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Thursday, March 5, 2026

"John Steinbeck on the Creative Spirit and the Meaning of Life"

John Steinbeck
"John Steinbeck on the Creative Spirit 
and the Meaning of Life"
By Maria Popova

"A decade before he won the Nobel Prize for Literature, John Steinbeck (February 27, 1902–December 20, 1968) wrote "East of Eden" (public library), which was eventually adapted into the 1955 film of the same title starring James Dean and which Steinbeck originally addressed to his two young sons. (The elder one, Thom, later became the recipient of Steinbeck’s magnificent letter of advice on falling in love.) The thirteenth chapter of the novel features some of the most beautiful, poignant, and timelessly transcendent prose ever written - a gorgeous meditation on the meaning of life and the essence of the creative spirit:

"Sometimes a kind of glory lights up the mind of a man. It happens to nearly everyone. You can feel it growing or preparing like a fuse burning toward dynamite. It is a feeling in the stomach, a delight of the nerves, of the forearms. The skin tastes the air, and every deep-drawn breath is sweet. Its beginning has the pleasure of a great stretching yawn; it flashes in the brain and the whole world glows outside your eyes. A man may have lived all of his life in the gray, and the land and trees of him dark and somber. The events, even the important ones, may have trooped by faceless and pale. And then - the glory - so that a cricket song sweetens his ears, the smell of the earth rises chanting to his nose, and dappling light under a tree blesses his eyes. Then a man pours outward, a torrent of him, and yet he is not diminished. And I guess a man’s importance in the world can be measured by the quality and number of his glories. It is a lonely thing but it relates us to the world. It is the mother of all creativeness, and it sets each man separate from all other men."

Writing in 1952, and writing for his two young sons, Steinbeck peers into the future, perhaps our present, with a concerned and prescient eye: "There are monstrous changes taking place in the world, forces shaping a future whose face we do not know. Some of these forces seem evil to us, perhaps not in themselves but because their tendency is to eliminate other things we hold good. It is true that two men can lift a bigger stone than one man. A group can build automobiles quicker and better than one man, and bread from a huge factory is cheaper and more uniform. When our food and clothing and housing all are born in the complication of mass production, mass method is bound to get into our thinking and to eliminate all other thinking. In our time mass or collective production has entered our economics, our politics, and even our religion, so that some nations have substituted the idea collective for the idea God. This in my time is the danger. There is great tension in the world, tension toward a breaking point, and men are unhappy and confused."

He extends a poignant reminder of what anchors us to life and what makes that life worth living: "At such a time it seems natural and good to me to ask myself these questions. What do I believe in? What must I fight for and what must I fight against?

Our species is the only creative species, and it has only one creative instrument, the individual mind and spirit of a man. Nothing was ever created by two men. There are no good collaborations, whether in music, in art, in poetry, in mathematics, in philosophy. Once the miracle of creation has taken place, the group can build and extend it, but the group never invents anything. The preciousness lies in the lonely mind of a man.

And now the forces marshaled around the concept of the group have declared a war of extermination on the preciousness, the mind of man. By disparagement, by starvation, by repressions, forced direction, and the stunning hammerblows of conditioning, the free, roving mind is being pursued, roped, blunted, drugged. It is a sad suicidal course our species seems to have taken.

And this I believe: that the free, exploring mind of the individual human is the most valuable thing in the world. And this I would fight for: the freedom of the mind to take any direction it wishes, undirected. And this I must fight against: any idea, religion, or government which limits or destroys the individual. This is what I am and what I am about. I can understand why a system built on a pattern must try to destroy the free mind, for this is one thing which can by inspection destroy such a system. Surely I can understand this, and I hate it and I will fight against it to preserve the one thing that separates us from the uncreative beasts. If the glory can be killed, we are lost."

"The Most Honest Three Minutes In Television History"

Strong language alert!
Full screen recommended.
"The Most Honest Three Minutes In Television History"
Comments here:

"The Limits of US and Israeli Air Power"

"The Limits of US and Israeli Air Power"
by Larry C. Johnson

"The West, including Israel, refuses to learn from history with regards to the use of air power to achieve regime change. The decision of Israel and the United States to attack Iran on February 28 and force a change of regime is a colossal failure. The murder of the Ayatollah Khamenei, along with the Minister of Defense and the head of the IRGC, and the killing of 165 school girls aged 6 to 12, instead has galvanized the Iranian public to unite around the Islamic Republic and eliminated the chance that there will be a negotiated settlement to the war on terms acceptable to the West. Iran refuses to surrender to the US and Israel and is fully committed to removing the US from the Persian Gulf region and devastating Israel.

Donald Trump, at the urging of his Zionist cheerleaders, broke his promise to his base to not start an unnecessary war and chose instead to start a war that is bleeding US offensive capabilities. Trump, through ignorance or hubris, bet his presidency on the belief that a combination of air and naval power could effect regime change. But history shows that air power alone has never toppled a determined regime. Let’s look at seven examples where the US or Israel tried and failed to achieve military victory by relying on air strikes.

IRAQ 2003: In March 2003 the United States launched one of the most intense air campaigns in history. Over the first three weeks, coalition aircraft flew more than 20,000 sorties and dropped more than 29,000 munitions. “Shock and Awe” was designed to paralyze Saddam Hussein’s regime from the air, break its will to fight, and trigger internal collapse. Yet air power alone did not topple Saddam. Regime change required a rapid ground invasion by US.and British forces that reached Baghdad in just 21 days. George W. Bush’s “Mission Accomplished” speech on May 1, 2003, aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln declared the end of “major combat operations” in Iraq, just six weeks after the US-led invasion, which began on March 20, 2003. Despite this optimistic proclamation, the broader conflict - encompassing insurgency, sectarian violence, occupation, and counter-insurgency efforts - continued for more than eight years afterward.

