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Friday, May 15, 2026

"How We Created a Stupid Generation Incapable of Thinking"

Full screen recommended.
The Psyche,
"How We Created a Stupid Generation Incapable of Thinking"
"We live in an age of information - yet never before has humanity been so misinformed, distracted, and intellectually fragile. How did we create a generation that no longer knows how to think? In this powerful and provocative video, we expose how education, media, technology, and culture have conspired to create a society of conformity - a world where comfort replaces curiosity, distraction replaces reflection, and emotion replaces reason."
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Musical Interlude: Spirit Tribe Awakening, "Raise Positive Vibrations"

Full screen recommended. 
Spirit Tribe Awakening, "Raise Positive Vibrations"
528Hz Positive Energy, Self Healing with 417Hz Solfeggio frequency. Peaceful, empowering and soothing music and nature to nurture your mind, body, and soul. Supporting and empowering you on your life journey."

I can't praise this visually beautiful, and very effective, video enough. In these incredibly highly stressful times, please be kind to yourself and take the time to savor this exquisite work in full screen mode. Headphones suggested but not necessary. It works, as simple as that... - CP

"A Look to the Heavens"

“This wide, sharp telescopic view reveals galaxies scattered beyond the stars and faint dust nebulae of the Milky Way at the northern boundary of the high-flying constellation Pegasus. Prominent at the upper right is NGC 7331. 
Click image for larger size.
A mere 50 million light-years away, the large spiral is one of the brighter galaxies not included in Charles Messier's famous 18th century catalog. The disturbed looking group of galaxies at the lower left is well-known as Stephan's Quintet. About 300 million light-years distant, the quintet dramatically illustrates a multiple galaxy collision, its powerful, ongoing interactions posed for a brief cosmic snapshot. On the sky, the quintet and NGC 7331 are separated by about half a degree.”

"How Easy It Seems..."

“A craven can be as brave as any man, when there is nothing to fear. And we all do our duty, when there is no cost to it. How easy it seems then, to walk the path of honor. Yet soon or late in every man’s life comes a day when it is not easy, a day when he must choose.”
- George R.R. Martin

"All The Money You Make..."

Full screen recommended.
Steve Cutts, "Happiness"
“All the money you make will never buy back your soul. ”
- Bob Dylan

"In The Only Time You Have..."

"The country seems bigger, for you can see through the bare trees. There are times when the woods is absolutely still and quiet. The house holds warmth. A wet snow comes in the night and covers the ground and clings to the trees, making the whole world white. For a while in the morning the world is perfect and beautiful. You think you will never forget.

You think you will never forget any of this, you will remember it always just the way it was. But you can't remember it the way it was. To know it, you have to be living in the presence of it right as it is happening. It can return only by surprise. Speaking of these things tells you that there are no words for them that are equal to them or that can restore them to your mind. And so you have a life that you are living only now, now and now and now, gone before you can speak of it, and you must be thankful for living day by day, moment by moment, in this presence.

But you have a life too that you remember. It stays with you. You have lived a life in the breath and pulse and living light of the present, and your memories of it, remember now, are of a different life in a different world and time. When you remember the past, you are not remembering it as it was. You are remembering it as it is. It is a vision or a dream, present with you in the present, alive with you in the only time you are alive."
- Wendell Berry

"Homo Credulus"

"Homo Credulus"
by Joel Bowman

"Man: He’ll go along with just about anything. Given the right circumstances…a little programming…and enough time for it all to marinate in his soft, mammalian brain… there is almost nothing Homo Credulus will not learn to embrace. Don’t believe us?

Take a look at the historical record; you’ll soon wonder how we ever got this far. Sure, you’ll discover gizmos and flying contraptions, art and agriculture, music and mathematics. You’ll witness spectacular scientific breakthroughs, the number “0” and a man’s footprint on the moon. You’ll also find automobiles with so many cup holders, you won’t know where to holster your oversized 7/11 Big Gulp.

But you’ll also scratch your head. Perhaps you’ll even weep. And if you think hard enough, you’ll put a few things to serious question…“Central banks?” “Modern democracy?” “The Ellen DeGeneres Show?” How has mankind survived such atrocities? Self inflicted, no less! And why, moreover, does he rush so earnestly to repeat and replay his worst mistakes? (Ellen has been on air since 2003!) Don’t be too hard on yourself, Dear Reader. After all, repetition is nothing new…

You’ll recall that it was the Greeks who first gave the world democracy – from the Greek, dÄ“mokratía, literally “Rule by ‘People’”. (And yes, it was those very same Greeks who put their own beloved Socrates to death, by a majority vote of 361-140.) Today, democracy is a cherished tenet of “the West.” It is woven into the civic religion, sewn into the social fabric. Men march off eagerly to fight for it, to proselytize it, and to die in forgotten ditches defending it.

At least, that’s what they believe they’re doing. As usual, the poor saps have been duped. Herewith, a little historical context…The phrase “Making the world safe for democracy” was actually a marketing slogan, coined back in the 1910s, as a way to sell “The Great War” to America. Weary from their own disastrous Civil War just a few decades earlier, in which hundreds of thousands of (mostly) young men gave up the ghost, Americans were mostly inward looking at the time. That is to say, they wanted little to do with what they largely saw as a “European affair.”

