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Friday, July 7, 2023

Greg Hunter, "Weekly News Wrap-Up 7/7/23"

"Weekly News Wrap-Up 7/7/23"
Supply Chain Break, War Theft, Economy Update
by Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com

"The story that will most affect you is the possible strike by UPS. Why is that? UPS carries about 60% of the nation’s packages, and if this strike happens at the end of July, the supply lines are going to get clogged - really clogged. FedEx, the U.S. Postal Service and other shippers can in no way pick up the slack. If there is something you need, you will have to order it now or possibly wait months. Even if the strike only goes on for a short while, it will cause much longer wait times for just about everything you need. So, get it now to be on the safe side.

I have been covering the Ukraine war since the very first sanction. I predicted the sanctions would backfire, and every one did backfire on NATO and Europe. Why do these folks want to keep on with the war and not have any talk of peace? Journalist Max Blumenthal says it’s all about the money the Uni-party is stealing by keeping the carnage in Ukraine going. Blumenthal gave a stunning presentation at the U.N. last week talking about the $150 billion ripped off from taxpayers so far. He also gives a long list of grifters inside and outside the U.S. government who are cashing in on death. It’s everything you want to know about the Ukraine war in 15 interesting and entertaining minutes. (You can see it or read the transcript here.) The most important point Blumenthal makes is we are temping nuclear war so a few greedy reckless people can make huge amounts of money.

They are telling us the economy is strong, but nothing could be further from the truth. The Fed is straight up telling us that interest rates are going up. That is going to melt down an already deeply troubled commercial real estate market while thumping residential to boot. Meanwhile, credit card use has exploded while rates on that borrowed money are at an all-time high. To add insult to injury, one of the top search terms on Google is “Pawn Shop Near Me.” That can’t be good." There is much more in the 45-minute newscast.

Join Greg Hunter on Rumble as he talks about these 
stories and more in the Weekly News Wrap-Up for 7/7/23.

Jim Kunstler, "Father of Our Country"

"Father of Our Country"
by Jim Kunstler

“If cocaine is so prevalent in the West Wing that there is somehow ‘extra’ cocaine just laying around, when is the White House going to start drug testing its employees?” 
- Margot Cleveland

"Consider for a moment, and be grateful for, how perfect “Joe Biden” is as president of this foundering republic. He and his family project the rectified essence of every depravity now driving the life of our nation to some murky bottom, where it may be forced to assess its sorry state, repent, and perhaps recover (or just give up and die). There he stands, without ambiguity or conscience: “Joe Biden,” the personification of a failed state.

As a criminal enterprise, for instance, the Biden family influence-peddling operation among foreign powers reflects exactly the racketeering character of corporate America today - which is to say, making money dishonestly, and often for doing nothing. In America’s biggest industry, finance, this is absolutely the case. You may have forgotten what finance is, and what it’s supposed to do: namely, to lend money for activities intended to produce things of value, useful things that people need and want, sometimes even public works that benefit everyone in society.

American Finance now is in the business of receiving free money (loans at minimal interest) from government-chartered central banks (issuing “credit” from nowhere), that banks, hedge funds, private equity outfits, and sundry freebooters can roll into instruments such as interest-yielding bonds (loans back to government) and derivatives (algorithmic bets derived, abstracted from, and tuned to market movements) magically multiplying money that finally produces nothing of value - though it may translate into yacht purchases, alimony payments, luxury suites at ballparks, private Caribbean islands, and traffic in humans for use as sex toys.

The Biden business model also applies nicely to medicine and higher education, two endeavors saturated in prestige and pomp, like the doings in the White House, but which, similarly to that hotbed of policy and action, in the case of medicine, produces shocking amounts of unnecessary death (est. 251,000 a year from iatrogenic treatment errors), and in the case of higher ed, the production of specious and harmful Big Ideas - while both endeavors expand like turbo-tumors within the dying body of an expiring manufacturing economy.

As in the Biden model, dishonesty is now the keystone in both “Meds” and “Eds.” Our public health officialdom hasn’t stopped lying about the Covid-19 episode since it began, and in every aspect from the origin of the disease (if that’s even what it was), to the deaths statistically attributed to it, to everything about the “vaccines” cooked up to stop it. In turn, those officials coerced America’s doctors into withholding the best treatments (ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine) while applying deadly protocols (remdesivir plus intubation) guaranteed to kill hospital patients - which the government then rewarded with gargantuan bonus payments.

Higher ed has now turned its energies from learning to political activism, meaning the performance of morality preening stunts for acquiring status under the pretense of addressing social problems that boil down to bad behavioral choices and mental illness. Higher ed is now in the business of generating more of both those things in the form of manufactured racial antagonism and sexual torment (in partnership with the medical establishment). All fields of study in college are now racialized and genderized, and all at the expense of organized knowledge, which gets burdened with fatuous theory and spurious crypto-religious missions. The price of admission to this carnival of fakery multiplies at a faster rate than the generalized annual dollar inflation, abetted by federal loan guarantees that “Joe Biden,” in his munificence, seeks to abridge with a jubilee for student debt.

Of course, it’s the fantastic psychodrama within the Biden family that presents the most arresting model for America. “Joe Biden” tells us over and over that he loves his son, who he calls “the smartest man I know.” A father’s love is a wonderful thing, for sure. And yet, is there anything that Hunter Biden has not done to destroy “the Big Guy,” short of, say, driving a number nine knitting needle ear-to-ear through the old man’s skull?

Look at what Hunter has loosed on his loving dad: a photo archive of amateur pornography (including sex acts with children), drug crime, and bribery deal memos so vast and clear-cut that a first-year law student could write them up into a federal criminal case and/or a bill of impeachment. Hunter went and got a pole-dancer pregnant and lately tried to weasel out of paying to support the daughter he refused to acknowledge until DNA testing pinned it on him. He only just wriggled out of tax evasion and handgun charges due to his father enlisting the US DOJ as a private protection service, thus befouling the agency and destroying the public’s trust in it. Now Hunter’s suspected of leaving a bag of cocaine in a West Wing cubby, where White House security was sure to find it.

What we’re witnessing is an order of magnitude greater than Greek tragedy: the implacable drive to destroy not just the father, who happens (by the sheerest electoral subterfuge) to be president, but to take down the nation with him. And it’s working. The Biden family is crashing into smoldering wreckage, and so is the USA - as acted out in the sad-sack nation of Ukraine, a festering hub of Biden family moneygrubbing going back more than a decade, now being needlessly sacrificed as part of a massive criminal cover-up, with America’s geopolitical prestige on-the-line.

I know, the complexity of this melodrama is overwhelming. How can one bumbling political idiot wreak so much havoc? It’s a wonder, all right. But it’s all playing-out before us in real time. “Joe Biden” - who (let’s face it) is only partly there - Hunter, brother Jim, and the rest of this sorry clan are all going down. We won’t miss them when they're gone. Everything about them is ignoble, which you can’t exactly say about our country itself. One way or another, they will be thrown overboard, and then we’ll see if we can get this ship righted and under sail again."

Bill Bonner, "How the Rich Live"

Taormina seen from the Greek theater.
"How the Rich Live"
Sex, money, power and the false god of equality...
by Bill Bonner

Taormina, Sicily - "This is how the rich live. We look out over the Ionian Sea…at the yachts…and the sun glistening on the water. We ask the waiter for another ‘macchiato.’ We are beside the pool. Young women wear such skimpy bikinis, we can scarcely believe our eyes. We have to get closer to verify it; we don’t want to pass along misinformation. We’ll come back tomorrow for confirmation.

Our hotel, the San Domenico Palace, sits on a cliff, with a stunning view of the Ionian Sea, looking out towards Calabria in Italy. It was one of the sets for the TV show, The White Lotus. We see why it would be. It is full of rich people in a rich setting seeking to distract themselves by acting like rich people.

It’s nature’s way. People get a lot of money; they must get rid of it somehow. Some buy the latest tech stocks. Some open their own hotels or restaurants. And some are content to take advantage of the amenities at the Four Seasons in Taormina…and cavort with other rich people.

Oscar, Eddie and Audrey: "Here’s what the hotel says about itself: "One of the world’s most legendary hotels, San Domenico Palace invites you to embark on an epic journey into history. With origins dating back to 1374, this classic Dominican convent was expanded in 1896 to become a hotel, featuring a new building designed in liberty style. For more than a century, San Domenico Palace has welcomed the world’s most illustrious guests – from Oscar Wilde and King Edward VIII to Elizabeth Taylor, Audrey Hepburn and Sophia Loren."

At breakfast yesterday, we saw no sign of Oscar, Edward or Audrey. Instead, there were people who might have been Mustafa, Rahul or Omar. A young couple sat near us. The man was heavy, unattractive, wearing brightly colored shorts and a tee-shirt. The woman, dark haired, was his opposite. Slender. Pretty. The two seemed bored with each other. He ate his breakfast, ignoring her. She tried to make conversation, but got only a grunt in return. She made a pouty face and turned to her phone. Rich people having fun!
Room with a view.
The Peacock Walk: The most fundamental drive of humans is survival. The next is procreation. This second one is the interesting one; it takes an infinite number of sizes, shapes, and disguises. It is why we have wars, Swiss watches and the San Domenico Palace hotel.

Heads swivel towards wealth or fame. Eyes are easily blinded by the pixie dust of power…and bulge at the swimming pool. But for the sake of Dear Readers, your editor tries to keep his wits about him…recording the human comedy faithfully, rather than acting like one of the comic characters himself. It is a romantic comedy…a ‘rom com,’ as they say in Hollywood. Boy meets girl. Girl rejects boy. Boy goes to Wall Street, makes a pile of money. Boy invites girl for a weekend at the San Domenico Palace. Boy gets girl. Girl later divorces him.; takes half his money…and the family dog.

How boys and girls…or boys and boys…girls who used to boys…boys pretending to be girls…and non-binary people with piercings and green hair…get together is not only the subject of countless movies, it is the sotto voce story of our lives…and all the world’s vanities, power struggles and quests for wealth.

We men need to show ourselves and others that we have the brightest feathers on the peacock walk. We do so in endless iterations, many of them contradictory, senseless, and futile. We play chess to win the game. We wear the latest styles…or dismiss them as fads. We spend our money to show off…or hoard it to show how prudent we are. One man feels superior because he lifts weights. Another knows he has a leg up because he reads books. And yet another does neither – and regards it as an emblem of superiority.

False Gods: It’s why ‘equality’ is a false god. Nobody really wants to be equal…we all want to be superior. We want to stand out. That’s the way the animal kingdom (including us) works…by discriminating, good from bad, better from worse, winners from losers. In the end, we all want to ‘get the girl’ (the prize…the recognition…the love…the money). All of it, from the most petty insult to the conquest of Gaulle, is rooted in the fertile soil of sex.

At least, that is our view, which we share (perhaps) with Lucretius and Epicurus. The desire to be better…superior…Numero Uno...is the motor force of progress…the real success secret of the human race. We innovate to impress; we impress to reproduce. Even monks, who live in a cloister, and have taken a vow of chastity, do so because it makes them feel better about themselves, (so they would be better mates…if they were into that sort of thing.)

In the world of money, some make it by inventing new computer chips. Others take it from them by producing fine wines and building elegant hotels. This insight, if it is one, has little practical application. But at least it gives us a hard surface from which to launch our ruminations.

Note that this view emphasizes the relative nature of wealth. While some people innovate to get ahead…others get ahead by trying to force others behind. Even the campaign for ‘equality’ is just another way for some people to feel better about themselves. First, they feel superior simply because they have fashionable opinions – showing the proper concern for the poor. Second, wealth equality can only be achieved by leveling down…reducing the wealth of the rich and thereby making the non-rich relatively richer. This helps us understand why so much of politics seems so stupid; the real goal of it is not to increase human progress, happiness or wealth, but to take it away from some (those who create it) and give it to others (those favored by the elite who control the government).

The math is easy to understand. You and your neighbor each have $100. If you earn another 50 dollars, you’re $50…or a third…richer than he is. If he could prevent you from earning more money, he would remain – relatively – rich. And if he could take away $50 from you, you’d have only $50 left, while he’d have $150 – three times richer! He can go to the San Domenico Palace…you’ll have to stay at home."

Thursday, July 6, 2023

Musical Interlude: Ludovico Einaudi, "The Royal Albert Hall Concert"

Full screen recommended.
Ludovico Einaudi, "The Royal Albert Hall Concert"

"Nuclear PSA Alert! Consulates Close; The Only Plan Left is This; 500,000 Mobilizing"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 7/6/23
"Nuclear PSA Alert! Consulates Close; 
The Only Plan Left is This; 500,000 Mobilizing"
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Context...
"Douglas Macgregor: Devastating Strike!"
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"There are a multitude of fuses affixed to dozens of powder-kegs and little kids with matches are on the loose. I don’t know which of the fuses will be lit and which powder-keg will blow, but someone is bound to do something stupid, and then all hell will break loose. It could happen at any time. One military miscue. One assassination. One violent act that stirs the world. And the dominoes will topple, setting off fireworks not seen on this planet since 1939 – 1945. I can see it all very clearly." - Jim Quinn

"Disney Is In Deep, Deep Trouble As Major Losses Threaten To Collapse Its Retail Business"

Full screen recommended.
"Disney Is In Deep, Deep Trouble As Major Losses 
Threaten To Collapse Its Retail Business"
By Epic Economist

"Disney is in financial distress as its latest movie releases result in billionaire losses while its retail footprint continues to shrink, its streaming service underperforms, and its Florida amusement parks face political battles with state government Ron DeSantis. The company’s poor financial results are worrying Wall Street and sending shares into a free fall at a time when bankruptcies in the entertainment sector continue to rise. Experts say CEO Bob Iger has a huge problem on his hands, and in today’s video, we break down the troubles facing the House of Mouse.

A new analysis by Valliant Renegate estimates that the Walt Disney Company is looking at a $900 million loss following the fiasco of its latest releases. The last eight studio movies put out by the entertainment giant had a very weak performance compared to executives' expectations.

CEO Bob Iger has been facing increasing pressure due to the mounting losses, but he has also been dealing with a political battle against Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who is trying to take over Disney World's theme park district. The conflict between DeSantis and Disney started in 2022 after the entertainment enterprise, in the face of rising backlash, publicly opposed legislation concerning a bill that banned schools from teaching about sexual orientation and gender identity for the state’s students.

In retaliation, DeSantis took over Disney World's governing district through legislation passed by lawmakers and established a new board of supervisors. But the truth is that Disney’s amusement park problems in Florida are small in comparison to the issues facing its online and brick-and-mortar retail operations.

The company’s streaming media business is going from bad to worse this year. According to data shared by Reuters, “Walt Disney Co faced streaming losses by $400 million in the prior quarter and also shed subscribers in Q1 2023.” Overall, the entertainment corporation lost $659 million just on its streaming segment. Subscriptions dropped to 157.8 million from 161.8 million. In total, the company is seeing a loss of over $1.5 billion. Additionally, Iger announced that two dozen physical locations in America will be eliminated before the end of 2023.

Wall Street is extremely worried about the headwinds faced by Disney, and investors punished the company for its latest earnings report. Amid multiple controversies and shakeups, The Walt Disney Company’s stock price is nowhere near where it once was, losing 117% of its value since 2021. Since the beginning of the year, shares plunged by almost 20%. Financial experts say that the selloff was fueled by uncertainty over Iger’s takeover of the company.

So far, the new CEO has not turned the company around. His, so far, has not been successful. Instead, he laid off 7,000 workers in a cost-cutting move. The cuts come as he tries to slash $5.5 billion in costs to keep the business afloat. The outlook is truly concerning, especially amid a trend of billionaire bankruptcies in the entertainment industry. This year alone, Vice Media, Regal Cinemas, which owns CineWorld and National CineMedia filed for bankruptcy due to a massive drop in revenue and loss of profitability. The environment is getting more hostile for US businesses as Americans continue to struggle financially. The future of Disney is on the line, and now more than ever, executives must step up their game to save the legacy of Walt Disney."
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"Americans Are Panic Selling To Pawn Shops"; Financing Your Wannabe Millionaire Lifestyle"

Jeremiah Babe, 7/6/23
"Americans Are Panic Selling To Pawn Shops"; 
Financing Your Wannabe Millionaire Lifestyle"
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Musical Interlude: Deuter, "Along the High Ridges"

Deuter, "Along the High Ridges"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Planetary nebula Abell 78 stands out in this colorful telescopic skyscape. In fact the colors of the spiky Milky Way stars depend on their surface temperatures, both cooler (yellowish) and hotter (bluish) than the Sun. But Abell 78 shines by the characteristic emission of ionized atoms in the tenuous shroud of material shrugged off from an intensely hot central star. The atoms are ionized, their electrons stripped away, by the central star's energetic but otherwise invisible ultraviolet light.
The visible blue-green glow of loops and filaments in the nebula's central region corresponds to emission from doubly ionized oxygen atoms, surrounded by strong red emission from electrons recombining with hydrogen atoms. Some 5,000 light-years distant toward the constellation Cygnus, Abell 78 is about three light-years across. A planetary nebula like Abell 78 represents a very brief final phase in stellar evolution that our own Sun will experience... in about 5 billion years.”

Chet Raymo, "Why We Need Poets"

"Why We Need Poets"
by Chet Raymo

"The poet Jane Hirshfield referred in a poem to the number of atoms it takes to make a butterfly. Ten to the 24th power, I think she said. I thought I'd check it out. A typical butterfly might weigh about half a gram. The exact ratio of elements I don't know, but mostly hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen. Let's assume an atomic weight of ten for a typical atom; that is, an atom with ten nuclear particles (Hydrogen=1, carbon= 12, oxygen=16, and so on). A proton or neutron has a weight of about 1.6 X 10-24 grams. About 3 X 1022 atoms in a butterfly.

If I'm remembering Hirshfield's reference correctly (and I may not be), we are off by one or two orders of magnitude. No matter. It's a very big number. You want to make a butterfly? You will need 30,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 atoms. And every one in exactly the right place.

Now consider the miracle of metamorphosis. The caterpillar builds a chrysalis. Wraps itself up in its closet. And there, in the privacy of its self-sufficiency, it rearranges those arrangements of atoms. The caterpillar's six stumpy front feet are turned into the butterfly's slender legs. Four wings develop, as do reproductive organs. Chewing mouthparts become adapted for sucking. A crawling, insatiable, leaf-eater is transformed into a winged, sex-obsessed nectar sipper.

This is why we need poets. It's one thing to count atoms, or draw diagrams of the 22 amino acids, or suss out their sequence on the long chains that are the proteins. Or read out the genome that controls the machinery that turns a creeping leaf-cruncher into a winged angel. But all that biochemistry, as wonderful as it is, leaves the essential mystery intact. The hum. The unceasing hum that is life. The inextinguishable continuity. Sing, poets. Sing your hosannas."

The Poet: Dylan Thomas, "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night"

"Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night"

"Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
Because their words had forked no lightning they
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

And you, my father, there on the sad height,
Curse, bless, me now with your fierce tears, I pray.
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Rage, rage against the dying of the light."
- Dylan Thomas

“Sigmund Wollman’s Reality Test”

“Sigmund Wollman’s Reality Test”
by 
Robert Fulghum  

“In the summer of 1959, at the Feather River Inn near the town of Blairsden in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of northern California. A resort environment. And I, just out of college, have a job that combines being the night desk clerk in the lodge and helping out with the horse-wrangling at the stables. The owner/manager is Italian-Swiss, with European notions about conditions of employment. He and I do not get along. I think he’s a fascist who wants pleasant employees who know their place, and he thinks I’m a good example of how democracy can be carried too far. I’m twenty-two and pretty free with my opinions, and he’s fifty-two and has a few opinions of his own. One week the employees had been served the same thing for lunch every single day. Two wieners, a mound of sauerkraut, and stale rolls. To compound insult with injury, the cost of meals was deducted from our check. I was outraged.

 On Friday night of that awful week, I was at my desk job around 11:00 P.M., and the night auditor had just come on duty. I went into the kitchen to get a bite to eat and saw notes to the chef to the effect that wieners and sauerkraut are on the employee menu for two more days.

That tears it. I quit! For lack of a better audience, I unloaded on the night auditor, Sigmund Wollman.

I declared that I have had it up to here; that I am going to get a plate of wieners and sauerkraut and go and wake up the owner and throw it on him. I am sick and tired of this crap and insulted and nobody is going to make me eat wieners and sauerkraut for a whole week and make me pay for it and who does he think he is anyhow and how can life be sustained on wieners and sauerkraut and this is un-American and I don’t like wieners and sauerkraut enough to eat it one day for God’s sake and the whole hotel stinks anyhow and the horses are all nags and the guests are all idiots and I’m packing my bags and heading for Montana where they never even heard of wieners and sauerkraut and wouldn’t feed that stuff to the pigs. Something like that. I’m still mad about it.

I raved on this way for twenty minutes, and needn’t repeat it all here. You get the drift. My monologue was delivered at the top of my lungs, punctuated by blows on the front desk with a fly-swatter, the kicking of chairs, and much profanity. A call to arms, freedom, unions, uprisings, and the breaking of chains for the working masses.

As I pitched my fit, Sigmund Wollman, the night auditor, sat quietly on his stool, smoking a cigarette, watching me with sorrowful eyes. Put a bloodhound in a suit and tie and you have Sigmund Wollman. He’s got good reason to look sorrowful. Survivor of Auschwitz. Three years. German Jew. Thin, coughed a lot. He liked being alone at the night job – gave him intellectual space, gave him peace and quiet, and, even more, he could go into the kitchen and have a snack whenever he wanted to – all the wieners and sauerkraut he wanted. To him, a feast. More than that, there’s nobody around at night to tell him what to do. In Auschwitz he dreamed of such a time. The only person he sees at work is me, the nightly disturber of his dream. Our shifts overlap for an hour. And here I am again. A one-man war party at full cry.

“Fulchum, are you finished?”
“No. Why?”
Lissen, Fulchum. Lissen me, lissen me. You know what’s wrong with you? It’s not wieners and kraut and it’s not the boss and it’s not the chef and it’s not this job.”
“So what’s wrong with me?”

“Fulchum, you think you know everything, but you don’t know the difference between an inconvenience and a problem. If you break your neck, if you have nothing to eat, if your house is on fire – then you got a problem. Everything else is inconvenience. Life is inconvenient. Life is lumpy. Learn to separate the inconveniences from the real problems. You will live longer. And will not annoy people like me so much. Good night.” In a gesture combining dismissal and blessing, he waved me off to bed.

Seldom in my life have I been hit between the eyes with a truth so hard. Years later I heard a Japanese Zen Buddhist priest describe what the moment of enlightenment was like and I knew exactly what he meant. There in that late-night darkness of the Feather River Inn, Sigmund Wollman simultaneously kicked my butt and opened a window in my mind.

For thirty years now, in times of stress and strain, when something has me backed against the wall and I’m ready to do something really stupid with my anger, a sorrowful face appears in my mind and asks: “Fulchum. Problem or inconvenience?”

I think of this as the Wollman Test of Reality. Life is lumpy. And a lump in the oatmeal, a lump in the throat, and a lump in the breast are not the same lump. One should learn the difference. Good night, Sig.”

The Daily 'Near You?"

Salem, West Virginia, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"We Are About to Lose It All"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly 7/6/23
"We Are About to Lose It All"
"It’s crazy. Retail theft is at an all time high. When you apply for a job, they want you to have all your personal information. Website, history, social media, history, and now you’re biometric data. It’s over, Johnny."
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The Poet: Maya Angelou, "When You Know Better, Do Better"

Full screen recommended.
Maya Angelou,
 "When You Know Better, Do Better"

 

"Sometime In Your Life..."

"Sometime in your life, hope that you might see one starved man, the look on his face when the bread finally arrives. Hope that you might have baked it or bought or even kneaded it yourself. For that look on his face, for your meeting his eyes across a piece of bread, you might be willing to lose a lot, or suffer a lot, or die a little, even."
- Daniel Berrigan

"How It Really Is"

 

"Our Alleged President Is a Corrupt Scumbag and the Ruling Class Is OK With That"

"Our Alleged President Is a Corrupt Scumbag
 and the Ruling Class Is OK With That"
by Kurt Schlichter

"It’s undeniable that PINO – President-In-Name-Only – Joe Biden is massively corrupt in every possible way. From leveraging his position as vice-president for cash to covering up for his meth-addled, stripper-banging, scumbag son – who is currently spilling his Bolivian party powder all over the White House – this senile pervert is a one-man crimewave. And the ruling class simply doesn’t care. If anything, its members are happy about it. This is not something they merely excuse. This is something that they find a positive good. Grandpa Badfinger reset the corruption bar for all of them. Now they too can now freely line their own pockets without fear of shame or prosecution while sending us proles an unequivocal message – we can do whatever we want.

As the gang at the Ruthless podcast (who I’m scheduled to visit next month) observe, this is not about hypocrisy. We’re so far past “Imagine the scandal if Trump did that!” This is about hierarchy. This is to show you that they have power and there is nothing you can do about it. But I’m unconvinced they are thinking this through.

Granted, it’s bad now and will likely get worse before it gets worse – for them. Let’s understand something. Nothing is ever going to happen to Joe Biden regarding his massive criminal enterprise. Nada. Zip. Asa Hutchinson’s chances in the primaries.

Sure, Crusty is probably going to get impeached somewhere down the road, once the Republicans gather all the evidence they can, and there’s a lot of evidence. It’s damning. And it does not matter because Democrats support the PINO’s graft. While the impeachment will barely squeak through the House on a pure party line vote, it’ll go over and die in the Senate. Not a single Democrat – well, maybe election-year Manchin – will vote for it. Understand that to the Democrat Party, power is more important than any of our norms, rules and/or customs. We constantly hear about “Our Democracy,” despite us being a Republic. Well, Our Democracy, Our Butt. It doesn’t mean a nation run by citizens to them. It means the nation run by them.

So, Joe Biden will skate on being impeached, as will that loathsome Stasi clerk Merrick Garland, and whatever that idiot’s name is who runs Homeland Security and left the border wide open. There will be no accountability because there is no accountability. The ruling class figured out that if they just refuse to abide by the rules that used to exist, there’s no cosmic referee out there who will descend from the sky and enforce them. The regime media certainly isn’t going to do it. You just bullSchiff your way through, you commit a bunch of crimes, and you keep your position and your prestige. That’s great for the elite in the short-term. It’s not so great for Our Democracy in the long term. But the elite does not want citizens to have a say in our government. It does not want us to have a saying in anything. It wants us to be disenfranchised, disarmed, defeated, and sometimes deceased.

