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Sunday, May 17, 2026

"A Simple Flat Tire Is A Financial Death Sentence, People Are Crashing Out On The Economy"

Jeremiah Babe, 5/17/26
"A Simple Flat Tire Is A Financial Death Sentence, 
People Are Crashing Out On The Economy"
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Musical Interlude: Justin Hayward, "The Way of the World"

Full screen recommended.
Justin Hayward, "The Way of the World"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Can the night sky appear both serene and surreal? Perhaps classifiable as serene in the below panoramic image taken last Friday are the faint lights of small towns glowing across a dark foreground landscape of Doi Inthanon National Park in Thailand, as well as the numerous stars glowing across a dark background starscape. Also visible are the planet Venus and a band of zodiacal light on the image left.
Click image for larger size.
Unusual events are also captured, however. First, the central band of our Milky Way Galaxy, while usually a common site, appears here to hover surreally above the ground. Next, a fortuitous streak of a meteor was captured on the image right. Perhaps the most unusual component is the bright spot just to the left of the meteor. That spot is the plume of a rising Ariane 5 rocket, launched a few minutes before from Kourou, French Guiana. How lucky was the astrophotographer to capture the rocket launch in his image? Not lucky at all- the image was timed to capture the rocket. What was lucky was how photogenic - and perhaps surreal - the rest of the sky turned out to be.”

"It's Not the End of the World"

"It's Not the End of the World"
by Jeff Thomas

"Periodically, I’ll encounter someone who has read one of my essays and has decided not to pursue them further, stating, "You’re one of those ‘End of the world’ guys. I can’t be bothered reading the writings of someone who thinks we’re all doomed. I have a more positive outlook than that." In actual fact, I agree entirely with his latter two comments. I can’t be bothered reading the thoughts of a writer who says we’re all doomed, either. I, too, have a more positive outlook than that.

My one discrepancy with such comments is that I don’t by any means think that the present state of events will lead to the end of the world, as he assumes. But then, neither am I naïve enough to think that if I just hope for the best, the powers that be will cease to be parasitical and predatory out of sympathy for me. They will not.

For any serious student of history, one of the great realizations that occurs at some point is that governments are inherently controlling by nature. The more control they have, the more they desire and the more they pursue. After all, governments actually produce nothing. They exist solely upon what they can extract from the people they rule over. Therefore, their personal success is not measured by how well they serve their people, it’s measured by how much they can extract from the people. And so, it’s a given that all governments will pursue ever-greater levels of power over their minions up to and including the point of total dominance.

It should be said that, on rare occasions, a people will rise up and create a governmental system in which the rights of the individual are paramount. This was true in the creation of the Athenian Republic and the American Constitution, and even the British Magna Carta. However, these events are quite rare in history and, worse, as soon as they take place, those who gain power do their best to diminish the newly-gained freedoms. Such freedoms can almost never be destroyed quickly, but, over time and "by slow operations," as Thomas Jefferson was fond of saying, governments can be counted on to eventually destroy all freedoms.

We’re passing through a period in history in which the process of removing freedoms is nearing completion in many of the world’s foremost jurisdictions. The EU and US, in particular, are leading the way in this effort. Consequently, it shouldn’t be surprising that some predict "the end of the world." But, they couldn’t be more incorrect.

Surely, in 1789, the more productive people of France may have felt that the developing French Revolution would culminate in Armageddon. Similarly, in 1917, those who created prosperity in Russia may well have wanted to throw up their hands as the Bolsheviks seized power from the Romanovs.

Whenever a deterioration in rule is underway, as it is once again now, the observer has three choices:

Declare the End of the World: There are many people, worldwide, but particularly in the centers of the present deterioration – the EU and US – who feel that, since the situation in their home country is nearing collapse, the entire world must also be falling apart. This is not only a very myopic viewpoint, it’s also quite inaccurate. At any point in civilization in the past 2000 years or more, there have always been empires that were collapsing due to intolerable governmental dominance and there have always concurrently been alternative jurisdictions where the level of freedom was greater. In ancient Rome, when Diocletian devalued the currency, raised taxes, increased warfare and set price controls, those people who actually created the economy on a daily basis found themselves in the same boat as Europeans and Americans are finding themselves in, in the 21st century.

It may have seemed like the end of the world, but it was not. Enough producers left Rome and started over again in other locations. Those other locations eventually thrived as a result of the influx of productive people, while Rome atrophied.

Turn a Blind Eye: This is less dreary than the above approach, but it is nevertheless just as fruitless. It is, in fact, the most common of reactions – to just "hope for the best." It’s tempting to imagine that maybe the government will realize that they’re the only ones benefitting from the destruction of freedom and prosperity and they’ll feel bad and reverse the process. But this clearly will not happen. It’s also tempting to imagine that maybe it won’t get a whole lot worse and that life, although not all that good at present, might remain tolerable. Again, this is wishful thinking and the odds of it playing out in a positive way are slim indeed.

Accept the Truth, But Do Something About It: This, of course, is the hard one. Begin by recognizing the truth. If that truth is not palatable, study the situation carefully and, when a reasonably clear understanding has been reached, create an alternative. When governments enter the final decline stage, an alternative is not always easy to accept. It’s a bit like having a tooth pulled. You want to put it off, but the pain will only get worse if you delay. And so, you trundle off to the dentist unhappily, but, a few weeks after the extraction, you find yourself asking, "Why didn’t I do this sooner?"

To be sure, those who investigate and analyze the present socio-economic-political deterioration do indeed espouse a great deal of gloom, but this should not be confused with doom. In actual fact, the whole point of shining a light into the gloom is to avoid having it end in doom.

