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Tuesday, June 17, 2025

"Food Shortages Are Here - Prepare Now or Regret Later!"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 6/17/25
"Food Shortages Are Here - 
Prepare Now or Regret Later!"
"Food shortages are here, and it’s time to prepare NOW or regret later! In this video, I’m walking you through the shocking reality of empty shelves at a Whole Foods in Huntington Beach, California, after a major cyber attack disrupted their supply chain. If this can happen to Jeff Bezos and Amazon, what does that mean for the rest of us? This is your wake-up call to stock up on essentials before it’s too late. From dairy products to juices, bread, and even chips, the randomness of what’s missing is alarming. I share practical tips on what to store - beans, rice, canned goods, water, and even emergency food like MREs - and how to prepare for the worst. Whether it’s a prolonged cyber attack, power outage, or another crisis, having a plan is key."
Comments here:
o
Meanwhile, elsewhere...
Full screen recommended.
Travelling with Russell , 6/17/25
"Can You Buy Eggs in Russia in 2025? Egg Shortages!"
"Can you buy eggs in Russia in 2025? I decided to go and visit some of Russia's most well-known and typical supermarkets to find out. Is Russia in the middle of an egg shortage or egg crisis? I want to know first-hand on the tour of multiple Russian supermarkets."
Comments here:

"Maybe..."

“Maybe we’re not supposed to be happy. Maybe gratitude has nothing to do with joy. Maybe being grateful means recognizing what you have for what it is. Appreciating small victories. Admiring the struggle it takes to simply be a human. Maybe, we’re thankful for the familiar things we know. And maybe, we’re thankful for the things we’ll never know. At the end of the day, the fact that we have the courage to still be standing is reason enough to celebrate.”
- “Grey’s Anatomy”

"Don’t Waste Time, That’s All You Have"

"Don’t Waste Time, That’s All You Have"
by John Wilder

"One of Seneca's (Dead Roman Philosopher Dude) most famous quotes is, "It is not that we have a short time to live, but that we waste a lot of it." What surprises me is that Seneca wrote this before Twitter® existed. But even back in the time of Rome, there were ways to waste time. I’m thinking Facebook® might be that old.

Regardless, his message is timeless: every moment that we’re breathing here on Earth is precious. We may not always get a choice as to how we spend our time (Ted Kaczynski seems to be booked every day) but the true crime is to waste time. Oh, and blowing people up.

I have been as guilty as anyone of wasting time. And one of the biggest wastes of time is to become consumed by negative thoughts and emotions. In reality, most of the time (most) the things that irritate me are small. How small? So small that if I pack up my emotions, and really assess as to why I’m mad, it just looks silly. When Hillary reflects on why she’s mad, well, she calls the Suicide Hotline and places an order.

But that reflection is crucial. It’s called self-control, and although it appears to be unfashionable in certain locations (Chicago, I’m looking at you) it is the only way to be successful. If I threw a temper tantrum when (spins wheel) I drop a sock on the floor, I think there’s a simple word for that in the English language: Leftist feminist the ATF unstable.

No, when I’m upset I stop. I take a deep breath. I ask myself, “Does it matter?” Most of the time, it doesn’t. At all. Very few of the things that have irritated me matter at all over any rational timeframe. The old two rules apply: 1. Don’t sweat the small stuff. 2. It’s all small stuff.

The second question is, can I control whatever the situation is or influence it? If the answer is no, then that’s like being mad that the Sun is coming up in the morning. Even if it’s my mistake, it’s sillier than being angry over the English coal minimum price subsidy in the 1800s or...anything that happened in 1619.

One concept I’ve come across recently is "amor fati," which is Latin for “put armor on fat people”. Oh, wait, my translator was wrong. It really means, "love your fate." I think I first heard a variation of this when I was a kid: “You get what you get, and you’ll like it, and grease up the fat people so we can put plate mail on them.”

The reality of amor fati is this, though: I am where I am, and I have a choice. I can get up every morning and be mad, or I can be happy where I am. Does that mean I’m content? No. Does that mean I’m not going to fight like hell? No. Does that mean I’m not going to try to change certain things with the fire of a thousand suns? No.

It does mean that if life sucks, I can still find meaning, still find purpose, and still try to create the change that I seek to create. It’s not complacency. Heck, Seneca himself was one of the richest dudes in all of Rome. That didn’t just happen. He didn’t just wake up one morning, and say, “Holy crap, I have an amazing amount of money. How did that happen?” Seneca embraced what he had, and tried to better himself, and change himself. He did okay.

Our choices are our choices, but even more than that, we always have the choice how we feel, even Ted Kaczynski. We may have lost everything else, but we always retain that. We should not be overcome by fear or despair. To be clear – those are just about the most negative things we can let into our lives, unless you know one of the women on 'The View.'

The only proper way to deal with tough times is to face into them. Our obstacles make us stronger. Each obstacle we face with virtue and excellence improves us. Except for bullets. Those sound like they really suck.

Regardless of all of that, the first point is still the most important: our lives aren’t too short – our lives are exactly as long as they are. Deal with it. Love it. Use your time – every minute. Every second you waste? It’s wasting your life. Now, go make something happen."

The Daily "Near You?"

Round Rock, Texas, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"And There Comes A Time..."

“Cowardice asks the question, 'Is it safe?' Expediency asks the question, 'Is it politic?' Vanity asks the question, 'Is it popular?' But, conscience asks the question, 'Is it right?' And there comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular, but one must take it because one's conscience tells one that it is right.”
- Martin Luther King Jr.

"Why Are Large Numbers Of U.S. Air Force KC-135R Stratotankers And KC-46 Pegasus Tankers Flying East Across The Atlantic?"

"Why Are Large Numbers Of U.S. Air Force KC-135R Stratotankers
 And KC-46 Pegasus Tankers Flying East Across The Atlantic?"
by Michael Snyder

"Did President Trump just pull the trigger on a major decision? When dozens of U.S. Air Force tankers started taking off from their bases, all sorts of speculation started to erupt on social media. And then when those tankers started flying east across the Atlantic, the level of speculation escalated to a frenzy. As I write this article, the Pentagon has still not explained what all of these tankers are doing. But TWZ has accurately noted that what we are witnessing is “very peculiar”

Over two dozen U.S. Air Force KC-135R and KC-46A tankers from across the United States appeared on flight-tracking software yesterday evening, taking off from their bases and heading east over the Atlantic. It isn’t clear if they were ‘dragging’ any combat aircraft with them, but there wasn’t any obvious signs of that.

While tanker movements in this direction are far from abnormal, such a large, near-simultaneous migration of the jets was very peculiar, especially at a time of extreme crisis in the Middle East. The exact reason for the mass deployment is unclear, although many of the potential answers would indicate a change, or preparations for a potential change, in the current conflict between Israel and Iran. I have never seen anything like this.

According to the most recent reports, “more than 30” U.S. Air Force KC-135R Stratotankers and KC-46 Pegasus Tankers are flying east across the Atlantic Ocean…"Dozens of American military aerial-refueling aircraft left U.S. shores heading east across the Atlantic Ocean early on Monday in an unprecedented deployment of the U.S. Air Force. The KC‑135 and KC‑46 planes, more than 30 in all, might participate in a scheduled NATO exercise in Europe. However, analysts and regional officials speculate the mission could extend to the Middle East, possibly supporting operations related to the ongoing hostilities between Israel and Iran.

I think that it is quite likely that these tankers are headed over to Israel to provide refueling support. Because Israel only has minimal aerial refueling capabilities, there is a limit as to how many long-range strikes the IDF can conduct in Iran…As we have discussed repeatedly for years, and especially since this conflict kicked off, Israel lacks robust aerial refueling capabilities, with just a handful of aging 707 tankers (around seven operational) available to support hundreds of fighter aircraft. This is a massively limiting factor when it comes to sortie generation for long-range strikes into Iran. It also severely limits how long aircraft can remain on station once in their assigned target area and how deeply they can penetrate into Iranian territory.

As Israel gains air superiority further east over Iran, aerial tanking becomes even more important. It also allows fighters to employ direct attack weapons, as opposed to much more expensive, and, in some cases, less effective standoff munitions. Bringing the Israeli Air Force’s heaviest bunker-busters to bear on targets will require Israeli aircraft to be in close proximity to them, in particular. Additional tanker support would greatly help with these efforts.

If dozens of U.S. tankers start providing the IDF with refueling support, that will allow Israel to hit Iran much harder and much more frequently. It is also possible that these tankers are headed over to the Middle East because the U.S. is preparing for a scenario in which it will have to start attacking Iran directly.

Yesterday, I listed 3 potential trigger events which could draw the U.S. directly into the conflict. Interestingly, on Saturday the U.S. Air Force broadcast an Emergency Action Message that was unusually long…"The US Air Force has broadcast two encrypted emergency codes, typically utilized for crucial military communications, sometimes pertaining to nuclear command and control. The initial Emergency Action Message (EAM) was aired on Saturday, exhibiting a complexity far beyond the standard signals that usually span around 30 characters. This covert message, typically released a day later, on Sundays, extended to 246 characters. It coincided with reciprocal bombardment between Israel and Iran as the two Middle Eastern countries continued their hostilities."

And then on Sunday the U.S. Air Force broadcast an Emergency Action Message that was even longer… "A subsequent communication was issued on Sunday, this time extending to 290 characters, again through the US Air Force’s High Frequency Global Communications System, reports the Mirror US."

What in the world is going on? I think that there is far more happening behind the scenes than we are being told. Ultimately, Israel’s success in this war will be determined by how much damage is done to Iran’s nuclear facilities. According to the IAEA, the 15,000 centrifuges at Natanz have likely been seriously damaged or destroyed

"It is very likely all the roughly 15,000 centrifuges operating at Iran’s biggest uranium enrichment plant at Natanz were badly damaged or destroyed because of a power cut caused by an Israeli strike, the UN nuclear watchdog chief told the BBC on Monday. The International Atomic Energy Agency and its Director General Rafael Grossi had previously said the centrifuges at the underground enrichment plant at Natanz may have been damaged as a result of an airstrike on its power supply, even though the hall housing the plant itself did not seem to have been hit.

“Our assessment is that with this sudden loss of external power, in great probability the centrifuges have been severely damaged if not destroyed altogether,” Grossi said in an interview with the BBC."

But the facilities at Fordow are much harder to get at because they are very deep underground. The U.S. has bunker buster bombs that could potentially do the job, and that is one of the main reasons why the Israelis want the U.S. to join the operation…

“While the US has B-2 stealth bombers with 30,000lb massive ordnance penetrators that are designed just for this type of strike, Israel’s options are more limited - if it is operating by itself,” says a report in the Financial Times. “Israeli F-15 fighter bombers can carry 4,000-5,000lb GBU-28 bunker-buster bombs, each capable of punching through 5-6m of concrete. Israel does have such bombs but their numbers are a closely guarded secret, and few analysts believe the country has enough on its own to do the job.”

Israel’s forces “don’t have enough 5,000-pounders” to take out Fordow and Natanz, retired US Air Force General Charles Wald, who now works for the Jewish Institute for the National Security of America, had said in April. 

We shall see what happens. I have a feeling that there will be all sorts of “surprises” in the days ahead. Right now, the USS Nimitz carrier strike group is headed toward the Middle East, and the USS Carl Vinson carrier strike group is already there…"The USS Nimitz carrier strike group is on its way to the Middle East from the South China Sea, a U.S. official told Fox News. The Nimitz strike group was previously scheduled to replace the USS Carl Vinson carrier strike group, which has been deployed for several months, but is now heading to the Middle East ahead of schedule. The two will now be in the Middle East at the same time. USS Carl Vinson was the only aircraft carrier in the region as of last Friday, U.S. defense officials told Fox News.

The “final showdown” with Iran that I have been writing about for such a long time has arrived. I believe that this story is far from over. There has already been a tremendous amount of death and destruction, but I anticipate that we will see much more as this conflict rolls along."

"Pants on Fire"

"Pants on Fire"
by Joel Bowman

“Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.”
(The more things change, the more they stay the same.)
~ Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr (1808-1890)

Cefalonia, Greece - “Where is that global warming when you need it?” The cheeky comment was overheard at a little seaside taverna near our temporary digs back in Syros a couple of weeks ago... at least by those sitting within earshot of our table when we said it. The summer “swimming season” had officially begun in Greece... but the waters remained unseasonably fresh, at least for our warm, Aussie blood. Those visiting from cooler climes – Brits, Germans and the perennially fearless Scandinavians – waded into these seas like Bugs Bunny slipping into a cannibal's kettle. Then again, when you’re accustomed to Baltic waters and North Sea icebergs...

To the climate anxious ear, our quips may appear insensitive. But then, if the “era of global boiling has arrived,” as UN Secretary-General António Guterres lectured the world back in 2023, surely a little levity is in order... if only to break the awkward silence around the cauldron as we’re all poached and simmered to death.

Privilege Checked: Of course, it goes without saying that, as a white, heterosexual male... with not one but two functional arms... we speak from a position of privilege as unforgivable as it is unearned. As such, the plight of any number of marginalized communities remains eternally beyond our grasp... intellectually... emotionally... spiritually... and otherly. Not that our unfortunate advantages excuse us from “doing the work” to understand things we can never know anyway. There’s always more to be done, especially when the claims made by the high priests of climate alarmism remain beyond conceivable doubt.

In the meantime, here is a smattering of hyperventilating headlines, with which to flagellate ourselves from here to Hades...

"Why Climate Change is Inherently Racist" ~ BBC

""Gender equality is the missing piece in the climate debate" ~ United Nations Development Programme

"Climate vs. War: How Combating the Climate Crisis Can Help Ukraine" ~ Vox

"The Disproportionate Impact of Climate the Climate Crisis on the LGBTQIA2S+ Community" ~ Greenpeace

"Pakistani Trans Community is Especially Vulnerable to Climate Crisis" ~ Global Health NOW

"Climate Change Leaves Transgender Indians Even More Vulnerable" ~ The Washington Blade

"Hundreds of Millions on Verge of Starvation, Billions More Undernourished as Climate Crisis Droughts Take Their Toll" ~ BNE

"Climate Change’s Overlooked Role in Obesity " ~ Global Health NOW

Yes, dear reader... whether the victims are Indian or Pakistani... fat or skinny... female or non-male... black or brown or non-white... gay, trans or two-spirit animal... The climate “crisis” is only making matters worse... and it’s all our fault!

Climate Agnosticism: And yet, for all our immutable characteristics and unpardonable life choices, our inexpiable sins nevertheless failed to raise the sea temperature down the hill even to the seasonal average. From seatemperature.info: "Water temperature in Syros today is 21°C, below the June average of 22.5°C. Based on our historical data, the warmest water on this day in Syros was recorded in 2010 and was 24.8°C, and the coldest was recorded in 2022 at 21.4°C."

Perhaps a few more carbon belching plane flights are in order. (If only we could spring for private jet-setting; then we could aspire to the kind of difference Bill Gates and Leo DiCaprio and John Kerry make daily, without even breaking a sweat.) All of this is merely anecdotal, of course, a few jibes amidst a sea of our own acknowledged ignorance. When it comes to the unquestionable tenets of the Climate Change Cult, your editor remains radically agnostic.

How, then, does one assess some of the above headlines, some of which were presumably not written in jest (or at least not on purpose)? Take the claim that “hundreds of millions are on the verge of starvation, with billions more undernourished.” How does that square with, say, the verifiable fact that hunger deaths have (mercifully) collapsed over the past generation, as global crop yields skyrocket to historical records year… after year… after year?

In 1928, the League of Nations estimated that more than two-thirds (65%) of humanity lived in a “constant state of hunger.” By 1970, malnutrition afflicted “just” one quarter (25%) of the world’s population. And by 2008, the number of people considered “chronically hungry” was down to less than one in ten. The favorable trend is particularly noticeable among children, who are the most vulnerable to the historical scourge of malnutrition. From the Financial Post:

Click image for larger size.

Please Sir, Can I Have Some More? What accounts for this rapid decline in hungry little mouths? Writes Danish political scientist and “skeptical environmentalist,” Bjorn Lomborg: "Hunger is way down because incomes have risen dramatically and humanity has become much better at producing food. We have more than quintupled cereal production since 1926, and more than halved global food prices. At the same time, extreme poverty has dropped sharply, allowing parents to buy their children more and better food."

And don’t look now, but here’s more positive news... this time from Our World in Data, citing figures sourced from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. Their reports show total agricultural output (adjusted for inflation) increasing by over 310% during the last six decades. That’s almost double the rate of population increase, which grew by ~160% over the same period (from ~3 billion in 1961 to ~8 billion in 2025).

Click image for larger size.

Whether looking at the production of potatoes (+200%), wheat (+245%), maize (+400%), or soybeans (+1,280%), the world’s leading food crops are handily outpacing population growth. And that trend looks set to continue. Lomborg, again: "As we move towards 2050, continuing increases in incomes will almost eradicate extreme poverty. At the same time, food prices will likely decline slightly or stay about the same, as even more people switch to higher-quality, more expensive foods. All credible forecasts see even lower levels of malnutrition by mid-century."

As for the role dreaded carbon dioxide has played in all this, Lomborg is heretical in citing reality: "Carbon dioxide is a fertilizer. Tomato producers routinely pump it into their greenhouses to boost productivity. It has a similar impact across the living world. Since the 1970s, the rising concentration of CO₂ has caused the planet to become greener, producing more biomass. Satellites show that since 2000 the world has so many more green leaves their total additional area is larger than Australia."

Starvation down... crop yields up... biomass expanding... and life flourishing. What on God’s greening earth is to be done?

Deaths in Decline: Meanwhile, death rates from natural disasters – including droughts, floods, extreme temperatures, wildfires, glacial lake outbursts, etc. – are collapsing. In the decade from 1920-1930, 26.5 people per one hundred thousand died from such catastrophic events. The rate a century on: less than half a person per thousand...a non-trivial 98.11% reduction. Again, from Our World in Data:

Click image for larger size.

Reading through the headlines and parsing the data, it’s almost as though we’re living on a different planet from the Political-Celebrity Industrial Complex...one that is not teetering on the brink of a mass extinction event, but one in which poverty is decreasing precipitously as food production hits record after record...where deaths from extreme weather events have collapsed over the past century, thanks in large part to a general increase in wealth per capita, in which access to cheap, reliable energy in the form of fossil fuels and nuclear power has delivered billions from the grips of poverty and misery.

We don’t claim to know what the temperature will be a year... a decade... a century from now. Nor do we claim to know what should... or even could... be done to alter it, if indeed that were definitively demonstrated to be a net positive outcome.

Moreover, we don’t pretend to understand the myriad opportunity costs involved in such a complex re-tooling of the global economy, administered and enforced by precisely the same clutch of corrupt politicians who have proven themselves least qualified to do so, nor what might be the inevitable and unintended consequences such a project might unleash on the rest of us. Helpfully, the world divides itself into two camps on these – and many other – pertinent questions: those who admit they don’t know all the answers... and liars."

"How It Really Is"

"So long as the deceit ran along quiet and monotonous, all of us let 
ourselves be deceived, abetting it unawares or maybe through cowardice..." 
- William Faulkner

Bill Bonner, "No Big Deal"

"No Big Deal"
by Bill Bonner

"We can easily get a deal done between
 Israel and Iran and end this bloody conflict.’
- Donald J Trump

Youghal, Ireland - "One of the most surprising things about the Trump regime is how few deals the great deal maker actually does. No deal the frozen North of Greenland or Canada, or in the tropics of the Panama Canal. But who thought anything else would happen? Nothing should have happened; and nothing did happen. And…maybe public policy is more than just trying to get a better deal.

There are the wars, for example, sponsored and funded by the US, in the Ukraine and Gaza. It would be easy for the US to stop the killing. Just cut off the flow of money and weapons to the killers. But that wouldn’t need a deal maker. That would require an act of genuine disruption - standing up to the firepower industry and mega-donors…defying the neocons and Zionists. And so, no deal; the violence continues.

There was no deal for the DOGE either. Musk found waste — in the billions. Congress and the White House could have followed up…cutting programs and budgets permanently. No deal was needed. And no great insight either. The politicians know how much the US Treasury is likely to receive in tax collections. All they need is the backbone to keep the outgo below the income. But Congress, which controls (or rather, doesn’t control) the budget, doesn’t really want to cut spending. Neither does POTUS. DOGE was just for show.

There were also the tariffs. According to Trump Team promises, the president was going to impose ‘reciprocal’ tariffs that would make the whole global trade system fair…and bring manufacturing back to the US. But after the stock market cracked, he gave up and went back to deal making. And the deals never get done, because the real deals are made between buyers and sellers, not between hack tariff negotiators. Team Trump could get out of the way and let the traders do the deals. Instead, tariffs are set, paused, modified, re-negotiated…and we end up with a moveable hodge-podge of taxes on trade (aka tariffs)…which makes it almost impossible for the real traders to do business. The Daily Mail:

"Companies are warning how turmoil and confusion around Trump's trade wars is slowing the progress made in reinvigorating American factories. The latest jobs report revealed that manufacturing jobs declined by 8,000 last month - the most this year so far. Anxiety is high in the Midwest, which remains home to the largest concentration of US manufacturing jobs -  despite losing tens of thousands of workers to offshoring in the early 2000s. 'Overall, it is going to be a drag on the US economy,' Gus Faucher, chief economist for PNC Financial Services Group in Pittsburgh, told Bloomberg."

The fake ‘deal-making’ also encourages foreigners to make deals of their own. The New York Times: "Trump Is Pushing Allies Away and Closer to Each Other." "America’s closest allies are increasingly turning to each other to advance their interests, deepening their ties as the Trump administration challenges them with tariffs and other measures that are upending trade, diplomacy and defense. Concerned by shifting U.S. priorities under President Trump, some of America’s traditional partners on the world stage have spent the turbulent months since Mr. Trump’s January inauguration focusing on building up their direct relationships, flexing diplomatic muscles and leaving the United States aside."

But Trump’s most important ‘deal’ - to bring federal spending and deficits under control - was never even proposed. There again, the fault lies not in the president’s deal-making skills. The budget could be balanced. But the president has no interest in making that deal. Because that deal means taking short term pain in exchange for a long-term benefit. That’s not the way politics, or Donald J. Trump, work. So, the deficits keep coming.

And now…another war…another opportunity for fake deal making! It is a war of geo-political hygiene, say its sponsors (the US and Israel)…designed to immunize the Mideast against a nuclear-armed Iran. But everybody knows Iran poses no real nuclear threat. Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard: ‘We continue to assess Iran is not building a nuclear weapon and that Supreme Leader Khamenei has not reauthorized the nuclear weapons program he suspended in 2003.’

Even if Iran had a nuclear bomb (which it doesn’t) imagine what would happen if it dared to use it. Israel, with hundreds of nukes, would obliterate it. That’s why Iran agreed to give up its nuke program…and submit to regular inspections - not because its leaders are pure-hearted saints, but because nuclear weapons would do them no good. That was a real deal. Iran dumped the expense of a useless nuclear weapons program; Israel no longer had to worry about it. And now, the US could stop the killing and destruction easily. It could stop supporting it. But it is a war begun on false premises. Fake deal-making won’t stop it. Instead, the whole world tilts toward violence."

"Market Note, by Tom Dyson"
"This chart shows investment in oil supply, adjusted for inflation. Pumping a hundred million barrels of oil from out of the ground – each day – is hard work and takes a lot of money. But they aren’t investing enough to sustain it. This chart suggests that oil supply is about to get a lot scarcer. Maybe not immediately, but soon. US oil production growth is already peaking, for example. Makes you wonder, could oil be the more likely reason they’re trying to topple Iran’s government?"
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"Iran's Lethal Blows, The Strategic Deception Operation"

Full screen recommended.
Mahmood OD, 6/17/25
"Iran's Lethal Blows, 
The Strategic Deception Operation"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Times Of India, 6/17/25
"Iran ‘Carpet-bombs’ Tel Aviv,
 IDF Intel HQ, Mossad Center ‘Explodes’"
"The IRGC issued a statement a short while back that it had struck Israeli military's Intelligence HQ and Mossad Operations center in an airstrike on Tel Aviv. Footage on social media showed thick plumes of smoke emanating from buildings reportedly from Tel Aviv. The attacks follow a fresh missile barrage that hit central Israel in the morning. The attack caused widespread damage and triggered fires. This was Tehran's revenge for the IDF strike on the building of Iran's state TV - IRIB - last night."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Oneindia News, 6/17/25
"Iran Kills Mossad Chief David Barnea? 
Terrifying Video Shows Mossad HQ Bombed to Ashes"
Comments here:

Gregory Mannarino, "The Fiat System Collapse: Problem, Reaction, Solution"

Gregory Mannarino, 6/17/25
"The Fiat System Collapse: Problem, Reaction, Solution"
https://traderschoice.net/
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Hindustan Times, 6/17/25
"Khamenei To Close Strait Of Hormuz? 
Why This Move Will Devastate World Economy"
"Strait of Hormuz is a narrow channel, approximately 30 miles wide at the narrowest point. Strait of Hormuz is deep & relatively free of maritime hazards & lies between Oman & Iran. Some reports suggest Iran is now threatening to close the vital strait of Hormuz amid war with Israel. Watch for all the details."
Comments here:

"Jeffrey Sachs: US Prepares to Join War Against Iran"

Prof. Glenn Diesen, 6/17/25
"Jeffrey Sachs: US Prepares to Join War Against Iran"
"Prof. Jeffrey Sachs is a world-renowned economics professor, an advisor to political leaders around the world, a bestselling author, and a global leader in sustainable development. Prof. Sachs discusses the reckless surprise attack on Iran, and the dangerous escalation as the US is making preparations to join the war."
Comments here:
Follow Prof. Glenn Diesen:
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Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, AM 6/17/25
"Prof. Jeffrey Sachs: Trump and War"
Comments here:

Monday, June 16, 2025

"Trump Orders 17 Million To Leave Tehran Before Attack; Oil Tankers On Fire!"

Full screen recommended.
Prepper News, 6/16/25
"Trump Orders 17 Million To Leave Tehran 
Before Attack; Oil Tankers On Fire!"
Comments here:

"The 2025 Crash Is Now Accelerating, This Is Going To Get Bad"

Jeremiah Babe, 6/16/25
"The 2025 Crash Is Now Accelerating,
 This Is Going To Get Bad"
Comments here:

"Gas Stations Will Go Empty In The Days Ahead As Oil Supplies Collapse And Prices Skyrocket"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 6/16/25
"Gas Stations Will Go Empty In The Days Ahead 
As Oil Supplies Collapse And Prices Skyrocket"

Gas stations across America could run completely dry in just days. We're not talking about expensive fuel anymore – we're talking about no fuel at all. Right now, as you're watching this video, Iranian lawmakers are seriously considering a move that could send shockwaves through every gas station from coast to coast. They're threatening to close the Strait of Hormuz – the narrow waterway that carries 20% of the world's oil supply. If that happens, we won't just see $5 gas. We won't just see $7 gas. We could see gas stations with bags over the pumps and "NO FUEL" signs everywhere you look.

Remember the 1970s oil crisis? The long lines? The rationing? The panic buying? That's about to look like child's play compared to what's coming. The dominoes are already falling in the Middle East, and the final domino is going to land right at your local gas station. Within 48 hours, this situation could spiral completely out of control. Here's why you need to prepare now.
Comments here:

"Iran Prepares Largest Attack 'In History', 4 F-35's Shot Down!? Trump Prepares for War"

Full screen recommended.
Prepper news, 6/16/25
"Iran Prepares Largest Attack 'In History',
 4 F-35's Shot Down!? Trump Prepares for War"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Enya, "A Day Without Rain"

Full screen recommended.
Enya, "A Day Without Rain"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“What powers are being wielded in the Wizard Nebula? Gravitation strong enough to form stars, and stellar winds and radiations powerful enough to create and dissolve towers of gas. Located only 8,000 light years away, the Wizard nebula, pictured above, surrounds developing open star cluster NGC 7380. Visually, the interplay of stars, gas, and dust has created a shape that appears to some like a fictional medieval sorcerer.
The active star forming region spans 100 about light years, making it appear larger than the angular extent of the Moon. The Wizard Nebula can be located with a small telescope toward the constellation of the King of Aethiopia (Cepheus) Although the nebula may last only a few million years, some of the stars being formed may outlive our Sun.”

Chet Raymo, “Telling Stories”

“Telling Stories”
by Chet Raymo

"When the pulse of the first day carried it to the rim of night, First Woman said to First Man, "The people need to know the laws. To help them we must write the laws for all to see"... And so she began, slowly, first one and then the next, placing her jewels across the dome of night, carefully designing her pattern so all could read it. But Coyote grew bored watching First Woman carefully arranging the stars in the sky: Impatiently he gathered two corners of First Woman's blanket, and before she could stop him he flung the remaining stars out into the night, spilling them in wild disarray, shattering First Woman's careful patterns."

This episode from the Navajo creation story of is from "How the Stars Fell Into the Sky", a children's book by Jerrie Oughton. It is a lovely story, full of ancient wisdom. For centuries, Navajo children heard the story at an elder's knee. The story was taken literally, or at least accepted with a willing suspension of disbelief. I heard a similar creation story in my youth - of Adam and Eve and the Garden of Eden, the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, and the Serpent. I accepted the story with a willing suspension of disbelief.

All cultures, everywhere on Earth, have stories, passed down in scriptures, traditions or tribal myths, that answer the questions: Where did the world come from? What is our place in it? What is the source of order and disorder? What will be the fate of the world? Of ourselves? No people can live without a community story. The problem comes when the community story becomes so disconnected from empirical experience that it no longer commands a suspension of disbelief. For many of us in the West, that is the case with the creation stories that have undergirded Western civilization.

Today, a New Story exists for those who choose to accept it. It is the product of thousands of years of human curiosity, observation, experimentation, and creativity. It is an evolving story, not yet finished. Perhaps it will never be finished. It is a story that begins with an explosion from a seed of infinite energy. The seed expands and cools. Particles form, then atoms of hydrogen and helium. Stars and galaxies coalesce from swirling gas. Stars burn and explode, forging heavy elements - carbon, nitrogen, oxygen - and hurling them into space. New stars are born, with planets made of heavy elements.

On one planet near a typical star in a typical galaxy life appears in the form of microscopic self-replicating, carbon-based ensembles of atoms. Life evolves, over billions of years, resulting in ever more complex organisms. Continents move. Seas rise and fall. The atmosphere changes. Millions of species of life appear and become extinct. Others adapt, survive, and spill out progeny. At last, consciousness appears. One of the millions of species on the planet looks into the night sky and wonders what it means. Feels the spark of love, tenderness, responsibility. Makes up stories - of First Woman and Coyote, of Adam, Eve and the Serpent - eventually making up the New Story. The New Story places us squarely in a cosmic unfolding of space and time, and teaches our biological affinity to all humanity. We are inextricably related to all of life, to the planet itself, and even to the lives of stars.

It has been the task of many of us gathered here on this cyber porch to help wed the New Story to the spiritual quest, to create what Thomas Berry calls an "integral story." In his introduction to Kathleen Deignan's collection of Thomas Merton's nature writing, Berry writes: "Today, in the opening years of the twenty-first century, we find ourselves in a critical moment when the religious traditions need to awaken again to the natural world as the primary manifestation of the divine to human intelligence. The very nature and purpose of the human is to experience this intimate presence that comes to us through natural phenomena. Such is the purpose of having eyes and ears and feeling sensitivity, and all our other senses. We have no inner spiritual development without outer experience. Immediately, when we see or experience any natural phenomenon, when we see a flower, a butterfly, a tree, when we feel the evening breeze flow over us or wade in a stream of clear water, our natural response is immediate, intuitive, transforming, ecstatic. Everywhere we find ourselves invaded by the world of the sacred."

Berry reminds us that we will neither love nor save what we do not experience as sacred. The older creation stories locate the source of the sacred outside of the creation. The New Story, the scientific story of creation, provides unique opportunities to experience the creation itself as holy and good.

We should treasure the ancient stories for the wisdom and values they teach us. We can praise the creation in whatever poetic languages and rituals our traditional cultures have taught us. But only the New Story has the global authority to help us navigate the future. Of all the stories, it is certainly the truest. It is the only story whose feet have been held to the fire of exacting empirical experience.”

The Poet: William Stafford, "You Reading This, Be Ready"

"You Reading This, Be Ready"

"Starting here, what do you want to remember?
How sunlight creeps along a shining floor?
What scent of old wood hovers, what softened
sound from outside fills the air?

Will you ever bring a better gift for the world
than the breathing respect that you carry
wherever you go right now? Are you waiting
for time to show you some better thoughts?

When you turn around, starting here, lift this
new glimpse that you found; carry into evening
all that you want from this day. This interval you spent
reading or hearing this, keep it for life.

What can anyone give you greater than now,
starting here, right in this room, when you turn around?"

- William Stafford

"It Just Means..."

 

"10 Gross Facts That Confirm the Middle Ages Were Beyond Filthy"

"10 Gross Facts That Confirm
the Middle Ages Were Beyond Filthy"
by Selme Angulo

"The Middle Ages weren’t the cleanest and most hygienic time to be alive. People didn’t live nearly as long as they do today, and a big part of that was because the medical care, basic hygiene practices, and quality of food were all horrific compared to what we are used to now. It’s difficult to state just how bad those things really were, though. After all, we’re talking about an era of time that is now multiple centuries in the past. It’s difficult to conceive of just how gross daily life must have been like back then!

Well, that’s why we’re here today. In this list, we’re going to take a look at the actual situation on the ground for medieval peasants. Their lives were brutal, their work was difficult, and their happiness was limited to very fleeting moments of joy. And they were filthy all around! This is the real story of how disgusting life was back in the Middle Ages…

Bathing? Nah! Upper-class people during the Middle Ages most often had access to tubs in which they could bathe with water. However, even many of the middle-class folk - or what was roughly considered to be middle class by our modern-day designations - didn’t. And if you were poor? Well, forget about it.

Peasants had to make do with very infrequent access to public baths if they were lucky, but most of them were plain unlucky. So they were forced to haul huge buckets of dirty and grimy river water or illegally gained well water to their homes by hand. Then, with the unheated and dirty water, they had to bathe by hand. Better not waste any water, though! The buckets weren’t huge and there was no faucet or pipe to easily pump in more if they were liberal in applying it to their bodies. For those who were lucky enough to live near rivers or lakes, they simply jumped in every day when it was time for a bath. That was easy, but it also brought its own dangers. Obviously, the river water was completely untreated. In many cases, it carried its own germs and parasites.

Peasants mostly didn’t have access to soaps (and certainly not to shampoos!) at that time. So all they were really doing was washing off the dirt and grime that had accumulated on their bodies after a long, hard day of manual labor. They’d go to sleep, get up, do it all over again, and repeat the cycle endlessly. Peasants who were less fortunate or not situated near bodies of water bathed a lot less often. And some didn’t bathe at all. We know it must have smelled crazy in there.

When Ya Gotta Go…Well-to-do people living in castles and on estates had benches with holes in them to use as primitive toilets during the medieval era. But normal people mostly didn’t have access to even simple and rudimentary things like that. Instead, they were forced to use outhouses at best - and share them with large community groups all at once.

At worst, they were given chamberpots or waste buckets. When the urge came to use the bathroom, they had to go in the little pot and then somehow manage not to ruin their tiny hovels with the stench. When the chamberpots started to become filled up, they had to drag them out, careful not to spill any waste on their stuff, and get rid of the mess.

Disgusting, right? Well, it gets worse. There were no pipes to run sewage and human waste along like we have nowadays. So, there were only two places for peasants to toss their excrement when their chamberpots filled up. The first was at the local river. Yes, that would be the very same river from which peasants were pulling out water to bathe or jumping in to get cleaned off. Gross!

The second spot was the street. Peasants would simply take their chamberpots out to the street, turn them over, and dump their wet contents all over the cobblestones. And that was that. See, back then, people believed that the smell of waste was what caused disease, and not the germs in it. So, they were keen on getting rid of the smell as quickly as possible. If only they knew…

Clothing Conundrums: Many people who had means in medieval times dressed in several layers of clothing. Among other reasons, that was so they could avoid having to wash their outer garments too often. But peasants didn’t own several layers of clothing. They pretty much just wore one thing day after day after day.

Now, impressively, etiquette books from the time actually counseled people to wash their clothing regularly. They even advised that one should change their underwear every day! Peasants mostly couldn’t read and didn’t have access to those books, but culturally, the practices nevertheless made it down to them. Seems less disgusting than you would have expected, right? Well, it wasn’t all sunshine and roses like that.

As we’ve already learned, the average peasant really only had access to regular water if it was in a nearby river or lake. So they would go down to the river once a week or so and try to scrub their dirty clothes in the water. If they were lucky, they had access to some lye soap to clean their clothes as best they could. If they were unlucky - and most were unlucky - they could only use the dirty river water alone. And as we’ve seen so far in this list, that water was filled with all kinds of nasty bacteria.

In addition to nature’s regular onslaught, rivers were horribly polluted, with people upstream thoughtlessly dumping their waste into it. Downstream, then, peasants were forced to wash their clothes in that same water. How’d you like to put those garments back on your body afterward?

Look Out for Lice: When it came to living in medieval times, head lice and fleas were simple facts of life. Parasites like that were ubiquitous because nobody had any idea what shampoo was. And soap, as we’ve learned, was really a hit-or-miss affair. Plus, horribly dirty water from rivers and lakes was the best people could do to “bathe,” if you can even call it that.

So comb makers had to get creative with how they produced their products to make up for all that. And create, they did: During the Middle Ages, comb makers started putting more and more fine-toothed fingers on their combs. The hair of the average medieval peasant was so thick with lice that the combs with tight, tiny fingers could actually yank them out. Of course, sleeping in squalor meant the lice just went right back in the next day. But at least they were trying, right?

That’s not all, either. Peasants eventually got around to figuring out ways to delouse themselves and each other. And the delousing groups were so important to overall health and so fun to take part in that they actually became a social activity! Sure, we might think of a social outing as a trip to a bar, going to see a baseball game, visiting the zoo, or something like that.

However, in the Middle Ages, people routinely took their social time by helping to delouse one another and get as clean as they could. Women who were skilled at delousing even made a bit of a side hustle out of it, successfully charging militaries and other groups to come along and do the delousing of a large group of people for a fee. Anything for a buck, right?

Hangin’ at the Cesspit: In the modern era, we flush our toilets, rinse our hands in the sinks, and go on about our day. Way back when, peasants would all, uh, hang out at the cesspit. Sadly, we’re not totally kidding about that. See, whenever a chamberpot became too full with excrement, peasants had to haul it off to the local cesspit. In many cities, towns, and villages back then, this was a communal cesspit in which everybody would dump their waste together.

Many people also dumped old food, rotten fruits and vegetables, and other forms of garbage into the pit. Can you even imagine how bad it must have smelled? And it’s even worse to think about how those cesspits would inevitably leak into the ground, contaminate the groundwater, and make the surrounding soil for quite a considerable area absolutely disgusting.

However, that wasn’t even the worst part! The worst part is that much of the contamination likely traveled very quickly to areas where water had descended, including rivers and lakes. Water always finds the lowest point, of course. And so, too, does the waste that tracks along with it. Just imagine a big area right on the outskirts of a city in which everybody is tossing out their human waste with nary a care in the world. They’d lug and dump horse and livestock waste, too, with nowhere else to leave it. Gross, right?

In bigger cities, the cesspits were even worse. That’s because, in those cities, many people would dump their chamberpots from second and third-story balconies where they lived right onto the street below! Inevitably, the mess would attract mice, rats, and other vermin. And that’s not to mention the smell - and the splatter zone that would inevitably be created around the mess…

Horrible Sleeping Habits: The average medieval peasant slept on a bed made of straw - and some slept on hay and other bedding. But while that might seem better than, say, sleeping on the floor, it came with its own major problems. Sure, peasants were comfortable and relatively insulated from the cold by sleeping on straw. But they were also sleeping with rats, mice, and tons of things they couldn’t see, including bedbugs, fleas, and lice!

People in the Middle Ages didn’t exactly understand how germs worked, and they didn’t have a pressing drive to get rid of them. They did do one thing, though: They used scented flowers and herbs to try to make things seem cleaner. You know how you tend to spray Febreze to liven up a place? It was sort of like that. But it didn’t kill any of the bugs!

There were other issues when it came to medieval bed and sleeping rituals, too. Namely, peasants often slept in tandem or group bedding situations. Entire families would sleep together in bed either to keep warm together or because they lacked the money for multiple beds. Some even lacked the place to put down multiple beds in their tiny hovels.

This meant that if one person was even slightly sick, they would immediately and undoubtedly spread those germs to everyone else around them. Can you imagine the issues with flu season when it came to people sharing beds like that? We need to take some Vitamin C just thinking about it!

Women’s Woes: If you think all peasants had it equally bad in the Middle Ages when it came to hygiene, we have news for you: Women had it much, much worse. (Certainly, any woman reading this list right now is probably nodding along, knowing the whole time that this was coming, right?) Women have so often had it worse throughout history, and the medieval era was no exception. And specifically for the purposes of this list, it’s their menstruation that is drawing attention.

Unfortunately, tampons and other period products were very much not a thing way back then. In their places, many women resorted to absolutely insane methods to collect and soak up blood during their monthly cycles. Most notably, some women used dirty and soiled pieces of rags to do the job. Others wrapped strips of cloth around tiny twigs to use as a de facto tampon. Still, others resorted to using absorbent moss as an impromptu pad. Yes, really -sticks, twigs, and moss as period products.

Even worse than that, religious authorities at the time regarded menstruation as being shameful and disgusting. So, many women of the Middle Ages felt significant pressure to hide their monthly movements from the men in their lives. Lots of women carried around scented herbs and flowers in a bid to mask the smell so men wouldn’t be able to tell.

Also, you have to remember that women’s lives were so brutally hard and their overall health so poor during the Middle Ages that it is likely that they may have routinely missed periods. That would at least get them off the hook when it came to soaking up the blood and masking the smells, but it certainly wasn’t easy on their bodies. Truly, women suffered worse than men during that period in so many ways - monthly menstrual cycles chief among them.

Primitive Dental Care: There were no such things as toothbrushes around during the Middle Ages. So, without them on hand to clean teeth, peasants resorted to using twigs to brush out any excess food particles. Well, the ones they could find and root out, at least. Plaque and gingivitis and all that were completely unknown, of course. Some peasants would even go so far as to place a piece of wool over their teeth and then rinse their mouths out with water.

Those who were slightly better off and had access to salt would create a mixture of that and sage to form a very primitive paste that could freshen their breath. It would even whiten their teeth - you know, ‘whiten’ being a relative term considering how terrible dental care was way back then.

Now, as disgusting as all this sounds, things weren’t so bad for peasants. That’s in large part because sugar was virtually entirely absent from their diets. They had no money to pay for sugar being imported from faraway lands (in the rare cases that it even was imported at all). So, without it, their teeth held up better than you’d expect.

Still, if they had to remove a problem tooth, the work was absolutely barbaric. There was no such thing as anesthesia. And dentists at the time weren’t doctors as much as they were butchers. Peasants would often get extremely drunk before having their teeth pulled just to try to dull the pain as much as possible. It rarely worked.

Wine for Wounds: Alcohol wasn’t only used to dull peasants’ senses when it came time for primitive dental work. Wine was also used as a medical option to help cure ailments - and help anesthetize patients in early ways. As you might expect, most peasants believed that prayer was the answer to all their health issues.

They had minimal schooling if any at all, and with the church functioning as such an important part of their lives, that’s where they turned for help. Slowly, however, knowledge of science and medicine began to spread across Europe. And when it did, it manifested itself in some strange (but actually understandable) ways.

Take the use of wine to clean wounds as an example. At the most primitive hospitals and surgery centers of the medieval era, doctors had figured out that alcohol could be used to successfully clean wounds. They also learned that any lacerations they made could be cauterized to get closed back up nice and tight. So, if you went in for an operation of any kind in the Middle Ages, you were going to be doused with wine and then burned back until your skin closed at the end of it. As you might expect, a great many people died from infections in this context since nobody knew the first thing about hygiene. But at least you could maybe get drunk and bathe in wine while perishing. Yay?

But They DID Wash Their Hands! Here is possibly the most crazy fact of them all: many medieval peasants washed their hands. Like, very often! Keeping one’s hands clean was seen as an important custom of the Middle Ages. It went back to showing that one took pride in one’s appearance. It was also considered common etiquette to keep one’s hands clean and free from dirt and grime. People in the Middle Ages knew nothing of unseen germs and bacteria, but they nevertheless wanted to keep their hands routinely washed just to showcase their civility to others. And so they did!

There were a few things people did when it came to hand-washing etiquette. First, they always washed their hands and face in whatever water they had available after they woke up. Then, they continued to wash their hands at various points throughout the day. After work and before dinner, they very often washed their hands to ensure that they were clean enough for the meal.

That was particularly important, too, since silverware wasn’t really a thing. Virtually all people in the Middle Ages - and certainly all peasants - ate with their hands and typically grabbed food with their grubby fingers from out of a communal bowl or dish. Better hope everybody else washed their hands, too, in that scenario!"

The Daily "Near You?"

Lugoff, South Carolina, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Get Your Stuff Together..."

“We all got problems. But there’s a great book out called “Too Soon Old, Too Late Smart.” Did you see that? That book says the statute of limitations has expired on all childhood traumas. Get your stuff together and get on with your life, man. Stop whinin’ about what’s wrong, because everybody’s had a rough time, in one way or another.”
- Quincy Jones