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Wednesday, February 4, 2026

"I Wish You Enough"

"I Wish You Enough"
by Bob Perks

"I never really thought that I'd spend as much time in airports as I do. I don't know why. I always wanted to be famous and that would mean lots of travel. But I'm not famous, yet I do see more than my share of airports. I love them and I hate them. I love them because of the people I get to watch. But they are also the same reason why I hate airports. It all comes down to "hello" and "goodbye." I must have mentioned this a few times while writing my stories for you.

I have great difficulties with saying goodbye. Even as I write this I am experiencing that pounding sensation in my heart. If I am watching such a scene in a movie I am affected so much that I need to sit up and take a few deep breaths. So when faced with a challenge in my life I have been known to go to our local airport and watch people say goodbye. I figure nothing that is happening to me at the time could be as bad as having to say goodbye. Watching people cling to each other, crying, and holding each other in that last embrace makes me appreciate what I have even more. Seeing them finally pull apart, extending their arms until the tips of their fingers are the last to let go, is an image that stays forefront in my mind throughout the day.

On one of my recent business trips, when I arrived at the counter to check in, the woman said, "How are you today?" I replied, "I am missing my wife already and I haven't even said goodbye." She then looked at my ticket and began to ask, "How long will you... Oh, my God. You will only be gone three days!" We all laughed. My problem was I still had to say goodbye. But I learn from goodbye moments, too.

Recently I overheard a father and daughter in their last moments together. They had announced her departure and standing near the security gate, they hugged and he said, "I love you. I wish you enough." She in turn said, "Daddy, our life together has been more than enough. Your love is all I ever needed. I wish you enough, too, Daddy." They kissed and she left. He walked over toward the window where I was seated. Standing there I could see he wanted and needed to cry. I tried not to intrude on his privacy, but he welcomed me in by asking, "Did you ever say goodbye to someone knowing it would be forever?" "Yes, I have," I replied. Saying that brought back memories I had of expressing my love and appreciation for all my Dad had done for me. Recognizing that his days were limited, I took the time to tell him face to face how much he meant to me. So I knew what this man was experiencing.

"Forgive me for asking, but why is this a forever goodbye?" I asked. "I am old and she lives much too far away. I have challenges ahead and the reality is, the next trip back would be for my funeral," he said. "When you were saying goodbye I heard you say, 'I wish you enough.' May I ask what that means?" He began to smile. "That's a wish that has been handed down from other generations. My parents used to say it to everyone." He paused for a moment and looking up as if trying to remember it in detail, he smiled even more. "When we said 'I wish you enough,' we were wanting the other person to have a life filled with just enough good things to sustain them," he continued and then turning toward me he shared the following as if he were reciting it from memory...

"I wish you enough sun to keep your attitude bright.
I wish you enough rain to appreciate the sun more.
I wish you enough happiness to keep your spirit alive.
I wish you enough pain so that the smallest joys in life appear much bigger.
I wish you enough gain to satisfy your wanting.
I wish you enough loss to appreciate all that you possess.
I wish enough "Hello's" to get you through the final "Goodbye."

He then began to sob and walked away. My friends, I wish you enough!"

The Poet: Kuroda Saburo, "I Am Completely Different"

"I Am Completely Different"

"I am completely different.
Though I am wearing the same tie as yesterday,
am as poor as yesterday,
as good for nothing as yesterday,
today
I am completely different.

Though I am wearing the same clothes,
am as drunk as yesterday,
living as clumsily as yesterday, nevertheless
today
I am completely different.

Ah...
I patiently close my eyes
on all the grins and smirks,
on all the twisted smiles and horse laughs -
and glimpse then, inside me
one beautiful white butterfly
fluttering towards tomorrow."

- Kuroda Saburo

The Daily "Near You?"

San Jose, California, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"12-Step Recovery Program for Menticide"

"12-Step Recovery Program for Menticide"
by Margaret Anna Alice

"Are We Being Hypnotized, And Do We Like It?" 
A Conversation with Professor Mattias Desmet, PhD

Full screen recommended.
Sprouts, "Bonhoeffer‘s Theory of Stupidity"

"Dietrich Bonhoeffer argued that stupid people are more dangerous than evil ones. This is because while we can protest against or fight evil people, against stupid ones we are defenseless - reasons fall on dead ears. Bonhoeffer's famous text, which we slightly edited for this video, serves any free society as a warning of what can happen when certain people gain too much power."

“Neither protests nor the use of force accomplish anything here; reasons fall on deaf ears; facts that contradict one’s prejudgment simply need not be believed - in such moments the stupid person even becomes critical - and when facts are irrefutable they are just pushed aside as inconsequential, as incidental.…

There are human beings who are of remarkably agile intellect yet stupid, and others who are intellectually quite dull yet anything but stupid. The impression one gains is not so much that stupidity is a congenital defect, but that, under certain circumstances, people are made stupid or that they allow this to happen to them.

It is a particular form of the impact of historical circumstances on human beings, a psychological concomitant of certain external conditions. Upon closer observation, it becomes apparent that every strong upsurge of power in the public sphere, be it of a political or of a religious nature, infects a large part of humankind with stupidity...

