StatCounter

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Gerald Celente, "The Trends Journal"

Strong Language Alert!
Gerald Celente, 4/28/26
"From Boomer Miniskirts To Blimpitis Maxiskirts: 
The World Is Carrying A Heavy Load"
"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:

LOL, Gerald's in fine form!

"Alert! There's Nothing To Negotiate, A Bigger War Is Coming"

Full screen recommended.
Prepper News, 4/28/26
"Alert! There's Nothing To Negotiate, 
A Bigger War Is Coming"
Comments here:

"They're Not Telling You The Truth, The Day of Reckoning is Nearing"

Jeremiah Babe, 4/28/26
"They're Not Telling You The Truth, 
The Day of Reckoning is Nearing"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Deuter, "Song Of The Last Tree"

Deuter, "Song Of The Last Tree"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Grand spiral galaxies often seem to get all the glory. Their young, blue star clusters and pink star forming regions along sweeping spiral arms are guaranteed to attract attention. But small irregular galaxies form stars too, like NGC 4449, about 12 million light-years distant. Less than 20,000 light-years across, the small island universe is similar in size, and often compared to our Milky Way's satellite galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). 
 Click image for larger size.
This remarkable Hubble Space Telescope close-up of the well-studied galaxy was reprocessed to highlight the telltale reddish glow of hydrogen gas. The glow traces NGC 4449's widespread star forming regions, some even larger than those in the LMC, with enormous interstellar arcs and bubbles blown by short-lived, massive stars. NGC 4449 is a member of a group of galaxies found in the constellation Canes Venatici. Interactions with the nearby galaxies are thought to have influenced star formation in NGC 4449.”

"The Universe"

“Nothing is ever lost in this adventure of all adventures. The lessons and discoveries of every single life, no matter how large or small, difficult or easy, are added to the whole. Like stones in the base of a pyramid, they permanently raise and forever support every manner of adventure that follows. And so it is that the hearts of those who came first continue to beat in all subsequent generations forevermore. Every single life is added to the whole, and yet each remains its precious unique self.” 
“I got you, babe -” 
    The Universe

“Thoughts become things... choose the good ones!”

“If Only You Knew”

“If Only You Knew”
by Teresa Marchese

“That morning, I saw a young man, hanging dead from a tree. It started out as a typical Friday morning. It was 6:45 am. I brought the "toys" today; weights, bars, balls and boxing gloves, to have my clients work at stations. I run Rock Solid Fitness, a women's outdoor fitness club, at San Francisco's Land's End. We run trails and hills and stairs on this rocky park of cypress and redwood. But this morning, the first client to arrive begged for a "wimpy" workout, so we headed out to Land's End trail. It was a beautiful morning, and I thought some deep stretching overlooking the Golden Gate as the sun rose was in good order.

Walking that path shoulder to shoulder with three of the amazing women with whom I begin each day, whose stories I learn, whose lives weave through mine with soft, smiling, shimmering threads. An evening at the theater was recounted, a daughter was praised, a mention of Bill Clinton's charm (if you were to meet him in person), a reference to Vince Neil. Setting a quick pace, marching on, the stories continued. Looking forward, as I tend to do, I noticed an unfamiliar silhouette in those well-known woods. My stomach lurched, but only slightly, as I was unbelieving. A body hung from a tree, heels in the leafy ground. "Is it real?" I asked, as we moved toward him. Hands. Face. Body. It looked almost an effigy, a sick waxy joke, at the end of a rope.

We moved closer. And we moved quickly. There was no doubt he was real. There was no doubt he was dead. Clearly trained in knots, he had hung himself well in the night with a brand new electrical cord. A suicide. Finished.

He was young. Early twenties? Looking back, I wonder if he was younger, maybe in his teens. I don't meet Death often, but I suppose his mask makes one look older. Apart from being lifeless, he was everything a young man should be - handsome, well-heeled, sporting backpack and iPod. Hood up over dark curly hair - a San Francisco kid. His hands rested, resolute, at his sides.

Not one of us hesitated to touch him, to hold him, to relieve the tension that took his last breath. We four women strongly played our part - mother, sister, tender, friend - released him from his hold. Normally, I'm in charge. I'm the teacher. I'm the trainer. I give the orders. But something else took over here - a solidarity among women. One a doctor, another a mother, all of us upright and bold. We didn't speak. We didn't need to, I guess. We understood that we wanted to get him down and we moved accordingly. The thick branch that held him was about seven-and-a-half feet off the ground. I got underneath him and lifted his weight as the tallest of us lifted the smallest of us to reach and unwrap the cable. We laid him on the soft, grassy earth. Our doctor checked his pulse, his pupils. I felt his fingers, tried to open his stiff hand.

I looked at the group, I knew none of us was carrying a phone. Addressing the three of them, I said, "You'll stay? And I'll go for help." Help? There was no helping this one. I would take the next proper step. I spotted a morning hiker, ran to him and explained the situation. I took his phone while he went to the parking lot to direct the first-responders to the trail.

911 answered immediately, but wanted an address. Frustrated, I asked to be connected to San Francisco dispatch, to someone who could listen to my instructions and understand where I was. I heard sirens within two minutes, hung up the phone, and waved the paramedics to the trailhead. The first jumped from the engine to walk with me. "How do you know he's dead?" he asked me. "He's dead," I answered.

We left them to their work and deferentially gave a park police officer our statements. We were commended for staying - merely for staying on the scene. Most people call and leave, he told us. Really? How can someone just walk away from the dead? Because we took him down, we had to give detailed written statements. Our foursome huddled together in one car and rode in silence. There was a deep sadness and reverence among us - among all of us. Even the paramedics and the police officers, who surely meet grief often, were dejected and mindful. Because of the hour and "remote" location, the scene was respectfully not tainted with gawking onlookers and gossip-hungry voyeurs. For this, I was grateful.

We handed over our statements, hugged each other hard, and dispersed. It was 7:58 a.m. I canceled my next class and the day's remaining appointments and sat in my truck for a while, looking out over the edge of the world. I wanted to shout out to everyone I love, "We belong on this earth! We are here for a reason! Stay here with me!" I decided I would do just that, in my own way. I would start with my husband. I drove home, vowing to better love those I love, as well as those I don't yet.

To the family of the nameless one, I am sorry I could not speak his name. Please know he was carefully and lovingly tended to when he was found. Four gentle, but rock-solid women, took him from that tree and laid him down to rest.

To the nameless one, whom I briefly held, I'm sorry. I'm sorry for the loss of those who loved you. (They did, of course, you know.) I'm sorry that it wasn't enough for you, here, now. Alas, you've moved on, young friend. You left your sorrow in that tree. Let your despair roll down those rocky cliffs, and be taken with the tide, pummeled and churned in the pacific surf, sprayed and splayed on the horizon, metamorphosed into air and light. Now do you see that you interrupted the rhythm of all things? If only you could have known how important you are to the fabric of this life, this place, you could have stayed, and lived your short life longer. You surely would have cried more tears, but you would have laughed more, you would have loved, you would have learned and lost and traveled. You might have started a business, a revolution, a country. You might have saved a life. I wish you would have. And now I wish I would have.”

