Monday, August 15, 2022

"HOW in the hell did the artist do that???"

"HOW in the hell did the artist do that???"
by Stucky

"I’ve watched this about 20 times... still as amazed the 20th time as I was the first. Would love to see this in person...maybe then I might understand better?"

“The days are long, but the years are short.”

This brilliant painting shows human aging:
Watch in full screen!
- Vala Afshar (@ValaAfshar) August 13, 2022
Hat tip to Stucky and The Burning Platform for this material.
The artist's name is Sergi Cadenas, born 1972. He is a Spanish painter who rose to fame after a series of Instagram videos of his illusory, dual-image portraits went viral. Self-taught, Cadenas uses a piping bag to prepare large-scale canvases with precise vertical ridges before painting separate portraits on either side of the narrow ridges. The process leads to a mesmerizing effect in which each portrait appears to transform into the other as the viewer shifts vantage point. Through these paintings, Cadenas explores complex themes of duality, such as youth and mortality, the polarity of emotions, and racial difference. Cadenas’s technique is informed by his training as a metalworker in Girona, Spain, where he runs his family’s centuries-old foundry, Ferros d’Art Cadenas. His artwork can be found in the Porrentruy Optical Art Museum (POPA) in Switzerland and in private collections around the world.
Google Search for Sergi Cadena images:

The Daily "Near You?"

Bothell, Washington, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Bank Warns - This is Much Worse Than a Recession"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, iAllegedly 8/15/22:
"Bank Warns - This is Much Worse Than a Recession"
"We just got another bank warning from the one and only JP Morgan. Jamie Dimon came out and spoke to his wealthy clients on a conference call. He gave them several warnings and spoke about how he feels that the country is heading into much deeper trouble than a recession."
Comments here:

Bill Bonner, "Crossing the Rubicon"

"Crossing the Rubicon"
The ongoing bananafication of a once proud nation.
by Bill Bonner

"We write today in non-partisan alarm. For the first time in US history, the nation’s highest law enforcement agency – the FBI – has pulled out its automatic weapons and raided the house of an ex-president, as if he were a drug dealer. Why not just ask for the files, politely? Did they think Donald Trump would skip town? Were they afraid he would put up a fight? Were FBI agents’ lives in danger? Justified or not? We don’t know. But the raid on Mar-al-Lago was certainly a step towards bananafication.

The conservative press took the bait… calling out the G-Men for “crossing the Rubicon.” Newt Gingrich in Newsweek: "Crossing the Rubicon at Mar-a-Lago|Opinion." "On Monday, Buck Sexton told Jesse Waters: It almost feels like a preemptive coup.... This is meant to prevent Donald Trump from being able to run again... This is the Rubicon being crossed. This is something we've never seen before. This is something that is outrageous. And the usage of the FBI in this way is really the nail in the coffin for so many Americans as to whether you can trust the FBI or trust the DOJ. Clearly not on political matters." On CNN on Tuesday, George Conway repeated that "they've crossed the Rubicon here." Crossing the Rubicon references a historic event with a specific meaning. To truly "cross the Rubicon" is to take a step which changes decisively the circumstance in which politics and government occur.

Bad Money: “Alea iacta est,” said Caesar as he crossed the Rubicon. (The die is cast.) But Caesar was an able, energetic commander at the head of a victorious army. The FBI is very different; it has not exactly covered itself in glory over the last few years. And it was not the Rubicon that the FBI crossed… it was another, muddier river.  

Money is our beat, not politics. But money is just a piece – an important one – in the web of civilization. Money keeps score, telling us who has and who has not. And when the tally is falsified, everything goes bad.

Today is Assumption Day… the day celebrated by Catholics for the Virgin Mary’s rise to Heaven. It is also the day when America’s money went to Hell. It was on this day, in 1971, when the US substituted a “paper” dollar for the old, gold-backed greenback.  This new money had an advantage; it could be diddled, counterfeited, and tricked-up. The Fed could ‘print’ as much as it wanted… and fiddle interest rates down to absurd levels (zero!)

After a stumbling start, the Fed figured out how to exploit the new money system in the ‘80s. Thereafter, it was off to the races… with huge increases in debt… and a steady decline in the value of the dollar. Since the switcheroo in 1971, a person who had put his money in his mattress has lost 86% of it.

The slippage sped up dramatically after 2020. The Chinese could no longer be counted on to reduce consumer prices… and the lockdowns from the Covid Panic had caused severe supply chain disruptions. Once people get used to not working, for example… it became a hard habit to break.

Fox News: "According to Labor Department data, the number of workers in the U.S. has fallen 400,000 since March, a troubling sign after the number of workers approached pre-pandemic levels earlier this year. The total labor force is now about 600,000 smaller than it was in early 2020, right before widespread COVID-19 restrictions plunged the economy into a recession."

Slouchy Flimflam: In 2020, the Fed added $4 trillion new dollars – and the federal government spread the new money around in stimmie checks, unemployment boosters and PPP loans. By the summer of 2022, the CPI (consumer price index) rose over 9%, the worst inflation since 1980. Suddenly, the whole scam became clear. The feds could ‘print’ money. Or, they could control the value of their money. They couldn’t do both. In the event, they chose to expand the supply of dollars; the value of each one fell.

Along with the money, faith in “the system” fell too. Civil society became less civil. Politics became more vicious. The press became more partisan and less reliable. The universities stifled debate, rather than encouraging it. The rich got richer. The poor got poorer.

Last week saw a major step down for America’s justice system. The FBI crossed an important river. But it was not the Rubicon… it was the Rio de la Plata. And it leads not to the imperial magnificence of Augustus… but to the slouchy flimflam of Juan Peron’s Argentina, where chaos, cynicism and corruption still dominate political life.

But wait. All is not lost. The Fed is trying to reverse the damage. After three decades of inflating, it is now deflating – desperately trying to restore its credibility, gain the upper hand against inflation, and save the value of the dollar. How long will it be able to stay the course? Or will it be tempted to ease up… now that inflation has “peaked? Like the FBI, will it take a little raft across the Rio de la Plata itself?”

That is the story we are watching. It is also the drama that will determine the direction of the US economy for decades into the future. Stay tuned…"

Jim Kunstler, "A Different Sort of Warrant"

"A Different Sort of Warrant"
by Jim Kunstler

"It should be pretty obvious that the FBI raid on Mar-a-Lago was an attempt to seize evidence likely to be used in former President Donald Trump’s civil lawsuit in the Southern Florida Federal District Court against Hillary Clinton and associated defendants in and out of government for the defamation and racketeering operation known as RussiaGate - AND in any future criminal proceedings that might grow out of congressional investigations-to-come against officials past and present in the DOJ and FBI. The idea is to tie up all those documents in a legal dispute about declassification so they can’t be entered in any proceeding.

Over the weekend, independent journalist Paul Sperry reported that many of the same FBI officers involved in the Mar-a-Lago raid happen to be subjects of Special Counsel John Durham’s investigation into the origins of RussiaGate. Have some of them already been hauled into grand juries? We don’t know. But, with the Mar-a-Lago caper, it looks like the law enforcement apparatus of the federal government is seeking to suppress evidence of its own long-running criminal enterprise.

The parallel purpose of the raid was to find - or perhaps plant - documents that might be used in a scheme to disqualify Mr. Trump from running for office again. The January 6th show-trial in Congress has failed to galvanize the country’s attention, and may have foundered in its attempt to find grounds for a criminal referral against the former president that would take him off the playing field. So, now this.

Momentous legal quarrels that arise out of the Mar-a-Lago raid may evolve into a constitutional crisis that the captive news media can use as a smokescreen to divert the public’s attention from any balloting shenanigans going into the November election. At least it will shove any other issues off-stage in the run-up to the midterm. Is it a miscalculation?

The choice of going to federal magistrate Bruce Reinhart for the Mar-a-Lago warrant sure looks crude and desperate. Only weeks ago, he was presiding over the Trump v Clinton lawsuit. How did that even happen, given Mr. Reinhart’s role defending Jeffrey Epstein’s associates - many of them Clinton-connected - in the 2007 sex-trafficking case? And only after the spectacularly weird act of switching sides from the federal prosecution team to Epstein’s defense team. Not to mention Mr. Reinhart’s record of public statements denouncing Mr. Trump. There are twenty-five other magistrates who rotate their duties in the Southern District of Florida, why pick him?

It all shapes up as a systematic effort to obstruct justice by the US Department of Justice. They’ve been doing it consistently since 2016 in all matters pertaining to Mr. Trump, and it is a big reason that the country is now viciously coming apart. This is just a continuation of the same seditious treachery that went on with James Comey releasing his classified interview memo concerning Mr. Trump to The New York Times via his attorney friend from Columbia University, Daniel Richman; and the ensuing dishonest Mueller investigation the leak provoked; and the Crossfire Hurricane operation run by Peter Strzok, Andrew McCabe, and Rod Rosenstein; and the illegal entrapment and prosecution of National Security Advisor Michael Flynn; and the serial misrepresentations to the FISA court; and the illegal coordinated maneuvers in impeachment #1 between Rep. Adam Schiff, ICIG Michael Atkinson, the National Security Council, and CIA-agent Eric Ciaramella posing as a “whistleblower;” and more recently, the mischief around the FBI’s conjured-up Gretchen Witmer kidnapping scheme; and the FBI’s role in turning the January 6, 2020 election protests into a riot at the US Capitol.

Former president Trump is not without resources and recourse in all this. Though the news media does not follow it, the Trump v Clinton lawsuit trial continues, and it might not go so well for Mrs. Clinton and her friends. Criticism and doubts about Special Counsel John Durham aside for a moment, realize that evidence introduced during the March trial of DNC lawyer Michael Sussman has firmly established that the Hillary Clinton campaign, the DNC, the Perkins Coie law firm, and various private contractors created the Russian collusion narrative that evolved into the FBI/DOJ crimes of RussiaGate. It won’t be difficult to prove these parties’ intentions in all that, namely to drive Mr. Trump from office or disable him in the process. Do you think Mr. Trump can’t make that case against his antagonists? This is not being tried in the pliant DC federal district court. A Florida jury may see exactly what happened.

Let’s also suppose that Mr. Trump and his aides were pretty scrupulous about collecting documentary evidence about these shenanigans over the years they took place. Mr. Trump did indeed order the declassification and de-redaction of reams of pertaining documents before leaving office. Do you suppose that the Supreme Court would not adjudicate any quarrels over them with dispatch? The effrontery (and gross stupidity) of Attorney General Merrick Garland stands in luridly full display. In signing off on the Mar-a-Lago raid warrant, Mr. Garland signed the death warrant on his own reputation and career."

"The Difference..."

"The difference between stupidity and 
genius is that genius has its limits."
- Albert Einstein

"Massive Price Increases At Aldi! This Is Crazy! What's Next?"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures with Danno, 8/15/22:
"Massive Price Increases At Aldi! This Is Crazy! What's Next?"
"In today's vlog we are at Aldi, and are noticing massive price increases! We are here to check out skyrocketing prices, and a lot of empty shelves! It's getting rough out here as stores seem to be struggling with getting products!"
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 

"Repression, Terror, Fear: The Government Wants to Silence the Opposition"

"Repression, Terror, Fear: 
The Government Wants to Silence the Opposition"
by John & Nisha Whitehead

“Once a government is committed to the principle of silencing the voice of opposition, it has only one way to go, and that is down the path of increasingly repressive measures, until it becomes a source of terror to all its citizens and creates a country where everyone lives in fear.” - President Harry S. Truman

Militarized police. Riot squads. Camouflage gear. Black uniforms. Armored vehicles. Mass arrests. Pepper spray. Tear gas. Batons. Strip searches. Surveillance cameras. Kevlar vests. Drones. Lethal weapons. Less-than-lethal weapons unleashed with deadly force. Rubber bullets. Water cannons. Stun grenades. Arrests of journalists. Crowd control tactics. Intimidation tactics. Brutality. Lockdowns.

This is not the language of freedom. This is not even the language of law and order. This is the language of force. This is how the government at all levels - federal, state and local - now responds to those who speak out against government corruption, misconduct and abuse. These overreaching, heavy-handed lessons in how to rule by force have become standard operating procedure for a government that communicates with its citizenry primarily through the language of brutality, intimidation and fear.

We didn’t know it then, but what happened five years ago in Charlottesville, Va., was a foretaste of what was to come. At the time, Charlottesville was at the center of a growing struggle over how to reconcile the right to think and speak freely, especially about controversial ideas, with the push to sanitize the environment of anything - words and images - that might cause offense. That fear of offense prompted the Charlottesville City Council to get rid of a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee that had graced one of its public parks for 82 years.

In attempting to err on the side of political correctness by placating one group while muzzling critics of the city’s actions, Charlottesville attracted the unwanted attention of the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis and the alt-Right, all of whom descended on the little college town with the intention of exercising their First Amendment right to be disagreeable, to assemble, and to protest. That’s when everything went haywire.

When put to the test, Charlottesville did not handle things well at all. On August 12, 2017, government officials took what should have been a legitimate exercise in constitutional principles (free speech, assembly and protest) and turned it into a lesson in authoritarianism by manipulating warring factions and engineering events in such a way as to foment unrest, lockdown the city, and justify further power grabs.

On the day of scheduled protests, police deliberately engineered a situation in which two opposing camps of protesters would confront each other, tensions would bubble over, and things would turn just violent enough to justify allowing the government to shut everything down. Despite the fact that 1,000 first responders (including 300 state police troopers and members of the National Guard) - many of whom had been preparing for the downtown rally for months - had been called on to work the event, and police in riot gear surrounded Emancipation Park on three sides, police failed to do their jobs.

In fact, as the Washington Post reports, police “seemed to watch as groups beat each other with sticks and bludgeoned one another with shields… At one point, police appeared to retreat and then watch the beatings before eventually moving in to end the free-for-all, make arrests and tend to the injured.” “Police Stood By As Mayhem Mounted in Charlottesville,” reported ProPublica. Incredibly, when the first signs of open violence broke out, the police chief allegedly instructed his staff to “let them fight, it will make it easier to declare an unlawful assembly.” In this way, police who were supposed to uphold the law and prevent violence failed to do either.

Indeed, a 220-page post-mortem of the protests and the Charlottesville government’s response by former U.S. attorney Timothy J. Heaphy concluded that “the City of Charlottesville protected neither free expression nor public safety.” In other words, the government failed to uphold its constitutional mandates. The police failed to carry out their duties as peace officers. And the citizens found themselves unable to trust either the police or the government to do its job in respecting their rights and ensuring their safety.

This is not much different from what is happening on the present-day national scene. Indeed, there’s a pattern emerging if you pay close enough attention. Civil discontent leads to civil unrest, which leads to protests and counterprotests. Tensions rise, violence escalates, police stand down, and federal armies move in. Meanwhile, despite the protests and the outrage, the government’s abuses continue unabated.

It’s all part of an elaborate setup by the architects of the police state. The government wants a reason to crack down and lock down and bring in its biggest guns. They want us divided. They want us to turn on one another. They want us powerless in the face of their artillery and armed forces. They want us silent, servile and compliant.

They certainly do not want us to remember that we have rights, let alone attempting to exercise those rights peaceably and lawfully, whether it’s protesting politically correct efforts to whitewash the past, challenging COVID-19 mandates, questioning election outcomes, or listening to alternate viewpoints - even conspiratorial ones - in order to form our own opinions about the true nature of government.

And they definitely do not want us to engage in First Amendment activities that challenge the government’s power, reveal the government’s corruption, expose the government’s lies, and encourage the citizenry to push back against the government’s many injustices. Why else do you think Wikileaks founder Julian Assange continues to molder in jail for daring to blow the whistle about the U.S. government’s war crimes, while government officials who rape, plunder and kill walk away with little more than a slap on the wrist?

This is how it begins. We are moving fast down that slippery slope to an authoritarian society in which the only opinions, ideas and speech expressed are the ones permitted by the government and its corporate cohorts.

In the wake of the Jan. 6 riots at the Capitol, “domestic terrorism” has become the new poster child for expanding the government’s powers at the expense of civil liberties. Of course, “domestic terrorist” is just the latest bull’s eye phrase, to be used interchangeably with “anti-government,” “extremist” and “terrorist,” to describe anyone who might fall somewhere on a very broad spectrum of viewpoints that could be considered “dangerous.” This unilateral power to muzzle free speech represents a far greater danger than any so-called right- or left-wing extremist might pose. The ramifications are so far-reaching as to render almost every American an extremist in word, deed, thought or by association.

Watch and see: we are all about to become enemies of the state. Anytime you have a government that operates in the shadows, speaks in a language of force, and rules by fiat, you’d better beware.

So what’s the answer? For starters, we need to remember that we’ve all got rights, and we need to exercise them. Most of all, we need to protect the rights of the people to speak truth to power, whatever that truth might be. Either “we the people” believe in free speech or we don’t.

Fifty years ago, Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas asked: “Since when have we Americans been expected to bow submissively to authority and speak with awe and reverence to those who represent us? The constitutional theory is that we the people are the sovereigns, the state and federal officials only our agents. We who have the final word can speak softly or angrily. We can seek to challenge and annoy, as we need not stay docile and quiet. At the constitutional level, speech need not be a sedative; it can be disruptive. A function of free speech under our system of government is to invite dispute. It may indeed best serve its high purpose when it induces a condition of unrest, creates dissatisfaction with conditions as they are, or even stirs people to anger.”

In other words, the Constitution does not require Americans to be servile or even civil to government officials. Neither does the Constitution require obedience (although it does insist on nonviolence). Somehow, the government keeps overlooking this important element in the equation."

"Operation Mockingbird Never Stopped. It Merely Morphed"

"Operation Mockingbird Never Stopped. It Merely Morphed"
by Dr. Joseph Mercola

Excerpt: "TPV provides a quick review of Operation Mockingbird, a CIA operation in which journalists were recruited and paid to distribute fake news stories and CIA propaganda. Interestingly, the Mockingbird op was launched in 1948, the same year the U.S. Information and Educational Exchange Act (aka the Smith-Mundt Act) became law, which forbade the U.S. government from pushing propaganda onto the U.S. population. This anti-propaganda law was repealed in 2013 by then-President Barrack Obama. So, since July 2013, the U.S. government and CIA have been legally permitted to propagandize U.S. citizens.

Ironically, the dismissal of conspiracy theories and conspiracy theorists as mentally unstable crackpots was a tactic invented by the CIA. Its intent is to marginalize and demoralize anyone who dares question the official narrative. In the video below, media analyst Mark Dice provides a slightly more in-depth summary of Operation Mockingbird."
View this complete article here:
"Operation Mockingbird:
CIA Control of Mainstream Media - The Full Story"

"We'll Know..."

"What’s Going In Your Head?"

"What’s Going In Your Head?"
by John Wilder

"What goes in your head? Really, what goes in your head? The CIA did some significant experiments in the past under the collective name of “MK-Ultra”. If you haven’t looked them up, this won’t be the place to get good information about it. Heck there are very few places to get good info about MK-Ultra because the CIA just shredded it all. Or burned it. The biggest reason we have information about it is through accounting records. No one in the 1970s remembered to burn the receipts.

The goal of MK-Ultra was mind control. Why? I’m not sure, perhaps to create a group of super-secret assassins? The CIA already had zillions of ways to kill people and topple foreign governments. So, not that. What minds would they want to control? Dunno. Maybe ours?

There are lots of different types of mind control. The MK-Ultra type is really cool for movies, because it involves creating what I think of as the ultimate horror – a human being whose mind has been hollowed out, and whose actions no longer belong to them. The goal of MK-Ultra was to create zombies. And not the Rob kind.

Again, we don’t have the data from MK-Ultra, but we do know that the one thing government craves more than any other is the power that it has. Jerry Pournelle called it Pournelle’s Iron Law of Bureaucracy. To allow Jerry to describe it himself: "Pournelle's Iron Law of Bureaucracy states that in any bureaucratic organization there will be two kinds of people": First, there will be those who are devoted to the goals of the organization. Examples are dedicated classroom teachers in an educational bureaucracy, many of the engineers and launch technicians and scientists at NASA, even some agricultural scientists and advisors in the former Soviet Union collective farming administration.

Secondly, there will be those dedicated to the organization itself. Examples are many of the administrators in the education system, many professors of education, many teachers’ union officials, much of the NASA headquarters staff, etc.

The Iron Law states that in every case the second group will gain and keep control of the organization. It will write the rules, and control promotions within the organization."

This is the story of government since, well, forever. Thankfully, Federalism and the Constitutions slowed it. A bit. The real power, though, got into place around the turn of the century – the turn of the 20th Century. The CIA wasn’t the cause of it, it was more the result. If the CIA was willing to drug unknowing citizens with LSD and also to conduct experiments on hundreds (if not thousands) of other people, it’s not very hard for me to believe that they also spent a lot more effort studying how to influence the average American.

When it comes to persuasion, the most potent medium is visual. It creates it’s own reality – it creates an emotional investment. I remember as a kid, when the Death Star® blew up, I felt the emotion, just as if I had flown the X-Wing® down that trench myself. When the alien was about to munch a scantily clad Sigourney Weaver, pre-puberty me felt a zillion emotions. Seeing the video made it seem like I was there.

There’s a reason for that. The medium of video is “hot” (in the theory of Marshall McLuhan) and is especially wonderful for propaganda. Hot media fully engages one sense, and spoon feeds the content directly into the viewer’s mind. Cool media, like this blog, demands interaction, and demands thought.

And you thought those memes were just for fun. In reality, they serve a purpose – they exist to counter propaganda. It’s why the Right is so good at memes and the Left is awful. A great meme from the Right tells the Truth in just a few words. The Left, on the other hand, has to build an entire reality for their meme to even make sense – if you’re not already on board with the worldview of the Left, they have to build it for you.

But media today is everywhere. Especially, it’s on phones. And it’s addictive. I was at dinner with Pugsley today and he was on his phone. I said, “Please, put that down.” He didn’t. “Pugsley,” I said, “You don’t want to have people watching you databating in public.” He turned sixteen shades of red, and the phone went down onto the table like it had been sucked down with a magnet and his hand moved away like the phone was hotter than the Sun. So, Internet, if you ever want your kid to put the phone down, let them know you don’t approve of public databation.

And that explains the memes. They break the programming, and break the addiction loop. But back to the programming itself. What values does the world want you to have? What values are those who program the algorithms at YouTube® attempting to create in our minds? What values and beliefs does Hollywood™ want to create? And how are those values being rolled out?

When you look back at a television show like "Sex and the City", showing how strong independent women don’t really need men, what impact did that have? I wonder, because the writer whose stories the whole series was based on is now in her sixties, and was lamenting that she never created a strong marriage and family.

Ooops. But what about all those girls that bought the message? And what about all those divorced moms, living in houses that (in reality) they’d never be able to afford? How many women were influenced that divorce was the key to freedom, prizes, and a home version of the game? Even if you ignore the awful emotional consequences of divorce on the family and on children, divorce is generally economically devastating on all the participants as well.

Divorce was featured and glamorized on film and television starting in the 1960s. Why? Who benefits? Well, families don’t. Churches don’t. Communities don’t. So that leaves lawyers, the court system, and the alimony/child support complex, which employs thousands in most states. But that’s not enough. A strong family is like an atom – self-sufficient. It provides strength, and a way to transmit values from generation to generation. But families don’t consume welfare, mostly. They aren’t dependent and that’s why Nu-Government® has little use for them, and would like them to disappear.

Who benefits from this? The Left. They want the families destroyed, so that individuals have to turn to government for their money and values.

Movies are also used to try to influence public opinion on policy. How many movies do you see in 2022 where immigrants are here dealing drugs or committing crimes? Contrast that with how many films that show immigrants in a ludicrously positive light. Why? Studies show that immigrants coming into this country are overwhelmingly in favor of strong states that provide massive welfare and restrict (for instance) the individual right to keep and bear arms.