Polls might have indicated no appetite for battle, but the nation’s politicians were nonetheless starved for military misadventure. They sensed big profits abroad, both in manufacturing armaments and making onerous bank loans to foreign lands. Sure, “the nation” would have to fill tank and trench with warm young bodies, but very few soldiers would carry senatorial surnames along with their rifles. And so, after a public relations campaign of truly epic proportions, America marched off to war, wrapped in the delusion they had freshly been sold.

Eddie Bernays, the man who coined the phrase and, thus, peddled the war to America, made a fortune for his efforts. He was even invited by Woodrow Wilson to attend the Paris Peace Conference, in 1919, as a show of gratitude for his services. There, Bernays learned the full impact of his “democracy” slogan. An obviously bright fellow, the surreal experience caused him to think. If people will line up to kill one another under the influence of a mere marketing campaign they could surely be convinced to do, say and buy just about anything!

Bernays was right. In fact, he wrote a series of books, detailing his insights. They included "Crystallizing Public Opinion" (1923), "A Public Relations Counsel" (1927) and a neat little number titled "Propaganda" (1928), in which Bernays laid out the blueprint for mass social and psychological manipulation. The collected works went on to become a huge success, and the favorite of none other than Joseph Goebbles, Reich Minister for Propaganda in Nazi Germany between 1933-45.

Bernays himself, writing in his 1965 autobiography, recalls a dinner at home in 1933 where… "Karl von Wiegand, foreign correspondent of the Hearst newspapers, an old hand at interpreting Europe and just returned from Germany, was telling us about Goebbels and his propaganda plans to consolidate Nazi power. Goebbels had shown Wiegand his propaganda library, the best Wiegand had ever seen. Goebbels, said Wiegand, was using my book "Crystallizing Public Opinion" as a basis for his destructive campaign against the Jews of Germany. This shocked me. […] Obviously the attack on the Jews of Germany was no emotional outburst of the Nazis, but a deliberate, planned campaign."

It is indeed chilling to think of such a heinous undertaking as being engineered, blueprinted, premeditated and carried out according to some kind of script. And yet, there it is, in Bernays’ own words, the “Father of Propaganda.” Having acquired somewhat of a tainted reputation-by-association, propaganda, itself, underwent a “strategic rebranding” after WWII. But make no mistake, the very same métier thrives to this day, under the more socially palatable designation, “Public Relations.” Still, a ruse by any other name…

“Could we be so stupid again?” wonders the gentle reader. “Might the mob still be swayed by what Charles Mackay termed ‘extraordinary popular delusions and the madness of crowds?’” Why, of course! That’s the nature of the mob! Whether in love, finance, politics or any other matter, man is wont to be convinced, assured, persuaded, often against his own best interests. Few are the absurdities in which he will not take refuge, invest his hard-earned capital or squander his morality. All he needs is a good story, something to arrest his imagination and cauterize his capacity for reason. A distraction from his lonely, quotidian existence. That, and a few crumbs to pass his lips.

The Roman poet, Juvenal, recognized as much when he mocked the panem et circenses (bread and circuses) stratagem almost two millennia ago. In his "Satire X", he referred to the Annona (a kind of grain dole) and the famous circus games, held in the Colosseum and elsewhere, as designed to keep the unthinking population fed and happy.

Look around you today, Dear Reader. What do you see, two millennia later, in the Year of Their Lord, 2026 AD? We’ve got reality television and stadium sports matches, food stamp programs and an Everest of transfer payments, we’ve had mask mandates at schools and the whole pretense of safety and security, there’s $39 trillion in national debt and government spending out the wazoo, plus a collapsing workforce, an opioid epidemic (out-killing COVID-19 in < 65s) and  behind it all, the greatest bread and circuses show ever: modern representative democracy. Now, as then, the show goes on!"

Freely download "Satire X", by Juvenal, here:

"This Species is Amusing Itself to Death. The Addictive Contaminated Media Reality"

"This Species is Amusing Itself to Death.
The Addictive Contaminated Media Reality"
By Dr. Gary G. Kohls

“And when they found our shadows (grouped ‘round the TV sets), they ran down every lead; they repeated every test; they checked out all the data in their lists. And then the alien anthropologists admitted they were still perplexed, but on eliminating every other reason for our sad demise they logged the only explanation left: This species has amused itself to death.”  - Roger Waters

“Apathy and indifference are nurtured in the modern age as most peoples’ free time is frittered away with worthless trivia like ball games, computer games, movies and soaps, and fiddling with their mobile phones. These distractions might be fun, but after most of them you’ve learnt nothing of any value, and remain ignorant, malleable and suggestible, which is just how the elites want you.” – Clive Maund

“A truth’s initial commotion is directly proportional to how deeply the lie was believed… When a well-packaged web of lies has been sold gradually to the masses over generations, the truth will seem utterly preposterous and its speaker, a raving lunatic.” – Dresden James

“A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.”
– Winston Churchill

"30 years ago (1985) Neil Postman (a professor of communications arts and sciences at New York University – until his death in 2003) wrote the best-selling book “Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business”. (Free download below.) The book exposed, among other things, the subtle but profound dangers to the developing mind from the mesmerizing (and addictive) commercial television industry.

