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Monday, January 26, 2026

"What They're Not Telling You About The Monster Storm That Just Hit The U.S."

Full screen recommended.
The Sleepy Explorer, 1/26/26
"What They're Not Telling You About
The Monster Storm That Just Hit The U.S."

"They told you it was just weather. Record cold, they said. A freak atmospheric event. But three days before Winter Storm Fern turned half of America into a frozen wasteland, something else happened - something almost no one is talking about.

From ninety‑three million miles away, the Sun unleashed an S4 solar radiation storm, one of the strongest in decades. Satellites were hit. Auroras spilled far beyond the poles. Earth’s already‑weakening magnetic shield absorbed the impact. And then - almost immediately - the polar vortex collapsed southward like a broken dam. Coincidence? Or a clue?

Tonight, we peel back the headlines and follow the timeline nobody wants to connect. From space weather alerts buried in NOAA reports, to strange upper‑atmosphere signals, to theories scientists argue about quietly behind closed doors, this investigation asks a dangerous question: What if our weather isn’t being shaped only from the ground up… but from space down? Stay until the end, because the final connections - involving recent discoveries in space physics, AI, and cosmic monitoring - might permanently change how you see the sky above your head. And the timing? That’s where things get strange."
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OMG...God help us...

"Winter Storm Fern Update: -50 Degrees Fahrenheit: The Polar Vortex Just Fractured"

A Terrifying MUST-VIEW!
Whiteout Reports, 1/26/26
"Winter Storm Fern Update: -50 Degrees Fahrenheit: 
The Polar Vortex Just Fractured"
"The "Arctic Re-Fire" has officially begun as a secondary polar surge crashes across the border, threatening to paralyze the nation once again. While Winter Storm Fern departs, a new, more dangerous threat is emerging: a record-shattering "Canadian Scythe" that will plunge temperatures to life-threatening levels across 40 states. We are breaking down the thermodynamics of this historic freeze and why the next 48 hours are the most critical of the year."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Stefan Burns, 1/26/26
"Weather Forecasters Can't Give 
a Forecast Beyond 7 Days, I Can"
"The massive disruption of the polar vortex began just as a solar superstorm impacted Earth, triggering a G5-/G4+ geomagnetic storm and a S4 radiation storm - the strongest since 2003. These sort of ultra space weather impacts can alter the Earth geophysical system for not only week and months after the event but even years... The space weather impact amplified the disruption to the polar vortex, and is likely to continue increasing the volatility of those arctic atmospheric jet streams. Geophysicist Stefan Burns reports on the big picture and provides a generalized weather forecast for the rest of winter and spring this year (2026)."
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Earth Evolution Energy Analytics:

"Government Shutdown Just Days Away, This Will Be Worse"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 1/26/26
"Government Shutdown Just Days Away, 
This Will Be Worse"
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Adventures with Danno, "The Winter Storm: Where Do We Begin?

Adventures with Danno, 1/26/26
"The Winter Storm: Where Do We Begin?
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Musical Interlude: 2002, "Even Now"

Full screen recommended.
2002, "Even Now"

"A Look to. the Heavens"

"Sharp telescopic views of NGC 3628 show a puffy galactic disk divided by dark dust lanes. Of course, this deep portrait of the magnificent, edge-on spiral galaxy puts some astronomers in mind of its popular moniker, the Hamburger Galaxy. It also reveals a small galaxy nearby, likely a satellite of NGC 3628, and a faint but extensive tidal tail. The drawn out tail stretches for about 300,000 light-years, even beyond the right edge of the wide frame. 
NGC 3628 shares its neighborhood in the local universe with two other large spirals M65 and M66 in a grouping otherwise known as the Leo Triplet. Gravitational interactions with its cosmic neighbors are likely responsible for creating the tidal tail, as well as the extended flare and warp of this spiral's disk. The tantalizing island universe itself is about 100,000 light-years across and 35 million light-years away in the northern springtime constellation Leo."

The Poet: Henry Austin Dobson, “The Paradox Of Time”

“The Paradox Of Time”

“Time goes, you say? Ah no! 
Alas, Time stays, we go; 
Or else, were this not so, 
What need to chain the hours, 
For Youth were always ours? 

Time goes, you say? – ah no! 
Ours is the eyes’ deceit 
Of men whose flying feet 
Lead through some landscape low; 
We pass, and think we see 
The earth’s fixed surface flee - 
Alas, Time stays, – we go! 

Once in the days of old, 
Your locks were curling gold, 
And mine had shamed the crow. 
Now, in the self-same stage, 
We’ve reached the silver age; 
Time goes, you say? – ah no! 

