Sunday, January 14, 2024

"The Gods Laugh At Your Plans"

"The Gods Laugh At Your Plans:
Chekhov, Jaspers, And Life-changing Moments"
The most momentous and significant events in our lives are the 
ones we do not see coming. Life is defined by the unforeseen.
by Jonny Thomson

"You’re in the shower one day, and you feel a lump that wasn’t there before. You’re having lunch when your phone rings with an unknown number: there’s been a crash. You come home and your husband is holding a suitcase. “I’m leaving,” he says.

Life is inevitably punctuated by sudden changes. At one moment, we might have everything laid out before us, and then an invisible wall stops us in our tracks. It might be an illness, a bereavement, an accident or some bad news, but life has a habit of mocking those who make plans. We can have our eyes on some distant shore, some faraway horizon, only to find everything come crashing down by the most unseen of events. As the Scottish poet Robert Burns wrote, “The best laid schemes o’ Mice an’ Men. Gang aft agley” (often go wrong).

In Anton Chekhov’s remarkable play, "The Seagull," we meet a cast of characters who are all, in some way, in love with something. The young, idealistic artist Konstantin is in love with the idea of pure art. Arkadin, his mother, is in love with her fans and her celebrity. Konstantin’s girlfriend, Nina, is in love with becoming rich and famous. Everyone in the play has some kind of ambition and plan, or they live in regret over the life they chose. They rail against how misguided or mistaken their life has been, while longing for something else.

They are each like a seagull, flying over the sea or a great lake, and aiming purposefully for the shore. The view up there is wonderful. But the longer the seagull flies, the more oblivious they are to how they tire or weaken. They’re so fixated on some distant horizon that they’re at the mercy to life’s sudden changes. They’re blinkered and distracted, and the gods love nothing more than the hopeful hubris of mankind.

At one point in the play, Chekov has the character Trigorin recount a short story about a gull flying over a lake who’s, “happy and free.” But in the next moment, “a man sees her who happens to come that way, and he destroys her out of idleness.” The seagull is killed, its flight and plans annihilated, in one instant of random thoughtlessness.

Boundary Situations: While so much of our lives are spent in planning and preparation, the most transformative and significant moments are those which come at us out of the blue. These are what the psychiatrist Karl Jaspers called “boundary situations” - the ones we cannot initiate, plan, or avoid. We can only “encounter” them. These are not the mundane, everyday parts of our life - what Jaspers calls “situation being” - but rather they are things which thunder down to shake the foundations of our being. They change who we are. Although these “boundary situations” (sometimes called “limit situations”) change a bit in Jaspers’ works, he broadly sorted them into four categories:

Death: Death is the source of all our fear. We fear our loved ones dying, and we fear the moment and fact of our own death. When we know grief and despair, or when we reflect on mortality, we are transformed. We always know about death, but when it’s a boundary situation, it comes crashing into our lives like some grim scythe; an unforeseen curtain call. The awareness and subjective encounter with death transforms us.

Struggle: Life is a struggle. We work for food, compete for resources, and vie with each other for power, prestige, and status in almost every context there is. As such, there are moments when we are inevitably overcome and defeated, but also when we are victorious and champion. The final outcomes of struggle are often sudden and great, and they make us who we are.

Guilt: Hopefully, there comes a moment for each of us when we finally accept responsibility for things. For many, it comes with adulthood, but for others it comes much later still. It’s the awareness that our actions impact all around us, and our decisions echo into the world. It’s seeing the damage or tears we’ve caused. It’s to recognize that, however small or big, we’ve hurt and upset someone. It’s a profound pull of the heart that changes how we live, and it often comes on unexpectedly.

Chance: No matter how neat and ordered we might want our world to be, there will always be a messy, chaotic, and unpredictable exception. We can hope for the best, and make the plans we want, but we can never take a steering handle on the facts that will affect our existence. According to Jaspers, we each prefer, “assembling functional and explanatory structures… whose central axis lies in sufficient reason” and yet, “despite this, it is not possible for man to control and explain everything. In fact, day by day he faces events that he cannot call anything else other than coincidences or hazards.” We want order, and regularity. What we get is the mercurial and capricious throes of chance.

The best laid plans: What Chekhov’s Seagull and Jaspers’ “boundary situations” get right is that we are each much more vulnerable than we might want to allow. A wedding, three years and a fortune to plan, is ruined by a stomach bug. An hour-long journey home for Christmas winds up getting you stuck in the traffic of a freak snowstorm. A lifetime achievement is overshadowed by a national disaster. Our lives are defined by the unforeseen. We have our dreams, hopes and are flying to some faraway shore. Yet life doesn’t care. Around every corner, at every flap of our wings, everything can change."
If you caught a glimpse of your own death,
would that knowledge change the way you live the rest of your life?"
- Paco Ahlgren, "Discipline"

"Decide..."

“We're all going to die. We don't get much say over how or when, but we do get to decide how we're gonna live. So, do it. Decide. Is this the life you want to live? Is this the person you want to love? Is this the best you can be? Can you be stronger? Kinder? More compassionate? Decide. Breathe in. Breathe out and decide.”
- “Richard”, “Grey’s Anatomy”
o
"Passion doesn't count the cost. Pascal said that the heart has its reasons that reason takes no account of. If he meant what I think, he meant that when passion seizes the heart it invents reasons that seem not only plausible but conclusive to prove that the world is well lost for love. It convinces you that honor is well sacrificed and that shame is a cheap price to pay. Passion is destructive. It destroyed Antony and Cleopatra, Tristan and Isolde, Parnell and Kitty O'Shea. And if it doesn't destroy it dies. It may be then that one is faced with the desolation of knowing that one has wasted the years of one's life, that one's brought disgrace upon oneself, endured the frightful pang of jealousy, swallowed every bitter mortification, that one's expended all one's tenderness, poured out all the riches of one's soul on a poor drab, a fool, a peg on which one hung one's dreams, who wasn't worth a stick of chewing gum."
- W. Somerset Maugham

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

"Banks Are Closing Thousands Of Branches And Retailers Are Shutting Down Thousands Of Stores"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 1/14/24
 "Banks Are Closing Thousands Of Branches 
And Retailers Are Shutting Down Thousands Of Stores"

"As we enter 2024, once thriving US high streets are starting to resemble desolate ghost towns as America is taunted by the ever-looming threat of yet another financial crash. If the economy is thriving then why are we seeing more bank closures than ever before and why are retailers being forced to shutter many of their branches?

Many banks and retailers are being forced to close locations in an effort to reduce expenses and stem the problems caused by an impending economic crisis. In the past two decades, the number of brick-and-mortar banks in the US has almost halved, a trend which shows little sign of slowing down. Data from the S&P Global Market Intelligence tells us that between 2022 and 2023 almost 5000 bank locations in America were closed permanently. In 2023 alone, two superpowers of the banking industry, PNC Financial Services Group and U.S. Bancorp, shuttered one in ten of their branches. This means that for the fourteenth year in a row, there has been a significant decrease in the amount of banks on our high streets.

In the past few years, the increase in branch closures has also been driven by a shift in the banking industry towards prioritizing online services over traditional locations. While this transition is evident across the board, it is particularly affecting low-income neighborhoods and rural areas. The depressing truth is that the high street banking network is disappearing before our eyes.

Many of these areas are experiencing what is commonly referred to as "banking deserts." The consequence of this trend is a growing disparity in access to essential banking services, posing challenges for individuals in these communities who may face difficulties in accessing financial resources and support. Many financial institutions are embracing digital platforms and reducing their physical presence to survive. However, this comes at a high cost, not only for their customers but for their employees too. Less high street banks mean fewer jobs."
Comments here:

The Daily "Near You?"

Bristol, Connecticut, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"A Strange Honey..."

"Bad things will happen and good things too. Your life will be full of surprises. Miracles happen only where there has been suffering. So taste your grief to the fullest. Don't try and press it down. Don't hide from it. Don't escape. It is life too. It is truth. But it will pass and time will put a strange honey in the bitterness. That's the way life goes."
- Ben Okri

Paulo Coelho, "Killing Our Dreams"

"Killing Our Dreams"
by Paulo Coelho

"The first symptom of the process of our killing our dreams is the lack of time. The busiest people I have known in my life always have time enough to do everything. Those who do nothing are always tired and pay no attention to the little amount of work they are required to do. They complain constantly that the day is too short. The truth is, they are afraid to fight the Good Fight.

The second symptom of the death of our dreams lies in our certainties. Because we don’t want to see life as a grand adventure, we begin to think of ourselves as wise and fair and correct in asking so little of life. We look beyond the walls of our day-to-day existence, and we hear the sound of lances breaking, we smell the dust and the sweat, and we see the great defeats and the fire in the eyes of the warriors. But we never see the delight, the immense delight in the hearts of those who are engaged in the battle. For them, neither victory nor defeat is important; what’s important is only that they are fighting the Good Fight.

And, finally, the third symptom of the passing of our dreams is peace. Life becomes a Sunday afternoon; we ask for nothing grand, and we cease to demand anything more than we are willing to give. In that state, we think of ourselves as being mature; we put aside the fantasies of our youth, and we seek personal and professional achievement. We are surprised when people our age say that they still want this or that out of life. But really, deep in our hearts, we know that what has happened is that we have renounced the battle for our dreams – we have refused to fight the Good Fight.

When we renounce our dreams and find peace, we go through a short period of tranquility. But the dead dreams begin to rot within us and to infect our entire being. We become cruel to those around us, and then we begin to direct this cruelty against ourselves. That’s when illnesses and psychoses arise. What we sought to avoid in combat – disappointment and defeat – come upon us because of our cowardice. And one day, the dead, spoiled dreams make it difficult to breathe, and we actually seek death. It’s death that frees us from our certainties, from our work, and from that terrible peace of our Sunday afternoons."

"Get Your Stuff Together..."

“We all got problems. But there’s a great book out called “Too Soon Old, Too Late Smart.” Did you see that? That book says the statute of limitations has expired on all childhood traumas. Get your stuff together and get on with your life, man. Stop whinin’ about what’s wrong, because everybody’s had a rough time, in one way or another.”
- Quincy Jones

"A Kind Of Stubborn, Unrecognized Courage..."

"For many great deeds are accomplished in times of squalid struggle. There is a kind of stubborn, unrecognized courage which in the lowest depths tenaciously resists the pressures of necessity and ill-doing; there are noble and obscure triumphs observed by no one, unacclaimed by any fanfare. Hardship, loneliness, and penury are a battlefield which has its own heroes, sometimes greater than those lauded in history. Strong and rare characters are thus created; poverty nearly always a foster-mother, may become a true mother, distress may be the nursemaid of pride, and misfortune the milk that nourishes great spirits."
- Victor Hugo

"How It Really Is"

Dan, I Allegedly, "Insurance Nightmare - Who Can Afford This?"

Dan, I Allegedly 1/14/24
"Insurance Nightmare - Who Can Afford This?"
Could you imagine your insurance bill going up $30,000 in one year? 
Who can? Even if you live in a high-risk area this is an outrageous figure."
Comments here:

"Israel’s Campaign in Gaza Fits the Legal Definition of Genocide"

"Israel’s Campaign in Gaza Fits 
the Legal Definition of Genocide"
by Mitchell Zimmerman

An old legal adage states: “Men are presumed to intend the natural consequences of their acts.” The natural, indeed inescapable, consequence of Israel’s cutting off life-sustaining supplies of food and water to over 2 million people in Gaza is famine and mass death by starvation and dehydration. As 90% of the people of Gaza have become refugees, 93% of the population is facing crisis levels of hunger.

Epidemics of cholera, typhoid, and dysentery are also the natural consequence as sanitation systems collapse and there’s only contaminated water to drink. Deaths from disease and hunger are predicted to be several times that from fighting and bombing.

Who are most likely to die first? Children, the elderly, and pregnant women. Who are least likely to be affected? Hamas’ soldiers, who stockpiled food and water before the war.
Israel’s indiscriminate bombing has killed over 23,000 Palestinians, 40% of them children. The pace of killing has been “exceptionally high,” reports TheNew York Times. “It’s beyond anything that I’ve seen in my career,” says a former Pentagon senior intelligence analyst.

Israelis assert casualties are high because Hamas uses civilians as “human shields.” But Hamas fighters are intermixed with civilians because they live crammed together in densely populated Gaza. Even on its own terms, the excuse fails. If a killer tries to escape capture by forcing an innocent family to stand between himself and the police, the cops can’t mow them all down to get the killer. If Hamas terrorists are surrounded by the people of Gaza, that doesn’t justify eliminating the entire population. “Israel’s liberal use of very large weapons in dense urban areas, including U.S.-made 2,000-pound bombs that can flatten an apartment tower, is surprising,” the Times report continued.

But it’s not a surprise if Israel in fact intends the mass deaths it has inflicted. Calls for “erasing” the people of Gaza and claims that “there are no innocents in Gaza” have become widespread among Israeli officials. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has likened the war in Gaza to a biblical call to “totally destroy” the Amalekites, a rival nation to the ancient Israelites. “Do not spare them,” the prophet Samuel tells King Saul: God commands you to “put to death men and women, children and infants.” The idea of treating Palestinians this way is now widespread among Israeli leaders.

Why deliberately target civilians? Many Israelis consider all the territory between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean to be the God-given “Land of Israel.” Butchering and starving Palestinian noncombatants forces the survivors to flee this land.

“There will be no electricity and no water,” decreed Israeli Major General Ghassan Alain at the outset of the war. “There will only be destruction.” General Giora Eiland added: “Gaza will become a place where no human being can exist.” Eiland said Palestinians should be told, “They have two choices: to stay and to starve, or to leave.”

Last September at the United Nations, Netanyahu himself displayed a map showing “The New Middle East.” The map had no West Bank and no Gaza - only Israel incorporating both. Members of Israel’s cabinet openly call for removing 90% of Palestinians from Gaza and resettling the land with Israelis. And Netanyahu recently told a meeting of his party that he is “looking for countries that are willing to absorb Gazans… we are working on it.”

Israel’s campaign in Gaza fits the legal definition of genocide: Israel is killing or inflicting conditions intended to bring about the destruction of Gazans as a group. But whatever you call it, genocide or ethnic cleansing, deliberate mass murder is part of the project. The Biden administration should reconsider its support for Israel."

"Horror After Horror Laid Bare: Remember Us"

A young girl is treated after being hit in an Israeli air strike in Rafah.
"Horror After Horror Laid Bare: Remember Us"
by Abby Zimet

"In their historic case against "the ongoing slaughter of the people of Gaza,” South Africa opened its presentation at the Hague with what rights experts deemed "chilling" and "devastating" evidence of Israel's genocidal intent in "an exceptionally brutal military campaign" - from vast civilian deaths of mostly women and children to massive infrastructure destruction to looming starvation. A grim reminder: As they spoke, and today, and tomorrow, the atrocities - bolstered by U.S. funds - fester unchecked.

In "compellingly argued and powerfully presented" arguments, South African jurists at the International Court of Justice laid out what the U.K.'s Jeremy Corbyn called "horror after horror, laid out in plain sight for all to see," in their case accusing Israel of violating the landmark Genocide Convention - incongruously enacted the same year Israel was born through the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians. Seeking an emergency order to halt Israel's savage three-month assault on Gaza, South Africa's 84-page filing offered a comprehensive account of "textbook genocide," by definition acts intended "to destroy (a) national, ethnic, racial or religious group." In such a case, intent is critical; fortuitously, the chutzpah of Israeli leaders bent on revenge was on full, damning display. "Let the Prime Minister's words speak for themselves," said attorney Tembeka Ngcukaitobi, who cited nine pages of genocidal statements by Israeli officials, from a Knesset member's vow to "burn Gaza to the ground" to Netanyahu's, "Remember what Amalek has done to you - spare no one." As a result, "The evidence of genocidal intent (is) overwhelming and incontrovertible."

Lawyers also noted that, once Israeli officials "systematically and in explicit terms declared their genocidal intent," their goals were inevitably taken up by soldiers on the ground; evidence of that murderous cycle included unsettling video of IDF soldiers in Gaza dancing and chanting there are "no uninvolved civilians." "What state would admit to genocidal intent?" rhetorically asked one jurist. "Yet the distinctive feature of this case is not silence, but the reiteration and repetition of genocidal speech." At least part of Israel's shameless, bloody audacity, notes Jeremy Scahill, stems from a sense of invincibility born of decades of well-funded complicity by a United States they know will shield them from accountability. "South Africa laid out a meticulous case detailing Israel’s genocidal intent," he writes. "The U.S. supported it all." Given the U.S. role as "ultimate overlord" of Israeli abuses - and its "macabre ritual" of feigning sorrow for the deaths of children while circumventing Congress to expedite them - it was unsurprising, if still shocking, to hear fucking Anthony Blinken blithely dismiss the exhaustively documented charge of Israeli genocide as "meritless." Color us speechless with rage.

Oxfam estimates Israel kills 250 Palestinians a day, including 48 mothers and 118 children, many blown to pieces; Gaza's 90,000-plus dead, wounded, missing make it the deadliest conflict of the century. In wrenching, closing arguments at the Hague, Irish lawyer Blinne Ní Ghrálaigh offered more grievous facts: "Entire multigenerational families obliterated," "huge swaths of Gaza wiped from the map," the daily death of at least 3 medics, 2 teachers, one journalist and UN worker and, every other day, a first responder who's spent months digging dead or wounded from the rubble with bare hands. Each day, 10 children will have one or both legs amputated, often without anaesthetic; more will earn the acronym WCNSF - Wounded Child, No Surviving Family. She ended her speech with two photos of a Gazan hospital whiteboard that health workers, inundated by casualties early in the war, had wiped clean of previously scheduled surgeries. The first image shows a messag written by MSF Dr. Mahmoud Abu Nujaila: "We did what we could. Remember Us"; the second shows the board shattered in an Israeli strike that killed Abu Nujaila and two other doctors.

And still it goes on. CAIR regularly documents Israel's "war crimes of the day": the summary executions of unarmed Palestinians in front of their families,.the shelling of Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital that killed or wounded 40 people, the bulldozing of bodies in cemeteries and medical tents with injured Palestinians inside, the killing of four members of a Red Crescent ambulance crew in Deir al-Balah, the targeted executions of at least 77 journalists including Hamza Al-Dahdouh, 27, son of Al Jazeera's Gaza bureau chief Wael Dahdouh, who's now lost five family members. Mourned Wael of Hamza, "He was the soul of my soul." Hundreds more Gazan civilians have been detained at Israeli "torture camps" for the "crime" of not leaving their homes, which soldiers then burned. In interviews, those released say they were beaten, punched, spat on, electric shocked, burned with cigarettes, tied handcuffed and blindfolded to fences, denied food, water and bathrooms, "treated like chickens or sheep," and "tortured all day." Pleading with IDF soldiers they are innocent civilians, they are told, "You are Hamas. Everyone who remains in Gaza is Hamas."

Since the Oct. 7 Hamas attack, mass arrests, military raids and killings have also soared in the occupied West Bank, where at least 340 Palestinians have died. This week, Israeli forces stormed Tulkarem refugee camp, blasting so indiscriminately into residential areas even a Palestinian fighter called the heavy gunfire "delusional - they assassinate innocents." After IDF soldiers surrounded the al-Kholi family home, video shows a long, loud barrage as six young men try to flee; three are caught and shot dead - Yousef Ali Al-Kholi, 22, Ahed Mousa, 23, and Tareq Shahin, 24. One soldier keeps firing into a still-moving body; then a jeep runs over another body. Relatives called the deaths "assassinations." "The soldiers could have just surrounded and arrested them," said Al-Kholi’s aunt. "The Occupation, they always kill." Al-Kholi’s 12-year-old cousin Ahmad said he hid nearby; he could hear Yousef screaming but "soldiers were everywhere." Once they left, Ahmad went to his body, took off the headband Yousef had given him, and dipped it in his blood "because he is my cousin. I love him. I love him as much as the sea." And yes, he will remember him."
Ahmed al-Kholi wears the bloodied headband of his 
cousin Yousef, 22, killed by Israeli forces in Tulkarem.
o
"The World Should Be Ashamed"
Irish lawyer's stunning speech at The Hague 
accusing Israel of genocide in Gaza.
o
The monsters doing this slaughter aren't even human, they're a psychopathically degenerate, murderously genocidal sub-species of mankind who, like the viciously rabid animals they are, deserve what's coming for them. Look at what they've done, and continue doing! How could anyone possibly deny this? Stipendium peccati mors est, Israel... God damn you to Hell! And YOU, Americans, don't you dare look away from what you, and I and all of us paid for, allowed and supported. That blood's all over our hands, too, to our eternal shame and disgrace. That's my opinion and I don't give a damn who doesn't like it! - CP

Adventures With Danno, "We Have A Massive Problem!"

Adventures With Danno, 1/14/24
"We Have A Massive Problem!"
"We have a massive problem as many food items continue to be recalled 
due to contamination and foreign objects being found in these products."
Comments here:

Greg Hunter, "0% Interest Rates Coming Back When System Implodes "

"0% Interest Rates Coming Back When System Implodes "
by Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com

"Financial writer, market analyst and precious metals expert Craig Hemke says the variables are so numerous it is nearly impossible to predict exactly what is going to happen in 2024. One thing is for sure, the variables are all bad. There is the exploding federal debt, now at $34 trillion. The federal government is on track to increase the debt by a whopping $2 trillion in one year! There are growing global war possibilities in the Middle East, Tiawan and Ukraine. Low unemployment numbers coming out of the BLS are lies hiding a sick economy. Commercial real estate is a tanking mess. Unrealized losses are in the hundreds of billions of dollars sitting at the banks. There is a growing liquidity crisis brewing. CV19 deaths and injuries are exploding with no end in sight. The Southern border is wide open to terrorists wanting to harm America, according to the FBI. This is just the short list of very real potential disasters that could easily strike. Keep in mind, every single one of these could all happen during 2024. Hemke says, “It’s not fixable. It’s just not fixable. It’s such a joke to hear from the politicians that you are going to get this election year. They will say, ‘We have to have a balanced budget. We have to get the federal budget deficit back to pre-Covid levels.’ Yeah, right. Good luck. That’s not going to happen.”

When does it all crash to the ground? Hemke says, “I don’t know. It’s arbitrary. Remember the Jenga game where you stack those cubes and you start pulling them out? You don’t know what will be the last cube you pull out that will topple the whole thing. It’s the same thing. What will be the last trillion dollars that will topple the whole thing. There also may be a confluence of things, like nations saying to the US, ‘the heck with you and your dollar.’ Then we have all these dollars that come home, and we have all these dollars swimming around, and the whole thing implodes so quickly. The parallels in the US in the 2020’s compared to Weimar, Germany in the 1920’s are remarkable, and not just monetarily, also societal and political. The similarities are incredible.”

Hemke has a dark prediction if we get a full-blown war, which is looking like it’s on the way now. Hemke predicts, “The Fed cuts rates to 0% again. If we have a full-blown war and we have terror attacks all over the country that is grinding the US economy to a halt, they will have emergency action. Remember when things were going down in Covid and in March 2020, here comes the Fed with all these programs. They lowered the Fed Funds Rate to 0%. They started all this new QE, and the markets just shot up. Gold was up $100 a day for two days in a row. That’s exactly what they will do. The economy will be seizing up, and we will be back to where we were at the beginning of Covid." There is much more in the 47-minute interview.

Join Greg Hunter on Rumble as he goes One-on-One with 
Craig Hemke of the popular website TFMetalsReport.com.

Saturday, January 13, 2024

The Atlantis Report, "The Banks Know Exactly What's Coming Next, And They're Hiding It"

Full screen recommended.
The Atlantis Report, 1/13/24
"The Banks Know Exactly What's 
Coming Next, And They're Hiding It"
"Behind the polished façade of stability and prosperity, an undercurrent of concern is gaining momentum. As we navigate through the financial landscape, the ominous signs continue. Large and small banks witness consecutive weeks of non-seasonally adjusted deposit inflows while loan volumes spiral downward. This surge in total bank deposits, despite substantial losses in the previous year, prompts a closer examination of the banks' risk-averse behavior."
Comments here:

Jeremiah Babe, "Bank of America On The Brink Of Collapse; Powerful Winter Storms Hit US"

Full screen recommended.
Jeremiah Babe, 1/13/24
"Bank of America On The Brink Of Collapse; 
Powerful Winter Storms Hit US"
Comments here:

"Alert! Massive Attack On Russia; Radioactive Event; Nuke Tests; Blackout; Dire WW3 Warning; Yemen"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 1/13/24
"Alert! Massive Attack On Russia; Radioactive Event;
 Nuke Tests; Blackout; Dire WW3 Warning; Yemen"
Comments here:

Scott Ritter, "IDF Are Just Stupid Kids In Combat Kits, Hamas Will Kill Them All"

Must view! Brutally honest truth...
Full screen recommended.
Scott Ritter, 1/13/24
"IDF Are Just Stupid Kids In Combat Kits, 
Hamas Will Kill Them All"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: 2002, "Return To Freedom"

Full screen recommended.
2002, "Return To Freedom"

Beautiful...

A Rousing Musical Interlude: Outlaws, “Green Grass And High Tides”

Outlaws, “Green Grass And High Tides”
Turn it up! lol

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Big, beautiful spiral galaxy NGC 1055 is a dominant member of a small galaxy group a mere 60 million light-years away toward the aquatically intimidating constellation Cetus. Seen edge-on, the island universe spans over 100,000 light-years, a little larger than our own Milky Way galaxy. The colorful, spiky stars decorating this cosmic portrait of NGC 1055 are in the foreground, well within the Milky Way. But the telltale pinkish star forming regions are scattered through winding dust lanes along the distant galaxy's thin disk.
Click image for larger size.
With a smattering of even more distant background galaxies, the deep image also reveals a boxy halo that extends far above and below the central bulge and disk of NGC 1055. The halo itself is laced with faint, narrow structures, and could represent the mixed and spread out debris from a satellite galaxy disrupted by the larger spiral some 10 billion years ago."
o
"What can we know? What are we all?
Poor silly half-brained things peering out at the infinite,
with the aspirations of angels and the instincts of beasts."
- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

The Poet: Charles Bukowski, "The Laughing Heart"

 

"Middle East Crisis Update, 1/13/24"

Full screen recommended.
OpenmindedThinker Show, 1/13/24
"Panic In Israel: Iron Dome Fails, Massive Explosions 
Destroy Israel’s Oil Rig in Mediterranean Sea"
Comments here:
o
Full screens recommended.
Ray Mcgovern, 1/13/24
"Israel Is Going The Wrong Way As It Genocides Palestinians"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Scott Ritter, 1/13/24
"Hezbollah And Houthis Backed By Iran; 
US-UK And Israel Both Will Lose All Wars"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
"The critical point here is not whether the Zionist State of Israel has calculatedly perpetrated an ongoing and utterly odious genocide in Gaza, as a precursor to their long-planned Gaza Strip Land Grab, it’s that all of the Western military powers have both enabled and encouraged this Palestinian Holocaust. To wit, the United States and United Kingdom are, therefore, unindicted co-conspirators in this unparalleled mass murder of mostly women and children, elderly and infirm."

"I'd Still Swim..."

"If I were dropped out of a plane into the ocean and told
the nearest land was a thousand miles away, I'd still swim.
And I'd despise the one who gave up."
- Abraham Maslow

And don't you ever give up...

Full screen recommended.
Jason Mraz, "I Won't Give Up"

The Daily "Near You?"

Kingman, Arizona, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Joy, Shipmates, Joy"

“Night and day the river flows. If time is the mind of space, the River is the soul of the desert. Brave boatmen come, they go, they die, the voyage flows on forever. We are all canyoneers. We are all passengers on this little mossy ship, this delicate dory sailing round the sun that humans call the earth. Joy, shipmates, joy.”
- Edward Abbey

"What Do You Value?"

"What Do You Value?"
by John Wilder

“I have been in the service of the Vorlons for centuries, looking for you. Diogenes, with his lamp, looking for an honest man, willing to die for all the wrong reasons. At last, my job is finished. Yours is just beginning. When the darkness comes, know this; you are the right people, in the right place, at the right time.” 
– "Babylon 5"

"What is the most common question asked by philosophers nowadays? “Do you want fries with that?” Diogenes is dead. When he was up and kicking around, he lived in a wine barrel at the end of town, and often was caught on the streets stark naked. Sometimes he was, um, enjoying himself. Oddly, he was also thought of as a respected philosopher. When I try to emulate him, though, all I get is a restraining order and some embarrassing YouTube® videos.

The reason we remember Diogenes is for two reasons: First, he invented the chicken nugget, but sadly was unable to invent any tasty dipping sauces. Second, he walked around making pithy little statements like this: “We sell things of great value for things of very little, and vice versa." It’s a very short, and very wickedly to the point piece of advice. Frankly, it points out many of the problems we are facing as a society today.

Let’s take consooming for today’s topic.Billions of dollars are spent attempting to convince people to purchase one product or another. These advertisements are hard to avoid – and they have one thing in common – a desire to get the consoomer to spend money. In some cases, the ads provide the ability to match a need with a product. If I’m cutting down trees using axes and handsaws, knowing that a thing called a chainsaw exists is providing me a real value. So, ads inform.

But ads also are used to create desire in customers, playing on emotions to drive purchase decisions for things that aren’t needs, but frivolities. I have plenty of those! I’m a sucker for some things in particular. In the sitting room (where I’m typing this now) I look around and see a map I bought as artwork a few years ago. It shows all the undersea telegraph cables in around 1871. So very cool! I walked into the store, saw it, and bought it. I consoomed. I can’t cut down a tree with it. I can’t drive it to work. It’s just... there, stuck to my wall.

Is the map of great value? No. It’s a print. It doesn’t make me better, more complete, important, or accomplished. We can look in terms of multiple ways to value things. Dollars are only one. In this case, the picture cost about what I made in about an hour or two. Was it worth an hour of my life to own that map? Yeah, I guess so. But when I start to value objects that I own, and look at how much of my life I traded for them, my equation starts to change.

If I didn’t spend that hour at work, what could I have spent that hour on? How could I have changed my life? Could I have spent more time brushing my teeth, so they were 2.3% brighter? Should I have spent that time waxing my dog? What did I overlook or not spend time on? And which of those things might have been more valuable?

I understand that money is important – those who say that money isn’t important haven’t gone without it. But money isn’t the goal, it’s what can be done with it that’s important. The true currency of our lives isn’t gold, silver, or even PEZ™. It’s time. Each of us on this planet have a finite number of hours left on this rock, and that number goes down by one each hour that we spend. It goes down by one if I spend it at a job I don’t like. It goes down if I spend it writing the best post I’ve ever written. It goes down by one if I’m sleeping. It goes down by one every hour.

Yes, I know, exercising and other positive things might extend that life, but I’m still going to die. In the endless summer of a life when I was, say, 12, I didn’t think much about time and how I spent it. Even then, though, I didn’t try to just “pass the time” since there was so much to do and see and learn in the world. Now as I’m on the back side of life, I can see that those hours I have left cannot be wasted.

They’re all I have. And learning is great, but now it has to have purpose. Will it help me write? Will it help me crack a puzzle that I can share? Will it help me with some project I’m working on? Can it help me change the world?

Again, as I get older, it ceases to be about me. It’s now about what I can do to help others, how I can help make the world a better place. Thankfully, during my career I’ve been able to do work on things that matter, and have made the world a slightly better place. If I’m trading my life for my work, I’m glad that it’s work that matters.

Diogenes? He’s still dead, but he changed the world, just a little bit. And I can, too. And so can you. Time is still all we have, but it’s up to us to make the most of it, each and every day, just like Diogenes showed us. But, I don’t recommend you do it naked. Now, I wonder how Diogenes dealt with the restraining orders?"

"People Cling..."

"People cling to their hates so stubbornly because they sense, 
once hate is gone, they will be forced to deal with pain." 
- James Baldwin

"We Are Witnessing A Tsunami Of Economic Suffering All Over America"

"We Are Witnessing A Tsunami Of 
Economic Suffering All Over America"
by Michael Snyder

"Many among the elite don’t really care that tens of millions of Americans on the bottom of the economic food chain are deeply suffering right now. It is being reported that approximately 93 percent of all stock market wealth held by U.S. households is controlled by the top 10 percent, and the stock market has been performing remarkably well in recent months. As long as their stock portfolios look good, there won’t be too much concern about the economic pain that the masses are experiencing. But they should care, because what we are witnessing is going to deeply affect all of us.

2023 was really tough for much of the country, and many of the economic trends from last year just continue to intensify.

For example, just look at what is happening at food banks all over the nation. At one location in southern California, demand is up almost 60 percent since before the pandemic…"The nonprofit Second Harvest Food Bank of Orange County, which provides food for 400,000 people a month in Orange County, has seen a nearly 60 percent increase in demand since before the pandemic. “If we are really going to help lift people out of poverty, they need fresh food,” Claudia Keller, CEO of Second Harvest Food Bank of Orange County."

At a food bank in the Big Apple, demand has actually doubled since before the pandemic, and now they are being forced to turn people away due to a lack of food…"The shelves at a Bronx food pantry have been bare for the past two weeks as hungry New Yorkers face heightened food insecurity at the beginning of the New Year. The Albanian American Open Hand Association (AAOHA), located in Pelham Parkway, fed around 800 weekly before the pandemic, but that has since doubled to 1,600. For the first time in 10 years, the pantry has been forced to turn people away."

This is something that is going to become increasingly common. From coast to coast, donations are down and food costs are up, and so in the months ahead more desperate Americans that have lined up for hours at food banks around the nation will be told that there is “no food today”…"Food pantry president Alexander Nilaj told The Post Tuesday that he has had to turn them away. “It’s very heartbreaking. People line up at six or seven in the morning,” the 52-year-old said in a phone interview. “We tell them: ‘Don’t wait, we have no food today.’”

Despite all of the happy talk that we are constantly getting from the Biden administration and the mainstream media, the truth is that poverty is exploding and homelessness in the U.S. has been growing at the fastest pace ever recorded…"Homelessness is on the rise in the United States, and it’s growing at a rate never seen before, according to data released Friday by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

The 2023 Annual Homeless Assessment Report shows that more than 653,000 people were experiencing homelessness in the U.S. - marking a 12% increase from 2022. The report uses compiled Point-In-Time Count data - a method that attempts to count every person living homeless one day out of the year - from across the nation to track the ebbs and flows of the nation’s homelessness crisis."

Unfortunately, our economic problems appear to be accelerating. According to the government’s own numbers, the U.S. lost a whopping 1.531 million full-time jobs in December alone. And layoffs continue to be announced at a furious pace here in January.

Earlier today, I was stunned to learn that Pixar has decided to conduct mass layoffs…"Walt Disney’s Pixar Animation Studios is set to cut jobs as the studio has completed production on some shows and now has more staff than it needs, a source familiar with the situation told Reuters on Thursday. TechCrunch reported earlier that Pixar was set to undergo layoffs as high as 20% this year, with the studio’s team of 1,300 people reduced to under 1,000 over the coming months."

Twitch is laying off workers too. In fact, more than a third of their workers will soon be searching for new employment…"Amazon’s livestreaming platform, Twitch, announced it would cut 35% of its workforce in a blog post. “As you all know, we have worked hard over the last year to run our business as sustainably as possible,” wrote Twitch CEO Dan Clancy in a blog post. “Unfortunately, we still have work to do to rightsize our company, and I regret having to share that we are taking the painful step of reducing our headcount by just over 500 people across Twitch.”

Sadly, even Google is laying off workers at this stage. We are being told that “hundreds of staff” are getting the axe…"Google has laid off hundreds of staff across the company as it tries to cut costs and focus on artificial intelligence. The tech titan confirmed the new wave of mass firings on Wednesday night, which employees claimed was more than 1,000 people.

Welcome to 2024. This is going to be such a crazy year. And as more companies lay off workers, large numbers of Americans won’t be able to pay their bills. In fact, credit card delinquency rates at all stages have already surpassed pre-pandemic levels…"More Americans are buckling under the weight of mounting credit card debt. All stages of credit card delinquency (30, 60 and 90 days past due) jumped higher during the third quarter of last year, surpassing pre-pandemic levels for the first time, according to a report released Thursday by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia."

Don’t let anyone tell you that the economy is in good shape. The elite may be doing just fine for the moment, but most of the country is really struggling. Do you remember the tremendous suffering that we witnessed during the Great Recession? Well, what is ahead will be even worse. A giant economic mess has already begun, and 2024 will be even more painful than 2023 was."

"In Retrospect..."

“In retrospect, the spark might seem as ominous as a financial crash, as ordinary as a national election, or as trivial as a Tea Party. The catalyst will unfold according to a basic Crisis dynamic that underlies all of these scenarios: An initial spark will trigger a chain reaction of unyielding responses and further emergencies. The core elements of these scenarios (debt, civic decay, global disorder) will matter more than the details, which the catalyst will juxtapose and connect in some unknowable way. If foreign societies are also entering a Fourth Turning, this could accelerate the chain reaction. At home and abroad, these events will reflect the tearing of the civic fabric at points of extreme vulnerability – problem areas where America will have neglected, denied, or delayed needed action.” 
– "The Fourth Turning", Strauss & Howe

Dan, I Allegedly, "The Scam Was Too Good"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly 1/13/24
"The Scam Was Too Good"
"So many people have been the victim of banking scams. Now we have a celebrity that has been a victim and it’s getting press. But the scam was so good with the way that they handled it. He had no idea that he was losing hundreds of thousands of dollars until it was too late."
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 

Adventures with Danno, "Items At Walmart Everyone Should Be Buying In January 2024!"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures with Danno, 1/13/24
"Items At Walmart Everyone 
Should Be Buying In January 2024!"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Travelling with Russell, 1/13/24
"A Russian Typical Supermarket 
After 700 Days of Sanctions"
"What does a Russia Typical supermarket look like in Moscow, Russia. How does this store compare to where you live? Could you shop in a store like this?"
Comments here: