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Friday, April 3, 2026

"Trump’s Premature Claim About Air Supremacy and Obliterated Iranian Air Defenses"

"Trump’s Premature Claim About Air Supremacy 
and Obliterated Iranian Air Defenses"
by Larry C. Johnson

"During his Wednesday night speech, Donald Trump made the following claim about Iran’s air defenses: They have no anti-aircraft equipment, their radar’s 100% annihilated, we are unstoppable as a military force. It appears that President Trump was a bit premature. The US Air Force had a difficult day on Friday:

➡️ F-15E (48th Fighter Wing) - Shot down in southwestern Iran. Pilot rescued; WSO still missing.
➡️ A-10C Thunderbolt II - Shot down and crashed into the Persian Gulf. Pilot reportedly recovered.
➡️ 2X HH-60G Pave Hawk - Hit during CSAR mission, one crash-landed across the border in Iraq. All crew reportedly rescued.
➡️ KC-135R Stratotanker - Emergency squawk 7700 around 10:00 UTC near Tel Aviv.
➡️ F-16CJ “Wild Weasel” (F-16C Block 50/52, SEAD configuration) - Emergency squawk 7700 over Saudi Arabia near the Iraqi border around 15:00 UTC; later disappeared from FlightRadar.
➡️ KC-135R Stratotanker - Emergency squawk 7700 around 19:00 UTC near Tel Aviv.

It appears that Iran has no centralized air defense C2 or any kind of joint engagement zone (JEZ) anymore. However, as evidenced by the incidents above, Iran appears to be relying on Vietnam-style guerrilla tactics of shoot-and-scoot air defense with their passive and highly tactical indigenous system… The IR-SA-7’s (pronounced “Ur-sah-seven”). These Some are specially developed missiles that can loiter at altitude, almost like a glider, completely passive, that lie in wait for one of the US older generation fighters, tankers or other support aircraft to wander too close and then hone-in. While the US can claim “air supremacy” this does not mean that US aircraft can fly over Iran without incurring the risk of being shot down.

I wonder if the Russians are paying attention to Iran’s information operations? Iran is proving to be quite clever and creative in producing videos that take trolling to new heights:
Absolutely hilarious must-view video is here:

"Marandi: Sinister Leaders Like Trump, Netanyahu Will Push Countries To Obtain Nukes"

Gerald Celente,4/3/26
"Marandi: Sinister Leaders Like Trump, 
Netanyahu Will Push Countries To Obtain Nukes"
Comments here:

"The State Of Israel Is About To Be Wiped Off The Map Permanently"

Full screen recommended.
Col. Larry Wilkerson, 4/3/26
"The State Of Israel Is About To Be 
Wiped Off The Map Permanently"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Judge Napolitano, 4/3/26
"John Mearsheimer: Israel Defenses Completely Empty – 
The Next Wave Ends Tel Aviv"
Comments here:

"Dining Out Is Broken… And It’s Not Getting Better"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 4/3/26
"Dining Out Is Broken… And It’s Not Getting Better"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Michael Bordenaro, 4/3/26
"Fast Food Is Collapsing As 
Gas Prices Hit A Breaking Point"
Comments here:

Jeremiah Babe, "Warning: Economy, War And Inflation Are About To Collide"

Jeremiah Babe, 4/3/26
"Warning: Economy, War And Inflation
 Are About To Collide"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Jeremiah Babe, 4/3/26
"People Freaking Out At The Gas Station; 
Shopping For More Security"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: "Dark Legend"

Look at the news posts below...Every day we're hopelessly saddened and discouraged at just how truly bad it really is, and knowing there's nothing we can do about it. Of necessity we need to be aware of these things, but it's not and never will be enjoyable. Then, as now, you need a short break away from it all, and this very special musical interlude is precisely that. Now and then, very rarely, you stumble upon something simply extraordinary, something that's just so astonishingly, magically beautiful and well done it's unbelievable. This is one of those times... Savor these wonderful musical images... - CP

Full screen recommended.
Dark Legend, "An Imaging of Tuesday Afternoon"
The Elves sing of the beauty of Tuesday Afternoon.
o
Full screen recommended.
Dark Legend, "An Imaging Of Nights In White Satin"
o
Full screen recommended.
Dark Legend, "An Imaging Of Forever Autumn"
o
Full screen recommended. 
Dark Legend, "An Imaging Of 'Your Wildest Dreams"
o
Full screen recommended.
Dark Legend, "A Whiter Sade Of Pale"
o
I'm a harsh critic, have done this blog for 16 years with 
over 110, 000 posts, thought I'd seen it all until finding this.
I simply cannot compliment or recommend this site highly enough.
Enjoy the magic...
YouTube Dark Legend Channel