Once, when my voice was strong, 
I filled the woods with song 
To praise your ‘rose’ and ‘snow’; 
My bird, that sang, is dead; 
Where are your roses fled? 
Alas, Time stays, – we go! 

See, in what traversed ways, 
What backward Fate delays 
The hopes we used to know; 
Where are our old desires? 
Ah, where those vanished fires? 
Time goes, you say? – ah no! 

How far, how far, O Sweet, 
The past behind our feet 
Lies in the even-glow! 
Now, on the forward way, 
Let us fold hands, and pray; 
Alas, Time stays, – we go!”

- Henry Austin Dobson
“Time passes in moments. Moments which, rushing past, define the path of a life, just as surely as they lead towards its end. How rarely do we stop to examine that path, to see the reasons why all things happen? To consider whether the path we take in life is our own making, or simply one into which we drift with eyes closed? But what if we could stop, pause to take stock of each precious moment before it passes? Might we then see the endless forks in the road that have shaped a life? And, seeing those choices, choose another path?”
- Gillian Anderson as Dana Scully, “The X-Files”
Full screen recommended.
Hans Zimmer, "Time"

"Humanity, I Love You..."

"Humanity, I love you because when you're down
and out you pawn your intelligence for a drink." 
 - e.e. cummings

"The World..."

"The world is a comedy to those that think,
a tragedy to those who feel. "
- Horace Walpole, In a Letter, 1770

"The Bank Was Saved, and the People Were Ruined."

"The Bank Was Saved,
 and the People Were Ruined."
by Jeff Thomas

"The above quote is from William Gouge, commenting on the Panic of 1819. The panic had been caused when the First Bank of the United States had first expanded the money supply dramatically by offering loans, then contracted the money supply by tightening its requirements for new loans, causing a crash. This is a useful quote, as, in its simplicity, it states the very nature of crashes brought on by irresponsible banking practices. In every case in which this occurs, it is possible through the complicity of the government of the day.

The origin of this syndrome goes back to Mayer Rothschild, a very clever fellow who, in the late 18th century, offered financial benefits to politicians in Germany in trade for political support for whatever activities his bank might practice. Rothschild was a long-term thinker; his method involved the offering of regular emoluments to politicians without their having to provide him with anything immediately. Then, when he needed a large favor, he would call it in. Movie buffs may see a similarity between Rothschild's method and the deals made by Don Corleone in The Godfather. "Some day - and that day may never come - I'll call upon you to do a service for me."

Rothschild created boom-and-bust cycles which were highly profitable for his bank, but depended upon the support of the government when the "bust" part came along. As described above, the bank would offer loans to the public on generous terms, then suddenly rein in those terms on all future loans. The claim the bank would make would be that inflation was taking place and the bank was taking action to control that inflation. (Of course, Rothschild did not bother to mention that it was the bank itself that had caused the inflation.) The net result would be a "panic," or, in today's terms a "depression." Everyone involved would be harmed by the event except the politicians and the bank.

This scheme was accurately and succinctly described by G. Edward Griffin: "It is widely believed that panics, boom-and-bust cycles, and depressions are caused by unbridled competition between banks; thus the need for government regulation. The truth is just the opposite. These disruptions in the free market are the result of government prevention of competition by the granting of monopolistic power to the central bank."

Mayer Rothschild's five sons followed in his footsteps and would go on to control much of the banking in Europe. The Rothschilds are perhaps best known for the Bank of England, which is still in operation today as one of the world's most powerful banks. So, let's have a brief look at central banking in America.

In 1782, the Bank of North America was opened in America during the infancy of the United States. It was modelled after Rothschild's Bank of England. It operated as a central bank and, as it was organized by Congressman Robert Morris, it was intended from the start to serve both its directors and the politicians of the day. The bank did indeed serve the bankers and politicians - at the expense of the depositors. Although the bank lost its charter in 1783, an effort was soon afoot to create a virtually identical bank, called, "The Bank of the United States." The proposal was backed by the Rothschilds, who intended to control it.

Having just seen, first hand, how much damage a central bank, with a fascist relationship to the government could do, a terrible (and ongoing) row took place within the Cabinet of President George Washington as to whether another potentially disastrous bank should be allowed. The main protagonist was Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, who said, "I sincerely believe that banking institutions are more dangerous than standing armies; and that the principle of spending money to be paid by posterity…is but swindling futurity on a large scale."

On the other side, Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton led the argument in favor of the creation of a second central bank. Incredibly, even though Congress had just seen what a disaster this could be, they approved the charter for the new bank in 1791. It opened with less than nine percent of the private funds required by its charter.