The lessons from that book have essentially been ignored by the amoral and corrupted sociopathic capitalist system that says “damn the torpedoes/full steam ahead” and blindly and greedily promotes unlimited growth no matter what the costs and who or what gets hurt long–term in the resource-extractive, exploitive and permanently polluting processes.

But Postman’s thesis applies even more strongly today to the current internet/computer/ age-inappropriate, pornographic sex and pornographic violence-saturated televangelist/political-contaminated media reality with which the prophetic Postman was properly alarmed.

SOMA, the Drug That Predicted Prozac by 50 Years: In the classic “Brave New World” (1932) Aldous Huxley wrote about the new form of totalitarianism that has now come to pass in the developed world, thanks to the privatized profit-driven, drug, medical and psychiatric corporations whose practitioners were once (naively or altruistically?) mainly concerned with relieving human suffering and trying to holistically and permanently cure their distressed patients’ ailments (rather than lucratively “managing” said “clients” as permanently paying consumers of unaffordable prescription drugs). Nearly 30 years after he wrote the book, Huxley said,

“And it seems to me perfectly in the cards that there will be within the next generation or so a pharmacological method of making people love their servitude, and producing a kind of painless concentration camp for entire societies, so that people will in fact have their liberties taken away from them but will rather enjoy it, because they will be distracted from any desire to rebel by propaganda, brainwashing, or brainwashing enhanced by pharmacological methods.” Neil Postman’s very last sentence of his book concerned the prescription drug-infested victims of the new form of totalitarianism that Huxley had described in “Brave New World”.

Of course, Huxley’s book was all about his imaginary psychotropic drug SOMA that Prozac’s makers and promoters in the late 1980s to falsely claim to make its swallowers “feel better than well”. One of the characters in Brave New World said: “And if ever, by some unlucky chance, anything unpleasant should somehow happen, why, there’s always Soma to give you a holiday from the facts. And there’s always Soma to calm your anger, to reconcile you to your enemies, to make you patient and long-suffering. In the past you could only accomplish these things by making a great effort and after years of hard moral training. Now, you swallow two or three half-gramme tablets, and there you are. Anybody can be virtuous now. You can carry at least half your morality about in a bottle. Christianity without tears; that’s what Soma is.”

Postman ended his book by writing: “What afflicted the people in Brave New World was not that they were laughing instead of thinking, but that they did not know what they were laughing about and why they had stopped thinking.” A couple of years after the publication of Postman’s book, Roger Waters (of “Pink Floyd’s The Wall” fame) released a “concept” album that was inspired by the book. He titled the album “Amused to Death”. The lyrics of the title track are as follows:
“Amused To Death”
by Roger Waters

"Doctor, Doctor what’s wrong with me?
This supermarket life is getting long.
What is the heart life of a color TV?
What is the shelf life of a teenage
queen?
Ooh western woman,
Ooh western girl,
News hound sniffs the air
When Jessica Hahn goes down
He latches on to that symbol of
detachment
Attracted by the peeling away of
feeling
The celebrity of the abused shell
of the belle
Ooh western woman
Ooh western girl
And the children of Melrose strut
their stuff
Is absolute zero cold enough?
And out in the valley warm and clean
The little ones sit by their TV screens
No thoughts to think
No tears to cry
All sucked dry down to the very
last breath.

Bartender what is wrong with me,
Why I am so out of breath?
The captain said excuse me ma’am,
This species has amused itself to death
We watched the tragedy unfold,
We did as we were told.
We bought and sold,
It was the greatest show on earth.
But then it was over,
We oohed and aahed,
We drove our racing cars,
We ate our last few jars of caviar,
And somewhere out there in the stars
A keen-eyed look-out
Spied a flickering light
Our last hurrah.

And when they found our shadows,
Grouped ‘round the TV sets,
They ran down every lead
They repeated every test,
They checked out all the data in
their lists.
And then the alien anthropologists
Admitted they were still perplexed.
But on eliminating every other reason
For our sad demise,
They logged the only explanation left.
This species has amused itself to death.
No tears to cry,
No feelings left,
This species has amused itself to
death…"
Freely download “Amusing Ourselves to Death:
Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business”, by Neil Postman, here:

The Daily "Near You?"

Sand Springs, Oklahoma, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Empty Malls, Bank Fraud Warnings & An Economy Falling Apart"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 5/15/26
"Empty Malls, Bank Fraud Warnings &
 An Economy Falling Apart"
"Dan from iAllegedly walks through the nearly empty Main Place Mall in Santa Ana, California, exposing the shocking collapse of the American shopping mall. Once packed with customers and thriving retail stores, malls across America are now turning into ghost towns filled with vacant storefronts, failed businesses, rising rents, and declining foot traffic. Dan also discusses restaurant closures, layoffs, inflation, rising labor costs, student loan debt, and the growing pressure crushing middle-class Americans. In this video, Dan also breaks down a serious banking fraud warning involving payment scams, fake QR codes, Zelle fraud, wire fraud concerns, and growing cybersecurity threats connected to global tensions with Iran and banking sanctions. Banks are warning customers to stay alert as scams become more sophisticated and consumers remain financially vulnerable while living paycheck to paycheck. This is another boots-on-the-ground economic update covering retail collapse, banking risks, consumer debt, layoffs, and the changing American economy."
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o
Meanwhile, elsewhere...
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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"Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 5/15/26"

Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 5/15/26
"INTEL Roundtable w/ Johnson & McGovern - 
Weekly Wrap 15-May"
Comments here:
o
Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 5/15/26
"Prof. Jeffrey Sachs: 
What the Chinese Think of Trump"
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"Too Often..."