It should be said here that remaining in a country that is tumbling downhill socially, economically and politically is also not the end of the world. It is, however, true that the end result will not exactly be a happy one. If history repeats once again, it’s likely to be quite a miserable one.

Those who undertake the study of the present deterioration must, admittedly, address some pretty depressing eventualities and it would be far easier to just curl up on the sofa with a six-pack and watch the game, but the fact remains: unless the coming problems are investigated and an alternative found, those who sit on the sofa will become the victims of their own lethargy.

Sadly, we live in a period in history in which some of the nations that once held the greatest promise for the world are well on their way to becoming the most tyrannical. If by recognizing that fact, we can pursue better alternatives elsewhere on the globe, as people have done in previous eras. We may actually find that the field of daisies in the image above is still very much in existence, it’s just a bit further afield than it was in years gone by. And it is absolutely worthy of pursuit."

"What Happens When We Die"

"What Happens When We Die"
by Maria Popova

"When my atheist engineer grandfather died, my atheist engineer grandmother leaned over the body in the hospice bed that had contained half a century of shared life and love, cradled the cranium in which his stubborn and sensitive mind had dwelt, and whispered into the halogen-lit ether: “Where did you go, my darling?”

Whatever our beliefs, these sense making playthings of the mind, when the moment of material undoing comes, we - creatures of moment and matter - simply cannot fathom how something as exquisite as the universe of thought and feeling inside us can vanish into nothingness.

Even if we understand that dying is the token of our existential luckiness, even if we understand that we are borrowed stardust, bound to be returned to the universe that made it - a universe itself slouching toward nothingness as its stars are slowly burning out their energy to leave a cold austere darkness of pure spacetime - this understanding blurs into an anxious disembodied abstraction as the body slouches toward dissolution. Animated by electrical impulses and temporal interactions of matter, our finite minds simply cannot grasp a timeless and infinite inanimacy - a void beyond being.
Pillars of Creation, Eagle Nebula, Messier 16
Even Walt Whitman, who could hold such multitudes of contradiction, could not grasp the void. “I will make poems of my body and of mortality,” he vowed as a young man as he reverenced our shared materiality in his timeless declamation that “every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.” It was easy, from the shimmering platform of his prime, to look forward to becoming “the uncut hair of graves” upon returning his own atoms to the grassy ground one day.

But then, when that day loomed near as he grew old and infirm, “the poet of the body and the poet of the soul” suddenly could not fathom the total disbanding of his atomic selfhood, suddenly came to “laugh at what you call dissolution.” And then he did dissolve, leaving us his immortal verses, verses penned when his particles sang with the electric cohesion of youth and of health, verses that traced with their fleshy finger the faint contour of an elemental truth: “What invigorates life invigorates death.”

I wish I could have given my grandmother, and given the dying Whitman, the infinitely invigorating "Mr g: A Novel About the Creation" (public library) by the poetic physicist Alan Lightman - a magical-realist serenade to science, coursing with symphonic truth about our search for meaning, our hunger for beauty, and what makes our tender, transient lives worth living.

Toward the end of the novel, Mr g watches, with heartache unknown in the Void predating the existence of universes and of life, an old woman on her deathbed, the film of her long and painful and beautiful life unspooling from the reel of memory, leaving her grief-stricken by its terminus, shuddering with defiant disbelief that this is all. “How can a creature of substance and mass fathom a thing without substance or mass?” wonders Mr g as he sorrows watching her succumb to the very laws he created. “How can a creature who will certainly die have an understanding of things that will exist forever?”

And then, as a faint smile washes across her face, she does die. Lightman writes: "At that moment, there were 3,​147,​740,​103,​497,​276,​498,​750,​208,​327 atoms in her body. Of her total mass, 63.7 percent was oxygen, 21.0 percent carbon, 10.1 percent hydrogen, 2.6 percent nitrogen, 1.4 percent calcium, 1.1 percent phosphorous, plus a smattering of the ninety-odd other chemical elements created in stars.

In the cremation, her water evaporated. Her carbon and nitrogen combined with oxygen to make gaseous carbon dioxide and nitrogen dioxide, which floated skyward and mingled with the air. Most of her calcium and phosphorous baked into a reddish brown residue and scattered in soil and in wind.

But then we see that every atom belonging to her - or, rather, temporarily borrowed by her - truly does belong to everything and everyone, just as you and I are now inhaling the same oxygen atoms that once inflated Walt Whitman’s lungs with the lust for life: "Released from their temporary confinement, her atoms slowly spread out and diffused through the atmosphere. In sixty days’ time, they could be found in every handful of air on the planet. In one hundred days, some of her atoms, the vaporous water, had condensed into liquid and returned to the surface as rain, to be drunk and ingested by animals and plants. Some of her atoms were absorbed by light-utilizing organisms and transformed into tissues and tubules and leaves. Some were breathed in by oxygen creatures, incorporated into organs and bone.

In a passage evocative of the central sentiment in Ursula K. Le Guin’s spare, stunning poem “Kinship,” he adds: "Pregnant women ate animals and plants made of her atoms. A year later, babies contained some of her atoms… Several years after her death, millions of children contained some of her atoms. And their children would contain some of her atoms as well. Their minds contained part of her mind.

Will these millions of children, for generations upon future generations, know that some of their atoms cycled through this woman? It is not likely. Will they feel what she felt in her life, will their memories have flickering strokes of her memories, will they recall that moment long ago when she stood by the window, guilt ridden and confused, and watched as the tadr bird circled the cistern? No, it is not possible. Will they have some faint sense of her glimpse of the Void? No, it is not possible. It is not possible. But I will let them have their own brief glimpse of the Void, just at the moment they pass from living to dead, from animate to inanimate, from consciousness to that which has no consciousness. For a moment, they will understand infinity.

And the individual atoms, cycled through her body and then cycled through wind and water and soil, cycled through generations and generations of living creatures and minds, will repeat and connect and make a whole out of parts. Although without memory, they make a memory. Although impermanent, they make a permanence. Although scattered, they make a totality."

Here we are, you and me, Walt and Alan, my grandmother who is and my grandfather who is no more - each of us a trembling totality, made of particles both absolutely vulnerable and absolutely indestructible, hungering for absolutes in a universe of relatives, hungering for permanence in a universe of ceaseless change, famished for meaning, for beauty, for emblems of existence. Out of these hungers, out of these contradictions, we make everything that invigorates life with aliveness: our art and our music, our poems and our mathematics, our novels and our loves."

"The Wisdom Of Satchel Paige"

“Age is a case of mind over matter. 
If you don't mind, it don't matter.”

“Don't look back. Something might be gaining on you.”

“Ain't no man can avoid being born average, 
but there ain't no man got to be common.”

“Money and women. They're two of the strongest things 
in the world. The things you do for a woman you wouldn't
 do for anything else. Same with money.”

“How old would you be if you didn't know how old you are?”

"Work like you don't need the money.
Love like you've never been hurt.
Dance like nobody's watching."

- Satchel Paige

The Poet: Rainer Maria Rilke, "A Walk"

"A Walk"

"My eyes already touch the sunny hill.
going far ahead of the road I have begun.
So we are grasped by what we cannot grasp;
it has inner light, even from a distance -
and changes us, even if we do not reach it,
into something else, which, hardly sensing it,
we already are; a gesture waves us on
answering our own wave...
but what we feel is the wind in our faces."

- Rainer Maria Rilke

Chet Raymo, “The Radiance Of What Is”

“The Radiance Of What Is”
by Chet Raymo

“In the summer of 1936, as I nestled snug in my mother's womb, Fortune magazine sent the young writer James Agee and the photographer Walker Evans to rural Alabama to report on how the Great Depression was affecting the poorest of the poor. For eight weeks they lived with three impoverished sharecropper families. (Pictured below is the family of Bud Fields.)
Their combined work never appeared in Fortune, but it was published as a book- “Let Us Now Praise Famous Men”- in 1941. The book was not an immediate success, but decades later, after Agee won a posthumous Pulitzer for "A Death in the Family", it found a new audience and eventually a place in the American canon of literary and photographic masterpieces.

The book has a strange, difficult and self-lacerating Preamble in which Agee tries to understand what it is that he and Evans have done. Does art report or create? Have the two artists exploited the families they reported on? How do we discern the truth when we are burdened with so many limitations, preconceptions and personal agendas? How do we make ourselves neutral channels for what is and not for what we wish it to be? Is it possible to be "neutral"? Is it desirable?

These are questions that science and art struggle with perennially, each in its own way. These are questions that each of us should ask about our own constructions of reality. Agee writes: For in the immediate world, everything is to be discerned, for him who can discern it, and centrally and simply, without dissection into science or digestion into art, but with the whole of consciousness, seeking to perceive it as it stands: so that the aspect of a street in sunlight can roar in the heart of itself like a symphony, perhaps as no symphony can: and all of consciousness is shifted from the imagined, the revised, to the effort to perceive simply the cruel radiance of what is.

Agee professes his desire to suspend imagination, so that "there opens before consciousness, and within it, a universe luminous, spacious, incalculably rich and wonderful in each detail, as relaxed and natural to the human swimmer, and as full of glory, as his breathing."

A marvelous aspiration. But impossible, of course. Science strives mightily for "objectivity." The artist too wants to reveal something real and wonderful, a cruel radiance. And always there, between our eyes and the world, is the imagination. And why not? It is the imagination that defines our humanity, the channel by which the world becomes conscious of itself. We read “Let Us Now Praise Famous Men” or look at Evans' photographs, and we see what is and what should be, creation roaring in the heart of itself and in our hearts too.”

The Daily "Near You?"

Cluj-napoca, Cluj, Romania. Thanks for stopping by!

"The Tragedy..."

"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

“Have we raised the threshold of horror so high that nothing short of a nuclear strike qualifies as a ‘real’ war? Are we to spend the rest of our lives in this state of high alert with guns pointed at each other’s heads and fingers trembling on the trigger?”
 - Arundhati Roy

"Hezbollah Kills 9 IDF Generals in One Strike - IDF Command Paralyzed?"

Full screen recommended.
"Hezbollah Kills 9 IDF Generals in One Strike - 
IDF Command Paralyzed?"
"The conflict on the Northern Front has just witnessed its most severe escalatory blow. In a stunning tactical development, reports are surfacing of a high-impact precision strike targeting an IDF forward command briefing in Southern Lebanon. Hezbollah is claiming a catastrophic success, stating that 9 high-ranking IDF officials and commanders were neutralized in a single, coordinated missile and drone assault. With rumors of a "paralyzed" command structure circulating across the region, the cross-border war has reached a point of absolute reckoning.In this emergency report for Money wars history l, we examine the tactical details of this massive strike, the weaponry used to bypass air defenses, and the immediate operational response from Jerusalem.
The Command Post Strike: Analyzing the reports surrounding the targeted strike on a temporary, reinforced IDF forward headquarters located just beyond the Litani River. 
The "9 Officials" Claim: Breaking down the claims coming out of Beirut regarding the identities and ranks of the targeted personnel. How a high-level operational briefing was compromised despite strict field security protocols. 
Bypassing the Grid: How Hezbollah utilized its new fiber-optic guided drone technology and low-altitude cruise missiles to strike the compound without triggering early-warning sirens, leaving the command post completely vulnerable. 
IDF Command Posture: Separating internet rumors from tactical reality—how the IDF is restructuring its frontline leadership to prevent operational paralysis and maintain the integrity of the "Yellow Line" security zone. 
The Retaliation Wave: Reporting on the immediate, heavy artillery and airstrike campaigns launched by the IDF across Southern Lebanon in the hours following the attack."
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o
Col. Douglas Macgregor, 5/17/26
"Iran Erases Secret Us–Israel Command Center - 
167 Elite Troops Killed, Pentagon In Chaos"
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o
Scott Ritter, 5/17/26
"Israel Can't Strike Iran - Drone War Nightmare"
"Scott Ritter drops the bomb: Why Israel can no longer strike Iran effectively. The shocking drone war reality - Hezbollah’s FPV drones are destroying Iron Dome while U.S. and Israeli munitions are running out. Trump’s plan is collapsing fast."
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"Alert! We Dont Have Much Time Left. Day X and WW3"

Canadian Prepper.5/17/26
"Alert! We Dont Have Much Time Left. 
Day X and WW3"
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"Dr. Mohammad Marandi: Israel Evacuates 50,000 from Haifa - Missile Threat Too Great to Ignore"

Strategic Conflict Brief, 5/17/26
"Dr. Mohammad Marandi: Israel Evacuates 
50,000 from Haifa - Missile Threat Too Great to Ignore"
"Dr. Marandi discusses escalating tensions in the region as reports circulate about large-scale evacuations in Haifa amid heightened security alerts. This video examines the strategic importance of Haifa, potential missile threats, regional escalation risks, and the broader geopolitical implications involving Israel and neighboring states. While tensions and security concerns in the region remain high during conflict periods, large-scale evacuation figures and specific claims should be treated cautiously unless officially confirmed. Stay informed with balanced analysis of ongoing developments in the Middle East."
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"Oh How It Really Is"

 

"The Empire of Debt: How America’s Financial Machine Became More Dangerous Than Its Enemies"

"The Empire of Debt: How America’s Financial 
Machine Became More Dangerous Than Its Enemies"
by Milan Adams

"Great nations are rarely destroyed in the way Hollywood imagines. Most people still think empires collapse under missile strikes, invasions, assassinations, revolutions, or dramatic military defeats broadcast live across television screens. History, however, tells a colder and far more disturbing story. The strongest civilizations usually begin dying financially long before the population realizes anything irreversible has started. Military decline only becomes visible later, after the economic foundations supporting the empire have already begun cracking underneath the surface. Rome did not suddenly wake up one morning and discover barbarians had magically become stronger than the empire itself. Rome exhausted its own machinery through expansion, corruption, currency debasement, and unsustainable costs that eventually became impossible to maintain. The same pattern appeared centuries later inside the British Empire, which emerged victorious from world wars yet slowly realized it could no longer financially sustain global dominance. In every case, decline arrived disguised as normality for years before history finally admitted what was happening.

That is what makes the current American situation feel strangely unsettling in 2026. The United States still appears overwhelmingly powerful from the outside. It possesses the world’s strongest military, the dominant reserve currency, the largest capital markets, unmatched technological influence, and enough geopolitical leverage to shape conflicts occurring thousands of miles away from its own borders. Yet beneath this image of stability, another reality is quietly expanding at a speed even many economists no longer fully understand. The official U.S. national debt has now moved beyond thirty-nine trillion dollars, while interest payments alone are approaching levels once considered economically absurd. Treasury projections and Congressional Budget Office estimates suggest America is now spending close to three billion dollars every single day merely servicing existing debt obligations. That means before roads are repaired, before healthcare programs are funded, before military operations are financed, before pensions are paid, and before schools receive money, billions already disappear automatically into the machinery of debt maintenance.

They said it could never happen... but it did. Within hours, power grids failed, water stopped, and communication went silent. What followed wasn't panic - but a slow, terrifying realization: no one was coming that reveals just how fragile everything really is… and what happens when it all disappears.

What makes this even more disturbing is not simply the size of the debt itself but the dependency it creates. Modern America no longer functions without constant refinancing. Every month, the Treasury Department must issue enormous quantities of new debt in order to roll over older obligations while simultaneously financing current spending requirements. Financial media often describes these Treasury auctions using sterile language that makes them appear routine, yet there is nothing historically normal about a superpower requiring continuous investor confidence simply to preserve operational stability. In practical terms, the United States survives because global markets continue believing American debt remains safe. That belief has become the invisible pillar supporting the entire structure.

For decades, this arrangement appeared almost indestructible because the dollar occupied a unique position within the international system. Countries accumulated Treasuries automatically, central banks stored dollars as reserve assets, and investors viewed American debt as the safest destination during global uncertainty. Washington therefore gained extraordinary freedom to borrow at levels impossible for ordinary nations. Over time, however, this privilege produced a dangerous psychological effect inside American political culture. Leaders gradually began acting as though debt itself no longer mattered because demand for dollars would remain infinite forever. That assumption now appears increasingly fragile.

Earlier this year, the thirty-year Treasury yield climbed above five percent for the first time since the financial crisis era of 2007. To ordinary citizens, this sounded like another technical market detail buried inside financial news segments. Inside bond markets, however, the event triggered genuine concern because rising yields signal investors are demanding higher compensation to continue financing American borrowing. Once borrowing costs increase for a heavily indebted nation, the mathematics become vicious very quickly. Higher yields mean more expensive refinancing. More expensive refinancing creates larger deficits. Larger deficits require even more debt issuance. More issuance places additional pressure on yields. Eventually, the system begins feeding itself mechanically, almost like a machine consuming its own components in order to continue operating for another year.

History shows that civilizations trapped inside these loops rarely escape without major social consequences. The frightening detail is that collapse almost never feels dramatic in the beginning. Daily life continues. Grocery stores remain stocked. Streaming platforms still function. Airports stay crowded. Politicians continue delivering speeches about prosperity and resilience. Yet beneath this surface normality, structural weakness accumulates silently until confidence begins eroding faster than governments can stabilize it. Financial systems survive primarily through collective belief, and belief is one of the most psychologically unstable forces in human history.

This is why the behavior of central banks has started feeling increasingly theatrical over the past decade. Federal Reserve officials now speak in carefully engineered language designed not only to guide markets but also to maintain psychological stability itself. Investors analyze every sentence, every pause, every wording adjustment because entire sectors of the global economy react instantly to expectations surrounding future monetary intervention. Algorithms scan speeches in milliseconds while traders obsess over whether the Fed sounds “hawkish” or “dovish.” One sentence can move trillions of dollars worldwide within hours. Healthy civilizations are not supposed to operate like this. Systems this dependent on psychological reassurance eventually begin resembling fragile ecosystems rather than stable economies.

At the same time, global trust in American financial permanence has started showing subtle but increasingly visible fractures. Central banks across multiple regions have accelerated gold purchases to historic levels, while countries such as China continue gradually reducing dependence on long-term Treasury holdings. Alternative payment systems and trade arrangements designed to bypass traditional dollar infrastructure are expanding quietly throughout parts of Asia and the Middle East. None of these developments individually threaten immediate American collapse, but together they suggest something historically important: parts of the world are beginning to prepare for scenarios once considered impossible. Empires rarely notice the beginning of strategic diversification because decline initially appears too gradual to trigger panic.

What makes the atmosphere surrounding all this feel almost conspiratorial is the growing suspicion that modern economies may no longer be capable of surviving without continuous intervention hidden beneath official narratives. Since 2008, central banks have repeatedly stepped into markets whenever instability threatened systemic panic. Quantitative easing, emergency liquidity programs, balance-sheet expansion, and indirect bond market stabilization have transformed from temporary emergency measures into recurring features of the financial landscape. Critics increasingly argue that global markets are no longer functioning naturally but instead surviving through carefully managed confidence operations designed to postpone structural correction for as long as possible.

The darker theories emerging online exaggerate many details, but the psychological environment producing them is very real. Institutional trust across the United States continues deteriorating rapidly. Younger generations increasingly view the future with cynicism rather than optimism. Housing affordability has collapsed across major metropolitan regions despite official claims of economic resilience. Middle-class lifestyles that once required one stable income now demand multiple jobs, side businesses, or debt dependency merely to maintain basic security. Inflation continues shaping daily life emotionally even when official data suggests conditions are improving. Citizens feel pressure everywhere while governments insist the system remains fundamentally healthy.

This contradiction creates exactly the type of social atmosphere historically associated with declining powers. People begin sensing instability emotionally before they fully understand it intellectually. Anxiety becomes permanent. Distrust spreads. Conspiracy culture expands because populations lose faith in official explanations while searching desperately for hidden causes behind visible deterioration. In many ways, conspiracy theories themselves become symptoms of institutional exhaustion. When governments and financial systems stop appearing credible, societies begin constructing alternative narratives to explain the instability they experience daily.

There is also a deeper fear developing quietly inside financial circles that rarely reaches mainstream discussion openly. Some analysts increasingly suspect that future Treasury markets may eventually require indirect forms of permanent Federal Reserve support simply to absorb the scale of future issuance without destabilizing borrowing costs. Publicly, officials deny any such danger exists. Privately, however, many investors understand the mathematical pressure building underneath the system. If debt expands faster than organic demand for Treasuries, intervention eventually becomes difficult to avoid. The danger is that repeated intervention risks weakening long-term confidence in the currency itself, especially if markets begin believing monetary policy is no longer independent from fiscal survival.

That possibility explains why the current geopolitical atmosphere feels so unnervingly tense. Throughout history, periods of severe debt stress frequently overlap with geopolitical escalation because heavily indebted governments struggle to manage economic decline politically. Large-scale conflict historically provides justification for extraordinary spending, emergency powers, industrial mobilization, monetary expansion, and centralized control. This does not mean war becomes inevitable, but history repeatedly demonstrates that financial instability and geopolitical volatility tend to evolve together once structural pressure intensifies.

Meanwhile, ordinary life inside the United States continues carrying strange symptoms of underlying exhaustion. Healthcare costs feel predatory. Housing feels unreachable. Education increasingly resembles a debt trap. Consumer credit balances continue rising while savings rates weaken. Political polarization expands every year because populations unconsciously recognize that the system no longer distributes stability the way it once did. The empire still appears wealthy, yet more citizens feel economically cornered despite living inside the richest country on Earth. Historically, this psychological contradiction often emerges late in imperial cycles, when visible power remains enormous while internal confidence begins deteriorating underneath.

Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of the entire situation is how normal everything still appears from a distance. There are no invading armies crossing American borders. No burning capitals. No visible national humiliation. Instead, there are endless Treasury auctions, endless refinancing operations, endless debt ceiling negotiations, endless liquidity interventions, and endless reassurances from officials insisting everything remains manageable. The empire does not look conquered. It looks tired.

And maybe that is the true horror hidden underneath modern finance. Great powers rarely collapse because enemies suddenly become stronger. More often, they collapse because the systems sustaining their dominance become too expensive, too dependent on borrowing, and too psychologically fragile to survive permanent stress indefinitely. History suggests civilizations can normalize astonishing levels of dysfunction for years while convincing themselves decline remains temporary. Rome normalized currency debasement. Britain normalized imperial retreat. The Soviet Union normalized stagnation and shortages. Every empire believed historical laws somehow stopped applying to itself. Until eventually they didn’t."

"Warning: Red Diesel Just Skyrocketed, Your Grocery Bill Will Be Next"

Full screen recommended.
The Economic Ninja, 5/17/26
"Warning: Red Diesel Just Skyrocketed,
 Your Grocery Bill Will Be Next"
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Dan, I Allegedly, "We’re Running Out Of Oil"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 5/17/26
"We’re Running Out Of Oil"
"America may be facing a major motor oil shortage and the consequences could impact every household. Toyota, Nissan, and AutoZone have reportedly warned about tightening motor oil supplies, delayed service, and growing pressure on the automotive supply chain. In this video, Dan from i Allegedly breaks down why this matters far beyond car maintenance - from diesel trucking and freight costs to grocery prices, inflation, deliveries, and the overall economy. If trucks stop moving, shelves go empty and prices surge. This video covers the growing concerns surrounding oil shortages, supply chain disruptions, diesel truck maintenance, inflation, and rising costs hitting everyday Americans. We discuss how shortages could affect Uber drivers, trucking companies, repair shops, dealerships, and consumers already struggling with high food prices, rent, insurance, and debt. Watch until the end for practical tips on how to prepare your vehicle and protect yourself before this situation gets worse."
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"America’s Debt Just Crossed a Dangerous Line"

"America’s Debt Just Crossed a Dangerous Line"
by Peter Reagan

"The best way to destroy the capitalist system is to debauch the currency. By a continuing process of inflation, governments can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens." - John Maynard Keynes

"There’s something satisfying about a milestone. A graduation. A paid-off mortgage. A retirement party. A child’s first steps. A number on the calendar that tells you, finally, you made it. Then there are the other kinds of milestones. The kind nobody should want to celebrate. America just reached one of those.

According to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, federal debt held by the public reached 100.2% of GDP at the end of March 2026. In plain English, the debt held by the public is now larger than the entire U.S. economy produces in a year. The last time America saw this level was in the aftermath of World War II. That is not just another big number out of Washington. It is a warning light. And what makes it especially troubling is not simply the size of the debt. It’s how we got here. The last time debt was this high, America had just fought a world war

It’s worth remembering what America was doing the last time debt reached this level. World War II was not a normal government program. It was a national mobilization on a scale most of us can barely imagine today. Factories were converted from consumer products to weapons. (Companies like National Postal Meter and IBM made rifles, Ford and General Motors made bombers and tanks, the Singer sewing machine company made pistols.)

Consumer goods were rationed. Sugar, coffee, meat, butter, cheese and canned goods sales were all limited with ration books. Tire sales, too, then gasoline and then cars and bicycles. New shoes were limited to three (then two) pairs per year. Entire industries were diverted to the war effort (batteries, optics, radios, even candy). American families were encouraged to convert their yards into “Victory gardens.”

Millions of Americans served in the armed forces, as volunteers and draftees. Fully 12% of the population was in uniform. The entire nation was reorganized around a single goal: Winning a global war on multiple fronts. During World War II, even chocolate was rationed as part of the war effort. Image via Lafayette College.
The federal government paid for all those tanks and bombers, rifles and pistols, shoes and gasoline, with IOUs. As a result, the national debt exploded. After the end of the war, when the troops came home and factories returned to civilian production, the economy grew at a breakneck pace.

People had saved up a lot of money during the war (and there wasn’t much to spend it on, either). Consumer spending, along with new home construction and new technologies developed during the war effort, spurred incredible economic expansion. And slowly, the federal government paid down its debt.

Now, that does not make wartime debt harmless. Debt is still debt, a way of spending tomorrow’s money today (at the cost of paying for it down the road). But at least the cause was obvious. The country borrowed heavily to face an existential threat. Very few people argued against this because the stakes were so high. All the Allied nations faced the same challenge. They hoped they’d be around to worry about paying off that accumulated debt, because that at least would mean they’d survived.

Today’s situation is different. We didn’t just fight World War II. We are not demobilizing millions of troops, paying for their education and job training. We are not financing the reconstruction of Europe and Japan. We are not converting a wartime economy back into a peacetime one. Instead, we find ourselves burdened with the same level of debt after decades of ordinary political decisions. Spending more than the federal government takes in, borrowing the difference, and trusting future taxpayers to somehow sort out the details.

That is the part that should bother every single American. It’s become status quo in Congress to shrug away annual deficits. As if they’re meaningless. Debt isn’t just a number, though! It’s a bill presented to the next generation.

You and I understand this in a way Washington pretends not to. A household can borrow for an emergency. A roof caves in. A trip to the emergency room. My car dies at the worst possible time. But you know what I don’t do? I don’t get a car loan and tell my daughter to pay it. I pay for it myself (even if it means fewer rounds on the golf course). For decades now, the federal government has been spending on an “emergency” basis. But if the “emergency” never ends – if borrowing becomes the monthly routine – over time, the debt itself becomes the emergency. That’s very much where I fear we’re headed.

Forget the principal, the interest bill is becoming its own problem The debt problem is often discussed as if it were theoretical. It isn’t. The Congressional Budget Office projects that net interest costs will rise beyond $1 trillion in 2026. That means interest on past borrowing is becoming one of the largest and fastest-growing expenses in the federal budget. Think about that for a moment.

More than $1 trillion – not to build roads, not to care for veterans, not to fund Social Security checks, not to pay air traffic controllers or FDA inspectors or any of the other federal employees who help keep the nation running. Just interest. Just the absolute minimum payment required to keep borrowing!

That is the cruel arithmetic of debt. At first, borrowing feels painless. If you keep it up though, the payments crowd out everything else. Anyone who has ever had a credit card balance understands the trap. The problem is not just the original purchase. The problem is that the balance keeps growing, and those costs make it harder to pay off. At the federal level, the numbers are larger. But the principle is the same.

Today, Washington still has buyers for its debt. Reuters recently reported that New York Fed President John Williams said demand remains strong for U.S. government debt, despite the ongoing heavy borrowing. Now, that may sound reassuring. Treasury Secretary Bessent, for one, should be delighted to hear it.

Because this means the system has not broken yet. The federal government can still borrow. The world still treats U.S. debt as a major financial anchor. In fact, the United Arab Emirates recently asked for a swap line with the U.S. Treasury specifically so it wouldn’t need to sell off U.S. debt. The details of this arrangement don’t matter. What’s important is, the dollar and federal government debt are still considered assets worth keeping. And that’s definitely beneficial. But it’s not the same as saying everything is fine.

Strong demand today does not erase the cost of tomorrow’s interest payments. It does not change the fact that the federal government is borrowing heavily in good times as well as bad times. It does not change the incentives facing Congress, who are elected for promising benefits today, and then punished for admitting the bill must eventually be paid.

In my view, that is the real problem. All the incentives push those in charge to postpone hard choices. And you can get away with that! For a little while. But again, as everyone who’s had a credit card understands, the longer you wait to make those tough choices, the tougher they get…

Nobody wants to take away the ice cream: Here’s the uncomfortable truth: Almost every part of the budget has its supporters. Every program has defenders. Every benefit has recipients. Every tax break has supporters. Every proposed cut has someone ready to explain why this particular spending is essential. And I’m not just talking about special interest groups and lobbyists, I’m talking about everyday American families. And often, they have a point.

That is what makes the debt problem so difficult. It is not simply that Washington is full of villains twirling mustaches and burning money for fun. The incentives are deeper than that. Voters like benefits. Politicians like reelection. Agencies like larger budgets. Industries like federal contracts. Retirees depend on promises made decades ago. Workers pay taxes because we expect the government to be there later. So the easiest path is always the same: Borrow more. That way, nobody has to be disappointed today.

Here’s the thing nobody seems to understand: Debt does not make the cost disappear. Debt is a time machine that simply shifts the cost into the future – with interest. At some point, a government with too much debt faces a narrow set of choices:

Raise taxes.
Reduce spending.
Keep borrowing and pay higher costs.
Allow inflation to eat away at the real value of the debt.
All of the above.

None of those choices are painless. And for citizens, the danger is especially clear. When Washington’s costs rise, the pressure often shows up in everyday life: higher prices, stretched public programs, less room for emergency response and a currency that buys a little less than it used to. Please understand, this is not a prediction of collapse. I merely want you to recognize the pressure that already exists. The real risk is that Washington keeps pretending this is normal

What worries me most is not that America crossed 100% debt-to-GDP. A single milestone does not end a nation. My real concern is that crossing this line may not change anything. Washington may keep treating trillion-dollar deficits as routine. Congress may keep assuming demand for U.S. debt will always be there. The Fed may keep trying to balance inflation, employment and financial stability while fiscal policy makes its job harder.

Meanwhile, ordinary Americans are left trying to make sense of a system that feels increasingly detached from reality. Because nobody gets to live this way forever. If your grocery bill rises, your insurance premium jumps, your property taxes climb and your savings earn less purchasing power than they used to, you cannot simply issue more debt and call it policy. You have to adjust. You have to decide what is essential, what is fragile and what deserves a place in your long-term plan. For many families, that is the point."

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Adventures With Danno, "This Is Worse Than We Thought"

Adventures With Danno, 5/16/26
"This Is Worse Than We Thought"
Comments here:

"The Everything Shortage Is Here And Governments Are Hiding The Data"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 5/16/26
"The Everything Shortage Is Here
 And Governments Are Hiding The Data"
Comments here:

"20 Minutes Of People Crashing Out Over The Broken Economy"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 5/16/26
"20 Minutes Of People Crashing Out 
Over The Broken Economy"
'In this video, seventeen working Americans describe in their own words what 2026 actually feels like out here. A college graduate denied a cashier job at Target. A woman doing her paycheck math on camera and ending the month with $203 to live on. A renter watching her $950 apartment turn into $1,695 for the same four walls. A grocery shopper staring at $17 goat milk and $75 steaks. A man losing his job because he couldn't afford the gas to drive to it. The official numbers say inflation has cooled and unemployment is low. The people in this video say something very different. They aren't asking for sympathy. They're asking a question the analysts refuse to answer: how is anyone supposed to survive this? If you've felt it too the grocery store panic, the paycheck disappearing before it lands, the slow realization that working harder doesn't fix anything anymore you are not alone. You are watching the largest cost-of-living crisis in modern American history happen in real time, and the working class is the only group still doing the math out loud. Twenty minutes. Seventeen voices. One conclusion."
Comments here:

"Food Costs Skyrocket: Americans Struggle as Prices Break Records"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 5/16/26
"Food Costs Skyrocket: 
Americans Struggle as Prices Break Records"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Vangelis, “Beautiful Planet Earth”

Full screen recommended.
Vangelis, “Beautiful Planet Earth”

"A Look to the Heavens"

"A gorgeous spiral galaxy, M104 is famous for its nearly edge-on profile featuring a broad ring of obscuring dust lanes. Seen in silhouette against an extensive central bulge of stars, the swath of cosmic dust lends a broad brimmed hat-like appearance to the galaxy suggesting a more popular moniker, the Sombrero Galaxy. This sharp optical view of the well-known galaxy made from ground-based image data was processed to preserve details often lost in overwhelming glare of M104's bright central bulge.
Also known as NGC 4594, the Sombrero galaxy can be seen across the spectrum, and is host to a central supermassive black hole. About 50,000 light-years across and 28 million light-years away, M104 is one of the largest galaxies at the southern edge of the Virgo Galaxy Cluster. Still the colorful spiky foreground stars in this field of view lie well within our own Milky Way galaxy. "

"What Goes Around Comes Around"

 

"Life is never fair, and perhaps it is a 
good thing for most of us that it is not."
- Oscar Wilde

“24 Life Lessons By An Old Greek Shepherd”

“24 Life Lessons By An Old Greek Shepherd”
by George Giotis, Greece by Greeks

1. “The road to the destination is never straight. To reach out to the winter shelter someone must take a lot of turns, travel along rough roads, suffer losses. You have to make sure that you always take food supplies with you.

2. Leave the past behind. If a wolf eats your goat, you can’t do anything about it. Just make sure that next time you will be more careful.

3. Don’t live just for saving money and don’t be stingy. Don’t postpone the tasting of joy for future times. Do it now, while you are still young. Make your hard work worth even more.

4. Struggle, fight. You are the only one in charge of yourself. Don’t be truant, don’t expect your dogs to do all the work in herding the sheep.

5. Ask for the respect you deserve, don’t let others use you as a doormat. Set limits, put up fences, protect your animals.

6. Blessed are the ones who make mistakes. Make mistakes. These are life lessons, we call these experience. Don’t forget who you were until yesterday. Start today and define with your actions who you are going to be from now on.  Learn to forgive, starting with yourself. Don’t feel guilty, you have no time for that.

7. Blessed are those who doubt. Don’ t let your life be ruled by dogmas. Remember that if some people hadn’t doubted previous knowledge, mankind would have still lived in caves. Examine the information, be skeptical, think critically, think rationally, revise. You haven’t seen any fairies and ghosts in the forest, just wolves.

8. Be careful. Observe others. Look them in the eyes. Like a Greek saying, “If it is not shown in the goat, it is shown by the horn.”

9. Life is a journey, not a destination. And it is valuable. The previous word you read already belongs to the past.

10. Don’t advise the young constantly, it’s a waste of time. There is no right way to teach them pain or misery, solely experience will do that.

11. Go travel! Trips are experiences that stay with us forever. Get out, try, taste, savor images greedily. Let your senses free. Expose yourself, let it go, crumble, lose your self-control from time to time. Not just your self-control, but stop controlling others too.

12. You have been isolated enough in your winter shelter, get out. Go find your friends and companionship.

13. Do not try to control others. You condemn in anxiety and suffering not only yourself, but also those who you try to control. Let others live, and live for yourself. Leave the other flocks to their shepherds, take care of yours. 
14. Life is not fair. The universe does not owe you any solace, and it is certain that at the end of the road you die. Hurry up.

15. You can be a winner. Learn from those around you. Become a child with children, play with them, but also go to the cafe and talk to the elderly. You can learn from their accumulated experience.

16. Do not take everything into account. Do not take everything seriously. You are probably overreacting today. What bothers you or you are afraid of now, most likely tomorrow will seem lukewarm or insipid. Try to see yourself from a distance, take a look at the sight of your flock from the hill.

17. Have patience. The goats do not give birth every month. But when that happens you need to be there because they need you.

18. Quarrel with your partner if necessary, it is not terrible, let the feelings be defused. Make decompression in anger. The fire is sometimes beneficial. If an area of kermes oak get burnt, spring will give again vegetation, fine food for goats and their young. Careful though, the words you say you can’t take them back. Watch what your goats eat, they don’t know how to pick. If they eat the shoots of trees, the forest cannot be created again, the place will be left bare fallow.
  
19. Be balanced. Enjoy the food and your drink. Do not forget that the world’s poor walk miles for their daily food while the rich walk miles to digest it.

20. There is no perfect time, the circumstances and conditions will never be ideal. Start from where you are now! Do not postpone.

21. Be polite. A smiling face reflects similar behavior. Make gifts. Even the gift of a good word is important. Behave well to the elderly, you will soon be like them. Behave well to animals, they are not mean or envious, they have no obsessions or selfishness. They forgive without limit.

22. If you know how to read, read a lot! Those who read live extra lives. Not only their own but also all of those who you have read about.

23. Be bold. The fear keeps you tied but it is not real, it just comes from the unknown which is not in your head.

24. Do not get attached to things. Life is like the path of the pastures and the shepherd’s bag. The more you fill it, the harder you will walk. Take only the necessary things with you. The flock keeps walking, it will not wait for you if you can’t move because of too many heavy things. Let them go, release them, feel more flexible and free.”
Translated by Eleni Vafeiadou