A primary object of the bank was to provide fiat currency for the government, whilst collecting deposits from the public. Immediately, the new bank began to print money and to lend it, with predictable results. By 1811, it had closed its doors, having rewarded only its directors and some politicians, whilst the depositors lost their money. This, surely, would be the end of the failed concept of a central bank, a fascist partnership between financiers and politicians. However, in 1816, Congress granted a charter to the second "Bank of the United States." Within three years, the bank had caused the Panic of 1819, as stated in the opening paragraph of this article and, again, as Gouge said, "the bank was saved and the people were ruined."

In 1832, President Andrew Jackson was up for re-election and he risked his success on a campaign to stop the renewal of the charter of the Bank of the United States. Although he won both his re-election and his bid to stop the renewal of the charter, both the Rothschild family and their American counterparts continued their efforts to create a central bank that would provide both bankers and politicians with wealth whilst using depositors as cash cows. They succeeded marvelously in 1913 with the creation of the Federal Reserve, a more sophisticated relationship between bank and State that has operated ever since. In the boom-and-bust cycles it has created, the US dollar has been devalued by over 97%.

But the system today is far more advanced than in the eighteenth century. It is no longer necessary to fold the banks involved, or at least not immediately. Government has declared that the closing of the central banks would be the worst catastrophe that could befall the country and therefore, the country must borrow heavily to re-fund them. No requirement was made of the banks to actually offer these funds on loan, let alone to bail out the debtors. The banks have instead been able to absorb the funds, continuing the massive bonuses to the very directors who caused the disaster in the first instance.

The above history is a brief, thumbnail sketch of events relative to central banking in the US since the formation of the country. It is not meant to be all-encompassing and the reader is encouraged to study the subject further. But the sketch does have a purpose. Today, most of the First World is in the midst of an economic crisis that has been caused by debt. That debt has been the product of bankers and governments working together. History shows us that the present situation is not an accident. It is the repetition of a very successful method by which bankers, with the complicity of governments, create boom-and-bust cycles; cycles that, whilst damaging for nearly all citizens of a country, are very profitable for those who create the cycles.

If we are to watch the evening news, there are, daily, politicians and pundits offering "solutions" - "Provide quantitative easing," "tax the one percent," or simply, "kick the can down the road." Through endless debate, viewers are encouraged to believe that somehow, the government and the directors of the banks and the Chairman of the Federal Reserve will come up with a solution to the problem. However, a brief read of the history above suggests that there will be no "solution," as no solution is intended by those who have created the problem. The entire concept is to periodically hang the depositor out to dry. (It's not done to be purposely unkind; it's done because it's so very profitable.)

If the reader has not yet been squeezed to the point that his net worth (value of assets, minus debt) is under water, he would be well advised to consider means by which his liquid assets can be removed from the banking system, a system that, if history repeats, may soon take those remaining assets. Does this mean that the reader should run right down to the bank and withdraw his assets? Not necessarily. What it does mean is that it would be best to recognize that a clear pattern has existed for hundreds of years regarding boom-and-bust banking and the reader would be well-advised to ask himself some unpleasant questions. Here are a few:

Will my bank be one of those that crashes?
Will my savings be lost partially or entirely?
How much time do I have before I should remove my deposits?
Will my bank honor the agreement of the paper gold that they have sold me?
Will I be able to take delivery of gold that they "hold" for me?
What do I do with my assets if I withdraw them from the bank?
Will there be banks that will remain in business? Which ones?

The above questions should be asked periodically, as events unfold. Doing so may mean the difference between the retention or loss of assets that the reader now trusts his bank to hold for him. History shows that when banking crises strike, governments and financial institutions are protected first - while depositors are left exposed. That reality is driving more people to look beyond the traditional banking system and consider jurisdictions specifically designed to resist capital controls, confiscation, and political overreach. One place that stands out is the Cayman Islands, whose legal structure, culture, and zero-tax environment have long made it a cornerstone of a serious Plan B."

"Did Sanctions Affect Russia's Largest Shopping Malls?"

Full screen recommended.
Travelling With Russell, 1/26/26
"Did Sanctions Affect Russia's Largest Shopping Malls?"
"What does the largest shopping mall in Russia look like? How have sanctions affected the Russian retail trade since 2022? Join me as I walk around Aviapark, Russia's largest shopping centre. With more than 450 stores spread over 390,000 square meters. How does it look in 2026?"
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The Daily "Near You?"

Mexico City, Mexico. Thanks for stopping by!

"This Difficult Thing of Being Human"

"This Difficult Thing of Being Human"
by Bodhipaksa

"It's always good to remember that life isn't easy. I don't mean to say that life is always hard in the sense of it always being painful. Clearly there are times when we're happy, when things are going well, when we feel that our life is headed in the right direction and that even greater fulfillment is just ahead of us, etc.

