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Friday, July 11, 2025

"There Are A Lot Of People..."

"Thomas Edison said in all seriousness: "There is no expedient to which a man will not resort to avoid the labor of thinking"- if we bother with facts at all, we hunt like bird dogs after the facts that bolster up what we already think - and ignore all the others! We want only the facts that justify our acts - the facts that fit in conveniently with our wishful thinking and justify our preconceived prejudices. As Andre Maurois put it: "Everything that is in agreement with our personal desires seems true. Everything that is not puts us into a rage." Is it any wonder, then, that we find it so hard to get at the answers to our problems? Wouldn't we have the same trouble trying to solve a second-grade arithmetic problem, if we went ahead on the assumption that two plus two equals five? Yet there are a lot of people in this world who make life a hell for themselves and others by insisting that two plus two equals five - or maybe five hundred!"
- Dale Carnegie

"Don’t Fear The Reaper"

"Don’t Fear The Reaper"
by John Wilder

“No. Not like this. I haven't faced death. I've cheated death. I've tricked my way out of death and patted myself on the back for my ingenuity. I know nothing.”
- James T. Kirk, "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan"

“Death is the only wise advisor that we have. Whenever you feel, as you always do, that everything is going wrong and you're about to be annihilated, turn to your death and ask if that is so. Your death will tell you that you're wrong; that nothing really matters outside its touch. Your death will tell you, 'I haven't touched you yet.'”
- Carlos Castaneda, "Journey to Ixtlan"

"When The Soon To Be Mrs. and I were just dating, I was cooking something or other. I think it was eggs. I like eggs sunny side up, and don’t particularly care if they’re cooked all the way.  The Soon To Be Mrs.: “Aren’t you worried about salmonella?” John Wilder: (Laughs in full Chad manifestation.) The Soon To Be Mrs.: (Swoons.)

Seriously, she swooned. I’ve never seen it before in my life, but in that moment I think that was what sealed the deal, the moment in time that The Soon To Be Mrs. realized that this one is different. He’s not like the others. Here is a man who has zero fear of The Current Thing, and knows that salmonella won’t be the thing that punches his ticket out of having a functioning circulatory system.

No. I’m not afraid of salmonella. I would spit in its tiny little eyes or flagellum or tentacles and say, “Not today, my bacterium friend! My Danish-Scots-Germanic blood is far too strong for the likes of you!” And then I would attack Poland. Oh, wait, that’s been done.

I know I’m not going to die like Hemingway, and I’m not going to die like the comedy greats Belushi, Twain, or Nietzsche did. Nope. I think I’m gonna go out like Elvis. On a toilet after having eaten a fried peanut butter, jelly and bacon sandwich covered in cheddar cheese and mayo. Nope, I’m gonna die on a toilet. I mean, after all, a king should spend his last moments on the throne, right?

A lot of people worry about dying. I suppose I did, in my 20s, when I was worried about carrying out my responsibilities as a dad. Those are serious responsibilities – because those kids are going to be the legacy that I leave on Earth. That and my writing, collection of PEZ® dispensers and velvet Elvis paintings.

Again, a lot of people worry about dying. I’m not sure why. Of things that are more-or-less predetermined, that’s the big one. We’re all going to die. All of us. And I’m not sure I care.

Oh, sure, I want to live. I have no particular desire to die. If given the preference, I suppose I’m in favor of my continued heartbeat. But I don’t fear death. I don’t go to sleep at night wondering if this pain or that pain or that thing might be the symptom I look up on WebMD® that seals the deal that Wilder is going up to irritate Jesus in Heaven with bad puns.

I don’t worry about some future point when I’m going to enjoy life. I’ve achieved nearly every goal I’ve ever set for my life. End. Full stop. It’s like when a baseball game goes into extra innings, “Hey, free baseball.” And me? Free life. I’ve done nearly everything I’ve ever wanted to do.

What do you give a man who has everything? I mean, besides another bottle of wine. You give that man: Today. I’ve got Today. The only moment I live in is right now. And right now isn’t all that bad. I’m sitting in the sitting room (question: is any room I sit in, by definition, a sitting room? Discuss.) with the cool night air blowing in the window, some songs I love playing on the laptop, a cold beer by the keyboard, and the knowledge that at this moment, everything is fine.

Literally, in my life, Every Single Thing Is Fine. I could go into details, but you already know how awesome I am. So, I live for today? Hell no.

That’s YOLO. The idea that “You Only Live Once” is a free pass to act in any fashion has corroded society. It’s really at the root of many of the problems we have today. It is, in many ways, the absolute inverse of the philosophy I’m trying to describe. YOLO seeks to elevate hedonism and the passions of the moment as the highest good. YOLO is Tinder® times Planned Parenthood© times SnapFaceGramInstaChat® times Rwanda®.

t’s the inversion of beauty: it consists of being positive about, well, any old thing that feels good. I could list these “pleasures”, but you know the list as well as I do. We see it every day, with vice being paraded as virtue, and the continual demand going out for people to celebrate it, because, “Can’t you see? This horrid abomination that no healthy society or people in the entire history of the world has tolerated, iS BeAuTIfUL!” No, I think living a life built on YOLO is one doomed to fail – inevitably it will fail based on two reasons: it is materialism or a faith based on the nihilism of the material world writ large, and it is based on needs, like youth, wealth, sensation, or, yes, even life. So, not YOLO.

One thing I’ve tried to preach is outcome independence. Indeed, since the final outcome of life on Earth is fixed, all the intermediate steps lead there. Instead, I try to focus on virtue and faith. I write not because of YOLO, and not because it’s easy. Some nights it’s hard as hell to get the post to “close” and feel right. There are dozens of posts where, even after 1600 words, I still didn’t say exactly what I meant to say. That’s okay, it’s on me. I’m learning, and if I were perfect at this, I wouldn’t have more work to do.

