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Sunday, March 29, 2026

"The Food Supply Chain Is Breaking. Again"

"The Food Supply Chain Is Breaking. Again"
by John Rubino

"Spring has sprung, which means seeds that were planted in late winter are starting to germinate. They’re hungry and will only grow to their full nutritional potential if they’re well fed. But that, apparently, isn’t happening, as fertilizer supplies are interrupted by yet another pointless Middle East war. The result? Global food shortages that might dwarf the COVID-era Costco-hoarding mess of recent memory. Here’s an overview: Shanaka Anslem Perera @shanaka86

BREAKING: The nitrogen trap just closed. Three locks snapped shut simultaneously. The planting window is closing behind them. And the food the world eats next year is now being decided by molecules that cannot reach the soil in time.

Lock one: the Strait of Hormuz. The IRGC permissioned corridor allows oil tankers from friendly nations to pay $2 million in yuan and pass. It does not allow fertilizer vessels to pass at any price. Zero approved fertiliser transits in 24 days. The Gulf supplies 49 percent of the world’s exported urea and roughly 30 percent of traded ammonia. That supply is not delayed. It is denied. The gate opens for molecules that fund the gatekeeper. It stays closed for molecules that feed the planet.

Lock two: Russia. The world’s largest exporter of ammonium nitrate just halted all AN exports until after April 21. Three to four million tonnes per year, gone from global markets at the exact moment the Northern Hemisphere needs it most. The official reason is “domestic priority.” The strategic effect is leverage. Russia earns windfall revenue from the oil price spike its ally’s war created, then removes the fertilizer that farmers need to plant through the crisis. The disease and the cure, again, from the same address.

Lock three: China. Beijing has banned exports of nitrogen-potassium blends and phosphate fertilisers through August 2026. China is the world’s largest phosphate producer and a major nitrogen supplier. The ban removes the last alternative source that could have compensated for Hormuz and Russia. Three locks. Three countries. Three deliberate decisions timed to the same biological calendar.

The biological calendar does not negotiate. Corn requires nitrogen at the V6 to VT growth stage or kernel set is permanently reduced. Wheat requires it at tillering and jointing or grain fill collapses. Rice requires it at transplanting or yield drops 20 to 40 percent in low-input systems. These are not economic models. They are cellular processes. The plant either receives nitrogen during the window or it does not. If it does not, no subsequent application, no price increase, no policy reversal can recover what was lost. The damage is written into the biology of the seed.

The US Corn Belt window closes mid-April. European top-dressing is happening now. Indian Kharif preparation begins in May. Bangladeshi Boro rice transplanting is underway this week. Every one of these windows is closing while the three largest sources of nitrogen on Earth are simultaneously locked: Hormuz by military blockade, Russia by export decree, China by trade ban.

The USDA Prospective Plantings report arrives March 31. The FAO Food Price Index publishes April 3. These will quantify what the molecules already know: the nitrogen did not arrive. The yield loss is locked in. The 5 to 10 percent global drag will concentrate where the buffers are thinnest: subsistence farms in Bangladesh, Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, where a 20 percent shortfall does not mean lower profits. It means hunger.

Sri Lanka banned synthetic fertilizer in 2021. Rice yields collapsed 40 percent. The government fell. In 2008, fertiliser and oil spiked simultaneously and food riots erupted across 30 countries. In 2026, the strait blocks fertilizer while Russia and China withdraw the alternatives, and the planting windows close on a planet with nowhere else to turn.

The war is fought with missiles. The famine is fought with molecules. The molecules are trapped behind three locks on three continents, timed to the one calendar that cannot be paused, extended, or negotiated: the calendar written into the DNA of every seed in the soil. Read a deeper dive here.

This is Why We Should Have Gardens…and Gold, Goats, and Guns: Even after the pandemic, many (most?) people in the developed world continue to view “food supply chain disruption” as a tin-foil-hat concern. They’re apparently wrong. Again. And note that higher food prices are just the first-order effect of a fertilizer shortage. The second and third-order impacts are geopolitical and possibly military. So let this latest “peak complexity” signal encourage you to keep prepping. Anticipate shortages, higher prices, even more chaotic politics, and take some of the steps we’ve been discussing here."
If they'll do this over a TV, what happens when there's no food?

"Jar Farming for Dummies"

"Jar Farming for Dummies"
By MN Gordon

"Starting a big war in the Middle East is much easier than stopping it. This is the lesson President Trump is now learning. After one month of dropping bombs and launching missiles at Iran, Trump has called for a time out. A proposed one-month ceasefire. He even put a 15-point peace plan on the table. It was delivered via intermediaries in Pakistan. The proposal included a comprehensive off-ramp to address everything from nuclear disarmament and missile limits to reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Tehran quickly put a match to it and countered with five conditions of its own – including demands for reparations.

It was but one month ago when Operation Epic Fury kicked off. What was intended to be a brief operation of destruction rained down on Iran, turned into something much greater. The initial shock and awe adeptly targeted high-level leadership and missile infrastructure. But the operation quickly spiraled into a larger war of attrition that physically severed the world’s most vital energy artery – the Strait of Hormuz.

The initial success was overshadowed by a grim, structural reality. Market volatility is one thing. Physical depletion of global resource reserves, which puts a big squeeze on every major economy, is entirely another. Perhaps some limited shipping will be allowed to traverse the Strait as the war rages on. One can only hope. Because if it remains closed for another 30 days, the emergency oil and gas reserves held by nations like Japan and Germany will stop flowing. In fact, hundreds of gas stations have already run dry across Australia.

One more month of this will have dramatic consequences. Namely, it will result in the forced deindustrialization of energy-dependent economies as critical links in the world’s just-in-time supply chain breakdown. When shipping containers stack up in idle ports and fertilizer plants go dark, the survival of economies across the globe are at risk.

Physical Shortages: Month one, by and large, was nothing. The impacts to the average person were mainly limited to sticker shock at the gas pump. Brent crude briefly spiked above $120 a barrel, and everyone’s 401(k) took a modest nosedive. Month two, however, is when things really start to get serious. That’s when higher prices are met with physical shortages. The next 30 days are the real make or break moment for the global economy.

In March, the world survived on oil and gas that was already in the pipes and the tanks. The U.S. and its allies tapped into strategic reserves to help buffer the price spikes. But those reserves are a very short-term solution. Around 20 percent of the world’s Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) is currently trapped behind the Strait. QatarEnergy, the world’s LNG heavyweight, has had to declare force majeure on exports.

Most major industrial centers in Europe and Asia keep about 30 to 45 days of gas in easily accessible storage. If the Strait doesn’t open by mid-April, we aren’t just talking about higher gas prices and heating bills. We’re talking about mandatory industrial shutdowns. If you can’t power the factory, you can’t make the product.

Similarly, if you can’t supply fertilizer, you can’t grow food. In addition to being one of the world’s top suppliers of oil and gas, the Persian Gulf is also one of the world’s top suppliers of agricultural fertilizers. What’s more, fertilizer shortages couldn’t have come at a worse time. It’s spring planting season in the northern hemisphere. Farmers in the U.S. Midwest, Brazil, and India are looking at prices of nitrogen fertilizers that are 30 percent to 50 percent more expensive than they were four weeks ago. And that’s if they can find them at all. If supply constraints persist through April, farmers will simply plant less or conserve fertilizer. That means lower crop yields this fall. Moreover, it means there will be a global food security emergency that will peak in about six months.

Energy Holidays and Empty Shelves: You may have also heard of looming helium shortages. Most of the world’s helium, which is essential for cooling the machines that make high-end AI chips, comes from Qatar. High-end semiconductor fabricators in Taiwan and Arizona have about a three-month buffer of these specialty gases. One month’s supply is already gone. If we lose another, there could be a shortage of chips that power everything from your phone to the newest AI models.

If the Keep Out signs stay up at the Strait through April, there could be several disagreeable consequences. For example, there will be energy holidays (i.e., forced rationing) in energy-hungry nations. Factories that make cars, plastics, and chemicals will go dark to conserve power for hospitals and homes.

Shipping companies will also avoid the Persian Gulf. This will add an additional 15-day detour around Africa for goods being shipped from Asia to Europe. The additional transport time will add costs to imported goods.

Many economies were already stalling out before the attacks on Iran. But now, if 20 percent of the world’s oil remains offline through May, it’s a near certainty that major economies like Germany, Japan, and China – and the USA – will slip into a recession. In short, month one was merely a siren. Month two is the start of the actual physical impact. Specifically, the global economy will move from higher costs to shortages.

A world where shortages of everything from medical instruments to basic consumer electronics and manufacturing components, and essentials like gasoline and fresh fruits and vegetables, could soon be the reality. The buffer period provided by global strategic reserves is disappearing with each passing day. While the first 30 days stimulated a chaotic news cycle and wild market swings. The next 30 days will stimulate a structural shift in how people live.

Jar Farming for Dummies: At this point, there doesn’t appear to be a quick and easy end to the war with Iran that will restore passage of the Strait of Hormuz. If anything, things are escalating with the prospect of ground troops becoming more and more likely. So, without reservation, hard times are coming to a town near you.

The just-in-time world was not built for a sustained severance of its primary jugular. When the oil and gas stops flowing, the helium stops cooling the fabrication machines in Taiwan, and the nitrogen stops hitting the soil in the Midwest, the convenience and abundance of modern life break down. So, too, does the debt and the credit edifice that sustains it.

As part of the New Year edition of the Economic Prism, in the closing section titled Preparing for Chaos, we included one practical action you can take to prepare for war, inflation, or the breakdown of an ever-increasing complex digital world.Many people laughed at our suggestion. Few took our advice. But, for fun and for free, we’ll revisit this simple, but important recommendation…

Assuming you have food storage, and some basic backup power such as a simple battery storage system that can charge with portable solar panels, there is the critical, and often overlooked need for micronutrients. After two weeks, no matter how much protein and carbs you have, you need micronutrients for your brain and body, or you start losing mental clarity, strength, and a well-functioning digestive system. The simple solution is sprouting.

To get started, take a look at Sprout People. There you will find a great education section – simplified for dummies – and a large variety of nutrients you probably never imagined could be sprouted. We have no financial or business arrangement or affiliation with Sprout People. We’re merely passing on information we believe you will find valuable. When the time comes, the ability to be a ‘jar farmer’ to sustain health via sprouts will be essential."

Saturday, March 28, 2026

"Millions Are Losing Interest in Everything... America Has Changed"

Full screen recommended.
The Unfolded States, 3/28/26
"Millions Are Losing Interest in Everything...
 America Has Changed"
"Millions of Americans are quietly losing interest in the things that once gave life meaning. From rising living costs and workplace burnout to social disconnection and growing uncertainty about the future, this video breaks down why everyday life in America no longer feels the same. Using real economic and social trends, we explore how financial pressure, loneliness, housing stress, and changing expectations are reshaping the way people work, live, and think about the future. This is not just about emotion. It is about what years of pressure can do to an entire society. Do you think America is truly changing, or are people simply rethinking what success and stability mean in 2026? Share your thoughts in the comments."
Comments here:

"10 Signs America's Financial Collapse Is Already Here"

Michael Bordenaro, 3/28/26
"10 Signs America's Financial Collapse Is Already Here"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 3/28/26
"Americans Panic - 
Gas Stations Start Limiting Purchases"
Comments here:

"Catastrophe Begins: U.S. Base Hit; War Escalation Will Send Oil Soaring"

Jeremiah Babe.3/28/26
"Catastrophe Begins: U.S. Base Hit; 
War Escalation Will Send Oil Soaring"
Comments here:

"The US/Israel-Iran War One Month In: ‘Who Will Say Uncle First?’"

"The US/Israel-Iran War One Month In:
 ‘Who Will Say Uncle First?’"
by Leo Hohmann

"The Middle East theater of World War III has officially been raging for one month. And the U.S./Israel war on Iran has taken new steps up the escalatory ladder this weekend, following a pattern of escalation each weekend since the war started on Feb. 28 with an unprovoked attack on Iranian sovereign territory.

My fear from the start was that by biting off more than it could chew with Iran, the U.S. Empire would be exposed as a paper tiger. That is now looking more likely by the day, with the Houthis now entering the war on the side of Iran and Iran showing it is far from running low on missiles like we have been told by our largely corrupted Western media.

We were told that the war would be quick and easy. That Iran was “more vulnerable than ever” and we had a “historic opportunity,” in the words of cartoonish politicians like Lindsey Graham and dishonest Fox News military generals like Gen. Jack Keane.

They assassinated the leadership of Iran and their replacements, and the replacements of the replacements, Trump told us. The Iranian military troops are all “hiding in their bunkers” cowering in fear, Trump’s equally cartoonish War Secretary Pete Hegseth told us just a few days after the war started. Without a functioning leadership structure, it was just a matter of time before they exited their bunkers waving little white flags. All of this talk amounted to the fantasies of sick men who believe their own lies about America being the “strongest military force the world has ever seen, and it’s not even close,” as Trump assured us.

Those who refused to give their minds over to the cult of Trump knew better. You can’t cut the head off the snake when the snake has a thousand heads. You can’t assassinate your way to regime change. You can’t kill your way to a safer, more peaceful world.

These are all presuppositions that need to be exploded and forever dispelled as lies leading to horrific consequences. If these axioms were true, then Hamas and Hezbollah should have gone extinct long ago. They have been pummeled by a superior military force for decades, that being the Israeli Defense Forces, and yet they still exist. They still fight back.

Rather than reflexively celebrating each new assassination by the U.S. and Israel, maybe we should look from 30,000 feet above at the overall effect of this policy. It has galvanized the Iranians against us. Even many who opposed the Islamic regime now support it. And not only the Iranians but Shia Muslims everywhere are seething in anger against the Great Satan. In Iraq, in Bahrain, in Yemen, in Lebanon, and everywhere they reside, which by the way includes places like Dearborn, Detroit and Hamtramck, Michigan. All the while, U.S. government officials lie to us about why they started this war to begin with.

Financial analyst Catherine Austin Fitts explained in a 12-minute video clip recorded on March 26 the real reasons Iran had to be attacked and its regime taken out. Spoiler alert: It has absolutely nothing to do with Islam, nuclear development or freeing an oppressed people. It has to do with “leakage” in the global financial system and corresponding Western control grid.
As I reported on March 1, the U.S. and Israel made two massive blunders on the first day of the war on Feb. 28 - they killed the ayatollah, the spiritual leader for 300 million Shia Muslims, and they killed 175+ Shia school girls in southern Iran. This opened Pandora’s box by making it a religious war and, in the eyes of the Shia, an unjust and immoral war against not just their religion, but their leaders, their communities, their people. It doesn’t matter if you think the ayatollah was a bad guy, a terrorist, or whatever your favorite label of choice. It doesn’t matter if you think those dead school girls were just collateral damage. What matters is how your enemy sees it and how they respond. And what the Trump-Netanyahu tag-team’s response to the responses will be.

With major new escalations coming every weekend, we could easily be staring down the barrel of full-on World War III and potential attacks on American soil in the near future. The hornet’s nest has not only been kicked. It has been turned upside down and emptied of its decades-long resentment against U.S. power, or the misuse of power as the Iranians see it. Their memories extend back to the first economic sanctions slapped on them 46 years ago. They remember the atrocities committed against them by the U.S. ally Saddam Hussein in the 1980s, when the U.S. used Saddam as a proxy to attack the center of Shia Islam while cuddling up to Sunni Islam.

Are we prepared for the blowback of this pent-up anger? As individuals? As families? As a nation? I would submit that we aren’t. The Trump administration has destabilized the world and made it much more dangerous for Americans, especially those living or visiting abroad, but also here at home. The saddest thing is that it all could have been avoided. It’s too late for that now, however, so all we can do is prepare for the worst, which will include attacks on American cities. It’s inevitable."
o
Full screen recommended.
Prof. John Mearsheimer, 3/28/26
"Israel Out of Missiles! Iran Ready for Biggest Strike Yet"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Larry C. Johnson, 3/28/26
"Israel Is Surrounded - The Nightmare Begins"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: George Harrison, "What Is Life"

George Harrison, "What Is Life"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Why is the sky near Antares and Rho Ophiuchi so colorful? The colors result from a mixture of objects and processes. Fine dust illuminated from the front by starlight produces blue reflection nebulae. Gaseous clouds whose atoms are excited by ultraviolet starlight produce reddish emission nebulae. Backlit dust clouds block starlight and so appear dark.
Antares, a red supergiant and one of the brighter stars in the night sky, lights up the yellow-red clouds on the lower center. Rho Ophiuchi lies at the center of the blue nebula near the top. The distant globular cluster M4 is visible just to the right of Antares, and to the lower left of the red cloud engulfing Sigma Scorpii. These star clouds are even more colorful than humans can see, emitting light across the electromagnetic spectrum.”

The Poet: Wendell Berry, "The Circles Of Our Lives"

"The Circles Of Our Lives"

"Within the circles of our lives
we dance the circles of the years,
the circles of the seasons
within the circles of the years,
the cycles of the moon,
within the circles of the seasons,
the circles of our reasons
within the cycles of the moon.

Again, again we come and go,
changed, changing. Hands
join, unjoin in love and fear,
grief and joy. The circles turn,
each giving into each, into all.

Only music keeps us here,
each by all the others held.
In the hold of hands and eyes
we turn in pairs, that joining
joining each to all again.
And then we turn aside, alone,
out of the sunlight gone
into the darker circles of return,
Within the circles of our lives..."

- Wendell Berry
“We are travelers on a cosmic journey, stardust,
swirling and dancing in the eddies and whirlpools of Infinity.
Life is Eternal.
We have stopped for a moment to encounter 
each other, to meet, to love, to share.
This is a precious moment. It is a little parenthesis in Eternity.”

- Paulo Coelho
"We all know that something is eternal. And it ain't houses and it ain't names, and it ain't earth, and it ain't even the stars... Everybody knows in their bones that something is eternal, and that something has to do with human beings. All the greatest people ever lived have been telling us that for five thousand years and yet you'd be surprised how people are always losing hold of it. There's something way down deep that's eternal about every human being."
- Thornton Wilder

Free Download: George Orwell, "Animal Farm"

"Animal Farm"
by George Orwell

Biographical note: "George Orwell, 1903-1950, was the pen name used by British author and journalist Eric Arthur Blair. During most of his professional life time Orwell was best known for his journalism, both in the British press and in books such as "Homage to Catalonia," describing his activities during the Spanish Civil War, and "Down and Out in Paris and London," describing a period of poverty in these cities. Orwell is best remembered today for two of his novels, "Animal Farm" and "Nineteen Eighty-Four."

Description: Power corrupts, but absolute power corrupts absolutely- and this is vividly and eloquently proved in Orwell's short novel. "Animal Farm" is a simple fable of great symbolic value, and as Orwell himself explained: "it is the history of a revolution that went wrong." The novel can be seen as the historical analysis of the causes of the failure of communism, or as a mere fairy-tale; in any case it tells a good story that aims to prove that human nature and diversity prevent people from being equal and happy, or at least equally happy.

"Animal Farm" tells the simple and tragic story of what happens when the oppressed farm animals rebel, drive out Mr. Jones, the farmer, and attempt to rule the farm themselves, on an equal basis. What the animals seem to have aimed at was a utopian sort of communism, where each would work according to his capacity, respecting the needs of others. The venture failed, and "Animal Farm" ended up being a dictatorship of pigs, who were the brightest, and most idle of the animals.

Orwell's mastery lies in his presentation of the horrors of totalitarian regimes, and his analysis of communism put to practice, through satire and simple story-telling. The structure of the novel is skillfully organized, and the careful reader may, for example, detect the causes of the unworkability of communism even from the first chapter. This is deduced from Orwell's description of the various animals as they enter the barn and take their seats to listen to the revolutionary preaching of Old Major, father of communism in Animal Farm. Each animal has different features and attitude; the pigs, for example, "settled down in the straw immediately in front of the platform", which is a hint on their future role, whereas Clover, the affectionate horse "made a sort of wall" with her foreleg to protect some ducklings.

So, it appears that the revolution was doomed from the beginning, even though it began in idealistic optimism as expressed by the motto "no animal must ever tyrannize over his own kind. Weak or strong, clever or simple, we are all brothers." "When the animals drive out Mr. Jones, they create their "Seven Commandments" which ensure equality and prosperity for all the animals. The pigs, however, being the natural leaders, managed to reverse the commandments, and through terror and propaganda establish the rule of an elite of pigs, under the leadership of Napoleon, the most revered and sinister pig.

"Animal Farm" successfully presents how the mechanism of propaganda and brainwashing works in totalitarian regimes, by showing how the pigs could make the other animals believe practically anything. Responsible for the propaganda was Squealer, a pig that "could turn black into white." Squealer managed to change the rule from "all animals are equal" to "all animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others." He managed to convince the other animals that it was for their sake that the pigs ate most of the apples and drank most of the milk, that leadership was "heavy responsibility" and therefore the animals should be thankful to Napoleon, that what they saw may have been something they "dreamed", and when everything else failed he would use the threat of "Jones returning" to silence the animals. In this simple but effective way, Orwell presents the tragedy and confusion of thought control to the extent that one seems better off simply believing that "Napoleon is always right".

Orwell's criticism of the role of the Church is also very effective. In Animal Farm, the Church is represented by Moses, a tame raven, who talks of "Sugarcandy Mountain", a happy country in the sky "where we poor animals shall rest forever from our labors". It is interesting to observe that when Old Major was first preaching revolutionary communism, Moses was sleeping in the barn, which satirizes the Church being caught asleep by communism. It is also important to note that the pig-dictators allowed and indirectly encouraged Moses; it seems that it suited the pigs to have the animals dreaming of a better life after death so that they wouldn't attempt to have a better life while still alive...

In "Animal Farm," Orwell describes how power turned the pigs from simple "comrades" to ruthless dictators who managed to walk on two legs, and carry whips. The story may be seen as an analysis of the Soviet regime, or as a warning against political power games of an absolute nature and totalitarianism in general. For this reason, the story ends with a hair-raising warning to all humankind: "The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again: but already it was impossible to say which was which."
Free download George Orwell’s “Animal Farm" here:

"Crabs in a Bucket"

"Crabs in a Bucket"
by Sarah Robinson

"When I was a little girl, I lived very close (an hour and fifteen minutes) to the Florida panhandle beaches. Which meant we spent a TON of time there. Early evening was one of my favorite times to walk the beach with my mom and my older brothers. We were all clean and fed and slightly sun weary but still desperate to be outside. So, we would grab flashlights, dip nets and a bucket and search the ocean’s edge for crabs. We would catch a bucket full in an evening and drag them back home where my mom or my grandmother would cook them up into something delicious. (Yes, I was traumatized by the crabs being put into boiling water, but that story is for another day.)

The problem was that as we made that long walk home carrying crabs, there were always one or two who figured out how to climb up to the edge of the bucket in an attempt to escape. Every now and then we would have to tap the edge of the bucket to knock them back down. Because I was too little to carry the bucket very far, I got the job of watching for potential escapees. And I noticed something... well… odd. More often than not, as a crab would begin to inch its way higher to the edge of the bucket, the other crabs would latch on to him and pull him back down. I watched this scenario play out again and again, year after year.

Fast forward to this morning. As I was drinking my coffee and perusing my twitter stream, and up pops this gem from @paulocoelho (He wrote "The Alchemist", one of my all time favorite books): “Only mediocrity is safe. Get ready to be attacked, and be the best.” Maybe it was the early hour. Maybe it was my post-event mushy brain. I don’t know. But the minute I read Paulo’s tweet, I thought of those crabs in a bucket. So I sent him this tweet: “I’m thinking of crabs in a bucket. They always try to pull down the one who’s figured out how to escape.”

Paulo liked my analogy so much that he retweeted it and I’ve spent my morning connecting with people all over the world who liked it, too. It resonated deeply for a lot of people. I did a quick Google search and discovered that “Crab Mentality” is actually an official phrase that roughly means “if I can’t have it, neither can you.” And it is talked about. A lot.

There will always be people who will subtly or not so subtly try to keep us from escaping. Why? Because our escape threatens their mediocre existence. Pulling us down, sabotaging our efforts, picking apart our brilliant ideas – all of that keeps them feeling safe. And living undisturbed mediocre lives.

So what if we added a new piece to the crab mentality picture? Imagine a crab, or a group of crabs on the other side of the bucket building a ladder to aid your escape. They managed to crawl out of the bucket in spite of all the energetic attempts to pull them backwards. Because they’ve tasted freedom and they know your struggle, they are putting energy into aiding and abetting your escape.

I believe that for those of us determined to get out of the bucket, such a group exists. It may take some time to find them, but they are there, ready to throw a safety rope over the edge and pull us out. Start listening for them. Start looking for them. They are there. Reach just a little further and they’ll meet you at the edge of the bucket."

The Daily "Near You?"

