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Friday, July 17, 2026

"How It Really Is"

Full screen recommended.
Delta King's Blues, 
"Everybody Talks Too Damn Much"
"Seems like everybody’s got an opinion these days… and nobody’s listening. “Everybody Talks Too Damn Much” is a witty, old-school Delta King’s Blues tune about endless chatter, loud opinions, and missing the days when silence was just as valuable as words. A laid-back, front-porch acoustic guitar settles into a relaxed groove like a man quietly sipping coffee while the world argues around him. The harmonica answers with dry, knowing bends, saying more in a few notes than most folks say all day. The rhythm rolls slow and easy, built for people who’ve learned that wisdom usually speaks softly. This is blues for folks who’d rather hear birds sing than another pointless argument. For those who know that listening is becoming a lost art. The older I get, the less I want noise… and the more I appreciate a little peace and quiet."

"There Was Truth..."

"Being in a minority, even a minority of one, did not make you mad. 
There was truth and there was untruth, and if you clung to the truth 
even against the whole world, you were not mad.”
- George Orwell, “1984”

Jim Kunstler, "Acceleration"

"Acceleration"
by Jim Kunstler

“.The Democrat Party. . . are morally bankrupt nincompoops who
 have been beaten by the establishment like the rented mules they are. “ 
- Kurt Schlichter on X

"Strange to relate, in last night’s speech to the nation on election chicanery, President Trump managed to both overwhelm and underwhelm public expectation. He touched on voting machine shenanigans, registration skullduggery, cyber-fuckery, labor union toolery, ballot fraud, and especially China meddling.

Internal CIA / FBI docs at the time said that China’s policy around the 2020 US election was to “leverage all domestic and foreign elements” opposed to the President to prevent his re-election. The Intel bunch never sent that memo to the White House. They were too busy pushing fake Russia meddling, fake impeachment, and a fake Covid-19 pandemic. Then they declared that the 2020 was “the most secure election in history.”

As of yesterday, the President de-classified many thousands of Intel agency documents for the public (and news media) to peruse. And naturally, the major cable news networks (except Fox) declined to broadcast the speech. As of Friday morning, The New York Times leads the offensive to disparage the actual news.
He’s Obsessed, that Trump! The actual news: China hacked over 220-million voter registrations, plus social security files; manufactured and shipped tens of thousands of fake US driver’s licenses to be used in motor-voter states; and paid favored US journalists to write negative articles about Mr. Trump. The Department of Homeland Security reported 278,000 non-citizens were registered to vote in federal elections. But that number was compiled only from states that complied with DOJ demands for voter rolls. California, New York, and Illinois and many other states refused, so the number is probably more than double the DHS figure.

The big take-away was that US Intel agencies withheld all this intel from the President of the US, Mr. Trump, in the lead-up to the 2020 vote. Yes, there really is a Deep State, as seen starkly in a now-declassified memo from the then-chief of the FBI’s Counterintelligence Division, one Nikki Floris, who wrote “I’m basically running a shadow government at this point” by hiding information from POTUS. Ms. Floris is now employed as Microsoft’s Director of Insider Risk (former Deputy Attorney General under “Joe Biden,” Lisa Monaco, is President of Microsoft Global Affairs.)
According to the NY Post’s Miranda Devine, in August 2020, Nikki Floris also tried to hoodwink Senators Chuck Grassley and Rob Johnson, telling them the Hunter Biden laptop was a Russian op — a gag later ratified by fifty-one former intel officers (including five former CIA Directors) who signed the notorious October letter to the news media. All of this activity, Mr. Trump averred, amounted to a cover-up of a conspiracy by members of the permanent bureaucracy to overthrow the government. And that is exactly why more than one federal grand jury is convened in Fort Pierce, Florida, right now, to sort out who, exactly, is going to account for these rather grave crimes. The new document release is apt to accelerate the work of US Attorneys there, since declassification is the biggest routine holdup in the process.

On the “underwhelming” side of the president’s speech, there was little mention of the swing-state ballot fraud enabled and conducted by local election officials in Fulton County, Georgia, Maricopa County, Arizona, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Antrim County, Michigan, Mesa County, Colorado, and Philadelphia, PA. But you know that the FBI raided Fulton County election headquarters months ago and seized around 700 boxes of evidence, and then reassigned 260 FBI agents to examine all the material. All that might still be to-come.

Then there is the question of the millions of dollars that Hunter Biden winkled out of China over the years before the 2020 election - records of which were stuffed in his infamous laptop, along with photos and video of his sexual exploits there - and whether Hunter’s father, Joe, was a blackmail captive of China leading up to that election. Stay tuned on that.

Altogether, Mr. Trump’s speech and document drops are obviously an effort to move election reform, the Save America Act, through Congress, where it has languished in a procedural miasma for months due to one man: Senate Majority Leader John Thune. The President’s emphasis last night on China’s election meddling is purposeful in ways not broadly apprehended, but I will tell you:

If Congress does not find a way to vote that bill out to Mr. Trump’s desk before they recess for the rest of the summer in late July, Mr. Trump will invoke an executive order under the National Emergencies Act (NEA) - Public Law 94-412; codified at 50 U.S.C. §§ 1601–1651 - requiring the fifty states to employ all the same provisions that are in the SAVE America Act for the 2026 midterm elections. Under the NEA, the federal courts cannot be used to fight or strike down the executive order; it can only be stopped by a two-thirds vote in both the House and the Senate.

