StatCounter

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

"Are You Prepared for Your World to Be Totally Different Tomorrow Morning? Trump Says it Will Be... Forever!"

"Are You Prepared for Your World to Be Totally Different 
Tomorrow Morning? Trump Says it Will Be... Forever!"
by David Haggith

"I’m going to publish the headlines early today because they are so massively important. Of course, Trump Always Chickens Out (TACO Trump), so I wouldn’t be surprised if he finds some last-minute argument for why he’s not going to follow through with his newly amplified threats, but for now he has intensified them even above his expletive-laden rants of Easter weekend.

He now says that, if Iran does not open the strait, which he just said a couple of days ago he doesn’t even care about anymore, by this evening, ITS CIVILIZATION WILL CEASE TO EXIST! He says he will bomb every major bridge and every electrical power plant in the nation in a four-hour period tonight! Here was his post on Truth Social: "A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again. I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will. However, now that we have Complete and Total Regime Change, where different, smarter, and less radicalized minds prevail, maybe something revolutionarily wonderful can happen, WHO KNOWS? We will find out tonight, one of the most important moments in the long and complex history of the World. 47 years of extortion, corruption, and death, will finally end. God Bless the Great People of Iran!" Iran responded (I paraphrase), “No ceasefire, and, if you do that, we’ll do the same thing to all the nations around us that are allied with Israel and the US.” 

Think this is just a bluff by Trump? Maybe. He does the TACO dance a lot, BUT consider this: Israel just told all the Iranian people to stay away from their railroads today, and then it started bombing railroad stations! Israel is targeting civilian infrastructure today to make travel in and out of Iran much more difficult so they cannot escape what is about to rain down upon them even as refugees.

Now, think of what this means. Israel appears to be taking out railroads. Trump says he will take out all the bridges. Iran is a modern society just like ours with high-rises that depend on HVAC just to survive inside them. That is not just for cooling, but to get enough airflow to breathe. Without electricity, many buildings in this desert climate will become unlivable. Elevators won’t function to get people up 20-50 stories to their apartments. There will be no refrigeration. Water stops moving through all the pipes all over the nation. Bridges and railroads are taken out all over the nation. That means food cannot be moved in; neither can water. How long can you survive in a desert without water? With mass-transit being wiped out and major bridges, it now becomes almost impossible to escape the cities. Million of civilians will die. Mass genocide on a scale that would put Hitler to shame! From the US. From Israel!

Unless, of course, TACO. But you cannot bet on TACO, especially from a man who either is insane or wants to convince his enemy that he’s insane so they fear him. Unless we are going to bank the entire world on TACO or insanity, his cabinet members and VP need to exercise the 25th Amendment TODAY! Even his former supporters are begging for that action TODAY! Because, after today, it becomes too late … unless TACO. You gonna bet the world on a TACO?

Maybe former pro-Trumper Tuckered Carlson can get through to rational conservatives and the remaining irrational MAGA members, who still support Trump even after their best voices have left him, what I cannot and have not succeeded in conveying to any more than a minuscule handful of readers here since many in MAGA have listened to Carlson for a long time.

I never thought Carlson would be waging the arguments I’ve been waging since Trump entered politics and I called him a Trojan horse for conservatives. But, in this video he even goes after Trump’s high priestess of the White House, Paula White-Cain, whom I came out strongly against in my weekend Deeper Dive: “The President’s Prophet and the Pentagon’s High Priest Predict ARMAGEDDON!” Here is a strong attack from a former Trumper for the first 20-30 minutes of the video:
If you thought my Armageddon title was too strong this last weekend, look at what things have ratcheted up to in the two days since! Yet, my reward for that warning about the cult driving Trump and the US military intentionally and outspokenly toward Armageddon was just that I lost two more paying subscribers. (Maybe that was why, maybe not. They didn’t say.) If you want to keep a spotlight shining into this darkness, I could certainly use some replacement supporters because taking this stand has cost me ever time! (But I promised you I would not stop, even if it cost me everything I make on this tiny publication.)

Meanwhile, look also at the inflation that is now piling in below in the headlines, but especially look at the war headlines. You better hope this is just another insane TACO move because, IF IT IS NOT, you will be living in a vastly different world tomorrow morning because of these kooks unless the 25th Amendment happens tonight! Even at home, your inflation WILL GO THROUGH THE STINKING ROOF!

Still think I’ve been too rough on the president or his self-appointed prophets of profits? Tune in tomorrow morning if the maniac isn’t just bluffing about mass genocide with conventional weapons, and you’ll see where tolerating and defending a narcissistic megalomaniac gets you.

“Trump threatens four-hour obliteration of Iran on Tuesday night with every bridge and power plant destroyed” That’s the headline of headlines.  BETTER HOPE IT IS A BLUFF BECAUSE IRAN DIDN’T BACK DOWN! It already said, “No way! We’ll do everything to you that you do to us.” Better hope Trump is kidding.

Your world will never be the same; neither will mine because a move like this will up the amperage in Iran to an electrifying war in the Middle East even if the power goes off, resulting in the deaths of millions… IF the maniac does what he says. If he doesn’t, Iran may act preemptively anyway because he is almost forcing them to by telling them their entire civilization will cease to exist tonight. Their military requires electricity and may be much less functional even with backup generators if it waits for his attack to happen first. They may even interpret his existential threat as a nuclear threat. If they take him at his word that they will cease to exist as a civilization, now that they have flat-out rejected his demands, then they will act while they can. The possibility of preemptive Iranian action against civilian infrastructure all over the Middle East is another risk Trump just created with his words.

Is someone who takes these big gambles the kind of screwball you want running the US military - the biggest military in history? Then you had better hope the military does as some generals got fired for already and refuses to obey orders from the president and Hegseth! That is the constitutional crisis we enter tonight if Trump carries through and gives the command he has promised."

"This Is Bad - Home Depot Confirms What We Feared About the Economy"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 4/7/26
"This Is Bad - Home Depot Confirms 
What We Feared About the Economy"
"Home Depot has just issued a major economic warning, and it could signal that a recession is closer than many people think. In this video, we break down the latest data showing a sharp decline in consumer spending, especially in big-ticket home improvement projects like appliances, flooring, and remodels. Instead, Americans are cutting back and only spending on essential repairs - a trend historically seen before economic downturns like the 2008 financial crisis. If consumers are pulling back this aggressively, it raises serious concerns about discretionary income, inflation, and the overall health of the U.S. economy.

We also dive into rising HOA fees, increasing utility costs, and how financial pressure is impacting everyday Americans across the country. From declining retail traffic to shifts in housing, real estate, and even corporate layoffs, this is a full breakdown of the warning signs you need to know right now. If you’re watching the economy, worried about inflation, or preparing for a potential recession, this video connects the dots and explains what’s really happening behind the headlines."
Comments here:

Bill Bonner, "Knock Out Punch"

Ali and Foreman fight in Zaire in 1974
"Knock Out Punch"
by Bill Bonner

‘Hey...maybe there’s more to war than just blowing things up.’
- A thought bubble finally appears over Pete Hegseth’s head.

Baltimore, Maryland - "Our strategic objectives in the war, such as they were, have already been accomplished: We went. We saw. We kicked butt. We are now just inflicting gratuitous violence. And, if some analysts are correct, we will soon pay ‘reparations’ to fix what we have broken.

As of this morning, despite the 32,000 bombs dropped on Iran - the mullahs have not cried ‘uncle.’ The Strait of Hormuz is still under Iranian control...countries who want to use it will now have to negotiate with the mullahs - and pay. Nobody seems to think it can be liberated by pounding the Iranians harder.

Whether this outcome is a victory or a defeat depends on who you talk to. But it could be worse. And now emerging, like spring flowers, is a pullulating industry of early ‘post-war’ analysis and forecasting. Of course, no ‘final,’ apocalyptic battle has yet taken place. No Appomattox Courthouse. No surrender on the USS Missouri. Trump has not put a gun to his head. So, the reckonings thus far are purely speculative...incomplete...and subject to change without notice. Nevertheless, some useful insights are emerging.

Trump fans, of course, see nothing not to like in the way the war has gone so far. The stock market has not crashed. Gasoline is still under $5 a gallon. If kicking butt is an end in itself, the results are acceptable. And since no other war aim was clearly identified, this appears to be a coherent way to look at it. But the trouble with kicking butt as a strategy is that it rarely leads to a felicitous outcome. It makes the kicker feel better about himself. More in control. Stronger. More resolute and manly. But it leaves the kickee hoping to return the favor, and looking for a steel-toed boot. And maybe it is no victory at all.

Several analysts are already claiming that Donald Trump was “befooled by Iran’s grand strategy.” That strategy was hardly ever hidden. A variant of the old ‘rope-a-dope’ technique used by another famous Muslim - Mohammed Ali - against George Foreman in the ‘Rumble in the Jungle,’ 1974, it allows the heavy hitter to pound away, exhausting himself. Then, the lighter opponent goes on the attack.

In the Iran theatre, the mullahs had no chance of matching US/Israeli muscle. All they could do was to hunker down...and make the Strait of Hormuz dangerous to transit. And while the warfighters can still bomb at will, the people grow weary. Trips to the gas station are painful.

America’s allies saw the problem early on...and refused to join in. Now, they approach Iran to negotiate terms of passage. But Iran demands ‘reparations.’ And here is where it gets interesting. The reparations machinery seems to be already in place. Iran will insist on a ‘toll’ to pass through the Strait, paid by the shippers and ultimately passed along to consumers. The money will be used to rebuild the schools, bridges, and military installations that have been destroyed. The worldwide price of oil will have to rise – and stay up – to cover the tolls. Thus, in theory, US consumers will pay for both sides of the conflict – at the pump.

This is such a remarkably favorable outcome for Iran, some see a new dawn for the once-benighted country. Solidarity.co.nz: "Professor Robert Pape, a top US expert on warfare, based at the University of Chicago, says Iran will likely emerge from this terrible war as a super-power. Many analysts, such as Colonel Daniel Davis, Mark Sleboda, Annelle Sheline, and John Mearsheimer, now see an Iranian victory as likely. Pape himself has run simulations of US-Iran wars for decades and is clear: “Trump made a huge mistake”.

"For the moment, the Americans and Israelis are enjoying success after success: killing leaders and school girls, blowing stuff up and so on. “That can be mesmerizing, and cause this illusion of precision control but it is not the same thing as a strategic victory. Iran before the war controlled 4% of the world’s oil. Twenty-six days later they control 20% of the world’s oil.”

As Trita Parsi of the Quincy Institute pointed out this week Denmark charged transit fees for 400 years for vessels to pass through the Øresund Strait into and out of the Baltic. Panama, Egypt and Turkey all charge transit fees. Of course, none of this will matter very much if Iran is actually ‘obliterated.’ Trump has not only threatened to target civilian infrastructure but to ‘take out the whole country.’ What that means, exactly, is hard to say. A higher oil price most likely. Stay tuned."

"The Mongols, Drones, and the Future of War"

"The Mongols, Drones, and the Future of War"
The $500 Weapon That Changes Everything
by Jay Martin

"In under 70 years, an unknown confederation of nomadic tribes built the largest land empire in human history. At its peak, it covered everything from the Pacific coast of China to the borders of Poland, and from Siberia down to the Persian Gulf. That was East Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe. It was five times larger than the Roman Empire at its peak. And it all happened in the span of one lifetime. “God alone knows who they are and from where they came.”, a Russian chronicler describing the Mongols’ arrival.

The Mongol armies arrived so swiftly and conquered so decisively that the civilized world had no framework for what was happening to it. They swept out of the steppe like a weather system - by the time you understood that something was coming, it had already arrived. What is so notable is that the Mongols did not conquer a collection of disorganized, defenceless people. They overthrew the wealthiest empires the world had ever known. And they did it quickly. The scale of what they conquered is difficult to overstate.

The Khwarezmian Empire, stretching across modern-day Iran, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan, had taken over 150 years to build. There were over two million people, wealthy trading cities, and standing armies. The Mongols dismantled it all in two years.

The Abbasid Caliphate in Baghdad - seat of Islamic civilization for five hundred years, home to over a million people and the largest library in the world - fell in thirteen days.

The Song dynasty in China - three hundred and nineteen years old. A hundred and twenty million people and an economy that produced a third of the world’s GDP - three times the output of all of medieval Europe combined. A civilization that had invented gunpowder, movable type, and paper money. In 1279, all of China fell to the Mongols.

A Minor Adjustment: How? How does a collection of nomadic tribes from the barren steppe dismantle the wealthiest civilizations on earth? Most historians point to a minor adjustment in military technology. The stirrup.

Stirrups existed before Genghis Khan. But the Mongols weaponized them in a way no army had done before. With both feet planted firmly in iron stirrups and mounted on hardy steppe horses, Mongol warriors could fire arrows at full gallop with devastating accuracy. They could stand, pivot, and even ride backwards while loosing volleys into a pursuing enemy. They could cover distances that no infantry-based army could match, arriving at the walls of cities before scouts had time to deliver a warning. The stirrup didn’t just improve cavalry. It created an entirely new kind of warfare - one that made the existing military paradigm obsolete overnight.

Erik Prince - the founder of Blackwater, the most elite private military force ever assembled - made an observation recently that stopped me in my tracks. He said, reflecting on the current conflict in Iran, that the introduction of drone warfare onto the modern battlefield represents “the greatest swing in the pendulum, since Genghis Khan put stirrups on horses.”

Now, when most people hear “drone warfare,” they think of a Predator or a Reaper - a $28 million aircraft operated by the U.S. military from a facility in Nevada. That is not what Prince is talking about. He is talking about a $500 commercial quadcopter fitted with a 3D-printed munition that can be assembled in a garage and destroy a $3 million tank. He is talking about Iran’s Shahed drones - which cost somewhere between $20,000 and $40,000 to produce - being shot down by $5 million Patriot interceptor missiles. He is talking about the U.S. Navy spending over a billion dollars in munitions to defend against Houthi drones that cost less than a used car. This is what Prince means by stirrups.

The empires the Mongols conquered had operated for centuries under a simple assumption: more wealth meant larger armies, stronger weapons, and military dominance. Genghis Khan wiped that assumption out with a piece of bent iron that cost almost nothing and fit in the palm of your hand. The stirrup didn’t give the Mongols a bigger army. It gave a smaller, poorer force the ability to defeat a richer, more established one. Prince argues that is exactly what drones are doing today. The battlefield no longer belongs to the nation that spends the most. It belongs to the nation that adapts the fastest. If he is right, we need to think very carefully about what comes next.

Winning by Not Losing: Here is a question most people never consider. What is the difference between winning a battle and winning a war? The Americans have the most powerful military the world has ever seen. This is not a matter of opinion. In terms of technology, firepower, logistics, training, and the ability to project force anywhere on the planet, the United States military is without peer.

And yet. The American military won every significant battle in Vietnam, Iraq and Afganistan… but lost all three wars. The lesson is as old as warfare itself. When a smaller, weaker force is attacked by a superpower, it does not need to win. It needs to not lose. Survival is victory. If you are still standing when the great power loses its appetite for the fight - when the cost in blood and treasure exceeds the political will to continue - you have won. Not by defeating your enemy, but by refusing to be defeated.

Iran cannot defeat the American military. No honest assessment of the balance of forces suggests otherwise. But Iran does not need to defeat the American military. Iran needs to endure it. Every day the conflict continues without a decisive American victory, Iran’s strategic position improves. Every day the Strait of Hormuz remains contested, the cost to America - economic, political, and reputational - compounds. And that brings us to a curious parallel in modern geopolitics…

America’s Suez Moment? Most people assume that the transition from the British pound to the U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency happened at the end of World War II. It seems logical. Britain was shattered. America was ascendant. The Bretton Woods agreement in 1944 appeared to settle the question. But if you look at the actual balance sheets of central banks in 1945, you will not find a sudden pivot. Despite being battered - infrastructure destroyed, resources depleted, debts staggering - Britain had won the war. And after a century and a half of trusting the pound sterling, the world’s central banks did not have sufficient incentive to go looking for an alternative. Until 1956.

In 1956, Egypt’s President Gamal Abdel Nasser made a calculation. He assessed that the United Kingdom - once the most powerful empire in human history - was too weak to defend and maintain its occupation of the Suez Canal. The Suez Canal was not an ordinary waterway. It was the artery through which two-thirds of Europe’s oil supply travelled. It connected Britain to what remained of its trade interests in the Middle East, the Indian Ocean, and Asia. Whoever controlled the Suez Canal controlled the flow of energy to the Western world.

President Nasser nationalized it. The United Kingdom, unwilling to accept this humiliation, mobilized what had once been the most powerful navy on the planet and moved toward the canal alongside France and Israel. But this was 1956, not 1856. The Royal Navy was short of resources. Without American manufacturing support - the same support that had sustained Britain through two world wars - they lacked the firepower for a sustained campaign. So Britain did what it had done throughout World War II. It appealed to the Americans for help.

President Eisenhower, however, saw the situation differently. He worried that Britain attacking Egypt would push the entire Arab world toward the Soviet Union in the middle of the Cold War. This was against the US interests. Frustrated with the careless nature of Britain's military pursuits, he responded strategically and sent a message to the rest of the world. He blocked $561 million in IMF standby credit that Britain desperately needed. He froze $600 million in Export-Import Bank loans. And he ordered the US Treasury to prepare to dump America’s holdings of British sterling bonds - a move that would have collapsed the pound overnight.

Britain’s Chancellor warned the Prime Minister that without American financial support, the country would be unable to import sufficient food and fuel within weeks. The message was simple. Withdraw from the Suez Canal, or we will destroy your currency. The British Navy retreated home. Tail between their legs. With the rest of the world watching.

This - not Bretton Woods, not the end of the war - was the moment that central banks around the world truly pivoted from the pound sterling to the American dollar. They watched the previous world superpower, which had dominated the globe for all of recent memory, become neutered. Unable to act without the permission and support of the new greater power.

The Strait: That is why analysts are calling the Strait of Hormuz America’s potential Suez moment. The Americans have indicated a willingness to withdraw from Iran before the Strait of Hormuz is reopened to international shipping. If that happens - if an unsuccessful military adventure in Iran results in the Americans going home having lost control of the situation, having forfeited control of the Strait to their adversary - it does not matter under what pretense the narrative is spun domestically. The rest of the world will see what actually happened. And central banks will do what central banks have always done when they witness that kind of moment. They will adjust.

The Promoter: But here is something else I am thinking about. The American military is dependent on manufacturing inputs from China. This is well documented. From rare earth minerals to electronic components, the supply chain that sustains American military capability runs through Chinese factories. Iran is also dependent on China.

Although the Strait of Hormuz is theoretically closed to Western-bound oil tankers, ships have been travelling through it - with Iranian permission. Not just Iranian crude heading out to China, but Chinese cargo ships heading into Iran. Since the war began on February 28th, Iran has shipped at least 12 million barrels of crude oil through the Strait, all of it to China. Meanwhile, China-linked cargo vessels have been transiting in the opposite direction.

There has been much speculation in the United States about whether Iran will run out of missiles. My question is different. What is on those Chinese cargo ships arriving in Iran? Reports have surfaced of Chinese-supplied air defense systems, kamikaze drones, anti-ship cruise missiles, and even precursor chemicals for solid rocket fuel being shipped to Iranian ports. Is any of this finding its way onto the battlefield? And if so - what exactly are we looking at here? I’ll tell you what it looks like to me.

In the 1970s, a boxing promoter out of Cleveland perfected something that would make him the most famous man in the sport - and the most controversial. He put on some of the biggest fights in boxing history - Muhammad Ali versus George Foreman and Ali versus Joe Frazier. He managed Mike Tyson’s rise to undisputed heavyweight champion, against foes like Buster Douglas and Larry Holmes. He dominated the sport through the 1970’s, 80’s and 90’s.

The promoter’s name was Don King. And he is the most famous boxing promoter who ever lived. King understood something very simple: if you hold the promotion contract on both fighters, you don’t need to pick a winner. You just need the fight to happen. Why is that controversial? A boxing promoter’s job is to protect his fighter - to negotiate the best purse, to select the right opponent at the right time, to make sure the terms of the fight favor his man. It’s a negotiation, and by definition, that means negotiating against the interests of the opponent.

But when one promoter holds both contracts, the negotiation shifts from promoter-on-promoter to promoter-on-fighter. And that’s a fight the promoter wins every time. (This is probably why Don King has been sued over 12 times by fighters.)

