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Tuesday, March 18, 2025

"Attritional Drone War"

"Attritional Drone War"
by The ZMan

"Prior to the start of the Ukraine war, it was assumed that the Russians, if they desired, could quickly smash the Ukrainian army. Russia is a big country with a big army and Ukraine is not as big, but few understood that it had a big army. At the start of the war, it had an army of 350,000, with a similar number in reserve. Fewer anticipated the hundreds of billions in NATO weapons and money. Everyone, including the Russians, expected a short war, but instead it is a long war.

One main reason for this is technology. The Russians badly miscalculated how the war would unfold, but they also failed to adapt to new technology, specifically the use of drones in frontline battles. Their first taste of drone warfare was the Bayraktar TB2 drones supplied by the Turks to the Ukrainians. This is a medium-altitude long-endurance vehicle that allowed the Ukrainians to precisely aim their artillery at Russian formations, as well as directly attack those formations.

The Russians have proven to be quick learners. They rushed to embrace the new technology and have now taken it in directions few anticipated. First person video drones are now the primary weapon in the Russian arsenal, used to not only attack Ukrainian men and material, but used to shape the battlefield. This new use of drones came to the fore in the Ukrainian Kursk offensive, which concluded last week with a stunning Ukrainian defeat.

The “Kursk incursion” as the Ukrainians called it, was an attack across the Russian border to gain control of the nuclear facilities in the Kursk region. There is a nuclear power plant there and a storage facility for nuclear weapons. It is unclear what weapons, if any, are stored there, but Ukraine wanted to gain control of it as well as the power plant for the purpose of nuclear blackmail. The Russians would either surrender or Ukraine creates another Chernobyl.

The Russians managed to stop the Ukrainian offensive, but instead of it becoming a stalemate or requiring the Russians to spend men and material to keep the Ukrainians bottled up, it became a killing field for Ukraine due to the Russian use of drones to police every square meter of the region. The air over the Ukrainian formations was full of drones twenty-four hours a day. Any effort to move men and material at any scale was detected and attacked by drones.

To understand how drones are now used by the Russian army and to a lesser extent the Ukrainian army, this Turkish YouTube channel provides video of drone attacks with a AI generated voice over. There are three things to notice. One is that the drone operators can fly these things into the tightest of spaces. This allows them to hunt for assets inside of buildings and hidden in wooded areas. These things are like a swarm of birds that have cameras and explosives.

The other thing is they can now operate at night. This is a Russian innovation that Ukraine has not matched. Russian FPV drones have night vision and infrared cameras, so they can spot men moving around at night. The “solution” to constant drone surveillance during the day was to move men and material around at night, but now there is no hiding from the drone swarms after dark. In Kursk, the Ukrainians were under twenty-four-hour surveillance and attack.

The third thing is the drones are essentially networked together either through the tether to the drone operators or through the over-the-air system. Fiber optic drones rely on a fiber optic cable to communicate with the operator. The operator is then connected to the Russian command and control system. The effect is that the drones in the sky have created a twenty-four-hour-a-day information space over the battlefield. This massive data collection system is then used to anticipate changes.

These parts of the evolving use of drones all came together in the stunning rout of the Ukrainians in the Kursk region last week. The Russians could accurately predict where Ukrainian men and material will be at all times, so they could plan the stunning move through the gas pipelines to put troops behind the Ukrainians in Sudzha. They could also be ready for when the Ukrainians reacted to hit them with drones and drone-controlled artillery and glide bombs.

Kursk has become a model for drone attritional war. Filling the sky with networked suicide and surveillance drones is the first step. This prevents the enemy from gathering their forces for an attack. Instead, they are required to spread out and hide everything from the ever-present drones. The next step is to use the drones to shape the activity of the enemy in order to create an opportunity. The final step is to use the drones as part of combined arms assault on the enemy.

Of course, the same rules apply to the attacker. Even though the Ukrainian drones are not as good and numerous as the Russian drones, they still have lots of them, which means the Russians must disperse their resources as well. The battle for Kursk quickly turned into two armies spread thin across a wide area in order to avoid becoming an easy target for drones. This is why it took seven months for the Russians to dislodge the Ukrainians from the area.

To understand how this changes war, imagine if two armies are only equipped with long bows and crossbows. One the one hand, the longbowman can attack any grouping of men on the other side and vice-versa. Everyone must hide in buildings and underground bunkers. On the other hand, small assault groups of crossbowmen go out to hunt the enemy in close quarter assaults. Once they secure an area, more men come into to take up positions.

This is the battlefield in the drone age. Tanks and armored personnel carriers still operate, but they are easily spotted by drones. Even those equipped with electronic warfare countermeasures are vulnerable. Often, they are simply used to transport men on a one-way trip. As soon as the vehicle is disabled by the drone, the men scatter before the drones finish off the machine. Armor is often just an expensive delivery mechanism for small groups of men.

This is why the Ukraine war drags on. On the one hand, the Russians are unwilling to lose men and machines on big assaults due to the threat of drones. On the other hand, they have adapted the new technology to slowly hunt small groups of Ukrainians and individual pieces of equipment. Since Ukraine is fixated on holding territory, this attritional drone war lumbers along at a snail’s pace. In Kursk, the Ukrainians lost about four hundred men a day to these small-scall attacks.

We are, of course, at the cusp of drone war, but it is not hard to imagine how this could change the nature of war. At the start of the technological revolution, technology was the great dis-equalizer. It gave America a massive edge over the rest of the world in terms of military power. Now, at the end of the technological revolution, technology is becoming a great equalizer. Cheap drones are turning expensive, high-tech weapons into liabilities and returning war to a battle of men and wits."

"The Good, The Bad... and The Ugly"

Following "A Fistful of Dollars" and "For a Few Dollars More," "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" was the third in the so-called Dollars Trilogy. It was released in Italy in 1965 and to US audiences the following year.
"The Good, The Bad... and The Ugly"
by Joel Bowman

“You see in this world there's two kinds of people, my friend. 
Those with loaded guns and those who dig. You dig.”
~ Blondie (Clint Eastwood) in the movie "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" (1966)

"When we left you last week, we were noticing a diverging trend between the north and south, from one End of the Americas to the Other. Down here in our adopted sometimes home of Argentina, markets are opening up and trade barriers are coming down... growth is revised higher and inflation is returning to earth... as the people cast their weary eyes upon the future and discover, to their own astonishment, the hope of brighter days to come.

North of the Rio Grande, meanwhile, trade barriers are going up as tariffs take center stage... growth is revised lower and inflation expectations creep higher... and hardworking everyday citizens, having enjoyed their “exceptional” position at the top of the heap for as long as they can recall, turn their tired eyes toward the future and discover, to their own chagrin, debt, deficits and doubletalk deceit as far as the eye can see.

Of course, all is not quite as it seems. And our American friends need not despair entirely, for there is a third trend in motion... one lately accelerating on the other side of the Atlantic... which makes the republic’s prospects appear outright rosy.

Over the next few Notes, we’ll take a look at these diverging trajectories, roughly trifurcated into The Good, the Bad and The Ugly. And so, like a pimply teen at a high school dance, we shall begin with the former... and work our way to the latter.

Argentina, The Good: In what some are daring to call the “Milei Effect,” the OECD has revised higher its economic outlook for Argentina and estimates growth of 5.7% for this year, making it the world's second fastest-growing economy in 2025, after India. Projected growth for 2026, according to the crystal ballers, have Argentina in 3rd place, behind India and Indonesia, respectively. All the while, inflation is expected to end the year at ~23%... a fraction of the near ~300% annual rate seen in these parts just over a year ago.

Dear readers will be duly skeptical… and certainly the numbers don’t tell the whole story. As we mentioned in this space last week, GDP figures are easily goosed by government actors, who are only too willing to lard the expenditure side of the nation’s ledger with costly boondoggles and make-work scams, which they then pronounce (and count) as “progress.”

And yet, as anyone with an IQ above room temperature (celsius) knows, not all government programs are created equally, nor do their dubious blessings fall on the innocent and the guilty alike. Some programs are corrupt to the core, concocted around congressional cauldrons by crooks and conmen, designed from the outset to fail... and always in the politician’s favor. Such schemes look like acts of Congress and smell like acts of Congress, so are generally treated by the upstanding public with the disdain they so desperately deserve.

But here we refer only to what might be called “honest treachery,” which leaves out those myriad programs cynically smuggled past the public’s notice under the guise of do-goodery, like so many pretty little cherubs... with dynamite sticks stuffed inside their jackets.

Think of the hundreds of billions of dollars that go towards “making the world safe for democracy,” for example, a marketing slogan as demonstrably hollow as it is lethal, the modern iteration of Horace’s hoary old dulce et decorum est pro patria mori (“it is good and sweet to die for your country”).

You Dig? All the more impressive, then, that the “Milei Effect” – collapsing inflation and world-beating growth – has been achieved while cutting government programs, from top to bottom, bad to worse. Rather than juicing the economy with fiat-powered economic steroids, in other words, Argentina’s pro-market president has instead focused on slaying the Leviathan and returning voluntary trade back to its rightful owners: free markets, free minds and free people.

As Milei remarked earlier this month, in that “other” State of the Union address...“The chainsaw today is the symbol of a change of era, the beginning of a new golden age for humanity, but this time, instead of going against the world, Argentina is at the forefront.” “The eyes of the world are now on Argentina,” Milei continued, noting that many other countries were beginning to adopt his administration’s approach and were applying it to their own economies. He mentioned a certain centibillionaire and legacy media whipping boy, one who rescues stranded astronauts in his spare time, as one instance where real cuts to “waste, fraud and abuse” were being made.

And this was only the beginning... “The chainsaw is not simply a government program, it is a state policy that will last for years,” he promised. To the cheers of the working many... and the horror of the grifting few... Milei publicly celebrated the fact that 40,000 public non-workers had been laid off during his first year, citing in particular the closure of whole public institutions, including the state media propaganda arm, formerly known as Télam, the national film industry (INCAA), and the so-called Women’s Ministry (founded by ex-president Alberto Fernández, who has since been charged with... wait for it... “gender-based violence” for beating his then-pregnant wife).

Describing these and other corrupted agencies as a “giant political scam,” Milei announced he had “eradicated the lie that public works generate jobs,” stating only that they really just “generate taxes.”

Unlike so-called pro-business leaders elsewhere, who merely shuffle the deck in their own favor, President Milei is decidedly pro-market, letting the chips (to switch casino metaphor) fall where they may. But as things continue to look good down at this End of the World, what about the Bad and the Ugly elsewhere? Stay tuned for more Notes From the End of the World..."

"How It Really Is"

 

Dan, I Allegedly, "Cash is Here to Stay"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 3/18/25
"Cash is Here to Stay"

"Cash is king, and it’s not going anywhere anytime soon! In today’s video, I dive into why cash remains essential despite the growing push for a cashless society. From Sweden and Norway’s struggles with cyberattacks to the importance of keeping cash on hand for emergencies, let’s break down the reality behind going digital. Plus, we’ll explore how debanking, risky loans, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s shutdown are shaping the financial world as we know it. We also touch on how credit card usage is changing in surprising ways and why central bank digital currencies may not be the solution everyone expects. Whether you’re concerned about financial stability, digital currency, or just the practicality of cash, this video covers it all."
Comments here:

Bill Bonner, "Let's Not Make a Deal"

"Let's Not Make a Deal"
by Bill Bonner

“To all Houthi terrorists, YOUR TIME IS UP, AND YOUR ATTACKS 
MUST STOP, STARTING TODAY. IF THEY DON’T, HELL WILL 
RAIN DOWN UPON YOU LIKE NOTHING YOU HAVE EVER SEEN BEFORE!”
- Donald Trump

Baltimore, Maryland - "The Houthis have seen a lot. Whether they will be cowed as easily as America’s university students, we don’t know. But when it comes to foreign policy, the less you know about a place, its history, its people…the easier it is to offer a solution to its problems. In this respect too, Mr. Trump is perhaps uniquely equipped to lead the empire.

Trump has brought ‘Big Man’ government to the US. That might be a good thing…the Big Man can do what more conventional leaders cannot. He could use his remarkable power to clean house, for example. Or he could just make a mess messier, with more chaos and corruption.

Many are the interpretations of the Trump phenomenon. He is ‘setting things right.’ He is ‘destroying our democracy.’ He’s ‘saving America from the lib-tards.’ He’s creating ‘an oligarchy.’ He’s a ‘Russian asset.’ He’s a ‘populist.’ He’s an ‘authoritarian.’ Etc. We prefer our own: That Mr. Trump has an historic mission of which he is unaware.

Fish gotta swim. Birds gotta fly. And late, degenerate empires gotta act like late, degenerate empires. A wise and sensible leader would insist that the budget be balanced…and unnecessary wars brought to a swift close. But that’s not what a late, degenerate empire does. Typically, it relies more and more on brute force and less on gentle commerce. And it finds a leader who is up the challenge. He has to keep the empire on course…to its own denouement.

The invincible Spanish Armada proved very vincible. Napoleon had to retreat from Moscow. The sun set on the British Empire. The Blitzkrieg bogged down in Stalingrad. Almost all great empires meet their Waterloo in a combination of debt and foreign policy. The Austro-Hungarians invaded Serbia, and set off WWI. By 1918 the Austro-Hungarian army was still in the field, but without ammunition or food…fighting for a starving empire that soon disappeared.

The original United States were famously not interested in foreign policies. They generally eschewed ‘foreign entanglements,’ treaties, international organizations, coalitions of the willing, nation building, defending democracy and all the other claptrap of today’s empire. Besides, they were fully occupied by dispossessing the Indian tribes who stood in their way, from sea to shining sea.

The first major break with the live-and-let-live tradition was the War Between the States in which the North insisted that the South do as it was told. A generation later, by the 1880s, the US had the world’s biggest economy. The temptation to empire was irresistible, led by Teddy Roosevelt, William McKinley and Woodrow Wilson. And today, the US has more foreign entanglements than you can shake a stick at, with some 800 bases around the world ready to exert ‘full spectrum dominance’ over whatever hapless locals get in the way.

But nothing lasts forever. And already at the edges of the spectrum, the deep reds and violets are beginning to fade. The Financial Times: "Since 2017, Trump’s first year in office, trade has held more or less steady at just under 60 per cent of global GDP. But there’s been a decline in the US share of trade flows offset by an increase in other regions, particularly the nations of Asia, Europe and the Middle East. Trump 2.0 seems likely to bring more of the same: trade without America."

Nations get rich like individuals, by offering goods and services to others. As you’d expect, most developed and developing nations have increased the importance of trade over the last ten years. The one big exception is the US, where trade as a percentage of GDP has dipped to around 25%. The Financial Times: "America may be increasingly dominant as a financial and economic superpower but not so much as a trading power. Its share of global equity indices has exploded to almost 70 per cent. Its share of global GDP has inched up to more than 25 per cent. Yet its share of global trade is under 15 per cent, and has declined significantly in the last eight years."

A timber company executive in British Columbia described the light in his neck of the woods: “It is impossible to replace the US in the short-term, but in the long-term, we are building up our contacts with China and Japan.”

And what about America’s leading industry - high tech? Fortune: "The U.S. may have the brains in leading AI chip development globally, but China will continue to have the brawn to manufacture applications for those chips, and that won’t change anytime soon, billionaire investor Ray Dalio says. “We do not have manufacturing, and we're not going to go back and be competitive in manufacturing with China in our lifetimes, I don’t believe.”

As a trading partner, the US lost ground over the last ten years. Now it is an aim of US foreign policy - to reduce its trade with the rest of the world, making it less dependent on foreign imports. The Big Man threatens, bullies, sanctions, tariffs, bombs - whatever it takes to make a deal. Trade slows. And the empire shuffles to its fate."

"Democrats Panic as Biden's Pardons Get Overturned"

"Democrats Panic as Biden's Pardons Get Overturned"
MattMorseTV, 3/18/25
It's game over for the Democrats.
Comments here:

This could get very interesting...

"Here Are 7 Astonishing Economic Charts That Will Absolutely Blow Your Mind"

"Here Are 7 Astonishing Economic Charts
 That Will Absolutely Blow Your Mind"
by Michael Snyder

"As a nation, we have literally been in the process of committing financial suicide for decades. Sadly, some people have responded to the new administration’s efforts to get debt levels under control by committing acts of extreme violence. Our society is deeply addicted to debt and that must stop. The 7 economic charts that you are about to see are incredibly shocking. If you know anyone that still does not believe that the United States is in the midst of a long-term economic decline, just show them these charts. Sometimes you can quote economic statistics to people until you are blue in the face and it won’t do any good, but when those same people see charts and pictures suddenly it all sinks in. What is great about charts is that you can very easily demonstrate what has been happening to the economy over an extended period of time. As you examine the economic charts below, pay special attention to what has been happening to the U.S. economy over the last 30 or 40 years. 

The truth is that what is wrong with the U.S. economy is not a great mystery. All of the economic problems that we are experiencing now have taken decades to develop. Hopefully the charts in this article will help people realize just how nightmarish our economic problems have become, because until people start realizing how incredibly bad things have gotten they will never be willing to accept the dramatic solutions that are necessary to fix our financial system.

The sad fact of the matter is that we are living in the biggest debt bubble in the history of the world. All of this debt has made the present more pleasant, but it has also destroyed the bright economic future that our children and our grandchildren were supposed to enjoy. If they have the opportunity, future generations of Americans will look back on what we have done to them in absolute horror.

The 7 economic charts posted below are meant to shock you. Most Americans today need to be shocked before they will be motivated to take action. Please share these charts with as many people as you can. If we can wake enough people up, hopefully something will be done about all of these problems while there is still time.

1 – Government spending is expanding at an exponential rate. As you can see from the chart below, federal spending is now roughly 14 times higher than it was back in 1980. And federal spending is about three trillion dollars higher per year than it was during the last full year before the pandemic. Once the pandemic subsided, federal spending went down a bit, but now it is starting to rise at an exponential rate once again…


2 – U.S. government debt is absolutely exploding. The United States government is 36 trillion dollars in debt. How insane is that? Our national debt is approximately 36 times larger than it was when Ronald Reagan first entered the White House. Unfortunately, it continues to grow at breathtaking speed. Even with the budget cuts we are witnessing, we will add trillions more to the debt this year. Can we afford to continue to accumulate debt at this rate?…


3 – The growth of our money supply is a horror show. Just look at how rapidly M1 has been skyrocketing over the last couple of years. During the pandemic, M1 went from about 4 trillion dollars to more than 20 trillion dollars. The Federal Reserve is clearly guilty of economic malpractice. Is there any way that we are going to be able to avoid paying a very serious price for all of this reckless money printing?…


4 – Household debt has soared to almost unbelievable levels over the last 30 years. The sad truth is that it is not just the U.S. government that has a massive debt problem. U.S. households have also been accumulating debt at a staggering rate. Total household and nonprofit organization debt did not pass the 2 trillion dollar mark until the mid-1980s, but now total U.S. household and nonprofit organization debt has surpassed the 20 trillion dollar mark. Household debt alone accounts for approximately 18 trillion dollars of this total…


5 – The total of all debt (government, business and consumer) in the United States is now well over 100 trillion dollars. If anyone doubts that our society is addicted to debt, just show them this chart. This is a debt bubble that is absolutely unprecedented in U.S. history…


6 – More than 100 million U.S. adults that do not have jobs are considered to be “not in the labor force”. When a U.S. adult is not working, they are put into one of two buckets. For years, government bureaucrats have kept the number of Americans that are “officially unemployed” at a very low level, while the number of Americans that are dumped into the bucket labeled “not in the labor force” has just kept going up and up. During the Great Recession, the number of Americans that were considered to be “officially unemployed” plus the number of Americans that were considered to be “not in the labor force” never exceeded 100 million. Today, the number of Americans that are considered to be “not in the labor force” alone exceeds 102 million…


7 – The price of gold has gone absolutely nuts, and that is not a good sign. When instability hits the financial markets, many investors flock to gold. This is especially true in inflationary times. Since the Federal Reserve was created in 1913, the value of the U.S. dollar has declined by close to 99 percent. One of the reasons given for the creation of the Federal Reserve was that the Fed was supposed to help control inflation. But that didn’t exactly work out too well. The truth is that the United States never had consistently rampant inflation until the Federal Reserve took control. In particular, once the U.S. totally went off the gold standard in the 1970s inflation really started escalating out of control. When the gold standard ended, an ounce of gold was worth 35 dollars. Today, an ounce of gold is worth more than 3,000 dollars…


Needless to say, if the economic trends documented by the charts above continue to persist, we will have an enormous nightmare on our hands. The U.S. economy as it currently exists is unsustainable by definition. It is only a matter of time before we slam into an economic brick wall.

We have developed an economy that cannot function without massive amounts of debt, and at this point it seems like almost everyone is drowning in red ink. The federal government is massively overextended, most of our state and local governments are massively overextended, most of our major corporations are massively overextended, and the majority of U.S. consumers are massively overextended.

The only way that the game can continue is for our leaders to continue to borrow and spend increasingly larger mountains of money. But no debt spiral can go on forever. At some point this entire house of cards is going to collapse. When that happens, there is going to be economic pain that is greater than anything that this country has ever seen before. Everything that I have been warning about for more than a decade is playing out right in front of our eyes.

We can’t keep piling up debt like this. We just can’t. But look at what has happened as a result of Elon Musk and his team making some modest cuts to government spending. A significant portion of the population is losing their minds. Our society cannot handle large spending cuts, and our society cannot handle what will come after a financial crash either. We are in far more trouble than most people realize."

Adventures With Danno, "Great Sales at Meijer"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, AM 3/18/25
"Great Sales at Meijer"
"I take you shopping with me at Meijer to find the best grocery deals
 of the week. Grab your notepad as these are some really good sale prices!"
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Monday, March 17, 2025

Canadian Prepper, "Alert! Iran War Imminent, Iranian Ship Sunk?"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 3/17/25
"Alert! Iran War Imminent, Iranian Ship Sunk? 
US Warplane Near Nuke Plant; Yemen In Flames"
Comments here:

"Living In A Backyard Tiny Home, The New American Dream, You Will Own Nothing"

Jeremiah Babe, 3/17/25
"Living In A Backyard Tiny Home, 
The New American Dream, You Will Own Nothing"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: 2002, "Breathing Light"

Full screen recommended.
2002, "Breathing Light"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Is this one galaxy or two? The jumble of stars, gas, and dust that is NGC 520 is now thought to incorporate the remains of two separate disk galaxies. A defining component of NGC 520 - as seen in great detail in the featured image from the Hubble Space Telescope - is its band of intricately interlaced dust running vertically down the spine of the colliding galaxies. A similar looking collision might be expected in a few billion years when our disk Milky Way Galaxy to collides with our large-disk galactic neighbor Andromeda (M31).
The collision that defines NGC 520 started about 300 million years ago. Also known as Arp 157, NGC 520 lies about 100 million light years distant, spans about 100 thousand light years, and can be seen with a small telescope toward the constellation of the Fish (Pisces). Although the speeds of stars in NGC 520 are fast, the distances are so vast that the battling pair will surely not change its shape noticeably during our lifetimes."

The Poet: W.H. Auden, "September 1, 1939"

"September 1, 1939"

"Defenseless
under the night
Our world in stupor lies;
Yet, dotted everywhere,
Ironic points of light
Flash out
wherever the Just
Exchange their messages:
May I, composed like them
Of Eros and of dust,
Beleaguered by the same
Negation and despair,
Show an affirming flame."
- W.H. Auden
"On September 1, 1939, the German army under Adolf Hitler launched an invasion of Poland that triggered the start of World War II (though by 1939 Japan and China were already at war). The battle for Poland only lasted about a month before a Nazi victory. But the invasion plunged the world into a war that would continue for almost six years and claim the lives of tens of millions of people."
And here we are, on the brink of a nuclear World War III,
 having learned... nothing...
Gregory Mannarino, PM 3/17/25
"War, Millions Could Potentially Die; 
Apocalyptic Extremism Has Taken Over America"
Comments here:

"Thought..."

"Men fear thought as they fear nothing else on earth, more than ruin, more even than death. Thought is subversive and revolutionary, destructive and terrible, thought is merciless to privilege, established institutions, and comfortable habit. Thought looks into the pit of hell and is not afraid. Thought is great and swift and free, the light of the world, and the chief glory of man."
- Bertrand Russell

"Five percent of the people think;
ten percent of the people think they think;
and the other eighty-five percent would rather die than think."
- Thomas A. Edison.

"The Ideology Of Ressentiment"

"The Ideology Of Ressentiment"
by The ZMan

"Over the weekend there was a poll released that said only seven percent of Americans have a high opinion of the Democratic Party. It also said that the party is enjoying its lowest approval rating ever recorded. The events of last week suggest that the party is a disorganized mess at the moment. This is due in large part to the fact that what we call the left has collapsed into chaos. They no longer can explain what they oppose, much less what they claim to offer.

This is due to the transformation of the left over the last thirty years into a grab bag of conspiracy theories and grievances. The American left has always been a conspiracy theory, of sorts, owing to its roots in American Protestantism, but it had a positive agenda through most of the twentieth century. The long list of things it opposed stood in the way of the things it desired. Over the last thirty years, those desires have largely faded, leaving just a list of enemies.

The most obvious example is the antifascist conspiracy theory that was dominant with self-identified leftists for the last decade. The fact that there are no fascists in this age has been used as an opportunity to create them. The same thing happened with conspiracy theories around race. Instead of Hitler hiding behind every bush, it is men in white hoods ready to pounce. The dominant subcultures of the left over the last few decades are all conspiracy theories of some sort.

Another defining feature is that the progressive coalition is all driven by something called ressentiment. This is a sense of hostility towards something or someone that is viewed as a cause of one’s diminished condition. It is frustration at the sense of inferiority and hatred at a perceived external cause. This blend of envy and hatred results in a moral code which delegitimizes the cause of the person’s failure and elevates the status of the alleged victim.

This is what lies behind tabloid news of the rich and famous. The primary appeal is to people who feel they should be rich and famous. The failings of the actual rich and famous allow these people to feel as if they are living better lives or are better people, despite the fact they do not have what they desire. On the one hand they envy the people they follow, but on the other hand they relish their suffering as it allows them to feel morally superior to them.

What we call the left operates the same way. They often target people who are living good lives but hold opinions that the left does not like, and this is what triggers their envy and resentment toward that person. On the one hand, the person “exposing” the bad person is a loser in the conventional sense, while the person they are harassing is successful by conventional measures. Doxing is a formalization of a process by which the loser flings her poo at the winner.

The recent spate of vandalism directed at Tesla automobiles is a good example of how this blend of righteousness and anger works. These people are attacking cars because on the one hand, they envy Elon Musk and what he is doing. He is the man of action they wish they could be, but they are losers, so they hate him for his success as a way to justify their low status. The attacks on the cars themselves are like a child throwing a tantrum when frustrated by a toy.

This is not a surprising development as what we call the left in America is a manifestation of certain aspects of American Protestantism. The progressive ideology is popular Christianity stripped of its Scriptural foundation. What was supposed to console the weak and downtrodden with a promise of everlasting life now seeks to comfort losers with the claim that their betters are not really better. They are bad people because the believers have declared them to be bad people.

The trouble for the people we call the left is that Christianity is a life-denying religion in that what matters is what comes after this life. The faithful navigate this world of sin to reach everlasting life after death. For those who care only about this life, this cannot work, so those Christian ethics at the core of what we call the left quickly curdled into a bundle of resentments and hatreds. The American left is a workshop of resentment staffed by the ugly who live to oppose beauty.

The genius of Christianity is that it offers an image of beauty, the perfectly beautiful, that allows the faithful to catch glimpses of it in the fallen world. Resent and envy toward these glimpses of beauty are sins. Instead of cultivating these qualities among the lower classes, it celebrated those glimpses of beauty to motivate the faithful toward a Christian life with the promise of eternal life after death. Failure in this world was turned into a motivation to strive for success in the next.

The modern left lacks all of this. Instead, it offers the faithful nothing but a sty in which they can wallow in their own crapulence. As a social and political force, it is nothing more than a bundle of incoherent hatreds. While those hatreds provided a rally point for a period, no movement can exist only on hatred. This is why what we call the left is falling to pieces and taking its party with it. The last ideology, American Progressivism, is sinking into the mire of its own hatreds."

The Daily "Near You?"

Cumberland, Virginia, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Above All..."

"Above all, don't lie to yourself. The man who lies to himself and listens to his own lie comes to a point that he cannot distinguish the truth within him, or around him, and so loses all respect for himself and for others. And having no respect he ceases to love. " 
- Fyodor Dostoevsky, "The Brothers Karamazov"

"The Worst Of Them All..."

"Science may have found a cure for most evils,
but it has found no remedy for the worst of them all -
the apathy of human beings."
- Author Unknown
"I am an invisible man. No, I am not a spook like those who haunted Edgar Allan Poe; nor am I one of your Hollywood-movie ectoplasms. I am a man of substance, of flesh and bone, fiber and liquids - and I might even be said to possess a mind. I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me. Like the bodiless heads you see sometimes in circus sideshows, it is as though I have been surrounded by mirrors of hard, distorting glass.  When they approach me they see only my surroundings, themselves, or figments of their imagination - indeed, everything and anything except me."
- Ralph Ellison, "Prologue to Invisible Man"
Full screen recommended.
Phil Collins, "Another Day In Paradise"

Free Download: Neil Postman, "Amusing Ourselves To Death"

"This Species is Amusing Itself to Death.
The Addictive Contaminated Media Reality"
By Dr. Gary G. Kohls

“And when they found our shadows (grouped ‘round the TV sets), they ran down every lead; they repeated every test; they checked out all the data in their lists. And then the alien anthropologists admitted they were still perplexed, but on eliminating every other reason for our sad demise they logged the only explanation left: This species has amused itself to death.”  - Roger Waters

“Apathy and indifference are nurtured in the modern age as most peoples’ free time is frittered away with worthless trivia like ball games, computer games, movies and soaps, and fiddling with their mobile phones. These distractions might be fun, but after most of them you’ve learnt nothing of any value, and remain ignorant, malleable and suggestible, which is just how the elites want you.” – Clive Maund

“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

“A lie gets halfway around the world before
the truth has a chance to get its pants on.”
– Winston Churchill

"30 years ago (1985) Neil Postman (a professor of communications arts and sciences at New York University – until his death in 2003) wrote the best-selling book “Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business”. (Free download below.) The book exposed, among other things, the subtle but profound dangers to the developing mind from the mesmerizing (and addictive) commercial television industry.

The lessons from that book have essentially been ignored by the amoral and corrupted sociopathic capitalist system that says “damn the torpedoes/full steam ahead” and blindly and greedily promotes unlimited growth no matter what the costs and who or what gets hurt long–term in the resource-extractive, exploitive and permanently polluting processes.

But Postman’s thesis applies even more strongly today to the current internet/computer/ age-inappropriate, pornographic sex and pornographic violence-saturated televangelist/political-contaminated media reality with which the prophetic Postman was properly alarmed.

SOMA, the Drug That Predicted Prozac by 50 Years: In the classic “Brave New World” (1932) Aldous Huxley wrote about the new form of totalitarianism that has now come to pass in the developed world, thanks to the privatized profit-driven, drug, medical and psychiatric corporations whose practitioners were once (naively or altruistically?) mainly concerned with relieving human suffering and trying to holistically and permanently cure their distressed patients’ ailments (rather than lucratively “managing” said “clients” as permanently paying consumers of unaffordable prescription drugs). Nearly 30 years after he wrote the book, Huxley said,

“And it seems to me perfectly in the cards that there will be within the next generation or so a pharmacological method of making people love their servitude, and producing a kind of painless concentration camp for entire societies, so that people will in fact have their liberties taken away from them but will rather enjoy it, because they will be distracted from any desire to rebel by propaganda, brainwashing, or brainwashing enhanced by pharmacological methods.” Neil Postman’s very last sentence of his book concerned the prescription drug-infested victims of the new form of totalitarianism that Huxley had described in “Brave New World”.

Of course, Huxley’s book was all about his imaginary psychotropic drug SOMA that Prozac’s makers and promoters in the late 1980s to falsely claim to make its swallowers “feel better than well”. One of the characters in Brave New World said: “And if ever, by some unlucky chance, anything unpleasant should somehow happen, why, there’s always Soma to give you a holiday from the facts. And there’s always Soma to calm your anger, to reconcile you to your enemies, to make you patient and long-suffering. In the past you could only accomplish these things by making a great effort and after years of hard moral training. Now, you swallow two or three half-gramme tablets, and there you are. Anybody can be virtuous now. You can carry at least half your morality about in a bottle. Christianity without tears; that’s what Soma is.”

Postman ended his book by writing: “What afflicted the people in "Brave New World" was not that they were laughing instead of thinking, but that they did not know what they were laughing about and why they had stopped thinking.” A couple of years after the publication of Postman’s book, Roger Waters (of “Pink Floyd’s The Wall” fame) released a “concept” album that was inspired by the book. He titled the album “Amused to Death”. The lyrics of the title track are as follows:
“Amused To Death”
by Roger Waters

"Doctor, Doctor what’s wrong with me?
This supermarket life is getting long.
What is the heart life of a color TV?
What is the shelf life of a teenage
queen?
Ooh western woman,
Ooh western girl,
News hound sniffs the air
When Jessica Hahn goes down
He latches on to that symbol of
detachment
Attracted by the peeling away of
feeling
The celebrity of the abused shell
of the belle
Ooh western woman
Ooh western girl
And the children of Melrose strut
their stuff
Is absolute zero cold enough?
And out in the valley warm and clean
The little ones sit by their TV screens
No thoughts to think
No tears to cry
All sucked dry down to the very
last breath.

Bartender what is wrong with me,
Why I am so out of breath?
The captain said excuse me ma’am,
This species has amused itself to death
We watched the tragedy unfold,
We did as we were told.
We bought and sold,
It was the greatest show on earth.
But then it was over,
We oohed and aahed,
We drove our racing cars,
We ate our last few jars of caviar,
And somewhere out there in the stars
A keen-eyed look-out
Spied a flickering light
Our last hurrah.

And when they found our shadows,
Grouped ‘round the TV sets,
They ran down every lead
They repeated every test,
They checked out all the data in
their lists.
And then the alien anthropologists
Admitted they were still perplexed.
But on eliminating every other reason
For our sad demise,
They logged the only explanation left.
This species has amused itself to death.
No tears to cry,
No feelings left,
This species has amused itself to
death…"
Freely download “Amusing Ourselves to Death:
Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business”, by Neil Postman, here:

"Read On To See That You Don’t Have To Care"

"Read On To See That You Don’t Have To Care"
by John Wilder

"It used to be that people didn’t have to have an opinion on, well, everything. Now, it seems, that everyone wants an opinion on everything:
• Ukraine versus Russia.
• Palestine versus Israel.
• Meghan and Harry versus the rest of the English royal family.
• Twix™ versus vodka. I mean, you can have both.

And you’re supposed to care about these things, deeply, even though the media noise it appears that Meghan and Harry have the collective I.Q. of a poorly-watered houseplant. I guess they’re more like a cactus with a fancy title.

I’ll take a controversial opinion: I don’t really care about any of those things I listed above, and you can’t make me. And, if forced to choose, I’d rather live in a world without vodka than a world without Twix©, because, well, bourbon.

Neil Postman wrote about part of this in his famous book "Amusing Ourselves to Death," which I highly recommend if you haven’t read it. News gets filtered down to the barest elements – image and emotion. Our consciousness is then hit with a barrage of unactionable information. I don’t care about any of those things precisely because I started learning about them as they developed, after I dig deeper into details. I tend to do that when I get the sense that the propaganda is flying hot and heavy: what are the facts of the situation?

Another corollary: if I lived in 1745 America, would I even hear of these conflicts taking place half a world away? Does it make any difference to me that these fights are taking place? Not really. And I won’t have been upset that Carl the Butcher three states away didn’t give a “thumbs up” to my “killed the Indians raiding our village” update on Ye Olde Facebooke®.

But we don’t live in 1745 America, so we hear about them. I will say that the filters still do work in that a car crash in the next county gets a lot more news locally than a school bus filled with nuns and orphans going over a cliff in India or the Rwandans deciding that they want to eat half 1.3 million residents of the Congo.

We are primed, however, to affiliate with our tribe. People who enjoy the same football (0.3048 meterball to you Europeans) or baseball (cricket, but with beer) team mainly all get along pretty well in the stadium or at work on Monday after the game. But if I don’t like the local team, nobody at work really cares. In this, although they affiliate, they’re much more in the role of spectator rather than moral participants. That has ceased. Tribes used to be fun, but now they’ve turned feral. I mainly blame the GloboLeft, because they simply are broken emotionally.

I’ve written before about the mechanism where GloboLeftists have cast their empathy net so far that they’ve essentially forgotten about humanity. Note that their incessant handwringing about COVID Vaxxing® disappeared the second that a Russian tank tread touched Ukrainian clay.

Yes, GloboLeftists care about borders. Just not our borders. Have an unending stream of invaders into Europe that makes The Camp of the Saints look like a best-case scenario instead of impossible dystopian fiction? Not a problem. But let one group of Slavic people invade another group of Slavic people in countries where potatoes are used instead of coins?

Count me out, but I’ll pop some popcorn as I watch the GloboLeft switches trip and the gold and blue flags pop up. I decided to read about what was really going on, and came up with the opinion that I don’t care if the Russians are attacking the Ukrainians. And no one can make me care.

Frankly, I’m happier to let those things go. If I want to spend my energy caring, I’ll care about things much closer to home, and spend it on things that are much more important than if one quasi-dictator takes out another. By all means, please, feel free to care about any or all of those things.

The reason that I blame the GloboLeft is that they have always cared more than the TradRight about what the people care about. The high point of these were the communist governments of the 20th century. Stalin’s minions cared what you thought about Stalin. Mao’s Long March Through the Institutions was built on rooting out people that didn’t think like Mao. It didn’t matter if you were a good bricklayer, you had to be a bricklayer that thought like Mao.

One of the commentators had previously described this as an essentially feminine characteristic. I guess I can see that. Ma Wilder cared what I thought. Pa Wilder just wanted peace and quiet. What’s next?

From what I see today, I think we’re moving into Pa Wilder territory – Trump absolutely doesn’t care what I think about him. Trump just deported a bunch of Venezuelan gangsters to “entertainment camps” in El Salvador. Normally, the GloboLeftist media would have brought up a storm of complaint. Now, not so much. Why? The pendulum is moving, rapidly, right. When even CNN sees that the party of “caring” is less popular than Ebola at a Methodist potluck in Minnesota, even they can read the room.

Me, I care about our borders first. And, I’m also glad I live in a Universe where I can have both vodka and Twix®."

"How It Really is"

 

Dan, I Allegedly, "No Income Tax Under $150K? Game Changer or Fantasy?"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 3/17/25
"No Income Tax Under $150K? 
Game Changer or Fantasy?"
"No income tax under $150K? Could this proposal truly be a game-changer or just wishful thinking? Today on I Allegedly, I dive into this bold idea and what it could mean for millions of Americans. From cutting taxes on tips and overtime to balancing the budget, this concept has sparked intense debate. Could eliminating income tax for the majority really spur the economy, or is it just another campaign promise? I share my take and want to hear yours!"
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