 

"OPEC Fractures, the Draft Returns, and the Age of Consequences Begins"

"OPEC Fractures, the Draft Returns, 
and the Age of Consequences Begins"
by Chris MacIntosh

"Lookie here… The United Arab Emirates recently announced it would quit OPEC after nearly six decades, striking a major blow to the oil cartel and to Saudi Arabia, its unofficial leader. Let’s be clear, the UAE didn’t leave OPEC. They were bought out. You may recall that this event was preceded by two major developments that tell the actual story. The first was the shutting of the Strait of Hormuz (SoH). This bled UAE finances and continues to do so. It creates not only a loss of revenue but a shortage of dollars with oil being sold for dollars.

This is why the US provided the UAE with dollar swap lines. The UAE is also highly dependent on the US military not abandoning them. They already realize that has happened to some degree. But looking around their neighborhood, they know they have no friends and so cling to whatever is left of US security promises.

The market immediately saw this as a step towards more production, since the UAE would no longer be constrained by OPEC’s agreed quotas, but the reality is that productive capacity has been destroyed (refineries bombed, wells capped).

What’s important to think about is that swap lines are nothing more than a credit card, and debt is the ultimate tool of slavery. From America’s perspective, Bessent is using these for a couple of reasons. First, as the Gulf states face financial difficulties there is a risk they begin selling assets. Those assets are, of course, US Treasury bonds. That’s not good, especially as the US needs to continue financing the wars. The second reason is to stop CNY settlement from scaling.

Swap lines give allies dollar liquidity, reducing their incentive to price oil or trade in CNY. Personally, I think it’s a bad deal. The Emirates just traded 60 years of sovereignty to become a debt slave. Every country that ties its survival to American goodwill learns the same lesson eventually: the US doesn’t have allies, it has interests. And when those interests shift, you’re fresh outta luck. This move doesn’t strengthen them. It neuters them…

Ultimately, the war is being fought not only in the Middle East but in central bank boardrooms. What we’re seeing is a world forming where there will be multiple currency blocs and settlement structures. In a world where currency, settlement, and banking rails are all being weaponised, this is definitely a time to own precious metals.

Promised and Now Delivered: It gives me no pleasure pointing out things we’ve discussed at length in these pages over the last few years, only to have them come to fruition. We’re as happy as the next guy making money, but when it comes to things like war, I’m frustrated and upset. Making money on such outcomes sucks, even though we’re not funding the conflict (we would be if we were investing in defense stocks, I suppose).

The inevitability of war we’ve been discussing still doesn’t make it necessary or just. Still, realism is what we must invest with.Which brings me to one of the promises we’ve been making for some years now - that the probability of conscription was high across the board. When we first began mentioning it, the pushback was: "Oh no, have you seen the youth of today? They’re far too flaccid and weak and lazy. They’ll never go along with that." We argued that none of that would matter. And here we are…

Eligible men will be automatically added to the military draft database by December, replacing much of the old self-registration process in an effort to cut costs and make the system more efficient. The Selective Service System, the agency responsible for keeping records of men who could be called up during a national emergency, filed a proposed rule with the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs on March 30. Most men between the ages of 18 and 25 are already required to register with the Selective Service, but automatic registration was mandated in December 2025 as part of the fiscal 2026 National Defense Authorization Act.

This of course follows on from our sauerkraut-eating friends and the war-mongering sycophants who are in positions of power in Germany.Given the collapse in public opinion of all of the pointy shoes, my sincere hope is that when the inevitable happens and men are called to war to "defend freedom" (or whatever other claptrap they conjure up) the revolt will be broad. I do actually think it’ll happen. This is also how the US gets itself into a civil conflict. It’s potentially how the EU fractures and the "Union" collapses. It couldn’t come soon enough.

Either way, we’re living in the age of consequences. The consequences of debt accumulation and the degradation of trust in government and large corporate institutions lead me to believe that the most probable outcome is for the existing divide in the US to harden under war conditions. And, just as we have "sanctuary cities" for migrants, we’re likely to get "sanctuary states" regarding the military draft. That will lead the feds to take action, and things get spicy.

Either way, all of this - should it happen - will be highly stagflationary and benefit our current portfolios. So there’s some cheer for you in the misery. See, we’re not all grumpy buggers.

The UAE’s exit from OPEC is not just about oil. It is another warning sign that the old monetary, political, and security arrangements are breaking down - and that governments are preparing for a world of currency blocs, debt traps, resource shocks, and expanding military demands. That has serious implications for your money, your freedom, and how you prepare."