If you are not a boxing fan, think of it this way - the parallel would be hiring the same lawyer to represent both sides of a lawsuit. The only person guaranteed to walk away richer is the one collecting fees from both. But here was King’s real leverage - his contracts required any fighter to agree that if they won, King would promote their future fights too - so he always retained the winning fighter under contract. It didn’t matter who won. He had already locked up whoever walked out of the ring with the belt.

Is China the Don King of the Persian Gulf? If the Strait reopens on American terms and Western commerce resumes, China will remain America’s indispensable manufacturing partner. The supply chains don’t change. The rare earth dependencies don’t change. America still can’t build the next generation of weapons systems without Chinese inputs. China keeps the contract.

If Iran wins - if the Americans withdraw and Iran maintains sovereign control of the Strait - China stays Iran’s primary weapons supplier, its largest oil customer, and its most important trading partner. Iranian crude flows to Chinese refineries at a discount. Chinese cargo flows into Iranian ports unopposed. China keeps the contract.

Show me a conflict where one country supplies both sides, and I’ll show you the country that’s actually “winning”. The question the world should be asking is not whether America can defeat Iran. The question is whether America can afford to fight a war in which its primary economic competitor is bankrolling both corners of the ring. Honest question - let me know in the comments: what am I missing?"

Musical Interlude: Michael Bennett, “After I Pass Away”

Full screen recommended.
Michael Bennett, “After I Pass Away”
"Simon Cowell in tears experiencing a truly unforgettable performance by Michael Bennett on America’s Got Talent. In this moving rendition of “After I Pass Away”, Michael pours his heart and soul into every note, leaving the judges, audience, and viewers around the world in tears. From the first note to the final chord, the emotional depth of this song touches every heart. You will witness the raw power of music as it evokes deep emotions, creating a moment where everyone in the room, including the judges and audience members, is completely overwhelmed by the beauty and sorrow of this heartfelt performance. This video captures the intensity of a performance that proves why Michael Bennett is a truly extraordinary talent. Sit back, watch, and feel every emotion in this breathtaking performance."
Oh my God... feel that...
o
Tears And Talent, 4/7/26
"His Wife Died. He Has Cancer. 
Michael Bennett's Last Song Made Everyone Cry"
"Michael Bennett, a 70-year-old man from a small town in Kansas, took the stage for what he believes will be the last time. Six months ago, he was diagnosed with Stage 4 pancreatic cancer. But Michael didn't come here to talk about dying. He came here to sing for the love of his life, Margaret. After 42 years of marriage, Michael lost Margaret to Alzheimer's three years ago. He spent every day by her side, singing the hymns she could no longer remember, holding her hand until her very last breath. Her final words to him were, "Don't you dare stop singing." He hasn't stopped since. This is Michael's last song. A song written in honor of Margaret, faith, and the hope that somewhere on the other side, she’s still humming."
o
Full screen recommended.
"What Happened to Michael Bennett’s Son? 
The Story That Broke the Room"
"After losing his 17-year-old son Ethan in a tragic car accident, Michael nearly gave up on music forever. But a message his son left behind changed everything - and led him to step onto the AGT stage to keep a promise no father ever wants to make. This touching story is resonating deeply with viewers who understand grief, love, and the courage it takes to move forward after loss. If you enjoy emotional talent show moments, inspirational stories, and powerful music journeys, this is a video you won’t forget."

Monday, April 6, 2026

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Few butterflies have a wingspan this big. The bright clusters and nebulae of planet Earth's night sky are often named for flowers or insects, and NGC 6302 is no exception. With an estimated surface temperature of about 250,000 degrees C, the central star of this particular planetary nebula is exceptionally hot though - shining brightly in ultraviolet light but hidden from direct view by a dense torus of dust. 
 Click image for larger size.
This dramatically detailed close-up of the dying star's nebula was recorded by the Hubble Space Telescope soon after it was upgraded in 2009. Cutting across a bright cavity of ionized gas, the dust torus surrounding the central star is near the center of this view, almost edge-on to the line-of-sight. Molecular hydrogen has been detected in the hot star's dusty cosmic shroud. NGC 6302 lies about 4,000 light-years away in the arachnologically correct constellation of the Scorpion (Scorpius).”

Chief Tecumseh, "So Live Your Life"

Full screen recommended.
RedFrost Motivation, 
Chief Tecumseh, "So Live Your Life"
Read by Shane Morris

"Hobson's Choice"

"Hobson's Choice"
by Jeff Thomas

"Thomas Hobson owned a large stable of horses in Cambridge, England in the early seventeenth century. As he had some forty horses in his stable, prospective customers assumed that they’d maximize their possibility of choice there, if they needed a mount.However, each potential customer was told by Hobson that he could rent the horse in the stall closest to the door, or rent none at all. This approach allowed Hobson the ability to assure that none of his horses would ever be overused. But, in the bargain, it gave him control over his clientele.

Henry Ford used Hobson’s choice very effectively. He created his inspired "car for the multitude" in 1908. His market share increased enormously. Then, in 1913, he discovered that that black paint dried more quickly than any other color. Black cars could be produced more quickly and were therefore more profitable. So, beginning in 1914, he eliminated all color choices for his popular Model T cars. From then on, he said, "Any customer can have a car in any color as long as it is black." Like Mr. Hobson, he gained control over his customers by minimizing their choices.

It’s important to recognize here that neither Messrs. Hobson nor Ford had the ability to implement such restrictions when they first started their businesses. It was only after they had secured a significant market share through a free market, that they were in a position to make that market less free. In this, we see an important aspect of the concept of government. The United States began as a Republic, but downgraded quickly into a democracy, then downgraded further, over time, into a quasi-collectivist democracy and is now moving quickly into a fully-collectivist state.

But, this is not a new idea, nor a new effort. Some 2400 years ago, Greece came up with the idea of a republic – a state in which the freedom of choice of the individual was paramount. Laws were minimal and, as long as he followed those basic laws, he was free to do as he pleased.

Ancient Rome was the same. After a state of prosperity due to increasing production, a republic was formed, but it was soon downgraded into a democracy, then later became an empire, then collectivism set in.

The pattern is the same. Productivity leads to prosperity, which leads to a rise in individual rights. The nation then peaks in terms of personal freedom. Then, the decline begins, as democracy slowly replaces individual rights. Democracy sounds good, as it’s presented as "the will of the majority." But, in fact, it’s the thin end of the wedge.
                   
Thomas Jefferson said, "A democracy is nothing more than mob rule, where fifty-one percent of the people may take away the rights of the other forty-nine." In every country, democracy appears to be benign, but it opens the door to collectivism. But, how is this possible? Why, after over a century of the consistent and blatant failure of collectivist states, is it still possible for a waitress from New York City to hold up a photo of Karl Marx and get elected by a substantial margin over a liberal incumbent?

Well, the answer lies in Hobson’s choice. In primitive times, a king called the shots. No choice existed. But, democracy introduced the illusion of choice. Since that time, it has been possible to remove more rights and to impose greater taxation than ever before if the population believes that their deteriorated condition is the result of personal choice. And the greatest refinement of this process is to always proffer two (and only two) "viable" choices. All other possible choices are beyond any real consideration.

In his career as a power broker (referred to in polite circles as a "diplomat"), Henry Kissinger became a master at always offering two choices and two choices only. Whether it was to either destroy the Soviet Union or face Armageddon, or invade Southeast Asia or see the end of democracy in the world, Mr. Kissinger acknowledged later in his books that Hobson’s choice was one of the most formidable tools in his toolbox in succeeding in his goals.

It has often been said that "Hobson’s choice is essentially no choice at all." Well, in reality that’s true, but technically-speaking, Hobson’s choice is always an "either/or" choice. "Take the horse in the stall next to the door or be without transportation. (Hobson never suggested a third choice, which might be to go to another stable.)

As to Mr. Ford, he essentially said, "Accept a black Model T or be without transport." (He never suggested a third choice, which might be to buy another make of car.) And, of course, Mr. Kissinger never offered any third choice, either. He never said, "We might additionally consider true diplomacy, in which all countries have their own sovereignty and arrive at their own decisions."

And so, in the US today, as in Europe, Canada and many other countries that at one time made up the Free World, we’re presented with a series of Hobson’s choices. "Vote for Trump, who offers the empty promise to drain the swamp." (The implied alternative is the unchecked growth of the liberal Deep State.) "Vote for Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who offers the empty promise of full collectivism." (The implied alternative is the unchecked growth of the conservative Deep State.)

And this is how an otherwise, relatively intelligent, relatively educated people come to be subjugated. It’s easy to hate a king who you feel oppresses you, but most people are unable to fathom the Jesuit logic of Hobson’s choice. So, is that it? Life is doomed to end in collectivist totalitarianism? Well, no. It’s just one of many phases that nations pass through.

Let’s look back at Henry Ford again. During the mid-1920’s, his son Edsel convinced him that Americans had tired of his practical, but grim little car. Other auto producers were offering cars with new improvements over the Ford, in addition to a variety of colors. Their market share was increasing, as they offered more freedom of choice. In 1926, Henry begrudgingly acquiesced and began offering colors again. The following year, he admitted that the Model T had become outmoded through freedom of choice and the Model T’s last model year was 1927.

Just as collectivism has failed wherever it’s been introduced, in every one of these countries, it was (initially) welcomed with open arms by the hoi polloi, as they bought into the tempting Hobson’s choice. Predictably, collapse was inevitable, as collectivism only works for the rulers. Then the country has to begin the cycle all over again, beginning, as always, with productivity. But the process is always the same. The welcome of collectivism is always the first step and the nation then progresses downhill for generations.

Historically, very few people recognize when their nation is at the turning point. Nor do they recognize the universal effectiveness of Hobson’s choice. The con is that there is not a multitude of choices; there are only two and one of them is clearly unlivable. So, we’re not forcing you to do anything in particular, we’re just funneling your brain so that you fail to understand that you have choices other than the one we’re leading you into. The answer is to question everything. Envision other choices. Choose your own destiny."

The Universe"

"13th Warrior, Prayers Before Final Battle"

Full screen recommended.
"13th Warrior, Prayers Before Final Battle"

"In the movie "The 13th Warrior" Antonio Banderas' character, an Arab Muslim, delivered a prayer just before an epic battle that has stuck with me ever since. Some of the words in that prayer are words that have inspired me to say and do and think some of the things that I have since I walked out of the theater on the night that I saw that movie. This prayer, although delivered by a Muslim rather than Christian character, has become part of me. The words are beautiful and simple and eloquent:

"Merciful Father... I have squandered my days with plans of many things. This was not among them. But at this moment, I beg only to live the next few minutes well. For all we ought to have thought and have not thought, all we ought to have said and have not said, all we ought to have done and have not done, I pray thee, God, for forgiveness."

Of course if you think about it this prayer also spawns thoughts to the inverse of the lines used; i.e. Father forgive me for the things that I/we have thought that I ought not have thought, for the things I have said, that I ought not have said, for things I have done that I ought not have done.

Then brave Buliwyf begins to pray, also, to his many pagan gods and to his ancestors, and is joined by all the members of his band:

Buliwyf: "Lo, there do I see my father."
Herger: "Lo, there do I see My mother, and my sisters, and my brothers. Lo, there do I see The line of my people..."
Edgtho: "Back to the beginning."
Weath: "Lo, they do call to me."
Fahdlan: "They bid me take my place among them."
Buliwyf: "In the halls of Valhalla..."
Fahdlan: "Where the brave..."
Herger: "May live..."
Ahmed: "...forever."

The Daily "Near You?"

Grangeville, Idaho, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Trump: 'If it were up to me I would take the oil. I'd keep the oil. I'd make plenty of money'"

"Trump: 'If it were up to me I would take the oil. 
I'd keep the oil. I'd make plenty of money'"
by Leo Hohmann

"Here we are on Day 36 of a war that was supposed to be over in a week or two, as if anyone can ever predict how long a war will last once it starts. Things always happen that are unexpected. Capabilities of opponents are often underestimated, especially when it comes to a people’s ability and willingness to stubbornly defend their homeland. It’s a war of choice for us. It’s a war of survival for them.

That’s why wars should always be a last resort, defensive in nature. War should never be a convenient tool you whip out in order to get what you want in terms of resources or trade routes, or whatever makes up the true motivation of Washington’s neocons.

Donald Trump has lost his patience for the Iranian regime. In a post on Easter Sunday morning to his Truth Social account, he referred to them as “crazy bastards” who need to take his deal or risk being obliterated. He ended the post with something truly bizarre, even for Trump. See below.
He said Monday that he can’t believe the Iranians haven’t “cried uncle.” “But they will,” he added. “And if they don’t, then they’ll have no bridges, no power plants. They’ll have no anything. I won’t go any further because there are other things that are worse than those two.”

The Iranians have already promised that if Trump bombs their civilian power grid, bridges and oil infrastructure, then they will bomb the same types of targets in the U.S.-allied Arab Gulf states of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Qatar, and Bahrain. This would deal a death blow to the world economy, which runs on oil, gas and critical fertilizers that pass through the Strait of Hormuz. It would set off energy and food shortages of a magnitude the modern world has never before experienced, followed by extreme inflation, famine and starvation. Not to mention the refugees. Floods of refugees driven from their homes in Iran and the Arab Gulf states. Where will they go? Why, into the West of course!

But Trump didn’t stop there in his Monday rant. It gets worse. “I won’t go any further because there are other things that are worse than those two,” he said. This sounds like a not-so-veiled threat of a nuclear holocaust against Iran, a country of 92 million, including more than 500,000 Christians. But before he could expound on that threat, his mind switched to the oil.

Trump stated that “if I had my choice what would I like to do? Take the oil. Because it’s there for the taking, and there’s not a thing they can do about it. Unfortunately, the American people would like to see us come home. If it were up to me I’d take the oil. I’d keep the oil. I’d make plenty of money.”

But wait, we were told this was about stopping Iran from getting a nuclear weapon and freeing the Iranian people from the grips of an oppressive regime. Trump’s latest comments once again provide a window into his true motivations. He just can’t help himself. He is obsessed with money, oil and resource wealth and he tells us as much in no uncertain terms. “I’d take the oil. I’d keep the oil. I’d make plenty of money.” He’s already done this with Venezuela. Now Iran. Wash. Rinse. Repeat. If he is successful in Iran, who will be next? Cuba? Greenland? Canada? Mexico?

The sitting president of the United States is talking like he’s the world’s most feared pirate, or some kind of tribal kingpin. If something is “there for the taking,” he wants to take it. Not because it’s his, not because it’s right, just because he can. He has the power to take it so why not? And we say “God bless America?” How can God bless a nation with this kind of gangster mentality?

This is the epitome of unrighteous raw-power politics and if he is allowed to continue in this way, unchecked by Congress, then I believe he will be the last American president who holds office under even the pretense of us being a constitutional republic. How ironic as we get ready to celebrate the 250th anniversary of our constitutional republic, a nation of laws with checks and balances designed to prevent any one person or group of individuals from attaining unchecked power. Instead, we have devolved into a system of “might makes right,” and, shockingly, most Americans seem OK with that.

On Easter Sunday, Trump called the Iranians “crazy bastards” for having the audacity to defend their country against an outside invading force, armed to the teeth and bent on their total destruction. He used the foulest language to threaten them with war crimes, saying that if they didn’t agree to end the war on his terms, then 48 hours later on Tuesday evening he would bomb their civilian bridges and knock out their electric power grid, leading to untold human suffering and a mass outflow of Islamic refugees.

Trump is either not playing with a full deck, or he is being controlled by an outside entity bent on the total destruction of America as we know it. The world will not forever tolerate a brigand of this magnitude, a man who uses the power of the United States military to steal the wealth of other countries and demand they sign away their sovereignty under threats of bombings to the point of total obliteration.

A world order based on one man’s demands is not sustainable, not for America and not for the world. After that man is gone, there will be a terrible price to pay. Trump, who rode to power on the laudible idea of “America first,” has come to represent naked militarism and unprovoked aggression. He is willing to use American military force in ways it was never meant to be used, to plunder what is not rightfully his.

This is not who we are as a people. We used to stand against this type of behavior by other countries. Stealing another country’s resources and making them a vassal of the United States is brute colonialism of the type that went out of style in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Trump’s comments over the weekend and again on Monday once again prove this war is not about preventing Iran from getting a nuclear weapon. It’s about money and resources and greed. And not one U.S. Senator, other than perhaps Rand Paul, has had the courage to stand up and tell the president that his behavior is unconstitutional and un-American, and that it must stop.

Trump even made the outrageous claim during his press conference Monday that his administration has been contacted by Iranians pleading with him to keep bombing them. “Please keep bombing us,” we are supposed to believe they’re telling our government. “Please come back and bomb our homes again!” Only a complete moron would believe such a ridiculous propaganda story.

Then you have congressmen like Rep. Rick Crawford, R-Ark., making equally ridiculous and outrageous comments on Fox News about how Iran needs to “do the right thing” and agree to Trump’s ceasefire deal. You can hear him if you fast-forward to the 15-minute mark in the video podcast by Lt. Col. Daniel Davis below:
Crawford says, with a straight face, that he wants the Iranian people to “do the right thing.” This is a talking point I’ve heard others repeating. Do the right thing? By handing over their oil wealth and surrendering their sovereignty to a foreign power?

What if Russia or China launched an unprovoked war against us, bombed our buildings, bridges, power grid and other civilian infrastructure, assassinated our top government leaders, and then ordered us to “do the right thing” by surrendering on their terms? We would say they were crazy and tell them to go pound sand. We would fight to the death to defend our country. Why do we expect anything less from our adversaries?

The best-case scenario would be for we the people to remove Trump from office under the 25th Amendment. This way, the world will know in very clear terms that we do not approve of this kind of gunboat diplomacy and trampling over the sovereignty of other nations. Until that happens, our nation is in grave danger."

"President Makes the News for Declaring Holy War, and America Will Pay the Price"

"President Makes the News for Declaring Holy War, 
and America Will Pay the Price"
by David Haggith

"Two powerful headlines came out right after I wrote my weekend Deeper Dive about the apocalyptic cult driving the presidents war from within the White House and the Pentagon: “The President’s Prophet and the Pentagon’s High Priest Predict ARMAGEDDON!

One of the articles was titled “TRUMP INVOKES HOLY WAR” as the top headline in large print and all in caps on Drudge. The full headline of the article on the publisher’s page was “Donald Trump invokes holy war as he gives final Easter Monday ultimatum to Iran.” The other article title was “Trump tells Iran: Open the f---ing strait you crazy b----rds!” The two headlines hit me like they were the exclamation point on the article I wrote over the weekend.

The first story quotes the president as saying, "Donald Trump has invoked a holy war in a furious final Easter Monday ultimatum to Iran: “Remember when I gave Iran ten days to MAKE A DEAL or OPEN UP THE HORMUZ STRAIT. Time is running out - 48 hours before all Hell will reign down on them. [sic] Glory be to GOD! President DONALD J. TRUMP”

Sounds like the apocalyptic religious fervor behind this war that I wrote about, straight from the mouth of the president. Extraordinary even for Trump. This kind of religiously laden statement is certainly not what we are accustomed to hearing from US presidents, who have always tried to make sure, when fighting in the Middle East, that their statements carry no content that would sound like their war is religiously based, lest that incite jihad in the Arab world, joining all Muslims together in the fight. The guys in the White House and the Pentagon seem to be wanting to incite jihad by repeatedly emphasizing the religious basis for their present war, which they started.

The US starting the war makes it a defensive war for Iran, which is essential for declaring jihad under Arab understanding of jihad. It’s like NATO, a defensive agreement, but with a religious basis that says Muslim nations must join each other in defending their religion if attacked. By framing the war in apocalyptic religious terms the US is encouraging Arabs and Persians and other Muslims to understand the war as an attack on Islam, which makes jihad, in their view, all the more appropriate.

US presidents have typically bent over backwards to make clear that the wars they are raining down on the Middle East have nothing to do with Islam to avoid heightening those possible interpretations of the war, which are the very thing that could turn this into full-scale World War III and a “holy war” at the same time.

The other article says, "Donald Trump has threatened to strike more of Iran’s critical infrastructure if the Strait of Hormuz is not reopened tomorrow in an expletive-laden social media post. “Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one... Open the f---ing Strait, you crazy b-----rds, or you’ll be living in hell – just watch! Praise be to Allah,” he said in on Truth Social. That’s throwing it in their face by using a phrase that sounds awfully close to their “Allahu Akbar,” often shouted just before some horrific act of violence in their name for God Have we ever been in more directly apocalyptic times?

Tariff it! Americans are already going to pay big. The US war continues to put West Texas Intermediate crude in the rare “backwardization” where it is priced above Brent Crude (European oil from the North Sea). That is a huge windfall from war for US industry and some US billionaires, but a massive tax for US citizens to pay. It’s a win for the Military Industrial Complex … or, at least, one major part of it. For most of us, it just means desperately higher prices for everything that oil goes into.

That is, unless Trump does what Trump says he loves to do and puts an export tax on US oil. WTI is now selling at a 30-40% premium, which puts the price up for domestic users of America’s own oil because it is an open, competitive market. So, producers will sell to the best price. The real purpose of export tariffs is found in exactly this situation, which is to reduce external sales so that a nation’s people (or government) have enough of the nation’s own product.

Since the sellers of US oil are profiting exorbitantly from a war that taxpayers are entirely paying for, the US government should put an export tax on that oil for 30-40%, taking that wartime windfall and putting it in the government’s coffers to help offset the taxpayers cost for the war. The oil producers didn’t do anything exceptional to realize these enormous gains from war, which is why they lobby for war.

Take the entire benefit away, then maybe that component of the MIC will stop lobbying for war. Use the windfall to pay for the war in cash and to drive down fuel prices for US taxpayers by removing the incentive to sell all US oil to foreign buyers for higher profits. Under such a tariff, US oil producers can either sell to foreign buyers for the same profit they get from US buyers because they have to reduce their price to offset the tariff, with the government pocketing the full difference between what the oil producer charges and what the foreign buyers has to pay, or they can sell to US buyers for the same amount of money they are getting under that tariffed situation from foreign buyers.

How the cost of this war will endure: Even with an export tariff, the war tax US consumers are now paying on oil will continue for a long time. As Reagan’s budget planner (very familiar with the oil-based stagflation of the 70’s under the OPEC embargo) says, “This is not your grandfather’s stagflation.” In fact, I’m inclined to believe that another article in the headlines section today is right in claiming that oil prices will NEVER return to what they were before the war.

“I don’t think we’re going back to the pre-war prices for the foreseeable future,” said Mark Zandi, the chief economist of Moody’s Analytics and among the first economists to predict the 2008 financial crisis, speaking with Politico for its report Monday. “Certainly won’t be this year, won’t even be next year. Might not be ever.”

The difference between now and back then, as both writers point out, and as I also said last week, is that oil was shut off with a simple decree back then, so it could be turned back on when the Arab objective was met with another OPEC decree. This time, however, the ability to transport oil from well to sea is being destroyed, and the ability to refine crude oil into products is being destroyed. The only thing that can be turned back on overnight by decree is opening up the Strait of Hormuz, but it will take years to fully repair destroyed infrastructure in that arena to where the oil supply lines that have been taken out can start moving again.

As Stockman says, "We are going to get a globe-shaking economic conflagration erupting from the void that was the Persian Gulf commodity fountain. That includes between 20% and 50% of all the basic commodities that drive global GDP, including crude oil, LPGs, LNG, ammonia, urea, sulfur, helium, and sundry more."

Stockman points out a different but equally valid reason the crisis Trump has created will not be like the OPEC Oil Crisis. The high inflation was not as painful because America had just experienced thirty years of a roaring economy. So, when the economy was taken way down by the limited supply of oil and the high costs of oil, American spending power was still generally running at a slightly positive grade. We, on the other hand begin with an economy that had already fallen essentially to zero real GDP growth after Trump’s first tariff-enthusiastic year.

(That happened because IMPORT tariffs, which were Trump’s entire focus, make everything more expensive for US consumers and companies because most of what we buy is imported, and most of the rest of what we buy is filled with imported parts or resources. EXPORT tariffs, in a case like this, merely reduce exorbitant extra profits that come from price premiums for US companies on foreign sales. The companies sell the oil at the premium price, but the government skims off all the premium in taxes because the government created that exorbitant pricing opportunity for them with its war; they didn’t earn it. Since the premium portion of the price is purely the windfall of war, the companies will still make the same profit they made during non-war times from selling to foreign entities; but for US customers, prices get held down because they are not bid up by more desperate foreign buyers and the oil company doesn’t have to pay the tariff on sales to domestic buyers. All of that helps offset what taxpayers would also be on the hook for with this war.)

Stockman points out that, in the seventies, US incomes had long been rising at more than 3% per year, while inflation had long been less than that. So, they were more able to absorb the much higher inflation that came along in the seventies because their incomes had for a couple of decades been pushed up in buying power. So, they lost buying power during the OPEC crisis, but were still ahead of where they had been years before. It wasn’t fun or good, but it was endurable because they had somewhat of a cushion.

Now, however, US consumers are being hit after coming out of years of inflation that have already seriously eroded their buying power - inflation that was still higher than anything they had seen for many years and inflation that was already rising again. They are already drained and reliant on credit for everyday expenses, and credit is already, due to the cost of tariffs, defaulting at a much higher rate than it had been pre-Trump.

Total public and private debt back in the seventies was a TINY fraction of what it is today in the US; so there was a lot more capacity to weather through by using increased debt as a tool. During the seventies total national and private debt went from 147% of GDP to 162%.

BUT… Debt outstanding now totals nearly $108 trillion and weighs in at 343% of national income (GDP). That is to say, as we head into the next stagflationary era, the US economy will be carrying two turns of extra debt relative to income than was the case in 1970.

In an already depleted state, consumers are now getting hit by huge cost increases from this war with elevated prices that the other article says are not going away: “I don’t think we’re going back to the pre-war prices for the foreseeable future,” said Mark Zandi, the chief economist of Moody’s Analytics and among the first economists to predict the 2008 financial crisis, speaking with Politico for its report Monday. “Certainly won’t be this year, won’t even be next year. Might not be ever….” In an apparent effort to address concerns over rising prices, Trump has said gas prices would “come tumbling down” as soon as the United States pulls out of Iran, as would inflation – a claim Zandi rejected out of hand…. [Naive or outright lying.]

Even if the conflict were to be resolved soon, business leaders fear that any market improvements would be delayed by months. “The die is being cast for the rest of the year for what’s going to happen in the markets,” said Jim Fitterling, the CEO of Dow Inc., speaking at the CERAWeek conference in Houston recently, as reported…. “It’s like the unwind we saw on supply chains during COVID. You could be in the 250- to 275-day range. This is not going to be an instantaneous rewind.”

OPEC didn’t break things. Maybe people, but not things. This war has broken a lot of things, as wars do, but this war, unlike all previous wars, has focused particularly intensively on breaking OILY things. So, prices will rise for as long as it takes to manufacture and install these things.

Moreover, the prospect of resolving all of this by saving the collapsing economy with a Trumpian attack on interest rates to reduce the cost of all that debt is now unlikely to work as the president thinks. As I just wrote to a reader who asked me about this …"I don’t think rates will go lower. I think Big Beautiful Bill will demand higher rates. Rapidly expanding war spending will add huge additions of debt to what BBB already created. All that debt is going to demand higher rates of interest. Soaring inflation from oil-based cost increases for the next 2-3 years will also demand higher interest as bond rates are highly inflation-sensitive.

With all of that, I don’t think it will matter much what the Fed does, unless it does QE beyond what we’ve ever seen because there is just too much new debt to keep hosing up, plus the compounding interest on all of that to be financed with each new issue of debt.

I think the failing economy will also lower the nation’s credit ratings, and, at the same time, demand more debt spending in order to save the economy. With all of that, I think it more likely the system will blow up from overload than that it will pave the way to lower interest just because it desperately needs lower interest… In short, I think the bond vigilantes will demand higher interest in spite of what the president wants or what the Fed might do if it were inclined to give the president what he wants.

Or, as David Stockman put it, "But after February 28th and Trump’s initiation of a war in the Persian Gulf that can’t be won and which will send the global economy into a tailspin like nothing seen since the mid-1970s, we are truly off to the stagflationary races. Energy and fuel costs have already soared. Most importantly, the workhorse hydrocarbon of the US economy- diesel fuels used by the nation’s massive fleet of trucks, rail, and farm tractors - is already above its 2022 level at $5.40 per gallon and still climbing. [Now $6.19 where I live!]

Likewise, on the very eve of the planting season fertilizer costs have already doubled, meaning that application rates will be cut back, yields will fall, and food prices will be soaring by the 4th of July when the USDA crop condition reports pretty much forecast the fall production levels.

And, of course, no one took into account that the natural gas processing plants of Qatar were fastened at the hip to the semiconductor plants in South Korea and Taiwan and from there to the entire manufacturing sector of the world. All of this through the life line of helium gas extracted from natural processing plants.

In short, these soaring commodity prices are going to push the inflation indices higher, even as industrial output contracts owing to rising costs and limited availability. Labor markets are frozen as much as they were in the depth of lockdowns from April 2020, while new home sales are evaporating.

That’s stagflation by any other name, but this time the Fed will not be in a position to do much about either inflation or recessionary pressures. Neither, with $40-trillion of national debt, can the Fed fight this inflation by raising interest rates. That would sink the US government, not to mention what it would do to the much larger amounts of private debt. Nor dare the government add to that debt mountain in order to stimulate the economy because that, too, would push interest rates higher in order to find buyers for the extra debt. So, dream on Trump. The damage is done. Your inflation is here to stay! Fait accompli!"

"Well, It Is Our Fate..."

"Well, it is our fate to live in a time of crisis. To live in a time when all forms and values are being challenged. In other and more easy times, it was not, perhaps, necessary for the individual to confront himself with a clear question: What is it that you really believe? What is it that you really cherish? What is it for which you might, actually, in a showdown, be willing to die? I say, with all the reticence which such large, pathetic words evoke, that one cannot exist today as a person, one cannot exist in full consciousness, without having to have a showdown with ones self, without having to define what it is that one lives by, without being clear in ones mind what matters and what does not matter."
- Dorothy Thompson
o
“When the pain of leaving behind what we know outweighs the pain of embracing it, or when the power we face is overwhelming and neither flight nor fight will save us, there may be salvation in sitting still. And if salvation is impossible, then at least before perishing we may gain a clearer vision of where we are. By sitting still I do not mean the paralysis of dread, like that of a rabbit frozen beneath the dive of a hawk. I mean something like reverence, a respectful waiting, a deep attentiveness to forces much greater than our own.”
- Scott Russell Sanders

Folks, I fear our time for such reverence has come.
And so, we bravely face it. God help us, God help us all...

Bill Bonner, "Night at the Museum"

"Night at the Museum"
Everyone knows that the feds are already insolvent, with spending 
commitments eight times as much as their revenues. But if you 
can’t spend money you don’t have on war, what can you spend it on?
by Bill Bonner

‘Open the F**king Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be
 living in Hell - JUST WATCH!...Praise be to Allah.’
- Donald J. Trump

Baltimore, Maryland - The weekend began on the edge of our chair. A US pilot was being pursued by both US and Iranian forces...each racing to get to him before the other. Iran has been beaten to a bloody pulp by US and Israeli forces...or so we were told. It is helpless...defenseless...its radar, air force, navy, artillery - all decimated.

Yet, on Friday, it was somehow still able to get off two lucky shots. It downed America’s ultra-sophisticated and very expensive aircraft - the F15E - and an A-10 ‘Warthog.’ This happened, apparently, while the US was busy targeting civilian infrastructure (a war crime, sayeth the media). SAN: "US destroys 3 of Iran’s main bridges as Trump follows through with threat to hit ‘extremely hard.’

The Iran War because it is beginning to look like a banana peel on a museum’s marble floor. Someone’s likely to slip up and fall hard...and in all the excitement, no one will notice the Rembrandt walking out the door. CBS News: Trump’s 2027 budget asks Congress for $1.5 trillion in defense spending, with 10% cuts elsewhere President Trump’s budget proposal for fiscal year 2027 asks Congress for $1.5 trillion in defense spending - a 42% increase - while cutting nondefense spending by $73 billion, or 10%.

Everybody knows that the firepower industry is going to get more money. War costs money. And everybody who’s spent time in Washington knows that non-defense spending won’t go down. And everyone who has been following the news also knows that the feds are already insolvent, with spending commitments eight times as much as their revenues. But if you can’t spend money you don’t have on war...what can you spend it on? And with so much drama going on, who’s watching the cash?

Meanwhile, the headlines recalled the last hostage crisis in Iran. To bring less hoary readers up to speed, the US/CIA had derailed Iran’s fledgling democracy in 1953 by putting the ‘Shah’ back on the throne. Then, in 1979, the Shah went to New York for cancer treatment. Allowing the Shah into the US was bound to cause trouble. Everyone knew it. But the policymakers had a quaint sense of loyalty to him. Hendrik Hertzberg, President Carter’s chief speechwriter explained that “This guy was a sh*t, but he was our sh*t for all these years.”

Students - not the government itself - then seized the American embassy. This was a huge affront to diplomatic tradition and international law. But it went over well in Iran, boosting the popularity of the new government. It paid to have friends. Six US embassy employees escaped and were taken in by Canadian and Swedish diplomats. They left the country with false passports, pretending to be members of a film crew.

But the administration of Jimmy Carter, who had real military experience, and perhaps a fresh recollection of trying to bomb Vietnam “back to the Stone Age,” was remarkably restrained. It did, however, attempt a military rescue. That effort was both extremely inept and unlucky. It resulted in the accidental deaths of eight US soldiers...and the extraction of zero hostages.

Otherwise, Carter’s approach was wise. It cost almost nothing. Except for the aforementioned accidental deaths, it involved no incendiaries, no jackass threats, and left no dead bodies. And the hostages were released after 444 days. Carter had sacrificed (it turned out) his own re-election ambition to get the hostages back safely. Fortunately, the downed Airman was recovered safely on Saturday night. Donald Trump didn’t have to face the same problem."