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Thursday, March 26, 2026

Economic Market Snapshot, 3/26/26

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 3/26/26
"The Credit Card Debt Crisis Nobody's Talking About"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Jay Reed, 3/26/26
"Truck Drivers Are Losing Everything 
After Gas Prices Skyrocket"
"Truck drivers across the country are being hit hard - and many are losing everything. Fuel costs are skyrocketing, profit margins are shrinking, and for some drivers… it’s no longer sustainable. What used to be a reliable way to make a living is now becoming a serious financial struggle. But what’s really happening behind the scenes? In this video, we break down why gas and diesel prices are hitting truckers the hardest, how it’s impacting the supply chain, and why this situation could affect everyone - not just drivers."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Michael Bordenaro, 3/26/26
"This Is How the Housing Crash Starts… Again"
Comments here:

Dan, I Allegedly, "This Is About to Get Much Worse"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 3/26/26
"This Is About to Get Much Worse"
"The economic warning signs are everywhere, and in this video from i Allegedly, we break down how the growing oil crisis is about to impact every part of your daily life. From skyrocketing gas prices and rising airline costs to food shortages, supply chain disruptions, and small business struggles, this is more than just inflation - it’s a full-scale economic shift. As fuel costs surge, industries like travel, fishing, farming, and transportation are already feeling the pressure, and it’s only the beginning. If you think things are expensive now, you need to see what’s coming next. This i Allegedly update dives into real-world examples of how higher fuel prices are triggering bankruptcies, reducing consumer spending, and forcing major changes across the economy. We also discuss what this means for your finances, your business, and your ability to stay ahead during uncertain times. Whether you're a business owner, investor, or just trying to make sense of today’s financial chaos, this video gives you the insight you need to prepare. Stay informed with the latest business news, economic updates, and financial trends right here on i Allegedly."
Comments here:

"Israel: Same Old Playbook"

"Israel: Same Old Playbook"
by Redacted

"While the U.S. and Israel become increasingly desperate, Israel is moving fast on its expansive plans of ethnically cleansing Palestinians. The Israeli Knesset’s National Security Committee approved a bill this week that will impose the death penalty on Palestinian prisoners. This means executions by hanging. This is terrifying. Israel has over 14,000 Palestinian prisoners right now, held without charge or trial. This law would allow them to kill them at will. Remember, they had at least 4,000 October 7 Hostages, but the media won’t use that word.

Palestinians are already enduring extreme suffering. According to a report from B'Tselem, an Israeli human rights group, Israeli prisons currently function as a network of torture camps. Yet now, legislation threatens to escalate that harm even further by passing a bill that can easily end their lives. Additionally, The Guardian finds that Israel has not prosecuted the killing of a Palestinian in the West Bank since 2020, despite hundreds of adults and children alike being killed by Israeli settlers in that time frame. It seems this war has only made the plight of Palestinians worse as attention is diverted to Iran."
o
"All Palestinian Prisoners To Be Executed And Shot In The Head"
"The Minister of National Security of Israel, Itamar Ben-Gvir, says he plans to introduce legislation in the Knesset which reads: "All Palestinian prisoners to be executed and shot in the head." – The Minister of National Security of Israel, Itamar Ben-Gvir
Watch this monster say it himself!

"Israel is Evil personified. Israel is Evil embodied."
- Scott Ritter
o
"Shocking Genetic Science Reveals Ashkenazi Jews
 Suffer High Rates of Mental Illness Due To Inbreeding"
by Mike Adams 

"We are facing a dire situation for humanity. Today, I reveal some of the elements that have led us to that, including shocking scientific evidence that studied the inbreeding common among Ashkenazi Jews (the dominant population worldwide) and found that centuries of inbreeding has produced widespread mental illness and schizophrenia. This is relevant because Netanyahu thinks God talks to him and tells him to mass murder people in Gaza, Lebanon and Iran. He thinks he's hearing voices from God. It's actually a genetic mental illness caused by inbreeding.
- Genetic studies on Ashkenazi Jews reveal mental disorders.
- Generations of inbreeding have produced mental illness defects.
- High levels of schizophrenia among "God's chosen people."
- Netanyahu thinks God is talking to him and telling him to commit genocide.
- Quotes from Jewish Rabbis calling for mass death of non-Jews.
- The U.S. has provided nuclear weapons to mentally ill sociopathic inbreds.
- Jewish inbreeding has also removed "mirror neurons" responsible for empathy and compassion.
- High risk of nuclear war that kills billions, due to Israel's insane genocide."
Fully explained in video here:


Many references online.

Now it all makes sense...

OMG...God damn these psychopathically degenerate inbred monsters to Hell! And YOU, Americans, paid for it all, every bullet, every bomb, every tank, everything, billions and billions of dollars! All that blood's on YOUR hands too! 100,000 innocent and unarmed old people, men, women and 20,000 CHILDREN slaughtered, with another 10,000 buried under the rubble and unrecovered. And these ZioNazi creatures from Hell call the Palestinians "human animals?!" Eternal shame and disgrace on us all! Stipendium peccati mors est, Israel, and it's coming...

Bill Bonner, "The Teacher of Life"

"The Teacher of Life"
by Bill Bonner

"A man who is pretty undisciplined, doesn’t like to read, doesn’t read briefing reports, doesn’t like to get into the details of a lot of things, but rather just kind of says, ‘This is what I believe’...
a f**king moron."
- Rex Tillerson, former Secretary of Defense, 
describing his Commander-in-Chief.

Baltimore, Maryland - "Our big picture view, here at BPR, is not unique...and not original. It is not at all ‘mainstream,’ either. And yet, tested against recent events, it seems to be holding up pretty well. Here’s the latest...after declaring the war ‘won’ on at least five different occasions, claiming that Iran was ‘dead’ and its military capacity ‘obliterated,’ suddenly something doesn’t add up. The Wall Street Journal: "Pentagon to Deploy 3,000 82nd Airborne Soldiers to Gulf. The Pentagon is planning to deploy about 3,000 soldiers from the Army’s elite 82nd Airborne Division to the Middle East to support operations against Iran, according to two U.S. officials, with a written order expected in the coming hours. Officials cautioned that a decision to put boots on the ground in Iran hasn’t been made. But deploying the 82nd opens the door to President Trump for several strategic options."

Many are those who’ve noticed that ‘history tends to repeat itself.’ Never exactly. Never reliably. And never predictably. Still, the misfortunes that man engineers for himself show up so often that news reporters say their job is simply to remind readers about what happened before. As the Trump administration sends troops for what could be an invasion of Iran, for example, they might remind them of a war game conducted 24 years ago. It showed that the Iranians would win big...sinking the US flotilla in a matter of minutes.

But just because it would have been a bad idea back then doesn’t mean it is a bad idea today. Bad policies...unnecessary wars...foolish theories - never go away. Like zombies, they rise up in the light of the full moon, and terrorize the world once again. These ‘mistakes’ come so frequently in history that they appear as a ‘pattern.’ But for that to happen, there need to be people around who are dumb enough to repeat them.

As the Soviet army smashed through Germany’s defenses in WWII, for example, a Russian officer, with a sense of humor, stood before a group of German captives. ‘Didn’t any of you bother to read Tolstoy?’ he asked. None raised his hand.

Tolstoy described, in his novel "War and Peace," the disaster that befell Napoleon Bonaparte’s army when it invaded Russia. But it wasn’t the history of the war that was important. It was the history lessons. They might have been useful to the Nazi strategists in the 1940s...and might be helpful to the Trump crew today. But the Big Men do not study history...they live it.

Tolstoy’s central idea, similar to our own, is that these illustrious leaders do not write their own scripts. Instead, they read those History gives them. They are actors on the big stage, fully outfitted with the myths, mores, and madness of their time. “Historia magistra vitae,” is how Cicero put it (history is the teacher of life).

Few Frenchmen would have dared to attack Russia in the early 19th century. But when the opportunity arose, the one-in-a-million leader appeared on the scene - Bonaparte. Clever enough to win battles and organize the Grande Armee into the world’s finest fighting force, he channeled the post-revolutionary energy of France into war. And so, the gods must have chuckled as the most talented military genius of his time was totally defeated...and his army virtually wiped out. Not by a superior military machine, but by time, mud, cold, hunger, Cossacks, and peasants.

Then, 128 years later, Germany found the one-in-a-million leader mad enough to repeat Napoleon’s catastrophic adventure. “We have only to kick in the door,” said the Fuhrer, “and the whole house [the Soviet Union] will collapse.” It didn’t happen.

Subsequent events will tell the tale, but it appears that the US is stepping up to the historical challenge. All we have to do, said Trump, is take out the leadership and Iran will surrender. That didn’t happen either. Obviously, the MAGA team hasn’t come up with something new. And Donald Trump for all his flamboyant novelty, is hardly as wicked as many of his predecessors. Nor is he uniquely responsible for the attack on Iran or its most barbaric features. Tolstoy explained that “kings are the slaves of history...in historical events great men...are but labels...having the least possible connection with the event itself.”

Wickedness lies dormant in all of us...as in frozen soup, ready to bubble up as soon as you put it on the stove. It must have been simmering in the US for many years. Iran was a designated enemy back in the Carter administration. Senator McCain was calling on the US to bomb it in 2007. Finally, the Trump Team sat down to eat. History needs such benighted leaders. Otherwise, the ‘patterns’ disappear into a shapeless broth."
o
Thousands of American troops will rapidly die...
Their landing craft will never reach the shore.
"Iran "Laying Traps" And "Building Up Defenses" On
Kharg Island, Preparing For U.S. Ground Attack"
by Tyler Durden

"Iran has recently bolstered its defenses around Kharg Island, anticipating a possible US move to seize the key oil export hub, CNN reported this week. The island is vital to Iran’s economy, handling roughly 90% of its crude shipments, and has become a focal point in escalating tensions.

The Trump administration has explored the option of sending US forces to take control of the island as leverage to pressure Iran into reopening the Strait of Hormuz. But military officials caution that such an operation would carry serious risks. Iran has reinforced the island with additional air defense systems, including portable missiles, and has planted mines along likely landing zones.

There is also growing skepticism among US allies and policymakers about whether capturing the island would achieve its broader objective. Even if successful, it may not resolve the wider dispute over energy flows and could instead intensify the conflict. An Israeli source warned that US troops could face attacks from drones and shoulder-fired missiles if they attempt a landing.

“I would be very worried about this,” said retired Adm. James Stavridis. “Iranians are clever and ruthless. They will do everything they can to inflict maximum casualties on US forces both on the ships at sea, and especially once ground troops are anywhere in their sovereign territory.” CNN writes that Iran has responded with its own warnings. Parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said any attempt to occupy Iranian territory would prompt retaliation against critical infrastructure in the region, adding that US troop movements are under close watch.

Despite its relatively small size - about one-third of Manhattan - Kharg Island would require a substantial military operation to capture. US forces in the region include Marine units trained for amphibious assaults, along with airborne troops preparing to deploy. Surveillance has shown newly fortified positions and defensive preparations on the island. Although earlier US strikes weakened parts of Iran’s defenses, American forces would still face significant threats from missiles and drones launched from the nearby mainland. This has led to internal debate in Washington over whether the potential benefits justify the risks.

Regional allies are urging restraint, warning that a ground assault could result in heavy casualties and trigger wider retaliation across the Gulf. Some analysts suggest that targeting Iran’s oil exports through a naval blockade could be a less risky alternative to putting troops on the ground."
o

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

"Iran's Mystery Gift To Trump"

"Iran's Mystery Gift To Trump"
by Larry C. Johnson

"I think the picture sums it up… Iran is not going to negotiate with the Trump administration on Trump’s terms. Iran has set its terms and will not deviate from those. Here is a synthesis of the key demands from recent Iranian statements and reporting:

Complete halt to aggression and assassinations: Iran demands an immediate and total end to US and Israeli attacks, strikes, and targeted killings against Iranian territory, officials, nuclear sites, and allied “resistance” forces (e.g., Hezbollah in Lebanon, groups in Iraq, and others across the region). This includes a ceasefire that extends to all fronts, not just a temporary pause.

Guarantees and mechanisms to prevent future attacks/war: Concrete, verifiable international or legal safeguards that the war will not be “reimposed” on Iran. This could include binding agreements or frameworks ensuring no resumption of hostilities.

War reparations and compensation for damages: Payment (or “guaranteed and clearly defined” financial compensation) for destruction caused by the strikes, including infrastructure, civilian areas, and economic losses. Some reports tie this to broader sanctions relief or economic concessions.

Recognition of Iranian sovereignty and control over the Strait of Hormuz: A new regulatory or legal framework affirming Iran’s authority over this critical chokepoint for global oil shipping. This has been interpreted as seeking economic leverage (e.g., potential passage fees or control), rather than unrestricted international access. Iran has used threats/partial closures of the strait as leverage during the conflict.

Broader regional elements: A ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah (and potentially other proxies). In some lists: Closure or dismantling of US military bases in the region. Continued development of Iran’s ballistic missile program without external limitations. An end to the conflict “across all fronts” for all involved resistance groups. Additional elements mentioned in some Iranian or mediated contexts include recognition of Iran’s “legitimate” nuclear rights (peaceful enrichment) and rejection of any forced dismantlement of its nuclear program.

There you have it. Trump has been successful this week in bamboozling the oil and stock markets into believing that an end of the war is at hand and that Iran will accept defeat. If Trump decides to launch a ground attack on Iran this weekend or early next week, that will finally awaken the deluded Western market makers that the war, rather than wrapping up, will amp up.

In my last article I laid out one scenario - i.e., a simultaneous attack on Kharg and Qeshm islands - that I think is most likely because it is supposed to open the Strait of Hormuz. If that is the target of the ground operation, it will fail to achieve the goal of lifting Iran’s blockade of the Strait.

There are a couple of other scenarios that some pundits believe are more likely: capturing Chabahar port or capturing Iran’s enriched uranium. I think these are unlikely, but I’m not the one calling the shots and cannot rule them out. Capturing Chabahar achieves nothing strategic, and certainly does not open the Strait of Hormuz. In my judgment, the US does not have enough troops to secure that port and prevent Iran from retaking it.

What about the other scenario - i.e., capturing a site where Iran’s enriched uranium is stored? This is unlikely because I believe those sites are located in the interior of Iran and the US helicopters that would deliver the troops to the site would not have enough fuel to fly back to the place from where they launched. The US would have to covertly insert massive fuel bladders at some remote location that would be used to refuel the air assets used on such a mission. To do that would require flying a number of C-130s into Iran. Those are relatively slow-flying aircraft and would likely be shot down before reaching their destination. I am not saying it cannot be done, but it is a highly risky venture and is more likely to fail. I continue to hope that I am wrong. We’ll know better come Monday morning."

"Alert: We're Entering a Global Oil Lockdown, It's Worse Than We're Being Told"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper. 3/25/26
"Alert: We're Entering a Global Oil Lockdown, 
It's Worse Than We're Being Told"
Comments here:

"Mohammad Marandi: 48 Hours To Global Catastrophe - Nuclear Strikes & Energy Collapse"

Glenn Diesen, 3/25/26
"Mohammad Marandi: 48 Hours To Global Catastrophe - 
Nuclear Strikes & Energy Collapse"
"Total War is here. Prof. Marandi reveals Iran’s plan after Trump’s 48-hour ultimatum and attacks on nuclear & desalination plants. Global stability hangs in the balance - the next few days will decide everything."
Comments here:

"The Strait Jacket"

"The Strait Jacket"
It suits the president well.
by David Haggith

"Iran flat-out rejected Trump’s “peace plan” today (again) and continued its attacks around the gulf and at Israel where missile interceptors seem to be stretched a little thin now in their ability to shield the public, almost like Israel is running triage to save their use now for the most important sites. Iran clearly wants to stay in the fight at this point to exact as much revenge as it can (and it has said as much several times.) A move by US President Donald Trump to start indirect talks is illogical and not viable at this stage of the conflict, Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency reported on Wednesday

None of this stopped the president from continuing to say that Iran is eagerly negotiating for peace, and he hopes to have an agreement later this week, to which Iran gave an interesting response: "Has the level of your inner struggle reached the stage of you (Trump) negotiating with yourself?" That came from Iran’s top spokesperson for its joint military command, Ebrahim Zolfaqari, speaking on Iranian state TV.

Trump also claimed enthusiastically that Iran has agreed to give up its nukes. Clearly he is smoking something different than the Iranians, who shrewdly suggested that all of Trump’s claims are vain boasts, solely intended to talk up US stock prices and talk down oil prices. Both markets do seem ready to lap up the swill on a daily basis. So, mission accomplished, I guess.

‘I don’t want to say in advance, but they’ve agreed they will never have a nuclear weapon,’ Trump said. Hmm. “I don’t want to say in advance, but I will, even though no one asked me to.” Always a good tactic to speak the news that isn’t going to happen in advance while you still can. If you wait for it to happen, you’ll never get to make the boast.
Trump make vain boasts?

Iran says it has been taken in by Trump’s empty claims three times already so there is no point in negotiating with someone you cannot trust to hold to his word or his stated intent. Iran cited past instances where negotiations coincided with surprise attacks. Of course, Trump said in those past instances that Iran was just stalling for time, not negotiating - always just pretending it might concede something important.

While the president claims the war will be ending in an agreement soon so that the US can leave, Iran says (paraphrasing), ”That’s fine, go ahead and leave the area if you want; but we’re going to keep bombing until it really, really hurts.” They told the president he has no say on when the war ends because it won’t end until they say it does. His side might end, and they are fine with that.

A Trump adviser was quoted as describing the administration’s approach as combining diplomacy with coercion, saying Trump has “a hand open for a deal and the other is a fist.” The president even described a significant confidence-building step by Iran today that he said was related to oil and gas flows through the Strait of Hormuz, calling it a “very big present worth a tremendous amount of money.” As usual, his claims was short on any details.

Iran subsequently informed the International Maritime Organization that “non-hostile vessels” could transit the strategic waterway, which carries around one-fifth of global oil supply. It is not clear, however, what “non-hostile” vessels means. Does it refer to all ships that are not carrying oil and are not military vessels, regardless of whom they are shipping for, or does it refer only to ships that are flagged under a nation that is regarded as a friend to Iran? If the latter, then Iran’s big present was the equivalent of saying, “For your birthday present, we’ve decided we won’t spank any of your friends, but we are going to keep punching you in the mouth.”

Trump reassured the US, "I can tell you, they’d like to make a deal." The very same words we heard a lot during the endless tariff negotiations when Trump would say his phone was ringing off the hook with nations eager to make a deal. Then nothing would happen for weeks, or any nations he mentioned specifically would say they hadn’t placed any calls to the president. Then, eventually, the president would raise his tariff threat a big notch higher in order to try to elevate their interest in negotiating. Perhaps besides negotiating with himself, he also calls himself a lot and then pretends he is talking to someone on the other end who is pleading for a deal, talking loudly enough to make sure Karoline Leavitt can hear the fruitful conversation.

The President continued to refuse to name names, but he said Iranian leaders the US is dealmaking with gave the country a ‘present.’ ‘They did something yesterday that was amazing. Actually, they gave us a present and the present arrived today and it was a very big present, worth a tremendous amount of money,’ Trump said. ‘And I’m not going to tell you what that present is, but it was a very significant prize and they gave it to us.’

Tune into The Apprentice next week to find out what it is! Maybe it’s a shiny, new fancy jet like the one Qatar gave him, which they can encourage the president to travel in as soon as possible to his final negotiation meeting in Iran. Something that says “Trojan Airlines” and bears the logo of a horse on wheels.

Trump said that gesture signaled one thing to him. ‘We’re dealing with the right people,’ he stated. Uhhhh huh! Trump also said that the only two people disappointed by the sweet present given by Iran and its likelihood of sealing a deal were Pete Hegseth and General “Raizin’ Cain.” (Well, and maybe Senator Lindsay Graham.) To make them happy, he has ordered up a few more thousand troops today, particularly paratroopers and sent them on their way. Most articles believe they are going to storm Kharg Island. Some veterans called a deployment onto Kharg a “suicide mission,” while Republican Nancy Mace (a Trump supporter) replied to Trump’s plan by walking out of a military briefing, saying,

"Just walked out of a House Armed Services briefing on Iran. Let me repeat: I will not support troops on the ground in Iran, even more so after this briefing. Washington’s war machine is hard at work. They are try [sic] to drag us into Iran to make it another Iraq. We can’t let them. The justifications presented to the American public for the war in Iran were not the same military objectives we were briefed on today in the House Armed Services Committee. This gap is deeply troubling. The longer this war continues, the faster it will lose the support of Congress and the American people.

Virginia Burger, a Marine veteran and senior defense policy analyst at the Project on Government Oversight’s Center for Defense Information, said, "Why are we going into something that [could be] be so protracted? Iran [has a] vote in this, right? We don’t exist in a vacuum - the Marines aren’t just going to walk onto Kharg Island [unopposed]. What is that going to look like, as far as loss of American lives, loss of American equipment?"

Another vet, Mike Prysner, Executive Director of the Center on Conscience & War said, "What people don’t realize is that the U.S. is preparing for a big war. Everyone’s getting ready to go." John Byrnes, a veteran and the strategic director for Concerned Veterans for America, said, "I am certain we can get our boots on the ground. I am more concerned about a long-term operation. Every step along the way [in a ground deployment], there’s going to be some U.S. casualties - and what generals might think is going to take a week suddenly might take a month or two months."

And still another …An extended conflict in Iran might “be something more akin to Gallipoli than Vietnam,” Webb said, referring to the failed, heavy-casualty allied campaign to capture Turkish straits during World War I. So, the quagmire begins. Remember, Iran has to have the strait open by this weekend, or the promised bombing of all of its electrical power plants begins. So, besides Kharg Island, I am sure boots are needed to extract the fissile material before it moves into the wrong hands.

Now, if you want a suicide mission, it looks like the UK has cratered to Trump’s ridicule and is planning something appears really stupid: "The UK is set to lead a coalition of countries including France to help sweep the Strait of Hormuz for mines and reopen it to oil tanker traffic. Additionally, the UK said it is looking to send a either a Royal Navy mine sweeper ship or hire a civilian ship that can launch mine sweeping drones into the area, The Times reported."

One wonders how long until the first allied ship sinks to the bottom of the sea with thousands of sailors inside. While they may do fine with avoiding the mines they are sweeping, by providing such a target-rich environment, they will also have to be dodging hundreds of drones and missiles topside while doing it. In WWII history (before my time), I don't recall hearing about the allies notifying the enemy in advance that they’ll be coming very close by with war ships and stating what their mission is.

Perhaps we can take comfort in reminding ourselves how Secretary Hegseth gathered every general in the nation out of their theaters of war to sit in a theater in Washington and tell them it was time to slim down and warrior up. That pep rally to shine up the top brass was, to me, the mark of a keen warrior."

"Americans Reach Breaking Point, Surcharges Begin"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 3/25/26
"Americans Reach Breaking Point, 
Surcharges Begin"
Comments here:

"Scott Ritter: 2,500 Marines Sent to Kharg Death Trap, US Bases Crushed"

Dialogue Works, 3/25/26
"Scott Ritter: 2,500 Marines Sent to Kharg Death Trap, 
US Bases Crushed"
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"War And Immorality, Lies And Unwarranted Killing"

Gerald Celente, 3/25/26
"War And Immorality,
 Lies And Unwarranted Killing"
"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."
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Musical Interlude: 2002, "Land of Forever"

Full screen recommended.
2002, "Land of Forever"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"To some, it looks like a giant chicken running across the sky. To others, it looks like a gaseous nebula where star formation takes place. Cataloged as IC 2944, the Running Chicken Nebula spans about 100 light years and lies about 6,000 light years away toward the constellation of the Centaur (Centaurus).
The featured image, shown in scientifically assigned colors, was captured recently in a 12-hour exposure. The star cluster Collinder 249 is visible embedded in the nebula's glowing gas. Although difficult to discern here, several dark molecular clouds with distinct shapes can be found inside the nebula."

"This I Believe..."

“This I believe: That the free, exploring mind of the individual
human is the most valuable thing in the world.
And this I would fight for:
the freedom of the mind to take any direction it wishes, undirected.
And this I must fight against:
any idea, religion, or government which limits or destroys the individual.”
- John Steinbeck

"The Devil’s Work"

"The Devil’s Work"
by The Zman

"There is an old expression that has fallen out of favor in the post-scarcity age, but it may be the key to understanding the current crisis. That expression is, “Idle hands do the Devil’s work.” When people do not have anything productive and useful to do with their time, they are more likely to get involved in trouble and criminality. A variant of this is “The Devil makes work for idle hands.” The idea there is if you want to avoid Old Scratch, then make sure you keep yourself useful to God.

The source of these proverbs is unknown, but variations of them go back to the early middle ages, so it is probable they evolved with Christianity. It is not unreasonable to think the idea is universal to civilization. After all, every human society has had to deal with the idle, lazy, and troublesome. Making sure these people are kept too busy to cause trouble is one of those primary challenges of civilization. Every ruler has known that too many idle young men is bad for his rule.

