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Sunday, July 12, 2026

"People Are Noticing Something at Grocery Stores… And It Confirms Everything"

Full screen recommended.
Across The States, 7/12/26
"People Are Noticing Something at Grocery Stores… 
And It Confirms Everything"
"Your grocery store isn't just changing - it's quietly transforming right in front of you. Rising food prices are only one piece of a much bigger story. From AI-powered surveillance and self-checkout to smart shopping carts, shrinkflation, and customer data collection, today's supermarkets operate very differently than they did just a few years ago. Here's the thing… many shoppers notice higher prices but miss the technology working behind the scenes. This video explores how retailers are using artificial intelligence, behavioral analytics, loyalty programs, and automation to reduce costs, prevent theft, and reshape the shopping experience. What most people don't realize is that every trip through the aisles can generate valuable insights that help stores predict demand, optimize inventory, and personalize promotions. We also discuss why stores feel less personal, why products are being locked behind glass, and what these changes could mean for the future of grocery shopping. Watch until the end for a complete breakdown of one of the biggest transformations happening in modern retail today."
Comments here:

"Everyone's About To Run Out Of Fuel In 1-2 Weeks"

Bob Moriarity, 7/12/26
"Everyone's About To Run Out Of Fuel In 1-2 Weeks"
Comments here:

Dan, I Allegedly, "America's Biggest Brands Are Selling for Pennies"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 7/12/26
"America's Biggest Brands Are Selling for Pennies"
"For decades, these companies were household names, but today many of America's most recognizable brands are being sold for a fraction of what they were once worth. In this video, I break down the shocking sale of Hot Dog on a Stick for just $8 million and explain why bankruptcy sales, distressed assets, and corporate restructurings are creating opportunities that few people are talking about. We'll also look at brands like Stein Mart, RadioShack, Pier 1 Imports, Dressbarn, Linens 'n Things, and more to see why investors are buying struggling companies instead of starting from scratch. Is this a warning sign for the economy, or the opportunity of a lifetime? Let me know in the comments what business you would buy if the price was right. Don't forget to like, subscribe, and share this video with someone who loves business, investing, and economic news."
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Saturday, July 11, 2026

"U.S. Attacks Iran; IRGC Closes Strait"

Full screen recommended.
Lt. Col. Daniel Davis, 7/11/26
"U.S. Attacks Iran; IRGC Closes Strait"

"'Life Doesn’t Owe Anyone a Damn Thing'; or 'Handle Hard Better'"

"'Life Doesn’t Owe Anyone a Damn Thing'; 
or 'Handle Hard Better'"
by Justin Smith

“We all wait in life for things to get easier. It will never get easier. What happens is you handle hard better. That’s what happens. Most people think that it’s going to get easier. Life is going to get easier. Basketball is going to get easier. School is going to get easier. It never gets easier. What happens is you become someone who handles hard stuff better. And if you think life when you leave college is going to all of a sudden get easier because you graduated, and you got a Duke degree, it’s not going to get easier. It’s going to get harder. So make yourself a person that handles hard well.” ~ Kara Lawson, Head Coach for Duke University Women’s Basketball Team and Graduate of the University of Tennessee [July 5th 2022]

"An incredible number of Americans today have been coddled, pampered and fed a sense of entitlement from birth that continued into their early adulthood, making them always look to others or the government for help in acquiring their needs and wants. They have been raised without a backbone, weak-willed and dependent; and so, whenever they find themselves to be in a minority, they more often than not petition the federal and state governments, protest and riot, in order that their particular concerns are proactively pursued and implemented as favored, privileged and superior, no matter how insane, from destroying humanity by way of transgenderism or energy and job-killing fallacious “climate change” policies.

From my earliest memories, I saw hard men, laughing, loving, fighting hard and playing just as hard, as they’d rise each day to head out to work, in the mines, the forests, office buildings and on the nation’s lines of defense, and in particular I recall learning something of worth from each of them, much as I did from my Granddad Spurge, who was a coal miner and a stone mason. They were a hardy bunch of industrious scrappers, who pulled up their sleeves and worked hard to make a better life for themselves and their children, to build better communities, a better America.

But what passes for young “men” today is but a mere shadow of men of worth from better days gone by, what with their feminine appearances and their aversion to doing anything to break a sweat. And aside from weak bodies, too much coddling has made their minds work in a new, cunning devious manner, in which they waste enormous amounts of effort sidestepping real work and figuring out how to get something for nothing rather than perform an honest day’s work to pay for bills they make, without any intention of ever repaying, such as student loans.

Half of America seems content to allow Uncle Sam to make life better for them and their children via the welfare system and the government cheese, even tho’ it means a life of subsistence, just scraping by. Although today, many have developed gaming the system into a real art, whereby they live just about as good as anyone working a full-time job, complete with HUD homes, EBT cards, late model cars, color T.V.s and government purchased cellphones.

Life doesn’t owe any of us a thing, regardless of the circumstances and station of our birth. The miracle of your birth alone doesn’t mean you are automatically owed a job, a house, a bed or a single meal after you are a grown adult and supposedly capable of doing for yourself. You’re not owed recognition and understanding for simply existing, and neither are you owed success and comfort, abundance and happiness or immunity from the problems, pain and suffering that is simply a part of the human condition, and you certainly aren’t due any money you haven’t earned through your own sweat and effort, not from me, the American taxpayers or the U.S. government.

The only thing anyone should expect from The Government, if we are to accept the Contract found in our Constitution, are those things enumerated in its original form, and in that sense, we are owed a strong, affirmative and fierce defense of our Inalienable God-given Rights, as expressed and defined in the Bill of Rights, to be left alone to our own devices to live and thrive as free born Americans, without interference from The Government and its agents where no real harm is being done.

People aren’t created equal in the very real definition of the word and life has never been fair to anyone, and yet, the constant refrain heard all across all levels of American society today, from the ranks of the Mau Mau Marxist-Maoist totalitarians, those lovers of “democracy”, is “the world is so unfair”. They were evidently raised to believe “all men are created equal” in the context of the Declaration of Independence meant they are somehow guaranteed equal outcomes in everyday life, instead of the simple “equality under the law” as intended. And their voices are now amplified by an out-of-control regime that seeks to use their envy to complete the fundamental transformation of America, by any means necessary, no matter how unconstitutional or illegal they might be and are currently proving to be.

Standing on one’s own two feet and making your way through the merit of your own knowledge and work are now a thing of the past, as the poorest results in school and on the job are given the same weight and worth as the best and everybody gets a participation trophy. And in its place, envy, greed, sloth, gluttony, lies, sex and murder, the destroyer of worlds, are the rule, for a generation indoctrinated through Marxist-Maoist multiculturalist doctrine and propaganda, taught from kindergarten through university, who are now driven by an unhinged hate and anger directed at white society and capitalism.

This, in part, is the reason we see whole cities, controlled by the Marxist-Maoists and the totalitarian minded, enacting new “laws” that make the theft of anything $900 or less a misdemeanor, giving way to thousands of groups of poorly taught, undisciplined, predominantly black “youths” rampaging, rioting and looting numerous times a day, taking $900 dollars worth of merchandise nine times a day, if not more, taught racism and hatred and driven by envy and greed. It’s the reason cities across America are folding up, shriveling like a crop attacked by locusts and dying on the vine where once they thrived, back when our people, indeed our youth, had more pure hearts and moral directions and had not strayed far and away from America’s Christian roots.

Over the past thirty years, the nutcases of the Democrat Party have advocated a pathologically negative agenda for America that is based on destroying the Founding and revising history to portray early America as evil and worth casting on the ash-heap of history. Accelerating their plans through the public education system, an entire generation of America’s youth have been brainwashed to believe our planet is dying due to manmade CO2 and “climate change”, in defiance of actual science, and as if that isn’t enough, we are all constantly inundated with one alarm after another raised over racism - even as reverse racism against whites is now advocated, capitalism - which hasn’t really existed in America for over 100 years, homophobia / gender bigotry, capitalist oppression - even tho’ our system is economic fascism, and the fallacious assertion that White Supremacist Nazis are ascending in every community in America.

The real problem found within the ranks of the Takers? They just can’t face the fact that life isn’t easy for anyone, especially the Makers; and it never has been, although exceptions can be found in those born into wealth. But even the wealthy are weighted with life’s problems, if of a different variety, much as the old adage says that “money can’t buy you love or happiness”, even if it does buy you a line of coke and hookers, in a sad sort of dystopian world of a different immoral construct.

The routines many of us indulge in daily have made the largest percentage of Americans, a fairly large majority, complacent and apathetic, caring next to nothing on matters of government and whether or not they are actually living free.

Americans rise each morning, check their emails and cellphones, shower, shave and maybe brush their teeth, to rush off to their same, everyday, boring regular job that may or may not quite pay the bills, grabbing their $7 dollar cup of Starbucks special latte of the day, to do a job they find meaningless. At day’s end, they may grab some overpriced fast-food on the way home, to relax and maybe drink a cheap beer or glass of whiskey, while they watch The Voice - or is it porn [?] - call some friends to complain over how bad things are, and then simply watch some news, ’til they call it a night, sleeping fitfully and rising the next morning to do it all over again, and everyday afterward, year after year, until one day someone hands them their walking papers or a copper watch upon their “retirement”.

Too many live under the delusion that they should be able to drive brand new $60k cars, own $400k homes complete with the most exquisite adornments and furniture on their $15 per hour paycheck at McDonald’s, having never put forth the effort to gain useful knowledge demanded by skilled and professional career positions, in order to make themselves more valuable to society on the whole, and thus able to demand a salary that would allow them to buy all the trappings of such success. Instead, they cast an envious eye in the direction of the Makers and scheme on how to take what they want, by any scheme, any illegal act, any means necessary. They believe their mere existence entitles them to other people’s property, just because deep down in their black little souls, they really, really want it - just not enough to go after it the right way.

Our youth have lost all sense of shame and seem fine with getting anything they want, right when they want it, no matter how they come to acquire it. They never learned that something worth having is worth the work it takes to purchase, as if stuff is just supposed to fall from the heavens and land in their lap. Things of real worth don’t come easy.

Sure. Not everyone has the intelligence and capability to become a surgeon, but if that’s your dream, you will never know if you could have been one, until you try - same for anything else that any of you are dreaming of being, no matter if you dream of being a content farmer or a successful writer. Whatever you want in life, put forth the effort to achieve competency in that field and then go do it.

If you want something of worth in life, stop depending on others. Venture out on your own in some business or capacity you love, rather than settling to work for someone else your entire life. And for your own sake, quit wallowing in self-pity over bad circumstances created by your own bad choices.

As Ms Lawson notes (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oDzfZOfNki4) at one point: "Any pursuit in life, if you want to be successful, it goes to the people that handle hard well. Those are the people that get the stuff they want. People that wait around for easy, you probably see them at the bus stop. They’re waiting on the easy bus to come around. Easy bus never comes around. Go handle hard.”

Too many parents, too many schools, too many churches have failed America by failing to teach them that hard times won’t break you if only you have the right state of mind on life - that there is a loving God - and no one will ever find a fulfilling or positive way of life by looking to The Government for answers and solutions. Our society stopped teaching the youth how to be strong and independent somewhere along the way, as the tyrant-wannabes persisted in teaching “everyone is a victim”; but the fact remains today, anyone can be a proud survivor of hard times, if only they persevere and never give-up and never give-in to defeat, choosing to ultimately succeed and live good, prosperous and happy lives."

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

David Gates, "Suite: Clouds and Rain"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Some spiral galaxies are seen nearly sideways. Most bright stars in spiral galaxies swirl around the center in a disk, and seen from the side, this disk can appear quite thin. Some spiral galaxies appear even thinner than NGC 3717, which is actually seen tilted just a bit. Spiral galaxies form disks because the original gas collided with itself and cooled as it fell inward. Planets may orbit in disks for similar reasons.
The featured image by the Hubble Space Telescope shows a light-colored central bulge composed of older stars beyond filaments of orbiting dark brown dust. NGC 3717 spans about 100,000 light years and lies about 60 million light years away toward the constellation of the Water Snake (Hydra)."

"Getting Old Ain’t for Sissies"

Full screen recommended.
Delta King's Blues,
"Getting Old Ain’t for Sissies"
"Growing old ain’t gentle… it’s a test of grit. “Getting Old Ain’t for Sissies” is a raw, straight-talkin’ Delta King’s Blues tune about stiff mornings, long memories, and the stubborn strength it takes to keep going. A gravel-toned acoustic guitar grinds out a slow back-porch groove, steady as boots on worn wood. The harmonica wails low and weathered, like it’s felt every mile of the road itself. The rhythm stays slow and tough, built for folks who learned life doesn’t hand out easy years. This is blues about surviving the long haul. For people who may creak when they stand up - but never back down from another day. Getting old ain’t for the soft… it’s for the strong who kept showing up."

Native Elder, "What the Old Ones Knew About Regret That No One Makes Peace With"

Full screen recommended.
Native Elder,
"What the Old Ones Knew About Regret 
That No One Makes Peace With"

The Daily "Near You?"

Homedale, Idaho, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"The Devil’s Work"

"The Devil’s Work"
by The Zman

"There is an old expression that has fallen out of favor in the post-scarcity age, but it may be the key to understanding the current crisis. That expression is, “Idle hands do the Devil’s work.” When people do not have anything productive and useful to do with their time, they are more likely to get involved in trouble and criminality. A variant of this is “The Devil makes work for idle hands.” The idea there is if you want to avoid Old Scratch, then make sure you keep yourself useful to God.

The source of these proverbs is unknown, but variations of them go back to the early middle ages, so it is probable they evolved with Christianity. It is not unreasonable to think the idea is universal to civilization. After all, every human society has had to deal with the idle, lazy, and troublesome. Making sure these people are kept too busy to cause trouble is one of those primary challenges of civilization. Every ruler has known that too many idle young men is bad for his rule.

Even in the smaller context, this is something we instinctively know. In the workplace, people with too much free time get into trouble. If the IT staff has too much free time, they start tinkering around with the stuff that is working and before long that stuff stops working and the system goes down. A big part of what goes on inside the schools is to keep the kids and the teachers busy. Home schoolers have known for years that the learning content is just a few hours a day. The rest is busy work.

The point here is that people of all ages need a purpose, something that occupies their mind and their time. If something useful and productive is not filling that need, then something useless or unproductive will fill the void. For most people this may be a hobby or leisure activity. For others, it often means a useless activity is turned into something important. Elevating the mundane to the level of the critical and then creating drama around the performance of the mundane activity.

This is what we see in our political class. The ruling class of every society has a ceremonial role, a procedural role, and a practical role. Outside of a crisis like a war or natural disaster, the political class is performing its duties in the same way a line worker in a factory preforms his role. In popular government this means the pol shows up at public events. He performs the tasks his office requires like signing papers and casting votes. He helps grease the wheels when they need grease.

Into the 20th century, most of our political offices were part-time jobs. State legislatures met for a short period during the year. Otherwise, the legislators were back home doing their jobs. Executive positions like governor and president were fulltime jobs, as they were in charge of the civil service and in the case of president, commander-in-chief of the military. Within living memory, Washington DC would empty out in the spring and remain empty until the fall when Congress returned.

What we see today is politics at all levels has become a full-time job, but one with less to do when it was considered a part-time job. Congress, for example, is something close to a 24-hour drama now. The politicians and their retinues are now doing politics as a full-time obsession. Yet almost all of what they do is unnecessary. In fact, much of what they do is harmful. Very few things passed by Congress enjoy the support of the majority of the people or even a large plurality.

It is not just that these part-time jobs have been made into full-time obsessions. It is that much of what we used to need from government is now filled by individuals, ad hoc networks, and the private sector. Much of what government does is actually done by private contractors on government contracts. One of the ironies of the post-Cold War world is that the federal workforce has declined relative to the population, while the number of people employed in politics has gone up.

Then there is the fact that much of what government does could be automated or simply eliminated entirely. The services that are required like renewing licenses and paying fees can all be automated. In many cases they have been, but that did not result in fewer people, as we see in the dreaded private sector. Instead, it resulted in more idle hands looking for a purpose. On the political side, much of what Congress does could also be eliminated or automated.

What has happened in the last 30 years is we have grown the idle class at the top of our society and while decreasing their necessity. Much of what goes on in our politics is make work designed to get public attention. Think about it. If the cable news channels were shuttered and the social media platforms run by the oligarchs were closed, what would change in America? Nothing of practical importance. Our world would get quieter and there would be a boom in forgotten hobbies.

American political culture evolved during the Cold War to fight communism and prevent a nuclear war. Those were important tasks that occupied the minds and hands of the political class. Once those things went away, those idle hands searched about for a new crisis. Health care, Gaia worship, Islam and now invisible Nazis have been used to keep the idle hands of the political class busy. In the process, the political class has been driven mad and is threatening the rest of society."

The Poet: A. J. Constance, "All of Us Here On This Spinning Blue World"

"All of Us Here On This Spinning Blue World"

"Let's not plan too much
or expect
or promise
or say how much
or how little
or outline how things must be
or how they must not be.

All of us here on this beautiful
spinning blue world,
let's just love each other
from one millisecond to the next
as much as we can."

- A. J. Constance
o
Full screen recommended.
The Moody Blues, "Blue World"

"You Can Never Tell..."

"You can never tell what people have inside them
until you start taking it away, one hope at a time."
- Gregory David Roberts

"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

"The Artifacts That Should Not Exist"

Click image for larger size.
"The Artifacts That Should Not Exist: Experts Are Quietly
Raising Concerns About Artifacts That Do Not Fit Our History"
by Milan Adams

"There is a strange pattern in archaeology that no one officially talks about, yet anyone who spends enough time digging through old reports, forgotten journals, and obscure museum records will eventually notice it. Every few decades, somewhere in the world, an object is discovered that does not quite belong to the time it is found in. Not dramatically out of place in a way that screams impossibility, but subtly wrong in a way that makes experts uncomfortable. Too precise. Too advanced. Too refined. Too… early.

Individually, each discovery is easy to dismiss. A dating error. A misinterpretation. A hoax. Contamination of a site. The explanations are always reasonable when viewed in isolation. But when you start lining them up side by side, across continents and centuries, the pattern becomes harder to ignore. The same types of anomalies appear again and again, discovered by different people, in different places, in different eras, all pointing toward the same unsettling implication: there are objects in our historical record that do not fit the timeline we teach.

What makes this particularly unsettling is not the objects themselves, but the reaction they tend to provoke. These are not celebrated discoveries. They do not become the centerpieces of museums. They are rarely the subject of documentaries. They are mentioned briefly, cautiously, in academic literature, and then quietly fade into obscurity. Not because they were debunked, but because discussing them too openly creates questions that lead somewhere uncomfortable.

Questions about when certain knowledge really appeared. Questions about how advanced ancient people truly were. And eventually, questions about whether the story of human progress is as linear and straightforward as we have always assumed.

One of the most telling examples of this discomfort can be seen in the way certain discoveries are described. When historians encounter a normal artifact, the language is confident. Direct. Precise. But when they encounter something that challenges the framework, the wording becomes careful, almost defensive. Words like “anomalous,” “uncertain,” “unusual for its time,” begin to appear. The object is not denied, but it is linguistically softened, wrapped in layers of cautious phrasing until its implications no longer seem threatening. Because the real issue is not what these artifacts are. It is what they imply.

Over the past century, a quiet category of objects has accumulated in museum archives and academic footnotes. Objects that appear to skip entire stages of technological evolution. Objects that seem to appear fully formed, with no visible developmental history leading up to them. Objects that suggest that at certain moments in the past, people possessed knowledge that, according to our timeline, they should not have had yet.Devices of surprising mechanical complexity found in ancient shipwrecks, capable of tracking astronomical cycles with a precision that rivals early modern instruments.

Megalithic stone constructions in South America and elsewhere, where blocks weighing dozens of tons are cut and fitted together with a mathematical precision that modern engineers still struggle to replicate using only the tools those cultures supposedly had. Metallic or manufactured objects reportedly found embedded in geological formations far older than the civilizations that could have produced them, documented in 19th and early 20th century reports before quietly being dismissed as errors. Taken alone, each of these can be explained away. But taken together, they begin to suggest that something is missing from our understanding of the past.
Consider the mechanical device recovered from an ancient Mediterranean shipwreck in the early 1900s. At first it looked like a lump of corroded bronze. Only later did researchers realize it contained a complex system of interlocking gears. After decades of study, it became clear that this was a form of ancient astronomical calculator, capable of predicting celestial movements with astonishing accuracy. The official explanation today acknowledges its sophistication, but what is rarely emphasized is the absence of any evolutionary trail leading up to it. There are no simpler prototypes. No earlier versions. No gradual technological buildup that we can point to and say, “this is how they got there.” It appears in history fully realized, like a machine that had no childhood. That is what makes experts uneasy. Not that it exists, but that it exists without a clear lineage.
Full screen recommended.
A similar unease surrounds certain stone structures in the Andes. Tourists marvel at the perfectly cut stones, the seamless joints, the walls that have withstood centuries of earthquakes without collapsing. Guides explain that ancient builders used primitive tools and immense patience. But engineers who study the sites often admit, quietly, that the precision is difficult to explain. Some stones appear shaped in ways that suggest they were not simply chiseled, but manipulated while in a state we do not fully understand. Local legends speak of stones that could be made to “flow” or “soften.” Modern science dismisses these stories as myth, yet no one has conclusively demonstrated how the stones were shaped with the tools we believe were available. Again, the site is not hidden. It is famous. Photographed. Studied. But the deeper question is avoided: what technique was used here, and why do we not recognize it?

Then there are the stranger reports, the ones that rarely make it into modern discussions. Accounts from miners in the 1800s who claimed to find manufactured objects inside solid coal. Reports of metallic spheres discovered in ancient mineral deposits in South Africa. Nails allegedly found embedded in sandstone. These stories are usually dismissed immediately as hoaxes or misunderstandings, and perhaps many of them were. But what is striking is how often similar stories appear, told by people with no connection to one another, separated by geography and time, all describing the same unsettling detail: objects where they should not be.

The academic approach to these cases is consistent. Treat each one individually. Isolate it. Dismiss it. Never allow them to be viewed collectively as a pattern. Because if even one of them were genuine in its original context, it would imply something deeply destabilizing. Either our methods of dating geological layers are flawed, or human history is far older and more complex than we believe, or there were advanced cultures before recorded history that left almost no trace behind. Any of these possibilities would require rewriting history books across the world. And history, once established, is not easily rewritten.

This is where the discomfort becomes understandable. History is not just a record of the past. It is the foundation of education, national identity, academic authority, and entire scientific disciplines. To suggest that this foundation might be incomplete is not a small academic correction. It is a structural problem. It threatens credibility. And credibility is the currency of academia.

So the safer path is to keep these artifacts in a category that is neither fully accepted nor fully rejected. They are curiosities. Anomalies. Interesting footnotes. Never central pieces of the narrative. But the pattern remains. Across cultures that never had contact with each other, we find evidence of unexpectedly advanced astronomical knowledge. We find massive constructions that challenge our understanding of ancient engineering. We find myths from different continents describing lost knowledge, lost civilizations, and catastrophic collapses that forced humanity to start over from a primitive state.

These stories are treated as legend. But what if they are memory? Distorted by time, yes. Exaggerated, perhaps. But rooted in something real that has been slowly eroded by thousands of years of forgetting. Because the real danger of these artifacts is not that they are mysterious. It is that they suggest we may not be at the beginning of human progress. We may be somewhere in the middle of it. And if that is true, then the most unsettling question is no longer how these objects were made. It becomes: what happened to the people who knew how to make them?

The Quiet Disappearance of Evidence, Institutional Memory and Selective Attention: If the first layer of discomfort surrounding anomalous artifacts lies in their existence, the second lies in what happens after they are discovered. Contrary to popular imagination, these objects are rarely hidden in any dramatic or conspiratorial sense. They pass through official channels. They are documented, photographed, sometimes even displayed briefly. For a moment, they exist fully within the light of academic scrutiny. And then something more subtle occurs.

Attention shifts. Not abruptly, not suspiciously, but in a way that mirrors the natural rhythm of institutional research. Priorities evolve. Funding is redirected. New discoveries emerge that fit more comfortably within established frameworks, drawing focus away from those that do not. Over time, the anomalous becomes peripheral, and the peripheral becomes forgotten - not erased, but effectively removed from active discourse.

This process creates a form of selective memory, not enforced by any central authority, but produced organically by the structure of academia itself. Systems that depend on consistency tend to favor information that reinforces existing models. Data that introduces friction -especially unresolved friction - is gradually deprioritized, not because it is false, but because it is inconveniently incomplete.

What remains, decades later, is a scattered trail of references. A paper from the early 20th century noting an unusual metallic composition. A geological report mentioning an object embedded deeper than expected. A museum record describing an item that no longer appears in the public catalog. Each fragment, taken alone, is insignificant. Together, they form something more difficult to dismiss: a pattern of quiet disappearance.

It is important to emphasize that this does not require intentional suppression. It is, in many ways, more unsettling than that. It suggests that the system does not need to hide uncomfortable data - it simply needs to outlast it. Because attention is finite. And what is not actively discussed eventually ceases to exist in any meaningful sense.

Cartographies of the Unexplained: If one were to map these anomalies - not geographically alone, but temporally and typologically - a striking structure begins to emerge. The objects cluster, not randomly, but along faint lines of correlation that are rarely explored in mainstream analysis. What this simplified table suggests is not proof of a lost civilization or hidden technology, but something more structurally intriguing: repetition without continuity. The same categories of anomaly - precision, complexity, material inconsistency - appear across different regions and time periods without a clear evolutionary bridge connecting them.

In conventional models of technological development, innovation leaves traces. Early attempts, failed designs, gradual refinements. A progression that can be followed, even if imperfectly. But in these cases, that progression is either missing or incomplete. Instead, what we observe are punctuated appearances - moments where something unexpectedly advanced emerges, only to vanish from the developmental record.

If visualized as a map, the pattern would not resemble a steady expansion of knowledge, but a series of isolated peaks rising from an otherwise uneven landscape. Peaks that do not connect to one another in obvious ways, yet share underlying characteristics. This raises a question that is rarely addressed directly: are these truly isolated events, or are we only seeing fragments of a larger structure that has not survived intact? Because absence of evidence, in this context, does not necessarily imply absence of reality. It may simply reflect the limits of what has been preserved, discovered, or recognized. And if what we are seeing are fragments, then the full picture - whatever it once was - has been reduced to scattered signals, barely coherent, and easily ignored.

The Hypothesis of Interruption, Non-Linear Histories: The dominant model of human development is built on continuity. A gradual progression from simplicity to complexity, from primitive tools to advanced systems, from isolated knowledge to interconnected understanding. It is a model that works well because it aligns with most of the evidence we can clearly observe. But it is not the only model that fits the data.

There exists another possibility - one that is rarely formalized, but often implied in the margins of anomalous research. A model not of continuous growth, but of interrupted cycles. Periods of advancement followed by disruption, where knowledge is not steadily accumulated, but periodically lost. In such a framework, the anomalies cease to be anomalies. They become survivals.

Residual artifacts from phases of development that did not continue long enough to establish a visible lineage. Technologies that existed briefly, perhaps locally, perhaps more widely, before being erased by events that left little trace in the conventional archaeological record. This would explain why certain objects appear without precedent. Why techniques seem to emerge fully formed. Why myths from unrelated cultures describe similar narratives of collapse - floods, fires, darkness, the loss of knowledge, the need to begin again. Not as literal historical accounts, but as cultural echoes of real disruptions, filtered through memory and transformed over generations. In this model, history is not a straight line. It is a series of partial resets.

The Problem of Survival Bias: To understand how such a pattern could exist without dominating our current historical framework, one must consider a simple but powerful concept: survival bias. What we know about the past is not a complete record. It is a filtered one. Materials decay. Structures collapse. Knowledge stored in fragile mediums - organic matter, oral traditions - disappears far more easily than stone or metal. Catastrophic events, whether environmental or otherwise, do not erase everything equally. They select. They preserve some things while eliminating others.

If a period of advanced knowledge relied on systems that were not designed to endure - complex devices, perishable materials, localized infrastructure - then the likelihood of that knowledge surviving in recognizable form decreases dramatically over long timescales. What might remain are precisely the kinds of objects we now struggle to explain: unusually durable, structurally resilient, or accidentally preserved artifacts that outlasted the context that gave them meaning.

This creates a distorted picture. We do not see the system - only the fragments that survived its collapse. Imagine attempting to reconstruct modern civilization thousands of years in the future based solely on what is most likely to endure: a handful of engineered structures, scattered mechanical components, and incomplete records stripped of their context. The result would not resemble a coherent narrative. It would appear fragmented, inconsistent - perhaps even anomalous. Much like the record we are currently examining."

"Archaeologists Discovered A Lost Civilization In The Desert That Vaporized And Turned To Glass"

Full screen recommended.
LifesBiggestQuestions, 
"Archaeologists Discovered A Lost Civilization 
In The Desert That Vaporized And Turned To Glass"
"The ancient city of Mohenjo-daro in Pakistan hides a chilling secret. Could its destruction be the result of a sudden catastrophe rather than a gradual decline? Evidence like vitrified structures and scattered skeletal remains suggests a powerful force swept through this Indus Valley metropolis. Was Mohenjo-daro vaporized by an ancient weapon, leaving behind melted ruins and enigmatic "glass beads"? Explore the unsettling possibilities and uncover the archaeological clues that may reveal the truth behind this ancient city's destruction."
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 

"Bamboozled..."

