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Friday, July 10, 2026

John Wilder, "Here We Stand"

"Here We Stand"
by John Wilder

"There are those that thought that when a simple Carpenter was executed on the Cross, “Well, that’s the end of that.” His followers thought that. But, it seems that was simply not the case. Even if you’re not religious, it’s clear that the Cross was no defeat, just a victory in a fashion that no one would have ever expected. Western Civilization and the basic concepts that have driven it rest on foundations that endure:

ͦ The idea that what is True, Beautiful, and Good is excellent and should be rewarded.
ͦ The idea that the elite work for the common good and not merely themselves.
ͦ That the basic societal unit is the family and not the individual or the state.
ͦ That our leaders are not our rulers.
ͦ That merit matters.
ͦ That the rule of law is important, but that too many laws smother freedom, and those that skirt the intent of the law are Evil.

And that neither Greece nor Rome improved when covered with foreigners, because nations, those living ties of a people bound by blood, history, language, and shared destiny matter more than any abstract economic ledger.

Western Civilization is unique, and the things that flow from it are likewise unique. Judaism is a fundamentally non-Western religion, yet Christianity is fundamentally Western. The differences are stark, and they matter. One brought a chosen people through covenant and law. The other spread a message of redemption that transformed every people it touched, planting seeds of individual dignity, ordered liberty, and the search for truth that grew into the modern world.

Rome did not exist as a market economy. It existed as a place for Romans. When that sense of shared purpose and identity waned, when the center no longer held because the people no longer saw themselves as one people with one destiny, Rome faded. These lessons repeat again and again whenever we lose the path of what Western Civilization actually is. But we return. We always return.

Greece fell into fragmentation and conquest, yet Rome rose from its ruins and carried forward the best of Greek thought wrapped in Roman discipline and law. Rome fell to internal decay, external pressure and a dilution of what being Roman even meant, yet in turn nation after nation in Europe rose. Each nation drew on the same inheritance, each adding its own chapter of courage and creation.

As Europe waned under the weight of its own successes and the forgetting that sometimes follows prosperity, America rose. A new nation built on the oldest principles, tested in fire, and sent forth to carry the torch further.

Again and again, Western Civilization fought back invaders, sometimes with a margin so slim that it is impossible to explain how the West survived except by the hand of Divine Providence. The Battle of Tours in 732 stopped the advance of Islamic forces deep into Europe at a moment when nothing else seemed able to stand in their way. The Siege of Vienna in 1683 saw the city on the brink, the Ottoman host at the gates, until relief came in one of history’s great charges.

These were near-run things. One different decision, one day of worse weather, one failure of nerve, and the map of the world changes forever. But Western Civilization returned. It always returned.

Western Civilization, however, didn’t fall from the sky. It came from things that worked, and they worked because they were True, Beautiful, and Good. And also because long years of struggle and effort revealed them. Greek philosophy asked hard questions about reality and virtue. Roman engineering and administration turned those questions into roads, aqueducts, and systems that lasted centuries. Christian faith added the conviction that every soul matters and that justice ultimately comes from a higher order than any king or mob.

These roots produced the scientific method, the rule of law that protects the weak from the strong, the family that raises the next generation with purpose, and the drive to explore and build that took men to every corner of the globe and then when we’d seen the entire globe, Western Civilization went beyond it.

When these principles are honored, societies flourish. Families stay intact and children grow up rooted. Leaders who see themselves as servants rather than masters earn loyalty instead of resentment. Merit opens doors for the capable regardless of birth. Nations with a clear sense of “us” can absorb newcomers on their own terms instead of dissolving into competing tribes. The West did not become wealthy and powerful by accident or by exploitation. It became so because it aligned more closely than any other civilization with reality itself.

The challenges of our time are real. We see the forgetting, the dilution, the turning away from the hard work of maintaining what our ancestors built. We see institutions captured by those who view the common good of the nation as an obstacle rather than the goal. We see the slow erosion of the family, the substitution of feelings for truth, the replacement of merit with managed outcomes.

These are not new. Again and again, the same test. Yet the pattern holds. When the center seems to be giving way, something in the Western soul stirs. People rediscover the old books, the old stories, the old virtues. They build families again. They demand leaders who serve rather than rule. They remember that a nation is not a hotel or a corporation; it is a home for a particular people. They choose excellence over ease. They choose truth over comfort. And bit by bit, the tide turns.

This is the record of two and a half thousand years. Every time the West has seemed spent, it has drawn on these same sources and risen stronger. The principles are not fragile. They are battle-tested. They have survived barbarian invasions, plagues, internal tyrannies, and ideological madness. They will survive whatever is thrown at them now.

As long as we work for what is True, Beautiful, and Good, Western Civilization will not die. We carry it in our hearts, in our homes, in the way we raise our children, in the standards we set for ourselves and for those who lead us. We carry it when we choose the family as the irreplaceable center of human life, when we insist that a nation belongs first to its own people.

These choices are acts of fidelity. And they are enough. We will win. I am certain.

I’m not promising the path that it will take, because I don’t know. The road may be longer and harder than we would like. There may be more losses before the turn. But the destination is not in doubt for those who hold fast. This is not done. This is not over. Here we stand."

Jim Kunstler, "Scenario"

Seth Rich
"Scenario"
by Jim Kunstler

"The scene: February of 2027, a federal courtroom in Stuart (Martin County), Florida, the third day of trial in the RussiaGate matter. Defendants seated on the right (from the judge’s vantage) are so numerous they require two tables, including John Brennan, James Comey, James Clapper, Andrew McCabe, Rod Rosenstein, Strzok & Page, Bruce Ohr, Lisa Monaco, Mary McCord, Christopher Wray, Marc Elias, and seven other former federal officials.

Former President Barack Obama and former Sec’y of State Hillary Clinton, named as “unindicted co-conspirators,” are not present in the courtroom for the sake of decorum. Former MI6 agent, the slippery Christopher Steele, purveyor of the infamous “dossier,” is on-the-lam, whereabouts unknown. The charges against the bunch are Seditious Conspiracy (18 U.S. Code § 2384), Conspiracy to Obstruct Justice (18 U.S.C. §§ 1503, 1512, 1519), Conspiracy Against Rights / Deprivation of Rights Under Color of Law (18 U.S.C. §§ 241, 242), Perjury (18 U.S.C. § 1621), Concealment (18 U.S.C. § 1001).

At 10:00 a.m., a “surprise” witness is ushered into the room. Gasps erupt from all angles. The witness is immediately identified by his snow-white hair and beard. Everybody sees it is Julian Assange. He is a surprise witness for security reasons. He has been flown from Sydney to New Delhi to Frankfurt, and finally to Miami in a US government airplane, the lone passenger.

Recall: in June 2024, Assange reached a plea deal with the US DOJ: guilty on one count of conspiring to obtain and disclose classified US national defense information. He was sentenced to sixty-two months (time served), crediting the approximately five years he had already spent in Britain’s Belmarsh prison while fighting extradition - but not counting the six years and ten months he was holed-up before that in the Ecuadorian embassy in London. There was no additional jail time, supervision, or financial penalty.

Assange is sworn and seated, led through preliminary questions as to his identity, place of residence, his former occupation running the news service known as Wikileaks, blah blah. The prosecuting federal attorney will now turn to the subject of one Seth Rich - remember him? The twenty-seven-year-old was working for the Democratic National Committee (DNC) in 2016 as Voter Expansion Data Director. At 4:00 a.m. July 10, 2016, Rich was found dead, shot twice in the back, on Flagler Place NW, in the Bloomingdale neighborhood of Washington, D.C., in what police called “a botched robbery.”

Rather bizarrely from a police procedural standpoint, Rich’s wallet, stuffed with money, his watch, and his cell phone remained on his person. Only his laptop was taken in the “robbery.” It has been a “cold,” unsolved case all these years.

Sometime before the murder, as early as Spring 2016, well before the Democratic party’s nominating convention, Assange’s Wikileaks received a large packet of information containing as many as 58,000 emails hacked out of the account of John Podesta, Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman. The emails detailed many curious machinations inside the DNC that year, including sketchy efforts underway to derail Clinton’s rival, Bernie Sanders, excerpts from Clinton’s paid private Wall Street speeches (e.g., to Goldman Sachs), references to Clinton’s health problems, her private email server issue, various Clinton foundation dealings, and a lot of strange chatter about “pizza” and other mundane food items that would eventually spawn the “PizzaGate” story alluding to alleged child sex cult activities centered around John Podesta and his brother Tony.

It was quite a juicy load. But Wikileaks sat on it until just before the election. That spring and summer, Hillary was already laboring under the scandal about the private email server she had set up in her suburban Chappaqua, NY, home. She had apparently used it casually when she ran the State Department to conduct official government business, including classified information, instead of her official government email address. That itself was against the law, apart from what else the content of the Podesta email trove revealed. The FBI had been working the server case that spring, and just weeks before the convention, FBI Director Jim Comey made a big public show of exonerating Hillary, declaring incorrectly that he declined to prosecute — since it is not the FBI’s job to prosecute, only investigate, and for the DOJ to actually decide whether to prosecute. But he did add for the record that her doings had been “extremely careless.”

Anyway, Comey’s blunder became a low-grade scandal unto itself, colored by the suspicious meeting a month earlier between Bill Clinton and then Attorney General Loretta Lynch in her official airplane parked on the tarmac of the Phoenix airport. Both claimed they just talked about their grandchildren. Hence, Comey letting Hillary off the hook in July had the odor of a set-up. She was duly nominated July 26, 2016.

In October, 2016, Wikileaks began dribbling out the hacked Podesta emails they had obtained earlier that year, just in time for the election. To complicate things, the FBI and the New York City police were just then investigating former Rep. Anthony Weiner, husband of Clinton’s closest aide Huma Abedin, for sending sexually explicit messages to a minor. In the course of things, they obtained Weiner’s laptop, which was stuffed with 140,000 additional emails between Ms. Abedin and Hillary. Yikes!

On October 28, 2016 (eleven days before the election), Comey sent a letter to Congress notifying them that the FBI was reviewing these newly discovered emails to determine if they contained classified information (they did), in effect re-opening Hillary’s private server case. Comey later testified he felt obligated to inform Congress to avoid accusations of a cover-up close to the election. He called it a “no-win situation.” On November 6, 2016 (two days before Election Day), Comey announced the review found no new evidence warranting charges, reaffirming the July conclusion.

All of this intrigue revolved around the question of who, exactly, hacked those DNC emails. In June 2016, a cyber-security outfit called CrowdStrike, run by former FBI agent Shawn Henry, identified two Russian intelligence-linked groups - Cozy Bear and Fancy Bear as responsible for the DNC hack. By that time, the Steele Dossier was already circulating between the CIA, the FBI, and the White House. The Russia collusion story (the RussiaGate hoax) was busy being born. Russia Russia Russia !!! It was all the people of the USA heard the whole four years of the first Trump term.

Which brings us forward to the courtroom scene, February, 2027, Julian Assange in the witness chair. The young lead federal prosecutor (one of several) in the room, finishes his preliminary questions and asks Assange: “Are you willing to tell the court now, who exactly was your source for the DNC emails?” Assange has kept it secret for all these years. But he had been very badly abused by some of the very US government officials who are sitting at the two defendant’s tables, and he is rather sore about all the years he had to hide out in the Ecuadorean embassy in London before the Americans induced the British authorities to stuff him in Belmarsh prison for another five.

“Yes,” he says placidly. “It was a young man named Seth Rich. He copied it onto a thumb-drive directly from the DNC.” And that is how all the bullshit about RussiaGate finally dissolves into a rancid cloud of sedition for the folks slumped in their seats on the defendants’ side of the courtroom."

"Financial Armageddon Is Coming - And This War Just Made It Arrive Faster"

Col. Douglas Macgregor, 7/10/26
"Financial Armageddon Is Coming - 
And This War Just Made It Arrive Faster"
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"People Refuse To Pay Off Their Debt... And They Think They'll Get Away With It"

Full screen recommended.
The Unfolded States, 7/10/26
"People Refuse To Pay Off Their Debt... 
And They Think They'll Get Away With It"
"Social media is full of people claiming they have stopped paying their credit cards, car loans, student loans, or even taxes without facing any consequences. But how much of that is actually true? In this video, we break down some of the most viral debt stories of Twenty Twenty Six and compare them with real financial data, legal realities, and how the debt collection process actually works. From credit cards and auto repossessions to Buy Now, Pay Later, student loans, chargeback fraud, and unpaid personal loans, you'll see why delayed consequences are often mistaken for no consequences at all. Along the way, we'll separate internet myths from facts and explain the financial mechanisms that most viral videos never mention. If you enjoy data-driven commentary on personal finance, the economy, and consumer behavior, subscribe for more in-depth analysis. Which story surprised you the most, and what is the worst financial advice you've ever seen online? Let us know in the comments."
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Dan, I Allegedly, "Everything Is A Scam"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 7/10/26
"Everything Is A Scam"
"Fraud is exploding, scams are becoming more sophisticated, and everyday Americans are paying the price. In this video, I break down real-world examples of stolen credit cards, bank account fraud, identity theft, retail scams, and why financial institutions are making it harder than ever to recover your money. From online phishing attacks and fake emails to self-checkout theft and merchant account fraud, I'll show you why protecting yourself has become a full-time job and what you can do to avoid becoming the next victim. We'll also discuss why stores continue raising prices, how organized retail theft impacts every consumer, recent fraud cases involving Costco, Walmart, TJ Maxx, and major payment processors, plus why financial education has never been more important. If you care about personal finance, protecting your savings, avoiding scams, understanding today's economy, and staying one step ahead of criminals, this video is for you. Be careful, stay informed, and never assume someone else is looking out for your money."
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Thursday, July 9, 2026

"Alert! Israel Threatens To Assassinate Trump? Mile Long Fuel Line Ups!

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 7/9/26
"Alert! Israel Threatens To Assassinate Trump? 
Mile Long Fuel Line Ups! Hormuz Dead"
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Jeremiah Babe, "We're Heading Into Big Trouble, This Is Going To Get Bad"

Jeremiah Babe, 7/9/26
"We're Heading Into Big Trouble, 
This Is Going To Get Bad"
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"Iran Tells U.S., ‘Slap Me? Hell, I’m Going To Punch You.'"

Trends Journal, 7/9/26
Larry Johnson:
"Iran Tells U.S., ‘Slap Me? Hell, I’m Going To Punch You.'"
"Larry Johnson, the former CIA analyst from Sonar21.com, tells The Trends Journal that the U.S. does not have a military solution for the Strait of Hormuz and that Tehran has clear escalation dominance." 
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Gerald Celente, "American Dream A Nightmare, Markets Up, Ceasefire Off"

Strong language alert!
Gerald Celente, 7/9/26
"American Dream A Nightmare, Markets Up, Ceasefire Off"
"This week on Trends in the News, Gerald Celente breaks down the market fallout from the collapse of the Iran ceasefire as war tensions escalate in the Middle East and Ukraine. The Bigs are getting bigger, prices keep rising, and America keeps sliding. What does it all mean for the economy, markets, and your future? Tune in for the current events forming future trends. 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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Prepare Yourself Because This Is Coming For America"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 7/9/26
"Prepare Yourself Because This Is Coming For America"
"College graduates getting rejected from Walmart and McDonald's, a doctor buried under $600,000 in training debt, and a nurse who can't land a hospital job after a year of trying. This video pulls together real people describing what the current job market and cost of living feel like from the inside, and why doing everything right no longer guarantees a paycheck. If you have wondered whether it's just you, these stories say otherwise. If any of this sounds like your situation or someone you know, leave a comment and share your experience with the job market where you live. Subscribe to follow more compilations like this one, and pass this video along to anyone who has been told to simply work harder while the math keeps getting worse."
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Musical Interlude: 2002," River of Stars"

Full screen recommended.
2002," River of Stars"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"These are galaxies of the Hercules Cluster, an archipelago of island universes a mere 500 million light-years away. Also known as Abell 2151, this cluster is loaded with gas and dust rich, star-forming spiral galaxies but has relatively few elliptical galaxies, which lack gas and dust and the associated newborn stars. The colors in this remarkably deep composite image clearly show the star forming galaxies with a blue tint and galaxies with older stellar populations with a yellowish cast.
The sharp picture spans about 3/4 degree across the cluster center, corresponding to over 6 million light-years at the cluster's estimated distance. Diffraction spikes around brighter foreground stars in our own Milky Way galaxy are produced by the imaging telescope's mirror support vanes. In the cosmic vista many galaxies seem to be colliding or merging while others seem distorted - clear evidence that cluster galaxies commonly interact. In fact, the Hercules Cluster itself may be seen as the result of ongoing mergers of smaller galaxy clusters and is thought to be similar to young galaxy clusters in the much more distant, early Universe.”

