The IDES OF MARCH Origin
March 15, 44 B.C. was the day Ceasar was assassinated. After entering a hall next to Pompey's Theater for a meeting, History.com reported a group of senators, including Marcus Brutus, stabbed him over 20 times.
"Beware the Ides of March," was a piece of advice a soothsayer twice gave Caesar. At the time, Caesar wasn't aware the statement was in reference to his looming demise, although it became clear at the end of the play.
Beware the Ides of March Meaning
The idea that March 15 (or "the ides of March") is unlucky goes back to ancient traditions and superstitions. Most people have probably heard the phrase "the ides of March" quoted from a famous line in Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar: "Beware the ides of March." The phrase, spoken twice by a soothsayer, warns Caesar of his impending assassination.
The Ides of March was certainly unlucky for Caesar, who actually was killed on that day. (Of course these days a psychic making such a death threat would be investigated by the Secret Service.) Since that time the idea stuck that the Ides of March is unlucky or a portent of doom—even if your name isn't Caesar.
The fact that an aura of doom stuck to the date through millennia is not surprising. People tend to give special significance to certain dates: birthdays, anniversaries, leap years, Friday the Thirteenth, and so on. This tendency is similar to numerology, in which people interpret cosmic significance in numbers and dates, seeing them as good or bad, lucky or unlucky. July 7, 2007, for example, was supposedly "extra lucky" because the numerical date was full of lucky sevens.
Anons - Let's Flip this Fucking "Beware the Ides of March" Shit ~ Over To ~ Hey, Deep State/ Cabal/ Illuminati/ Satan-Worshiping MF-ers/ et. al. [[[ YOU ]]] Beware this Day ~ March 15, 2020 Ides of March
sauce:
https://www.livescience.com/6224-ides-march-diary-doomed-day.html
https://www.newsweek.com/julius-caesar-assassination-what-are-ides-march-beware-ides-march-meaning-1359119