Wednesday, June 28, 2023

"What The World Needs Now"

"In this difficult day, in this difficult time for the United States, it is perhaps well to ask what kind of a nation we are and what direction we want to move in. You can be filled with bitterness, with hatred, and a desire for revenge. We can move in that direction as a country, in great polarization and filled with hatred toward one another. Or we can make an effort to understand and to comprehend, and to replace that violence, that stain of bloodshed that has spread across our land, with an effort to understand with compassion and love. What we need in the United States is not division; what we need in the United States is not hatred; what we need in the United States is not violence or lawlessness; but love and wisdom, and compassion toward one another, and a feeling of justice toward those who still suffer within our country, whether they be white or they be black."
- Robert F. Kennedy, on the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.
Full screen recommended.
"What The World Needs Now"
by Tom Clay
"Detroit DJ brought this out early in 1973 and it was seen as
a celebration of the message behind that spread
by John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr. and Bobby Kennedy."

"This Is Your Life..."

“This is your life, and it's ending one minute at a time.
Every breath is a choice.
Every minute is a choice.
To be or not to be.
Every time you don't throw yourself down the stairs, that's a choice.
Every time you don't crash your car, you re-enlist.
If death meant just leaving the stage long enough to change costume
and come back as a new character...Would you slow down? Or speed up?"
- Chuck Palahniuk
"If you were going to die soon and had only one phone call you could make,
who would you call and what would you say? And why are you waiting?"
- Stephen Levine

"We Don't Have A Clue..."

We don’t have a clue what’s really going down, we just kid ourselves that we’re in control of our lives while a paper’s thickness away things that would drive us mad if we thought about them for too long play with us, and move us around from room to room, and put us away at night when they’re tired, or bored.”
- Neil Gaiman

The Daily "Near You?"

Frisco, Texas, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

Col. Doug Macgregor, "The Russian Army Has Finished It"

Col. Doug Macgregor, 6/28/23
"The Russian Army Has Finished It"
"Analysis of breaking news and in-depth discussion of current
 geopolitical events in the United States of America and the world."
Comments here:

"This Is Actually Terrifying"

"This Is Actually Terrifying"
by Jim Richards

"The “coup” in Russia is over but there’s a very worrying development going on in Ukraine right now that should frighten everyone. That’s the growing risk of a nuclear war. I’m not being hyperbolic. Let’s break it all down…

President Biden is accusing Russian President Vladimir Putin of preparing to use tactical nuclear weapons in Ukraine. The theory is that if Russia is in danger of military collapse in Ukraine, Putin will resort to the use of tactical nuclear weapons out of desperation. But you can basically rule that out because Russia isn’t losing the war in Ukraine. In fact, it’s winning the war and continues to gain momentum. Russia is crushing the much-anticipated Ukrainian offensive and is either advancing or holding the line in other sectors.

Meanwhile, Russian arms factories are churning out massive amounts of weapons and ammunition while the West is scraping the bottom of the barrel to find enough weapons and ammo to send to Ukraine. It’s a war of attrition and there’s no practical way that Ukraine can win that war. So why would Putin need to use nuclear weapons? The answer, of course, is that he wouldn’t. He’s winning the war.

Nuclear Swordsmanship: But such warnings about Putin using nuclear weapons are not new. Biden has been accusing Russia of threatening to use nuclear weapons since the start of the war last February. Some perspective is needed to assess this claim. For the record, the United States is the first and only country to conduct a nuclear war, which it did between Aug. 6 and Aug. 9, 1945, killing about a quarter-million civilians.

Putin has made it clear that Russia will not use nuclear weapons unless the U.S. or NATO allies do so first. The U.S. has not made a similar pledge.

Biden based his threat assessment on the fact that Putin recently moved tactical nuclear weapons to its ally, Belarus, which is closer to Kyiv. That’s true, but it conveniently ignores the facts that the U.S. has placed nuclear weapons in Germany, that the U.K. and France are nuclear powers in their own rights and that U.S. Navy submarines and destroyers with nuclear missiles are deployed around Russia. Belarus also had nuclear weapons when it was part of the Soviet Union prior to 1991. In short, there was nothing particularly provocative about Putin’s move relative to prior positioning and the U.S. deployment of nukes.

MADness! What is provocative is a recent article by Michael Rubin, a former Pentagon official and now a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank. Rubin recommended that the U.S. should provide tactical nuclear weapons to the Ukrainians themselves. The rationale is a version of the doctrine of mutually assured destruction, MAD, that maintained stability between the U.S. and the former Soviet Union (really Russia) during the Cold War. The idea is if each side has enough nuclear weapons to survive a first strike by the other and launch a second strike of its own, then neither side will start a nuclear war because it would be destroyed in turn.

There’s merit to the MAD doctrine subject to a long list of conditions including large arsenals, secure command-and-control procedures, good communication between the protagonists (such as the “hot line”) and rational leadership on both sides. None of those conditions applies to Ukraine. It would have a modest arsenal (not enough to survive a first strike), has weak command-and-control, has almost no communication with Russia and has desperate and insecure leadership. It’s almost as if Rubin’s proposal is designed to force Putin to attack any Ukrainian nuclear capacity as a way to justify escalation by the U.S. and get U.S. and NATO boots on the ground in Ukraine.

That’s a short path to World War III. Any talk of giving Ukraine nuclear weapons is reckless. Rubin’s idea could be behind Putin’s plan to move nuclear weapons to Belarus as a way to dissuade the U.S. from going further. Of course, Putin’s actions in Belarus are an example of escalation, which may be exactly what Rubin and the other warmongers in the U.S. wanted. Simply put, Rubin’s idea is reckless and moves the world closer to nuclear war.

When you hear Biden talk about Putin’s threat to use nuclear weapons, it’s critical to bear in mind that the U.S. is the real threat and is acting with a view to escalating the war and dragging NATO into a direct war with Russia.

Will Ukraine Conduct a “False Flag” Attack on a Nuclear Power Plant? But that’s not all. There’s the possibility that an increasingly desperate Ukraine could try to stage a “false flag” attack on the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant (ZNPP) in the Kherson region and blame it on Russia. Both Ukrainian President Zelenskyy and the head of Ukrainian intelligence services have warned recently about a possible Russian attack on the plant. In other words, they could be putting the conditions in place for a false flag attack. “See, we warned you this would happen!”

Such an attack could potentially spread nuclear radiation throughout the region and possibly beyond. It wouldn’t be on the level of Chernobyl because the plant is operating at a much smaller capacity than Chernobyl. But still, it would be seen as an unacceptable war crime by Russia, which would spark international outrage and set the stage for direct NATO intervention. Incidentally, ZNPP is currently under Russian control, but much of the surrounding territory is still held by the Ukrainians.

How might an attack on the plant go down? Here’s some more detail: Ukraine (under direction of the U.S. and with U.S. help) could send a commando team to the facility, plant heavy explosives and then detonate them in a way intended to cause a partial meltdown and release of radiation. Prevailing winds would carry the radiation in the direction of Romania, Poland and Slovakia, all of whom are members of NATO. Once the radiation reaches those countries it will be regarded as an “attack” on NATO members. This will trigger Article 5 of the NATO treaty, which says that an attack on one is an attack on all.

Sens. Lindsey Graham and Richard Blumenthal, in fact, just proposed legislation stating that Russian nuclear weapons use in Ukraine would be considered a direct attack on NATO. Bombing a nuclear power plant isn’t the same as employing tactical nuclear weapons, but do you really think they’d draw that distinction?

The Article 5 trigger would provide legal cover to the U.S., the U.K., France, Germany and the rest of the coalition to send troops to Ukraine to prop up the failing offensive. The next step would be direct combat between U.S. and Russian troops. And that’s a direct gateway to World War III.

Is This Really Just Conspiratorial Nonsense? You might dismiss all this talk as conspiratorial nonsense. After all, why would Ukraine want to create a serious nuclear incident on its own soil? I’d just remind you that there’s credible evidence (according to German intelligence) that Ukrainian security agencies were responsible for the destruction of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, the largest act of eco-terrrorism ever conducted. In fairness, there’s also credible evidence that the U.S. carried out the attack, so it might not have been Ukraine. But it remains a legitimate possibility.

It’s also probable that Ukraine destroyed the Nova Kakhovka Hydroelectric Dam earlier this month in an effort to undermine Russia’s position in the area. The result was an environmental disaster. As with Nord Stream 2, there’s no definitive proof that Ukraine was responsible. Of course, as with the pipeline, Ukraine blamed Russia. While it’s possible Russia did it, Russia stood to lose much more than Ukraine from the dam’s destruction and the subsequent flooding. If you were a detective, Ukraine would be your prime suspect.

Assuming Ukraine was responsible for both the pipeline and dam incidents, would it be out of the question for it to stage a nuclear incident if that meant bringing NATO directly into the war? I don’t think it would be.

Again, I have no proof that Ukraine was actually responsible for the destruction of the pipeline or the dam. But it is a reasonable possibility. That’s why you shouldn’t rule out the possibility of a false flag attack on the nuclear power plant. Again, Ukraine is getting desperate and desperate times call for desperate measures. So if there is an attack on the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant in the days to come, you’ll know who was responsible. You’ll also know that the world is one step closer to nuclear war."
o

"How It Really Is"

 

Bill Bonner, "Poverty, Drugs and Political Machines"

"Poverty, Drugs and Political Machines"
A fatal combination for America's once proud down towns...
by Bill Bonner

Poitou, France - "An old friend writes from Baltimore: 'I was taking a post-prandial stroll the other day, up St. Paul, a left on Read, then down again on Charles. I noticed there was a single car parked inside the 1217 kraal. Two on the lot behind 808.

I noticed the fading For Sale banner on the cast-iron fence in front of the Chas. St. property. The dead and deserted lunch-time eateries heading down toward Pratt. Tumbleweeds where Kerrigan Kitikul used to make the best Chicken Pad Thai anywhere, complaining to me about the latter-day yuppies who ordered chicken without the chicken.

No chickens, no yuppies in sight. Just grad students with crap hanging from their pierced nostrils and the bored scribblings of tenth-graders permanently etched on their flabby hides. Looking up to good old George W, I pondered if the time was right to replace him with Horatio Nelson, gazing over the swells at Trafalgar... shot-to-sh*t French men o'war... the shivered-me timbers of Spanish galleons... a single oar still moving in frantic cones: a lone survivor unaware that the painted Fortuna at the bow was already winking at passing mackerel. O quae mutatio rerum (how things have changed)...'

Political Machines: Our friend was describing the carcass of our own business! Until 2020, we attracted hundreds of young workers into the city…ready to spend their money and enjoy misspending their youth. Now, they see no reason to come into the city at all. Our buildings – 10 of them in the heart of the city – are mostly empty. They had been grand houses for rich people. Then, after the rich left, they became nice places to work, with desks and computer screens amid the classical trimwork.

Yesterday, we began to describe what happened to American cities. Democratic mayors, machine politics and wars against poverty and drugs pummeled the cities over decades. Today, we drop down further, like Dante Alighieri, and continue our exploration of the circles of Hell.

Fox Business: "The business districts in a number of America’s major cities like New York and San Francisco are facing an "urban doom loop" as the workforce shifts away from office work in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic – a trend that has economists raising alarm about the fiscal impacts. This was not solely the fault of Democratic city governments. While they continued to jab and punch at their own voters, the Trump Administration came at them like Mike Tyson for Evander Holyfield’s left ear. In March of 2020, Trump proclaimed ‘two weeks to stop the spread’ – a shutdown of much of the US economy. Workers suddenly didn’t have to come to the office. They could work, or not, remotely."

Or Not…Even then, it was obvious that the Covid virus was a threat to the old and the un-fit…not to the huge majority of people with 9-5 jobs. Most working people are under 65 years of age. But the overwhelming bulk of Covid victims had already retired. The Mayo Clinic reports: In the U.S., about 81% of deaths from the disease have been in people aged 65 and older. Risks are even higher for older people when they have other health conditions.

In other words, people died from the Covid much like they did everything else – when they got old. And by now, despite vaccines that promised to protect them from it, almost everyone we know has gotten Covid 19, some people more than once. And (almost!) every one of them is still alive.

The horrors of the lockdowns are largely forgiven. But they are not forgotten. Dr. Fauci, the perpetrator of the scam, is joining the faculty of our old alma mater, Georgetown, where he will be able to infect young minds. But office space is still largely vacant. During the lockdown, people in cities could scarcely leave their houses or apartments. They were trapped – often in dreadful circumstances. After all, in big cities, space tends to be expensive. Many people – especially young people – use their tiny pads just as places to sleep. The rest of the time, they are out and about – at work, at health clubs, at bars, parks and restaurants. But during the lockdown they were, well, locked down. There was nowhere to go. And nothing to do. God forbid you were trapped in a small space with someone you didn’t like.

Fake Emergency: Many people – the trend setters – took the lockdowns as an invitation to get out of Dodge. They headed to states that were less eager to tell their citizens what they could and could not do. Small towns and suburbs were more pleasant, freer, and even cheaper. And the emigres found that they could work just as well in their new gardens – remotely – as they once worked in their cubicles. And then, when the fake emergency was over, they didn’t want to go back to work. Fox continues:

"The growing popularity of remote work has decreased the number of workers heading to the office on a daily basis and made it easier than ever for workers to live in suburban and rural areas without needing to commute. That workforce migration poses challenges for businesses reliant on sales and traffic from bustling downtowns, and risks triggering a fiscal doom loop in which cities see tax revenue dwindle and respond by raising taxes or reducing services, further exacerbating conditions for the remaining residents and businesses.

Office occupancy rates in major cities fell to just 10% by the end of 2020. Still today, only about half the workforce has returned to the desks and diners that once knew them. In response, landlords have had to reduce office values by an estimated 39% to retain renters. But the vacancy rate is running at twice the historic average. And in total, economists believe the value of New York’s commercial office space might be cut by about half a trillion dollars as a result."

Yes…city governments and the national government have both done their parts to make city life miserable. But those are just the outer rings of Urban Hell. There are more. Stay tuned..."

Gregory Mannarino, "Expect A Worldwide Banking System Crisis/Collapse"

Gregory Mannarino, AM 6/28/23
"Expect A Worldwide Banking System Crisis/Collapse"
Comments here:

"Brace For The Next Move"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly 6/28/23
"Brace For The Next Move"
"We are hearing about more layoffs now. The banking industry, and the automotive industry are having massive layoffs. Get ready for what's next."
Comments here:

"What If..."

"What if when you die they ask, "How was Heaven?"
~ Author Unknown

A truly terrifying thought...

Tuesday, June 27, 2023

"Scott Ritter, Ukraine Update: Wagner is a Criminal Entity"

Redacted, 6/27/23
"Scott Ritter, Ukraine Update: 
Wagner is a Criminal Entity"
Comments here:

"Its Been Great, But The Collapse Won't Be"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 6/27/23
"Its Been Great, But The Collapse Won't Be"
Comments here:

"The Damage Is Unrepairable, Things Are Breaking"

Jeremiah Babe, 6/27/23
"The Damage Is Unrepairable, Things Are Breaking"
Comments here:

"15 Big Box Retailers That Report Massive Grocery Price Increases In 2023"

Full screen recommended.
"15 Big Box Retailers That Report Massive 
Grocery Price Increases In 2023"
By Epic Economist

"We’re being told that inflation numbers are going down, but when it comes to food inflation, that’s a whole different story. More than half of US food retailers are still raising prices this year, a nine percentage point jump from last year, according to BDO’s 2023 Retail CFO Outlook Survey. With major food makers, including Procter & Gamble, Nestlé, Unilever, and Coca-Cola signaling their intent to continue to push prices up despite falling sales volumes, retailers are having to pass these higher costs on to shoppers – plus a little extra. At this point, many people argue that big brands are, in fact, price-gouging their customers. Some of these companies are actually facing lawsuits over allegations of abusive price increases over the past year. Unfortunately, big names like Sam’s Club, Kroger, and even discount grocers say that the cost of essential products is about to go up even further in the second half of 2023. 

According to GOBankingRates, over the past year, Walmart grocery prices climbed by 22%, and earlier this month, the world’s biggest retailer warned that it might still have to increase prices to deal with higher costs. During an investor’s meeting, Walmart CFO John David Rainey said that the company is still facing significant challenges with its supply chain. “We’re assuming that this year is going to be somewhat anomalous. Still feeling the effects of higher prices,” Rainey said. Consequently, Walmart shoppers’ grocery bills are likely to go up by at least another 10% before the end of the year. That’s quite worrying considering that prices at Walmart stores have risen by 50% since 2020, according to consumers reports. On TikTok, one content creator decided to buy and compare the same items she did in 2020 Her shopping cart included corn mix, flour, 12-gallon nondairy milk, six eggs, two bananas, a small bundle of green Scallion, two potatoes, pinto beans, frozen mixed vegetables, and grain. According to the user, she purchased all of these items for $10.09 in 2020. She claims she made a “week’s worth of meals for one person,” sharing her receipt. As of January 2023, the shopper claims she went back to Walmart to purchase the items yet again and the total came out to $15.10, “a 50%” increase from a couple of years ago. “We need to start calling it what it is: price gouging,” one viewer stressed. “I wish they’d just stop lying to us by calling this inflation, this is 100% price gouging and I am sick of it,” a second agreed. “The ‘cheap’ butter we used to buy a year-ish ago, was 99 cents, now it’s 3 bucks,” another one shared. “I just got hamburger from Walmart for almost $6/lb. I remember it being like $3.50/lb,” another person said. Reports like that are getting increasingly more common as more and more Americans complain about soaring grocery costs at the retailer’s stores.

Food inflation will persist for many months, and that will have a huge effect on our monthly budgets and our purchasing power. We must organize ourselves and always remember to shop consciously. If you haven’t stocked up yet, we advise you to start preparing for these price hikes right now. The rest of the year is going to be very turbulent for those who didn’t get ready for these major changes, so make sure you got your needs covered because prices will only get higher from here on. For that reason, today, we decided to list which grocery stores are reporting another wave of price hikes right now."
Comments here::

Musical Interlude: Deuter, "Sound of Invisible Waters"

Deuter, "Sound of Invisible Waters"

Musical Interlude: Jefferson Airplane, "White Rabbit"

Full screen recommended.
Jefferson Airplane, "White Rabbit"
“Reality is what we take to be true.
What we take to be true is what we believe.
What we believe is based upon our perceptions.
What we perceive depends upon what we look for.
What we look for depends upon what we think.
What we think depends upon what we perceive.
What we perceive determines what we believe.
What we believe determines what we take to be true.
What we take to be true is our reality.”
- Gary Zukav

Chet Raymo, “Very, Very, Very, Very, Very...”

 “Very, Very, Very, Very, Very...”
by Chet Raymo

"In a short story that was published posthumously in the New Yorker, the inestimable Primo Levi meditated on the limits of language. The story was called “The Tranquil Star.” He writes "The star was very big and very hot, and its weight was enormous," and realizes immediately that the adjectives have failed him: “For a discussion of stars our language is inadequate and seems laughable, as if someone were trying to plow with a feather. It's a language that was born with us, suitable for describing objects more or less as large and long-lasting as we are; it has our dimensions, it's human. It doesn't go beyond what our senses tell us.

Until fairly recently in human history, there was nothing smaller than a scabies mite, writes Levi, and therefore no adjective to describe it. Nothing bigger than the sea or sky. Nothing hotter than fire. We can add modifiers: very big, very small, very hot. Or use adjectives of dubious superlativeness: enormous, colossal, extraordinary. But, really, these feeble stretchings of language don't take us very far in grasping the very, very, very extraordinarily diminutive or spectacularly colossal dimensions of atomic matter or cosmic space and time. We can overcome the limitations of language, Levi say, "only with a violent effort of the imagination."

I spent more than forty years trying to find ways to violently stretch the imaginations of my students (and myself) to accommodate the dimensions of the universe revealed by science. I would project onto a huge screen a photograph of a firestorm on the Sun, then superimpose a scale-sized Earth, which fit comfortably inside a loop of solar fire. I would take the class into the College Quad here near Boston, where I had set up a basketball to represent the Sun, then gathered 100 feet away with a pinhead Earth; we walked together with our pin in the great annual journey of the Earth, and looked through a telescope at the marble-sized Jupiter than I had previously installed at the other end of the long Quad (the next closest star system would have been a couple of basketballs in Hawaii). We walked geologic timelines that took us from one end of the campus to the other.

In one of my Globe essays I used this analogy: “Imagine the human DNA as a strand of sewing thread. On this scale, the DNA in the 23 pairs of chromosomes in a typical human cell would be about 150 miles long, with about 600 nucleotide pairs per inch. That is, the DNA in a single cell is equivalent to 1000 spools of sewing thread, representing two copies of the genetic code. Take all that thread - the 1000 spools worth - and crumple it into 46 wads (the chromosomes). Stuff the wads into a shoe box (the cell nucleus) along with - oh, say enough chicken soup to fill the box. Toss the shoe box into a steamer trunk (the cell), and fill the rest of the trunk with more soup. Take the steamer trunk with its contents and shrink it down to an invisibly small object, smaller than the point of a pin. Multiply that tiny object by a trillion and you have the trillion cells of the human body, each with its full complement of DNA.”

Or this description from 'Waking Zero': “The track of the Prime Meridian across England from Peace Haven in the south to the mouth of the River Humber in the north is nearly 200 miles. If that distance is taken to represent the 13.7 billion year history of the universe, as we understand it today, then all of recorded human history is less than a single step. The entire story I have told in this book, from the Alexandrian astronomers and geographers to the present-day astronomers who launch telescopes into space, would fit neatly into a single footprint. If the 200 miles of the meridian track is taken to represent the distance to the most distant objects we observe with our telescopes, then a couple of steps would take us across the Milky Way Galaxy. A mote of dust from my shoe is large enough to contain not only our own solar system but many neighboring stars.”

But as hard as one tries, the scale of these things escape us. If one could truly comprehend what we are seeing when we look, say, at the Hubble Ultra Deep Field Photo above, which I have done my best to convey to myself and others in a dozen ways, it would surely shake to the core some of our most cherished beliefs. Just as our language is contrived on a human scale, so too are our gods.”

"The Hand We're Dealt...:

“Bad things don’t happen to people because they deserve for them to happen. It just doesn’t work that way. It’s just… life. And no matter who we are, we have to take the hand we’re dealt, crappy though it may be, and try our very best to move forward anyway, to love anyway, to have hope anyway… to have faith that there’s a purpose to the journey we’re on.”
- Mia Sheridan

The Daily "Near You?"

Martins Ferry, Ohio, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

Free Download: Kahlil Gibran, "The Prophet"

"The Prophet: On Good and Evil"

 "Of the good in you I can speak, but not of the evil.
For what is evil but good tortured by its own hunger and thirst?
Verily when good is hungry it seeks food even in dark caves,
and when it thirsts it drinks even of dead waters.

You are good when you are one with yourself.
Yet when you are not one with yourself you are not evil.
For a divided house is not a den of thieves; it is only a divided house.
And a ship without rudder may wander aimlessly among
perilous isles yet sink not to the bottom.

You are good when you strive to give of yourself.
Yet you are not evil when you seek gain for yourself.
For when you strive for gain you are but a root
that clings to the earth and sucks at her breast.
Surely the fruit cannot say to the root,
 Be like me, ripe and full and ever giving of your abundance.
For to the fruit giving is a need, as receiving is a need to the root.

You are good when you are fully awake in your speech,
Yet you are not evil when you sleep
while your tongue staggers without purpose.
And even stumbling speech may strengthen a weak tongue.

You are good when you walk to your goal firmly and with bold steps.
Yet you are not evil when you go thither limping.
Even those who limp go not backward.
But you who are strong and swift,
see that you do not limp before the lame, deeming it kindness.

You are good in countless ways,
and you are not evil when you are not good,
You are only loitering and sluggard.
Pity that the stags cannot teach swiftness to the turtles.

In your longing for your giant self lies your goodness:
and that longing is in all of you.
But in some of you that longing is a torrent rushing with might to the sea,
carrying the secrets of the hillsides and the songs of the forest.
And in others it is a flat stream that loses itself in angles and
bends and lingers before it reaches the shore.
But let not him who longs much say to him who longs little,
 Wherefore are you slow and halting?
For the truly good ask not the naked,
 Where is your garment?
nor the houseless, What has befallen your house?"

- Kahlil Gibran
Freely download a PDF version of  "The Prophet" here:

"The Ways We Miss Our Lives..."

"A sad fact, of course, about adult life is that you see the very things you'll never adapt to coming toward you on the horizon. You see them as the problems they are, you worry like hell about them, you make provisions, take precautions, fashion adjustments; you tell yourself you'll have to change your way of doing things. Only you don't. You can't. Somehow it's already too late. And maybe it's even worse than that: maybe the thing you see coming from far away is not the real thing, the thing that scares you, but its aftermath. And what you've feared will happen has already taken place. This is similar in spirit to the realization that all the great new advances of medical science will have no benefit for us at all, thought we cheer them on, hope a vaccine might be ready in time, think things could still get better. Only it's too late there too. And in that very way our life gets over before we know it. We miss it. And like the poet said: The ways we miss our lives are life."
- Richard Ford

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

"9 Big Restaurant Chains That Filed For Bankruptcy"

Full screen recommended.
"9 Big Restaurant Chains That Filed For Bankruptcy"
by Economics Today

"Our favorite restaurants are vanishing from sight as worsening economic conditions continue to squeeze U.S. businesses. With shoppers eating out less and tightening their budgets, even big names in the industry are seeing their operations rot from within. Over the past three years, over 160,000 restaurants have been permanently closed around the country, and unfortunately, that trend is still picking up force in 2023.

It’s hard to believe but even the biggest and most successful fast food chains in the world aren’t immune to bankruptcies among franchisees. Just a couple of months ago, Rice Enterprices LLC declared bankruptcy and shuttered all of the McDonald’s restaurants it operated. Serious labor issues involving minors led the franchisee to face a millionaire lawsuit that affected the brand as a whole. Last month, the company announced hundreds of store closings, not only in America, but all across the globe. Some of its formats have become outdated, executives say. The decision was made after a team of board members discussed the growth potential of certain locations and decided to focus on the ones with higher financial returns, excluding struggling stores from its portfolio."
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 

Bill Bonner, "Big City Blues"

"Big City Blues"
St. Louis, Baltimore, Oakland, Philadelphia, Newark…
the list is long…and sad...
by Bill Bonner

"When you're alone and life is making you lonely
You can always go downtown.
When you've got worries, all the noise and the hurry
Seems to help, I know, downtown."
~ Made famous by Petula Clark

Poitou, France - "Not any more. Who wants to go downtown, now? You go downtown…you lock your car doors. You dodge the junkies…you pay off the squeegee kids so they won’t damage your car…you watch your step to avoid twisting your ankle on the broken pavement…or stepping into something that shouldn’t be there…you skirt the ‘unhoused’ people…and keep an eye out for rats… and then you get out of there as soon as possible!

Yes, America’s downtowns are downers – run down…down at the heels…down and out…and let down by their own governments. For hundreds of years, cities have been centers of production, commerce, education and commerce. It’s where the smart, handsome and rich people went to make their fortunes…and where the out-of-towners went to gawk and have a good time.

Ecumenical Apoliticism: But last week, cometh the Tweet: "You hear about how bad San Francisco is. I was filming a shot of my father, Shelby Steele, and in the ten minutes we were gone our SUV was broken into and nearly $15k of cameras stolen. Called 911 & they hung up twice."

Cities are prominent victims of democracy. In the 1960s, the ‘War on Poverty’ directed billions of dollars to help end ‘urban blight.’ Poor people moved to the cities to get in on the loot. The middle class moved out to avoid rising crime. Politicians found they could win city elections by offering more and more ‘free stuff.’

Democrats tend to be better at pandering to the poor. And probably no democrats were better at it than those of Flint, Michigan. In 2016, filmmaker Michael Moore, visited Flint and tweeted: “Flint has voted for Dems for 84 straight yrs…what did it get us?” We can answer that. It got them undrinkable water and an unlivable city. But Moore, of course, missed his own point. He wanted to arrest Michigan’s Republican governor!

Here at Bonner Private Research we don’t take sides. Our contempt for the political class is ecumenical. But we can’t help but notice how democratic politics has destroyed our own home town – Baltimore – along with many others. As a child, we remember the city as a place to work, to shop, to go to movies, theaters and restaurants. Baltimore had a steel mill…an auto plant…Black & Decker tools…and dozens of nationally-known brands. McCormick spices infused the air around the inner harbor…and the sounds of workmen were everywhere.

Taxes, Crime, Corruption and Incompetence: Now, the factories are closed…the retail shops are closed…and the downtown area often seems like a ghost-town. Even the tourist attraction – the Inner Harbor – seems neglected and shabby. What happened?

Detroit elected its last Republican mayor in 1957. Chicago’s democratic machine has been in control since the 1920s. St. Louis, Baltimore, Oakland, Philadelphia, Newark…the list is long…and sad. Big cities are run for the benefit of their ‘deciders’ and their employees, not for ‘the people’ who live there. Good people leave town…the holdouts fight a lost cause battle against taxes, crime, corruption and incompetence.

Forbes Magazine looked at San Francisco’s payroll back in 2020: "We found truck drivers loaded up with $262,898; city painters making $270,190; firefighters earning $316,306; and plumbing supervisors cleaning up $348,291 every year. One deputy sheriff earned $574,595 last year – including $315,896 in overtime. On average, the city’s 44,526 employees received pay and perks costing taxpayers $131,335 apiece. Four out of ten – 18,749 city workers – received a compensation package exceeding $150,000 per year."

What You Pay For: Typically, cities pay too much for services…and get far too little. Unionized employees end up with chubby checks and fat pensions. But the kids can’t pass normal proficiency tests…the potholes aren’t fixed…and the streets are unsafe. Meanwhile, income earning, tax paying win-win businesses are replaced by nonprofits and government agencies. Then, under the strain of paying for past services, cities cut back on current services…making themselves even less attractive to young families. Tax revenues fall.

The National Bureau of Economic Research calls it the “biggest fiscal problem” facing America’s cities. As the workforce ages, pension promises become harder and harder to keep. But that is just the beginning of the blight now infecting urban centers. Stay tuned..."

"This Will Change It All"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly 6/27/23
"This Will Change It All"
"Can you explain any of this? The Economy is in complete turmoil. We are also going to see the effects of two major lawsuit on the real estate industry. Will the real estate industry change forever?"
Comments here:

"Holiday Sale At Meijer! Stock Up Now! Be Prepared!"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 6/27/23
"Holiday Sale At Meijer! Stock Up Now! Be Prepared!"
"In today's vlog, we are at Meijer and are noticing that they are having a huge sale on holiday baking items this month! We are stocking up and showing the best deals as we take you shopping with us. It's getting rough out here as stores seem to be struggling with getting products!"
Comments here:

Monday, June 26, 2023

Jim Kunstler, "Coup Coo"

"Coup Coo"
by Jim Kunstler

“At exactly the point of the AFU’s weakest moment and near-collapse on the battlefield he chose to strike Russia in the back as if obviously driven by a hidden hand.”- Simplicius on Substack

"You’d think that the hapless DC neocons, Antony Blinken and his boss, Victoria Nuland, plus the gang at Spook Central, would have learned a lesson about the diminishing returns of color revolutions: namely, that these bold pranks blow back… and not in a good way.

The New York Times informs us that US Intel was well aware weeks beforehand of the developing coup attempt by Yevgeny Prigozhin and his personal army, the Wagner Group. Congressional leaders were briefed a day prior to its roll-out. Well, golly, can you suppose for a New York minute that Russia’s intel agency didn’t know all about it, too?

A vast array of explanations for this bizarre wartime vaudeville can be found in every corner of the Internet. I’ll go with this one: Prigozhin came to bethink himself a Napoleonic figure. Just as Bonaparte wowed revolution-weary France with his military exploits against her enemies, and seized leadership of the nation, Prigozhin’s mercenary army carried the brunt of the action in Ukraine this year, culminating in the heroic victory at Bakhmut. Priggy regarded the Russian Ministry of Defense as oafish, and by extension, his long-time friend and mentor, Vlad Putin, indecisive about it. The moment was ripe to seize power! As a recent US president might have said: he misoverestimated.

It looks like the neocons, the CIA, and Britain’s MI6 did, too, if they helped nudge the event to fruition with assurances and cash - say, some of that $6.2 billion the Pentagon happened to find recently via an “accounting error.” What better time to destabilize Russia than during Ukraine’s vaunted spring offensive (which, let’s face it, was not going too well)? In fact, Ukraine’s whole NATO-assisted project from the get-go looked like a bust. The Bakhmut “meat-grinder” was just the latest fiasco. But then, the irascible, disgruntled, and grandiose field marshal Priggy seemed like the perfect instrument to jazz things up for the demoralized West.

Pretty darn quick, on the road from Rostov-on-Don to Moscow, Priggy learned the hard way that he had no support in the government, the military, or among the Russian public. The coup fizzled before sundown the very day it started. Some say, any way you cut it, the result is Vlad Putin left looking weak and vulnerable. I don’t think so. His speech to the Russian people that day appeared, if anything, resolute. And the way he seemed to spit out the words “a stab in the back,” you couldn’t think he was play-acting. By evening, with the whole psychodrama concluded, the people of St. Petersburg crowded the quay along the Neva River and busted into patriotic song.

Let’s address one nagging question: why did Mr. Putin allow the Wagner Group private army to play the leading role countering the Ukraine offensive? Answer: because he was saving and building-up the regular Russian army to strength in the further event that NATO might finally jump into Ukraine with all its multi-national feet when all else fails.

We’re left, of course, with the manifold mysteries of the coup’s hasty resolution. Mr. Prigozhin, we’re told, will be turned over to the custody of the Belarus president Lukashenko, to… to be done what with? To be put on the shelf like a bowling trophy? I’m sure…. If they can even find the bugger now. (I’d look in Africa, where sundry Wagner units have been operating - Priggy must have had a plane standing by in Rostov.) In any case, we know the rest: Wagner troops who did not participate in the coup get folded into the regular army, and said regular army takes over duty along the front in Ukraine. Mr. Putin, despite all these insults, will continue to seek a diplomatic end to all this nonsense, and he might get it sooner rather than later. Germany and France, among Euro others, must be sick of these shenanigans.

Can Ukraine even carry on much longer? President Zelensky, the comedian, seems to have gone mad-dog now. He just cancelled next year’s election, which makes him… what? Dictator? So much for America’s democracy export program. He’s also issued warnings to the effect that Russia is about to blow up the Zaporozhye nuclear power plant, Europe’s largest. Such an act would supposedly trigger direct intervention by NATO, according to the policy promoted by war-hawk US Senators Lindsey Graham and Richard Blumenthal. The nuclear plant is under Russian control. Mr. Zelensky says they have set mines in it. The scenario is pretty absurd. Nobody believes it. Of course, Mr. Zelensky might use some of his NATO missiles to zap it, but Russia has video surveillance and recording equipment at every angle around the joint and the world will know five seconds after how it was blown up.

From his latest photographs, it looks like Mr. Zelensky is in the terminal throes of a cocaine rapture, and his actions are consistent with that state of mind. He must know that he’s not long for this world. And our country, the USA, must know that this Ukraine gambit is another lost cause on our long march of military misadventures. And if the government of our country doesn’t know, the people surely do. Have you noticed, the yellow-and-blue flags are not flying anymore? Even the most hardcore anti-Trump Democrats seem to understand what pounding sand down a rat-hole means when it comes to the many billions of dollars squandered on this stupid project while our cities rot and a whole lot more goes south in our own ailing homeland.

Not to mention the parlous position of the American president himself, the spectral “Joe Biden,” skulking in his demon-haunted White House as evidence of his treasonous turpitudes mounts and mounts. Which leaves us to wonder whether our Intel Community may have stirred up the Russia coup as just another distraction from its own Biden-linked crimes against this nation."

"Thousands Of German Troops To Russian Border; 8,000 Wagner In Belarus; Ukraine Nuke Drill"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 6/26/23
"Thousands Of German Troops To Russian Border;
 8,000 Wagner In Belarus; Ukraine Nuke Drill"
Comments here:

"I Got Some Bad News From Ford Today; You Could Lose Your Job Tomorrow; Get Out Of Debt Now"

Jeremiah Babe, 6/26/23
"I Got Some Bad News From Ford Today;
 You Could Lose Your Job Tomorrow; Get Out Of Debt Now"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: 2002, "Children in Time"

Full screen recommended.
2002, "Children in Time"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Why doesn't the nearby galaxy create a gravitational lensing effect on the background galaxy? It does, but since both galaxies are so nearby, the angular shift is much smaller than the angular sizes of the galaxies themselves. The featured Hubble image of NGC 3314 shows two large spiral galaxies which happen to line up exactly. The foreground spiral NGC 3314a appears nearly face-on with its pinwheel shape defined by young bright star clusters. Against the glow of the background galaxy NGC 3314b, though, dark swirling lanes of interstellar dust can also be seen tracing the nearer spiral's structure. Both galaxies appear on the edge of the Hydra Cluster of Galaxies, a cluster that is about 200 million light years away. 
Gravitational lens distortions are much easier to see when the lensing galaxy is smaller and further away. Then, the background galaxy may even be distorted into a ring around the nearer. Fast gravitational lens flashes due to stars in the foreground galaxy momentarily magnifying the light from stars in the background galaxy might one day be visible in future observing campaigns with high-resolution telescopes."

Chet Raymo, “As Time Goes By”

As Time Goes By
by Chet Raymo

“Is time something that is defined by the ticking of a cosmic clock, God’s wristwatch say? Time doesn’t exist except for the current tick. The past is irretrievably gone. The future does not yet exist. Consciousness is awareness of a moment. Or is time a dimension like space? We move through time as we move through space. The past is still there; we’re just not there anymore. The future exists; we’ll get there. We experience time as we experience space, say, by looking out the window of a moving train. Or is time…

Physicists and philosophers have been debating these questions since the pre-Socratics. Plato. Newton. Einstein. Most recently, Lee Smolin. Without resolution. What makes the question so difficult, it seems to me, is that time is inextricably tied up with consciousness. We won’t understand time until we understand consciousness, and vice versa. So far, consciousness is a mystery, in spite of books with titles like “Consciousness Explained”. Will consciousness be explained? Can consciousness be explained? If so, will it require a conceptual breakthrough of revolutionary proportions? Or is the Darwinian/material paradigm enough? Are we in for an insight, or for a surprise?

As I sit here at my desk under the hill, looking out at a vast panorama of earth, sea and sky, filled, it would seem, infinitely full of detail, so full that my awareness can only skim the surface, I have that uneasy sense that it’s going to be damnably difficult to extract consciousness, as a thing, from the universe in its totality. I think of that word “entanglement,” from quantum theory, and I wonder to what extent consciousness is entangled, perhaps even with past and future.

Who knows? Perhaps consciousness, or what I think of as my consciousness, is just a slice of cosmic consciousness, in the same way that the present is a slice of cosmic time. As a good Ockhamist, I am loathe to needlessly multiply hypotheses. But time will tell. Or consciousness will tell. Or something.”

"We're All Mad Here..."

"But I don't want to go among mad people," Alice remarked.
"Oh, you can't help that," said the cat. 
"We're all mad here. I'm mad. You're mad."
"How do you know I'm mad?" said Alice.
"You must be," said the cat, "Or you wouldn't have come here."
- Lewis Carroll,
"Alice's Adventures in Wonderland"

Oh, I know, I know, some days...lol

The Poet: Theodore Roethke, "In A Dark Time"

"In A Dark Time"

"In a dark time, the eye begins to see,
I meet my shadow in the deepening shade;
I hear my echo in the echoing wood -
A lord of nature weeping to a tree.
I live between the heron and the wren,
Beasts of the hill and serpents of the den.

What’s madness but nobility of soul
At odds with circumstance? The day’s on fire!
I know the purity of pure despair,
My shadow pinned against a sweating wall.
That place among the rock - is it a cave,
Or winding path? The edge is what I have.

A steady storm of correspondences!
A night flowing with birds, a ragged moon,
And in broad day the midnight come again!
A man goes far to find out what he is -
Death of the self in a long, tearless night,
All natural shapes blazing unnatural light.

Dark, dark my light, and darker my desire.
My soul, like some heat-maddened summer fly,
Keeps buzzing at the sill. Which I is I?
A fallen man, I climb out of my fear.
The mind enters itself, and God the mind,
And one is One, free in the tearing wind."

- Theodore Roethke

The Daily "Near You?"

Magnolia, Texas, USA. Thanks for stopping by!