The process at work here is not that particular human capacities, for instance, the intellect, suddenly atrophy or fail. Instead, it seems that under the overwhelming impact of rising power, humans are deprived of their inner independence, and, more or less consciously, give up establishing an autonomous position toward the emerging circumstances.

The fact that the stupid person is often stubborn must not blind us to the fact that he is not independent. In conversation with him, one virtually feels that one is dealing not at all with a person, but with slogans, catchwords and the like that have taken possession of him. He is under a spell, blinded, misused, and abused in his very being. Having thus become a mindless tool, the stupid person will also be capable of any evil and at the same time incapable of seeing that it is evil. This is where the danger of diabolical misuse lurks, for it is this that can once and for all destroy human beings. Yet at this very point it becomes quite clear that only an act of liberation, not instruction, can overcome stupidity.”

Many of you are well-educated and simply too busy with life’s obligations to seek out unbiased information for yourself, so you defer to people you’re told are experts instead of conducting your own investigations. Unfortunately, this was a potentially lethal error, but realizing that and reversing course before you submit yourself to further rounds of experimentation could save your life and the lives of those you love.

If you recognize any of the above signs in yourself, not to worry. Just follow this twelve-step recovery program, and you’ll be thinking clearly, logically, rationally, and independently in no time! All you have to lose are your manufactured delusions; misplaced pride; gullibility; fear; terror; anxiety; rage; and mental and physical enslavement. In exchange, you gain an independent mind; critical-thinking abilities; research skills; fact-based knowledge; confidence in your understanding; internal peace; empowerment; mental and physical health; and maybe even your life.

Nothing is more consequential to your life than facing the fact that you have been deluded and seeking to understand the evidence your deceivers are hiding from you. If you cannot take that crucial step, then you are stupid according to Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s "Theory of Stupidity", and you might as well stop reading here.

Only you can liberate yourself from willful stupidity. Continuing to read this article and being willing to implement these twelve steps proves you have the intelligence to do so."
Please view this complete, critically important, article here:
"12-Step Recovery Program for Menticide"

"The Level Of Intelligence..."

"If man were relieved of all superstition, and all prejudice, and had replaced these with a keen sensitivity to his real environment, and moreover had achieved a level of communication so simplified that one syllable could express his every thought, then he would have achieved the level of intelligence already achieved by his dog."
- Robert Brault

“The Science of Stress and How Our Emotions Affect Our Susceptibility to Burnout and Disease”

“The Science of Stress and How Our Emotions
Affect Our Susceptibility to Burnout and Disease
by Maria Popova

"I had lived thirty good years before enduring my first food poisoning - odds quite fortunate in the grand scheme of things, but miserably unfortunate in the immediate experience of it. I found myself completely incapacitated to erect the pillars of my daily life - too cognitively foggy to read and write, too physically weak to work out or even meditate. The temporary disability soon elevated the assault on my mind and body to a new height of anguish: an intense experience of stress. Even as I consoled myself with Nabokov’s exceptionally florid account of food poisoning, I couldn’t shake the overwhelming malaise that had engulfed me - somehow, a physical illness had completely colored my psychoemotional reality.

This experience, of course, is far from uncommon. Long before scientists began shedding light on how our minds and bodies actually affect one another, an intuitive understanding of this dialogue between the body and the emotions, or feelings, emerged and permeated our very language: We use “feeling sick” as a grab-bag term for both the sensory symptoms - fever, fatigue, nausea - and the psychological malaise, woven of emotions like sadness and apathy.

Pre-modern medicine, in fact, has recognized this link between disease and emotion for millennia. Ancient Greek, Roman, and Indian Ayurvedic physicians all enlisted the theory of the four humors - blood, yellow bile, black bile, and phlegm - in their healing practices, believing that imbalances in these four visible secretions of the body caused disease and were themselves often caused by the emotions. These beliefs are fossilized in our present language - melancholy comes from the Latin words for “black” (melan) and “bitter bile” (choler), and we think of a melancholic person as gloomy or embittered; a phlegmatic person is languid and impassive, for phlegm makes one lethargic.

And then French philosopher and mathematician René Descartes came along in the seventeenth century, taking it upon himself to eradicate the superstitions that fueled the religious wars of the era by planting the seed of rationalism. But the very tenets that laid the foundation of modern science - the idea that truth comes only from what can be visibly ascertained and proven beyond doubt - severed this link between the physical body and the emotions; those mysterious and fleeting forces, the biological basis of which the tools of modern neuroscience are only just beginning to understand, seemed to exist entirely outside the realm of what could be examined with the tools of rationalism.

For nearly three centuries, the idea that our emotions could impact our physical health remained scientific taboo - setting out to fight one type of dogma, Descartes had inadvertently created another, which we’re only just beginning to shake off. It was only in the 1950s that Austrian-Canadian physician and physiologist Hans Selye pioneered the notion of stress as we now know it today, drawing the scientific community’s attention to the effects of stress on physical health and popularizing the concept around the world. (In addition to his scientific dedication, Selye also understood the branding component of any successful movement and worked tirelessly to include the word itself in dictionaries around the world; today, “stress” is perhaps the word pronounced most similarly in the greatest number of major languages.)

But no researcher has done more to illuminate the invisible threads that weave mind and body together than Dr. Esther Sternberg. Her groundbreaking work on the link between the central nervous system and the immune system, exploring how immune molecules made in the blood can trigger brain function that profoundly affects our emotions, has revolutionized our understanding of the integrated being we call a human self. In the immeasurably revelatory "The Balance Within: The Science Connecting Health and Emotions" (public library), Sternberg examines the interplay of our emotions and our physical health, mediated by that seemingly nebulous yet, it turns out, remarkably concrete experience called stress.

With an eye to modern medicine’s advances in cellular and molecular biology, which have made it possible to measure how our nervous system and our hormones affect our susceptibility to diseases as varied as depression, arthritis, AIDS, and chronic fatigue syndrome, Sternberg writes: "By parsing these chemical intermediaries, we can begin to understand the biological underpinnings of how emotions affect diseases… The same parts of the brain that control the stress response play an important role in susceptibility and resistance to inflammatory diseases such as arthritis. And since it is these parts of the brain that also play a role in depression, we can begin to understand why it is that many patients with inflammatory diseases may also experience depression at different times in their lives.

Rather than seeing the psyche as the source of such illnesses, we are discovering that while feelings don’t directly cause or cure disease, the biological mechanisms underlying them may cause or contribute to disease. Thus, many of the nerve pathways and molecules underlying both psychological responses and inflammatory disease are the same, making predisposition to one set of illnesses likely to go along with predisposition to the other. The questions need to be rephrased, therefore, to ask which of the many components that work together to create emotions also affect that other constellation of biological events, immune responses, which come together to fight or to cause disease. Rather than asking if depressing thoughts can cause an illness of the body, we need to ask what the molecules and nerve pathways are that cause depressing thoughts. And then we need to ask whether these affect the cells and molecules that cause disease.

We are even beginning to sort out how emotional memories reach the parts of the brain that control the hormonal stress response, and how such emotions can ultimately affect the workings of the immune system and thus affect illnesses as disparate as arthritis and cancer. We are also beginning to piece together how signals from the immune system can affect the brain and the emotional and physical responses it controls: the molecular basis of feeling sick. In all this, the boundaries between mind and body are beginning to blur."

Indeed, the relationship between memory, emotion, and stress is perhaps the most fascinating aspect of Sternberg’s work. She considers how we deal with the constant swirl of inputs and outputs as we move through the world, barraged by a stream of stimuli and sensations: "Every minute of the day and night we feel thousands of sensations that might trigger a positive emotion such as happiness, or a negative emotion such as sadness, or no emotion at all: a trace of perfume, a light touch, a fleeting shadow, a strain of music. And there are thousands of physiological responses, such as palpitations or sweating, that can equally accompany positive emotions such as love, or negative emotions such as fear, or can happen without any emotional tinge at all. What makes these sensory inputs and physiological outputs emotions is the charge that gets added to them somehow, somewhere in our brains. Emotions in their fullest sense comprise all of these components. Each can lead into the black box and produce an emotional experience, or something in the black box can lead out to an emotional response that seems to come from nowhere."

Memory, it turns out, is one of the major factors mediating the dialogue between sensation and emotional experience. Our memories of past experience become encoded into triggers that act as switchers on the rail of psychoemotional response, directing the incoming train of present experience in the direction of one emotional destination or another.

Sternberg writes: "Mood is not homogeneous like cream soup. It is more like Swiss cheese, filled with holes. The triggers are highly specific, tripped by sudden trails of memory: a faint fragrance, a few bars of a tune, a vague silhouette that tapped into a sad memory buried deep, but not completely erased. These sensory inputs from the moment float through layers of time in the parts of the brain that control memory, and they pull out with them not only reminders of sense but also trails of the emotions that were first connected to the memory. These memories become connected to emotions, which are processed in other parts of the brain: the amygdala for fear, the nucleus accumbens for pleasure - those same parts that the anatomists had named for their shapes. And these emotional brain centers are linked by nerve pathways to the sensory parts of the brain and to the frontal lobe and hippocampus - the coordinating centers of thought and memory."

The same sensory input can trigger a negative emotion or a positive one, depending on the memories associated with it. This is where stress comes in - much like memory mediates how we interpret and respond to various experiences, a complex set of biological and psychological factors determine how we respond to stress. Some types of stress can be stimulating and invigorating, mobilizing us into action and creative potency; others can be draining and incapacitating, leaving us frustrated and hopeless. This dichotomy of good vs. bad stress, Sternberg notes, is determined by the biology undergirding our feelings - by the dose and duration of the stress hormones secreted by the body in response to the stressful stimulus. She explains the neurobiological machinery behind this response:

"As soon as the stressful event occurs, it triggers the release of the cascade of hypothalamic, pituitary, and adrenal hormones - the brain’s stress response. It also triggers the adrenal glands to release epinephrine, or adrenaline, and the sympathetic nerves to squirt out the adrenaline-like chemical norepinephrine all over the body: nerves that wire the heart, and gut, and skin. So, the heart is driven to beat faster, the fine hairs of your skin stand up, you sweat, you may feel nausea or the urge to defecate. But your attention is focused, your vision becomes crystal clear, a surge of power helps you run - these same chemicals released from nerves make blood flow to your muscles, preparing you to sprint.