"How It Really Is"

 

U.S. National Debt Clock, Real-time:

Joel Bowman, "The Digital Noose Tightens"

"The Digital Noose Tightens"
by Joel Bowman

“Ultimately, arguing that you don’t care about the right to privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different than saying you don’t care about free speech because you have nothing to say.” – Edward Snowden

Villa la Angostura, Argentina - "Programmable citizens... artificial intelligence... and ubiquitous, 24/7 Big Gov oversight…Gee, what on earth could go wrong? One doesn’t need to be a bonafide paranoiac to imagine governments around the world using (or even creating) any number of crises to herd “We, The Sheeple” into ever smaller corrals.Indeed, if The Covid taught us anything, it was that people are only too willing to surrender their essential liberties for “the promise of a little temporary safety,” to paraphrase Benjamin Franklin. And yet, from fifteen-minute cities to ration cards to social credit scores and beyond, programmable money makes it easier than ever to control the population.

In today’s guest column, below, MN Gordon gives us an update on the end of financial privacy as we know it… and the beginning of programmable citizens. Please read on for more… Oh, and by the way, if you’d like to see more of Mr. Gordon’s fine work, do be sure to check out his Economic Prism website, right here. We have no financial arrangement with our long time contributor and do not benefit from featuring his writing... other than that we simply enjoy what he has to say and hope you do, too."

"The Digital Noose Tightens"
by MN Gordon, founder of Economic Prism

"In January, as part of our 2026 outlook, we detailed how the GENIUS Act, which was signed into law by President Trump on July 18, 2025, would bring about the next shift in American money. The GENIUS Act, if you recall, requires stablecoins to be backed one-for-one by U.S. dollars or short-term U.S. Treasuries. This is a topic we don’t like writing about. In fact, we’d rather ignore it. But by doing so we’d be in dereliction of duty. So, today, begrudgingly, we offer an update on the latest efforts to tokenize the U.S. dollar – including the dollars in your bank account.

Just last month, while most people were distracted by the war with Iran, the U.S. Treasury, its Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), and the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) issued a joint proposed rule to implement provisions of the GENIUS Act. This rule formally integrates stablecoins into the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA). According to Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent: “This proposal will protect the U.S. financial system from national security threats without hindering American companies’ ability to forge ahead in the payment stablecoin ecosystem.”

What you must understand about this proposal is that integration is code for surveillance. By forcing every digital dollar into a rigid, trackable framework under the cover of “national security,” the government is effectively eliminating financial privacy. This, in essence, establishes a permanent digital leash that can be used to control your behavior. As these regulations tighten, the wall between your private wealth and federal oversight disappears. Every transaction you make will be visible to a centralized authority.

Death of Financial Privacy: As a refresher, a stablecoin is a digital token designed to stay pegged one-for-one to the U.S. dollar. Unlike Bitcoin, which can be volatile, a stablecoin is supposed to be boring. Under the GENIUS Act, a legal stablecoin must be backed 100 percent by cash or short-term U.S. Treasuries. In practice, the issuer (like Circle or a big bank) holds the Treasuries and pockets the interest. The user (you) gets the convenience of digital speed but receives no interest. Most importantly, the Government gets a brand-new buyer for its never-ending debt.

The headline from the April 8 joint rule proposal was simple enough: Permitted Payment Stablecoin Issuers (PPSIs) are now legally defined as financial institutions under the BSA. On the surface, it sounds like common sense. A way to make sure terrorists and drug cartels aren’t using digital dollars to finance illicit business operations. But in practice, this integration means that every compliant stablecoin, like USDC, is now a tracking device.

Under the new FinCEN rules, issuers must perform full Know Your Customer (KYC) on every wallet holder. Issuers must also file Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) on any peer-to-peer transfer that looks atypical. They must also maintain a direct data feed to federal regulators for real-time reserve monitoring.

At the same time, a series of state-level regulations, led by Florida’s SB 314 and similar bills in 14 other states, have created a tiered oversight model. If a stablecoin issuer stays small – under $10 billion in circulation – they can hide under state rules. But the moment they exceed that threshold, they are handed over to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) of the U.S. Treasury Department.

This arrangement functions as a trap. The states lure people in with a hands-off oversight approach. All the while, the federal government’s standing by, ready to close the corral gate after the sheep have unknowingly wandered in.

Programmable Money: By moving the dollar onto blockchains, money becomes programmable. You can set conditions for payments (smart contracts) that traditional banks can’t handle. While this makes payments faster and 24/7, it shifts the dollar away from being a physical or purely ledger-based asset into a digital software-based asset. Once the infrastructure exists for all dollars to be tokens, there is little reason for the old physical dollar to exist in its current form.

This is where we move from financial efficiency to dystopian control. Because these tokens operate via smart contracts, the money itself can have rules attached to it. If all assets are tokenized and integrated into the Bank Secrecy Act/GENIUS Act framework, personal autonomy becomes a relic of the 20th century.

Imagine a world where your paycheck expires if you don’t spend it within 30 days to stimulate the economy. Or where carbon caps are enforced by your wallet. Try to buy gas after hitting your limit, and the smart contract simply rejects the transaction.

There’s also the prospect that your ability to go where you want, when you want may be taken away. If the central authority wants you to always remain within 15 minutes of your residence, it will merely have your car shut off automatically if you traverse outside of its digital fence.

You’ll also need to always remain silent, even in the face of imposed wrongs. Programmable money allows for social credit integration. If you refuse to take a faux vaccine or wear a facial mask, your civic score drops. As a result, your tokenized assets could be frozen or restricted to essential purchases only.

In the old world of physical cash and fragmented bank ledgers, the government had to work hard to freeze you out. In the GENIUS Act era, they just have to update a line of code on the centralized general ledger.

The Digital Noose Tightens: The GENIUS Act doesn’t just regulate stablecoins. It integrates them into the U.S. monetary plumbing. By mandating Treasury backing and providing a federal charter for issuers, it effectively converts the U.S. dollar into a token-first currency, where the physical dollar is merely a reserve asset for the digital tokens we actually spend.

Yet the April guidelines don’t stop at stablecoins. They opened the door for the tokenization era. The FDIC’s new proposal specifically addresses tokenized deposits. Far more than just establishing a digital dollar, the goal is to turn your personal bank account into a series of tokens on a blockchain.

When Larry Fink said every stock and bond would eventually be on one general ledger, he forgot to mention your checking account. In this new world, your cash becomes a tokenized deposit, your home becomes a Non-Fungible Token (NFT) on a county-run ledger, and your car, stocks, and gold are all converted into digital chips. Why? Because when an asset is tokenized, it can be moved instantly. It can be used as collateral in the blink of an eye. But more importantly for the powers that be, it can be programmed.

We don’t like this. We don’t like the deceitful way the government is using stablecoins to hide a debt crisis, and we certainly don’t like the loss of privacy and personal autonomy. But as we said in January, you can’t ignore it. The legislative framework is no longer a proposal. It’s not some farfetched idea. It is becoming the law of the land. Through the midwife of a shock event, be it a recession or a war in the Middle East, the transition to tokenized bank accounts will be marketed as being for your safety and convenience.

By all accounts, the GENIUS Act is the most significant financial overhaul in 50 years. But most people are asleep at the wheel. Nonetheless, the digital noose is tightening. The era of anonymous money is ending. The era of the programmable citizen is beginning. As a little guy investor and wealth builder there are some things you can do to prepare. You can maintain a subset of wealth – like confidentially held physical gold and silver – that doesn’t require a power outlet or a government-approved ledger. Preparing for this shift requires a proactive strategy that balances modern digital utility with the timeless security of off-ledger wealth. Straddling both sides of the ledger is imperative."

John Wilder, "Novelty vs. Routine: The One Line Every Man Must Guard Or Watch His Life Slip Away"

"Novelty vs. Routine: The One Line Every Man 
Must Guard Or Watch His Life Slip Away"
by John Wilder

"Routine is where life goes to die. On reflection the other day I was a bit amused to note how much of my life is on autopilot. I have three pairs of pants that are all the same that I wear for work that are identical in cut, color, and comfort, so I never have to stand in front of the closet wondering what matches what. I have six shirts that rotate on my torso for daily wear, each one as unremarkable as the last. I get up, generally, within one minute of the same time each day, and the Wildermobile™ hits the pavement within the same thirty seconds each workday. 

 I have cigars three times a week, on the same days and at the same approximate time, rain or shine, good mood or bad. Why three times a week? Well, because insurance says that means I’m a non-smoker. It’s a loophole I’m happy to exploit, and it keeps the premiums from getting as high as Johnny Depp jumping on Mount Everest.

Now, don’t get me wrong, I set those things up on purpose. I figure I have only so much energy to make decisions each day, so why not save it up and also pre-make decisions for the time I’m stupidest each day? For me, that’s in the morning when I get up. Brush teeth first, pants second, and if I’m lucky they’re on my legs and not as a unique set of chestless arm chaps. No debate, no drama, just forward motion.

It’s like giving my brain a head start on the real work that comes later. This makes sense to me. Efficient. Practical. The kind of system a man builds when he realizes life is long on demands and short on spare mental horsepower.

But. I get concerned sometimes that I’ve pre-programmed life a bit too much, and created too much of a routine. The reason I’m concerned is that all of those minutes faced with nothing novel or consequential happening slip away like the replicant played by Rutger Hauer says in Blade Runner: “All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.”

And the mostest lostest will be those moments where I was living life on routine, putting one foot in front of the other with hours of my life slipping by on autopilot. The coffee is hot, the drive is the exact same stretch of highway, the cigar smoke curls up exactly as it did last Tuesday. Comfortable, yes. But is comfort the same as living?

Time is really one of the biggest fascinations of my life. Even as a kid, I was obsessed with the idea that something new is only bright and shiny when it’s brand new, and after a certain amount of damage it simply can’t be made to look new again. It wears. It gets scratched and dinged, and none of that is, short of melting it down and remaking it new again, reversible.

Time does that to everything, including us. I can go back to the home I left this morning, but I can’t go back to this morning. It’s a lost country, a place where I can only go in my memory. Gone. Irretrievable. And what if every morning is the same for a thousand days? Haven’t I just compressed all of my life into one single Groundhog Day, with the only exception that I’m getting older, less shiny and new? Less naïve? Less innocent?

The calendar pages flip, but the days bleed together into one long, grey blur. I wake up, I do the things, I go to bed, and suddenly a decade has vanished while I was busy being responsible. The flip side of routine is novelty.

I remember the first night I met The Mrs., the way the room felt electric and the conversation refused to end. I remember my first car. I remember my first touchdown. I remember my last day of college.

I remember building the first Pinewood Derby® car with The Boy and the last one with Pugsley. Those moments and milestones that make up the peaks and valleys of life. Those, certainly, have made my life longer. Not in years, but in the way that life stretches when something real happens. I remember those moments intensely.

There’s a fine line, though. If my life is nothing but novelty, then what chance do I have of creating something useful, of establishing meaning with my life? There is none. Chaos is where life goes to lose meaning. One wild distraction after another, no anchor, no progress, just a pinball existence bouncing from shiny object to shiny object until nothing sticks and nothing matters.

If my life is always routine, I’m pushing every bit of meaning away, becoming a grey man in a gray room on a grey house on a gray hill. Everything blends. Nothing stands out. The days stack up like identical bricks in a wall you can’t see over, and one day I realize the wall is my life and I built it yourself.

I have this thought, mainly because Pugsley is mostly on his own now. I figure the time when I’ve spent half of the hours I’ll ever spend with him was sometime in 2015 or 2016. He’s now out in the world. That realization sneaks up on a father like a quiet thief. No warning bell when the halfway mark passes. I just look up one day and notice the house is quieter, the schedule has gaps, and the kid you taught to ride a bike is suddenly navigating highways I’ll never drive.

It forces the question: so what now? Again, routine is where life goes to die, and chaos is where life goes to lose its meaning. Routine is Scylla; Chaos, Charybdis. I love it when I work a semicolon into a sentence! We paddle between the two monsters, trying not to get devoured by either. Too much of one and we drown in sameness. Too much of the other and we drown in noise.

I think we as a culture are caught between these two monsters right now. We have chaos in the never-ending rise of technological advancement, which at the same time turns faces toward the black mirrors in their hands, where they take the cold comfort of doomscrolling their life away in an endless sea of other people’s outrage and other people’s highlights. Every notification promises novelty with a new opinion that will surely change everything.

But it doesn’t. It just scrolls. The phone lights up, the brain lights up, and another slice of irreplaceable time disappears into the glow. We’ve engineered a world that offers infinite novelty at the cost of any real depth, and we wonder why so many feel hollow.

Reality, I think, is part of the antidote. Writing is, for me. Sure, I do it on a routine: same time, same chair, same keyboard, but each post is something different. Each one starts from a fresh thought, a fresh observation, a fresh wrestle with whatever corner of life is nagging at me that week.

It’s routine that (mostly) invites novelty instead of smothering it. And getting out and accomplishing something in the physical world is also important, too. Building something with my hands. Moving my body until it complains and then keeps going anyway. These things don’t just fill time; they mark it. They leave evidence that I was here, that I did something that outlasts the doomscroll.

The balance isn’t perfect and it never will be. Some days the routine wins because the world demands it. Other days novelty crashes in whether I wanted it or not. The trick, I’m learning, is to guard the line between them like it’s the most important border in your life. Protect enough routine to keep the engine running and enough novelty to keep the engine pointed somewhere worth going.

Because time doesn’t wait for us to figure it out. It keeps moving, wearing us down, turning shiny new mornings into well-worn afternoons. And if I’m going to lose moments like tears in rain, I’d rather a few of them be the kind worth remembering: sharp, vivid, and undeniably mine, than a thousand identical ones that blur together into nothing at all."

"The Point..."

 

"Iran Just Forced America Into The Most Dangerous Position Washington Has Ever Faced"

Full screen recommended.
Prof. Jeffery Sachs, 5/15/26
"Iran Just Forced America Into The Most
 Dangerous Position Washington Has Ever Faced"
Comments here:

"Iran Attacks Nevatim Israel, 60 F-35s Burn, U.S Admits Israel Lost War"

Full screen recommended.
Col. Douglas Macgregor, 5/15/26
"Iran Attacks Nevatim Israel, 
60 F-35s Burn, U.S Admits Israel Lost War"
For the first time in modern military history, a senior American defense official publicly admitted what was once unthinkable - Israel has lost its conventional air power. 60 F-35s burning at Nevatim Air Base. Every hardened shelter penetrated. Every defensive layer overwhelmed. This is not damage that gets repaired. This is a structural verdict on thirty years of American-backed Israeli air dominance - delivered in a single strike by an adversary Washington spent decades insisting was being contained. This is the unfiltered breakdown of the night Israeli air power died and America finally told the truth."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Col. Douglas Macgregor, 5/14/26
"Iran Annihilates Israel's 500 Tanks – 
$4 Billion Army Vanishes Overnight"
"Iran just erased Israel's entire armored force in a single night - 500 Merkava IV tanks, $4 billion in hardware, 50 years of doctrine. Gone. In this breakdown, we analyze the precision loitering munition campaign that shattered IDF ground combat power, why Trophy active protection failed, and what Washington's silence actually means. This isn't a tactical story - it's a doctrinal turning point that every major military is war-gaming right now."
Comments here:

"Scott Ritter: Russia Will Soon Expand War by Striking Europe"

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Daniel Davis/Deep Dive, 5/15/26
"Scott Ritter: Russia Will Soon
 Expand War by Striking Europe"
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"Prof Mearsheimer: Shock Analysis: Russia Considers Nuclear Escalation v Europe"

Full screen recommended.
"Prof Mearsheimer: Shock Analysis:
Russia Considers Nuclear Escalation v Europe"
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"Putin Activates Nuclear Doctrine, U.S. Hits DEFCON 3, 72 Hours Until Launch Window"

Full screen recommended.
"Putin Activates Nuclear Doctrine, 
U.S. Hits DEFCON 3, 72 Hours Until Launch Window"
"For the first time since the Cuban Missile Crisis, the world stands at the nuclear threshold. Putin has formally activated Russia's revised nuclear doctrine - lowering the threshold for nuclear weapons use to levels not seen in 60 years. The United States responded by elevating to DEFCON 3, placing nuclear forces on heightened alert and dispersing strategic bombers to forward positions. This is not posturing. This is not a drill. Both superpowers have moved their nuclear arsenals into positions that reduce decision time and magnify the consequences of error. This analysis breaks down what Putin activated, why America responded with DEFCON 3, and the terrifyingly narrow paths back from the edge."
Comments here:

"AI Shows the First 72 Hours of Nuclear War"

Full screen recommended.
Urban Fallout, 5/13/26
"AI Shows the First 72 Hours of Nuclear War"
"AI ran scenarios on what the first 72 hours of a nuclear
 war would look like. Here is a rundown on what was found."
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Thursday, May 14, 2026

"Alert: June to August Will be F%$KED! Buckle Up!"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 5/14/26
"Alert: June to August Will be F%$KED! Buckle Up!"
Comments here:

"Consider The Fact..."

“Consider the fact that for 3.8 billion years, a period of time older than the Earth's mountains and rivers and oceans, every one of your forebears on both sides has been attractive enough to find a mate, healthy enough to reproduce, and sufficiently blessed by fate and circumstances to live long enough to do so. Not one of your pertinent ancestors was squashed, devoured, drowned, starved, stranded, stuck fast, untimely wounded, or otherwise deflected from its life's quest of delivering a tiny charge of genetic material to the right partner at the right moment in order to perpetuate the only possible sequence of hereditary combinations that could result - eventually, astoundingly, and all too briefly - in you.” 
- Bill Bryson, "A Short History of Nearly Everything."

Enjoy your life - it is quite a remarkable gift!

Delta King's Blues, “Ain’t No Future Like Yesterday”

Full screen recommended.
Delta King's Blues, “Ain’t No Future Like Yesterday”
"Some folks chase tomorrow… some learn too late that yesterday held everything they were ever looking for. The dreams were lighter, the nights were longer, and hope didn’t cost so much to carry. “Ain’t No Future Like Yesterday” is a slow, reflective Delta King’s Blues meditation on memory, regret, and the strange comfort of looking back. Acoustic guitar drifts low and dusty, like footsteps circling the same old thoughts. Harmonica cries soft and tired, carrying the ache of chances that slipped away without saying goodbye. The rhythm moves unhurried, letting the past sit beside you for a while. This is the blues of longing - of knowing you can’t go back, but still wishing the road would turn around. Heavy. Honest. Quietly devastating. Tomorrow keeps moving… yesterday stays."

"Lt. Col. Anthony Aguilar: Israel’s Defeat Begins: Hezbollah & Yemen Just Hit Hard"

Dialogue Works, 5/14/26
"Lt. Col. Anthony Aguilar: Israel’s Defeat Begins: 
Hezbollah & Yemen Just Hit Hard"
Comments here:

Gerald Celente, "BRICS Alert: Death Of The Dollar, Bye Bye U.S.A."

Strong language alert!
Gerald Celente, 5/14/26
"BRICS Alert:
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"The Trends Journal is a weekly magazine analyzing global current events forming future trends. Our mission is to present Facts and Truth over fear and propaganda to help subscribers prepare for What's Next in these increasingly turbulent times."
Comments here;

Musical Interlude: Soothing Relaxation, "Sunny Mornings"

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 Soothing Relaxation, "Sunny Mornings"

"I am a composer from Norway and I started this channel with a simple vision: to create a place that you can visit whenever you want to sit down and relax. I compose music that can be labeled as for example: sleep music, calm music, yoga music, study music, peaceful music, beautiful music and relaxing music. I love to compose music and I put a lot of work into it.

Thank you very much for listening and for leaving feedback. Every single day I am completely astonished by all your warm support and it really inspires me to work even harder on my music. If you enjoy my work, I would be very happy if you decided to subscribe and join our community. Have a wonderful day or evening!"
- Peder B. Helland, composer for Soothing Relaxation

Absolutely beautiful...

"A Look to the Heavens"

Sculpted by stellar winds and radiation, a magnificent interstellar dust cloud by chance has assumed this recognizable shape. Fittingly named the Horsehead Nebula, it is some 1,500 light-years distant, embedded in the vast Orion cloud complex.
About five light-years "tall", the dark cloud is cataloged as Barnard 33 and is visible only because its obscuring dust is silhouetted against the glowing red emission nebula IC 434. Stars are forming within the dark cloud. Contrasting blue reflection nebula NGC 2023, surrounding a hot, young star, is at the lower left. The gorgeous color image combines both narrowband and broadband images recorded using three different telescopes.”