What I mean is that even when we have times in our life that are good, that doesn't last. In fact, often the things we're so excited and happy about later turn out to be things that also cause us suffering. For example, you start a brand new relationship and you're in love and it's exciting and fulfilling. And then you find yourself butting heads with your partner, and you hurt each others feelings. Maybe you even split up. Does that sound familiar?

For example, the new job that you're thrilled about turns out to contain stresses you hadn't imagined. Has that ever happened?

For example, the house you're so pleased to have bought inevitably ends up requiring maintenance. Or perhaps the house value plummets. Or perhaps your circumstances change and you find it a struggle to meet the mortgage. Maybe you've been lucky, or maybe you've been there.

Happiness has a way of evaporating. Unhappiness has a way of sneaking up on us and sucker-punching us in the gut. On a deep level, none of us really understand happiness and unhappiness. If we truly understood the dynamics of these things, we'd be happy all the time and would never be miserable. We'd be enlightened. But pre-enlightenment, we're all stumbling in the dark, and sometimes colliding painfully with life as we do so.

This being human is not easy. We're doing a difficult thing in living a human life. It's good to accept all this, because life is so much harder when we think it should be easy. When we think life should be straightforward, and that we think we have it all sorted out, then unhappiness becomes a sign that we've failed. And that makes being in pain even more painful.

We haven't failed when we're unhappy; we're just being human. We're simply experiencing the tender truth of what it is to live a human life. So when you're unhappy, don't beat yourself up about it. Don't fight it. Accept that this is how things are right now. Often when you do that, you'll very quickly - sometimes instantly - start to feel better. By accepting our suffering, we start to move through it. And as you look around you, realize that everyone else is doing this difficult thing of being human too. They're all struggling. We're all struggling. We all want happiness and find happiness elusive. We all want to avoid suffering and yet keep stumbling into it, over and over.

Many of the things that bother you about other people are their attempts to deal with this difficult existential situation, in which we desire happiness, and don't experience as much of it as we want, and desire to be free from suffering, and yet keep becoming trapped in it. Their moods, their clinging, their anger - all of these are the results of human beings struggling to find happiness, and having trouble doing so.

If we can recognize that this human life is not easy - if we can empathize with that very basic existential fact - then perhaps we can be just a little kinder to ourselves and others. And that would help make this human life just a little easier to navigate."

The inevitable excuse for doing what we know is wrong is always,
 "I'm only human." I've always wondered, compared to what?
Full screen recommended.
Billy Joel, "You're Only Human"


The Psyche, "Is This You? - Dostoevsky"

Full screen recommended.
The Psyche, "Is This You? - Dostoevsky"
"Is this you? Dostoevsky knew your Inner struggle before you did. Why do we repeat patterns that hurt us? Why do we cling to thoughts, habits, and suffering we already understand - but cannot seem to escape? In this deep psychological and philosophical exploration, we dive into the unsettling brilliance of Fyodor Dostoevsky, a writer who exposed the hidden contradictions of the human soul long before modern psychology existed. His characters are not distant literary figures - they are mirrors. Intelligent, self-aware, conflicted, and painfully human."
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"I Can't Convince Myself..."

“I can’t convince myself that it does much good to try to challenge the everyday political delusions and dementias of Americans at large. Their contained and confined mentalities by far prefer the petty and parochial prisons of the kind of sense they have been trained and rewarded for making out of their lives (and are punished for deviating from them). What it costs them ultimately to be such slaves and infants and ideological zombies is a thought too monstrous and rending and spiky for them even to want to glance at.”
- Kenneth Smith

“If you want to tell people the truth,
 make them laugh, otherwise they’ll kill you.”
- Oscar Wilde

"How It Really Is"

 

"America’s Biggest Cities Are Crumbling As Trash Piles Up And Businesses Disappear"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 1/26/26
"America’s Biggest Cities Are Crumbling 
As Trash Piles Up And Businesses Disappear"

"In today's video, we're looking at what people are actually witnessing on the ground in these urban areas. We've got footage from folks showing massive piles of garbage that just aren't getting cleaned up, burnt-out buildings in downtown LA where people are sleeping among the ruins, and streets that look like they've been completely abandoned. But here's the thing - this isn't just about garbage trucks or street cleaning schedules. What we're seeing is all connected. When cities can't keep up with basic services like trash pickup, it starts affecting everything else. Businesses don't want to operate next to piles of garbage, so they leave. When businesses leave, people lose jobs. When people lose jobs, some end up homeless. And when you've got growing homelessness, it puts even more strain on city services.