For me, it’s the work. It’s getting better. It’s finding ways to add value to those people around me. There are those who pull their weight in the world, and those that don’t. I want to be one that pulls his weight, who has contributed as much as I can to helping my family and the wider world.

I don’t always do it. And I’m not always right, either. I’ve produced some stuff in my life that was really, really good, but not perfect. Thankfully, that’s not my mark, either, since just like immortality here on Earth, searching for perfection is a lonely and silly pastime. I want to make the world a better place with my family (first) and my work (now second) guided by God. And I want people to laugh hard while learning and thinking about the things I write.

The beauty of this is to win, all I have to do is the best that I can do every day. To win? All I have to do is be the best person I can be every day. See? Each night, I go to bed and sleep soundly if I know, in that day, that I gave it my all. Do I take time for me? Sure. But that’s not the goal – I serve a higher purpose.

So, what do I fear? Not death. It’s coming whether I like it or not, and, honestly, I’d rather not return my body in factory-fresh condition – I’d like all the parts to fail at once. On the toilet. I think Elvis would have wanted it that way. Oh, wait... I wonder if Elvis ate eggs sunny-side-up? Hang on, I’m sure he did. Elvis ate everything."
Full screen recommended.
Blue Oyster Cult , "Don't Fear The Reaper"

The Daily "Near You?"

Blanco, Texas, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"The Dispersion of Our Moral Energies"

"The Dispersion of Our Moral Energies"
by Paul Rosenberg

Humans have long been, and remain, deeply attached to morality. Even confirmed criminals will say things like “That ain’t right,” which is purely a moral judgment. And this focus on morality holds across the panorama of human of life. Examine any workplace and you’ll find a long stream of moral judgments: “He didn’t treat me right,” “She’s arrogant,” “That’s a man you can respect,” and so on.

This moral obsession of ours is a good thing; it’s the bedrock that allows us to enjoy a civilized existence. That said, we’ve allowed our moral energies to be wasted, and that’s something we need to fix. But before continuing, consider this, please: Any assemblage of people that is insufficiently safe and cooperative internally (that is, morally), must use force to make people behave sufficiently. This guarantees that the group will choke itself to death. So, morality is indispensable as a practical matter. If we fail to cultivate it, we create our own ruin… a ruin that is inevitable, even if it takes generations to become clear.

Dispersion: The leading issue with morality in our era is not that it is suppressed (though that happens too), but that it’s so widely dispersed as to have little or no effect. Here’s the problem in a nutshell: Humans have limited amounts of energy, and that includes energy for moral concerns. If that energy is widely dispersed, little or none can be focused on the moral concerns that really matter.

The internal energies of average, middle-of-the-road people, are almost fully directed away from serious moral issues. These people will devote their emotional and moral strength toward whatever terror is in their newsfeed, perhaps to a pet or a sports team, and definitely toward hating one political party or another. They may also spend time complaining about all the little moral failures they saw that day. After all that, they’re simply too tired for weightier matters; it’s far easier to spit out a slogan and roll into bed.

The Winners: The big winners in this situation are the entities that need to stay out of the moral spotlight. I’ll leave you to decide who those entities are, but they have a need to work against moral focus and clarity. Even if they don’t do this intentionally, they soon enough learn that frightened, tired and distracted people are far better for them than confident, energetic and thoughtful people. So, the names on your list (should you wish to make one) would be:

Those who frighten you.
Those who impose shame.
Those who claim special standing.

Such entities are acting as if they cannot endure comparison to clear moral standards like the golden rule, and in this we should believe them: They thrive by directing our moral energies to harmless targets.

And So…And so we morally-sensitive humans (which is nearly all of us) must recognize that we’re vulnerable in this way. We must grasp that our moral energies are first of all more important than we’ve believed, and secondly that they must be conserved, rather than allowing them to be scattered every which way."

"Too Often..."

"Too often we underestimate the power of a touch, a smile, a kind word,
a listening ear, an honest compliment, or the smallest act of caring,
all of which have the potential to turn a life around."
- Leo Buscaglia

Dan, I Allegedly, "The Collapse Has Begun - Shocking Trends"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 7/11/25
"The Collapse Has Begun - Shocking Trends"
"The real estate market is shifting fast, and in today’s video, I’m breaking down the signs that the collapse has begun. From shocking price drops in California to booming markets in Connecticut, the trends we’re seeing are staggering. Inventory is rising, sales are slowing, and affordability is at an all-time low—can anyone really handle an $860,000 house payment? I also share insider tips on navigating these uncertain times, from negotiating deals to protecting your finances. Plus, we dive into how rising interest rates and slowing economic growth are reshaping everything from housing to energy prices. Stay tuned for insights from industry experts and real-world stories that reveal what’s really happening out there."
Comments here:

"Choose Wisely..."

“A craven can be as brave as any man, when there is nothing to fear. And we all do our duty, when there is no cost to it. How easy it seems then, to walk the path of honor. Yet soon or late in every man’s life comes a day when it is not easy, a day when he must choose.”
- George R.R. Martin
o
“Life has no victims. There are no victims in this life. No one has the right to point fingers at his/her past and blame it for what he/she is today. We do not have the right to point our finger at someone else and blame that person for how we treat others, today. Don’t hide in the corner, pointing fingers at your past. Don’t sit under the table, talking about someone who has hurt you. Instead, stand up and face your past! Face your fears! Face your pain! And stomach it all! You may have to do so kicking and screaming and throwing fits and crying – but by all means – face it! This life makes no room for cowards.”
- C. Joybell C.

