Thursday, August 10, 2023

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Here is one of the largest objects that anyone will ever see on the sky. Each of these fuzzy blobs is a galaxy, together making up the Perseus Cluster, one of the closest clusters of galaxies. The cluster is seen through a foreground of faint stars in our own Milky Way Galaxy.
Near the cluster center, roughly 250 million light-years away, is the cluster's dominant galaxy NGC 1275, seen above as a large galaxy on the image left. A prodigious source of x-rays and radio emission, NGC 1275 accretes matter as gas and galaxies fall into it. The Perseus Cluster of Galaxies, also cataloged as Abell 426, is part of the Pisces-Perseus supercluster spanning over 15 degrees and containing over 1,000 galaxies. At the distance of NGC 1275, this view covers about 15 million light-years.”

"25 Life Lessons from the Anglo-Saxons"

Full screen recommended.
RedFrost Motivation,
"25 Life Lessons from the Anglo-Saxons"
Narrated by Nicky Rebelo
o
"The Exeter Book": This is the largest (and perhaps oldest) known collection of Old English poetry/literature still in existence. Freely download "The Exeter Book" here:
o
“The Durham Proverbs”: “The proverbs are considered to have been used to document everyday business of the people of Anglo-Saxon England.”

Chet Raymo, “Living In The Little World”

“Living In The Little World”
by Chet Raymo

"My wisdom is simple," begins Gustav Adolph Ekdahl, at the final celebratory family gathering of Ingmar Bergman's crowning epic “Fanny and Alexander.” I saw the movie in the early 1980s when it had its U.S. theater release. Now I have just watched the five-hour-long original version made for Swedish television. Whew!

But back to that speech by the gaily philandering Gustav, now the patriarch of the Ekdahl clan and uncle to Fanny and Alexander. The family has gathered for the double christening of Fanny and Alexander's new half-sister and Gustav's child by his mistress Maj. A dark chapter of family history has come to an end, involving a clash between two world views, one- the Ekdahl's- focussed on the pleasures of the here and now, and the other- that of Lutheran Bishop Edvard Vergerus, Fanny and Alexander's stepfather- a stern and joyless anticipation of the hereafter.

It is not the habit of Ekdahls to concern themselves with matters of grand consequence, Gustav tells the assembled guests. "We must live in the little world. We will be content with that and cultivate it and make the best of it."

The little world. I love that phrase. This world, here, now. This world of family and friends and newborn infants and trees and flowers and rainstorms and- oh yes, cognac and stolen kisses and tumbles in the hay. The Ekdahl's are a theatrical family; we will leave it to the actors and actresses to give us our supernatural shivers, says Gustav. "So it shall be," he says. "Let us be kind, and generous, affectionate and good. It is necessary and not at all shameful to take pleasure in the little world."

The Daily "Near You?"

Perryville, Arkansas, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Gerald Celente, Trends Journal 8/10/23"

Strong language alert!
Gerald Celente, Trends Journal 8/10/23
"Inflation Bullsh*t, US Ramping Up War In Ukraine"
"In today's Trends in the News, Gerald Celente, goes over the bullshit inflation numbers, Biden's $24 billion to Ukraine and the conflicts ramping up in Sudan and Niger. 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:

"The Lives They Lead..."

 

"Ukraine/Russia War Update 8/10/23"

Col. Douglas Macgregor, Straight Calls 8/10/23
"Total Destruction Once They Come
 Into Contact With Russian Forces"
"Analysis of breaking news and in-depth discussion of current geopolitical events in the United States of America and the world. Interview with Stephen Gardner."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Hindustan Times, 8/10/23
"Russian 'Rocket Rain' Wipes Out Over 1,000 
Ukrainian Troops; Chechens Join Battle For Orekhovsky"
"Russia has delivered massive defeats to Ukraine in the Orekhovsky region. More than 1,000 Ukrainian troops have been killed in back-to-back Russian strikes. Moscow's forces have launched a missile storm in the Orekhovsky region. Vladimir Putin's trusted Chechen fighters have joined the Russian Army in the region. The region has become a hotspot in the last few days amid Kyiv's counterattacks."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Redacted, 8/10/23
"U.S. Admits Disaster for Ukraine's Failed 'Counter Offensive'"
"Western media is waking up to the fact that Ukraine’s counter offensive that started on June 4th was not a counter offensive at all but a total failure… and sent tens of thousands of Ukrainian men to their deaths. Put another way, NATO just sent tens of thousands of Ukrainian men to their deaths."
Comments here:
o
Don't look away. That's my hand. That's your hand. 400,000 dead Ukrainian soldiers, 30,000 dead Russians. That's what you and I and all of us bought with the $150 billion we supported this horror with. Wear it proudly...

"Who Will Say 'No More' To The Current Madness?"

"Who Will Say 'No More' To The Current Madness?"
by Victor Davis Hanson

"Britain slept in the 1930s as an inevitable war with Hitler loomed. A lonely Winston Churchill had only a few courageous partners to oppose the appeasement and incompetence of his conservative colleague Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain. One of the most stalwart truth-tellers was a now little remembered politico and public servant Leo Amery, a polymath and conservative member of Parliament. Yet in two iconic moments of outrage against the Chamberlain government’s temporizing, Amery galvanized Britain and helped end the government’s disastrous policies.

In the hours after Hitler invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, there was real doubt whether Chamberlain would honor its treaty and declare war on Germany. A Labour Party member, surrogate Arthur Greenwood, got up in the House of Commons to announce that he would be speaking for Labour on behalf of his ill party leader Clement Attlee. Immediately Amery interrupted, shouting out, “Speak for England, Arthur!” He was met with overwhelming applause and soon public acclamation.

After all, Amery was a political voice in the wilderness warning that neither his own party nor opposition Labour was speaking or acting for the real interest of the British people. Amery, a shocked Greenwood, and others had finally had enough of the partisan nonsense, and demanded the nation unite against Nazi Germany. Britain hours later declared war on Germany, the first major power to do so.

On a second iconic occasion on May 7, 1940, Amery voiced even stronger views - again, widely held by the public, but rarely voiced by the timid political class. The inept Chamberlain government had just lost a winnable Norway campaign to Germany. Amery responded with a blistering attack on the incompetence of the conservative Chamberlain administration by quoting Oliver Cromwell’s hallmark 1653 order to the Long Parliament:

“You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing. Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go.”

Three days later after Amery’s speech and the invasion of France, an ill Chamberlain and most of his advisors resigned. Churchill became Prime Minister. The rest is history.

We need a voice like Amery’s. Like Britain from 1939 to 1940, America is in existential danger.

The Biden administration has utterly destroyed the southern border - and immigration law with it.

Biden green lighted 7 million illegal aliens swarming into the U.S. without legal sanction or rudimentary audit.

China spies inside and over the U.S. with impunity. Beijing has never admitted to its responsibility for the gain-of-function Covid virus that killed a million Americans.

President Biden printed $4 trillion at exactly the wrong time of soaring post-COVID consumer demand and supply shortages. No wonder he birthed the worst inflation in 40 years. In response, interest rates tripled, gas prices doubled.

Our military is thousands of recruits short. It lacks sufficient munitions.

Following Biden’s humiliating pullout from Afghanistan, vast troves of arms were abandoned in Kabul. Billions more in scarce weapons were sent to Ukraine.

The Pentagon’s woke agenda trumps meritocracy in promotions and advancement.

Our enemies - Russia, China, Iran, North Korea - are on the move, while the U.S. seems listless.

The Biden renegade Department of Justice, CIA and FBI have become weaponized. Ideology, politics, and race - not the law - more often guide their investigations, intelligence operations and enforcement.

The downtowns of our once majestic major cities are becoming unlivable. They are mired in refuse and trash, violent crime and homelessness. Stores and businesses leave. Millions each year flee the blue urban coasts to the red west and south.

To even say there are still two biological genders, that global warming may not be entirely manmade or necessarily destroying the planet, or that class, not race, is the proper barometer of inequality is to face ostracism and career cancellation.

The public assumes that President Biden is severely cognitively challenged, likely corrupt, and a serial fabricator.

Most know what must be done, but few will tell the truth:

• Balance the budget.
• Return to legal only immigration.
• Restore a well-funded, but unwoke Pentagon.
• Insist on racial unity.
• Curb the overweening administrative state.
• Enforce the rule of law.
• Produce more gas and oil.
• Reestablish civic education.
• Insist universities protect free speech and due process - and stop proselytizing.

In other words, restore what until recently made America the strongest, most prosperous, and freest nation in the world. And quit undoing all the great good that eight generations of prior Americans bequeathed to us. Somewhere out there an American Leo Amery is growing infuriated over what is being done to America. And if he finally stands up like Amery to call out our bankrupt political class, the American people will echo his famous order to this disastrous government: “Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go.”
o
"September 1, 1939"

"Defenseless
under the night
Our world in stupor lies;
Yet, dotted everywhere,
Ironic points of light
Flash out
wherever the Just
Exchange their messages:
May I, composed like them
Of Eros and of dust,
Beleaguered by the same
Negation and despair,
Show an affirming flame."

- W.H. Auden
"On September 1, 1939, the German army under Adolf Hitler launched an invasion of Poland that triggered the start of World War II (though by 1939 Japan and China were already at war). The battle for Poland only lasted about a month before a Nazi victory. But the invasion plunged the world into a war that would continue for almost six years and claim the lives of tens of millions of people."

"How It Really Should Have Been"

 

"Argentine-Style Bulls"

"Argentine-Style Bulls"
Cronyism, corruption and crackpottery... 
from Washington DC to the Pampas...
by Bill Bonner and Joel Bowman

“This model of crooked politicians, crony businessmen, union leaders turning their backs on workers left us with this mess. In that context, we went from having a rich society to a poor one, where the only ones who prospered were from the damned political class.”
~ Javier Milei, candidate for president, Argentina

Cherbourg, France…on our way back to Ireland for a baptism..."Guess what stock market is up 42% this year? The S&P Merval in Argentina, of course. The inflation rate is over 100%. But these stock prices are quoted in dollars. In other words, you would have made a lot more money in Argentine stocks than in US stocks. Why? Investors put their money into stocks to avoid losing it to inflation. The result was a stock market boom.

Everything Passes, Everything Breaks: Whatever else may happen, our guess is there will be an Argentine-style bull market in chaos and confusion in the years ahead. Things will go up that should go down…politicians who make things worse will claim to be creating a ‘new era of prosperity.’ Prices will rise…or fall…for no apparent reason.

What can you count on in such a topsy-turvy world? “Tout passe, tout casse,” they say in French, to explain the way of the world. It is also our unofficial motto here at Bonner Private Research. Or, as Nietzsche put it, ”Amor fati.” We have faith – that everything that is born will die…that every upswing will be followed by a downturn…and that no song…no empire…no bull market will last forever.

Over time, everything degrades and fades away. We saw yesterday how the Industrial Revolution slacked off after 1970. We saw how the dollar was corrupted into a currency that the political class could use to make themselves rich. We’ve all seen how American politics has degenerated into a comic opera…where fat ladies sing every day and nobody cares.

Over time, freedom gives way to politics. A dynamic, entrepreneurial economy is taken over by central planners and hacks. And small government yields to Big Government, with its millions of rules regulation, lawyers…prisons…fines… missiles…sanctions…2% target inflation…malinvestment and claptrap. How much these things slowed down the economy is incalculable, but the US Chamber of Commerce puts the cost of government regulation alone at $1.9 trillion annually. Winslow Wheeler puts the cost of empire at another $1.5 trillion.

Remarkable Naïveté Joseph Stiglitz does not share our cheerful fatalism. In 2018 he wrote a remarkably naïve article…cited yesterday…in the ‘Scientific American’ magazine, no less. There was nothing the least bit scientific about it. Instead, Stiglitz ignored the fading industrial revolution completely. As for the fraudulent dollar, he didn’t mention it. And instead of wishing to wipe the slate clean of stifling rules and regulations, he wanted more of them.

Whenever you see a Nobel laureate saying that ‘we need to do this’ and ‘we need to do that’ you can be sure that what follows is drivel. Stiglitz did not disappoint us: "We need more progressive taxation and high-quality federally funded public education, including affordable access to universities for all, no ruinous loans required. We need modern competition laws to deal with the problems posed by 21st-century market power and stronger enforcement of the laws we do have. We need labor laws that protect workers and their rights to unionize. We need corporate governance laws that curb exorbitant salaries bestowed on chief executives, and we need stronger financial regulations that will prevent banks from engaging in the exploitative practices that have become their hallmark. We need better enforcement of anti-discrimination laws: it is unconscionable that women and minorities get paid a mere fraction of what their white male counterparts receive. We also need more sensible inheritance laws that will reduce the intergenerational transmission of advantage and disadvantage.

…We need to guarantee access to health care. We need to strengthen and reform retirement programs, which have put an increasing burden of risk management on workers (who are expected to manage their portfolios to guard simultaneously against the risks of inflation and market collapse) and opened them up to exploitation by our financial sector (which sells them products designed to maximize bank fees rather than retirement security). ..we have to have urban housing policies that ensure affordable housing for all."

Good gracious, is there anything we don’t need to do? In short, he said, we need more control…more laws…more regulations…more handcuffs…more penalties…more prison cells…and more loops for the holes to go in – more of what got us into this mess in the first place.

Hot Air and Bad Ideas: But wait…you would think a Nobel prize winner might dig a little deeper. How, exactly, does that work? Our political system created the problems. How is it going to solve them? Who’s going to write these new laws? Who’s going to enforce these new rules and regulations? What Solomons will govern this brave new world? What angels will police it? Amid all Stiglitz’s gassy do-goodism is a small breeze of reality: "A vicious spiral has formed: economic inequality translates into political inequality, which leads to rules that favor the wealthy, which in turn reinforces economic inequality."

He’s right about that. Our system is rigged up. Stiglitz: "It is not the laws of nature that have led to this dire situation: it is the laws of humankind. Markets do not exist in a vacuum: they are shaped by rules and regulations, which can be designed to favor one group over another."

But if the old rules favored the wealthy…why wouldn’t the new rules also favor the people whose lobbyists write them? And wouldn’t members of congress, still eager for some emolument, vote on them? 'The People’ have no lobbyists. They have no way of knowing what regulations are coming down the pike…or to whom they will deliver their hidden goodies. The voters are like wax, ready to be molded into whatever shape the insiders want. Why should we expect anything different?

Stiglitz doesn’t address the subject. But that was in 2018. Stiglitz did not say so directly, but with a wink and a nod, readers knew what he meant. With so much inequality afoot, he warned that a demagogue might be able to stir up popular resentment and endanger our democracy. It does not bother him that ‘our democracy’ did nothing to prevent the problems he complains about. And then, in 2020, in the middle of the raging covid stream, our democracy changed horses. But the water continued to flow as before.

In Russia, Putin opponent Alexei Navalny faces another 19 years in prison on what look like trumped up charges. In Pakistan, Imran Khan, the country’s democratically elected president, faces 3 years in jail after the CIA conspired to remove him from office. In Niger, President Bazoum is said to be under house arrest and running out of food. And now, America’s leading demagogue is facing prison time too, after a new administration, more to Stiglitz’s liking, took control and the Justice Department went to work on the opposition. Cronyism, corruption, crackpottery…at least, there are some things you can still count on."

Joel’s Note: If Argentina is the ghost of America’s future, the republic may wish to remain among the living a while longer. When we left Buenos Aires a few months ago, official inflation had already topped 100%. A couple of days ago, according to Bloomberg, it was seen passing the 115% annual rate, the highest since 1991. Recent polls cited by newswire Reuters forecast 150% before the year is out…

What does that mean, practically speaking? As with all things in Argentina, there’s the “official” way of doing things… and the “actual,” “real world” way they get done (to the extent they actually get done, that is). De jure vs de facto, as the lawyers would say. Abiding by Gresham’s Law – roughly stated as “bad money drives out good” – Argentina operates on both an official exchange rate… and an actual one. Known as the “blue rate,” this parallel exchange represents the real world value of the peso vs. the USD, euros, gold, bitcoin, etc. It’s what desperate porteños pay to escape the fast shrinking cage that is their national medium of exchange/store of value.

Back in May, as your editor at large were flying north for the summer, the exchange rate was ~500 pesos to the US dollar. Yesterday, that rate eclipsed 600:1. A friend and amateur economist (everyone in Argentina is an amateur economist, not by choice, but by necessity) notes that, had the parallel rate only kept pace with official inflation, the rate would be closer to 700:1 by now.

Argentina’s general elections, set for October, promise to be a referendum on the economy. The situation is getting so bad, even young people are beginning to turn away from the usual “tax and spend” policies of the ruling Peronistas. Presidential candidate, Javier Milei (quoted above), has promised if elected to burn the central bank to the ground. Sounds like a decent start…"

Dan, I Allegedly, "We Have To Get By With Less"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 8/10/23
"We Have To Get By With Less"
"We are seeing entire industries that have sales off 50%. We are hearing now that hospitals will be closing at a record pace. People need to get by with less."
Comments here:

"Massive Price Increases At Kroger! Here We Go Again! Get Ready!"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 8/10/23
"Massive Price Increases At Kroger! 
Here We Go Again! Get Ready!"
"In today's vlog, we are at Kroger and are noticing massive price increases on groceries. It's happening again as we have talked about on the channel here. More price increases on groceries as many families continue to struggle to put food on the table. Get ready as there seems to be no end in sight. Stock Up on the sales, and get prepared."
Comments here:

Wednesday, August 9, 2023

"We Got Big Trouble, Don't Ignore The Warning Signs; The FED Will Crush the Economy and Housing"

Jeremiah Babe, 8/9/23
"We Got Big Trouble, Don't Ignore The Warning Signs; 
The FED Will Crush the Economy and Housing"
Comments here"

"Red Alert! Mushroom Cloud By Moscow At Nuclear Bomber Facility; Drone Attack On 'Nuclear Fuel'"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 8/9/23
"Red Alert! Mushroom Cloud By Moscow At Nuclear 
Bomber Facility; Drone Attack On 'Nuclear Fuel'"
Comments here:

"Aldi Store Closings Double As Biggest Grocery Stores In America Face Mass Shutdowns"

Full screen recommended.
"Aldi Store Closings Double As Biggest Grocery 
Stores In America Face Mass Shutdowns"
by Epic Economist

"Some of the biggest grocery chains in America are in the process of closing thousands of stores right now, and discounter Aldi is one of them. Even though Aldi is considered one of the fastest-growing retailers in the country, the industry giant hasn’t been able to increase profitability in some struggling locations. And as it watches its competitors reducing their brick-and-mortar footprint in preparation for more economic turbulence, the company has decided to follow the same move. According to a new analysis, the number of store shutdowns announced by the discount chain rose by 50% year-over-year. That means a lot of shoppers are losing access to affordable grocery prices at a time food inflation is still soaring. But Aldi closures are just a symptom of something much worse that is rapidly spreading across the entire sector.

In June and July, there was a flood of reports of sudden Aldi store shutdowns across the country. According to Retail Data Insights, Aldi store closures doubled in the past year. Researchers found that between January and June 2022, and January and June 2023, the number of shutdowns conducted by the chain increased by 52%, resulting in a total of 178 closures across 17 states.

That is a major indicator that the food retailer is reassessing its brick-and-mortar portfolio to get ready for more volatility in the final stretch of 2023, and into 2024. However, it’s important to note that these closures are not indications of the retailer’s total collapse, but a sign that conditions are souring even for the biggest grocery chains in America.

At the moment, another problem is also upsetting Aldi customers. They have been finding bare shelves and empty freezers in several stores. Supplies of bread, produce, meat, dairy, and other staples are running out because of "technical supply chain issues," according to the grocery chain. The Aldi Reviewer reports that the chain is facing multiple product shortages that may vary according to the area. Some of the most commonly cited stockouts are sour cream, ricotta cheese, saltine crackers, spaghetti noodles, canned cat food, blossom tampons, string cheese, frozen chicken, sausage, bakery items, hash browns, fresh garlic, apple juice, frozen pancakes, and various types of fresh meat.

In the coming months, more people may struggle to get the food they need, especially as affordable grocery stores continue to close. Food is a bare necessity, and there will always be a demand for it. That’s why during economic downturns, grocery is typically the only sector that stays strong. But this time around, things are vastly different. Major chains are reporting mass store closings, and facing challenges to improve performance and profitability to continue supporting their business. Ultimately, Aldi’s decision to permanently shutter some locations is a matter of survival in this highly competitive industry. And if even the biggest players are in survival mode, that means everyone else is in deep trouble."
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Deuter, "Endless Horizon"

Deuter, "Endless Horizon"
Full screen recommended. 
"I cannot paint
What then I was. The sounding cataract
Haunted me like a passion: the tall rock,
The mountain, and the deep and gloomy wood,
Their colors and their forms, were then to me
An appetite; a feeling and a love,
That had no need of a remoter charm,
By thought supplied, not any interest
Unborrowed from the eye.

That time is past,
And all its aching joys are now no more,
And all its dizzy raptures. Not for this
Faint I, nor mourn nor murmur: other gifts
Have followed; for such loss, I would believe,
Abundant recompense.

For I have learned
To look on nature, not as in the hour
Of thoughtless youth; but hearing oftentimes
The still, sad music of humanity,
Nor harsh nor grating, though of ample power
To chasten and subdue."

- William Wordsworth,
"Lines Written A Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey"
“Some feelings sink so deep into the heart that
only loneliness can help you find them again.
Some truths are so painful that only shame can help you live with them.
Some things are so sad that only your soul can do the crying for them.”
- Gregory David Roberts, "Shantaram"

Musical Interlude: Elton John, "Your Starter For"

Elton John, "Your Starter For"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"These two mighty galaxies are pulling each other apart. Known as the "Mice" because they have such long tails, each spiral galaxy has likely already passed through the other. The long tails are created by the relative difference between gravitational pulls on the near and far parts of each galaxy. Because the distances are so large, the cosmic interaction takes place in slow motion - over hundreds of millions of years.
NGC 4676 lies about 300 million light-years away toward the constellation of Bernice's Hair (Coma Berenices) and are likely members of the Coma Cluster of Galaxies. The featured picture was taken with the Hubble Space Telescope's Advanced Camera for Surveys in 2002. These galactic mice will probably collide again and again over the next billion years so that, instead of continuing to pull each other apart, they coalesce to form a single galaxy."

'If You Will Not Fight..."

“If you will not fight for the right when you can easily win without bloodshed, if you will not fight when your victory will be sure and not too costly, you may come to the moment when you will have to fight with all the odds against you and only a precarious chance of survival. There may be a worse case. You may have to fight when there is no hope of victory, because it is better to perish than to live as slaves.” 
– Sir Winston Churchill

"I'm Always Tempted To Ask..."

"You've seed how things goes in the world o' men. You've knowed men to be low-down and mean. You've seed ol' Death at his tricks... Ever' man wants life to be a fine thing, and a easy. 'Tis fine, boy, powerful fine, but 'tain't easy. Life knocks a man down and he gits up and it knocks him down agin. I've been uneasy all my life... I've wanted life to be easy for you. Easier'n 'twas for me. A man's heart aches, seein' his young uns face the world. Knowin' they got to get their guts tore out, the way his was tore. I wanted to spare you, long as I could. I wanted you to frolic with your yearlin'. I knowed the lonesomeness he eased for you. But ever' man's lonesome. What's he to do then? What's he to do when he gits knocked down? Why, take it for his share and go on.”
- Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings

"When I hear somebody sigh, 'Life is hard,' 
I am always tempted to ask, 'Compared to what?'"
- Sydney J. Harris

"Crabs in a Bucket"

"Crabs in a Bucket"
by Sarah Robinson

"When I was a little girl, I lived very close (an hour and fifteen minutes) to the Florida panhandle beaches. Which meant we spent a TON of time there. Early evening was one of my favorite times to walk the beach with my mom and my older brothers. We were all clean and fed and slightly sun weary but still desperate to be outside. So, we would grab flashlights, dip nets and a bucket and search the ocean’s edge for crabs. We would catch a bucket full in an evening and drag them back home where my mom or my grandmother would cook them up into something delicious. (Yes, I was traumatized by the crabs being put into boiling water, but that story is for another day.)

The problem was that as we made that long walk home carrying crabs, there were always one or two who figured out how to climb up to the edge of the bucket in an attempt to escape. Every now and then we would have to tap the edge of the bucket to knock them back down. Because I was too little to carry the bucket very far, I got the job of watching for potential escapees. And I noticed something... well… odd. More often than not, as a crab would begin to inch its way higher to the edge of the bucket, the other crabs would latch on to him and pull him back down. I watched this scenario play out again and again, year after year.

Fast forward to this morning. As I was drinking my coffee and perusing my twitter stream, and up pops this gem from @paulocoelho (He wrote "The Alchemist", one of my all time favorite books): “Only mediocrity is safe. Get ready to be attacked, and be the best.” Maybe it was the early hour. Maybe it was my post-event mushy brain. I don’t know. But the minute I read Paulo’s tweet, I thought of those crabs in a bucket. So I sent him this tweet: “I’m thinking of crabs in a bucket. They always try to pull down the one who’s figured out how to escape.”

Paulo liked my analogy so much that he retweeted it and I’ve spent my morning connecting with people all over the world who liked it, too. It resonated deeply for a lot of people. I did a quick Google search and discovered that “Crab Mentality” is actually an official phrase that roughly means “if I can’t have it, neither can you.” And it is talked about. A lot.

There will always be people who will subtly or not so subtly try to keep us from escaping. Why? Because our escape threatens their mediocre existence. Pulling us down, sabotaging our efforts, picking apart our brilliant ideas – all of that keeps them feeling safe. And living undisturbed mediocre lives.

So what if we added a new piece to the crab mentality picture? Imagine a crab, or a group of crabs on the other side of the bucket building a ladder to aid your escape. They managed to crawl out of the bucket in spite of all the energetic attempts to pull them backwards. Because they’ve tasted freedom and they know your struggle, they are putting energy into aiding and abetting your escape.

I believe that for those of us determined to get out of the bucket, such a group exists. It may take some time to find them, but they are there, ready to throw a safety rope over the edge and pull us out. Start listening for them. Start looking for them. They are there. Reach just a little further and they’ll meet you at the edge of the bucket."

The Daily "Near You?"

Lyons, Oregon, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

The Poet: Rod McKuen, “A Cat Named Sloopy”

 
“A Cat Named Sloopy”

“For awhile
the only earth that Sloopy knew
was in her sandbox.
Two rooms were her domain.
Every night she’d sit in the window
among the avocado plants
waiting for me to come home,
my arms full of canned liver and love.
We’d talk into the night then,
contented,
but missing something.
She the earth she never knew,
me the hills I ran
while growing bent.
Sloopy should have been a cowboy’s cat,
with prairies to run,
not linoleum,
and real-live catnip mice,
no one to depend on but herself.
I never told her,
but in my mind
I was a midnight cowboy even then.
Riding my imaginary horse
down Forty-second street,
going off with strangers
to live an hour-long cowboy’s life.
But always coming home to Sloopy,
who loved me best.
For a dozen summers
we lived against the world.
An island on an island.
She’d comfort me with purring,
I’d fatten her with smiles.
We grew rich on trust,
needing not the beach or butterflies.
I had a friend named Ben
Who painted buildings like Roualt men.
He went away.
My laughter tired Lillian
after a time,
she found a man who only smiled.
But Sloopy stayed and stayed.
Winter,
Nineteen fifty-nine,
Old men walk their dogs.
Some are walked so often
that their feet leave
little pink tracks
in the soft snow.
Women, fur on fur,
elegant and easy,
only slightly pure,
hailing cabs to take them
round the block and back.
Who is not a love seeker
when December comes?
Even children pray to Santa Claus.
I had my own love safe at home,
and yet I stayed out all one night,
the next day too.
They must have thought me crazy
screaming SLOOPY!
SLOOPY!
as the snow came falling
down around me.
I was a madman
to have stayed away
one minute more
than the appointed hour.
I’d like to think a golden cowboy
snatched her from the window sill,
and safely saddlebagged
she rode to Arizona.
She’s stalking lizards
in the cactus now perhaps,
bitter, but free.
I’m bitter too,
and not a free man anymore.
But once upon a time,
In New York’s jungle in a tree,
before I went into the world
in search of other kinds of love,
nobody owned me but a cat named Sloopy.
Looking back,
perhaps she’s been
the only human thing
that ever gave back love to me.”

- Rod McKuen 

"What Is Hope?"

"What Is Hope?"

"What is hope? It is the pre-sentiment that imagination is more real and reality is less real than it looks. It is the hunch that the overwhelming brutality of facts that oppress and repress us is not the last word. It is the suspicion that reality is more complex than the realists want us to believe.

That the frontiers of the possible are not determined by the limits of the actual; and in a miraculous and unexplained way, life is opening creative events which will light the way to freedom and resurrection. But the two - suffering and hope - must live from each other. Suffering without hope produces resentment and despair. But hope without suffering creates illusions, naïveté and drunkenness.

So let us plant dates even though we who plant them will never eat them. We must live by the love of what we will never see. That is the secret discipline. It is the refusal to let our creative act be dissolved away by our need for immediate sense experience, and it is a struggled commitment to the future of our grandchildren. Such disciplined hope is what has given prophets, revolutionaries and saints the courage to die for the future they envisage. They make their own bodies the seed of their highest hope."
- Rubin Alves

"Why The Other Side Won’t Listen to Reason"

"Why The Other Side Won’t Listen to Reason"
by David Cain

"At some point during your first year as a human being, the adults throw a real curveball at you. They expect you to start understanding what right and wrong mean. These lessons come in the form of mysterious reactions that follow certain things you do. After you pull all the books from the bottom shelf onto the floor, quite a feat for a one year-old, they scold you for some reason. When you pee in the correct place, they praise you. It’s completely baffling, but over time you get a sense that adults are extremely preoccupied with classifying actions into two broad categories: okay and not okay, or good and bad.

You quickly gather this is how the world works. And there is some logic behind what’s rewarded and what’s punished: “bad” actions are usually (but not always) ones that hurt, annoy or inconvenience other people, and “good” actions usually (not always) help in some way, or at least don’t hurt anyone.

This classification system is so strongly emphasized by the adults that you develop a keen sense of it yourself. You see rights and wrongs everywhere, particularly where you stand to gain or lose something personally: in the fair distribution of treats, in acknowledgement for chores done, in which cartoon characters deserve to be happy (or in a police wagon) at the end of the episode. 

Seemingly everything is morally relevant. There are right and wrong ways to speak, play, fidget, ask for things, touch people, and express your feelings. The rules are endlessly detailed and idiosyncratic. There are right and wrong places to sit or stand, things to wear, things to stare at, even expressions to have on your face. Some acts are okay in one place and very bad somewhere else. The adults insist that navigating this sprawling bureaucracy is simple: just be good.

You make use of this system. You argue your case to your parents when your sibling takes something of yours, or plays with a coveted toy too long—if you feel slighted, there must be wrongdoing, and you say so, perhaps listing reasons why you’re right. You petition teachers to take action against other kids who are being greedy, annoying, or mean, and you defend yourself when you’re the one being accused.

There’s Something Fishy About the Way We Judge: By adulthood, morality has become such an intuitive part of our thinking that we barely realize when we’re making a moral judgment.

Hundreds or thousands of times a day we assess the character of another person. We feel we know enough to commend or condemn (usually condemn) a person from the way they park, a word they chose to use in their comment, the state of their front lawn, how they stand in a queue, what they laugh at, where and when they look at their mobile phones, how long they take to get to the point of their anecdote, or any of ten thousand other morally salient micro-actions.

Our moral sense works with great speed and force. Every news article - even the headline alone -gives us a strong, immediate, and seemingly unmistakable sense of which are the good and bad parties involved. Virtually every time we feel annoyed, we reflexively assert some wrongdoing on the part of another human being, even if it’s someone we’ve never seen. If service is slow, some employee is being lazy or inconsiderate. If traffic is crawling it’s because the city always schedules construction work at such stupid times. If an item’s price is unexpectedly high, some greedy CEO is getting paid too much.

There’s something fishy about all this moralizing. We treat our moral feelings and judgments as though they’re truly all-important; seemingly, nothing deserves as much energy and attention as determining the right and wrong of everything done and said in the human world, and lamenting that world’s failure to meet our idea of what’s right. (For endless examples, just check Twitter.) Yet for all their importance, we’re extremely flippant with our moral judgments. We make them all day long, with ease and even a kind of pleasure, and very little second-guessing. Maddeningly, other people have almost perfectly opposite positions on the same moral issues - drug policy, immigration, pornography, whether mayo belongs in guacamole - and they cast their judgments with the all the same ease and certitude.

You’d think that if determining right and wrong were truly what’s important to us, we’d be far more careful about making judgments. We’d want to gather a lot of information before saying anything. We’d seek opposing viewpoints and try to understand them. We’d offer people the benefit of the doubt whenever possible. We’d be very wary of our initial emotions around the topic, and very interested in how our personal interests might be skewing our conclusions. We’d refrain from making conclusions at all if we didn’t need to.

In other words, we’d employ the same reserved, dispassionate, self-scrutinizing ethic we use to examine questions about anything else: physics, history, biology, engineering, business, or any other arena of understanding where premature conclusions can create a big problem. We’d have a keen, ongoing interest in learning how we might be wrong.

But we’re not like this at all. We make moral conclusions freely, immediately, and without self-scrutiny, recruiting as much emotional tilt as possible. We dismiss counterpoints reflexively, as though it’s dangerous to even consider changing our minds. We only rarely admit that an issue is too opaque or complex to be sure what to think.

Why are we so smart and careful when it comes to figuring things out in most areas of inquiry, and so dumb and impulsive when it comes to moral questions, which are supposedly the most important ones to get right?

Why We’re So Stubborn: Social psychologist Jonathan Haidt sheds a lot of light on our confused moral psychology in his book, "The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided By Politics and Religion."  It’s a fascinating read, but the main punchline is that our moral sensitivity didn’t evolve in order to make us good at determining right and wrong. It evolved to help us survive and thrive in highly social environments.

Our moral feelings are quick and reactive because they developed to aid us in real-time social interactions, not in careful, solitary periods of reflection. These feelings are often conflicting and illogical because they adapted to meet a number of different social goals:

• Our desire to protect the vulnerable, and our hatred for cruelty and carelessness, adapted to motivate us to keep children safe at all costs, and keep potentially dangerous people away
• Our resentment for cheating and unfairness adapted to help us avoid getting exploited by the rest of our group
• Our respect for loyalty, and our fear of betrayal, evolved to help us form coalitions, and identify disloyal people before they make trouble
• Our attitudes towards authority, and those who subvert it, conferred an advantage at positioning ourselves within social hierarchies
• Our moralizing around cleanliness and the sanctity of bodies, sex, and bodily functions, adapted to help us avoid infection and disease 
• It’s no wonder our moral intuitions are so strong, quick and often thoughtless. They are essentially survival reflexes, conditioned by our upbringing and our instincts.

Our moral reasoning - our capacity to explain why something is right or wrong - comes only after our emotional intuitions, if at all, and is tuned for persuading others of our value to the tribe, not for helping us find the most sensible moral stances. Haidt describes our moral reasoning as working much like a press secretary or company spokesperson - its purpose is to justify positions and actions already taken, using any explanation that sounds passably good in the moment, true or not.

Note that none of the above social goals require our moral feelings to be fair or logically sound, and in fact, that can be disadvantageous - a tribe that viewed all outsiders as predators likely would have protected its children better than a tribe that was most concerned with never falsely accusing someone of being dangerous.

In other words, our moral intuitions are strongly tuned to make us groupish and tribal, not even-handed and insightful. And our moral reasoning is tuned more for soliciting approval from others than for actually discovering moral truths.

This explains why we’re so susceptible to rhetoric, prejudice, selective hearing, and fake news. It also explains why it’s strangely pleasurable to take hard moral stands, no matter how poor or nonexistent the reasoning behind them - hard stands, declared publicly, reliably generate a small flood of praise and approval from the tribe that shares those positions.

You can see what a powder keg this moral psychology is liable to create in an increasingly global, internet-connected society, composed of people from many different backgrounds, all of whom enjoy getting Retweeted, Liked, and Favorited.

It’s why, when it comes to politics, the other side simply doesn’t listen to reason. Of course, all of us are on someone’s other side."

"America Is Now A Zombie State"

"America Is Now A Zombie State"
by Jacob Howland

“Every nation gets the government it deserves,” wrote the philosopher Joseph de Maistre, and some are getting it good and hard right now. De Maistre’s moral interpretation of politics admits of exceptions, but the United States in 2023 is not one of them. A wasting tide of bad education and corruption is rotting the cultural and constitutional piers that, since the Civil War, have kept the US above the waters of chaos.

The American regime has become a tawdry theatrocracy in which political actors, hypokritai in Greek, play stock characters in a loathsome farce. In the run-up to the 2024 elections, Donald Trump stars as the persecuted saviour, and Joe Biden the righteous defender, of the American republic. Never mind that Trump is self-absorbed and impulsive to the point of criminal stupidity, that Biden is senile and evidently corrupt, and that both of these braying, boorish old men are fraudsters and fabulists. These vices do not matter to their furious followers, who love their man precisely because he is not the hated other. Trump and Biden cannot, and will not, be separated; each needs his opponent as the hammer needs the nail. And above the wretched spectacle sit a click-hungry media, feeding on riot and picking favorites like vulturous pagan gods.

This drama of political decadence defies easy categorization. Aristotle wrote that tragedy depicts people who are better, and comedy worse, than us spectators. Biden and Trump are certainly worse than those who voted them into office, but they are not remotely funny. Their antics are repellent and their goofiness unlovable. Observing them and the choral leaders that follow in their train - jerky puppets like Rudy Giuliani sweating hair-dye, or Anthony Fauci claiming to be science itself - Americans feel only shame and dread, without the cathartic release of laughter or tears.

These trapped emotions spring from the same source. They are visceral responses to the approaching death by senescence of the American experiment in ordered liberty. The problem goes well beyond presidential dementia. The US Senate (from the Latin senex, “old”) looks more like the waiting room of a geriatric neurologist than a council of wise elders. There’s Mitch McConnell, prone to falls and freeze-ups; wheelchair-bound and confused Dianne Feinstein; and John Fetterman, who at only 53 is less fit for public service than any other member of that formerly august body. It’s as if C-SPAN, a network that televises congressional hearings, decided instead to air absurdist, post-apocalyptic horror films.

The zombification of the Capitol - not to mention our city streets, which have become permanent encampments of the dazed and disturbed - is merely a symptom of the underlying disease. Like all institutions, politics falls apart without regular infusions of constructive energy. A modern democracy is healthy only if its major parties grow organically from their voters, representing their interests by habit and inclination even more than conscious effort.

But the grassroots politics Tocqueville admired when he visited the US in the 1830s gave way long ago to the top-down astroturfing of technocratic managerialism. Our governing elites represent no one but themselves and their cronies, and they don’t welcome shocks to the system. Insurgent candidates such as Robert Kennedy Jr. and Vivek Ramaswamy, whose public elevation of the concerns of many Americans aims to revitalise national politics, are censored and met with active resistance, even by their own parties.

It’s not just in politics that the wellsprings of individual and social vitality have dried up. Americans are marrying less and later, and having too few children, to reproduce themselves and the families that nurtured them. What is more, our public schools have largely ceased to transmit the accumulated knowledge and civilizational wisdom of the past to the children we do have. A taste for historical repudiation has taken hold across the culture, leading curators to “contextualise” art, city governments to take down statues, colleges to rename buildings, and publishers to censor or rewrite books. But creativity withers when it ceases to be nourished by the oxygenated blood of the tradition. Little wonder that Hollywood increasingly cannibalizes its legacy by pouring old films into new plastic scripts.

Technology has exacerbated our national enervation. We have become charging-stations for our smartphones, which drain psychic energy with insistent distractions and overloads of information-babble. Video calls and work-from-home limit in-person interactions with actual existing individuals, who would otherwise be together for most of their weekly waking hours. Targeted advertising, fine-tuned algorithms, and politically stratified social media sharply decrease our exposure to new ideas. We are immuring ourselves within our own private caves, watching flickering images in darkness.

AI language-learning models offer a cautionary parable of these larger cultural developments. Programs such as ChatGPT, whose writing remains formulaic and prone to errors, learn by sifting through a sea of digitalised text, a growing share of which consists of AI-generated content. The predictable result of this feedback loop is the kind of levelling we’ve seen across our institutions. Like newspapers that drink their own ink - and which ones don’t, these days? - their product can only get worse.

Cultural exhaustion, social withdrawal, and the general enfeeblement of life forces are the practical expression of a will to nothing. There is a name for this spiritual and intellectual condition, and it is nihilism. Nihilism is demonic to the extent that the will to nothing is still a will, a life force. That it is only a negative one is by no means reassuring, because it is easier and more economical to tear down than to build up. Destruction is dramatic and accomplishes the illusion of vitality with relatively little energy. And who in this apocalyptic time, including the nihilist, doesn’t want to feel even a little alive?"
Hat tip to The Burning Platform for this material.

"How It Really Is"