StatCounter

Monday, May 25, 2026

Bill Bonner, "An Almost Miraculous Way"

"An Almost Miraculous Way"
by Bill Bonner

San Martin, Argentina - "Our local padre came over to bless the new chapel. The wind blew cold and hard across the yard. The local people gathered outside, bundled up in winter coats and caps, to celebrate its sanctification.

Life on the farm goes on, much as before. “No one has ever made any money in the Calchaqui Valley.” The words of our lawyer echo through the fields and deserts...and squat in our brain.

He’s not exactly right. There are many small subsistence farms where people have lived for generations. They grow corn, wheat, apples, onions - almost anything and everything. But the scale is too small to be of much commercial interest. And when local farmers try to do anything on a larger scale, they run out of water...or simply can’t compete with the larger farms of the ‘pampa.’ Argentina has some of the richest farmland in the world. Down on the flat land emanating out from Buenos Aires, there are millions of acres producing some of the finest beef and best crops you’ll find anywhere.

But a productive farm...and an attractive farm...are less and less likely to be the same farm. Productive farms do not have quaint stone fences, old barns, graceful houses, or small fields separated by irrigation ditches lined with flowers. Instead, they are all business - with flat fields stretching far onto the horizon, and everything charming or picturesque cleared away. Efficiency rules!

On a very modest level, we saw the change in modern agriculture in France. When we arrived in the ‘90s, our farm was still operated more or less as it always had been. Stone barns with clay tile roofs held old equipment...cows...and square bales of hay. (We recalled how, as a teenager, our summer jobs often included tossing those bales onto a trailer, to be stacked in a barn.)

Now, the cows shelter in a vast metal structure with solar panels on the roof. And the old workers - who had been born on the farm and knew its secrets - retired. They were replaced by younger employees who do their work ‘by the book’ - following the exigencies of French labor law and environmental protection rules. They arrive in the morning and leave in the evening. And the old square bales of hay have been replaced by large, round bales. No one tosses these bales of hay onto a trailer; they are much too heavy. Instead, they are manipulated by a special tractor with an extendable arm - a ‘manitou’ - and stocked under a tin roof.

Here in the Calchaqui Valley, too, we arrived twenty years ago...and found a farm that was so picturesque we couldn’t resist. The locals plowed with mules...and cut hay with a horse-drawn sickle bar, ricking up the hay with pitchforks in stacks down by the river. We introduced tractors, a backhoe, and other ‘modern’ equipment. The new ways of doing business improved output. But they increased our costs...and we are still not able to compete with ‘pampas’-based producers.

Twenty years have gone by. And we’ve now passed the baton onto our daughter and son-in-law. They are young and full of energy...and believe they can make the ranch marginally profitable. Their plan is to keep it as ‘authentic’ as possible and invite a few tourists to share it. Will that work? We’ll see.

In the meantime, it is still extremely picturesque. Last week, our local padre came over to bless the new chapel. The wind blew cold and hard across the yard. The local people gathered outside, bundled up in winter coats and caps, to celebrate its sanctification. It is a ‘family chapel,’ too small for more than a handful of people.
The chapel was a project that we undertook a couple of years ago. A professional builder, a huge man with a huge drinking problem, set up the stone foundation. We took it from there, laying up the walls in adobe blocks.

For the cross above the altar, we cut wine bottles in half, taped two bottom halves together with duct tape...and embedded them in the adobe - a technique we learned 40 years ago from the Earthship builders of Taos, New Mexico…This was done on the east-facing wall so that in the morning, it lights up in an almost miraculous way, with the sun beaming through the green glass of the Malbec bottles.

But the genius of the chapel was the roof. Large, old barrel staves - imported from France at least 50 years ago - were used to form up a cupola. The barrel staves were then covered by cane stalks...and the whole of it plastered on the outside with mud. It looked a little sloppy when we left it, but the aforementioned professional builder came along after us and cleaned it up.

People - all related in some way to the farm or its workers - came from across the river for the ceremony. A red ribbon had been dangled in front of the door, to be cut by the ‘duenos’ - us. And a table was set up in front as a makeshift altar.

Padre Walter takes care of several parishes. He explained that he couldn’t stay long. So, he set to work as soon as the people were assembled, many of them riding over in the back of our farm trucks. There is no bridge across the river. But the water is low enough so that you can drive across...if you know what you’re doing. (On Saturday, a neighbor got stuck and had to be pulled out with a tractor.)

It was freezing cold. And our hat kept blowing off. Still Padre Walter, a compact man with a warm smile, continued at a lively pace until the ‘host’ had been received by all those who wanted it.

While the priest was thus occupied, two riders bounced on their horses up the lane next to the cattle enclosure. They wore their broad-brimmed hats and chaps and turned left at the corral, not paying any particular attention to the Mass on the hill next to them. After a few minutes - between the time for the Apostles’ Creed and the General Confession - they came back, driving three cows in front of them. We bowed our heads and crossed ourselves. For these were the cows we had given to the community for their annual ‘Fiesta Patronal.’ They were on their way across the river to be butchered on Saturday. RIP.

The Mass completed, people filed into the chapel to admire it...
And then came down the hill where a feast of ‘locro’ and Coca-cola had been prepared. Long tables, set on trestles, had been set up on the veranda. The group gradually found seats on the benches beside them. The soup was served out of a huge cauldron, used exclusively for these ceremonies, while a lively chatter kept participants engaged.

Typically, the ‘distinguished’ guests - local landowners, priests, and government officials - are seated together in the middle of the assembly. On this occasion, the priest had to run off for another event, leaving us in the company of just one other notable - the owner of the adjacent farm, who had also been born in the house we now call our own.

He, too, recalled an earlier period. “No comparison,” he said. “My father was a real pioneer here...in the 1950s. He was the first to bring in tractors and other machinery. He made a new road, now abandoned, that made it possible to go all the way to Salta [the capital of the province] without crossing the river. And for a while, we did well. But we were selling beef locally. And pimiento. And onions….But then, they built the big highways down to Buenos Aires. And when they developed the refrigerated trucks, the beef from the pampas took over.

Our friend did not go into detail, but he described a long, and maybe sad, story in which the big farms were sold...and sold again...sinking to a price level they could justify.

But the question now is whether they can justify - commercially - any price at all. Most of the farms in the valley seem to be operating with ‘skeletal’ crews. Unnecessary expenses are cut. Fields and fences are left to take care of themselves. Cattle herds grow smaller.

“Thank God for the cattle,” says our neighbor, tested and perhaps worn down by more than 70 years in the valley. “Prices for beef are high. [They went up after Milei eliminated the ban on exports. Previous socialist governments had outlawed selling Argentina’s best product - beef - abroad, in order to keep domestic prices low.] Everything else is terrible. The best we can do is to sell a few animals...and keep expenses to a minimum.”

“It used to be a much harder life here,” his wife added, a good-looking blond woman in her ‘60s. “I came here as an 18-year-old bride. And I was a city girl. I couldn’t even understand what the local people were saying. We had no electricity. And no telephone. We lived with fires in the chimney and kerosene lamps.

“You know, Pedro, Inez’s father?” We did. He is a really old-timer, who is half blind and walks unsteadily with a cane. He almost died during the Covid lockdown. We were able to get him medical supplies, but what he really needed was a doctor. And none could be found. But he survived somehow, and now wears a black beret to keep his head warm...and a wool suit whenever he goes out.

“He has the gift...he doesn’t do it anymore, but he used to be able to look at you and tell you things about your future. I went to see him after my second child was born. We wanted to have a big family and, after two boys, I was hoping for a girl. But he looked at me and said sadly that I would only have three children.

I didn’t believe him. And after my third child - he was a boy too - I came back from the city to be with my husband at the farm. But a day or two later, I started bleeding. Heavily. There was no telephone. And no one to call. No doctor. No clinic anywhere nearby. And I was fainting. Ramon [her husband] picked me up and put me in the truck and drove five hours to the city. I was only half alive when I got there. But there they saved my life. And Pedro was right; I couldn’t have more children.”

The wind died down. The clouds parted. On a signal from our son-in-law, everyone got up and began to clear away the dishes. One by one, the 30-or-so guests said their good-byes. Some shook hands. Some hugged. Some kissed. Children presented a cheek for us to kiss. The workers hands were as hard as iron. The women were no strangers to hard work either. Teeth may have been missing. But warm smiles were everywhere."

Delta Blues Brother, "The World Keeps Nothing"

Full screen recommended.
Delta Blues Brother, "The World Keeps Nothing"
"One day, the last person who remembers you will disappear too. And suddenly… it’ll be as if you were never here at all. “The World Keeps Nothing” is a deep philosophical Delta blues meditation about death, impermanence, ego, money, memory, and the strange freedom that comes from realizing none of this was ever truly ours to keep. The resonator guitar moves slow and hollow, like footsteps through an empty town after midnight. The harmonica drifts through the silence like memory itself fading into the dark. The groove stays patient, heavy, reflective… like an old soul finally making peace with time. This isn’t blues about despair. It’s blues about perspective. The world keeps nothing."

Memorial Day 2026

Have a safe, thoughtful and grateful holiday, folks...

John Williams, "Hymn To The Fallen"

Full screen recommended.
John Williams, "Hymn To The Fallen"
from "Saving Private Ryan"

"All Gave Some... Some Gave All"

 

John Wilder, "Memorial Day"

AA gun at Corregidor.
"Memorial Day"
by John Wilder

“If words cannot repay the debt we owe these men, surely with 
our actions we must strive to keep faith with them and 
with the vision that led them to battle and to final sacrifice.”
- Ronald Reagan

"Last year when The Mrs. was putting flowers on the graves of her relatives, my job was to drive the car while she located the locations. It was her first year when she actively did that for all of her relatives. Her mother had done that previously, but since my mother-in-law passed, that duty of remembering the family had fallen to The Mrs.

I saw one gravesite in particular, and I decided to research it. It stuck out, because it was the grave of a United States Army officer who died in May of 1942. I was curious. Thankfully, there was at least some information about this officer online. He had been born elsewhere, but went to high school here in Modern Mayberry. His particulars weren’t all that unusual for a young man in the 1930s: he loved baseball, he graduated, went to college, got a degree, got a job, and got married.

While in college, he was in ROTC, so he graduated as a 1st Lieutenant in the Army Reserve. I think even in the mid-1930s people could see the writing on the wall that there was the real possibility of war, so I imagine a core group of people with officer training was just what they wanted on the shelf.

His life was, I imagine, the same as millions of lives in that quasi-Depressionary era. He and his wife welcomed a baby into the world 1940, but by early 1941 the young officer had been drafted back into the Army. He was sent, half a world away, to Manila. I’m sure he told his wife as they shipped him off that his job, thankfully, was to be in the rear with the gear. It would be other people that would really be in the crosshairs of the enemy. Besides, it would be crazy of the Japanese to make a strike at Manilla. That would mean war!

He was at the airfield in Manilla on December 8, 1941, when the Japanese attacked. The planes he was supposed to serve hadn’t arrived. The troops that were supposed to protect the airfield hadn’t arrived. Yet his Company had. On Christmas Eve, 1941, his group was given the task of demolishing the airstrip and leaving nothing the Japanese could make use of. This is generally not a good sign. Then, every man in his Company was given a rifle and told they were now members of the Provisional Air Corps Infantry. This is an even worse sign.

Our young officer and his troops were then ordered to join the defense of Bataan. Bataan is a peninsula that forms the northern part of the entrance to Manila Harbor. To really control Manila and use it as a base, you have to control Bataan. The original allied plans had called for falling back to Bataan and holding out, but MacArthur had thought that defeatist, and planned on a more active defense.

When the Japanese attacked, there weren’t enough supplies for MacArthur’s plan, so they fell back to Bataan, where there also weren’t enough supplies for the defense of Bataan because they stopped shipping those because MacArthur had changed his mind. The Japanese general who would later be fired because it took him too long to defeat the combined American-Filipino army at Bataan also noted that the Americans had numerical superiority, and in his opinion, could have retaken Manila. I’m not sure that going through this exercise made me think more highly of MacArthur ...

If you’re not familiar with the Battle of Bataan, it took over three months, and ended up the largest U.S. Army surrender since the Civil War. Over 76,000 troops were captured. To my knowledge, there is no written record of the Provisional Air Corps Infantry during the Battle of Bataan, though there is a record that on March 4, the 1st Lieutenant was promoted to Captain, just before MacArthur high-tailed it out of the Philippines to safety in Australia.

The troops at Bataan were officially surrendered on April 9, 1942. But in this case, the Provisional Air Corps Infantry was not part of the surrender, and was ordered to the island of Corregidor. Over 20% of the men of the Company had already been lost.

Corregidor was an island that resembled a battleship – at the time of the Japanese invasion, it was bristling with coastal defense guns, mortars, anti-aircraft guns, and minefields. Now that Bataan was taken, the last thing required to control Manilla Bay was that the island forts fall. Corregidor was, by far, the biggest of these.

The Navy ran the guns, but the defense of the beach was the responsibility of the 4th Marine Regiment, along with a ragtag group of other orphan units, including at least one Company from the Provisional Air Corps Infantry and a young Captain from Modern Mayberry, who were sent into the foxholes with the Marines to guard the beaches since they had combat experience from Bataan. Sometime in early May, the young Captain was in one of those foxholes with several Marines, and a Japanese artillery shell hit, killing them all. Even the very date this happened isn’t clear, and his family wouldn’t even hear of his death until a year later.

I don’t know what this young officer from Modern Mayberry did during his time in battle on Bataan and Corregidor – it’s nearly certain that no one alive does. His wife later remarried, half a decade after finding out her husband was dead. His son still bears the name of a father he never knew, if he’s still living.

There is a white cross in a field in Manilla, surrounded by green grass that is regularly cut, where it is said, his body lies. The marker here in Modern Mayberry is only for remembrance, to let people like me know he lived. And, I saw it, and learned his story, and every year around this time, I tell a few people from Modern Mayberry who haven’t heard about him. The Mrs. plans to put some flowers out for him, but even if she doesn’t, I’ll spend some time thinking about him."

"On Memorial Day", "Dulce et Decorum Est"

"On Memorial Day"
by Matt Taibbi

"As a boy I read Wilfred Owen’s famous poem about World War I, describing the suffering of young men sent by industrial powers to die in clouds of poison gas. It’s a warning: if you saw what Owen did, and your nights were tormented by visions of blood and death, “You would not tell with such high zest, to children ardent for some desperate glory, The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori.”

Owen was killed in November 1918, a week before the Armistice. In his poems you read a soldier’s hope that boys like me would read them before they became old enough to want to prove themselves in combat. God didn’t design us to be killers, he said, noting we aren’t born with claws or talons, and a boy’s teeth are more suited for “laughing round an apple.” I know that’s true of my children, who’ll be taught to remember soldiers like Owen today."
o
"Dulce et Decorum Est"
by Wilfred Owen

"Bent double, like old beggars under sacks,
Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge,
Till on the haunting flares we turned our backs,
And towards our distant rest began to trudge.
Men marched asleep. Many had lost their boots,
But limped on, blood-shod. All went lame; all blind;
Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hoots
Of gas-shells dropping softly behind.

Gas! GAS! Quick, boys! - An ecstasy of fumbling
Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time,
But someone still was yelling out and stumbling
And flound’ring like a man in fire or lime.
Dim through the misty panes and thick green light,
As under a green sea, I saw him drowning.
In all my dreams before my helpless sight,
He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning.

If in some smothering dreams, you too could pace
Behind the wagon that we flung him in,
And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,
His hanging face, like a devil’s sick of sin;
If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,-
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old Lie: 
"Dulce et decorum est, Pro patria mori."

Latin phrase is from the Roman poet Horace: 
“It is sweet and fitting to die for one’s country.”

"Memorial Day, Lest We Forget"

"Memorial Day, Lest We Forget"
By John Kass

"We had some fine traditions in America, though many have been pushed aside because they get in the way of modern politics. And when it comes to patriotism on the days when we mourn our war dead, you can feel the media groaning. Patriots and patriarchs aren’t much appreciated these days. They’re now considered just too toxic, too masculine and they’re such a bother.

America once prized merit and competition. Now, though, we prize politics and our cultural institutions strive to make Beta males. There are unintended costs to all of this, including all those young men lost, boys adrift without fathers to guide them, lonely confused boys who rage in the anonymous shadows of social media. Add unfettered access to violent video games, unfettered access to internet porn, raised by mothers who resent the fathers who walked away, shaped by anger and social isolation.

Throw in the absence of a spiritual life and the absence of a common morality. Add guns. This stew of rage boils over into murder sprees, in rural areas, in urban centers. We ignore what we feel in our bones to be wrong. We’d rather play our politics instead.

Ultimately the day comes - and it always comes - when some other powerful nation that isn’t obsessed with creating Beta males shows up with its armies. They come to take all that you have and all that you’d ever dreamed of having. They come to take your food, your life, the lives of your children. Your spine. Your hope. Your identity. Everything. And then you don’t have a country. The landless descend into wandering barbarism. They become as beasts of no nation, because their nation is gone.

Don’t think it can’t happen. It happens. It has happened in many other ages. It happened to Thebes. That nation had destroyed the unstoppable superpower and military might of Sparta, but soon Thebes was itself destroyed, all the way down to the scattered, nameless stones, the people dead or sold off in the slave markets. And who and what they were was forgotten. All that was left were scratches on stones bleaching like bones in the sun.

History tells us these stories again and again, if we’d listen. History warns of what happens to nations that weaken themselves and abandon their own borders, prizing sensitivity and men without chests above virtue.

A culture becoming fragile is awash with tears, but it becomes dry, like pottery. It cracks. And as the ages forget the names, history smirks. When the people are threatened, with the people desperate and frightened, it is then that soldiers are appreciated, welcomed and needed. The armed forces, forming that thin line between civilization and chaos are honored for a time. Though eventually, if they’re successful in defense, they are inevitably forgotten, again. All soldiers throughout history have understood this dynamic, especially in free, prosperous nations like ours.

Our war dead didn’t risk or lose their lives to be praised and petted with flowery words. They knew they were led to slaughter by fine words from the double-tongues about great honor and great sacrifice. But they also knew this: They had a job to do, protecting our liberty and our nation with their bodies and blood. I suppose they hoped, as Americans, that we would live up to our half of the bargain and not dishonor the freedom they’d given to us, that was bought with their lives.

Traditions are an important means for a people trying to stave off cultural betrayal. This is why traditions are often targeted by agents of change. The old traditions remind us who we are, what we were, reminding us of our ideal selves, of virtue lost to time and what we call progress.

Memorial Day is when we mourn the fallen of the United States Armed Forces who died for our liberty. And because it is Memorial Day, not burger and beer day, not sports day, not play video games day, not chips and dip day, there is one tradition I hope we try our best to keep. It involves us taking time out to think hard and long about a soldier’s poem and the poppies, row on row.

“In Flanders Fields” is that soldier’s poem, written in World War I by Col. John McCrae, a man who’d seen the devastation of war, and hopelessness. Yet with clear eyes and a clean heart he wrote of poppy blossoms as rebirth of hope, those bright orange/red papery thin blossoms, as delicate as dreams, waving in the breeze over the freshly dug graves of the dead.

The scene was Ypres, Belgium at a farm converted to a military hospital, where McCrae was an Army doctor, doctor, dealing with pain and death and disease. Flanders Fields is particularly tragic. The political leadership had led their citizens into hell, and still the citizen soldiers marched toward death and the trenches and the barbed wire, and the gas.

My mother, 92 years old and born of the United Kingdom, hasn’t forgotten. She was born in Guelph, Ontario, the town where Col. McCrae is from. She knew his family. They all knew of the McCraes, but they did not treat them as celebrities. Instead, they respected them. My mom would put a book of his poetry on the breakfast table when my sons were little boys, so that we’d remember as we taught the boys. And that is how traditions are maintained.

And my friend Bill Gritsonis, a former soldier of the U.S. Army and member of the American Legion Hellenic Post 343 hasn’t forgotten. The entire American Legion hasn’t forgotten. The legion remembers the poem and the poppy, and members hand out poppies to help commemorate Memorial Day. “We’d hand out the poppies around City Hall,” he said. “Some of the veterans who survived are so very old. They’re still holding on. We have to do this for them, for us, for our kids, for our country. We just can’t forget.”

On this Memorial Day, when too many of us are thinking of grilling meat and drinking beer and staring at ballgames with sports announcer talking of the loss of a game as if it is death. American Legion posts and Veterans of Foreign Wars and many other groups will attend and participate in ceremonies of somber remembrance and mourning.

Some will be at parades in small towns. Or in quiet gatherings in cemeteries. They’ll bow their heads as a bugler plays “Taps” in a town square, or as the notes from the horns echo on the gravestones in great national cemeteries.

American Legion Hellenic Post 343 plans on being at Elmwood Cemetery, in River Grove, Il., as they have for years, since the 2011 dedication of the Hellenic American Veterans Memorial that honors Greeks who served. “This began way before my time, with others, the group as a whole, Hellenic Post 343 bought the land at Elmwood Cemetery, raised the funds,” Gritsonis said. “The Scouts remember. Our former commander, Anastasios “Steve” Betzelos, he’s 98 and a half. He’s going to try to make it.”
Gritsonis isn’t looking for a mention. He’s not like that. Once a top soldier, he doesn’t seek glory in the words of others. He’d rather that I write around his name. But he and other former U.S. Armed Service Personnel and those on active duty will remember. Why? Once you learn about Flanders Fields, once you read the poem, it sears. It is difficult to forget.

And perhaps because we all come from someplace else. We’re Americans. And whatever our ethnicity or creed, we’re bound together by the ideas that maintain our liberty. They’re written in the Constitution of the United States and The Bill of Rights added to the Constitution by wise and great men, that form a nation that is still the last, best hope of mankind on earth.

Some old soldiers will be asked about Col. McCrae’s poem and the poppies on the graves. I hope they’re asked about it. You might want to print this poem out, take it with you to the cemetery, or a parade, or a lonely grave. You might leave a copy of the poem on a picnic table, as others stuff their faces and guzzle beers without a thought of the Americans who gave everything for them. I don’t mean to shake it at them as if it’s some kind of dare. We’ve had too much of that on all sides.

Politicians and their angry mouthpieces are waging wars of words right now over what to do in the aftermath of mass shootings. The way they talk, they’re all about winning some kind of advantage, hoping to crush their political opponents. It’s as if their words were political tomahawks fashioned from the bones of the dead children from that school in Uvalde. The dead children become the pointed tips of their rhetorical spears.

And others wage wars of words over the war in Ukraine, the same voices that frightened the nation about those weapons of mass destruction that couldn’t be found in Iraq, the same voices that argued for that war. The same voices that assured us that Western-style democracy could be imposed on people with no idea or appreciation for our democratic traditions. These are same voices that told us not to worry about the rise of the American Surveillance State.

And all these barking dogs on all sides sound as if they have a deep faith, not in God, but in themselves, and their own special talents. The anonymous life on social media has left them unbound. They rage and become their own gods, and for as long as they keep barking, I suppose they feel they’ll never be held accountable. So the barking continues.

When “In Flanders Fields” was first published anonymously, in the English magazine “Punch” on Dec. 15, 1915, it seemed as there was a common purpose to our history. And then as now, the young wanted so desperately to live. It became an anthem. Here is John McCrea’s poem:
There have been other poems. But this, to me, to many of us, on this Memorial Day, when we mourn our war dead, is one of a kind. ‘Lest we forget."
"For the Fallen"
 
"With proud thanksgiving, a mother for her children,
England mourns for her dead across the sea.
Flesh of her flesh they were, spirit of her spirit,
Fallen in the cause of the free.

Solemn the drums thrill; Death august and royal 
Sings sorrow up into immortal spheres,
There is music in the midst of desolation
And a glory that shines upon our tears.

They went with songs to the battle, they were young,
Straight of limb, true of eye, steady and aglow.
They were staunch to the end against odds uncounted;
They fell with their faces to the foe.

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old: 
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.

They mingle not with their laughing comrades again; 
They sit no more at familiar tables of home;
They have no lot in our labour of the day-time;
They sleep beyond England's foam.

But where our desires are and our hopes profound, 
Felt as a well-spring that is hidden from sight,
To the innermost heart of their own land they are known
As the stars are known to the Night;

As the stars that shall be bright when we are dust, 
Moving in marches upon the heavenly plain;
As the stars that are starry in the time of our darkness, 
To the end, to the end, they remain."

- Laurence Binyon

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Scott Ritter, "Critically Important Analysis"

Scott Ritter, 5/24/26
"Critically Important Analysis"
Comments here:

"Americans Can't Buy A Home, Can't Afford Rent, And Can't Sell Either"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 5/24/26
"Americans Can't Buy A Home,
 Can't Afford Rent, And Can't Sell Either"
"The American housing market in 2026 locked an entire generation out of ownership and trapped an older one inside payments that keep mutating. Home prices climbed over 50% since 2019 while wages crawled single digits. Median carrying costs in major metros now exceed 40% of pre-tax income. Construction material costs are up nearly 40% since 2020. Rents in the top 25 metros outpaced wage growth every year since. 

This video shows the breakdown from inside the homes of the Americans living it.\n\nWhat this video covers:\n\nCarrying costs that now eat over 40% of pre-tax income in major American metros. Lease renewals that the rental sector treats as repricing events every twelve months. Multigenerational households hitting a 50-year high in 2024 as adult children move back home. 22 million American households spending over half their income on shelter, a record since federal tracking began. Landlord-tenant filings surging in major court systems since 2022. Homeowner insurance premiums climbing over 30% in three years while HOA fees double in some regions since 2019.\n\nIf one of these clips sounds like your life, drop your own housing receipt in the comments and tell us where you live, what you pay, and what you make. 

Send this video to someone who keeps blaming themselves for a market that broke years before they entered it. Subscribe to Epic Economist for more compilations like this one.\n\nThis is the American housing nightmare in 2026. The rent crisis is crushing tenants. The carrying costs are trapping owners. The shelter inflation is grinding families down. The US housing market is breaking the people inside it."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Across The States, 5/24/26
"Something Is Wrong In America - 
Families Live In Sheds As Homeless People Disappear"
"America’s housing crisis is no longer just about high rent. It’s creating an invisible population of working people living in cars, storage units, RVs, and hidden spaces most society never sees. And some of them disappear without anyone noticing. Here’s the thing… many of the people facing homelessness today have jobs. They clock in every day, wear uniforms, pay taxes, and still can’t afford stable housing. Rising rent, stagnant wages, medical debt, and a shortage of affordable homes pushed millions past the point where the math still works.

What most people miss is that homelessness often doesn’t look the way they expect. It’s not always tents or street corners. It’s coworkers sleeping in parking lots, seniors living in vehicles, and families quietly rotating between temporary places just to survive another month. The reality is, once someone becomes invisible to the housing system, they also become vulnerable to violence, exploitation, health crises, and even disappearance. And the system's meant to protect them often fail long before anyone realizes they’re gone."
Comments here:

"Middle East Geopolitics 5/24/26"

Col. Douglas Macgregor, 5/24/26
"Shocking: Netanyahu Flees 
Tel Aviv As Iran Strikes Hard!"
"Is Benjamin Netanyahu’s 30-year political invincibility officially shattered? In this video, we break down the shocking geopolitical shift as Iran strikes deep into Israel, exposing a massive gap between the Prime Minister’s promises and reality. Reports reveal Netanyahu was missing from the war room during the critical hours of the attack, triggering a massive domestic and international backlash. We dive into the intelligence warnings that were strategically ignored, the multi-million dollar corruption cases catching up to him, and why his own extremist coalition partners are starting to desert the building. Watch until the end to see how this historic escalation permanently changes the Middle East and what the upcoming independent commission of inquiry means for the future of Israel."
Comments here:
o
Col. Douglas Macgregor, 5/24/26
"Red Alert:
 Israel Panics As Qatar Sides With Iran!"
"Israel is reportedly growing increasingly concerned as Qatar signals a softer, more diplomatic approach toward Iran, potentially reshaping the balance of power across the Middle East. In this video, we break down how Qatar’s regional positioning, Gulf diplomacy, and Iran tensions could impact Israel’s security strategy and alliances. From Doha to Tehran to Tel Aviv, major geopolitical shifts are unfolding that may redefine Middle East power dynamics in 2026. Could this be the beginning of a wider regional realignment where Gulf states prioritize survival and de-escalation over confrontation? Watch until the end for a full analysis of how Qatar-Iran relations may affect Israel, the Gulf states, U.S. influence, and future regional stability."
Comments here:
o
"Col. Doug Macgregor:
 US-Iran Deal, Israel's Nightmare"
Comments here:

"Good Grief"

"Good Grief"
by No1
Click image for larger size.

"That is the most consequential string of weasel words I’ve seen since “weapons of mass destruction - related program activities”. Largely. Negotiated. Subject to. Finalization. That’s not a deal. That’s not even a ceasefire! No formal document, no signed terms, no local commander on record. The blockade is still running, which by any classical definition is an act of war.

Trump held a call with eight countries about Iran - Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, Bahrain, without Iran. A memorandum of understanding was reached, understanding being conditional, the memorandum being provisional, the reaching being subject to a later reaching, and the whole thing pending the participation of the participant who didn't participate.

Meanwhile Israel got... a separate call. Not the main call. A side call. The country that lit the match in the first place got pulled aside for a one-on-one, outcome described as having gone “very well”, and the Strait of Hormuz is going to be opened, and the final details will be “announced shortly”. Whenever that may be.

The neocons are already losing their minds on X. Pompeo, Levin, Graham, the whole fingerprints-up-their-asses crowd - furious. Which, for what it’s worth, is the one legible signal in all of this that something real might be happening.


Saturday night, Trump told the world the deal was “largely negotiated” and would be announced “shortly”. Sunday morning he posted that he’d told his negotiators “not to rush into a deal” because “time is on our side” - and the blockade stays until everything is “certified and signed”. Twelve hours. Give or take.

So as of Sunday we have two reports, one from the NYT and one from Reuters, both citing sources, both presumably correct. In one, Iran has agreed to give up its highly enriched uranium. In the other, Iran has agreed to give up nothing, and the uranium was never on the table to begin with. These are facts.

The stockpile is simultaneously surrendered and untouched, the nuclear issue is both the centrepiece of the deal and not part of it, the Strait is both reopening and under Iranian management, depending on which capital’s press release you read. Which is impressive, when you think about it. It usually takes years for the signatories of a treaty to start disputing what it says. These two managed to do that before anyone even found the document.
Netanyahu, or his AI counterpart, said that any deal needed to include “dismantling Iran’s nuclear enrichment sites and removing its enriched nuclear material from its territory” - and separately that Israel would “maintain freedom of action against threats in all areas, including in Lebanon”.“Largely negotiated”… Right?!

Whatever the fine print says about the uranium, the deal itself is the issue here. A deal is something you sign with someone who is still there to sign it. And for the past three months the official position was that this someone in question had been totally destroyed, completely eliminated, and reduced to a cautionary tale. Eliminated regimes are famously difficult to negotiate with. They miss meetings. They do not RSVP.

So if the United States is now sitting across a table from Iran, lifting blockades and haggling over a stockpile, then either the elimination didn’t take, or it’s the most expensive way anyone has ever found to lose a negotiation to a corpse.

Option one is that the deal holds. The Strait opens, for a price, Trump claims THE GREATEST DEAL IN THE HISTORY OF DEALS, and the country that was totally destroyed eighteen weeks ago dictates the terms. Everybody agrees not to look too closely at who got what.

Option two is that Israel moves before finalization. The “separate call” is doing a lot of work in that sentence. Netanyahu is not a party to this agreement in any visible way - and he just told the world he expects complete dismantlement as a baseline. The neocon wing of Washington, the one that got Thomas Massie primaried out for daring to vote against the war, will be in his ear for the duration.

This afternoon, while the deal is supposedly being finalized, his office released this marketing poster. For the sequel, I assume, since the first one totally obliterated the reviewers. THAT trailer is going to be explosive! The pattern for the last decade is that when a US-Iran deal gets close, something happens. Something loud. And with a lot of body bags.

Option three, and that’s the one I think gets underpriced: nothing lands now, both sides lick their wounds, and in six months or a year from now, someone tries again.

Except by then something will have shifted. Every Gulf leader on that call has just watched what happens when you let USrael use your territory as a staging area. Saudi Arabia. The UAE. Qatar. All of them on the phone, begging Washington to stop - their own economies on the line, their own populations in the blast radius of a decision made in Tel Aviv and rubber-stamped in Washington.

The GCC’s god ain’t Allah, it’s $$$. But the dollar only works if the oil keeps flowing and the refineries keep standing. Iran knows exactly where every desalination plant and every refinery in the Gulf is. Iran itself is too big to destroy - too much territory, too much depth, too much bombs - and the GCC are exposed in ways that Iran simply isn’t. So not friends. Not enemies either. Frenemies. And frenemies can do business. So the calculation will be shifting. Slowly, quietly, but shifting.

If USrael comes back for round three, Iran could play it smart: keep the fire on Israel, leaves GCC infrastructure largely untouched unless they allow the use of their airspace again. Because why would you bomb the refinery of the country you’re trying to peel away from the American orbit? A Hormuz transit toll runs for about $1 a barrel which translates to roughly $0.03 at the pump. No1’s going to notice that. But what everyone will notice are Gulf refineries turned to rubble. Iran will collect their toll once the Americans are gone. The GCC will keep the oil and the money flowing. Nobody has to like each other for that to work.

That’s the long game, and it runs regardless of whether this “largely negotiated” deal ever becomes a real one. Push the Gulf hard enough, often enough, and the thing that breaks probably won't be Iran. It'll be the petrodollar."

Musical Interlude: David Gates, "Suite: Clouds and Rain"

David Gates, "Suite: Clouds and Rain"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Galaxies don't normally look like this. NGC 6745 actually shows the results of two galaxies that have been colliding for only hundreds of millions of years. Just off the below digitally sharpened photograph to the lower right is the smaller galaxy, moving away. The larger galaxy, pictured above, used to be a spiral galaxy but now is damaged and appears peculiar. Gravity has distorted the shapes of the galaxies.
Although it is likely that no stars in the two galaxies directly collided, the gas, dust, and ambient magnetic fields do interact directly. In fact, a knot of gas pulled off the larger galaxy on the lower right has now begun to form stars. NGC 6745 spans about 80 thousand light-years across and is located about 200 million light-years away."

"And It Was Pointless..."

“And it was pointless… to think how those years could have been put to better use, for he could hardly have put them to worse. There was no recovering them now. You could grieve endlessly for the loss of time and for the damage done therein. For the dead, and for your own lost self. But what the wisdom of the ages says is that we do well not to grieve on and on. And those old ones knew a thing or two and had some truth to tell… for you can grieve your heart out and in the end you are still where you were. All your grief hasn’t changed a thing. What you have lost will not be returned to you. It will always be lost. You’re left with only your scars to mark the void. All you can choose to do is to go on or not. But if you go on, it’s knowing you carry your scars with you.”
- Charles Frazier

"Go Down Swinging!"

"We lose those battles as often as we succeed. The key, though, win or lose, is to never fail. And the only way to fail is not to fight. So fight until you can't fight anymore. Never let go. Never give up. Never run. Never surrender. Fight the good fight, you fight even when it seems inevitable you're about to go down swinging." 
- "Amelia Shepherd", "Grey's Anatomy"

The Poet: Czeslaw Milosz, "Hope"

"Hope"

"Hope is with you when you believe
The earth is not a dream but living flesh,
That sight, touch, and hearing do not lie,
That all things you have ever seen here
Are like a garden looked at from a gate.
You cannot enter. But you're sure it's there.
Could we but look more clearly and wisely
We might discover somewhere in the garden
A strange new flower and an unnamed star.

Some people say we should not trust our eyes,
That there is nothing, just a seeming,
These are the ones who have no hope.
They think that the moment we turn away,
The world, behind our backs, ceases to exist,
As if snatched up by the hands of thieves."

- Czeslaw Milosz,
"Hope", from "The World"

Kahlil Gibran, “The Farewell”

“The Farewell”

“Farewell to you and the youth I have spent with you.
It was but yesterday we met in a dream.
You have sung to me in my aloneness,
and I of your longings have built a tower in the sky.
But now our sleep has fled and our dream is over,
and it is no longer dawn.
The noontide is upon us and our half waking has turned to fuller day,
and we must part.
If in the twilight of memory we should meet once more,
we shall speak again together and you shall sing to me a deeper song.
And if our hands should meet in another dream
we shall build another tower in the sky.”
- Kahlil Gibran, “The Prophet”
Freely download "The Prophet", by Kahlil Gibran, here:

"Native American Elder Breaks Down Why Respect Disappeared From America"

Full screen recommended.
"Native American Elder Breaks Down 
Why Respect Disappeared From America"
Comments here:

The Daily "Near You?"

Kuala Lumpur, Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Thanks for stopping by!

"The End of Retail Stores, Nobody Saw This Coming"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 5/24/26
"The End of Retail Stores, Nobody Saw This Coming"
Comments here:

Dan, I Allegedly, "Bills Up. Money Gone."

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 5/24/26
"Bills Up. Money Gone."
"People across America are feeling the pressure as inflation, rising gas prices, expensive groceries, and shrinking paychecks continue to crush household budgets. In this video, Dan from i Allegedly breaks down why so many hardworking people feel like they can’t get ahead anymore. From Memorial Day price hikes and discount store closures to skyrocketing restaurant costs and the collapse in consumer confidence, this video explains the real financial struggles families are facing right now. Dan also covers rising debt, student loan disasters, layoffs, car affordability, and why millions of Americans are cutting back just to survive. If you feel like your paycheck disappears the moment it hits your account, you are not alone. This video dives into the economic reality many people are experiencing but few are openly talking about. Watch until the end and share your thoughts about inflation, the economy, and how you’re coping with rising costs in 2026."
Comments here:

"Russia Is Abnormally Hot, Streets And Beach Walk In Moscow"

Full screen recommended.
Window To Moscow, 5/23/36
"Russia Is Abnormally Hot, 
Streets And Beach Walk In Moscow"
"Experience Moscow during an unusually hot summer as we walk through busy streets, city vibes, and beach areas in stunning 4K HDR. This walking tour captures the atmosphere of Russia during a heatwave - crowded embankments, summer fashion, relaxing beach scenes, and everyday life in Moscow. If you enjoy immersive city walks, urban ambience, travel videos, and realistic street atmosphere, this video is for you. Friends, welcome to my YouTube channel Window to Moscow! Enjoy watching!"
Comments here;

"How It Really Is"

 

"That's Where It All Begins..."

"That's where it all begins. That's where we all get screwed big time as we grow up. They tell us to think, but they don't really mean it. They only want us to think within the boundaries they define. The moment you start thinking for yourself - really thinking - so many things stop making any sense. And if you keep thinking, the whole world just falls apart. Nothing makes sense anymore. All rules, traditions, expectations - they all start looking so fake, so made up. You want to just get rid of all this stuff and make things right. But the moment you say it, they tell you to shut up and be respectful. And eventually you understand that nobody wants you to really think for yourself.
- Ray N. Kuili

Free Download: Erich Maria Remarque, “All Quiet on the Western Front”

Ask her if it was worth it...
o
“You still think it's beautiful to die for your country. The first bombardment
taught us better. When it comes to dying for country, it's better not to die at all.”
- "Paul Baumer", "All Quiet on the Western Front" (1930)

Freely download “All Quiet on the Western Front”, 
by Erich Maria Remarque, here:
http://explainallquietonthewesternfront.weebly.com/
o
And these chickenshit Neocon chickenhawk 
politicians are determined to get us all killed...

"Never Think..."

“When one with honeyed words but evil mind
Persuades the mob, great woes befall the state.” 
- Euripides

"9/11 False Flag Terror OP: Overwhelming Hard Proof Of An Inside Job Pulled Off By US Intel Community and Armed Forces, MOSSAD & MI6"

"9/11 False Flag Terror OP: Overwhelming Hard Proof Of An Inside
 Job Pulled Off By US Intel Community and Armed Forces, MOSSAD & MI6"
by Laurent Guyenot

Excerpt: "SOTN Editor’s Note: In light of the the 9/11 false flag terrorist attacks perpetrated by the U.S. Intelligence Community & U.S Armed Forces, C.I.A & MOSSAD, among other major organs within the US government as well as foreign state actors, the following exposé is being posted - AGAIN.

This highly authoritative breakdown of what was actually a complex international conspiratorial criminal plot of the highest order proves, unequivocally, that 9/11 was an “inside job”. Should any investigator doubt this obvious conclusion, the following links provide even more indisputable evidence of the quite amateur “inside job”. In other words, the perps really didn’t care if anyone found out who pulled it off or how they really did it. They just didn’t care, so controlled would the massive cover-up be, so they thought. N.B. What follows is the gold standard regarding irrefutable proof confirming that 9/11 was a patently inside job.

Technical impossibilities: Thanks to courageous investigators, many anomalies in the official explanation of the events of 9/11 were posted on the Internet in the following months, providing evidence that this was a false flag operation, and that Osama bin Laden was innocent, as he repeatedly declared in the Afghan and Pakistani press and on Al Jazeera. The proofs of this appalling fraud have been accumulating ever since, and are now accessible to anyone willing to spend a few hours of research on the Web. (Although, while preparing this article, I noticed that Google is now making access to that research more difficult than it was five years ago, artificially prioritizing anti-conspiracy sites.)

For example, members of Architects and Engineers for 9/11 Truth have demonstrated that it was impossible for plane crashes and jet fuel fires to trigger the collapse of the Twin Towers. Even Donald Trump understood this. In fact, speaking of “collapse” is perhaps misleading: the towers literally exploded, pulverizing concrete and projecting pieces of steel beams weighing several hundred tons hundreds of meters laterally at high speeds. The pyroclastic dust that immediately flooded through the streets, not unlike the dust from a volcano, indicates a high temperature mixture of hot gasses and relatively dense solid particles, an impossible phenomenon in a simple collapse. It is also impossible that WTC7, another skyscraper (47 stories), which had not been hit by a plane, collapsed into its own footprint at near free-fall speed, unless by “controlled demolition.”

Testimonies of firefighters recorded shortly after the events describe sequences of explosions just before the “collapse”, well below the plane impact. The presence of molten metal in the wreckage up to three weeks after the attack is inexplicable except by the presence of incompletely burned explosives. Firefighter Philip Ruvolo testified before Étienne Sauret’s camera for his film Collateral Damages (2011): “You’d get down below and you’d see molten steel - molten steel running down the channelways, like you were in a foundry - like lava.”

Aviation professionals have also reported impossibilities in the behavior of the planes. The charted speeds of the two aircraft hitting the Twin Towers, 443 mph and 542 mph, exclude these aircraft being Boeing 767s, because these speeds are virtually impossible near ground level. In the unlikely event such speeds could be attained without the aircraft falling apart, flying them accurately into the towers was mission impossible, especially by the amateur pilots blamed for the hijacking. Hosni Mubarak, a former pilot, said he could never do it. (He is not the only head of state to have voiced his doubts: Chavez and Ahmadinejad are among them.) Recall that neither of the black boxes of the jetliners was ever found, an incomprehensible situation. And of course, there are the obvious anomalies of Shanksville and Pentagon crash sites: no plane or credible plane debris can be seen on any of the numerous photos easily available.

Inside Job or Mossad Job? Among the growing number of Americans who disbelieve the official version of the 9/11 attacks, two basic theories are in competition: I called them “inside job” and “Mossad job”. The first one is the dominant thesis within the so-called 9/11 Truth movement, and blames the American government, or a faction within the American Deep State. The second one claims that the masterminds were members of a powerful Israeli network deeply infiltrated in all spheres of power within the US, including media, government, military and secret services.

This “Mossad job” thesis has been gaining ground since Alan Sabrosky, a professor at the U.S. Army War College and the U.S. Military Academy, published in July 2012 an article entitled “Demystifying 9/11: Israel and the Tactics of Mistake”, where he voiced his conviction that September 11th was “a classic Mossad-orchestrated operation.”

We can notice from the outset that incriminating Israelis or Arabs are both “outside job” theories (in fact, they are mirror images of each other, which is understandable in light of what Gilad Atzmon explains about Jewish “projected guilt”). Before even looking at the evidence, “outside job” sounds more credible that “inside job”. There is something monstrous in the idea that a government can deceive and terrorize its own citizens by killing thousands of them, just for starting a series of wars that are not even in the nation’s interest. By comparison, a foreign power attacking the U.S. under the false flag of a third power almost seems like fair play. Indeed suspicion of Israel’s role should be natural to anyone aware of the reputation of the Mossad as: “Wildcard. Ruthless and cunning. Has capability to target U.S. forces and make it look like a Palestinian/Arab act,” in the words of a report of the U.S. Army School for Advanced Military Studies quoted by the Washington Times, September 10th, 2001 - the day before the attacks.

This is an important point, because it raises the question of how and why the 9/11 Truth movement has been led to endorse massively the outrageous “inside job” thesis without even considering the more likely thesis of an attack by a foreign power acting under an Islamic false flag - and what foreign power but Israel would do that?

Of course, the two dissenting theses do not necessarily exclude each other; at least, no one incriminating Israel denies that corrupted elements from the American administration or deep state were involved. The “passionate attachment” between Israel and the U.S. has been going on for decades, and 9/11 is one of its monstrous offsprings."
View,objectively and without preconceptions, complete article here:
o
And here's the truth! Read it if you dare...