"How It Really Is"

 

"War, Debt, and Distraction: 
The Hidden Collapse Behind the Iran Hype"
by Chris Macintosh

"While we are all having our attention directed towards the war with Iran, we should always be looking at the “why.” Keeping in mind the absolutely true adage that all wars are bankers’ wars, I noted this from ZeroHedge.
So while we’re being directed towards the Middle East, I note the easing of the capital rule on banks. This - together with the war - are absolutely totally part of the same equation, despite the fact that not one in a 100 folks will ever know it or realize it, and for that very reason it will progress. Here is the problem…

• The US government has quietly initiated a stealth liquidity backdoor for banks by easing capital requirements on Treasury trades. This means:Banks no longer need to reserve as much capital when holding or trading US government debt, making banks dodgier than they already are.
• They can now soak up more Treasury issuance without showing increased risk on their balance sheets, making banks dodgier than they already are.
• This injects artificial demand into the Treasury market and helps paper over collapsing organic demand while making banks dodgier than they already are.

This is not a mere policy shift. It’s a quiet declaration of structural stress. What this really means is that the Treasury market, the backbone of the current financial system, is now so fragile and overburdened with issuance that it can no longer function without regulatory distortion.The US government is now issuing a whopping $1–2 trillion in new debt every quarter. Foreign buyers like China and Japan are net sellers. Domestic demand for treasuries is not keeping up. Yields are becoming increasingly unhinged from real risk.

I’d always thought they’d tap the boomers’ capital sitting in pension funds, mandating percentages to be allocated to “safety” or some such hogwash, but this is a new one that I admit I did not see coming - they’re turning banks into forced buyers by changing the rules. Sneaky buggers! It won’t be called yield curve control, but this is exactly what it is… and it stinks of desperation.

So where does the Iran distraction come in? Exactly here: War is a cover for liquidity expansion. War equals narrative control. War is a moral justification for massive capital deployment. And war means optical deferral of systemic accountability (they screwed up biggie, but can’t admit to it, because by doing so we’d get a revolution). Far better to send the peasants into a meat grinder (worked in Ukraine).

The Iran “surprise” hype machine serves a dual purpose:
• Emotionally spike public attention away from the fact that the US is suffering from domestic insolvency.
• Creates a narrative for justifying increased military spending and debt expansion, all under the guise of national security. The deep state truly is in control.

They’re not trying to hide the debt anymore. They’re trying to normalize the next phase of collapse by staging urgency elsewhere. The United States is entering a phase where the legitimacy of the dollar system depends entirely on manufacturing belief. And when belief wanes, control mechanisms shift from fiscal logic to memetic warfare.

This is why capital rules are being gutted in silence, all the while state media channels scream about “world-changing surprises” (Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill) and existential threats (Russia bad, Iran bad, yadda, yadda, yadda). It is simply another step in the process of a failing empire.

As you've just read, the spectacle of war and the noise of global crises are not merely unfortunate distractions - they're deliberate mechanisms used to mask a deeper rot within the financial system. The easing of capital rules, the relentless debt issuance, and the normalization of systemic fragility all point to one unavoidable truth: the collapse isn’t coming - it’s already here."

Jim Kunstler, "Flux Rules"

"Flux Rules"
by Jim Kunstler

We're trapped in a structure. 
We named the structure 'Jeffrey Epstein'."
- Eric Weinstein

"No one in America - not even the most deranged, spike-faced, pink-haired transtifas - believes the latest Epstein story as played out by Mr. Trump and AG Bondi in this week’s cabinet parlay: nuthin to see, just a bunch of pointless child porn, fuggeddabowdit...

But stay! Much is moving, flowing unseen. The world is yugely in flux, large events in human affairs are in motion, many things are breaking, rotating, dissolving and re-forming, while others wind into giant hairballs...so many players acting as though they live in one great hall of mirrors, and treachery abides at every turn. Nobody seems to be actually managing any of it, though there is plenty of pretense, jockeying, staging. The public’s anger and anxiety rise in tandem.

One thing about Epstein is likely certain: it was an intel operation. And one thing is probable: it was a joint operation between the CIA, Israel’s Mossad, and the UK’s MI6. The object: to get as many political poohbahs on-the-hook for disgraceful behavior of the lowest kind and blackmail-able. Under the thumb. Theories and suppositions abound.

If Mr. Trump was in on the Epstein sex shenanigans, as Elon blurted this week, why did the Democratic Party not go after him for it in three election campaigns (and all the many months in between)? Well, not to put too fine a point on it, Elon appears to be losing his shit. His CEO at “X” bailed on him this week. His A-I app, Grok, started spouting Hitler gags, and his empire of world-beating genius is tottering on a broken business model.

You can write all that Elon stuff off as a sideshow for now - wildly grotesque as it may be. But what is actually going on in the three rings of this circus? Flux in the Middle East is one. Whatever else the “Twelve Day War” was about, it’s the end of Israel threatening to bomb Iran’s nuke program out of existence. We’ve done that favor for them, or pretended to, as some are saying, kabukied it out. So, Israel, shut up about that for now...is the policy.

One story is that the actual Epstein material, whatever still exists, that is, which might reside in multiple locations, is so destructive to the architecture of global leadership that it must be squelched for the sake of majorly realigning forces, tensions, and polities across the Middle East, namely, the Abraham Accords. Getting all that lined up is more important to Mr. Trump for the moment than defenestrating the various perverts-in-office around Western Civ. It just is...so...gotta lump it.

Let’s surmise that the president has learned a lot about the intel hall of mirrors over the past decade, but especially lately, in his second term, from DNI Tulsi Gabbard, who has access to every document in the bottomless pit of the intel archives. The President knows he is not exactly in control of his intel “community.” And he aims to do something about it. You could make the case that the so-called “community” is just a giant criminal syndicate engaged in the most nefarious activities ongoing in this world of sin: human trafficking, drugs, money-laundering, weapons, every off-the-book turpitude you could imagine. Nor is John Ratcliffe exactly in control of his own agency, though he can utilize some of its services...but more about that later.

Forget about Bondi’s gaffe. She is just following orders, as are Messrs. Patel and Bongino, standing down, good soldiers, and only on the Epstein business. You can’t even rule out the possibility that Jeffrey Epstein is not dead. Was it suicide? Or an escape? Shall we say, a rendition to parts unknown? I would not assert that, just proffer it as a possibility, since the events of that night in the Manhattan federal lockup were so astoundingly sketchy - the sleepy guards, the broken CC cameras, the missing minute in the one camera recording that worked, the suicide-proofed jail cell... But, then, the autopsy reports...performed upon...whom, exactly?

There is parallel matter of Ukraine to consider. Mr. Trump is yugely frustrated by his inability to put a quick end to it, to make that golden deal with Russia. The Ukraine War is the globalists desperate final project, its last stand. By saying which, let’s assume that the Globalists are “a thing,” a combo of the UK’s remaining potent assets (MI6 and the City of London financial octopus), the megalomaniacal EU bureaucratic leadership (von der Leyen & Co.), and the WEF-Davos gang. Ukraine was their instrument to break up Russia. The project has failed. Yet the war goes on. Mr. Trump says he was not even informed about Ukraine’s recent long-range drone attack deep into Russia, to take out its strategic bombers. Wasn’t informed? WTF???

Was it because the CIA has gone rogue over in Ukraine? Running the war their way - and not even Mr. Ratcliffe has a handle on all that? Consequently, Mr. Trump is yugely embarrassed in his many skull sessions with Mr. Putin. And thus, Mr. Putin seeks to bring about an end to this enormous pain-in-the-ass situation by simply winning the war. Which he is doing. His terms have been simple, plain, and straightforward from the get-go: a disarmed, neutralized Ukraine that must surrender the Donbas provinces, end-of-story, and don’t even mention Crimea because there’s nuthin to talk about there. And, of course, regime change in Kiev...eighty-six on Nazis, thank you.

In the natural course of things, the incompetent drug-addict Zelenskyy should have been overthrown by his own people months ago and it is only the rogue US intel community that continues to prop him up. As political dramaturgy, Mr. Trump must pretend to oppose Russia’s winning of the Ukraine War - we don’t let Russia win wars! - though it is the logical best solution to the problem. So, he is forking over the last $100-million, probably just to pay government salaries, pensions, and social services in Kiev for a month or so. But Russia will win and the UK-EU-WEF will be the big loser, and then Britain, France, and Germany can get on with the job of committing suicide, as they’ve dedicated themselves to do.

Mr. Ratcliffe, meanwhile, earnestly attempts to not become a hostage to the agency he’s supposed to run. So amidst all the other sturm-and-drang of July 2025, he issued that report on former CIA director John Brennan’s 2017 Intel Community Assessment that kicked off RussiaGate. Ratcliffe’s report looked like a predicate for a prosecution. And indeed, Mr. Ratcliffe (an experienced prosecutor himself) issued a criminal referral to the DOJ on the matter...and voila...we learn next that the FBI has indeed been investigating Brennan and former FBI chief James Comey for months - probably since the very day that Patel and Bongino got their office keys.

Well, about goshdarn time. These two seditious caitiffs will be going to court, looks like. Maybe just for lying to congress, which is easy to prove with video and documents, and doesn’t require the spinning-out of a vast prosecutorial narrative that a hostile DC jury could nitpick. We’re also informed that there are more “targets” in the FBI’s investigation. A lot of things are in motion now. Expect cascades of developments."

Gregory Mannarino, "I Have Been Wrong And America Is Dead"

Gregory Mannarino, AM 7/11/25
"I Have Been Wrong And America Is Dead"
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Bill Bonner, "She Will Destroy Us All"

"She Will Destroy Us All"
by Bill Bonner

"Hearts that are broken and love that's untrue,
These go with learning the game."
- Leo Kotke

Channel Islands - "Shock...awe...confusion...bafflement... US policies surprise...and appall. Take away the capital by absorbing almost all our savings into federal deficits. Take away the labor by scaring away immigrants. Take away the benefits of trade by threatening absurdly high tariffs. Every major initiative reduces the only thing that might save the nation’s finances - growth. Breaking news this morning, CBS: "Trump threatens 35% tariff against Canada."

Another day, another tariff. And this, Money Talks News: "U.S. Trade Drops Second Straight Month As Tariff Effects Emerge." "U.S. trade falls for second consecutive month as tariff uncertainty drives shifts in global commerce patterns and gold trading reaches historic levels."

But also in the news comes this from Barrons: "Inflation Is Eating the Labor Market. Gains Are a Mirage."

For much of the last three years, we have heard a reassuring story about the U.S. labor market: It was tight, hot, even historically strong. Policymakers pointed to low unemployment and high job openings as evidence that workers had healthy bargaining power. This story continued last week, after the Labor Department reported hiring in June outpaced predictions. Unemployment dropped to 4.1%.

Yet, beneath the rosy narrative lies an uncomfortable truth: Real wages have been falling. With long-term unemployment creeping up, labor-force participation slipping, and industries hemorrhaging jobs, the U.S. labor market is actually less robust than just a year ago. How could it be true? In this ‘greatest economy ever,’ 25 years into the 21st century, is the typical working stiff really losing ground...growing poorer? What kind of game is this? What kind of trick is History playing on us?

Anyone could spend a few minutes and come up with much better federal policies. How about this:
• Quietly get rid of the violent criminals...then, set up a friendly guest-worker program for other immigrants.
• Seriously cut government programs...reduce spending...balance the budget. Let Congress waste resources any way it wants...just so long as it doesn’t spend more than it gets in revenue.
• Disband the Fed...re-establish a gold-backed dollar as America’s monetary standard...and let buyers and sellers of credit discover interest rates on their own.
• Going forward, if Americans wanted to have more money, they’d have to earn it! No more giveaways. No more debt. No more ‘stimmies’ or subsidies...or tax credits...or grants...or stock market backstops.

In other words, we’d strip the claptrap out of the system entirely. On the foreign policy front, too, the way forward is obvious. Declare victory in America’s century-long war for global domination. Bring the troops home to a spectacular victory parade...a celebration of America’s imperial greatness. Then, de-mob (de-mobilize) them all. Shut the empire down carefully and intentionally...rather than wait until it is shut down by bankruptcy and war.

But we’re not in charge, are we? And there’s a reason. That’s not how the game is played, is it? That old temptress - History - has a say. And she is cruel and uncompromising...she is fickle and unpredictable...and she delivers her moral instruction with a sense of humor that can be almost nasty. And while we have no idea what foolish things she will have us do day-to-day...we know, beyond a doubt, what she will do to us, eventually - she will destroy us all. The b*tch!

As the ancients might have put it, no man ever born of woman ever survives. And none ever gets through his life without making mistakes. Vanity, hatred, envy - the sins to which flesh is heir - always show up. So dying is not enough. We also have to suffer - by inflicting pain on ourselves and others.

And in the money world, it begins with crackpot theories, jackass statistics, and monumental misunderstandings. Which is why the elites can claim wage gains...even as the average worker is falling behind. As we’ve seen, this is not just a recent phenomenon. Real output (GDP) per worker - measured in gold - is only half what it was in 1950. Gold was outlawed for much of that period. So Americans lived with dollars, not gold. And they lost 93% of their Eisenhower-Era purchasing power.

But wait. Suppose you had been riding that great Wall Street escalator for all those years. You’d be above the clouds by now, right? Maybe. But as Tom reports, all of the gain in stock prices comes from inflation: "In gold terms, the stock market is currently below 1929 levels. So according to gold, there has been no real growth in stock market values over the last century. (We publish the Dow/Gold ratio every month in our Strategy Report.) In money supply terms, you get a similar result: Almost no real stock market gains. Better keep the parachute handy."

"Alert! France And UK Prepare Nukes; Trump Goes To War With Russia; Iran Waits; China Invasion Drill!"

Full screen recommended.
Prepper News, 7/10/25
"Alert! France And UK Prepare Nukes; 
Trump Goes To War With Russia; Iran Waits; China Invasion Drill!"
Comments here:

Thursday, July 10, 2025

"True Love..."

Author Unknown

"For years, that dog was his only friend. They didn’t have a house, or comfort, or anything fancy - but they had each other. Through rain, heat, and long dusty roads, they always stayed side by side. They shared dry bread, dirty water, and cold nights with only cardboard to keep warm.

Now, the silence feels even heavier. His dog no longer walks with him. There’s no wagging tail. No soft licks as the sun goes down. But he couldn’t just leave him behind. Not after the world had left them behind so many times.

With his own hands, he made a small wooden stretcher. And with a broken heart, he carried his friend on his back. No money, no car, no one to help - but still, he walked, step by step, to take him to his final place. He was hurting inside, but he held onto his love and respect. Because true love doesn’t walk away. Not everyone will get what this picture means. Some will only see a man with a dog. But those who have really loved will see a story of loyalty - the kind that doesn’t end, even after death. I truly understand this picture."

"Why Memento Mori Is The Ultimate Life Hack"

"Why Memento Mori Is The Ultimate Life Hack"
by Danny Kenny

"The plane lurched violently upward. “Ladies and gentlemen, we’re making an emergency climb due to traffic in our flight path.” In other words: There’s a plane where it’s not supposed to be, so we’re getting the hell out of here. The captain’s voice was steady, but the g-forces pressing me into my seat and the fast climb told a different story. It was the kind of airplane experience where your mind races to conclusions you’d rather not reach.

As turbulence shook the cabin, I noticed something strange happening in my body. While others gripped armrests and exchanged terrified glances, I found myself focusing on my breath to see how low I could bring my heart rate. Like a psychopath. In for four. Hold for four. Out for four. Hold for four. Facing the possibility of death, I needed to know: Am I ready?

My grandfather used to say, “Make sure to have your bags packed.” Not to literally have your luggage by the door, but to be ready to leave life without regrets, unfinished business, and words left unsaid. As Flight 447 to Orlando climbed through that storm, I did my check: Am I good with all my people? The answer surprised me. Despite all my achievement-chasing and productivity-hacking, despite the endless striving I’ve documented in these pages…I was good. I’d added warmth, humor, and joy to the lives I’d touched. My relationships were in a good spot. The world was, perhaps, a slightly brighter place for my existence.

It honestly wasn’t the answer I was expecting, but it was a grounding one. A few minutes later, the plane leveled off. Thirty minutes later, we were safely on the ground in Orlando. But something had shifted. The rest of that trip felt clearer, less anxious, and more grounded. The obnoxious emails waiting in my inbox had lost their sting. The “urgent” meeting that wasn’t really urgent revealed itself to be something not worth spending any additional energy on. Death, it turns out, is an excellent BS detector, and we could be thinking about it way more often in our daily lives.

The ancient practice modern high-achievers need most: Memento mori, which literally means “remember you will die,” sounds like the kind of thing that would send modern optimizers running for longevity protocols (such as infrared light, collagen, and definitely some kind of algae) and the promise of immortality. But as Tim Ferriss observed: “I think about death all the time and it’s not a morbid, sullen exercise for me … I find it to be, and this might sound strange, but greatly encouraging because it drives a sense of urgency, or at least time sensitivity, to a lot of my decisions.”

He goes on to describe looking at stars and contemplating that the light hitting your eye might be from a star that no longer exists. That realization isn’t an excuse for nihilism; it instead provides perspective, clarifies, and empowers. Suddenly, that workplace drama or Twitter beef reveals itself as the cosmic irrelevance it always was. “It’s all dust,” Ferriss said. “Nobody gives a f*ck.”

Ryan Holiday put it even more directly in his exploration of Stoic practices: “Meditating on your mortality is only depressing if you miss the point. It is in fact a tool to create priority and meaning.” The ancients knew this. Emperor Marcus Aurelius reminded himself, “You could leave life right now. Let that determine what you do and say and think.”

But here’s what Ferriss, Holiday, and the Stoics are really pointing to, and what that moment on Flight 447 made visceral for me: Death isn’t the enemy. It’s the life coach you desperately need but never, ever, ever wanted to hire.

Befriending your mortality: Ernst Becker won a Pulitzer for "The Denial of Death" by arguing that human civilization is essentially an elaborate defense mechanism against our awareness of our own mortality. We build monuments, chase achievements, create legacies to somehow convince ourselves we’ll find a way to overcome the one thing guaranteed by our biology. This denial drives what Becker calls our “immortality projects,” the ways we try to ensure that our existence will echo beyond our inevitable end.

For me, it was the 4.0 GPA, the PhD, the six-figure consulting gig. For you, it might be the IPO, the bestseller, the perfect family photo that gets 500 likes. We’re all running toward some imagined future, achievement, or trophy that grants us immunity from dying. We’re scrambling to find the thing, and we’re scrambling to get the thing, and we’re scrambling to hold onto it forever.

We don’t have to do that. This shift from seeing death as the enemy to recognizing it as a clarifying force has been gradual for me: years of Stoic practice, meditation, and simply observing life unfold around me. People in my life dying, some way too soon. People diagnosed with long-term illnesses. These are consistent, regular reminders that life is a finite, non-renewable resource.

The irony is that befriending death doesn’t make life feel shorter or scarier. It makes it feel more vivid, more precious, more worth living authentically rather than performatively. When you truly internalize that you could leave life right now - not as some abstract philosophy but as lived reality - several things happen:Your real values emerge from the noise. Suddenly, being seen as successful matters less than actually connecting with people you love.

Fake urgencies reveal themselves. That ASAP email? Unless someone’s actually dying, it can wait. Your tolerance for BS approaches zero. Life’s too short for meetings that should have been emails or relationships that drain more than they give. What actually matters becomes blindingly clear. Hint: It’s usually much simpler than your brain wants to believe.

The 90-year-old test: Here’s an exercise I give to every coaching client as we start our work together. It never fails to cut through the complexity we create around our lives: Close your eyes. Fast-forward to age 90. It’s a Tuesday, and you’re sitting on a porch (because apparently all 90-year-olds have moved south and have porches in our imagination). What’s true about the best version of this moment? When I do this exercise, the picture that emerges is remarkably simple: I’m healthy enough to move around and be active. I’m surrounded by people and family I love. I’m still sharp enough to write, teach, and serve others. That’s it. That’s the whole list.

Notice what’s not there? The size of my bank account. The prestige of my job title, the number of LinkedIn followers, whether I ever gave a TED talk. None of it makes the cut when you’re staring down the barrel of your own mortality. This isn’t about having low ambitions - it’s about having accurate ambitions. When you know how your story ends, you can work backward to figure out what actually matters now.

The 90-year-old test is where I start my values work because it’s the only perspective that can’t be fooled by short-term thinking or social pressure. Your 90-year-old self doesn’t care about inbox zero or Q3 targets. They care about whether you were present for the people who mattered. They care about doing work you find meaningful. And they care about not dying with a life unlived.

Practical memento mori: Here are a few more concrete practices that bring death’s clarity into daily life:Write your own eulogy. Many people have heard of this, but I recommend writing two versions: 

Write the eulogy for if you died today, and then write the one for if you lived a life aligned with what truly matters to you. The gap between them is the work for you to do and the places for you to focus.

The deathbed story filter. Before any major decision, ask: “On my deathbed, will I regret not doing this, or will I regret the things I sacrificed to do it? What’s the story I wish to be able to tell about this when I’m dying?” This question has helped me see through superficial achievement traps and, on the other side, has helped me choose the short-term painful thing that benefits me in the long term.

Study the stars and get outside. Adapting Ferriss’s advice, go outside at night and look up. Find a star. Consider that its light traveled years to reach you, meaning the star itself might already be gone. Find ways to be in grand scenes in nature. Find places that bring you awe. Let that cosmic perspective shrink your problems to their actual size.

Here’s what nobody tells you about memento mori: It’s the ultimate productivity system. Not productivity in the mercenary sense of cramming more into less time. But productivity in the truest sense: producing what matters, eliminating what doesn’t.

When you truly grasp your mortality: You stop procrastinating essential conversations.
You quit optimizing systems that optimize nothing meaningful.
You delegate or delete those many trivial tasks to focus on the vital few.
You stop trading time for money once you have “enough.”
You start creating things that might outlive you in valuable ways.

After that flight to Orlando, I noticed immediate changes. Emails that would have sent me into an hour-long response spiral got two sentences or silence. Arguments that would have escalated got met with a, “You might be right” or “This isn’t worth our energy.”

I began to understand what Becker was really saying: We’re all going to die, and no amount of achievement can change that. Instead of this being depressing, I found it liberating. But the biggest shift? I started prioritizing shared meals with loved ones as if they were board meetings with God because, from the perspective of mortality, they basically are.

When you stop trying to outrun death through achievement, you can start using your limited time to contribute something meaningful. The question shifts from “How can I matter forever?” (an absurd exercise likely to lead to shallow, inauthentic answers) to “How can I matter right now?” (a powerful question for finding compassionate action to make the world a little bit better around you, in this moment).

Your mortality, your mentor: As I write this, I’m thinking of my uncle Ward. A kind, lovable, and humble man, he was an example to all who met him. He passed, far too soon, in August 2023, after a horrific battle with throat cancer and Crohn’s disease that meant he could not eat and barely speak for months. He was far too gentle, too kind, too good to have deserved a fight I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy. And yet, even as he lost weight and even when words became too painful to form, my uncle still showed up for his family, managed to communicate love through presence alone, and found ways to express care even as his body betrayed him.

I remember how he’d text me about the latest Cubs game or to share the latest news on my one friend who made it to the MLB. For anyone he knew driving to or from Chicago, he would be checking the weather for them, letting them know the forecast and the ideal driving windows to avoid the worst of it. And there was nothing any of his many nieces or nephews could accomplish without my uncle Ward being one of the first to congratulate them for it.

By remembering him, I remember to live. I remember how he loved his family and his friends. I remember the generosity of his spirit, being the first to serve charity, to leave behind a bigger tip, to congratulate someone on their latest accomplishment.

My uncle can no longer do those things on this earthly plane. But I can. This is the paradox of memento mori: The more we remember death, the more fully we live. The more we befriend mortality (our own or the people in our lives), the less it controls us. Admittedly, this embrace feels weird. But death is the feature of our existence that makes life meaningful. Without scarcity, there’s no value. Without endings, there’s no urgency to begin. And without mortality, there’s no reason to choose what matters over what’s merely urgent.

So I’ll ask you what I asked myself on that turbulent flight: Are you ready? Are you good with your people? Have you said what needs saying, done what needs doing, loved who needs loving? If not, what are you waiting for? Death is waiting to help you figure out what actually matters. All you have to do is listen."

Musical Interlude: Gnomusy (David Caballero), "Footprints On The Sea"

Gnomusy (David Caballero),
 "Footprints On The Sea"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Galaxies don't normally look like this. NGC 6745 actually shows the results of two galaxies that have been colliding for only hundreds of millions of years. Just off the above digitally sharpened photograph to the lower right is the smaller galaxy, moving away. The larger galaxy, pictured above, used to be a spiral galaxy but now is damaged and appears peculiar. Gravity has distorted the shapes of the galaxies.
Although it is likely that no stars in the two galaxies directly collided, the gas, dust, and ambient magnetic fields do interact directly. In fact, a knot of gas pulled off the larger galaxy on the lower right has now begun to form stars. NGC 6745 spans about 80 thousand light-years across and is located about 200 million light-years away."

"And It Was Pointless..."

“And it was pointless… to think how those years could have been put to better use, for he could hardly have put them to worse. There was no recovering them now. You could grieve endlessly for the loss of time and for the damage done therein. For the dead, and for your own lost self. But what the wisdom of the ages says is that we do well not to grieve on and on. And those old ones knew a thing or two and had some truth to tell… for you can grieve your heart out and in the end you are still where you were. All your grief hasn’t changed a thing. What you have lost will not be returned to you. It will always be lost. You’re left with only your scars to mark the void. All you can choose to do is to go on or not. But if you go on, it’s knowing you carry your scars with you.”
- Charles Frazier
"Passion doesn't count the cost. Pascal said that the heart has its reasons that reason takes no account of. If he meant what I think, he meant that when passion seizes the heart it invents reasons that seem not only plausible but conclusive to prove that the world is well lost for love. It convinces you that honor is well sacrificed and that shame is a cheap price to pay. Passion is destructive. It destroyed Antony and Cleopatra, Tristan and Isolde, Parnell and Kitty O'Shea. And if it doesn't destroy it dies. It may be then that one is faced with the desolation of knowing that one has wasted the years of one's life, that one's brought disgrace upon oneself, endured the frightful pang of jealousy, swallowed every bitter mortification, that one's expended all one's tenderness, poured out all the riches of one's soul on a poor drab, a fool, a peg on which one hung one's dreams, who wasn't worth a stick of chewing gum."
- W. Somerset Maugham

"Regret for the things we did can be tempered by time;
it is regret for the things we did not do that is inconsolable."
- Sydney J. Harris

"Everything You Need To Know About War With Iran, w/Alastair Crooke"

Full screen recommended.
Chris Hedges Report, 7/10/25
"Everything You Need To Know About War With Iran, 
w/Alastair Crooke"
"Former British diplomat Alastair Crooke uses his geopolitical expertise to break down the global complexities of the US and Israeli war with Iran - from variables involving China, Russia, trade deals with the Gulf States and more, there is much to be considered when analyzing the implications of this latest conflict."
Comments here:

"California To Build Low Income Housing In Fire Zones; Illinois Pension Debt Nears $145 Billion"

Jeremiah Babe, 7/10/25
"California To Build Low Income Housing In Fire Zones; 
Illinois Pension Debt Nears $145 Billion"
Comments here:

Gerald Celente, "Markets Up, Economies Down, World Ramping For War"

Strong Language Alert!
Gerald Celente, 7/10/25
"Markets Up, Economies Down, 
World Ramping For War"
"The Trends Journal is a weekly magazine analyzing global current events forming future trends. Our mission is to present facts and truth over fear and propaganda to help subscribers prepare for what’s next in these increasingly turbulent times."
Comments here:

Oh, Gerald's in fine form today! Bravo, Maestro!

The Daily "Near You?"

Tours, Centre, France. Thanks for stopping by!

The Poet: Wisława Szymborska, "Nothing Twice"

"Nothing Twice"

"Nothing can ever happen twice.
In consequence, the sorry fact is
that we arrive here improvised
and leave without the chance to practice.

Even if there is no one dumber,
if you’re the planet’s biggest dunce,
you can’t repeat the class in summer:
this course is only offered once.

No day copies yesterday,
no two nights will teach what bliss is
in precisely the same way,
with precisely the same kisses.

One day, perhaps some idle tongue
mentions your name by accident:
I feel as if a rose were flung
into the room, all hue and scent.

The next day, though you’re here with me,
I can’t help looking at the clock:
A rose? A rose? What could that be?
Is it a flower or a rock?

Why do we treat the fleeting day
with so much needless fear and sorrow?
It’s in its nature not to stay:
Today is always gone tomorrow.

With smiles and kisses, we prefer
to seek accord beneath our star,
although we’re different (we concur)
just as two drops of water are."

1923 –2012

"I Asked A Wise Man..."

 

"Shaking Earth, Raging Sea"

"The Earthquake of 1755",  painted from 1756 to 1792 by João Glama Ströberle,
 1708-1792. Currently in the National Museum of Ancient Art, Lisbon, Portugal
"Shaking Earth, Raging Sea"
by Joel Bowman

“Unhappy mortals! Dark and mourning earth!
Affrighted gathering of human kind!
Eternal lingering of useless pain!
Come, ye philosophers, who cry, ‘All's well,’
And contemplate this ruin of a world.”
~ Voltaire, "Poème sur le désastre de Lisbonne"
 (Poem on the Lisbon Disaster), 1756

Óbidos, Portugal - "It’s quiet in the house. Dear daughter is having a golf lesson with some little friends down the road. Wifey is working away at the other end of the dining table, ensconced in the wonders of the ancient world, the gentle tapping on her keyboard a kind of meditative metronome for our own melancholy mood. Outside, a slate gray sky hangs over the pines. A few hundred meters down the hill, the timeless tide surges and crashes in fierce waves against the silver shores. Tonight, the moon will be full.

We are visiting friends here on the Continent; friends from the other End of the World. Our children play together in the pool and by the beach during the day. Yesterday, we took them to the aquarium in Lisbon, an hour or so drive south. Watching their faces, listening to their games and hearing their laughter, we wonder what kind of world awaits them, what tales they will tell their own children, about the olden days...

The Worst of All Possible Worlds: It was the morning of the Feast of All Saints, 270 years ago, when the ground beneath the capital began to quiver and shake. For five eternal minutes, time stood still while the great city trembled, the towering pillars of the indomitable Portuguese Empire thundering to the ground as fissures ten, fifteen, twenty feet-wide cracked and cleaved under the city center. Voltaire described the scene...

"A hundred thousand whom the earth devours,
Who, torn and bloody, palpitating yet,
Entombed beneath their hospitable roofs,
In racking torment end their stricken lives."

When at last, amidst the cries and helpless screams, the earth did settle once again, the astonished survivors rushed to the docks and open shores for safety, only to find the darkened sea receding beyond a mudplain of carnage, shipwreck and ruin. Lulling the bedraggled and bewildered into the downtown and harbor areas, the savage sea turned back, in the form of a monstrous tsunami which rushed up the Tagus banks and engulfed the city. So fast was the surge that, according to one account, “several people riding on horseback ... were forced to gallop as fast as possible to the upper grounds for fear of being carried away."

The sea delivered two further giants, lashing the shattered marketplaces and carrying off the injured and infirm, young and old. In the pandemonium, candles were swept from church altars and windowsills, igniting a blaze that grew to a firestorm which burned through what little remained of the city.

Wrenched Asunder: Mark Molesky, associate professor at Seton Hall University, about his book, "This Gulf of Fire: The Destruction of Lisbon," described the scene in an interview with NPR: "It was the middle of the 9 o'clock mass. And hundreds of little fires started across the city. Within a few hours, they coalesced in what I believe to be a firestorm, which is a fire that becomes so hot and so intense that it produces its own wind system. It actually pulls oxygen into itself, becoming hotter and asphyxiating people who were perhaps a hundred feet away. And this killed thousands more who were trapped or couldn't escape from the rubble and, in fact, did more physical damage to Lisbon than the earthquake had. It essentially gutted the heart of this great world empire."

Molesky estimates that the disaster claimed some 40,000 souls, one-fifth of the entire population of Lisbon. And that just here. The quake reverberated across the Iberian Peninsula and Morocco, with the resulting tsunami crossing the equator to claim its victims as far away as Northeastern Brazil, half a world away.

According to Molesky, the energy released by the megaquake was “perhaps a thousand times more energy that came out of the 2010 Haitian earthquake - 475 megatons of energy - the equivalent of 32,000 Hiroshima bombs.

“It was one of the largest earthquakes in history, estimated measurement between 8.5 and perhaps 9.2 on the Richter scale. It was the largest earthquake to affect Europe in the last 10,000 years, and its tremors and reverberations were felt as far away as Sweden, Northern Italy and the Azores in the Central Atlantic.”

Shaking Earth, Raging Sea: Sifting through the rubble of universities and churches alike, philosophers and clergymen sought an explanation for such a calamitous event, unprecedented in modern times.

What inspired heaven’s wrath so, wondered those in collar and cassock, such that we may avert His ire henceforth? Was the worship of mammon to blame, Lisbon being the capital of the Portuguese Empire, the earthly power of which stretched around the globe? Or was it punishment for the Inquisition, in which heretics and apostates were being burned at the stake in ritualized autos-da-fé.

Meanwhile, the Enlightenment philosophers, Voltaire chief among them, were left to wonder: what kind of deity would allow such suffering and misery, wrought no less upon his own creation? The Frenchman’s musing, “Poem on the Lisbon Disaster, or An Examination of the Axiom: All is Well,” set off a fiery debate, which raged from Lima to Lisbon to St. Petersburg.

"To those expiring murmurs of distress,
To that appalling spectacle of woe,
Will ye reply: “You do but illustrate
The iron laws that chain the will of God”?
Say ye, o'er that yet quivering mass of flesh:
”God is avenged: the wage of sin is death”?
What crime, what sin, had those young hearts conceived
That lie, bleeding and torn, on mother's breast?"

Tomorrow we will make the short journey south to Penich, where we will take the children to visit a little church, the Santuário de Nossa Senhora dos Remédios, and the Praça-forte de Peniche, an historic fort by the seaside. Afterwards, we’ll enjoy a simple lunch of fish and rice and caldo verde. Maybe a nice bottle of local arinto to wash it all down. There will be laughter and tall tales for old and for young.

What did we do to enjoy such good fortune, a veritable spoil of food and friendship and family? How many lifetimes would it take for one to actually earn such a precious bounty? Then again, who knows? Maybe the earth will shake and the seas will rage... and we’ll all be wrenched asunder."
"Stay tuned for more Notes From the End of the World..."