Even in the smaller context, this is something we instinctively know. In the workplace, people with too much free time get into trouble. If the IT staff has too much free time, they start tinkering around with the stuff that is working and before long that stuff stops working and the system goes down. A big part of what goes on inside the schools is to keep the kids and the teachers busy. Home schoolers have known for years that the learning content is just a few hours a day. The rest is busy work.

The point here is that people of all ages need a purpose, something that occupies their mind and their time. If something useful and productive is not filling that need, then something useless or unproductive will fill the void. For most people this may be a hobby or leisure activity. For others, it often means a useless activity is turned into something important. Elevating the mundane to the level of the critical and then creating drama around the performance of the mundane activity.

This is what we see in our political class. The ruling class of every society has a ceremonial role, a procedural role, and a practical role. Outside of a crisis like a war or natural disaster, the political class is performing its duties in the same way a line worker in a factory preforms his role. In popular government this means the pol shows up at public events. He performs the tasks his office requires like signing papers and casting votes. He helps grease the wheels when they need grease.

Into the 20th century, most of our political offices were part-time jobs. State legislatures met for a short period during the year. Otherwise, the legislators were back home doing their jobs. Executive positions like governor and president were fulltime jobs, as they were in charge of the civil service and in the case of president, commander-in-chief of the military. Within living memory, Washington DC would empty out in the spring and remain empty until the fall when Congress returned.

What we see today is politics at all levels has become a full-time job, but one with less to do when it was considered a part-time job. Congress, for example, is something close to a 24-hour drama now. The politicians and their retinues are now doing politics as a full-time obsession. Yet almost all of what they do is unnecessary. In fact, much of what they do is harmful. Very few things passed by Congress enjoy the support of the majority of the people or even a large plurality.

It is not just that these part-time jobs have been made into full-time obsessions. It is that much of what we used to need from government is now filled by individuals, ad hoc networks, and the private sector. Much of what government does is actually done by private contractors on government contracts. One of the ironies of the post-Cold War world is that the federal workforce has declined relative to the population, while the number of people employed in politics has gone up.

Then there is the fact that much of what government does could be automated or simply eliminated entirely. The services that are required like renewing licenses and paying fees can all be automated. In many cases they have been, but that did not result in fewer people, as we see in the dreaded private sector. Instead, it resulted in more idle hands looking for a purpose. On the political side, much of what Congress does could also be eliminated or automated.

What has happened in the last 30 years is we have grown the idle class at the top of our society and while decreasing their necessity. Much of what goes on in our politics is make work designed to get public attention. Think about it. If the cable news channels were shuttered and the social media platforms run by the oligarchs were closed, what would change in America? Nothing of practical importance. Our world would get quieter and there would be a boom in forgotten hobbies.

American political culture evolved during the Cold War to fight communism and prevent a nuclear war. Those were important tasks that occupied the minds and hands of the political class. Once those things went away, those idle hands searched about for a new crisis. Health care, Gaia worship, Islam and now invisible Nazis have been used to keep the idle hands of the political class busy. In the process, the political class has been driven mad and is threatening the rest of society."

Chet Raymo, “Moments of Being”

“Moments of Being”
by Chet Raymo

“A passage from the "Pensees" of Teihard De Chardin: "Though the phenomena of the lower world remain the same- the material determinisms, the vicissitudes of chance, the laws of labor, the agitations of men, the footfalls of death- he who dares to believe reaches a sphere of created reality in which things, while retaining their habitual texture, seem to be made out of a different substance. Everything remains the same so far as phenomena are concerned, but at the same time everything become luminous, animated, loving..."

Whatever we think of Teilhard's Christocentric phenomenology, however much we are baffled by his vague and gushy prose, it is clear from his writing that he was a man who was in love with the world and experienced it as luminous, animated, and loving. Certainly, the experience he describes is not restricted to "he who dares to believe," by which Teilhard means a specifically Christian faith, or at least a faith which for him involved an image of the "cosmic Christ." No, I would suggest that the interior experience of the world he describes- as luminous, animated, and loving- is an predisposition of the human condition, part of our evolutionary makeup. It finds expression in religion, certainly, but also in art, music, poetry, scientific discovery, and in even in the quiet contemplation of a single flower or grain of sand.

It is an experience we all consciously or unconsciously seek, with varying degrees of success. For certain people- an artist like Kandinsky or a mystic like Teilhard- the interior rhapsodic state seems more or less permanent. For most of us, its achievement is a struggle against the humdrum and superficial, the "habitual texture" of things.

The challenge is not to abjure the world of immediate sensation, but to experience the world as fully as our present knowledge allows- not just earthworms and nematodes, wind and weather, Sun, Moon and stars, but also the ineffable flow of atoms, the ceaseless dance of the DNA, the whirling of the myriad galaxies, the infinite and the infinitesimal- to see in the mind's eye and feel in the mind's heart the fire and the flow that animates all things. We may not experience the universe as "loving," but we might certainly find it lovable.

"The whole universe is aflame," wrote Teilhard. His vision was partly informed by his science and partly by his religious faith. And partly, surely, because he was born with a particularly acute sensitivity to the ineluctable wholeness of things. Those of us of a less sensitive nature will settle for the occasional moments when the gates of our senses unaccountably fling themselves open to the unspeakable and unspoken mystery of the world."
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"The Philosophy of Blaise Pascal"
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Freely download  "Pensees", by Blaise Pascal, here:

"Maya Angelou's Life Advice"

Full screen recommended.
"Maya Angelou's Life Advice"
"Maya Angelou born Marguerite Annie Johnson April 4, 1928 – May 28, 2014) was an American poet, memoirist, and civil rights activist. She published seven autobiographies, three books of essays, several books of poetry, and is credited with a list of plays, movies, and television shows spanning over 50 years. She received dozens of awards and more than 50 honorary degrees. Angelou is best known for her series of seven autobiographies, which focus on her childhood and early adult experiences. The first, "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" (1969), tells of her life up to the age of 17 and brought her international recognition and acclaim."

The Daily "Near You?"

Barnsley, United Kingdom. Thanks for stopping by!

"Palaver and Parable: Trump’s Babble"

"Palaver and Parable: Trump’s Babble"
by Edward Curtin

“All lies and jests
Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest”
– “The Boxer,” Paul Simon

"Listening to Donald Trump is like staring at a record spinning on a turntable and finding your mind spinning with your eyes. Something playing here makes you feel crazy, not in the Patsy Cline sense of her singing “Crazy” about lost love, but in the sense of the song’s original title – “Stupid” – according to Willy Nelson, who wrote it.

Trump is like the mobster Vincent Gigante who walked around Greenwich Village in slippers, pajamas, and a bathrobe in an effort to convince federal prosecutors that he was crazy. Trump’s babble is a similar act. Only a very stupid person would be fooled by it. The Iranians are not stupid, nor should we be.

His latest palaver came yesterday morning when, after days of threatening to “obliterate” Iran’s power grid if it didn’t open the Strait of Hormuz within forty-eight hours, he now says he is postponing such strikes for five days since the U.S. and Iran have held “productive conversations.” He said: "I have instructed the Department of War to postpone any and all military strikes against Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure for a five-day period, subject to the success of the ongoing meetings and discussions."

Shortly after, Iran denied any such negotiations were taking place. Iranian PRESSTV’s headline read: “We negotiate with enemies with impact-driven strikes,” as it pounded Israel with waves of missiles.

One’s forgettery would have to be operating at full-speed to forget Trump’s past use of “negotiations” as a cover for attacking Iran. He is a treacherous liar and this is probably another blatant delaying tactic that will last a day or two or maybe even five. This becomes especially true as Simplicius and others report that the U.S 82nd Airborne “have gotten their deployment papers,” and Marines are heading for Iran and that Pakistan may be secretly staging U.S. troops to enter Iran from the east.

On February 27, the day before the US/Israel attacked Iran, I asked “Is it just a coincidence that as Trump amasses military strike forces to the west and south of Iran, Pakistan attacks Afghanistan, which countries line the 950 mile eastern border of Iran?” In response to such attacks, Trump said, “Pakistan [that has 170 or so nuclear warheads] is doing terrifically well.”

When the U.S. mainstream press reports that Trump is weighing his options for troops inside Iran, you can be quite certain he has already decided to do so. I have just heard from a friend that his military son has gotten all his shots and his unit is being deployed. To where? He can’t say. This war is moving inexorably toward a most dangerous phase, and as Americans and growing numbers of U.S. soldiers oppose it, the chance of a false flag attack in the U.S. to generate outrage toward Iran from Americans grows with it. Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern has just warned of that possibility.

For years, the general consensus among the mainstream and the independent media has been that Trump’s rise twice to the presidency has been a break with tradition because he is so bizarre a character with no political experience, etc. This assessment has come from those who love or hate him. I have argued the opposite for years: that he is an establishment figure from the start, dressed in costume, so to speak. Few have agreed. I recently wrote:

"Some say that is because he is a complete anomaly and was able to twice become president by some strange twist of fate. If that is so, it would be the first and second time in modern history that it happened. A man with no political experience, a comical reality-tv joke, a bombastic fat party boy with weird dyed hair who talks like a version of an East Coast Valley Girl, a womanizer, a very wealthy New York real estate wheeler and dealer, etc. gets the votes of middle Americans who are losing their farms and factory jobs and are angry at the government. All sorts of explanations have been given for this “anomaly,” except that it was not one, except in appearance."

Now it seems that others may be coming around to the same opinion. In a recent article, "Seeing Trump Clearly," Craig Murray, the former British diplomat, author, and Scottish human rights activist, who attended and reported on Julian Assange’s extradition trial, wrote: "It is comforting to see Trump as a buffoon, to accept the facade he presents of a blustering and ill-educated ignoramus, who swings wildly between policy options, and who does not understand the world of geopolitics."

But that is nonsense. Although Trump seems to be a clown, Murray says, it would be a terrible mistake to take seeming for being, for Trump is vicious and very dangerous and wholly intent on destroying the Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank, Iran and the Iranians, while supporting Israel’s takeover of Lebanon and Syria for Greater Israel and the United States. Yes, it is true that Trump and his venal family are also making a financial killing swinging deals throughout the Middle East, but his policies are part of a long-term U.S. strategy. Most importantly, Murray writes:

It is essential not to lose sight of the bipartisan nature of the United States’ long term plan. In a very real sense Trump is continuing – if greatly accelerating – the policy under Biden, who protected and enabled the Genocide in Gaza. The success of this US policy is phenomenal. Just consider that only 18 months ago the Zionist “Presidents” al-Jolani of Syria and Aoun of Lebanon were not in power. Both were brought to power as a result of US-aligned military action, by Israel against Hezbollah and by the CIA and MI6-sponsored HTS forces. Put in place by Biden, they are now central to Trump’s strategy. 

The same could be said for the bipartisan nature of the U.S. strategy toward the Ukrainian proxy war against Russia and the aggressive moves toward China, forecast ten years ago by the late great journalist John Pilger with his powerful documentary, "The Coming War on China."

The other evening a man went for a walk around his residential neighborhood in a small very liberal (Democratic Party ) New England town. He encountered no one except a squirrel, a few crows, and a host of black vultures circling overhead. As he was turning back home, a man emerged from the side door of a large house that had been posting the Ukrainian flag since February 2022. He recognized the man as the one who had donated a large cache of books about the CIA, Russia, Philip Agee (former CIA dissident), etc. to the local library. The man started scattering jelly beans on the lawn. The walker asked him what he was doing and the man said he was doing it to keep the Iranians from invading. The walker said, “But the Iranians aren’t invading.” To which the man replied, “See, it’s working. The Russians are afraid of jelly beans.”
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Simon & Garfunkel, "The Boxer"

"The Gig Economy"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 3/25/26
"Gig Economy Warning,
 Workers Aren't Getting Paid"
Comments here:
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Full screen recommended.
Zac Rios, 3/25/26
"The Gig Economy Collapse Nobody's Talking About"
Comments here:

"US-Israel-Iran War, 3/25/26"

Full screen recommended.
OPTM, 3/25/26
"Iran Just Did What No One Thought Possible 
Since WWII...Israel, US Trapped"
Comments here:
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Glenn Diesen, 3/25/26
"Jeffrey Sachs: 
Iran is the Graveyard of American Hegemony"
"Prof. Jeffrey Sachs argues that Trump is becoming increasingly irrational and that the miscalculations in the war against Iran reveal problems of a decadent hegemony."
Comments here:
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Glenn Diesen, 3/25/26
"Col. Douglas Macgregor: A New World Emerges - 
Iran Victory & Israel Is Finished"
"Retired Colonel Douglas Macgregor reveals the shocking truth: the Iran-Israel war has entered a dangerous new phase and a completely new Middle East is being born. Iran is winning decisively, Israel may not survive in its current form, oil prices are exploding past $100, and the United States is facing strategic disaster. The old world order is collapsing right now. Must-watch analysis you won’t hear anywhere else."
Comments here:

"This Is Not a Crisis...It's a Collapse (And You're Not Ready For What Comes Next)"

Jiang Xueqin Briefing, 3/25/26
Prof Jiang Xueqin:
"This Is Not a Crisis...It's a Collapse
 (And You're Not Ready For What Comes Next)"
"Welcome to "Jiang Xueqin Briefing," your dedicated resource for insightful, easy-to-digest educational content inspired by the groundbreaking work found on the 'Predictive History' channel. Our goal is to make the profound knowledge and historical analysis of Professor Jiang Xueqin accessible and engaging for a wider public audience. By simplifying complex theories and breaking down dense lectures, we empower everyone to understand the crucial forces that shape our past and define our future. In this specific video, we explore Professor Jiang Xueqin's analysis of the rise and fall of ancient civilizations and what it means for modern superpowers]. Based on years of meticulous research and the unique predictive framework developed by Professor Jiang Xueqin, this video will provide you with a fresh perspective on historical patterns and their practical application in predicting future geopolitical trends. We leverage visual aids, clear examples, and structured narration to ensure these vital lessons are truly learned."
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 

"The Greatest Economic Crash Ever"

"The Greatest Economic Crash Ever"
by David Haggith

"The “greatest economy ever,” as the king and all the king’s men (and women) keep calling it, is creating the greatest private-credit crisis ever. A crisis that is increasingly being described as something that could rapidly achieve critical mass like the Great Financial Crisis did keeps blowing up relentlessly. Today, yet another private credit fund that holds investments in many issuers of private credit, jumped on the heap of those that have already been throttling back on how much investors can withdraw from their funds in order to prevent an account-draining rush down the sewers of corporate history.

Apollo Global Management became the latest shadow bank to cap redemptions from one its biggest private credit funds after investors tried to pull $1.6bn (£1.1bn) over the last three months, as investor worries over the $3 trillion sector grow. That makes Apollo the 6th major company that has had to cap withdrawals from the fund this year—the others being Blackrock, Blackstone, Blue Owl, JP Morgan and Clearwater. Apollo’s shares have lost a quarter of their value since the start of the year.

Trouble for the industry began in September 2025, following the back to back bankruptcies of auto lender Tricolor and car-part maker Firstbrands…You probably remember that temblor that ran through the market as the auto industry of today started to look like the Chrysler, GM and almost-Ford bailout boneheads of yesteryear. Concerns about AI taking megabites out of the soft behinds of software companies and about the “total decimation” of oil wells and facilities that are setting up the Persian Gulf for future Trump-Gaza-Cuba style resort development while causing raging inflation for you and me are taking down the value of companies that could be heavily impacted by those threats.

You may recall that only about a week ago I wrote that the former CEO of Vampire Squid Goldman Sachs, Lloyd Blankfiend, said he “smells” signs of another GFC. He has a shark’s nose for that kind of dying meat, as the predator who profited most off of the last financial crisis. He knows the rigging and how to pull the ropes.

Speaking of the Great Financial Crisis, maybe that is what Team Trump is trying to say when they speak of the “greatest economy ever;” maybe they mean to say, “the greatest economic crisis ever.” Bigger than the GFC. After all, Marc Rowan, Apollo’s chief executive, said he does not believe this problem is going to be short term! Neither do I.

College dust up: Meanwhile, the greatest economy continues to leave young men and women just about to graduate from college in dire straits - not as dire as Hormuz, but worse off than these young men and women were a year ago. The job deterioration, which started before Trump, has now become so bad one New York Times article labels it “the grimmest job market in years.”

Granted, that only means back to the depths of the Covidcrash, but those were some major low depths we plumbed back when Trump agreed to shut down almost the entire economy on the advice of the likes of Dr. Anthony Grauci, to whom Trump awarded the bully pulpit every day for all of his last year in office while he helped to roll out the greatest vaccines ever, which he did in warp-speed (lickety-split) time with minimal human testing. That is to say, outside of the total global test they gave the vaccines as soon as possible.

Many college students are taking low-level jobs just to get work, not in the careers they trained for. Pushing mops to pay off pops or the government for its college loans which they believed would be easy to pay off with big, bold new jobs that mostly went up in smoke like dessert oil.

Treasury surprise: Here was a surprising little jolt: the US Treasury announced today the United States is insolvent! That’s not surprising as a fact. We could all see it coming for years. However, it is surprising that the Treasury would come right out and say it. Ooookaay, they didn’t quite say it, but they showed it. The word “insolvent” is Fortune Magazine’s take, based on how you’d call any corporation’s financial statements if it looked just like a scaled-down version of what the US government just presented: That’s not hyperbole - it’s the conclusion drawn directly from the Treasury Department’s own consolidated financial statements for fiscal year 2025, released last week to near-total media silence.

In true government ineptitude, which is apparently still running strong post-DOGE, "The Government Accountability Office (GAO) issued a disclaimer of opinion on the U.S. government’s FY 2025 financial statements - the 29th consecutive year it has been unable to determine whether the statements are fairly presented. This is primarily due to serious, ongoing financial management problems at the Department of Defense and weaknesses in accounting for interagency transactions."

In other words, the government still doesn’t know what the heck it’s got. Maybe when Peat Keg’sbreath gets done partying and pillaging every nook of the world with wars both small and tall, he can straighten out his own department and get it to start honest financial reporting. Of course, that is the kind of battle that can get a guy killed! It would take a true warrior, not a poly-sci college frat boy playing video games of War of the Worlds with the entire US military."

"The Collapse of Everyday Life in America is Getting Worse"

Full screen recommended.
A Homestead Journey, 3/2526
"The Collapse of Everyday Life
 in America is Getting Worse"
"The collapse of everyday life in America is getting worse, and more families are starting to feel it in real time. Rising cost of living, inflation, layoffs, and economic uncertainty are pushing everyday Americans to the edge as basic expenses like groceries, rent, and utilities become harder to afford. Across the country, people are quietly falling behind. Credit card debt is climbing, savings are disappearing, and many are being forced to choose between paying bills or buying food. What used to feel stable is now becoming unpredictable, exposing just how fragile the system really is.In this video, I break down what’s driving this decline, how inflation and rising costs are reshaping daily life, and why so many are struggling just to get by. More importantly, we’ll talk about what this means for the future and why preparedness, frugal living, and self-sufficiency matter now more than ever. If you’ve been noticing these changes in your own life, you’re not alone. This is a reality more Americans are waking up to - and it’s only getting harder to ignore."
Comments here:

Adventures With Danno, "Dollar Tree Items You Should Buy... Before Prices Increase"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 3/25/26
"Dollar Tree Items You Should Buy...
 Before Prices Increase"
Comments here:

John Wilder, "The Double Debt Mountain of 2026"

"The Double Debt Mountain of 2026"
by John Wilder

"The economy looks “fine” on the surface. Fine, that is, if you believe the headlines. I sense, though, underneath it’s a double debt mountain that’s getting closer to a landslide every day, and someone is planting bombs along the slope. Okay, that’s a lot of metaphor. Let me see if I can pilot this ship home.

Damn. Another metaphor. One bomb is the wallets of the kids. The other bomb is in Washington.

Both are set to blow up the same people: Millennials and Gen Z, generations already hammered by housing costs, stagnant real wages, hordes of legal and illegal aliens soaking up employment, and women who forgot that the main reason they exist is to make more humans.

Good news? Yeah, there’s a tiny sliver. Credit card delinquencies on some non-housing debt leveled out in late 2025 according to the New York Fed®. But that’s like saying the fire department showed up and has the fire down to burning one house an hour in the neighborhood. The real picture is as ugly as an Antifa swimsuit pageant. Yeah, it’s grim. And all of their older women are coming down with prostate cancer.

Credit cards have become the new paycheck for millions of young Americans, and new companies have shown up to monetize even the smallest debts. Want to go to Taco Bell™ and pay for that Super Crunchwrap Supreme Bellgrande™ over the next six months? You can do that.

Total credit card debt hit a record $1.28 trillion in 2025, up $44 billion in just three months. That’s not a blip: that’s paying for groceries on credit cards and only paying the minimum monthly payment. Delinquencies on household debt overall jumped to 4.8 percent, led by the kids. For people under 39, the transition into serious delinquency on credit cards is nearly double the national average.

Surveys show 56 percent of Gen Z are forced to use cards just to make ends meet because prices keep climbing. Sixty-six percent of Millennials say they rely on plastic to get through the month. Thirty-five percent of Millennials are carrying more than $10,000 in card debt. Credit card debt, the gateway drug of insolvency. Sure, payday lenders and “buy here, pay here” car places are the crack cocaine and meth of debt, but it all starts somewhere. Gen Z is running around $3,500 in average balances, while Millennials are pushing $7,000. They’re not buying yachts or avocado toast, they’re financing groceries, gas, and rent.

Here’s why this mess is worse than it looks: First, real wages aren’t keeping up, and the system is rigged against the young. Gen Z and Millennials entered the workforce during the pandemic hangover, got crushed by housing prices we already talked about, and now face interest rates that make every purchase a long-term loan. The GloboLeftElite told them to “follow your passion” and rack up student debt for useless degrees that qualify them for entry-level retail jobs in malls that don’t exist anymore. And they listened.

Credit cards fill the gap at 20-25 percent interest. For those that didn’t choose wisely and avoid jobs taken by Jugdish, life is not luxury. It’s debt, roommates, and used couches that smell vaguely of fish. Forever. One bad month due to a mandatory car repair, unexpected medical bill, or if Egyptians convince them to invest in a pyramid scheme, and they’re in the hole they can’t climb out of.

Second, banks and card companies love debt. People don’t get poor because they don’t make enough money, they get poor because they give it away to everyone else: ask the Amish. Banks are making fat margins on revolving debt while pretending everything is peachy. Delinquency rates are rising, but not fast enough for the suits to panic yet. They know the game: extend and pretend and as long as we get this quarter’s bonus, it’s all copacetic. Just like with the housing market in 2008.

Meanwhile, the official unemployment rate looks fine because more paper-pushers are getting hired in the last growth industry: government jobs. The real economy? Productive private-sector work is stagnant. Young people are borrowing to eat.

Third, this consumer debt bomb feeds right into the bigger federal debt bomb. Washington has its own plastic problem, except it’s measured in trillions. National debt sits north of $38.5 trillion. Net interest payments are projected to hit $1 trillion in fiscal year 2026 and interest payments are already bigger than defense spending in the first quarter of this year.

Interest already eats 19% of all federal revenue. By 2036, CBO says it doubles to $2.1 trillion and consumes nearly a quarter of everything the government takes in, but the CBO is always low, because they have to use the assumptions that Congress made up. Yes. AOC is responsible for the rules of the game. But what do we want to spend our money on? Defense? Medicare? Infrastructure? Sorry, the interest check has to clear first.

Fourth, the GloboLeftElite solution is always the same: print more, borrow more, kick the can. National debt doubles every eight years. The Fed and Congress act like debt is free because they control the printer and don’t have to worry. Higher debt, though, means higher interest rates, which means even more debt service, which means . . . you get it. It’s a doom loop.

Every time they “stimulate” to keep the economy looking good for the next election, they make the next crisis worse. And who pays? Not the politicians. Not the connected class in D.C. It’s the taxpayers, especially the young ones who haven’t built wealth yet, but yet were forced to watch the abomination that is Scrappy Doo™.

Fifth, the generational theft is obvious. Boomers got cheap debt, rising home values, and that long summer of the 1980s and 1990s. Oh, and pensions that actually worked. Millennials and Gen Z get 24 percent credit card APRs, $1 trillion in federal interest payments crowding out future programs, and a promise that “we’ll import more workers” to fix the birth rate collapse caused by imported workers, interest payments, and... Female empowerment.

Female hypergamy and economic despair already delayed families, and they’ve reached civilization-ending levels with Gen Z and Millennial female solipsism. Now add maxed-out cards and a government that can’t even pay its own interest without borrowing more. The kids who should be having kids are busy paying Visa® instead.

The result? Gen Z and Millennials fall even further behind. They delay marriage, delay kids, delay life. Birth rates keep dropping. The GloboLeftElite flips from “stop having babies, save the planet!” to “import babies, we’re not having enough!” in one generation because their policies broke the math. Young couples look at the spreadsheet listing rent, cards, future taxes for Boomer pensions and federal interest and decide “maybe later.” Or never.

But me? Debt mountains? Debt landslides? I think I need to stop with my metaphors because they’re making me sneeze. Metaphors really set off my analogies."