"Place Where Every Paw Belongs"

Full screen recommended.
John AI Art,
"Place Where Every Paw Belongs"

Native Elder, "When No One Calls and No One Visits"

Full screen recommended.
Native Elder,
"When No One Calls and No One Visits"
o
When no one calls, no one visits...
Full screen recommended.
Michael Bennett, “After I Pass Away”
"Simon Cowell in tears experiencing a truly unforgettable performance by Michael Bennett on America’s Got Talent. In this moving rendition of “After I Pass Away”, Michael pours his heart and soul into every note, leaving the judges, audience, and viewers around the world in tears. From the first note to the final chord, the emotional depth of this song touches every heart. You will witness the raw power of music as it evokes deep emotions, creating a moment where everyone in the room, including the judges and audience members, is completely overwhelmed by the beauty and sorrow of this heartfelt performance. This video captures the intensity of a performance that proves why Michael Bennett is a truly extraordinary talent. Sit back, watch, and feel every emotion in this breathtaking performance."
Oh my God... feel that...

"Getting Old Ain't for Cowards"

Full screen recommended.
Delta King's Blues,
"Getting Old Ain't for Cowards"
"Anybody can grow older… but it takes real grit to keep smiling through it. “Getting Old Ain’t for Cowards” is a powerful, heartfelt Delta King’s Blues tune about facing every new ache, every goodbye, and every sunrise with courage that only the years can teach. A gritty, slow-burning acoustic guitar carries the melody like a weathered cowboy riding one more dusty mile. The harmonica wails with quiet strength, echoing the battles fought, the losses survived, and the hope that never quite fades. The groove rolls steady and determined, built for folks who wear their scars with pride and keep putting one boot in front of the other. This is blues for the brave souls who keep showing up. For those who know that growing older isn’t about giving in - it’s about standing tall through every season of life. Wrinkles tell your age… courage tells your story."

"Anam Cara: A Book of Celtic Wisdom"

“The world rests in the night. Trees, mountains, fields, and faces are released from the prison of shape and the burden of exposure. Each thing creeps back into its own nature within the shelter of the dark. Darkness is the ancient womb. Nighttime is womb-time. Our souls come out to play. The darkness absolves everything; the struggle for identity and impression falls away. We rest in the night.”
- John O'Donohue,
"Anam Cara: A Book of Celtic Wisdom"
"Beannacht"

“On the day when
the weight deadens
on your shoulders
and you stumble,
may the clay dance
to balance you.
And when your eyes
freeze behind
the grey window
and the ghost of loss
gets in to you,
may a flock of colors,
indigo, red, green,
and azure blue
come to awaken in you
a meadow of delight.
When the canvas frays
in the currach of thought
and a stain of ocean
blackens beneath you,
may there come across the waters
a path of yellow moonlight
to bring you safely home.
May the nourishment of the earth be yours,
may the clarity of light be yours,
may the fluency of the ocean be yours,
may the protection of the ancestors be yours.
And so may a slow
wind work these words
of love around you,
an invisible cloak
to mind your life.”
John O'Donohue was an Irish author, poet, philosopher and former Catholic priest. He was born in County Clare on January 1, 1956. He died suddenly on January 4, 2008. He is best known for popularizing Celtic spirituality and is the author of a number of best-selling books on the subject.
Freely download "Anam Cara: A Book of Celtic Wisdom", 
by John O'Donohue, here:

The Daily "Near You?"

Valley Center, Kansas, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"War..."

"War does not determine who's right... only who's left."
- Bertrand Russell

"The tragedy of modern war is that the young men die fighting
 each other - instead of their real enemies back home in the capitals."
- Edward Abbey

"The Third Iran War Is Going To Be Crazy: The Fighting Just Won’t Stop As U.S. Officials Prepare For A Prolonged Period Of Conflict"

by Michael Snyder

"We knew that this wasn’t over. The ill-fated “Memorandum of Understanding” may have delayed the inevitable, but now the ceasefire is dead and fighting is raging throughout the Middle East all over again. Sadly, we shall soon see just how far both sides are willing to escalate matters. In my opinion, we are going to witness some absolutely shocking escalations in the months ahead. None of the parties involved in this war have any intention of backing down, and I am convinced that some very shocking “surprises” are ahead.

On Tuesday and Wednesday, U.S. forces pounded dozens of important Iranian military targets… US strikes on Iran over the last 48 hours have targeted Iran’s military assets near the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway responsible for one-fifth of the world’s oil supply. Various Iranian air defense systems, drones, regime speed boats, and missile storage sites have been destroyed, according to US Central Command. US officials claim that the strikes are designed to stop Iran from attacking commercial shipping vessels crossing the strait.

U.S. Central Command is telling us that a total of 170 targets were hit. These airstrikes were far more extensive than what we witnessed near the end of last month, and the Iranian response has been much larger as well. In fact, in recent hours the Iranians have launched missiles and drones at bases in Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Jordan…Just as the US nighttime strikes were significantly bigger than prior rounds in June, so has Iran’s ‘retaliation’ been bigger – chiefly on Gulf states and American bases there.

In the overnight and Thursday daytime hours, Iranian ballistic missiles and drones have targeted Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and even faraway Jordan. The country is reporting that it has intercepted several missiles, which targeted Muwaffaq Salti Air Base – jointly operated by US and Jordanian forces. Oil prices have persisted above prewar levels on Thursday.

If Iran was ready to stop shooting, it appears that the U.S. was willing to stop shooting as well…
Unfortunately, the Iranians didn’t stop shooting. Instead, they seem quite eager to fight. In fact, on Thursday the Iranians have just kept on striking more targets…Iran has launched fresh strikes on US targets today, following a second night of strikes between the two countries last night. The fragile ceasefire between the two countries was ruptured earlier this week when the US accused Iran of targeting commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

Apparently the “ports of some Arab countries” are being targeted in this latest round of attacks…
I really wish that the Iranians would show some restraint. But that isn’t likely to happen at this stage. Meanwhile, there have been rumors of more U.S. airstrikes in Iran…
The U.S. is denying that it conducted those strikes. So if it wasn’t the U.S., who was it? There are reports that Kuwait and Bahrain actually decided to conduct “a joint strike operation”
This would be a major development if it is true. If other Gulf nations have decided that now is the time to directly fight Iran, that could greatly expand the scope of the conflict. It is being reported that the renewed fighting has interrupted the final stage of the funeral procession for Ayatollah Khamenei…The chaos from the latest US-Iran strikes has delayed the final stage of the funeral procession for slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, according to the New York Times. Hundreds of thousands of mourners in recent days have taken to the streets of Tehran to mourn the death of the country’s notorious dictator.

Khamenei was set to be buried in his hometown, the holy city of Mashhad, on Thursday, but the burial was delayed as strikes rang out nearby. This multi-day funeral procession has whipped the Iranians into a frenzy, and it would be difficult to overstate how angry they are at this moment.

I don’t think that there is any turning back now. President Trump has been trying to do everything that he can think of to resolve the crisis in the Middle East, but so far nothing has worked… President Trump has used every tactic in the book to wind down his war with Iran. Threats (he threatened the end of their civilization). Cajoling (he offered them hundreds of billions of dollars). Loosely worded interim deals (there have been at least two, the April ceasefire and then the June memorandum of understanding).

But none of it has worked. Iran has continued attacking ships in the Strait of Hormuz. This week, Trump took away Iran’s ability to sell oil. He’s bombing dozens of sites in the country. Iran is launching attacks at Bahrain and Kuwait, where there are U.S. bases. The stock market is falling. And oil prices are spiking.

Is it a full-blown war again? Hard to tell. But it’s sliding toward ugly. So where do we go from here? Trump was supposed to get an important intelligence briefing at 1 PM eastern time
It appears that the U.S. is willing to fight to break Iran’s control of the Strait of Hormuz. As a result, now the Iranians have some key decisions to make

So, the immediate choice to go up or down the escalation ladder lies with Iran. If Tehran deescalates, they cede control of Hormuz. If they escalate, their options are to hit Hormuz more – triggering more US counter strikes; or GCC energy – triggering a larger war; to use (battered) proxies like Hezbollah – triggering wider war; or perhaps to rush for a nuclear weapon – which would mean far worse war. The New York Times reports Iran’s president and foreign minister were physically attacked this week by supporters of a hard-line faction that vehemently opposes any deal with the US: it remains to be seen if the streets, IRGC, clerics, or politicians will decide what happens next – but both the politicians and the IRGC benefit from talks going on and oil flowing.

The US would also have to decide if it can afford to cede Hormuz or will fight to keep it open when the SPR is seen near a tank bottom– was this discussed at the NATO summit, perhaps? I don’t think that there is any way that the Iranians will back down. So there will be a lot more fighting, and Israel is apparently ready to join in if needed

Israel is willing to join future US attacks on Iran should Washington seek help after President Trump declared the cease-fire with Tehran “over,” sources in Jerusalem told The Post. We’ve proved that we stand with the US,” one source said. “I’m not sure it will be the interest of them - of the US that Israel will join on this - but, you know, we realize that we need to stretch our muscles.” “We’re willing to do it again, if needed,” the person added.

I have no doubt that this is true. In fact, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz just confirmed that the IDF is ready to hit Iran “with even greater force” this time around… Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz on Thursday said his country was prepared to resume its military campaign against Iran if needed, vowing to do so “with even greater force.”

The latest remarks came as new fighting erupted between the United States and Iran, raising fears of a return to full-scale war after an April ceasefire and a U.S.-Iran agreement in June to end hostilities. “The army is ready and on alert for a resumption of fighting, in order to regain air superiority and strike again … in Iran, to eliminate threats, including a third time if necessary,” Katz said at a military ceremony. “If we have to go back, we will go back, with even greater force,” he added. Israel is not going to be on the sidelines for long.

What all of this means is that the Strait of Hormuz is going to be closed for the foreseeable future. The Iranians have not officially shut it completely down yet, but even now barely any commercial vessels are getting through… Barely any oil tankers have been passing through the Strait of Hormuz since the US and Iran renewed their fighting in earnest earlier this week.

This morning, July 9, only two tankers had made it through, according to Reuters. One of them loaded in Iran and is subject to US sanctions. The other carries a flag for the Marshall Islands. On July 8, at least four oil and gas tankers turned around instead of risking being attacked in the Strait of Hormuz, according to Reuters.

The next chapter of the global energy crisis has begun, and it is going to be even more intense than the last chapter. And the fighting in the Middle East will ultimately escalate to a level that will shock the entire planet. We have been waiting for Iran War 3, and now it is here. Even as I wrap up this article, missiles and drones are flying all over the Middle East. We are falling through the air with no parachute, and this story is going to have an absolutely crazy ending."

"Pepe Escobar: Trump Begins All-Out War, Iran's Hypersonic Missiles SMASH Qatar & Jordan"

Full screen recommended.
"Pepe Escobar: Trump Begins All-Out War, 
Iran's Hypersonic Missiles SMASH Qatar & Jordan"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Times Of India, 7/9/26
"‘Biggest Mistake’: Putin, Xi ‘Officially Enter’
 Iran War As Trump Blows Up Russia-China Rail Link"
"The recent escalation in the U.S.-Iran conflict has shifted focus from traditional military targets to critical infrastructure, with the United States reportedly striking the Ag-Tekeh Khan railway bridge in Iran's Golestan Province. This bridge, a vital link in the China–Turkmenistan–Iran rail corridor, serves as a key trade route supporting China's Belt and Road Initiative and Russia's logistics, especially after maritime disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz. The attack underscores how the conflict now threatens global supply chains and strategic partnerships among Iran, China, and Russia, raising the stakes beyond the battlefield."
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"Memento Mori"

"Memento Mori"
by Ryan Holiday

"Were all the geniuses of history to focus on this single theme, they could never fully express their bafflement at the darkness of the human mind. No person hands out their money to passersby, but to how many do each of us hand out our lives! We're tight-fisted with property and money, yet think too little of wasting time, the one thing about which we should all be the toughest misers."  - Seneca

Born with a chronic illness that loomed large throughout his life, Seneca was constantly thinking about and writing about the final act of life. "Let us prepare our minds as if we'd come to the very end of life," he said. "Let us postpone nothing. Let us balance life's books each day. The one who puts the finishing touches on their life each day is never short of time."

Most interestingly, he quibbled with the idea that death was something that lay ahead of us in the uncertain future. "This is our big mistake," Seneca wrote, "to think we look forward to death. Most of death is already gone. Whatever time has passed is owned by death." That was Seneca's great insight - that we are dying every day and no day, once dead, can be revived.

So we should listen to the command that Marcus gave himself. He wrote,"Concentrate every minute like a Roman on doing what's in front of you with precise and genuine seriousness, tenderly, willingly, with justice. And on freeing yourself from all other distractions." The key to this kind of concentration? "Do everything as if it were the last thing you were doing in your life."

That's the power of Memento Mori - of meditating on your mortality. It isn't about being morbid or making you scared. It's about giving you power. It's to inspire, to motivate, to clarify, to concentrate like a Roman on the thing in front of you. Because it may well be the last thing you do in your life.

The Stoics were philosophers, but more than that they were doers. They didn't have room for big words or big ideas, just stuff that made you better right here, right now. As Marcus Aurelius said: "Justice, honesty, self-control, courage, don't make room for anything but it - for anything that might lead you astray, tempt you off the road, and leave you unable to devote yourself completely to achieving the goodness that is uniquely yours."

"How It Really Is"

 

"Our Dilemma..."

"Our dilemma is that we hate change and love it at the same time;
what we really want is for things to remain the same but get better."
- Sydney J. Harris

"Whenever I hear someone sigh, 'Life is so hard', 
I'm always tempted to ask: compared to what?"
- Sydney J. Harris

"A Tale Told By An Idiot..."

William Shakespeare,
"A Tale Told By An Idiot..." "Macbeth" 

Joel Bowman, "The Engine Of History"

"The Engine Of History"
by Joel Bowman

“New ideas and innovations are always the achievement of uncommon men.”
~ Ludwig von Mises, "Human Action" (1949)

Buenos Aires, Argentina - "What is the engine of history? What drives a civilization forward? And how will we know if we ever “get there”? Each generation has its theories, of course... its competing conjectures... crackpot hypotheses and its lunatic explanations. But which ideas are worth guarding... and which are better jettisoned?

These thoughts and more were rattling around your editor’s caffeinated cranium as we strolled along our favorite avenue yesterday, the grand Avenida Libertador, after a particularly riveting World Cup football match. Generally speaking, we don’t care much for team sports. There’s plenty of hooting and hollering and macho showboating on display in modern politics... and there we only pay attention as a kind of occupational hazard. But here in South America, futbol (soccer) is less a simple game and more a way of life... one that occasionally borders on the religious.

Thus, it is impossible not to be swept along in the pomp and ceremony when, every four years, the mundial comes around, with all its attendant customs, anthems, superstitions and cast of larger-than-life characters.

When the Argentine team scores, for example, all the portenos rush to their balconies to wave the national flag, La Albiceleste, and to sing and dance in a kind of citywide communion. Of course, when the other team scores... the place is quiet as a crypt. And so it was that yesterday afternoon, during the match against Egypt, Buenos Aires was as silent as its famous Recoleta Cemetery... for 75 harrowing minutes. You could have robbed a bank... or walked the streets in your birthday suit... and not a single one of the 15 million souls who call the capital home would have noticed. All eyes were on the game, where the fate of a nation seemed to hang by a bootlace...

The Hand of History: But let us turn our attention back to history... its movers and shakers... its great men and grand causes... and the question of what drives it on.

For the German philosopher G. W. F. Hegel, the engine of history resides in the contradictions inherent within ideas themselves. Every concept, Hegel reckoned, contains tensions that eventually reveal its own limitations, thereby setting in motion a process he famously called the dialectic. Civil society, Hegel argued, naturally generates these tensions. Think individual liberty and collective obligation, for example. As each contradiction is resolved (say, through constitutional freedom), it is not simply eliminated but rather sublated into a richer conception of freedom. That resolution, in due course, then becomes the starting point for a new dialectical process, and so on and so forth...

Thus does history advance according to Hegel, each resolution revealing new tensions to be reconciled in turn. This process, he thought, occurs necessarily and immanently, which is to say, it comes “from within.” It is, in a sense, history “reasoning with itself.” “But wait!” we hear you rejoin, “where is the individual in all this?” Good question, dear reader! We thought that one might come up...

As Hegel saw it, individuals are less the authors of history than they are the vehicles through which the collective World Spirit (or Geist) gradually realizes itself. When he famously referred to Napoleon as the “World Soul on horseback,” for example, he was thinking of him not as the playwright… but merely as a gifted actor, playing his part. Dazzling... alluring... confusing... the notion of a World Spirit was appealing to many, but a little squirrely for some.

A Diabolical Dialectic: Karl Marx, for example, admired Hegel’s dialectical method but rejected its idealist foundations. And so, through his own kind of philosophical inversion, he rather immodestly claimed to have turned Hegel “right side up.”

Where Hegel believed ideas moved history... Marx insisted that material conditions did the heavy lifting. Where Hegel suggested consciousness shaped society... Marx argued it was the other way around. And where Hegel placed the dialectic in thought itself... Marx relocated it to the material world, where he saw it playing out through the endless drudgery of class struggle. “It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence,” Marx wrote (with Engels) in "The German Ideology," “but their social existence that determines their consciousness.”

A man who never met a horse before which he did not wish to place a carriage, nor one who looks said gift horse in the mouth, Marx gladly retained Hegel’s dialectical engine... but swapped the motive force. Alas, the essential architecture remained… history’s principal actors were still collective rather than individual. Hegel’s World Spirit disappeared, only to be replaced by Marx’s historical classes. The metaphysics had changed, in other words, but the essential collectivism still remained.

And so the world inherited Marx’s dialectical materialism, a diabolical philosophy of history into which universities, political institutions, governments, and even entire nations disappeared for generations, surrendering individual agency to the march of “historical necessity.” “Yes, yes… ” we hear our gentle reader nudge. “But enough of mystical ‘World Spirits’ and class struggles! Get to the individual!” My, my... aren’t we testy today! Okay then...

While both Hegel and Marx described history in fundamentally collective terms... others advanced the idea that it actually came down to individual human beings acting purposefully who shape the course of history. One such thinker was Ludwig von Mises…

Human Action: Society doesn’t think, Mises boldly insisted. Only individuals think... and therefore, only individuals act. To be sure, individuals often act together. “There is joint action,” Mises readily acknowledged, “but no joint thinking.” Nations don’t choose; classes don’t decide; history doesn’t possess a “mind of its own.” At least, not one separate and detached from the individuals that comprise it.

Nor, Mises argued, is there any predetermined destiny that history is attempting to realize, whether through class struggles or unholy ghosts or any other philosophical prestidigitation. Economics can (and does!) discover universal laws of human action, he asserted, but history itself unfolds through the purposive choices of individuals, not according to any deterministic script or teleological endgame.

History is not “reasoning with itself” after all. It possesses no predetermined destination, no discoverable telos. It is, rather, the accumulated consequence of billions of purposeful individual choices... the “ultimate given of history,” as Mises himself put it.

So where does this leave the so-called “great men” of the ages? Does Mises allow room for, say, a Milei... or even a Messi? And how do such individuals take their place on history’s grand stage, for better or for worse? This we reckoned over on the stroll home, simultaneously swept along by the celebratory crowd, while passing statesmen in bronze and marble lining the grand avenue...Stay tuned for more Notes From the End of the World..."

Dan, I Allegedly, "Great News! Foreclosures are Up!"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 7/9/26
"Great News! Foreclosures are Up!"
"Is rising foreclosure activity really "good news"? That's exactly what some headlines are suggesting because more foreclosures could eventually create more housing inventory and lower home prices. But at what cost? In this video I break down why Southern California home sales have fallen below Great Recession levels, why more homeowners are quietly entering foreclosure, why sellers are refusing to lower prices, and why affordability - not a housing crash - is the real story. I also share insights from professionals I know who work directly in the foreclosure business and explain what they're seeing on the ground. 

This video connects the dots between the housing market, rising insurance costs, groceries, gasoline, utilities, property taxes, and the financial pressure facing millions of Americans. If you've been wondering why homes aren't selling, why foreclosures are increasing, or why so many families feel like they're falling behind despite working harder than ever, this breakdown is for you. As always, I'd love to hear your thoughts in the comments. Please like, subscribe, and share this video if you believe more people need to understand what's really happening in today's economy."
 Comments here:

"Well Being: The Processed Meat Problem" (Excerpt)

"Well Being: The Processed Meat Problem" (Excerpt)
by Dr. Robert W. Malone

"A Series About Ham, Hot Dogs, Science, and What We Lost Along the Way: We are told that processed meat is bad for us. The World Health Organization says processed meat is linked to colorectal cancer. Many peer-reviewed studies associate it with shorter lifespan, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and other chronic conditions. Headlines are often blunt: bacon is bad, ham is bad, sausage is bad, hot dogs are bad. But there is a problem hiding inside that simple warning.

What, exactly, is processed meat? Is a hot dog the same thing as Prosciutto di Parma? Is bologna the same thing as Jamón Ibérico? Is canned luncheon meat the same thing as a Virginia country ham, dry-cured with salt and aged for months in a smokehouse? From a regulatory and epidemiological standpoint, these foods are usually grouped together. From a food-science standpoint, they are radically different.

For most of human history, meat preservation was not an industrial trick. It was a survival skill. Curing required salt, smoke, air, time, and beneficial microbes, which allowed families to preserve the harvest, survive winter, and create some of the world’s most beloved foods. Virginia country ham, Italian prosciutto, Spanish jamón, bresaola, salami, and traditional smoked meats all come from this old world of preservation. This is a vastly different process than what passes for cured meats now.

Long aging gave way to rapid “curing.” Whole-muscle meats gave way to emulsified products. Smokehouses gave way to factories. Salt and time were increasingly replaced by injected brines, nitrites, phosphates, binders, fillers, artificial flavorings, and industrial processing. And yet, in much of the scientific literature, these very different foods are often collapsed into one category: processed meat. This series is an attempt to take that category apart.

Executive Summary: The central question is simple: Are all processed meats biologically equivalent, or has nutrition science lumped together foods that should be studied separately? The evidence linking processed meat to disease is real, but it is also more complicated than the headlines suggest. Much of it comes from observational studies, where correlation does not automatically prove causation. The reported risks are often relative risks, not absolute risks. Understanding the difference is essential because an impressive-sounding relative increase may translate into only a small change in actual lifetime risk. And the exposure category itself is crude.

A 50-gram serving of processed meat could mean a hot dog, a slice of bologna, deli ham, bacon, dry-cured salami, prosciutto, country ham, or jamón. These foods differ in curing chemistry, additives, smoke exposure, fermentation, water content, microbial ecology, and degree of industrial processing.

The Series:

Part One: The Death of Virginia Ham: A look at the lost American tradition of country ham, smokehouses, family curing, and how Virginia’s once-famous ham culture faded into industrial pork - now mostly owned and operated by Chinese companies.

Part Two: When Did Ham Become “Processed Meat”? A food-science primer on the difference between salt curing, dry aging, fermentation, smoking, nitrite curing, pump curing, and modern emulsified meat products.

Part Three: What Does the Science Actually Prove and The Nitrite Question? A careful look at the WHO/IARC claims, the peer-reviewed literature, relative versus absolute risk, correlation versus causation, and the limits of food-frequency epidemiology. This includes an examination of curing salts, nitrate, nitrite, nitrosamines, smoke compounds, heme iron, and the plausible mechanisms by which some processed meats may increase risk.

Part Four: The Meat Processing Continuum: A proposed framework that separates traditional preserved meats from modern industrial products, from Prosciutto di Parma and Virginia country ham to hot dogs, bologna, Spam, and ultra-processed deli meats.

Part Five: What Should We Actually Eat? A practical conclusion: how to think about preserved meats without panic, nostalgia, or public-health oversimplification. What products are traditionally cured, and how to read labels. Because "processed meat" is not a single food. It is a broad category that encompasses products with profoundly different ingredients, preservation methods, and food chemistry. Before we can understand the science, we first have to understand what is actually being studied."
Full, most highly recommended article is here:
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Part 2 is here:

Adventures With Danno, "Massive Price Increases At Kroger!"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 7/9/26
"Massive Price Increases At Kroger!"
Comments here:

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

"Alert! Iran Launching Massive Attacks! Trump Goes To War With Russia! WW3 Defcon"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 7/8/26
"Alert! Iran Launching Massive Attacks!
Trump Goes To War With Russia! WW3 Defcon"
Comments here"

Adventures With Danno, "Well It's Happening... Price Increases Everywhere"

Adventures With Danno, 7/8/26
"Well It's Happening... Price Increases Everywhere"
Comments here:

"Doctors Are Walking Away! The Terrifying Reality Inside US Hospitals"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 7/8/26
"Doctors Are Walking Away! 
The Terrifying Reality Inside US Hospitals"
"Doctors are leaving American medicine in numbers that keep climbing, and this video shows you why from the people living it. You'll hear physicians describe residency training, canceled contracts, staffing takeovers, and the financial precarity that follows a decade of debt. If you've ever wondered what's actually driving the physician shortage, these firsthand accounts explain what the workforce numbers only count later."
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Deuter, "Atmospheres"

Deuter, "Atmospheres"

"A Look to the Heavens"

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

"The Forest Village Where Time Has Always Moved This Slow"

Full screen recommended.
oltsev art,
"The Forest Village Where 
Time Has Always Moved This Slow"
"Somewhere in the trees, there is a village that never learned to hurry. The carpenter opens his door before sunrise. Not because he has to. Because he always has. The old woman hangs her linen in the morning air. The child feeds the ducks the same way her grandmother did. The baker's window is open. It is always open. Nobody there is trying to catch up with anything. You have probably forgotten what that feels like. Most people have. This film is for everyone who has carried a quieter life somewhere inside them - and never quite found the way back.'

"I Look Older Than I Feel (Most Days)"

Full screen recommended.
Delta King's Blues,
"I Look Older Than I Feel (Most Days)"
"Mirror says one thing… my spirit says another. “I Look Older Than I Feel (Most Days)” is a laid-back, self-aware Delta King’s Blues tune about aging on the outside while still feeling young somewhere underneath it all. A smooth, easygoing acoustic guitar rolls like a man who’s learned to laugh at the mirror. The harmonica smiles through every bend, playful but knowing. The groove stays relaxed and steady, built for folks who don’t rush - they just keep going their own way. This is blues with a wink. For anyone who knows age shows up in the mirror before it shows up in the soul. I might look older… but I ain’t done feeling young."

Native Elder, "Why Men Stopped Being Men"; "Why Women Stopped Being Women"

Full screen recommended.
Native Elder,
"Why Men Stopped Being Men"
o
Full screen recommended.
Native Elder,
"Why Women Stopped Being Women"