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Monday, June 29, 2026

"Economic Market Snapshot 6/29/26"

"Economic Market Snapshot 6/29/26"

Down the rabbit hole of psychopathic greed and insanity...
Only the consequences are real - to you!
"It's a Big Club, and you ain't in it. 
You and I are not in the Big Club."
- George Carlin
o
Market Data Center, Live Updates:
Financial Stress Index

"The OFR Financial Stress Index (OFR FSI) is a daily market-based snapshot of stress in global financial markets. It is constructed from 33 financial market variables, such as yield spreads, valuation measures, and interest rates. The OFR FSI is positive when stress levels are above average, and negative when stress levels are below average. The OFR FSI incorporates five categories of indicators: creditequity valuationfunding, safe assets and volatility. The FSI shows stress contributions by three regions: United Statesother advanced economies, and emerging markets."
Job cuts and much more.
Commentary, highly recommended:
"The more I see of the monied classes,
the better I understand the guillotine."
- George Bernard Shaw
Oh yeah... beyond words. Any I know anyway...
And now... The End Game...
o

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Jeremiah Babe, "Life Is Precious; Napa Valley Facing Oblivion"

Jeremiah Babe, 6/28/26
"Life Is Precious; Napa Valley Facing Oblivion"
Comments here:

"America Is Already Dead Inside"

Full screen recommended.
"America Is Already Dead Inside"
"When was the last time you looked someone in the eye? Not glanced. Looked. If you can’t remember, you are the majority. Psychologists call what is happening to the American population a “meaning crisis” traditional sources of purpose, identity, and belonging have been eroded without replacement. Life expectancy is declining in the richest country on Earth. 264,000 Americans die of despair every year the 5th leading cause of death. 42% of teenagers meet the clinical threshold for depression. 165 million adults report loneliness equivalent to smoking 15 cigarettes a day. The country replaced God, community, and purpose with Amazon Prime, Netflix, and Pornhub. And life expectancy went down while convenience went up. Four industries spent billions engineering a population that cannot feel pleasure at normal intensity because numb people spend more. Your emptiness is their profit. Your numbness is their margin. 40% of managers got a new mental health diagnosis this year. 60% of doctors are burned out. 42% of pastors considered quitting. The rescuers are dead inside too. America didn’t die from the outside. It died at the kitchen table. Where two people used to talk. And now they scroll."
Comments here:

"We Are Entering The Most Dangerous Chapter Of World War III That We Have Experienced So Far As The Agreement With Iran Collapses"

"We Are Entering The Most Dangerous Chapter Of World War III
That We Have Experienced So Far As The Agreement With Iran Collapses"
by Michael Snyder

"A lot of people out there still don’t realize that we are literally watching World War III play out right in front of our eyes. The war between Russia and Ukraine is already longer than World War I was, and every single ceasefire in the Middle East that has been agreed to since October 7th, 2023 has ultimately collapsed. Just a couple of weeks ago, the world was celebrating because the U.S. had signed a “Memorandum of Understanding” with Iran and we were being told that we were finally going to have permanent peace in the Middle East. So how did that work out? I feel like a broken record when I keep saying that there isn’t going to be peace in the Middle East, but it is the truth.

At the end of last week, the Iranians attacked a commercial vessel that was traveling through the Strait of Hormuz using a route that they did not authorize, and the U.S. responded by bombing several Iranian military targets. This is something that I covered in an article for my core supporters on Friday. Then on Saturday, the same cycle repeated again.

Iran attacked another commercial vessel that was attempting to slip through the Strait of Hormuz along an “unauthorized” route, and in response the U.S. conducted an even larger wave of strikes…U.S. Central Command said its forces had carried out the new strikes after a Panama-flagged tanker was attacked by an Iranian drone on Saturday. “Iran was given a chance to honor the ceasefire agreement but elected not to,” Central Command said in a statement. U.S. strikes were “in direct response to continued Iranian aggression against commercial shipping” and targeted Iranian military surveillance, communications, air defence, drone storage and mine-laying facilities, it said.

Following that wave of strikes, President Trump warned that there “may come a point” when the U.S. must hit Iran so hard that it “will no longer exist”… “United States aircraft just struck Iranian missile and drone storage locations, and coastal radar sites, for violating the Cease Fire Agreement, AGAIN!” Mr. Trump said in a Truth Social post. The president issued an aggressive threat in the post, saying it was possible Iran “may never learn.” “There may come a point when we are no longer able to be reasonable, and will be forced to militarily complete the job that we very successfully started,” the president said. “If that happens, the Islamic Republic of Iran will no longer exist!”

That is very strong language. Needless to say, conventional weapons would not be able to accomplish that goal. In response to the latest wave of U.S. strikes, the IRGC launched missiles and drones at U.S. facilities in Kuwait and Bahrain… Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said in a statement its navy and air forces had launched missile and drone operations targeting U.S. military sites in Kuwait and Bahrain. The Guards said U.S. strikes had violated the ceasefire and “will result in the complete halt of all diplomatic processes”, state-run Press TV said. The IRGC navy command said American bases in the region “will experience hell in the coming days”. Most of the missiles and drones were intercepted, but significant damage was done to a residential building in Bahrain.

This is not what a ceasefire is supposed to look like. I know that there was so much hope that the negotiations which were initiated once the Memorandum of Understanding was signed would finally resolve the central issues that the U.S. and Iran have been fighting about, but those negotiations have now been put on hold…Talks to end the U.S. war with Iran are on hold after the U.S. struck Iranian military targets in retaliation for Tehran’s latest strikes on shipping vessels in the Strait of Hormuz. A Pakistani source involved in the negotiations to settle the conflict between the U.S. and Iran told MS NOW that while the talks are now on hold, all sides are maintaining representatives in Switzerland to restart discussions when given the go-ahead. The source did not make clear to MS NOW which side decided to pause negotiations.

Sadly, the reality of the matter is that these negotiations were doomed anyway. Iran is never going to make the nuclear concessions that the Trump administration is seeking. And Iran is never going to agree to allow commercial traffic to flow freely through the Strait of Hormuz the way that it did before the war

The Iranian parliament’s national security committee spokesperson on Sunday said the Strait of Hormuz would not return to its pre-war state and that other countries would have no choice but to comply with Iran’s orders in the waterway. “We firmly support the action of the ever-victorious Guards in a crushing confrontation with the American enemy and in asserting Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz,” Ebrahim Rezaei wrote on X. “The Strait of Hormuz will not return to its previous state, and others have no choice but to comply with Iran’s orders in the strait.”

The crisis in the Middle East is not going to have a happy ending. I believe that we will witness some absolutely shocking escalations in the months ahead, and there are some Iranians that are convinced that now is the time to greatly accelerate their nuclear program

Iran has “no choice” but to develop a nuclear bomb, a media outlet linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said - the latest threat to the peace deal. The article, titled “No choice but to build the atomic bomb,” claims that Iran must negotiate with its enemies from a position of strength, and was published by Iranian state news outlet Fars on Sunday. “To achieve the peace and calm that Iran needs, it must absolutely reach nuclear deterrence to ensure that the rest of the issues can be resolved through negotiation,” thunders the piece, before comparing Iran’s situation with the US to that of China in the 1970s.

Of course the Iranians are also furious about the fighting that has been going on in Lebanon. The latest ceasefire with Hezbollah has already collapsed, and the IDF conducted even more strikes in Lebanon on Sunday…Israel renewed its strikes on Lebanon on Sunday, Lebanese state media reported, two days after an agreement was signed by the two countries, which a Hezbollah lawmaker warned would lead to “internal conflict”. The strikes come a day after one person was killed in an Israeli strike on the south, according to Lebanon’s health ministry, with the Israeli military saying it targeted Hezbollah members near its self-proclaimed “security zone”, which reaches 10 kilometres (6 miles) into Lebanon. Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported several strikes on Sunday. There will never be permanent peace between Israel and Hezbollah. Anyone that believes otherwise is just being delusional.

Meanwhile, the war in Ukraine just continues to intensify. In recent days, the Ukrainians have been conducting a series of stunning long-range attacks deep inside Russian territory… Ukraine kept up its heavy drone assault on Russia, setting fire to a major oil refinery in the south and killing at least two people, Russian authorities said Sunday, as President Vladimir Putin acknowledged his country is going through a “difficult period.”

Ukraine has markedly stepped up its long-range attacks on Russian military industries and energy facilities in recent months, aiming to cut Moscow’s revenue for its invasion - now in its fifth year - and make Russians feel the consequences. Russian leaders are running out of patience, and it would not surprise me at all if they decide to use tactical nukes at some point. But for now, they continue to absolutely pummel Ukrainian cities with conventional weapons

President Volodymyr Zelensky stated on Saturday, June 27, that Russian forces deployed approximately 1,400 attack drones, 1,500 guided aerial bombs, and 19 missiles of various types, including ballistic missiles, against Ukraine over the past week. In a statement published on Telegram, Zelensky noted that 15 Ukrainian regions were subjected to Russian attacks during the seven-day period. He highlighted that the cities of Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Kharkiv, and Sumy faced near-daily bombardment.

No matter how much the politicians have talked about peace, nothing has been able to stop the war in Ukraine. And no matter how much the politicians have talked about peace, nothing has been able to stop the war in the Middle East. We really are living at a time of “wars and rumors of wars”, and the truth is that this is just the beginning. We are going to witness death and destruction on a scale that most people cannot imagine, and the world is simply not prepared for what is coming next."

Musical Interlude: Ludovico Einaudi, "The Royal Albert Hall Concert: Lady Labyrinth and Nightbook"

Full screen recommended.
Ludovico Einaudi, 
"The Royal Albert Hall Concert:
 Lady Labyrinth and Nightbook" ( 2010 )

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Why doesn't the nearby galaxy create a gravitational lensing effect on the background galaxy? It does, but since both galaxies are so nearby, the angular shift is much smaller than the angular sizes of the galaxies themselves. The featured Hubble image of NGC 3314 shows two large spiral galaxies which happen to line up exactly. The foreground spiral NGC 3314a appears nearly face-on with its pinwheel shape defined by young bright star clusters. Against the glow of the background galaxy NGC 3314b, though, dark swirling lanes of interstellar dust can also be seen tracing the nearer spiral's structure. Both galaxies appear on the edge of the Hydra Cluster of Galaxies, a cluster that is about 200 million light years away.
Gravitational lens distortions are much easier to see when the lensing galaxy is smaller and further away. Then, the background galaxy may even be distorted into a ring around the nearer. Fast gravitational lens flashes due to stars in the foreground galaxy momentarily magnifying the light from stars in the background galaxy might one day be visible in future observing campaigns with high-resolution telescopes."

"I Know..."

“I know the world seems terrifying right now and the future seems bleak. Just remember human beings have always managed to find the greatest strength within themselves during the darkest hours. When faced with the worst horrors the world has to offer, a person either cracks and succumbs to ugliness, or they salvage the inner core of who they are and fight to right wrongs. Never let hatred, fear, and ignorance get the best of you. Keep bettering yourself so you can make the world around you better, for nothing can improve without the brightest, bravest, kindest, and most imaginative individuals rising above the chaos.”
- Cat Winters

The Poet: Joy Harjo, "Remember "

"Remember"

 "Remember the sky that you were born under,
know each of the stars stories.
Remember the moon, know who she is. I met her
in a bar once in Iowa City.
Remember the suns birth at dawn, that is the
strongest point of time. Remember sundown
and the giving away to night.
Remember your birth, how your mother struggled
to give you form and breath. You are evidence of
her life, and her mother's, and hers.
Remember your father. He is your life also.
Remember the earth whose skin you are:
red earth, black earth, yellow earth, white earth
brown earth, we are earth.
Remember the plants, trees, animal life who all have their
tribes, their families, their histories, too. Talk to them,
listen to them. They are alive poems.
Remember the wind. Remember her voice. She knows the
origin of this universe. I heard her singing Kiowa war
dance songs at the corner of Fourth and Central once.
Remember that you are all people and that all people are you.
Remember that you are this universe and that this universe is you.
Remember that all is in motion, is growing, is you.
Remember that language comes from this.
Remember the dance that language is, that life is.
Remember."

- Joy Harjo

"The Minister of Truth!"

"The Minister of Truth!"
by Allan Weisbecker

"I strongly urge you to pick up "Forgotten Civilization; New Discoveries on the Solar Induced Dark Age," by Robert Schoch. Schoch: In "Forgotten Civilization" covers a lot of ground, including the very important issue of the cataclysm that ended the last ice age, approximately 12,000 B.P. (before the present). Schoch shows (to my satisfaction) that it was almost certainly a solar eruption that did in the ice age mega-fauna (and almost all of our ancestors), and not a comet. Schoch is almost certainly right. Read Schoch’s book if you’re interested in this. But be forewarned: Schoch doesn’t pull any punches about the coming cataclysm. He gives us multiple lines of evidence that mean it’s overdue."

Hueyatlaco is an archeological site in the Valsequillo Basin near the city of Puebla, Mexico. After excavations in the 1960s, the site became notorious due to geochronologists‘ analyses that indicated human habitation at Hueyatlaco was dated to ca. 250,000 years before the present (my emphasis).[1][2]

These controversial findings are orders of magnitude older than the scientific consensus for habitation of the New World (which generally traces widespread human migration to the New World to 13,000 to 16,000 ybp). The findings at Hueyatlaco are the subject of continued debate by the scientific community, and have seen only occasional discussion in the literature." [3]

References:
Freely download "Forgotten Civilization: New Discoveries 
on the Solar Induced Dark Age," by Robert Schoch, here:

"Be All That You Can't Be"

And we need a $1.5 TRILLION "defense" budget for THIS?

Our enemies are dying from laughing so hysterically at this disgrace...

The Daily "Near You?"

East Dubuque, Illinois, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"The Gentle Souls by the Sea"

Full screen recommended.
"The Gentle Souls by the Sea"

Native Elder, "How to Reclaim Your Strength After Life Broke You Down"

Full screen recommended.
Native Elder,
"How to Reclaim Your Strength 
After Life Broke You Down"

"You Gotta Be Tough To Grow Old"

Full screen recommended.
Delta King's Blues, 
"You Gotta Be Tough To Grow Old"
"Wrinkles ain’t weakness - they’re proof you survived. “You Gotta Be Tough To Grow Old” is a gritty, soul-deep Delta King’s Blues anthem about resilience, scar tissue, and standing tall through the years. A strong, steady acoustic guitar drives the rhythm like boots planted firm in red dirt. The harmonica blows bold and weathered, carrying the sound of hard winters and hotter summers. The groove stays slow but unbreakable - built for endurance, not speed. This is survival blues. For people who took their hits, buried their losses, and kept waking up anyway. Growing old ain’t for the soft - it’s for the stubborn."

"Sometimes..."

 

Dan, I Allegedly, "No More Hospitals?"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 6/28/26
"No More Hospitals?"
"Hospitals are closing across America at an alarming rate, creating "medical deserts" where families may have to drive 20, 30, or even 60 minutes to reach emergency care. In today's video, I break down why rural and community hospitals are shutting down, what rising healthcare costs, staffing shortages, insurance reimbursement, and inflation have to do with it, and why this is much bigger than a healthcare story. Hospital closures are an economic warning sign that impacts jobs, businesses, real estate values, emergency response times, and entire communities. We also discuss why health insurance means very little if the nearest emergency room has closed, why hospitals are often the largest employer in town, and what practical solutions could help preserve access to emergency care before more communities become medical deserts. This is a business story, a personal finance story, and a public safety story that affects every American - because you don't think about the hospital until you need it."
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

“‘I will surely strike my hands together at the unjust gain
 you have made and at the blood you have shed in your midst.”
– Ezekiel 22:13

"Peak Focus for Complex Tasks, With Beta Isochronic Tones"

Full screen recommended.
"Peak Focus for Complex Tasks, 
 With Beta Isochronic Tones"
by Jason Lewis - Mind Amend

"This is a high-intensity audio brainwave entrainment session, using isochronic tones. Listen to this when you need a strong burst of intense focus to concentrate and study things like advanced mathematics, scientific formulas, financial analysis or any other complex mental activity. Listen to this track with your eyes open while doing the task/activity you want to focus on. Use this session in the morning, afternoon or early evening, to train your brain for better cognition, focus and thought processing. You can either sit somewhere quiet and comfortable with your eyes closed and give your brain a nice workout, or you can also listen to this while doing an activity that requires a boost in concentration.
Headphones are NOT REQUIRED for this video.
Although headphones are not required you may find they produce a more intense effect, because they help to block out distracting external sounds.

Isochronic tones are a fast and effective audio-based way to stimulate your brain. Among many of the benefits, they can help improve focus, relaxation, energy levels, sleep and more, without taking drugs or needing any special equipment. What isochronic tones essentially do is guide your dominant brainwave activity to a different frequency while you are listening to them, allowing you to influence and change your mental state and how you feel."
I strongly suggest you read Comments here:
"Isochronic Tones –
How They Work, the Benefits and the Research"
This is a brainwave entrainment audio session using isochronic tones combined with music. The isochronic tones are the repetitive beats you can hear on top of the music throughout the track. If you are new to this type of audio brainwave entrainment, find out how isochronic tones work and how they compare to binaural beats here: 
Listen folks, we're out of time! Whether you want to know it or not we're literally in the fight of our lives, for our lives right now, and it's going to get much, much worse. Some of you reading this will not survive, and I may not either, so I'll take any edge I can get, and you should too... This works for me. Prepare yourself, brace for impact...
- CP

"How Not To Forget What Matters"

"How Not To Forget What Matters"
by Henrik Karlsson and Johanna Karlsson

"Every few months I will read a tweet, or have a conversation, that makes me feel this is important, I must remember this. Often, these epiphanies are accompanied by a sense that I actually know this already, it had just somehow slipped my mind. And for a few days, I do remember: my life shimmers with a new intensity, and I live the truth of what I grasped. But then, inevitably, the conveyor belt of things to pay attention to keeps churning, and my mind gets filled with small problems I need to solve, or new epiphanies or random noise, like news, and the shining fades from my eyes - I regress to being the same person as ever.

The Latin word for the tendency to lose track of what matters in the cacophony of things that attract our attention is stultitia. “Stultitia,” writes Michel Foucault in “Self-writing,” "is defined by mental agitation, distraction, change of opinions and wishes, and consequently weakness in the face of all the events that may occur; it is also characterized by the fact that it turns the mind toward the future, makes it interested in novel ideas, and prevents it from providing a fixed point for itself in the possession of acquired truth."

You can’t just read a blog post about high agency, get filled with a sense of possibility, and become, from then on, an agentic person. As John Gray puts it in his monograph on J.S. Mill, our character is “a cluster of habitual willings.” For changes to our behavior to become permanent, we must become different people.

In the same way that it is not enough to make a resolution that you will learn the piano, it is not enough to realize that when the kids act out, you shouldn’t lose your temper but slow down, listen, and regulate their nervous systems with the help of yours. Imagine how good a person I would be if having insights were enough! But reacting to the frustrations of your children with calm and curiosity is a skill as much as playing the piano is - and as with the piano, the act of learning it requires rewiring your nervous system through sustained attention and practice. Realizing the value of acting in a certain way might give you a temporary motivation to do it. But in order to actually live in accordance with what you believe in long-term, you must make it a habit.

And this is much harder than making a habit out of playing the piano. When you’re trying to make something like piano practice a habit, the standard advice is to chain it onto some already existing habit - to practice immediately after you brush your teeth in the morning, for example, or after you change out of your work clothes in the afternoon. Chaining the new habit to an already existing one provides a predictable trigger that helps remind you to practice. But the habits that make up our characters often do not follow a predictable schedule like this. I never know, for instance, when our children will act out (except that it will usually be when I’m least capable of handling it with grace—whenever both they and I are unusually hungry and tired). The conflicts seem to come out of nowhere, so I have to, somehow, always be ready to act in the proper way. I need to have the right reaction “ready at hand” (procheiron), as the Greek-philosopher-Roman-slave Epictetus put it. If Johanna and I talked about how we want to deal with the kids’ conflicts the night before, I will nearly always handle the situation well. The problem is to keep it top of mind.

During the first two centuries of the Roman Empire, there spread a practice known as hypomnēmata, a type of notetaking system, used as a tool for meditation, in which the writer would store quotes from books they had read. Each day, often in the morning, the notetaker would open their notebook and look for a passage relevant to something they were struggling with, and then they would meditate on that - unpacking it, making the idea top of mind, ensuring it was alive in them. If they needed courage, for instance, they could meditate on an anecdote that made it real for them what it meant to act bravely. The idea was that over time, the insights they gathered by reading would be transformed into character, something deeply ingrained in their way of thinking and seeing and acting.

This was, as I understand it, an exercise designed to combat the problem I outlined above. Meditating on what matters is a simple habit, which you can chain onto your morning routine, but it reinforces the habits you can’t plan, the habits that make up your character. It was, in the words of the French classicist Pierre Hadot, a spiritual exercise - an exercise because it required work and discipline, spiritual because it engaged the whole person, not just their intellect, but their emotions and their moral character. It was an attempt to treat the formation of character as a skilled practice, as something you can deliberately train and improve through targeted exercises.

The most famous example of this practice is the meditations Marcus Aurelius wrote in his tent as plague swept through the camps during the military campaigns along the Danube River, but it seems to have been a fairly widespread practice among the “cultivated class.” A suggestion repeated in several popular manuals for living was that you should collect every snippet of thought that deeply inspires you to live in a more ethically true way and then, in the pre-dawn hour, look through your hypomnÄ“mata to find passages relevant to your current situation -insightful quotes, examples, actions you had witnessed, notes from conversations you’d had, and so on - and meditate, in writing, on those that help you orient toward your current challenges, until you feel inspired to act in the proper way.

What could be an example? Today I woke up with a headache after having slept with my neck at an odd angle and so didn’t feel like working. Having procrastinated for an hour or so, while Johanna tried to get me to start the day, I recalled principle 23 from a list Nabeel S. Qureshi has compiled for himself: "Doing things is energizing, wasting time is depressing. You don’t need that much ‘rest’."

Walking around the farm with a cup of coffee, reminding myself of the truth of this observation, I gained a sliver of motivation, enough to throw myself into rewriting this essay - and now my headache has lifted, and I feel excited. For more examples of things one might meditate on, I suggest looking at Nabeel’s list. I also like to meditate on stories that make real to me some ethos I aspire to, such as the story of how Werner Herzog, dead broke while scouting for locations for Nosferatu in Brittany, happened upon a field of menhirs and decided to abandon his work to stay at the field for as long as necessary to solve the mystery of how the giant stones had been erected - a story that makes it visceral to me what it means to “take your curiosity seriously.”

The hypomnÄ“ma was a mechanism for centering your mind on what matters, and for gradually refining your understanding of what matters. It was, to use a word from Plutarch, a tool for ethopoiesis (ethos meaning “character” and poiesis “making”), a tool for turning truth into character. By meditating daily on sentences that made it real to you how you wanted to live, you would remember to do the right thing - you would remember to practice it during the day (simply thinking about it is not going to change you). And gradually, you would become that sort of person. You wouldn’t even need to remind yourself. Your principles would have become your character. You would have developed expertise in the skill of holding yourself in a better way.

I first came across the idea of using in this way eight years ago when a friend sent me a copy of Foucault’s “Self-writing.” In the essay, Foucault talks about hypomnÄ“mata and other modes of reading and writing used to fashion a self during the Hellenistic and Imperial eras. I didn’t pick up the practice in its full form. But rereading the essay now, I realize how much it has influenced how I write: my essays are (often) meditations I do in order to deepen core ideas I want to live by, and to strengthen parts of myself I want strengthened. (Writing treatises and letters was a common way of internalizing the content of the hypomnÄ“mata.) And this practice has been transformative for me. I have often noticed that my experience of reality improves if I write and think about something.

But it strikes me now that the practice Foucault wrote about was probably more transformative than what I’ve ended up doing. Essay writing is incredibly time-consuming, and a lot of that time is spent on things that aren’t self-transforming: I spend less time reshaping my mind than I spend solving literary-technical problems that help me write more functional and beautiful essays, for the joy of the craft and for the benefit of readers. Another limitation of my practice is that when an essay is done, I move on. The ideas - though they have been much deepened and more firmly lodged in my mind - fall out of attention and start to fade.

There is an element of self-deception involved here. I like to write essays, so it is comforting to think of it as a powerful practice, something that helps me live more fully and grow as a person. But if I look at it soberly, it is clear to me that essay writing is not a practice that is ideal for the purpose of ethopoiesis. It is common to think that what we do achieves what we want it to achieve, even if there is no evidence for it. There are many practices that promise to transform and improve us - therapy, meditation, psychedelics, but that branding doesn’t mean that they actually do much for us: it is common to see people use these techniques for years without any obvious progress on their problems. If you want to achieve a particular outcome, it is important to start from that goal and evaluate which practices actually help you.

The most important ideas we need to return to weekly, even daily. Essay-writing, then, is not a functional substitute for having a practice that keeps the important truths top of mind, day after day. But it did help me reach that conclusion."

Joel Bowman, "Fatal Conceits"

"Fatal Conceits"
by Joel Bowman

Buenos Aires, Argentina - "What is it, we wonder, that stirs the crowd? That swells the chest and moves the masses? From wild stock market manias… to the sound of trumpets on the battlefield… to belting out national anthems, hands on hearts, before sports matches…Is it the sense of wanting to belong to “something bigger”? Is it a case of mass psychology permeating our vastly interconnected world?

Or is it, as some folk have suggested, a replacement for religion in an increasingly secularized (Western) world? Among English-speaking peoples, from Europe to Australia, Canada to South Africa, fewer people identify with organized religion than they did a generation ago. Even in the United States of America, “One country, under God,” church attendance has declined significantly during our lifetime.

According to Pew Research, the share of Americans identifying as Christian fell from roughly 85–90% in the early 1990s to 62% as of the 2023–24 Religious Landscape Study. Meanwhile, the so-called “religiously unaffiliated” more than tripled, from about 8% to 29%. So what do people pour into this “gap of the gods”? Hmm…
Click image for larger size.
Our reader’s observation recalled to mind the myth of Narcissus. A fatally handsome young man, he arrogantly scorned all those who courted him, including the poor nymph, Echo, who suffered his rejection until she wasted away to nothing… save the sound of her voice in the woods.

As punishment for his pride, the god Nemesis led Narcissus to a drinking pool, where he left the conceited mortal to fall under the spell of his own reflection. Unable to differentiate reflection from reality, Narcissus soon became hopelessly enamored with himself. Whenever he would reach for his beloved reflection, the waters would ripple and the image would disappear. Then, in his sullen melancholy, the beautiful face would return, luring his attention back to the pool anew.

Marooned between desire and impossibility, the helpless youth remained beside the pool, unable to eat, sleep, or turn away. Too late he realized, writes the great Roman poet, Ovid: “I am he.” Even when Narcissus understood that the object of his love was himself, the realization brought no relief. Unable to possess what he desired, he wasted away and died beside the water. And where his body had lain, goes the story, a flower appeared, the narcissus, which bears his name today.

It’s interesting to note that it is not the image itself that proves fatal for our young Narcissus, but his inability to draw his attention away from it, to involve himself in the world, to make real connections with those around him."

"The Day the Lights Never Came Back: How a Single Moment Could Push Modern Civilization to the Brink" (Excerpt)

"The Day the Lights Never Came Back:
 How a Single Moment Could Push Modern Civilization to the Brink"
by Milan Adams

"“Seventy percent of power transformers are 25 years or older, 60% of circuit
 breakers are 30 years or older, and 70% of transmission lines are 25 years or older.”
- ASCE 2025 Infrastructure Report Card

“All it takes is one nihilistic madman with a nuclear arsenal to start a nuclear war.”
- Richard Garwin, physicist and contributor to the first hydrogen bomb design

Excerpt: "Modern civilization often feels permanent. We wake up, switch on the lights, check our phones, pour a cup of coffee, and assume that electricity, clean water, food deliveries, digital banking, emergency services, and global communications will continue functioning exactly as they did yesterday. The complexity behind these everyday conveniences is almost invisible, and perhaps that is why we rarely stop to consider how remarkably fragile they actually are. Every aspect of contemporary life depends upon an enormous web of interconnected systems that must operate continuously, every second of every day, without significant interruption. The moment one of these systems fails on a sufficiently large scale, the others begin to unravel with astonishing speed.
History teaches us that civilizations rarely disappear because of a single dramatic event. Most decline gradually through economic exhaustion, political instability, environmental pressures, or prolonged conflict. Yet modern civilization presents an entirely different paradox. Never before has humanity possessed so much technological sophistication while simultaneously becoming so dependent on a handful of critical infrastructures. The more advanced society becomes, the more catastrophic the consequences of systemic failure become. Unlike previous generations, we have built a world where electricity is not merely a convenience but the foundation upon which nearly everything else rests.

This dependence creates a vulnerability that receives surprisingly little public attention despite repeated warnings from engineers, scientists, military planners, and emergency management experts. The greatest existential threats facing industrial society may not begin with visible destruction at ground level. Instead, they could originate hundreds or even millions of miles above us, arriving silently before spreading through the electrical networks that sustain modern civilization. Whether triggered by an extreme solar event, a high-altitude electromagnetic pulse, or the opening moments of a large-scale nuclear war, the immediate consequence would be strikingly similar: the sudden failure of electrical infrastructure on a scale unlike anything humanity has previously experienced.

For decades, these scenarios were often dismissed as speculative or confined to the realm of science fiction. Popular culture certainly played its part. Films imagined machines overthrowing humanity after a nuclear apocalypse, while novels portrayed societies descending into chaos after mysterious blackouts. Although entertaining, these fictional narratives unintentionally encouraged many people to associate grid collapse with fantasy rather than legitimate strategic planning. In reality, government agencies across multiple countries have spent years studying these exact possibilities, not because they are inevitable, but because their consequences would be so severe that ignoring them would be irresponsible.

The uncomfortable truth is that many of the risks are not hypothetical at all. The Sun continues to produce powerful solar eruptions just as it has throughout recorded history. Nuclear weapons remain deployed across several nations, many still maintained on high levels of operational readiness. Geopolitical tensions have intensified over the past several years rather than diminished, while technological dependence continues expanding into virtually every aspect of daily life. Meanwhile, much of the infrastructure responsible for delivering electricity across North America was designed decades ago, long before today’s digital economy, interconnected supply chains, or sophisticated electronic control systems existed.

Key Insight: The greatest danger is not simply losing electricity. It is losing every other critical service that depends upon electricity at exactly the same time."
Full, most highly recommended article is here:
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Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 6/28/26
"US Should Prepare For Major Blackouts By 2027"
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Saturday, June 27, 2026

Canadian Prepper, "Alert! Trump Strikes Iran! Massive Attack, Ceasefire Dead"

Canadian Prepper, 6/27/26
"Alert! Trump Strikes Iran! 
Massive Attack, Ceasefire Dead"
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Musical Interlude: 2002, "Wait For Me"

Full screen recommended.
2002, "Wait For Me"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Gorgeous spiral galaxy NGC 3521 is a mere 35 million light-years away, toward the constellation Leo. Relatively bright in planet Earth's sky, NGC 3521 is easily visible in small telescopes but often overlooked by amateur imagers in favor of other Leo spiral galaxies, like M66 and M65. It's hard to overlook in this colorful cosmic portrait, though. Spanning some 50,000 light-years the galaxy sports characteristic patchy, irregular spiral arms laced with dust, pink star forming regions, and clusters of young, blue stars.
Remarkably, this deep image also finds NGC 3521 embedded in gigantic bubble-like shells. The shells are likely tidal debris, streams of stars torn from satellite galaxies that have undergone mergers with NGC 3521 in the distant past."

"A Dangerous Place..."

"If I were to remain silent, I'd be guilty of complicity."
- Albert Einstein

"Wrong is wrong, even if everyone is doing it.
Right is right even if only you are doing it."
- Author Unknown

"They Want To Own You - A Financial Transformation Is Underway"

Jeremiah Babe, 6/27/26
"They Want To Own You - 
A Financial Transformation Is Underway"
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"America Has Officially Hit The Breaking Point - Millions Are Snapping"

Full screen recommended.
Finance Economist, 6/27/26
"America Has Officially Hit The Breaking Point - 
Millions Are Snapping"
"55% of Americans say their finances are getting worse the highest since Gallup started asking in 2001. Higher than the pandemic. Higher than the Great Recession. 67% are actively stressed about money. Two-thirds couldn’t attend birthday dinners or weddings because they couldn’t afford it and 55% lied about why. 84% of workers say burnout is affecting their productivity. 72% have been pressured to work through mental health struggles. 40% of senior managers received a new mental health diagnosis this year. One-third skip meals to afford a doctor. Rent is up 54% since 2017. Housing up 60% since 2019. Credit card debt up 63% since 2021. And the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget just published a paper called Break Glass because “the US has never experienced an economic shock as indebted as we are today.” Nobody is coming to help you. Prepare now or you will regret it."
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"What's Coming To America Should Worry Everyone - and You're Not Ready"

Full screen recommended.
Across The States, 6/27/26
"What's Coming To America Should Worry Everyone - 
and You're Not Ready"
"Why are everyday expenses in America rising even when many people are working full-time? This video connects the dots between global oil markets, the Strait of Hormuz, rising fuel costs, food inflation, farming challenges, and the financial pressure millions of U.S. families are feeling in 2026. Here's the thing… inflation isn't just about one expensive grocery trip. It's a chain reaction that begins with energy prices, impacts transportation, farming, manufacturing, and eventually reaches your monthly budget. What most people don't realize is that higher diesel costs, fertilizer shortages, electricity bills, and supply chain disruptions are all connected in ways that affect every household. The reality is that small businesses, farmers, commuters, and working families are experiencing these changes differently. In this video, we break down the facts, explain what's driving these economic shifts, and discuss what they could mean for the months ahead. Watch till the end and share your thoughts—how have rising prices affected your daily life?"
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