If that is the course that this takes, you can expect Antifa and the Democratic-Socialist foot-soldiers to take to the streets this fall in a violently-amplified episode of “No Kings” demonstrations - because fair and honest elections with citizens-only voting will mean the end of the Democratic Party, and they know it. Last night’s move by President Trump is only the opening bid of a quickening game against the Deep State, and their partners-in-sedition. The game is gonna get rough now."

Bill Bonner, "A Pure Bar Room Brawl"

"A Pure Bar Room Brawl"
by Bill Bonner
From the W.B.Yeats ferry to Cherbourg - "Poor Donald Trump. He hailed from Queens, not from Manhattan - separated by a few miles, the East River, and a whole cosmos of snobbery. The sophisticates, the intellectuals, the chic folk who had done their time at the Ivy League and paid their annual devotions at the Met, wrote him off as a low-bred clown. But he showed them, by God.

His father was rich. And hard as a paving-stone. And young Donald learned early the peculiar art of getting on as the son of a rich, hard man: he resolved to be richer and harder still. To that end he engaged a lawyer - Roy Cohn, celebrated far and wide for his meanness and his venom - to tutor him. “If someone hits you, you hit back 10 times as hard.” There was his code. His formula. His catechism.

The object was to win. By what means? Whatever it takes. By piling deal upon deal. By heaping up money. By slapping his name across the face of everything that would hold paint. And when some New York scribbler pricked him early in his career, Trump fired back the immortal riposte: “I get more pussy than you do.” A real gentleman, as always.

The formula produced, let us say, mixed dividends. The fresh enterprises had a tendency to go bust. The girlfriends arrived and departed like subway trains. And he passed a great deal of time with lawyers - some laboring to keep him out of trouble, the rest laboring, for a fee, to plunge him deeper into it. Honor and Shame Archive:

Donald J. Trump has built a career that is as legally entangled as it is high-profile. From lawsuits over failed casinos and construction contracts to criminal indictments concerning national security and election interference, Trump has been involved in over 4,000 lawsuits - a number unmatched by any other U.S. president in history.

But there was one arena in which the “hit back ten times as hard” gospel paid off handsomely, and that was politics. In business, cooperation pays; a man gives to get...he goes along to get along. But politics is a pure barroom brawl. Trump lost not an instant; he laid into his rivals - “little Marco,” “Pocahontas” Warren. Lindsey Graham he pronounced “one of the dumbest human beings I have ever met.”

It was refreshing. Liberating, even. Gone was the counterfeit respectability, the mincing and the bowing. No more Mr. Nice Guy. There was something strangely heart-warming in Mr. Trump at the zenith of his tawdry power - quick with the insult, sublimely confident, careening along as free and heedless as a runaway freight train down a mountain grade. We happily enjoyed the spectacle...and looked forward to its end.

The climax of the man’s existence very likely arrived in the moments after the election of 2024. For four long years Trump thundered that American elections were a swindle, a fraud, a rigged game. Yet, when the votes were tallied on the 6th of November, 2024, not one syllable of doubt escaped him. That election, mysteriously, had been won fair and square!

Mr. Trump had been given up for dead more than once in his long career. In the early ‘90s it looked a near-certainty that he would go broke. Money Digest: "Trump Shuttle airline to the casinos he opened in an attempt to capitalize on the legalization of gambling in Atlantic City. But by the early ‘90s, he was in dire straits. Trump Shuttle disappeared in 1992, and the early years of a recession sent his other businesses in a downward spiral that left him $3.4 billion in the red."

Trump’s empire of debt was saved by Alan Greenspan, who lowered the cost of borrowing and boosted the value of leveraged real estate. But after his rout in 2020, surely - surely - this time he was finished for good. Convicted of business fraud; compelled to pay out millions to settle a rape charge; impeached; hounded by prosecutors of the enemy party. How could the man claw his way back from that?

And then - lo and behold - up he rose, an angry zombie...undead...loosed from his political grave. He bellowed. He pranced. He barked and he danced. And he won the White House all over again! A wiser man would have sipped his triumph slowly and then withdrawn, with what grace he could muster, from the public stage. Pushing 80, astride the summit of the world, elected twice to the world’s highest office, there was nowhere left for him to travel but downhill.

Instead, he grasped at immortality. A triumphal arch. A Trump ballroom. “Trump Accounts.” The Trump Kennedy Center. A Trump “Board of Peace” to supplant the UN. His visage upon a $250 bill, upon the passports of the Republic, chiseled into the hard rock of Mt. Rushmore. But it all looked more like unrestrained vanity than celebrations of real achievement.

And while his bullying and bragging made him a champion at politics, at the actual business of policy, of diplomacy, of leadership, he was an unrelieved calamity. And he surrounded himself with the sorriest bunch of incompetent yes-men the White House has ever seen. Two heads are often better than one. But Trump had only his own weary noggin to consult - with precious little genuine knowledge or useful experience stored somewhere within it.

Everything ran on-again, off-again, hostage to the slow grind of the courts or the quick change of the president’s moods. Tariffs, immigration, war - scarcely had the citizen become accustomed to a program than it was reversed, revised, or repudiated. Instead of retiring the national debt with tariff revenue, as advertised, the feds now scramble merely to refund the money they seized in the first place, illegally.

DOGE, deficits, deportations, and the war upon Iran - all have arrived at very much the same destination: a great blast of trumpets at the launching, and then a whimpering neglect once the thing was quietly abandoned, withdrawn, or forgotten.

And now, poor Mr. Trump confronts an enemy that won’t give up, the courts that won’t let up, and elections that could set him up at odds with Congress. Even worse, he faces the one adversary against whom his creed and his training are both useless. There is no deal to be struck. There is no way to hit back even a single time, let alone tenfold. There is no insult on earth that will land the smallest blow.

Each passing day makes him less of what he once was - such as he was - and more of what we are all fated to become. His thoughts hang together less and less. His policies grow ever more incoherent. His speech slides, sentence by sentence, into blabber. Like it or not, he is mortal...and all mortal things decay. Life’s unkind. Poor Mr. Trump. He climbed so very high. The way down must be particularly painful."

Dan, I Allegedly, "Short Sales are Back!"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 7/17/26
"Short Sales are Back!"
"The housing market is changing again, and one of the biggest warning signs is back: short sales. In this video, I explain what a short sale is, why homeowners are suddenly finding themselves underwater, and how rising mortgage rates, expensive insurance, and declining home values are creating opportunities for investors while putting many families at financial risk. We also discuss foreclosure alternatives, REO properties, cash-for-keys programs, and why today's real estate market is beginning to resemble conditions seen after the 2008 housing crash. We'll also cover the hottest real estate markets showing distress, including Florida, Arizona, Colorado, Texas, and other parts of Middle America. If you're buying a home, selling a property, investing in real estate, or simply trying to understand where the economy is headed, this video will help explain why short sales are increasing and what it could mean for home prices, foreclosures, personal finances, banks, and the overall economy. As always, let me know what you're seeing in your area."
 Comments here:

Adventures With Danno, "Massive Sales At Kroger"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 7/17/26
"Massive Sales At Kroger"
Comments here:

"Americans Are Cutting Back on Groceries"

"Americans Are Cutting Back on Groceries"
by Martin Armstrong

"Politicians can point to a lower inflation report, but they cannot explain why Americans are standing in grocery aisles putting food back on the shelf. CNBC reports that consumers are spending less on groceries, forcing companies like PepsiCo, General Mills, Kraft Heinz, Campbell’s, and Conagra to slash prices and rely on promotions simply to move inventory. Millions have reached the point where every trip to the store has become an exercise in deciding what they can live without.

The numbers tell a much darker story than the headlines. Americans now owe roughly $1.25 trillion in credit card debt, the highest level ever recorded. The average credit card balance has climbed above $6,500, while interest rates on many cards remain above 21%. Families who cannot pay their balances in full are watching interest charges consume more of every paycheck. According to recent surveys, roughly one-third of working-age Americans have used credit cards to purchase groceries, and millions are carrying that grocery debt month after month because they simply do not have another option.

This is no longer simply inflation. It has become a cost-of-living crisis. A family may technically still have a job, but that job no longer buys the same standard of living it did only a few years ago. Housing costs remain near record highs, auto insurance premiums continue climbing, utility bills have increased substantially, healthcare consumes a larger share of household income, and groceries cost far more than they did before inflation exploded. Slower inflation does not undo years of rising prices. It simply means the rate of increase has moderated while families continue living with the cumulative damage.

The Department of Agriculture is hardly forecasting relief. Food prices are expected to continue rising through 2026. Beef prices alone are projected to increase another 7.5% as the U.S. cattle herd has fallen to its smallest size in roughly seventy-five years. Fresh vegetables are forecast to rise 7.7%, sugar and sweets nearly 7%, nonalcoholic beverages about 5.7%, while restaurant prices are expected to continue climbing as labor and operating costs remain elevated.

People continue pointing to overall retail sales as proof that consumers remain healthy. June retail sales rose only 0.2%, exactly as expected. Strip away gasoline prices, which temporarily declined because of the brief ceasefire in the Middle East, and some categories appear stronger. Yet those numbers hide an important shift. Consumers are becoming far more disciplined with necessities while selectively spending on promotions and discount events such as Amazon Prime Day. That is not confidence. That is adaptation.

Food prices themselves have hardly disappeared as a problem. The USDA continues forecasting overall food prices to rise another 3.2% this year. Grocery prices are expected to increase roughly 2.8%, while restaurant prices are projected to climb an even faster 3.6%. Several categories remain under significant pressure. Beef prices are expected to rise 7.5% during 2026 as the U.S. cattle herd has fallen to its lowest level in roughly seventy-five years. Fresh vegetables are forecast to increase 7.7%, sugar and sweets nearly 7%, and nonalcoholic beverages about 5.7%. Consumers may find bargains on certain processed foods, but the underlying trend remains one of rising food costs.

Consumers are adapting because they have little choice. Delinquencies on credit cards have risen sharply over the past two years, and Americans are increasingly financing everyday necessities instead of discretionary purchases. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York recently reported that serious credit card delinquencies continue trending higher, particularly among younger borrowers, while total household debt has climbed above $18 trillion. Those are not the characteristics of a healthy consumer.

Households are sending a message that economists often miss because it never appears in a government report. When people begin treating groceries as a luxury rather than a routine purchase, they are telling you confidence has already deteriorated. The statistics may take months to reflect that change. Consumers make those adjustments immediately.

The grocery cart has always been one of the best economic indicators because families cannot manipulate it. They either have the purchasing power to buy what they want, or they don’t. Increasingly, Americans are answering that question every time they walk into a supermarket."

"Alert! US Bombs Bridges! Iran Hits Refinery! Trump's $10 Million Bounty"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 7/16/26
"Alert! US Bombs Bridges! Iran Hits Refinery! 
Trump's $10 Million Bounty"
Comments here:

Thursday, July 16, 2026

"Dr. Marandi: 'No More Negotiations', Iran is Preparing For Ground War"

Canadian Prepper, 7/16/26
"Dr. Marandi: 'No More Negotiations',
 Iran is Preparing For Ground War"
Comments here:

"Something Big Is Coming, Americans Will Be Shocked; Parents Paying Their Kid's Bills"

Jeremiah Babe, 7/16/26
"Something Big Is Coming, Americans Will Be Shocked;
Parents Paying Their Kid's Bills"
Comments here:

Gerald Celente, "AI Stocks Sliding, Energy Prices Spiking, Iran War Ramping"

Strong language alert!
Gerald Celente, 7/16/26
"AI Stocks Sliding, Energy Prices Spiking, 
Iran War Ramping"
"In this episode of Trends in the News, Gerald Celente breaks down the powerful forces shaking the global economy. As AI stocks lose momentum and energy prices surge, the geopolitical crisis in the Middle East continues to escalate, driving fears of a broader Iran war. Meanwhile, military spending is soaring worldwide while economies struggle under mounting debt, inflation, and slowing growth. Celente connects the dots between financial markets, geopolitics, and economic trends shaping the future - revealing what these developments mean for investors, businesses, and everyday people. Get the trends before they become headlines."
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Supertramp, "Take The Long Way Home"

Full screen recommended.
Supertramp, "Take The Long Way Home"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Riding high in the constellation of Auriga, beautiful, blue vdB 31 is the 31st object in Sidney van den Bergh's 1966 catalog of reflection nebulae. It shares this well-composed celestial still life with dark, obscuring clouds recorded in Edward E. Barnard's 1919 catalog of dark markings in the sky. All are interstellar dust clouds, blocking the light from background stars in the case of Barnard's dark nebulae. For vdB 31, the dust preferentially reflects the bluish starlight from embedded, hot, variable star AB Aurigae.
Exploring the environs of AB Aurigae with the Hubble Space Telescope has revealed the several million year young star is itself surrounded by flattened dusty disk with evidence for the ongoing formation of a planetary system. AB Aurigae is about 470 light-years away. At that distance this cosmic canvas would span about four light-years.”

"I'm Sure..."

"I'm sure the universe is full of intelligent life. 
It's just been too intelligent to come here."

"Two possibilities exist: Either we are alone in the 
Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying."
- Arthur C. Clarke

"A Midnight Journey Through Fading Shadows"

Full screen recommended.
Golden Quiet Things,
"A Midnight Journey Through Fading Shadows"
"Welcome to a dark, whimsical musical journey. "Shadows on the Faded Glass" is a mystery-folk cinematic ballad that captures the bittersweet isolation of a midnight journey. Tailored with a distinctive "stop-motion puppet texture," the track features an intimate, close-mic older male baritone lead. The song moves at a steady walking pace driven by a fingerpicked acoustic guitar, deep upright bass, low viola pads, and delicate pizzicato strings. Wrapped entirely in a warm, dusty analog tape hiss with absolutely no EDM elements, it evokes the feeling of an old film reel coming to life. If you love atmospheric acoustic music, dark storytelling, and melancholic indie folk, this track is for you."

"What the Old Ones Knew About Why the Kindest People Get Hurt the Most"

Full screen recommended.
Native Elder,
"What the Old Ones Knew About 
Why the Kindest People Get Hurt the Most"

"Too Old to Pretend"

Full screen recommended.
Delta King's Blues,
"Too Old to Pretend"
"Ain’t got the energy to fake it no more. “Too Old to Pretend” is a stripped-down, truth-first Delta King’s Blues tune about honesty, self-acceptance, and finally living without putting on a show.  A bare, unpolished acoustic guitar lays it out straight - no tricks, no hiding. The harmonica speaks plain and low, like a man who’s done explaining himself. The groove moves slow and steady, built for folks who stopped performing and started being. This is blues without masks. For people who outgrew pretending and found peace in being real. Truth gets easier… when you stop trying to impress."

The Daily "Near You?"

Surrey, British Columbia, Canada. Thanks for stopping by!

"We Don’t Really Know What’s Happening"

"We Don’t Really Know What’s Happening"
by Paul Rosenberg

"And, believe it or not, this is rather good news. I’ll explain. We all like to know what’s happening in the world, and for good reason… understanding our surroundings is essential to survival. We instinctively seek information… we need information. There is, however, a problem that we face: No matter how much “news” you consume, you won’t really know what’s going on in the world.

We can’t know, because ‘the news’ is half illusion, provided by government-dependent corporations that are paid to keep you watching and to keep you joined to the status quo. Granted, they are quite good at providing pictures from disaster areas, but when it comes to explaining why the disaster happened, they mislead almost every time. Yes, some truth makes its way through the news machine, but most of it is wrapped in layers of manipulation. If, for example, you watch the news feeds all day, you’ll find a good deal of truth, but you’ll find it amongst a pile of half-truths. Do you really have enough time to analyze them all?

One Piece of Truth: The truth about public reporting comes out from time to time, but usually well after the fact. So, here’s one piece of truth that’s worth remembering: For those who don’t recall the 1970s, Daniel Ellsberg was a man who worked as an analyst at the RAND Corp., moved from there to the Pentagon, spent two years in Vietnam working for the State Department, and then went back to RAND. He is the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers in 1971. These were the documents that revealed that three US presidential administrations had been plainly, knowingly, and openly lying to the public.

