π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Wednesday, March 04, 2026
7:00 AM CST
π Top-Line Summary
The spot market is experiencing a sharp day-over-day volume contraction to 167,676 available loads, yet the national average rate remains highly resilient at $2.25/mile. Flatbed freight continues to overwhelmingly dominate the board with nearly 76,000 active loads as spring construction and energy sector staging accelerate. For freight brokers, the most critical immediate catalyst is the severe spike in diesel prices to $4.038/gallon, driven by escalating military conflicts in the Middle East and threats to the Strait of Hormuz. This fuel surge, combined with the FMCSA's sudden revocation of 14 ELD platforms and ongoing CDL enforcement, is creating a highly volatile, tightening capacity environment. Brokers must aggressively manage fuel surcharges, navigate severe regional flooding in the Midwest, and strictly vet carriers as negligent selection liabilities remain a major legal focal point.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- High Wind Warning (Southern California (CA, Ventura and Santa Barbara counties)): North winds up to 65 mph along the I-5 corridor will create severe blow-over risks for high-profile vehicles, likely causing capacity to reroute or delay transit, driving up spot rates for outbound LA/Southern California freight.
- Extensive Regional Flooding (Central and Southern Indiana (IN, Jackson, Bartholomew, Greene counties)): Moderate to severe flooding along the White River and East Fork White River is inundating state and county roads, disrupting agricultural freight, and forcing carriers to detour around the I-65 and I-69 corridors, tightening local capacity.
- Winter Storm Watch (Northern Utah (UT, Wasatch and Western Uinta Mountains)): Heavy snow accumulations of 8 to 20 inches along the I-80 North corridor will create hazardous winter driving conditions, likely paralyzing transcontinental freight movement and forcing costly reroutes through southern lanes.
βοΈ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: Today through Thursday, the primary operational disruption centers on central and southern Indiana, where county roads feeding agricultural and manufacturing pickup points are experiencing flooding-driven closures. The Jackson, Bartholomew, and Greene county areas are seeing light to moderate rain through the afternoon hours based on the current forecast, which will sustain rather than resolve existing flood conditions in the near term. Thursday's forecast of 0.4 inches of precipitation with a 75% probability of occurrence represents the most significant near-term weather risk for the Indianapolis-to-Chicago and Columbus-to-Louisville corridors β this additional precipitation event could worsen flood conditions before any improvement occurs.
- Secondary Market Effects: Rerouted freight from the I-65 and I-69 flood disruptions is likely increasing congestion and dwell times on alternate routes, including portions of I-70 and I-74. This secondary congestion effect is adding transit time to loads that are not directly in the flood zone but are sharing alternate routing infrastructure. Expect carriers to factor this additional drive time into their rate demands even for loads that appear geographically removed from the flooding.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: As floodwaters migrate downstream along the White River system toward the Ohio River, the Louisville, KY and Cincinnati, OH markets may experience secondary capacity tightening later this week and into the weekend. Shippers in those markets who have not yet seen direct weather impacts should be proactively warned that the capacity shortage currently centered in Indiana is likely to extend southward. In Utah, the Thursday snow forecast with 0.1 inch of precipitation and a 45% probability, followed by continued light snow on Friday, suggests the I-80 Wasatch Mountain disruption will be a multi-day event β likely keeping transcontinental flatbed and reefer capacity off the northern I-80 corridor through at least the weekend.
- Recovery Timeline: Based on the Indiana forecast, conditions may begin improving by Sunday, March 8, when the forecast shows mostly sunny skies at 57Β°F. However, flood recovery on county roads and agricultural access points typically lags atmospheric clearing by several days, so full operational normalization in the affected Indiana counties is unlikely before mid-next-week at the earliest. The Utah I-80 corridor should see improvement by Saturday, March 7, when the forecast shows sunny conditions at 40Β°F, though pass conditions and chain requirements may persist into that weekend. The California I-5 high-wind event appears to be a shorter-duration disruption based on the forecast showing stable, sunny conditions with moderate winds through the remainder of the week.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global geopolitical tensions, specifically the conflict in Iran, have driven diesel prices above $4.03/gallon. Futures indicate continued volatility, meaning carriers will aggressively push for higher fuel surcharges to protect their margins.
- Carrier Financial Health: Carriers are facing a dual threat of surging fuel costs and forced equipment upgrades due to the FMCSA's recent revocation of 14 ELDs. Smaller fleets operating on thin margins are at high risk of insolvency or consolidation.
- Economic Indicators: Despite inflationary pressures from rising transport costs, industrial and energy sector demand remains robust, as evidenced by the overwhelming volume of open-deck freight moving through the spot market.
π° Impactful News Analysis
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Geopolitical Tensions Threaten 10% Jump in Freight Rates π:
With diesel surging to $4.038/gal, the threat of a Strait of Hormuz closure means brokers must immediately adjust pricing models to account for volatile fuel surcharges. Lock in contract rates with fuel escalators and prepare customers for sudden spot market spikes.
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FMCSA Revokes 14 ELDs, Triggering 60-Day Compliance Clock π:
The sudden revocation of these ELDs forces affected carriers to replace their systems within 60 days or face out-of-service orders. Brokers must proactively audit their carrier base to ensure compliance, as non-compliant carriers will suddenly drop out of the capacity pool, tightening supply.
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Spot Rates Hit Three-Year High Amid CDL Crackdowns π:
As spot rates reach multi-year highs and the FMCSA targets 'sham' CDL schools, structural capacity is shrinking. Brokers should leverage this data in customer conversations to justify higher rates and emphasize the value of reliable, thoroughly vetted carrier networks.
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Courts Target Broker Liability in Negligent Selection Cases π:
With courts increasingly scrutinizing broker hiring practices, operations teams must strictly adhere to carrier vetting protocols. Do not bypass safety checks for cheap capacity, as the legal and financial risks of negligent selection far outweigh the margin gained on a single load.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: The FMCSA ELD revocation is creating immediate compliance uncertainty today. Brokers calling carriers for capacity confirmations should be asking directly about ELD system compliance status. Carriers who cannot confirm their system is on the current approved list represent an operational risk β not a hypothetical future risk β as enforcement actions can remove trucks from service on discovery. The diesel price at $4.038 per gallon is an active cost factor in every carrier negotiation happening today.
- 3-Day Market Implications: Within 72 hours, expect carriers operating on the 14 revoked ELD platforms to begin making decisions about compliance pathways β either rushing hardware orders, seeking temporary waivers, or reducing operational commitments while they transition. This decision period will create near-term capacity ambiguity as affected fleets assess their options. Simultaneously, Thursday's forecasted precipitation in Indiana adds a 72-hour window of elevated weather risk that could push routing guide failure rates higher and drive additional spot market urgency.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By the end of next week, the 60-day ELD compliance clock will be approximately 10 days into its countdown. Carriers who have not yet sourced replacement hardware will begin facing longer lead times as demand for compliant ELD systems increases across the industry. Brokers should use this window to identify which carriers in their network are affected and prioritize relationships with fully compliant fleets before the compliance pressure intensifies further. Additionally, if Middle East tensions continue escalating, diesel prices may see further movement, making this week an optimal time to introduce fuel escalator clauses into shipper agreements.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: The CDL enforcement actions targeting sham schools are creating a structural, not cyclical, reduction in the driver pool. This is not a demand-side reduction that will reverse when freight volumes normalize β it represents a permanent removal of inadequately credentialed drivers from the system. Brokers should update their carrier qualification standards to require verification of CDL issuance legitimacy for new carrier onboarding, both as a compliance best practice and as a defense against negligent selection liability exposure that courts are actively expanding.
π Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time data shows a 31.9% day-over-day contraction in overall load volume, yet average rates remain elevated at $2.25/mile. This divergence suggests that while fewer loads are posted, the freight that is moving is urgent and commands a premium.
- Capacity Alerts: Severe capacity shortages are emerging in the Midwest due to extensive flooding across Indiana, and in the Mountain West ahead of a major winter storm along I-80. Flatbed capacity remains universally tight.
- Technology Disruptions: The sudden decertification of 14 ELD platforms is creating a compliance shockwave. Carriers utilizing these systems have 60 days to transition, which will likely cause temporary capacity disruptions as fleets take trucks offline for hardware swaps.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: Flatbed demand is likely to intensify further over the next 7 days as warmer temperatures β the Indiana forecast shows 72Β°F on Friday and 67Β°F on Saturday β accelerate construction project mobilization across the Midwest and Southeast. This temperature-driven demand surge will collide with a capacity pool that is already strained by weather disruptions, creating a potential rate spike window mid-to-late next week. Reefer demand is expected to remain elevated as early produce season staging in the Southeast continues to absorb temperature-controlled equipment before standard spring volumes arrive.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: The current market is running ahead of typical early-March seasonal patterns. Flatbed volumes at nearly 76,000 loads reflect a spring construction demand acceleration that normally does not reach this intensity until mid-to-late March. This early-season surge, combined with the atypical confluence of weather disruptions, fuel spikes, and regulatory capacity reductions, means the market is not following a predictable seasonal curve. Brokers should not expect the typical late-March rate softening that follows early-spring surges β the structural capacity constraints are likely to sustain elevated rates beyond the normal seasonal window.
- Economic Leading Indicators: Retail front-loading activity ahead of potential tariff implementations is sustaining van demand from major port markets despite the overall load volume contraction. Industrial and energy sector freight is driving flatbed demand independent of seasonal construction activity, providing a demand floor that prevents rate softening even during volume dips. The automotive sector's just-in-time sensitivity to the Indiana flooding is creating urgent, premium-rate expedited opportunities that are unlikely to resolve until flood conditions clear.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: As Indiana flooding persists through the weekend based on the forecast, expect equipment to gradually reposition northward toward Chicago and the I-80 corridor. This repositioning may temporarily ease capacity in northern Indiana and Chicago markets while deepening the shortage in the central and southern Indiana flooding zones. Simultaneously, the Utah winter storm is likely to push some Mountain West flatbed capacity toward the I-70 and southern I-15 corridors, potentially creating brief capacity surpluses in those lanes before demand reabsorbs the equipment.
π₯ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are front-loading imports to hedge against potential tariff implementations and supply chain disruptions linked to Middle East conflicts, driving steady outbound van demand from major ports.
- Manufacturing: Industrial manufacturing is driving the massive flatbed demand, with heavy machinery and raw materials moving aggressively ahead of the spring construction season.
- Agriculture: Early produce season staging in the Southeast is absorbing reefer capacity, while extensive flooding in the Ohio Valley is disrupting local agricultural supply chains and feed transport.
- Automotive: Auto parts suppliers in the Midwest are facing transit delays due to widespread flooding in Indiana, forcing expedited freight conversions to keep just-in-time assembly lines running.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently experiencing a severe convergence of capacity constraints driven by extensive flooding across Indiana and Ohio, combined with ongoing CDL proficiency audits removing drivers from the road. The flooding of the White River and East Fork White River is inundating state and county roads, forcing carriers to detour around major arteries like I-65 and I-69. This routing friction is increasing transit times and causing carriers to demand significant rate premiums to enter the region. Concurrently, the massive national demand for flatbed equipment is draining open-deck capacity from the Midwest's industrial and manufacturing hubs, leaving standard shippers scrambling for coverage.
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
Indianapolis, IN β Chicago, IL:
This critical Midwest corridor is heavily disrupted by moderate to severe flooding south and west of Indianapolis, causing localized capacity shortages. Carriers are reluctant to take loads originating near flood zones without significant premiums, while demand from auto and manufacturing sectors remains rigid. The surging cost of diesel is further inflating operating costs on this short-haul lane.
Columbus, OH β Louisville, KY:
Freight moving southwest from Ohio into Kentucky is facing headwinds from the Little Miami River flooding and broader Ohio Valley weather systems. Demand for van and reefer equipment is steady, but carriers are demanding higher rates to offset the surging fuel costs and potential weather delays along I-71.
π¨ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound Indianapolis, IN (Flood disruptions and detours)
- Outbound Salt Lake City, UT (Impending winter storm on I-80)
- Outbound Los Angeles, CA (High winds on I-5 corridor)
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Flatbed capacity is critically short nationwide (75,858 loads). Reefer capacity is severely constrained in the Southeast due to produce staging and the Midwest due to weather avoidance.
Opportunity Zones:
- Inbound Chicago from the flooded Ohio Valley (High urgency recovery freight)
- Short-haul flatbed lanes in the Southeast and Texas (Premium rates available)
π― Strategic Recommendations for Today
πΌ For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Educate customers on the 'triple threat' currently hitting the market: diesel surging past $4.03/gal due to Middle East conflicts, spot rates hitting a three-year high, and structural capacity shrinking due to FMCSA ELD/CDL crackdowns.
Action: Proactively approach customers to renegotiate fuel surcharges on contracted lanes and offer guaranteed capacity solutions for freight moving through the flooded Midwest.
π For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Focus heavily on securing flatbed capacity nationwide, and prioritize locking in reefer carriers in the Southeast before produce season fully absorbs the remaining equipment pool.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the recent FMCSA ELD revocations as a vetting tool. Carriers with compliant technology and clean safety records should be prioritized, but do not overpay for capacity in lanes unaffected by weather or fuel spikes.
π Customer Communication Scripts
Rate Increase Justification
Opening Script: "Good morning β I wanted to reach out proactively because the market shifted significantly overnight. Diesel just crossed $4.038 per gallon nationally, which is being driven by military escalation in the Middle East and direct threats to the Strait of Hormuz. On top of that, the FMCSA just pulled certification from 14 ELD platforms, which is forcing affected carriers to either swap hardware or park trucks within 60 days. We're seeing the spot market reflect this today β rates are holding at $2.25 per mile nationally despite a sharp drop in available loads, which tells us the freight that's moving is urgent and carriers have pricing power. I want to make sure your freight is protected before this gets more expensive."
Value Proposition: By locking in capacity and updated fuel surcharge agreements now, your freight avoids the auction dynamic that occurs when routing guides fail and shippers are forced into a tightening spot market at peak pressure.
Urgency Creator: The Indiana flooding is actively disrupting I-65 and I-69 today, and the forecast shows an additional 0.4 inches of rain on Thursday with a 75% probability. Capacity that is available today may be repositioned or unavailable by end of week.
Objection Handler: If a customer says 'rates were lower last month,' respond: 'You're right, and that's exactly why I'm calling. The three factors that held rates down β stable fuel, full ELD compliance across fleets, and clear weather corridors β have all reversed simultaneously. The FMCSA ELD revocations alone are removing a portion of the available capacity pool over the next 60 days. We're not seeing a temporary spike; we're seeing a structural tightening. Getting ahead of it now protects your supply chain from emergency-rate exposure later.'
Capacity Shortage Communication For Flatbed-Dependent Shippers
Opening Script: "I'm reaching out because we're tracking something that directly affects your open-deck freight. Right now there are over 75,000 flatbed loads competing for a constrained equipment pool nationally β spring construction staging and energy sector activity are running simultaneously and both sectors are absorbing specialized equipment at an accelerated rate. Paid rates on flatbed are already at $2.49 per mile, and carriers are prioritizing high-yield industrial freight. If your flatbed shipments are not committed, you're competing against construction and energy freight for the same trucks."
Value Proposition: Carriers with clean safety records and compliant ELD systems are being selectively booked by brokers who have vetted their networks. By working with us now, you access pre-screened capacity before it is absorbed by higher-paying spot freight.
Urgency Creator: High winds on the I-5 corridor in Southern California and a winter storm bringing snow to Utah's I-80 corridor are both reducing available flatbed lanes in the West this week, pushing equipment demand pressure toward Midwest and Southeast corridors where your freight likely moves.
Objection Handler: If a customer says 'I can find a cheaper truck on a load board,' respond: 'You may find a posted rate, but with 14 ELD platforms just decertified by the FMCSA, there is currently elevated risk of booking a carrier who is 60 days from an out-of-service order. Courts are also actively tightening broker liability standards for negligent carrier selection right now. The margin difference on a single load is not worth the legal and operational exposure. We vet every carrier we use β that is the value you are paying for.'
π― The Veteran's Wednesday Playbook: Profiting Through the "Triple Threat"
Welcome to Wednesday. If you are only looking at the top-line volume dropβa 31.9% contraction to 167,676 available loadsβyou are reading the board wrong. The national average rate hasn't budged from $2.25/mile. When volume plummets but rates hold firm, it means the freight left on the board is highly urgent, and structural capacity is actively evaporating.
Today, we are navigating a "Triple Threat" environment: Diesel just violently breached the $4.00 psychological barrier ($4.038/gal), the FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) just nuked 14 ELD (Electronic Logging Device) platforms, and severe regional weather is paralyzing key corridors. Amateurs will spend today apologizing for rate hikes; professionals will spend today selling their compliance and execution as a premium liability shield. Here is your tactical execution plan for the next 24-72 hours.
π The Spread: Margin Capture Matrix
Margin is found in the delta between shipper panic (posted rates) and carrier reality (paid rates). Here is exactly how to trade today's spreads based on this morning's real-time data.
- Specialized (Massive Broker Leverage): 18,091 loads | Posted $2.42 > Paid $2.31
- The Play: A massive +$0.11/mile spread. Shippers are over-posting rates because they are terrified of the specialized equipment shortage and weather routing complexities.
- Execution: Capture this double-digit margin by absorbing the logistical friction. Buy access to reliable carriers at the $2.31 average by handling the permit legwork, providing clear securement plans, and ensuring strict FMCSA compliance.
- Heavy Haul (Strong Broker Leverage): 33,571 loads | Posted $2.57 > Paid $2.52
- The Play: A healthy +$0.05/mile spread.
- Execution: Quote shippers at the $2.57 posted average, but buy at the $2.52 paid average. Focus your sourcing on the lower 48 energy and construction sectors, avoiding the paralyzed Mountain West corridors.
- Van (Standard Broker Leverage): 21,892 loads | Posted $2.13 > Paid $2.09
- The Play: A +$0.04/mile spread. Volume is cooling, but capacity is shrinking due to aggressive CDL (Commercial Driver's License) enforcement and ELD revocations.
- Execution: Quote shippers at the $2.13 posted average. Target regional distribution hubs where retail front-loading (hedging against tariffs) is creating consistent outbound volume.
- Reefer (Fading Broker Leverage): 8,085 loads | Posted $2.47 > Paid $2.43
- The Play: A +$0.04/mile spread, but capacity is dangerously scarce (down 41.1% to just 8k loads nationally).
- Execution: Pre-book all Thursday and Friday freight today. As Southeast produce staging accelerates and carriers actively avoid the flooded Midwest, this spread will flip to carrier leverage by tomorrow afternoon. Do not float reefer freight this week.
- Flatbed (Carrier Leverage): 75,858 loads | Paid $2.49 > Posted $2.48
- The Play: Carriers are entirely dictating terms. With nearly 76,000 loads sitting on open decks, you are in a knife fight for trucks.
- Execution: You must pay for securement and tarping time upfront. Win trucks by offering guaranteed reloads. Do not haggle over minor rate differences if you have a verified, compliant driver ready to roll.
β½ Geopolitical & Regulatory Shockwaves
These three macro-factors will dictate your margin and your legal exposure this week. Adjust your strategy immediately.
- The Middle East Fuel Shock ($4.038/gal)
- The Threat: Escalating military operations in Iran and disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz have pushed diesel up to $4.038/gallon. Carriers will immediately demand higher linehaul rates to compensate for the psychological blow of $4+ fuel.
- The Action: Shorten your quote validity windows to 24 hours maximum. Do not offer 7-day spot quotes this week. Proactively communicate these geopolitical impacts to customers to justify rate increases on new quotes. Ensure your contract freight has an airtight FSC (Fuel Surcharge) mechanism.
- The FMCSA ELD Purge (14 Devices Revoked)
- The Threat: The sudden revocation of 14 ELDs triggers a 60-day compliance clock. Carriers using these systems will either scramble for hardware or face Out-Of-Service (OOS) orders.
- The Action: Make ELD verification a mandatory question on every dispatch call today. Use this as a vetting tool. Carriers with compliant technology should be prioritized. Sell this rigorous vetting process to shippers as a premium service.
- Negligent Selection & CDL Crackdowns
- The Threat: Courts are actively targeting brokers in negligent selection cases, while the FMCSA targets "sham" CDL schools, permanently removing drivers from the pool.
- The Action: Double down on strict carrier vetting. Do not let the tight flatbed market tempt you into using unvetted or marginal carriers. Shippers need to know that cheap freight isn't worth a nuclear verdict.
πΊοΈ Regional Arbitrage & Weather Routing
Weather and regional imbalances are creating distinct arbitrage opportunities today.
- Indiana/Ohio Valley Flooding (Expedited Auto/Ag Demand)
- The Situation: Moderate to severe flooding along the White River (Jackson, Bartholomew, Greene counties) is inundating county roads and forcing major detours around I-65 and I-69.
- The Tactic: Automotive just-in-time supply chains are breaking down. Pitch expedited van and team transit to auto suppliers in the Midwest who are facing line-down situations. Expect carriers to demand heavy premiums to enter central/southern Indiana.
- Utah Wasatch Winter Storm (I-80 Rerouting)
- The Situation: 8 to 20 inches of snow along the I-80 North corridor will paralyze transcontinental freight movement.
- The Tactic: Reroute transcontinental freight south to I-70 or I-40 immediately. Add $200-$400 detour adders to your rate confirmations and pad ETAs by 12-24 hours.
- Southern California High Winds (I-5 Blow-Over Risk)
- The Situation: North winds up to 65 mph along the I-5 corridor (Ventura/Santa Barbara) are creating severe blow-over risks for high-profile trailers (vans/reefers).
- The Tactic: Expect outbound LA capacity to tighten as drivers park to wait out the wind. Sell outbound capacity out of AZ and NV, where rerouted or delayed trucks will be looking for their next load.
π Wednesday Execution Scripts
Equip your floor with these exact narratives to control the conversation today.
1. The "Fuel & Compliance Reality Check" Script (For Customer Sales)
"Good morning [Name]. I'm calling proactively because the market shifted violently overnight. Diesel just crossed $4.03 a gallon due to the Middle East escalation, and simultaneously, the FMCSA just revoked certification for 14 ELD platforms. Carriers are pulling trucks off the board to renegotiate linehauls or figure out their hardware compliance. I am quoting your lanes slightly above last week's average today because I want to lock in your capacity right now with a fully compliant, vetted carrier before the broader spot market panics. Locking in today insulates your supply chain from a rapid mid-week rate correction."
2. The "Liability Shield" Script (For Customer Sales)
"John, I wanted to touch base regarding the recent court rulings on freight broker liability and the FMCSA's crackdown on sham CDL schools. The risk of negligent carrier selection is at an all-time high. We are seeing a lot of cheap capacity out there right now that is operating on revoked ELDs or questionable CDLs. When you book with us, you aren't just buying a truck; you are buying our strict, automated compliance vetting. We ensure every carrier on your freight is fully compliant, shielding you from that liability risk. The margin difference on a single load is not worth the legal exposure."
3. The "Flood Recovery Expedite" Script (For Carrier Reps)
"Hey driver, I know the White River flooding is making pickups a mess around Indianapolis and I-65 right now. If you are willing to navigate the detours, I have urgent, premium-paying automotive freight that needs to move to keep assembly lines running. Let me lock you in on this dedicated outbound run with a heavy detour premium built-in, so you don't have to fight 50 other trucks for standard freight."
π
This Day in History
1493: Explorer Christopher Columbus arrives back in Lisbon, Portugal, aboard his ship NiΓ±a from his voyage to what are now The Bahamas and other islands in the Caribbean.
1794: The 11th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is passed by the U.S. Congress.
1990: Lennox Sebe, President for life of the South African Bantustan of Ciskei, is ousted from power in a bloodless military coup led by Brigadier Oupa Gqozo.
π Quote of the Day
"Misfortune shows those who are not really friends."
β Aristotle