and international oversight.
[01:08] Victor Hale: The region's secession followed the Kosovo War of the late 90s,
[01:13] Victor Hale: which eventually led to a long period of UN-led administration.
[01:17] Victor Hale: By 2008, the leadership in Pristina felt the time for full sovereignty had arrived.
[01:24] Thatcher Collins: The declaration itself was such a bold move.
[01:28] Thatcher Collins: It immediately raised complex questions about international law and the rights of a region
[01:34] Thatcher Collins: to secede without the consent of the central government.
[01:38] Thatcher Collins: How did the global community react when the news broke, Victor?
[01:42] Victor Hale: That's remarkable because of how polarized the response was.
[01:46] Victor Hale: While Serbia and its allies strongly opposed the move, citing territorial integrity,
[01:52] Victor Hale: the declaration was a pivotal step toward recognition by the United States and much of the European Union.
[01:59] Victor Hale: Legally, it was a unique case that required balancing the principle of self-determination against established national borders.
[02:07] Thatcher Collins: That balance of boundaries is actually a great transition to our next topic.
[02:11] Thatcher Collins: While diplomats were drawing lines on maps in 2008, geologists were discovering that we had entirely missed a major part of the map for centuries.
[02:21] Thatcher Collins: It turns out there was a whole continent hiding in plain sight.
[02:24] Thatcher Collins: Exactly. You are talking about the 2017 announcement regarding Zealandia.
[02:30] Thatcher Collins: It is so rare that we get to add a new continent to the textbooks in the modern era.
[02:35] Thatcher Collins: People usually think every corner of the Earth has been cataloged by now.
[02:39] Thatcher Collins: Yep. On this day in 2017, researchers published a paper in the journal GSA Today,
[02:45] Thatcher Collins: asserting that Zealandia is a mostly submerged continental crust in the South Pacific.
[02:51] Thatcher Collins: It covers about 5 million square kilometers, which is roughly the size of the Indian subcontinent,
[02:57] Thatcher Collins: but 94% of it is underwater.
[02:59] Thatcher Collins: No way!
[03:01] Thatcher Collins: It really changes how we perceive the geography of the South Pacific, from the sovereignty
[03:06] Thatcher Collins: of nations to the sovereignty of the Earth itself.
[03:08] Thatcher Collins: Today is full of major shifts, and that extends to the people born on this day who have reshaped our culture in profound ways.
[03:17] Thatcher Collins: We have a very diverse group of birthday anniversaries to cover, starting with a truly historic figure from the 7th century.
[03:24] Thatcher Collins: Victor, who are we looking at first to start this timeline?
[03:27] Thatcher Collins: We begin in the year 624 with the birth of Wu Zetian.
[03:31] Thatcher Collins: She is a fascinating figure because she remains the only woman to ever rule China as an emperor
[03:37] Thatcher Collins: in her own right, establishing her own Zhu dynasty within the Tang period. Her path to the throne
[03:44] Thatcher Collins: was legendary. Truly, her reign was incredibly significant. Despite being characterized
[03:50] Thatcher Collins: as ruthless by some later historians, she was a highly effective administrator.
[03:56] Thatcher Collins: She expanded the empire's borders and, perhaps most importantly, opened up government positions to people based on merit, rather than just noble birth through the imperial examination system.
[04:10] Thatcher Collins: Absolutely. Moving from ancient politics to modern sports, we also celebrate the birth of Michael Jordan, born in 1963.
[04:20] Thatcher Collins: He is a figure whose influence on the court transformed basketball into a global phenomenon.
[04:26] Thatcher Collins: I don't think anyone has had a bigger impact on the game.
[04:30] Thatcher Collins: Jordan wasn't just a player, he became an icon of excellence.
[04:34] Thatcher Collins: Between his six championships and his massive success as a brand ambassador,
[04:39] Thatcher Collins: he redefined what it meant to be a professional athlete.
[04:43] Thatcher Collins: His work ethic and competitive drive are still the gold standard for players today, regardless of the sport.
[04:50] Thatcher Collins: And finally, we have a birthday from 1981 that represents a major shift in how we understand modern media, Paris Hilton.
[04:59] Thatcher Collins: She's often credited with pioneering the influencer model that dominates our social landscape today, long before social media even existed.
[05:09] Thatcher Collins: That is a great point.
[05:11] Thatcher Collins: As a model, actress, and entrepreneur, Hilton navigated the transition to the digital age
[05:16] Thatcher Collins: by turning her own persona into a global brand.
[05:21] Thatcher Collins: It is a path that countless creators have followed since,
[05:24] Thatcher Collins: but she was certainly at the forefront of that movement in the early 2000s.
[05:28] Thatcher Collins: From an empress in ancient China to a basketball legend and a modern media mogul,
[05:33] Thatcher Collins: these three figures each took the systems of their time and left an indelible mark on them.
[05:39] Thatcher Collins: It shows how individual influence can ripple through centuries.
[05:44] Thatcher Collins: It has been a fascinating look at the boundaries we create,
[05:47] Thatcher Collins: the ones we discover, and the people who push past them.
[05:51] Thatcher Collins: That brings us to the end of our dive into February 17th.
[05:54] Thatcher Collins: For more stories like these, you can visit deepdive.neuralnewscast.com.
[06:00] Thatcher Collins: Thank you for joining us for another look at the history that shapes our present.
[06:04] Thatcher Collins: Deep dive is AI-assisted, human-reviewed.
[06:07] Thatcher Collins: Explore history every day on Neural Newscast.