Here’s what Ellsberg thought the New York Times was good for: "… to see what the rubes and the yokels are thinking about and what they think is going on and what they think the policy is…" Later, in 1998, he said this in an interview: "The public is lied to every day by the president, by his spokespeople, by his officers. If you can’t handle the thought that the president lies to the public for all kinds of reasons, you couldn’t stay in the government at that level…"

And here’s what Michael Deaver, a top aide to President Ronald Reagan, said about the press: The media I’ve had a lot to do with is lazy. We fed them and they ate it every day." That’s the truth about news, my friends. The news channels and newspapers are where the yokels get informed, presidents flatly lie, and legislatures are massively corrupt. And Internet news sites primarily recycle TV and newspaper stories.

Yes, some truth does slide through, but it looks almost the same as the other stuff. The only places we get anything close to refined truth is on a few Internet sites… and many of them have a particular axe to grind. The Internet is being funneled into Google, Facebook, and a few other friends of the state. Social media is being massively censored, and the the independents are being squeezed out anyway.

More Truth: This is what William Colby, former director of the CIA, is quoted as saying in "Derailing Democracy: The America the Media Don’t Want You to See": "The Central Intelligence Agency owns everyone of any significance in the major media."

Now, since people have disputed that quotation, let’s back it up: Please consider Operation Mockingbird: Beginning in 1948, a CIA agent named Frank Wisner started gathering journalists and broadcasters… and started using them to ‘inform’ the public. The operation soon got so elaborate that other agents called it “Wisner’s Wurlitzer.” (Wurlitzer being a popular brand of organ.) In other words, Wisner played the media like a musical instrument.

While the real situation is more complex than this short description, rest assured that every major news organization in every major country is manipulated by intelligence groups. Where do you think they get all those “unnamed sources”? If you were an intel operator, wouldn’t you do precisely that? You’d be considered derelict not to. So, you can rely upon this fact.

And So…I could continue listing facts, but there’s no real point. The crucial thing is to accept the truth: The news is worked over before it reaches us. We do know some facts, of course, and a generation from now we may learn nearly the whole truth about some of these events, but only if we wait and then go out of our way to find it.

The good news in all of this comes when we accept the facts and stop running our brains on bad information. Yes, it would be nice to know what’s really going on, but we don’t, and there isn’t much we can do about it. So, it’s time to stop treating the news seriously.

So long as the guv-megacorp-intel structure remains, it will enforce our ignorance. That’s what such organizations do, by their very nature. To expect differently is like expecting a dog to sprout wings and fly. But once we accept that fact, we stop being spun around by the talking heads and their handlers. And then, you can start building the kind of world you’d like to live in."

"A 28 Item Grocery Order From Target That Cost $64.50 In 2020 Is Now $158.30 In 2026"

by Michael Snyder

"The cost of living has become absolutely suffocating for millions of Americans. For years, the bureaucrats in Washington have been feeding us numbers that show that the rate of inflation is low, but it is obvious to everyone that what they are telling us is simply not true. Many of the items that I regularly purchase at the grocery store have more than doubled in price over the past decade. Some have more than tripled in price. When I get to the register to check out, I feel like asking the cashier which organ I should donate to pay for my groceries.

We have reached a stage where grocery prices are causing extreme financial stress for families all over America. One man recently caused quite a stir on social media when he revealed that a grocery order from Target that cost $64.50 in 2020 is now $158.30 in 2026
This post has already been viewed a million times. The reason why it is so popular is because it instantly resonates with people. Everyone knows that grocery prices have risen to absurd levels, and yet the statisticians in Washington keep assuring us that everything is fine. I don’t believe them. Do you?

The Washington Post just conducted a poll that found that 66 percent of Americans consider the cost of groceries to be unaffordable. That figure has risen by 21 percent just since February…"Americans are feeling worse about the price of groceries than they were before the war with Iran began, a Washington Post-Ipsos poll finds. About two-thirds, or 66 percent, of Americans say they would describe the cost of groceries as unaffordable, up sharply from the 45 percent who said the same thing in February before the conflict started." Partisanship continues to play a big role in perceptions, with half of Republicans saying groceries are affordable in the latest poll, compared with about one-quarter of independents and Democrats.

Housing is even worse. The median price of an existing home in the United States has now surpassed the $440,000 mark…"With a landmark housing affordability bill in political limbo, U.S. home prices have hit an all-time high. The median price of existing homes in June was $440,660, up 1.8% from $432,700 a year ago, according to new data from the National Association of Realtors (NAR). Home prices have risen for 36 straight months. “Housing affordability remains low under slowing wage growth and stronger home price growth,” Ershang Liang, an economist with PNC Economics Research, said in a report."

Who can afford to pay that much for a house? Rental prices have also gone through the roof. If you can believe it, the average rent on a one bedroom apartment in Manhattan is now a whopping $5,408 a month…"The city’s housing crisis has hit “DefCon 1”- with average rents for a one-bedroom in Manhattan hitting an all-time high of nearly $5,500 last month, and Brooklyn following suit, according to new data and critics. “We need bold action. This is a crisis,’’ New York City Comptroller Mark Levine posted on X over the weekend, along with a link to the latest figures from the inhabit blog by real-estate giant Corcoran Group. The dismal June stats reveal that renters paid an average of $5,408 for a one-bedroom in Manhattan, with studio prices not far behind at $4,014.

