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Friday, May 8, 2026

"Russia Victory Day Parade, Nukes Roll Out, Xi Backs Putin in Show of Power!"

Full screen recommended.
"Russia Victory Day Parade, Nukes Roll Out, 
Xi Backs Putin in Show of Power!"
"Russia unleashed a breathtaking display of military power in Red Square to mark the 71st anniversary of victory over Nazi Germany. With over 16,000 troops, 200+ military vehicles, and nuclear missiles thundering through Moscow, the parade showcased the might of the Russian Armed Forces like never before. But what truly stunned the West was the presence of Chinese President Xi Jinping, standing proudly beside Vladimir Putin - a powerful symbol of a growing alliance. As Western leaders boycotted the event, Russia sent a loud message to the world: its strength is real, its allies are watching, and its enemies should take note."

"Staring Into The Abyss..."

"We work in the dark. We do what we can to battle the evil that would otherwise destroy us. But if a man's character is his fate, it's not a choice but a calling. Sometimes the weight of this burden causes us to falter from the fragile fortress of our mind, allowing the monster without to turn within. We are left alone staring into the abyss, into the laughing face of madness."
- Fox Mulder, "X-Files"

"Plandemic 2.0? The Horrible and Hideous, Horrendous and Hairy Hantavirus Has Escaped a Cruise Ship And..."

"Plandemic 2.0? The Horrible and Hideous, Horrendous
 and Hairy Hantavirus Has Escaped a Cruise Ship And..."
by State Of The Nation

"Now we’re all in danger of a deadly virus that’s been around as long as rats and mice have roamed planet Earth? What they want you to know and be afraid of:
Full screen recommended.
"Deadly Virus Hits Home, Prepare To Quarantine"

Excerpt: "Anyone practicing in the Health and Wellness space today cannot even believe what we are seeing and hearing about the cruise ship Hantavirus outbreak. Even our peers throughout the highly controlled American Healthcare System are incredulous at the absurd hype around this so-called global Hantavirus scare. But why are we laughing so hard at this particular Khazarian-directed psyop? As follows:
For some more vital perspective on this daffy conspiracy to lock down the entire planetary civilization - AGAIN - let’s pay close attention to the good doctor: Listen to Dr. Drew dish out some essential truth about the Hantavirus scare. Talk about a completely manufactured public health scare!!! You just can’t make this stuff up; except that’s exactly what they’re doing.

One thing is for sure, unless the New World Order globalist cabal has a billion infected rats to unleash across the planet, this ridiculously fake and potential Plandemic ain’t goin nowhere. And you can take that to the bank … and the hospital … and any other place that proclaims a full-blown fraudulent medical alert.

Incidentally, if this thing does develop into something way beyond a simple cruise ship event, then we know we are all witnessing a totally staged Plandemic 2.0. As follows:
Oh, and by the way, the evidence is now stacking up that points directly to another weaponized vaccination program as a government response to the Hantavirus. HOW CONVENIENT! A Patent for Hantavirus mRNA ‘Vaccine’ Filed in 2025. All of which means that it’s quite plausible that the Big Pharma-Big Medical-Big Govt Complex is planning a public health disaster that’s BIG enough for the Trump administration to declare full-scale “Medical Martial Law”.
After all, OPERATION COVID-19 was executed during Trump’s first term…and during an election year as well. Not only that, but the Trump regime is desperate to the extreme to determine the electoral outcomes for the midterms. For Trump knows that the GOP cannot lose both congressional majorities lest he be impeached multiple times for some very serious high crimes and misdemeanors (unlike the spurious impeachments during his first term)."
View this complete, most highly recommended article here:
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Food for thought... connect the dots.
Full screen recommended.
X-Files, Season 10

"Millions Are Living In Tents And Cars Because Working America Can't Afford Rent Anymore"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 5/8/26
"Millions Are Living In Tents And Cars 
Because Working America Can't Afford Rent Anymore"
"Millions of working Americans are sleeping in tents tonight. Millions more are sleeping in their cars. Not because they stopped working. Because rent stopped letting them in. The federal minimum wage hasn't moved since 2009. Median rent has nearly doubled in the same window. That gap doesn't close - it widens, every quarter, every algorithmic rent-pricing cycle. This is what 15 working tenants describe in their own words. They paid rent on time for years. They had jobs. They had kids. Then one notice, one raise, one car payment broke them - and the wall they fell against had been built quietly while nobody was looking. Listen to who is actually under the tarp."
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Musical Interlude: Yanni, "The Storm"

Full screen recommended.
Yanni, "The Storm"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Dwarf galaxies NGC 147 (left) and NGC 185 stand side by side in this sharp telescopic portrait. The two are not-often-imaged satellites of M31, the great spiral Andromeda Galaxy, some 2.5 million light-years away. Their separation on the sky, less than one degree across a pretty field of view, translates to only about 35 thousand light-years at Andromeda's distance, but Andromeda itself is found well outside this frame. 
Brighter and more famous satellite galaxies of Andromeda, M32 and M110, are seen closer to the great spiral. NGC 147 and NGC 185 have been identified as binary galaxies, forming a gravitationally stable binary system. But recently discovered faint dwarf galaxy Cassiopeia II also seems to be part of their system, forming a gravitationally bound group within Andromeda's intriguing population of small satellite galaxies."
o
“I like the stars. It's the illusion of permanence, I think. I mean, they're always flaring up and caving in and going out. But from here I can pretend... I can pretend that things last. I can pretend that lives last longer than moments. Gods come and Gods go. Mortals flicker and flash and fade. Worlds don't last; and stars and galaxies are transient, fleeting things that twinkle like fireflies and vanish into cold and dust. But I can pretend...”
- Olethros, in “Sandman”

The Poet: Langston Hughes, “Life Is Fine”

“Life Is Fine”

“I went down to the river,
I set down on the bank.
I tried to think but couldn’t,
So I jumped in and sank.
I came up once and hollered!
I came up twice and cried!
If that water hadn’t a-been so cold
I might’ve sunk and died.
But it was Cold in that water! It was cold!

I took the elevator
Sixteen floors above the ground.
I thought about my baby
And thought I would jump down.
I stood there and I hollered!
I stood there and I cried!
If it hadn’t a-been so high
I might’ve jumped and died.
But it was High up there! It was high!

So since I’m still here livin’,
I guess I will live on.
I could’ve died for love -
But for livin’ I was born.
Though you may hear me holler,
And you may see me cry -
I’ll be dogged, sweet baby,
If you gonna see me die.

Life is fine! Fine as wine! Life is fine!”

- Langston Hughes

"When We Have Time..."

“How small a portion of our life it is that we really enjoy. In youth we are looking forward to things that are to come; in old age, we are looking backwards to things that are gone past; in manhood, although we appear indeed to be more occupied in things that are present, yet even that is too often absorbed in vague determinations to be vastly happy on some future day, when we have time.” - Charles Caleb Colton, “Lacon”

“The problem is, you believe you have time.”
- Buddha

"How The GloboLeft Uses Your Virtue Against You And Why It’s Killing The West"

"How The GloboLeft Uses Your Virtue Against 
You And Why It’s Killing The West"
by John Wilder

“Then what makes a beautiful person? Isn’t it the presence of excellence? Young friend, if you wish to be beautiful then work diligently at human excellence. And what is that? Observe those who you praise without prejudice. The just or the unjust? The just. The even-tempered or the undisciplined? The even-tempered. The self-controlled or the uncontrolled? The self-controlled. In making yourself that kind of person, you will become beautiful. But to the extent you ignore these qualities, you’ll be ugly, even if you use every clever trick to appear beautiful.” - Epictetus

Epictetus may have had some ulterior motives when he said this, since if history is correct he was lame, was missing an eye and an ear, and had hair only in patches on his skull. Did I mention the burn scars? I kid. But Epictetus was lame. I mean, not 1980s “lame” but rather had a limp. The point he makes is a good one, though. We are fundamentally the genes we are born with. If I wanted to be taller, I suppose there is surgery I could get to lengthen my legs. Yeah. Really.

If I wanted to avoid being a blinding hazard when the Sun shines off of my scalp, well, I could get hair plugs or a toupee. Neither of those, however, would make me a better person. And I don’t know about you, but when I find out about the vile beliefs and practices of some Hollywood™ starlets, well, they start to lose a lot of their attractiveness to me. In fact, I start to see ugly, just like the ugly I see with Jeff Bezos’ wife.

I mean, really. Wow. That’s a lot of plastic surgery. Seriously, does she not look like an alien that was constructed out of a scaffold of lizard DNA in a Tupperware® factory? If she and Bezos have kids I don’t know which they’ll look like: dime-store rubber geckos or a tube of Saranwrap©.

I do think that Epictetus, despite the handicap of being dead as well as gimpy, has done a good job at sketching out some of the things that have made Western Civilization great. There was a time that we nearly universally admired being just. Our culture is one that’s based on guilt, rather than shame, so being just comes from within.

Shame comes from without. In a shame-based culture (which describes most third world cultures) the idea is that cheating an old widow in Iowa out of her family fortune is acceptable unless you get caught. It’s clever, and they feel guilt only in being caught. Ever see any video of a foreigner getting caught doing something wrong on video? I know you have.

What happens is that the shame kicks in. They can’t and don’t feel guilt over doing evil, only shame for getting caught doing evil. This explains why India looks like India and Nigeria looks like Nigeria. Good actions aren’t valued.

Next, Epictetus talks about the virtue of being even-tempered. Again, this is something that society selected for through its very construction. People who impetuously committed crime were systematically executed in Great Britain for nearly a thousand years. Don’t think that has something to with keeping tempers in a bottle? It certainly does. And when men like that become warriors, well, Heaven help you if you push one over the edge into rage and wrath. That is something mythic, something that makes entire continents burn.

Lastly, Epictetus talks about self-controlled versus, well, not. Again, this is a virtue that Western Civilization has lauded in its stoic male heroes who experience hardship yet come away stronger for the effort. Our very fables talk about men who never cry because they understand that they are masters of their emotions and can select which ones they let to the surface when the stress is running high. This is not a bug like Hollywood© would try to make us think: this is a feature.

To one extent Epictetus is right: these are all necessary values for beauty, at least for me. They are also necessary values for everything that is required to move society upward, to keep us from being crabs in a bucket, drawing each other down for our own temporary gain.

And, Epictetus notes that these virtues are within our control, each and every one of them. Sure, if you come from a place that’s not been selecting for these behaviors for nearly a thousand years (and I could argue that Europe as a whole has been selecting for these behaviors for thousands of years) then it might be difficult. But not impossible. And if it is impossible, then that person could rightly be called a savage.

All of Western Civilization is ultimately built on the idea that these are things that individuals can do, right here, right now through being virtuous. They are True. They are Beauty in themselves. And they are Good.

This is, in my mind, a major disconnect and why Western Civilization is hated by so many in the third world. They look at this wonderful cultural set of values of which we are exemplars (on our best days) through our own choices and feel envy. They want a world that looks like ours, but yet don’t want to change their behaviors. This is why they don’t build. This is why we do.

Are there other cultures with similar values? Certainly. Japan appears to have undergone a similar winnowing with respect to honor. Feel free to opine in the comments about other places that make the grade.

Like Western Civilization, though, cultures that have a large focus on just outcomes are susceptible to propaganda that plays on cultural guilt. Ever wonder why GloboLeftists pimped the 1619 Project? Like the entire Civil Rights movement, it was based on creating guilt in people who had committed no crime or offense. And it was effective. On white people. But it wouldn’t be on them.

I think that there still exists a strong fear on the part of white people to say, “Hey, I’d rather live among other white people.” It sounds scary to them. Yet, those same people wouldn’t bat an eye if black people wanted their own dorms that excluded whites.

It’s guilt. Our virtues have been weaponized against us. It’s so effective that even British people feel guilt over slavery, even when they effectively ended the international trade in slaves. Those who do this are, like Epictetus said, using every trick to be Beautiful to try to hide their true ugliness.

My guess is that’s why they really want the statues to come down. To see Western Civilization and all it has created is the biggest slap in the face to them and fills them with shame, so they have to either destroy it, or come up with some reason why they have failed to assuage their shame.

Continue in your quest for excellence, and understand those that will try to drag you down or fill you with guilt. Ignore them. And, in the immortal words of Abraham Lincoln, “Party on, dudes!”

Travelling With Russell, "Walking in the World-Famous Gorky Park in Russia"

Meanwhile, elsewhere...
Full screen recommended.
Travelling With Russell, 5/8/26
"Walking in the World-Famous Gorky Park in Russia"
Come for a walk with me around the World-Famous Gorky Park in Moscow, Russia. Locally known as Park Kultury, or The Park of Culture. Discover what it's like on a beautiful sunny Monday evening, right at Sunset time in Gorky Park. Simply amazing."
Comments here:

Judge Napolitano, "INTEL Roundtable w/Johnson & McGovern, and Scott Ritter"

Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 5/8/26
"INTEL Roundtable w/Johnson & McGovern, and Scott Ritter:
Weekly Wrap 8 May"
Comments here:

The Daily "Near You?"

Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, United Kingdom.
Thanks for stopping by!

"A Parade Of Fools..."

"Humanity is a parade of fools,
and I am at the front of it, twirling a baton."
- Dean Koontz

"Bread And Circuses..."

Decimus Iunius Iuvenalis", in English:
"Give them bread and circuses and they will never revolt."
- Juvenal

"Take away my bread and circuses and all I have left is my pitchfork..."

"The Psychology of Manipulation: 6 Lessons from the Master of Propaganda"

"The Psychology of Manipulation: 
6 Lessons from the Master of Propaganda"
by Ryan Matters

"Edward L. Bernays was an American business consultant who is widely recognized as the father of public relations. Bernays was one of the men responsible for “selling” World War 1 to the American public by branding it as a war that was necessary to “make the world safe for democracy”. During the 1920s, Bernays consulted for a number of major corporations, helping to boost their business through expertly crafted marketing campaigns aimed at influencing public opinion.

In 1928, Edward Bernays published his famous book, "Propaganda", in which he outlined the theories behind his successful “public relations” endeavours. The book provides insights into the phenomenon of crowd psychology and outlines effective methods for manipulating people’s habits and opinions. For a book that’s almost 100 years old, "Propaganda" could not be more relevant today. In fact, its relevance is a testament to the unchanging nature of human psychology.

One of the key takeaways of the book is that mind control is an important aspect of any democratic society. Indeed, Bernays maintains that without the “conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses”, democracy simply would not “work”.

We are governed, our minds molded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men we have never heard of. This is a logical result of the way in which our democratic society is organized. Vast numbers of human beings must cooperate in this manner if they are to live together as a smoothly functioning society. According to Bernays, those doing the “governing” constitute an invisible ruling class that “understand the mental processes and social patterns of the masses”.

In "Propaganda", Bernays draws on the work of Gustave Le Bon, Wilfred Trotter, Walter Lippmann, and Sigmund Freud (his uncle!), outlining the power of mass psychology and how it may be used to manipulate the “group mind”. If we understand the mechanism and motives of the group mind, is it not possible to control and regiment the masses according to our will without their knowing about it?

I recently explored this topic in an essay about how occult rituals and predictive programming are used to manipulate the collective consciousness, influencing the thoughts, beliefs and actions of large groups of people, resulting in the creation of what occultists call “egregores”. Here I have extracted some key insights from Bernays in an attempt to show how his book "Propaganda" is, in many ways, the playbook used by the globalist cryptocracy to process the group mind of the masses.

1. If You Manipulate The Leader Of A Group, The People Will Follow: Bernays tells us that one of the easiest ways to influence the thoughts and actions of large numbers of people is to first influence their leader. If you can influence the leaders, either with or without their conscious cooperation, you automatically influence the group which they sway.

In fact, one of the most firmly established principles of mass psychology is that the “group mind” does not “think”, rather, it acts according to impulses, habits and emotions. And when deciding on a certain course of action, its first impulse is to follow the example of a trusted leader.

Humans are, by nature a group species. Even when we are alone, we have a deep sense of group belonging. Whether they consciously know it or not, much of what people do is an effort to conform to the ideals of their chosen group so as to feel a sense of acceptance and belonging.

This exact method of influencing the leader and watching the people follow has been used extensively throughout the last few years. One notable instance that comes to mind is the horrendously inaccurate epidemiological models created by Neil Ferguson, which formed the basis for Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s lockdown policies. Once Johnson was convinced of the need to lockdown and mask up, the people gladly followed.

2. Words Are Powerful: The Key To Influencing A Group Is The Clever Use Of Language: Certain words and phrases are associated with certain emotions, symbols and reactions. Bernays tell us that through the clever and careful use of language, one can manipulate the emotions of a group and thereby influence their perceptions and actions. By playing upon an old cliché, or manipulating a new one, the propagandist can sometimes swing a whole mass of group emotions.

The clever use of language has been employed throughout the Covid-19 pandemic to great effect. An obvious example of this was when the definition of “vaccine” was changed to include injections utilizing experimental mRNA technology. You see, the word “vaccine” is associated in the public mind with a certain picture – that of a safe, proven medical intervention that is not only life-saving but absolutely necessary.

If governments had told people to go get their “gene therapies”, the vast majority of the public would likely question the motives behind such a campaign; they would feel extremely skeptical because the phrase “gene therapy” is not associated with the same images, emotions and feelings as “vaccine”.

The same goes for the word “pandemic”, the definition of which was also changed. The word “pandemic” is generally associated in the collective consciousness with fear, death, chaos and emergency (largely thanks to Hollywood and the myriad virus films it has released over the years).

3. Any Medium Of Communication Is Also A Medium For Propaganda: Any system of communication, whether phone, radio, print, or social media, is nothing more than a means of transmitting information. Bernays reminds us that any such means of communication is also a channel for propaganda. There is no means of human communication which may not also be a means of deliberate propaganda.

Bernays goes on to stress that a good propagandist must always keep abreast of new forms of communication, so that they may co-opt them as means of deliberate propaganda. Indeed, systems that most people would associate with freedom of speech and democracy are none other than means of circulating propaganda. Facebook fact-checkers, Big Tech censorship and YouTube’s Covid banners certainly fall into this category.

Other examples of this include the recent algorithm updates made by various search engines (including Google and DuckDuckGo) to penalize Russian websites, although this should come as no surprise (Google has been engaging in this type of “shadow propaganda” for many years).

4. Reiterating The Same Idea Over And Over Creates Habits And Convictions: Although Bernays terms this a technique used by the “old propagandists”, he, nonetheless, recognizes its usefulness. It was one of the doctrines of the reaction psychology that a certain stimulus often repeated would create a habit, or that the mere reiteration of an idea would create a conviction.

Repeating the same idea or the same “mantra” again and again is a form of neuro-linguistic programming aimed at instilling certain concepts or emotions into the subconscious mind. Indeed, people who are feeling sad or depressed are often advised to repeat to themselves an uplifting saying or affirmation.

There are many examples of this simple, yet effective, technique being used to great effect over the last few years. Think Q’s “trust the plan”, the globalist favourite, “build back better” or the incessant repetition of that twisted phrase, “trust the science”. Included in this category are the 24/7-in-your-face death statistics and case numbers, aimed at promoting the illusion of a pandemic.

There are more obvious examples of this as well, such as news anchors in different areas all reading from the exact same script.

5. Things Are Not Desired For Their Intrinsic Worth, But Rather For The Symbols That They Represent: After studying why people make certain purchasing decisions, Bernays observed that people often don’t desire something for its usefulness or value, but rather because it represents something else which they unconsciously crave. A thing may be desired not for its intrinsic worth or usefulness, but because he has unconsciously come to see in it a symbol of something else, the desire for which he is ashamed to admit to himself.

Bernays gives the example of a man buying a car. From the outside, it may appear as if the man is buying the car because he needs a means of transport, but in actuality, he is buying it because he craves the elevated social status that comes with owning a motor vehicle.

This idea, too, applies to the events over the last few years. For example, masks are a symbol of compliance. Everyone knows they don’t work but they wear them because of their desire to “fit in”, and to be seen as an upstanding citizen who follows the rules. Covid-19 injections are also a symbol and many people choose to get them because they have a desire to avoid being called an “anti-vaxxer” or a “conspiracy theorist”.

6. One Can Manipulate Individual Actions By Creating Circumstances That Modify Group Customs: Lastly, Bernays tells us that if one wishes to manipulate the actions of an individual, the most effective way to do so is to create circumstances that engender the desired behavior. What are the true reasons why the purchaser is planning to spend his money on a new car instead of on a new piano? […] He buys a car, because it is at the moment the group custom to buy cars. The modern propagandist therefore sets to work to create circumstances which will modify that custom.

For example, why all of a sudden does everyone “stand with Ukraine”? According to Bernays, it’s not because there is a war going on and innocent people need our love and support, but rather because it is the new “group custom” to do so. The process of altering group customs begins from the top down. In every nation or social clique, there are leaders, public figures and influencers. Manipulating those with the most sway eventually filters down into the public mind. That is why when a celebrity decides to wear something extravagant on the red carpet, a whole new trend can arise overnight.

Similarly, at the beginning of the Covid saga and then the Russia-Ukraine war, the media were quick to circulate stories of celebs “catching Covid” and urging people to stay home, or public figures condemning Russian actions and calling for stricter sanctions (which just so happened to hurt the West more than they hurt Russia).

The Propaganda Playbook: The world is a volatile place right now. Things seem to change quickly and no one knows what might happen next. However, amid all this chaos there is one thing that has not changed and is unlikely to change any time soon, and that is human psychology. Because of this, the tactics used to manipulate people’s thoughts, beliefs and actions have not changed either. In fact, most of them were outlined in detail 100 years ago by Edward Bernays in his 1928 book, "Propaganda."

That’s right, the Puppet Master’s playbook isn’t a secret. It’s right there, freely available to anyone who cares to understand how the powers that be seek to influence them on a daily basis."
Freely download "Propaganda", by Edward L. Bernays, here:

Joel Bowman, "Love Taps and Reckless Attacks"

"Love Taps and Reckless Attacks"
by Joel Bowman

"Already long ago, from when we sold our vote to no man, the People have abdicated our duties; for the People who once upon a time handed out military command, high civil office, legions - everything, now restrains itself and anxiously hopes for just two things: bread and circuses." ~ Juvenal, "Satires X"

Buenos Aires, Argentina - "First up, the same olds...From Reuters: "Trump says ceasefire still holds after fighting between the US and Iran flares." From the New York Times: "Tehran Accuses U.S. of “Reckless Attack” in Strait as Trump Insists Ceasefire Holds." And from Fox News: "Trump calls US strikes on Iran a ‘love tap’ after destroyers targeted in Strait of Hormuz." And there you have it, dear reader. Clean as an oil spill. Now, is the situation improving… or deteriorating? Are attacks flaring… or the ceasefire holding? Are we talking reckless attacks… or love taps? Hmm...

Death by Democracy: As we’ve seen in these Notes many times before, modern man can be made to go along with just about anything. Given the right circumstances… some narrative framing… and enough time for it all to marinate in his soft, mammalian brain… there is almost nothing Homo Credulus will not learn to embrace.

Just take a look at the historical record; you’ll soon wonder how we even 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. But you’ll also scratch your head. Perhaps you’ll even weep. And if you reckon hard enough, you’ll put a few assumptions in the firing line…

The Divine Right of Kings? Strongman rule? Modern democracy? How has mankind survived such crude contrivances? Self inflicted, no less! And why, moreover, does he rush so earnestly to repeat and replay his own worst mistakes? Ah, let us not be too hard on our fellow creatures. 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, as an astute reader reminded us recently, 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, and inked on our hallowed mastheads. 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 devil is in the details. Herewith, a little historical context…

The Father of Propaganda: 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 grueling Civil War just a few decades earlier, in which hundreds of thousands of 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 loans to foreign powers. 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’s sons 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 his nation, made a personal fortune for his efforts. He was even invited by Woodrow Wilson to attend the ill-fated 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 would be willing to kill one another under the influence of a mere marketing campaign, surely they could 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 the author laid out the blueprint for mass social and psychological manipulation. The collected works went on to become a huge success and a 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.”

The Show Must Go On: Having acquired somewhat of a tainted reputation-by-association, propaganda, itself, underwent a “strategic rebranding” after WWII. Needless to say, 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! Such is the nature of the mob! Whether in love, literature, 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 finite time 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, 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. And lo!

So many moons later, a quarter century into the new millennium, we’ve got trending headlines and streaming infotainment, the pretense of safety and a surrender of liberty, soaring national debt at home foreign entanglements abroad, mindless TV debates and partisan hack electioneering. Now, as then, the show goes on!"

"How It Really Is"

 

Adventures With Danno, "Stocking Up At Aldi Before Price Increases"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 5/8/26
"Stocking Up At Aldi Before Price Increases"
Comments here:

Chris Hedges, "America’s Suicide Pact"

"America’s Suicide Pact"
by Chris Hedges

"Civilizations, as the historian Arnold J. Toynbee famously argued, “die from suicide, not by murder.” They collapse from within. They fall prey to moral, social and spiritual decay. They are seized by a parasitic ruling class. Democratic institutions seize up. The citizenry is immiserated, wealth is funneled upwards to the ruling class and coercion is the principle form of control.

Our suicidal march began long before Donald Trump and his bizarre court of buffoons, sycophants, grifters and Christian fascists took power. It began when the ruling class, especially under the Reagan and Clinton administrations, set out to harvest the country and empire for personal profit.

There is a word for these people. Traitors. These traitors, ensconced in the leadership of the two ruling parties, stripped us of assets and power slowly. They used subterfuge, lies and legalized bribery. They pretended to honor electoral politics, checks and balances, a free press and the rule of law while subverting all of these democratic pillars. That old system, however flawed, was hollowed out. It was turned over to the amoral and the idiotic - look at the Supreme Court or Congress - those willing to do the bidding of the billionaire class.

Armed with billions by the mortal enemy of the demos - the oligarchs and corporations - the political elites, Republicans and Democrats, destroyed the careers of those politicians who resisted. They crushed labor unions. They blacklisted honest journalists and consolidated the press into the hands of a handful of corporations and oligarchs. They slashed regulations that constrained unfettered greed and protected the population from predatory corporations and environmental toxins. They passed legislation that created a de facto tax boycott for the rich - Trump famously paid no federal income taxes in 10 of the 15 years prior to his presidency - while stripping the country of its industry and throwing some 30 million people out of work. Wealth is no longer created by producing or manufacturing. It is created by manipulating the prices of stocks and commodities and imposing a crippling debt peonage on the public.

These parasites cut or abolished social programs, militarized the police, built the largest prison system in the world and pumped funds into a bloated and out-of-control war industry. German socialist and politician Karl Liebknecht, on the eve of the suicidal folly of World War I, called German imperialists “the enemy at home.” Our rulers, our enemies at home, mounted a series of futile wars that degraded the empire’s global hegemony and poured trillions of dollars of taxpayer money into their bank accounts. Iran is the most recent example.

Trump is not an outlier. He is the naked, stripped-down expression of this suicidal pact. He does not pretend the system he inherited works. He lies with less finesse. He crassly enriches himself and his family. He speaks in crude vulgarities. He dismantles any government agency dedicated to the common good, including the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Education and the U.S. Postal Service. But he embodies what came before him, albeit without the liberal façade.

“Trump is not an anomaly,” I wrote in “America: The Farewell Tour” He is the grotesque visage of a collapsed democracy. Trump and his coterie of billionaires, generals, half-wits, Christian fascists, criminals, racists, and moral deviants play the role of the Snopes clan in some of William Faulkner’s novels. The Snopeses filled the power vacuum of the decayed South and ruthlessly seized control from the degenerated, former slaveholding aristocratic elites. Flem Snopes and his extended family - which includes a killer, a pedophile, a bigamist, an arsonist, a mentally disabled man who copulates with a cow, and a relative who sells tickets to witness the bestiality - are fictional representations of the scum now elevated to the highest level of the federal government. They embody the moral rot unleashed by unfettered capitalism.

The Epstein files, a window into the degeneracy of our ruling class, included not only Trump, but former U.S. president Bill Clinton - who allegedly took a trip to Thailand with Epstein - Prince Andrew, Microsoft founder and billionaire Bill Gates, hedge fund billionaire Glenn Dubin, the former New Mexico governor Bill Richardson, former secretary of the treasury and former president of Harvard University Larry Summers, cognitive psychologist and author Stephen Pinker, Epstein’s lawyer and arch Zionist Alan Dershowitz, billionaire and Victoria’s Secret CEO Leslie Wexner, the former Barclays banker Jes Staley, former Israel prime minister Ehud Barak, magician David Copperfield, actor Kevin Spacey, former CIA director William Burns, real estate mogul Mort Zuckerman, former Maine senator George Mitchell and disgraced Hollywood producer and convicted rapist Harvey Weinstein. They all orbited Epstein’s perpetual Bacchanalia.

Anand Giridharadas, who wrote “Winners Take All: The Elite Charade of Changing the World,” notes that the circle of powerful men, and a handful of women who surrounded Epstein, are emblematic of a privileged caste that lack empathy in the suffering and abuse of others, whether that is sexual abuse, including that of children, financial meltdowns they orchestrate, wars they back, addictions and overdose they enable, the monopolies they defend, the inequality they turbocharge, the housing crisis they milk and the intrusive technologies they refuse to protect people against:

People are right to sense that as the emails lay bare, there is a highly private merito-aristocracy at the intersection of government and business, lobbying, philanthropy, start-ups, academia, science, high finance and media, that all too often takes care of its own more than the common good. They are right to resent that there are infinite second chances for members of this group even as so many Americans are deprived of first chances. They are right that their pleas often go unheard, whether they are being evicted, gouged, foreclosed on, A.I.-obsolesced - or, yes, raped.

“The Epstein emails, in my view,” Giridharadas writes, “together sketch a devastating epistolary portrait of how our social order functions, and for whom. Saying that isn’t extreme. The way this elite operates is.” “If this neoliberal-era power elite remains poorly understood,” he continues, “it may be because it is not just a financial elite or an educated elite, a noblesse-oblige elite, a political elite or a narrative-making elite; it straddles all of these, lucratively and persuaded of its own good intentions.”

“These people are,” Giridharadas reminds us, “on the same team. On air, they might clash. They promote opposite policies. Some in the network profess anguish over what others in the network are doing. But the emails depict a group whose highest commitment is to their own permanence in the class that decides things. When principles conflict with staying in the network, the network wins.” You can see my interview with Giridharadas here.

The entire system is rotten. It will not reform itself. The Democratic Party has hit on the novel campaign issue of reducing taxes to win this year’s midterm elections. It will, no doubt, anoint another vapid, issue-less and genocide-supporting presidential nominee. Democratic donors pumped a staggering $1.5 billion into Kamala Harris’s abridged 15-week celebrity-fueled presidential campaign. She became the first Democratic presidential candidate to lose the national popular vote in two decades and be defeated in every battleground state.

The Democratic Party is not a functioning political party. It is a corporate mirage. Its members can, at best, select preapproved candidates and act as props in choreographed conventions and rallies. Party members have zero influence on party politics.

The more the diminishing power of the empire becomes apparent, evidenced in Trump’s debacle with Iran, the more a confused population retreats into a fantasy world, a world where hard and unpleasant facts do not intrude.

In the final days of a civilization, a population wallows in self-delusional hubris and trumpets false virtues. It looks for scapegoats to explain its failures - Muslims, undocumented workers, Mexicans, African-Americans, feminists, intellectuals, artists and dissidents. Magical thinking and the myth of American exceptionalism dominate public discourse and are taught in schools. Art and culture are degraded to nationalist kitsch. Science is dismissed, even in the midst of the environmental crisis. Cultural and intellectual disciplines that allow us to see the world from the perspective of the other, that foster empathy, understanding and compassion, are replaced by a grotesque and cruel hypermasculinity and hypermilitarism. Trump is perfectly tailored for these death throes. He is not a freak or an anomaly. He is the naked visage of our pathological sickness."

"The Day Civilization Runs Out Of Bread Will Not Feel Like Fiction"

"The Day Civilization Runs Out Of 
Bread Will Not Feel Like Fiction"
by Madge Waggy

"For nearly three decades, much of the modern world behaved as though the nuclear age had quietly expired sometime in the early 1990s. The collapse of the Soviet Union created the comforting illusion that humanity had stepped away from the edge permanently, as if the terrifying balance that defined the Cold War had dissolved together with old political maps. Younger generations grew up hearing about nuclear drills, fallout shelters, and atomic panic the same way they heard about trench warfare or medieval plagues: as distant historical experiences disconnected from ordinary life. Governments gradually shifted public attention toward terrorism, economic globalization, artificial intelligence, and climate policy, while nuclear annihilation faded into the background of public consciousness.

Yet history has a dangerous habit of returning precisely when societies become convinced they have outgrown it. Throughout 2025 and the opening months of 2026, the international system entered one of its most unstable periods since the twentieth century. Military analysts began warning openly about simultaneous geopolitical flashpoints involving several nuclear powers at once. Russian officials intensified references to strategic deterrence during ongoing confrontations connected to Eastern Europe, while NATO expanded military exercises across regions Moscow considers existentially sensitive. At the same time, China accelerated modernization of its nuclear arsenal and long-range missile systems at a pace that alarmed Western intelligence agencies. North Korea continued demonstrating increasingly advanced delivery capabilities, and tensions surrounding Taiwan, cyber warfare, and contested maritime territories pushed diplomatic relations into progressively uncertain territory.

Most citizens observed these developments from a psychological distance shaped by modern media exhaustion. Continuous exposure to crisis has transformed public attention into something fragmented and temporary. Economic anxiety, inflation, political polarization, housing instability, technological disruption, and endless digital noise have conditioned people to process existential threats as short-lived headlines rather than historical warnings. This emotional fatigue may partially explain why recent discussions surrounding nuclear risk have failed to produce widespread public alarm despite the seriousness of the underlying situation.

What many people still fail to understand is that contemporary fears surrounding nuclear war extend far beyond the immediate destruction caused by the weapons themselves. The dominant concern among climate scientists, food security experts, and strategic analysts is no longer limited to blast zones or radiation exposure. The larger fear involves what happens afterward, when the environmental consequences of large-scale firestorms begin altering the planet’s atmosphere and destabilizing the systems that sustain modern civilization.
Civilization Does Not Collapse In One Afternoon: During the Cold War, researchers studying atmospheric science reached conclusions that many policymakers initially struggled to accept. Their models suggested that nuclear detonations targeting cities and industrial infrastructure would ignite massive firestorms capable of releasing extraordinary amounts of soot and smoke into the upper atmosphere. Unlike ordinary pollution, these particles could remain suspended in the stratosphere for extended periods, blocking significant portions of sunlight from reaching the Earth’s surface. The phenomenon eventually became known as “nuclear winter,” though the phrase itself almost sounds too simple for the scale of devastation being described.

The consequences outlined in scientific simulations were extraordinary. Temperatures across major agricultural regions could fall dramatically within weeks. Growing seasons would shorten or disappear entirely in some parts of the world. Rainfall patterns could become severely disrupted, while frost conditions might appear during periods traditionally associated with crop growth. Wheat, corn, rice, and soy production would decline simultaneously across multiple continents, creating a synchronized collapse unlike anything modern economies were designed to survive.

What makes this possibility especially catastrophic in 2026 is the structure of contemporary civilization itself. Modern societies are built upon tightly interconnected supply chains operating with remarkable efficiency but very little redundancy. Large urban populations depend on continuous transportation networks, imported food, fuel distribution systems, refrigeration infrastructure, and stable international trade routes to maintain ordinary daily life. The abundance visible inside supermarkets creates the illusion of permanent security, yet many cities possess only limited food reserves capable of supporting their populations for short periods without resupply.

Once agricultural output begins failing internationally, governments would almost certainly prioritize domestic survival over global cooperation. Export restrictions would emerge rapidly. Shipping routes could become militarized or inaccessible. Financial systems would destabilize under panic conditions, while fuel shortages would further damage transportation and farming operations. Nations heavily dependent on food imports would face immediate humanitarian crises, but even agricultural powers would struggle once climate disruption and supply chain fragmentation intensified simultaneously.

Several modern studies examining nuclear famine scenarios estimate that billions of people could face starvation following a large-scale nuclear exchange. Some projections, revisited in light of newer climate data and current population levels, suggest mortality rates so extreme that they challenge the imagination. This is partly why historical American government assessments discussing potential death tolls approaching ninety percent of humanity continue attracting renewed attention today. The figure sounds almost impossible to comprehend until one begins analyzing how dependent modern civilization truly is on environmental stability and uninterrupted agricultural production.

There is also a psychological dimension to these discussions that experts rarely address publicly in direct terms. Human beings often assume technological sophistication automatically guarantees resilience. The modern world appears powerful because it possesses satellites, artificial intelligence, advanced medicine, digital communication, and industrial automation. However, none of those systems can function normally without stable energy networks, functioning governments, predictable climates, and access to food. Civilization may appear technologically invincible while remaining biologically fragile underneath.

Historical examples repeatedly demonstrate that famine destabilizes societies faster than almost any other force. Political institutions that appear permanent during periods of abundance can deteriorate with astonishing speed once populations begin competing for survival. Social trust erodes rapidly under conditions of scarcity, and governments facing mass hunger frequently resort to emergency powers, censorship, militarized distribution systems, or violent repression in attempts to preserve order. The concern among researchers is not merely that people would suffer physically after a nuclear conflict, but that the organizational foundations of civilization itself could begin disintegrating under sustained environmental pressure.
The Most Dangerous Illusion Of The Twenty-First Century: Perhaps the most unsettling aspect of the modern nuclear dilemma is the persistence of a belief that rational actors will always prevent ultimate catastrophe. Nuclear deterrence theory has long depended upon the assumption that political leaders understand the unacceptable consequences of escalation. For decades, this logic arguably prevented direct conflict between major powers. However, contemporary geopolitical conditions have introduced forms of instability far more unpredictable than those defining much of the Cold War.

Cyberattacks, artificial intelligence-assisted military systems, disinformation campaigns, autonomous weapons development, regional proxy wars, and instantaneous digital propaganda have dramatically accelerated the speed at which crises evolve. Decision-making environments have become saturated with uncertainty, misinformation, and political pressure. Under such conditions, the possibility of miscalculation increases substantially. Many historical catastrophes did not emerge because leaders consciously desired apocalypse; they unfolded because governments believed escalation remained controllable until events moved beyond anyone’s ability to contain them.

This fear now shapes many contemporary security discussions behind closed doors. Analysts increasingly worry less about intentional world-ending war and more about uncontrolled escalation arising from regional conflict, technological failure, accidental launch detection, or political desperation during moments of extreme instability. The existence of thousands of nuclear warheads means humanity continues living inside a system where a relatively small number of decisions made within minutes could alter the trajectory of civilization permanently.

The deeper tragedy is that modern society possesses enough scientific knowledge to understand these risks with remarkable clarity while simultaneously lacking the political unity necessary to eliminate them completely. Humanity has mapped the environmental consequences, modeled agricultural collapse scenarios, studied historical famines, and analyzed strategic escalation pathways extensively. The danger is not hidden ignorance. The danger is collective normalization.

For years, nuclear weapons survived in public imagination mostly as symbols rather than active threats. In 2026, that perception has begun changing again. What once felt theoretical now appears uncomfortably plausible to many researchers observing the deterioration of international stability. The silence surrounding these fears should not be mistaken for safety. In many ways, silence may simply reflect how accustomed humanity has become to living beside mechanisms capable of ending the modern world.

The Hunger That Would Rewrite Human History: For most people living in industrialized nations, hunger exists as an abstract concept rather than an immediate fear. Supermarkets remain illuminated throughout the night, delivery systems function with mechanical precision, and food arrives so consistently that modern consumers rarely consider the extraordinary infrastructure required to sustain this daily normality. Entire generations have grown up inside societies where scarcity feels temporary and manageable, something associated with distant humanitarian crises rather than a condition capable of consuming advanced civilizations. This psychological distance from famine may explain why discussions surrounding nuclear conflict still focus overwhelmingly on explosions instead of agriculture.

Yet among climate scientists and food security researchers, the central nightmare has increasingly shifted away from the battlefield itself. The deeper fear concerns the months and years following the initial detonations, when collapsing harvests begin interacting with fragile political systems and overstretched global supply chains. In this scenario, the bombs become only the beginning of the disaster rather than its conclusion.
A Planet Running Out Of Sunlight: Recent studies examining large-scale nuclear conflict suggest that the atmospheric consequences could emerge faster than most populations would expect. Massive firestorms generated by burning urban centers, oil facilities, industrial complexes, and transportation infrastructure would inject soot into the upper atmosphere on a scale modern civilization has never experienced directly. Once suspended in the stratosphere, these particles could reduce the amount of sunlight reaching agricultural regions across the planet for extended periods of time.

Even relatively small temperature declines can devastate food production when they occur globally and simultaneously. Agriculture depends upon stability more than abundance. Crops evolve around predictable seasonal rhythms, specific rainfall patterns, and narrow temperature windows that determine germination, growth, and harvest cycles. Sudden climatic disruption affecting multiple breadbasket regions at once would trigger cascading failures impossible to offset through ordinary trade mechanisms.

Wheat production in North America, rice cultivation across Asia, corn yields in major exporting nations, and soybean harvests supporting livestock industries could all experience severe declines within the same agricultural cycle. Fisheries might collapse as ocean ecosystems react to cooling temperatures and contamination, while livestock production would suffer from both feed shortages and infrastructure breakdown. Nations that currently import large portions of their food supplies would face immediate humanitarian emergencies, but even countries traditionally considered agricultural powers would struggle to maintain internal stability under prolonged climate disruption.

One of the most disturbing conclusions emerging from famine modeling is that modern civilization possesses remarkably little resilience once synchronized global shortages begin appearing. International trade networks function efficiently during normal conditions precisely because they rely on predictability. Under extreme pressure, however, governments tend to abandon cooperative frameworks rapidly in favor of domestic preservation. Export bans would likely emerge within days of confirmed agricultural collapse. Strategic grain reserves would become politically weaponized. Transportation systems already strained by fuel shortages and economic panic could deteriorate rapidly, preventing aid distribution even when supplies remain technically available.

History offers numerous examples of societies destabilized by food insecurity, but the modern world has never experienced simultaneous scarcity affecting billions of people across multiple continents. During previous famines, unaffected regions could still provide assistance or maintain economic stability. A nuclear-induced agricultural collapse would remove that possibility almost entirely because every major nation would confront variations of the same crisis at once.

The social consequences become difficult to calculate precisely because they extend beyond starvation itself. Large urban populations dependent on uninterrupted food deliveries would likely experience panic within weeks of sustained shortages. Financial systems could freeze as governments impose emergency controls. Mass migration, civil unrest, organized violence, and authoritarian crackdowns would become increasingly probable as political institutions struggle to preserve order. Under such conditions, mortality would rise not only from hunger but from disease outbreaks, collapsing medical systems, infrastructure failures, exposure during extreme winters, and violent conflict over remaining resources.
Why The Twenty-First Century Could Be Less Prepared Than The Cold War: There is an uncomfortable irony hidden within modern discussions about civilization and progress. Technologically, humanity has never appeared more advanced. Artificial intelligence systems can process extraordinary quantities of information, satellites monitor climate activity in real time, and global communication networks connect billions of people instantly. Yet beneath this technological sophistication lies a level of systemic dependency that may actually increase vulnerability during extreme crises.

Cold War societies, despite living under constant nuclear anxiety, often possessed stronger local manufacturing capabilities, larger strategic reserves, and populations more psychologically familiar with rationing or national emergency planning. In contrast, contemporary economies operate through highly optimized global supply chains designed for efficiency rather than resilience. Many industries maintain minimal redundancy because uninterrupted trade and stable geopolitical conditions became normalized assumptions after decades of globalization.

This efficiency creates enormous fragility. A disruption affecting fuel, transportation, fertilizer production, semiconductor manufacturing, or energy infrastructure can rapidly spread through multiple sectors simultaneously. Agriculture itself has become deeply industrialized and dependent on advanced logistics systems. Modern farming requires machinery, synthetic fertilizers, pesticides, refrigeration networks, digital coordination systems, and stable access to fuel. Once several of these components begin failing together, food production declines far more dramatically than many people assume.

Another factor rarely discussed publicly involves population density. The global population now exceeds eight billion people, with massive concentrations living inside urban environments unable to sustain themselves independently for extended periods. Cities function because surrounding systems continuously move food inward and waste outward. Remove those systems long enough and urban civilization becomes extraordinarily difficult to maintain peacefully.

Researchers studying nuclear famine scenarios increasingly emphasize that the world entering such a crisis would already be politically and environmentally strained beforehand. Climate change has intensified droughts, floods, heatwaves, and agricultural unpredictability across several continents. Economic inequality has deepened social tensions within many nations, while migration pressures and regional conflicts continue destabilizing vulnerable areas. In this context, a large-scale nuclear exchange would not strike a healthy and stable international order. It would strike a world already showing signs of exhaustion.

Perhaps this is why certain historical government assessments produced mortality estimates that appear almost surreal to ordinary readers. The projections were not based solely on blast casualties. They reflected broader systemic collapse involving food insecurity, governance failure, economic fragmentation, environmental destabilization, and prolonged humanitarian breakdown. Once those variables interact globally, the number of potential deaths rises with terrifying speed.

The greatest misconception surrounding nuclear war may therefore be the belief that survival depends primarily on avoiding the initial explosions. In reality, the long-term environmental and societal consequences could determine humanity’s future far more decisively than the first hours of destruction. The bombs themselves would last minutes. The famine afterward could reshape civilization for generations."
Hat tip to The Burning Platform for this material!