One clip that really stuck with me was from someone in LA who started picking up trash on his daily walk to the coffee shop. He filled an entire bag just going around one corner, and he pointed out something important - a lot of that trash had been there for months. It's not that people are constantly littering everywhere; it's that nobody's cleaning it up. When someone does clean an area, it actually stays pretty clean for weeks.

We're also looking at what's happening to major business districts. San Francisco's Union Square has seen about half its retail stores close in just four years. Pittsburgh has whole streets of boarded-up buildings. Seattle's got areas where families and tourists are just three blocks away from serious crime and drug problems.

Some of the people in these videos are talking about this as part of a larger societal collapse - the idea that our cities are dying, and when cities die, countries die. Others are focusing on specific solutions, like better emergency shelters or job programs for the homeless. There are different perspectives on what's causing all this and what we should do about it.

What I find troubling is how these problems seem to be accelerating. Multiple people mentioned that they don't remember things being this bad even just a few years ago. Whether it's the pandemic's impact, policy decisions, or something bigger going on in our society, something's clearly not working.

I'm curious what you all think about this. Are we seeing temporary problems that cities can solve, or are these symptoms of something more serious? Have you noticed changes in your own area? What solutions do you think might actually work? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below. If you found this video helpful, please give it a thumbs up and consider subscribing for more content about what's happening in our communities across America."
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"Deadly Winter Storm Leaves Chaos Nationwide, Millions Still Trapped"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 1/26/26
"Deadly Winter Storm Leaves Chaos Nationwide,
 Millions Still Trapped"
Comments here:
o
Whiteout Reports, 1/26/26
"Winter Storm Fern: National Emergency -
 2,000-Mile 'Glass Road' Has Officially Formed"
"Winter Storm Fern has moved into the Atlantic, but the real danger is just beginning. A historic Arctic surge has triggered a nationwide Flash Freeze, unleashing a hidden black ice crisis and plunging temperatures not seen in decades. From paralyzed highways in the South to ice-glazed cities and record-breaking cold in the North, this storm has become a life-threatening, coast-to-coast emergency.

In this briefing, we break down why Monday, January 26th, 2026 is the most dangerous day of the entire event. We explain the Polar Vortex fracture, the physics behind invisible black ice, and why bridges and overpasses have turned into deadly traps. We also cover widespread power outages, grid failure risks, travel paralysis, and critical survival guidance as millions face extreme cold without electricity."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Max Velocity - Severe Weather Center, 1/26/26
"This Winter Pattern Is About To Get WAY Worse"
"In today’s forecast, we’re breaking down what’s still left behind after this major winter storm, which knocked out power to thousands and caused millions of dollars in damage. We’ll explain why these impacts will linger longer than expected, and what to expect as we head into the next week of weather."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Stefan Burns, 1/26/26
"Weather Forecasters Can't Give 
a Forecast Beyond 7 Days, I Can"
"The massive disruption of the polar vortex began just as a solar superstorm impacted Earth, triggering a G5-/G4+ geomagnetic storm and a S4 radiation storm - the strongest since 2003. These sort of ultra space weather impacts can alter the Earth geophysical system for not only week and months after the event but even years... The space weather impact amplified the disruption to the polar vortex, and is likely to continue increasing the volatility of those arctic atmospheric jet streams. Geophysicist Stefan Burns reports on the big picture and provides a generalized weather forecast for the rest of winter and spring this year (2026)."
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Earth Evolution Energy Analytics:

"The Biggest Bank Lie Ever Told - They Sold What Didn’t Exist"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly 1/26/26
"The Biggest Bank Lie Ever Told - 
They Sold What Didn’t Exist"
"Banks cheated us all, and the truth is finally coming to light. In today’s video, I break down how banks manipulated the system, from lending money they didn’t have to fractional banking practices that preyed on everyday people. From outrageous fees to unchecked interest rates, these schemes have impacted communities everywhere - and it’s catching up with them now. I also dive into silver and gold markets, why these investments matter today more than ever, and what the future might hold for precious metals. If you’ve ever wondered what “silver at $250 an ounce” could mean or why banks are facing a crisis, this video is for you."
Comments here:

Jim Kunstler, "Had Enough?"

Neville Roy Singham
"Had Enough?"
by Jim Kunstler

"Minnesota Democrats hate ICE because they're deporting their voters." 
- Gunther Eagleman on "X"

"Isn’t it obvious by now that the seditious mischief roiling Minneapolis is some kind of a demonstration project for a China-backed overthrow of the whole country? This is not hard. And, apparently, the Democratic Party is either a willing accomplice or a hostage in thrall to its captor - like Patty Hearst, the heiress kidnapped and bamboozled by psychotic Maoist maniacs who styled themselves the Symbionese Liberation Army, until she was happily making bombs and robbing banks with them (and ended up in prison).

It is well understood that these ICE-Out riots are organized and funded by a network created by one Neville Roy Singham (American, b. 1954), now based in Shanghai. Singham funds the Party for Socialism and Liberation, The Peoples’ Forum, Code Pink, the United Community Fund and a web of other money laundries that supply all the logistics for Lefty-left mobs going back to the George Floyd / BLM operations of 2020 and including the pro-Palestinian uproars of 2024.

Singham’s father, Archibald, was a Sri Lankan poly-sci prof at Brooklyn College, specializing in Third World revolution; his mother was a Cuban-born Marxist. Singham founded a software development company called Thoughtworks in 1993, and sold it to a London-based private equity firm, Apax, for $785-million in 2017, after which he devoted himself to the cause of “dismantling capitalism,” and destroying the USA. If ever there was a James Bond villain come to life, it’s Neville Roy Singham.

And then you have his perfect foil, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, who visited China at least thirty times in his previous career as a teacher, his travel often funded by the CCP. What was he up to there? I think we’re going to find out. We’re also going to find out what he has been up to in the state he supposedly runs, especially vis-à-vis the developing mega-scandal of billions creamed off taxpayers through the Somali fake social services fraud network. It’s already known that some of that money found its way into Democratic Party coffers. How much of it landed in the bank accounts of Minnesota politicians and administrative officials? We’ll find out about that, too.
ICE-Watch Signal Chat boss Amanda Noelle Koehler
 with her boss, Gov. Tim Walz

The communication system for the Minneapolis riots is an encrypted Signal Chat network (“MN ICE-Watch”) run by Tim Walz aide and campaign strategist Amanda Noelle Koehler. That’s how they organize rapid-response actions against ICE and broader mobilization for key propaganda opportunities like the recent shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti. Lt. Governor Peggy Flanagan acts as an admin for the MN ICE-Watch Signal group. Kind of makes you wonder if Tim Walz himself is involved in orchestrating the chaos. Another thing we’ll probably find out. Are these officials criminally liable in the deaths of Good and Pretti? In any case, it’s all a grand distraction from the massive Somali fraud scandal that broke out over Walz this month like a case of scabies.

The overall Singham/CCP plan is to get rid of Donald Trump, elect a Democratic Party Congress, and turn the USA into CCP-inflected clone state. The Dems have already made their strategy clear: bring in X-million illegal aliens (done) and set them up as voters; admit DC and Puerto Rico as new states to secure the Senate; stuff the Supreme Court with extra Lefty-left justices, and set about “redistributing” the nation’s wealth from the productive class to their rainbow coalition of the oppressed, marginalized, non-white, and mentally-ill. I’m sorry if this sounds like the ridiculous plot of a James Bond movie. Oscar Wilde was onto something when he observed that life imitates art.

Now, the question is: what are we going to do about all this - we who care about preserving an American republic based on economic liberty? And perhaps more to the point: how to put down the current engineered chaos in Minnesota ASAP, in a way that serves notice we will not allow our country to be overthrown by any Marxist-Jacobin rabble. Many are calling for President Trump to invoke the Insurrection Act. The Singham/CCP/Democratic Party axis would like nothing better, of course, because they could then slap the “tyrant” label on Mr. Trump and set him up for impeachment in 2027, if they can take the midterm election. And they’ll do exactly that if Senate Majority Leader John Thune keeps obstructing passage of the SAVE (election reform) Act.

Is there a path short of the Insurrection Act to quell the Minneapolis mobs? How about this: since the Minneapolis Police have been ordered to stand down by Mayor Jacob Frey... why not deputize the officers as federal marshals and put them under the direct authority of the US DOJ? Then arrest as many unruly mob actors as possible, just get them off the streets and make the point that there are consequences. Meanwhile, seize the assets of all the organizations that are funding the chaos. No more coffee and donuts. No more Signal Chat dispatch system. No more subsidized motel stays. No more riot paychecks. All support gone.

Perhaps that’s a start. Expect to see some resolute action this week against the parties involved in the Minneapolis attacks on Immigration Enforcement agents. And understand that the forensic litigation over Alex Pretti’s foolish death is just an obsessive-compulsive public ritual that is fooling nobody with half a brain. Get in law enforcements’ faces with a gun and you’ve signed your own death warrant. What part of that is a mystery?"

Bill Bonner, "High Stakes Monopoly"

"High Stakes Monopoly"
by Bill Bonner
Rancho Santana, Nicaragua - "The local news comes in whispers. “You wouldn’t believe the panic that has gone on here. They’re running scared. And I don’t blame them.” Our old friend was being cautiously optimistic. In the wake of Maduro’s kidnapping, much of Latin America is either rejoicing...or going into hiding.

Here in Nicaragua, the regime led by Danny Ortega and his wife must be particularly nervous. No country was closer to Cuba and Venezuela than Nicaragua. “Rumors are flying all over the place,” continued our friend. “Some say the Ortegas have activated their revolutionary, Sandinista-era cells. Nobody dares to say anything out loud, because anyone might be a member of a cell, reporting to the Ortegas who said what to whom...and who might be an enemy. Danny Ortega is 80 years old...and they say he’s sick. It’s his wife who actually runs things. But, there’s going to be a change. Nobody believes the family dynasty can hold onto power - at least not in the present form - for much longer.”

This could be good news. Or bad news. Most people would say that a change in government in Nicaragua couldn’t be bad. But that’s what they thought in Russia in 1917. And France in 1787. And America in 2024. Here at Bonner Private Research we maintain our sunny disposition by realizing that however bad things are they can always get worse. In the US, worse is where we think things are headed. But not necessarily here in Central America.

We’re down on the ‘Nicaraguan Riviera’ enjoying sunlight and beaches...fresh fruit and AC...and the happy status of marginal people everywhere. We sit on our porch and hear the waves crashing onto the long beach down below. A housemaid brings us a cup of coffee. A dictator in Managua? An autocrat? A big man? Not our problem!

Last week, out for a swim, we stepped on a string ray. It was very painful. “Did you go to the clinic?” asked a friend. “Nah, we went to the source of all knowledge - the internet - and asked it what to do. It said to put the foot in hot water. So, we sat on the edge of the tub with our foot in the water. Within seconds, the pain went away. As soon as we took it out of the hot water, however, the pain came back. We checked the internet again. It said to leave it there for an hour. So, we did. Then, it was completely cured.”

Apart from that, our visit to Nicaragua has been completely agreeable. And yet...here’s the message from the US State Department: "Reconsider travel to Nicaragua due to arbitrary enforcement of laws, the risk of wrongful detention, and limited healthcare availability. Exercise increased caution in Nicaragua due to crime."

Crime? Nicaragua has about six homicides per 100,000 people per year. In Baltimore, meanwhile, the mayor is celebrating a 50% drop in murder rates. But last year there were still four times as many homicides as Nicaragua. The US as a whole has a higher murder rate than Nicaragua too - at 10 per 100,000.

According to the locals, there are no gangs in Nicaragua...and no drugs. They are probably exaggerating, but one of the few advantages of a dictatorship is, generally, less free-lance crime. Dictatorship or Democracy, the feds aim for a monopoly on the use of force. Dictators dispense with the ‘rules based’ procedures – such as ‘due process of law’ - that protect criminals...political rivals...or people they don’t like. The result? A tighter monopoly on violence.

But dictators can lose control too. The Tren de Aragua gang is very active in Venezuela, apparently. It grew out of the crackdown on crime that put a large number of low-lifes in Venezuelan prisons. There, they formed alliances and traded skills, and built the gang that is so powerful today. In effect, the prisons turned into crime universities. And now the government must share its bully power with them.

Nicaragua doesn’t have that problem - yet. But a change of command is always dangerous. One of the charms of democracy is that its elections and succession rules avoid murderous power struggles. But once the rules go out the window, violence tends to come in the front door.

The revolution began in France in 1789 and lasted until the Coup de 18 Brumaire in 1799. There was the storming of the Bastille, the Great Fear, the Commune, the Jacobins, Monarchists, Reactionaries, Constitutionalists, Girondins, Montagnards, uprisings in Bordeaux, Lyon, Toulon, Marseilles, and Caen, and the Reign of Terror. There were also price controls, fake money and 3,500% inflation.

The civil war in Russia lasted five years following the abdication of the Tsar in 1917. Roughly 10 million people died - mostly civilians - until the ‘whites’ finally gave up in Vladivostok. They tried price controls and fake money too...one English pound was worth 45 rubles in 1917; by 1923, it was worth more than 5 million of them.

And here’s how the Ottoman Empire, 1566, avoided a power struggle. JSTOR Daily: When Mehmed III was crowned, he called his nineteen brothers into the throne room. They had nothing to fear, he told them, for he had only brought them there to be circumcised. In the next room, the assassins were waiting. One by one, the princes trouped in. One by one, they were throttled with a silken bowstring. The youngest was only eleven. Mehmed III didn’t stop at killing his living brothers. He also executed 15 women pregnant with his father’s unborn children. He thus consolidated his authority through bloodshed by killing the competition.

With luck, the transition, when it comes, will be peaceful in Nicaragua...and in the US. Our old friend leans forward. “They saw how easy it was to take out the Maduros,” he whispers. “And they don’t want to end up in a New York prison. I think they’re secretly negotiating with the CIA already.” More to come..."

"Economic Market Snapshot 1/26/26"

"Economic Market Snapshot 1/26/26"

Down the rabbit hole of psychopathic greed and insanity...
Only the consequences are real - to you!
"It's a Big Club, and you ain't in it. 
You and I are not in the Big Club."
- George Carlin
o
Market Data Center, Live Updates:
Financial Stress Index

"The OFR Financial Stress Index (OFR FSI) is a daily market-based snapshot of stress in global financial markets. It is constructed from 33 financial market variables, such as yield spreads, valuation measures, and interest rates. The OFR FSI is positive when stress levels are above average, and negative when stress levels are below average. The OFR FSI incorporates five categories of indicators: creditequity valuationfunding, safe assets and volatility. The FSI shows stress contributions by three regions: United Statesother advanced economies, and emerging markets."
Job cuts and much more.
Commentary, highly recommended:
"The more I see of the monied classes,
the better I understand the guillotine."
- George Bernard Shaw
Oh yeah... beyond words. Any I know anyway...
And now... The End Game...
o

Sunday, January 25, 2026

"This Winter Is About To Take A Dangerous Turn"

Full screen recommended.
Max Velocity - Severe Weather Center, 1/25/26, 6:53 PM
"This Winter Is About To Take A Dangerous Turn"
Comments here:

"People Are Dumpster Diving As A New Shocking Trend Spreading All Over America"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 1/25/26
"People Are Dumpster Diving As A New 
Shocking Trend Spreading All Over America"

"In today's video, we're taking a closer look at something that's been happening all across America - people are turning to dumpster diving outside grocery stores and major retailers to get thousands of dollars worth of products for free. With the cost of everything rising so rapidly, this has become more than just a survival tactic - it's actually turning into a viral trend on social media. We'll be watching some eye-opening TikTok clips that show just how much perfectly good food and merchandise is being thrown away by big grocery chains and retailers. From frozen foods and fresh produce to brand new cosmetics and clothing with tags still on, the amount of waste is honestly staggering. What's even more striking is seeing families - including what appears to be a mom with her teenage kid - out there trying to make ends meet this way.

But this isn't just about people who are down on their luck. We're seeing folks with nice cars stopping by dumpsters, and that really tells you something about how the middle class is struggling too. When people who seem to be doing okay financially are resorting to dumpster diving, you have to wonder what that says about where we are as a country right now.

What's particularly frustrating is learning why these companies choose to throw everything away instead of donating to food banks or homeless shelters. The tax write-off system actually incentivizes waste over charity, and that's something that really needs to be talked about.

We'll also look at how some people have turned this into an actual business model - finding products in dumpsters and reselling them online for profit. While this does prevent good products from ending up in landfills, it raises questions about safety and what we're comfortable with as consumers.

Throughout this video, I'm reflecting on what this trend reveals about our economy, our society, and the choices companies are making that affect all of us. It's not just about the individual stories we're seeing - it's about the bigger picture of what's happening when families feel like they have no other choice.

I'd love to hear your thoughts on this. Have you noticed the cost of groceries affecting your family? What do you think about companies throwing away perfectly good products instead of donating them? And honestly - would you buy something that came from a dumpster if you knew it was safe?

Let me know in the comments what you think about all of this. Are we seeing a new normal, or is this just a temporary response to tough times? I really value hearing from you all, and I hope this video gets us thinking about some important questions. Thanks for watching, and I'll see you in the next one."
Comments here:

Jeremiah Babe, "Tornado Warning In Alabama, Sirens Going Off"

Full screen recommended.
Jeremiah Babe, 1/25/26
"Tornado Warning In Alabama, Sirens Going Off"
Comments here:

"National Emergency: Winter Storm Fern, 2,300-Mile Ice Shield Paralyzes 35 States"

Full screen recommended.
John Smith, 1/25/26
"National Emergency: Winter Storm Fern,
2,300-Mile Ice Shield Paralyzes 35 States"
"Winter Storm Fern has officially been declared a National Emergency as a 2,000-mile ice and snow shield paralyzes over 35 states. From a "catastrophic" ice zone in the South to record-shattering snowfall in the Northeast, we are breaking down everything you need to know about this historic event. We discuss the Polar Vortex fracture, the life-threatening "Flash Freeze," and the potential for long-term power outages."
Comments here:

"1 Million Already Without Power - Worse Hits the Northeast Next"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 1/25/26, 4 PM EST
"1 Million Already Without Power - 
Worse Hits the Northeast Next"
Comments here: