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Friday, July 25, 2025

"Fire the Fed, Raise Tariffs, and Hope for the Best"

"Fire the Fed, Raise Tariffs, and Hope for the Best"
by MN Gordon

“Protectionism is a policy of wasting a 
country’s resources to support inefficiency.”
- Ludwig von Mises, "
Planning for Freedom "(1952)

Paris, France - "Uh, oh… here comes the counter-punch. French newspaper, Le Monde, has the latest…"EU approves €93 billion in counter-tariffs on US goods. Brussels prepares to strike back with up to 30% levies on US goods and services starting August 7 if no deal is reached, responding to US President Donald Trump's tariff threats.

EU states on Thursday, July 24, approved a €93 billion ($109 billion) package of counter-tariffs on US goods that would kick in from August 7 if talks with the United States fail, European diplomats said. US President Donald Trump blindsided the European Union this month when he threatened a 30% levy on EU goods unless the two sides reach a trade deal by August 1."

Brussels and Washington appear to be inching toward a deal with a baseline 15% levy on EU goods, but the bloc is still forging ahead with detailed retaliatory plans in the event of no accord. Trade wars might be a useful tool to rouse the rabble, but they rarely work out well for the people themselves. More taxes… more friction… more state intervention in what ought to be win-win deals; the history of tariffs does not argue in their favor.

Ah, but perhaps this time is different. President Trump is a genius, his supporters argue. He understands the “Art of the Deal.” Maybe. Maybe not... All we know is we never met a government program – be it tax, subsidy or market intervention by any another name – that didn’t inspire a furrowed brow and a heavy heart. Recall Ludwig von Mises’s warning, from Human Action (1949): “The worst thing that can happen to a nation is not to be conquered by a foreign power but to be subjected to domestic policy of protectionism.”

In today’s guest essay, MN Gordon takes a closer look at this topic du jour. As mentioned before in these Notes, we have no financial arrangement with Mr. Gordon and do not profit from publishing his work… we simply enjoy his thought-provoking articles and reckon you might, too.

Whether you agree or disagree with Mr. Trump’s tariffs, it’s worth taking a step back and considering them from the macro perspective. Check out Gordon’s latest musing, in today’s guest column, below. And if you like it, be sure to comment and share. Cheers ~ JB

"Fire the Fed, Raise Tariffs, and Hope for the Best"
by MN Gordon

"President Donald Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent want lower interest rates so they can lower the financing costs of America’s massive debt. The net interest on the debt for fiscal year 2025 is on track to hit $1 trillion.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has resisted daily lambasting from Trump to cut rates. Powell wants to first wait and see how Trump’s tariff policies impact consumer price inflation. Moreover, with unemployment moderately low, the CPI rising at an annual rate of 2.7 percent, and the stock market at all-time highs there is no compelling reason to cut rates.

Nonetheless, Trump’s had enough of Powell’s disobedience. This week Bessent revealed that active steps are being taken to fire Powell before his term runs out next year. He will be replaced with someone who will comply with Trump’s rate cut demands.

Of course, a sensible way to lower interest rates would be to eliminate deficit spending. With a balanced budget, the Treasury would no longer have to issue new debt. It could merely finance the existing debt. Under this scenario the pool of Treasuries would no longer be expanding. As the supply of Treasuries is reduced the continued demand would likely drive interest rates down. This would help Trump and Bessent achieve their desire for lower interest rates.

But instead of forcing Congress to balance the budget, Trump pushed his One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The combination of tax cuts and spending increases will add over $3 trillion in additional debt – over and above the already projected debt – over the next decade. This will blow the national debt out to over $60 trillion by 2040.

Can Tariffs Reduce the Deficit? The addition of all this new debt makes the prospect of lower interest rates highly unlikely. Still, Trump thinks he can influence the budget through other means. His big idea is to generate revenue from tariffs. He believes this will reduce the budget deficit.

Until the monthly Treasury Statement for June was reported, it appeared the U.S. government was on track to run a budget deficit of $2 trillion for fiscal year 2025. But something remarkable happened in June. The U.S. government ran a surplus of $27 billion. This is on the heels of a $315 billion deficit in May. Of note, the $27 billion surplus was the first time there has been a budget surplus in June since 2017. In June 2024, there was a $71 billion budget deficit. Tariffs do appear to have had a positive effect on the budget.

The monthly Treasury Statement shows that custom duties for June were $27 billion. This is up from $22 billion in May. What’s more, since October, total tariff revenues are $108 billion, which is the highest they’ve ever been for the first nine months of a fiscal year. At this point in the 2024 fiscal year, only $56 billion in custom duties had been collected. And for the full 2024 fiscal year custom duties totaled just $77 billion.

At a recent White House cabinet meeting Bessent noted that the U.S. could grow its tariff revenue to $300 billion by the end of the 2025 calendar year. Trump said he believes “the big money will start coming in on August 1.” Trump, however, didn’t elaborate on where the big money will come from…

Tariffs are Taxes: The status of Trump’s “on-again, off again” tariffs is hard to keep up with. As we understand it, the average U.S. tariff rate increased from 2.5 percent to an estimated 27 percent by April 2025, the highest in over a century. Trump’s apparent strategy has involved announcing tariffs, then pausing them for negotiation periods, only to re-impose or adjust them. If you recall, after announcing reciprocal tariffs on Liberation Day, April 2, 2025, a universal 10 percent tariff took effect, with additional tariffs for 57 trading partners initially planned but then paused for 90 days when Wall Street panicked.

The pause on reciprocal tariffs has now been pushed out to August 1, with Trump sending letters to countries detailing new tariff rates. These new tariffs are why Trump expects the “big money” to start coming in on August 1. Certainly, reducing the budget deficit via increased tariff revenue sounds like a positive outcome. But what are the consequences?

Trump’s trade tariff policies are designed to protect domestic production, bring manufacturing jobs home, and reduce America’s massive trade deficit. However, there are two sides to every coin. The flipside to Trump’s trade policies is higher prices. Very simply, tariffs are taxes. They are not paid by foreign producers out of some generous desire to subsidize American consumers. They are duties levied on imported goods. And like all taxes, they are ultimately paid by the end-user. In this case, American consumers.

For example, when Trump slaps a 10 percent, 25 percent, or even a 60 percent tariff on goods from China, Europe, Mexico, or anywhere else, that cost is absorbed into the price of those goods. Importers pay more, distributors pay more, retailers pay more, and eventually, you pay more.

Fire the Fed, Raise Tariffs, and Hope for the Best: Tariffs, and their associated effects, will touch just about every consumer good that people regularly buy and use. The clothes people wear, electronic gadgets they use, the car components they rely on, and raw materials for manufacturing. As you know, a significant share of these originate from beyond America’s borders.

When tariffs are imposed, the cost of bringing these goods to market escalates. Businesses, operating on razor-thin margins, have two choices. Absorb the cost and potentially go bankrupt or pass the cost along to the consumer. Most retailers will choose the latter, as this is the inevitable path of survival.

But the inflationary impacts don’t stop there. Tariffs, by their very design, are meant to make foreign goods less competitive. The objective is to give domestic producers an advantage. These protectionist policies result in higher consumer prices. They also reduce the competitive pressure that keeps prices in check. With less competition from abroad, domestic industries face reduced incentives to keep their prices low. Why innovate? Why cut costs? Why offer discounts?

If the playing field is artificially tilted in the favor of American producers, they can simply raise their prices to match the now-inflated cost of imports. This is the downside of protectionism. It breeds complacency and, ultimately, higher prices for everyone. It also reduces the choices consumers have and generally leads to lower quality goods. Trade tariffs also mess with the broad and complex economic supply chain. A tariff on steel, for example, doesn’t just make imported steel more expensive, it makes everything that uses steel – from cars to refrigerators to construction materials – more expensive.

The cumulative effect of these actions is a direct assault on the purchasing power of the average American. Your hard-earned dollars buy less. Real wages decline. The cost of living goes up.

Tariff induced higher prices act as a stealth tax on every household. This erodes savings and makes it harder for families to make ends meet. Gambling to close the budget deficit through massive trade tariffs and artificial rate cuts is madness. The consumer – that’s you – will be the one who pays the “big money” Trump’s counting on. The real solution is to cut spending. Yet politics won’t allow it. Thus, the folly continues."

Bill Bonner, "Ghost Wealth"

"Ghost Wealth"
by Bill Bonner
Poitou, France - "Today, we wonder about money itself. We come to no conclusion...for now, we just wallow in it, like a pig rolling in mud. In the Capital city, the money pours in...and the swamp waters rise. Politico: "The first six months of President Donald Trump’s term have produced a cash cow of historic magnitude for the lobbying industry, with record-breaking demand for help navigating the administration’s constant stream of policy pronouncements - or trying to avoid becoming a pay-for in the GOP’s megabill.

The result is a new set of power brokers in Trump’s swamp. Firms with strong ties to the White House have skyrocketed to the top of the pecking order of lobbying outfits in town, according to a POLITICO analysis of the latest quarterly lobbying disclosures filed this week.

No firm has benefitted more than Ballard Partners, which is led by Trump fundraiser Brian Ballard. The firm previously employed White House chief of staff Susie Wiles and Attorney General Pam Bondi. Ballard brought in $20.6 million in lobbying revenues during the second quarter of the year from clients including Palantir, American Express, TikTok, Ripple Labs and UnitedHealth. Its haul is more than four times what the firm brought in during the second quarter of 2024."

Public Citizen elaborates: "According to Bondi’s financial disclosure report filed in January, she received over $1 million in income from January 2023 to January 2025 as a lobbyist, partner, and chair of the Corporate Regulatory Compliance practice at Ballard."

The real genius of ‘Big Man’ leaders is being able to convince the masses that they are working for them, while the money still flows to the insiders. Another way to look at it: as the empire of laws declines, the degenerate rule of men takes over. They make money by offering to fix the problems their own policies cause. But let’s keep our eyes on the money. It gushes into financial assets too.

Stocks are at or near all-time highs. The S&P 500 is over 6,300. The Nasdaq is over 21,000. The Dow is over 45,000. And the total value of all US publicly traded stocks is over $50 trillion. ‘Anti-stocks’ - gold and crypto - are also getting more money. Gold is over $3,400. And it was just last week that USA Today reported a new breakthrough for bitcoin: "Bitcoin leapt past $120,000 for the first time on Monday, marking another milestone for the world's largest cryptocurrency as investors bet on long-sought policy wins for the industry this week, which has been dubbed "crypto week" by U.S. Republicans." Bitcoin BTC scaled a record high of $123,153.22 before pulling back. The increase brings the year-to-date gains for digital currency to 30%.

Everything seems to be getting more grease…except the real economy. So far this year, GDP went down in the first quarter. The second quarter shows some growth...leaving the first half of the year with about 1% net increase in output.

That puts the gain from bitcoin at about 30 times as much. Bitcoin has no material existence...no connection to any durable or tangible asset...no team of economists to manage and guide it...and no backing from anyone. It has nevertheless gained a full third in value this year against the dollar, while the dollar lost about 10% against other currencies and 20% against gold.

And here is where this ghost currency gets interesting. The total market cap of bitcoin is around $2.3 trillion. All the cryptos put together are worth over $4 trillion. Is this a $4 trillion increase to the world’s money supply? If so, where did it come from? What wealth does it represent? Or is it...like the new money itself...a kind of ghost wealth, ready to disappear in the light of day?

The ‘wealth’ implied by stock prices has gone way up too...about ten times as much as GDP. Corporate earnings don’t explain it. Instead, price/earnings leverage has increased to the second highest level on record. Even as late as 1980, stocks were selling for only 6- or 7-times annual earnings. But that was the end of an era. Since then, stocks have gone up...and up...and up...never again selling for as little as 10 times earnings.

And today, on the S&P, a dollar’s worth of corporate earnings is enough to justify $30 worth of stock price - a number greatly inflated by the fake dollar that appeared in 1971 and has been with us ever since. This suggests that as much as two-thirds of the stock market’s value – about $33 trillion - is also ‘ghost wealth.’

No hunter-gatherer tribe ever happened upon a Tesla pick-up truck. Not a single one of the Maya aristocracy...even in the hot jungle of Mesoamerica... turned on the air-conditioning...or opened a can of cold Coca Cola while watching the Super Bowl on his big screen TV. Nope, wealth is not discovered. It is created. So, there must be a connection between the makers and the made...between producers and their products...and between the income and the capital accounts.

A stock gets its value from its company output (real or imagined). We’ve seen that stock prices have risen far more than corporate profits. But where does bitcoin get its value; it produces no profits at all? No one working for bitcoin makes sales, let alone profits. No employees produce anything - no income...no output...no product...no nothing. Owners get no W-2 forms. No dividends. No tchotchkes. So where’s the ‘wealth’ implied by a $2.3 trillion capitalization? Tune in next week...we’ll look more closely at this ‘ghost wealth’…where does it come from; where does it go? And when does it go bye-bye?"
Since you asked...
The Rolling Stones, "Money (That's What I Want)"

Gregory Mannarino, "A Great Reckoning Is Coming"

Gregory Mannarino, AM 7/25/25
"A Great Reckoning Is Coming"
Comments here:

Jim Kunstler, "Baseless?"

"Baseless?"
by Jim Kunstler

"If you can arrest a former president named Donald Trump, 
you can arrest a former president named Barack Obama." 
- Peachy Keenan on "X"

"Don’t you think it’s time for The New York Times to stop using the cliché “baseless” when referring to allegations - now, actually, official accusations - of the seditious conspiracy to run President Trump out of office after the 2016 election? Of all the fake “journalistic” blurts emanating from this bastion of degenerate sell-outs, “baseless” is the fakest, as if the word printed in a headline were so magically potent, the sheer assertion of it can make all your problems just - poof! - go away.

It’s the thought process of wicked children who fail to develop a sense of true or false, right or wrong, who grow into adults specially licensed, by some new perversion of the social contract, to get away with anything. And those wicked children have become America’s managerial class, the elite who are supposed to do your thinking for you op-ed style, the credentialed experts, such as Tony Fauci, “economist” Paul Krugman, DEI avatar and NPR honcho Katherine Maher, Harvard law prof Lawrence Tribe...the list is interminable, but you get the picture.

This class is also the owner/operator of America’s political Deep State, which by 2016 had grown into a colossal racketeering operation, money-laundering gazillions of taxpayer dollars into NGOs dedicated to the country’s cultural and political destruction while it processed campaign donations into fantastic fortunes for people officially earning less than $200-K a year. The racket also managed to pay for the support of multitudes allergic to working for living, as long as they were available for riots and ballot-harvesting drives.

It was working at such a high pitch by the end of Barack Obama’s two terms, with the most stupendously privileged creature in the Boomer bestiary ready to take her “turn” in the Oval Office - after amassing a $300-million-plus fortune serving as US senator (salary, $174-K / year) and Secretary of State (salary $199,700/year, then) - that you must imagine the mighty freak-out at the prospect of one Donald John Trump, outsider vulgarian extraordinaire, promising to step in and drain the whole massive, putrid, necrotic, parasitical nepo-infested quagmire of predatory grifters, leaving them gasping for their lives on the stinking Potomac mudbanks like so many grunions dying on the beach at Redondo.

Barack Obama, apparently, Darth Vadar-ized himself and was handed a light-saber (Hillary’s Steele dossier) by John Brennan, Grand Duke of Planet Intel...and the rest should have been history - but instead festered in the US body politic for more than ten years like an inflamed tuberculoma and is now bursting out of the Beltway’s peritoneal cavity in a spectacular spray of ordure, sticking to everyone and everything like a thousand tails pinned on the everlasting Democratic donkey. Alas, Babylon-on-the-Potomac...

Also: “baseless,” my ass...The basis for all this mischief is in the process of having proof supplied by the one figure, DNI Gabbard, in a position to retrieve the evidence, in writing, from the various heavily ring-fenced agencies over which she is the ultimate overseer, which has not been done before, especially back in the crucial weeks of late 2020 when John Ratcliffe was in that position. The reason Tulsi succeeded this time where Ratcliffe did not is probably due to newly available A-I systems which make collation of cross-searches much easier through the countless servers of the many intel agencies. And so, now it pours forth day by day.

That’s where things stand and the dust has not even begun to settle, with former President Obama seemingly hoisted on the petard of his own making back in December of 2016. Whether or not all the declassified info can be crafted into prosecutable cases is not yet determined, but you might imagine it will come together soon enough, if at all possible. It may not add up to treason per se, but there are plenty of other serious charges generally proceeding from deprivation of rights under color of law (18 U.S.C. § 242), to seditious conspiracy, i.e., overthrow of the president (18 U.S.C. § 2384) to stuff a number of former officials into orange jumpsuits behind bars.

I doubt, though that we have reckoned the worst damage done by the perpetrators of RussiaGate and the serial crimes it entailed, which is how it drove half the population of our country plumb batshit crazy. Once RussiaGate was put over, any absurdity was force-fed to the increasingly delusional opposition to Donald Trump largely aggregated under the “Democratic Party” banner. You were suffered to believe such patent nonsense as men can become women, that riots with arson were mostly peaceful protests, that the US/Mexico border could not be controlled without vast new legislation, and that a demonstrably corrupt and obviously senile Joe Biden was an able, functioning chief executive.

The Covid-19 op was the coup de grâce for the Left’s mental health - while it was also a silver bullet to get rid of Mr. Trump in the 2020 election. There is even reason to believe that the mRNA vaccines, with their spike protein payloads, delivered physical brain injury by way of induced vascular disorder. Millions who took them may never recover their senses - but so far that is just hypothesis.

If cases are brought against those who acted in the long-running coup, and are proven in court via an honest and upright process, we’ll find out whether half the country can recover enough rationality to accept the outcome. The signs for now are discouraging, as they seem to veer deeper into delusion, nominating outright jihadi communists for important offices and continuing their lawfare campaign to disable all and any actions by Mr. Trump’s executive branch.

The ultimate goal, for those interested in continuing the project of this American republic, will be to see if it’s possible to restore a workable consensus about a common culture and the common good on principles that are anything but baseless: equal protection under the law, fair play, the rights of property, and respect for verifiable truth."

Adventures With Danno, "Massive Changes At Walmart"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, AM 7/25/25
"Massive Changes At Walmart"
Comments here:

Thursday, July 24, 2025

Musical Interlude: Soothing Relaxation, "Dance of Life"

Full screen recommended.
Soothing Relaxation, "Dance of Life"
Be kind to yourself, forget all the troubles for 
a little while and enjoy this beautiful video...

"A Look to the Heavens"

“The Cat's Eye Nebula (NGC 6543) is one of the best known planetary nebulae in the sky. Its more familiar outlines are seen in the brighter central region of the nebula in this impressive wide-angle view. But the composite image combines many short and long exposures to also reveal an extremely faint outer halo. At an estimated distance of 3,000 light-years, the faint outer halo is over 5 light-years across.
Planetary nebulae have long been appreciated as a final phase in the life of a sun-like star. More recently, some planetary nebulae are found to have halos like this one, likely formed of material shrugged off during earlier episodes in the star's evolution. While the planetary nebula phase is thought to last for around 10,000 years, astronomers estimate the age of the outer filamentary portions of this halo to be 50,000 to 90,000 years. Visible on the left, some 50 million light-years beyond the watchful planetary nebula, lies spiral galaxy NGC 6552.”
"Our planet is a tiny porthole, looking over a cosmic sea.
Can we learn what lies beyond our own horizons of perception?" 

"You Think..."

"You think you will never forget any of this, you will remember it always just the way it was. But you can't remember it the way it was. To know it, you have to be living in the presence of it right as it is happening. It can return only by surprise. Speaking of these things tells you that there are no words for them that are equal to them or that can restore them to your mind. And so you have a life that you are living only now, now and now and now, gone before you can speak of it, and you must be thankful for living day by day, moment by moment, in this presence. But you have a life too that you remember. It stays with you. You have lived a life in the breath and pulse and living light of the present, and your memories of it, remember now, are of a different life in a different world and time. When you remember the past, you are not remembering it as it was. You are remembering it as it is. It is a vision or a dream, present with you in the present, alive with you in the only time you are alive."
~ Wendell Berry

"Five Stupid Questions Women Ask Men: Vive la Différence, Indeed!"

"Five Stupid Questions Women Ask Men:
Vive la Différence, Indeed!"
"Why is it that men are better at getting their needs met than women? Maybe because they know how to keep it simple. Connie Podesta explains in this humorous yet poignant clip the five stupid questions women ask men and why. This is a very funny clip, enjoy!"
Comments here:
Hat tip to Kamosa from Second Life for this material!

Comments? He asks from a safe distance, of course lol...

"Regrets? Don’t Regret Anything, Unless You Want Me To Slap You When You Are Old"

"Regrets? Don’t Regret Anything,
Unless You Want Me To Slap You When You Are Old"
by John Wilder

"I’ve never written anything before that made me want to go to a hospice and slap a bunch of old dying people, but this particular post led me there. I’ll explain. It’s okay, it’ll all make sense in the end. I’m a trained professional.

I have made many mistakes in my life. Most of them I don’t remember – they were small and didn’t have any consequences, or at least any consequences I’ve seen yet.

Then there were some slightly larger mistakes – let’s call them medium size mistakes. There have been consequences to these. Again, medium-sized mistakes most often lead to medium-sized consequences. A scar here (carve away from your thumb, not towards it), a stock gone to zero there (thanks a lot, Enron®) and one really bad car trade when I was 24... medium-sized. Medium-sized mistakes are big enough for a big sting, but whatever permanent impacts there might be aren’t immediately fatal.

The biggest ones – I won’t give a laundry list of those. Most of those were where either passion, inexperience, a momentary lapse of character or judgement, or (worst of all) when all three contributed to a mistake. Some mistakes lasted longer, some were short. But all stung. The biggest include a marriage that led to divorce, underestimating a sociopathic boss, and wearing that white dress to my little sister’s wedding. I mean, I look fabulous in it, but some brides just have to be the center of attention. Also a bit weird because she wasn’t really my sister.

To put it bluntly, I am the author of almost every problem I have. If I didn’t cause the problem, I’m probably complicit in creating the problem or not dealing with the problem. But I don’t regret it. None of it. Not the victories, certainly, and not the failures. Why?

Life is a one-shot deal. And life is a ratchet. It only turns one way – we can’t take anything back. Regret isn’t a one-shot deal, though. If there’s anything that will burn a hole in your soul, it’s regret. Regret never comes alone – it brings guilt along for the ride.

If I were to dig more deeply into those feelings – regret and guilt are just ways that fear manifests itself. Fear of... what? Regret is a fear that the consequences of your choices or actions will impact you negatively, and cannot be changed. Here is a list of some of the common regrets from people on their deathbed (from a former palliative care nurse named Bronnie Ware, and, yes, I spelled that right – blame her parents, not me):

“I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.”
“I wish I hadn’t worked so hard.”
“I wish I’d had the courage to express my feelings.”
“I wish I had stayed in touch with my friends.”
“I wish that I had let myself be happier.”

Even a quick look at this list tells me one simple thing: regret is for losers. I have never seen a whinier pack of self-serving weakness since I last watched a Democratic presidential debate. Everything, absolutely everything on this “top five” list is just, well, sad.

Would you like to go to your grave worrying about any of those things? I can’t imagine doing it. I refuse to let regret rule me. And I refuse to let any decision I made twenty years ago rule me. Hell, I refuse to let any decision I made last week rule me, except for choosing that convenience store egg/muffin sandwich – I don’t need to explain why. Deal with the consequences? Certainly. But regret? No.

Let’s go down the “top five” list:

Not living a life “true to yourself”? I’ve never heard such nonsense in my life. I was talking with a guy the other day who quit his job because his boss asked him to do something illegal. That’s being true to yourself – he walked away without a paycheck but with his values and beliefs intact. If you’re not being true to yourself, you’re either weak or flighty. The good news? Anyone who reads this blog is neither.

Wishing you hadn’t “worked so hard”? That’s also nonsense. A soul thrives on doing good work that matters. Doing good work excellently is hard. The Mrs. teaches, and works hard at it – I can see from her talking about her students, talking about the ones who learned and improved, the ones who keep coming back to her classroom to report on their lives that her work matters. Working hard at work that matters is what makes us the best humans we can be. If you think you worked too hard, you weren’t doing anything worth doing. The good news? Change now. You have an entire lifetime to fix that mistake.

Didn’t have the “courage to express my feelings”? Wow. This is the weakest on the list, so far. Number one: do you have feelings that matter? Most feelings are stupid – and I have stupid feelings, too. Thankfully, I’m not a five year old – I am at least twelve. I get to examine my feelings and reject those that don’t reflect my values, my virtue, my beliefs. I get to choose. If I feel slighted by something silly or petty? I get to choose to understand what a fool I’m being and ignore that feeling. Again, if you don’t express your feelings, that’s not always a bad thing. Your feelings are often stupid.

I’m sorry that “staying in touch with your friends” was so hard. But it’s really not. The people you care about, that care about you, are there. They always have been, they always will be. I don’t Facebook® much – why? I call my friends, on an actual phone. I text my friends. Am I often the one that calls first? Sure. Do we develop different lives, does life pull us away for a while? Do hundreds or thousands of miles separate us? Maybe. But I make quite a few phone calls. And mostly my friends pick up. Sure, it’s true that the biggest miracle Jesus exhibited in the Bible was having 12, 11 close friends (thanks, Judas) after the age of thirty – but you just need a few – a few that will have your back. A few you can share with.

Seriously – number five on the list is a wish for “letting themselves be happier.” Happy is easy ("All You Will Ever Need To Read About How To Be Happy* (*Most of the Time")), being significant is hard. It requires hard work while being true to yourself. It requires expressing those feelings that your virtue allows to exist. Friends? The good ones will be with you forever, and you can restart your conversations with the slightest hint of time passing, even if you haven’t talked regularly in a decade, if they’re true friends.

I’ve never thought about going to a hospice and slapping someone, but this list made me want to do it. I know, I know, it’s too late for them. And this is the list of people who had regrets. People like me? I don’t have a single regret at this moment of my life. Not one. In a hospice, I hope I’d be the, “Regrets? No. More clam chowder, please,” guy.

To be clear – it’s not that I don’t care. It’s not that I’m not blameless. It’s not that I was always right. Not one of those things is true. But I have done the most important thing I can think of: When I do something I regret, I’ve changed myself so that I won’t ("Clintoncide", "John Bolton’s Waifu", and "October Market Crashes: Knock on Wood") do that thing again. I cannot change the past. But if I have learned, if I can help others not make the same mistakes while not repeating my own mistake? Like an algebra teacher for the soul, I have taken something negative and turned it into something positive. The bonus is I get to end the dreams of high school freshmen in the process.

And I’m not planning on having any regrets tomorrow. If you have regrets? Fix them now or recognize them for the dead weight they are and cut them loose. The alternative? Trust me, you don’t want to have me chasing you down in a hospice and slapping you silly."

The Daily "Near You?"

Rock Port, Missouri, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

The Poet: Barbara Crooker, "In the Middle..."

"In the Middle..."

"In the middle
of a life that's as complicated as everyone else's,
struggling for balance, juggling time.
The mantle clock that was my grandfather's
has stopped at 9:20; we haven't had time
to get it repaired. The brass pendulum is still,
the chimes don't ring. One day you look out the window,
green summer, the next, and the leaves have already fallen,
and a grey sky lowers the horizon. Our children almost grown,
our parents gone, it happened so fast. Each day, we must learn
again how to love, between morning's quick coffee
and evening's slow return. Steam from a pot of soup rises,
mixing with the yeasty smell of baking bread. Our bodies
twine, and the big black dog pushes his great head between;
his tail is a metronome, 3/4 time. We'll never get there,
Time is always ahead of us, running down the beach, urging
us on faster, faster, but sometimes we take off our watches,
sometimes we lie in the hammock, caught between the mesh
of rope and the net of stars, suspended, tangled up
in love, running out of time."

~ Barbara Crooker

"The Times..."

"The times might be unpleasant, repulsive. The ghastly chaos, the abhorrent incivility might be intolerable, might force us into argument or leave us panic-stricken. On such occasions people build within themselves a conviction that the world outside is diabolical. The whimsical insults test our level of endurance, causing us to plead for mercy, wanting us to be pitied than exploited and victimized. Often this grief and shame form a delusion within us that there no longer exists good in this world, that good people are fictitious, and that goodness has lost its definition altogether. But such is not true because there are still people who are virtuous, unselfish, willing to help and possessing the ability of restoring our faith in humanity. To disregard them, their presence, would be as heinous as the deeds of the people who are unlike them. The times might be unpleasant, repulsive, but we'll come out it, unharmed and liberated." - Chirag Tulsiani
o
Sam: "It's like in the great stories Mr. Frodo, the ones that really mattered. Full of darkness and danger they were, and sometimes you didn't want to know the end because how could the end be happy? How could the world go back to the way it was when so much bad had happened? But in the end it's only a passing thing, this shadow, even darkness must pass. A new day will come, and when the sun shines it'll shine out the clearer. Those were the stories that stayed with you, that meant something even if you were too small to understand why. But I think Mr. Frodo, I do understand, I know now folk in those stories had lots of chances of turning back, only they didn't. They kept going because they were holding on to something.
Frodo: What are we holding onto, Sam?
Sam: That there's some good in the world, Mr. Frodo, and it's worth fighting for."
- Samwise Gamgee, "Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers"

"At The Approach Of Danger..."

“At the approach of danger there are always two voices that speak with equal force in the heart of man: one very reasonably tells the man to consider the nature of the danger and the means of avoiding it; the other, even more reasonable, says that it is too painful and harassing to think of the danger, since it is not a man’s power to provide for everything and escape from the general march of events; and that it is therefore better to turn aside from the painful subject till it has come, and to think of what is pleasant. In solitude a man generally yields to the first voice; in society to the second.”
- Leo Tolstoy, “War and Peace”

“All our mortal lives are set in danger and perplexity: one day to prosper,
and the next – who knows? When all is well, then look for rocks ahead.”
- Sophoclese, “Philoctetes”
Free Downloads:
A little light reading from Tolstoy…   
Freely download “War and Peace”, by Leo Tolstoy, here:

Freely download “Seven Tragedies of Sophocles- Philoctetes” here:

"A Simple Choice..."

"It comes down to a simple choice, really. 
Get busy living or get busy dying."
- "Andy Dufresne", "Shawshank Redemption"

"On the Other Hand..."

Michel de Montaigne’s cenotaph 
at the Musée d’Aquitaine in Bordeaux.
"On the Other Hand..."
by Joel Bowman
Bordeaux, France - “On the other hand...” The refrain was overheard, repeatedly, at Le Noailles brasserie yesterday, during an unhurried luncheon. Our agnostic interlocutor, who may be a friend or distant relative, is a cheerful septuagenarian, senior enough to eschew the vapid certainty that so contaminates youth.

Whether discussing philosophy or physics, politics or economics, or simply comparing the magret de canard versus the confit de canard, the gentleman was unfashionably thoughtful. “On the one hand,” he would begin with a wry smile, “cooking the animals in their own fat has a certain appeal. On the other, given the way they’ve handled the economy these past few years, I might as soon send them directly to the guillotine...”

At some point – between the oysters and the hypothetical severing of various heads of state – the conversation turned to The Enlightenment... “‘Sapere aude!’ as Kant challenged us. ‘Dare to know!’ Actually, the untraveled Königsberger borrowed the phrase from the great Roman poet, Horace. Nothing new under the sun, you see? Still, it’s generally accepted, even amongst thinking people, that ‘progress’ is something we can know and measure. ‘Standing on the shoulder of giants,’ as Newton phrased it, we need only employ our reason, our uniquely human capacity for rational thinking, to advance from A to B... then onto C... and so on and so forth.

Of course, this all rests on the idea that humans themselves are ‘improvable,’ an assertion that appears to fly in the face of all observable evidence to the contrary. Still, our ‘enlightened’ ancestors saw the history of man as a story of advancement, the triumph of knowledge over ignorance, wellbeing over misery, freedom over tyranny, etcetera... But is it really as simple as all that?”

An Acquired Distaste - At this point in the meal, the youngest of the gathered gourmandizers offered a Montaigne-worthy non sequitur, expertly weaving together a tale from the book series Spy Kids, a recent dream about Icelandic horses, and a raw assessment of what it’s like to try an oyster for the very first time: “It’s like eating snot. Really. Why on earth do adults like them so much?”

Following a brief discourse on gastronomy, in which the above-mentioned Montaigne was quoted – “A man may live well without riches, but he cannot live well without a stomach” – the subject veered back to man’s alleged path of progress.

“Take the unenviable task of governance, for example. On the one hand, we might say that it is preferable to have a government that serves the people, as opposed to the other way around. It was Messrs. Locke, with his "Two Treatises", and Montesquieu, with his "Spirit of the Laws," who did much of the heavy lifting there.

“And let’s not forget that other rapscallion, Rousseau, and his so-called ‘Social Contract.’ Have you ever seen a copy? I haven’t. What kind of contract is it, anyway, where the consent of the parties is merely implied? Ah, but that’s Rousseau for you. A Genevan, mind. And let us say nothing of the man’s advice on child-rearing, nothing Voltaire hasn’t already mentioned...

“But coming to the point... We are supposed to have a government ‘of the people, by the people and for the people.’ And democracy is held up as the process by which such an arrangement is delivered. At least, that’s the idea. Progress, remember?

“Now, I have little doubt that living under, say, Philip IV, the man they called “the Iron King,” was no picnic. Same for Charles VI, nicknamed “the Mad,” whose delusions brought this land under a brutal civil war... or Louis XI, who earned the moniker “the Universal Spider” after his penchant for spinning webs of psychological intrigue... and torturing his political opponents, sometimes to death. They were mad kings... lunatic dictators... and blood-thirsty sociopaths, all of them. On the other hand... at least the people knew what they were up against! Can we really say the same today, standing smugly atop our post-Enlightenment pedestal?"

Irrational Reverence: “Today, it is considered right and proper to revere our political class. We refer to them as ‘leaders’ and ‘statesmen’ and afford them all manner of special privilege and status. We bow to them not out of rational fear, but out of irrational reverence.

And when they rob us, harass us and send our children off to war, do we raise the sharpened blade, ready to deliver France’s closest shave? No. We praise the process by which they were elected... the sacred cow of democracy... and march off to the ballot box to give the next gang their turn at the helm.

Moreover, in addition to this political Stockholm Syndrome, we appear to suffer a kind of collective identity disorder, too, wherein we mistake our enslaved selves for our very own masters. What was it Hillary Clinton said? ‘Our government is all of us.’ And remember Obama, lately in the news, duly disgraced. What was it he used to say? ‘Government isn’t some distant force — it’s made up of us, the people.’

Well, he’s right about the first part; government is not ‘some distant force.’ Like an object in the rearview mirror, that force is closer than it may appear. It is a direct and immediate force, too, ready to rob, imprison, and even ‘cook in their own fat’ any one of us who doesn’t fall in line.

“As for the derriere-backwards notion of government being ‘all of us’... was it ‘all of us’ who ran our respective countries trillions and trillions of euros into debt? Was it ‘we, the people,’ who opened our borders to millions and millions of illegal immigrants? Was it ‘all of us’ who first created a virus, they used it to lock down the world? Who is this ‘we,’ they speak of so glibly? Like Rousseau’s phantom contract, written in invisible ink, I don’t remember signing off on any such matters...On the other hand... the Saint-Estèphe pairs perfectly with the duck, and the company of friends and family is not to be improved by talk of politics.” Stay tuned for more Notes From the End of the World...

"How It Really Is"

 

"Home Sales Fall as Prices Hit Record High - Real Estate Crisis 2025"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 7/24/25
"Home Sales Fall as Prices Hit Record High - 
Real Estate Crisis 2025"
"Home sales have hit a shocking 30-year low, and the real estate market is facing some serious challenges. In this video, I break down what’s REALLY happening with home prices, interest rates, and why so many homes aren’t selling. From skyrocketing average home prices to the struggles of realtors across the country, I’m sharing the latest insights and what it all means for buyers, sellers, and renters alike. If you’ve been wondering about #TheFed, #HomeBuilders, and #NAR predictions, this is the video to watch."
Comments here:

"The Coup And The Cover-Up"

"The Coup And The Cover-Up"
by Paul Rosenberg

"This is our second condensation of classified documents released by US Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard. And again, this release shows that intelligence reports were manufactured to undermine Donald Trump.

The July 23rd release is a single, 46-page document, dated 18 September 2020, which seems to have existed in only five copies (the cover sheet is noted “Copy 1 of 5”) and was “stored in a limited-access vault at CIA headquarters.” It is a critique (apparently for the House Intelligence Committee) of the 5 January 2017 report, “Assessing Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent US Elections,” the one we mentioned in our previous post on this subject as the public beginning of the Russia-did-it narrative.

I’ll now give you some snips from this new report. But again, you can and should download the original to see it for yourself. This time I’ll set quotations in italics:

(The director of the CIA published three reports which were) substandard – containing information which was unclear, of uncertain origin, potentially biased or implausible – and those became foundational sources for ICA judgments that Putin preferred Trump over Clinton.

One scant, unclear, and unverifiable fragment of a sentence from one of the substandard reports constitutes the only classified information cited to suggest the Putin “aspired” to help Trump win.” Putin’s principle motivations… were to… weaken what the Russians considered to be an inevitable Clinton presidency. Putin held back leaking some compromising material for post-election use against the expected Clinton administration.

The ICA (“Assessing Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent US Elections”) ignored or selectively quoted reliable intelligence reports that challenged – or in some cases undermined – judgments that Putin sought to elect Trump.

The DCIA (Director of the CIA) picked five CIA analysts to write the ICA and rushed its production two weeks before President-Elect Trump was sworn-in. Hurried coordination and limited access to the draft reduced opportunities for the IC to discover misquoting of sources and other tradecraft errors. The drafters of the ICA did not accurately cite the most critical context statements.

The reports were published after the election on DCIA orders, despite veteran CIA officer judgments that they contained substandard information which was unclear, of uncertain origin, potentially biased, implausible, or in the words of senior operations officers, “odd.”

CIA officers also said that DCIA personally directed that two of the most important reports not be formally disseminated when he first learned of them, ostensibly because they were too sensitive to create printed copies. We were unable to obtain a convincing explanation, however, for why DCIA did this, since the CIA has a special reporting channel… whereby sensitive reports are restricted.

DCIA ordered the publication of a second substandard report, from an unknown subsource… to allege that Putin favored Trump. This information was both unverified and implausible and, like the unclear fragment, CIA professionals originally declined to publish it when it was first collected. It was only published on DCIA’s orders, after the election… to source the first bullet of evidence for the judgment that Putin “developed a clear preference” for candidate Trump.

There is much more in this report – including things like the State Department offering money to US religious organizations if they would support Hillary – and so you really should read it yourself.

Now, as to a cover-up: It’s important to understand that this has already been covered up. The report we’re talking about here was written five years ago, then delivered to the House Intelligence Committee, consisting of twenty-plus members, roughly half Democrats and half Republicans. For five years this group of elected representatives had this report and revealed nothing. A significant number of operators at CIA and other intel groups likewise knew of this and said nothing. Furthermore, the Special Prosecutor who previously examined this, John Durham, almost certainly saw these documents and likewise did nothing.

So, the cover-up has been running for a long time already. All of this is why it’s so crucial that Ms. Gabbard released actual evidence, not just talk about evidence. Official Washington has given us nothing, despite this being a type of coup. And it’s hard to characterize it any other way, once we consider that Mr. Trump was twice impeached, prosecuted endlessly, had his home invaded and more, largely based upon lies which were fabricated by the US intelligence apparatus, as ordered by Mr. Obama.

This is huge. If fact it may be so huge that most Americans will look for one excuse after another to close their eyes and stop their ears. And so we must spread this evidence as widely and repeatedly as possible."



This is treason... you do remember the traditional penalty 
for treason, don't you? A short drop and a very sudden stop...
Make it so.

Bill Bonner, "Bombastic Bullying Brutes"

The remains of the Roman Forum
"Bombastic Bullying Brutes"
By Bill Bonner

‘We are born into this time and must bravely follow
 the path to the destined end. There is no other way.’
- Oswald Spengler

Poitou, France - "As recently as 1999, the US had a budget surplus...debt of only $5.6 trillion...and stocks worth more (in gold and dollar terms) than ever in history. The US was still widely admired. Its federal debt was bought as a monetary reserve all over the world. It wasn’t at war and wasn’t sponsoring major wars or paying for mass murders overseas. It encouraged free trade and, generally, favored the rule of law. That was probably the apogee for the US...and for Western Civilization. It has been downhill ever since. At least, that’s how it looks to us.

This is not an original point of view. Oswald Spengler foresaw the peak of Western Civilization coming around the year 2000. And even Donald Trump noticed the decline and pledged to turn it around. And now that we are a quarter of a century into the down cycle, the real questions for us remain the same: how far down will it go...and how will it get there.

Spengler guessed that the top for Western Civilization would be followed by a difficult period of ‘Caesarism’ (which we’ve described as ‘Big Man Government’). Spengler saw Benito Mussolini as an early example of the post-democratic leader. “Democracy is beautiful in theory,” said Mussolini. “In practice it is a fallacy. You in America will see that some day.” Spengler died in 1936; he never met Donald Trump.

Yesterday, we looked at the way tariffs figure in the big scheme of things. In short, they seem to confirm the ‘declining empire hypothesis.’ Restrictions on trade slow an economy down and make people poorer. But they also nudge it away from civilization itself. Whether trade is a cause or an effect, we don’t know. But the two seem to go together. And restrictions on trade tend to move a society backwards - making it poorer...but also, like North Korea, less free and less civilized.

Restraining trade seems to be a part of the new world order. The first pitch of the Trump team was that other countries were ‘ripping us off’ (presumably with high tariffs compared to our lower ones). As a matter of fairness, as well as encouraging domestic production, tariffs would be made ‘reciprocal.’ But reciprocity fell by the wayside and the the negotiated deals are leading to higher tariffs, not lower ones. Even countries with which the US has a trade surplus - the UK and Brazil, for example - now face higher US tariffs.

Who pays? The Washington Post: "Tariffs hit U.S. companies hard, but businesses absorb them for now. The Trump administration’s tariffs are hitting companies that do business in the United States. But prices haven’t reflected them yet in many cases. In earnings reports, multiple companies on Monday and Tuesday blamed tariffs for hurting their bottom lines, including automakers General Motors and Stellantis. Companies will soon raise prices to protect their margins. Then, consumers will pay."

Meanwhile, the US president continues to threaten even higher tariffs. The Hill: "President Trump recently announced his intent to impose a 200 percent tariff on pharmaceuticals to lure drug manufacturing back to the U.S. This action, if implemented, will come at great cost to millions of Americans already struggling to cover their medical bills and force them deeper into health care debt."

What to make of it? What we make of it is that tariffs have become just another sleazy way to raise taxes and give the Big Man more power. They take us further into the political world…of bullying, bombast and brute force arms."

Adventures With Danno, "Unbelievable Prices at Kroger"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 7/24/25
"Unbelievable Prices at Kroger"
Comments here:

Wednesday, July 23, 2025

"My Family Is Leaving California For Idaho, Housing Crisis Deepens"

Jeremiah Babe, 7/23/25
"My Family Is Leaving California For Idaho,
 Housing Crisis Deepens"
Comments here:

Greg Hunter, "Prepare for Global War – Steve Quayle"

"Prepare for Global War – Steve Quayle"
by Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com

"Renowned radio host, filmmaker, book author and archeological dig expert Steve Quayle says his sources are confirming exactly what Martin Armstrong is saying about the coming war with Russia that will, no doubt, go nuclear. Quayle says the US does not have any advantage over Russia in hypersonic missiles, subs or in the air. In short, Russia can see our B2 stealth bomber and everything else stealth. Yet, the US seems to be bumbling towards war with a superior adversary. Quayle explains, “Russia has warned over and over again that there is nothing the West has that can counter their hypersonic missiles. The American defense posture is this: It is simply going to be kiloton tactical nuclear weapons, and there is going to be no intercontinental ballistic missiles. That’s wrong, and that’s a lie. I believe the President is being lied to by the military industrial complex, and I do not believe Trump understands high technology.

This is not a put down, it is an awareness. The Russians could not have been more clear, and they have basically said we have all this advanced technology. Here’s a piece of information I just got, all of the Russian submarines are out to sea. The Russian subs are out to sea, and it appears the United States defense posture is out to lunch. The United States cannot sustain intercontinental ballistic missiles with 25-ton warheads. When this starts, Russia will hit all of the biggest bases. The United States is already defeated because they have not provided the civilian population with a viable civil defense.”

Quayle also points out the terrible money problems Europe and the US have. Quayle says, “In about 10 days, $7 trillion in US debt comes due. Again, $7 trillion. That’s seven thousand billion, and the United States cannot cover $7 trillion. People who are the debt holders don’t want any more T-bills or notes. They don’t want paper. Look, we don’t have the money. The US is not on a wartime economy. We do not have the industrial base or the raw material base.”

Quayle goes on to warn, “There is not time to dilly dally. Forget about being a spectator. First thing you should do is get out of online banking. There is no security, and the cyber hackers and attackers have access. Take your dominion over you own finances, and get canned food. Get rice. Now, in Japan, they like rice too, and they are rioting over the rice prices. Rice price not so nice. Take control of your funds. Those of you who have profits in Bitcoin or crypto currencies, take at least half of it and convert it to gold. There are no claims against gold you hold in your hand.”

Quayle also points out, “We are seeing on Earth the stress of nations, and we are seeing earthquakes in diverse places. That’s Jesus speaking in Matthew 24.” Add dozens of volcanos popping off all over the world, and you can see why Steve Quayle says, “Get ready, and get right with Christ Jesus.” There is more in the 64-minute interview.

Join Greg Hunter on Rumble as he goes one-on-one with Steve Quayle,
warning you to prepare for global war. 

Musical Interlude: Peder B. Helland, "High Above: "Beautiful Relaxing Music for Stress Relief"

Full screen recommended.
"High Above:
"Beautiful Relaxing Music for Stress Relief -
Relax, Sleep, Meditate, Study"
Beautiful relaxing music for stress relief, composed by Peder B. Helland. This track is called "High Above" and can be used to relax, sleep, meditate, study, work, do yoga, read and more.

"A Look to the Heavens"

"These cosmic clouds have blossomed 1,300 light-years away, in the fertile starfields of the constellation Cepheus. Called the Iris Nebula, NGC 7023 is not the only nebula to evoke the imagery of flowers. Still, this deep telescopic image shows off the Iris Nebula's range of colors and symmetries, embedded in surrounding fields of interstellar dust. 
Within the Iris itself, dusty nebular material surrounds a hot, young star. The dominant color of the brighter reflection nebula is blue, characteristic of dust grains reflecting starlight. Central filaments of the reflection nebula glow with a faint reddish photoluminesence as some dust grains effectively convert the star's invisible ultraviolet radiation to visible red light. Infrared observations indicate that this nebula contains complex carbon molecules known as PAHs. The dusty blue petals of the Iris Nebula span about six light-years."