Hmmm. Who would that make happy? Oh, yeah. The Left. You can think of plenty of other examples of how film and television and news has been used to create a version of reality that leads to Leftist values, which always, always leads to the horror and carnage of Leftism in action.

There is that alternative, though. When done well, film can really be uplifting, and fun. It has the ability to provide examples of the very best values that man can strive for, and share them back with us. Always, always, guard what goes into your head."
Freely download "The Search for the 'Manchurian Candidate': 
The CIA and Mind Control: The Secret History of the Behavioral Sciences"
by John D. Marks, here:

Greg Hunter, "'Hell No' to Any CV19 Vax – Lt. Col. Theresa Long MD"

"'Hell No' to Any CV19 Vax – Lt. Col. Theresa Long MD"
By Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com

"Lt. Col. Theresa Long is a Medical Doctor at Fort Rucker who is one of the U.S. Army’s top Flight Surgeons and an expert on public health. Dr. Long makes sure military pilots are ready and able to fly America’s complicated and lethal aircraft. Dr. Long has been a skeptic of the so-called Covid-19 experimental vaccines from the beginning. After months of medical observation of the devastating effects of these injections, she’s come to a conclusion the top Army Brass does not like. When asked if she would recommend the CV19 vax to pilots she evaluates, Dr. Long, who is unvaxed, says, “If you think for a moment that the very same doctors, politicians or whoever that told you this was safe and effective, if you are waiting and holding your breath for them to come back and say, oops, we made a mistake, it’s dangerous and deadly, that’s never going to happen.”

And if an Army pilot walked into Dr. Long’s office and asked if the CV19 vax was safe? What would she tell them? Dr. Long says, “I would tell them, ‘Hell no, I don’t think it’s safe.’”

What is Dr Long seeing first hand after the CV19 injections? Dr. Long says, “I have seen everything from strokes, to clots in the spleen and liver, cancers, testicular pain, infertility, miscarriages, menstrual irregularity, lung issues, thyroid disfunction, erratic heart rates, a lot of things that I don’t see in someone flying an aircraft. You can see myocarditis and pericarditis weeks and months after vaccines.”

The U.S. Military is very familiar with the problems Lt. Col. Long has reported. Dr. Long testified n a Senate hearing last November with doctors and medical researchers who treat CV19 vaccine injuries, along with patients who have experienced adverse events due to the CV19 vaccine. Dr. Long also made a highly publicized affidavit against the Biden Administration’s vax mandates as a whistleblower under the Military Whistleblower Protection Act in September of 2021. The military brass are well aware of who Dr. Long is and the many problems she is reporting with the so-called vaccines.

What are her superiors telling her? Dr. Long says, “It’s always disheartening when people come to me and say privately, I completely agree with you. I completely agree with you that we should stop these vaccinations, but publicly I will disown you. That’s not being a leader. It’s just straight up cowardice when you know you are doing the wrong thing and you refuse to change.”

Dr. Long estimates there are “200,000 to 400,000 military members who are not vaccinated,” and the Pentagon and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin have threatened to kick them all out of the service. Are the military leaders this stupid, this compromised or simply committing treason? Dr. Long’s plea to the military brass is, “Pray for wisdom and courage.” There is much more in the 1-hour and 6-minute video.

"Join Greg Hunter on Rumble as he goes One on One with Lt. Col Theresa Long, Medical Doctor and Flight Surgeon at Fort Rucker, Alabama, who is putting her career and life on the line to protect soldiers from the CV19 vax and is blowing the whistle on the deadly and dangerous problems surrounding the forced injections of our military."

Sunday, August 14, 2022

"Brace For Egg Shortages As Global Food Production Is Being Hit By Major Crisis After Major Crisis"

Full screen recommended.
"Brace For Egg Shortages As Global Food Production
 Is Being Hit By Major Crisis After Major Crisis"
by Epic Economist

"Egg prices are exploding in the United States as the food supply chain crisis spirals out of control. A new Bloomberg report exposed that food costs are rising uncontrollably all across America, reaching the highest level since May 1979.A few years back, American consumers could actually fill up an entire shopping cart full of food for less than 30 dollars. Now, every time they visit the grocery store, they end up leaving a larger share of their budgets just to purchase the same amount of products.

In the old days, eggs were a fairly inexpensive option, especially for those who couldn’t afford meat and other protein-rich foods. But inflation is wreaking havoc on the breakfast table, with egg prices at grocery stores soaring a whopping 47% in July over last year, according to retail analytics firm Information Resources Inc. One of the main drivers of that stunning price spike is the bird flu epidemic that decimated egg-laying chicken flocks all around the nation in the past year. In fact, ranchers say that this was one of the worst bird flu outbreaks in U.S. history, killing more than 30 million commercial and wild birds. The crisis hurt egg-laying hens and turkeys the most.

Of course, eggs aren’t the only item seeing explosive price increases. Butter saw a 26.3% increase from last year, bread prices climbed 15%, and frozen meals were 23% more expensive, BLS data shows. UN experts warned earlier this month that global food prices are going to be substantially higher in 2023 because food production all over the planet will be way below expectations in the months ahead. If only our paychecks were rising at the same pace as the price of consumer goods, we would be able to handle those increases. But that’s not happening at all. Analysts with ZeroHedge actually pointed out that real average weekly earnings are “now down 16 straight months as inflation eats away at any wage gains.”

In other words, even the highly manipulated figures that official agencies are reporting show that our standard of living has been falling for 16 months in a row. To further complicate matters, industry executives are projecting that energy costs are set to soar all over the western world, and that is certainly going to make things even worse. In the past month alone, the price of natural gas in the U.S. has risen by nearly half, as dry weather conditions spread across the country and millions of Americans turn up their air conditioners in a heatwave. In July, natural-gas futures jumped 48%. Some US electricity utility companies have warned that energy prices are set to become 25% higher in the coming months.

Our leaders had assured us that inflation would just be “transitory”, but here we are with the highest prices in a generation and the lowest purchasing power on record.They keep telling us that next year everything will get better. You can believe that if you want. But the truth is that global food production is currently being hit by one major crisis after the other and, consequently, food prices are likely to continue their upward spiral for the foreseeable future, meaning that the pain has only just begun."

“Fake Friends Are Dangerous; Big Crash Will Hit Markets; Housing Bubble Losing Air”

Jeremiah Babe, 8/14/22:
“Fake Friends Are Dangerous; Big Crash Will Hit Markets; 
Housing Bubble Losing Air”
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Liquid Mind, "A Gentle Mind"

Liquid Mind, "A Gentle Mind"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Bright clusters and nebulae abound in the ancient northern constellation of Auriga. The region includes the open star cluster M38, emission nebula IC 410 with Tadpoles, Auriga’s own Flaming Star Nebula IC 405, and this interesting pair IC 417 (lower left) and NGC 1931. An imaginative eye toward the expansive IC 417 and diminutive NGC 1931 suggests a cosmic spider and fly.
Click image for larger size.
About 10,000 light-years distant, both represent young, open star clusters formed in interstellar clouds and still embedded in glowing hydrogen gas. For scale, the more compact NGC 1931 is about 10 light-years across.”

The Poet: Robinson Jeffers, “Be Angry at the Sun”

“Be Angry at the Sun”

“That public men publish falsehoods
Is nothing new. That America must accept
Like the historical republics corruption and empire
Has been known for years.
Be angry at the sun for setting
If these things anger you.
Watch the wheel slope and turn,
They are all bound on the wheel, these people,
Those warriors,
This republic, Europe, Asia.
Observe them gesticulating,
Observe them going down. The gang serves lies,
the passionate Man plays his part;
the cold passion for truth hunts in no pack.
You are not Catullus, you know,
To lampoon these crude sketches of Caesar.
You are far from Dante’s feet,
 but even farther from his dirty
Political hatreds.
Let boys want pleasure, and men
Struggle for power, and women perhaps for fame,
And the servile to serve a Leader and dupes
to be duped.
Yours is not theirs.”

- Robinson Jeffers, 1941

Chet Raymo, “Hanging On”

“Hanging On”
by Chet Raymo

“I change the desktop image on my laptop every now and then, generally when I come across a new image I like. In the last year or so you’ll remember that I wrote about Caravaggio’s “The Rest on the Flight Into Egypt” and Vermeer’s “The Milkmaid.” Live with an image for a while and it’s inevitable that you learn something from it. Here is the painting I’ve had as my desktop in recent weeks, Winslow Homer’s “Snap the Whip”, 1872, one of America’s sentimental favorites.

A simpler, more innocent time. Boys at recess, barefoot in the grass. Hand-me-down clothes. Autumn wildflowers, trees turning to red and gold. A fumbling Ulysses S. Grant is in the White House, the country is at peace after a horrendous civil war, and the Panic of 1873 and subsequent depression is still in the offing. Anyway, all of that political and economic stuff is a bit of a pother and far away. The sun is high in the sky, there’s an apple in the pocket, and only the oldest boy is thinking yet about the eternal mystery that is girls.

Yes, a lovely sentimental anecdote to the busy rancor of our own time, the incessant noise of the television, the attack ads, the news of war. How blissful to be twelve years old again, fit and healthy with the grass between your toes. Never mind that these boys had a life expectancy at birth of about 40 years, and that many of them had probably already lost a sibling or parent; when the sun’s out, and it’s recess, and you’ve got eight pals to play with…

But that’s not why I like the painting. I love the way the arc of the whip reflects the curve of the hill. The vanishing point of the red schoolhouse and three white shirts – everything converges on the two adults in the distance, the grown-up world that inevitably awaits.

Between the three boys who anchor the whip and the six who resist the centrifugal force that breaks the chain is the schoolhouse, the open door and window bracketing the anchor’s grip. Maybe it’s because I was a teacher all my life, but I like to think that the “message” of the painting has to do with education, with what goes on when the boys and girls are called back inside by the teacher’s bell – the glue that holds a civil society together when the whiplash of events threatens to tear us apart. Not indoctrination. Rather, reading, ‘riting and ‘rithmetic, the basic skills that enable an individual to explore the world creatively. History, geography and science, with their lessons of diversity, tolerance and respect for empirical fact. The ameliorating influence of poetry and art. And one of these boys, maybe the oldest in the center, will become a teacher himself, maintaining an unbroken chain of accumulated knowledge that anchors us to the past and propels us together into a mutually supportive and secure future.”

"Hold Up Your Head!"

“Each must for himself alone decide what is right and what is wrong, and which course is patriotic and which isn’t. You cannot shirk this and be a man. To decide against your convictions is to be an unqualified and inexcusable traitor, both to yourself and to your country, let men label you as they may. If you alone of all the nation shall decide one way, and that way be the right way according to your convictions of the right, you have done your duty by yourself and by your country – hold up your head! You have nothing to be ashamed of.”
- Mark Twain

"Alas..."

“Alas, regardless of their doom, the little victims play!
No sense have they of ills to come, nor care beyond today.”
- Thomas Gray,
“Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College”

“Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than
sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.”
- Martin Luther King, Jr.

"The Limits of Our Freedom"

"The Limits of Our Freedom"
by Mark Harrison

"Viktor Frankl, the Austrian psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor, wrote in "Man's Search for Meaning", "Between stimulus and response there is a space, and in that space lies all our freedom."In the most extreme conditions of privation imaginable, Frankl discovered that he was, remarkably, free to choose his response to any situation. I love this quote because it sums up the essence of my philosophy. I believe it is the cornerstone of a happy and effective life. A real, experiential understanding of this radical freedom is life changing, liberating and empowering. To suddenly come upon the realization that we have always been free, not in some abstract sense, but in a real, personal and imminent way, is like being let out of prison.

We are not free to control others: The point is that we are free. And so is everyone else. That means we cannot impinge on the freedom of others. This is not some moral statement. I'm not saying we should not interfere with other people's freedom - it is simply impossible to do so. You cannot make another person do anything. Even putting a gun to someone's head cannot make them do anything. If someone is threatened to the extent that they fear for their life, they are likely to comply with whatever is being demanded of them, but this compliance is not a result of the threat, it is still a choice they make. If you doubt it, think about the people who have been threatened and not complied, think about people who have died for what they believe in rather than comply with an external demand.

The belief that we can control and coerce others, bending them to our will, is the cause of a great deal the misery in the world. This belief, springing from the external control psychology that we have overwhelmingly been conditioned to accept, is the cause of much of our pain. To let go of our belief that we can control others is astonishingly liberating. To accept other people as they are, to make no demands on them, simply to dance our own dance, as Anthony de Mello would have put it, and to accept that we cannot but allow everyone else to do the same, is not only the only choice that makes any sense, but is also the only way we can make any difference in the world.

We have a choice: In every situation, there is a choice. Accept that we cannot control other people or try to force, coerce, manipulate and bully to get our own way. The latter course of action damages relationships and, in the end, leads to pain and dysfunction. Or, we can accept people as they are, accept they are utterly free agents, accept that we cannot force them, and concentrate instead on building relationships with them and on building the inner world which echoes back to us as our experience. When we have good relationships, things work. Perhaps not in the way we might have expected, or even in the way we would have preferred, but things will work. The world is not ours to control, so let it go, and let it work in its own miraculous way. This is the effortlessness to which Lao Tzu alluded when he wrote, "The world is a mysterious instrument, not meant to be handled." Those who act on it never, I notice, succeed. 

We are responsible: We are responsible for ourselves. We make our choices and then we must live with them, not blaming others or circumstances, and not cowardly abdicating responsibility to some external forces. We are not victims! We are in control. By the same token, we are not responsible for other people. Their fear, their anger, their pain, their misery - it's all a choice they make, as freely as we make ours, and they need to shoulder the consequences of these choices, they are not our crosses to bear. Their happiness, their success, their joy - it's all their doing, not ours.

Being proactive: So here lies our freedom, it is inside us every moment and we can recognize it and live our lives according to the truth of this freedom, or we can continue to behave in the way we have been conditioned by society and try to force our way through life, pushing and coercing others into doing our will. One way is peace and happiness, the other way is pain and madness. Being proactive is the first of Steven Covey's "Seven Habits" and is the cornerstone of a truly effective life. I believe that living a proactive life, centered in the self, accepting that we can change nothing but ourselves, and choosing to focus on the good in our life and seeking to attract more it to ourselves is the purpose of our existence." 

"Real Estate is Crashing - Buckle Up and Strap In"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, iAllegedly 8/14/22:
"Real Estate is Crashing - Buckle Up and Strap In"
"I have a special guest today. Scott Walters realtor is joining me to talk about the state of the real estate industry. It’s great to get his expertise on all of this. The wave has crested in Real Estate."
Comments here:

The Daily "Near You?"

South Pittsburg, Tennessee, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"The Worst Part..."

"The worst part is wondering how you'll find the strength tomorrow to go on doing what you did today and have been doing for much too long, where you'll find the strength for all that stupid running around, those projects that come to nothing, those attempts to escape from crushing necessity, which always founder and serve only to convince you one more time that destiny is implacable, that every night will find you down and out, crushed by the dread of more and more sordid and insecure tomorrows. And maybe it's treacherous old age coming on, threatening the worst. Not much music left inside us for life to dance to. Our youth has gone to the ends of the earth to die in the silence of the truth. And where, I ask you, can a man escape to, when he hasn't enough madness left inside him? The truth is an endless death agony. The truth is death. You have to choose: death or lies. I've never been able to kill myself."
 - Louis-Ferdinand Celine

"87,000 Agent Smiths"

"87,000 Agent Smiths"
Don't look now, but your tax-collecting 
overlords just got a big, fat raise...
by Joel Bowman

“Taxes are the price we pay for civilization”

~ Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes

“Civilization is the price we pay for taxation”

~ Joel Bowman (with no apologies to OWH)


"As if to underscore the point of last Sunday’s missive - What’s in a Word? - the fraudulently named Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) slithered through the palm-greased halls of Congress during the week. Much ballyhooed by the fawning press, which never saw a check they didn’t want someone else to sign, the act passed the Senate by the barest of purely partisan margins (50-51, with president-in-waiting, Kamala Harris, casting the deciding vote) before sailing through Nancy’s House Friday afternoon.

As for actually doing what it says on the box, the $433 billion dollar extravaganza aims to reduce inflation by doing more of exactly what caused the 40-year high in rising prices in the first place... which is to say, spending more money the government doesn’t have on things the country doesn’t need and its citizens don’t want. Will it work? Depends who you ask. (And what you mean by “work.”)

The Penn Wharton Budget Model predicts the IRA’s impact on inflation to be “statistically indistinguishable from zero.” That’s expensive business school-speak for “bugger all.” The model also predicts lower productivity, as measured by GDP, for the remainder of the decade while “slightly increasing GDP by 2050.”

The Tax Foundation’s General Equilibrium Model, meanwhile, expects the IRA to “reduce long-run economic output by about 0.1 percent and eliminate about 30,000 full-time equivalent jobs in the United States. It would also reduce average after-tax incomes for taxpayers across every income quintile over the long run.”

And here’s University of Chicago economist, Casey Mulligan, who reckons the IRA will...
• Reduce employment by 900,000

• Reduce annual GDP by 1.2%

• Reduce Average Household income by roughly $1,200


Mr. Casey also estimates the rate of inflation and the federal budget deficit are both “likely to rise, not fall, as a result of the IRA.”

Now, your humble Weekend Editor harbors no such pretense to knowledge. We have no idea whether the market will go up or down on Monday, much less what the growth rate of a $20 trillion+ economy might be ten... twenty... thirty years from now. And neither, by the way, does anyone else. It’s difficult to make predictions, as they say, especially about the future. So for now, let us return to the present act.

Among the IRA’s bulging, multi-billion dollar line items, working Americans were quick to notice a whopping $80 billion earmark for the Internal Revenue Service. As we mentioned during the week, if that sounds like a lot of money... it’s because it is. (The current annual budget for America’s least favorite “service” is a comparatively modest 12.6 thousand million dollars.)

What’s a government agency to do with all those fresh new Benjamins, you ask? Why, hire 87,000 new Agent Smiths, of course! (You’ll recall Agent Smith as the creepy, G-man AI program plugged into the Matrix, the one charged with eliminating any human simulacra which might bring about instability in the simulated reality. Only now, you’re the “simulacra” and the reality is about to get very real indeed.)

Tax Revolt! Or not… One wonders whether such a turbo-charged tax enforcement mechanism seems antithetical to the values of a country that revolted in full blown revolution over a paltry stamp tax? Recall that it was the Stamp Act, Sugar Act, Townshend Acts, and Intolerable Acts – passed between 1760-1775 – which finally set the colonists against their British overlords.

As for income taxes, corporate taxes and payroll taxes, the colonists had no truck with the redshirts there... probably because there were no such taxes in effect at the time. In fact, the average tax levied on colonial America - mostly collected through trade tariffs and excise taxes on certain goods at point of sale - is estimated to have been between 1-1.5%, a rate that would have appeared attractive even to the British themselves, who at the time suffered a rate roughly 5 times that (between 5-7%) back home.

But fear not, descendants of mighty patriots, fruit of the founding fathers, it’s not as though the goose-stepping platoons of federal tax agents are going to use the $46 billion of their new kitty apportioned for “enforcement” to... you know... do any hardcore enforcing. It’s not like special agents must “carry a firearm and be willing to use deadly force, if necessary.” Oh, wait... scratch that.
Shoot to Kill: Ok, ok... so the new special agents will be trained to “shoot to kill.” No biggie. They’re going after the big fish, right? And if you wanna catch the big fish, you gotta use a big line...

According to Forbes Magazine, there were 735 billionaires in the US in 2021. The New York Times puts the figure at 935. In any case, dear reader, they walk among us. And, of course, that’s a problem. Never mind that Elon Musk, to take the most conspicuous example, cut the IRS an $11 billion check last year, the most paid by any single citizen in American history and, in itself, almost enough to fund the entire IRS... and never mind that, like him or not, love or hate his companies, agree or disagree with his politics, Mr. Musk nevertheless employs 110,000 people across his various businesses, each of whom (presumably) pays their own taxes.

Let’s go instead with Elizabeth Warren’s assessment of the situation and assume Musk is a “freeloader” and needs to “pay his fair share.” And let’s go ahead and assume his “fair share” is... 100%. Everything he owns. And let’s say that goes for ALL America’s billionaires. (After all, Bernie Sanders said they “shouldn’t exist.” Who are we to argue with The Bern?) So you confiscate 100% of the billionaire class’s wealth. At $4.7 trillion, you’d have enough money to cover the nation’s bar tab for – carry the seven, divide by hypotenuse, sin cos tan – less than one fiscal year.

Now, having destroyed an entire class of ultra wealthy “moochers,” (and, presumably, their respective industries, responsible for employing millions and millions of Americans, on whom the state also relies for tax revenue) where do we suppose this income starved football stadium of Agent Smiths would turn next? Might they come knocking up and down your street?

Not a chance, says Madam Secretary Janet Yellen. In a public letter to IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig, published Wednesday, Ms. Yellen left no doubt as to who would be targeted...“I direct that any additional resources - including any new personnel or auditors that are hired - shall not be used to increase the share of small business or households below the $400,000 threshold that are audited relative to historical levels,” she wrote.

Hmm... seems like a rather specific dangling qualifier there, no? One wonders, what might these “relative historic levels” look like, exactly? According to a report from the Government Accountability Office (GOA), scintillatingly titled “Tax Compliance Trends of IRS Audit Rates and Results for Individual Taxpayers by Income” (go ahead, knock yourself out here), audit rates for Americans earning between $25,000 to $200,000 are down 76% from their 2010 levels. For those earning less than $25,000, audit rates are 61% lower. And for those earning between $200,000 to $500,000 audit rates are off 92% from 2010, their “relative historic level.”

In other words, 87,000 new IRS agents, armed with $700,000 worth of new ammo (purchased, according to the agency itself, in June and July of this year), could double the rate of audits on those earning under $25,000... quadruple audits on those in the $25,000 - $200,000 bracket... and increase tenfold the audits on those earning between $200,000-$500,000... and still fall within Yellen’s “relative historic levels.”

What does this mean for working and middle class Americans, for small businesses and family start-ups, for the entrepreneurial engine room of a nation that was founded on the idea of freedom from oppressive taxation without fair representation?"

“Knock, knock.”

“True Story Streets of Philadelphia"

Full screen recommended, if you can stomach it.
kimgary, 8/14/22:
“True Story Streets of Philadelphia"
"Violent crime and drug abuse in Philadelphia as a whole is a major problem. The city’s violent crime rate is higher than the national average and other similarly sized metropolitan areas. Also alarming is Philadelphia’s drug overdose rate. The number of drug overdose deaths in the city increased by 50% from 2013 to 2015, with more than twice as many deaths from drug overdoses as deaths from homicides in 2015. A big part of Philadelphia’s problems stem from the crime rate and drug abuse in Kensington.

Because of the high number of drugs in Kensington, the neighborhood has a drug crime rate of 3.57, the third-highest rate by neighborhood in Philadelphia. Like a lot of the country, a big part of this issue is a result of the opioid epidemic. Opioid abuse has skyrocketed over the last two decades in the United States and Philadelphia is no exception. Along with having a high rate of drug overdose deaths, 80% percent of Philadelphia’s overdose deaths involved opioids and Kensington is a big contributor to this number. This Philly neighborhood is purportedly the largest open-air narcotics market for heroin on the East Coast with many neighboring residents flocking to the area for heroin and other opioids. With such a high number of drugs in Kensington, many state and local officials have zoned in on this area to try and tackle Philadelphia’s problem."
Full screen recommended.
Bruce Springsteen, "Streets of Philadelphia"

"How It Really Is"