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Monday, March 30, 2026

"Iran Strikes Israel’s Final Active Water Plant — Nationwide Water Crisis Unfolds"

Full screen recommended.
Index AG, 3/29/26
"Iran Strikes Israel’s Final Active Water Plant -
 Nationwide Water Crisis Unfolds"
"The clock has officially run out for Israel’s national water security. Thirty minutes ago, a targeted Iranian cluster missile strike successfully neutralized the final functioning desalination and water treatment facility in the country. This was not just another attack on infrastructure; it was the definitive conclusion to the nation’s ability to provide life-sustaining fluid to its population. With the Meccarat network already decimated by previous engagements, this singular facility was the only heart still beating for four million people in Tel Aviv and the coastal plain. In this deep-dive analysis, we break down the high-level strategic engineering behind Iran’s choice of weaponry and why this specific strike represents a transition from a “water crisis” to a “water absence.” This is the reality of civilizational collapse in the 21st century."
Comments here:

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Jeremiah Babe, "Alert! This Is The Most Dangerous Time In U.S. History"

Jeremiah Babe, 3/29/26
"Alert! This Is The Most Dangerous
 Time In U.S. History"
Comments here:

"Alert! Emergency! Stock Up Now, Situation is Deteriorating, Desalination Plants Hit!"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 3/29/26
"Alert! Emergency! Stock Up Now, 
Situation is Deteriorating, Desalination Plants Hit!"
Comments here:

"A Photo From Auschwitz, 1944"

"If I didn't know where this photo was taken and who took it, namely an SS officer, I would think it was a moment of rest after the mass, in an open field, where one sits down and eats something after a pilgrimage, before when you go home and take a photo as a souvenir, just like I did as a child with our church community.
This photo shows a child who has found a dandelion in the grass
 and is now giving or showing it to an older child, perhaps a sibling.
A few minutes later, all the people shown here were sent to the gas chambers. And all that remains of these Hungarian Jews is this photograph... children, men, women, boys, girls and this small spontaneous gesture, then screams, shouts and silence."

“My heart broke on its shame and sorrow. I suddenly knew how much crying there was in me, and how little love. I knew, at last, how lonely I was. But I couldn’t respond. My culture had taught me all the wrong things well. So I lay completely still, and gave no reaction at all. But the soul has no culture. The soul has no nations. The soul has no color or accent or way of life. The soul is forever. The soul is one. And when the heart has its moment of truth and sorrow, the soul can’t be stilled. I clenched my teeth against the stars. I closed my eyes. I surrendered to sleep. One of the reasons why we crave love, and seek it so desperately, is that love is the only cure for loneliness, and shame, and sorrow. But some feelings sink so deep into the heart that only loneliness can help you find them again. Some truths about yourself are so painful that only shame can help you live with them. And some things are just so sad that only your soul can do the crying for you.”
                                         - Gregory David Roberts, "Shantaram"

Musical Interlude: 2002, "Children in Time"

Full screen recommended.
2002, "Children in Time"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Colorful NGC 1579 resembles the better known Trifid Nebula, but lies much farther north in planet Earth's sky, in the heroic constellation Perseus. About 2,100 light-years away and 3 light-years across, NGC 1579 is, like the Trifid, a study in contrasting blue and red colors, with dark dust lanes prominent in the nebula's central regions.
In both, dust reflects starlight to produce beautiful blue reflection nebulae. But unlike the Trifid, in NGC 1579 the reddish glow is not emission from clouds of glowing hydrogen gas excited by ultraviolet light from a nearby hot star. Instead, the dust in NGC 1579 drastically diminishes, reddens, and scatters the light from an embedded, extremely young, massive star, itself a strong emitter of the characteristic red hydrogen alpha light."

'There Are Days..."

"How do you beat the odds when it’s one against a billion? You stand strong, keep pushing yourself past all rational limits and never let yourself give up. But the truth of the matter is, despite how hard you try and fight to stay in control, when it’s all said and done, sometimes you’re just outnumbered."
- "Dr. Meredith Grey," "Grey's Anatomy"
"There are days that make the sacrifices seem worthwhile... and then there are the days where everything feels like a sacrifice. And then there are the sacrifices that you can't even figure out why you're making. A wise man once said, you can have anything in life if you will sacrifice everything else for it. What he meant it, nothing comes without a price. So before you go into battle, you better decide how much you're willing to lose. Too often, going after what feels good means letting go of what you know is right. And letting someone in means abandoning the walls you've spent a lifetime building. Of course, the toughest sacrifices are the ones we don't see coming. When we don't have time to come up with a strategy, to pick a side, or to measure the potential loss.When that happens, when the battle chooses us, that's when the sacrifice can turn out to be more than we can bear."
- "Dr. Meredith Grey", "Grey's Anatomy"

"What Keeps You Going"

“What keeps you going isn’t some fine destination but just the road you’re on, and the fact that you know how to drive. You keep your eyes open, you see this damned-to-hell world you got born into, and you ask yourself, ‘What life can I live that will let me breathe in and out and love somebody or something and not run off screaming into the woods?’”
- Barbara Kingsolver

“For this is what we do. Put one foot forward and then the other. Lift our eyes to the snarl and smile of the world once more. Think. Act. Feel. Add our little consequence to the tides of good and evil that flood and drain the world. Drag our shadowed crosses into the hope of another night. Push our brave hearts into the promise of a new day. With love: the passionate search for truth other than our own. With longing: the pure, ineffable yearning to be saved. For so long as fate keeps waiting, we live on. God help us. God forgive us. We live on.”
- Gregory David Roberts, “Shantaram"

The Poet: David Whyte, "The Sea"

“The Sea”

“The pull is so strong we will not believe
the drawing tide is meant for us,
I mean the gift, the sea,
the place where all the rivers meet.

Easy to forget,
how the great receiving depth
untamed by what we need
needs only what will flow its way.
Easy to feel so far away
and the body so old
it might not even stand the touch.

But what would that be like
feeling the tide rise
out of the numbness inside
toward the place to which we go
washing over our worries of money,
the illusion of being ahead,
the grief of being behind,
our limbs young
rising from such a depth?

What would that be like
even in this century
driving toward work with the others,
moving down the roads
among the thousands swimming upstream,
as if growing toward arrival,
feeling the currents of the great desire,
carrying time toward tomorrow?

Tomorrow seen today, for itself,
the sea where all the rivers meet, unbound,
unbroken for a thousand miles, the surface
of a great silence, the movement of a moment
left completely to itself, to find ourselves adrift,
safe in our unknowing, our very own,
our great tide, our great receiving, our
wordless, fiery, unspoken,
hardly remembered, gift of true longing.”

~ David Whyte,
“Where Many Rivers Meet”

Free Download: Albert Camus, "“The Myth of Sisyphus”

“A Life Worth Living: Albert Camus on Our Search for
Meaning and Why Happiness Is Our Moral Obligation
by Maria Popova

“To decide whether life is worth living is to answer the fundamental question of philosophy,” Albert Camus (November 7, 1913–January 4, 1960) wrote in his 119-page philosophical essay “The Myth of Sisyphus” in 1942. “There is but one truly serious philosophical problem, and that is suicide. Judging whether life is or is not worth living amounts to answering the fundamental question of philosophy. All the rest – whether or not the world has three dimensions, whether the mind has nine or twelve categories – comes afterwards. These are games; one must first answer. And if it is true, as Nietzsche claims, that a philosopher, to deserve our respect, must preach by example, you can appreciate the importance of that reply, for it will precede the definitive act. These are facts the heart can feel; yet they call for careful study before they become clear to the intellect. Everything else… is child’s play; we must first of all answer the question.” 

One of the most famous opening lines of the twentieth century captures one of humanity’s most enduring philosophical challenges – the impulse at the heart of Seneca’s meditations on life and Montaigne’s timeless essays and Maya Angelou’s reflections, and a wealth of human inquiry in between. But Camus, the second-youngest recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature after Rudyard Kipling, addressed it with unparalleled courage of conviction and insight into the irreconcilable longings of the human spirit.

In the beautifully titled and beautifully written “A Life Worth Living: Albert Camus and the Quest for Meaning” (public library), historian Robert Zaretsky considers Camus’s lifelong quest to shed light on the absurd condition, his “yearning for a meaning or a unity to our lives,” and its timeless yet increasingly timely legacy: If the question abides, it is because it is more than a matter of historical or biographical interest. Our pursuit of meaning, and the consequences should we come up empty-handed, are matters of eternal immediacy.

Camus pursues the perennial prey of philosophy – the questions of who we are, where and whether we can find meaning, and what we can truly know about ourselves and the world – less with the intention of capturing them than continuing the chase.”

Reflecting on the parallels between Camus and Montaigne, Zaretsky finds in this ongoing chase one crucial difference of dispositions: “Camus achieves with the Myth what the philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty claimed for Montaigne’s Essays: it places “a consciousness astonished at itself at the core of human existence.”

For Camus, however, this astonishment results from our confrontation with a world that refuses to surrender meaning. It occurs when our need for meaning shatters against the indifference, immovable and absolute, of the world. As a result, absurdity is not an autonomous state; it does not exist in the world, but is instead exhaled from the abyss that divides us from a mute world.”

Camus himself captured this with extraordinary elegance when he wrote in “The Myth of Sisyphus”: “This world in itself is not reasonable, that is all that can be said. But what is absurd is the confrontation of this irrational and wild longing for clarity whose call echoes in the human heart. The absurd depends as much on man as on the world. For the moment it is all that links them together.”

To discern these echoes amid the silence of the world, Zaretsky suggests, was at the heart of Camus’s tussle with the absurd: “We must not cease in our exploration, Camus affirms, if only to hear more sharply the silence of the world. In effect, silence sounds out when human beings enter the equation. If “silences must make themselves heard,” it is because those who can hear inevitably demand it. And if the silence persists, where are we to find meaning?”

This search for meaning was not only the lens through which Camus examined every dimension of life, from the existential to the immediate, but also what he saw as our greatest source of agency. In one particularly prescient diary entry from November of 1940, as WWII was gathering momentum, he writes: “Understand this: we can despair of the meaning of life in general, but not of the particular forms that it takes; we can despair of existence, for we have no power over it, but not of history, where the individual can do everything. It is individuals who are killing us today. Why should not individuals manage to give the world peace? We must simply begin without thinking of such grandiose aims.”

For Camus, the question of meaning was closely related to that of happiness - something he explored with great insight in his notebooks. Zaretsky writes: “Camus observed that absurdity might ambush us on a street corner or a sun-blasted beach. But so, too, do beauty and the happiness that attends it. All too often, we know we are happy only when we no longer are.”

Perhaps most importantly, Camus issued a clarion call of dissent in a culture that often conflates happiness with laziness and championed the idea that happiness is nothing less than a moral obligation. A few months before his death, Camus appeared on the TV show Gros Plan. Dressed in a trench coat, he flashed his mischievous boyish smile and proclaimed into the camera: “Today, happiness has become an eccentric activity. The proof is that we tend to hide from others when we practice it. As far as I’m concerned, I tend to think that one needs to be strong and happy in order to help those who are unfortunate.”

This wasn’t a case of Camus arriving at some mythic epiphany in his old age – the cultivation of happiness and the eradication of its obstacles was his most persistent lens on meaning. More than two decades earlier, he had contemplated “the demand for happiness and the patient quest for it” in his journal, capturing with elegant simplicity the essence of the meaningful life – an ability to live with presence despite the knowledge that we are impermanent: ”We must” be happy with our friends, in harmony with the world, and earn our happiness by following a path which nevertheless leads to death.”

But his most piercing point integrates the questions of happiness and meaning into the eternal quest to find ourselves and live our truth: ”It is not so easy to become what one is, to rediscover one’s deepest measure.”
Freely download “The Myth of Sisyphus,” by  Albert Camus, here:

"It's Extraordinary..."

“It’s extraordinary how we go through life with eyes half shut, with dull ears, with dormant thoughts. Perhaps it’s just as well; and it may be that it is this very dullness that makes life to the incalculable majority so supportable and so welcome.”
– Joseph Conrad, “Lord Jim”

"15 Common Dynamics Of SHTF Collapses"

"15 Common Dynamics Of SHTF Collapses"
by Fabian Ommar

When it comes to how we see and prepare for SHTF, thinking in terms of real and probable rather than fictional and possible can make a big difference. Even though SHTF has many forms and levels and is in essence complex, random, diverse and unsystematic, some patterns and principles are common to the way things unfold when it hits the fan. With Toby and Selco’s "Seven Pillars of Urban Preparedness" as inspiration, I came up with a different list of the 15 dynamics and realities of collapses.

#1 SHTF is nuanced and happens in stages: Thinking about SHTF as an ON/OFF, all-or-nothing endgame is a common mistake that can lead to severe misjudgments and failures in critical areas of preparedness. Part (or parts) of the system crash, freeze, fail, or become impaired. This is how SHTF happens in the real world. And when it does, people run for safety first, i.e., resort to more familiar behaviors, expecting things to “go back to normal soon.”

By “normal behaviors,” I mean everything from hoarding stuff (toilet paper?) to rioting, looting, and crime, and yes, using cash – as these happen all the time, even when things are normal. But no one becomes a barterer, a peddler, a precious metals specialist in a week. Society adapts as time passes (and the situation requires). That’s why preppers who are also SHTF survivors (and thus talk from personal experience) insist that abandoning fantasies and caring for basics first is crucial. This is not a coincidence. It is how things happen in the real world.

Recently I wrote about black markets and the role of cash in SHTFs, emphasizing these things take precedence except in a full-blown apocalypse – which no one can say if, when, or how will happen (because it never has?). Now, I don’t pretend to be the owner of the truth, but those insisting changes in society happen radically or abruptly should check this article about the fallout in Myanmar.

#2 Everything crawls until everything runs: Number two is a corollary to #1. SHTF happens in stair-steps, but most people failing to prepare and getting caught off-guard is evidence of the difficulty of the human brain to fully grasp the concept of exponential growth. It bears telling the analogy of the stadium being filled with water drops to illustrate this.

Let’s say we add one drop into a watertight baseball stadium. The deposited volume doubles every minute (i.e., one minute later, we add two more drops, then four in the next minute, eight in the next, then sixteen, and so on). How long would it take to fill the entire stadium? Sitting at the top row, we’d watch for 45 minutes as the water covered the field. Then at the 48-minute mark, 50% of the stadium would be filled. Yes, that’s only 3 minutes from practically empty to half full. At this point, we have just 60 seconds to get out: the water will be spilling before the clock hits 49 minutes.

This is an important dynamic to understand and keep in mind because it applies to most things. Another example: it took over 2 million years of human prehistory and history for the world’s population to reach 1 billion, and less than 250 years more to grow to almost 8 billion.

#3 The system doesn’t vanish or change suddenly: Based on history, the Mad Max-like scenario some so feverishly advocate is not in our near future. The Roman Empire unraveled over 500 years. We may not be at the tipping point of our collapse or the last minute of the flooding stadium, as illustrated in #2 above. But time is relative, and those 60 seconds can last five, ten, fifteen years. Things are accelerating, but there’s no way to tell at which point in the curve we are.

That doesn’t mean things will be normal in that period. A lot has happened to people and places all over the Roman empire during those five-plus centuries: wars, plagues, invasions, droughts, shortages, all hell broke loose. Our civilization has already hit the iceberg, and the current order is crumbling. There will be shocks along the way, some small and some big. But SHTF is a process, not an event.

#4 History repeats, but always with a twist: That’s because nature works in cycles, and humans react to scarcity and abundance predictably and in the same ways. Also, we’re helpless in the face of the most significant and recurring events. But things are never the same. Technology improves, social rules change, humankind advances, the population grows. This (and lots more) adds a variability factor to the magnitude, gravity, and reach of outcomes.

What better proof than the COVID-19 pandemic just surpassing the 1918 Spanish Flu death toll in the US? It’ll probably do so everywhere else, too. Even if we don’t believe the official data (then or now), we’re not yet out of this new coronavirus situation.

#5 SHTF is about scarcity: A shrink in resources invariably leads to changes in the individual’s standard of living or entire society (depending on the circumstances, depth, and reach of the disaster or collapse). Then it starts affecting life itself (i.e., people dying). Essentially, when things really hit the fan, abundance vanishes, and pretty much everything reverts to the mean: food becomes replenishment, drinking becomes hydration, sleeping becomes rest, home becomes shelter, and so on. Surviving is accepting and adapting to that.

#6 The consequences matter more than the type of event: I’ll admit to being guilty of debating probable causes of SHTF more often than I should, mainly when it comes to the economy and finance going bust. That’s from living in a third-world country, with all the crap that comes with it. It’s what I have to talk, warn, and give advice about. I still find it essential to be aware and thoughtful of the causes. But it’s for the consequences that we must prepare for: instability, corruption, bureaucracy, criminality, inflation, social unrest, divisiveness, wars, and all sorts of conflicts and disruptions that affect us directly.

#7 Life goes on: Humankind advances through hardship but thrives in routine. We crave normalcy and peace, and over the long term, pursue them. Contrary to what many think, life goes on even during SHTF. And things tend to return to normal after the immediate threats cease or get contained. At least some level of normal, considering the circumstances. For example, in occupied France, the bistros and cafés continued serving and entertaining the population and even the invaders (the Nazi army). It was hard, as is always the case anywhere there’s war, poverty, tyranny – but that doesn’t mean the world has ended.

#8 SHTF pileup: Disasters and collapses add instability, volatility, and fragility to the system, which can compound and cause further disruptions. Sometimes, unfavorable cycles on various fronts (nature and civilization) can also converge and generate a perfect storm. It’s crucial to consider that and try to prepare as best we can for multiple disasters happening at once or in sequence, on various levels, collective and individual – even if psychologically and mentally. And if the signs are any indication, we’re entering such a period of simultaneous challenges.

#9 Snowball effect: Daisy based her excellent article on the 10 most likely ways to die when SHTF on the principle of large-scale die-off caused by a major disaster, like an EMP or other. This theory is controversial and the object of endless discussions. Some say it’s an exaggeration. But in my opinion, that’s leaving a critical factor out of the equation.

Consider the following: according to WPR and the CDC, before COVID-19, the mortality rate in the US was well below 1% (2.850.000 per year, or about 8.100 per day). If the mortality rate increases to just 5%, this alone would spark other SHTFs, potentially more serious and harmful than the first. That five-fold jump in mortality would result in more than 16 million dead per year or 44.000 per day. That’s 5% we’re talking about, not 20 or 30. If there’s even a protocol to deal with something like that, I’m not aware. It would be catastrophic on many levels over a shorter period (say, a few months).

Early in the CV19 pandemic, some cities had trouble burying the dead, and the death rate was still below 1%. Sure, other factors were playing. But the point is, things can snowball: consequences and implications are too complex and potentially far-reaching. Think about the effects on the system.

#10 SHTF is a situation, but it’s also a place: Things are hitting the fan somewhere right now. Not in the overblowing media but the physical world: the Texas border, third-world prisons, gang-ruled Haiti, in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, in the crackhouse just a few blocks from an affluent neighborhood, under the bridges of many big cities worldwide, in volcano-hit islands. There are thousands of places where people are bugging out, suffering, or dying of all causes at this very moment. If you’re not in any SHTF, consider yourself lucky. Be grateful, too: being able to prepare is a luxury.

#11 Choosing one way or another has a price: Being unprepared and wrong has a price. However, so does being prepared and wrong. Though some benefits exist regardless of what happens, the investment in terms of time, finance, and emotion to be prepared could be applied elsewhere or used for other finalities (career, a business, relationships, etc.) rather than some far-out collapse.

Since so much in SHTF is unknown and open, and resources are limited even when things are normal, survival and preparedness are essentially trade-offs. We must read the signals, weigh the options, consider the probabilities, make an option, and face the consequences. That’s why striving for balance is so important.

#12 SHTF is dirty, smelly, ugly: This is undoubtedly one of the most striking characteristics of SHTF: how bad some places and situations can be. Most people have no idea, and they don’t want to know about this. Those who fantasize about being in SHTF should think twice. Abject misery and despair have a distinct smell of excrement, sewage, death, rotting material, pollution, trash, burned stuff, and all kinds of dirt imaginable. And insects. The movies don’t show these things. But bad smells and insects infest everything and everywhere, and it can be maddening.

During my street survival training, I get to visit some really awful places and witness horrible things. The folks eventually going out with me invariably get shocked, sometimes even sickened, when they see decadence up and close for the first time. Even ones used to dealing with the nasties – it’s hard not to get affected.

For instance, drug consumption hotspots are so smelly and nasty that someone really must have to be on crack just to stand being there. It’s hell on earth, and I can’t think of another way to describe these and other places like third-world prisons, trash deposits, and many others. Early on, being in these places would make me question why I do this. It never becomes “normal.” We just adapt. But seeing these realities changes our life and the way we see things.

#13 The Grid is fragile: It’s baffling how this escapes so many. Most people I know are in constant marvel with modern civilization. They look around, pointing and saying, “Are you crazy? Too big to fail! There’s no way this can go away! Nothing has ever happened!“.

We have someone to take our trash, slaughter, process our food, treat our sick, purify our water, treat our sewage, protect us from wrongdoers and evil people (and keep them locked), control the traffic, and defend our rights. Peeking behind the curtains is a red pill moment. What keeps The Grid up and running is not something small, but it’s fragile. The natural state of things is not an insipid, artificially controlled environment. On the positive side, it makes us feel more grateful, humble, and also more responsible.

#14 The frog in the boiling water: That’s you and me and everyone around us. There’s no other way around it. We’re the suckers who get squeezed and pay the bill whenever something happens, anywhere and everywhere. It’s always our freedom, rights, money, and privacy that gets attacked, threatened, stolen.

Not only because the 1% screws us at the top, but because we’re the big numbers, the masses. And only those who work and produce something can bear the brunt of whatever bad happens to society and civilization. Make no mistake: whenever the brown stuff hits the fan, it will fall on us. It’s no reason to revolt but to acknowledge that, ultimately, we’re responsible for ourselves.


Conclusion: Sometimes, the mechanics, brutality, and harshness of SHTF end up in the background of personal narratives and emotional accounts. Being more knowledgeable and cognizant of some general aspects of collapses may allow flexibility, creativity, improvisation, adaptation, resiliency, and other broad and effective strategies. Or, simply provide material for reflection and debate, really.

Either way, even those who haven’t been through collapse can still learn from history, from others’ experiences, from human behavior, from the facts. Just be sure to see the world for what it is and not from what you think. Because it will go its own way, and reality will assert itself all the same. 

What are your thoughts about the dynamics of an SHTF scenario? Are there any you want to add? Does this match up with your personal expectations? Let’s discuss it in the comments."

The Daily "Near You?"

Tillsonburg, Ontario, Canada. Thanks for stopping by!

"Grey's Anatomy"

"Grey's Anatomy"

“Whoever said, "What you don't know can't hurt you." 
was a complete and total moron.
 Sometimes not knowing is the worst thing in the world." 
- Meredith Grey

"Knowing is better than wondering. 
Waking is better than sleeping, 
and even the biggest failure, even the worst,
beats the hell out of never trying." 
-Meredith Grey

“Yes or no. In or out. Up or down. Live or die. 
Hero or coward. Fight or give in. 
I'll say it again to make sure you hear me. 
The human life is made up of choices. Live or die. 
That's the important choice. And it's not always in our hands." 
- Derek Shepherd

Greg Hunter, "CV19 Vax Causes Explosion in Cancer"

"CV19 Vax Causes Explosion in Cancer –
 Dr. Betsy Eads"
By Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com 

"From the very beginning of the CV19 bioweapon vax rollout in 2021, Dr. Betsy Eads (aka Dr. Betsy) sounded the alarm on all the severe medical problems, disabilities and deaths the injections would cause. Dr. Betsy has been promoting constant detoxing from the shots. In July, she, once again, pushed the idea that “Everyone Needs Treatment for CV19 Bioweapon Vax.” For the CV19 vaxed who are untreated, it is a total disaster. Just look at the out-of-control cancer numbers that Dr. Betsy said were coming back in 2021. Dr. Betsy says, “I gave you some predictions. I told you that there was going to be an explosion of cancer. This is all cause cancer, hematological and solid tumors in five years. Well, it’s 2026. It’s been five years, and the latest graph shows for 2026 an explosion for hematological cancers and solid tumor cancers, and that is just through February of 2026. This is about 300,000 cases just through February, and it is an absolute explosion of cases. I hate to say I told you so, but it was not just me who said this. There were many smart doctors in 2021 such as Ryan Cole, Pierre Kory, Dr. Sherri Tenpenny, and they have all been on your show, and we all said there would be an explosion in cancer.”

Dr. Betsy contends the CDC is covering up the true disaster the CV19 shots have become. Dr. Betsy says, “The CDC is actually deleting codes and data out of VARES purposely. In a stunning revelation today by Dr. Peter McCullough, 74% of all Covid 19 vaccinated autopsies were causally related to the CV19 vaccine. That is a huge number. It’s not just cancers. It’s all of the deaths that went to autopsy. 74% were directly related to the Covid 19 shot."

Dr. Betsy sees what is happening firsthand and points out, “These cancers, I am seeing every day. I am doing a telehealth consult almost every day with my team. The cancers are across the board: lymphoma, Hodgkins, breast cancer, stage four pancreatic cancer, lung cancer, liver cancer, colon cancer and melanoma cancer. It’s just exploding across the board. They are very, very difficult to treat cancers.”

So, why don’t the CV19 vax injured sue? Dr. Betsy says, “All the cases get kicked out for standing. The judges are being told not to let the cases go forward. The system is captured. The minute the CV19 shots are completely pulled off the market, you are going to have a riot. The minute the Prep Act is reversed, you are going to have a riot. Because what is going to happen is then you must give informed consent  Big Pharma are going to be sued into oblivion and into bankruptcy. That’s what all these judges are colluding about. They are all taking money from the government and Big Pharma. If you look at the FDA and CDC committee members, there is a Big Pharma person on those committees. Follow the money, it’s all about the money. 90% of Americans say they know a relative or close personal friend that the CV19 vax has hurt or killed–90%.”

In closing, Dr. Betsy says, “I think we are on the precipice of something big happening. There is going to be civil war or a civil uprising because people are not going to take this anymore. There are at least 17 million in America killed by the CV19 vax, and that number is underreported.” There is much more in the 64-minute interview.

Join Greg Hunter on Rumble as he talks to 27-year veteran Dr. Betsy Eads, DO, exposing the explosion of cancer from the CV19 injections. Dr. Eads still advises that everyone both vaxed and unvaxed needs treatment for the deadly effects of the CV19 bioweapon vax:
o

God help you if you've taken this shot...

"The Economic Damage Caused By This War Will Stretch To The End Of The Decade, And Shortages Will Go Way Beyond Oil, Gas And Fertilizer"

by Michael Snyder

"Even if the Strait of Hormuz opened tomorrow, and that is certainly not going to happen, we are being warned that the economic impact of this war will be felt all the way through the end of this decade. A lot of energy infrastructure has already been destroyed during this war, and it will take years to rebuild it. And the crop losses that we will experience in 2026 due to a lack of fertilizer will be felt long into 2027. But the shortages that we are facing go way beyond just oil, natural gas and fertilizer. As you will see below, we are also facing unprecedented shortages of pharmaceutical drugs, plastics and other vitally important goods. A global nightmare has already begun, and if we don’t get the Strait of Hormuz opened soon it will get a whole lot worse.

Since the war started, commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has fallen by 90 to 95 percent… Daily transits through the Strait of Hormuz have fallen some 90% to 95% since the conflict began, according to shipping intelligence firm Kpler, and hundreds of tankers are trapped in the Persian Gulf. Iran has allowed a limited number of vessels to pass through the Strait, but other than that commercial traffic has essentially been paralyzed.

I have written a lot about how this is affecting the availability of oil, natural gas and fertilizer. Here in the United States, gasoline prices have been soaring and diesel prices have been going absolutely nuts…From March 2-16, 2026, the average nationwide price of U.S. regular gasoline rose from US$3.01 to $3.96 per gallon, while diesel fuel rose from $3.89 to $5.37. Diesel prices matter to consumer costs because diesel engines power trucks, farm machines, construction equipment, fishing vessels and many of the vehicles that carry domestic freight. When items become more expensive to harvest, build and ship, diesel costs spread quickly into grocery, household and building material prices.

But this supply shock has not just been limited to oil, natural gas and fertilizer. The CEO of Dow is warning that a global supply crisis is hitting a very wide range of industries, and he is projecting that it could take 250 to 275 days to unwind this mess once the Strait of Hormuz is opened again…Petrochemical price spikes and shortages from the Iran war likely will cause inflationary effects at least through the end of the year on construction materials, consumer goods, the automative and aerospace industries, and much more, the CEO of chemical manufacturing giant Dow said.

While much of the global supply-shock focus is on oil, natural gas, fertilizers, and even helium for semiconductors, almost 20% of global petrochemical capacity is blocked from the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz chokepoint by Iran, said Dow chair and CEO Jim Fitterling. “The die is being cast for the rest of the year for what’s going to happen in the markets,” Fitterling said at the CERAWeek by S&P Global conference in Houston. “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.”

Of course all of the economic infrastructure that has been destroyed on both sides will not be rebuilt in 250 to 275 days. Sadly, the truth is that it will take years to fully rebuild all of that infrastructure even if the war ended immediately. So ultimately I agree with those that are warning that the economic impact of this war “will stretch until the end of the decade”

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz threatens roughly a fifth of global oil supply and the liquefied natural gas trade. But it is not only the price at the petrol pump that will hit your pocket - the disruption to shipping may cause shortages of everything from food and beer to medicine and MRIs. Even if the strait reopened tomorrow, the damage to energy facilities from missile strikes will take years to repair. In the uncertainty over how the war will end, one thing is certain: the economic effects will stretch until the end of the decade.

Most people in the western world have no idea how this war could potentially affect their daily lives. At this stage, we are being warned that we could soon witness very serious shortages of some pharmaceutical drugs… Rising energy prices will affect the pharmaceutical industry, where energy accounts for as much as a quarter of the cost of manufacturing the raw ingredients of drugs. But the flow of crude oil by-products, such as the petrochemicals used to create nearly 90 per cent of those ingredients, is also affected by the strait’s closure.

India, known as the pharmacy of the world, is reliant on Qatar for about 40 per cent of the crude oil imports used to create such petrochemicals. Generic medicines including antibiotics, blood pressure medication, paracetamol and diabetes drugs such as metformin are at the greatest potential risk. Drugs requiring refrigeration during transit, including most vaccines and cancer medications, typically flow through Dubai and Doha airports, so airspace closures compound the crisis.

This isn’t something that will start happening many months from now. In fact, it is being reported that the UK is just “a few weeks away” from experiencing drug shortages… Britain is “a few weeks away” from medicine shortages ranging from painkillers to cancer treatment if the Iran war continues, according to experts, while drug prices could also rise.

Most people out there still seem to think that conditions will soon return to normal. In a way, that is a good thing because it is keeping people calm. But once reality starts setting in, there will be panic.

We will also soon witness a global supply crunch for various types of plastic products… Another product refined from crude oil is naphtha, often called the mother of plastics. It is primarily transported to Asia and used to create ethylene, propylene and benzene, which play a role in the manufacture of plastic bags, bottles, food containers, IV bags, synthetic fibres such as polyester and even medicines such as antidepressants and anti-epileptics.

Roughly two thirds of Asia’s naphtha requirements originate in the Gulf. How many of the products that you regularly purchase come wrapped in plastic? Just think about that for a moment. What is going to happen when manufacturers are not able to get the plastic that they need to wrap those products?

If this war persists, we are going to see thousands upon thousands of supply chain breakdowns. And the Houthis could make this crisis even worse by shutting down the Bab al-Mandab Strait… The Houthis control most of Yemen’s Red Sea coast, including the major port of Hodeidah. They have a range of weapons – including drones and anti-ship missiles – that can cause severe damage and even sink merchant ships.

Shipping has to pass through the Bab al-Mandab Strait – which translates as the Gate of Tears – at the southern end of the Red Sea. Just 29 kilometers (18 miles) across at its narrowest point, the navigational challenges would make huge container vessels particularly vulnerable to attack. On Friday, Mohammed Mansour, deputy Information Minister in the Houthi government, told CNN that closing the Bab al-Mandab Strait “is a viable option, and the consequences will be borne by the American and Israeli aggressors.”

Nearly 15 percent of all global maritime trade travels through the Bab al-Mandab Strait. If the Houthis were inclined to do so, they could also shut down the Suez Canal. We are potentially facing a disruption to global trade that has no parallel in history. So let us hope that this war ends soon. If it doesn’t, the economic pain that our planet will experience will be absolutely unbearable."

"US-Israel-Iran War, 3/29/26"

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War Current, 3/29/26
"Iran Launched 400 Missiles at Israel in ONE Night - 
Defense Systems Overwhelmed, Civilians Panicking"
"Last night, Iran launched 400 ballistic missiles at Israel in a single coordinated attack, the largest missile barrage in Israeli history. Israel's Arrow and Patriot defense systems fired over 350 interceptors in four hours, burning through six months of production in one night while Iranian missiles continued to rain down on Tel Aviv, Ashdod, and Beersheba. This wasn't a one-time strike - it was wave 29 of Operation True Promise 4, and Iran has shown it can sustain this tempo indefinitely while Israel's interceptor stockpiles run dry. The cost ratio is catastrophic: Iran spends $350,000 per missile while Israel spends $2 million per interceptor, and the math guarantees Israeli economic collapse if this continues for 90 days."
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Full screen recommended.
WW3 Global Watch, 3/29/26
"Iran Just Hit Israel's Last Working Water Plant - 
And the Taps Have Gone Dry"
"Iranian cluster missiles struck the last functioning water treatment and desalination facility in Israel's national water network. Not the first facility. Not one of several. The last one. The facility that has been carrying the entire weight of Israel's civilian water supply since every other node of the Mekorot network went offline. Cluster munitions specifically chosen to distribute simultaneous damage across every system in the facility simultaneously rather than creating a single repairable impact point. The intake infrastructure. The desalination membranes. The treatment processing equipment. The pumping systems. The control infrastructure. All of it. Hit simultaneously. The last water plant is not damaged. It is destroyed. And the taps that were running this morning are not running anymore."
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Col. Doug Macgregor, 3/29/26
"Israel’s Arsenal Depleted! 
Iran Won’t Let Israel Breathe – Now They End This War"
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"How It Really is"

"At the beginning of June, 2025 our national debt was sitting at $31,467 trillion. Today, it has risen to $39,051 trillion. That means that we have added 8 trillion dollars to the national debt in just nine months. It is the largest single debt in the entire history of our planet, and it will never be paid off."
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Jethro Tull, "Locomotive Breath"

"30 Grocery Items You Should Stockpile Before Prices Skyrocket"

Full screen recommended.
The State Explorer, 3/29/26
"30 Grocery Items You Should 
Stockpile Before Prices Skyrocket"
"Stockpile food list that actually matters - most people already own the #1 item but still don’t have enough. Food prices keep climbing, shelves fluctuate, and the smartest prep isn’t what you think. This video breaks down everyday grocery items that quietly become essential when supply chains tighten. Not flashy gear - just practical foods with long shelf life, strong nutrition, and real versatility. Here’s the thing: survival food isn’t just about calories. It’s about staying energized, thinking clearly, and actually wanting to eat what you stored. From overlooked canned goods to high-impact pantry staples, you’ll see how small choices can stretch meals, boost nutrients, and prevent food fatigue over time. What most people miss is the second phase - after the obvious supplies run low. That’s where smart additions like dehydrated ingredients, fats, and flavor boosters make a serious difference. The goal isn’t panic buying… it’s building a calm, reliable backup using what’s already accessible. Start simple. Add gradually. Future you will be glad you did."
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Full screen recommended.
The View From Appalachia, 3/29/26
"What I Just Saw at Walmart Says Everything"
"I stopped at Walmart the other day and what I saw at checkout wasn’t normal. People are buying less, putting items back, and getting frustrated over rising prices. This is what it looks like on the ground right now - and it’s only getting worse..."
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"Country Folks Got Evicted From Their Home Today; Walmart Is Empty"

Full screen recommended.
Jeremiah Babe, 3/29/26
"Country Folks Got Evicted From Their 
Home Today; Walmart Is Empty"
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Dan, I Allegedly, "You Can’t Make This Up!"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 3/29/26
"You Can’t Make This Up!"
"The economy is producing stories that sound completely unbelievable - but they’re happening every single day. From mass layoffs and hundreds of job applications with no results, to homeowners being billed tens of thousands after losing everything, this video breaks down real-world examples of how broken the system has become. People are draining savings, turning to crowdfunding, and facing financial pressure from every direction as costs rise and accountability disappears. In this episode of iAllegedly, we cover outrageous economic stories, rising fees, scams, housing issues, and the everyday frustrations hitting Americans right now. From job market struggles to inflation, crypto risks, and consumer rip-offs, this is a raw look at what’s really going on in today’s economy. If you’re feeling the pressure, you’re not alone - this is happening everywhere."
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