"A Look to the Heavens"

Here is one of the largest objects that anyone will ever see on the sky. Each of these fuzzy blobs is a galaxy, together making up the Perseus Cluster, one of the closest clusters of galaxies. The cluster is seen through a foreground of faint stars in our own Milky Way Galaxy.
Near the cluster center, roughly 250 million light-years away, is the cluster's dominant galaxy NGC 1275, seen above as a large galaxy on the image left. A prodigious source of x-rays and radio emission, NGC 1275 accretes matter as gas and galaxies fall into it. The Perseus Cluster of Galaxies, also cataloged as Abell 426, is part of the Pisces-Perseus supercluster spanning over 15 degrees and containing over 1,000 galaxies. At the distance of NGC 1275, this view covers about 15 million light-years.”

"Sometimes Even To Live..."

"Sometimes even to live is an act of courage."
- Lucius Annaeus Seneca

"Life is an end in itself, and the only question as to whether 
it is worth living is whether you have had enough of it."
- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

That ultimately is the question...
Adrian Lester as Hamlet: "To be or not to be..."
William Shakespeare, "Hamlet", Act III, Scene I

"When An Old Friend Takes Her Own Life"

"When An Old Friend Takes Her Own Life"
by Charles Hugh Smith

"When an old friend takes her own life, your own life is irrevocably diminished. What seemed to matter before no longer matters, and what seemed to make sense no longer makes sense. My friend had recently moved 1,000 miles away, to a town which had long extended a magnetic draw on her. But she knew no one there, and since her work was all done on computer, she toiled alone. Like any other human being in those conditions, she was lonely. Yes, she had a loyal companion in her dog, and two very close friends here in California, and a constellation of lesser friends like me; but it was not enough at a critical moment.

She'd had those moments before, and been saved: just as she'd gathered the pills to swallow, a friend had called, and she'd gotten past that moment of dark obsession. Of all the past days' memories and thoughts, one returns: what if I had sensed her despair and called her at that moment? And why didn't I sense her need for reassurance and human contact at that critical hour? I have often dreamed of her, and had done so just the week before; it was a vivid dream, not at all alarming, and I'd recounted it to her in an email. She'd made no response, and I'd given it no further thought. Was the dream a premonition? No; but perhaps it was a signal, if not of distress, then of some tendril of distress.

It is convenient is think our friends resilient, just as it is convenient for adults to believe children are resilient when turmoil or tragedy strikes the family. Yes, children are resilent--they are human beings. But they are not endlessly resilient, and their quiet after death or upheaval is not resilience or resolve, it is the numbing of terrible pain.

And so this false reliance on resilience nags at me; I was too self-absorbed to think through the underlying conditions in my dear friend's life, and how lonely she might feel. Her childhood was not positive, nor was her family more than grudgingly supportive; there were always squabbles over money and demands for fealty she could not meet. She was resilient, but only just so; and I should have been alert to the proximity of her limits.

But I am also keenly aware of the limits of my influence in her life; though we each wish with all our hearts that we could have saved her in that moment of supreme temptation and pain, there are limits to our influence.

If you think of your oldest, closest friends - I have known and loved her for 37 years now - then we cannot recall all the thousands of words exchanged or spoken, or the thousands of hours spent together. We recall some few words and scenes, and it is those few we have to cherish and ponder. But what caused us to recall those moments and not others?

We are ripe to influence and connection only rarely; even our closest friends only influence our thinking and emotions at certain unpredictable junctures. After the fact, often when things have gone awry, we remember what they told us, or the comment they made off-handedly, or perhaps most rarely, their earnestly offered advice which we'd promptly ignored.

And so I hold two uncomfortably conflicting truths: that I could have been, and should have been, a better friend to her these past few months, when she needed all her friends' presence and understanding. But feeling this, and knowing it to be painfully true does not alter the limits of my influence in her life. Perhaps I could have contacted her in just the right moment, when my call or words could have tipped her away from that terrible decision; but more likely, that is a vain hope of a heartbroken friend, looking back from the periphery of her life.

For there are limits to us, this poor amalgam of brain and emotion; yes, faith can help, pets can help, friends and family can help, medication can help, insight can help, resolve can help -but none of these, or all of them put together, is guaranteed to overcome the darkness within us at its bleakest. The sufferer must be attuned to that particular wavelength at that moment in time; and if they have spun beyond our reach, then our ability to save them is lost as well.