Look at all the norms and the rules and the guardrails that have been bulldozed away and you might well wonder what the bottom of this slippery slope is going look like. But those of us with a glancing familiarity with history don’t wonder. We know the answer, and the answer is not particularly nice. In the short-term, America will stumble along under the New Corruption for a while, but over time this is unsustainable. These guys are running our country on the fumes of the empty gas tank of American democracy.

They keep going because of inertia, running on the power of default. Normal people want to think everything‘s just going along as it always has, but they can sense that something is wrong. They are troubled when they see the persecution of Donald Trump and other dissidents, of pandemic shenanigans, of Wall Street bailouts and endless wars, but it’s comforting for them to assume that everything is working, that the system is fair and just, and that we aren’t living in a dictatorship of the Whole Foods bourgeoise.

Those of us who are based see the reality and accept it, and that’s why we’re not freaking out when we see Hunter using daddy’s name in vain to shake down Chinese crooks for cash. It’s not a shock. We understand the inherent corruption of the ruling class. We understand that the idea that we live under the rule of law is baloney. We understand that the only thing that matters is power. But the normal people are going to figure that out too. How do I know? Because I know history, and this kind of crap cannot go on forever.

The advantage that patriots have over the people running the institutions is that our garbage ruling class is not composed of impressive people. They didn’t build the institutions they are destroying. They inherited them via their Ivy League credentials – often as legacies, which the left will cry about but not actually change because that is how the ruling class perpetuates itself. These are not accomplished people. These are not smart people. These are not brave people, and these are not tough people. They are cruel and ruthless people, willing to use the existing systems of power to defend their societal sinecure, but their problem and their weaknesses that they rely on the proles to do their dirty work.

Can the elite really rely on them? As I’ve discussed before, they can certainly rely on the leadership of the institutions, like the military, to do whatever they were told to do in order to maintain the power of our garbage ruling class. But an institution is not just its leaders. An institution is also its members. The members are largely normals. And remember that the enemy – and you are the enemy – always gets a vote. Crushing us would be no simple task no matter what F-16 advocates like our PINO say.

How is this trend going to turn out? It’s too early to say. But it very likely will get much, much worse. It is not beyond the realm of possibility that Republicans are going to nominate a man for president who the Democrats will throw in jail on trumped up charges – figuratively and literally – before the 2024 election. And then it’s going to occur to even the most unbased people that the rules don’t necessarily apply anymore. Oh, we’re not going to break into some sort of civil war because Trump gets hauled off to Leavenworth. That’s not likely for a number of reasons. But it is going to destroy the illusions of norms for the normals, and the illusion of norms matters. Norms are, in fact, the only real protection those currently engaged in eliminating the norms have.

I’ve often said that Trump is not our last chance but their last chance, and that remains accurate. A backlash is coming. It’s inevitable. Just look at history, which is a giant timeline of rebellions and reformations and revolutions. The idea that the mass of Americans is going to spend the rest of eternity being bullied by a bunch of people with the politics of a divorced Santa Monica wine mom simply goes against everything history teaches us. The question is not if they are stopped but how, and how hard.

Are we going to re-embrace the Constitution? Are we looking at an American Cesar, or an American Franco? These are questions that our ruling class will never ask because they are uninformed of history and uninterested in it. But they’re going to get interested, very interested, in history because history is very interested in them."
Hat tip to The Burning Platform for this material.

Bill Bonner, "Less to Save, Less to Spend"

The Greek theatre with Mount Etna volcano smoking 
ominously in the background, Taormina, Sicily, Italy.
"Less to Save, Less to Spend"
Plus "free" Italian villas, out of whack tech, Swedish Gelato and plenty more...
by Bill Bonner

Taormina, Sicily - "Sicily is warm. Dry. Sunny. The drive from Catania to Taormina was pretty with rose laurel in bloom along the highway and the sparkling Ionian sea on our right. The countryside is beautiful, if a bit stark. It is a fashionable place, with large yachts anchored offshore…and fancy hotels on the steep hillsides.

But inland, houses are free. Apparently, there are some available now in nearby Castiglione di Sicilia. The birthrate in Italy (as in much of the rest of the developed world) is so low, many towns are being abandoned. Houses – their owners in old-age homes or already under the ground – find no buyers. Instead, they are left empty…with fading paint and windblown shutters. Towns die along with their residents.

Swedish Gelato? A few years ago, an enterprising mayor had the idea of giving away the houses just to attract new residents. There was a catch, you had to spend some money to fix up the place…and live in it, at least for some minimal time. Since then, many places have followed the example, adding to the inducement with cash to pay for the renovations. Most recently, islands off the west coast of Ireland are offering houses and as much as $100,000 to anyone who will move in.

Many people have taken these offers. There are towns here in Sicily, for example, whose inhabitants are almost entirely American, Dutch, German or Scandinavian. They spend full or part time in their sunny new digs. And with the internet, many continue to work at their old jobs without interruption.

The only trouble is that one of the things that makes a place nice to live is the people who live in it. Take the Sicilians out of a Sicilian town and it’s no longer a Sicilian town. Where is the local bar? Where are the neighbors, speaking their distinct form of Italian? Where’s the panna cotta…the gelato...the ravioli neri? Foreigners can do a pretty good job of imitating these things…but it is not the same. More about Sicily…as we discover it.

Today, we turn back to what a great economy the US has…but only to say it ain’t so. Recall that the Fed funds rate was approximately zero for the 14 years, 2009-2022, with the after-inflation rate substantially negative. Now, the nominal rate is over 5%...approximately even with inflation.

Our hypothesis is that there is no way you can go from sustained interest rate falsification (setting lending rates far too low for far too long) back toward ‘normal’ without a serious rerating of capital values. By that we mean, if a stock was worth $100 when interest rates were sub-zero, it may be worth only half as much when they are near to 5%.

Back Into Whack: Why? Because an investor can now get a 5% return – with virtually no risk. Buying Nvidia, on the other hand, is practically an invitation to lose money. Real estate…bonds, same story. The Primary Trend in interest rates turned in 2020 (or so we believe). Now, the higher they go, the less stocks, bonds, and real estate are worth.

But wait…the financial media tells us that all is hunky dory. As Tom put it yesterday, we’ve gone from ‘hard landing’ to ‘soft landing’ to no landing at all. Take the stock market, for example. There is great excitement about the “Magnificent Seven.” These are the Big Techs. Together, they are supposedly worth $10 trillion. The most magnificent of them is probably Nvidia. It makes the silicon chips that investors believe will power the new AI advances. But the AI-inspired super-boom will almost certainly fizzle…just like the crypto bubble…and the dot.com bubble before it.

A form of artificial intelligence already powers things like ChatGPT and delivers blah blah on any subject you want. But like the breakthrough techs that preceded it, AI probably won’t contribute much to real, broad GDP growth. Most likely, at least one or two AI firms will turn into money makers…but Nvidia may not be one of them.

The Big Techs are very expensive. Unless something truly extraordinary has happened, they’ll almost surely be less expensive in the future. And when they go down, they will most likely drag the non-big, non-techs down with them.

Meanwhile, consumers are running out of money. Real incomes went down for more than two years. They’ve shown positive growth only recently…and the last revisions suggest that they may soon turn down again. Mortgage payments are back to over 40% of median income – right where they were in 2007, when the last real estate bubble popped.

Less to Save, Less to Spend: And now that the stimmies, giveaway loans, ultra-cheap interest rates, and tax cuts are visible only in the rear view mirror, the road ahead looks rocky. Consumers have less money to save. Newsweek reports: "The rate of savings among American households is rapidly falling. In February, the U.S. personal savings rate was estimated to be around 4.6 percent - much below the decades-long average of about 8.9 percent, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis."

And they have less to spend. Here’s Stephanie Pomboy: “How is this not the ONLY thing people are talking about today? The trend in weekly same store sales is F-ugly! And remember, this is NOMINAL. (The picture is even f-uglier in the context of soaring credit card borrowing.)”

Charlie Bilello has more: "The Conference Board’s Leading Economic Index declined in May for the 14th month in a row. They are now calling for a US recession from Q3 2023 to Q1 2014, driven by tight monetary policy and lower government spending. The two components in the Leading Index that are not currently portending economic weakness: the stock market (S&P 500) and Building Permits (increase in residential homebuilding activity). The other areas (inverted yield curve, credit, consumer expectations, new orders, etc.) continue to suggest a downturn is coming."

And here’s the conclusion of macro-strategist Gerard Minack: "In short, while several factors have delayed a prospective recession, most of them are temporary and will fade in the second half. Real GDI has fallen for two consecutive quarters, which is a strong signal that a second half recession is likely."

Recession coming? Stocks…real estate…bonds – all falling? We don’t know. But after seeing our hotel bill here in Taormina, we’re going to check out those free houses in Castiglione de Sicilia. We may need one."

"Outrageous Prices At Kroger! This Is Unaffordable! What's Next?"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures with Danno, 7/6/23
"Outrageous Prices At Kroger! 
This Is Unaffordable! What's Next?"
"In today's vlog, we are at Kroger and are noticing unaffordable price increases on groceries! This is not good as grocery prices are reaching an all-time high! It's getting rough out here as more and more families struggle to put food on the table."
Comments here:
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Meanwhile...
Full screen recommended.
Travelling with Russell, 7/6/23
"Kyrgyzstan Supermarket Tour: Moscow vs. Bishkek"
"Come along on a walk through a Kyrgyzstan Supermarket together with a Russian friend, as we compared a supermarket in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan with supermarkets in Moscow, Russia. What will we find? How are they different?"
Comments here:
o
Why?! How could this be?! Oh, there's a reason...
Full screen recommended.
Kimgary, 7/6/23
"Streets of Philadelphia, Kensington Ave."
Comments here:
o
"How many times do you need to get hit over 
the head before you realize who's hitting you?"
- Harry S. Truman

"You know, I've been around the ruling class all my life, and I've
 been quite aware of their total contempt for the people of the country.” 
- Gore Vidal 
So, while you desperately try to pay the bills and put food on the table...
Article from 2020, much worse since the hoax pandemic:

"The more I see of the monied classes,
the better I understand the guillotine."
- George Bernard Shaw

Comments?

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Musical Interlude: Runrig, "Running to the Light"

Full screen recommended.
Runrig, "Running to the Light"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"To some, it looks like a giant chicken running across the sky. To others, it looks like a gaseous nebula where star formation takes place. Cataloged as IC 2944, the Running Chicken Nebula spans about 100 light years and lies about 6,000 light years away toward the constellation of the Centaur (Centaurus).
The featured image, shown in scientifically assigned colors, was captured recently in a 12-hour exposure. The star cluster Collinder 249 is visible embedded in the nebula's glowing gas. Although difficult to discern here, several dark molecular clouds with distinct shapes can be found inside the nebula."

"A Tale Told By An Idiot..."

"A Tale Told By An Idiot..."
Freely download "The Complete Works of William Shakespeare" here:

"Never Ever Forget..."

"Never, ever forget that nothing in this life is free. Life demands payment in some form for your "right" to express yourself, to condemn and abuse the evil surrounding us. Expect to pay... it will come for you, they will come for you, regardless. Knowing that, give them Hell itself every chance you can. Expect no mercy, and give none. That's how life works. Be ready to pay for what you do, or be a coward, pretend you don't see, don't know, and cry bitter tears over how terrible things are, over how you let them become."
- Ernest Hemingway, "For Whom the Bell Tolls "

Gerald Celente, "Ready For War? The Preachers Have Lockjaw"

Very strong language alert!!
Gerald Celente, Trends Journal 7/5/23
"Ready For War? The Preachers Have Lockjaw"
"In today's episode Gerald dives into the never ending escalation of the war in Ukraine. The chance of nuclear exchange has never been higher as it is today. Gerald combats the lack of moral courage that is plaguing the world. 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:

"Weak Friends Are A Liability, Strong Friends An Asset; Consumers Struggle To Pay Bills?

Jeremiah Babe, 7/5/23
"Weak Friends Are A Liability, Strong Friends An Asset; 
Consumers Struggle To Pay Bills?
Comments here:

"Costco Food Items Are 70% More Expensive As Basic Grocery Items Become Impossible To Find"

Full screen recommended.
"Costco Food Items Are 70% More Expensive As 
Basic Grocery Items Become Impossible To Find"
by Epic Economist

"Costco Chief Financial Officer Richard Galanti is warning about exceedingly difficult times for U.S. consumers as food inflation is expected to continue to worsen all over the country. At the warehouse chain, shoppers are noticing explosive prices across a series of everyday items right now, and that will continue to be the norm for the rest of the year and into 2024. New reports reveal price hikes of up to 70% in some key categories. Meanwhile, some shelves remain empty at the retailer’s stores, That’s why, in today’s video, we decided to track the grocery products facing the steepest price increases in recent weeks and months, and which ones are still in short supply at Costco so you can prepare for the challenging environment that lies ahead

Over the past year, it has been hard to overlook the fact that the cost of everything from produce to baked goods to dairy products increased at Costco warehouses. But new reports show that this trend has intensified in recent months, and analysts at GoBankingRates say that a new round of price hikes was just introduced in the company’s system, that’s why staying aware and prepared is key.

Since April, price tag changes of 30% up to 70% were observed at the chain’s warehouses, according to Julie Ramhold, an industry expert with DealNews.com. That was also true in May, and June, with a flood of consumer reports confirming the trend. The report also notes that the most shocking price hikes occurred in the meat category, which includes beef, pork, poultry, and fish. Right now, four-pound packs of Costco's Kirkland Signature Sliced Bacon are selling for $21.99, up from $16.99 just a couple of months ago, Ramhold points out. Another user noted in May that ground beef prices soared to $25.99 at Costco, while the same product was selling for $19.49 at Aldi. The steepest price increase was observed on King Crab prices, which shoot up from $22.99/lb to $38.99/lb, a whopping 70% surge.

At the same time, dairy products and eggs continue to face empty shelves at Costco warehouses, and prices are rising faster than at other big-box stores. For lots of people out there, these higher prices mean they can no longer afford to shop at Costco. Although you can still find deals for certain products, the cost of basic staples is reaching record levels.

Data shared by Bloomberg reveals that those price hikes are already hurting Costco’s bottom line. In May, the company’s sales declined for the third straight month as US consumers fled to cheaper stores.In June, the company’s Chief Financial Officer Richard Galanti warned about exceedingly difficult times for US consumers. He said he has seen a significant share of customers switching from purchases of beef products to less expensive choices, like pork and chicken. He highlighted that typically observes this trend historically during times when the US entered a recession in the past.

Galanti’s cautious tone scared investors, who were already concerned about the company’s rising prices, supply chain problems, and slowing sales. That pushed Costco stock down 20% from March levels. With crazy-high prices turning more and more customers away, turbulence is coming for the warehouse chain. But before things start spiraling out of control, don’t forget to check for deals and get ready for the inflationary crisis at major grocery stores in the months ahead."
Comments here:
o

"None Of Us Care"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 7/5/23
"None Of Us Care"
"People don’t seem to care about inflation anymore. No one is losing any sleep as prices stay high. We are seeing the effects in the real estate market and in retail."
Comments here:

The Daily "Near You?"

 

Bristol, Vermont, USA. Thanks for stopping by!



"If We have No Idea..."

“If we have no idea what we believe in, we’ll go along with anything. Truth takes courage. Courage to stand up for what we believe in. Not necessarily in a confrontational way, but in a gentle yet firm way. Like an oak tree, able to sway gently in the wind, but strongly rooted to the ground.”
- A.C. Ping