StatCounter

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Dan, I Allegedly, "Your Power Is About To Go Out"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 7/2/26
"Your Power Is About To Go Out"
"America's power grid is being pushed to the limit as record-breaking heat sends electricity demand soaring across the country. The nation's largest power grid has issued emergency warnings, utility companies are struggling with aging infrastructure, and millions of Americans are facing higher electric bills just to stay cool. In this video, I break down why power outages, rolling blackouts, and rising energy costs are becoming a growing concern, how decades of underinvestment have left the electrical grid vulnerable, and why this could impact everything from traffic lights and hospitals to grocery stores, ATMs, and your own home. 

If you've wondered whether the power grid can handle another extreme summer, this is a discussion you won't want to miss. We also discuss the economic impact of skyrocketing utility costs, inflation, the cost of living, and why reliable electricity has become one of the biggest financial issues facing American families. I'll explain what the warnings from grid operators really mean, why demand continues to explode from air conditioning, AI data centers, electric vehicles, and population growth, and most importantly, what you can do to prepare your family before the next outage. As always, we connect the dots between business news and life. Be sure to subscribe to i Allegedly for daily updates on business, finance, the economy, and the biggest stories impacting your money."
Comments here:

"Traffic Through The Strait Of Hormuz Is Way Below Pre-War Levels As Trump Is Briefed On Options For 'All-Out War'”

"Traffic Through The Strait Of Hormuz Is Way Below 
Pre-War Levels As Trump Is Briefed On Options For 'All-Out War'”
by Michael Snyder

"The crisis in the Strait of Hormuz is not even close to being resolved, and global oil supplies continue to get tighter and tighter. The world has been running an “oil deficit” for months, and we have been able to do that by running down commercial oil inventories and strategic national reserves. There was hope that traffic through the Strait of Hormuz would return to pre-war levels before things got really hairy, but that isn’t happening. In fact, in recent days only about 30 to 40 commercial vessels have been traveling through the Strait each day. Before the war, the average was about 120 to 130 commercial vessels per day. The vast majority of the commercial vessels that have been getting through the Strait have been heading away from the Persian Gulf. Very few are headed into the Persian Gulf for understandable reasons. So once the backlog of commercial vessels that have been trapped in the Persian Gulf is finally eliminated, the level of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz will likely drop to depressingly low levels.

So we should be thankful that the price of oil has dropped a bit lower for now, but it won’t stay that way. And that will especially be true if war with Iran fully erupts again. We have seen fighting flare up multiple times in recent weeks, and it certainly wouldn’t take much to push things over the edge.

On Wednesday, it was being reported that President Trump has been briefed on options for “a return to all-out war with Iran”…"President Trump has weighed a return to all-out war with Iran, holding multiple conversations in recent days with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine on more strikes, but has decided to stick with diplomatic talks for now, according to U.S. officials familiar with the discussion.

The conversations have centered on whether the U.S. should abandon negotiations and resume full-scale attacks on Iran, the officials said, a move some of them describe as “finishing the job.” While not making a final decision, Trump has told aides he believes another round of full-scale attacks could derail diplomacy and hurt Washington’s chances of ultimately dismantling Iran’s nuclear program." I was quite surprised when I read that. I didn’t think that Trump and his team had an appetite for more conflict right now.

Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi just used some very strong language in an extremely inflammatory social media post…"The terms of the Islamabad MoU are crystal clear and public for all to see. POTUS has committed the U.S. to muzzling its pets in Tel Aviv. If they ignore their master, Iran will school them. Any threat against our People and Leadership will receive Immediate Powerful Response."

This is a threat to attack Israel. The Iranians are demanding that the Israelis must withdraw from Lebanon, but the Israelis continue to tell us that this will simply not happen…Israel’s defense minister said Wednesday that forces would remain “indefinitely” in so-called security zones established in Lebanon, Syria and the Gaza Strip. “The IDF will not withdraw and will remain in the security zones in Lebanon, Syria, and Gaza – indefinitely – to protect our residents and communities from jihadist elements,” Israel Katz said. “We are fighting to change reality and bring security to the residents of the north,” he added, referring to communities along Israel’s border with Lebanon from which thousands of people have been evacuated due to the threat posed by Iranian-backed Hezbollah.

The Israelis are absolutely determined to stop the bombardment of their northern communities. Since early March, Hezbollah has fired “more than 7,000 rockets, missiles and drones” into Israeli territory…Israeli officials say Hezbollah has launched more than 7,000 rockets, missiles and drones into Israel since early March while embedding military infrastructure inside civilian areas and Christian villages in southern Lebanon.

The claims were made by Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar during MUNI EXPO in Tel Aviv as Israel, Lebanon and the United States continue negotiations aimed at securing Hezbollah’s disarmament and a lasting peace agreement. “Since March alone, Hezbollah has launched more than 7,000 rockets, missiles and drones from Lebanese territory into Israel,” Sa’ar said. “What country can accept this and not act to restore security to its citizens?”

It is inevitable that Hezbollah will fire more rockets, missiles and drones into northern Israel. In response, Israel will bomb southern Beirut again. The Iranians have already told us that if Israel does that again they will fire ballistic missiles at Israel. And once that occurs, the IDF will strike back extremely hard.

I don’t know what those that are convinced that there will be peace in the Middle East are smoking, but it must be really strong. When more fighting erupts in the Middle East, traffic through the Strait of Hormuz will drop lower than it is now. And that is very bad news, because even though the “Memorandum of Understanding” was signed a couple of weeks ago, traffic through the Strait of Hormuz continues to remain at very low levels

Shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz began to rebound Monday following weekend tit-for-tat strikes between the U.S. and Iran. Reports from the maritime tracking firm Kpler said 40 vessels passed through the critical waterway on Monday, while 24 ships transited the strait on Sunday in addition to 39 ships on Saturday. Almost all of the commercial vessels that are passing through the Strait are headed out. Very few are headed in. And many of the ships that are actually headed in are Iranian.

For now, most shipping companies continue to treat the Strait of Hormuz “as a war zone”…Unions and shipping employers said in a statement Wednesday they will continue to designate the Strait of Hormuz as a war zone until at least July 9, maintaining double pay for seafarers in the area despite a fragile truce between the U.S. and Iran. The status only covers ships whose companies are signatories of the International Bargaining Forum’s labor agreements - around 15,000 vessels worldwide, according to the IBF.

Seafarers covered by the agreement working on ships in the Strait of Hormuz and its surrounding waters get paid double, and have the right to refuse to sail into the area and request repatriation at the company’s expense, increasing costs for shipping companies.

This is really bad news for the global economy. On top of everything else, Ukraine’s endless bombardment of Russian oil facilities has caused gasoline shortages all over Russia… Fuel shortages across Russia have triggered a new political challenge for President Vladimir Putin, as a relentless Ukrainian drone campaign aimed at the country’s oil refineries has brought the war home for most ordinary Russians.

While Ukraine has targeted Russian energy facilities for years, the quantity and firepower of Ukrainian drones and missiles have risen. This has allowed Kyiv to hit refineries as far as Tyumen, 1,200 miles away in Siberia, and permitted the spectacular raid that broke through thick layers of air defenses and destroyed Moscow’s main refinery on June 18, the turning point of the current crisis. Some 28% of Russia’s refining capacity was offline as of June 20, estimated Sergey Vakulenko, former head of strategy at Gazprom Neft, a large Russian oil company, and now a senior fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center in Berlin.

Russia is one of the largest oil producers on the entire planet. But now the Russians are being forced to actually import fuel thanks to Ukraine. Everything that I have shared in this article means that global supplies of oil are going to continue to become tighter and tighter in the weeks and months ahead. In other words, the stage is being set for a severe global energy crisis and a mammoth global economic meltdown. For the moment, many investors are still feeling very optimistic about things, but it won’t be too long before they are brutally blindsided by reality."

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

"Amerika The Bountiful: Politicians, Profiteers and Price Gougers"

“These prices are ridiculous. It’s hot out, so you need to 
lower them. You must stop profiteering off the heat wave.”
"Amerika The Bountiful: 
Politicians, Profiteers and Price Gougers"
by David Haggith

"President Trump increasingly runs a communist country as he now regularly socializes major corporations as a condition for granting them the privilege of expanding or making deals. That’s something that has not been a part of America until Trump, except in the case of major corporate bailouts, and it shouldn’t even have happened then. If Chrysler went bankrupt, by historic example,it doesn’t have to mean Chrysler employees all go without work. It means the board of directors and the stockholders all lose a ton of money and have to sell their stocks for dimes on the dollar in order to pay off all creditors; but their loss for stupidity is another person’s gain because someone has to buy those stocks on the other side of those trades, and those people go on to run the company differently. If stock sales cannot even raise enough value to pay off all creditors, it may mean creditors eat some losses, too. That is the risk they should have watched out for.

Those are the risks of doing business. If you cannot take the losses, you shouldn’t be investing in stocks. If you cannot run a company more securely than that because you either take stupid risks, greedy risks (usually the same thing) or just make really dumb business decisions, you’re out. That is what is supposed to happen so that smarter people take control and turn the company back into a going concern.

The government, instead of running bailouts could shepherd those deals in negotiations to make certain they serve the interest of saving jobs for employees who did not make those stupid decisions and likely had little to no say in any of them, except at the top tier. Making sure the sale secures employment as much as possible is also for the sake of keeping the national economy strong. But government should not ever be bailing out the failed barons of industry. Let them flounder in the hot sun like a beached fish.

Of course, government almost always does bail out the big boys, especially where it has favorites, which often means campaign donors. When the government becomes a major stockholder and even takes a position on the board, then the company is guaranteed of being a favorite and will likely get better protections and better opportunities from government contracts as government officials apply pressure on their underlings. Those corporations that have government as a major shareholder will be more likely to get bailouts as the government throws good tax dollars after bad to try to save its investments.

It’s also called Fascist economics because it is how Hitler built his wartime economy with joint ventures between friends in business, corporations and government funds. For decades, it was considered terribly anti-American. Now, it’s considered the Trump business plan. So, we have it happening on a fairly regularly basis these days wherein the US Treasury keeps increasing its holdings in corporations.

It’s not the America I grew up believing in. Capitalism only works properly when it is governed by laws that assure an equal and fair playing field, and government picking winners and losers in major stock purchases is far from an equal and fair playing field. Capitalism also only works when losers are forced to absorb their own losses. The dead wood gets trimmed out and burned. I believe corporate laws should also be rewritten so that they do not protect negligent corporate board members from losing all their possessions in a corporate bankruptcy. Right now they give too much protection. If you cannot stand the risk, stay out of the kitchen. Let employees with less to lose take those positions.

Capitalism is based on survival of the fittest seen in nature, which forces all organisms to compete for their space. Rough as it is, it is also what built a lot of strength into nature. That doesn’t mean it needs to be cage match. It can have rules that everyone has to play by that establish fair play, as any game has, and rules that avoid too many needless injuries as many games have.

For banks, it means, invest your money smartly, or lose it all. Depositors can still be protected over board members and other primary investors in the bank with a different kind of bailout. The FDIC, instead of inputting money into a failing bank to save it, should let bankruptcy do its work and focus on requiring the bank to sell off all shares in a fire sale and award the money from share sales to ALL depositors by shepherding it to new accounts in the new banks that take ownership of the parts and pieces of the failed banks. To the extent that losses born by stockholders on their sale of bank stocks and the sale of other bank assets don't cover all deposits, the FDIC can award its insurance money in the name of the depositors in the new accounts that are created in the banks that buy the parts and pieces to keep the depositors whole. The main stakeholders in the failed bank can all flush down the toilet as they should.

If banks are getting “too big to fail” to where their failure would be catastrophic for the entire economy, that was a failure of government in the first place to ever allow such corporate conglomeration to happen. More competition likely would have been better for depositors and creditors. Big banks should always be disqualified from buying the parts and pieces of the failed dinosaur banks because they are already “too big to fail.” Making them bigger is just plain stupid. To qualify as a bidder in the fire sale, you should have to be a well-run, fully solvent small or midsize bank.

I wrote about all of this with some hopefully humorous lampooning of the idiots in charge of the major banking crisis that dumped us into the Great Recession in my little ebook "DOWNTIME: Why We Fail to Recover from Rinse and Repeat Recession Cycles:" The same characters who created bailout bonanzas for banksters in the Great Recession are doing it again. Shall we let them?

We won’t see the kind of rational government I describe happen, of course, because politicians all love to feed their big, fat friends. They probably have big, fat investments with those friends, especially if they are president of the United States, who’s billions in profits from such investments I covered yesterday in an article titled, “AMERICAN FAIR: The Country May Not Be Great Yet, but the Grift Is Grand!

That is another reason the government should not be allowed to buy shares, even in failing enterprises (or especially in failing enterprises) in order to prop them up. Presidents these days have a tendency to buy shares first when the fire sale looks like the best price, and then use government funds to bail out the enterprise by soaking up a lot more existing shares from the bankrupt bankers that are being forced to liquidate as punishment for their sins, which raises the value of all shares like a stock buyback.

Separation of church and state and separation of business and state are equally good ideas. The government should not be taking ownership control in either of those things or picking winners and losers. In the case of businesses, let the greedy pigs fall flat on their faces and die in their wallows. Push the dirt over them, and move on.

Now we see a new communist move emerging this week from the Trump administration. It’s one I said predicted earlier we could likely see coming as an answer to this energy crisis because we saw it in the days of the Arab (OPEC) oil embargo. That commie move is price controls. The president is demanding gas stations lower prices as oil falls. The problem with price controls is that government, especially Trump government, works by decrees and not always by good sense. Kings can be capricious and demand things that are not even doable. “Make my ugly daughter beautiful, or off with your head.”

Many gas stations are not owned by Big Oil. They are smaller businesses that run convenience stores, even mom-and-pop business that run a single station. If they loaded up their storage tanks when prices were high, they cannot lower prices until they have sold all the fuel they put into those tanks at the higher prices without actually LOSING money.

Granted, there is probably some room here for government to regulate price gouging, but a lot of the price gouging happened when crude oil went up. Many gas stations seized the opportunity to immediately raise prices the next day, even though they did not buy any fuel for their storage tanks. Then they use the argument that they have to wait to lower prices until they buy fuel at the lower prices. That means, until they need to resupply, the reap a windfall.

I’m not sure what the right answer is for curbing opportunistic price gouging, but price controls usually result in poor business. You see it with rent controls where they guarantee slums as owners try to figure out how to keep a profit when costs rise but governments don't allow rents to rise enough to match. Government prices may even be arbitrary wish lists by politicians, like this one by President Trump: "In a Truth Social post, the president called on retailers to reduce prices and urged them to target roughly $2.50 per gallon.

Obviously, he doesn’t drive his own car, or he would know there are few if any parts of the country where that price was a reality even back when oil was $60/bbl. It’s a fantasy price, intended to make him look like a national hero. If he’s talking the base price before gasoline taxes, it might be doable in some areas, but presidents should not be making those decisions because they are often wrong and, as result, force more business losses down the road."

In his typical Iran-style negotiation, Trump also warned that there would be “no gouging,” calling the practice illegal, and suggested that retailers refusing to lower prices could face “big problems.” He might have to annihilate them by totally decimating their gas stations, etc.

Another problem with picking and choosing winners and losers: The president also singled out California, arguing that the state’s high gasoline taxes are artificially driving up prices for consumers. The president hates hyperblue California because he has a lot of political enemies and critics there, such as Senator Adam “Pencil Neck” Schiff, a.k.a. “Shiffty.” “California should stop charging such heavy Taxes on their Gasoline. Soon the Tax will be higher than the Product itself, and the United States will not stand for it, nor will the People of California, who are being abused by these ridiculous Taxes, and by their own Government,” Trump wrote.

The United States under King Trump will not stand for states setting their own taxes. Many things about California government are stupid, but it is their right to be stupid and suffer the consequences of setting up their own socialist government that used high fuel taxes to regulate behavior, supposed to aid in fighting global warming. Won’t that be fun in other states, however, such as when the Democrats are in charge of the White House and decide they won’t stand for Washington State, which has long resisted an income tax at the ballot box, not having a good, sturdy Democratic income tax? The Constitution envisioned it is better to let states set their own taxes, so that taxation is decided closer to the people.

Trump has repeatedly argued that reducing energy costs is central to lowering inflation and easing financial pressure on working families, making cheaper gasoline a key part of his broader economic agenda heading into the fall legislative session.

So is reducing tariffs, which, like those gasoline taxes, get added right into the price of the products. So, maybe he should start by eliminating his own excessive taxes. The consumers don’t get to see the excise tax they are paying on each purchase of goods or services due to tariffs just like consumers of gasoline don’t see the tax on each purchase because it doesn’t show up at the gas pump as a separate readout of what they paid in fuel tax; but they sure get to pay all of those taxes. Trump has tried to bully businesses into not passing the tariffs along just as he is trying to bully states into helping him lower fuel prices from the rise that his war brought about by ditching their taxes. He doesn’t want to own the problems he is creating. Such is endless business and economic control by decree of the central planners.

With all the communist/fascist economic manipulation that is happening in the Trump administration as it picks winners for government money investments, sells crypto to the Treasury for currency assets, awards major mineral contracts to mining companies owned by Trump & Sons, it’s no wonder that the economy keeps grinding down more sluggishly to where the the ADP jobs report came in today, again below 100,000 net new jobs, well below the recession threshold. At 98,000 for June, it was well below the last dismal number of 120,000 for May. When the economy is running healthy, we are usually well over 200,000 net new jobs each month.

As we move more and more into communist/fascist economics, I expect the economy will perform less and less efficiently. That has historically been the failure of centrally planned economies. To the degree China has started doing better, it is because it has started allowing more capitalism. The US, under Trump, is now moving in the opposite direction. One of the reasons America built a strong economy was that we largely resisted too much government involvement, though we’ve increasingly inched away from a market-based economy for a long time. However, we are no longer inching. We are practically running downhill with our arms flailing.

Ask yourself if it is starting to feel like the “golden era” we were promised yet. We’re almost a year-and-a-half into making America great. Is it starting to feel greater or just more centrally controlled and maybe a touch more imperial and hostile under the profiteering president who, surely, would never pick corporate winners and losers based on where his own bets are placed?

The problem with all these things, including Federal Reserve steering of the economy (a power that should also be stripped away from it by ending the Fed’s maximum-employment mandate and forcing it to just regulate the currency for 0% inflation) is that you have to second-guess all your own investments based on what you think the Fed will do and what the government will do, instead of purely on what seems like a good business idea and a well-run business. We are now lightyears away from buying shares in a business just because it is a good business. It’s all a casino now that bets on government bailouts and Fed moves and now government investments because that is where the bulk of the money comes from. Investors follow the money."

"Wars and Rumors Of Wars: The Middle East""

Larry Johnson, 7/1/26
"Trump Was Forced To Sign MOU 
Because Oil Supplies Are In A Catastrophic State"
"Larry Johnson, the former CIA analyst, says there’s a chance that the MOU between the U.S. and Iran holds because of the drop in strategic petroleum reserves and the fact that Washington can’t produce weapons fast enough to respond to Iran’s ballistic missiles.

The Trends Journal is a weekly magazine analyzing global current events forming future trends. Our mission is to present Facts and Truth over fear and propaganda to help subscribers prepare for What's Next in these increasingly turbulent times."
Comments here:
o
Scott Ritter, 7/1/26
"Iran Just Bombed The US 5th Fleet In Bahrain - 
And America Has No Answer"
Comments here:

Jeremiah Babe, "The Economic Data Is Bullsh*t"

Jeremiah Babe, 7/1/26
"The Economic Data Is Bullsh*t"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Michael Franti, "Hey World (Don't Give Up)"

Full screen recommended.
Michael Franti, "Hey World (Don't Give Up)"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Like delicate cosmic petals, these clouds of interstellar dust and gas have blossomed 1,300 light-years away in the fertile star fields of the constellation Cepheus. Sometimes called the Iris Nebula and dutifully cataloged as NGC 7023 this is not the only nebula in the sky to evoke the imagery of flowers. Still, this remarkable image shows off the Iris Nebula's range of colors and symmetries in impressive detail. Within the Iris, dusty nebular material surrounds a hot, young star.
The dominant color of the brighter reflection nebula is blue, characteristic of dust grains reflecting starlight. Central filaments of the dusty clouds glow with a faint reddish photoluminesence as some dust grains effectively convert the star's invisible ultraviolet radiation to visible red light. Infrared observations indicate that this nebula may contain complex carbon molecules known as PAHs. The bright blue portion of the Iris Nebula is about six light-years across.”

"Memories And Feelings..."

"Memories and feelings of nostalgia are nothing more than cruelties; they are the most beautiful lies we will ever convince ourselves to believe. We chase the false hope so fiercely that we nearly push ourselves past the edges of our sanity, longing for that which can never be in our possession again. These edges are blurred by our regrets and desperation all throughout the darkest hours of the night, until finally we are set free from the illusions and the ghosts of our past with the rising of the sun... and we are changed in some small, yet permanent way."
- Margaret E. Rise

"A Lot Of People..."

"When science discovers the center of the universe
a lot of people will be disappointed to find they are not."
- Bernard Baily

"Edward Abbey on How to Live and How to Die"

"Edward Abbey on How to Live and How to Die: 
Immortal Wisdom from the Park Ranger Who Inspired Generations"
by Maria Popova

"The summer after graduating high school, knowing he would face conscription into the military as soon as his eighteenth birthday arrived, Edward Abbey (January 29, 1927–March 14, 1989) set out to get to know the land he was being asked to die for. He hitchhiked and hopped freight trains, rode in ramshackle busses and walked sweltering miles across the American Southwest. Upon returning home to Pennsylvania, he was promptly drafted and spent two reluctant years as a military police officer in occupied Italy. 

Defiant of authority and opposed to the war, he was demoted twice and finally honorably discharged “by reason of demobilization of men.” When he received the discharge papers, he wrote “RETURN TO SENDER” on the envelope in big bold letters to signal that he was never willing for the job he was being fired from. The FBI took note and opened a file, to which they would later add the World Peace Movement he organized on his college campus, his acts of civil disobedience to protect old-growth forests from the corporate chainsaw, and his attendance of a Conference in Defense of Children in Vienna, deemed “communist initiated.”

Even as a teenager, Abbey understood that ideologies are only ever defeated not with guns but with ideas, so he decided to subvert the system by enrolling to study philosophy and literature at the University of New Mexico under the G.I. Bill. He spent the rest of his twenties traveling (he fell especially in love with Scotland, thinking about what makes life worth living, and dreaming of becoming a writer. It was when he took a job as a park ranger at thirty that he found the material for his first book: the ravishing "Desert Solitaire," which went on to inspire generations of writers and environmental activists, among them Wendell Berry, Gary Snyder, Cheryl Strayed, and Rebecca Solnit.

Throughout his life, Abbey kept a journal that stands as a crowning curio in the canon of notable diaries, selections from which were posthumously published as "Confessions of a Barbarian" (public library). In an entry penned just before his twenty-fifth birthday, when most of us move through the world feeling invincible and immortal, Abbey contemplates the end of life:

"How To Die - but first, how not to: Not in a smelly old bloody-gutted bed in a rest-home room drowning in the damp wash from related souls groping around you in an ocean heavy with morbid fascination with agony, sin and guilt, expiated, with clinical faces and automatic tear glands functioning perfunctorily and a fat priest on the naked heart.

Not in snowy whiteness under arc lights and klieg lights and direct television hookup. No never under clinical smells and sterilized medical eyes cool with detail calculated needle-prolonged agonizing, stiff and starchy in the white monastic cell, no.

Not in the muddymire of battle blood commingled with charnel-flesh and others’ blood, guts, bones, mud and excrement in the damp smell of blasted and wrung-out air; nor in the mass-packed weight of the cities atomized while masonry topples and chandeliers crash clashing buried with a million others, no.

Not the legal murder either - too grim and ugly such a martyrdom - down long aisled with chattering Christers chins on shoulders under bright lights again a spectacle an entertainment grim sticky-quiet officialdom and heavy-booted policemen guiding the turning of a pubic hair gently grinding in a knucklebone an arm hard and obscene fat-assed policemen everywhere under the judicial - not to be murdered so, no never.

But how to: Alone, elegantly, a wolf on a rock, old pale and dry, dry bones rattling in the leather bag, eyes alight, high, dry, cool, far off, dim distance alone, free as a dying wolf on a pale dry rock gurgling quietly alone between the agony-spasms of beauty and delight; when the first flash of hatred comes to crawl, ease off casually forward into space the old useless body, falling, turning, glimpsing for one more time the blue evening sky and the far distant lonesome rocks below - before the crash, before…

"With none to say no, none.
Way off yonder in the evening blue, in the gloaming."

When he did die a lifetime later, alone in his desert home, Abbey left a winking note for anyone seeking his final words: “No Comment.” He requested that his useless body be used “to help fertilize the growth of a cactus or cliff rose or sagebrush or tree.” Wishing to have no part in the funeral industry’s embalmments and coffins, he asked his friends to ignore the state laws, place him in his favorite blue sleeping bag, and bury him right into the thirsty ground. If a wake was to be held, he wanted it simple, brief, and cheerful, with bagpipe music, “lots of singing, dancing, talking, hollering, laughing, and lovemaking,” and no formal speeches - “though the deceased will not interfere if someone feels the urge.” When the wake was held at Arches National Park, where he had found his voice as a writer, Wendell Berry and Terry Tempest Williams were among those who felt the urge.

Long after he composed his passionate prospectus for how (not) to die and not long before he returned his borrowed atoms to the earth, Abbey offered his best advice on how to live in a speech he delivered before a gathering of environmental activists: "It is not enough to fight for the land; it is even more important to enjoy it. While you can. While it’s still here.

So… ramble out yonder and explore the forests, climb the mountains, bag the peaks, run the rivers, breathe deep of that yet sweet and lucid air, sit quietly for a while and contemplate the precious stillness, the lovely, mysterious, and awesome space.

Enjoy yourselves, keep your brain in your head and your head firmly attached to the body, the body active and alive, and I promise you this much; I promise you this one sweet victory over our enemies, over those desk-bound men and women with their hearts in a safe deposit box, and their eyes hypnotized by desk calculators. I promise you this; You will outlive the bastards."

Couple with Anna Belle Kaufman’s spare and stunning poem about how to live and how to die, then revisit the poetic science of what actually happens when we die.
o
"Life is hard? True - but let's love it anyhow,
though it breaks every bone in our bodies."
- Edward Abbey
o
"Benedicto"
“May your trails be crooked, winding, lonesome, dangerous, leading to the most amazing view. May your mountains rise into and above the clouds. May your rivers flow without end, meandering through pastoral valleys tinkling with bells, past temples and castles and poets' towers into a dark primeval forest where tigers belch and monkeys howl, through miasmal and mysterious swamps and down into a desert of red rock, blue mesas, domes and pinnacles and grottos of endless stone, and down again into a deep vast ancient unknown chasm where bars of sunlight blaze on profiled cliffs, where deer walk across the white sand beaches, where storms come and go as lightning clangs upon the high crags, where something strange and more beautiful and more full of wonder than your deepest dreams waits for you - beyond that next turning of the canyon walls.” - Edward Abbey

"We've All Heard..."

"The early bird catches the worm. A stitch in time saves nine. He who hesitates is lost. We can’t pretend we haven’t been told. We’ve all heard the proverbs, heard the philosophers, heard our grandparents warning us about wasted time, heard the damn poets urging us to seize the day. Still, sometimes, we have to see for ourselves. We have to make our own mistakes. We have to learn our own lessons. We have to sweep today’s possibility under tomorrow’s rug, until we can’t anymore, until we finally understand for ourselves what Benjamin Franklin meant: That knowing is better than wondering. That waking is better than sleeping. And that even the biggest failure, even the worst, most intractable mistake, beats the hell out of never trying.”
- “Meredith”, “Grey’s Anatomy”

The Daily "Near You?"

San Luis Obispo, California, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"The Rules..."

 

"So..."

"That life. This life. It looks as if you can have both. I mean, they're both right there, one on top of the other, and it looks as if they'll blend. But they never will. So, you take this thing. You take this thing you want, and you put it in a box and you close the lid. You can let your fingers trace the cracks, the places where the light gets in, the dark gets out, but the lid stays on. You don't look inside. You don't look at this thing you want so much, because you Can. Not. Have. It. So there's this box, you know, with the thing inside, and you could throw it away or shoot it into space; you could set it on fire and watch it burn to ashes, but really, none of that would make a difference, because you cannot destroy what you want. It only makes you want it more. So. You take this thing you want and you put it in a box and you close the lid. And you hold the box close to your heart, which is where it wants to go, and you pretend it doesn't kill you every time you feel yourself breathe."
- Megan Hart

The Poet: Rainer Maria Rilke, "And Yet"

"And Yet"

"And yet, though we strain
against the deadening grip
of daily necessity,
I sense there is this mystery:
All life is being lived.
Who is living it then?
Is it the things themselves,
or something waiting inside them,
like an unplayed melody in a flute?
Is it the winds blowing over the waters?
Is it the branches that signal to each other?
Is it flowers
interweaving their fragrances
or streets, as they wind through time?"

~ Rainer Maria Rilke

"A Good Morning Makes No Noise"

Full screen recommended.
Ajimebabo Art,
"A Good Morning Makes No Noise" 
"Sometimes the most beautiful mornings are the quietest ones. Follow a peaceful countryside morning as the kettle hums, the old dog stretches, and sunlight slowly fills the farm. This gentle poetic narration celebrates slow living, mindfulness, simplicity, and the beauty of everyday life. If you enjoy relaxing poetry, calm storytelling, nature-inspired reflections, and peaceful slow-living moments, this video is for you."

Native Elder, "The Truth About American Society"

Full screen recommended.
Native Elder,
"The Truth About American Society"

Delta King's Blues, "Welcome To Middle Age"

Full screen recommended.
Delta King's Blues,
"Welcome To Middle Age"
Getting older is a good thing, if you're lucky enough to do it.
The alternative is less appealing...

"How It Really Is"

 

Did you really believe you'd receive this?

"I Know Why You Did It..."

Full screen recommended.
"There are of course those who do not want us to speak. I suspect even now, orders are being shouted into telephones, and men with guns will soon be on their way. Why? Because while the truncheon may be used in lieu of conversation, words will always retain their power. Words offer the means to meaning, and for those who will listen, the enunciation of truth. And the truth is, there is something terribly wrong with this country, isn't there? Cruelty and injustice, intolerance and oppression. And where once you had the freedom to object, to think and speak as you saw fit, you now have censors and systems of surveillance coercing your conformity and soliciting your submission. How did this happen? Who's to blame? Well certainly there are those more responsible than others, and they will be held accountable, but again truth be told, if you're looking for the guilty, you need only look into a mirror. I know why you did it. I know you were afraid. Who wouldn't be? War, terror, disease. There were a myriad of problems which conspired to corrupt your reason and rob you of your common sense. Fear got the best of you, and in your panic you turned to the government. They promised you order, they promised you peace, and all they demanded in return was your silent, obedient consent."
- "V For Vendetta"

"Trinity’s Shadow"

"Trinity’s Shadow"
by Edward Curtin

"I sit here in the silence of the awakening dawn’s stillness stunned by the realization that I exist. I wonder why. It is my birthday. The first rays of the rising sun bleed crimson over the eastern hills as I imagine my birth. The house and my family sleep.

Someday I will die and I wonder why. This is the mystery I have been contemplating since I was young. That and the fact that I was born in a time of war and that when my parents and sisters were celebrating my first birthday, my country’s esteemed civilian and military leaders celebrated another birth: the detonation of the first atomic bomb code-named Trinity.

Trinity has shadowed my life, while the other Trinity has enkindled my days. Sick minds play sick word games as they inflict pain and death. They nicknamed this death bomb “the Gadget,” as if it were an innocent little toy. They took and blasphemed the Christian mystery of the Trinity as if they were mocking God, which they were. They thought they were gods. Now they are all dead gods, their fates sealed in their tombs.

Where are they now? Where are all their victims, the innocent dead of Hiroshima and Nagasaki? Where are the just and the unjust? Where are the living now, asleep or awake as Trinity’s progenitors in Washington, D.C. and the Pentagon prepare their doomsday machines for a rerun, the final first-strike run, the last lap in their race to annihilate all the living? Will they sing as they launch the missiles – “So long, farewell, auf Wiedersehen, good night?”

The wheel turns. We count the years. We wonder why.

Years ago I started my academic life by writing a thesis entitled “Dealing With Death or Death Dealing.” It was a study of the transformation of cultural symbol systems, death, and nuclear weapons. The last hundred years and more have brought a transformation and disintegration of the traditional religious symbol system – the sacred canopy – that once gave people comfort, meaning, and hope. Science, technology, and nuclear weapons have changed all that. Death has been socially relocated and we live under the nuclear umbrella, a sinister “safeguard” that is cold comfort. The ultimate power of death over all life has been transferred from God to men, those controlling the nuclear weapons. This subject has never left me. I suppose it has haunted me. It is not a jolly subject, but I think it has chosen me. Was I born in a normal time? Is war time our normal time? It is. I was.

But to be born at a time and place when your country’s leaders were denouncing their German and Japanese enemies as savage war criminals while execrably emulating them and then outdoing them is something else again. With Operation Paperclip following World War II, the United States government secretly brought 1,600 or more Nazi war criminals into the U.S. to run our government’s military, intelligence, space, chemical, and biological warfare programs. We became Nazis. Lewis Mumford put it this way in "The Pentagon of Power":

"By the curious dialectic of history, Hitler’s enlargement and the refurbishment of the Nazi megamachine gave rise to the conditions for creating those counter-instruments that would conquer it and temporarily wreck it. In short, in the very act of dying the Nazis transmitted their disease to their American opponents; not only the methods of compulsive organization or physical destruction, but the moral corruption that made it feasible to employ those methods without stirring opposition."

There are always excuses for such moral corruption. When during WW II the U.S. firebombed almost all Japanese cities, Dresden and Cologne in Germany, and then dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki killing hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians in gratuitously savage attacks, these were justified and even celebrated as necessary to defeat evil enemies. Just as Nazi war criminals were welcomed into the U.S. government under the aegis of Allen Dulles, who became the longest running CIA director and the key to JFK’s assassination and coverup, the diabolic war crimes of the U.S. were swept away as acts of a moral nation fighting a good war. What has followed are decades of U.S. war crimes from Korea through Vietnam and Iraq, etc. A very long list.

The English dramatist Harold Pinter, in his Nobel Address, put it bluntly: "It never happened. Nothing ever happened. Even while it was happening it wasn’t happening. It didn’t matter. It was of no interest. The crimes of the United States have been systematic, constant, vicious, remorseless, but very few people have actually talked about them. You have to hand it to America. It has exercised a quite clinical manipulation of power worldwide while masquerading as a force for universal good. It’s a brilliant, even witty, highly successful act of hypnosis."

Nothing could be truer. When in 2014 the U.S. engineered the coup in Ukraine (coups being an American specialty), it allied itself with neo-Nazi forces to oppose Russia. This alliance should have shocked no one; it is the American way. Back in the 1980s when the U.S. was supporting death squads in Central America, Ronald Reagan told the world that “The Contras are the moral equivalent of the Founding Fathers.” Now the Ukrainian president Zelensky is feted as a great hero, Biden telling him in an Oval Office visit that “it’s an honor to be by your side.” Such alliances are not anomalies but the crude reality of U. S. history.

But let me return to “Trinity,” the ultimate weapon of mass destruction since I was reading an article about it. Kai Bird, the coauthor of "American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer," the book that inspired the film "Oppenheimer" about J. Robert Oppenheimer, the scientist credited as “the father of the atomic bomb” and the man who named the first atomic bomb Trinity, has written an Op Ed piece in The New York Times titled, “The Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer.” True in certain respects, this article is an example of how history can be slyly used to distort the present for political purposes. In typical NY Times fashion, Bird tells certain truths while concealing, distorting, and falsifying others.

I do not consider Oppenheimer a tragic figure, as does Bird. Complicated, yes; but he was essentially a hubristic scientist who lent his services to a demonic project, and afterwards, having let the cat out of the bag by creating the Bomb, guiltily urged the government that used it in massive war crimes to restrain itself in the future. Asking for such self-regulation is as absurd as asking the pharmaceutical or big tech industries to regulate themselves.

Bird rightly says that Oppenheimer did not regret his work inventing the atomic bomb, and he correctly points out the injustice of his being maligned and stripped of his security clearance in 1954 in a secret hearing by a vote of 2 to 1 of a security panel of The Atomic Energy Commission for having communist associations. “Celebrated in 1945 as the ‘father of the atomic bomb,’” Bird writes, “nine years later he would become the chief celebrity victim of the McCarthyite maelstrom.” A “victim,” I should add, who named names to save his own reputation.

But tucked within his article, Bird tells us: “Just look at what happened to our public health civil servants during the recent pandemic.” By which he means these officials like Anthony Fauci were maligned when they gave the public correct scientific information. This is absurd. Fauci – “attacks on me quite frankly are attacks on science” – and other government “civil servants” misinformed the public and lied over and over again, but Bird implies they too were tragic figures like Oppenheimer.

He writes: "We stand on the cusp of another technological revolution in which artificial intelligence will transform how we live and work, and yet we are not yet having the kind of informed civil discourse with its innovators that could help us to make wise policy decisions on its regulation. Our politicians need to listen more to technology innovators like Sam Altman and quantum physicists like Kip Thorne and Michio Kaku."

Here too he urges “us” to listen to the very people responsible for Artificial Intelligence, just as “we” should have listened to Oppenheimer after he brought us the atomic bomb. Implicit here is the belief that science just marches progressively on and there’s no stopping it, and when dangerous technologies emerge from scientists’ work, we should trust them to control them.

Nowhere does Bird suggest that scientists have a moral obligation before the fact to not pursue a certain line of research because of its grave possible consequences. Maybe he has never read Mary Shelley’s "Frankenstein", only written over two hundred years ago.

Finally, and most importantly, Bird begins his concluding paragraph with these words: "Today, Vladimir Putin’s not-so-veiled threats to deploy tactical nuclear weapons in the war in Ukraine are a stark reminder that we can never be complacent about living with nuclear weapons This is simply U.S. propaganda. The U.S. has provoked and fueled the war in Ukraine, broken all nuclear weapon treaties, surrounded Russia with military bases, stationed nuclear weapons in Europe, engaged in nuclear blackmail with its first strike policy and threats, etc. Putin has said in response that if – and only if – the very existence of the Russian state and land is threatened with extinction would the use of nuclear weapons be considered."

A little history is informative. “Barely six weeks after the Hiroshima-Nagsaki bombings,” Michel Chossudovsky tells us, “the US War Department [Pentagon] issued a blueprint (September 15, 1945) to ‘Wipe the Soviet Union off the Map’ (66 cities with 204 atomic bombs), when the US and the USSR were allies. This infamous project is confirmed by declassified documents.” (For further details see Chossudovsky, 2017)

Below is the image of the 66 cities of the Soviet Union which had been envisaged as targets by the US War Department. 


But back to Bird, who, in writing a piece about Oppenheimer’s “tragedy” and defending science, has also subtly defended a trinity of other matters: the government “science” on Covid, the transformative power coming from AI, and the U.S. propaganda about Russia and nuclear weapons. There is no mention of JFK’s call to abolish nuclear weapons. This is how the “paper of record” does its job.

I sit here now at the end of the day. Shadows are falling and I contemplate such trinities. I am stunned by the fact that we exist, but under a terrifying Shadow that many wish to ignore. Jung saw this shadow side as not just personal but social, and when it is ignored, the collective evils of modern societies can autonomously erupt. Bird argues that nuclear weapons are the result of a scientific quest that is unstoppable. He writes that Oppenheimer “understood that you cannot stop curious human beings from discovering the physical world around them [and then making nuclear bombs or designer babies].”

This is the ideology of progress that brooks no opposition since it is declared inevitable. It is a philosophy that believes there should be no limits to human knowledge, which would include the knowledge of good and evil, but which can then be ignored since it and all thought and beliefs are considered a priori to be relative. The modern premise that everything is relative is of course a contradiction since it is an absolute statement. Many share this philosophy of despair disguised as progress as it has crept into everything today. It is tragic, for if people accept it, we are doomed to follow a Faustian pact with the devil and all hell will follow. I think of Bob Dylan singing : 
"I just don’t see why I should even care,
          It’s not dark yet, but it’s gettin’ there..."             

But I do care, and I wonder why. As night comes on, I sit here and wonder."

"The AI Jobs Apocalypse Has Begun: We Are Witnessing An Unprecedented Wave Of AI-Related Layoffs In 2026"

"The AI Jobs Apocalypse Has Begun: We Are Witnessing
 An Unprecedented Wave Of AI-Related Layoffs In 2026"
by Michael Snyder

"We all knew that this would be coming. In 2026, the rate of AI-related layoffs has greatly accelerated, and that means that large numbers of good paying jobs are suddenly disappearing from the economy. This is occurring when we are already facing one major crisis after another, and so the timing could not be worse. Many young people specifically chose a major in college that would prepare them for positions in the tech industry because those were supposed to be the jobs of the future. Unfortunately, the AI jobs apocalypse is wiping out those jobs the fastest.

Let me give you some cold, hard numbers that will clearly demonstrate what I am talking about. According to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, the number of announced job cuts in the United States last month was the highest that we have seen during the month of May since the peak of the last pandemic…"U.S.-based employers announced 97,006 job cuts in May, up 16% from the 83,387 job cuts recorded in April, and up 3% from the 93,816 announced in the same month last year, according to a report released Thursday from global outplacement and executive coaching firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

May’s total is the highest for the month since 2020, when 397,016 job cuts were recorded in May at the height of the pandemic. It also marks the third straight month that cuts have risen, climbing from 48,307 in February to 97,006 in May."

There is no way to spin those numbers to make them look good. And for the third month in a row, artificial intelligence accounted for more layoffs than any other reason…"In May, Artificial Intelligence (AI) led all reasons for job cuts for the third month in a row, with 38,579 announced cuts. It is the highest monthly total ever recorded for the reason since Challenger began tracking it in 2023, and it accounted for 40% of all cuts announced in May - up from just 7% in January, 25% in March, and 26% in April. For the year, AI has been cited in 87,714 cuts, or 22% of all 2026 layoffs, already far surpassing the 54,836 attributed to the reason in all of 2025."

Read that last sentence again. The number of AI-related layoffs in 2026 has already surpassed the grand total of AI-related layoffs for the entire year of 2025. That is how fast things are now moving. Needless to say, the tech industry is being hit the hardest.

At this point, tech layoffs are running 44 percent faster than last year…"So far this year, there have been an estimated 363 layoffs at tech companies this year, affecting nearly 150,000 people - a pace of about 974 people per day, 44% faster than last year - according to TrueUp, a tech job board and recruiting platform that also runs one of the most widely cited tech layoff trackers."

The trend appears to be accelerating. Tech layoffs hit their highest single month in two years last month, with nearly 40,000 cuts, and AI was the most-cited reason for layoffs across every industry for the third month running, according to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

There is no long-term loyalty in the tech industry anymore. The moment that AI can do your work more efficiently than you can, you are in danger of being let go. Some of you out there have personally experienced this. During the past six months, we have seen some of the biggest names in tech radically transform their workforces…Several major tech companies have announced significant workforce reductions this year while simultaneously ramping up investments in artificial intelligence.

Oracle disclosed recently that it has reduced its workforce by roughly 21,000 employees (4) over the past year. Meanwhile, Google has continued trimming staff (5) through performance reviews, buyout programs and reorganizations, with outside estimates suggesting between 1,500 and 3,000 engineering roles have been eliminated in 2026.

Meta also laid off roughly 8,000 employees earlier this year while shifting about 7,000 workers into AI-focused roles, highlighting how some companies are cutting jobs in certain areas while continuing to invest heavily in artificial intelligence.

This is just the beginning. And it is going to spread to every industry. If you can believe it, a major tobacco company just announced that it is planning to “cut about 20% of its workforce as it pursues an AI-driven ‌overhaul”…"British American Tobacco (BATS.L), opens new tab plans to cut about 20% of its workforce as it pursues an AI-driven ‌overhaul to lower costs and lift profits amid regulatory challenges and delayed launches. The maker of Lucky Strike and Dunhill cigarettes said on Monday it would cut around 5,500 jobs and move roughly 3,500 roles to third-party firms, including Accenture. The restructuring would affect around 9,000 employees in total, but excludes the U.S., the company’s biggest ​market."

BitGo is another firm that is ruthlessly firing employees for AI-related reasons…"BitGo has joined the growing ranks of crypto firms slashing staff numbers as part of a pivot to AI. The crypto custody and infrastructure company is cutting nearly 15% of its workforce, co-founder and CEO Mike Belshe said Thursday in a tweet that BitGo also filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission."

A lot of the workers that are hitting the bricks are relatively young. In the past, it was fairly easy to find another tech industry job, but now that has completely changed. In fact, it has become so difficult to find a tech job these days that many job seekers have resorted to “spraying and praying”…"To survive this nightmarish job market, candidates are now “spraying and praying,” as one career coach described it — or paying resume services to blast out thousands of CVs per day to game the system and land a gig. However, according to experts in the tech industry who spoke with SFGATE, this is only creating a vicious cycle of inefficiency that hurts both workers and companies.

According to a recent survey conducted by Robert Half, a Bay Area talent and business solutions firm, over 50% of hiring managers said that AI-generated resumes are “flooding the market,” making it difficult to weed out candidates who are actually qualified for roles. To combat this torrent of resumes, 33% of hiring managers are now using AI-detection tools and spending more time training employees on how to spot ones that feel authentic.

“Many hiring managers tell us it’s becoming harder to distinguish between applicants because AI-generated resumes often use similar language, formatting and keywords,” Terah Brossart Daniels, a technology jobs expert with Robert Half, said. “Another issue is authenticity. A resume may look impressive on paper, but employers are spending more time validating whether a candidate’s experience, accomplishments and technical skills hold up throughout the interview process.”

If conditions are this bad now, what will the employment market look like once things really start falling apart in this country? We were promised that AI would unleash a new golden age of peace and prosperity for our society. Obviously that is not what is actually happening. AI technology will continue to advance at an exponential rate, and soon millions more human workers will become obsolete. This story is not going to end well, but most of you have already figured that out."
o
Full screen recommended.
The Unfolded States, 7/1/26
"Mass Layoffs Are Coming for 
White Collar Jobs in 2026"
"Why are so many profitable companies laying off white-collar workers in 2026? Mass layoffs, slowing hiring, falling salary offers, AI-driven automation, outsourcing, and rising corporate pressure are quietly reshaping the labor market. But are these layoffs really about artificial intelligence, or is something much bigger happening beneath the surface? Here's the thing... many workers have noticed that something feels different, even if they cannot fully explain it. From sudden layoffs at major tech companies to shrinking salary offers for experienced professionals, the market is shifting in ways that go far beyond job cuts. What looks like a normal layoff cycle may actually be the beginning of a much deeper reset. What most people do not realize is that these changes are not random. They are being driven by a combination of AI adoption, wage compression, labor oversupply, offshoring, shareholder pressure, and corporate restructuring. 

As companies push for higher efficiency and lower labor costs, the balance of power between employers and workers is changing fast. The reality is this: the biggest risk in 2026 may not be unemployment alone. It may be a labor market where millions remain employed, but at lower pay, with weaker negotiating power and far less security than just a few years ago. Watch till the end and share your opinion. Is AI truly replacing jobs, or are companies using it to justify a much larger white-collar reset?"
Comments here: