Saturday, September 23, 2023

Greg Hunter, "Weekly News Wrap-Up 9/22/23"

"Weekly News Wrap-Up 9/22/23"
Biden Backlash, US Russia War, Economic Warning Signs
By Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com 

"This is the number that explains it all - 9.5% Biden approval rating. No, the Lying Legacy Media (LLM) will not tell you this, but the people at the top know the real approval rating and it’s 9.5%. My private sources that compute this number also are seeing a huge Biden backlash for everything from the Ukraine war, wide open borders, huge inflation, CV19 vax and being forced to think drag queens are really women. These are just a few of backlashes brewing and brewing big.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov says, in no uncertain terms, that the “U.S. is waging war against Russia.” Let that sink in. When is the last time you heard this from a Russian Foreign Minister? NEVER. Lavrov is signaling there is a war coming if the U.S. does not stop funneling billions of dollars into Ukraine for unending war against Russia. (Probably a good chunk of that money is being returned to the swamp in kickbacks.) This week, Vice President Biden coughed up another $325 million for more war in Ukraine. Senators on both sides of the swamp have publicly stated this is “a good investment.” America is being run by corrupt, compromised morons, and the Ukraine war more than proves this.

Economic warning signs abound, and most Americans are sleepwalking into the Greatest Depression ever seen. The federal debt is unpayable, and it is now exploding at an exponential rate. America went another $1 trillion in the hole in the last three months alone. Congress cannot even debate the next budget, which is setting the country up for a government shutdown in 10 days. Meanwhile, Treasury income, according to the St. Louis Fed, is off by more than $100 billion in the last year alone. Something is very wrong with the finances of America. It’s not a question of if the wheels fall off but when. It could be sooner than many believe. This cannot go on forever."

Join Greg Hunter on Rumble as he talks about these 
stories and more in the Weekly News Wrap-Up for 9/22/23:

"Satellite Confirms Nuke Testing; Gov't Shutdown; Oct. 4 Emergency; Russian Admiral Murked"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 9/22/23
"Satellite Confirms Nuke Testing; Gov't Shutdown; 
Oct. 4 Emergency; Russian Admiral Murked"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Hindustan Times, 9/22/23
"Russia On Alert As U.S. 'Plans' To Arm
 Ukraine With 'Most Dangerous Weapons'"
"Russia accused the U.S. of planning to supply the 'most dangerous' weapons to Ukraine. Russia said that the U.S.' move comes to keep Kyiv's failed counteroffensive afloat. Moscow warned that supplying weapons to Kyiv would further escalate the war."
Comments here:

So we provide Ukraine with long range missiles and encourage them to strike targets in Russia, the missiles being guided by the US military controlled StarLink system. How is this not an act of war? We're just begging for a Russian preemptive first strike nuclear attack, and we deserve it, too...

Friday, September 22, 2023

"Market Hope Has Been Crushed, Prepare For An Economic Nightmare"

Jeremiah Babe, 9/22/23
"Market Hope Has Been Crushed, 
Prepare For An Economic Nightmare"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Liquid Mind, "Laguna Indigo"

 

Full screen recommended.
Liquid Mind, "Laguna Indigo"

"A Look to the Heavens"

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

"Be Careful..."

 

"Regrets? Don’t Regret Anything, Unless You Want Me To Slap You When You Are Old"

"Regrets? Don’t Regret Anything, 
Unless You Want Me To Slap You When You Are Old"
by John Wilder

"I’ve never written anything before that made me want to go to a hospice and slap a bunch of old dying people, but this particular post led me there. I’ll explain. It’s okay, it’ll all make sense in the end. I’m a trained professional.

I have made many mistakes in my life. Most of them I don’t remember – they were small and didn’t have any consequences, or at least any consequences I’ve seen yet.

Then there were some slightly larger mistakes – let’s call them medium size mistakes. There have been consequences to these. Again, medium-sized mistakes most often lead to medium-sized consequences. A scar here (carve away from your thumb, not towards it), a stock gone to zero there (thanks a lot, Enron®) and one really bad car trade when I was 24 . . . medium-sized. Medium-sized mistakes are big enough for a big sting, but whatever permanent impacts there might be aren’t immediately fatal.

The biggest ones – I won’t give a laundry list of those. Most of those were where either passion, inexperience, a momentary lapse of character or judgement, or (worst of all) when all three contributed to a mistake. Some mistakes lasted longer, some were short. But all stung. The biggest include a marriage that led to divorce, underestimating a sociopathic boss, and wearing that white dress to my little sister’s wedding. I mean, I look fabulous in it, but some brides just have to be the center of attention. Also a bit weird because she wasn’t really my sister.

To put it bluntly, I am the author of almost every problem I have. If I didn’t cause the problem, I’m probably complicit in creating the problem or not dealing with the problem. But I don’t regret it. None of it. Not the victories, certainly, and not the failures. Why?

Life is a one-shot deal. And life is a ratchet. It only turns one way – we can’t take anything back. Regret isn’t a one-shot deal, though. If there’s anything that will burn a hole in your soul, it’s regret. Regret never comes alone – it brings guilt along for the ride.

If I were to dig more deeply into those feelings – regret and guilt are just ways that fear manifests itself. Fear of... what? Regret is a fear that the consequences of your choices or actions will impact you negatively, and cannot be changed. Here is a list of some of the common regrets from people on their deathbed (from a former palliative care nurse named Bronnie Ware, and, yes, I spelled that right – blame her parents, not me):

“I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.”
“I wish I hadn’t worked so hard.”
“I wish I’d had the courage to express my feelings.”
“I wish I had stayed in touch with my friends.”
“I wish that I had let myself be happier.”

Even a quick look at this list tells me one simple thing: regret is for losers. I have never seen a whinier pack of self-serving weakness since I last watched a Democratic presidential debate. Everything, absolutely everything on this “top five” list is just, well, sad.

Would you like to go to your grave worrying about any of those things? I can’t imagine doing it. I refuse to let regret rule me. And I refuse to let any decision I made twenty years ago rule me. Hell, I refuse to let any decision I made last week rule me, except for choosing that convenience store egg/muffin sandwich – I don’t need to explain why. Deal with the consequences? Certainly. But regret? No.

Let’s go down the “top five” list:

Not living a life “true to yourself”? I’ve never heard such nonsense in my life. I was talking with a guy the other day who quit his job because his boss asked him to do something illegal. That’s being true to yourself – he walked away without a paycheck but with his values and beliefs intact. If you’re not being true to yourself, you’re either weak or flighty. The good news? Anyone who reads this blog is neither.

Wishing you hadn’t “worked so hard”? That’s also nonsense. A soul thrives on doing good work that matters. Doing good work excellently is hard. The Mrs. teaches, and works hard at it – I can see from her talking about her students, talking about the ones who learned and improved, the ones who keep coming back to her classroom to report on their lives that her work matters. Working hard at work that matters is what makes us the best humans we can be. If you think you worked too hard, you weren’t doing anything worth doing. The good news? Change now. You have an entire lifetime to fix that mistake.

Didn’t have the “courage to express my feelings”? Wow. This is the weakest on the list, so far. Number one: do you have feelings that matter? Most feelings are stupid – and I have stupid feelings, too. Thankfully, I’m not a five year old – I am at least twelve. I get to examine my feelings and reject those that don’t reflect my values, my virtue, my beliefs. I get to choose. If I feel slighted by something silly or petty? I get to choose to understand what a fool I’m being and ignore that feeling. Again, if you don’t express your feelings, that’s not always a bad thing. Your feelings are often stupid.

I’m sorry that “staying in touch with your friends” was so hard. But it’s really not. The people you care about, that care about you, are there. They always have been, they always will be. I don’t Facebook® much – why? I call my friends, on an actual phone. I text my friends. Am I often the one that calls first? Sure. Do we develop different lives, does life pull us away for a while? Do hundreds or thousands of miles separate us? Maybe. But I make quite a few phone calls. And mostly my friends pick up. Sure, it’s true that the biggest miracle Jesus exhibited in the Bible was having 12, 11 close friends (thanks, Judas) after the age of thirty – but you just need a few – a few that will have your back. A few you can share with.

Seriously – number five on the list is a wish for “letting themselves be happier.” Happy is easy ("All You Will Ever Need To Read About How To Be Happy* (*Most of the Time")), being significant is hard. It requires hard work while being true to yourself. It requires expressing those feelings that your virtue allows to exist. Friends? The good ones will be with you forever, and you can restart your conversations with the slightest hint of time passing, even if you haven’t talked regularly in a decade, if they’re true friends.

I’ve never thought about going to a hospice and slapping someone, but this list made me want to do it. I know, I know, it’s too late for them. And this is the list of people who had regrets. People like me? I don’t have a single regret at this moment of my life. Not one. In a hospice, I hope I’d be the, “Regrets? No. More clam chowder, please,” guy.

To be clear – it’s not that I don’t care. It’s not that I’m not blameless. It’s not that I was always right. Not one of those things is true. But I have done the most important thing I can think of: When I do something I regret, I’ve changed myself so that I won’t ("Clintoncide", "John Bolton’s Waifu", and "October Market Crashes: Knock on Wood") do that thing again. I cannot change the past. But if I have learned, if I can help others not make the same mistakes while not repeating my own mistake? Like an algebra teacher for the soul, I have taken something negative and turned it into something positive. The bonus is I get to end the dreams of high school freshmen in the process.

And I’m not planning on having any regrets tomorrow. If you have regrets? Fix them now or recognize them for the dead weight they are and cut them loose. The alternative? Trust me, you don’t want to have me chasing you down in a hospice and slapping you silly."

The Daily "Near You?"

Crozet, Virginia, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Are People Really Stupid?"

 
“All of the available data show that the typical American citizen has about
as much interest in the life of the mind as does your average armadillo.”
- Morris Berman

“Think of how stupid the average person is,
and realize half of them are stupider than that.”
- George Carlin

"Are People Really Stupid?"
by Fred Russell

"On the face of things, judging from the general level of knowledge and understanding, not to mention the intellectual pursuits, of most of the human race one is tempted to say that the overwhelming majority of mankind lacks the intellectual capacity, the intelligence, to contribute to human progress. And it is in fact a very small elite that has carried us beyond Neanderthal Man, without whom, if the truth be told, we might still be living in caves. It is, in a word, appalling to contemplate the level at which ordinary people use their minds, what they read, if at all, what they watch on TV, the movies they go out and see, and the ease with which they are seduced and manipulated by the technicians of the psyche, namely, politicians and advertisers.

The impression one gets when contemplating these tens and hundreds of millions of people glued to their TV screens for the reality shows and sitcoms or fiddling with their smartphones from morning till night is of complete empty-headedness. This is not to say that such people cannot be shrewd, resourceful, or, for that matter, simply decent. It is to say that at the average level of intelligence displayed by the human race, the great intellectual achievements of mankind seem to be beyond the scope of the vast majority of men and women. But are people really stupid? And if they aren't, who or what has held them back?

Now one may be inclined to place all the blame for our ignorance on the television producers and gadget makers, but the truth is that by the time they get to us the damage has already been done. All they really succeed in doing is dragging us down a little further. The problem starts in childhood. It starts in the schools with all those empty cells waiting to be filled and no one, not entire educational systems, really knowing how to fill them. In fact, the opposite result is achieved. By the time the child finishes elementary school, unless he is destined to join the intellectual or scientific or economic or political elite and is self-motivated, as the saying goes, he will have developed an aversion to the learning process that will persist for the rest of his life.

It is not hard to understand why. School bores him, and oppresses him. Its premise, fostered in the West by the Church the virtually exclusive supplier of teachers until fairly recent times, historically speaking is that as a consequence of Original Sin all men are born evil and must therefore be coerced into doing what is good. The result has been rigidly structured frameworks where teachers hammer away at the captive child until his head is ready to explode. Within just a few years, the public school system thus destroys the natural curiosity of the child and dooms him to a life of total ignorance, dependent, for whatever sense of the world he does have, on second rate journalists, who themselves lack the knowledge, understanding, discipline and integrity to be historians or even novelists and therefore shape his perception like the ignorant clerics of the Middle Ages, raining down on his head a disjointed and superficial body of information presented largely to produce effects, and even this is beyond his capacity to retain.

The man in the street may thus be said to have a great many opinions but very little knowledge, mindlessly repeating the half-truths of experts and analysts who reflect his own biases and constructing out of them a credo of dogmatic views that remain embedded in his mind for an entire lifetime like bricks in a brick wall.

Does it matter? After all, we have all the scholars and scientists we need, and besides, a world where everyone became one would be a dull place indeed. It can even be argued that it is better for the race if progress is opposed, since, judging from its products, it mostly expresses itself materially and economically in an unholy alliance of greed and technology. However, progress of this kind cannot be fought if all that people have on their minds is to wire themselves into this technology, and that is what they will be doing until their minds are engaged in less frivolous pursuits. They are thus doubly victimized, first by the schools, whose methods are not attuned to the temperament and capacity of the average child, and then by the economic elites who control the technologies and consequently the flow of information and whose only interest in the man in the street is as a consumer of their products.

Unfortunately, there is very little hope that any of this will change. The wrong people control human society and will continue to do so, because they created the model and are the only ones who know how to operate it. The sad truth is that today's man in the street is neither wiser nor more knowledgeable than a medieval peasant. Calling ourselves Homo sapiens, or even Homo sapiens sapiens, seemed like a good idea once but very few of us have lived up to the billing."

Apologies to armadillos for the comparison! lol

"I Urge All Of You..."

“To me, there are three things we all should do every day. We should do this every day of our lives. Number one is laugh. You should laugh every day. Number two is think. You should spend some time in thought. And number three is, you should have your emotions moved to tears, could be happiness or joy. But think about it. If you laugh, you think, and you cry, that’s a full day. That’s a heck of a day. You do that seven days a week, you’re going to have something special. I just got one last thing... I urge all of you, all of you, to enjoy your life, the precious moments you have.”
- Jim Valvano

"15 Big Box Retailers That Are Closing Multiple Stores This Fall"

For unknown reasons Blogger is once again 
blocking new video uploads.Please view this video here:
Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist. 9/22/23
"15 Big Box Retailers That Are 
Closing Multiple Stores This Fall"

"Dark clouds are emerging all over the U.S. economy. This fall, many events can make the outlook even grimmer for companies. That's why many major retail chains are shuttering multiple locations right now. Some brands are taking an extra step to ensure their financial stability in the near future, so they are eliminating underperforming stores from their system before they impact their long-term profitability. At the same time, many others are in the process of liquidating their inventory and going out of business this fall.

That’s the case with Bed Bath & Beyond. Bankrupt since April, the big-box home retailer had been trying to restructure its business. But prospects for a revival were looking bleak. In an updated bankruptcy plan, the chain reiterated the bad news to shareholders. It said in an agreement that eliminates particular interests or claims related to Bed, Bath & Beyond that those holding these interests will not receive any compensation or benefits. Put simply, shareholders will leave empty-handed. Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter pointed out that the company's debt exceeded its assets even after Overstock paid $21 million for the intellectual property for the Bed, Bath & Beyond brand a few months ago. On September 12, the company finally confirmed that it would liquidate all of its assets and close all of its remaining 360 stores, across 40 states.

Similarly, mass store shutdowns and layoffs are on the horizon for JoAnn Fabrics. This month, the retailer confirmed more store closings for 2023 and staff layoffs at its corporate office. A spokesperson for Joann, Amanda Hayes, stated that certain positions across various departments are being eliminated to align the company’s corporate structure and expenses with its business needs. The exact number of layoffs and store shutdowns has not been disclosed yet. The latest financial results are very concerning, particularly considering that the company has only $19.1 million in cash on hand while it has over $1 billion in debt. The retailer also saw its quarterly loss rise to $73 million compared to $56.9 million in the previous quarter. On top of all that, the chain is at risk of being delisted, a move that would make it harder to raise needed capital. Today, JoAnn shares are down 68% compared to a year ago, and off 95% from its peak in 2021. With all that said, it's not hard to see how bleak the chain's reality has become or why the company is now on Moody's bankruptcy watchlist.

Every day, new reports detail the huge wave of store closings that is now taking form. Unfortunately, those store closings aren't the only losses Americans are dealing with right now. Hundreds of thousands of retail workers are being laid off while these companies fight for their place in the market, or quit it entirely. The impact on our major economic indicators, including the nation's gross domestic product, will be significant. But for countless hard-working Americans, the retail crisis will completely turn their lives upside down. Even though it is too early to measure the scope of this downturn, one thing is certain: the American retail landscape will look a whole lot different in early 2024. In this video, we investigate which popular brands are reducing their store counts to survive the ongoing recession."
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"


Bill Bonner, "A Prejudice Primer"

"A Prejudice Primer"
Your helpful guide to what you can – 
and cannot – think in a free country
by Bill Bonner

Poitou, France - "How about you, dear reader? Are you a man…a woman? Are you free from boundaries set by nature? Or do you lie awake at night, worrying that you might be ‘just prejudiced?’ Well, you can stop worrying. You are prejudiced. Enjoy it.

Here at Bonner Private Research, we take great pride in our prejudices. We were in London last week. We learned that Professor Kathleen Stock was bullied, harassed and chased from her job for daring to voice the mainstream view that “trans women are not the same as biological women.” Singer Roisin Murphy was cut from the BBC’s line-up after she described puberty blocker drugs as “absolutely desolate” and called for “little mixed-up kids” to be protected from them. These women were both women perpetrators of prejudice…and victims of it. Herewith, a primer on what prejudices are in style…and which you shouldn’t admit. First, a quick update.

Higher for Longer: Yesterday, the Fed said nothing surprising. But it was not what investors wanted to hear. They sold stocks. CNBC: "Dow tumbles more than 300 points to notch third day of losses amid fears of higher rates, government shutdown. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 370.46 points, or 1.08%, to close at 34,070.42. The S&P 500 slid 1.64% to 4,330. The Nasdaq Composite retreated 1.82% to 13,223.98."

Back to the wonderful, wacky world of prejudice…The newspapers are full of it. The Sunday Telegraph relayed this story: “The General Medical Council has removed all mention of “mothers” from a maternity document for its staff.” What’s the General Medical Council got against ‘mothers?’ We don’t know. In place of the word, “mother,” the GMC is using “parent” or “birthing parent.” And if the GMC goes on to develop a prejudice against “parent,” perhaps it could use “homo sapiens with the double X chromosomes.”

Meanwhile, the same edition of The Telegraph had an interview with a man who spent a lot of time studying chromosomes, Richard Dawkins. An evolutionary biologist, he’s the author of the “Selfish Gene” which was a real barn-burner back in the ‘70s. We may like redheads because we think they are pretty. We may not like Russians, because we think they have bad manners. But the theory of evolution suggests that our prejudices have deeper roots than we realize. Biased we may be. Unbiased, we ain’t.

The Selfish Gene: The idea of the “selfish gene” is that our basic programming has its own prejudices. It wants to replicate. So, it re-purposes its hosts – us – to seek things that increase the odds of its own survival.

We want to live in a ‘good’ neighborhood, for example. We don’t really know good from bad, but our genes must think some of that ‘good’ will rub off on us. We don’t want to live in a bad neighborhood. We say we ‘don’t like it.’ But what makes us ‘like’ anything? Do we like sugar donuts because of some process of rational thought, made possible by our large, computer-like crania? Or, is it the genes that like them, because they help them survive…from one generation to the next?

“It is better to be a Spartan, than an Athenian,” said the Spartans. “It is better still to be a Roman,” said the Romans. “It is better to get a perfect score on your SAT,” says the Korean mother. “Or practice the violin 7 hours a day.”

Some families have a bias in favor of working for the government. “You have security with the feds,” they say. “It’s better to start a business,” say others. “It’s the only way to make real money. Start a business. Take it public.”

We don’t really know what will turn out to be “better” any more than we know what is “good;” we can’t predict the future. It’s just a prejudice. Of course, prejudices are often not very well thought out…or very attractive to others. If you are opening a Chinese restaurant, you may want to rid yourself of your prejudice against Asians. If you are coaching a basketball team, a prejudice against Black players is not likely to be an advantage. And if you’re selling milking machines how helpful would it be to have a prejudice against dairy products?

Certain types of prejudices are frowned upon. If you don’t like Jews, you’re thought to be an ‘anti-semite.’ You can dislike Lithuanians, vegetarians or Baptists all you want. But after 1945, not liking Jews was considered sinful.

ou can still openly discriminate against different kinds of food, art, or automobile. You can have prejudices against fat people or skinny people…or against stupid people…or against people with accents you don’t like. There are some people no one seems to like – such as Adolph Hitler or Amber Heard. But you can’t discriminate against people with a stutter. That could be a ‘disability’ and protected by the courts.

“Contemptuous Ridicule”: You can discriminate against people with dark skin. You might suspect that people with deep tans spend too much time in the sun and not enough on the ball. But the law forbids discrimination against “people of color.” The effect of this law is probably to hurt the people it was meant to help. An unidentified employer in America was quoted as saying she quietly rejects every resume from men named ‘Dante’ or women named ‘LaToya.’ Did she have a prejudice against the names…or the people behind them? Alas, racism can be very subtle. And the employer or landlord who tries to avoid being charged with “racism” is ipso facto “racist,” no matter how he goes about it.

Political opinions can still be openly mocked. Richard Dawkins has a prejudice against “woke” people, who should be treated, he says, with “contemptuous ridicule.”

Some prejudices are required. In the elite media – along with the universities, government, Wall Street, ESG corporate America – you must have a prejudice against “white supremacy,” whatever that is…against Confederate statues and memorabilia…against MAGA Republicans…against oil…against guns (unless they are being used to kill foreigners in a righteous war)…against genuine religious feeling…and anything else that gets in the way of the Elite Agenda.

You can dislike women or you can dislike men. But you cannot have a prejudice against “women” who used to be considered men…or “men” who used to be considered women. Genders are considered “fluid.” There are no women. No men. We are “non-binary,” they say, ready to hop into bed with man or beast, depending on social conditioning. No other view is permitted. But prejudice and discrimination on the basis of sex have been with us from the get-go. They’re not going away. Here’s Dawkins: “I speak as a biologist. There aren’t many absolutely clear distinctions in biology. Mostly what we have is a spectrum. But the male-female divide is exceptional in biology. It really is a true binary.” Prejudices run deep. And it is by our prejudices that we shall be known."

Jim Kunstler, "Blobitis"

"Blobitis"
by Jim Kunstler

“Our government has not failed us. To fail implies there 
was at least a good faith effort to do the right thing.”
 - Eric Matheny

"The new science of blobology informs us that political blobs blow up like dying stars gorging on runaway fusion.The blob expands beyond the viable limits of its internal contradictions and implodes in a spectacular vacuum of absurdity. The Washington DC blob’s dire pulsations lately signal that it’s about to blow its toxic endoplasm all over our nation’s capital, drowning many denizens in deadly slime.

Did you catch Attorney General Merrick Garland’s performance Wednesday before the House Judiciary Committee? The absurdity ran pretty rank in the chamber as the AG artfully evaded explaining how it is he doesn’t know a darn thing about the consequential cases in process at his DOJ - and if he did happen to know, he wouldn’t be able to say because… reasons.

For instance, the strange inability of one US attorney David Weiss to generate charges after five whole years of investigation in the sundry matters involving the president’s son, Hunter Biden, until the statute of limitations on tax evasion dribbled away. And then, after concocting a booby trapped plea deal on a Mickey Mouse gun rap that blew up under a judge’s scrutiny, the selfsame Mr. Weiss is appointed Special Counsel (i.e. prosecutor) over those very cases. Say, whu…? Not to mention that it’s against the regulations to appoint anyone special counsel from within the DOJ.

Well, you see, Mr. Weiss is a splendid fellow, Mr. Garland explained. When asked if he could give a working definition of professional incompetence, the AG affected to be stumped. In the course of all this play-acting, Mr. Garland maybe perjured himself several times, and he seemed painfully aware of his own possible looming legal difficulties.

One suspects through all this mummery and confabulation that Merrick Garland is not actually in charge of the US DOJ. Then who is? My guess would be the ultra low profile Deputy AG Lisa Monaco, a mitochondria of the DC blob, one of its energy cells. Ms. Monaco was up to her eyeballs in the Obama regime’s prep work for the Russia Collusion Hoax of 2016, and since her appointment as DAG in April, 2021, is a behind the scenes architect of the new American police state. The Washington Post pretends that she doesn’t exist. One also wonders when a House committee will become interested in deposing her, especially on the subject of her involvement with J-6 prosecutions.

So far, the blob has gotten away with its many depredations because the DC federal district court is one of its pseudopods, able to reach out, engulf, and dissolve anyone who poses a threat. But a turning point in America’s struggle against blobbery may have been crossed far away from there. Down in Texas, which is lately afflicted with blobitis, the state Attorney General Ken Pxton escaped an impeachment trap laid by Party of Chaos state legislators and blob allies revolving around Karl Rove and the next-gen Bush family, losing its legacy as owners of the Texas GOP.

Mr. Paxton must be royally pissed off by these shenanigans and maybe ready to rumble with blob agent Homeland Security Sec’y Alejandro Mayorkas and his putative boss, “Joe Biden.” As it happens, with Autumn here and temperatures along the border moderating, crossings of illegal aliens are at 10,000 a day. A few days after Mr. Paxton’s aquittal in the Texas Senate, Governor Greg Abbot officially declared “an invasion.” Under the US Constitution, federal failure to defend the border allows the states to repel the invaders with force. It also pretty explicitly spells out an impeachable offense against “Joe Biden” - failure to defend our country. The blob quivers and throbs."

"This Debt Market Meltdown May Just Be Getting Started"

Gregory Mannarino, AM 9/22/23
"This Debt Market Meltdown May Just Be Getting Started"
Comments here:

Dan, I Allegedly, "How Scary is This?"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly AM 9/22/23
"How Scary is This?"
"How awful is this? There is a company that is falsifying documents for airline parts. Who would want to fly on an airplane that had bogus parts used in this construction? Plus, all the leading economic indicators are pointing down."
Comments here:

"Walmart Grocery Prices Going Up In Fall & Winter 2023! Get Ready! This Is Not Good!"

Adventures With Danno, AM 9/22/23
"Walmart Grocery Prices Going Up In Fall & Winter 2023! 
Get Ready! This Is Not Good!"
"In today's vlog, we are going over Walmart grocery prices that are going up in the fall & winter of 2023, and why this could be devastating for some families!"
Comments here:

Thursday, September 21, 2023

Musical Interlude: Liquid Mind, "Velvet Morning"

Full screen recommended.
Liquid Mind, "Velvet Morning"
Liquid Mind ® is the name used by Los Angeles composer and producer
Chuck Wild of the best-selling Liquid Mind relaxation music albums.

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Barred spiral galaxy NGC 1365 is truly a majestic island universe some 200,000 light-years across. Located a mere 60 million light-years away toward the chemical constellation Fornax, NGC 1365 is a dominant member of the well-studied Fornax galaxy cluster.
This impressively sharp color image shows intense star forming regions at the ends of the bar and along the spiral arms, and details of dust lanes cutting across the galaxy's bright core. At the core lies a supermassive black hole. Astronomers think NGC 1365's prominent bar plays a crucial role in the galaxy's evolution, drawing gas and dust into a star-forming maelstrom and ultimately feeding material into the central black hole.”

"There Is Always The Hope...'

“What happens to people living in a society where everyone in power is lying, stealing, cheating and killing, and in our hearts we all know this, but the consequences of facing all these lies are so monstrous, we keep on hoping that maybe the corporate government administration and media are on the level with us this time. Americans remind me of survivors of domestic abuse. This is always the hope that this is the very, very, very last time one’s ribs get re-broken again.”
- Inga Muscio

"Buyer Beware - Prepare For A Major Crash, Markets Must Collapse"

Jeremiah Babe, 9/21/23
"Buyer Beware - Prepare For A Major Crash, 
Markets Must Collapse"
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o
A comprehensive, essential daily read.
Financial Stress Index

"The OFR Financial Stress Index (OFR FSI) is a daily market-based snapshot of stress in global financial markets. It is constructed from 33 financial market variables, such as yield spreads, valuation measures, and interest rates. The OFR FSI is positive when stress levels are above average, and negative when stress levels are below average. The OFR FSI incorporates five categories of indicators: creditequity valuationfunding, safe assets and volatility. The FSI shows stress contributions by three regions: United Statesother advanced economies, and emerging markets."

"The U.S. Isn’t Becoming Rome"

"The U.S. Isn’t Becoming Rome"
by Brian Maher

"The United States - and its purported diminishment - is often likened to the Roman Empire. As the Roman Empire succumbed to debauchery, degeneracy and profligacy… the United States is succumbing to debauchery, degeneracy and profligacy. As Rome had its bread and its circuses, the United States has its bread and its circuses. They differ merely in form. Not in substance. In brief: The Roman destiny will be the American destiny. That destiny is of course ruin.

So runs the theory. Yet does another wrecked empire offer a truer mirror of American decline than Rome’s? What former empire might this be? Answer shortly. Let us first look in on another scene of debauchery, degeneracy and profligacy - Wall Street.

Discouragement" Yesterday the Federal Reserve elected to sit upon its hands. It held interest rates even. The stock market’s initial response was… mixed. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was encouraged while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite were discouraged. By closing whistle all three were discouraged.

The Dow Jones concluded trading down 76 points. The S&P retreated 41 points while the Nasdaq was most discouraged of the three  down a dispirited 209. Wall Street was disappointed, profoundly, that Mr. Powell and mates dangled before it the threat of additional rate increases. “We have to do more with rates,” intoned the chairman today.

This Is the Empire America Most Resembles: Yet to revisit today’s central question: Does another formerly grand empire offer a superior mirror of American decline - than Rome itself? Today we stand before the jury… and argue the case that one such empire exists. What empire is this? The Spanish Empire. That is correct - the Spanish Empire.

In this telling the American destiny is not Rome’s destiny. It is Spain’s destiny. A certain R. Taggart Murphy professes international political economy at a Japanese university. From whom: "Those contemplating the possible demise of American global hegemony most often turn for lessons to Rome… but the parallels between America and Spain are striking."

Striking? You have seized our attention. Please, sir, elaborate. "Spain was the first global superpower. Obviously, there had been other great powers - Rome, the China of the Tang and Ming dynasties, the vast Mongol domains - but none had spanned oceans and continents the way the Spanish Empire did at its height.

In the first half of the 16th century, Charles V reigned over vast swathes of Europe; his son Philip II controlled most of the Western Hemisphere as well as a sizable chunk of Asia (the Philippines were named after him). Imperial Spain’s maximum territorial reach would only be surpassed by the British Empire in the 19th century, and in the 20th by the informal American imperium, with its 750 overseas bases and network of global alliances." We must agree. The Spanish reach was vast - as the American reach is vast.

Money and Empire: And as the American empire bosses the world with its dollar… the Spanish Empire bossed the world with its gold and silver specie: "The most revealing parallels relate to a different expansionary dynamic - that of money. The key to so much else that happened to both countries was the appearance of what seemed like unlimited wealth but was actually access to unlimited quantities of a universal medium of exchange, craved and accepted everywhere.

In the late 16th century, the Spanish elite could buy whatever it wanted wherever it wanted with the gold and silver that was pouring into Spain from the mines of Peru and Mexico. Today, the American ruling class can do the same with U.S. dollars created at will…

That Midas-like power permitted elites in both countries to confuse money with what it could buy, and led to financialization, politically dangerous levels of inequality and the wasting of wealth on endless wars aimed at remaking the world in the image, respectively, of Iberian Catholicism and American democracy."

We believe this Murphy fellow has struck bull’s-eye. He sketches a parallel very nearly perfect - in our estimation at least. Mr. Murphy proceeds to inform us that Spain was the most debt-sunken nation of Europe… despite its infinities of gold and silver. We might remind you that the United States national debt presently exceeds $33 trillion. And that its debt-to-GDP ratio exceeds 120%. This, despite its infinity of dollars.

Spain Blows It: What, Mr. Murphy, befell Spain and its American-mirrored empire? "Spain blew it. Already by the middle of the 17th century, under the crisis-ridden rule of Philip IV, the Iberian kingdom “had been left behind by the rest of Europe,” as John A. Crow wrote in his classic study 'Spain: The Root and the Flower'."

The next question is the natural question: Will the United States steer an identical course? "Over the past several decades, dollar hegemony has landed the United States in the same position that Spain enjoyed after the conquest of the Aztec and Inca empires. Like Habsburg monarchs of an earlier age, those who manage the American economy are able to run “deficits without tears…"

But if Spanish history is any guide… all that money tempts you to do what less well-positioned countries would hesitate to consider - because they can’t afford it: namely, wage endless wars. The United States has embarked upon many of these wars. It presently wages one of proxy in the nation of Ukraine. If the gods are kind it will remain a war of proxy - again - if the gods are kind. Are they?

Imperial Ideology: Mr. Murphy cites an additional Spanish-American parallel: ideology. The ideologies are opposites yet they are the same. They are both crusading faiths. Spain was hot to fan the Catholic faith worldwide. The United States is hot to fan the democratic faith worldwide.

Spain had its infamous Inquisition, yes. Yet the United States runs its own Inquisition of sorts - an Inquisition not religious in nature but secular in nature: "The parallels extend from the material substrate to the cultural and ideological realm… Washington [has established] an updated Tribunal of the Holy Office of the Inquisition…

The institutional and technical apparatus that this newly reincarnated Holy Office has constructed to impose orthodoxy and eliminate error would earn the envy and admiration of its Spanish forebears.

It starts with the ubiquitous diversity, equity and inclusion offices in practically every corporation, university, government agency and civil-society organization… It has new names, the “Global Engagement Center” in the State Department being one of the most noteworthy, but the aims remain the same: ferreting out heresy or, as they now call it, “disinformation.”

Once again there is juice here. The American imperium recently bears a very powerful ideological impress. You may, if you wish, label it “woke.”

“The Most Formidable Tool of the New Holy Office”: What is “the most formidable tool of the new Holy Office”? The most formidable tool of the new Holy Office is its control of the internet. Here we find echoes of the draconian response of the Catholic hierarchy to translations of the Bible into the vernacular and their wide dissemination made possible by the newly invented printing press…"[All of this] tempts countries — or at least the ruling classes of such countries — into global imperial projects, driven by the fantasy that they are the vehicles of universal salvation…

Spain’s example suggests that tears may indeed await countries whose elites convince themselves that they have been chosen by God to spread his faith throughout the world — or, to update the language, that theirs is the world’s “indispensable nation,” ordained by history to bring it to an end…"

The historical boneyard is strewn with many such “indispensable nations.” Spain was one. The United States will likely end in the identical burial ground… on some distant tomorrow at least. We do not believe it is imminent.

Yet if you seek to divine the American future, look less to Rome. Look more to Spain.

The Daily "Near You?"

Lehigh Acres, Florida, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Meltdown! Leading US Economic Indicators Crater Again! Bond Market Selloff!"

Gregory Mannarino, PM 9/21/23
"Meltdown! Leading US Economic Indicators 
Crater Again! Bond Market Selloff!"
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"The Biggest Car Market Collapse Of Our Lifetime Has Begun"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 9/21/23
"The Biggest Car Market Collapse 
Of Our Lifetime Has Begun"

"The car market collapse of 2023 is reaching proportions no one could’ve predicted just a couple of years ago. While the used car market is spiraling downward, automakers are facing worrying disruptions in the production of new cars, and inventory is getting tight again, which could add even more pressure on prices in the final stretch of the year. Major Wall Street Banks including JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley are warning that this crisis can derail the economy and wreak havoc on financial markets this fall, and today we explain how it can affect American consumers over the next few months.

About a week ago, August data was released, and the downtrend gripping the industry became even more evident. The used car market saw the biggest August drop in over a decade, with prices falling 6.6%. But according to Cox Automotive, used car prices haven’t bottomed out yet. Since January, some popular models have faced an up to 30% crash as the supply of used cars leveled out and demand for these vehicles waned.

Those price changes have been significant for car buyers, especially as higher interest rates make auto loan payments more expensive. On the flip side, car dealers are seeing a profit squeeze as demand continues to cool down. As for the new car market, conditions are vastly different. According to analysts at Reuters, now that the United Auto Workers union has started a strike, the new car segment is about to be thrown into turmoil all over again.

Insiders believe that if no agreement is reached by the end of this week, that could quickly spread in numbers and locations. Together, GM, Ford, and Stellantis account for about 43% of new cars sold in the U.S. In other words, the disruption in the supply chain is expected to reach enormous proportions.

To make things even more complicated, Morgan Stanley economists say the blow on U.S. economic output and payrolls could contract GDP by almost one full percentage point in the fourth quarter. With oil prices at their highest this year and eyeing $100 a barrel again, the last thing we need is another inflation catalyst. At this point, crude futures are up by 30%. That is, oil is once again inflationary, not deflationary. Over the past 30 days, gasoline prices accelerated all across the U.S., peaking at $3.984 per gallon in the third week of August, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

This is a worst-case scenario for the Federal Reserve. Policymakers and financial market participants won't need reminding of the role supply chain disruptions and semiconductor shortages, as well as shortages of parts and other inputs had in driving inflation to the highest in over 40 years. They will need to hike rates for much longer than they’ve predicted to achieve the goal of 2% inflation. The problem is that financial markets are hanging by a thread. And that will put investors, companies, and banks at risk due to their exposure to auto loans.

When Elon Musk alerted his followers on Twitter earlier this year that the auto loan crisis would lead us to the “worst financial crisis ever,” the media rapidly refuted his remark saying that the two sectors weren’t directly associated. But now the connection is clear. A historic car market crash is already in motion, and you just have to open your eyes to see it."
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"Gerald Celente, Trends Journal 9/21/23"

Strong language alert!
Gerald Celente, Trends Journal 9/21/23
"As Forecast: Market Meltdown Coming"
"The Trends Journal is a weekly magazine analyzing global current events forming future trends. Our mission is to present facts and Ttuth over fear and propaganda to help subscribers prepare for what’s next in these increasingly turbulent times."
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"How It Really Is"

Bill Bonner and Joel Bowman, "Pride and Prejudice"

"Pride and Prejudice"
Fed to "proceed carefully" and Americans
 to keep their opinions to themselves...
by Bill Bonner and Joel Bowman

Poitou, France -  "Of course, you already know the news. Bloomberg: "Fed Signals Higher-for-Longer Rates With Hikes Almost Finished." Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell made clear Wednesday the central bank is close to done raising interest rates, but his colleagues delivered the message that resonated: Borrowing costs must remain higher for longer amid renewed strength in the economy. After a series of rapid rate hikes over the past 18 months, the Fed can now “proceed carefully,” Powell said — a sentiment he repeated at least a dozen times Wednesday …"

And of course, you know too that this is all nonsense. Is inflation going up or down? Jerome Powell will find out at the same time as the rest of us. And if it goes up substantially, he will have to raise rates, whether he wants to or not. For now, he will follow; he won’t lead.

Out of Control: The Fed is not really in control. Not now. But it has to appear that it is pulling the strings and turning the knobs. And those things have effects of their own. Investors will buy…or sell…depending on which way they think the wind is blowing. The real test…the moment of truth…will come when asset prices start to go down in a hurry. Then, the Fed will have a real choice – either lead, or follow. Inflate or die. It will then either follow deflating prices with lower interest rates. Or, it will panic and lead the way into a more dangerous inflationary cycle. We will see.

In the meantime, here comes news from Hollywood Unlocked: "Rolling Stone Co-Founder Fired From Hall Of Fame Board After Saying Black Artists Weren’t As Articulate As White Stars." Wenner was discussing his new book. He made the mistake of speaking his mind. For his interviews, he thought the white music greats were more forthcoming. He apologized later, but the harm was done. In America, saying what you really think is verboten.

Too bad. Prejudices are helpful. They economize time. And they help organize things in an orderly, agreeable way. Imagine that you are looking for an investment advisor. You talk to a young man who is dirty, smelly and uses foul language. For all you know, he may be the greatest investor of all time. But your prejudice tells you to keep looking. We take great pride in our prejudices. And since prejudices have fallen out of style, that is, since so many people seem to have a prejudice against them, we rise with a contrarian view.

A Matter of Preference: We like baked onions. We are not fond of fish, generally. When we see a nice, ripe apple on a tree, it gives us a good feeling. A snake – even a harmless black snake – does not.

We all have prejudices – ideas, tastes, preferences about the way things are…or how they should be. The whole progress of humanity depends on them. Some things are good, desirable, worth cultivating and working for…even dying for. Others aren’t. We must choose. We must discriminate. A woman chooses the most desirable mate she can get. A man chooses the best value auto he can afford. We develop prejudices – often unconscious ones – as a kind of shorthand or algorithm to guide us.

Imagine, again. You are a member of a primitive tribe. Another tribe, your hereditary enemies for generations, suddenly appears, girded for battle, near your camp. As far as you know, they have come bearing gifts…wishing to sit around the campfire with you, singing songs of friendship. But you have a bias. You believe they can’t be trusted…you think they have come to kill you and turn your wife and children into slaves. You could be mistaken. Maybe you’re ‘just prejudiced.’ But the cost of being wrong will be high…probably fatal. Prejudice could save you.

Marketing, politics, marriage, work, religion – at some level, all are just a clash of prejudices. Nobody knows the future. Nobody knows what God wants. Nobody knows what is ‘best.’ We all have to guess, by generalizing…stereotyping…and discriminating. And together, through trial and error, mistake, misfire, and misjudgment we stumble along.

In a banned episode of The Simpsons, Homer decides he needs financial help. “I want a Jew,” he says. Maybe Homer didn’t know it, but Bernie Maddoff was a Jew. It didn’t matter. Homer was just giving voice to a popular, but now forbidden, prejudice: Jews are better with money than goyim.

But what we are all most prejudiced about is ourselves. Musk oxen prefer the company of other musk oxen. Elk, geese, penguins – all stick to their own kind. Even slime molds seem to have an affinity for other slime molds just like themselves. And when we look in the mirror, we wonder how any race could be as fetching as we are. If we were Chinese, we would think the Chinese were superior. If we were Italian, we’d likely think Italians had some edge. Jews…Blacks…every group develops a kind of pride in itself…and prejudices towards others. Poor Jan Wenner apologized later, but the harm was done. In America, recognizing your own prejudices is unpardonable." More to come…"
o
Joel’s Note: Long time readers will already be familiar with the phrase “higher for longer.” In fact, it was the title of a column we published in these very pages… back in September of last year! “No, it’s not the name of Snoop Dog’s new album,” we joked at the time, “it’s what we’re forecasting the Fed will do with interest rates in the face of persistent, decidedly non-transitory inflation.” And lo! Here we are… twelve months on… by told by the jefe himself…that rates will, indeed, be higher for longer. Huzzah!

Not that Mr. Powell has every been “ahead of the curve,” so to speak. The man who gave us “transitory inflation” is still battling to get that toothpaste back in the tube. The Fed’s core measure for August showed the biggest increase in 14 months… and that’s on top of the steepest rate hike in living memory. What now? Is it “inflate or die,” as we’ve been chorusing… or inflate and die, as some have put it? We’ll have to wait and see.

Meanwhile, Dan and Tom are polishing the new BPR Doom Index V2.0… “The idea behind the Doom Index,” mused Bill when he introduced the very first iteration more than a decade ago, “is to measure the tension in the system and get a better idea of when the rubber band is going to snap.”

Dear readers know full well the kind of “tension” of which Bill speaks. It’s the chasmic divide between the Wall Street economy and Main Street reality… between D.C. politics and what folks in America’s cities experience on a day to day basis… between what the mainstream presstitutes spout of an evening and what working Americans see and hear with their very own eyes and ears…

“We're focused on the real economy,” explains Dan, “instead of the fake stock market. As such, we're concentrated on the price and flow of the 'master economic resource,' energy. The 8 indicators in the new index are almost all related to the flow of energy in the real economy, from extraction, to transport, to use (this is a faint echo of how the Transports, the Utilities, and the Industrials work in Dow Theory)…”

The new index – Doom 2.0 – will feature prominently in next week’s Monthly Strategy Report, available to subscribers. If you’re not already enjoying all our member’s research, feel free to get “ahead of the curve” and join us, here…"

"Home Depot Is In Trouble Now, This Is A Warning"

Full screen recommended.
The Atlantis Report, 9/21/23
"Home Depot Is In Trouble Now, This Is A Warning"
"Home Depot is dealing with a major crisis, and the global leader in home improvement is in trouble. A company that has long been considered a barometer of the real estate market and the overall economy, is facing serious financial challenges in the last quarter of 2023. Home Depot boasts a storied history as a bellwether indicator for many industries. Over the years, it has consistently mirrored the pulse of the housing and construction industry as well.

What makes Home Depot particularly intriguing is its resilience in the face of adversity. Even during previous downturns, including the infamous Great Recession, Home Depot weathered the storm. Its ability to adapt and thrive during challenging financial times is somewhat of an anomaly. Yet, current indicators appear to deviate from historical patterns. Recent reports have shed light on a series of unfortunate events that Home Depot is currently grappling with. One of the most prominent red flags is the sharp decline in same-store sales experienced during Quarter Two. This downward trend marked Home Depot's third consecutive quarter of negative SSS growth."
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Dan, I Allegedly, "It’s A Spending Revolt"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly 9/21/23
"It’s A Spending Revolt"
'People are making up their minds. They do not want to spend any money between now and the end of the year. It’s going to be a bleak holiday season. Plus, we are seeing tax preparers commit fraud, and try to inflate peoples tax returns to get larger commissions."
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"Gregory Mannarino, AM 9/21/23"

Down the rabbit hole of psychopathic greed and insanity...
Only the consequences are real - to you!
Your guide:
Gregory Mannarino, AM 9/21/23
"Hyper-Alert! Debt Market Selloff Intensifies! 
Stock Market Risk Is Skyrocketing!"
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"Massive Recall On Hamburger! What Now? What's Next?!

Adventures With Danno, 9/21/23
"Massive Recall On Hamburger! 
What Now? What's Next?!
"In today's vlog, we are covering the latest of hundreds of recalls over the last year. 58,000 pounds of ground beef has been recalled, and we are discussing how this will affect the grocery prices even more than they already have!"
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