ISRAEL 2023 to Present:Israel possesses one of the world’s most advanced militaries: unmatched air superiority, precision-guided munitions, real-time intelligence from drones and satellites, layered missile defenses, elite special forces, and the unconditional backing of the United States. Hamas, by contrast, is a non-state terrorist organization with no air force, no navy, no tanks, and a GDP per capita roughly 1/50th of Israel’s. On paper, the outcome of any conventional war should be swift and total. Yet more than two years after the October 7, 2023 attack that killed 1,200 Israelis and took 250 hostages, Hamas remains a functioning military and political force in Gaza.

Afghanistan 2001 to 2021: The United States entered Afghanistan in October 2001 with total air dominance, the world’s most advanced special forces, precision-guided weapons, NATO allies, and a clear initial mission: destroy al-Qaeda and remove the Taliban regime that had sheltered it. By December 2001 the Taliban had been routed from power. Twenty years later, in August 2021, the same Taliban rolled back into Kabul in pickup trucks as the US-backed government collapsed in days.

Yemen — Operation Rough Rider March 2025: The US air and naval campaign against Houthi targets in Yemen — began on March 15, 2025, and officially ended on May 6, 2025. Over 53 days the United States fired more than 1,000 strikes, expended over $1 billion in munitions, deployed two aircraft carrier strike groups, and lost several MQ-9 drones and other assets. The stated objective was clear: restore freedom of navigation in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden by stopping Houthi attacks on commercial shipping. Yet more than ten months later, in March 2026, the Red Sea remains a high-risk zone. Major shipping companies continue to reroute around Africa, insurance premiums remain elevated, and occasional Houthi attacks or credible threats persist. The United States, with unmatched naval power and precision strike capability, did not achieve its core goal.

In this list of failures we should also include the following:

In Kosovo (1999), 78 days of NATO bombing forced Serbia to withdraw from Kosovo but did not remove Slobodan Milošević from power; he fell later due to internal politics.

In Libya (2011), seven months of NATO air strikes helped rebels overthrow Gaddafi only because ground rebel forces advanced on Tripoli.

North Vietnam endured years of Rolling Thunder and Linebacker bombing without regime change.

With the exception of North Vietnam, Iran possesses more military capability than any of the other cases cited above. When this war is over -- with Iran still intact - the US will have depleted critical military supplies that will not be replaced for years and Israel’s economic and military infrastructure will be decimated. Why?

First, the US started a war without an industrial base that could ramp up production of air defense and attack missiles that are being rapidly depleted. Compounding the production challenge is the lack of critical rare earth minerals needed to produce weapons and combat aircraft… China controls those and has refused to export them to the US.

Second, the US and Israel failed to accurately assess Iran’s ability to deploy and launch thousands of drones and ballistic and cruise missiles. Although Israeli censors are working feverishly to hide the damage being done - and I guarantee you that similar hits are pummeling Haifa and Israeli military and intelligence installations across Israel - the truth is leaking out."

An Enraged Repost: "All Palestinian Prisoners To Be Executed And Shot In The Head"

"All Palestinian Prisoners To Be Executed And Shot In The Head"
"The Minister of National Security of Israel, Itamar Ben-Gvir, says he plans to introduce legislation in the Knesset which reads: "All Palestinian prisoners to be executed and shot in the head." – The Minister of National Security of Israel, Itamar Ben-Gvir
Watch this monster say it himself!

"Israel is Evil personified. Israel is Evil embodied."
- Scott Ritter
OMG...God damn these psychopathically degenerate inbred monsters to Hell! And YOU, Americans, paid for it all, every bullet, every bomb, every tank, everything, billions and billions of dollars! All that blood's on YOUR hands too! 80,000 innocent and unarmed old people, men, women and 20,000 CHILDREN slaughtered, with another 10,000 buried under the rubble and unrecovered. And these ZioNazi creatures from Hell call the Palestinians "human animals?!" Eternal shame and disgrace on us all! Stipendium peccati mors est, Israel, and it's coming...

"US-Israel-Iran War, 3/5/26"

Full screen recommended.
WLA, 3/5/26
"Israel Shaking While Iran Unleashes Worst
 Hypersonic Missile Wave, Iron Dome Crumbles"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Hook Global, 3/5/26
"Iran Attacks With Full Might,
 Israel Hit Across Haifa, Tel Aviv, Jerusalem"
Comments here:

"Alert! Iran's 3 Stage War Plan: Hormuz Closure, Oil Wars And Nukes!"

Full screen recommended.
Prepper News, 3/5/26
"Alert! Iran's 3 Stage War Plan:
 Hormuz Closure, Oil Wars And Nukes!"
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Wednesday, March 4, 2026

"The Cost of Living in America Is Making Everyone Leave"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 3/4/26
"The Cost of Living in America Is Making Everyone Leave"

"The cost of living in the United States has reached a point where millions of Americans are making a decision that would have been unthinkable just a few years ago. They're leaving. Not on vacation, not temporarily, but for good. From young couples working multiple jobs just to stay afloat, to retirees on fixed incomes watching their savings disappear, people from every walk of life are looking beyond American borders for something that used to be a given here: a decent, affordable life.

In this video, we hear directly from Americans who have already made the move and from those who are right on the edge of doing it. Their stories paint a picture that's impossible to ignore. Housing costs have surged, car insurance and groceries have skyrocketed, and wages have barely moved. For a lot of people, the math simply stopped adding up. Working full time used to be enough. Then it took two incomes. Now, for many families, even four sources of income aren't covering the basics.

What makes this even more eye-opening is what people are discovering once they leave. Americans who've relocated to Europe, Southeast Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East are reporting something that almost sounds too good to be true. They're spending less, stressing less, eating better, and actually enjoying their daily lives. Some are living on a thousand dollars a month or less and feeling healthier and more fulfilled than they ever did back home. Access to affordable healthcare, fresh food, and a slower pace of life is changing how they see everything they were taught about success and happiness.

Retirees are finding that their Social Security checks, which barely cover rent in most American cities, can fund a comfortable and even enjoyable lifestyle in dozens of countries around the world. The ability to see a doctor the same day for a fraction of the cost, to live without the constant anxiety of one emergency wiping out your savings, that's not a distant possibility anymore.

This video also breaks down the real costs of making the move. How much money you actually need to relocate, how visas work, what to expect with your benefits abroad, and why it's far more accessible than most people assume. Whether you're seriously considering a move or just curious about why so many Americans are choosing this path, this is a conversation worth having."
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Musical Interlude: "This Too Shall Pass"; "The World Needs Your Story"; "You Matter"

Full screen recommended.
Fearless Soul, "This Too Shall Pass"
"Nothing in life is permanent - not the pain, not the struggle, not even the most beautiful moments. Life moves in waves, in seasons, in quiet transformations we often don’t understand until later. This song is a reminder to breathe… to trust… to let go. Whatever you are going through right now - this too shall pass. And in that truth, there is peace. There is freedom. There is beauty. When we stop resisting life and start allowing it to flow, we begin to see: everything is unfolding exactly as it should. Even the hard moments are shaping us, guiding us, awakening us. Let this be your mantra in dark times and bright ones alike - This too shall pass. Take a breath. Release control. Trust the journey."
o
Full screen recommended.
Fearless Soul, "The World Needs Your Story"
o
Fearless Soul, "You Matter"

Musical Interlude: "Beautiful Relaxing Music - Calming Piano & Guitar Music"

Full screen recommended.
Soothing Relaxation,
"Beautiful Relaxing Music - Calming Piano & Guitar Music"
"Beautiful relaxing music by Soothing Relaxation. Enjoy calming piano and
 guitar music composed by Peder B. Helland, set to stunning nature videos."

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Where did this big ball of stars come from? Palomar 6 is one of about 200 globular clusters of stars that survive in our Milky Way Galaxy. These spherical star-balls are older than our Sun as well as older than most stars that orbit in our galaxy's disk. Palomar 6 itself is estimated to be about 12.5 billion years old, so old that it is close to - and so constrains - the age of the entire universe. 
Containing about 500,000 stars, Palomar 6 lies about 25,000 light years away, but not very far from our galaxy's center. At that distance, this sharp image from the Hubble Space Telescope spans about 15 light-years. After much study including images from Hubble, a leading origin hypothesis is that Palomar 6 was created - and survives today - in the central bulge of stars that surround the Milky Way's center, not in the distant galactic halo where most other globular clusters are now found."

"Life Changing Poems for Hard Times"

Full screen recommended.
RedFrost Motivation,
 "Life Changing Poems for Hard Times"
Read by Shane Morris
Poems:
 "Defeat" by Khalil Gibran
 "A Psalm of Life" by H. W. Longfellow
"If" by Rudyard Kipling
 "Invictus" by William Ernest Henley
 "Desiderata" by Max Ermann

"A Dreamer..."

And why does it make you sad to see how everything hangs by such thin and whimsical threads? Because you’re a dreamer, an incredible dreamer, with a tiny spark hidden somewhere inside you which cannot die, which even you cannot kill or quench and which tortures you horribly because all the odds are against its continual burning. In the midst of the foulest decay and putrid savagery, this spark speaks to you of beauty, of human warmth and kindness, of goodness, of greatness, of heroism, of martyrdom, and it speaks to you of love.”
- Eldridge Cleaver

“A Life of One’s Own"

“If the sun is shining, stand in it – yes, yes, yes. Happy times are great, but happy times pass – they have to – because time passes. The pursuit of happiness is more elusive; it is life-long, and it is not goal-centered. What you are pursuing is meaning – a meaningful life… There are times when it will go so wrong that you will be barely alive, and times when you realize that being barely alive, on your own terms, is better than living a bloated half-life on someone else’s terms.” - Jeanette Winterson
“‘A Life of One’s Own’: A Penetrating 1930s Field Guide to Self-Possession, 
Mindful Perception, and the Art of Knowing What You Really Want”
by Maria Popova

“One must know what one wants to be,” the eighteenth-century French mathematician Émilie du Châtelet wrote in weighing the nature of genius. “In the latter endeavors irresolution produces false steps, and in the life of the mind confused ideas.” And yet that inner knowing is the work of a lifetime, for our confusions are ample and our missteps constant amid a world that is constantly telling us who we are and who we ought to be – a world which, in the sobering words of E.E. Cummings, “is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody else.” Try as we might not to be blinded by society’s prescriptions for happiness, we are still social creatures porous to the values of our peers – creatures surprisingly and often maddeningly myopic about the things we believe furnish our completeness as human beings, habitually aspiring to the wrong things for the wrong reasons.

In 1926, more than a decade before a team of Harvard psychologists commenced history’s longest and most revelatory study of human happiness and half a century before the humanistic philosopher Erich Fromm penned his classic on the art of living, the British psychoanalyst and writer Marion Milner (February 1, 1900–May 29, 1998) undertook a seven-year experiment in living, aimed at unpeeling the existential rind of all we chronically mistake for fulfillment – prestige, pleasure, popularity – to reveal the succulent, pulsating core of what makes for genuine happiness. Along her journey of “doubts, delays, and expeditions on false trails,” which she chronicled in a diary with a field scientist’s rigor of observation, Milner ultimately discovered that we are beings profoundly different from what we imagine ourselves to be – that the things we pursue most frantically are the least likely to give us lasting joy and contentment, but there are other, truer things that we can train ourselves to attend to in the elusive pursuit of happiness.

In 1934, under the pen name Joanna Field, Milner released the results of her inquiry in “A Life of One’s Own” – a small, enormously insightful book, beloved by W.H. Auden and titled in homage to Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own,” published three years after Milner began her existential experiment. Milner would go on to fill her ninety-eight years with life of uncommon contentment, informed by her learnings from this intensive seven-year self-examination.

In the preface to the original edition, Milner admonishes: “Let no one think it is an easy way because it is concerned with moments of happiness rather than with stern duty or high moral endeavour. For what is really easy, as I found, is to blind one’s eyes to what one really likes, to drift into accepting one’s wants ready-made from other people, and to evade the continual day to day sifting of values. And finally, let no one undertake such an experiment who is not prepared to find himself more of a fool than he thought.”

This disorienting yet illuminating task of turning the mind’s eye inward requires a practice of recalibrating our conditioned perception. Drawing on Descartes’s tenets of critical thinking, she set out to doubt her most fundamental assumptions about what made her happy, trying to learn not from reason alone but from the life of the senses. Half a century before Annie Dillard offered her beautiful lens on the two ways of seeing, Milner writes: “As soon as I began to study my perception, to look at my own experience, I found that there were different ways of perceiving and that the different ways provided me with different facts. There was a narrow focus which meant seeing life as if from blinkers and with the centre of awareness in my head; and there was a wide focus which meant knowing with the whole of my body, a way of looking which quite altered my perception of whatever I saw. And I found that the narrow focus way was the way of reason. If one was in the habit of arguing about life it was very difficult not to approach sensation with the same concentrated attention and so shut out its width and depth and height. But it was the wide focus way that made me happy.”

She reflects on the sense of extreme alienation and the terror of missing out she felt at the outset of the experiment, at twenty-six: “Although I could not have told about it at the time, I can now remember the feeling of being cut off from other people, separate, shut away from whatever might be real in living. I was so dependent on other people’s opinion of me that I lived in a constant dread of offending, and if it occurred to me that something I had done was not approved of I was full of uneasiness until I had put it right. I always seemed to be looking for something, always a little distracted because there was something more important to be attended to just ahead of the moment.”

Throughout the book, Milner illustrates the trajectory of her growth with the living record that led to her insights, punctuating her narrative with passages from her diary penned during the seven years. One, evocative of eighteen-year-old Sylvia Plath’s journal, captures the disquieting restlessness she felt: “I want to feel myself part of things, of the great drift and swirl: not cut off, missing things, like being sent to bed early as a child, the blinds being drawn while the sun and cheerful voices came through the chink from the garden.”

In another, she distills the interior experience of that achingly longed-for sense of belonging to with world: “I want… the patterns and colorings on the vase on my table took on a new and intense vitality – I want to be so harmonious in myself that I can think of others and share their experiences.”

Looking back on the young self who penned those journal entires at the outset of the experiment, Milner reflects: “I had felt my life to be of a dull dead-level mediocrity, with the sense of real and vital things going on round the corner, out in the streets, in other people’s lives. For I had taken the surface ripples for all there was, when actually happenings of vital importance to me had been going on, not somewhere away from me, but just underneath the calm surface of my own mind. Though some of these discoveries were not entirely pleasant, bringing with them echoes of terror and despair, at least they gave me a sense of being alive.”

Much of that aliveness, she notes, came from the very act of chronicling the process of self-examination, for attention is what confers interest and vitality upon life. Joining the ranks of celebrated authors who championed the benefits of keeping a diary, Milner writes: “Not only did I find that trying to describe my experience enhanced the quality of it, but also this effort to describe had made me more observant of the small movements of the mind. So now I began to discover that there were a multitude of ways of perceiving, ways that were controllable by what I can only describe as an internal gesture of the mind. It was as if one’s self-awareness had a central point of interest being, the very core of one’s I-ness. And this core of being could, I now discovered, be moved about at will; but to explain just how it is done to someone who has never felt it for himself is like trying to explain how to move one’s ears.”

This inarticulable internal gesture, Milner found, was a matter of recalibrating her habits of perceiving, looking not directly at an object of attention but taking in a fuller picture with a diffuse awareness that is “more like a spreading of invisible sentient feelers, as a sea anemone spreads wide its feathery fingers.” One morning, she found herself in the forest, mesmerized by the play of sunlight and shadow through the glistening leaves of the trees, which left her awash in “wave after wave of delight” – an experience not cerebral but sensorial, animating every cell of her body. Wondering whether such full-body surrender to dimensional delight could provide an antidote to her feelings of anger and self-pity, she considers the trap of busyness by which we so often flee from the living reality of our being: “If just looking could be so satisfying, why was I always striving to have things or to get things done? Certainly I had never suspected that the key to my private reality might lie in so apparently simple a skill as the ability to let the senses roam unfettered by purposes. I began to wonder whether eyes and ears might not have a wisdom of their own.”

That tuning into one’s most elemental being, she came to realize, was the mightiest conduit to inhabiting one’s own life with truthfulness and integrity undiluted by borrowed standards of self-actualization. Nearly half a century before the poet Robert Penn Warren contemplated the trouble with “finding yourself,” Milner writes: “I had been continually exhorted to define my purpose in life, but I was now beginning to doubt whether life might not be too complex a thing to be kept within the bounds of a single formulated purpose, whether it would not burst its way out, or if the purpose were too strong, perhaps grow distorted like an oak whose trunk has been encircled with an iron band. I began to guess that my self’s need was for an equilibrium, for sun, but not too much, for rain, but not always… So I began to have an idea of my life, not as the slow shaping of achievement to fit my preconceived purposes, but as the gradual discovery and growth of a purpose which I did not know. I wrote: “It will mean walking in a fog for a bit, but it’s the only way which is not a presumption, forcing the self into a theory.”

