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Monday, February 10, 2025

"The Inevitable War With Iran, Trump's Gaza Ultimatum Means War, Israel And US Face Defeat"

Full screen recommended.
Jeffrey Sachs, 2/10/25
"The Inevitable War With Iran, Trump's Gaza 
Ultimatum Means War, Israel And US Face Defeat"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Oneindia News, 2/10/25
"U.S-Israel Vs Iran Nuclear War Soon? 
Khamenei To Revoke Fatwa On Nukes Amid Trump's Warnings?"
"Tensions are reaching a boiling point as senior IRGC officials urge Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to revoke his longstanding fatwa against nuclear weapons. The pressure comes amid heightened threats from the U.S. and Israel, intensified by recent Israeli airstrikes on Iranian military sites. With Trump issuing fresh warnings and Iran facing diplomatic isolation, speculation is growing over whether Tehran will abandon its nuclear restraint. Could this trigger an all-out nuclear showdown in the Middle East? Stay tuned for the latest developments on this high-stakes geopolitical crisis."
Comments here:
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Full screen recommended.
Times Of India, 2/10/25
"Iran To Go Nuclear Finally? 
Khamenei's Men Make Bombshell Pitch; 'Revoke Fatwa...'"
"Iran's IRGC commanders have urged Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to lift his 1990s fatwa banning the development of nuclear weapons. They argue that possessing nuclear bombs is essential for Iran’s survival and would serve as a deterrent, especially amid rising tensions with Israel."
Comments here:

Dan, I Allegedly, "You Are Still On The Hook"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 2/10/25
"You Are Still On The Hook"
"Car Sale Mistake Costs $38K 🚗💸 | Today, I’m sharing an unbelievable story about how selling a car without filing the correct paperwork cost one man $38,000 in fines! You won’t believe how this mistake could put your finances at serious risk. I’ll explain the importance of filing a Notice of Release of Liability when selling a car, especially in California, and how you can protect yourself from unexpected toll and parking charges tied to a car you no longer own. Trust me, this is a lesson you don’t want to learn the hard way!"
Comments here:

"What to Say When You Meet the Angel of Death at a Party"

"What to Say When You Meet 
the Angel of Death at a Party"
by Kate Bowler

"Every 90 days I lie in a whirling CT machine, dye coursing through my veins, and the doctors look to see whether the tumors in my liver are growing. If they are not, the doctors smile and schedule another scan. The rhythm has been the same since my doctors told me I had stage IV colon cancer two and a half years ago. I live for three months, take a deep breath and hope to start over again. I will probably do this for the rest of my life. Whatever that means.

When my scan is over, I need to make clear to my friends and my family that though I pray to be declared cured, I must be grateful. I have three more months of life. Hallelujah. So I try to put the news in a little Facebook post, that mix of sun and cloud. I am trying to clear the linguistic hurdles that show up on my chart. Noncurative. Stage IV. I want to communicate that I am hoping for a continued durable remission in the face of no perfect cure, but the comments section is a blurry mess of, "You kicked cancer's butt!" and "God bless you in your preparations."

It feels impossible to transmit the kernel of truth. I am not dying. I am not terminal. I am keeping vigil in the place of almost death. I stand in the in-between where everyone must pass, but so few can remain.

I was recently at a party in a head-to-toe Tonya Harding costume, my blond wig in a perfect French braid, and a woman I know spotted me from across the dance floor.  "I guess you're not dying!"  she yelled over the music, and everyone stopped to stare at me. "I'm working on it!"  I yelled back, after briefly reconsidering my commitment to pacifism.

We all harbor the knowledge, however covertly, that we're going to die, but when it comes to small talk, I am the angel of death. I have seen people try to swallow their own tongue after uttering the simple words, "How are you?" I watch loved ones devolve into stammering good wishes and then devastating looks of pity. I can see how easily a well-meaning but ill-placed suggestion makes them want to throw themselves into oncoming traffic.

A friend came back from Australia with a year's worth of adventures to tell and ended with a breathless, "You have to go there sometime!"  He lapsed into silence, seeming to remember at that very moment that I was in the hospital. And I didn't know how to say that the future was like a language I didn't speak anymore.

Most people I talk with succumb immediately to a swift death by free association. I remind them of something horrible and suddenly they are using words like pustules at my child's fourth-birthday party. They might be reminded of an aunt, a neighbor or a cousin's friend. No matter how distant the connection, all the excruciating particularities of this person's misfortune will be excavated.

This is not comforting. But I remind myself to pay attention because some people give you their heartbreak like a gift. It was a month or so into my grueling chemotherapy regimen when my favorite nurse sat down next to me at the cancer clinic and said softly: "I've been meaning to tell you. I lost a baby." The way she said "baby," with the lightest touch, made me understand. She had nurtured a spark of life in her body and held that child in her arms, and somewhere along the way she had been forced to bury that piece of herself in the ground. I might have known by the way she smoothed all my frayed emotions and never pried for details about my illness. She knew what it was like to keep marching long after the world had ended.

What does the suffering person really want? How can you navigate the waters left churning in the wake of tragedy? I find that the people least likely to know the answer to these questions can be lumped into three categories: minimizers, teachers and solvers.

The minimizers are those who think I shouldn/t be so upset because the significance of my illness is relative. These people are very easy to spot because most of their sentences begin with, "Well, at least.."  Minimizers often want to make sure that suffering people are truly deserving before doling out compassion.

My sister was on a plane from Toronto to visit me in the hospital and told her seatmate why she was traveling. Then, as she wondered when she had signed up to be a contestant in the calamity Olympics, the stranger explained that my cancer was vastly preferable to life during the Iranian revolution.

Some people minimize spiritually by reminding me that cosmically, death isn't the ultimate end. It doesn't matter, in the end, whether we are here or there. It's all the same, said a woman in the prime of her youth. She emailed this message to me with a lot of praying-hand emoticons. I am a professor at a Christian seminary, so a lot of Christians like to remind me that heaven is my true home, which makes me want to ask them if they would like to go home before me. Maybe now?

Atheists can be equally bossy by demanding that I immediately give up any search for meaning. One told me that my faith was holding me hostage to an inscrutable God, that I should let go of this theological guesswork and realize that we are living in a neutral universe. But the message is the same: Stop complaining and accept the world as it is.

The second exhausting type of response comes from the teachers, who focus on how this experience is supposed to be an education in mind, body and spirit. "I hope you have a Job experience", one man said bluntly. I can't think of anything worse to wish on someone. God allowed Satan to rob Job of everything, including his children's lives. Do I need to lose something more to learn God's character? Sometimes I want every know-it-all to send me a note when they face the grisly specter of death, and I'll send them a poster of a koala that says, "Hang in there!" 

The hardest lessons come from the solutions people, who are already a little disappointed that I am not saving myself. There is always a nutritional supplement, Bible verse or mental process I have not adequately tried. "Keep smiling! Your attitude determines your destiny!"  said a stranger named Jane in an email, having heard my news somewhere, and I was immediately worn out by the tyranny of prescriptive joy.

There is a trite cruelty in the logic of the perfectly certain. Those people are not simply trying to give me something. They are tallying up the sum of my life - looking for clues, sometimes for answers - for the purpose of pronouncing a verdict. But I am not on trial. To so many people, I am no longer just myself. I am a reminder of a thought that is difficult for the rational brain to accept: that the elements that constitute our bodies might fail at any moment. When I originally got my diagnosis at age 35, all I could think to say was, "But I have a son." It was the best argument I had. I can't end. This world can't end. It had just begun.

A tragedy is like a fault line. A life is split into a before and an after, and most of the time, the before was better. Few people will let you admit that out loud. Sometimes those who love you best will skip that first horrible step of saying: "I'm sorry. I'm so sorry this is happening to you."  Hope may prevent them from acknowledging how much has already been lost. But acknowledgment is also a mercy. It can be a smile or a simple, "Oh, hon, what a year you've had."  It does not ask anything from me but makes a little space for me to stand there in that moment. Without it, I often feel like I am starring in a reality program about a woman who gets cancer and is very cheerful about it.

After acknowledgment must come love. This part is tricky because when friends and acquaintances begin pouring out praise, it can sound a little too much like a eulogy. I've had more than one kindly letter written about me in the past tense, when I need to be told who I might yet become.

But the impulse to offer encouragement is a perfect one. There is tremendous power in touch, in gifts and in affirmations when everything you knew about yourself might not be true anymore. I am a professor, but will I ever teach again? I'm a mom, but for how long? A friend knits me socks and another drops off cookies, and still another writes a funny email or takes me to a concert. These seemingly small efforts are anchors that hold me to the present, that keep me from floating away on thoughts of an unknown future. They say to me, like my sister Maria did on one very bad day: "Yes, the world is changed, dear heart, but do not be afraid. You are loved, you are loved. You will not disappear. I am here." 
"Someday stars will wind down or blow up. Someday death will cover us all like the water of a lake and perhaps nothing will ever come to the surface to show that we were ever there. But we WERE there, and during the time we lived, we were alive. That's the truth - what is, what was, what will be - not what could be, what should have been, what never can be."
- Orson Scott Card

Free Download: Jack London, "The Iron Heel"

"I know nothing that I may say can influence you. You have no souls to be influenced. You are spineless, flaccid things. You pompously call yourselves Republicans and Democrats. You are lick-spittlers and panderers, the creatures of the Plutocracy." 
- Jack London
Freely download "The Iron Heel", by Jack London, here:

Read online The Project Gutenberg eBook 
of "The Iron Heel", by Jack London, here:

The Daily "Near You?"

Arvada, Colorado, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"I'm Rightly Tired Of The Pain..."

“I'm rightly tired of the pain I hear and feel, boss. I'm tired of bein' on the road, lonely as a robin in the rain. Not never havin' no buddy to go on with or tell me where we's comin' from or goin' to or why. I'm tired of people bein' ugly to each other. It feels like pieces of glass in my head. I'm tired of all the times I've wanted to help and couldn't. I'm tired of bein' in the dark. Mostly it's the pain. There's too much. If I could end it, I would. But I can't.”
- Stephen King, "The Green Mile"

“Gods dream of empires, but devils build them.”
- Jessica Cluess, "House of Dragons"

Adventures With Danno, "Shocking Sales At Meijer This Week"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 2/10/25
"Shocking Sales At Meijer This Week"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Different Russia, 2/10/25
"Inside Russian Convenience Shop, 
Real Life as Is in a Small Town Near Moscow"
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 

"The Grocery Store Hack That Helps You Avoid Ultra-Processed Foods"

Bill Bonner, "The 79 Times"

"The 79 Times"
"There is a time for everything under heaven.
 A time to sow and a time to reap.
 A time to hold ‘em… a time to fold ‘em…
 a time to walk away, and a time to buy gold.
by Bill Bonner

Baltimore, Maryland - "Number 79 on the periodic table is remarkably heartless. The poor? Let them get jobs. The homeless? Let them sleep in hollow logs. Body bags in Gaza? That’s their problem. Gold is indifferent to the sufferings of others. It is as callous as a torturer… as clueless as a Democrat. Does a man want you to refer to him as ‘they?’ Does an Afghani force his wife to wear a full-length cover…head to toe? And why shouldn’t the Trump Team want to find a better place for Palestinians… or give preference to White South African refugees…even after eliminating the refugee program?

Eh…gold shrugs. Are you getting richer? Poorer? Are stocks going up? Is Nvidia a ‘buy?’ Is it time to cash out your 401k? Don’t bother asking gold. It doesn’t know…and it doesn’t care. And yet…sometimes, gold glitters. This morning, for example. Markets Insider: "Gold hits record high after Trump threatens steel and aluminum tariffs. Commodity prices climbed and related currencies softened against the dollar on Monday after President Donald Trump said he would impose 25% tariffs on all steel  and aluminum entering the US."

But that sparkle is not just an overnight thing. Since January 2000, the Dow (a general measure of US stocks) is up 290%. Oil has gone up too…from $29 a barrel to $71. And bonds? They’ve just suffered their worst sell-off in history. The Wall Street Journal: "A Bond Selloff Is Rocking the World."

But gold has shined… from $282 an ounce in 2000, it now trades at nearly $2,900 – a gain of 900%, more than 3 times what you could get from stocks. CBS News: "The remarkable, record-breaking price surge that gold experienced in 2024 continued this week as the price of the precious metal surged to $2,871.74 per ounce. That's up from the $2,700 mark gold surpassed last October and, overall, is up just under 40% from where it started in January 2024 when the metal was priced at $2,063.73 for the same amount. It's possible, if not likely, that gold could soon surpass the $3,000 price point should certain economic conditions become more pronounced."

Would you have been better off in Nvidia… or Tesla… or Bitcoin? But those are individual investments; you might have gotten lucky… or not. Take Facebook, for example. The stock was trading at $23 when Barron’s thought it was too expensive. ‘Stay away from the stock,’ it counseled its readers. Today, Facebook (now Meta) trades at $717. Who knew? Trying to pick the hot stocks is a losing proposition. There are few winners…and lots of losers.

It’s asset allocation, not stock selection, that makes the most difference for most investors. Being in the right place at the right time is what really matters. And among leading 21st century places - stocks, bonds, gold, commodities - nothing beat gold. Which is a very odd thing. After all, not only does gold lack sympathy, empathy, and other kinds of pathy…it is also unproductive… and almost completely useless…except…as money.

What a strange thing.. How could an otherwise useless thing, with no pretensions to activity of any kind, beat a corporation, with all its smart people, patents, marketing machinery… innovations and capital - a sophisticated complex, dynamic organization, intentionally set up to increase wealth?

Our take on it is this: there is progress…and backsliding. There is virtue…and sin, beauty and ugliness. There is profit…and loss. There is life…and death. There is a time for everything under heaven. A time to sow and a time to reap. A time to hold ‘em…a time to fold ‘em…a time to walk away, and a time to buy gold.

In the autumn of 1999, US stocks had never been more expensive. It was time to get up from the table…time to walk away from equities…and put our wealth back into real money, gold. We weren’t trying to fructify it. We weren’t looking for capital gains or for dividends. We didn’t want a good return on our money; we just wanted a return OF our money. That’s what real money is supposed to do. Not go up. Not go down. Just not go away.

Most of the time, there should be better places for your investment money. But now? Is burying your talents in the ground the best you can do? An important insight from our Law of Conservation of Value (about which more, tomorrow): Prices go up…and down. No kidding. Gold has outpaced stocks for a quarter of a century. Isn’t it time for it to go down? More to come."

Jim Kunstler, "Warfare on Lawfare"

"Warfare on Lawfare"
"This feels like a national exorcism." - Charlie Kirk
by Jim Kunstler

“It is axiomatic that those who are beneficiaries of waste, fraud and unnecessary government spending will be the most threatened by the cuts that DOGE is making in these programs. These beneficiaries of waste and fraud are also extremely worried about the reputational, legal and potential criminal risk they will suffer by being exposed by DOGE.” 
- Bill Ackman

"I’m so glad that The New York Times explained what Kendrick Lamar was up to in his Superbowl half-time act because all I could make out was a grown man dressed-up like an eight-year-old hollering nursery rhymes in front of a flash-mob. Apparently, KL is engaged in a feud with another rapper named Drake, whom KL styles as a child molester. So, you see, the whole thing was just a bit of wholesome family entertainment. Thank The NY Times, for putting a grad-school spin on it:
Speaking of metanarratives - and apart from the private vendettas on Planet Rap - a nice one is developing at center-stage of US political life: the Party of Chaos using federal judges to oppose the dismantling of their gigantic grift scaffold. In other words, more lawfare to obstruct any earnest effort to effectively reform the management of our country. So, last week, you get Judge Carl J. Nichols in the DC District arguing that the DOGE shutdown of USAID was unauthorized and potentially illegal, lacking congressional approval.

Then, late Friday (when most citizens are checking out of the week’s struggles) Judge Paul Engelmayer out of the Southern District of New York blocked DOGE and other executive branch officials from accessing US Treasury record of expenditures. The injunction, comically, prevents Treasury Secretary Scott Bessant from seeing what his agency doles out money for - that is, from managing anything his department does. The suit that prompted the ruling was brought by nineteen states’ Attorneys General led by NY AG Letitia James. So, you see how this works.

You must also imagine that the White House was prepared for these lawfare shenanigans, though they haven’t shown their hand in response so far. This is a constitutional quarrel, of course, since it concerns who has authority between the executive, the legislature, and the judiciary over agency spending and, in particular, who gets to audit it. The actual objective by the plaintiff in these cases (the Party of Chaos) is simply to delay any corrective action.

The DOJ under Pam Bondi can designate the US Solicitor General to petition the Supreme Court (SCOTUS) for certiorari - to expedite the resolution of this constitutional issue as to whether Mr. Trump, as chief executive, and his bona fide appointees, can carry out executive functions. The arguments against that appear to be weak.

It is the President’s duty to see that the laws are faithfully executed, meaning that the departments under him do their jobs correctly, which would give him inherent authority to audit and restructure agencies like USAID. Both judges Nichols and Engelmayer are arrogating executive and legislative functions on policy-making for themselves, triggering a separation-of-powers dispute that the SCOTUS must adjudicate promptly.

What matters most in these cases is that SCOTUS has an opportunity to put up new guardrails against the hijacking of the federal courts for the purpose of lawfare - that is, for political dirty-fighting under color-of-law. The law is slow-moving, arcane, and incomprehensible to most non-lawyer citizens and that is why the Party of Chaos has misused it so liberally.

In any event, DOGE is moving ahead on many other fronts and the next battleground looks like the US Department of Education, an agency which, since its creation in 1979, has only presided over an epic degeneration in the academic performance of young people. The agency has grown since 1979 to 4,400 employees overseeing a $238-billion budget. Otherwise, what it’s mainly accomplished is to enrich the various teachers’ unions and to raise the cost of college tuitions astronomically while degenerating the purpose and value of higher ed. The fifty states were arguably doing a better job on their own without any DOE on the scene.

Meanwhile, it’s satisfying to see the security clearances revoked from Antony Blinken, Jake Sullivan, Lisa Monaco, Letitia James, Alvin Bragg, Andrew Weissmann, Mark Zaid, and Norm Eisen. The reason: among other crimes, they all dabbled in election interference. And “Joe Biden” lost his, too, on account of being too feeble-minded to be trusted with classified information. Who knows what other legal complications lie in waiting up ahead for that whole gang? Lawfare giveth and lawfare taketh away. Or FAFO."

"Excited Couple Closes Escrow On Dozen Eggs"

"Excited Couple Closes Escrow On Dozen Eggs"
by BabylonBee.com

Olympia WA - "After a lengthy negotiation process, local couple Chris and Haven Whitmer celebrated finally closing escrow on a dozen eggs. Though a stretch on the young couple's budget, Haven had long dreamed of owning her own eggs, and Chris felt they had at last reached a place financially where they could take the plunge. "We did it, babe," smiled Chris as he handed her the carton. "Gosh, how many eggs did we look at before we settled on these? It was all worth it, though. We finally have real, beautiful eggs to call our own."

While sources report that Haven initially had visions of jumbo eggs, she soon realized those were out of their price range. "With Chris being an engineer and me a teacher, jumbo eggs were never really an option," explained Haven. "These are the perfect starter eggs for a new couple like us. In ten years or so, we may talk about extra-large, but for now, we're so happy to have eggs that are really ours." At publishing time, the Whitmer family had purchased egg-owner's insurance to protect their precious assets."

"Alea Iacta Est"

"Alea Iacta Est"
by Alexander Macris

"In the closing days of 50 BC, the Roman Senate declared that Julius Caesar’s term as a provincial governor was finished. Roman law afforded its magistrates immunity to prosecution, but this immunity would end with Caesar’s term. As the leader of the populares faction, Caesar had many enemies among the elite optimates, and as soon as he left office, these enemies planned to bury him in litigation. Caesar knew he would lose everything: property, liberty, even his life. Caesar decided it was better to fight for victory than accept certain defeat. In January 49 BC, he crossed the Rubicon River with his army, in violation of sacred Roman law, and began a civil war. “Alea iacta est,” said Caesar: The die is cast."
"Roll the Dice" by Charles Bukowski 
(read by Tom O'Bedlam)

John Wilder, "Civil War 2.0 Weather Report: Trump Crossing The Rubicon"

"Civil War 2.0 Weather Report: 
Trump Crossing The Rubicon"
by John Wilder

"On January 6, 2021, Donald J. Trump did not cross the Rubicon. As his supporters entered the Capitol Building, he could have egged them on to stay and actually occupy the building. He did not. That was a moment in history where Trump could plausibly have conducted a counter-coup on the government. He did not.

The counter-coup really started on January 20, 2025. As Trump entered office, his strategy was entirely different – but more on that on Wednesday where we’ll discuss tactics. No, the “how” is important, but the “what” is even more important. The “what” is this is the most seismic moment in United States politics since Civil War 1.0, and perhaps since the American Revolution (or, as commentors have noted in the past, Civil War 0.0).

Quite simply, Trump has crossed the Rubicon by tearing into the Deep State, the entrenched bureaucracy that exists to perpetuate itself. Oh, sure, that’s what we thought it did, but it turns out that that same Deep State functions to fund jobs for all of the Marxists Grievance Studies graduates the GloboLeftElite schools can produce. And it appears to be a money laundering operation for the politically connected, with layers of foundations paying each other money, much of which originates from federal spending. This spending has been obscured for so long that the Deep State though no one could ever find it. D.O.G.E. found it, or at least billions of it. I think when it’s all said and done that we’ll see that it’s an octopus with tendrils in everything.

Oh, that’s if they’re allowed. This information is already causing the Democrats to behaving in the worst way possible: defending the obvious corruption, with one of the corruptcongresscreatures actually saying “the public has no right to see how the government is spending money.” They’re acting like the person who found the evidence of the crime is guilty.
The immune system of the GloboLeftElite has been activated: the lawsuits and injunctions have already started, with the latest (and most ludicrous) one indicating that properly appointed staffers of the Treasury Department aren’t allowed to do their jobs.

So, Trump crossed the Rubicon. Legally. Devastatingly. But now that he’s done it, there are not choices for him. Trump (and Musk) have to win, have to follow this through, because if they don’t, the Deep State will convulse and likely send both of them to prison for life. I’m not kidding.

This has already driven the GloboLeft rank and file to despair – they see the corruption that Trump is uncovering, and know they shouldn’t defend it, yet they can’t help themselves. The fact that the federal government gave George Soros $28 million to help elect GloboLeftist D.A.s to increase the violence in big cities and that GloboLeft senators and representatives can’t denounce it? Or the employees? We know at least partially how they spend their workdays:
Tells you everything you need to know if they’re fine with the U.S. government paying a foreigner to influence local elections. It’s because if they do what the Deep State wants, they’re rewarded with wealth and power in private sector jobs or in foundations. You don’t denounce that which is making you unjustly rich.

There is danger here, yet this is perhaps the only offramp left to keep the nation out of Civil War 2.0. Will it work? Probably not – the odds are still against it. But it sure is fun to watch."

"Economic Market Snapshot 2/10/25"

"Economic Market Snapshot 2/10/25"
Down the rabbit hole of psychopathic greed and insanity...
Only the consequences are real - to you!
"It's a Big Club, and you ain't in it. 
You and I are not in the Big Club."
- George Carlin
o
Market Data Center, Live Updates:
Comprehensive, essential truth.
Financial Stress Index

"The OFR Financial Stress Index (OFR FSI) is a daily market-based snapshot of stress in global financial markets. It is constructed from 33 financial market variables, such as yield spreads, valuation measures, and interest rates. The OFR FSI is positive when stress levels are above average, and negative when stress levels are below average. The OFR FSI incorporates five categories of indicators: creditequity valuationfunding, safe assets and volatility. The FSI shows stress contributions by three regions: United Statesother advanced economies, and emerging markets."
Job cuts and much more.
Commentary, highly recommended:
"The more I see of the monied classes,
the better I understand the guillotine."
- George Bernard Shaw
Oh yeah... beyond words. Any I know anyway...
And now... The End Game...
o

"New Released Hostages Give Shocking Details, Video Goes Viral (Israel Bans Interview)"

Full screen recommended.
OpenmindedThinker Show, 2/10/25
"New Released Hostages Give Shocking Details, 
Video Goes Viral (Israel Bans Interview)"
Comments here:

"Saudi Arabia Makes Huge U-Turn, Takes Side With Palestine and Iran!"

OpenmindedThinker Show, 2/10/25
"Saudi Arabia Makes Huge U-Turn, 
Takes Side With Palestine and Iran!"
Comments here:
WE, America, paid for it all, everything, and allowed and supported this genocidal
 horror to continue, and continue to do so! We have become an eternal, shameful 
disgrace the whole world can now see, no different from the evil psychopathically
degenerate inbred Israeli monsters doing the actual killing! 
Shame! Shame and disgrace on us!
o
"Professor Jeffrey Sachs Presents 4 Reasons 
Why The U.S. Failed to Stop Genocide in Gaza"

Sunday, February 9, 2025

Musical Interlude: The Moody Blues, "The Voice"

The Moody Blues, "The Voice"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"These two mighty galaxies are pulling each other apart. Known as the "Mice" because they have such long tails, each spiral galaxy has likely already passed through the other. The long tails are created by the relative difference between gravitational pulls on the near and far parts of each galaxy. Because the distances are so large, the cosmic interaction takes place in slow motion - over hundreds of millions of years. 
NGC 4676 lies about 300 million light-years away toward the constellation of Bernice's Hair (Coma Berenices) and are likely members of the Coma Cluster of Galaxies. The featured picture was taken with the Hubble Space Telescope's Advanced Camera for Surveys in 2002. These galactic mice will probably collide again and again over the next billion years so that, instead of continuing to pull each other apart, they coalesce to form a single galaxy."

Chet Raymo, “Tyger, Tyger Burning Bright…”

“Tyger, Tyger Burning Bright…”
by Chet Raymo

“Divinity is not playful. The universe was not made in jest but in solemn incomprehensible earnest. By a power that is unfathomably secret, and holy, and fleet.” You may recall these words from Annie Dillard’s “Pilgrim at Tinker Creek.” There is nothing intrinsically cheerful about the world, she says. To live is to die; it’s all part of the bargain. Stars destroy themselves to make the atoms of our bodies. Every creature lives to eat and be eaten. And into this incomprehensible, unfathomable, apparently stochastic melee stumbles… You and I.

With qualities that we have - so far - seen nowhere else. Hope. Humor. A sense of justice. A sense of beauty. Gratitude. But also: Anger. Hurt. Despair. Strangers in a strange land.

Galaxies by the billions turn like St. Catherine Wheels, throwing off sparks of exploding stars. Atoms eddy and flow, blowing hot and cold, groping and promiscuous. A wind of neutrinos gusts through our bodies, Energy billows and swells. A myriad of microorganisms nibble at our flesh.

We have a sense that something purposeful is going on, something that involves us. Something secret, holy and fleet. But we haven’t a clue what it is. We make up stories. Stories in which we are the point of it all. We tell the stories over and over. To our children. To ourselves. And the stories fill up the space of our ignorance.

Until they don’t. And then the great yawning spaces open again. And time clangs down on our heads like a pummeling rain, like the collapsing ceiling of the sky. Dazed, stunned, we stagger like giddy topers towards our own swift dissolution. Inexplicably praising. Admiring. Wondering. Giving thanks.”
“The Tyger”

“Tyger! Tyger! burning bright
In the forests of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Could frame thy fearful symmetry?
In what distant deeps or skies
Burnt the fire of thine eyes?
On what wings dare he aspire?
What the hand dare sieze the fire?
And what shoulder, and what art.
Could twist the sinews of thy heart?
And when thy heart began to beat,
What dread hand? and what dread feet?
What the hammer? what the chain?
In what furnace was thy brain?
What the anvil? what dread grasp
Dare its deadly terrors clasp?
When the stars threw down their spears,
And watered heaven with their tears,
Did he smile his work to see?
Did he who made the Lamb make thee?
Tyger! Tyger! burning bright
In the forests of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Dare frame thy fearful symmetry?”

- William Blake

"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

"Even With Good People..."

"Cause even with good people, even with people that
you can kinda trust, if the truth is inconvenient,
and if the truth doesn't, like, fit, they don't believe it."
- Marie Adler

The Daily "Near You?"

Keller, Texas, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

Greg Hunter, "Danger of Deep Worldwide Recession in 2025"

"Danger of Deep Worldwide Recession in 2025"
by Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com 

"Former Wall Street money manager and financial analyst Ed Dowd of PhinanceTechnologies.com is back with a new report called “Danger of Deep Worldwide Recession in 2025.” The new report shows how a weak economy was propped up under the Biden Administration and how a crash, this year, is inevitable. Dowd says, “What we are going to have going forward is the reversal of deficit government spending, which was juicing the economy with illegals. Some of them got jobs, but a lot of them got benefits. They got housing accommodations. The NGO system was flush with money to facilitate this massive, purposeful logistical operation. People don’t understand that the net legal migration in the US is one million a year. That’s one million people a year. The last four years, we brought in 10 million to 15 million people. That is a new economic variable, and it distorted the economy. It never got us into expansion territory, but it papered over a lot of the ills we were seeing. Trump’s policies are going to reverse that all out. The velocity of money under Joe Biden really started to rise. Illegal immigration is very inflationary. In the fourth quarter, the velocity of money is already rolling over. The Trump effect began the moment he was elected. We’ve seen self-deportations. We have seen new tenant rents plunge, and that’s what has been holding up the housing market.”

How bad is the economy going to get? Dowd predicts, “We are seeing a recession in 2025. The rest of the globe is already starting to roll over. It’s going to be a worldwide recession. There is going to be a mini housing crisis. Housing has been stagnant for the better part of the year. There is no transaction volume, and nobody can afford homes. We are hitting the 18-year housing cycle. The last housing cycle was in 2007, and you add 18 years and you get 2025. The economy for the middle-class is going down. As time goes on, we are going to see GDP numbers go lower and lower and lower. It’s kind of a perfect storm for the Trump Administration. There is no way to avoid the pain.”

When can we expect things to get better? Dowd says, “This is much like Ronald Reagan in his first term. He was elected with -2% real wages. This was the same phenomenon going into the 2024 Election. So, we are going to have a recession. Then, Trump gets his policies, and he has a very short window of opportunity to get all of his policies enacted. If he does, we will be booming on the other side of this.”

Dowd still likes gold and thinks rates will begin going lower, which means locking in rates now will be a smart play for many. Dowd says, “Gold is good long term.” Dowd also thinks AI is over-bought and is in a bubble and points out, “There is no money on the other side,” of the AI boom. Dowd thinks AI tech will crash just like the internet bubble in early 2000. Dowd thinks, “AI prices are too expensive, and they will collapse at some point.” There is much more in the 51-minute interview.

Join Greg Hunter on Rumble as he goes One-on-One with money manager and investment expert Ed Dowd, as he talks about his new report called “Danger of Deep Worldwide Recession in 2025.” 

Musical Interlude: Karla Bonoff, "Goodbye My Friend"

Full screen recommended.
Karla Bonoff, "Goodbye My Friend"

"Oh we never know where life will take us,
We know it's just a ride on the wheel.
And we never know when death will shake us,
And we wonder how it will feel.

So goodbye my friend,
I know I'll never see you again.
But the time together through all the years
Will take away these tears.
It's O.K. now,
Goodbye my friend.

I'd see a lot of things that made me crazy,
And I guess I held on to you.
You could've run away and left, well maybe.
But it wasn't time and we both knew.

So goodbye my friend,
I know I'll never see you again.
But the love you gave me through all the years
Will take away my tears.
I'm O.K. now,
Goodbye my friend.

A life so fragile, a love so pure,
We can't hold on but we try.
We watch how quickly it disappears,
And we'll never know why.
But I'm O.K. now.
Goodbye my friend,
You can go now.
Goodbye my friend."