Thursday, April 18, 2024

Free Download: George Orwell, “1984”

“What opinions the masses hold, or do not hold,
is looked on as a matter of indifference. They can be
granted intellectual liberty because they have no intellect.”

“To know and not to know, to be conscious of complete truthfulness while telling carefully constructed lies, to hold simultaneously two opinions which cancelled out, knowing them to be contradictory and believing in both of them, to use logic against logic, to repudiate morality while laying claim to it, to believe that democracy was impossible and that the Party was the guardian of democracy, to forget whatever it was necessary to forget, then to draw it back into memory again at the moment when it was needed, and then promptly to forget it again: and above all, to apply the same process to the process itself – that was the ultimate subtlety: consciously to induce unconsciousness, and then, once again, to become unconscious of the act of hypnosis you had just performed. Even to understand the word “doublethink” involved the use of doublethink.”
– George Orwell, “1984” (1949)
Freely download “1984″, by George Orwell here:

"The Worst Betrayal..."

“Whether the mask is labeled fascism, democracy, or dictatorship of the proletariat, our great adversary remains the apparatus - the bureaucracy, the police, the military. Not the one facing us across the frontier of the battle lines, which is not so much our enemy as our brothers’ enemy, but the one that calls itself our protector and makes us its slaves. No matter what the circumstances, the worst betrayal will always be to subordinate ourselves to this apparatus and to trample underfoot, in its service, all human values in ourselves and in others.”
- Simone Weil, French philosopher and political activist.

Robert Gore, "Shorting Evil" (Excerpt)

"Shorting Evil"
by Robert Gore

Excerpt: "Evil is in a topping formation. Evil is completely dependent on the good it attempts to destroy. When good discovered fire, invented the wheel, and started planting seeds, evil invented government. Evil produces nothing, it only commands, coerces, enslaves, destroys, and murders. Gigantic tombs loom over Egypt’s desert, built by slaves millennia ago, monuments to rulers’ vanity. A single farmer working the Nile’s alluvial soil produced more than any pharaoh, yet the former had to send a portion of his crop to the latter. Nothing has changed since then. How do the production and lives of the good become the property of evil?

Force, fear, and fraud are the usual answers, but they can’t be the entire answer. Rulers and their military and police forces are always vastly outnumbered by the ruled. Revolts have brought down countless governments. Yet, why have most people down through the ages not revolted but endured the force, fear, and fraud?

The trick is to get the ruled to assign their right in their own lives to the rulers, acting as the purported agent of a collective. If the mass of people accept the proposition that there is a cause or causes greater than themselves, the rest is easy. So, find a greater cause - God, country, fighting evil enemies domestic or foreign, fighting a deadly germ, safety, the common good, the public interest, global warming, global cooling, climate change - the list is endless.

The people will fight wars, pay taxes, comply with every absurd law and regulation, mask up, lockdown, take deadly vaccines, embrace misery, and line up for the concentration camps. Who am I, they might ask, to question, to object, to fight, to revolt? They’ve already answered that question. They’ve surrendered their lives and souls; they are nobodies. Figuratively and perhaps literally, these corpses will join the stack in the ditch or the ashes in the crematorium.

The rulers expertly play their emotions, but what stirs their greatest passion is the occasional odd man or woman out - the ones who refuse to assign their lives to the collective. The nothings burn the somethings at the stake; self-loathing finds its expression in destruction and death.

By a wide margin no person or institution has caused more destruction and death than governments. Evil and governments are joined at the hip, and history’s bloodiest epoch, from World War I right up to today, has also been the epoch of its largest and most totalitarian governments. That’s no coincidence.

That epoch is drawing to its bloody close. Evil finds itself undone by its perpetual nemesis, its inability to produce. Honest income statements for the world would show that production and income are in decline. Honest balance sheets would show that the world is bankrupt, debt far in excess of assets and almost every asset already pledged as collateral, often several times over.

The rapacity of evil knows no limits. Plans are supposedly being made for a Great Taking, which will hoover up much of the world’s book entry claims - or in the lingo of the thieves, subordinated security entitlements - on income and assets. Those entitlements are subordinated to “secured creditors,” the largest participants in the derivatives complex. Imagine losing your stocks to Goldman Sachs. The grim joke is on evil. A Great Taking may well happen - once. Evil will feed itself for a few weeks or months, but just like its victims, it will ultimately own nothing."
Full, most highly recommended article is here:

"Chastity In A Whorehouse..."

"People do not expect to find chastity in a whorehouse. Why, then, do they expect to find honesty and humanity in government, a congeries of institutions whose modus operandi consists of lying, cheating, stealing, and if need be, murdering those who resist?"
- H. L. Mencken

"How It Really Is"

 

Bill Bonner, "The Coming Retirement Income Squeeze"

"The Coming Retirement Income Squeeze"
The average interest rate on US Treasury bonds is near 5%. Priced in gold, the Dow is down 21%. In order to catch up to the December 2021 high, in real terms, the Dow would have to go over 48,000.
by Bill Bonner

“Something will have to give.”
-  IMF warning the US this week about its growing debt.

Dublin, Ireland - "‘Stocks down. Interest rates up.’ That was our message in the autumn of 2020. Amid the falling leaves... and the general gloom of the Covid epidemic... we thought the Primary Trend had shifted.

Music, leaves, lives - there are patterns to everything. A single swallow does not a summer make. But keep your eyes on the flock and you’ll time the seasons. Here in Europe, they migrate to Africa in the winter... and then come back in the Spring. So too, for days, weeks, months... stock market trading seems chaotic. Without rhyme or reason. Maybe an AI program can make sense of it; we can’t. But beneath the surface chop are long patterns that persist over decades.
Click image for larger size.
In July 2020, after 40 years, the interest rate cycle finally hit bottom. The US 10-year Treasury bond yielded all of 52 basis points (0.52 of one percent) - the lowest rate in 500 years. We predicted the obvious; now they would go up!

And if rates were rising, stocks would fall. A year and a half later, they did.

Nothing since then gives us a reason to believe the Primary Trend will not continue - stocks down (inflation adjusted)... interest rates up. Today, the average interest rate on US Treasury bonds is near 5%. Priced in gold, the Dow is down 21%. In order to catch up to the December 2021 high, in real terms, the Dow would have to go over 48,000.
Megapolitics

Meanwhile, there are patterns in political affairs too. Sometimes it is hard to connect the two - finance and politics (a field we call Megapolitics). But the record highs in stocks in 2021 and bonds in 2020 were clearly the product of government policies. Two key policies - debt and war - brought the Dow to over 36,000 and bond yields under 1% (starkly negative when adjusted for inflation).

The stimmies, wars and debts increased, so did consumer prices. And then inflation forced the Fed to abandon its support for the stock and bond markets. Stocks fell. Bond fell too (yields rose). In the stock market, the damage was sharp... but later disguised by inflation. In 2023, prices on Wall Street rose... even though, adjusted for inflation, they were still well below their Dec. 2021 level. Bonds suffered the worst sell-off ever recorded.

But the full impact of the bond market decline has not yet been felt. Pension funds, insurance companies, and banks hold billions in US government bonds. Many were required to buy bonds as “safe” forms of capital reserves. Then, when the bonds lost value, their owners held on... counting them at face value, pledging to hold them to maturity, and pretending that they would not lose money.

This is why there is so much talk of lowering interest rates as soon as possible. There is nothing inherently good about lower interest rates. People pay interest. But they also receive interest on their savings. Interest rates are just information.

But the key players in our financial system - banks, Wall Street and the federal government - all are massive owners and sellers of US bonds. And $7.6 trillion worth of existing US bonds are maturing this year. They need to be refinanced. So do current deficits, bringing the total financing load to nearly $10 trillion.

Bond sellers and refinancers (the borrowers) want lower interest rates. And yet the volume of their borrowing itself naturally drives up interest rates.

When interest rates go up, not only is it harder for them to borrow more money, the value of their bond holdings also goes down. The banks are said to be holding more than $600 billion in unrealized losses on their bond portfolios.

The feds themselves - including the Fed - are the largest holders of US Treasury debt. Total US debt is now over $34 trillion. About $25 trillion of it is in the hands of the public. The rest - $9 trillion - is held by US government agencies.

Squeezing Social Security: The Social Security trust account, for example, has about $2.8 trillion in US bonds. As those bonds lose value to inflation, Social Security gets squeezed on both sides at once. Its outflow - payments to retirees - are adjusted to inflation, but its Treasury bonds are not. The feds then need to raise more money to cover the shortfall in their reserves. This requires more borrowing... which pushes interest rates higher.

Meanwhile, more and more people are retiring... putting further pressure on US government finances. Retired people spend. They depend on Social Security and Obamacare.

This pattern of fiscal and monetary policies tracks the Primary Trend patterns of the markets. Fed policies - notably, extremely low interest rates - tricked up the stock and bond markets to extreme highs. Now... over the decades ahead... their policies - war and debt - will likely push them to extreme lows. Stay tuned."

Market Note, by Dan Denning: "Social Security began running a deficit (paying out more in benefits than it's taking in through taxes and other sources) a few years ago. It was a dangerous ‘cross over’ point. Regular deficits would eventually mean reducing the size of the Trust fund to pay benefits.

The most recent report from the Trustees who manage Social Security was published in November of last year. It says that without any changes, and under current projections, the Trust fund would be depleted by 2034. Or, that benefits will have to be cut to 80% of the expected level to correspond with insufficient FICA tax receipts and interest income.

Before you panic, the same situation happened in 1983. The deckchairs were arranged by Congress to allow the various Trust funds to fund each other in the event one was running a deficit. And immediate crisis averted. And 83 million Baby Boomers were years from retiring anyway. But long-term?
Click image for larger size.
Social Security benefits could always be paid out of a direct transfer of cash from the Treasury to beneficiaries. This would be wildly inflationary, of course, printing money to pay old age pensions. And even before that, taxes on benefits could be increased to generate more income.

More likely is that long before drastic measures are required, the Social Security Trust Fund will be be forced to start selling its $2.8 trillion Treasury stockpile that Bill mentions above (see chart). It won't be a buyer anymore. Without annual surpluses, the Trust fund won’t be able to buy any of that debt Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has to sell to fund annual US deficits and refinance our $34 trillion in debt.

It's not exactly the family silver. Or even the National Silver (or National Treasure). But when the Trust fund has to sell assets to pay benefits, the clock is ticking on US government finances. All of this raises the issue of having enough retirement income to beat inflation in retirement. It’s a problem we have front and center in 2024 and beyond."
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"The 'Everything Bubble' Expressed in Terms of Gold"
by Tom Dyson

"The Dow/Gold ratio made a new three-and-a-half-year low Monday... it’s now at 15.82. Meaning, it will take you roughly 15 ounces of gold to buy the DJIA. For new readers, a falling Dow/Gold ratio shows gold is beating stocks. The Institute of International Finance tracks the size of the global debt pile. It recently published the figure for 2023. Its finding? In 2023, the global debt pile increased by more than $15 trillion, reaching a new record high of $313 trillion. For every dollar of this debt, there’s also an over-inflated asset somewhere backing it.

What if Earth itself were a single financial entity? Would all these highly valued assets and debts mean Earth Corp. was getting more valuable? The human race works hard every day, building stuff and improving stuff. And the efficiency of our labor goes up slowly over time. So we’re definitely accumulating some real wealth.

But for years, the Fed and other central banks kindled a gargantuan credit inflation by motivating speculators with all kinds of crazy incentives and reassuring them with all kinds of safety nets. And then they printed reserves to make sure it was easy for speculators to write new debts. The rising market value of assets and debts has far outpaced any real value creation or output. This chart shows this phenomenon in the US. Here’s wealth charted against GDP, indexed to 1950 and using a log scale.
Click image for larger size.
A hundred trillion here... a hundred trillion there... these debt and asset values all just look like mountains of overpriced paper to me. If this is true – that it’s all just been massive credit inflation – the forces of debt deflation must now be immense.

Our core position is that asset prices have to collapse, and much of the attached debt will need to be written off and erased. History is pretty clear about this. All credit bubbles deflate and asset valuations return to “fair” and then “cheap.” It’s how nature restores equilibrium. We call the adjustment that’s coming “The Big Loss.”

The critical insight is this: the Big Loss in stocks will occur in terms of gold. A debt deflation... priced in gold. So when you see the price of gold rising on your screen this week, don’t think “gold is going up.” Instead think “the Everything Bubble is deflating” because that’s exactly what’s happening. The world’s pile of debt and equity is deflating... in gold terms. This is why we watch the Dow and other asset prices exclusively in terms of gold. And why we’re recommending such a large allocation to precious metals in our asset allocation model.

This bubble has already started to collapse five times – in 2000, in 2008, in 2018, in 2020 and in 2022 – and each time they doubled down with huge new incentives to speculate and other stimulus to re-inflate the bubble.

Now it’s the most patched-up, bolted-on credit bubble in history... a true mutant. We must be close to another debt bubble zenith. So it goes..."

Adventures With Danno, "Items At Kroger Everyone Should Be Buying Right Now!"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, AM 4/18/24
"Items At Kroger Everyone Should Be Buying Right Now!"
Comments here:

Dan, I Allegedly, "Proof People Are Not Paying"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 4/18/24
"Proof People Are Not Paying"
"We just heard from Bank of America that defaults on credit cards are rising. It was pretty warm. This is proof that people are not paying their bills. Plus, there’s a ton of their business news in this video. Elon Musk wants a $56 billion payday and we hit $3000 an ounce. Plus much more."
Comments here:

Gregory Mannarino, "Is A Stock Market Crash Imminent?"

Gregory Mannarino, AM 4/18/24
"Is A Stock Market Crash Imminent?"
Comments here:

Greg Hunter, "Driving America Into a Brick Wall "

"Driving America Into a Brick Wall "
By Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com

"Back in February, when everyone was predicting a Fed rate cut, precious metals expert and financial writer Bill Holter said rates would be going up and not down. Since that call, the 10-Year Treasury is up more than 30 basis points. It closed today at 4.67%. Now, Holter is still calling for higher interest rates that will coincide with higher gold and silver prices. Why? It’s called inflation, and it’s not temporary. Holter explains, “Foreigners are backing away from buying Treasuries. That is the only thing that has kept the doors open, so to speak, is the fact we are able to borrow an unlimited amount of money because we are the world reserve currency. Foreigners backing away from our debt is going to lead the Federal Reserve to be the buyer of last, and then, only resort. So, you will have direct monetization between the Fed and the Treasury. What that will cause is a currency that declines in purchasing power. It will decline in a big way, and it will decline rapidly. So, what I am describing is inflation that turns into hyperinflation.”

But that is not the end of our problems. Holter points out, “I do think it is going to get worse, and that means interest rates will go higher, and that will put on much more pressure. We are at 4.65% on the 10-Year Treasury now. We went from 3.75% to 4.65% (in a short amount of time). We run through 5% on the 10-year Treasury, and everything blows up. The bottom line here is we are at the end game of a fiat currency. Young people have never experienced high inflation. Where we are this time around, Paul Volker (Fed Head in 1979) was able to raise rates to 16% or 17% and crush inflation. He was able to do that because there was not a ton of debt. The U.S. debt back in 1980 was 35% of GDP. Now, it is 125% plus debt to GDP. If you raise rates to 6% to 8%, you will blow up the entire system because much of this debt was put on during the 1% to 3% interest rate time. The inflation is going to push rates higher no matter what the Fed says.”

Gold is hitting one new record high after another. It’s not greed, but fear, and Holter says, “Big money is buying gold because they are looking for protection.” The other wild card is war, and Holter says, “War is a way to keep the system propped up.”

In closing, Holter contends, what you are seeing is not a series of mistakes by incompetent people. Holter says, “This is too stupid for it not to be the plan. This is not a Republican or Democrat thing. We are being steered directly into a brick wall because the globalists can’t take over the world with the US standing. They have to take the US down, and if they take the US down, so will the western financial system fall. If that happens, the globalists can have their way.”

Join Greg Hunter on Rumble as he goes One-on-One 
with financial writer and precious metals expert Bill Holter.

"Gerald Celente: World War Three Has Already Begun"

George Galloway MP, 4/18/24
"Gerald Celente: World War Three Has Already Begun"
"The world went to war in February ’22, they just didn’t admit it. Israel will inevitably retaliate, like a dog with a prostate problem, and WW3 will then escalate."
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Wednesday, April 17, 2024

Canadian Prepper, "It's Quiet, Too Quiet; Emergency Action Messages"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 4/17/24
"It's Quiet, Too Quiet; Emergency Action Messages"
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Jeremiah Babe, "Most People Will Be Dead Broke By 2025"

Jeremiah Babe, 4/17/24
"Most People Will Be Dead Broke By 2025; 
Student Loan Debt Is Now Your Debt"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Logos, "Cheminement"

Full screen recommended.
Logos, "Cheminement"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“The constellation of Orion holds much more than three stars in a row. A deep exposure shows everything from dark nebula to star clusters, all embedded in an extended patch of gaseous wisps in the greater Orion Molecular Cloud Complex. The brightest three stars on the far left are indeed the famous three stars that make up the belt of Orion. Just below Alnitak, the lowest of the three belt stars, is the Flame Nebula, glowing with excited hydrogen gas and immersed in filaments of dark brown dust.
Below the frame center and just to the right of Alnitak lies the Horsehead Nebula, a dark indentation of dense dust that has perhaps the most recognized nebular shapes on the sky. On the upper right lies M42, the Orion Nebula, an energetic caldron of tumultuous gas, visible to the unaided eye, that is giving birth to a new open cluster of stars. Immediately to the left of M42 is a prominent bluish reflection nebula sometimes called the Running Man that houses many bright blue stars. The above image, a digitally stitched composite taken over several nights, covers an area with objects that are roughly 1,500 light years away and spans about 75 light years.”
"Perhaps they are not stars, but rather openings in
heaven where the love of our lost ones pours
through and shines down upon us to let us know they are happy."
~ Eskimo saying.

Chet Raymo, “To Sleep, Perchance To Dream”

“To Sleep, Perchance To Dream”
by Chet Raymo

“What is more gentle than a wind in summer?
What is more soothing than a pretty hummer
That stays one moment in an open flower,
And buzzes cheerily from bower to bower?
What is more tranquil than a musk-rose blowing
In a green island, far from all men's knowing?
More healthful than the leafiness of dales?
More secret than a nest of nightingales?”

"What indeed? The poet Keats answers his own questions: Sleep. Soft closer of our eyes. I've reached an age when I find myself occasionally nodding off in the middle of the day, an open book flopped on my chest. Also, more lying awake in the dark hours of the night, re-running the tapes of the day. And, in the fragile moments of nighttime unconsciousness, dreaming dreams that reach all the way back to my childhood.

I've read the books about sleep and dreaming. There has been lots of research, but not much consensus about why we sleep or dream. Sleep seems to be pretty universal among animals. Who knows whether animals dream. Do we sleep to restore the soma? To knit the raveled sleeve of care? Process memories? Find safety from predators? After 50 years of work, the sleep researcher William Dement opined: "As far as I know, the only reason we need to sleep that is really, really solid is because we get sleepy."

The Latin poet Martial supposed that sleep "makes darkness brief," a worry-free way to get through the scary hours of the night when wolves howl at the mouth of the cave (and goblins stir under the bed). That hardly explains my dropping off after lunch into a dreamless stupor that I neither desire nor welcome.

“Low murmurer of tender lullabies!
Light hoverer around our happy pillows!
Wreather of poppy buds, and weeping willows!”

Not quite! There are the nightmares too. The tossing and turning. The hoo-has. But enough of this idle speculation. I'm getting sleepy...”

"A Perpetual Illusion..."

"Human life is thus only a perpetual illusion; men deceive and flatter each other. No one speaks of us in our presence as he does of us in our absence. Human society is founded on mutual deceit; few friendships would endure if each knew what his friend said of him in his absence, although he then spoke in sincerity and without passion. Man is then only disguise, falsehood, and hypocrisy, both in himself and in regard to others. He does not wish any one to tell him the truth; he avoids telling it to others, and all these dispositions, so removed from justice and reason, have a natural root in his heart."
- Blaise Pascal

Viktor Frankl, "Life Changing Quotes"

Full screen recommended.
Viktor Frankl, "Life Changing Quotes"
 ("Man's Search For Meaning")
"Viktor Emil Frankl was an Austrian neurologist and psychiatrist as well as a Holocaust survivor. Frankl was the founder of the logotherapy method and is most notable for his best-selling book Man's Search for Meaning."
Freely download "Mans Search For Meaning", by Viktor Frankl, here:
Highest recommendation:

"The Great Thing..."

"The great thing about the internet is that you get to meet people you
would otherwise only meet if you were committed to the same asylum."
- Robert Brault

"We Do Choose..."

"All men and women are born, live suffer and die; what distinguishes us one from another is our dreams, whether they be dreams about worldly or unworldly things, and what we do to make them come about... We do not choose to be born. We do not choose our parents. We do not choose our historical epoch, the country of our birth, or the immediate circumstances of our upbringing. We do not, most of us, choose to die; nor do we choose the time and conditions of our death. But within this realm of choicelessness, we do choose how we live."
- Joseph Epstein
"George Harrison knew something most of us didn't and still don't: there is a reality beyond the material world and what we do here and how we treat others affects us eternally. As he sings in "Rising Sun":
"But in the rising sun you can feel your life begin,
Universe at play inside your DNA.
You're a billion years old today.
Oh the rising sun and the place it's coming from
Is inside of you and now your payment's overdue."
Lyrics here:
"Death twitches my ear. 'Live," he says, 'I am coming.'"
~ Virgil (Publius Vergilius Maro)

The Daily "Near You?"

Ottawa, Illinois, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Here And Now..."

"That we can never know," answered the wolf angrily. "That's for the future. But what we can know is the importance of what we owe to the present. Here and now, and nowhere else. For nothing else exists, except in our minds. What we owe to ourselves, and to those we're bound to. And we can at least hope to make a better future, for everything."
- David Clement Davies

"The Most Honest Three Minutes In Television History"

Strong language alert!
Full screen recommended.
"The Most Honest Three Minutes In Television History"
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"Total Defeat: Israeli Media Say Israel Is Beaten & Terrified Of Iran"

Full screen recommended.
by KernowDamo, 4/17/24
"Total Defeat: Israeli Media Say
 Israel Is Beaten & Terrified Of Iran"

"At least two mainstream Israeli publications have outlined how breathakingly screwed their own government is over Gaza and Iran. This is an interesting story, not only because it nails on just how breathtakingly ruined Israel is reputationally, militarily and internationally, but because this comes from an Israeli news source, the Israeli version of the Guardian, Haaretz, using Benjamin Netanyahu’s oft used ‘Total Victory’ phrase against him in an article headlined ‘Total Defeat.’ If Bibi was fed up with Haaretz before, with threats to shut them down, this story will have him climbing the walls, but there is so much to agree with in it. There really is no way out of this that will restore Israel’s standing on the world stage and any nations associating with them, defending them and expressing their loyalty towards them are only damaging their own reputations at the same time. You can take a stand for what is right and finally deal with this appalling administration, or you can go down with them in Total Defeat.

So Israel is facing Total Defeat according to Haaretz newspaper and an op-ed article written by Chaim Levinson and this article, "Saying What Can't Be Said: Israel Has Been Defeated – a Total Defeat" is anything but pro Hamas, but definitely anti-Netanyahu and puts a large amount of the focus on him and the bats**t coalition regime he has assembled about him as the reason for it as this excerpt shows:

"After half a year, we could have been in a totally different place, but we're being held hostage by the worst leadership in the country's history – and a decent contender for the title of worst leadership anywhere, ever. Every military undertaking is supposed to have a diplomatic exit – the military action should lead to a better diplomatic reality. Israel has no diplomatic exit.

It has a scoundrel for a leader, someone with no capacity for leadership or decision-making, a person who loses his sense of good judgment over a free cigar. Yet the electorate put its faith in the current prime minister to the tune of 32 Knesset seats." Caustic description but true and I daresay many of us would be significantly less polite about Netanyahu here.

Reputationally, Israel has gone from playing the world’s biggest professional victims, a nation so many sympathized with, that uses antisemitism to get whatever it wants, arguing it is racist to oppose them doing what they like and people being too afraid of being labelled as such to disagree, to now being seen as a global pariah state, having been attacked by Hamas and having hostages taken, to now no longer being seen as the victim but the aggressor and instigator of genocide against the entire population of the Gaza Strip and not just Hamas. That isn’t a genie that is going to go back in its bottle, frankly there is no way back from that with the eyes of the world having been opened to save for the government of Netanyahu to fall, Netanyahu and his cabinet being brought up on war crimes as I think they should be and the withdrawal of Israel from the Occupied Palestinian Territories with borders being redrawn at least on 1967 lines."
Comments here:

Adventures With Danno, "Cinnamon 'Lead Poisoning' Outbreak!"

Adventures With Danno, 4/17/24
"Cinnamon 'Lead Poisoning' Outbreak!"
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 

"Where All the Time Went"

"Where All the Time Went"
by David Cain

"Time always feels like it’s speeding up, but you might feel like time has been going exceptionally quickly these past few years. The first few days of a new month quickly become the 11th, then the next day it’s the 23rd, and then your credit card is due and it’s a new month again. It might also be hard to remember, when people ask, what you did with those weeks and months. “Oh, I’ve just been, uh, working and stuff, I guess” you might say, when you bump into an acquaintance at the grocery store.

For some of us, the 2020s have also come with a certain lingering mental fog, or poor memory, which is another reason it can be hard to generate an interesting report about what you’ve been up to. Naturally I have a theory about this, maybe even a cure. The hypothesis I’m about to share is not entirely crackpot -  there is some scientific evidence behind this, but I’m mostly going off of my own intuitions here. Tell me what you think.

Basically, I believe the time acceleration and mental fog are mostly symptoms of the same problem: a lack of a certain life ingredient that suddenly became rare, virtually overnight, about four years ago. This ingredient is much more available now than it was then, so the problem can be remedied, but you do have to go out and get it.

As I write this, we just passed the four-year mark since the coronavirus pandemic blew everything up, beginning on that surreal week in March 2020 when they canceled the NBA season and told us to immediately stop touching our faces. In the following days there were mass closures, layoffs, and drastic new rules for everything. Each day of that month there was a new development, and each day our lives changed. As many have said, it felt like the longest month in history. Then the “new normal” set in, and the pages started flying off the calendar. The next four years went by in what felt (to me at least) like about eighteen months, and here we are.

People have always remarked that time seems to speed up as you age, which I’ve written about before. The sense of time accelerating is usually explained away with the idea of proportionality - a year to a one-year old is a lifetime, while to a centenarian it’s 1% of a lifetime.

I don’t buy that explanation. Time’s apparent “speed” changes with conditions, as we’ve all experienced. A week spent in a foreign city feels much longer than a routine week spent at home. In an unfamiliar place everything is novel, so it has to be engaged with more care and attention. In order just to manage everyday tasks, such as buying lunch or crossing the street, your mind has to do a lot more than it does at home. More details must be noticed, evaluated, and marked by memory for later. Less of what you experience can be navigated by habit or reflex, so you can’t spend much of your day preoccupied with your familiar and repetitive thoughts. Such a week simply can’t pass by unnoticed and unremembered.

In other words, periods of time that contain more novelty and variety pass slower and leave bigger, brighter memories. That’s why the more “foreign” the destination city is, the longer a one-week visit feels. An American tourist could walk down Dundas Street in Toronto while entirely preoccupied with their usual thoughts about home and work, remembering little of the experience; walking down Bangkok’s Khao-San Road while barely noticing it would be almost impossible.

The reason time seems to speed up over the years is that novelty naturally declines as we age. Life’s elements become increasingly familiar and routinized. You take fewer risks, become less adventurous, move house less often, change jobs less, meet fewer people, stay home more, and so on.

You can probably see where I’m going with this. When the pandemic emergency was declared, we were at first catapulted into the unfamiliar. Over only a few weeks, we had to adopt all new ways of living, working, socializing, sanitizing, entertaining ourselves, and thinking about the world. That few weeks felt very long and was very memorable. This is what happens when novelty spikes.

After that, novelty plummeted. Lockdown quickly made life very samey. There was so much less we could do, physically and legally. We interacted with fewer people, moved around less, and canceled new endeavors. We stayed much closer to home, in every sense.

For some of us, this sameyness came along with a certain mental fog: cognitive dullness and poor memory. People have suggested many explanations for it: too much screen time, additional stress, long-term effects of the virus itself, culture-war-induced despair, lack of exercise, and others.

It might be partly those things, but I suspect much of it is just what happens when variety and novelty disappear from life. A mind that is essentially being prevented from encountering new people, spaces, and sensory experiences isn’t going to remain at its sharpest. Under my pet theory, as the variety and novelty of day-to-day experience go down, mental sharpness declines with them, while time seems to speed up. If you graphed the last five years of this phenomenon, it might look like this:
My layperson’s grasp of the science behind this relationship is that novel experiences induce dopamine release into the hippocampus, which triggers the formation of memories. That makes evolutionary sense: if you discover something useful, like the location of a food source, you want to remember it.

There are two kinds of memories, however: semantic memories and episodic memories. Semantic memories are about factual information. Reference material. What color grass is, what temperature paper ignites at, what the flag of Italy looks like. This is information anyone could know, and exchange with others.

Episodic memories are the autobiographical ones, and they’re stored in a different place in the brain. These memories concern what happened in your life, as it relates to you: that you rode a gondola in Venice, that you gave birth to a baby girl, that you studied ancient languages, that you once saw James Gandolfini at a restaurant.

According to the study linked above, episodic memories form as a result of distinctly novel experiences — ones that “bear minimal resemblance to past experiences.” When the mind encounters a whole new category of experience like this — as a result of trying rock climbing, meeting new people, or walking unfamiliar streets — it encodes a lot of new information, and changes something about who you feel like you are. It adds to your story. You now feel like a person who has climbed granite slabs, knows Wendy G, and ate street food from a paper cone in Bangkok.

If you’re living a more routine and constrained life than you did five years ago, perhaps absorbing a lot of content and information but having fewer distinctly unfamiliar experiences, you’ve probably been forming fewer episodic memories. Consequently, life during that time might seem thinner and less significant in retrospect. It will seem to have gone by faster, and will be harder to recall. It might seem like you just got older and little else changed.

Most of us probably still haven’t made it back to pre-pandemic levels of novel experience. For many people, life got permanently smaller and less varied, with a smaller social circle, fewer events attended, less travel, less going out, less genuinely new material encountered by the mind. You may have become more cautious, more routinized, more of a homebody, and stayed that way. I know people that haven’t even gone to a restaurant in four years.

The remedy then, if you feel like time’s going too fast and the mind is foggy, is to try to get the variety level back to where it was, or as close to it as you can. That could mean reconnecting with some people, meeting new people, attending events, traveling, moving stalled projects forward, or taking on entirely new ones. Anything but the same things you’ve been doing.If my hunch is right, you just need to get life back to a state where new experiences happen regularly again, and then the weeks and months will be unable to slip by unnoticed."

The Poet: Henry Austin Dobson, “The Paradox Of Time”

“Time passes in moments. Moments which, rushing past, define the path of a life, just as surely as they lead towards its end. How rarely do we stop to examine that path, to see the reasons why all things happen? To consider whether the path we take in life is our own making, or simply one into which we drift with eyes closed? But what if we could stop, pause to take stock of each precious moment before it passes? Might we then see the endless forks in the road that have shaped a life? And, seeing those choices, choose another path?”
- Gillian Anderson as Dana Scully, “The X-Files”
o
“The Paradox Of Time”

"Time goes, you say? – ah no!
Ours is the eyes’ deceit
Of men whose flying feet
Lead through some landscape low;
We pass, and think we see
The earth’s fixed surface flee:-
Alas, Time stays, – we go!

Once in the days of old,
Your locks were curling gold,
And mine had shamed the crow.
Now, in the self-same stage,
We’ve reached the silver age;
Time goes, you say? – ah no!

Once, when my voice was strong,
I filled the woods with song
To praise your ‘rose’ and ‘snow’;
My bird, that sang, is dead;
Where are your roses fled?
Alas, Time stays, – we go!

See, in what traversed ways,
What backward Fate delays
The hopes we used to know;
Where are our old desires?-
Ah, where those vanished fires?
Time goes, you say? – ah no!

How far, how far, O Sweet,
The past behind our feet
Lies in the even-glow!
Now, on the forward way,
Let us fold hands, and pray;
Alas, Time stays, – we go!”

- Henry Austin Dobson
o
Full screen recommended.
Hans Zimmer, "Time"

"For This Is What We Do..."

"What keeps you going isn't some fine destination but just the road you're on, and the fact that you know how to drive. You keep your eyes open, you see this damned-to-hell world you got born into, and you ask yourself, 'What life can I live that will let me breathe in and out and love somebody or something and not run off screaming into the woods?'"
- Barbara Kingsolver
o
“For this is what we do. Put one foot forward and then the other. Lift our eyes to the snarl and smile of the world once more. Think. Act. Feel. Add our little consequence to the tides of good and evil that flood and drain the world. Drag our shadowed crosses into the hope of another night. Push our brave hearts into the promise of a new day. With love: the passionate search for truth other than our own. With longing: the pure, ineffable yearning to be saved. For so long as fate keeps waiting, we live on. God help us. God forgive us. We live on.”
- Gregory David Roberts, “Shantaram”
o
Justin Hayward, "Doin' Time"

"This Is The Weapon That Is Being Used To Destroy America’s Middle Class"

"This Is The Weapon That Is Being Used 
To Destroy America’s Middle Class"
by Michael Snyder

"The middle class in the United States has been steadily shrinking, and the gap between the ultra-wealthy and the rest of us has grown to absurd proportions. But it wasn’t always this way. When I was growing up in the 1980s, it seemed like almost everyone was middle class. Of course there were wealthy people and poor people in the 1980s too, but the vast majority of the population was comfortably somewhere in the middle. Sadly, things have changed so much since that time. Today, most of the people that I know are struggling. According to a report that was just released, in all 50 states it now takes an income of more than $100,000 in order for a family of four to live “the American Dream”…

"A new report from GOBankingRates used that framework to analyze how much money a family of two adults and two children would need in each state to own a home, a car and a pet. The report tallied estimated annual essential expenses for such a family and then doubled that figure. Using that framework, GoBankingRates found that all 50 states require more than a $100,000 annual income, according to the report, with 38 states needing more than $140,000."

Is your family bringing in more than $100,000 a year? If not, “the American Dream” is not for you. Sorry. Our leaders purposely pursued policies that they knew would cause inflation, and when new money enters the system most of it tends to flow into the hands of those at the top of the economic food chain. So the ultra-wealthy have been doing very well in this economic environment, but high inflation is absolutely eviscerating all the rest of us.

At this point, it takes the average U.S. household an extra $1,069 per month just to purchase the same goods and services that it did three years ago…"Inflation is once again gaining steam, forcing the average American to shell out a lot more money for everyday necessities. The typical U.S. household needed to pay $227 more a month in March to purchase the same goods and services it did one year ago because of still-high inflation, according to calculations from Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi shared with FOX Business. Americans are paying on average $784 more each month compared with the same time two years ago and $1,069 more compared with three years ago, before the inflation crisis began."

What we are witnessing is the collapse of the middle class. The cost of living has been rising faster than incomes have been, and that is putting an extraordinary amount of financial stress on U.S. households. For example, the cost of auto insurance has risen more than 22 percent over the past 12 months…"The cost of auto insurance rose 2.6% in March, bringing the total annual gain to 22.2% - the fastest yearly rate on record. When compared with the beginning of 2021, before the inflation crisis began, motor vehicle insurance is more than 50% more expensive."

Housing costs have been increasing at an even faster pace. If you can believe it, the average monthly mortgage payment on a newly purchased home has risen by 96 percent in just four years…"The real estate firm Zillow reports that since January 2020, the monthly mortgage payment on a typical U.S. home has nearly doubled. It’s up 96% in just four years. According to Zillow, a typical buyer will now pay nearly $2,200 a month, with a 10% down payment. Meaning, homeownership now costs well above the 30% of median income that was once thought to equate to “affordable” housing cost in America." Home ownership is now out of reach for a huge chunk of the population.

Needless to say, that isn’t a good thing. Why aren’t the American people more upset about all of this? In a desperate attempt to maintain a middle class standard of living, many Americans are piling up enormous amounts of debt. According to CNBC, some economists believe “that debt growth has become a substitution for income growth”…

"Economists have suggested that debt growth has become a substitution for income growth. Student loan debt reached an all-time high of $1.77 trillion in the first quarter of 2023 and Americans collectively owe $1.13 trillion on their credit cards as of the fourth quarter of 2023. This debt can have a ripple effect, especially when entire generations are starting their adulthoods with thousands of dollars in debt."

In many cases, people that have greatly overextended themselves now find themselves absolutely drowning in debt. One 28-year-old woman that purchased a Chevy Tahoe three years ago still owed $74,000 to GM Financial and was eventually forced to sell the vehicle…"Three years ago, 28-year-old Blaisey Arnold entered a local auto dealership and came away with the keys to an $84,000 Chevy Tahoe. But this month, the wedding photographer and mother shared a video to TikTok describing how she was forced to sell her dream car. Despite paying $1,400 a month in payments totaling more than $50,000, she still owes a balance of $74,000 to her lender – GM Financial."

Can you believe that? Of course she is far from alone. At this point, millions upon millions of Americans have gotten into trouble with debt, and credit card delinquency rates have risen to unprecedented levels…"Delinquency rates among American credit card holders are at an all-time high, while at the same time a record number of “active accounts” have “a balance of over $2,000,” according to a Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia report."

If Americans really understood what our politicians in Washington and the “experts” at the Federal Reserve were doing to us, there would be massive protests in the streets right now.These days, a lot of Americans that had actually retired are now heading back to work due to the rapidly rising cost of living. Hope Murray is one of those people…"Hope Murray retired in 2013 after a 50-year career that ranged from game show producer to Hollywood party planner to casino executive. She settled into a life of golf, game nights and pickleball in her San Diego community, her daughter living nearby. Then things got more expensive. Gas was nearly $5 a gallon, medication costs were adding up, the grocery bill was increasing."

Can you imagine going back to work when you are 80 years old? That is what she had to do, and now she spends her retirement years handing out samples at Costco…"So last October, at the age of 80, Murray ended her retirement and got a job giving out samples at Costco. She likes observing the people – some go grocery shopping in heels and a full face of makeup and others wear pajamas and slippers. Some people take one sample and others gobble three or four. “It just comes into my checking account every other week, and I can pay for everything,” she said of her $18-an-hour paycheck."

In recent months, prices have started to surge once again. It has become clear that the cost of living crisis is not going away any time soon. The middle class in the United States is going to continue to shrink, and that is not good news for any of us."