Those of you who were born with minds which don't follow the happier pathways, the easier pathways, know that the "normal" person cannot understand the despair felt by those prone to one or more of the many madnesses which plague the human mind and spirit. Yes, we all know despression and anxiety, but those blessed with standard-issue minds will never experience the bottomlessness the others experience.

In a peculiarity of natural selection, or God's will (perhaps, despite the false labeling imposed by language, they amount to the same thing), the human spirits with the most enthusiasm for life, the ones with the poet's spark, the ones with the keenest sensibilities and sensitivities to life, are the ones most often drawn to that terrible cliff of self-destruction.

Some may mock Thanatos, the urge to self-destruction, the yin to the will to live's yang, as illusion. But it is real, and if you have not felt it, then count your blessings.

It is ironic, and tragic, that the selfish among us, the bitter types who have soured on life and who tap an endless well of bile to blame others for their own difficulties, or those who always find the energy to trumpet their own self-glory, never end their own lives. They cling on, as if the will to sow discord and ego are indestructable. No, it is the fragile ones, the thoughtful ones, who are drawn to that dark edge, and who jump; for life is too painful to bear at times, and they think not of faith or the love of their friends and family, but of escape.

It is an illusion, a cherished one, and one I wish was true, that love alone can save a lovely soul in extremis. She was loved, dearly, and yet we who loved her could not save her. We cannot but wish with all our own lifeforce that we could have done so, but there are limits, even to love. How I wish I had felt an urge to pick up the phone and call her that day, that hour, in the hope that perhaps that simple act would have distracted her, or comforted her just enough to stay her hand. But I had felt no such urge, and so the moment was lost.

To wish for that is to wish for powers and strengths I do not possess; I am just another muddled, muddling-through human, struggling daily with my own weaknesses and demons, trying not to fail those I love in this life. But I cannot help but feel I failed her, and that haunts me, and will haunt me, even as I know that to want that power in her life is not the same as actually wielding it. Though it is natural to wish for a limitless ability to save such a dear soul, perhaps it is overstating our reach.

When an old friend takes her own life, then you come to know how little you knew of her and of her life in that distant town. There are limits on what a friend can know, at least a friend who is not in the inner circle; and perhaps even they cannot know.

We were close at times, something like cousins or perhaps at the very best, as she once told me, siblings; she had no brothers. There is no good analog or word for friendships with no romantic frisson between men and women. We did not look anything alike; I am tall and fair, and she was very petite, with skin and eyes far different from my own.

She was the much better writer, the one who deservedly won the notice of mentors and prize committees. In comparison, I am a plodder, the aspirant who rows along without attracting much notice because, well, I'm just not that good. I thought her beautiful, and liked looking at her; she had an enthusiasm for things, and life, which I admired and even envied at times.

Now she is gone, and my life is so much poorer. My only consolation, and it too is a poor one, is that I had just written her that I loved her very much, and had always loved her. She'd made no answering comment, for it was known, and understood; but I hope, in my secret heart, that it gave her some small solace to read it, and to know it was true."

"Life is an end in itself, and the only question as to whether 
it is worth living is whether you have had enough of it."
- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

The Poet: T.S. Eliot, "The Hollow Men"

"The Hollow Men" (read by Tom O'Bedlam)

"My Favorite Poem"
by Craig Boehman

"I’ve been experimenting with several of the AI platforms, attempting to learn all that I can about how the systems work and how to produce the best images from the prompts that I provide. My favorite platform is Midjourney, which is what I used to create the images for this poem. It’s a relatively straight-forward process over all, but there is a bit of learning when it comes to some of the finer aspects of telling AI exactly what it is that you want. Whether then AI can actually provide you with your desired results is another issue altogether, as I’ve discovered first-hand over the past week. 

Which brings me to "The Hollow Men" by T.S. Eliot, my favorite poem. I thought what better way to put Midjourney’s AI to the test? Surely, not even artificial intelligence can handle all of Eliot’s lines in a cohesive manner. I found this to be true. But in some cases, the visuals came pretty close to matching a visual interpretation of the lines. I’ll let you be the judge though. 

For each of the images below, the corresponding lines from the poem were fed into the bot as prompts, exactly as written, no other commands given except to make the images all in a 3:2 ratio. Other than that, you’re seeing only the results from Eliot’s own words."

"The Hollow Men"

I

We are the hollow men,
We are the stuffed men,
Leaning together,
Headpiece filled with straw. Alas!

Our dried voices, when
We whisper together
Are quiet and meaningless,
As wind in dry grass,

Or rats’ feet over broken glass
In our dry cellar.

Shape without form, shade without color.
Paralyzed force, gesture without motion;

Those who have crossed
With direct eyes, to death’s other Kingdom,

Remember us - if at all - not as lost
Violent souls, but only
As the hollow men.
The stuffed men.


II

Eyes I dare not meet in dreams
In death’s dream kingdom,

These do not appear:
There, the eyes are
Sunlight on a broken column

There, is a tree swinging,
And voices are
In the wind’s singing,

More distant and more solemn
Than a fading star.

Let me be no nearer
In death’s dream kingdom.

Let me also wear
Such deliberate disguises
Rat’s coat, crowskin, crossed staves
In a field,

Behaving as the wind behaves
No nearer -

Not that final meeting
In the twilight kingdom.


III

This is the dead land,
This is cactus land.
Here the stone images
Are raised, here they receive
The supplication of a dead man’s hand
Under the twinkle of a fading star.

Is it like this
In death’s other kingdom,
Waking alone,
At the hour when we are
Trembling with tenderness,
Lips that would kiss
Form prayers to broken stone.


IV

The eyes are not here,
There are no eyes here
In this valley of dying stars,
In this hollow valley,
This broken jaw of our lost kingdoms.

In this last of meeting places
We grope together
And avoid speech,
Gathered on this beach of the tumid river.

Sightless, unless
The eyes reappear
As the perpetual starm
Multifoliate rose
Of death’s twilight kingdom,

The hope only
Of empty men.


V

Here we go round the prickly pear,
Prickly pear prickly pear,
Here we go round the prickly pear,
At five o’clock in the morning.

Between the idea
And the reality,
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the Shadow.

                                                                                      For Thine is the Kingdom.

Between the conception
And the creation,
Between the emotion
And the response,
Falls the Shadow

                                                                          Life is very long.

Between the desire
And the spasm,
Between the potency
And the existence,
Between the essence
And the descent,
Falls the Shadow.

                                                                                              For Thine is the Kingdom.

For Thine is,
Life is
For Thine is the...

This is the way the world ends,
This is the way the world ends,
This is the way the world ends,
Not with a bang but a whimper."

- T. S. Eliot

The Daily "Near You?"

San Luis Obispo, California, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Get Ready to Pay More for Everything! The Surcharge Explosion Has Begun"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 4/3/26
"Get Ready to Pay More for Everything! 
The Surcharge Explosion Has Begun"
"Prices are rising again - and this time it’s coming through hidden fees and surcharges on everything you buy. In this episode of i Allegedly, we break down the growing “surcharge explosion” hitting everyday Americans, from delivery fees and food costs to new charges tied to global conflicts and supply chain disruptions. Major companies are quietly adding percentage-based fees that are stacking up fast, making everything more expensive without most people even realizing it. As inflation continues and economic pressure builds, businesses are finding new ways to pass costs directly to consumers. From Amazon delivery fees to restaurant surcharges and rising service costs, this trend is accelerating fast. Is this the new normal? Or just the beginning of something much worse? Watch as i Allegedly exposes how these hidden costs are impacting your wallet and what it means for the future of the economy."
Comments here:

Judge Napolitano, "INTEL Roundtable w/Johnson & McGovern: Weekly Wrap - 3-April"

Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 4/3/26
"INTEL Roundtable w/Johnson & McGovern:
 Weekly Wrap - 3-April"
Comments here:

'How It Really Is"

Very strong language alert!
George Carlin, "The American Dream"

"Americans Are Drowning In Debt… And It’s Getting Worse"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 4/3/26
"Americans Are Drowning In Debt… 
And It’s Getting Worse"
Comments here:

"Trump, Fresh Off Being Anointed America’s New Messianic Savior, Purges Military of Dissident Generals, Promises to ‘Destroy What’s Left of Iran’"

"Trump, Fresh Off Being Anointed America’s New 
Messianic Savior, Purges Military of Dissident Generals,
 Promises to ‘Destroy What’s Left of Iran’"
by Leo Hohmann

"There is so much news breaking heading into Easter weekend that I wanted to give a brief update. Everything we are hearing points to an imminent ground invasion of Iran being ordered by Donald J. Trump. This could change, of course, but as of 3 p.m. on Good Friday, it’s not looking good.

Trump fired at least three top Army generals in the last couple of days (with some reports suggesting as many as 12 generals have been purged in recent weeks), a sure sign that he has decided to launch a high-risk ground assault on Iranian territory.

An F-15E fighter jet was shot down overnight in Iran, just two days after Trump told the nation that Iran has no air defenses left and has been totally defeated on land, sea and air. A search and rescue operation is ongoing for at least one of the two pilots onboard the downed plane. One of the two pilots has reportedly been rescued.

A second Air Force combat aircraft reportedly crashed on Friday at the “same time” that an F-15E fighter jet went down in Iran. The New York Times reported that the second aircraft went down in the Persian Gulf near the Strait of Hormuz. The pilot was recovered, the report said. An A-10 Warthog attack plane was said to be involved in the crash. According to the Times, the A-10 went down “about the same time that an Air Force F-15E was shot down over Iran, the officials said.”

Iran has struck a major oil refinery in Kuwait. The Iranians have also hit a major AI data center owned by OpenAI in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). This comes hours after Iran hit an Amazon AI data center in Bahrain, which represents $1.2 billion in damages, not to mention lost government functionality associated with this data center.

These strikes came from a country, again, that Trump says has nothing left with which to fight. The Iranians are meanwhile churning out AI propaganda videos mocking the U.S. president as a loser and a coward who will meet a fiery end. Trump shot back at the Iranians with Truth Social posts saying he is about to hit them harder than ever. “Our Military… hasn’t even started destroying what’s left in Iran,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “Bridges next, then Electric Power Plants! New Regime leadership knows what has to be done, and has to be done fast!”

The U.S. destroyed Iran’s tallest civilian bridge in missile strike Friday. Iran alleges that the U.S. has hit over 600 Iranian schools, universities and other educational institutions. Separately, John Mecklin, editor-in-chief of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, which sets the Doomsday Clock, described the war as “absolutely idiotic,” warning that “accidents, miscalculations, crazy stuff” happen in wars and a nuclear accident “can’t be ruled out” until the fighting stops. The Intercept reports that the White House and Pentagon are massively covering up the number of U.S. casualties already suffered in the Iran war.

Trump’s top spiritual adviser, Paula White, held an April 1 prayer service at the White House in which she compared President Trump to Jesus, saying he was betrayed, arrested, and “rose up” again to save America. “Because of His (Jesus’s) victory, you will be victorious in all you put your hand to,” Preacher Paula told Trump.
Trump has already told us that he believes the only limit on his power is his “own morality” and his “own mind.” Combine that with the sense of invincibility that was just bestowed upon him by his personal “pastor,” who anointed him as America’s savior, and he now believes he can succeed in whatever he touches, no matter how risky, no matter how suicidal it may appear on paper or as presented by his generals. After all, the generals are mere humans acting on human wisdom. He is acting with the full power and wisdom of his god. At this point, we should all be questioning who that god is.

None of this sounds like a war that is “winding down,” as our Western media, particularly the Wall Street Journal, told us was the case just three days ago. As I said in my article last week, this war is just getting started. The Iranians have plenty of firepower left. Reports by Reuters and others suggest they’ve only used approximately 30 percent of their stockpiles of missiles and drones.

If this war in the Middle East gets jolted into a new and much deadlier phase, as I am expecting it will, look for Trump to either cancel the November midterms or wait till shortly after those elections and declare martial law, possibly also reinstating the draft, which would cause major anti-war and anti-Trump protests to erupt nationwide.

Trump will then use that unrest as the pretext to round up his enemies. Remember those warehouses the federal government was buying up, which I reported on exactly two months ago on Feb. 4? Anyone who believes the government narrative that these human warehouse buildings were intended solely for illegal immigrants is hopelessly naive. Trump has since announced he’s no longer interested in rounding up illegals, so what does that say about the warehouse acquisitions? I wrote about the plans for martial law on Oct. 31, 2025 here, and again on Jan. 7, 2026, here.

In the second article on Jan. 7, I wrote this: "I could foresee a scenario as we head into the 2026 midterm elections. Trump gets the U.S. involved in a major war on three or four fronts... The Democrats pull off a sweeping victory, move to impeach him, and then Trump declares martial law and basically shuts down Congress, declaring them a national-security threat. A false-flag attack could add to the drama and further grease the skids of public opinion behind Trump’s decision to take such drastic action."

I’m not suggesting that things will play out in exactly this manner in 2026, I’m merely saying that I would not be surprised if it did. Because, as we’ve seen over this last year, when it comes to Trump, all bets are off. And if he will act the way he’s acting against sovereign nations which stand in his way internationally, what’s to stop him from acting with the same audacity against sovereign citizens who make a stand against him here at home?

Bottom Line: We are no longer living in normal times. We should all be bracing ourselves and preparing for full-on World War III and potential martial law, rationing, lockdowns—nothing is off the table with this administration, which is clearly on a puppet string serving someone or something other than the American electorate."