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Thursday, May 15, 2025

The Poet: Carl Sandburg, "Four Preludes on Playthings of the Wind"

"Four Preludes on Playthings of the Wind"

“The past is a bucket of ashes.”

1
"The woman named Tomorrow 
sits with a hairpin in her teeth 
and takes her time 
and does her hair the way she wants it 
and fastens at last the last braid and coil 
and puts the hairpin where it belongs 
and turns and drawls: Well, what of it? 
My grandmother, Yesterday, is gone. 
What of it? Let the dead be dead. 

2
The doors were cedar
and the panels strips of gold 
and the girls were golden girls 
and the panels read and the girls chanted: 
We are the greatest city, 
the greatest nation: 
nothing like us ever was. 

The doors are twisted on broken hinges. 
Sheets of rain swish through on the wind 
where the golden girls ran and the panels read: 
We are the greatest city, 
the greatest nation, 
nothing like us ever was. 

3
It has happened before. 
Strong men put up a city and got 
a nation together,
And paid singers to sing and women 
to warble: We are the greatest city, 
the greatest nation, 
nothing like us ever was. 

And while the singers sang
and the strong men listened 
and paid the singers well 
and felt good about it all, 
there were rats and lizards who listened... 
and the only listeners left now... 
are…the rats…and the lizards. 

And there are black crows 
crying, “Caw, caw,” 
bringing mud and sticks 
building a nest 
over the words carved 
on the doors where the panels were cedar 
and the strips on the panels were gold 
and the golden girls came singing: 
We are the greatest city, 
the greatest nation: 
nothing like us ever was. 

The only singers now are crows crying, “Caw, caw,” 
And the sheets of rain whine in the wind and doorways. 
And the only listeners now are…the rats…and the lizards. 

4
The feet of the rats 
scribble on the door sills; 
the hieroglyphs of the rat footprints 
chatter the pedigrees of the rats 
and babble of the blood 
and gabble of the breed 
of the grandfathers and the great-grandfathers 
of the rats. 

And the wind shifts 
and the dust on a door sill shifts 
and even the writing of the rat footprints 
tells us nothing, nothing at all 
about the greatest city, the greatest nation 
where the strong men listened 
and the women warbled: Nothing like us ever was."

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

Dan, I Allegedly, "I Want My Money Back!"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 5/15/25
"I Want My Money Back!"
"AI in education sparks controversy! Northeastern University student Ella Stapleton believes her professor, Rick Atwood, used AI tools like ChatGPT and Gamma.ai to create lesson plans, tests, and presentations instead of teaching directly. When students aren’t allowed to use AI for assignments, should professors? Ella demanded a refund, but Northeastern denied her request despite her evidence. This raises a bigger question: How much is too much when it comes to AI in education? I also dive into the importance of being your own advocate, whether it’s fighting for fair insurance claims, managing property, or making sure you get what you pay for in education. From skyrocketing insurance rates to stories of resilience, this video highlights the need to stand up for yourself and demand fairness in every aspect of life."
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"Walmart’s Major Warning to the Entire U.S. Economy - Financial Nightmare Imminent!"

Full screen recommended.
Steven Van Metre, 5/15/25
"Walmart’s Major Warning to the Entire U.S. Economy -
 Financial Nightmare Imminent!"
"Retailers are panicking, manufacturers are scrambling, and consumers are on the brink of outrage. Walmart is warning that a financial storm is coming for the entire U.S. economy!"
Comments here:

The Daily "Near You?"

Oaxaca De Juarez, Oaxaca, Mexico. Thanks for stopping by!

"A Polar Comeback"

"A Polar Comeback"
Record breaking ice growth at the End of the World...
by Joel Bowman

“I am wisest of all the Greeks because that which
 I do not know, I do not claim to know either.”
~ Socrates in Plato's "Apology"

Syros, Greece - "Uh oh... Bad news, dear reader... at least, if you’re a card-carrying member of the Professional Catastrophist Community (PCC). The latest, from SciTechDaily: "Antarctica’s Astonishing Rebound: Ice Sheet Grows for the First Time in Decades." The article goes on to reveal a disturbing trend reversal in ice sheet coverage down at the other End of the World: "Mass changes across the Antarctic ice sheet have been detected using satellite gravimetry, revealing significant instabilities in major glacier basins of East Antarctica as well as across the entire ice sheet.

The Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) plays a major role in global sea-level rise. Since March 2002, the GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment) mission and its successor, GRACE-FO (GRACE Follow-On), have provided valuable data to monitor changes in ice mass across the AIS.

Previous studies have consistently shown a long-term trend of mass loss, particularly in West Antarctica and the Antarctic Peninsula, while glaciers in East Antarctica appeared relatively stable. However, a recent study led by Dr. Wang and Prof. Shen at Tongji University has found a surprising shift: between 2021 and 2023, the AIS experienced a record-breaking increase in overall mass." Wait, what? The Antarctic Ice Sheets are... growing? A “record-breaking” increase?

Mindless Automatons: As we all know, having mindlessly uploaded the daily headlines like obedient, unquestioning automatons, the world is going to Hades in a hand basket. And naturally, humble creatures that we are, humans are both at the center of, and to blame for, absolutely everything. Overpopulation… rising sea levels… collapsing crop yields... mass starvation... wild fires… hurricanes… volcanoes… bovine flatulence… That’s us! Guilty, on all counts!

And beneath it all, an archenemy of our very own, anthropogenic, making: climate change, né “global warming.” Or as Secretary of the United Nations, António Guterres, somberly reminded the rarified minds gathered around the UN cauldron a couple of years back: “The era of global warming has ended. The era of global boiling has arrived.”

What, then, to make of this latest anomaly, this catastrophic increase in Arctic Sheet Ice? What is the activist class to do with all those plastic “Science is Real” lawn signs, now that such pesky, counter-narrative facts have presented themselves? What cruel fate awaits the multi-hundred-billion dollar, virtue signaling, corporate ESG community? What of all the do-good Hollywood vegans, full of plastic themselves but bravely saving the planet one paper straw, one bug burger, one Toyota Pious at a time?

And, perhaps most pressing, what is to become of Lady Greta’s magic racing yacht, the Malizia II, which spirited the patron saint of great causes across the Atlantic during the height of her fame, so that she might lecture the unwashed, working masses about their crude, carbon-belching ways?

(Never mind that several crew members flew from the UK to the US to sail the boat back to Europe after Greta was done with it and the genuflecting media had regurgitated their “stories” ... nor that the vessel itself, made from non-recyclable, highly energy-intensive carbon fibre, thermoformed plastic and other naughty, environmentally damaging materials, produced thousands of tons of carbon during manufacturing, transportation and storage...)

Inconvenient Truths: Let us make like Greta and jettison those inconvenient truths for a moment, remembering that, despite the historic gains in ice growth throughout Antarctica from 2021 to 2023, the same study revealed that the continent suffered a net loss of 1.848 trillion tons of ice over the two decades preceding the “record-breaking increase.”

For those of us accustomed to counting annual federal budget deficits in trillions, magnificent market caps in the multi-trillions, and national debts in the tens of trillions, we have understandably become rather blasé about such a titanic numeral. Let’s turn then to the experts, to see what terrific damage has been wrought by such unabated Antarctic ablation…

According to the best estimates, AIS melt has contributed to a rise in sea levels during this century, the dreaded Era of Global Boiling (2000 to 2020), by an apocalyptic...5.99 millimeters. (Or about a quarter of an inch for our American readers). Indeed, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) best estimates, sea levels have risen by something like 20 centimeters (just under 8 inches) since 1880.

At that rate, 0.138 centimeters per year, we’ll be watching the world’s lowest lying country, the ill-fated, oft-publicized Maldives, sink beneath the waves in just...1,088 years! As with all apocalyptic claims regarding the future, that rate is subject to dramatic change... meaning full Maldivian submersion may arrive in half, or even a quarter of a millennium.

Submerging Markets" You remember The Maldives don’t you, dear reader? The picturesque island destination for well-heeled, jet-setting tourists first attained Climate Celebrity Status back in 1988, when Hussein Shihab, the country’s environmental affairs director, warned that his tiny nation would be completely underwater within 30 years, a prediction which expired, worthless, back in 2008. (Of course, those same experts also predicted the Maldives would run out of drinking water by 1992, before mass desalination solved that non-problem.)

Even so, one would think that even half (or even a quarter) millennium would be sufficient time even for the Maldivian population to construct a dam, a dyke or a simple levy. After all, the Dutch managed to protect their sub-sea level geography from time and tides with projects dating back to the 14th century.

The name “Netherlands” literally means “lower countries,” in reference to its low elevation and flat topography. To this very day, over a quarter (26%) of the entire country is below sea level. These farm-rich, sub-sea level areas, known as polders, are home to millions of Dutchmen, who nightly lay their blonde heads to rest, safe in the knowledge they will not be swimming with the proverbial fishes by morning.

Are climate alarmists suggesting that the Maldivians (along with the ill-fated Tuvaluans, Fijians and Kiribatis) will be incapable of doing in 1,000... 500... even 100 years what the Dutch already did 700 years ago? And what does that say for those forecasting a subaqueous future for first world cities like Boston, Miami and New York City?

Have citizens of these doomed locales no access to technology that was apparently available to the Dutch peasantry in the century before Hieronymus Bosch began imagining his Garden of Earthly Delights... before a single Dutchmen had ever heard the words “fossil fuel” or “nuclear reactor”... or even “light bulb?” If history is any indicator, it may not matter anyway. If nothing else, experts have a reliable track record of offering unreliable predictions.

This Time is Different: After all, aren’t these the same “experts” who predicted the imminent extinction of man-eating polar bears... right before it was discovered that their population is growing... the same infallible genius class who forecast the irreversible devastation of the Great Barrier Reef... right before the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) released its annual report, last August, showing that “Coral cover has increased in all three regions on the Great Barrier Reef and is at regional highs in two of the three regions...” the same proud Pentagon prognosticators who, in 2004, assured us that “major European cities would be underwater by 2020,” at which point Britain would “suffer the impacts of a Siberian climate...”

Readers will recall ABC host, Bob Woodruff, who told us New York City would be underwater by 2015... Al Gore who, a year later, predicted the Arctic Ocean would be “ice free” by 2014... a claim that was blindly recycled by St. Greta, who readjusted the doomsday calendar for 2022... (The European Space Agency’s Climate Change Initiative now predicts we could see “ice-free Arctic summers by 2050.” Gulp!)

Not that we’d have a problem with any of these predictions... if only costly and coercive government policy was not built so confidently upon them. Alas, 97% of scientists have reached a consensus: they agree with whatever they’re paid to believe. Still, there are some brave souls who are not allergic to independent thought. Here’s Mike Hulme, Professor of Human Geography at that well-known bastion of alt-right science denialism, the University of Cambridge...

“Climate change is cited as the sole explanation for everything going wrong in the world. Drought, famine, flooding, wars, racism – you name it. And if it's bad, it's down to global warming caused by humans,” Professor Hulme said in a recent interview with The Daily Mail. “I disagree with the doom-mongers,” the professor profaned. “Climate change is not like a comet approaching Earth. There is no good scientific or historical evidence that it will lead to human extinction or the collapse of human civilization.”

Like that old Greek gadfly, your non-scientist editor does not claim to know that which he does not know. It is not given to man to know his fate. As renowned physicist Niels Bohr famously proclaimed, “Prediction is very difficult, especially if it’s about the future!”

"Where Your Gaze Lingers..."

“Sometimes fate is like a small sandstorm that keeps changing directions. You change direction but the sandstorm chases you. You turn again, but the storm adjusts. Over and over you play this out, like some ominous dance with death just before dawn. Why? Because this storm isn’t something that has nothing to do with you, this storm is you. Something inside you. So all you can do is give in to it, step right inside the storm, closing your eyes and plugging up your ears so the sand doesn’t get in, and walk through it, step by step. There’s no sun there, no moon, no direction, no sense of time. Just fine white sand swirling up the sky like pulverized bones.

You have to look! That’s another one of the rules. Closing your eyes isn’t going to change anything. Nothing’s going to disappear just because you can’t see what going on. In fact, things will be even worse the next time you open your eyes. That’s the kind of world we live in. Keep your eyes wide open. Only a coward closes his eyes. Closing your eyes and plugging up your ears won’t make time stand still.”
- Haruki Murakami

“Closing your eyes won’t make the awfulness go away. It may be that nothing will. But dwelling on it, dreading the evil, playing out the misery in your head – doesn’t this feed the monster? You can’t close your eyes to life, but you can choose where your gaze lingers.”
- Richelle E. Goodrich

Dan, I Allegedly, "The FED is Bouncing Checks - Huge Blunder"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, AM 5/15/25
"The FED is Bouncing Checks - Huge Blunder"
"FEMA’s $30K blunder exposed! In today’s video, we dive into a shocking story about bounced FEMA checks and the chaos following Hurricane Hela in Florida. Imagine losing everything to a natural disaster and then having the government bounce not one but TWO checks for $30,000! This happened to Robert and his wife in Ruskin, Florida, and it’s a prime example of government inefficiency. We'll break it all down, from FEMA’s excuses to the financial strain on families stuck in the middle of this disaster. But that’s not all! I also discuss the outdated, floppy-disc tech still running Newark Airport’s air traffic control systems (yes, really), the rising gas prices across the country, and other wild developments affecting us all. Whether it’s inflation, homebuilder mergers, or data breaches at major companies, there’s a lot to cover today."
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'How It Really Is"

 

Bill Bonner, "Tomorrow's News"

"Tomorrow's News"
by Bill Bonner

From the ranch at Gualfin, Salta Province - "Mention integrity, honesty or intelligence in the company of ‘politician’ and it invariably brings a laugh. And as far as we know, no government program ever merited anything other than mockery. Nor did any empire - no matter how great - ever survive a final send-off sneer.

Since the turn of the century, in 2001, the trajectory of the US government has been uninterrupted. Deficits (trade and federal budget) have increased year after year. So has federal debt... along with the cost of maintaining the empire. America’s ‘national’ debt rose from less than $6 trillion in 2000 to over $37 trillion now. The US trade deficit, too, just hit a new record, rising to $1.1 trillion over the last 12 months - 10 times more than it was in 2000. And now, all over the world, people prepare their contemptuous chuckles. The end of the mighty US empire is coming into view.

Many people criticize Donald Trump for being too ‘disruptive.’ But the trends that lead inevitably to chaos and crisis continue... to the point that they are probably irreversible. “Any great power that spends more on debt service (interest payments on the national debt) than on defense,” writes historian Niall Ferguson, “will not stay great for very long.” “True of Habsburg Spain, true of ancient regime France, true of the Ottoman Empire, true of the British Empire, this law is about to be put to the test by the US beginning this very year.”

Yes, here’s the latest from Charlie Bilello: "The US Government now spends more money on interest payments on the National Debt ($1.11 Trillion) than it does on National Defense ($1.10 Trillion). Still, most people are willing to believe that the lessons of the past no longer apply... or that latest policy moves might stay the hand of history. It is on that basis that a whole nation of 330 million people goes along with Mr. Trump’s trade war, when all the evidence - both theoretical and empirical - suggests that it will be a complete fiasco." And so far, it is.

The UK trade war armistice produced the most remarkable outcome. Last year, $80 billion worth of US goods were sold in the UK, compared to just $68 billion in exports to the US. What sense did it make to target a country with whom you have a $12 billion surplus? But now, in the quest for fairness, American consumers will pay an extra $6 billion per year (according to Howard Lutnick…based on the new 10% tariff) for the opportunity to enjoy UK-made products...while the tax (tariff) on US goods going into the UK will be only 1.8%.

Next up was China. Byron King: "Despite hoopla, tough talk and bluster, Team Trump walked into a policy minefield. Tariffs on China highlighted how many of America’s problems are rooted in toxic domestic politics, and unforgiving industrial-scientific reality...label it whatever else you wish, but the U.S. has suffered a self-inflicted strategic defeat."

After his ‘Liberation Day’ trade war, Trump wisely decided that negotiated settlements were the only way to keep the stock market from collapsing. In each case, he would come to terms on a more reasonable basis...and announce a Big Win. But so far, they are not ‘wins’ at all... except in the sense that a person is better off after he stops beating his head against the wall.

China can still sell its gadgets and geegaws into the US - subject to a 30% tariff. Which means, grosso modo, that US consumers will now pay 30% more for their China-made products...and the geegaw and gadget makers will stay where they are - in China.

Even with US consumers paying a 30% penalty, most imports from China will keep coming. Chinese industries are larger and more competitive than those of the US... and Chinese labor is still much cheaper than US labor. Based on the minimum wage, an unskilled laborer in Shanghai can expect to make less than $4 per hour...whereas one in Washington DC will make $17. (This is largely because the Fed has inflated wages along with everything else in the U.S. while enabling a huge increase in debt, much of which was used to buy foreign-made goods.) Labor may average only about 24% of the Cost of Goods Sold. But China also has much more extensive, and cheaper, supply chains for almost all raw materials and wholesale inputs.

Of course, we get tomorrow’s news no sooner than anyone else. All we are doing is trying to project the patterns of the past onto the future. Empires always come to an end, for example. So, they must find a way to make an exit - either with a roar or a whimper. In the present case, ‘The Donald’ howls at the moon and disrupts almost everything... except for those things that most need disrupting."

Gregory Mannarino, "We Have 2 Weeks And That's All, This Is What To Expect"

Gregory Mannarino, AM 5/15/25
"We Have 2 Weeks And That's All, 
This Is What To Expect"
Comments here:

"Alert: Global Airlines Prepare For A 'Nuclear 'Event'; Russia Enters NATO Airspace"

Canadian Prepper, AM 5/15/25
"Alert: Global Airlines Prepare For A 'Nuclear 'Event';
 Russia Enters NATO Airspace"
Comments here:

Adventures With Danno, "Jaw-Dropping Prices at Kroger"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, AM 5/15/25
"Jaw-Dropping Prices at Kroger"
Comments here:

"Under New Management"

"Under New Management"
by The Zman

"President Trump has wrapped up his trip to Saudi Arabia and the Western media is trying hard to ignore it. The main reason is they hate Trump, of course, but a secondary reason is they do not understand the importance of the trip. To them, it just looks like another foreign trip by a president. In reality it is a glimpse of how the large share owners of America Inc. are restructuring the company. The deals signed in Saudi Arabia are the first step in that restructuring.

For fifty years, the United States and Saudi Arabia had an agreement primarily centered around oil trade and the use of the U.S. dollar. The formal part of the agreement committed the Saudis to investing their profits from energy into U.S. Treasuries in exchange for American military commitments. The result was the Saudis priced everything in dollars, which led all other OPEC members to work in dollars, thus establishing the petrodollar concept.

The reason the dollar is the world’s reserve currency is it is backed with energy, the one thing everyone needs. The gold bugs like to say the dollar is “fiat currency” and is just colorful bits of paper, but that was always false. The dollar, like all real money, represents power. From the 1970’s to the present, the dollar represented the power of the United States and the power of hydrocarbons. Instead of money backed by shiny bits of metal, the dollar was backed by energy.

Another consequence of this arrangement is it provided an unlimited demand for dollar-denominated debt, especially treasuries. Because that debt is created within the American banking system, it made the United States the global bank. In effect, the petrodollar arrangement made the United States the world mint and the world’s banker, with the oil producing countries as the miners. With only one mint, it meant that the United States also controlled the mines.

This system has been under great pressure of late for a few reasons. One is the abuse of the system by the neocons in their foreign policy schemes. No one cared that much about using the financial system against small, nuisance countries like North Korea, but when the system was turned against big countries like Russia, one of the important mints, then people did care. The rise of BRICS as an off-dollar trading system was a response to the abuse of the system.

Another reason for the faltering dollar scheme is the Saudis decided to let the fifty-year-old agreement lapse. One reason for this is the abuse of the system by the neocons during the Biden years. The neocons were deliberately trying to destabilize the region in their war against Russia. This is not what the Saudis want. The other reason is the world is changing, and the Saudis need to adapt. They cannot continue to be a gas station in the desert. They need to diversify.

The biggest reason for the pressure on the petrodollar system is it hollowed out the American economy. It is not just the decline in manufacturing, which gets most of the attention, but also the decline in the nation’s infrastructure. This is becoming acute as the demand for electricity climbs. Artificial Intelligence may be oversold, but it is a real thing that will spike demand for electricity. Without trillions in new investments, the United States will not keep up with the world.

That last bit is the what the Saudi deal addresses. The Saudis are not going to plow their profits into treasuries, but into direct investments in the United States, while the United States provides support for Saudi Defense and infrastructure. This means the Saudis will be investing in American companies that are doing work inside the United States to build factories and infrastructure. The Saudis are not just a mint serving the American bank, but an investor in America Inc.

That is another thing easily missed about this trip. In the past, presidents went to Saudi Arabia to talk about military cooperation and the local politics. Business was delegated to Treasury and Commerce. The Treasury Secretary might make a trip to the region and meet his counterparts to discuss money. When a president visited these countries, money was not on the agenda. It was politics and the military situation in the places where America had stationed soldiers.

Notice on this trip that Scott Bessent was on the trip. Notice also that Bessent turns up in all of these foreign policy events. He led the charge on the so-called mineral deal with the Ukrainians. For the first time in a long time the bankers are now part of the foreign policy discussion. In fact, Bessent is involved in everything. He is part of the effort to root out some of the massive waste in government. What we are seeing is the return of political – economy to America Inc.

For several decades, at least, the managerial class has separated economics from politics, leaving the latter to the elected officials. Economics was too important to let the politicians get involved, so it was handled by experts. The result has been the perversion of economic policy. Instead of economic policy that benefits the people of the nation, we got policy that satisfied the theorists and the tiny minority that was able to arbitrage their access to the experts.

What this trip to Saudi Arabis represents is the return of political-economy where political decisions, including foreign policy, is measured against the standard of the national interests. Trump made that clear in his speech. He declared that foreign policy would no longer be about nation wrecking but about making deals that benefit the American people. Much as economics is being dragged from the abstract to the practical, foreign policy is being brought back to reality.

This trip also symbolizes the return of American Inc. The United States has never been a country in the traditional sense. It was always a business, something like a conglomerate containing many regional companies. The post-Cold War years were a monopoly phase, where managers stopped worrying about profits and focused on pet projects and social schemes. That time is done, and the company needs to be radically reformed to become competitive again.

Like all corporate restructurings, this one will fall far short of the dreams of the reformers, but whatever the result, it must be better than the alternative because the alternative is bankruptcy. In the case of empires, bankruptcy usually ends with the shareholders swinging from trees. The oligarchs of American seem to get this, which is why they are backing Trump and his turnaround team. Time will tell if American Inc. re-emerges as a strong company or a failed experiment."

"Can Your Phone Read Your Mind?"

"Can Your Phone Read Your Mind?"
by Michael Snyder

"Have you ever been thinking about something and then an ad for that very thing comes up on your phone? It isn’t just a coincidence when that happens. Our phones are the greatest surveillance devices that have ever been created in the entire history of humanity. When you carry a phone with you, you are carrying around a microphone, a camera, a location tracking device and a social media hub all rolled into one. Tech companies are literally collecting thousands upon thousands of data points on each one of us, and all of that information is fed into extremely sophisticated algorithms.

There are many apps that specifically request access to your microphone or camera. Some apps want access to both. Giving apps such permission is a very dangerous thing to do. There are some apps that are specifically designed to pick out keywords from conversations that you are having with your contacts. That is just one of the reasons why you may notice an ad for something that you were just discussing with a friend pop up. Your phone has the ability to track everywhere that you go as well. So if you're driving down the highway, you may get an ad for a nearby hotel. That is just the way that it works.

Of course we also willingly offer vast amounts of data to the big tech companies by searching the Internet and by interacting with others on social media. In fact, your Facebook profile is literally a treasure trove of personal information. Don’t put anything on Facebook that you don’t want the entire world to know.

Our phones are far more advanced than most people realize. According to one expert, our phones can even determine when we are asleep…"Phone sensors have become very good at automatically capturing data, including whether you’re moving, walking, sitting or sleeping. “The machine-learning algorithm on your phone detects the phone screen hasn’t been turned on in two hours, no apps have been used, it’s after 11 p.m. on a weekday and the phone is charging. Therefore, we assume you’re asleep,” explains Dominic Sellitto, a clinical assistant professor of management science and systems at the University at Buffalo School of Management. “There’s so much that these phones collect about you, but they use this data to infer even more about you.”

All of the information that our phones collect is processed by extremely sophisticated algorithms. And those algorithms are very good at showing us eerily accurate ads…"Imagine this: you’re casually chatting with a friend about planning a trip to the Maldives. A few hours later, you open your smartphone, and guess what? You’re bombarded with ads for tropical getaways, swimsuit sales, and “best hotels in the Maldives” suggestions. Coincidence? Or is your phone secretly tuned into your every thought? Welcome to the era of advanced AI technologies that sometimes make it feel like our smartphones are practically reading our minds.

Of course what we are experiencing now is just the beginning. As AI technology continues to grow at an exponential rate, we are rapidly getting to a point where your phone will know you “better than even your closest friends might”…Artificial Intelligence (AI) is the backbone of modern smartphones. We may think AI is limited to voice assistants like Siri or Google Assistant, but it’s everywhere - from predictive text to facial recognition to those eerily accurate recommendations you get while shopping online. AI works by gathering vast amounts of data and analyzing patterns to predict behaviors. So no, your smartphone isn’t literally reading your mind, but it’s collecting and analyzing a lot of information about you.

When you use your phone, you’re leaving behind a trail of digital breadcrumbs: what you click, how long you scroll, your search history, and even how fast you type. AI crunches these numbers to understand you better. Essentially, your phone is getting to know you - your habits, preferences, and patterns - better than even your closest friends might.

So what could a tyrannical government do with this sort of technology? If authorities had access to every single detail of your life, there would be nowhere to run and nowhere to hide. And the fact that most of us are constantly being watched, monitored and tracked is certainly not good for our mental health.

A new study that was recently released discovered that constant surveillance can increase feelings of stress…"The latest study found that unconscious processes were affected by being watched, with participants in a study performing faster when under surveillance." That may seem like a positive thing, but scientists say it puts the brain in constant fight-or-flight mode, something that can be stressful and taxing. The impact is likely worse on those with mental illness, particularly conditions where people may be hypersensitive to being observed, like schizophrenia or social anxiety.

I definitely do not like to feel like I am being watched. So I do not carry a phone around with me. These days, that puts me solidly in the minority. We have raised an entire generation of young Americans that have become accustomed to being constantly glued to their phones. But many of them have also become accustomed to having their parents pay their phone bills

When Kaylynn St. Peters turned 27, she got a job doing entertainment booking, but her excitement took a slight hit when her dad saw it as a sign it was time for her to start paying her own phone bill. “I was kind of riding that high until they kicked me off,” St. Peters said."

While some may believe your late 20’s is a tardy start to taking on such a task, on average, people start paying for their own cell line at age 27, a responsibility 76% of Americans consider one of the ultimate signs of adulthood, according to a new AT&T survey. Still, 32% of people don’t start paying their own cell phone bill until they are 30 or older and 18% don’t take it on until after they’ve turned 40.

I was quite stunned when I saw those numbers. Even if young adults are still living at home, they should at least be paying for their own phones. We live in a world that is so different from the one that many of us grew up in. When I was young, a “phone” was something that sat on the wall and that would ring once in a while when someone was trying to call. Today, most of the population has become completely addicted to “phones” that can perform thousands of different tasks and that are constantly spying on them. Have these phones made our society a better place? I certainly don’t think so."

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

"The World Economy 2025"

Full screen recommended.
The World Economy 2025
Full screen recommended.
Steven Van Metre, 5/14/25
"Oh Sh*t –This Crashed -61%!"
"Loans are tanking, delinquencies are skyrocketing, and unemployment is about to spike. China’s banks are sounding alarms that its economy is spiraling toward chaos."
Comments here:

"Larry C. Johnson: This Is the One Thing Tearing America Apart"

Dialogue Works, 5/14/25
"Larry C. Johnson: 
This Is The One Thing Tearing America Apart"
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Canadian Prepper, We're F***ked, And People Are Getting Angry!"

Canadian Prepper, 5/14/25
We're F***ked, And People Are Getting Angry!"
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Musical Interlude: Deuter, "Music of the Night: East of The Full Moon"

Full screen highly recommended.
Deuter, "Music of the Night: East of The Full Moon"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“These bright rims and flowing shapes suggest to some melting ice cream on a cosmic scale. Looking toward the constellation Cassiopeia, the colorful (zoomable) skyscape features the swept back, comet-shaped clouds IC 59 (left) and IC 63. About 600 light-years distant, the clouds aren't actually melting, but they are slowly dissipating under the influence of ionizing ultraviolet radiation from hot,luminous star gamma Cas. 
 Click image for larger size.
Gamma Cas is physically located only 3 to 4 light-years from the nebulae, just off the upper right edge of the frame. In fact, slightly closer to gamma Cas, IC 63 is dominated by red H-alpha light emitted as the ionized hydrogen atoms recombine with electrons. Farther from the star, IC 59 shows proportionally less H-alpha emission but more of the characteristic blue tint of dust reflected star light. The field of view spans about 1 degree or 10 light-years at the estimated distance of gamma Cas and friends.”

"Walmart Shoppers Feeling The Pain; Major Threat To U.S. Grid Discovered"

Jeremiah Babe, 5/14/25
"Walmart Shoppers Feeling The Pain; 
Major Threat To U.S. Grid Discovered"
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"Character..."

"Character cannot be developed in ease and quiet. 
Only through experiences of trial and suffering can the soul be 
strengthened, vision cleared, ambition inspired and success achieved."
- Helen Keller

"Something You Already Know..."

“Let me tell you something you already know. The world ain't all sunshine and rainbows. It's a very mean and nasty place and I don't care how tough you are it will beat you to your knees and keep you there permanently if you let it. You, me, or nobody is gonna hit as hard as life. But it ain't about how hard ya hit. It's about how hard you can get it and keep moving forward. How much you can take and keep moving forward. That's how winning is done! Now if you know what you're worth then go out and get what you're worth. But ya gotta be willing to take the hits, and not pointing fingers saying you ain't where you wanna be because of him, or her, or anybody! Cowards do that and that ain't you! You're better than that!” 
- Rocky Balboa

The Daily "Near You?"

Long Beach, California, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

Gerald Celente, "Freedom Suspended: Government Advocates War And Violence"

Gerald Celente, 5/14/25
"Freedom Suspended: 
Government Advocates War And Violence"
"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."
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"The Luxury Of Thinking One’s Own Thoughts"

"The Luxury Of Thinking One’s Own Thoughts"
By Paul Rosenberg

"When people think of luxuries, they think of things that rich people can afford but they can’t. And as it happens, the luxury I’m talking about today fits into that category. I’m hearing reports of very rich people enjoying this luxury, while people of lesser means find it unattainable.  I suppose it’s best to start this conversation very directly, even though it may be a bit jarring. Nonetheless, the following statement is true, and we all know it’s true on some level: The greatest thought-disruption system in the history of mankind is the combination of the smartphone and social media.

I’m sorry if that’s harsh, but it’s true all the same, and I’ll make the case for it by giving you some slightly edited passages from Johann Hari’s books, "Stolen Focus and The Anxious Generation": A study at the University of Oregon found that if you are focusing on something and get interrupted, it will take an average of 23 minutes before you regain the same state of focus. While getting phone calls and emails, a person’s IQ drops by an average of 10 points.

Professor Earl Miller at MIT believes we’ve created “a perfect storm of cognitive degredation, as a result of distraction.” If you see the world through fragments, your empathy often doesn’t kick in, as it does when you engage in a sustained, focused way. The more you let your mind wander (undistracted), the better you are at having personal goals, being creative, and making patient, long term decisions.

We are creating an arms race that causes companies to find more reasons to steal people’s time. Children are being deprived of the chance to develop intrinsic motives. In 2017, the President of Facebook asked, “How do we consume as much of your time and conscious attention as possible?” I’ll add to this that, on average, Americans check their smart phones 205 times per day.

And so, the luxury I’m addressing today sets us free from ruinous distraction... ruinous in the short and long term. Back in the 1990s, I trained my friends and business associates to contact me via email, and I did that for one simple reason: Email didn’t distract me. I might check it ten times a day, but those would be times that I chose, not times which were thrust upon me and which interrupted my thoughts.

I did that because I had earlier noticed how badly distractions and interruptions ruined my work, and I very much needed to remain productive in those years. For a long time, in the years before email, I worked at night and slept during the day, because it was worth it to think unobstructed thoughts. I got a lot more done.

An Easily Attainable Luxury: Obtaining this luxury is easy: Turn in your smart phone for an old-style flip-phone. It’ll do just fine for phone calls and you can even receive and send texts when you need to. This will make you functionally smarter and more creative; it’ll even save you money. The only real cost involved is that of letting people think you’re weird. Or, perhaps, breaking your addiction to the phones. If that affects you, you have my condolences. And please remember this little phrase: Smart phones and Facebook are the new smoking.

It wasn’t many years ago, of course, that no one had smart phones, and we survived it just fine. Not too long before that we had no mobile phones at all, and we survived that as well. And so, this particular “need” is artificial, not essential. And if your experience is anything like mine, you’ll be happy that you ditched the thing. You’ll love being free to think your own thoughts. (That said, breaking the addiction can be very hard. I escaped that part.)

Last Thoughts: So often it’s seemingly mundane, real-world events that cement things in us. For me, that moment came during a taxi ride. I settled in to the cab and one of those new screen systems flipped on and started showing me ads. I asked the driver to turn it off, then added, “I want to think my own thoughts.” And I really did; they were far more fruitful than being subjected to uninvited hucksters trying to pull money out of me. And so I think this makes a nice model for all of us: Turn the thing off and think your own thoughts. Your own thoughts will serve you far, far better than thoughts that are implanted in you by paying strangers... and by people whose income depends upon addicting you."

"In Three Words..."

 

"DOGE, Deficits, and the Coming Financial Earthquake"

"DOGE, Deficits, and the Coming Financial Earthquake"
by International Man

"International Man: What’s your perspective on the claims Elon Musk and others made about the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) during the campaign, and how would you assess the actual progress they've achieved since then?

Doug Casey: I hate to sound pessimistic, because the idea of DOGE was excellent, but it's not making much in the way of progress. Musk first thought he could cut $2 trillion from the budget. I see how he could say that; it’s a very reasonable estimate. But as he discovered the depth of the resistance, he reduced it to $1 trillion. And now it's $150 billion - and he's probably not even going to be able to do that.

Why is it failing? One reason is that Congress has legislated and mandated most of the spending, and the hundreds of agencies that carry it out - and Trump can’t eliminate them. Congress has to abolish these programs and agencies. All DOGE can do is make recommendations.

It's true that the USAID building is closed, but apparently, many of its employees and programs have just simply been reassigned to the State Department or other places. They've made no progress on getting rid of the Department of Education.

I’m sure Trump very much wants to see DOGE be successful, but unfortunately its very name is "Government Efficiency," and I question whether we really want the government to be more efficient. The only way to solve the problem isn’t by making government more efficient, but by abolishing agencies wholesale - not just trimming some fat.

Will there be a fundamental change? That’s unlikely because, as I’ve said many times before, Trump has no philosophical center. Nor any understanding of economics, as evidenced by his tariffs scheme, which I think will fail utterly - and may even be the catalyst that sets off the Greater Depression. He’s flying by the seat of his pants.

Equally bad - or worse - he appears to want an industrial policy for the US, where he'll be making investments in all kinds of things to make the US a manufacturing center again. It's like what Argentina did under the Peronists. He does whatever seems like a good idea at the time…

International Man: With Elon Musk signaling his impending departure from DOGE, how do you foresee the future of DOGE and its initiatives unfolding without his leadership?

Doug Casey: As Chairman Mao once said, "The helmsman sets the course that sails the ship." And if the helmsman jumps ship, it's questionable whether other crewmen can take over successfully. Maybe they will. But without the public profile and moral suasion of Musk, I suspect that the people he leaves in charge of this advisory agency will flounder.

And, remember, DOGE itself has no power. But the Deep State has an immense amount of power, and they’re fighting it tooth and nail - both with go-slow policies and by filing lawsuits everywhere possible to stop it from happening.

In the long run, just cutting things back can't possibly work. It's like pruning a plant. Gardeners prune plants to make them healthier. If you just prune agencies, they’ll grow back even more virulent. The only solution is for scores of them - hundreds of them - to be pulled out by the roots and Agent Orange sown where they grew. That’s not happening.

For instance, take Ukraine. Zelensky has become a billionaire, as have all his cronies, and the fighting is still going on. Why? Because the US is still sending them money and materiel.

I’m afraid serious cuts are bluster, not reality. And where can they really cut things? Are they going to take money away from the Veterans Administration or military pensions? No. Certainly not from the military itself - Trump has said they're going to increase spending from $800 billion to $1 trillion. Are they going to cut back Medicare or Social Security? Abolish Medicaid? They should, but they won’t. These things, along with interest on the national debt, equal about 85% of spending.

They can't reduce the interest burden on the federal debt; it will continue growing with more spending and higher interest rates. Which, I suspect, are headed toward the levels we saw in the early 1980s, when the government was paying 20% for its money.

Musk has said he’s found thousands of egregious cases of waste, fraud, and abuse that should be referred to the Department of Justice. But that’s far, far more than the DOJ can handle. Where are the headlines about prosecutions for the things Musk has talked about? I’m quite disappointed. I’d like to see hundreds of heads on stakes, but it looks like the bedbugs and cockroaches are just going to hide while the lights are on.

International Man: Do you believe DOGE’s proposed cuts will lead to genuine, permanent reductions in government spending - or will they simply free up funds for Washington to redirect toward areas like defense?

Doug Casey:
All kinds of obvious things aren't being touched - like the $50 billion the US gives to foreign governments around the world, a bottomless pit of graft. That's not going to change. Certainly not the $4 billion the US gives to Israel every year, or the $4 billion it gives to Egypt every year to bribe it into being Israel's BFF.

One thing that will kill any real progress from DOGE is subtle threats from the Deep State in general, and the praetorian agencies in particular. The NSA knows everything about everybody. If any DOGE employee gets too aggressive about breaking rice bowls or imprisoning bigwigs, they’ll be intimidated. These agencies know, or can fabricate, inconvenient things about them.

Or perform a cover up. Look at the Epstein case. We were supposed to learn what Epstein was up to, and with who. But everything’s being heavily redacted to protect guilty but well-connected people. The elite always close ranks to protect each other.

It’s all smoke but no fire. These agencies - with all the information they have - can destroy anyone who attacks them. If not now, while Trump is still in office, they’ll certainly seek retribution after he leaves. Our best hope - but it’s a long shot - is that Trump will realize that it’s kill or be killed, and will try to destroy them utterly while he’s still in power. That would be inviting civil war… but he has no real alternative.

International Man: Given that DOGE represents the most significant attempt to reduce government spending in generations, what are the implications if it fails?

Doug Casey: The economy is on the ragged edge, and with the tariffs creating economic chaos the Democrats may be re-elected in 2028. In fact, they may even win the midterms, which would guarantee that all of Trump’s efforts fail.

If the Democrats regain control of the government, they’ll redouble spending to try to forestall the Greater Depression and kick the can down the road for a few more years. And they’ll be supported by the American people, who are going to miss all the freebies the government was bribing them with. The average American has become so corrupt that he doesn’t want to have his doggy dish taken away.

For a while, during the first month of Trump’s presidency, it looked like it was going to once again be morning in America. But we’re finding out that morning only lasts six hours - and we’re already past noon. Things look quite grim.

International Man: As the US debt crisis intensifies, what steps should individuals take to protect their wealth - and what speculative opportunities do you see emerging from this turmoil?

Doug Casey: Even if we avoid a major war, I’m afraid the trend that’s been in motion for many decades is going to stay in motion and continue accelerating until the whole mess collapses under its own weight. The US has become a giant multicultural empire revolving around the Washington Beltway. It could go down catastrophically the way Rome did. Or it may just degrade slowly like Spain or England. They still exist, but they’re hollow shells of their previous selves.

The financial, economic, political, and social problems we're laboring under are leading to a breakup of the country. So, instead of the US getting bigger with the extremely expensive acquisitions of Greenland, the Panama Canal Zone, and - God forbid - Canada, the US is more likely to get smaller. Unchecked government power, financial decay, and systemic collapse are not theoretical - they’re unfolding in real time."

"How It Really Is"

 

"Yemen Humbles a Superpower"

"Yemen Humbles a Superpower"
by Nick Giambruno

"Yemen lies at the gateway of the Bab-el-Mandeb, which translates to "Gate of Tears" in English - a name that aptly reflects the significance of this strategic maritime choke point in the Red Sea. Bab-el-Mandeb is a crucial conduit for global trade, enabling the flow of goods from the Suez Canal to the open seas and linking Europe and Asia through one of the world's busiest shipping routes.

Much to the consternation of the US, Israel, and their regional lackeys, the Ansar Allah movement - often referred to dismissively in the West as the "Houthis" - controls this key passage and is not afraid to leverage it against their adversaries. This is a major reason Saudi Arabia, along with a "Coalition of the Bribed," launched Operation Decisive Storm in March 2015 - an ill-fated invasion aimed at dislodging the Houthis from power.

Yemen has sometimes been called "the Afghanistan of the Middle East" due to its status as an impoverished, tribal society that is heavily armed, situated in rugged mountainous terrain, and historically resistant to both foreign occupation and centralized authority. So, it was not hard to foresee that Saudi Arabia’s campaign wouldn’t end well. By 2019, the conflict had ground to a military stalemate. By March 2022, the Saudi-led coalition announced a halt to all hostilities, having failed to achieve any of its objectives.

Most people remain unaware of this war or its details. Yet it’s remarkable that the Saudis -among the wealthiest in the Middle East and backed by the full weight of US military and political support - failed to defeat the region’s most impoverished people in Yemen.

President Biden Tries - and Fails - to Subdue the Houthis: The Houthis are a key component of Iran’s network of regional allies, collectively known as the Axis of Resistance. This alliance includes Iran, Hezbollah in Lebanon, several Palestinian groups (including Hamas), and several militias in Iraq.

Following the October 7, 2023 attacks and Israel’s subsequent war on Gaza, the Houthis opened another front by targeting Israeli-linked ships in the Red Sea in solidarity with the Palestinians. Their actions disrupted global trade through one of the world’s most vital maritime corridors. In response, former President Joe Biden launched Operation Prosperity Guardian in December 2023, aiming to pressure the Houthis into halting their costly blockade. While exact figures remain unknown, Operation Prosperity Guardian likely cost billions and ultimately failed to halt the Houthi attacks.

A suspicious incident unfolded in February 2024 when a cruise missile launched from Yemen narrowly missed the USS Eisenhower aircraft carrier. Another questionable episode followed in June, as the Houthis claimed they had successfully struck the Eisenhower, which then quietly withdrew from the region - amid a telling silence from both the media and the US military. In the months that followed, Operation Prosperity Guardian gradually faded, having failed to break the Houthis’ naval blockade on Israel.

President Trump Tries - and Fails - to Subdue the Houthis: Trump inherited the Yemen problem after winning the 2024 presidential election. The Houthi blockade persisted, as did a string of suspicious incidents involving the US military in the region. In December 2024, for example, an F/A-18 Hornet combat aircraft - worth $60 million - from the USS Harry S. Truman was shot down in what was reported as a friendly fire incident.

Then, in February 2025, the same aircraft carrier suffered significant damage under murky circumstances - allegedly after colliding with a merchant vessel near the Suez Canal. The US government offered no details, but the damage was severe enough to force the Harry S. Truman to dock in Greece for repairs. Adding to the intrigue, Captain Dave Snowden, the commanding officer of the Harry S. Truman, was relieved of duty later that month due to a "loss of confidence in his ability to command" following the incident.

Several weeks later, on March 15, 2025, President Trump launched Operation Rough Rider with plenty of tough talk about bombing the Houthis into submission - though he never quite explained why he believed he’d succeed where Biden and the Saudis had failed.

Despite the intense bombing campaign, Houthi attacks continued largely unabated. And the string of suspicious incidents didn’t stop either. On April 28, the USS Harry S. Truman lost another F/A-18, which allegedly fell overboard while the carrier was executing an evasive maneuver to dodge a Houthi drone and missile strike. Then, on May 6, the Harry S. Truman lost yet another F/A-18 under murky circumstances. That very same day, Trump shocked the world by declaring victory and announcing a ceasefire with the Houthis, claiming that his military campaign had forced them to capitulate.

The Houthis, however, rejected that version of events. They stated that while they had agreed to stop targeting the US military - on the condition that the US stopped targeting them - the ceasefire did not extend to Israel. They made it clear they would continue attacking Israeli targets.

Billions Lost at the "Gate of Tears": Since late 2023, when Biden launched military operations that essentially continued under Trump, here’s a brief rundown of some of the most prominent costs.The Houthis have shot down 22 MQ-9 Reaper drones - each costing around $30 million - bringing the total loss to roughly $660 million. The Houthis have also exposed the MQ-9 Reaper drone - a key asset of the US military - as effectively obsolete in modern warfare.

Three F/A-18 Hornet combat aircraft - each valued at $60 million, totaling $180 million - were lost under suspicious circumstances. The US Navy burned through countless high-value interceptors—many costing hundreds of thousands, even millions, per shot—just to take down the Houthis’ low-cost drones, depleting stockpiles that are difficult to replace. The USS Harry S. Truman sustained significant, unexplained damage and required extensive repairs.

And that’s not even counting the cost of offensive operations, which were largely ineffective and almost certainly racked up a bill in the billions. To me, the whole thing looks like a colossal failure that Trump tried - unconvincingly - to spin as a victory.

The US war in Yemen has easily cost billions, with little to show for it. The Yemenis may be the poorest people in the Middle East, but they're wearing down the US military at an astonishing rate. It’s clear Trump was looking for a way out of this mess. The bottom line is hard to miss: after years of wasted billions, failed operations, and mounting losses, the US has nothing to show for its war in Yemen - while one of the poorest nations on Earth continues to expose the limits of American power. But this isn’t just about military failure - it’s part of a broader unraveling. It’s a symptom of something bigger: a system under strain, and a monetary reset already in motion.

"Honey Badgers"

"Honey Badgers"
Full screen recommended.
"Scott Ritter has humorously described the Yemeni Houthis as "the honey badgers of the Middle East, absolutely fearless and relentlessly ferocious." They just simply don't care. They've declared war on Israel while all the other Muslim states just talk, and send missiles and drones to attack Israel and attack any ships connected to Israel in any way. They totally control the 12 mile wide Bab-el-Mandab ("Gate of Grief") strait connecting the Red Sea and the Arabian Sea, which transits 40% of the world's oil. Closing that is having catastrophic consequences on global economies, and the Houthis know it. And so it is...

Honey badgers are the Italian mafia of the animal kingdom. No one, and I mean no one, wants to mess with these savages. They literally wake up and choose violence daily. They are regarded as the most fearless animal in the wild and they back that up every day, all while looking like a ferret on steroids. They'll combat anything from lions, leopards, hyenas and even cobras and pythons. But how did they become so fearless? How do these compact sized danger-weasels take on the deadliest predators like it was a regular Sunday’s brunch with the girls? These are moments of honey badgers being straight up savages."
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Dan, I Allegedly, "The Feds Are Garnishing Wages - They Are Not Messing Around"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 5/14/25
"The Feds Are Garnishing Wages - 
They Are Not Messing Around"
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Adventures With Danno, "Unbelievable Prices At Dollar Tree, This Is Shocking"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 5/14/25
"Unbelievable Prices At Dollar Tree, This Is Shocking"
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Gregory Mannarino, "The Real Meltdown Has Already Begun, And Here Is The Proof"

Gregory Mannarino, 5/14/25
"The Real Meltdown Has Already Begun,
 And Here Is The Proof"
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