All this occurs quickly. If you were to measure the stress hormones in your blood or saliva, they would already be increased within three minutes of the event. In experimental psychology tests, playing a fast-paced video game will make salivary cortisol increase and norepinephrine spill over into venous blood almost as soon as the virtual battle begins. But if you prolong the stress, by being unable to control it or by making it too potent or long-lived, and these hormones and chemicals still continue to pump out from nerves and glands, then the same molecules that mobilized you for the short haul now debilitate you."

These effects of stress exist on a bell curve - that is, some is good, but too much becomes bad: As the nervous system secretes more and more stress hormones, performance increases, but up to a point; after that tipping point, performance begins to suffer as the hormones continue to flow. What makes stress “bad” - that is, what makes it render us more pervious to disease - is the disparity between the nervous system and immune system’s respective pace. 

Sternberg explains: "The nervous system and the hormonal stress response react to a stimulus in milliseconds, seconds, or minutes. The immune system takes parts of hours or days. It takes much longer than two minutes for immune cells to mobilize and respond to an invader, so it is unlikely that a single, even powerful, short-lived stress on the order of moments could have much of an effect on immune responses. However, when the stress turns chronic, immune defenses begin to be impaired. As the stressful stimulus hammers on, stress hormones and chemicals continue to pump out. Immune cells floating in this milieu in blood, or passing through the spleen, or growing up in thymic nurseries never have a chance to recover from the unabated rush of cortisol. Since cortisol shuts down immune cells’ responses, shifting them to a muted form, less able to react to foreign triggers, in the context of continued stress we are less able to defend and fight when faced with new invaders. And so, if you are exposed to, say, a flu or common cold virus when you are chronically stressed out, your immune system is less able to react and you become more susceptible to that infection."

Extended exposure to stress, especially to a variety of stressors at the same time - any combination from the vast existential menu of life-events like moving, divorce, a demanding job, the loss of a loved one, and even ongoing childcare - adds up a state of extreme exhaustion that leads to what we call burnout.

Sternberg writes: "Members of certain professions are more prone to burnout than others - nurses and teachers, for example, are among those at highest risk. These professionals are faced daily with caregiving situations in their work lives, often with inadequate pay, inadequate help in their jobs, and with too many patients or students in their charge. Some studies are beginning to show that burnt-out patients may have not only psychological burnout, but also physiological burnout: a flattened cortisol response and inability to respond to any stress with even a slight burst of cortisol. In other words, chronic unrelenting stress can change the stress response itself. And it can change other hormone systems in the body as well."

One of the most profound such changes affects the reproductive system - extended periods of stress can shut down the secretion of reproductive hormones in both men and women, resulting in lower fertility. But the effects are especially perilous for women - recurring and extended episodes of depression result in permanent changes in bone structure, increasing the risk of osteoporosis. In other words, we register stress literally in our bones.

But stress isn’t a direct causal function of the circumstances we’re in - what either amplifies or ameliorates our experience of stress is, once again, memory. Sternberg writes: Our perception of stress, and therefore our response to it, is an ever-changing thing that depends a great deal on the circumstances and settings in which we find ourselves. It depends on previous experience and knowledge, as well as on the actual event that has occurred. And it depends on memory, too.

The most acute manifestation of how memory modulates stress is post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. For striking evidence of how memory encodes past experience into triggers, which then catalyze present experience, Sternberg points to research by psychologist Rachel Yehuda, who found both Holocaust survivors and their first-degree relatives - that is, children and siblings - exhibited a similar hormonal stress response.

This, Sternberg points out, could be a combination of nature and nurture - the survivors, as young parents for whom the trauma was still fresh, may well have subconsciously taught their children a common style of stress-responsiveness; but it’s also possible that these automatic hormonal stress responses permanently changed the parents’ biology and were transmitted via DNA to their children. Once again, memory encodes stress into our very bodies. Sternberg considers the broader implications: "Stress need not be on the order of war, rape, or the Holocaust to trigger at least some elements of PTSD. Common stresses that we all experience can trigger the emotional memory of a stressful circumstance - and all its accompanying physiological responses. Prolonged stress - such as divorce, a hostile workplace, the end of a relationship, or the death of a loved one - can all trigger elements of PTSD."

Among the major stressors - which include life-events expected to be on the list, such as divorce and the death of a loved one - is also one somewhat unexpected situation, at least to those who haven’t undergone it: moving. Sternberg considers the commonalities between something as devastating as death and something as mundane as moving: One is certainly loss - the loss of someone or something familiar. Another is novelty - finding oneself in a new and unfamiliar place because of the loss. Together these amount to change: moving away from something one knows and toward something one doesn’t. An unfamiliar environment is a universal stressor to nearly all species, no matter how developed or undeveloped.

In the remainder of the thoroughly illuminating "The Balance Within", Sternberg goes on to explore the role of interpersonal relationships in both contributing to stress and shielding us from it, how the immune system changes our moods, and what we can do to harness these neurobiological insights in alleviating our experience of the stressors with which every human life is strewn.”
Related:
"Neuroscience Says Listening to This Song 
Reduces Anxiety by Up to 65 Percent"
By Melanie Curtin
Full screen recommended.
"Everyone knows they need to manage their stress. When things get difficult at work, school, or in your personal life, you can use as many tips, tricks, and techniques as you can get to calm your nerves. So here's a science-backed one: make a playlist of the 10 songs found to be the most relaxing on earth. Sound therapies have long been popular as a way of relaxing and restoring one's health. For centuries, indigenous cultures have used music to enhance well-being and improve health conditions.

Now, neuroscientists out of the UK have specified which tunes give you the most bang for your musical buck. The study was conducted on participants who attempted to solve difficult puzzles as quickly as possible while connected to sensors. The puzzles induced a certain level of stress, and participants listened to different songs while researchers measured brain activity as well as physiological states that included heart rate, blood pressure, and rate of breathing.

According to Dr. David Lewis-Hodgson of Mindlab International, which conducted the research, the top song produced a greater state of relaxation than any other music tested to date. In fact, listening to that one song- "Weightless"- resulted in a striking 65 percent reduction in participants' overall anxiety, and a 35 percent reduction in their usual physiological resting rates. That is remarkable.

Equally remarkable is the fact the song was actually constructed to do so. The group that created "Weightless", Marconi Union, did so in collaboration with sound therapists. Its carefully arranged harmonies, rhythms, and bass lines help slow a listener's heart rate, reduce blood pressure and lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol.

When it comes to lowering anxiety, the stakes couldn't be higher. Stress either exacerbates or increases the risk of health issues like heart disease, obesity, depression, gastrointestinal problems, asthma, and more. More troubling still, a recent paper out of Harvard and Stanford found health issues from job stress alone cause more deaths than diabetes, Alzheimer's, or influenza.

In this age of constant bombardment, the science is clear: if you want your mind and body to last, you've got to prioritize giving them a rest. Music is an easy way to take some of the pressure off of all the pings, dings, apps, tags, texts, emails, appointments, meetings, and deadlines that can easily spike your stress level and leave you feeling drained and anxious.

Of the top track, Dr. David Lewis-Hodgson said, "'Weightless' was so effective, many women became drowsy and I would advise against driving while listening to the song because it could be dangerous." So don't drive while listening to these, but do take advantage of them:

10. "We Can Fly," by Rue du Soleil (Café Del Mar)
8. "Someone Like You," by Adele
7. "Pure Shores," by All Saints
6. "Please Don't Go," by Barcelona
5. "Strawberry Swing," by Coldplay
4. "Watermark," by Enya
2. "Electra," by Airstream
1. "Weightless," by Marconi Union

I made a public playlist of all of them on Spotify that runs about 50 minutes (it's also downloadable)."

"All The Money You Make..."

Full screen recommended.
Steve Cutts, "Happiness"
“All the money you make will never buy back your soul. ”
- Bob Dylan

The Psyche, "Why Good People Become Monsters"

Full screen recommended.
The Psyche, "Why Good People Become Monsters"

"How It Really Is"

 

"The Whole Problem..."

 

"The Solar Storm Racing to Earth May Surprise Us"

Full screen recommended.
Stefan Burns, 2/4/26
"The Solar Storm Racing to Earth May Surprise Us"
"Geophysicist Stefan Burns reports on the extreme solar activity that is currently ongoing - the new 4.1 x-flare and the coronal mass ejection inbound - as well as the magnitude 6.1 earthquake that struck north of New Zealand, the strongest earthquake in more than 7 days."
Comments here:
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Full screen recommended.
EarthSky, 2/4/26
"Solar Storm Alert: AR4366 Unleashes 10 X-Flares"
"Sunspot AR4366 has erupted this week with an astonishing 9 X-class flares and dozens of M-class flares. Some of these flares have released CMEs, great burps of solar materials and magnetic fields. And the first CME is expected to brush Earth on February 5. EarthSky's Deborah Byrd is here with sun images from the week, and to explain what the CMEs mean for skywatchers and space weather."
Comments here:

"We Are Bankrupt As a Nation: The Truth About 2026"

Full screen recommended.
Jhone AG, 2/4/26
"We Are Bankrupt As a Nation: 
The Truth About 2026"
Comments here:

"No More Free Rent - The Free Ride Is Ending for Thousands"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly 2/4/26
"No More Free Rent - 
The Free Ride Is Ending for Thousands"
"Hundreds of thousands of people are getting their rent paid for free - and many were never supposed to qualify in the first place. In today’s episode of I Allegedly, I break down what’s really happening inside the HUD housing system and why officials are suddenly forcing mass re-qualification across the country. This isn’t about helping the elderly or people on fixed incomes - those programs matter. This is about abuse, oversight failures, and how the system has been quietly exploited for decades."
Comments here:

"The Great Divide"

"The Great Divide"
by Joel Bowman

“Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, 
diagnosing it incorrectly, and applying the wrong remedies.”
~ Groucho Marx (1890-1977)

Buenos Aires, Argentina - "Today, we continue our rumination on the futility of attempting to make sense of the world through the distorting lens of politics (and why market signals offer a far clearer alternative). But first...

Newsflash for dear readers: Winter still cold, summer still hot. No joke! At least, that’s according to the intrepid journalisming from our brave colleagues in the popular press, who never met a molehill that didn’t identify as a mountain...

From AccuWeather: "Polar vortex to keep frigid pattern locked over eastern US through much of February."

The BBC: "Bomb cyclone winter storm set to bring another round of snow to eastern US."

And, as always, one from the astute headline hunters over at The Guardian: "How to dress in cold weather: 10 stylish and cosy updates for winter."

Seen and Not Heard: Many headlines ago, when your editor was a young(er) man, it was considered impolite to bring up religion or politics at the dinner table. Such talk could get one a “clip behind the ear” if one were not careful. Today, now that the civic religion is politics, nothing escapes its all-encompassing, thought-corrupting purview.

Don’t believe us? Thumb through your morning paper and witness the ink bleeding over from the politics section into every nook and cranny of “all the news worth printing” (and plenty more that is not). From Business and Finance... Sports and Entertainment... Science and Technology... even the funny pages are not immune from tribal invectives.

What used to be a story about a company’s earnings, market share, profit and loss, annual growth etc. ... has become a narrative about Fed policy, about taxes and tariffs, about ESG, DEI and the so-called “gender pay gap,” such that there ends up being more noise than actual signal.

A piece on which team won the Big Game over the weekend has morphed into a polemic about the racial make-up of the players, which athlete took a knee and for what cause, and whether the 6 foot 4 inch “person with a penis” has a right to beat-up on high-school girls... and towel off in their changing rooms afterward.

Indeed, topics as formerly bland and banal as the weather have become battlegrounds for hyper-partisan cage-fighting, with “wrongthink” punishable by banishment from the sacred in-group, excommunication from “consensus.”

Hard Cold Facts: Just to press a point, here’s a little-known fact, often misreported... if it is reported at all: Many, many more people die as a result of extreme cold weather than perish from extreme warm weather. We write “many” as in an order-of-magnitude many. It’s true.

A few years ago, The Lancet published a dubious graph in which they attempted to equalize the impact of fat tail events at either weather extreme. And they might have gotten away with it, too, were it not for… people who can read graphs. These pedantic nit-pickers – with their stubborn facts and whatnot – pointed out that the x-axis was skewed in such a way as to make it appear as though both hot and cold deaths were similar in size. Not so.

Bjorn Lomborg, the former director of the Danish government’s Environmental Assessment Institute (EAI) and a self-described “skeptical environmentalist,” showed the graphs both “before and after” correcting for the wild x-axis discrepancy, here:
Click image for larger size.
In reality, something in the order of 10x more people die of extreme cold in Europe each year than do of extreme heat. Why distort that fact? Because it doesn’t agree with the publisher’s politics, of course, in which global warming is a far greater threat than global cooling (which, after all, hasn’t been en vogue among the planet’s managerial class since the ‘70s.) In other words, the graph on the left is a politically motivated distortion. The graph on the right is corrected for that distortion.

The same phenomenon is true elsewhere, too, including in the United States. Using official data from the Center for Disease Control (CDC) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which apparently keep tabs on such things, we asked our underpaid (AI) interns to construct a graph of annual heat- and cold-related deaths in the US since the turn of the century.

Over a 20-year period, there were on average 3,414 deaths per year resulting from extreme heat... while the average number of fatalities due to extreme cold was 45,992... about 13.5x higher, or roughly what they are in Europe.
Click image for larger size.
(NB: If one is tempted to read anything into the slight upticks in both lines, consider that the US added some 60 million people to its population in the first two decades of the century, more than enough to account for any variability shown here.)

The Great Political Divide: We chose this “ordinary” subject not to make a point about the climate per se, but to underscore how a subject that used to be spectacularly apolitical, so much so that “the weather” was considered an island of refuge for the conversationally conflict-averse, has over time been infected with rabid bias and partisan politics. We could just as easily have chosen mask mandates… woman’s soccer/football… the Grammys… the price of uni in Japan… or a hundred other subjects to make the very same point, so ubiquitous has the blinding division become.

In 2026, political labels have become so defining, so central to one’s sense of self, that precious few will not answer when their party name is called. Indeed, parading one’s political affiliation, once seen as a rather tawdry affair, has gone from being a mere virtue signal to something of a mating call, with the number of single men and women willing to date across party lines in steady decline... along with the birthrate.

And the divide is only getting wider. A study by the Kinsey Institute showed that 30% of respondents “have never and would never date a partner with opposing political views.” And while older generations (Millennials, Gen X, Boomers) were found to be generally less inclined to make politics a primary deal-breaker, the same cannot be said of the next wave of parents-to-be (or not-to-be, as the case may be). The same polling showed, for instance, that 37% of Gen Z women entirely ruled out dating someone with different political beliefs.

No doubt legacy media has played its part in driving a wedge between its readers... just as anti-social media has amplified the effects by siloing us into our own little epistemic enclaves, all the better to pipe the outrage trash in through our appropriately named feeds.

All of which did not spring forth by accident, of course. As George Orwell wrote in his famous essay, Politics and the English Language, (1946): “Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.” Where do we turn, dear reader, when every facet of human life is subsumed under the dark domain of politics, when public life drives out private life, and politics itself becomes totalitarian? To the antithesis of politics, of course, which we shall unpack Friday. Stay tuned for more Notes From the End of the World..."

Bill Bonner, "Here Passes the Buck"

"Here Passes the Buck"
by Bill Bonner

"Nobody goes there anymore. It’s too crowded."
- Yogi Berra

Rancho Santana, Nicaragua - "Good lord...dios mio...The empire really is in decline. Futurism.com reports: "Trump Is Causing the United States’ First-Ever Population Decline." According to Bloomberg, one well-regarded population estimate warns that 2026 is primed to be the year of the first real population decline in the 250 year history of the United States. One of the main reasons, Census officials say, is the Trump administration’s incredibly aggressive deportation campaign.

From July 2024 to July 2025, US Census data released this week shows the total US population only grew by around 0.5 percent, or 1.8 million people - a rate that seems all but certain to slip into the negative.

Things aren’t about to get any better, either. According to data released by the Congressional Budget Office, the US birth surplus - the number of births over deaths - is expected to completely collapse by 2030. When that happens, the US will be totally dependent on immigration to sustain population growth. This is good news for us. We introverts don’t like crowded restaurants...long lines...or waiting rooms. We don’t take readily to people we don’t know...and some of us even cross the street to avoid people we do know.

But it’s a view few share. Newsthink: "Elon Musk warns that falling birth rates could threaten civilization itself. Global population growth has already slowed dramatically, and many countries sit below the replacement rate of 2.1 children per woman. That means each generation is smaller than the last. The UN expects growth to nearly stop by 2100, and some experts think it will reverse sooner. The risk isn’t overcrowding - it’s decline."

Cause or effect, we don’t know, but Baltimore has been bleeding people for the last 75 years and the results are not attractive. There were almost a million people in the city the year we were born. The town bustled with activity - an active port...the smell of McCormick spices in the harbor...autos coming off the GM assembly lines down in Canton…and steel hot from the furnaces of Sparrows Point.

There were rows and rows of washed marble doorsteps...and neighborhood bars on every corner ready to quaff the thirst of stevedores, steelworkers, pipe fitters, dockhands, factory girls...clerks, cops, and “hedgerow whores” (as Jefferson indelicately described the women who worked on “The Block.”).

Most amazing, Baltimore had one of the most highly developed, upscale social scenes in the US. In the 1950s, one of our distant cousins, from England, even came to Baltimore for her ‘coming out.’ It was a real town, in other words, with real industries and real jobs, and real people who paid taxes to support it.

Today, it is a pale shell of itself with barely half as many people. The city is full of abandoned houses, trash, ambulance chasers, dusty museums and busy emergency wards. In the place of money-making industries are non-profit institutions. And in the houses that once held honest wage earners, are welfare recipients and NGO beneficiaries.

From an economic standpoint, a population decline - at least in a modern, societies with debts they can’t pay - is thought to be catastrophic. More people equal more output...more demand...more houses...more roads...more GDP...more tax receipts...more activity. Take away the people and the result is grim.

Total debt in the US is about $110 trillion...or about a million per household. Not included are the costs of delivering Social Security and Medicare benefits to an aging population, said to be about $73 trillion more. Larger, richer populations may afford to take on the debts of their parents. Shrinking, poorer populations cannot.

An age-old idea is that each generation should try to add a little wealth to the next. A society is said to grow richer as its old people plant trees whose shade they will never enjoy themselves. What the next generation doesn’t want, however, is infrastructure it can’t afford to maintain, transfer programs it can’t afford to continue and debts it can’t afford to pay. And even before Trump stymied population growth, the next generations were feeling pinched. 

CNN: "Even though the US economy is growing - not everyone is prospering. Millennials are on track to be the first generation not to exceed their parents in terms of job status or income, studies show. Among Americans born in the late 1980s, only 44% were in jobs with higher socioeconomic status than their parents when both were age 30, while 49% had positions of lower status..."

If the US wanted to treat its young people decently, it would trim its budget and avoid spending more than its current taxpayers are willing to pay for. Instead, the deficits come hot and heavy...passing the buck on today’s overspending to people who have never shaved, never voted...many of whom haven’t even been born. MSN: "Treasury reports $1 trillion debt surge in under three months." This is not planting new trees. This is cutting down the old ones, grinding down the stumps and putting Round-Up on the roots."

"A Burst of Snow Exploding Into a Monster - 80 Cities Forecast"

Full screen recommended.
USA Weather Pulse, 2/4/26
"A Burst of Snow Exploding Into a Monster - 80 Cities Forecast"
"A burst of snow is exploding into a monster storm as a deadly bomb cyclone barrels through North Carolina with historic snowfall. We're tracking the latest winter storm forecast for 80 cities in the direct path of this beast. From Charlotte buried under nearly a foot of snow to James City recording a jaw-dropping 18 inches, this nor'easter is absolutely hammering the Carolinas. Blizzard conditions, sub-zero wind chills, and whiteout conditions are making travel nearly impossible. Don't get caught off guard - find your city in the full 80-city breakdown!"
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Tuesday, February 3, 2026

"Carrington Event: Here's Why Scientists Are Terrified Of It - And Why It Could Happen Again"

Full screen recommended.
The Quiet Archivist, 2/3/26
"Carrington Event: Here's Why Scientists Are Terrified Of It - 
And Why It Could Happen Again"
"In 1859, a solar storm set telegraph wires on fire. If it happened today, it wouldn’t just knock out your Wi-Fi - it could unravel the systems that hold modern civilization together. This video dives into the forgotten terror of the Carrington Event, a geomagnetic superstorm so powerful it electrified equipment, shocked operators, and lit the skies far beyond the poles. Back then, the world survived because it was simple. Today, everything depends on satellites, high-voltage power grids, GPS timing, and fragile digital networks. And now, the Sun is sending warning shots. The AR4366 sunspot region has erupted into a full-blown solar flare factory, producing massive X-class flares that raise uncomfortable questions scientists can’t fully answer yet. Is this just noise at the peak of Solar Cycle 25 - or the early phase of something much bigger? This is a deep-dive into real data, historical clues, modern vulnerabilities, and the unsettling possibility that the next Carrington-level storm won’t announce itself until it’s already too late."
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Correction: The narrator says "2025" instead of 2026.
o
Food for thought... "Knowing"
God help us.

"This Sunspot Could Fry Our Power Grid"

Full screen recommended.
Space-news, 2/3/26
"This Sunspot Could Fry Our Power Grid"
"A monster sunspot that didn't exist 3 days ago just unleashed 21 solar flares in 24 hours, including an X8.3 eruption - the most powerful solar flare of 2026. Sunspot AR4366 is now half the size of the one that caused the 1859 Carrington Event. In this video, we break down what NASA and NOAA are tracking, why scientists are calling this region a "solar flare factory," and what a direct hit could mean for Earth's power grids, GPS systems, and satellites. Plus: could we see northern lights in the US this week?"
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o
Full screen recommended.
The Sleepy Explorer
"The Monster Sunspot Is Growing - 
And Now It's Entering the Strike Zone"
"For nearly a month, we’ve been following a trail of events that refuse to resolve cleanly. Five investigations in, the pattern hasn’t broken - it’s tightened. It began with a solar storm strong enough to destabilize the polar vortex, then escalated into a global seismic burst timed to a rare planetary alignment, followed by a shattered winter system, a historic bomb cyclone, and finally the largest solar flare in eight years. When the X8.1 flare fired and the CME turned out to be weak, the headlines moved on and the world was told the danger had passed. But that’s not what the data shows. What makes this moment different is what didn’t happen: the sunspot didn’t vent its energy - it pulled it back in. In the days since, it has grown larger, denser, and more magnetically unstable, and now it’s rotating into the exact position where any major eruption would be aimed directly at Earth. This documentary picks up where the coverage stopped, connecting the dots between solar physics, Earth’s increasingly sensitive systems, and a window of time that may be far more consequential than anyone wants to admit. The X8.1 wasn’t the ending. It may have been the opening signal."
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o

"100,000 People Have Been Laid Off From Amazon And 30,000 UPS Jobs Have Just Disappeared"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 2/3/26
"100,000 People Have Been Laid Off From Amazon 
And 30,000 UPS Jobs Have Just Disappeared"
"Something unprecedented is happening in the American job market, and most people don't realize how fast it's moving. We're not just talking about typical recession layoffs, entire job categories are vanishing permanently as companies completely restructure around AI and automation. In this video, I'm breaking down what I'm seeing across multiple industries. From UPS cutting 30,000 positions to Amazon eliminating over 100,000 human jobs while adding 750,000 robots, the scale of this shift is staggering. And it's hitting every sector, tech, healthcare, retail, you name it.

What's really concerning is how this is affecting Gen Z. An entire generation followed the traditional path, college, student loans, degrees, only to find there aren't any good-paying middle class jobs waiting for them. The career ladder their parents climbed? It's just not there anymore. I'm also looking at what experts are predicting for the next few years. Some are warning that up to 83 million jobs could disappear by 2027, with AI already capable of replacing about half of all current roles. The speed of this change is unlike anything we've seen before.

But here's what gets me, most people aren't prepared for this reality. Companies are quietly implementing AI systems that can do the work of entire departments, and millions of workers have no idea their jobs are about to be automated away. What are you seeing in your industry? Are these changes affecting your area yet? Drop a comment below and let me know your thoughts."
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o
Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 2/3/26
"The US Job Market Just Got Worse, 
Millions Stuck With Unlivable Wage"
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