"The Glitter Of The Sun..."

“I am part of the sun as my eye is part of me. That I am part of the earth my feet know perfectly, and my blood is part of the sea. There is not any part of me that is alone and absolute except my mind, and we shall find that the mind has no existence by itself, it is only the glitter of the sun on the surfaces of the water.”
- D. H. Lawrence

The Poet: Paul Fisher, "The Boat"

"The Boat"
"Maybe the eyes of a dragon or goddess
glare from its prow.
More likely it leaks, loses an oar,
and reeks of rainbows awash on a sheen
of gutted salmon and gasoline.
If it’s a liner, we lash ourselves
to whatever will float or sell.
No matter which. We choose. We’re aboard,
icebergs or no, as we plow
through the songs of the siren stars-
one boat, black water, dark whispering below."
- Paul Fisher, 
"Rumors of Shore"

The Daily "Near You?"

Saint Petersburg, Saint Petersburg City, Russian Federation.
Thanks for stopping by!

"Hanging by a Thread"

"Hanging by a Thread"
by Todd Hayen

"It is quite amazing how close people are to serious mental illness. What is serious mental illness? Suicidal depression, psychosis, anxiety that requires hospitalization, and frankly anything that keeps a person from living a functional life, a life with its share of sadness, trauma and suffering, but also with moments of happiness, fulfillment, love and laughter.

That’s serious mental illness. What about “not so serious” mental illness? Well, we’ve got a lot more of that than one could even imagine. And then twice that many hanging by the thread, just about ready to drop into depression, anxiety, personality disorders of a dizzying variety, sadness, emotional dysfunction, relational wackiness, on and on. It is a pandemic, and yes, a real one that isn’t a hoax.

In my opinion, nearly every human alive suffers from some sort of emotional/mental anomaly. Maybe not everyone but a lot (and if you find one who doesn’t - maybe some young couple dressed in loincloths riding horses on the beach of some idyllic island somewhere in the South Pacific - let me know about them, I would love to meet them).

I see a lot of people in my practice, and I can unequivocally say that they all have issues. Well, that stands to reason, of course. That’s like a dentist saying everyone who comes into his or her office has some issue with his or her teeth. But I also hear about my client’s friends and family, I also interface with people in the grocery store, on the streets, and in my own friend circle, and all of these people have emotional issues, or are hanging by a thread - me included, of course (although my thread broke long ago and I have been swimming in psychological muck for most, if not all, of my life).

Isn’t this the normal “human condition?” Well, I used to think so, but not anymore. There is, of course, a “normal” human condition concerning mental and emotional regulation. Everyone gets depressed and sad once in a while, everyone gets anxious and has emotional flare-ups. We can describe a “normal” mental state which includes a lot of ups and downs. What I am describing is more than that, it is what comes across as abnormal, intense, devoid of much reason, out of regulation, and bordering on crazy. We are all, for the most part, whacked.

Ok, ok, not all of us are whacked. I know I am; you might not be. You may fall into this narrow band of a “normally wiggy” person psychologically, and if you do, congratulations. I am not convinced, however, that there are very many of you who can completely escape the screwed-up environment we all live in (yes, some may be more adept at processing this shite show than others). I would venture to say that you more than likely have been bitten, in some way, by the agenda if you live on this particular planet. Even if only through being around people who are truly crazy - that’s enough to make you fit into this category.

But I am not really commenting on fringe stuff here. I am commenting on those of us who are very close to being certifiably “off” - close to an actual diagnosis. Whether it be run-of-the-mill depression or anxiety, or more exotic personality disorders such as Borderline, Narcissistic, Histrionic, or even any one of the array of psychotic maladies such as Schizophrenia, Bipolar with Psychosis, or Paranoia.

Let’s look at some numbers. Almost 3 million people have been diagnosed with depression in 2020 in the USA, 66 million with anxiety over the past year. In the same year almost 5 million were diagnosed Borderline Personality Disorder, about 5 million with Narcissist Personality Disorder, and almost 2 million with Schizophrenia.

About 10 million will suffer from some form of psychosis in their lifetime, almost 10 million have been diagnosed with BiPolar disorder over the past year, 15 million adults suffer from ADHD, and nearly 35 million children were diagnosed with this particular malady over the same year.

And these statistics only apply to people who have complained enough about their mental condition to their doctor, psychiatrist, or certified psychologist, to be actually diagnosed and put on the docket as having these mental disorders. No telling how many are suffering from mental illness and have not shared their condition with someone who is qualified to render an official diagnosis (psychotherapists, in Canada, are not allowed to diagnose).

Yep, it’s a big problem. And then there is the medication. It is estimated that approximately 76 million people in the US, of all ages, have been prescribed, and are consuming, some form of psychiatric drug (I would venture to say it is more than this). That’s a lot of folks, folks.

Do I put a lot of weight on official diagnoses and labelling? Not really. But regardless of what you think of diagnosis standards and criteria, people are suffering from something - even if you refrain from putting a name to it. This is easy to see without doing much digging. People seem to have lost a lot of their mental capacity to think, to think critically, and to function within the expected “norms” of society (whatever that is). People, in general, seem to have a very difficult time making any sort of rational decisions about everyday challenges in everyday life.

That’s a big statement, I know. And maybe this has always been true, but my gut tells me this is all due to the social pathology the agenda has brought upon us. And no, it isn’t all due to an intentional agenda to pulverize us into flesh-eating zombies, but by golly most of it is.

If you think about how far away humans are from living a natural life, it isn’t much of a stretch to believe we are all suffering from some sort of mental and emotional dysfunction. Although this has been slowly going on since humans stopped living in caves, we have been relatively skilled at staving off the pandemic of mental illness we now seem to be suffering.

Sure, humans have always been a bit kooky. But wouldn’t you say today it appears to be much worse than it was 100 years ago? 200 hundred years ago? The disintegration of moral values, character development, a misunderstanding of “right and wrong,” the dissolution of family, community, spirituality, gender, and even the sanctity of the human body has all had its toll on healthy emotional and mental processing. When we no longer can process properly, we lose psychic homeostasis, and disease sets in."
o
"Don't wonder why people go crazy. Wonder why they don't.
In the face of what we can lose in a day, in an instant,
wonder what the hell it is that makes us hold it together."
- "Grey's Anatomy"
o
"The worst part is wondering how you'll find the strength tomorrow to go on doing what you did today and have been doing for much too long, where you'll find the strength for all that stupid running around, those projects that come to nothing, those attempts to escape from crushing necessity, which always founder and serve only to convince you one more time that destiny is implacable, that every night will find you down and out, crushed by the dread of more and more sordid and insecure tomorrows. And maybe it's treacherous old age coming on, threatening the worst. Not much music left inside us for life to dance to. Our youth has gone to the ends of the earth to die in the silence of the truth. And where, I ask you, can a man escape to, when he hasn't enough madness left inside him? The truth is an endless death agony. The truth is death. You have to choose: death or lies. I've never been able to kill myself."
- Louis-Ferdinand Celineo
o
"Life is an end in itself, and the only question as to whether
 it is worth living is whether you have had enough of it." 

"A Tale Told By An Idiot..."

"Perpetual Cognitive Dissonance"

"Perpetual Cognitive Dissonance"
by Todd Hayen

"There’s a clinical term in psychology, which in the vernacular would be described with the phrase, “I think I am going crazy.” This is “cognitive dissonance.” I have actually seen this term show up in casual reading more often in the past couple of years than in all the years before. It seems to have become a rather common utterance.

I am not sure if I will be using the term correctly in this article because in its purest form it describes a cognitive malfunction which occurs when a person creates a story in their mind that doesn’t match reality.

There is an assumption in this definition that there is an objective reality to compare it to, and that reality, as defined here, is stable and not subject to multiple interpretations. Although this isn’t really important because you can still experience cognitive dissonance if both the “story” and what is perceived as “reality” is illusory. Thus cognitive dissonance verges on another clinical term, psychosis.

Despite these nuances in definitions, cognitive dissonance, as well as psychosis, supposedly (according to the folks in white coats) causes internal psychic problems. I don’t necessarily have a problem with this assumption, although if left alone I am not sure if psychotic people really have psychic problems. It is more likely that the people around them have the problems.

I digress.

Most definitions of cognitive dissonance describe it as a “tension” felt if a person behaves differently from a belief system they resonate with, such as an overweight person who eats cookies all day but believes they would be happier if healthier and at a lower weight. I would venture to extend this description to a person who fundamentally believes that a government of smiling, sweet-talking, elected politicians should be honest and caring but end up being liars and willfully hurtful toward their constituents.

The official definition also states that when someone encounters cognitive dissonance they will adjust whatever they have access to adjust in order to relieve the discomfort. In the above examples, a person eating cookies might deny that they are doing something that isn’t conducive to good health and weight loss, saying things like, “I didn’t eat that many!” or “these cookies are not really fattening.” The latter example might find those experiencing cognitive dissonance denying completely the lies of their smooth talking politicians, or justify them in some odd way: “he didn’t really mean it” or “she is only human, she just made a mistake.”

That, though, is “sheep side cognitive dissonance” and I am not as concerned about that in this article - (in general I am personally very concerned about it). Sheep do seem to be in a perpetual form of cognitive dissonance, but I am not sure if many of them know it yet. Their “beliefs” seem to match up with their perceived reality for the most part, so they don’t, at the moment, experience any dissonance. Possibly unconsciously they may, but have plunged themselves into a deep denial. But clinically, to this particular clinician, it doesn’t seem that way. I see no obvious resulting tension - not yet.

Those of us on this side of the fence, however, grapple with this every day because we are more conscious. Everyone’s world has been turned upside down. In fact, the world has basically been upside down, from what most of us perceived as being “right side up,” for quite some time - maybe even the chief dude Neanderthal king was a lying son-of-a-bitch, who knows. Depending on what particular time in history you “woke up” - meaning when did you first see through the fog and understand you had been fed a story your whole life - you are either a “long time truther,” or a rather “short time truther.” Fact is you were not born seeing the truth, unless you were born a soothsayer. Yes, there probably are a few outliers out there who popped out of the womb totally impervious to brainwashing - if you are one of these then more power to you.

However, it is human nature to believe the world, and other humans in it, are benevolent. What I mean by “human nature” is that babies are born to trust. They have to be taught otherwise, and if they grow up in the West, which in the past was fundamentally benign (compared to other rather traumatic areas of the world) they can easily live a life believing, for example, that their government is not going to intentionally hurt them. (Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know, but as we see, most people seem to believe this.)

It is all part of our indoctrination to remain loyal to this “human nature” sort of benevolence. Since it is fundamentally our nature to believe in the benevolence of our world, when we learn that it is essentially false and a fabrication, then we will begin to experience this cognitive dissonance. This comes when we begin seeing that our experiences just don’t fit the story we were born believing.

Each time something crazy happens we have to shake our head…much like characters do in a cartoon, along with that “booooiiinnng” sound. “What the f—k???” Even though we know intellectually that nothing is really as it seems, most of the time when we actually experience an example of this insanity it takes a second for it to sink in, “Are you kidding? Really???”

Now, I know some of you out there are hard-core veterans and don’t shake your head, and don’t hear that “booooiiinnng” sound when something fishy happens. You may instead give a little smirk and think, “here we go again.” Well, I am not one of you, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the majority of people out there reading this are not in your group either.

And when we see things like Universities still demanding their students wear masks, or places of employment still demanding vaccinations to be employed, or hear the talk of digital IDs and a no cash world, and 15 minute cities, and leaders telling their constituents they will hunt down the unvaccinated and make sure they get jabbed, we shake our head and hear “boooiiinnng.” I know I do.

This is the sort of cognitive dissonance I am talking about, and it is pretty much constant. I know for me a day doesn’t go by that I am not shaking my head. It truly is the Chicken Little story, the sky perpetually falling on our melons and all of us running around screaming about the impending doom, “Can’t you see it!? Can’t you see it!?” Nothing ever seems right; nothing ever seems to be properly aligned with basic human expectations. If we were all literal prisoners in the gulag, we would at least match up our internal beliefs with our external reality. We would know we were in prison. Right now, we have little literal reason to believe what we believe, other than pretty clear signs of it being planned.

Yes, those of us unvaccinated see the persecution, and the aforementioned mandates still in place. What we see indicates clearly to us that what we believe is really happening, at least part of it is. But we are constantly being told, “All is fine, nothing to worry about, we love you, we will take care of you, you should be happy you live in a free country, look at my shiny white smile, relax, all is safe…” "Booooiiinnng."

And so it is...

"We Have Become..."

“We have become a Nazi monster in the eyes of the whole world, a nation of bullies and bastards who would rather kill than live peacefully. We are not just Whores for power and oil, but killer whores with hate and fear in our hearts. We are human scum, and that is how history will judge us. No redeeming social value. Just whores. Get out of our way, or we'll kill you. Who does vote for these dishonest shitheads? Who among us can be happy and proud of having all this innocent blood on our hands? Who are these swine? These flag-sucking half-wits who get fleeced and fooled by stupid little rich kids like George Bush? They are the same ones who wanted to have Muhammad Ali locked up for refusing to kill gooks. They speak for all that is cruel and stupid and vicious in the American character. They are the racists and hate mongers among us; they are the Ku Klux Klan. I piss down the throats of these Nazis. And I am too old to worry about whether they like it or not. F**k them.”
- Hunter S. Thompson

Dated, but still so absolutely true...

"Trump’s War: The Kind of Military Misadventure That Ends Empires"

"Trump’s War: The Kind of Military 
Misadventure That Ends Empires"
by Alfred McCoy

"Writing more than 2,000 years ago, the Greek historian Plutarch gave us an eloquent description of what modern historians now call “micro-militarism.” When an imperial power like Athens then, or America now, is in decline, its leaders often react emotionally by mounting seemingly bold military strikes in hopes of regaining the imperial grandeur that’s slipping through their fingers. Instead of another of the great victories the empire won at its peak of power, however, such military misadventures only serve to accelerate the ongoing decline, erasing whatever aura of imperial majesty remains and revealing instead the moral rot deep inside the ruling elite.

There is mounting historical evidence that America is indeed an empire in steep decline, while President Donald Trump’s war of choice against Iran is becoming the sort of micro-military disaster that helped destroy successive empires over the past 2,500 years - from ancient Athens to medieval Portugal to modern Spain, Great Britain, and now the United States.

And at the core of every such ill-fated war-making decision lay a problematic leader, often born into wealth and prestige, whose personal inadequacies reflected and ramified the many irrationalities that make imperial decline such a painful process. During that demoralizing downward spiral, imperial armies, so lethal in an empire’s ascent, can err by plunging their countries into draining, even disastrous “micro-military” misadventures - psychologically compensatory efforts to salve the loss of imperial power by trying to occupy new territories or display awe-inspiring military might.

Although such micro-militarism often chose targets that proved strategically unsustainable, the psychological pressures upon declining empires are so strong that they all too often gamble their prestige on just such misadventures.

Not only did such disasters add financial pressures to a fading empire’s many troubles, but in a humiliating fashion, they also invariably exposed its eroding power while exacerbating the destabilizing impact of imperial decline in the capitals of empire (whether Athens, Lisbon, Madrid, London, or Washington, DC).

In our moment, when the bombs stop falling and the rubble is finally cleared from the streets of Tehran and Beirut, the impact on US global power of such a de facto defeat will become all too clear - as alliances like NATO atrophy, American hegemony evaporates, legitimacy is lost, global disorder rises, and the world economy suffers.

Let me now turn from the disasters of the present imperial moment to the lessons of history to explore the sort of lasting damage that Donald Trump’s micro-military misadventure in the Middle East might be inflicting on this country’s declining imperium.

Defeat of Athens in Sicily: The date was 413 BC. The place was ancient Athens, then the seat of a powerful empire, long dominant around the rim of the Aegean Sea but losing influence to a sustained military challenge by Sparta.

At the port of Piraeus, a “certain stranger,” as the historian and philosopher Plutarch recalled, “took a seat in a barber’s shop, and began to discourse [on] what had happened as if the Athenians already knew all about it.” Stunned by this stranger’s report of a military debacle in far-off Sicily, the barber “ran at the top of his speed to the upper city” of Athens, where the news sparked “consternation and confusion.”

What that stranger described was the greatest military disaster in the history of the Athenian empire. Two years earlier, in the midst of the protracted Peloponnesian Wars, the aristocrat Nicias - an indifferent, indecisive leader who used his inherited wealth to court popularity with lavish spectacles - persuaded the citizens of Athens to deliver a theoretically bold blow against a rival imperial power, Sparta, by attacking its ally Syracuse in Sicily in hopes of crippling the enemy, capturing riches, and recovering Athens’ ebbing hegemony.

Instead of victory, however, Athens’ vast armada of 200 ships and some 12,000 soldiers suffered a devastating defeat. Not only was the fleet destroyed (largely because Nicias proved “an incompetent military commander”), but his surviving soldiers were captured, confined on a starvation diet in a stone quarry, and sold into slavery. Athens never recovered.

Within a decade, the city had been starved into submission by Sparta’s impenetrable blockade of a naval choke point in the Dardanelles Strait, stripped of its empire, and subjected to autocratic rule by a pro-Spartan oligarchy.

Portugal’s debacle in Morocco: Our next date is 1578. The place is Portugal, the seat of a lucrative empire that had controlled commerce across the Indian Ocean for decades but now found its hegemony challenged by Muslim merchant princes allied with the Ottoman Empire.

In its capital, Lisbon, a headstrong young king, Sebastian, suffered from sexual impotence and a fiery temperament that made him a fanatical “captain of Christ.” With the idea of striking a lethal blow in his country’s global war against Islam, the young king persuaded the flower of his nation’s aristocracy to follow him on a latter-day crusade across the Mediterranean Sea to Morocco.

There, at the fateful Battle of Alcacer Quibir, Portugal’s army was slaughtered by local Muslim forces. Some 8,000 Portuguese troops were killed, 15,000 captured, and only 100 escaped. The defeat was so devastating that it not only destroyed the king and his court but also precipitated the country’s incorporation into the Spanish empire for the next 60 years. In the aftermath of such reverses, the Portuguese Estado da India (or state of India) at Goa was reduced to selling permits to any ship captain who could pay, whether Hindu, Muslim, or Christian. With Portuguese commercial dominance removed from the Indian Ocean, Muslim merchants and pilgrims could once again move across it unimpeded.

Though the Portuguese empire would survive for another three centuries, it would never recover the commercial hegemony that had once allowed it to dominate the world’s sea lanes from the Spice Islands of Indonesia, across the Indian Ocean and the South Atlantic to the coast of Brazil.

Spain’s disaster in the Atlas Mountains: And now to jump several centuries, another significant date for imperial disasters is 1920. The place was Madrid, where Spain’s leaders were already reeling from the psychological stress of their country’s long imperial decline, culminating in the loss of its last colonies, Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines in the Spanish-American War of 1898 with the rising United States.

Seeking regeneration through further colonial conquest, Spain’s conservative leaders reacted to that demoralizing defeat against America by expanding their small coastal enclaves in northern Morocco to establish a protectorate over the whole region and its arid Atlas Mountains.

Spain’s inept monarch Alfonso XIII, who liked to play soldier, cultivated a clique of military favorites who shared his passion for the recovery of lost imperial glory by pacifying that rugged terrain. As resistance to Spanish rule by Berber Muslims escalated into the bloody Rif War of 1920, one of the king’s favorite generals led his troops into the Battle of Annual, where Berber fighters slaughtered some 12,000 of them.

Nonetheless, through the influence of the king and his military cronies, Spain clung desperately to those profitless Moroccan mountains. The Spaniards would, in fact, dispatch 125,000 more troops there, including its Foreign Legion led by the man who, in the 1930s, would become the leader of a fascist Spain, Francisco Franco, for a protracted pacification campaign that featured both mass slaughter and military innovation.

In a desperate quest for a victory that defied both economic and strategic rationality, Spain produced some 400 metric tons of lethal mustard gas to conduct history’s first aerial bombardment using poison gas, raining mass death down upon Berber villages. And in military history’s first successful amphibious operation, the Spanish navy also landed 18,000 troops and a squadron of light tanks at Al Hoceima Bay in September 1925 to flank and soon defeat the Berber guerrillas there.

Such micro-militarism, however, not only plunged Spain into a protracted pacification campaign with soaring costs, heavy casualties, and mass atrocities, but also unleashed political forces that would destroy its struggling democracy. As the masses protested that misbegotten war, King Alfonso backed a military favorite, General Primo de Rivera, in imposing a decade of dictatorship that finally gave way to a short-lived Second Republic.

In 1936, however, only a decade after the Rif War ended, General Franco flew his Army of Africa back from Morocco over the Mediterranean Sea, launching a Spanish civil war that would defeat the Republic and establish a fascist dictatorship that would rule the country for nearly 40 dismal years of economic stagnation.

End of the British Empire at Suez: Arguably, when it came to imperial decline, however, the most revealing date was 1956. The place was London, the seat of the once-proud British Empire, where the suffocating stress of a painful, protracted global imperial retreat had pushed British conservatives into a disastrous micro-military intervention at Egypt’s Suez Canal, leading to what one British diplomat would term the “dying convulsion of British imperialism.”

In July 1956 (as described in my recent book “Cold War on Five Continents“), Egypt’s charismatic president Gamal Abdel Nasser nationalized the Suez Canal, ending British colonial control there, electrifying the Arab world, and elevating himself to the first rank of world leaders.

Although British ships could still pass freely through the canal, the country’s conservative prime minister, Anthony Eden, a vain aristocrat and determined defender of empire, would be deeply unsettled, if not unhinged, by Nasser’s assertive nationalism. Indeed, his leadership throughout the crisis would prove so unbalanced that senior Foreign Office officials would become convinced “Eden has gone off his head.”

In response to the news of the canal’s nationalization, an apoplectic Eden would immediately convene a council of war at 4:00 in the morning. Calling Nasser a “Muslim Mussolini,” a reference to the former fascist ruler of Italy, Eden ordered “him removed and I don’t give a damn if there’s anarchy and chaos in Egypt.” Making his meaning perfectly clear, Eden asked his foreign minister: “What’s all this nonsense about isolating Nasser or ‘neutralizing’ him as you call it?” He then added pointedly: “I want him destroyed, can’t you understand? I want him murdered.”

With the British secret service MI6 failing in multiple assassination attempts, however, Eden’s government began plotting with the French and Israelis to launch a secret, two-phase invasion of the Suez Canal Zone. On October 29, the Israeli army led by the dashing General Moshe Dayan swept across the Sinai Peninsula, destroying Egyptian tanks and bringing his troops within 10 miles of the canal. Using that fighting as a pretext for its own intervention (supposedly to restore peace), in just three days, an armada of six Anglo-French aircraft carriers smashed the Egyptian air force, destroying 104 of its new Soviet MIG jet fighters and 130 additional aircraft.

With Egypt’s strategic forces destroyed and its military virtually helpless before the might of that imperial juggernaut, Nasser deployed a geopolitical strategy brilliant in its simplicity. He had dozens of rusting cargo ships filled with rocks and then scuttled them at the canal’s northern entrance, quickly closing one of the world’s main maritime choke points and so cutting off Europe’s oil lifeline to the Persian Gulf.

By the time 22,000 British and French forces began storming ashore at the canal’s north end on November 6, their objective of securing the free movement of ships had already been snatched from their grasp. By the end of that micro-military disaster, Britain would be reprimanded by the United Nations; its currency would require an International Monetary Fund bailout to save it from utter collapse; its aura of imperial majesty would have evaporated; and the once mighty British Empire would be on the road to extinction.

In retrospect, the Suez Crisis would not only expose the full-scale decline of British power, but also show the world that the country’s ruling Conservative establishment, with its illusions of imperial and racial superiority, was no longer capable of global leadership.
America’s defeat in the Strait of Hormuz

Another date likely to prove all too significant when it comes to the history of imperial decline is February 28, 2026. The place was Washington, DC, home to what had been history’s most powerful imperial state that had dominated much of the globe for nearly 80 years through a mixture of military alliances, deft diplomacy, and economic leadership.

By then, however, cracks had distinctly begun to appear in its edifice of power as US global hegemony faced an increasingly strong economic challenge from China, its massive military suffered two searing defeats in Afghanistan and Iraq, and its economic globalization produced an angry populism at home.

After a populist campaign based on promises to restore both working-class prosperity and America’s global power, Donald Trump took office a second time in January 2025 promising a “golden age of America,” a “thrilling new era of national success” in which the country would “reclaim its rightful place as the greatest, most powerful, most respected nation on Earth, inspiring the awe and admiration of the entire world.”

Born to wealth and privilege himself, Trump returned to office convinced of his unique “genius” for leadership and believing that “I was saved by God to make America great again.” Wielding raw economic and military might to compel obeisance from friend and foe alike, the president, inspired by a delusional sense of divine mission, began attempting to bend the world to his will. But during his first year in office, nothing seemed to work as planned. Indeed, most of his initiatives produced the sort of backlash that only served to show how far the United States had fallen from 1991, when the break-up of the Soviet Union made it the world’s sole superpower.

On April 2, 2025, on what he called “Liberation Day,” Trump announced a roster of punitive tariffs to protect domestic manufacturing largely from Chinese imports that faced an initial duty of 34%—later raised to a fully punitive 100%. But at their October 2025 meeting in South Korea, China’s leader Xi Jinping forced Trump to back down by cutting US access to his country’s storehouse of strategic rare earth minerals.

In January, with his tariff initiative losing its luster, Trump plunged the NATO alliance into crisis by demanding that Denmark give him the island of Greenland, threatening to impose new tariffs on European allies unless they complied. Within a week, however, vociferous European resistance had led him to retract that threat at the Davos economic summit, claiming he was satisfied with NATO’s offer of a “framework of a future deal.”

On February 28, 2026, with his tariff initiative failing and his Greenland gambit checkmated, Trump joined Israel in a seemingly bold strike on Iran that soon had the makings of the sort of fateful “micro-military” maneuver that appears to go with imperial powers in decline. In the first few days of war, US and Israeli bombing killed Iran’s leadership, destroyed its navy, and eliminated its air defenses, leaving the country seemingly prostrate before the might of America’s air-power juggernaut.

After a week of devastating bombardment that seemed to stun the world with its lethality and precision, on March 6 Trump demanded that Iran offer an “unconditional surrender” and signal its capitulation by “the selection of a GREAT & ACCEPTABLE Leader.” In exchange, he promised that the US would “work tirelessly to bring Iran back from the brink of destruction.”

But much as Nasser had done at Suez in 1956, Iran’s leadership reversed the war’s geostrategic balance by closing a critical maritime choke point in the Strait of Hormuz. By striking five freighters with drones in the first week of war, Iran’s leaders, taking a leaf from Nasser’s geopolitical playbook, effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz to tanker traffic, cutting off gas, fertilizer, and oil shipments that plunged the world economy into an unprecedented energy crisis. By the end of March, Iran’s chokehold over the strait was so tight that it began collecting “tolls” from freighters to permit passage.

Blindsided by the strait’s unexpected yet utterly predictable closure, on April 5, Easter Sunday, an unsettled Trump posted a social media message saying: “Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!!” He added: “Open the Fuckin’ Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell—JUST WATCH. Praise be to Allah.” Two days later, Trump threatened that, unless Iran opened the Strait of Hormuz, he would attack its civilian infrastructure so severely that “a whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again.”

After the collapse of subsequent negotiations between the two sides at Islamabad, Pakistan, on April 12, Trump plunged ever deeper into the Iran quagmire, ordering the US Navy to “begin the process of BLOCKADING any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz,” and “interdict every vessel in International Waters that has paid a toll to Iran.” With characteristic bluster, he added: “We are fully ‘LOCKED AND LOADED,’ and our Military will finish up the little that is left of Iran!”

Even if Trump destroys Iran’s infrastructure or eventually negotiates a face-saving peace deal, by every metric that really matters, Washington has already lost its war with Iran. Like all weaker powers in asymmetric warfare, Tehran has been willing to absorb relentless punishment, while inflicting pain that the dominant power can ill sustain. The US will soon run out of targets in Tehran, but Iran has a whole world of damage that its cheap drones can do to the elaborate, exposed petroleum infrastructure on the south shore of the Persian Gulf.

Like Britain at Suez in 1956, Washington will likely pay a heavy price for its “micro-militarism” in the Strait of Hormuz. Close allies, the bedrock of US global power for 80 years, have refused any military support for Washington’s war of choice, prompting Trump to call them “cowards.”

In response to his thundering threats of civilian and civilizational destruction (both war crimes), Trump has been condemned by world leaders. Oblivious to the dangers of war in a region that is the epicenter of global capitalism, Washington is now proving ever more dangerously disruptive of the global economy, making China look like a far more stable choice for world leadership. Moreover, while the US military has proven its tactical agility in destroying targets, it clearly can no longer capture meaningful strategic objectives.

With its alliances in tatters, its world leadership forfeited, and its aura of military might evaporating, the only trajectory for US global hegemony now seems to be downward (like so many great powers of the past). By the time Trump’s micro-military misadventure in the Strait of Hormuz is over, the decline of US global power will have accelerated drastically and the world will be trying to move beyond the old Pax Americana toward a new, distinctly uncertain global order."

"How It Really Is"

 

Full screen recommended.
Zac Rios, 4/28/26
"People Can't Afford To Buy Groceries in 2026"
Comments here:

"The Day Electricity And Water Disappeared"

"The Day Electricity And Water Disappeared"
by Madge Waggy

"There is a version of the end that does not come with fire, explosions, or dramatic collapse, but with something far more unsettling: silence. It begins quietly, almost politely, with small interruptions that seem temporary, harmless, familiar. The lights go out. Phones lose signal. Screens freeze mid-motion as if time itself hesitated. People wait, because waiting is what modern life has trained them to do. Systems fail sometimes, but they always come back. That is the unspoken promise of civilization—that even if something breaks, there is always someone, somewhere, fixing it. But what happens when nothing comes back? When the silence stretches, deepens, settles into the walls, into the streets, into the space between people, until it becomes clear that this is not an interruption, but a condition?

The first true sign that something was fundamentally wrong was not the darkness, but the absence of water. Electricity can disappear and life can still function for a while, but water is different; it is immediate, physical, impossible to ignore. Someone turns on a faucet expecting at least a weak response, a stutter in the pipes, some lingering sign of pressure—but there is nothing. Not even air. That absence carries weight, because it reveals something most people never think about: water does not simply exist in cities, it is delivered constantly, forced through a vast system that depends entirely on power. Without that power, the system does not degrade gracefully—it stops. And when it stops, millions of people are left with no buffer, no reserve, no plan.

At first, the reaction is denial, and denial has its own rhythm. People check things repeatedly, as if repetition might somehow restore function. They move from room to room, from building to building, from street to street, searching for confirmation that this is localized, temporary, fixable. But as hours pass, a pattern emerges, and that pattern spreads. No lights anywhere. No signals. No movement in the systems that are supposed to respond automatically. It becomes clear, slowly and then all at once, that the failure is total. And with that realization comes the first fracture in collective thinking, because modern life is not built to handle total failure. It is built on assumptions, and those assumptions are now gone.

Water, or rather the lack of it, begins to reshape behavior almost immediately. People search for what they have, ration what little is available, and then begin looking outward. The problem is not just scarcity, but scale. In a small community, a well or a stream might be enough, but in a city, where millions depend on continuous supply, the absence becomes catastrophic within days. Toilets stop functioning, and with that, an entire layer of civilization disappears. Waste, which was once invisible, managed, removed without thought, begins to accumulate. At first, it is contained within buildings, but systems that rely on flow cannot function without it, and what does not move begins to stagnate. What stagnates begins to spread. And what spreads becomes impossible to control.

As people turn to natural water sources, another shift begins - one that is less visible but far more dangerous. Lakes, rivers, and reservoirs that once seemed abundant are suddenly under pressure from a population that has no alternative. The problem is not just that people are taking water, but that they are bringing contamination with them, because without sanitation, there is no separation between waste and survival. It happens gradually, almost invisibly, as human activity alters the environment in ways that cannot be reversed quickly. And then, as if following a script written long before, illness begins to appear. Not as a single outbreak, but as a convergence of multiple threats, each feeding into the same weakened system.

The progression is subtle at first, easy to dismiss, but it follows a pattern that becomes increasingly difficult to ignore as it spreads through groups and communities:

Initial discomfort - fatigue, mild dehydration, a sense that something is off.
Escalation - digestive distress, weakness, inability to retain fluids.
Breakdown - severe dehydration, loss of strength, impaired judgment.
Collapse - where the body can no longer compensate and begins to shut down.

What makes it particularly dangerous is not just the speed, but the feedback loop it creates. People need water to survive, but the water they have access to is making them weaker, reducing their ability to seek better sources, to move, to think clearly. It is a trap that closes slowly, giving just enough time for awareness to grow, but not enough for effective response.

At the same time, another system begins to fail - the one that most people never see, but rely on every day: the supply chain. Food does not appear in cities by accident; it is transported continuously, in massive volumes, coordinated through systems that require power, communication, and fuel. Remove those elements, and the flow stops. At first, stores still have stock, and people move quickly to secure what they can. But consumption does not slow, and without resupply, depletion is inevitable. Within days, the shelves are empty, not because food has ceased to exist, but because the mechanisms that distribute it are no longer functioning.

Hunger does not arrive as a sudden shock, but as a gradual pressure that builds until it becomes dominant. It changes how people think, how they interact, how they make decisions. What begins as concern turns into urgency, and urgency into something sharper, more focused, less constrained by the rules that once governed behavior. The transformation follows a pattern that is as psychological as it is physical:

Conservation - people reduce activity, try to extend what they have.
Obsession - thoughts narrow, focusing almost entirely on obtaining food.
Adaptation - standards change, things once considered unacceptable become options.
Action - people begin to take what they need, regardless of ownership or consequence.

It is at this stage that the social structure begins to shift in ways that are difficult to reverse. Trust, which once existed by default, becomes conditional, then rare. Interactions are no longer neutral; they carry weight, risk, calculation. Groups begin to form, not out of ideology, but out of necessity. Individuals alone are vulnerable, but groups can defend, can organize, can control access to resources. And with that organization comes hierarchy, because decisions need to be made quickly, and not everyone can make them at once.

Violence does not explode into existence; it emerges, slowly, in the spaces where systems used to enforce limits. At first, it is subtle - arguments that escalate, confrontations that go too far, situations where desperation overrides hesitation. But as people realize that there is no longer a higher authority to intervene, to punish, to restore order, the boundaries shift. What was once unthinkable becomes possible, then practical, then normal. The progression is not chaotic; it follows a pattern that reflects underlying human behavior when constraints are removed:

Opportunistic actions - taking advantage of unguarded resources.
Defensive aggression - protecting what one has from others.
Organized force - groups acting together to secure territory or supplies.
Dominance structures - where certain groups establish control over areas and enforce rules.

The city, once a place of density and opportunity, becomes something else entirely - a concentration of need without the means to fulfill it. Buildings that once offered shelter become liabilities, especially those that extend vertically. Without elevators, without water pressure, without lighting, upper floors become inaccessible, dangerous, impractical. Movement within these structures becomes a risk, especially in darkness, where visibility is limited and control is minimal. Gradually, people begin to leave, not in coordinated efforts, but in a steady flow outward, driven by the understanding that survival requires access to resources the city can no longer provide.

This movement outward creates pressure in new areas, places that were never designed to support large populations. Land that once sustained small communities becomes contested, not because it has changed, but because the number of people depending on it has increased beyond what it can support. The balance between availability and demand breaks down, and with it, the possibility of peaceful coexistence becomes more fragile. Those who were already there see the change immediately, because it affects not just their resources, but their security, their predictability, their control over their environment.

And through all of this, as the physical world reshapes itself around the absence of systems, another layer of thought begins to emerge, one that is harder to define but impossible to ignore. Systems of this scale are not supposed to fail completely, not all at once, not without partial recovery or isolated functioning. The totality of the silence, the absence of any visible attempt to restore what has been lost, begins to suggest something that people are reluctant to articulate, but cannot entirely dismiss. The idea forms gradually, not as a conclusion, but as a question that refuses to disappear:

Why did everything stop at the same time?
Why is there no sign of recovery anywhere?
Why has no authority re-established even minimal control?
And most importantly - who benefits from a world where the system no longer exists?

These questions do not have immediate answers, and perhaps they never will, but they change the way people interpret what is happening. Because once the possibility of intent enters the equation, the situation is no longer just a collapse. It becomes something else - something that was allowed, or even designed, to happen. And in a world where survival has already become uncertain, that possibility introduces a different kind of fear, one that is not tied to hunger or thirst, but to the realization that the systems people trusted may not have failed them accidentally. They may have been turned off.
Click image for larger size.
The Signal Beneath the Silence: There comes a moment, not sudden but inevitable, when the silence stops feeling like an absence and begins to feel like a presence, something that exists not because everything has failed, but because something has replaced what used to be there, something quieter, more controlled, more deliberate, and once that shift happens, people begin to notice details that did not seem important before, details that should not exist in a world that has completely collapsed, and yet they persist with a consistency that becomes harder to dismiss the longer one pays attention. It is not obvious at first, because nothing announces itself clearly anymore, but patterns begin to form in the background of perception, subtle alignments that suggest that the world has not gone dark everywhere, only in the places where people are still allowed to see.

The first clues are always indirect, because direct evidence is rare and unreliable, but indirect evidence accumulates in ways that are far more convincing over time. Roads that should be blocked are not, but they are also not used in the chaotic, desperate way that defines everything else, as if movement along them follows rules that are invisible to outsiders. Structures that should be abandoned show no signs of decay, not because they are maintained openly, but because they never reached the state of neglect that defines the rest of the environment. And then there are the moments that people hesitate to talk about, the ones that sound too precise to be imagination and too inconsistent to be confirmed, like distant lights that remain steady for hours without fluctuation, or the low, continuous hum of machinery somewhere beyond reach, always present but never traceable.

At first, these observations remain isolated, dismissed as stress responses or coincidences, but the longer the silence continues, the less convincing those explanations become, because coincidence does not repeat with structure, and stress does not produce identical details across different people who have never met. Slowly, reluctantly, people begin to connect these fragments into something resembling a conclusion, and that conclusion does not emerge all at once, but through a sequence of realizations that build on each other whether people want them to or not:

• The collapse affected everything that was publicly accessible, but not necessarily everything that existed.
• The absence of recovery efforts suggests not failure, but intentional non-intervention.
• The persistence of controlled, localized activity implies that some systems are still functioning in isolation.
• And if systems are still functioning, then someone, somewhere, still has access to them.

That last point is the one that changes everything, because it introduces inequality into what was previously assumed to be a universal condition, and inequality implies structure, and structure implies control. From that moment forward, the silence is no longer interpreted as emptiness, but as restriction, as if the world has been divided into layers that are no longer meant to interact in the way they once did. And once people begin to think in those terms, their behavior shifts accordingly, not in obvious ways at first, but in small, calculated adjustments that gradually reshape priorities.

Survival is no longer just about finding food or water, but about finding proximity to whatever remains operational, even if that proximity is based on nothing more than rumor or intuition. Groups begin to move differently, choosing directions not based on known resources, but on patterns, on whispers, on the faint suggestion that certain areas are less abandoned than others. These movements are cautious, often hesitant, because the closer people believe they are getting to something real, the more unpredictable the environment becomes, and unpredictability, in this new world, rarely means randomness.

There are places that feel wrong in ways that are difficult to define, locations where the usual signs of collapse are absent, but not replaced by anything recognizable. No visible activity, no open access, no indication of occupation—and yet something about them resists entry. People who approach these areas often describe the same sequence of sensations, even if they use different words: a growing sense of being observed, a subtle pressure that builds without a clear source, an instinctive hesitation that feels less like fear and more like recognition. Some turn back before crossing whatever invisible boundary defines these zones, unable to justify their decision logically but unwilling to ignore it.

Others continue. And those who continue do not always come back the same. Not broken, not visibly harmed, but altered in ways that are more unsettling precisely because they are so difficult to measure. They speak less, or not at all, about what they experienced. When they do speak, their accounts lack cohesion, not because they are lying, but because their memories seem fragmented, as if something interfered not with the event itself, but with the ability to retain it fully. And sometimes, the most disturbing detail is not what they describe, but what they avoid describing, the pauses, the sudden shifts in topic, the moments where language fails in ways that feel unnatural.

The Boundaries No One Sees: As these encounters accumulate, the idea of invisible boundaries becomes harder to ignore, not as a theory, but as a practical reality that shapes movement and decision-making across entire groups. These boundaries are not marked in any traditional sense, but they are defined by outcomes that repeat with enough consistency to establish their existence without needing physical confirmation. People begin to map them mentally, not through precise coordinates, but through shared experience, building an understanding of where it is safer to go and where it is better to avoid, even if the reasons remain unclear.

This mapping process reveals something even more unsettling, because the boundaries are not random. They form patterns, large-scale divisions that suggest organization rather than coincidence, as if the world has been partitioned according to criteria that are not visible from within. Some areas are consistently avoided, others are cautiously approached, and a few become points of quiet focus, places where the possibility of access feels just within reach but never fully realized. The logic behind this structure begins to take shape through observation, not as a confirmed truth, but as a framework that explains more than it leaves unanswered:

• Areas with complete collapse show no signs of intervention, as if they have been abandoned entirely.
• Transitional zones exhibit inconsistent patterns, suggesting partial control or limited access.
• Isolated regions display subtle signs of maintenance, indicating selective preservation.
• And the most restricted areas produce the strongest behavioral responses, even without visible enforcement.

This layered structure creates a new kind of world, one where geography is no longer defined by physical features alone, but by access, by control, by the invisible rules that determine who can move where and under what conditions. And within this world, people are no longer just navigating terrain, but navigating a system they cannot see, reacting to signals they do not fully understand.

The Question That Changes Everything: At some point, inevitably, a question emerges that cannot be ignored once it has been fully considered, a question that does not come from fear or speculation, but from the accumulation of too many consistent observations to dismiss as coincidence. It is not asked openly at first, because even thinking it feels like crossing a line that cannot be uncrossed, but it exists, quietly, in the background of every conversation, every decision, every moment of silence where the mind has time to connect what it already knows: If something is still functioning, and if access to it is being controlled, then why? The answers that follow are never certain, but they tend to move along similar lines, shaped by the same underlying logic that has guided every realization up to this point:

• It could be preservation, an attempt to maintain critical systems for as long as possible.
• It could be selection, determining who has access and who does not based on unknown criteria.
• It could be containment, limiting interaction between different parts of what remains.
• Or it could be something else entirely, something that does not align with any familiar purpose.

That last possibility is the one that lingers, not because it is the most likely, but because it is the least understood, and in a world where understanding has already become scarce, anything that falls outside known patterns carries a weight that is difficult to ignore. Because if the silence is not simply the result of failure, and if the remaining structure is not designed for recovery, then the current state of the world may not be temporary. It may be intentional. And if it is intentional, then the silence that replaced everything is not the end of the system. It is the system, in a form that no longer needs to explain itself.

The Shape of What Remains: By the time this question fully settles into the minds of those who are still capable of asking it, the world has already crossed a threshold that cannot be reversed, not because the damage is too great, but because the pattern has become too consistent to be accidental, too stable to be temporary, and too controlled to be ignored. What once felt like survival within chaos begins to reveal itself as survival within constraint, and that distinction changes the nature of every decision that follows, because chaos can be navigated through instinct and adaptation, but constraint implies design, and design implies purpose, even if that purpose remains hidden behind layers of silence that no one has yet managed to break through.

At first, people continue to behave as if recovery is still possible, as if somewhere beyond the horizon there are functioning centers preparing to restore what has been lost, but that belief weakens over time, not because it is disproven directly, but because it is never confirmed in any meaningful way. There are no signs of rebuilding, no coordinated efforts that extend beyond isolated pockets, no evidence that the old systems are being repaired at scale. Instead, what exists begins to feel self-contained, as if the world has been divided into segments that are no longer meant to reconnect, each one operating within its own limitations, its own boundaries, its own unspoken rules.

This realization does not spread through sudden revelation, but through repetition, through the steady accumulation of moments where expectation fails to align with reality, where actions that should produce results no longer do, and where patterns that should break under pressure instead remain intact. Over time, these moments begin to organize themselves into a framework that people may not fully understand, but can no longer ignore:

• Systems that once depended on each other no longer attempt to reconnect, suggesting deliberate separation rather than accidental disintegration.
• Access to resources appears inconsistent, not because resources are gone, but because they are unevenly distributed in ways that do not follow natural patterns.
• Movement across regions produces predictable outcomes, indicating that unseen variables are influencing behavior and consequence.
• And most importantly, the absence of visible authority does not result in true disorder, but in a quieter, more controlled form of stability.

That last point is the one that alters perception completely, because it challenges the most fundamental assumption people once held about the relationship between control and visibility. There was a time when authority needed to be seen to be believed, when power announced itself through presence, through enforcement, through undeniable proof of its existence. But in this new structure, none of that is necessary. Control operates without declaration, without explanation, without even acknowledgment, shaping the environment in ways that guide behavior without ever needing to confront it directly.

People begin to adapt to this reality in ways that are subtle but profound, adjusting their actions not just based on what they experience, but on what they anticipate, learning to avoid certain thoughts as much as certain places, because both seem to carry consequences that are difficult to predict but impossible to ignore. Conversations become shorter, more cautious, not because people have nothing to say, but because saying the wrong thing, even in private, feels like crossing an invisible line. Decisions are made with less certainty, more hesitation, as if every choice exists within a field of influence that cannot be mapped but can be felt. And in that hesitation, something deeper begins to take shape.

It is not fear in the traditional sense, not the immediate, reactive kind that comes from danger, but a slower, more persistent awareness that the boundaries of reality itself may no longer be as fixed as they once seemed. Because if the environment can be controlled without visible mechanisms, if access can be restricted without physical barriers, then the limits people are experiencing may not be purely external. They may extend into perception, into cognition, into the way reality is processed and understood at a fundamental level.

This idea is difficult to accept, not because it is impossible, but because it destabilizes the last remaining point of certainty - the belief that even if the world changes, the mind observing it remains its own. And yet, the evidence, fragmented and indirect as it may be, begins to suggest otherwise, forming a pattern that becomes clearer the longer it is considered:

• People recall events differently after leaving certain areas, even when those events should be recent and clear.
• Shared experiences lose consistency when discussed, as if details are being altered or removed between perception and memory.
• Some individuals exhibit sudden shifts in behavior without identifiable cause, as though influenced by factors they cannot articulate.
• And perhaps most unsettling of all, certain conclusions feel difficult to hold onto, as if the mind itself resists completing specific lines of thought.

If these observations are accurate, even partially, then the implications extend far beyond survival, beyond control, beyond anything that can be addressed through physical means alone. They suggest that whatever remains of the system is not only shaping the external world, but interacting with the internal processes through which that world is understood, creating a feedback loop where perception and environment influence each other in ways that are no longer fully separable.

In such a reality, resistance becomes almost undefined, because it is no longer clear where the boundary between self and system truly lies. If choices are influenced before they are consciously recognized, if thoughts are redirected before they are fully formed, then the concept of autonomy begins to lose its meaning, not abruptly, but gradually, eroding under the weight of uncertainty until it becomes something that is assumed rather than confirmed.

And still, despite all of this, life continues. People eat when they can, move when they must, form connections where trust is still possible, even if that trust is fragile and often temporary. The human instinct to survive does not disappear simply because the rules have changed; it adapts, reshapes itself, finds ways to persist even within constraints that would have once seemed impossible. But survival, in this context, is no longer just about endurance. It is about navigating a reality that may be actively shaping the very process of navigation itself.

Which leads, inevitably, to the final thought, the one that cannot be proven but refuses to fade, the one that exists at the edge of every observation, every pattern, every unanswered question: If the silence was not the end, but the beginning of something more controlled, more precise, more deliberate…Then whatever remains is not waiting to be discovered. It is waiting to see what people will become within it.

And in that quiet, controlled world, where nothing announces itself and everything seems just slightly out of reach, the most unsettling possibility is not that humanity has been abandoned, but that it has been left exactly where it is meant to be, observed not as it was, but as it adapts, as it changes, as it reveals, piece by piece, what remains when everything unnecessary has been stripped away. Not destroyed. Not forgotten. But reduced to something simpler. Something easier to measure. Something easier to watch."
o
Tip of the hat to The Burning Platform for this material!