Distilling the essence of this reorientation of being, she adds: “I did not know that I could only get the most out of life by giving myself up to it.”

Several decades later, Jeanette Winterson would write beautifully of “the paradox of active surrender” essential to our experience of art. As in art, so in life – Milner writes: “Here then was a deadlock. I wanted to get the most out of life, but the more I tried to grasp, the more I felt that I was ever outside, missing things. At that time I could not understand at all that my real purpose might be to learn to have no purposes.”

Half a century after Nietzsche proclaimed that “no one can build you the bridge on which you, and only you, must cross the river of life,” Milner considers the difficulty – and the triumph – of recognizing that you are crossing life on someone else’s bridge: ”I had at least begun to guess that my greatest need might be to let go and be free from the drive after achievement – if only I dared. I had also guessed that perhaps when I had let these go, then I might be free to become aware of some other purpose that was more fundamental, not self-imposed private ambitions but some thing which grew out of the essence of one’s own nature. People said: ‘Oh, be yourself at all costs’. But I had found that it was not so easy to know just what one’s self was. It was far easier to want what other people seemed to want and then imagine that the choice was one’s own.”

“One can’t write directly about the soul,” Virginia Woolf wrote in her own diary in the same era. “Looked at, it vanishes.” Happiness, Milner found, was similarly elusive to direct pursuit. Rather, its attainment required a wide-open attentiveness to reality, a benevolent curiosity about all that life has to offer, and a commitment not to argue with its offerings but to accept them as they come, congruous or incongruous as they may be with our desires.

Looking back on the diary entires from the final stretch of her seven-year experiment, she reflects on the hard-earned mastery of this unarguing surrender: “It struck me as odd that it had taken me so long to reach a feeling of sureness that there was something in me that would get on with the job of living without my continual tampering. I suppose I did not really reach it until I had discovered how to sink down beneath the level of chattering thoughts and simply feel what it meant to be alive.”

Freely download “A Life Of Ones Own”, by Marion Milner, here:

The Daily "Near You?"

South Jordan, Utah, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"There Is Always The Hope..."

“What happens to people living in a society where everyone in power is lying, stealing, cheating and killing, and in our hearts we all know this, but the consequences of facing all these lies are so monstrous, we keep on hoping that maybe the corporate government administration and media are on the level with us this time. Americans remind me of survivors of domestic abuse. This is always the hope that this is the very, very, very last time one’s ribs get re-broken again.”
- Inga Muscio

"You Think..."

"That's why crazy people are so dangerous.
You think they're nice until they're chaining you up in the garage."
- Michael Buckley

"When We Can No Longer Tell the Truth "

"When We Can No Longer Tell the Truth"
by Charles Hugh Smith

"When we can no longer tell the truth because the truth will bring the whole rotten, fragile status quo down in a heap of broken promises and lies, we've reached the perfection of dysfunction. You know the one essential guideline to leadership in a doomed dysfunctional system: when it gets serious, you have to lie. In other words, the status quo's secular goddess is TINA - there is no alternative to lying, because the truth will bring the whole corrupt structure tumbling down.

This core dynamic of dysfunction is scale-invariant, meaning that hiding the truth is the core dynamic in dysfunctional relationships, households, communities, enterprises, cities, corporations, states, alliances, nations and empires: when the truth cannot be told because it threatens the power structure of the status quo, that status quo is doomed.

Lies, half-truths and cover-ups are all manifestations of fatal weakness. What lies, half-truths and cover-ups communicate is: we can no longer fix our real problems, and rather than let this truth out, we must mask it behind lies and phony reassurances.

Truth is power, lies are weakness. All we get now are lies, statistics designed to mislead and phony reassurances that the status quo is stable and permanent. The truth is powerful because it is the core dynamic of solving problems. Lies, gamed statistics and false reassurances are fatal because they doom any sincere efforts to fix what's broken before the system reaches the point of no return.

We are already past the point of no return. The expediency of lies has already doomed us.

Honest accounts of hugely successful corporations that implode share one key trait: in every case, managers were pressured to hide the truth from top management, which then hid the truth from investors and clients. is the key dynamic in failed oligarchies as well: if telling the truth gets you sent to Siberia (or worse), then nobody with any instinct for self-preservation will tell the truth. If obscuring the truth saves one's job, then that's what people do. That this dooms the organization is secondary to immediate self-preservation.

A distorted sense of loyalty to the family, community, company, institution, agency or nation furthers lying as the  solution to unsavory problems. Daddy a drunk? Hide the bottle. Church a hotbed of adultery and thieving? Maintain the facade of holiness at all costs. Company products are failing? Put some lipstick on the pig. The statistical truth doesn't support the party's happy story? Distort the stats until they do what's needed. The agency failed to fulfill its prime directive? Blame the managerial failure on a scapegoat.

Pathological liars and cheats rely on self-preservation and misplaced loyalty to mask their own failure and corruption. A hint here, a comment there, and voila, a culture of lying is created and incentivized.

Obscuring the truth is the ultimate short-term expediency. Now that it's serious, we have to lie. We'll start telling the truth later, we say, after everything's stabilized, we hope. But lying insures nothing can ever be truly stabilized, so there will never be a point at which the system is strong enough and stable enough to survive the truth.

We are now an empire of lies. The status quo,politically, socially and economically, depends on lies, half-truths, scapegoats and cover-ups for its very survival. Any truth that escapes the prison of lies endangers the entire rotten edifice.

In an empire of lies, leaders say what people want to hear. This wins the support of the masses, who would rather hear false reassurances that require no sacrifices, no difficult trade-offs, no hard choices, no discipline. The empire of lies is doomed. Lies are weakness, and they prohibit any real solutions. Truth is power, but we can no longer tolerate the truth because it frightens us. Our weakness is systemic and fatal."

"How It Tragically, Really Is"

 
Never in the history of the world has there been such a totally kind, compassionate, caring people as you, Good Americans! $359 billion for the neoNazis in Ukraine, God knows how many secret billions to the psychopathically degenerate genocidal Israeli monsters, US debt at $38.7 trillion to pay for the literally insane policies of the Left, all while our economy's being destroyed right in front of our eyes! Stores and restaurants closing everywhere; massive layoffs everywhere, millions jobless and homeless after losing their homes; 700,000 homeless people living in tents everywhere; 60,000 homeless veterans, 22 of whom kill themselves every single day; 150,000 drug overdose deaths last year; violent crime exploding everywhere; inflation out of control and about to explode higher; elderly can't afford life saving medications; rents sky high; city and state governments bankrupt; food banks desperately getting empty and your kids are hungry; gas prices about to explode much higher; $1.5 TRILLION a year, at least, for the military and its 800 bases around the world to spread "democracy" to the suffering masses everywhere; Wall St. thieves stealing TRILLIONS of dollars, including from the pension funds you foolishly believed you'd receive, and won't, and nobody's ever charged or goes to jail; and you go broke desperately trying to pay the electric bill. And yet, despite all this, Americans find it in their loving hearts to relieve other's suffering without complaining! No mass protests! My heart bursts, it bursts I tell you, with pride and admiration! Well, not exactly, but if I put here what I really feel about all this they'd instantly delete this blog...as they did the first one. - CP

"Preemptive War, Permanent Emergency: The Real Cost of Trump’s Iran Strike"

"Preemptive War, Permanent Emergency: 
The Real Cost of Trump’s Iran Strike"
by John & Nisha Whitehead

“From the least to the greatest, all are greedy for gain; prophets and priests alike, all practice deceit. They dress the wound of my people as though it were not serious. ‘Peace, peace,’ they say, when there is no peace.” -Jeremiah 6:13–14

“This is insane. Regime change will result in a bloody civil war... Resist this!” - Charlie Kirk (2025)

"The military-industrial complex and the American police state have joined forces. War abroad and war at home are no longer separate enterprises. They have fused. This did not happen overnight. Every modern president has stretched the limits of war-making power. Some have shredded those limits altogether. Each time that boundary is breached, the Constitution recedes a little further. This is one of those moments.

In a complete about-face from his claims to being a peace president, Donald Trump has authorized yet another preemptive strike - this time against Iran - without a declaration of war from Congress, without meaningful public debate, and without constitutional clarity. The gravity of that decision cannot be overstated.

While American troops were being ordered into harm’s way, Trump was hosting a $1 million-a-ticket fundraiser for himself at Mar-a-Lago, trotting out his signature dance moves between curtained war briefings. That spectacle tells you everything you need to know.

That is how we arrived at Operation Epic Fury.

With its Orwellian proclamations of “peace through strength,” Operation Epic Fury is less strategy than spectacle—an egotistical, muscle-flexing distraction by the Trump administration and an overarching attempt to normalize the use of unilateral force by the executive branch without congressional input or authorization.

This was never about peace. It was always about power.

And the Constitution is clear about how this is supposed to work, even if the White House is not.


And the Constitution is clear about how this is supposed to work, even if the White House is not. Permanent war places empire first.

And as usual, “we the people” will be forced pay for another unpopular forever war—financially, constitutionally, and domestically - and for the presidential hubris and the greed of the military-industrial complex and Deep State undergirding it all. Congress anticipated this danger. The War Powers Act was meant to rein in presidents who bypass Congress. But laws are only as strong as the institutions willing to enforce them. Without congressional authorization, without meaningful debate, without constitutional clarity, the executive branch claims the unilateral authority to wage war.

This is how dictatorships arise and republics erode. It happens when a president is allowed to treat constitutional limits as inconveniences rather than restraints. Trump routinely dismisses unfavorable polls, ignores the courts, sidesteps Congress, shows contempt for the will of the American people, and ignorance about the fact that he works for “we the people.” He behaves not as a public servant but as a potentate.

As John Jay warned in The Federalist No. 4: “Absolute monarchs will often make war when their nations are to get nothing by it, but for the purposes and objects merely personal, such as thirst for military glory, revenge for personal affronts, ambition, or private compacts to aggrandize or support their particular families or partisans. These and a variety of other motives, which affect only the mind of the sovereign, often lead him to engage in wars not sanctified by justice or the voice and interests of his people.”

If this were merely a constitutional dispute, it would be grave enough. But it is not merely constitutional. The consequences are immediate, political, and profoundly destabilizing. Trump has a tendency to bulldoze through constitutional and legal restraints, creating a spectacle or a crisis, and then leaving others to clean up the fallout - whether it is a gutted ballroom, an eviscerated federal agency, a chaotic immigration crackdown, or now a widening war in the Middle East. Long after the headlines move on, the wreckage remains.

And when the crisis involves war, the consequences are not merely bureaucratic or political - they are measured in lives and liberties 
War, in particular, has always been the most convenient tool of presidents facing troubles at home. When approval ratings slide, when economic policy falters, when scandal threatens to consume the headlines, foreign conflict has a way of shifting the narrative.

Trump’s Iran escalation- a deadly, costly, immoral, unpopular distraction from missteps of Trump’s own making - comes amid dismal polling, a faltering economy, escalating immigration crackdowns, eroding constitutional protections, and renewed scrutiny tied to the Epstein files. Six out of ten Americans disapprove of Trump’s military action against Iran. And while there is little to defend about Iran - it is a brutal regime - no nation has the right to declare itself judge, jury and executioner of another without lawful authority. To suggest otherwise is the language of strongmen.

Moreover, what happens abroad does not stay abroad. The same government that claims unilateral authority to bomb foreign nations claims expanded authority to surveil, detain and silence domestically. The military-industrial complex and the police state operate in tandem. At home, we are being subjected to many of the same tactics and technologies deployed overseas. This is how America becomes a battlefield.

The pattern is not new. George W. Bush expanded warrantless surveillance. Obama normalized drone warfare. Presidents of both parties have stretched executive power. Trump inherited the imperial presidency - and leaned into it. He boasts of his authority, derides the courts, dismisses Congress, and treats constitutional limits as inconveniences rather than guardrails. He governs as though Article II were a royal charter. Defense contractors may prosper in such a climate. The Constitution does not.

History teaches that war abroad produces blowback at home. Twenty-five years ago, 9/11 was itself blowback - the consequence of decades of military intervention and occupation in the Middle East. Blowback justifies emergency powers. Emergency powers justify a police state. A police state justifies a permanent national security state. The “war on terror” did not end terrorism. It institutionalized emergency. And permanent emergency makes constitutional government fragile.

James Madison warned that “the means of defense against foreign danger have been always the instruments of tyranny at home.” We have seen it unfold over the past quarter century: the militarization of police, battlefield tactics in American neighborhoods, expansive surveillance justified by counterterrorism. The same tactics and rationale deployed abroad eventually get used against the American people here at home. War abroad justifies control at home. That is the pattern.

As legal scholar Aziz Huq, professor of law at the University of Chicago, warns, the same national-security powers used to justify bombing foreign nations can be turned inward- against domestic opponents and even against the electoral process itself. That is the long game being played right now.

This unprovoked attack on Iran is turning the Middle East into a war zone, in turn laying the groundwork for Trump to act on the fantasies he has long entertained about cancelling the mid-term elections. It is not far-fetched to imagine he might attempt it. He has repeatedly hinted about it and has already demonstrated how far he is willing to go to overturn an election.

On the very day bombs began falling on Tehran, Huq notes that the White House was reportedly considering a unilateral executive order asserting the power to control how and when Americans vote in the upcoming midterm elections - citing “national security” and alleged foreign meddling as justification. As Huq explains, the presidency is especially weakly bound by law when “national security” is invoked. The absence of legal authority did not prevent the strikes on Iran - strikes that are unlawful under the Constitution, which assigns Congress alone the power to initiate war.

If national security can be invoked to bypass Congress abroad, it can be invoked to bypass constitutional limits at home. In other words, if a president can launch a war without congressional authorization, he can claim similar emergency authority to restrict voting, suppress dissent, or silence opposition. This is not republican governance. It is rule by force.

Even some of Trump’s former allies sense the instability. As Marjorie Taylor Greene bluntly put it, “I think it’s time for America to rip the Band-Aid off and we need to have a serious conversation about what the f— is happening in this country and who in the hell are these decisions being made for and who is making these decisions.”

America’s founders understood this danger. They structured the Constitution to prevent any one man from dragging the nation into war. In making the case that decisions about war should never be left to one man, legal scholar David French quotes then-Congressman Abraham Lincoln at the close of the Mexican-American War in 1948: “Kings had always been involving and impoverishing their people in wars, pretending generally, if not always, that the good of the people was the object. This, our convention understood to be the most oppressive of all kingly oppressions and they resolved to so frame the Constitution that no one man should hold the power of bringing this oppression upon us.” Concludes French: “Those words were true then, and they’re true now. No matter what he thinks, Trump is not a king. But by taking America to war all on his own, he is acting like one.”

If we are to preserve any semblance of constitutional government, Congress must reclaim its war powers. The War Powers Resolution must be enforced. Emergency powers must be narrowed, sunsetted and restrained. Surveillance must be reined in. Domestic military deployment must be limited to the most narrow, exceptional circumstances. But structural reform alone will not save a republic that has grown comfortable with permanent war. Because once war abroad and war at home fully merge, the Constitution becomes little more than words on paper.

War is not peace. Preemptive war is not strength. And an imperial presidency - no matter how loudly it wraps itself in flags - is not constitutional government. The Founders understood that the gravest threat to liberty would not come from foreign enemies alone, but from the concentration of power in the hands of one man who believed himself indispensable.

A president who can send bombs abroad without consent can silence opposition at home without hesitation. A government that governs by the rule of emergency eventually ceases to govern by the rule of law. And a nation that trades liberty for spectacle will wake up to find that it has neither. History is a relentless teacher: military empires may rise on the back of war, but they fall just as quickly from being spread too thin. Already, days after the start of this debacle of a war on Iran, U.S. forces are being used to combat drug trafficking in Ecuador.

The question is no longer whether America can police the globe. The question is whether our Republic can survive the weight of the Empire it has become. We are at the point where we must choose: the spectacle of permanent war, or the survival of the American experiment in freedom. We cannot have both."

Bill Bonner, "The Dots That Matter"

"The Dots That Matter"
by Bill Bonner

Youghal, Ireland - "We connect the dots. Sometimes right. Sometimes wrong. And always in doubt. Mr. Trump’s policies often appear contradictory, fickle, or incoherent. The Washington Post has trouble keeping up with them: "White House offers shifting rationales for war with Iran."

MAGA fans have been forced to explain the confusion by saying in effect that like God, Trump works in mysterious ways. He plays ‘4-dimensional chess,’ they claim. He’s looking at ‘third order effects,’ they believe.The latest big dot – war with Iran -- is easy to connect, but only when you see it as a part of his larger purpose in life (of which he is unaware)...to run the US empire onto the rocks. Just look at the alternative explanations for Trump’s major policy initiatives...

...that he was trying to restore ‘conservatism’ to the US government. But there has been nothing ‘conservative’ about America’s Supreme Leader...and two of the last ‘conservatives’ left in Congress, Rand Paul and Tom Massie, along with Tucker Carlson and ex-rep Marjorie Taylor Green, have become his arch-enemies.

...that he would rein in the Deep State and the Washington Establishment. But now the federal government - deep and shallow - has more power than ever.

...that he was a financial genius, who would make us all rich. He promises big ‘dividend’ checks...but will have to ‘print’ the money; US debt – a burden we all share -- increased $8 trillion during his first term....and another $2.2 trillion last year.

...that he was going to bring peace to the world. He’s bombed more countries than any previous president.

...that he was only using the presidency as a way to get personally richer...and more powerful. Well, yes...that may his conscious motive; but History may be using it for her own ends.

The only explanation that works is that he is doing the gods’ dirty work, helping to reduce the outsize power of the USA. Let’s look at the most recent dots. In a sky crowded with explosions and mass murder, some barely twinkle. Still, they fit more or less neatly into our (hypothetical) big picture.

CNN: "Trump administration drops suits against law firms with ties to Democrats and other Trump foes." The cases had been some of the most shocking attempts at retribution by Trump for his own past legal issues, with Trump aiming at large and well-known firms with prominent lawyers who had ties to Democratic administrations and the party.

The Big Man favors confrontation over cooperation. In the news item above, POTUS has had to abandon his attack on the law firms. But it is still a success...even the most prestigious law firms in the country know that they are not immune to the president’s wrath. They must now be looking for ways to curb presidential power.

Here’s another little dot that should fit the same story line, bringing more arbitrary power to the executive branch. Daily Beast: "Trump goon threatens airline industry over wife’s flight delay. White House Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair has been complaining online about delays he and his wife have experienced this week while flying American Airlines. “Today, American Airlines delays me 2.5 hours because someone failed to notice empty hydraulic fluid before it was time to go down the runway. Yesterday, they apparently forgot to BOOK A PILOT for my wife’s flight,” he alleged. “I’m going to take a new interest in the airline industry,” he continued.

Uh oh. The airline industry must be looking to jettison arbitrary federal oversight too. Another one. The Big Man doesn’t like dissent. He decrees that the US no longer work with the best companies, but with those who give him no independent opinions. CBS News: "President Trump announced Friday that he is ordering all federal agencies to “immediately” stop using Anthropic’s artificial intelligence technology, as the company neared a Pentagon deadline to drop its push for guardrails over the military’s use of its AI.

“I am directing EVERY Federal Agency in the United States Government to IMMEDIATELY CEASE all use of Anthropic’s technology,” Mr. Trump wrote on Truth Social. “We don’t need it, we don’t want it, and will not do business with them again!”

And here’s a more ominous dot that fits the pattern. The Guardian: "Trump’s Iran strikes accelerate the world’s drift from dollar dominance. The trade-weighted dollar, measured against a basket of global currencies, has lost 7% of its value over the past year...As Francisco Quintana, of Edinburgh Law School, puts it: “...t’s becoming more and more clear that it may not be the best thing to have such a huge dependence on the US, which is becoming less and less reliable.”

We squint...we strain our eyes...the dot matrix is evolving...still unclear...still imperfect... Like everyone else, we wait for the picture to take shape."

Dan, I Allegedly, "I Smell a Financial Crisis"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 3/4/26
"I Smell a Financial Crisis"
"Former Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein says he “smells another financial crisis” - and when someone who led Wall Street through 2008 says that, we should all be paying attention. In this episode of i Allegedly, Dan breaks down the growing warning signs: exploding consumer debt nearing $19 trillion, rising credit card delinquencies, commercial real estate collapsing, private lending cracks, insider stock selling, and Jamie Dimon’s warning that people are starting to do “dumb stuff” again. Are we watching the same reckless behavior that led to the last crash? From empty office buildings in California to struggling retailers, slowing GDP growth, multiple job holders, and Americans borrowing just to survive - the official “strong economy” narrative doesn’t match reality. This video connects the dots between Wall Street warnings, rising defaults, government deficit spending, inflation pressures, and everyday financial stress. You’re not crazy. Something feels off - and today we break down why."
Comments here:

"US-Israel-Iran War, Day 6"

Full screen recommended.
Judge Napolitano, Scott Ritter, 3/4/26
"'This Is Worse Than You Think', 
This Could Reshape U.S. Power for Decades"
Comments here:
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Mohammad Marandi & Pepe Escobar, 3/4/26
"Has Trump Lost the War?
Iran Strikes CIA, Destroys THADD"
"Mohammad Marandi joins from Iran alongside Pepe Escobar to break down the latest developments in Iran's historic retaliation to US and Israeli aggression, and what the latest hits on both side mean for the future of the war."
Comments here:
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Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 3/4/26
"Col. Douglas Macgregor:
 Trump’s War: A Mess of His Own Making"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Money Over History, 3/4/26
"Iran Hits the U.S. Navy Command Center in Bahrain"
"Iran has launched a major strike targeting the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet command center in Bahrain, marking one of the most serious escalations in the ongoing Middle East conflict. Smoke was seen rising over the Juffair district in Manama, where the United States Navy has operated its Fifth Fleet headquarters for decades. The base serves as the command hub for U.S. naval operations across the Arabian Gulf, Red Sea, Gulf of Oman, and parts of the Indian Ocean, covering nearly 2.5 million square miles of strategic waters.

In this video we break down what really happened during the attack on the U.S. Navy command center, how Iran targeted multiple American military bases across the region, and what this means for global shipping routes, Gulf security, and the wider Iran-U.S. conflict. We also analyze the strategic importance of the Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain, the potential impact on international trade routes such as the Strait of Hormuz and the Bab-el-Mandeb, and how this strike could reshape the balance of power in the region."
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