Thursday, August 15, 2024

Bill Bonner, "The Most Predictable Crisis Ever"

"The Most Predictable Crisis Ever"
In the Covid panic of 2020, people realized that they no longer needed to 
go to the office. This led to a spike in office vacancies and a big drop in prices.
by Bill Bonner

Poitou, France - "First, it appears that Warren Buffett is doing the same thing we are - moving to Maximum Safety Mode. Charlie Bilello: "Berkshire’s Cash Pile spiked to a new all-time high of $277 billion, increasing by a record $88 billion during the 2nd quarter. $75 billion of that came from stock sales with Berkshire selling nearly half of its position in Apple. Berkshire Hathaway is now holding 25% of their Assets in Cash, the highest percentage since 2004 and well above its historical average (14%)."

Why is Buffett selling Apple? Bilello points to the obvious reason - it’s gotten far too expensive. Today’s price is thirty times earnings and nine times sales, the highest level in the company’s history. Apple has been a marvellous success. Buffett bought his stake in Apple in 2016, when the stock was trading around $25. Now, it’s $220. What is the likelihood that the price continues to go up?

We don’t know, but the more expensive a company is, the more marvelous it must be. Taking the long view, marvels always cease. Apple was founded 48 years ago. It was a leader in the Internet Revolution. But the revolution may be over.

Aztec Real Estate: We’ve spent this week looking at the big picture... and the role of problem solving in causing societies to decline. How and when the Big Picture comes to bear on the Little Picture is our subject for today.

The price of real estate in the Aztec capital, for example, must have taken a tumble when Cortés massacred the inhabitants. But until his brigantines appeared on Lake Texcoco there was little sign of the coming catastrophe in Aztec asset markets. The same was true for the handsome houses of Pompei, covered with hot ash when Mt. Vesuvius lost its top in 79 AD. The loss was sudden... unanticipated... and catastrophic.

So too was the more recent crash in US commercial real estate. In the Covid panic of 2020, people realized that they no longer needed to go to the office. This led to a spike in office vacancies and a big drop in prices. Business Today: 'US real estate on fire sale': Another Washington DC office building sold at 75% discount: "Another Washington DC office building has just been sold at a massive 75 per cent discount, a real estate entrepreneur said on Sunday. The 175k sq. ft. tower at 1101 Vermont Avenue sold for $16 million, he said, adding that the building was last sold for $60 million in 2006. "

But wait. What’s this? Arabian Business reports: "Dubai office market records significant upsurge in Q1 2024, according to Savills. Grade A office rentals registered an average annual increase of 14%, with specific markets experiencing hikes up to 30%.

Location still matters. Here’s another detail, from Business Insider: "A record 128,000 millionaires are expected to move countries in 2024, according to a new report. Data from Henley & Partners shows the UAE has the largest predicted inflow of millionaires. This is the third year the UAE, dubbed a "wealth magnet" by the firm, topped the list.

We’ve visited Dubai. Horrible place. Hotter than Hades... and no charm or taste anywhere in sight. Like Las Vegas, only worse. But the rich are burrowing in there... not in New York, Paris or London. They’re moving to the burning sands of the United Arab Emirates... a ‘semi-constitutional monarchy’... not to the US, France or England. Why? Is the world’s center of gravity shifting away from The West? That appears to be a Big Picture trend... perhaps already showing up in property prices.

Not all Big Picture trends and events are surprises. Most - including some of the biggest catastrophes in financial history -could be seen coming for years. America’s rendezvous with bankruptcy, for example, has been called ‘the most predictable crisis ever.’ And for good reason; it is mathematically... scientifically... empirically proven that when you spend more than you earn, year after year, bad things will begin to happen. And yet, while the Big Picture is clear about where this bus is headed (not in detail, but in general)... the historical record provides little hope of a route change. Tune in tomorrow..."

Research Note, by Dan Denning: "On this day, fifty three years ago, US President Richard Nixon interrupted Bonanza to announce that he had ‘temporarily’ suspended the convertibility of the US dollar into physical gold for foreign investors. Inflation and a balance of payments crisis had led to a run on US gold reserves. Nixon, like Vice President Kamala Harris apparently intends to announce tomorrow, also enacted price controls.

In December of 1971, via the Smithsonian Agreement, Nixon devalued the dollar from $35/ounce of gold to $38/ounce but did not lift the ‘temporary’ suspension of convertibility. The dollar was devalued again in October of 1973 when the statutory price of gold (the price at which, by law rather than market prices, the US Treasury values the gold it owns) was raised to $42.22/ounce.

At this point the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates between currencies that had been in place since 1944 was effectively over. The Par Value Modification Act, passed in 1976, formally removed any link between the definition of the dollar and a weight or value of gold. The value of the fiat dollar (rather than the gold dollar) has since been determined by a global system of floating exchange rates. One result of Nixon’s decision is a stagnation in the value of wages and compensation to workers since 1971."
Click image for larger size.

Dan, I Allegedly, "How to Destroy a City - Shopping District Shut Down"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 8/15/24
"How to Destroy a City - 
Shopping District Shut Down"
"We're diving into how retail crime has destroyed a city, specifically the once-vibrant Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica. Witness firsthand the devastating impact of Proposition 47 on local businesses, where crime runs rampant and stores are left vacant. This was once a bustling hub of international tourists and lively commerce, but now? It's a ghost town filled with nothing but "For Lease" signs."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Cash Jordan, 8/15/24
"Brooklyn is Now So Dangerous… 
Even Cops Aren’t Safe"
"A journalistic report on the current situation facing Brooklyn NYC, a borough with 2.5 million residents who deserve the same city resources devoted to areas like Times Square."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Graham Stephan, 8/15/24
"WTF Happened To Santa Monica, California?!"
"Let's discuss what's happening throughout Santa Monica and Los Angeles, California, the problems they're facing, and my thoughts on the entire situation."

Adventures With Danno, "Massive Sales At Kroger!"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 8/15/24
"Massive Sales At Kroger!"
"In today's vlog, we are at Kroger and are seeking out some bargains on grocery items. With massive price increases continuing at grocery stores, we are searching for some good deals during these times of high inflation. We will go over the quality and prices of items that we shop for in the store."
Comments here:
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Meanwhile, elsewhere...
Full screen recommended.
Travelling with Russell, 8/15/24
"I Went to the Oldest Street Market
 in Russia: Levsha Fair"
"Levsha Fair has been operating in Moscow since 1824. Making it the oldest Trading market in Moscow, Russia. Join me on a tour of this famous old flea market on the outskirts of Moscow. What treasure can we find, what kind of antiques will they have for sale?"
Comments here: 

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

"Wars And Rumors Of War, 8/14/24"

Danny Haiphong, 8/14/24
"Scott Ritter: Putin's Gloves Are Off As Kursk 
Offensive Crushes Ukraine; Israel-Iran War Coming?"
"Former UN Weapons Inspector and US Marine Corps Intelligence Officer Scott Ritter (https://scottritter.com/) joins the show to react to the latest U.S. government attempt to silence him, how the Kursk offensive is dooming Ukraine to oblivion, and what comes next for the Middle East as Israel and Iran brace for war. This stream will cover all of the most pressing world developments and provide the key geopolitical analysis needed to understand them."
Comments here:
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Larry Johnson, 8/14/24
"Hezbollah-Iran Launch A Devastating Revenge!
 Israel Uses Nuclear, Open WWIII"
Comments here:

Gerald Celente, "Government Spying Rampant; Peace Warriors Punished"

Gerald Celente, 8/14/24
"Government Spying Rampant; 
Peace Warriors Punished"
"The Trends Journal is a weekly magazine analyzing global current events forming future trends. Our mission is to present facts and truth over fear and propaganda to help subscribers prepare for what’s next in these increasingly turbulent times"
Comments here:

Jeremiah Babe, "The Retail Apocalypse Is On Fire, The Inflation Lies Keep Getting Worse"

Jeremiah Babe, 8/14/24
"The Retail Apocalypse Is On Fire, 
The Inflation Lies Keep Getting Worse"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: 2002, "Kindred Spirits"

Full screen recommended.
2002, "Kindred Spirits"
"Once we sailed upon the seas. Now we sail among the stars. This song was composed as a tribute to our friend, harpist Hilary Stagg, who left us far too soon. Hilary loved the sea and he loved the stars."

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Have you ever seen the Pleiades star cluster? Even if you have, you probably have never seen it as large and clear as this. Perhaps the most famous star cluster on the sky, the bright stars of the Pleiades can be seen without binoculars from even the depths of a light-polluted city. With a long exposure from a dark location, though, the dust cloud surrounding the Pleiades star cluster becomes very evident.
The featured exposure covers a sky area several times the size of the full moon. Also known as the Seven Sisters and M45, the Pleiades lies about 400 light years away toward the constellation of the Bull (Taurus). A common legend with a modern twist is that one of the brighter stars faded since the cluster was named, leaving only six of the sister stars visible to the unaided eye. The actual number of Pleiades stars visible, however, may be more or less than seven, depending on the darkness of the surrounding sky and the clarity of the observer's eyesight."

"On The Meridian Of Time..."

“On the meridian of time there is no injustice: there is only the poetry of motion creating the illusion of truth and drama. If at any moment anywhere one comes face to face with the absolute, that great sympathy which makes men like Gautama and Jesus seem divine freezes away; the monstrous thing is not that men have created roses out of this dung heap, but that, for some reason or other, they should want roses. For some reason or other man looks for the miracle, and to accomplish it he will wade through blood. He will debauch himself with ideas, he will reduce himself to a shadow if for only one second of his life he can close his eyes to the hideousness of reality. Everything is endured – disgrace, humiliation, poverty, war, crime, ennui – in the belief that overnight something will occur, a miracle, which will render life tolerable.”
- Henry Miller

"I Promise You This..."

"One final paragraph of advice: do not burn yourselves out. Be as I am - a reluctant enthusiast... a part-time crusader, a half-hearted fanatic. Save the other half of yourselves and your lives for pleasure and adventure. It is not enough to fight for the land; it is even more important to enjoy it. While you can. While it’s still here. So get out there and hunt and fish and mess around with your friends, ramble out yonder and explore the forests, climb the mountains, bag the peaks, run the rivers, breathe deep of that yet sweet and lucid air, sit quietly for a while and contemplate the precious stillness, the lovely, mysterious, and awesome space. Enjoy yourselves, keep your brain in your head and your head firmly attached to the body, the body active and alive, and I promise you this much; I promise you this one sweet victory over our enemies, over those desk-bound men and women with their hearts in a safe deposit box, and their eyes hypnotized by desk calculators. I promise you this: you will outlive the bastards."
- Edward Abbey

“Sigmund Wollman’s Reality Test”

“Sigmund Wollman’s Reality Test”
by 
Robert Fulghum  

“In the summer of 1959, at the Feather River Inn near the town of Blairsden in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of northern California. A resort environment. And I, just out of college, have a job that combines being the night desk clerk in the lodge and helping out with the horse-wrangling at the stables. The owner/manager is Italian-Swiss, with European notions about conditions of employment. He and I do not get along. I think he’s a fascist who wants pleasant employees who know their place, and he thinks I’m a good example of how democracy can be carried too far. I’m twenty-two and pretty free with my opinions, and he’s fifty-two and has a few opinions of his own.

One week the employees had been served the same thing for lunch every single day. Two wieners, a mound of sauerkraut, and stale rolls. To compound insult with injury, the cost of meals was deducted from our check. I was outraged.

 On Friday night of that awful week, I was at my desk job around 11:00 P.M., and the night auditor had just come on duty. I went into the kitchen to get a bite to eat and saw notes to the chef to the effect that wieners and sauerkraut are on the employee menu for two more days.

That tears it. I quit! For lack of a better audience, I unloaded on the night auditor, Sigmund Wollman.

I declared that I have had it up to here; that I am going to get a plate of wieners and sauerkraut and go and wake up the owner and throw it on him.

I am sick and tired of this crap and insulted and nobody is going to make me eat wieners and sauerkraut for a whole week and make me pay for it and who does he think he is anyhow and how can life be sustained on wieners and sauerkraut and this is un-American and I don’t like wieners and sauerkraut enough to eat it one day for God’s sake and the whole hotel stinks anyhow and the horses are all nags and the guests are all idiots and I’m packing my bags and heading for Montana where they never even heard of wieners and sauerkraut and wouldn’t feed that stuff to the pigs. Something like that. I’m still mad about it.

I raved on this way for twenty minutes, and needn’t repeat it all here. You get the drift. My monologue was delivered at the top of my lungs, punctuated by blows on the front desk with a fly-swatter, the kicking of chairs, and much profanity. A call to arms, freedom, unions, uprisings, and the breaking of chains for the working masses.

As I pitched my fit, Sigmund Wollman, the night auditor, sat quietly on his stool, smoking a cigarette, watching me with sorrowful eyes. Put a bloodhound in a suit and tie and you have Sigmund Wollman. He’s got good reason to look sorrowful. Survivor of Auschwitz. Three years. German Jew. Thin, coughed a lot. He liked being alone at the night job – gave him intellectual space, gave him peace and quiet, and, even more, he could go into the kitchen and have a snack whenever he wanted to – all the wieners and sauerkraut he wanted. To him, a feast. More than that, there’s nobody around at night to tell him what to do. In Auschwitz he dreamed of such a time. The only person he sees at work is me, the nightly disturber of his dream. Our shifts overlap for an hour. And here I am again. A one-man war party at full cry.

“Fulchum, are you finished?”
“No. Why?”
"Lissen, Fulchum. Lissen me, lissen me. You know what’s wrong with you? It’s not wieners and kraut and it’s not the boss and it’s not the chef and it’s not this job.”
“So what’s wrong with me?”

“Fulchum, you think you know everything, but you don’t know the difference between an inconvenience and a problem. If you break your neck, if you have nothing to eat, if your house is on fire – then you got a problem. Everything else is inconvenience. Life is inconvenient. Life is lumpy. Learn to separate the inconveniences from the real problems. You will live longer. And will not annoy people like me so much. Good night.” In a gesture combining dismissal and blessing, he waved me off to bed.

Seldom in my life have I been hit between the eyes with a truth so hard. Years later I heard a Japanese Zen Buddhist priest describe what the moment of enlightenment was like and I knew exactly what he meant. There in that late-night darkness of the Feather River Inn, Sigmund Wollman simultaneously kicked my butt and opened a window in my mind.

For thirty years now, in times of stress and strain, when something has me backed against the wall and I’m ready to do something really stupid with my anger, a sorrowful face appears in my mind and asks: “Fulchum. Problem or inconvenience?”

I think of this as the Wollman Test of Reality. Life is lumpy. And a lump in the oatmeal, a lump in the throat, and a lump in the breast are not the same lump. One should learn the difference. Good night, Sig.”

Fred Reed, "Left and Right: Twin Halves of the National Lobotomy"

"Left and Right: 
Twin Halves of the National Lobotomy"
by Fred Reed

"Consider two children, white, boys, growing up in contented middle-class families in the same suburb of Washington, DC, equally bright, popular, successful with girls, and so on. One becomes a growling conservative, the other a chirping liberal. I think of them as woofers and tweeters.) Why the difference in outcome? A likely explanation, or so it seems to me, is that political orientation is innate or, as we would say today, a result of genetic predisposition.

Biological determination of behavioral traits is a matter of common observation. Differences of intelligence in individuals, races and breeds of animal are well known as are degrees of of aggressiveness, sociability, and protectiveness. Why political leaning should not be equally a matter of genetics, making us robots rather than the thinkers we believe ourselves to be, is not clear.

Note that liberal and conservative traits cluster together rather than assorting randomly, suggesting some underlying linkage. For example, we rarely see an ardent capitalist who favors racial integration, or a passionate liberal who will consider the possibility of racial differences in intelligence. There seem to be underlying patterns that determine the aggregate constellation of traits.

Today this luminous and inerrant column will propose the following insight, patent applied for. At their purest, conservatives are heartless and liberals, goofy. I hope this will unite Left and Right in a lynch mob thirsting for my blood. Comity at any price, I say. I will leave a false address. Anyway, some observations. It may not be fair to say that conservatives want to bomb the world into rubble and liberals, to breast feed it. So i won’t say it. But I may think it when no one is looking.

Liberals are more at ease with the new and different, whether racial, ethnic, or linguistic. Conservatives look back nostalgically to a former world of purity and honor, usually one that never existed. They tend to be intensely loyal to their group, racial or cultural, circling the wagons and looking out warily at a world suspected of being hostile. Liberals go dizzily dancing into the future, propelled by heartwarming ideas apparently conceived by a three year old girl with a new doll.

Also reinforcing the biological provenance of political behavior we believe to be the result of reason is that women are less aggressive than men, and that as men age and their androgens drop, they often become less combative. However, though women are less inclined than men to engage in bar fights, they are not without feral tendencies. One is reminded of Menken’s dictum, “A misogynist is a man who hates women as much as they hate each other.”

Women are more nurturing than men, perhaps accounting for an indefinable but noticeable feminine flavor of the Democrats compared to Republicans. Certainly a divide exists between underlying motives of Left and Right, with liberals being nicer people and conservatives, more practical. That is, conservatives are better at doing things that should not be done in the first place, whereas liberals are better at not doing things that should be done.

A conservatives worst nightmare, that wakes him in the early hours with night horrors and the sweating gollywobbles, is the thought of paying for anything for somebody else. This is heartless. By contrast, liberals want to pay for everything for everybody else with money that doesn’t exist. This is goofy.

To see this, note that China finds its brightest young with rigorous testing and then pays for their education on the grounds that it is good for the country. In America, liberals block testing so as to collect morons and conservatives refuse to pay for education as being too expensive. Actually this makes sense since the students have been chosen for being ineducable. This also is good for China.

Liberals think all races and ethnicities should live together in warmth and fuzziness, while conservatives say they would rather have a moist skin disease and anyway it just doesn’t happen.

Liberals want free medical care for everyone. Conservatives object that it would cost too much. This amounts to saying, “Let them die if they can’t pay,” which is heartless but, from the conservative point of view, practical. and anyway they prefer aircraft carriers.

Liberals favor immigrants, saying that these new people just want a better life, all four or so potential billion of them. Conservatives don’t care what kind of life they have, as long as they do it somewhere else.

Conservatives think that medical students should be tested for intelligence. Liberals want to admit retards of color because it makes them feel all inclusive and deserving. They seem unable to understand that a “doctor” who does not know which end of the body the head is attached to will kill people. This is goofy.

Conservatives believe that outcomes stem from deliberate choices. that is, the black crack whore with a 70 IQ and five birth-defective children decided to use crack and to sell sex to pay for it, and so deserves the life she has. The white upper-class woman decided to have a high IQ and to go to Yale and become married before gravid, and so also deserves the life she has. It’s just a question of choices.

Liberals believe that character, and thus behavior, are shaped by environment and thus are not the responsibility of the person exhibiting the behavior. No one is responsible for anything. The only exceptions are whites, who are malign and hate God, or would if he existed. That is, liberals believe that intelligence, which doesn’t exist, is equally distributed across the nonexistent races but that free will is greater among some races, that don’t exist, than others. This is giving me a headache.

Again, at their purest, conservatives are heartless and liberals, goofy. For example, racial conservatives cannot bring themselves to say that African chattel slavery was wrong, despite its gruesome record, which is heartless. However, it was not irrational. Slavery was a recognized way of making money. By contrast, the liberal drive to eliminate literacy tests for college and elite schools, to favor minorities, is goofy. It makes no sense, and would result in…well, today’s America.

Conservatives tend to regard the homeless as human detritus, suffering the consequences of their own moral failures and fecklessness. They deserve no sympathy and should be subject to unspecified measures to get them out of sight. This is heartless. Liberals want to put the homeless in hotels at public expense or build housing for them, which is kindhearted but tends to produce more homeless. i myself might well become homeless, at least for a really good hotel.

Liberals want to pay blacks reparations for slavery. This, requiring people who didn’t do it to pay people to whom it wasn’t done, is goofy. Conservatives want nothing to do with blacks, at all, ever, and don’t care what happens to them. While perhaps not precisely heartless, it leans that way.

The liberal belief that you can be guilty of things you didn’t do is exquisitely goofy. However it gets confusing. For example, I didn’t kill Abraham Lincoln and am therefore guilty of it, and therefore owe reparations to, well, somebody. Perhaps eight billion other people also didn’t kill him, making this an inverse mass murder of frightening proportions.

Liberals always want to do nice things for blacks without actually coming into contact with them and apparently not noticing that the money is accomplishing nothing. This is goofy but characteristic.

In fairness, it should be noted that liberals and conservatives can work together toward a common goal. For example, in a shared rush to wreck the United States, liberals engage in domestic destruction by lunatic social policy, while conservatives keep the country in disastrous and crippling wars. Similarly,democrats fight to keep the borders open while Republicans work to maximize hostility between races. It is a serviceable modus vivendi. See? There is hope.

Goofiness, sometimes called the “squirrel factor,” appears in a great deal of liberal thinking, if that is quite the word. For example, as mentioned above, conservatives want to find the brightest children with tests and put them into schools at their levels while crushing them with student loans. Liberals literally - I am not being cute - want to ban testing and select students by race to be all heartwarming. This is goofiness at its finest. It also plays to the resentment of underperformers against the more able, who don’t exist. Here again we see the superior niceness of liberals. They don’t want any group to feel left out or unequal. Thus they try to eliminate differences by fiat. It doesn’t work, but what counts is the spirit of the thing.

It invites parody: There are no septuagenarians with thick glasses and lousy jump shots in the NBA. disparate impact. I want reparations. A full–up Corvette, with tangerine metal-flake lacquer, would be acceptable. On the other hand, the IGMFY philosophy (“I got mine, screw you”) outlook common among conservatives and codified as capitalism, has its own downstream effects. These can involve bloodthirsty mobs, guillotines, burning at the stake, and suchlike. We aren’t quite there. Yet. There is a bottle of Wild Turkey in the kitchen. I am going to consort with it."

The Daily "Near You?"

Durand, Michigan, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"A 'Retail Apocalypse' Is Gaining Momentum All Over America. Is Your Favorite Chain Closing Stores?"

"A 'Retail Apocalypse' Is Gaining Momentum All Over America. 
Is Your Favorite Chain Closing Stores?"
by Michael Snyder

"Why are retailers closing thousands of stores if the U.S. economy is in good shape? Of course the truth is that the U.S. economy is not in good shape at all. The cost of living crisis is absolutely crushing working families all over the nation, and U.S. consumers simply don’t have as much discretionary income as they once did. Needless to say, our retailers are highly dependent on discretionary spending, and many of them have been reporting very disappointing sales numbers recently. Sadly, the problems that our retailers are experiencing are only going to intensify as U.S. economic activity continues to slow down.

According to CBS News, U.S. retailers have announced the closing of more than 3,000 locations in 2024…"The retail industry is going through a tough time as it copes with inflation-weary consumers and a rash of bankruptcies, prompting chains to announce the closures of almost 3,200 brick-and-mortar stores so far in 2024, according to a new analysis. That’s a 24% increase from a year ago, according to a report from retail data provider CoreSight, which tracks store closures and openings across the U.S." The closing of 3,200 stores sounds really bad, but it is important to note that the quote above is from a CBS News story that was published on May 13th.

Since that time, there have been a lot more store closing announcements. For example, last week we learned that Big Lots plans to close nearly 300 stores…"Two months after announcing plans to close about 40 stores nationwide due to financial woes, Big Lots has indicated on its website it intends to close almost 300 stores. The discount retailer announced in June it was facing several areas of financial strain that would result in 35-40 stores closing across the country. However, an audit of the Big Lots website on Aug. 2 reveals almost 300 stores are slated to close in the United States, including 18 in New England."

Meanwhile, a home goods retailer that has been in business since 1890 is preparing to permanently shut down over 170 stores…"A home goods retailer is closing all of its more than 170 stores after filing for bankruptcy. Conn’s HomePlus, based in The Woodlands, Texas, operates stores in 15 states, including 11 in Louisiana. The company began in 1890 in Beaumont, TX. The Conn’s HomePlus store on Derek Drive in Lake Charles is included in the closures."

Burdorf Interiors has been in business for even longer, but now they have also reached the end of the road…"Burdorf Interiors, a 157-year-old local business, is shutting down, according to Louisville Business First. The company announced the closure in a news release Wednesday. “It’s with a heavy heart that we are announcing the closing of Burdorf Interiors,” the release said. “The business has been open in several locations throughout Louisville since 1867." Just think about that. They opened their doors just after the end of the Civil War, and now it is all over.

Drug store chains have been hit particularly hard by our ongoing retail apocalypse. Rite Aid was once a retail powerhouse that was expanding like crazy, but now they plan to close 780 stores…"Rite Aid, which was based in East Pennsboro Township near Camp Hill for decades and is now based in Philadelphia, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in October to begin restructuring to significantly reduce its debt. Since October, the company has announced in bankruptcy filings the closing of 780 stores."

Of course Dollar Tree has Rite Aid beat. During the course of the next few years, Dollar Tree plans to close almost 1,000 stores…"Dollar Tree on Wednesday said it plans to close nearly 1,000 stores over the next several years, after disclosing significant losses in its latest earnings report. The discount store chain lost $1.7 billion in the fourth quarter, down sharply from earnings of $452.2 million a year ago."

Unfortunately, this is just the beginning. Analysts at UBS are projecting that approximately 45,000 stores will be permanently shut down in the U.S. during the years in front of us…"About 45,000 retail stores may close in the coming years as retail’s physical footprint increasingly shifts to serve as fulfillment and distribution centers, UBS analysts led by Michael Lasser said in an April 22 report."

Can you imagine what this is going to look like? Our landscape is going to be peppered with thousands upon thousands of derelict buildings that have been boarded up to keep criminals out. Of course some of our core urban areas already have lots and lots of empty commercial spaces that used to be thriving retail locations.

One of the primary reasons why retailers are shutting down so many locations in core urban areas is because shoplifting in this country has risen to unprecedented levels. According to a recent survey that was conducted by LendingTree, close to a fourth of the entire population admits that they have shoplifted…"Nearly one-quarter of American adults have shoplifted, according to a new survey from LendingTree, the personal finance site. Roughly 1 in 20 consumers have shoplifted within the past year."

Shoplifting is a complicated crime. The motive can range from adolescent rebellion to adult thrill-seeking to hand-to-mouth poverty. Many of us steal things we don’t need and won’t use. “I’ve learned that a lot of people have given shoplifting a try for lots and lots of reasons,” said Matt Schulz, chief credit analyst at LendingTree. At this point, shoplifting has become one of our primary national pastimes.

And it is increasingly becoming a “team sport” in many parts of the nation. On Friday night, a team of approximately 50 teens stormed a 7-Eleven in Los Angeles and completely ransacked it…"A large group of juveniles used “bodily force” to ransack a 7-Eleven store in Los Angeles Friday night, authorities said. A Los Angeles Police Department spokesperson confirmed to KTLA that about 50 teens descended upon the 7-Eleven at the corner of Olympic and La Cienega boulevards in Pico-Robertson at 7:50 p.m. The teens, many of whom were wearing masks, forcibly stole property from the store, the spokesperson said."

This particular incident barely made a blip in the news cycle. Why? These days, giant mobs loot stores so frequently that this sort of thing isn’t even considered to be very newsworthy anymore.

The thin veneer of civilization that we are all depend upon is disintegrating right in front of our eyes, and our once great country is descending into complete and utter chaos. If things are this bad now, what will our cities look like once economic conditions become far more painful than they are currently?"

"A Well-Packaged Web Of Lies..."

“A truth’s initial commotion is directly proportional to how deeply the lie was believed… When a well-packaged web of lies has been sold gradually to the masses over generations, the truth will seem utterly preposterous and its speaker, a raving lunatic.”
– Dresden James

Chris Hedges Report, "The Arab-Jew Experience Exposes the Myths of Middle Eastern Antisemitism"

"The Arab-Jew Experience Exposes 
the Myths of Middle Eastern Antisemitism"
It was Israel that brought the divide and plight of the Jews in the Middle East.
by The Chris Hedges Report, 8/14/24

"A significant justification for Israel’s existence relies on the narrative that, because of the alleged inherent and rabid antisemitism of Arabs and Islam, the Jews of the Middle East never had a home. Without Israel, it is said, these Jews would be left on the fringes of Middle Eastern societies, marginalized for an irrational prejudice against their religion and ethnicity by Muslims.

Historian and author Avi Shlaim details in his book, “Three Worlds: Memoirs of an Arab Jew,” through personal experience and historical analysis the lies that this narrative is constructed upon. “There was no history of antisemitism in the Arab world. Antisemitism is a European disease,” Shlaim tells Chris Hedges. “In the 1930s, antisemitism was exported from Europe to Iraq in particular, and it's striking that there was no antisemitic literature in Arabic. So antisemitic literature had to be translated from European languages into Arabic…”

Shlaim was born in Iraq, where a thriving, educated and economically diverse society existed for Jews during his childhood. He describes how “It took Europe much longer than it took the Arab world to accept the Jews as equal citizens,” and how “Jews were very much part of the fabric of Iraqi society. We were not a foreign body. There were thriving Jewish communities throughout the Arab world, in Lebanon, in Syria, in Iraq, in Egypt, throughout North Africa, but the Jewish community in Iraq was the most successful, the most prosperous, and also the best integrated of all the Jewish communities.”

It was Israel, according to Shlaim, that brought the divide and plight of the Jews in the Middle East. Shlaim mourns a time where his family experienced peaceful coexistence: “Muslim and Jewish coexistence was not an abstract idea. It wasn't a distant dream. It was the everyday reality.”

Shlaim’s accounts also utilize his skills as a historian, diving into the incontrovertible evidence he discovered that reveals false flag atrocities committed by the Israelis against Iraqi Jews themselves. These attacks fomented a fear of antisemitism amongst Arab Jews, correlating with a significant spike in Iraqi Jewish emigration, and ultimately, coercively reinforced the legitimacy of the Jewish state.

“This false flag operation,” Shlaim said, referring to the 1950 and 1951 Israeli bombings of Iraqi Jews, “is a terrible indictment of the State of Israel, because Israel was created to provide a safe haven for Jews fleeing persecution. Israel was not established in order to destabilize and frighten and create insecurity for the Jews of the diaspora.” “The real upheaval,” Shlaim recounts,“ happened when Israel was created in 1948 and as my mother said to me, when Israel was created, everything was turned upside down.”
o
You want the truth? Read this if you dare...

And now the monstrous psychopathically 
degenerate Zionist experiment must and will end...

The Poet: Wendell Berry, "A Warning To My Readers”


"A Warning To My Readers”

“Do not think me gentle
because I speak in praise
of gentleness, or elegant
because I honor the grace
that keeps this world. I am
a man crude as any,
gross of speech, intolerant,
stubborn, angry, full
of fits and furies. That I
may have spoken well
at times, is not natural.
A wonder is what it is.”

- Wendell Berry

"The Model Soldier"

Napoleon Addressing the 2nd Corps of his Army at the Bridge over the Lech at 
Augsburg, Germany, on October 12, 1805. Painting by Pierre-Claude Gautherot, 1808.

"The Model Soldier"
Lest We Forget: The State Wins Every War

"War is the health of the State.”
~ Randolph Bourne

Miami, Florida - "When Napoleon crossed the Niemen, at the outset of the 1812 French invasion of Russia, he had under his command some 422,000 men. When he approached those same waters the next year, this time from the east, in sluggish, worn down retreat after defeats in Moscow, Borodino, Smolensk…his ranks had been cut to barely 10,000. A few enfeebled diehards were all that remained of the Grande Armée.
Click image for larger size.
Charles Joseph Minard’s famous graph illustrates the decreasing size of the Grande Armée. The brown line (followed from left to right) shows Napoleon’s march to Russia. The black line (followed from right to left) depicts his retreat. The size of the army is shown equal to the width of the lines. Source: Public Domain

Doomed to Repeat: Even the most accomplished military strategists may prove slow to learn and quick to forget, especially when it comes to fighting the battles/repeating the mistakes of the past. Napoleon wasn’t the only intelligent fool to covet the vast plains of the east. One hundred and thirty years later, Adolf Hitler embarked on Operation Barbarossa, the largest military operation in human history, both in terms of manpower…and casualties.

His monstrous panzer divisions rolled east, pounding Napoleon’s tracks past Minsk, Orsha and Smolensk. They thundered north, over the River Dvina to Leningrad, and South, through the Ukraine and onto Stalingrad. Once again it was a remarkable show, equal parts brute strength and determined stupidity. In the end, the weather and the Russians buried the Germans too, just as they had The Little Corporal’s men. All in, 4.3 million Germans fell during the campaign — a fatality count ten times the size of Napoleon’s entire army. During the whole of WWII, the German army lost a total of 5.5 million soldiers.

To many, it would be obscene to talk about the “sacrifice” made by Napoleon’s army. Most people recognize it for what it probably was: an organized band of thugs invading other people’s land. And yet, the Frenchmen laid down their lives by the hundreds of thousands. They were patriotic to the last. Many considered themselves “liberators,” abolishing feudal laws and birthright privileges across the continent. Equally, it would be considered a breach of decency to hail the bravery and dedication of the Nazi soldiers. They are recognized as aggressors, as brutal occupiers and ruthless killers. And so they should be. But were they not highly trained and committed to their cause, too? Did they not “sacrifice” their lives by the millions for their country, for their own maniacal leader? Did they not join heartily in that hollow chorus, “Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer” And did they not fall for Horace’s old lie, “Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori”?

Unnatural Born Killers: In both cases, the defeated armies’ men were nothing short of model soldiers. They marched. They obeyed orders. They killed on command. And when the blood dried and the dust settled, they were awarded medals for murdering people they’d never before met, whose names and stories they’d never know. In this manner, they were not unlike their opposition…though without the good fortune of having “won” the war; a fate, as Tolstoy famously observed, that was probably beyond their control in any case.

The ground under a dead German may well be as cold and hard as that under a dead Russian or a dead Frenchman, but history doesn’t remember all soldiers equally. Nor does it tend to separate soldiers - whose job it is to kill - too well from civilians - whose desire it is not to be killed.

It is estimated that between one and three million German civilians were killed during WWII. Who murdered these people? What were their names? Their pastimes? Their unfulfilled dreams? It’s almost considered impolite to ask, lest any blame fall on heroes’ shoulders. Over in the Pacific, Japan lost between a half- and one-million civilians. Who killed these people, these men and women and children? Did they receive medals for doing so? Were they honored by their own State, duly feted, welcomed home with parades and showered in confetti?

Imagine for a second that The Axis Alliance was victorious in WWII. How might history remember President Roosevelt’s Executive Order 9066, ordering the internment of 110,000 Japanese Americans in “War Relocation Camps” across the United States?

The Agony of War: Moreover, what might history have to say about the only two nuclear weapons ever to have been deployed during wartime? Little Boy, the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, killed between 90,000-166,000 people. Fat Man, dropped on Nagasaki three days later, killed between 60,000-80,000 people. In both cases, the vast majority of the victims were civilians. They died of flash or flame burns…falling debris…radiation sickness. Millions more were maimed, deformed, condemned to lives of unceasing pain and misery.

Here’s what US President Harry Truman told the public in a radio address after dropping Fat Man: “We have used [the Atomic Bomb] in order to shorten the agony of war, in order to save the lives of thousands and thousands of young Americans. We will continue to use it until we completely destroy Japan’s power to make war.”

Who were these “thousands and thousands of young Americans” Truman was protecting? Surely not the same boys he was sending off to war. The US lost more than 400,000 soldiers on various battlefields in Europe and the Pacific…but “only” 1,700 civilians. Statistically, the best way to protect oneself against war abroad was then, as it is now, simply not to go. Suppose they gave a war, as the saying goes, and nobody came?

Switzerland, which stayed famously neutral (despite their inconvenient geography), lost zero soldiers… and “only” 100 civilians. Remote New Zealand, meanwhile, tucked safely away at the world’s end, lost nearly 12,000 troops, many of whom fell in places like Maleme and Galatas, during the Battle of Crete, and in far flung outposts in Italy and in Northern Africa. Again, these poor sods would have done better to stay at home, tending to their personal affairs, taking care of their families and ignoring heartfelt pleas from “society” for “shared sacrifice.” In all of WWII, not a single Kiwi civilian life was lost due to war.

Alas, The State’s message, articulated by Truman and emulated by “enemy leaders” around the world, was then as it is now: “We will make war in order to shorten it. We will make war until the other side cannot.” Recall that it is during times of conflict when The State is most able to arrogate authority and resources unto itself. War, as Randolph Bourne solemnly observed, is the very health of The State. Not so for those who end their sorry days face down in the muck.

Contrary to these bellicose hollering of the political class, therefore, the message of peace should not be to “share the sacrifice”…but to avoid both suffering and inflicting it as best one can. Lest we forget: The State wins every war."

"How It Really Is"

Dan, I Allegedly, "Home Depot’s Shocking Sales Drop - Collapsing House of Cards"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, AM 8/14/24
"Home Depot’s Shocking Sales Drop - 
Collapsing House of Cards"
"Home Depot has always been a bellwether for the economy, and right now, the numbers don't lie – sales are down, transactions are down, and people just aren't spending like they used to. We're in Huntington Beach, one of the busiest Home Depots around, and even here, the decline is evident."
Comments here:

Adventures With Danno, "Grocery Sales At Meijer This Week!"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, AM 8/14/24
"Grocery Sales At Meijer This Week!"
As prices continue to rise on food items everywhere, I take you along with me
 to show all of the best deals going on so you can save as much money as possible.
Comments here:

"Alert! Talks Collapse; Blinken Cancels Trip; Iran's Day X Plan; Russia's Leaked Plan To Nuke Europe"

Canadian Prepper, 8/14/24
"Alert! Talks Collapse; Blinken Cancels Trip;
 Iran's Day X Plan; Russia's Leaked Plan To Nuke Europe"
Comments here:

Bill Bonner, "The Sad Night"

Human sacrifice before the Temple of Tenochtitlan, from 
"The History of the Indies of New Spain", manuscript by Diego Duran, 1579.

"The Sad Night"
Problem solving - by government - is a problem in itself. 
It adds costs and complexity... creating more problems to solve... 
and ultimately dooming a society to failure.
by Bill Bonner

"Exploitation is a normal cost of stratification... 
bad government is a normal cost of government..."  
- Joseph Tainter 

Poitou, France - "Imagine your joy! Your chest swells with pride, just before the priest thrusts his obsidian knife in... and carves out your heart. You have been chosen as a special guest of honor at a great event. The old emperor had died. His son will take over. Sacrifices must be offered.

Human sacrifices were ‘normal’ in pre-Columbian meso-America. The Aztecs did them on such a scale that historians couldn’t believe it. Did they really sacrifice twenty thousand people in one ceremony? Did they eat them all? And why?

One theory: it was a problem-solution situation. The problem was that people in what is now called ‘Central America’ had no domesticated food sources. No sheep, cattle or pigs that they could use as sources of protein. So, they ate each other. More precisely, the elites and their favored supporters ate the non-elites. They exploited less powerful groups (often, captives from other tribes).

We have no particular insight into the whys and wherefores of cannibalism. Nor do we pretend to know anything about Aztec civilization. But we know that all civilizations have their challenges…and all eventually go extinct. One of the theories meant to explain this phenomenon is ‘complexity.’

We shocked visitors from America this summer. We mused about the only member of Congress of whom we approved, Thomas Massey. ‘Because he voted no on everything,’ we said. “What? That’s crazy,” came the reply. “These people are trying to solve problems. Of course, they miss the mark sometimes. But they’re probably right at least half the time.”

Problem solving - by government -- is a problem in itself. It adds costs and complexity... creating more problems to solve... and ultimately dooming a society to failure. At least, that is Joseph Tainter’s explanation. In his ‘Collapse of Complex Societies,’ he looked at the record of ‘societal collapse’ and came to the conclusion that it was the result of problem solving. Each challenge brought a response. Each response took energy, resources and time. The accumulated problem-solving ‘investments’ left nothing for the future.

But today, we offer a counter example. (Only because we happen to be reading Victor Davis Hanson’s book ‘The End of Everything.’) "Aztec civilization didn’t just ‘decline.’ It came to an abrupt and final end when Hernán Cortés - a Spanish adventurer - led a small group of a few hundred conquistadors into the heart of the Aztec capital at Tenochtitlan. He was appalled and wrote a letter to Charles V in 1519:

"They have another custom, horrible, and abominable, and deserving punishment, and which we have never before seen in any place, and it is this, that, as often as they have anything to ask of their idols, in order that their petition may be more acceptable, they take many boys or girls, and even grown men and women, and in the presence of those idols they open their breasts, while they are alive, and take out the hearts and entrails, and burn the said entrails and hearts before the idols, offering that in sacrifice to them. Some of us who have seen this say that it is the most terrible and frightful thing to behold that has ever been seen."

Cortes intended to set himself on top of Aztec civilization and exploit the locals. But the initial visit to the capital didn’t go well. Cortés entered the city with his Tlaxcalan allies peacefully. The Aztecs judged his force too small to be a genuine threat. And they were, naturally, curious. But then, the Spaniards made their famously audacious move - capturing the ruler, Montezuma, and holding him hostage. The Aztecs were confused. But they did not submit. And it became gradually clear to Cortés that while he might hold Montezuma, he and his little army were also captive... surrounded by many thousands of Aztec warriors.

The Aztec capital was built on an island in the middle of a shallow lake. There were causeways leading to the city, making it easy to control access. Beginning to fear that they might soon be the main course at an Aztec feast, the conquistadors attempted a breakout. At night, Cortés took one of the causeways out of town... but was soon detected. From hundreds of canoes, the ‘Indians’ threw rocks and shot arrows. Word went ahead to destroy the causeway so the foreigners couldn’t get away. But the Spaniards filled the gap with their own dead bodies... The Florentine Codex described it: "Those who followed crossed to the other side by walking on the corpses."

It was a disastrous escape, known to Spanish history as the Noche Triste (the Sad Night). That might have been the end of the story. But Hernán Cortés survived. And so did a few hundred of his soldiers. Despite his troops’ ‘wish to return to Veracruz and go back to Spain,’ Cortés rebuilt his alliances (su). In a matter of months, he was back on the trail... with battled-hardened veterans, fresh allies and a new strategy. He would build warships, in pieces... assemble them on the shores of the great lake... and lay siege to the city. Another bold move... and this time, it worked. Cortés not only won the war... he annihilated the whole Aztec civilization. Stay tuned... "

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Jeremiah Babe, "Grid Down, I Couldn't Use Cash Or Card Today"

Jeremiah Babe, 8/13/24
"Grid Down, I Couldn't Use Cash Or Card Today"
Comments here"

Musical Interlude: Procol Harum, "A Salty Dog"

Procol Harum, "A Salty Dog"
"Ulysses"

"There lies the port; the vessel puffs her sail:
There gloom the dark, broad seas. My mariners,
Souls that have toil'd, and wrought, and thought with me -
That ever with a frolic welcome took
The thunder and the sunshine, and opposed
Free hearts, free foreheads - you and I are old;
Old age hath yet his honor and his toil;
Death closes all: but something ere the end,
Some work of noble note, may yet be done,
Not unbecoming men that strove with Gods.
The lights begin to twinkle from the rocks:
The long day wanes: the slow moon climbs: the deep
Moans round with many voices. Come, my friends,
'Tis not too late to seek a newer world.
Push off, and sitting well in order smite
The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds
To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths
Of all the western stars, until I die.
It may be that the gulfs will wash us down:
It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles,
And see the great Achilles, whom we knew.
Tho' much is taken, much abides; and tho'
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield."

- Alfred, Lord Tennyson

"A Look to the Heavens"

Click image for larger size.
"Milky Way Behind Three Merlons"
"To some, they look like battlements, here protecting us against the center of the Milky Way. The Three Merlons, also called the Three Peaks of Lavaredo, stand tall today because they are made of dense dolomite rock which has better resisted erosion than surrounding softer rock. They formed about 250 million years ago and so are comparable in age with one of the great extinctions of life on Earth. A leading hypothesis is that this great extinction was triggered by an asteroid about 10-km across, larger in size than Mount Everest, impacting the Earth. Humans have gazed up at the stars in the Milky Way and beyond for centuries, making these battlefield-like formations, based in the Sexten Dolomites, a popular place for current and ancient astronomers."

"Ex Obscurum, Adagio for Strings, Op. 11"

Full screen recommended.
"Ex Obscurum, Adagio for Strings, Op. 11"
"From emotional turmoil, hatred, and addiction the miracle of recovery begins in this Spadecaller Video entitled "Ex Obscurum" (From Darkness). Featuring original poetry narrated by the author and visual artist, Matthew Schwartz. Composer Samuel Barber's powerful musical score, adopted for the movie "Platoon", (Adagio for Strings) sets the background for this spiritual exodus "From Darkness."

"So We Never Live..."

"We do not rest satisfied with the present. We anticipate the future as too slow in coming, as if in order to hasten its course; or we recall the past, to stop its too rapid flight. So imprudent are we that we wander in the times which are not ours, and do not think of the only one which belongs to us; and so idle are we that we dream of those times which are no more, and thoughtlessly overlook that which alone exists. For the present is generally painful to us. We conceal it from our sight, because it troubles us; and if it be delightful to us, we regret to see it pass away. We try to sustain it by the future, and think of arranging matters which are not in our power, for a time which we have no certainty of reaching. Let each one examine his thoughts, and he will find them all occupied with the past and the future. We scarcely ever think of the present; and if we think of it, it is only to take light from it to arrange the future. The present is never our end. The past and the present are our means; the future alone is our end. So we never live, but we hope to live; and, as we are always preparing to be happy, it is inevitable we should never be so."
- Blaise Pascal