Las Cruces, New Mexico, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"The Unraveling"

"The Unraveling"
by John Wilder

"The unraveling continues. In one sense, what’s happening is predictable. Looking back in history, while not everything happens in the same way, things very much rhyme. That’s why certain aspects of the current financial collapse are very, very familiar.

The Fed® still has enough influence that it can stop a snowball. Can the Fed® stop an avalanche? Not so much. They may have some tricks to push the day of reckoning down the line if it isn’t off the rails. Again, like a presidential election, it’s a short-term solution to a long-term problem.

If it were merely a financial problem, the actions might be enough. But it’s not just financial. Other problems include extreme societal decadence. Decadence is a strong word. When I was a kid, it was applied to places like the late Roman Empire, or Willy Wonka’s® Chocolate Factory™ where those Umpa-Loompas wore those scanty tight outfits.

But when people take kids – elementary-age kids – to Pride®©™ parades that contain actual nudity and sex acts between adults, and then suggest putting hormones into five-year-olds because they pretended to cook in a pretend kitchen one day, you know that this is the point where God told Noah, “Get the boat,” and told Lot, “Tell everyone to wear sunglasses – I don’t care if it’s night.”

Whatever fetish sex act that any individual wants to do “because it’s Thursday” now seems to take the place of virtue. Replacing actual virtue with temporary individual passions is exactly what every single functioning society in history has avoided to in order to remain functioning. When people follow passions that are productive, like building rockets, they add to society. When people act on passions counter to virtue? Those passions consume and destroy society. Period.

We don’t live in a world where “if it feels good, do it” can ever be a policy that lead to a productive society. At some point, we must be guided by virtue, we have to have a shared vision for a future, and a shared desire to build. Can you imagine a single event that would bring us all together again? I can’t. We have to have that shared vision – if nothing else, to survive. Do we have it?

We do not. We are divided. The idea of a selfless devotion to duty seems to have (in many places) evaporated. Cops are supposed to put themselves into danger to save the innocent – that’s the only reason we put up with the rest of the nonsense that they get up to. If they have changed their motto from “Protect and Serve” to “Hide Until We Can and Give Traffic Tickets to People That Don’t Scare Us” then they’re not much use.

Globalism is likewise something that sounds good, but isn’t. I can understand the need for some places like, say, deserts to import grain and Alaska to import medicine and export oil and good vibes. But can someone tell me that we’re in a better and safer position as a country now that we depend on far-flung nations for things. When I talked to The Boy about careers, the advice I gave him was simple – don’t do anything that someone can do over the Internet. If you do, you’re competing with a job with millions or billions of people.

We have reached the stage of cultural collapse. I’m in favor of capitalism – but amoral capitalism is different. When capitalism is allowed to meet any need, the result isn’t good. Like any system, it needs boundaries. As John Adams said, “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”

Freedom needs boundaries. Freedom needs responsibility. Liberty, real liberty, requires obligation for stability. Otherwise? It descends into chaos.

So, we’ve established that we’re in a difficult place. The things that we depended upon are slowly slipping away. The economy is in a very precarious place, culturally we’re shattered to the point that not even another 9-11 would bring us together. The difficulties that we see from here on out won’t serve to bring us together, they will bring us apart. How about the economic difficulties related to just high fuel prices alone?

The Lefties love it, even as it destroys our economy. Heck destruction of the economy might even be the point. But stresses have consequences. If I drop an orange, it will fall. If we destroy an economy, it will fail. Some parts of it will be predictable: interest rates going up will make housing prices go down. Simple.

The one thing that I can tell you, is what comes next won’t be like what came before. The problems that we have rhyme with the problems of the past, but they’re not the same. During the Great Depression, we were at least (mostly) homogeneous as a country. Now, not so much. The end state is tied to the initial conditions. And the initial conditions of the Great Depression were greatly different than they are today, so there’s no way that we’ll see the same results. And things will never go back to “normal” because we simply cannot go back in time, and there isn’t any such thing as “normal” nor any time period which is “normal”. They will be different.

What we have, though, is the rhyme. It won’t allow us to predict perfectly. But it will allow us to see, dimly."
Related:

"We're Gonna Need Bigger Body Bags"

"We're Gonna Need Bigger Body Bags"
by Mike Adams

"A 2023 report by the American Security Project found that 68% of active-duty U.S. service members are classified as either overweight or obese. That means nearly 7 out of 10 U.S. soldiers are too fat to fight. Iran’s soldiers, who vastly outnumber the U.S. troops set to invade Iran, do not have an obesity problem. They don’t live on Burger King and McDonald’s fast food.

Obese U.S. soldiers are the perfect reflection of the failed U.S. empire: A culture of excess calories but malnutrition. A culture that favors artificially-flavored fast food over authentic food that’s slow and intentional. The U.S. military sending fat soldiers to die in Iran is the perfect end cap to a failed empire that treats its own citizens like cattle, and its enemies like sub-human animals.

When dead U.S. soldiers come home in body bags (by the thousands), those body bags will have to be XXL just to fit the corpses of the soldiers who were raised on artificial food and sent to die in a foreign war that was started for artificial reasons by a delusional artificial president who funds his military by printing artificial currency."
"New analysis video: U.S. Troops Are Incapable of 
Defeating Iranian Soldiers in a Ground War" 

- HealthRanger (@HealthRanger) March 27, 2026

"Gerald Celente, "Alert! The Most Dangerous Time, The "Greatest Depression" is Coming"

Full screen recommended.
Prepper News, 3/28/26
"Gerald Celente, "Alert! The Most Dangerous Time, 
The "Greatest Depression" is Coming"
"Farmers across the country are being pushed to the edge - and many are losing everything. Costs are rising, conditions are getting tougher, and for some… it’s becoming impossible to keep going. What’s happening right now isn’t just a bad season - it’s part of a bigger shift that’s starting to impact farms nationwide. But what’s really causing it? In this video, we break down what’s happening behind the scenes, why farmers are struggling more than ever, and what this could mean for food prices, supply, and the economy."
Comments here:

"US-Israel-Iran War, 3/28/26"

"US-Israel-Iran War, 3/28/26"
Full screen recommended.
Prof. Jeffrey Sachs, 3/28/26
"Israel Just Activated Nukes! 
The War’s Most Horrifying Phase Begins"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Col. Douglas Macgregor, 3/28/26
"Trump's Last Gamble - One Move From Disaster"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Daniel Davis/Deep Dive, 3/28/26
"Deep Dive Intel Briefing: 
What We Learned This Week 3/28/2026"
Comments here:
o


Full screen recommended.
Glenn Diesen, 3/28/26
"Lawrence Wilkerson:
 Israel May Cease to Exist & Launch Nuclear Strike"
"Lawrence Wilkerson is a retired Colonel in the US Army and the former Chief of Staff to the US Secretary of State. Colonel Wilkerson discusses why the war against Iran could destroy Israel, and also the consequences if Iran develops a nuclear deterrent."
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 

Dan, I Allegedly, "I Need Help with My Mortgage!"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 3/28/26
"I Need Help with My Mortgage!"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Michael Bordenaro, 3/28/26
"2 Main Reasons Boomers Can't Sell Their House"
Comments here:

Adventures With Danno, "Shocking Prices at Meijer"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 3/28/26
"Shocking Prices at Meijer"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Jay Reed, 3/28/26
"Farmers Are Losing Everything 
And It’s Getting Worse - Here’s Why"
"Farmers across the country are being pushed to the edge - and many are losing everything. Costs are rising, conditions are getting tougher, and for some… it’s becoming impossible to keep going. What’s happening right now isn’t just a bad season - it’s part of a bigger shift that’s starting to impact farms nationwide. But what’s really causing it? In this video, we break down what’s happening behind the scenes, why farmers are struggling more than ever, and what this could mean for food prices, supply, and the economy."
Comments here:

"12 Grocery Items Leaving Grocery Chains in 2026 (Final March Shipments!)"

Full screen recommended.
The State Explorer, 3/28/26
"12 Grocery Items Leaving Grocery Chains
 in 2026 (Final March Shipments!)"
"Grocery chains are quietly pulling these items from shelves right now - and most families won't notice until the space is already gone.What's happening isn't a shortage headline. It's margin math. Corporate buyers are making distribution cuts based on profit percentages, and twelve specific products are already in that process as of March 2026. Some cost under a dollar. One of them is something most people have actively avoided their whole life - and by the end of this video, that'll make a lot more sense.Here's what most prep content gets wrong. Everyone focuses on calories and protein. But the first systems that break down during any extended disruption are micronutrient-dependent ones - mood, immunity, cognitive clarity. Several items on this list cover exactly that gap.These aren't predictions. These are distribution decisions already made. You're finding out before the shelf space disappears."
Comments here:

Friday, March 27, 2026

"The Collapse of Everyday Life in America Is Worse Than It Looks"

Full screen recommended.
The Unfolded States, 3/27/26
"The Collapse of Everyday 
Life in America Is Worse Than It Looks"
"Everyday life in America has not suddenly collapsed, but the cost structure behind it has changed in a way that is harder to ignore. Even as inflation slows, housing, healthcare, insurance, and basic living expenses remain elevated, reshaping what it actually takes to maintain a middle-class lifestyle. This video breaks down the real gap between income and cost of living in America, showing how fixed expenses, rising debt, and reduced financial flexibility are creating a system that looks stable on the surface but is becoming more constrained underneath. If you’ve noticed that your income doesn’t stretch as far as it used to, this is not just a personal issue. It reflects a broader shift in the US middle class and the way everyday life is being reshaped in 2026."
Comments here:

"Alert! Multiple Nuclear Plants Hit! Another Aircraft Carrier! Russia Halts All Exports!"

Full screen recommended.
Prepper News, 3/27/26
"Alert! Multiple Nuclear Plants Hit! 
Another Aircraft Carrier! Russia Halts All Exports!"
Comments here:

"People Can Sense What's Coming Will Be Worse Than A Financial Crisis"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 3/27/26
"People Can Sense What's Coming 
Will Be Worse Than A Financial Crisis"

Something is shifting beneath the surface of the American economy, and more people are starting to feel it even if they can't quite put it into words. In this video, we're walking through some of the most telling signs that a major financial disruption may be closer than most people think, and why this one could look very different from anything we've seen before.

Michael Burry, the investor who famously predicted the 2008 crash, is raising the alarm again. His concern this time centers on the structural vulnerability of passive investing, the reversal of baby boomer capital flows, and the collapse of corporate buybacks that have been quietly propping up stock valuations for years. When someone with that track record starts talking about crashes becoming more violent and longer in duration, it's worth paying attention.

But the warning signs don't stop with the stock market. The U.S. Treasury has now acknowledged that the federal government holds roughly $6 trillion in assets against nearly $48 trillion in liabilities, and that figure doesn't even account for the long-term obligations tied to Medicare and Social Security. At the same time, over 111 million Americans are carrying credit card balances every month, with more than 27 million only able to afford minimum payments. Personal and commercial bankruptcies are climbing, and many households are already choosing between paying bills and buying groceries.

What makes this moment particularly fragile is how interconnected all of these pressures are. As the 2008 crisis showed us, it doesn't take a total collapse to trigger a chain reaction. It just takes enough stress in the right places. And right now, the stress is spreading across multiple fronts simultaneously, from a weakening job market and rising entry-level unemployment to an oil crisis that is driving up the cost of nearly everything Americans buy on a daily basis.

The situation in global energy markets is adding another layer of complexity that the economy is poorly positioned to absorb. With oil above $110 a barrel and diesel crossing five dollars a gallon, the stagflation pressure on households and the Federal Reserve is intensifying in ways that leave very little room to maneuver. Higher energy costs mean higher prices across the entire supply chain, and a Fed that cannot cut rates without risking more inflation is a Fed with its hands tied.

Perhaps most concerning is what is happening in the banking sector away from the headlines. Hundreds of banks are reporting unrealized losses that exceed half their total capital. Shadow banking funds are locking redemption gates, trapping investor money inside. The Federal Reserve has been injecting billions into the system through overnight repos at a scale not seen since the early days of COVID. These are not the kinds of signals that show up in a healthy system.

If any of this resonates with you, drop a comment below and share your perspective. And if you want to keep following along as we track where all of this is heading, make sure you subscribe so you don't miss what's coming next."
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Vangelis, “Hymn”

Vangelis, “Hymn”

"A Look to the Heavens"

"In silhouette against a crowded star field along the tail of the arachnalogical constellation Scorpius, this dusty cosmic cloud evokes for some the image of an ominous dark tower.
In fact, clumps of dust and molecular gas collapsing to form stars may well lurk within the dark nebula, a structure that spans almost 40 light-years across this gorgeous telescopic portrait. Known as a cometary globule, the swept-back cloud, is shaped by intense ultraviolet radiation from the OB association of very hot stars in NGC 6231, off the upper edge of the scene. That energetic ultraviolet light also powers the globule's bordering reddish glow of hydrogen gas. Hot stars embedded in the dust can be seen as bluish reflection nebulae. This dark tower, NGC 6231, and associated nebulae are about 5,000 light-years away."

Chet Raymo, “Cosmic View”

“Cosmic View”
by Chet Raymo

“When writing about Philip and Phylis Morrison’s “Powers of Ten” the other day I found I had made the following notation in the flyleaf, perhaps a dozen or more years ago:

Britannica
 32 volumes
 1000 pages per vol
 1200 words per page
 5 letters/wd
 = 200 million letters. So, 200 million letters in the 32 volume set of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Why was I making that estimate? I can think of several possibilities. Perhaps…

1. I was making a comparison with the number of nucleotide pairs in the human DNA; that is, the number of steps- ATTGCCCTAA, etc.- on the double-helix. If the information on the human genome- an arm’s length of DNA in every human cell- were written out in ordinary type, it would fill 15 sets of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Nearly 500 thick volumes of information labeled YOU. Think of that for a moment. Fifteen 32-volume sets of the Encyclopedia Britannica in every invisibly-small cell of your body. And every time a cell reproduces, all of that information has to be transcribed correctly. Did I say the other day that it took a semester to stretch the imagination to grasp the universe of the galaxies? It could take another semester to stretch the imagination to grasp the scale of the molecular machinery that makes our bodies work.

Or maybe…

2. I was trying to give an insight into the complexity of the human brain. There are something like 100 billion nerve cells in the brain. That’s equivalent to the number of letters in 500 sets of the Britannica! Each many-fingered neuron connects to hundreds of other neurons, and each synaptic connection might be in one of many levels of excitation. I’ll let you calculate the number of potential states of the human brain. We’ve left behind the realm of Britannica. Even talking of libraries would be insufficient. I was marveling here recently about the amount of digital memory Google must command to store all of those 360-degree Street View images from all over the planet, all of it instantly retrievable by anyone with access to a computer and the internet. I imagined banks and banks of electronics in some cavernous building in California. Big deal! I’m sitting here right now in the college Commons and I can bring to mind street views of every place I’ve lived since I was three or four years old.

By the way…

3. The number of letters in 500 sets of the Britannica is about the number of stars in the Milky Way Galaxy.

And…”