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Monday, August 18, 2025

“Life Lessons From a Psychiatrist Who’s Been Listening to People’s Problems For Decades”

“Life Lessons From a Psychiatrist Who’s Been
Listening to People’s Problems For Decades”
by Thomas Oppong

“How you approach life says a lot about who you are. As I get deeper into my late 30s I have learned to focus more on experiences that bring meaning and fulfilment to my life. I try to consistently pursue life goals that will make me and my closest relations happy; a trait that many individuals search for their entire lives. Nothing gives a person inner wholeness and peace like a distinct understanding of where they are going, how they can get there, and a sense of control over their actions.

Seneca once said, “Most powerful is he who has himself in his own power.” “No people can be truly happy if they do not feel that they are choosing the course of their own life,” states the World Happiness Report 2012. The report also found that having this freedom of choice is one of the six factors that explain why some people are happier than others.

In his best-selling first book, “Too Soon Old, Too Late Smart: Thirty True Things You Need to Know Now”, Dr Gordon Livingston, a psychiatrist who’s been listening to people’s problems for decades, revealed thirty bedrock truths about life, and how best to live it. In his capacity as a psychiatrist, Dr Livingston listened to people talk about their lives and the many ways people induced unhappiness on themselves. In his book, he brings his insight and wisdom to the subjects of happiness, fear and courage.

“Life’s two most important questions are “Why?” and “Why not?” The trick is knowing which one to ask.” Acquiring some understanding of why we do things is often a prerequisite to change. This is especially true when talking about repetitive patterns of behavior that do not serve us well. This is what Socrates meant when he said, “The unexamined life is not worth living.” That more of us do not take his advice is testimony to the hard work and potential embarrassment that self-examination implies.”

Most people operate on autopilot, doing the same things today that didn’t work yesterday. They rarely stop to measure the impact of their actions on themselves and others, and how those actions affect their total well-being. They are caught in a cycle. And once you get caught in the loop, it can be difficult to break free and do something meaningful. Past behavior is the most reliable predictor of future behavior.

If your daily actions and choices are making you unhappy, make a deliberate choice to change direction. No matter how bleak or desperate a situation may appear to look, you always have a choice. “People often come to me asking for medication. They are tired of their sad mood, fatigue, and loss of interest in things that previously gave them pleasure. ”…“Their days are routine: unsatisfying jobs, few friends, lots of boredom. They feel cut off from the pleasures enjoyed by others.

Here is what I tell them: The good news is that we have effective treatments for the symptoms of depression; the bad news is that medication will not make you happy. Happiness is not simply the absence of despair. It is an affirmative state in which our lives have both meaning and pleasure.” “In general we get, not what we deserve, but what we expect,” he says.

Most people know what is good for them, they know what will make them feel better. They don’t avoid meaningful life habits because of ignorance of their value, but because they are no longer “motivated” to do them, Dr Livingston found. They are waiting until they feel better. Frequently, it’s a long wait, he says. Life is too short to wait for a great day to invest in better life experiences.

Most unhappiness is self-induced, Dr Livingston found. “The three components of happiness are something to do, someone to love, and something to look forward to. Think about it. If we have useful work, sustaining relationships, and the promise of pleasure, it is hard to be unhappy. I use the term “work” to encompass any activity, paid or unpaid, that gives us a feeling of personal significance. If we have a compelling avocation that lends meaning to our lives, that is our work, ” says Dr Livingston.

Many experiences in life that bring happiness are in your control. The more choices you are able to exercise, and control, the happier you are likely to be. “Happiness is an inside job. Don’t assign anyone else that much power over your life,” says Mandy Hale. Many people wait for something to happen or someone to help them live their best lives. They expect others to make them happy. They think they have lost the ability to improve their lives.

The thing that characterizes those who struggle emotionally is that they have lost, or believe they have lost, their ability to choose those behaviors that will make them happy, says Dr Livingston. You are responsible for your own life experiences, whether you are seeking a meaningful life or a happy life. If you expect others to make you happy, you will always be disappointed.

You can consistently choose actions that could become everyday habits. It takes time, but it’s an investment that will be worth your while. “Virtually all the happiness-producing processes in our lives take time, usually a long time: Learning new things, changing old behaviors, building new relationships, raising children. This is why patience and determination are among life’s primary virtues,”

Most people are stuck in life because of fear. Fear of everything outside their safe zones. Your mind has a way of rising to the occasion. Challenge it, and it will reward you. Your determination to overcome fear and discouragement constitutes the only effective antidote to that feeling on unhappiness you don’t want. Dr Livingston explains. “The most secure prisons are those we construct for ourselves. I frequently ask people who are risk-averse, “What is the biggest chance you have ever taken?” People begin to realize what “safe” lives they have chosen to lead.”

“Everything we are afraid to try, all our unfulfilled dreams, constitute a limitation on what we are and could become. Usually it is fear and its close cousin, anxiety, that keep us from doing those things that would make us happy. So much of our lives consists of broken promises to ourselves. The things we long to do — educate ourselves, become successful in our work, fall in love — are goals shared by all. Nor are the means to achieve these things obscure. And yet we often do not do what is necessary to become the people we want to be.”

As you increasingly install experiences of acceptance, gratitude, accomplishment, and feeling that there’s a fullness in your life rather than an emptiness or a scarcity, you will be able to deal with the issues of life better.

Closing thoughts: Dr Livingston’s words feel true and profound. The real secret to a happy life is selective attention, he says. If you choose to focus your awareness and energy on things and people that bring you pleasure and satisfaction, you have a very good chance of being happy in a world full of unhappiness, uncertainty, and fear."

"Are You Drowning Too? Vegetables Are Up 38.9%, Coffee is Up 25%, And Electricity Prices Are Rising Twice As Fast As Inflation"

"Are You Drowning Too? Vegetables Are Up 38.9%, Coffee is Up 25%,
 And Electricity Prices Are Rising Twice As Fast As Inflation"
by Michael Snyder

"Do you feel knots in your stomach due to financial stress? If so, you certainly have lots of company. All of a sudden, everyone is talking about the cost of living and prices are rising by double-digit percentages all around us. There are so many people out there right now that feel like they are “drowning” because no matter how hard they try there simply isn’t enough money for everything. Unfortunately, we are being warned to brace ourselves for even more inflation in the months ahead.

When I heard that the cost of vegetables in the United States had gone up by 40 percent in one month, I thought that there was no way that it could be true. So I looked it up, and I discovered that the cost of vegetables in the United States didn’t go up by 40 percent in one month. The real figure was 38.9 percent…"A 38.9% increase in prices for fresh and dry vegetables from June to July was the major driver of a higher index for “final demand goods” (things that are done and ready to be sold to a consumer, as opposed to things that go into a later production process)."

That is nuts! How can the cost of vegetables go up by 38.9 percent in a single month? Apparently this was the largest spike that we have ever witnessed in a summer month “in figures that go back to 1947”…"Per Bureau of Labor Statistics data, it’s also the largest monthly increase ever recorded in a summer month (June-August), in figures that go back to 1947."

The other day, I wrote about how beef has become so expensive that it is now considered to be a “luxury”. Well, now vegetables are a “luxury” too. And let’s not forget coffee. The price of coffee went up by 25 percent in just three months, and that was before coffee exports from Brazil were hit with a 50 percent tariff…"Coffee prices were already up before a 50 percent tariff on Brazil, the top coffee importer to the U.S., went into effect last week. Coffee prices sharply rose 25 percent over the past three months, according to inflation data released Tuesday. Reuters reported Tuesday that Brazilian coffee exports have started seeing postponements to their U.S. shipments. About two-thirds of all U.S. adults drink coffee." This is one of the most basic things that Americans buy. But now a lot of people are either going to have to cut back or stop drinking it entirely because it has become so ridiculously expensive.

Air conditioning is rapidly becoming a “luxury” as well. Electricity prices have been rising twice as fast as the overall rate of inflation, and some seniors must now choose between paying the electricity bill and paying for medication…"Across the country, electricity prices have jumped more than twice as fast as the overall cost of living in the last year. That’s especially painful during the dog days of summer, when air conditioners are working overtime. In Pembroke Pines, Fla., Al Salvi’s power bill can reach $500 a month.

“There’s a lot of seniors down here that are living check to check. They can barely afford prescriptions such as myself,” says Salvi, who’s 63 and uses a wheelchair. “Now we got to decide whether we’re going to pay the electric bill or are we going to buy medication. And it’s not fair to us. You’re squeezing us between a rock and a hard place.”

As our leaders were borrowing trillions upon trillions of dollars that we did not have, I warned that this was going to cause rampant inflation, but a lot of people out there didn’t want to listen. And as the Federal Reserve was pumping trillions upon trillions of dollars that they created out of thin air into the financial system, I warned that this was going to cause rampant inflation, but a lot of people out there didn’t want to listen. At first it seemed like our leaders were totally getting away with it. But now look at what has happened.

There are countless videos on TikTok right now of people breaking down emotionally over the rising cost of living. In one video, a woman that feels like she is “drowning” explains that no matter how hard she works “she can’t afford to live anymore”…"The video made by “diannaallen5” for TikTok was shared on X by @WallStreetApes to their 1 million X followers, writing, “Americans are breaking down, a grown woman crying because she can’t afford to live anymore.”

The woman in the video, who said she is from Illinois, was distraught and in tears as she spoke, saying that “gas prices and the electric bills and the prices of food is just so overwhelming.” “I’m wondering if anybody else is feeling like they’re drowning and they can’t get out,” she said. “I work overtime, and I cannot get above water. I mean, I literally have no gas for next week.” “I’m just wondering if anybody else feels like they’re drowning,” she said is despair."

Can you identify with her? I think that a lot of us can. At this stage, 83 percent of all Americans are experiencing “stressflation”…"A LifeStance Health survey released today reveals “stressflation” is affecting most Americans, with 83% reporting financial stress driven by inflation, mass layoffs, the rising cost of living and recession fears. Millennials and Gen Z report the most significant mental health impacts.

The number of respondents who have been deterred from seeking mental health care due to financial constraints remains consistently high (60%), increasing two percentage points from 2024. Those experiencing high financial stress levels are more than twice as likely to forgo mental health treatment due to cost, highlighting a mental health gap where financial strain exacerbates mental health challenges while limiting access to care."

We should have seen this coming way in advance, because we were specifically warned that this was coming. And if we stay on the same road that we have been traveling, conditions will get a whole lot worse. A lot of people out there don’t seem to understand that consequences do not always show up immediately. What we are experiencing now is the result of decades of bad decisions. It took time for the consequences of those bad decisions to materialize, but now they have officially started to arrive."
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Deputy Wendell: "It's a mess, ain't it Sheriff?"
Sheriff Ed Tom Bell: "Well, if it ain't, it'll do till the mess gets here."
- "No Country For Old Men"

Oh, the mess is here alright...and you ain't seen nothin' yet...
Brace for impact...

"Just Look At Us..."

"Just look at us. Everything is backwards; everything is upside down. Doctors destroy health, lawyers destroy justice, universities destroy knowledge, governments destroy freedom, the major media destroy information and religions destroy spirituality" 
- Michael Ellner

John Wilder, "The A.I. Bubble: Two Outcomes"

"The A.I. Bubble: Two Outcomes"
by John Wilder

"I remember the dotcom bubble. Back in the late ’90s, everyone was throwing cash at anything with a “.com” slapped on it. Anything. Take Pets.com™, which had the idea that they could take orders for dog food online and that would lead to them being worth a trillion dollars. Instead? They spent $11.8 million on ads which resulted in $619,000 of total sales. But wait, there’s more! Their business strategy was to sell their products at 30% of what they paid for them! Genius! I suppose they thought they could make it up on volume?

That’s just one example, and there are thousands of companies that burned through money like cocaine-addled chipmunks going through nuts. Billions of dollars vanished, but hey, at least we got Jeff Bezos managed to get a slightly used wife out of it. Fast-forward to 2025, and we just may be in Dotcom 2.0: the AI edition. This time, it’s not websites filled with dancing hamsters. Nope. Data centers are sprouting like marijuana in a Colorado hippie’s backyard. Chipsets are piling up like Indians in Canada. The spending is insane on this bubble, and if history’s any guide, the pop could echo for decades.

The source of this frothy mess? Massive investments in AI infrastructure. In the first half of 2025 alone, spending on AI data centers and related gear added more to U.S. GDP growth than all consumer spending combined. This is about $75 billion from AI infra versus $69 billion from folks buying lattes and lawnmowers.

That’s right: Big Tech’s server farms are propping up the economy more than shopping. Companies like Microsoft®, Google®, and Meta® are pouring trillions into building these behemoths, buying up NVIDIA® chips like they’re the last Twinkies® in a zombie apocalypse. It’s not just servers; it’s cooling systems, fiber optics, and enough wiring for George Bailey to finally lasso the Moon.

Why? Because AI needs compute power like a teenager needs a cell phone: continually and without gratitude. So, how long can this bender go on before someone yells “last call”? Analysts are projecting explosive growth through 2030 but they also told people that Pets.com® made sense. Bubbles don’t burst on schedule, they pop when reality bites. McKinsey estimates we’ll need $6.7 trillion worldwide by 2030 just to keep up with compute demands from the various AI products, while the global AI data center market is forecasted to balloon from $236 billion in 2025 to $933 billion by 2030, growing at a scorching 31.6% yearly.

Where will the power come from? 10 gigawatts of new data center capacity will break ground this year alone, with construction at record levels and power transmission delays stretching to four years in some spots. Let’s extrapolate this: If spending keeps doubling every couple of years, as it has since ChatGPT lit the fuse, we’re looking at a timeline where the frenzy peaks around 2028-2030. By then, data centers could consume as much electricity as Gavin Newsom’s blow dryer, and the supply chain for chips and rare earth metals starts buckling.

Analysts predict data center power demand surging, but what if AI hits diminishing returns? We’ve seen it before: the dotcom buildout assumed infinite internet growth, but when the stunning genius of selling products for 70% less than you bought them for didn’t pay off, the house of cards folded. Rapidly.

If AI doesn’t deliver massive productivity gains or the company can’t figure out how to make it up on volume, investors pull the plug. My guess? This bubble could inflate for another 3-5 years, then deflates when ROI reports come in looking like a kid’s lemonade stand profits for some companies.

It’s not just the data centers themselves; the ripple effects are creating mini-bubbles in related bits of the economy. AI’s thirst for electric power is turning it into the new oil. The International Energy Agency projects global data center electricity demand more than doubling by 2030 to 945 terawatt-hours, enough to power Australia several times over if they ever figure out electricity.

This means billions funneled into new power plants, grid upgrades, just to keep the lights on in these silicon sweatshops. Utilities are scrambling: nuclear restarts, solar fields the size of small states, and even deals with fusion startups that sound more sci-fi than spreadsheet. This is trillions spent on infrastructure, from transmission lines to cooling systems that guzzle water like a camel in the Sahara. If the bubble bursts, we’re left with ghost grids and stranded assets, much like the fiber optic cables buried post-dotcom that still haunt telecom balance sheets.

What happens if AI reaches its mature end-state? We’re talking Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) where machines that can do any intellectual task a human can, not to mention Artificial Superintelligence (ASI), where they outthink us like we’re Mexican mall lawyers trying to fix a copier. Some whisper we might already be there, with models like Grok™ or whatever OpenAI®’s cooking up blurring the lines. But assuming we hit it soon, the economy does a backflip. In the AGI/ASI world, productivity explodes: AI handles everything from coding to curing cancer, slashing costs and boosting output. But jobs? Poof.

Economists at AEI outline scenarios where AGI displaces masses of workers: truck drivers, lawyers, artists. Optimists say it will augment humanity, creating new gigs in “AI wrangling” or whatever. The dark side for this case: inequality skyrockets. A few tech overlords own the AIs, reaping trillions, while the rest scramble for UBI scraps. Civilization-wise, it’s transformative: endless innovation, but if ASI “solves” economics without humans, we enter a post-scarcity utopia... or dystopia, where labor is worthless and purpose is a luxury.

If we’ve hit AGI/ASI now (debatable, but let’s play along), the bubble accelerates short-term as companies race to integrate, then crashes when overcapacity hits. Data centers become obsolete overnight if ASI optimizes compute down to a laptop. The fallout? Trillions in sunk costs, like building railroads right before cars took over.

If AI fails (and there is no sign of this) we end up in, at least, a dotcom-style recession. At least. If AI succeeds, in the best case we end up in a strange, post-scarcity world, but a world that hardly needs us. I guess we could make it up on volume?"

"How It Really Is"

 

Gregory Mannarino, ""The FED Becomes The System! "

Gregory Mannarino, PM 8/18/25
"The FED Becomes The System! 
They Just Took It Completely Over; Real Estate Is Collapsing"
Comments here:
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"Total Real Estate Collapse"
by Gregory Mannarino

"MarketWatch: Home builders boost sales incentives to 5-year high as they struggle to sell newly built homes. Two-thirds of builders are offering sales incentives to lure home buyers. Builders’ sentiment in the market fell in August from the month before. Sentiment was glum as builders face weak demand as well as challenges associated with developing land and building homes. The National Association of Home Builders’ monthly confidence index fell in August to 32.

According to Their Data… which means the reality is much worse, two-thirds of builders are offering rate buy-downs, upgrades, and discounts. Incentives at this level = demand has collapsed! Builder Sentiment at 32! 32 32 32 32 32 32 32 32… yes, 32! The The National Association of Home Builders index is on a scale where 50 = neutral… 50 IS NEUTRAL! So at 32, builders are basically screaming “We’re in a MAJOR contraction, and we have a serious problem.”

Moreover, the fact the index fell again in August, shows things aren’t just bad, they’re worsening. Sound familiar? What this all means. Housing = the real economy’s mirror. When housing stumbles, the entire debt-based system shakes. This is not just seasonal weakness, it’s structural.

Key Point: Weak housing = weak consumer. Weak consumer = weak economy. Now expect that policy-making puppets well lean even harder, and scream louder, for rate cuts and weaker-dollar policy. Expect extreme debt expansion on a galactic scale to try and reinflate demand… but all that does is weaken the system further."

Adventures With Danno, "The Largest Flea Market In The Midwest!"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, AM 8/18/25
"The Largest Flea Market In The Midwest!"
Comments here:
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Full screen recommended.
Travelling With Russell, 8/18/25
"I Went To Russia's First Ramen Cafe (In A Supermarket)"
"What is it like to have lunch in a Russian Supermarket? Join me as I visit Russia's first ramen cafe, located inside a typical supermarket in Moscow, Russia. What items are on the menu, and how does the food taste?"
Comments here:

Jeremiah Babe, "People Living In Their Mom's Basement Will Never Get Ahead"

Full screen recommended.
Jeremiah Babe, 8/18/25
"People Living In Their Mom's 
Basement Will Never Get Ahead"
Comments here:

Dan, I Allegedly, "The Biggest Economic Cover Up in History - The Big Lie!"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, AM 8/18/25
"The Biggest Economic Cover Up in History - 
The Big Lie!"
"Are we being lied to about the job market? In today’s video, I’m breaking down why the official unemployment numbers just don’t add up and what this means for everyday people struggling to find work. The job market is tougher than ever, with overqualified individuals forced to take lower-paying jobs just to make ends meet. Inflation is soaring, and industries like manufacturing and biotech are feeling the squeeze - costs are rising, and opportunities are shrinking. Is this the economy we were promised?"
Comments here:

Bill Bonner, "Make the Foreigners Pay"

"Make the Foreigners Pay"
by Bill Bonner

Poitou, France - "The weekend news was dominated by the pow-wow held by Trump and Putin in Alaska. It was important because it was an opportunity for Putin to explain the Russian position which may help bring the war to a close. But from a financial perspective, the important news happened earlier last week...a real WTF moment. We laughed earlier this year when Trump created a ‘Sovereign Wealth Fund.’ What would he fund it with, we wondered? The US has $37 trillion in debt. Where’s the wealth?

Mr. Trump has repeatedly said that he would ‘make the foreigners pay.’ The Mexicans were supposed to pay for ‘the wall,’ for example. Then, nations with trade surpluses were supposed to pay tariffs which would ‘pay off the national debt.’ 
That was never going to happen. Because it’s not the exporter (the foreigners) who pay tariffs; it’s the importer...who then passes along the cost to either his shareholders or his customers. The tariffs were, in effect, a national sales tax.

But then, last week, it suddenly looked like there might actually be a method to the madness, making it madder than ever. On Tuesday, Secretary of the Treasury, Scott Bessent, laid it out to Larry Kudlow... a plan to ‘make the foreigners pay.’ ‘We have these agreements in place where the Japanese, the Koreans, and to some extent the Europeans, will invest in companies and industries as we direct them, largely at the president’s discretion. The way to think about it is that these huge [trade] surpluses, accumulated offshore… let’s say Japan, where we’re going to have $550 billion…and they will be reinvesting that back into the US economy, and we will be able to direct them.’ A White House ‘fact sheet’ further clarified that the US would take 90% of the gains from these investments.

Whew! So bold. Such audacity. Foreigners will own more and more of US critical assets. But we’ll get the lion’s share of the profits. It is like Japan’s ‘Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere’ in which China and Southeast Asia were invited to join Japan’s economic scheme - or else. The ‘else’ in Japan’s case, in the 1930s, was that Japan would invade and take whatever resources it wanted anyway. In today’s case, Japan and other US trading partners face high tariffs that could cripple their economies.

It is the importers who pay. But the more they pay, the harder it is for the exporter to sell. Trade slows. Both countries are harmed. But the US, with the world’s biggest single consumer market, figures that the foreigners can’t afford to say ‘no.’ The Business Standard adds detail: "US President Donald Trump’s trade policy has tied the financing of new American factories to the easing of some tariffs for foreign allies, a strategy that could channel more than $10 trillion into US manufacturing and critical industries...The targeted sectors include semiconductors, magnets, pharmaceuticals, steel, cars, and defense technology."

Let’s see… We buy a toilet plunger from Costco. A South Korean company makes a profit of five cents. It deposits the money and gets local currency in exchange. The pennies end up in the central bank. And now, presumably for the privilege of offering us the best plunger at the best price, the South Korean government is going to ‘invest’ the five cents in the US.

Up until now, it has generally chosen to use the five cents to buy US treasury bonds as a ‘reserve asset.’ Thanks to inflation, the fall of the dollar, and the sell-off in Treasuries, foreigners have lost about 20% of their money on US bonds since 2020. But now, they will use their surpluses to buy other US assets, guided by the Big Man himself, who will somehow know where the capital will do the most good. And then, in the unlikely event that these politically-driven investments actually bear fruit - the US government will get 90% of it. A 90% tax on the foreigners’ profits? Agreements in place? Probably not.

Another doomed experiment! With the tariffs, the Trump team is retesting the notion that central planning can do a better job of making trade decisions than individual buyers and sellers with skin in the game. Now, the Trump crowd will discourage foreigners from having anything to do with us...while testing the concept of a central industrial policy. POTUS will make capital allocation decisions, not private investors.

Let 1,000 AMTRAK’s bloom! Will the money go to Nvidia? Maybe Palantir...directed thither by the wizards on the Trump Team, who perhaps appreciate the campaign contributions? More data centers? More AI research? More chips...more drugs? The Mag 7 alone are worth $14 trillion. If there were a promising investment in these ‘critical’ industries, it wouldn’t need the feds to push capital its way. And if they were not good investments, what possible public utility is served by sending them more money?"

Jim Kunstler, "An Offer He Can't Refuse"

"An Offer He Can't Refuse"
by Jim Kunstler

“This is not our war. The US is not in a war. 
Ukraine is in a war...”
- Sec’y of State Marco Rubio

"Volodymyr Zelenskyy is dropping in at the White House today so that Mr. Trump can read him the riot act. It’s that simple. Somewhere to or from Alaska, Mr. Trump concluded that a ceasefire would not work, for the excellent reason that seven previous ceasefires in Ukraine failed, and only reinforced distrust and disappointment between the warring parties. Instead, the goal is a peace settlement, an end to the war.

The USA and Russia cannot make peace in Ukraine because the war is between Ukraine and Russia. The USA can only mediate and propose terms. Ukraine needs help formulating terms that are not preposterous. Russia’s terms have been clear and precise for years, most particularly: no NATO for Ukraine. What part of that is hard to understand? The EU wants missile bases on Russia’s border. It wants to draw Ukraine into its sphere of influence. Ukraine has been in Russia’s sphere of influence since. . . forever.

The US helped start this conflict in 2014, when Mr. Obama was in charge. It was always a cynical operation, in concert with the cynics of the EU. To put it as plainly as possible, Mr. Trump has called it off, recognizing the foolish futility of the scheme. But the EU players persist maniacally, even though they don’t have the money or the armaments to keep it up, and are otherwise jointly committing slow suicide of their own societies.

Anyway, Ukraine is exhausted. Ukraine has lost. Sheer intransigence could keep it going a while longer, but then Russia will sweep west with more pointless bloodshed. The argument is over. Territorial realities must be faced. Agreements must be made.

For the moment, Mr. Zelenskyy is the one who must be brought to agreement. His position as leader of Ukraine is, shall we say, squishy. His term as elected president of Ukraine ended in May 2024, and he only continues to occupy his position under martial law, self-declared. The Russians recognize his leadership as a contingency, because there is nobody else just now. Mr. Trump will be discussing Mr. Zelenskyy’s fate with him today in the White House. (It’s a little like a scene from an Ingmar Bergman movie, don’t you agree?)

There are many ways for this to go. Mr. Z can simply refuse a peace settlement, politely or otherwise. (War continues for no good reason.) He made noises to that effect on Sunday. Or, he can pretend to go along and then flip to some opposite stance, as he has done before. Mr. Z remains an actor of the prima donna variety. He can pretend to parlay in Washington, and then direct his return flight to some country other than Ukraine and seek asylum there, leaving his position vacant and inviting chaos in Kiev. Or... he can just play it straight and face the territorial realities.

Namely, that 1) Russia occupies most of the eastern frontier provinces at issue and intends to keep them, since they are inhabited by speakers of Russian who, remember, Mr. Z outlawed some years ago, and who were subject to relentless artillery and missile attacks prior to February, 2022, which prompted Russia’s Special Military Operation... that 2) Crimea belongs to Russia... that 3) Ukraine will not join NATO... that 4) Ukraine will hold new elections ASAP... and that 5) Ukraine will substantially disarm. Surely, I left some lesser details out, but that’s most of the meat on the table.

Mr. Z is probably aware that he holds zip in the way of leverage. He is probably thinking (as is everyone else paying attention to this psychodrama) that he will be extremely lucky to stay alive in the aftermath of this fiasco, whatever shadowy corner of the world he might flee to, or how many billions of purloined US dollars he’s managed to stash in the usual places that permit cash-stashing. Staying in Ukraine must be out of the question, considering the damage he’s done to his own people, and the animus it has generated. Who knows, maybe Mr. Trump has reserved a nice little villa for Mr. Z in West Palm, where the president can keep tabs on him? He could learn golf and open a dinner theater.

Meanwhile, the three big bears of NATO stew in impotence and delusion. They are all short timers, by the way: Starmer, Macron, Merz. Their collective polling is sunk in the 25-percent range — and it is common knowledge that 25-percent of any population is abidingly retarded, unfit to comprehend anything. EU Commission Girl-boss Ursula von der Leyen will travel to Washington today with those very three bears in-tow to provide moral support for Mr. Z. (That is, to try to hector Donald Trump against facilitating any settlement of a war they would prefer to keep going for no earthly good reason.) Perhaps Mr. Trump will ask the Eurolanders to wait in the nearby Roosevelt Room while he confabs one-to-one with Mr. Z and makes various offers that Mr. Z can’t refuse. Then, they can all convene together in the Oval for coffee and donuts and review the results of that confab.

If ever a situation for the mass humiliation of European heads-of-state had been conceived previously, this will be the topper played out on CNN in real time. You have to wonder if any of them will survive another month in office after that psychological beat-down. And then let’s stand by to see whether Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s airplane flies back to Kiev or takes an unexpected detour to, say, Abu Dhabi."
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"Economic Market Snapshot 8/18/25"

"Economic Market Snapshot 8/18/25"
Down the rabbit hole of psychopathic greed and insanity...
Only the consequences are real - to you!
"It's a Big Club, and you ain't in it. 
You and I are not in the Big Club."
- George Carlin
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Market Data Center, Live Updates:
Financial Stress Index

"The OFR Financial Stress Index (OFR FSI) is a daily market-based snapshot of stress in global financial markets. It is constructed from 33 financial market variables, such as yield spreads, valuation measures, and interest rates. The OFR FSI is positive when stress levels are above average, and negative when stress levels are below average. The OFR FSI incorporates five categories of indicators: creditequity valuationfunding, safe assets and volatility. The FSI shows stress contributions by three regions: United Statesother advanced economies, and emerging markets."
Job cuts and much more.
Commentary, highly recommended:
"The more I see of the monied classes,
the better I understand the guillotine."
- George Bernard Shaw
Oh yeah... beyond words. Any I know anyway...
And now... The End Game...
o

Sunday, August 17, 2025

"The Philosopher and the Physicist"

"The Philosopher and the Physicist"
by Joel Bowman

“Everybody knows Wells’s Time Machine, which enabled its possessor to travel backwards or forwards in time, and see for himself what the past was like and what the future will be. But people do not always realize that a great deal of the advantages of Wells’s device can be secured by traveling about the world at the present day.”
~ From "Skeptical Essays", by Bertrand Russell (1928)

Buenos Aires, Argentina - "On a clear, winter afternoon, much like today’s, a voluntary exile opened a relic of the past (known to old timers as a “physical book”) at a quaint café in Buenos Aires and began to read. The well-thumbed collection, from which the above quote is borrowed, brims with a lifetime of zany insights from the eccentric British philosopher and polymath, Bertrand Russell. Meditating on Wells’s fictional machine and the words at hand, the reader began to wonder whether he was, relative to his fellow café-goers around the world and throughout history, occupying a seat in the past or a place in the future, and whether the present really existed at all. “Otro cortado, por favor,” he called for another coffee “cut” with milk and began scribbling the following notes...

Time and Space: What is this space in time (Buenos Aires, August 2025) to a Japanese geisha, pouring tea and dispensing wisdom in coquettish flourishes to Tokugawa shoguns, gathered around the hearth tatami? Or to the Golden Age of the grand Viennese cafés, Schwarzenberg, Parsifal, Rebhuhn and Central, in whose abiding embrace huddled rabbis and intellectuals, librettists and rakish raconteurs, conscientious objectors and those who conscripted Horace’s hoary ode, “dulce et decorum est pro patria mori”?

What say those who filled their cups from Nicolas’s copper samovar, poured China’s best from Queen Charlotte’s earthen Wedgwood, or sought longevity (āyus,) and knowledge (veda) from the clove-spiced chai, flowing in Indian abodes for five-thousand years and more?

Gazing around Café Tabac, a point in space at the intersection of Avenidas Libertador y Coronel Diaz, the reader absorbs the liminal afternoon light as it is refracted through floor to ceiling windows. An amorphous liquid, he knows the glass itself is moving through space and over time. And yet, even the sun’s incomparable heat energy, so diffused during the 8 and 1/3 minutes (approx.) it takes to reach earth through the cold indifference of space, is insufficient to excite the structure’s atoms such that their movement is visible to the human eye. Indeed, mathematical models, standing themselves outside the constraints of the physical world, have shown it would take longer than the universe (and by extension, time itself) has existed for medieval cathedral glass to melt at today’s tepid temperature.

Bound by reality (temporal, spatial) and his merely mammalian brain (biological), and having duly lost count of his cortados, the reader cannot comprehend what this means. Instead, he contemplates the receding afternoon, the daily bombardment of heat and light fading from the Coronel’s corner, his thoughts pouring back over the event horizon of consciousness itself.

The present is a moment that reaches back into the past, set in motion long before Nicolas thwarted Konstantin’s Decembrist Revolt... before General José de San Martín liberated the peoples of Argentina, Chile and Perú... before Britain’s longest serving queen consort bore King George his fifteen children... before even Horace mobilized the latin for Wilfred Owen’s epic poem, two millennia prior...

“Time and space are modes by which we think,” observed Albert Einstein, “and not conditions in which we live.” This from a man who knew a thing or two about time and space, relatively speaking of course. Light pouring through the slow melting glass, the reader’s trembling thumb turns another page in Russell’s century-old meditation...

“A European who goes to New York or Chicago sees the future, the future to which Europe is likely to come if it escapes economic disaster. On the other hand, when he goes to Asia he sees the past. In India, I am told, he can see the Middle Ages; in China he can see the eighteenth century.”
~ Bertrand Russell, "Skeptical Essays"

And if he ventured to South America, considered the world from upside down, what past, what present, what future would the man behold?  Were the British philosopher seated here, in Café Tabac, one-hundred years ago, smoking his pipe under the gilt mirror over by the door, he might have encountered Herr Einstein, who was then touring the Paris of the South (and staying at the Australian Embassy, a short carriage ride up Avenida Libertador). The reader pictured the scene…

“What then of Wells’s device?” said the philosopher to the physicist, a plume of purple smoke infusing the atmosphere with an hazy glow. “A human being is a part of the whole called by us ‘universe,’” replied the latter behind a wry and knowing smile, “a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts, and his feelings as something separate from the rest – a kind of optical delusion of consciousness.” Placing Russell’s essays on the table, the reader considers the two men as they pass him by, backlit against the fading afternoon light, time and space forgotten..."
o

"Americans Can’t Afford Living Paycheck To Paycheck As Prices Hit Astronomical Levels"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 8/17/25
"Americans Can’t Afford Living Paycheck To Paycheck
 As Prices Hit Astronomical Levels"
"40% of Americans working hourly jobs would consider it a WIN just to make it from paycheck to paycheck without going deeper into debt. Think about that - living paycheck to paycheck is now a luxury most Americans can't afford. While the government tells us inflation is "under control" at 2.8%, rising prices have destroyed household budgets. Your grocery bill has doubled, your rent went up $300, and your car insurance is through the roof. These rising prices are pushing millions of Americans over the edge financially.

Many Americans are facing a significant cost of living crunch, struggling to afford basics like rent and food. Even those with decent incomes are feeling the financial strain, leading to increased debt. This cost of living crisis is impacting people across the country, making budgeting and financial planning more critical than ever. Gen Z Americans are drowning in buy now, pay later debt just to afford basic necessities, and Americans are carrying $1.25 trillion in credit card balances at 24.5% interest rates. The Federal Reserve is trapped - lower rates mean rising prices explode even higher, higher rates mean mass unemployment. Either way, Americans lose. But here's what they don't want you to know: we've seen this exact pattern before in the 1970s, and the second wave of rising prices was worse than the first. The system is rigged against regular Americans, but there are still ways to protect yourself if you act now."
Comments here:

"A Comment"

A Comment: I'm quite aware this blog's content has progressively turned into a virtual chamber of horrors - the collapsing economy, loss of civil liberties, endless wars, poverty, homelessness, climate change, the horrifying consequences of the Covid bioweapon mass murder - one disaster or horror after another - everything's going to Hell in a hand-basket and it's clearly displayed here to the best of my ability. The world's a complex place, so some articles are lengthy of necessity. Not by choice - I'd much rather focus on other, better things, or be doing something else, but take a glance at the main-stream liars and propagandists, you won't see any of these things covered there, just more of the sensationalistic garbage and pure propaganda from all those cheaply bought low-life money whores. I've always believed you CAN handle the truth, given the chance to know it. Of course you can find truth, or the best version of it, elsewhere on many sites if you know where to look, and I hope you're doing that. I can only speak to what you'll find here. Please, don't come here expecting all sweetness and light, you'll be rudely disappointed. Anymore the blog news article selection is really a threat-analysis and prioritization process, in hopes of keeping you informed about what's really happening behind the smoke screens and lies, and alerting you to imminent crises. We've run out of time, hence the sense of urgency. These things are upon us, they're here now, and you have an absolute right to know and understand how and why it's all happening as it is. That knowing may help you prepare, help you deal more effectively with inevitable changes we can do nothing about. So, apologies for the sometimes grim article content, but that's real life, just how it really is, whether any of us like it or not. Stay informed, stay aware, and stay strong, always, and most of all thanks for stopping by! - CP

Musical Interlude: Enya, "A Day Without Rain"; "Angeles"

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

"A Look to the Heavens"

"These clouds of interstellar dust and gas have blossomed 1,300 light-years away in the fertile star fields of the constellation Cepheus. Sometimes called the Iris Nebula, NGC 7023 is not the only nebula in the sky to evoke the imagery of flowers, though. Still, this deep telescopic view shows off the Iris Nebula's range of colors and symmetries in impressive detail.
Within the Iris, 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 dusty clouds 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 may contain complex carbon molecules known as PAHs. The pretty blue petals of the Iris Nebula span about six light-years."

Paulo Coelho, "Heaven and Hell"

"Heaven and Hell"
by Paulo Coelho

"A man, his horse and his dog were traveling down a road. When they were passing by a gigantic tree, a bolt of lightning struck and they all fell dead on the spot. But the man did not realize that he had already left this world, so he went on walking with his two animals; sometimes the dead take time to understand their new condition…

The journey was very long, uphill, the sun was strong and they were covered in sweat and very thirsty. They were desperately in need of water. At a bend in the road they spotted a magnificent gateway, all in marble, which led to a square paved with blocks of gold and with a fountain in the center that spouted forth crystalline water. The traveler went up to the man guarding the gate.

“Good morning. What is this beautiful place?” “This is heaven.” “How good to have reached heaven, we’re ever so thirsty.” “You can come in and drink all you want.” “My horse and my dog are thirsty too.” “So sorry, but animals aren’t allowed in here.”

The man was very disappointed because his thirst was great, but he could not drink alone; he thanked the man and went on his way. After traveling a lot, they arrived exhausted at a farm whose entrance was marked with an old doorway that opened onto a tree-lined dirt road.

A man was lying down in the shadow of one of the trees, his head covered with a hat, perhaps asleep. “Good morning,” said the traveler. “We are very thirsty – me, my horse and my dog.” “There is a spring over in those stones,” said the man, pointing to the spot. “Drink as much as you like.” The man, the horse and the dog went to the spring and quenched their thirst. Then the traveler went back to thank the man.

“By the way, what’s this place called?” “Heaven.” “Heaven? But the guard at the marble gate back there said that was heaven!” “That’s not heaven, that’s hell.” The traveler was puzzled. “You’ve got to stop this! All this false information must cause enormous confusion!” The man smiled: “Not at all. As a matter of fact they do us a great favor. Because over there stay all those who are even capable of abandoning their best friends…”

"If You're Lonely..."

"If you're lonely when you're alone, you're in bad company."
- John Rivero