"One of the saddest lessons of history is this: If we've been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle. We're no longer interested in finding out the truth. The bamboozle has captured us. It's simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves, that we've been taken. Once you give a charlatan power over you, you almost never get it back."
- Carl Sagan
o
Full screen recommended.
Don Henley, "Dirty Laundry"
Orwell feared that the truth would be concealed from us.
Huxley feared the truth would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance...
Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those 
who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egoism...

"The Day The Grid Failed: The Seventeen Minutes That Exposed The Fragile Foundations Of Modern Civilization"

"The Day The Grid Failed: The Seventeen Minutes 
That Exposed The Fragile Foundations Of Modern Civilization"
by Milan Adams

This is a fictionalized scenario exploring a hypothetical grid collapse.

"By the time the first official statement reached the public, the statement itself no longer mattered. Television networks were already off the air across much of the continent, mobile networks had fragmented into isolated pockets, and the internet - once assumed to be nearly indestructible - had become a collection of disconnected islands separated by an invisible wall of silence. Rumors traveled farther than verified information, speculation outran evidence, and for the first time in generations millions of people discovered how completely their understanding of the world depended on a stream of data they had always taken for granted. Historians would later argue over the precise moment the crisis began, but among engineers and emergency planners there was remarkably little disagreement. The collapse did not start when cities lost power. It started hours earlier, hidden inside measurements so small that they resembled ordinary background noise rather than the opening chapter of the largest infrastructure failure in modern history.

Three months before the blackout, engineers working at several independent transmission operators had submitted technical reports describing unusual synchronization anomalies affecting equipment connected to long-distance high-voltage networks. None of the incidents resulted in service interruptions. Most lasted only seconds before disappearing, leaving behind little more than incomplete diagnostic logs and confused maintenance teams. Similar anomalies occur every day somewhere in the world, usually explained by faulty sensors, timing errors, firmware bugs, or brief disturbances caused by weather. On paper, nothing justified escalating the reports beyond routine analysis. Yet a handful of specialists noticed an uncomfortable coincidence. Facilities separated by hundreds of kilometers, operated by different companies using different hardware, were documenting nearly identical irregularities with surprising consistency. Individually, each report looked insignificant. Viewed together, they formed a pattern that nobody could adequately explain.

Among the few people attempting to connect those isolated observations was electrical systems analyst Dr. Elena Varga, whose career had been built on studying failures that most people never noticed. She was not the kind of scientist who chased extraordinary theories. Colleagues often described her as frustratingly cautious, the sort of researcher who preferred saying "we don't know yet" over making bold predictions. Her office shelves held decades of technical journals instead of trophies, and she had spent more time inside substations than conference halls. When the anomaly reports began arriving from different operators, she did not suspect sabotage or some revolutionary new technology. She assumed someone had discovered an obscure software defect hidden inside synchronization protocols used by aging infrastructure. What concerned her was not the disturbance itself but the remarkable geographical distribution. Independent systems are supposed to fail independently. When they begin exhibiting nearly identical behavior over enormous distances, experienced engineers stop asking what is broken and start asking what every affected system has in common.

The answer, at least initially, appeared disappointingly ordinary. Every installation relied on highly accurate timing signals to coordinate power flowing across thousands of kilometers of transmission lines. Modern electrical grids function less like isolated power plants and more like orchestras whose musicians never meet. Every generator must maintain frequency within extremely narrow tolerances while responding continuously to changing demand. Tiny timing discrepancies can ripple through protective systems in unexpected ways, which is precisely why grid operators invest enormous resources monitoring them. Elena spent weeks comparing datasets from operators across multiple regions, convinced the evidence would eventually point toward a mundane explanation. Instead, every new dataset deepened the mystery. The disturbances did not spread like conventional faults. They appeared almost simultaneously, lingered briefly, then disappeared without damaging equipment or triggering emergency shutdowns. Whatever produced them behaved less like a malfunction and more like an external influence brushing against the grid before vanishing.

Her preliminary findings attracted little attention outside a small circle of specialists. Infrastructure warnings rarely make headlines because successful infrastructure is almost invisible. Society notices bridges only after they collapse, water systems only after taps run dry, and electrical networks only after lights fail to turn on. Government agencies acknowledged receiving technical briefings but found no evidence suggesting an immediate threat. Manufacturers reviewed equipment logs and concluded that no common hardware defect could account for every reported anomaly. Several academic reviewers argued that Elena's statistical model overstated the similarities between unrelated events. Others suggested increased solar activity as a possible explanation, although observatories monitoring space weather found nothing unusual during the relevant periods. By early autumn, the conversation had quietly faded. Budgets shifted toward more immediate priorities, research meetings were postponed, and another unexplained technical curiosity seemed destined to disappear beneath the endless flow of newer concerns.

Looking back after the disaster, investigators would discover that the most revealing evidence had been available from the beginning. It simply existed in places that rarely communicate with one another. Satellite operators had recorded fleeting disturbances affecting orientation sensors. Long-haul fiber operators noticed synchronization errors too brief to interrupt service but too consistent to dismiss completely. Maritime navigation systems documented isolated timing discrepancies that captains attributed to equipment calibration. Radio observatories logged bursts of interference that did not resemble known atmospheric phenomena. Each organization filed its own reports, reached its own conclusions, and archived its own data. No single institution possessed enough information to recognize that these isolated anomalies were fragments of a much larger picture.

Weeks later, when investigators finally reconstructed the timeline, one uncomfortable realization emerged again and again. The catastrophe had not arrived without warning. It had arrived with hundreds of warnings scattered across dozens of industries, each too small to trigger alarm on its own and too fragmented for anyone to assemble before it was too late.

The First Seventeen Minutes: The first indication that the event extended far beyond a conventional infrastructure failure did not come from a dramatic explosion or the sudden loss of an entire city. Instead, it emerged from dozens of control rooms that had never been designed to communicate with one another in real time. Electrical operators were watching frequency deviations, telecommunications engineers were troubleshooting synchronization faults, air traffic specialists were trying to understand disappearing radar returns, and satellite controllers were documenting brief anomalies that seemed too insignificant to justify escalating. Each organization believed it was confronting an isolated technical problem, and each followed procedures that had been refined over decades of responding to localized failures. Only much later, after millions of log entries had been reconstructed, did investigators realize that these seemingly unrelated incidents represented different perspectives of the same unfolding crisis.

Inside the National Energy Coordination Centre, conversations remained remarkably calm during those opening minutes. Nobody raised their voice. Nobody spoke about catastrophe. Engineers compared readings, requested confirmation from neighboring transmission operators, and assumed the irregularities would eventually reveal a familiar explanation. Modern electrical grids are constantly correcting themselves, balancing production against consumption with astonishing precision. Minor deviations are expected, and operators spend their careers distinguishing harmless fluctuations from genuine threats. What unsettled the room that morning was not the size of the disturbance but its consistency. Independent monitoring systems, separated by hundreds of kilometers and built by different manufacturers over different decades, were reporting nearly identical timing behavior. It was an outcome so statistically unusual that several technicians initially suspected a software fault affecting the monitoring platform itself rather than the infrastructure it was observing.

As additional reports arrived, the pattern grew increasingly difficult to dismiss. Regional substations that had no direct operational relationship began exhibiting synchronized protective responses within fractions of a second. Some transmission corridors automatically disconnected before reconnecting moments later. Others remained online but reported conflicting measurements that prevented automated balancing systems from determining whether the surrounding network was stable. None of these individual actions represented a malfunction. Every relay, breaker, and protection device performed exactly as it had been engineered to perform when confronted with uncertain operating conditions. The difficulty arose because thousands of perfectly functioning safety mechanisms were now responding simultaneously to a disturbance that existed outside the assumptions upon which those systems had been designed.

A Timeline That Would Later Define The Investigation: When the International Infrastructure Commission reconstructed the event months later, investigators established a sequence that became central to understanding why recovery proved so difficult. Although individual timestamps varied slightly across different regions, the broader progression remained remarkably consistent.

Time Infrastructure Activity Immediate Consequence:
08:43 Grid synchronization anomalies detected across multiple transmission operators. Automated monitoring classified the disturbance as low priority.
08:45 Satellite timing irregularities affected precision synchronization services. Network timing drift began appearing across communications infrastructure.
08:47 Protective relays isolated sections of the transmission network. Regional balancing capacity declined significantly.
08:50 Telecommunications providers reported widespread routing instability. Emergency services experienced delayed digital communications.
08:56 Multiple regional grids entered self-protection mode simultaneously. Cascading instability spread faster than manual intervention could contain it.

The timeline appears almost orderly when reduced to a table, yet the lived reality was anything but. Across countless cities, ordinary routines continued because almost nobody could perceive the invisible processes occurring beneath the surface of daily life. Financial institutions processed transactions more slowly than usual, hospitals switched briefly between redundant communication channels without interrupting patient care, and transportation networks quietly activated contingency software that had rarely been used outside controlled simulations. Even where warning indicators appeared, they were interpreted through the lens of previous experience. A railway dispatcher who had encountered signaling faults hundreds of times before saw no immediate reason to suspect that the issue belonged to a continental emergency. Likewise, a telecommunications engineer investigating unstable timing signals naturally searched for faults within his own network rather than imagining that identical symptoms were emerging across several countries at precisely the same moment.

Dr. Elena Varga would later describe those seventeen minutes as the most deceptive phase of the entire disaster. In her testimony before investigators, she argued that modern infrastructure had become exceptionally resilient against individual failures while simultaneously growing vulnerable to disturbances capable of affecting multiple sectors at once. The grid itself did not simply collapse; it attempted to preserve itself. Every protective decision made by automated systems reduced immediate risk within its own area of responsibility, but those local decisions gradually deprived neighboring regions of the stability they depended upon. It resembled thousands of watertight doors closing aboard a damaged ship. Each compartment protected itself exactly as intended, yet every sealed section made the vessel increasingly difficult to stabilize as a whole.

Beyond the control rooms, the first visible signs remained subtle enough that most people dismissed them as temporary inconveniences. Digital departure boards at railway stations displayed outdated schedules before freezing completely. Contactless payment terminals occasionally rejected valid cards despite functioning internet connections moments earlier. Navigation applications began calculating impossible routes as positioning data drifted beyond acceptable tolerances. In office buildings, secure access systems briefly denied entry to employees whose credentials had worked only minutes before. None of these incidents appeared alarming in isolation. Together, however, they reflected a common problem unfolding deep beneath the software that modern society depended upon but rarely acknowledged.

The situation changed irrevocably shortly after nine o'clock. Operators who had spent the previous twenty minutes attempting to understand scattered anomalies suddenly found themselves confronting a far more dangerous reality. Independent regions that normally exchanged enormous quantities of electrical power every second were no longer behaving as parts of a single synchronized network. Instead, they had begun separating into isolated electrical islands, each struggling to balance its own supply and demand without the support of neighboring systems. Some managed to stabilize temporarily through local generation. Others exhausted their available reserves within minutes, triggering automatic shutdown sequences designed to prevent catastrophic equipment damage. From that moment onward, the objective was no longer preventing the crisis. It was preventing the crisis from becoming irreversible.

The Morning After: At first light, the scale of the disaster became impossible to ignore. From elevated highways overlooking major metropolitan areas, the familiar rhythm of morning traffic had disappeared. Thousands of vehicles remained exactly where they had stopped the previous evening, abandoned after drivers realized fuel could no longer be purchased and navigation systems had become unreliable. Office towers that normally reflected the first rays of sunlight stood silent, their glass facades concealing floors without lighting, ventilation, or functioning communications. The silence itself was unsettling. Modern cities are rarely quiet, yet without electric trains, traffic signals, industrial machinery, advertising displays, or the constant background hum of air-conditioning systems, entire districts seemed strangely detached from the world that had existed only a day earlier.

Emergency services quickly discovered that the greatest challenge was no longer the loss of electricity but the disappearance of coordination. Local police departments continued operating, hospitals remained open wherever backup generation could be maintained, and firefighters responded to emergencies as they always had. What had changed was the invisible network connecting those institutions. Dispatch centers could no longer exchange live information with neighboring regions. Fuel deliveries became unpredictable because logistics companies had lost access to centralized routing systems. Medical supplies accumulated in some cities while hospitals elsewhere struggled to obtain essential equipment. The crisis was no longer technological alone; it had become logistical, and logistics had always been the foundation upon which modern civilization quietly depended.

Inside government emergency headquarters, officials faced decisions unlike any they had rehearsed during previous exercises. Most continuity plans assumed that unaffected regions would assist those experiencing difficulties. This event offered no such luxury. Every province, every state, and every neighboring country was confronting variations of the same problem simultaneously. Resources still existed, but moving them efficiently had become increasingly difficult as transportation, communications, and energy systems continued operating at only a fraction of their normal capacity.

Reconstructing The Impossible: The first formal investigation began less than seventy-two hours after the initial failures. Engineers understood that memories fade quickly during disasters, and electronic records are often incomplete once systems begin shutting themselves down. Teams were dispatched to substations, telecommunications exchanges, satellite control facilities, airports, and power stations with a single objective: preserve every available log before damaged hardware deteriorated or backup storage systems exhausted their remaining power.

Contrary to early speculation, there was no indication that a conventional cyberattack had initiated the cascade. Security analysts found no malicious software capable of explaining the synchronized failures across independent infrastructure. Likewise, forensic examinations revealed no evidence of coordinated physical sabotage against transmission equipment. Individual components had behaved largely as their manufacturers intended. The failure had emerged from the interaction between systems rather than the destruction of any single one.

As additional datasets became available, investigators noticed another remarkable pattern. Equipment installed decades earlier often continued functioning long after newer digital systems had entered protective shutdown. Older relay mechanisms, mechanical switching equipment, and analog communication devices demonstrated a resilience few engineers had expected. The discovery prompted difficult questions about the unintended consequences of pursuing efficiency above all else. Modern infrastructure had become faster, more interconnected, and significantly more capable than previous generations, but it had also developed dependencies so intricate that relatively small disturbances could propagate farther than anyone had anticipated.

Several universities later collaborated on extensive simulations attempting to reproduce the sequence of failures described throughout the investigation. None produced identical results, yet they shared a common conclusion: the catastrophe was not inevitable. Small differences in infrastructure design, timing architecture, redundancy, and operational procedures frequently altered the outcome. Some simulated networks stabilized successfully after temporary disruptions, while others fragmented almost immediately. The lesson was uncomfortable but valuable. Resilience depended less on possessing the most advanced technology and more on ensuring that critical systems could continue functioning independently when every surrounding layer became unreliable.

Lessons Written In Darkness: In the months that followed, recovery became less about rebuilding damaged equipment than rediscovering forgotten ways of operating. Municipal governments restored paper maps to emergency vehicles. Hospitals expanded manual record-keeping procedures that had gradually disappeared from daily practice. Utility companies commissioned analog communication links alongside their digital networks, accepting that technological diversity could itself become a form of protection. Engineers who had spent decades optimizing efficiency now found themselves discussing concepts that previous generations would have considered ordinary: mechanical redundancy, local autonomy, and graceful degradation rather than absolute dependence on centralized coordination.

Communities adapted more quickly than many experts had predicted. Neighborhood organizations emerged spontaneously to distribute food, share information, and assist vulnerable residents. Amateur radio operators established communication corridors between isolated towns. Local workshops began repairing equipment that would previously have been discarded. Schools became supply centers during the day and community meeting places after sunset. The event revealed not only the fragility of infrastructure but also the resilience of ordinary people once they understood that recovery depended as much on cooperation as technology.

Months later, when electricity had returned to nearly every affected region and communication networks once again carried billions of messages each day, researchers noticed an unexpected social change. Public confidence in technology had not disappeared, but it had become more measured. Infrastructure was no longer viewed as an invisible certainty existing somewhere beyond public attention. Citizens who had rarely considered where their electricity originated or how digital networks synchronized across continents began asking questions that had once been confined to engineering conferences. Governments responded by publishing resilience strategies in far greater detail than before, while universities reported increased enrollment in electrical engineering, emergency management, and critical infrastructure research.

The commission responsible for documenting the event concluded its report with observations that extended beyond transformers, satellites, or transmission lines. Modern civilization, it argued, had achieved extraordinary complexity by connecting countless systems into a seamless whole. That achievement remained one of humanity's greatest accomplishments, but it also carried responsibilities that had too often been overlooked. True resilience was not measured solely by speed, efficiency, or automation. It depended equally on diversity, transparency, and the ability to continue functioning when assumptions that had remained unquestioned for decades suddenly ceased to hold true.

The final archive assembled by investigators occupied thousands of pages, preserving technical analyses, personal diaries, engineering logs, emergency broadcasts, handwritten notes, and countless individual accounts from those who had experienced the blackout firsthand. Some readers searched those documents hoping to identify a single decisive mistake that could explain everything. They found none. Instead, the archive documented something more profound: a civilization that had spent generations perfecting interconnected systems, only to discover that its greatest strength could also become its greatest vulnerability.

Long after cities returned to life and the familiar glow of illuminated skylines erased memories of those unusually dark nights, one question continued to appear in scientific conferences, parliamentary hearings, and engineering classrooms alike. It was not whether such a catastrophe could happen exactly as described again, but whether future societies would recognize the warning signs of the next crisis before they became visible to everyone else."