It isn’t a mystery why most Americans are struggling in this sort of an environment. Many are turning to debt in a desperate attempt to make ends meet…"Many American families are struggling to make ends meet on their incomes alone and have resorted to credit cards, payday loans, and Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) options for groceries, according to nonprofit research center Urban Institute.

The findings are based on a survey of 18-to 64-year-old working-age adults conducted in December 2025. About 8.7 percent of adults said they used a credit card for groceries and were unable to make the minimum payment, up from 7.1 percent in 2023, the Urban Institute said in a July 13 report. This suggests “worsening financial distress” among families."

Almost one in 10 used BNPL to pay for groceries, out of which more than a third missed a timely repayment last year. Unfortunately, when you keep piling up debt a day of reckoning eventually arrives. Coming into this year, alarmingly large numbers of Americans were getting behind on their credit cards
And the number of foreclosures in the U.S. is way above the highly elevated pace that we witnessed last year… Foreclosures across the U.S. ballooned in the first half of the year, a sign of the increasing financial strain facing the nation’s homeowners. Foreclosure filings reached nearly 228,000 from January to June, up 21% from a year ago and 28% from two years ago, according to data released Thursday from real estate data company ATTOM.

Rising foreclosure rates indicate that more homeowners are in financial distress, Rob Barber, CEO of ATTOM, said in a statement. Homes go into foreclosure when the owner falls behind on mortgage payments, often due to extenuating life circumstances such as a job loss. ATTOM defines foreclosures as default notices, scheduled auctions or bank repossessions.

This reminds me so much of the conditions that we experienced just before the financial crisis of 2008. Unfortunately, the cost of living is only going to go higher. The cost of energy directly affects the cost of everything else, and it appears that the Strait of Hormuz is going to be closed for an extended period of time. The average price of a gallon of gasoline in the U.S. has nearly reached four dollars again, and the average price of a gallon of diesel has already risen above the five dollar mark… "US gas prices have rocketed higher during the on-again, off-again war with Iran. After a brief respite, the average price for gas has surged 15 cents in a week to $3.94 a gallon and appears headed north of $4 again. Diesel, which shows up in customers’ shipping costs, topped $5 a gallon again Thursday for the first time in 3 weeks, according to AAA."

It serves as a painful reminder of how the military conflict in the Persian Gulf has a direct effect on your wallet. Of even greater importance is what the closure of the Strait of Hormuz means for the global fertilizer market. As Mike Adams has pointed out, without sufficient quantities of nitrogen fertilizer we won’t even come close to producing enough food for everyone…

Admittedly, I have failed to explain the stakes clearly enough. For months, I have written about fertilizer supply chains, the Haber-Bosch process, and the vulnerability of the Strait of Hormuz. But the gravity of this crisis has not sunk in for most people. Let me put it as plainly as I can: The global population of more than 8 billion people depends on a fragile web of natural gas, oil, and downstream chemistry that took 60+ years to build on this planet. If we lose 25 percent of these critical substances, we lose 25 percent of the population. That is 2 billion people. Here is why that math is inescapable.

As I documented in my article “The Haber-Bosch House of Cards,” the single chemical reaction that fixes nitrogen from the air into fertilizer is responsible for feeding roughly half of humanity. That process requires vast quantities of natural gas. The Persian Gulf region, especially Qatar and Iran, supplies much of that gas. When the Trump administration launched its war on Iran in February 2026 and the Strait of Hormuz was effectively closed, the global fertilizer supply chain began to collapse. This is not a prediction of future famine. The famine is already baked in. But it could still get a whole lot worse depending on how things go from here.

We could be facing multiple years when global food production is at depressed levels. That means that food prices will go even higher in wealthy countries, and in poor countries there will be shortages. Famine is one of the major trends that I am tracking, and what we are already witnessing in some parts of Africa is absolutely heartbreaking. There is no magic button that we can press that is going to make these problems go away. A crisis of historic proportions is now upon us, and we are still only in the very early stages of it."

"Urgent Warning On What Foods To Avoid As 'Explosive Diarrhea" Parasite Spreads"

Click image for larger size.
"Urgent Warning On What Foods To Avoid 
As 'Explosive Diarrhea" Parasite Spreads"
by The Wellness Company

"The cyclospora outbreak is spreading like wildfire across the country. There were roughly 300 cases nationwide just a week to 10 days ago, now there are more than 3,000 cases in the state of Michigan alone! And these numbers are expected to grow dramatically over the next few weeks, in part because we still have no idea what is causing the infection.

Indeed, as cases of this parasitic infection, which causes “explosive diarrhea,” continue to sky-rocket, health officials are struggling to determine the exact source of the outbreak. According to The New York Post: "State and federal health officials are continuing to investigate multiple outbreaks, but the source has not yet been identified.

In previous US outbreaks, cyclospora has repeatedly been linked to fresh produce, including raspberries, basil, cilantro, green onions, snow peas, lettuce, mesclun and salad mixes. Research has also connected past outbreaks to blackberries, watercress, mangoes and vegetable trays. Health officials in Michigan, one of the states hardest hit during the current outbreak, are beginning to suspect lettuce or salad greens may be responsible, although the investigation remains ongoing."

While the culprit remains unknown, what we do know is that the symptoms from the parasite aren’t pretty: The parasite, cyclospora, spreads through raw produce and water contaminated with human feces – and it causes the intestinal illness cyclosporiasis, whose symptoms include cramps, nausea, fatigue, loss of appetite, low-grade fever and vomiting. The most commonly reported symptom is “watery diarrhea with frequent and sometimes explosive bowel movements”, according to the CDC.

Many Americans are asking what they can do to avoid this parasite: Officials recommend following proper food safety practices when preparing meals. Experts also say some foods appear to pose much less risk. “To date, no commercially frozen produce, cooked foods or peeled fruit have been associated with cyclosporiasis infection,” one study cited by WPIX found. The CDC advises washing hands thoroughly with soap and water after using the bathroom and before preparing food. Alcohol-based hand sanitizers do not kill cyclospora."
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Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 7/16/26
"Is Taco Bell To Blame?"
"This food safety story is raising serious questions across America. Reports involving a widespread parasite outbreak, contaminated produce, and thousands of illnesses have consumers wondering whether it's still safe to eat fresh vegetables or dine out. In today's video, I break down what health officials are saying, why Taco Bell has become part of the conversation, and how this could affect restaurants, grocery stores, farmers, and consumers nationwide. We'll also discuss Cyclospora infections, produce safety, restaurant inspections, the similarities to previous food contamination outbreaks, and why businesses could suffer long after the headlines disappear. As always, do your own research, read the sources below, and let me know whether you think this is being handled appropriately or if the public is overreacting."
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"So We Never Live..."

"We do not rest satisfied with the present. We anticipate the future as too slow in coming, as if in order to hasten its course; or we recall the past, to stop its too rapid flight. So imprudent are we that we wander in the times which are not ours, and do not think of the only one which belongs to us; and so idle are we that we dream of those times which are no more, and thoughtlessly overlook that which alone exists. For the present is generally painful to us. We conceal it from our sight, because it troubles us; and if it be delightful to us, we regret to see it pass away. We try to sustain it by the future, and think of arranging matters which are not in our power, for a time which we have no certainty of reaching. Let each one examine his thoughts, and he will find them all occupied with the past and the future. We scarcely ever think of the present; and if we think of it, it is only to take light from it to arrange the future. The present is never our end. The past and the present are our means; the future alone is our end. So we never live, but we hope to live; and, as we are always preparing to be happy, it is inevitable we should never be so."
- Blaise Pascal

"How It Really Is"

 

"Luddites Were Right, You Know…"

Several generations of idiots...
"Luddites Were Right, You Know…"
By Chris Black

"The term “Luddite” originated in the early 19th century and refers to a movement of English textile workers who protested against the increased use of machines in their industry. The term “neo-Luddite” was later applied to those who similarly oppose technology for similar reasons, but in a contemporary context.

Everywhere you go, you see people with their faces in their phones. Constantly, constantly, constantly. At the bus stop. On the train. In the driver’s seats of their moving cars. Their kid makes a bit of noise at the restaurant table? Shove the iPad in their face.

Boomerisms aside, it really can’t be overstated how f**ked up this is, and not because “people don’t interact” anymore. It’s actually much worse than that… Nobody ever allows themselves even a moment of peace inside their own heads. The real insidiousness of the smartphone is that it encourages you to constantly consume content, endlessly, never ever stopping. It’s common for people to spend their entire day with earphones in, listening to podcasts and watching Tiktoks literally constantly.

Our brains did not evolve to be bombarded with constant microbursts of hyper real stimulation this way. Attention spans are getting measurably shorter. Reaction times are getting longer. None of this sh*t is good for your brain.

Everyone always says, “Well, what about TV and the radio?” Inherently limited and fundamentally different because of the fact that they’re pre-programmed and don’t act as “magic mirrors” of you and your personal inputs into them. Your smartphone is designed to learn everything about you so that it can be as addictive as possible and maximize the amount of data it squeezes out of you. Nothing about TV or the radio - or even Web 1.0 internet - ever came anywhere close to this.

Even so, we have known for decades that TV is horrible for your brain on account of many of the same mechanisms that affect attention span and cognitive development. So imagine how much worse the smartphone is. Unfathomably worse. We already know it’s worse, but we won’t know exactly how much worse it is until at least another decade, when the younger Zoomers and Gen Alphas are a few years into adulthood after an upbringing that revolved around Web 2.0.

Millennials were lucky enough not to take the full brunt of the experience. We got our first taste as we came of age instead of growing up being marinated in it. The saddest part is that the only reason any of this even caught on or is the least bit operable is because of the fact that it hijacks the mechanisms that make us feel satisfied and good. We didn’t evolve to handle this level of stimulation, but BOY do we respond to it. It’s so excessive that it’s impossible for some people to resist. So there are no f**king brakes.

You have to cast The Ring into the fire or it totally consumes you. That’s the reality for most people. And that, my friends, is just sick.

Look at your screen usage on your phone and tell me I’m wrong, how you totally don’t need it and can stop whenever you want. You are no better than a crack head, and you won’t realize that until you actually do try to stop for real. It’s unprecedented in human history to think this way. We are truly in uncharted waters here. Just wait until the sensory overload most people are bathing in all day, every day becomes fully automated instead of just partially automated like it is now."

Greg Hunter, "Climate Engineered Drought, Heat Dome & Wildfires"

A terrifying must-view!
"Climate Engineered Drought, Heat Dome & Wildfires"
By Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog

"At the end of April, renowned climate engineering researcher Dane Wigington was on USAW to warn about increasing extreme weather caused by geoengineering or manmade weather modification in the sky. Wigington predicted a “Summer from Hell.” With record high temperatures all over the country, he was right - again. Let’s start with the drought in the Southwest that has water sources like Lake Powell hitting record lows. One story last week said, “Lake Powell reaching critically low elevation levels, nearing ‘dead power pool,’ experts say.” The water level in the reservoir is so low it is approaching a point where “water can no longer flow past Glen Canyon Dam by gravity.” Wigington explains, “There is 110 feet of sedimentation behind the Hoover Dam. That means that’s not water that’s dirt now. This means these incredibly low numbers of how much water is in these basins is probably half of what the official figure is. We are hurtling toward impact right now. There is no way out of this.”

What would Wigington do if he lived in Phoenix or Las Vegas? Wigington says, “Move. Yes, we have drought/deluge scenarios, and that is a hallmark of climate engineering. While we are seeing the Southwest dry up completely, what are we seeing in places like Texas right now? We are seeing emergency flash flood warnings. The scenarios of nothing but deadly deluge or devastating drought are hallmarks of climate engineering operations completely disrupting the entire global hydrological cycle.”

Then, there is the so-called ‘heat dome’ problem that is affecting most of the United States right now. Wigington says, “In Montana, record highs, and a week later, three feet of snow. A week after that, a record obliterating high of 115 degrees. The train is totally off the rails, and the vast majority has no idea how grave our situation is. They are caught up in politics and sports games, and we are about to hit the wall. People need to wake the hell up.”

Another problem is a huge smoke layer over North America. Wigington says they are burning forests in Canada to get smoke to do temporary cool downs with wildfires. Millions of square miles are torched, according to Wigington. Again, what makes this all much worse is climate engineering. Wigington says, “There is a psychological operation for climate engineering that serves those in power. Also, we have a covert weapon of war with which they can and continue to control populations and then blame nature. They can crush crops and cause unimaginable misery and blame nature. This is the crown jewel weapon of the controllers.” There is much more in the 43-minute interview.

Join Greg Hunter on Rumble as he goes one-on-one with Dane Wigington, founder of GeoEngineeringWatch.org, as the huge damage caused by geoengineering continues unabated as the obvious environmental collapse unfolds before our eyes.

There is vast and totally free information on GeoEngineeringWatch.org.

Dan, I Allegedly, "This Is Making America Even More Expensive"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 7/16/26
"This Is Making America Even More Expensive"
"Today's economy is filled with policies and financial decisions that sound great on paper but often make life even more expensive. In this video I break down Alameda County's proposal for a $30 per hour minimum wage, why restaurants and businesses are warning about higher prices, and how longer 96-month auto loans could leave millions of Americans trapped in debt. We also discuss soaring vehicle prices, Ford recalls, Lucid's financial struggles, and why buying beyond your means has never been more dangerous. I also cover the latest business news including Costco's massive new gas station, 7-Eleven's store remodels and closures, Nike's unusual lawsuit, weakness in major technology stocks, and why protecting your finances has become more important than ever. If you're interested in business news, the economy, inflation, personal finance, banking, real estate, and what these changes mean for everyday Americans, this is a video you won't want to miss."
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"Most Americans Are Running Out of Money Right Now"

Full screen recommended.
"Most Americans Are Running Out of Money Right Now"
"Most Americans Are Running Out of Money Right Now, but the real problem goes far beyond inflation. Why are millions of working Americans struggling to stay afloat even as wages continue to rise? This documentary uncovers the hidden forces behind America's growing financial pressure. Millions of households are discovering that earning more does not necessarily mean living better. This video explores how real wage growth has barely kept pace with inflation, while the cost of living continues to rise through higher housing, groceries, insurance, healthcare, and transportation expenses. It explains why slowing inflation does not bring prices back down, leaving many families with little financial margin to absorb unexpected costs. As everyday bills consume a larger share of income, saving for the future becomes increasingly difficult. The documentary also examines the housing affordability crisis, rising mortgage rates, growing credit card debt, and the increasing reliance on second jobs to cover basic living expenses. Through evidence based analysis and real life examples, it reveals why many middle class Americans feel financially trapped despite a stable economy. This is a closer look at the economic realities reshaping everyday life across the United States.'
Comments here:

"Thought..."

"Men fear thought as they fear nothing else on earth, more than ruin, more even than death. Thought is subversive and revolutionary, destructive and terrible, thought is merciless to privilege, established institutions, and comfortable habit. Thought looks into the pit of hell and is not afraid. Thought is great and swift and free, the light of the world, and the chief glory of man."
- Bertrand Russell

"Five percent of the people think; 
ten percent of the people think they think; 
and the other eighty-five percent would rather die than think."
 - Thomas A. Edison.

"Huxley vs. Orwell"

"Huxley vs. Orwell"
by Neil Postman

“What Orwell feared were those who would ban books.
 What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to
 ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one...
Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those 
who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egoism...
Orwell feared that the truth would be concealed from us.
Huxley feared the truth would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance...
Orwell feared we would become a captive culture. Huxley feared we 
would become a trivial culture, preoccupied with some equivalent
 of the feelies, the orgy porgy, and the centrifugal bumblepuppy...
As Huxley remarked in 'Brave New World Revisited', the civil libertarians and the rationalists who are ever on the alert to oppose tyranny “failed to take into account man’s almost infinite appetite for distractions.” In '1984,' Huxley added, people are controlled by inflicting pain. In 'Brave New World,' they are controlled by inflicting pleasure...In short, Orwell feared that what we hate will ruin us. Huxley feared that what we love will ruin us."
Huxley was very obviously correct..
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Freely download “Amusing Ourselves to Death:
Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business”, by Neil Postman, here: