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Tuesday, July 22, 2025

"Bonhoeffer’s 'Theory of Stupidity': We Have More to Fear From Stupid People Than Evil Ones"

"Bonhoeffer’s 'Theory of Stupidity': 
We Have More to Fear From Stupid People Than Evil Ones"
by Big Think and Jonny Thompson

"There’s an internet adage that goes, “Debating an idiot is like trying to play chess with a pigeon - it knocks the pieces over, craps on the board, and flies back to its flock to claim victory.” It’s funny and astute. It’s also deeply, depressingly worrying. Although we’d never say so, we all have people in our lives we think of as a bit dim - not necessarily about everything, but certainly about some things.

Most of the time, we laugh this off. After all, stupidity can be pretty funny. When my friend asked a group of us recently what Hitler’s last name was, we laughed. When my brother learned only last month that reindeer are real animals - well, that’s funny. Good-natured ribbing about a person’s ignorance is an everyday part of life. Stupidity, though, has its dark side. For theologian and philosopher Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the stupid person is often more dangerous than the evil one.

The enemy within: In comic books and action movies, we know who the villain is. They wear dark clothes, kill on a whim, and cackle madly at their diabolical scheme. In life, too, we have obvious villains - the dictators who violate human rights or serial killers and violent criminals. As evil as these people are, they are not the biggest threat, since they are known. Once something is a known evil, the good of the world can rally to defend and fight against it. As Bonhoeffer puts it, “One may protest against evil; it can be exposed and, if need be, prevented by use of force. Evil always carries within itself the germ of its own subversion.”

Stupidity, though, is a different problem altogether. We cannot so easily fight stupidity for two reasons. First, we are collectively much more tolerant of it. Unlike evil, stupidity is not a vice most of us take seriously. We do not lambast others for ignorance. We do not scream down people for not knowing things. Second, the stupid person is a slippery opponent. They will not be beaten by debate or open to reason. What’s more, when the stupid person has their back against the wall - when they’re confronted with facts that cannot be refuted - they snap and lash out. Bonhoeffer puts it like this:

“Neither protests nor the use of force accomplish anything here; reasons fall on deaf ears; facts that contradict one’s prejudgment simply need not be believed - in such moments the stupid person even becomes critical - and when facts are irrefutable, they are just pushed aside as inconsequential, as incidental. In all this the stupid person, in contrast to the malicious one, is utterly self-satisfied and, being easily irritated, becomes dangerous by going on the attack.”

With great power comes great stupidity: Stupidity, like evil, is no threat as long as it hasn’t got power. We laugh at things when they are harmless - such as my brother’s ignorance of reindeer. This won’t cause me any pain. Therefore it’s funny.

The problem with stupidity, though, is that it often goes hand-in-hand with power. Bonhoeffer writes, “Upon closer observation, it becomes apparent that every strong upsurge of power in the public sphere, be it of a political or of a religious nature, infects a large part of humankind with stupidity.”

This works in two ways. The first is that stupidity does not disbar you from holding office or authority. History and politics are swimming with examples of when the stupid have risen to the top (and where the smart are excluded or killed). Second, the nature of power requires that people surrender certain faculties necessary for intelligent thought - faculties like independence, critical thinking, and reflection.

Bonhoeffer’s argument is that the more someone becomes part of the establishment, the less an individual they become. A charismatic, exciting outsider, bursting with intelligence and sensible policies, becomes imbecilic the moment he takes office. It’s as if, “slogans, catchwords and the like… have taken possession of him. He is under a spell, blinded, misused, and abused in his very being.”

Power turns people into automatons. Intelligent, critical thinkers now have a script to read. They’ll engage their smiles rather than their brains. When people join a political party, it seems like most choose to follow suit rather than think things through. Power drains the intelligence from a person, leaving them akin to an animated mannequin.

Theory of stupidity: Bonhoeffer’s argument, then, is that stupidity should be viewed as worse than evil. Stupidity has far greater potential to damage our lives. More harm is done by one powerful idiot than a gang of Machiavellian schemers. We know when there’s evil, and we can deny it power. With the corrupt, oppressive, and sadistic, we know where we stand. You know how to take a stand.

But stupidity is much harder to weed out. That’s why it’s a dangerous weapon: Because evil people find it hard to take power, they need stupid people to do their work. Like sheep in a field, a stupid person can be guided, steered, and manipulated to do any number of things. Evil is a puppet master, and it loves nothing so much as the mindless puppets who enable it - be they in the general public or inside the corridors of power. The lesson from Bonhoeffer is to laugh at those daft, silly moments when in close company. But, we should get angry and scared when stupidity takes reign."
Full screen recommended.
"Bonhoeffer‘s Theory of Stupidity"
"Dietrich Bonhoeffer argued that stupid people are more dangerous than evil ones. This is because while we can protest against or fight evil people, against stupid ones we are defenseless -  reasons fall on dead ears. Bonhoeffer's famous text, which we slightly edited for this video, serves any free society as a warning of what can happen when certain people gain too much power." 

"Bamboozeled..."

"One of the saddest lessons of history is this: If we've been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle. We're no longer interested in finding out the truth. The bamboozle has captured us. It's simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves, that we've been taken. Once you give a charlatan power over you, you almost never get it back."
- Carl Sagan

"How It Really Is"

 

Dan, I Allegedly, "1000 Gas Stations Closing! What’s Next?"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, AM 7/22/25
"1000 Gas Stations Closing! What’s Next?"
"Whoa! Shell is shutting down 1,000 gas stations - can you believe it? It's all part of their pivot towards EV chargers, but what does this mean for everyday drivers and our already chaotic economy? In this video, I break down why this move is a huge deal, especially for those of us on the West Coast, where gas prices are already skyrocketing to insane levels. Plus, we’ll talk about how EV incentives are disappearing, making this transition even messier. I also cover the latest on real estate foreclosures, shocking trends in airline ticket pricing driven by AI, and the growing struggles in a doomsday-like economy. From Vegas to Manhattan, and even the South, the ripple effects of these changes are everywhere. Trust me, you’ll want to hear these crazy stats and stories!"
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Bill Bonner, "The Parts are Wearing Out"

Château de Courtomer
"The Parts are Wearing Out"
by Bill Bonner

Poitou, France - "Elizabeth rounded the edge of the house. There, in the back yard were two of Pierre’s prize cows. Sleek. Fat. Muscled. They were the kind of limousine cows that butchers must dream about. “Oh no....they’re going to eat our flowers.” She called Pierre. “Just close your gate so they can’t get out onto the road,” he advised. “It’s too dark for me to get them now. I’ll come in the morning. “And don’t worry; they won’t eat your flowers.” He was right. They didn’t eat them; they trampled them.

We got on the ferry last week. The wind was strong. The waves were high. The sea was rough. After a quick dinner, we returned to our cabin and lay down. We were afraid to get up. The ship was pitching and rolling so much, we feared we might get sick. Better to go to sleep. The next day, the sea was calmer and we got into Cherbourg without incident.

It is a long drive from the top of the Cotentin peninsula, on the north coast of Normandy, down to our house in Poitou. Along the way, the colors changed. From the green fields of Normandy, we passed through the pale grass of the Loire Valley and then on to the stunted corn and limp sunflowers of Poitou. “It’s a disaster,” Pierre reported. “The grass is all dried up over in their pasture. They came over to your place...I guess it really looked greener on the other side of the fence.”

Dressed in baggy shorts and a short-sleeve shirt, his sturdy legs tanned, his dark hair turning white at the edges, our neighbor is retiring this year. After a lifetime of trying to coax a living out of the poor soil of the area, he seems happy to be moving on. Pierre walked the cows back to where they were supposed to be, fixed the fence, and then joined us in the kitchen for a cup of coffee.

“So...what happened since we were gone?” is the same question we’ve posed each summer for the last 30 years. Pierre brings us up to date. Most of the news is about the neighbors who died in the last nine months...and those who are getting close.

We are in an area of Europe where little changes. Except, like an old man, it stoops over a bit more each year. Families don’t have children the way they used to. And those they do have tend to grow up and leave. Left behind are aging parents and grandparents, retirees and hangers-on.

To make matters worse, its main industry  -  farming  -  is becoming harder to do. Small farms are no longer viable. Big farms require large, sophisticated and expensive machinery. Pierre is retiring. Finding someone to replace him won’t be easy. Some landowners are giving up. They are planting trees, renting to large, commercial enterprises, or simply letting the weeds take over.

It was while we were discussing the grave state of French agriculture that Damien came over. “A cup of coffee?” we suggested. “Sure...” Damien wore a pair of loose working pants, topped by a t-shirt that was either very dirty or a drab brown color designed to look like it was dirty. A part-time handyman, Damien is more of a retainer than an employee...more like family than hired help. He is growing old too.

For the last twenty years, he has tended the vegetables, cut the grass, cut up the fallen trees, fixed the gutters, unclogged pipes... and made war on the ragondins (a giant water rat from South America that now infests rivers and ponds in Europe.) He traps them. He shoots them. He poisons them. They come at him in his nightmares. lIt is a war he seems to be losing. Yesterday, we walked down to the garden and startled two of the animals - young ones, about the size of small rabbits. They had come up from the canal next to the garden to eat plums that had fallen on the ground.

As a gardener Damien has two short-comings. He is color blind, so he can’t always tell when things are ripe. And he has a dislike for flowers that is almost as intense as his hatred of ragondins. Given his druthers, he would spray round-up on them all and pave the flower garden with asphalt.

Damien took the cigarette out of his mouth and sat down at the table. “The weather is supposed to break tomorrow. We’ve had a terrible heat wave. Everything is cooked. And did you see the fire? Somebody must have tossed a cigarette out of a window and it set fire to the dried-out bushes and grass next to the road. They had fire trucks from all over on the scene. But they got it under control pretty fast.” Damien gave a chuckle. The fire must have livened things up.

Last year, we worked with a grandson and framed out a studio apartment in one of the barns near the house. We didn’t really need another bedroom, but it was a fun project. While we were gone, Damien had finished it: he put up the insulated wall board and layed down an oak floor. We thanked him. “That took me the whole month of January,” he explained. “And then I was in such pain from bending over I had to go to the doctor. They tell me I have a pinched nerve. I’m going tomorrow to see what they’re going to do about it.”

Damien, too, is eyeing retirement. He grew up in an orphanage, went to work at 16, and has done physical jobs all his life, generally preferring brute force to labor-saving improvisation. “The parts are wearing out,” he says. We were all sitting outside, under an umbrella. The day was just beginning but it was already hot. “Bonjour.”

Across the gravel driveway came a tall figure...tanned, thin...with binoculars dangling from his neck. He was wearing only a pair of cut-off jeans and flip-flops. Edouard looks like someone in his 40s...but he is actually quite a bit older. He goes about in warm weather with as little on as possible because he suffers from a rare nerve disorder that makes it uncomfortable to wear clothes. He is a member of the family...handsome...clever. Though not a blood relative, he has been with us, off and on, for more than 50 years.

“I like the heat. But last week, it was too hot, even for me. I slept on the couch in the kitchen, where it was cooler than my bedroom.” The kitchen is in the oldest part of the house. Its thick stone walls keep it cooler than the rest of the house.

“But I don’t like the drought. The trees are drying up. Several of them are dead. You lose an old tree and you can’t replace it. I mean, you can put in a young tree, but not a noble, old one. And the birds like the old ones. “An old tree takes time…decades…to develop. You can create something new,” he continued philosophically. “But not something old.” As we puzzled over what he meant by that, Edouard pulled up a chair. He prepared himself a tea, which he drank through a silver straw, like an Argentine drinking mate.

After a few minutes of conversation, we all got up and went to our separate occupations. The day grew hotter and hotter. But as it went on clouds appeared in the west. They growled as we sat down for dinner. Then, after a long evening at the table, with wine, cigarettes, candles and conversation, we went to bed with the windows open (there is no air-conditioning) and heard the rumbling in the distance. During the night, as we lay, warm and dry in our beds, lightning flashed…thunder cracked…and the rain poured down.

The next morning, we went down to find the kitchen floor – barely above ground level -- flooded. A gutter had clogged up, sending a Niagara of rainwater splashing under the door. We baled and mopped...using a dust pan to scoop up the water. “Well,” said Edouard, looking on the bright side. “Maybe the drought is over.”
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"Breathing New Life into a Faded Beauty – Interiors Case Study"
"Elisabeth and Bill Bonner talk to Nicola Venning about their beautifully renovated Château de Courtomer’s farmhouse."
o
"The History Of Chateau de Courtomer"

Adventures With Danno, "I Went Shopping at Costco"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, AM 7/22/25
"I Went Shopping at Costco"
Comments here:
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Full screen recommended.
Travelling With Russell, 7/22/25
"Russian Typical (Brand New) Supermarket"
"What does a brand-new Russian supermarket look like in sanctioned Russia in 2025? The Magnit supermarket chain has just opened their newest store in Moscow, Russia. Combining a supermarket with a cosmetics store and a pharmacy."
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Monday, July 21, 2025

"ALERT! Russia is Preparing for Total War, Ports Under Martial Law! 42 Days Left of 'Ultimatum'"

Full screen recommended.
Prepper News, 7/21/25
"ALERT! Russia is Preparing for Total War,
 Ports Under Martial Law! 42 Days Left of 'Ultimatum'"
Comments here:

"30 Big Corporations That Will Collapse First As The Economy Crashes"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 7/21/25
"30 Big Corporations That Will Collapse
 First As The Economy Crashes"
"They're not announcing it on the evening news, but America's corporate giants are teetering on the edge of financial collapse. Stock crashes, debt spirals, bankruptcy filings, and emergency cash burns. While everyone's distracted by political theater, the backbone of American business is quietly crumbling from within. From tech darlings to retail empires, from automotive legends to entertainment giants – no sector is safe from the economic tsunami building beneath the surface. We're pulling back the curtain on 30 major corporations that could be the first dominos to fall when recession hits. And trust us, by the end of this, you'll question everything you thought you knew about American business stability. So buckle up, because what we're about to show you isn't just corporate drama – it's an economic collapse in slow motion."
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Gerald Celente, "Moscow Will Determine When The Ukraine War Ends"

Full screen recommended.
Gerald Celente, 7/21/25
"Moscow Will Determine 
When The Ukraine War Ends"
"Scott Ritter, the former UN weapons inspector, spoke to The Trends Journal about President Donald Trump’s 50-day deadline for Russia to end the war. Truth over fear and propaganda to help subscribers prepare for what’s next in these increasingly turbulent times."
Comments here:
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George Galloway, 7/21/25
"The Trump Weapons Deliveries
 to Ukraine Are a Pure Sham"
"Zelensky has to go and there's widespread recognition of this. He can go the old fashioned way, on a flight with a suitcase full of money, or with a bullet in his head."
Comments here:

"Should Obama Be Arrested Or Is He Above The Law? Hunter Biden Has Lost His Mind"

Jeremiah Babe, 7/21/25
"Should Obama Be Arrested Or Is He Above The Law? 
Hunter Biden Has Lost His Mind"
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Musical Interlude: 2002, "The End of the Journey"

Full screen recommended.
2002, "The End of the Journey"

Amazingly beautiful...

"A Deep Look to the Heavens"

Full screen recommended.
"The Hubble Ultra Deep Field in 3D"
"In this galaxy, there's a mathematical probability of three billion Earth-type planets. And in all of the universe, 6 to 20 trillion galaxies like this. And in all of that... and perhaps more, only one of each of us."
- "Dr. Leonard McCoy"

"When The Demons Come Along..."

"Here is a universal law: that when it comes to negative and positive, you will always thrive more powerfully in the positive if you have first been immersed in, and have heroically overcome, the polar opposite negative of that thing. To abide in the positive existence of something, without having known and overcome its polar opposite - that is to be only a frame of the real structure. Easily toppled down and taken apart. True power is in the hands of the one who thrives in the positive, after having known and conquered the negative. Because when the demons come along, she will say to those demons: "I know you, I have owned you, but now you bow down to me."
- C. JoyBell C.

Chet Raymo, "Free As A Bird"

"Free As A Bird"
by Chet Raymo

"All afternoon I have been watching a pair of hummingbirds play about our porch. They live somewhere nearby, though I haven't found their nest. They are attracted to our hummingbird feeder, which we keep full of sugar water. What perfect little machines they are! No other bird can perform their tricks of flight - flying backwards, hovering in place. Zip. Zip. From perch to perch in a blur of iridescence. If you want a symbol of freedom, the hummingbird is it. Exuberant. Unpredictable. A streak of pure fun. It is the speed, of course, that gives the impression of perfect spontaneity. The bird can perform a dozen intricate maneuvers more quickly than I can turn my head.

Is the hummingbird's apparent freedom illusory, a biochemically determined response to stimuli from the environment? Or is the hummingbird's flight what it seems to be, willful and unpredictable? If I can answer that question, I will be learning as much about myself as about the hummingbird. So I watch. And I consider what I know of biochemistry. The hummingbird is awash in signals from its environment - visual, olfactory, auditory and tactile cues that it processes and responds to with lightning speed.

How does it do it? Proteins, mostly. Every cell of the hummingbird's body is a buzzing conversation of proteins, each protein a chain of hundreds of amino acids folded into a complex shape like a piece of a three-dimensional jigsaw puzzle. Shapes as various as the words of a human vocabulary. An odor molecule from a blossom, for example, binds to a protein receptor on a cell membrane of the hummingbird's olfactory organ - like a jigsaw-puzzle piece with its neighbor. This causes the receptor molecule to change that part of its shape that extends inside the cell. Another protein now binds with the new configuration of the receptor, and changes its own shape. And so on, in a sequence of shapeshifting and binding - called a signal-transduction cascade - until the hummingbird's brain "experiences" the odor.

Now appropriate signals must be sent from the brain to the body - ion flows established along neural axons, synapses activated. Wing muscles must respond to direct the hummingbird to the source of nourishment. Tens of thousands of proteins in a myriad of cells talk to each other, each protein genetically prefigured by the hummingbird's DNA to carry on its conversation in a particular part of the body. All of this happens continuously, and so quickly that to my eye the bird's movements are a blur.

There is much left to learn, but this much is clear: There is no ghost in the machine, no hummingbird pilot making moment by moment decisions out of the whiffy stuff of spirit. Every detail of the hummingbird's apparently willful flight is biochemistry. Between the hummingbird and myself there is a difference of complexity, but not of kind. If humans are the lords of terrestrial creation, it is because of the huge tangle of nerves that sits atop our spines.

So what does this mean about human freedom? If we are biochemical machines in interaction with our environments, in what sense can we be said to be free? What happens to "free will"? Perhaps the most satisfying place to look for free will is in what is sometimes called chaos theory. In sufficiently complex systems with many feedback loops - the global economy, the weather, the human nervous system - small perturbations can lead to unpredictable large-scale consequences, though every part of the system is individually deterministic. This has sometimes been called - somewhat facetiously - the butterfly effect: a butterfly flaps its wings in China and triggers a cascade of events that results in a snowstorm in Chicago. Chaos theory has taught us that determinism does not imply predictability. Of course, this is not what philosophers traditionally meant by free will, but it is indistinguishable from what philosophers traditionally meant by free will. If it walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it's a duck.

I watch the hummingbirds at the feeder. Their hearts beat ten times faster than a human's. They have the highest metabolic rate of any animal, a dozen times higher than a pigeon, a hundred times higher than an elephant. Hummingbirds live at the edge of what is biologically possible, and it's that, the fierce intenseness of their aliveness, that makes them appear so exuberantly free. But there are no metaphysical pilots in these little flying machines. The machines are the pilots. You give me carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen and a few billion years of evolution, and I'll give you a bird that burns like a luminous flame. The hummingbird's freedom was built into the universe from the first moment of creation."

Further Reading:
• For a brilliant and provocative treatment of free will and determinism, read Daniel Dennett's "Freedom Evolves."
• The always provocative Roger Penrose looks for free will in quantum uncertainty in his "The Emperor's New Mind".

"Each Of Us..."

Each of us inevitable; Each of us limitless -
each of us with his or her right upon the earth;
Each of us allowed the eternal purports of the earth;
Each of us here as divinely as any is here.”
- Walt Whitman
"We all know that something is eternal. And it ain't houses and it ain't names, and it ain't earth, and it ain't even the stars... everybody knows in their bones that something is eternal, and that something has to do with human beings. All the greatest people ever lived have been telling us that for five thousand years and yet you'd be surprised how people are always losing hold of it. There's something way down deep that's eternal about every human being."
- Thornton Wilder

The Poet: Theodore Roethke, “The Waking”

“The Waking”

“I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.
I feel my fate in what I cannot fear.
I learn by going where I have to go.

We think by feeling. What is there to know?
I hear my being dance from ear to ear.
I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.

Of those so close beside me, which are you?
God bless the Ground! I shall walk softly there,
And learn by going where I have to go.

Light takes the Tree; but who can tell us how?
The lowly worm climbs up a winding stair;
I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.

Great Nature has another thing to do
To you and me; so take the lively air,
And, lovely, learn by going where to go.

This shaking keeps me steady. I should know.
What falls away is always. And is near.
I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.
I learn by going where I have to go.”

- Theodore Roethke

The Daily "Near You?"

Kuala Lumpur, Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Thanks for stopping by!

Gregory Mannarino, "The Economic Gospel Of Babylon, Now Tokenized"

Gregory Mannarino, PM 7/21/25
"The Economic Gospel Of Babylon, Now Tokenized"
Comments here:

Dan, I Allegedly, "Is the Banking Crisis Back? Wells Fargo in Trouble?"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, AM 7/21/25
"Is the Banking Crisis Back? Wells Fargo in Trouble?"
"Is the banking crisis back? Banking crises, digital currency fears, and the truth they’re not telling us - this video dives into it all. From Wells Fargo’s $200 billion borrowing bombshell to the unsettling rise of digital currencies, I’m breaking down the implications for your finances, freedom, and future. Is this the beginning of a bigger banking problem? I think so. We’ll also explore the growing trend of layoffs, economic shifts in major industries, and how they’re spinning these changes as “survival strategies.”
Comments here:

Adventures with Danno, "Shocking Prices at Meijer"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures with Danno, AM 7/21/25
"Shocking Prices at Meijer"
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o
Full screen recommended.
Lisa with Love, 7/20/25
"What is Russian Fast Food Really Like? 
Crazy Potato Meal!"
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 

"The West’s Forgotten Victory: Why They Hate Vienna"

"The West’s Forgotten Victory:
 Why They Hate Vienna"
by John Wilder

"One of the things I’ve learned about history is that they skip all of the really good parts. I recall my time as a leader in that well known paramilitary organization, Boy Scouting® (back when they were boys and they were doing scouting). On occasion the boys would mention some historical event, and I’d go into more detail: the Battle of Britain, the Revolutionary War, heck, even the Romans.

We’d talk through history. Then, when the subject was done, invariably one of the scouts would say, “Man, that’s interesting! Why don’t they teach that in school?” Well, because you’re watching "Frozen" or "Shrek" instead so your teacher can sleep off a hangover and your textbooks prefer pronouns to Patton. Who knew that campfire coffee mixed so well with history?

The nice thing is that there are still subjects that I learn about. Namely, 9/11. Oh, this isn’t the story of that 9/11. This is the story of September 11, 1683. And I believe that it’s a story that the Muslim world has yet to get over.

It’s September 11, 1683. Not a date I learned in school, but it should have been. In the history of the Western world, it isn’t even that far back. Isaac Newton was busy figuring out the delicate ballet of the spheres in the heavens, and Oliver Cromwell’s head was still busy rotting on a pike in London. But this is in Vienna, the heart of the Holy Roman Empire

Vienna on this date is surrounded by 300,000 Ottoman Turks. Think illegal aliens but with scimitars and an even more unintelligible language without any Juan being able to understand it. Vienna is down to 15,000 defenders. They’re starving and outnumbered 20-to-1, so why not just give in? The Turks are promising they’ll be treated well. Thankfully, the Turks had tried this line with another city in Austria that actually did surrender. The Turks had laid siege to the town of Perchtoldsdorf (gesundheit), and promised all the inhabitants would be spared and that the city would not be sacked.

When they surrendered, the city was sacked and the vast majority of inhabitants were killed or enslaved. That’s good, because now the people at Vienna knew exactly what sort of devil they were dealing with. What sort of devil was it? It was the Ottomans, led by Kara Mustafa, who are determined to own Europe, turning cathedrals into mosques, and making the West kneel to the Turks and to their god.

Sound familiar? It’s the kind of existential threat the GloboLeft pretends never existed, because “white culture” is always the bad guy in their revisionist fairy tales. In looking at European history, this was a Very Big Deal, and yet it’s glossed over or (in my case) never even mentioned in class. I think that it’s because the story didn’t end the way the anti-Western Civilization establishment that had taken control of education wanted it to end.

The defenders didn’t yield even a square inch (3.3 millicamels) of the city of Vienna. Instead they held the walls through two months of hell. Disease, cannon fire, Ottoman sappers blowing tunnels under the city. They went through summer, and now were hungry, and they were praying for a miracle.

Enter the relief force arriving on September 11th. 47,000 Germans and Austrians with 20,000 or 30,000 Poles. Most famously, King John III Sobieski of Poland, leading the Poles, including the Winged Hussars. The Winged Hussars were an insane calvary force comprised of big, husky Poles on huge horses, wearing lion and tiger pelts over their armor with huge eagle wings and 19-foot-long lances, four pistols each, swords and war hammers. To be clear, this is exactly what I would have drawn when I was six.
On September 12, Sobieski’s cavalry charges down Kahlenberg Hill, breaking the Ottoman lines like a velociraptor in a room full of puppies. By nightfall, the Turks had abandoned everything. Everything. They were trying to get back to Istanbul before it could be re-named Constantinople. They're running, leaving 15,000 dead and the Ottoman Empire’s dreams in the dust with the single largest military defeat in their history to date.

Sobieski’s letter home after the battle is amazing, and recommended reading (LINK). Vienna is saved. Europe is saved. The West lives to fight another day. The Siege of Vienna wasn’t just a win: it was a philosophical line in the sand. Faith fueled those defenders. Faith in God, in their people, in the idea that the West was worth saving. It’s in the first lines in Sobieski’s letter to his wife: "How Praised be our Lord God forever for granting our nation such a victory and such glory as was never heard of in all times past!"

Contrast that with despair, the kind the GloboLeft peddles today: “Western culture’s evil, dismantle it because it is worse than (whatever their pet culture is today).”

Vienna’s men didn’t negotiate with Kara Mustafa; they fought. More than that, they chose to fight there. They believed in something bigger than themselves: their family, their faith, and their civilization. That’s the code that built the West, from Athens to Rome to Vienna.

The GloboLeft hates this story. They want history rewritten. Sobieski’s a “colonizer,” the Hussars are “problematic.” They’d have you believe the Ottomans were just misunderstood diversity consultants.

Hollywood™ is no help in 2025, obviously: they churn out preachers of pronouns, not legends with lances. The 1683 defenders didn’t care about your feelings; they cared about survival. That’s the difference between faith and despair, valor and cowardice. They want us to forget Vienna because it proves the West’s worth fighting for. The Siege of Vienna shows what happens when men believe in something and act.

History rhymes, and because it does Vienna is a warning and I think there is no mistake in the choice of the date for the attack on the Twin Towers, they’re still stinging from the defeat. The defenders weren’t perfect. Some were drunks, some mercenaries, but they stood together. And the relief force had a clear vision of what they were fighting for. Back to John III’s letter:

"There is a huge pile of captured flags and tents; in short, the enemy has departed with nothing whatever but his life. Let Christendom rejoice and thank the Lord our God that he has not permitted the heathen to hold us up to scorn and derision and to ask, “Where, now, is your God?” So next September 11, remember what happened on September 12."

"The Traitor"

 

"Treason doth never prosper: what 's the reason?
Why, if it prosper, none dare call it treason."
- Sir John Harington

Bill Bonner, "The Grammar of a Scandal"

Alfred Dreyfus
"The Grammar of a Scandal"
by Bill Bonner

‘How to make an airplane totally invisible’...began a post from Elon Musk.
There followed a picture of a fighter jet with Jeffrey Epstein’s client list stuck to it.

Poitou, France - "L’Affaire Epstein refuses to die. Over the weekend came this news. USA Today: "Donald Trump is seeking $10 billion in damages in a lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal, its parent company, owner and two reporters claiming libel and slander for publishing an article saying the future president wrote a lewd letter to Jeffrey Epstein for his 50th birthday."

The Journal’s story appeared last week: "Jeffrey Epstein’s Friends Sent Him Bawdy Letters for a 50th Birthday Album. One Was From Donald Trump." According to the WSJ, Trump’s birthday wish included a drawing of a naked woman with ‘Donald’ etched in the pubic hair. Not true, said the Donald. “I never wrote a picture in my life.”

Within hours, his denial turned out to be not true. The Independent: "The president declared, “I don’t draw pictures.” Analysts were quick to pounce on Trump’s denial, including Media Matters chief Angelo Carusone, who told MSNBC, “I can think of three [Trump sketches] off the top of my head that were auctioned.” At least five sketches from the late 1990s and early 2000s have been sold at auction."

Is this worth thinking about? Like the Dreyfus affair in France, or the Aaron Burr case in the US...Watergate Break-in? Dreyfus was a military officer accused of betraying France. He was eventually found innocent. But the accusation revealed a deep vein of antisemitism, particularly in the army, and divided public opinion.

Aaron Burr was accused of launching an insurrection against the USA. The charges were many...and varied. He too was found innocent. But patriotic mobs threatened to hang him. Later, he shot Alexander Hamilton in a duel and was forever disgraced.

The Watergate saga is well known to us all. A group of inept CIA/Republican spooks broke into the Democratic party headquarters hoping to score some useful intel. They were arrested. It would have been a minor B&E crime story, except that the press began asking questions: How far up did the planning go? What did Nixon know? “I am not a crook,” Nixon insisted, but the tide of sentiment turned against him and he resigned.

That was 1973...more than half a century ago. Since then, the nation’s ideas and attitudes have evolved. Voters and news-spinners have different hot-buttons and different no-nos. They have no nose for corruption or sex peccadillos, but they gag on even a whiff of ‘antisemitism.’

While all the public figures deny any wrongdoing, Jeffrey Epstein was up to something. Jean-Luc Brunel, one of ‘regulars’ on his ‘Lolita Express,’ committed suicide. Ghislaine Maxwell is serving a 20-year jail sentence. And Epstein was [probably] strangled. (A former occupant of the cell where Epstein died said hanging himself would have been physically ‘impossible.’) Either something pretty bad was going on...or someone owes these people a big apology.

The government says it was a sex-trafficking story. But it is like an incomplete sentence. We have the subject - the traffickers. We have the verb - the trafficking. What we lack is the predicate...notably, the indirect object; to whom were these girls trafficked? Not a single person (of the hundreds?) to whom the girls were trafficked has been charged.

And Epstein had a vast fortune, with a townhouse in Manhattan, a ranch in New Mexico, and an entire island (with a staff of 70) in the Virgin Islands. But where did the money come from? And what was the point of photographing rich and powerful men with under-aged girls?

Most likely, Tucker Carlson is right. Epstein got his money from the Israeli intelligence community. And most likely, it was an old-fashioned honey pot trap. But accusing Israel of anything is a no-fly zone for the press and the politicians. So, this will remain a sex story...and it will probably fade away…like Jennifer Flowers and Stormy Daniels. In the interest of full disclosure, our name is not on ‘the list.’ We never got an invitation!"

"The Coup And The Silence"

"The Coup And The Silence"
by Paul Rosenberg

"Late last week, the US Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, released more than 100 pages of formerly-classified documents, showing that then-President of the United States, Barack Obama, ordered intelligence reports to be manufactured and to directly undermine the then President-Elect, Donald Trump.

As of this morning, July 21st, mainstream American news, as best I can tell, is almost stone-silent on the story… and that troubles me. Granted, I habitually avoid “the news,” but this morning I took a bit of time to check, and this gigantic story was simply absent from the “mainstream” feeds. Those feeds have ceased being mainstream, of course (their readership is generally old and small), but still: A former President is being accused of treason, and large portion of US intelligence agency bosses with him. And yet there is a near silence?

And so, here are just a few snips from the document release. I’ve annotated them in italics and you can (and should) download the originals here. Prior to Mr. Obama’s intervention, the “intelligence community” (IC), did not think Russia could, would or did manipulate the 2016 election:

From: -DNI-
Sent: Wednesday, August 31, 2016 8:05 PM
"There is no DNI-indication of a Russian threat to directly manipulate the actual vote count through cyber means."
**
From: dhs
Sent: Friday, September 09, 2016 12:58 PM

To: [to 39 addresses at CIA, DNI and NSA, as well as others]
Subject: RE: Russia and the US Elections 
"Took the intent of this email to get the basic starting point regarding Russia. We agree with: Russia probably is not (and will not) trying to influence the election by using cyber means to manipulate computer-enabled election infrastructure."
**
(U) Cyber Threats to the 2016 US Presidential Election
12 September 2016
"We judge that foreign adversaries do not have and will probably not obtain the capabilities to successfully execute widespread and undetected cyber attacks on the diverse set of information technologies and infrastructures used to support the November 2016 US presidential election."
**
For the President
14 September 2016
"We assess that foreign adversaries do not have the capability to covertly overturn the vote outcome of the coming US presidential election by executing cyber attacks on election infrastructure."
**
This one is from after the election:
From:
Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2016 2:09 PM
To: [at least 12 addresses at DNI]
Subject: ACTION: NIOs - DNI TPs for 12/9 Restricted PC on Russia-Cyber - Due 1500 Thursday
"We assess that foreign adversaries did not use cyber attacks on election infrastructure to alter the US Presidential election outcome this year. We have no evidence of cyber manipulation of election infrastructure intended to alter results."
**
Now, Barack Obama, POTUS, gets involved:
From: @dhs
Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2016 3:53 PM
To: @cia; @dhs. Cc: -DNI- @dni
Subject: RE: FW: Election PDB ---
"We spoke with the NIO Cyber shop, who discussed the prospect of a NIC product in response to POTUS at their afternoon (1400) session."
**
A Presidential Daily Briefing (PDB) which was prepared, but apparently pulled:
"For the President 8 December 2016 We assess that Russian and criminal actors did not impact recent US election results by conducting malicious cyber activities against election infrastructure."
**
Related to the briefing noted above, which would have been delivered the following morning:
From: @cia
Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2016 3:41 PM
To: Cc: -DNI-;
Subject: RE: FW: Election PDB ============
"Just tried calling you. Did you see email to you?"
**
Secure: @cia. -----Original Message-----
From: @dhs
Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2016 3:33 PM
To: @cia Cc: -DNI- @dni USA GOV @dhs DHS
Subject: FW: FW: Election PDB ============
"Good afternoon! This email is what my question is related to - if PASS is ok with this PDB going forward, and possibly including in the BN mention of the 4POTUS NIC tasking. Please let me know if you have any questions."
The briefing being pulled.
**
From: DHS
Sent: Thursday, December 08, 2016 2:22 PM
To: [50+ addresses at DNI, FBI, CIA and NSA]
Subject: RE: PDB Coordination Request - COB 8 December --- ============
"We have so far received responses from FBI, CIA/NIC, and NGA. Please provide coordination responses ASAP if you have not been able to yet. Thank you for understanding and trying to accommodate this short coordination period, to accommodate the Administration's request for this to run tomorrow."
**
-----Original Message-----
From: Sent: Thursday, December 08, 2016 12:59 PM
To: [ addresses at DNI, FBI, NSA STATE at DNI and NGA.]
"Due to high Administration interest, this piece is now scheduled to run tomorrow. Therefore, we now ask that coordination responses be sent by 2pm, so that the production process for tomorrow can be completed."
**
A new Russian response is formulated at the White House:
Summary of Conclusions for Meeting of the Principals Committee
DATE: December 9, 2016
LOCATION: White House Situation Room TIME: 11:30 a . m. - 1:30 p.m .

Susan Rice, Neil Eggleston, James Clapper, Secretary John Kerry, Victoria Nuland, Adam Szubin, Brian McKeon, Loretta Lynch, Mary McCord, Jeh Johnson, Rob Silvers, Denis McDonough, Maher Bitar, Andrew McCabe, John Brennan, Gen Joseph Dunford, Richard Ledgett, Avril Haines, Lisa Monaco, Ben Rhodes, Chris Fonzone, Caroline Tess, Brett Holmgren, Michael Daniel, Celeste Wallander. Samir Jain, Jeffrey Edmonds

A list of anti-Russia actions were ordered. And note the title is for the meeting, not from the meeting.
**
From: -DNI-
Sent: Friday, December 09, 2016 6:24 PM
To: [22 addresses at DNI, plus multiple redacted addresses]
RE: POTUS Tasking on Russia Election Meddling

Hello leadership team, I chatted with ___ tonight on our plan. Our plan is to have CIA/CCI to put together Part B.i and DHS to put together 3 (recommendations to protect). CIA/EEMC is to put together Part B.ii and B.iii. We will be the NIC firewall for those sections; our team will man the Part B.i and team will oversee Part B.ii and B.iii; as we integrate into Part B.iv by December 23.
We will also generate a draft version for Congressional briefing and an unclassified version. We will send out for coordination last week of December and first week of January for IC seniors to sign off and aim for delivery by January 9.
Note “POTUS Tasking.”
**
From: -DNI-
Sent: Friday, December 09, 2016 5:43 PM
To: [At least 22 addresses at DNI and CIA
Subject: POTUS Tasking on Russia Election Meddling

"Pursuant to the POTUS tasking at Monday’s meeting on Russia election meddling for a comprehensive assessment, the DNI broached the TPs below with Dennis McDonough and DCIA at the Russia PC this afternoon.The IC is prepared to produce an assessment per the President’s request… The goal would be to make the unclassified document publicly available.
“per the President’s request”
**
From: -DNI- Sent: Thursday, December 22, 2016 6:04 PM
To: [At least ten addresses at DNI]
Subject: RE: Rollout Planning for IC Report on Russian Election Meddling

"The only real direction we got was: 1) POTUS wants a comprehensive assessment, drawing from all available sources, and 2) it has to be before the end of his administration."
 **
From: -DNI- Sent: Thursday, December 22, 2016 5:40 PM
To: [8 addresses at DNI and others]
Subject: RE: Rollout Planning for IC Report on Russian Election Meddling

"We are working with WH and IC Leg and Comms teams, and want to make sure we’re all appropriately looped in and discussing the same things."
**
The birth of the Russia-Did-It Narrative:

"Assessing Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent US Elections ICA 2017-01 5 January 2017 Russian efforts to influence the 2016 US presidential election represent the most recent expression of Moscow’s longstanding desire to undermine the US-led liberal democratic order, but these activities demonstrated a significant escalation in directness, level of activity, and scope of effort compared to previous operations.

We assess Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered an influence campaign in the summer of 2016 aimed at the US presidential election. Russia’s goals were to undermine public faith in the US democratic process, denigrate Secretary Clinton, and harm her electability and potential presidency. We further assess Putin and the Russian Government developed a clear preference for President-elect Trump. We have high confidence in these judgments based on a body of intelligence reporting and the public behavior of senior Russian officials and state-controlled media.

We also assess Putin and the Russian Government aspired to help President-elect Trump’s election chances when possible by discrediting Secretary Clinton and publicly contrasting her unfavorably to him. CIA and FBI have high confidence in this judgment based on sensitive information not included in this version of the assessment; NSA has moderate confidence in this judgment based on the same sensitive information.
**

There is and will be more to this story, but I want as many people as possible to see these documents, because apparently many are being kept ignorant. Calling Treason on a former President, and supporting it with direct evidence… is huge."

Jim Kunstler, "Merry Pranksters on Parade"

"Merry Pranksters on Parade"
by Jim Kunstler

“The forces behind this coup have done and will do 
anything to protect their grasp on illegal & illegitimate power.” 
- Stephen Miller

"Let’s not pretend that RussiaGate was ever anything but a “treasonous conspiracy” and a “years’ long coup” as bluntly labeled by the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) on Friday. The election prank launched by Hillary Clinton’s campaign turned into an overt sedition op led by President Barack Obama to overthrow his elected successor, Donald Trump. DNI Tulsi Gabbard went even further and proffered criminal referrals on all this to the US Attorney General. If you think this is not extremely serious, you are not paying attention.

The New York Times was not paying attention in its Sunday edition. Not a word about this historic action on the paper’s website landing page. So now you know why the Harvard law professors, the Martha’s Vineyard chardonnay widows, and all the creative class hipsters of Brooklyn persist in their personal globes of political delusion. Instead, The Times dwelt on the Epstein business, still haplessly hoping to catch the Golden Golem in its golem trap. (Mr. Trump’s lawsuit against the Pulitzer Prize committee for rewarding the Time’s RussiaGate coverage is still pending, by the way.)

Meanwhile, DNI Gabbard went on Maria Bartiromo’s Sunday confab and warned of more info releases coming this week. Sooner or later AG Pam Bondi will have to announce that a case based on that referral is under construction. My guess is that this is exactly what Kash Patel’s FBI has been preoccupied with for months with no leaking — you can imagine severe penalties against that. You might also note that there are no higher crimes under our law than treason, as explicitly spelled out in the DNI report. The DNI also stated flatly on Sunday, “There must be indictments.” If you think DNI Gabbard went forward without consulting some crack constitutional lawyers, you’ll be disappointed.

And also meanwhile, Deputy AG Todd Blanche has applied for release of the sealed grand jury transcripts on the 2019 Epstein case from the DOJ’s Manhattan outpost (SDNY). And consider: all that info was completely segregated from the Epstein files that former FBI Director Christopher Wray controlled for years and years, meaning it was not subject to editing and manipulation. You may finally get to see the difference between the “hoax” elements of the story and the actual evidence.

The Russian meddling and collusion story might have seemed like “a thing” to many in the early January days of 2017 before Mr. Trump’s first inauguration. But when they went after the newly appointed National Security Advisor, General Mike Flynn, for having a conversation with the Russian ambassador, you had had to know that something sketchy was afoot. As this blog asked at the time: why are ambassadors from foreign lands here, if not to speak with our government officials? The story was preposterous but, of course, the news media helped run Gen. Flynn out of office and then led the cheering for the DOJ’s malicious prosecution of him afterward in Judge Emmet G. Sullivan’s DC district court.

You also have to wonder if anyone in the news media might be subject to indictment above and beyond the First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom of the press. Is there a line between that and acting as an accessory to treason? What did New York Times editor (at the time) Dean Baquet think he was doing, publishing all that patent garbage? Or the producers of CNN and other network news?

The DNI called these activities a “treasonous conspiracy” for a reason. A conspiracy charge that encompasses a skein of persons in a continuous series of crimes extends the statute of limitations to the latest criminal act for all involved. You might also wonder how wide a net the DOJ could cast. Will it include such obvious players as Senator Mark Warner, who schemed to play along on RussiaGate as Vice-chair of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence? Or then-Congressman Adam Schiff on the House Intel Committee when, for years, he pretended to have “proof” of (i.e., lied about) Trump-Russia collusion? Or FBI Director Wray, who hid evidence, might have tampered with evidence, and apparently lied to Congress about many of these connected matters? Or Andrew Weissmann, who virtually ran the phony Mueller Investigation as a RussiaGate cover-up op because Robert Mueller was mentally infirm? Or Lawfare Ninjas Marc Elias, Norm Eisen, and Mary McCord who appear liable for 2020 election hackery and the Jan 6 “insurrection” op (including the House J6 Committee fakery afterward) along with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi? Or former AG William Barr, who sat on the Hunter Biden laptop during Trump Impeachment No. 1, when the device was stuffed with exculpatory evidence withheld from Mr. Trump’s lawyers? Or CIA agent Eric Ciaramella, Lt. Col Alex Vindman, and Intel Inspector General Michael Atkinson, who conspired with Rep. Adam Schiff on the “Ukraine phone call” operation that was the basis of impeachment No. 1? Or DOJ Inspector General Michael Horowitz, who botched his investigation (on purpose?) of FISA court criminal irregularities, or Judge James Boasberg who presided over those criminal irregularities and issued many of them? Or Special Counsel John Durham who took years to overlook the salient elements of the RussiaGate coup? Or many other figures involved one way or another. . . McCabe, Stzrok, Page, Pientka, Thibault, Baker, Rice, Yates, Rummler, Halper, Pompeo, Haines, Bruce and Nellie Ohr. . . .

Are they all rounded-up and sent to court together, like a Nuremberg proceding? Or do they get their own separate cases? Or will the DOJ only go after the top dogs: Obama, Brennan, Clapper, and Comey?

Finally, consider this: demonizing Vladimir Putin set the stage for the Ukraine War - which was initially kicked off in 2014 under President Obama and his State Department/CIA group led by Victoria Nuland orchestrating the Maidan revolt. The official disclosures now by the DNI should make it clear that Mr. Putin did not deserve the treatment he got for years on end, and that the overall effect of it has been catastrophic for world peace. Half the people in the USA still believing all the manufactured bullshit about Mr. Putin has made it extremely difficult for President Trump to end the war in Ukraine that has killed millions.

RussiaGate had the gravest consequences, and now there can be consequences for the merry pranksters who started it and kept it going, one way or another, for a decade."