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Monday, October 20, 2025

"Economic Market Snapshot 10/20/25"

"Economic Market Snapshot 10/20/25"
o
A Horrifying must-view!
Full screen recommended.
Archival Capital, 10/20/25
"The 1929 Crash Is Back - History Is Repeating in 2025"
"The exact pattern that destroyed wealth in 1929 is repeating right 
now in 2025. This isn't a prediction - it's a warning backed by history."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Financial History Uncovered, 10/20/25
"The 1929 Crash Is Happening Again But Worse"
"The year is 2025 - and if you’re paying attention, history is repeating itself.
The same patterns that led to the 1929 stock market crash are flashing red again - debt, speculation, blind optimism, and government manipulation. Most people see rising stock prices and think prosperity. But behind the scenes, the system is shaking - and only a few can see it. This video uncovers the chilling similarities between 1929 and today’s economy, how the next collapse could unfold faster than ever, and what you can do before it’s too late."
Comments here:
o
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
o
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

Adventures With Danno, "Grocery Items at Meijer Everyone Should Be Buying Before Prices Go Up!"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 10/20/25
"Grocery Items at Meijer Everyone Should
 Be Buying Before Prices Go Up!"
Comments here:

Dan, I Allegedly, "Bank of America’s Dire Warning for 2025"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 10/20/25
"Bank of America’s Dire Warning for 2025"
"Bank of America just issued a dire warning for 2025, and it’s something none of us can afford to ignore. In this video, I dive into their latest findings, including concerning trends in hiring and unemployment, an overvalued stock market, and what the Fed’s next moves might mean for all of us. Is a recession looming? Are interest rates likely to drop? And why are businesses scaling back during the holiday season? I break it all down and share my thoughts on how to navigate these uncertain times. Let’s also talk about how these shifts are impacting everyday life, from fewer job postings to the struggles people face at restaurants and the economic pressures forcing fast-food chains to offer desperate discounts."
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Jim Kunstler, "Slouching Towards Peace"

"Slouching Towards Peace"
by Jim Kunstler

“Zelensky has been given a Russian ultimatum via Trump. 
Accept Russia terms or face total destruction.” 
- SiriusReport on “X”

"Well, “No Kings” came and went. Inflatable animal costumes did a brisk business for one week. The old Boomers got a social space to act out their nostalgic re-visit to the Age of Aquarius. They resisted... something. (Mainly authority of any kind, a retarded adolescent fantasy.) And now it’s back to Rachel Maddow for further instructions. The Republic slogs on, albeit with a shut-down government.

Did you forget about Ukraine? Yes, a war is still going on there and it’s a weeping lesion on Western Civ, possibly leading to fatal sepsis. US neocons set the stage in 2014 with the Maidan color revolution as a wedge to wreck and then loot Russia. Then, for eight years, Ukraine harassed the Donbas with US-supplied missiles and artillery. Russia had enough of that in 2022 and ventured in to stop it. For “Joe Biden,” the war was a nice smokescreen to cover his long-running grift operations in Ukraine. The Euro club stupidly came along for the ride.

It was all a tragic and feckless waste. Mr. Trump wants to stop it, but Western Civ as a whole is in such a state of florid strategic disorder that he’s had to pretend the US supports Ukraine. Mr. Zelensky could not possibly carry on this mischief without US weapons and loads of US taxpayer cash. Still, the Russians advance implacably on-the-ground. They are going to “win” this war eventually - meaning, the US and Europe will lose - and everybody knows it.

It would be nice if France, Germany, and the UK were still stable, thriving, rational nations, but they are not. They have entered an arc of collapse, largely due to their own stupendously bad choices, and their leadership is insane. Macron, Merz, Starmer... these are the Three Stooges of our time, and Europe’s collapse has degenerated to morbid, masochistic slapstick as their factories shutter and the Jihadis go about raping their wives and daughters. Do you think that’s not happening?

Mr. Trump surely realizes he has to cut the US loose from this evil clown-show. That they are our NATO allies complicates things, yet, really, the Euro gang is impotent and NATO has become an irrelevant anachronism. They have no effective military mojo. Their economies are imploding. They have surrendered their culture to a savage cult. Their populations are demoralized, emasculated, in thrall to the menopausal viragos in their councils and ministries. They know full-well that Ukraine lies in Russia’s sphere-of-influence - a centuries-long reality - and that it is none of their business. Yet, Macron, Merz, and Starmer keep pushing the fantasy that Russia seeks to invade them, and so they must strike at Russia before that happens... all pure delusion.

You can suppose that Mr. Putin wants a negotiated peace rather than continuing the long grind on-the-ground, with all its casualties and expenditures. Such a negotiated peace really amounts to the US ceasing to support Zelensky’s war effort. Of course, such is the insanity of US political life, that many in our government pretend that we have a stake in Ukraine, and must retain some control of it.

Mr. Trump must know this is insane and is against the interests of the USA. He knows that Ukraine is historically in Russia’s sphere of influence - as Venezuela is in ours - and that the best outcome of this mess would be for Ukraine to return to its prior status as a harmless frontier between Russia and western Europe - as it had been since 1945 - looking to its humble business of growing wheat for export. We do not need Ukraine to be anybody’s problem, despite the insane yearnings of the neocons, the weapons manufacturers, and the reckless globalists of the EU, to make it everyone’s problem.

Hence, Mr. Trump’s dilemma: how to dissociate from this losing proposition and come out looking like a winner, saving Europe from becoming a smoldering ashtray, stanching the flow of US taxpayers’ money and US-made weapons into this black hole, and forging friendly relations with a Russia that is decades beyond being our ideological enemy? America and Russia’s interests are geopolitically aligned, though no one in the arena is willing to admit it. Russia has much more to worry about with China right at Siberia’s doorstep than with the USA, just as the USA has much more to worry about with China as it weaponizes A-I, moves into outer space, and casts a covetous eye on the resources of the USA, Australia, Africa, and its next-door-neighbor, Russia.

These are the matters that Presidents Trump and Putin must be touching on in those long, two-and-a-half-hour phone confabs they hold. Meanwhile, Mr. Trump must put on a vaudeville show for his US adversaries about maybe giving tomahawk missiles to Ukraine... no, maybe not doing that... and the rest of the song and dance to make it appear that we are kinda-sorta still on Ukraine’s side when the truth is we are not so much at all.

And so, the two presidents head for Budapest where - if the intel spooks of Euroland don’t try to bump them off there - they might come to the necessary agreement that the war will end because the US no longer supports it, not even the pretense of supporting it. President Viktor Orban of Hungary, who Mr. Trump respects, will be on hand for moral support. Expect some tough-talking mummery from DJT, just to throw the MSNBC lunatics off-balance. Rogue idiots such as Senators Blumenthal and Schiff will fume that “Trump lost Ukraine,” but the 50-plus percent of Americans who are not-insane will understand what actually happened."

Bill Bonner, "Laying Down the Law"

"Laying Down the Law"
by Bill Bonner

"If you prick us, do we not bleed? if you tickle us, do we not laugh? if you poison
 us, do we not die? And if you wrong us, shall we not revenge?"  - Shylock
- William Shakespeare, "The Merchant of Venice"

Baltimore, Maryland - "Fox: "Farmageddon: Trump’s trade war and shutdown are crushing the heartland. Across the Midwest, combines sit idle and bins overflow with unsold grain. Corn prices are down nearly 50% since 2022. Soybeans have dropped 40%. Fertilizer and equipment costs are up double digits. And 8 in 10 farmers now say they believe the U.S. is on the brink of another farm crisis reminiscent of the 1980s. They’ve even given it a name: Farmageddon. This time, the crisis isn’t a result of macroeconomic conditions – it’s a direct result of decisions made by the White House. President Donald Trump’s reckless tariff war is crushing America’s farmers.

Today, we return to last week’s subject. Some public policies - wars of choice, trade wars, communism, debt, inflation, policy creep and paper money - are so obviously harmful,why do we have them? And what can we expect from them in the future?

G.K. Chesterton reminds us that things you don’t understand are usually there for a reason. Why do people go to war? Maybe they spur ‘development’ of new technologies. Maybe they are ways for people with bad ideas - world conquest! - to extinguish themselves. At least one historian, whose name we don’t recall, claims they are one of the few ways to ‘shake things up’…and dislodge a parasitic elite. Without war, elites use their control of government to get a larger and larger share of national output. The rich get richer, in other words, until something stops them.

But we leave that sort of speculation to others. Our guess is that wars are simply - like slavery - relics of an earlier age. Before the advent of civilized commerce - when you could produce more than you needed for your own consumption, and trade the surplus for others’ goods and services - war made sense. It was progress. You could kill or enslave competitors…and take their land, their women and children. Thus, would you get ‘ahead of the game.’

In modern times, you can’t do that. Today, wars of choice (those you don’t have to fight to protect yourself) are a ‘mistake.’ Because wealth comes from peaceful cooperation, not the use of force. Yes, today, you could still conquer territory. But territory does you no good. Russia has a vast territory while Monaco, Switzerland and Singapore are small. Which is richer? Which people live better? And imagine trying to run Nvidia or even Starbucks with slave labor!

Using force for anything but defense is a waste of money. It’s voluntary work, innovation, production and trade that make people better off. And with their wealth they are able to buy the latest military hardware to protect themselves.

The founders of the US government were well acquainted with the ‘mistakes’ made by Roman emperors. By coincidence, Gibbon’s great opus recounting them first appeared in 1776 - the year the US announced its independence. Adams, Jefferson, Madison, et. al. tried to prevent the nation from repeating those classic errors by laying down the law. America was meant to be a republic, not a democracy. And they put forth strict guidelines and limits on what its government could do.

Even a casual reading of the Constitution and the Amendments suggest that the feds today are way out of line. POTUS has no authority to unleash the dogs of war…to punish farmers…to kill people on his own say-so…to impose tariff taxes…to tell universities how they could conduct themselves…or to tell the states and cities how they should handle crime…and so forth. Even the use of paper money appears to be out-of-bounds.

Most remarkable, POTUS does these things with the support of Congress. Only one member consistently votes ‘no’ to this executive over-reach. The latest news on Rep. Tom Massie from The Hill: "Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) has made good on his promise to ensure President Trump’s threats to unseat him will “backfire” as his campaign fundraising numbers reach personal record heights. Massie has touted more than $2 million in cash on hand for his reelection bid after managing to pull in nearly $768,000 in contributions from July to September, according to filings with the Federal Election Commission. That three-month sum is reportedly a record for Massie’s political career."

Trump: “Thomas Massie, the worst Republican Congressman, and an almost guaranteed NO VOTE each and every time, is an Embarrassment to Kentucky,” Trump wrote in one post on Truth Social in July. “He’s lazy, slow moving, and totally disingenuous - A real loser!”

Fox continues: "Massie voted against the administration’s summer spending bill that wiped out Medicaid funds for states and has pushed for the Justice Department to release files tied to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein." Amid an uptick in politically motivated shootings, Massie urged Trump to cool down his rhetoric surrounding party divisions in the wake of the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Most recently, Massie voted no to the Republican-led stopgap measure to end the government shutdown.

Massie’s ‘no’ is a yes for the Constitution and limited government. But what we’re trying to figure out is why so many people give up on the principles of the Republic. War may be a special case; it may be in our DNA. But rent control? Debt? Inflation? Why are so many people so ready to rehearse the mistakes of the past?" Tune in tomorrow…
o
"O, pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth,
That I am meek and gentle with these butchers!
Thou art the ruins of the noblest man
That ever lived in the tide of times.
Woe to the hand that shed this costly blood!
Over thy wounds now do I prophesy,
Which, like dumb mouths, do ope their ruby lips,
To beg the voice and utterance of my tongue - 
A curse shall light upon the limbs of men;
Domestic fury and fierce civil strife
Shall cumber all the parts of Italy;
Blood and destruction shall be so in use
And dreadful objects so familiar
That mothers shall but smile when they behold
Their infants quarter'd with the hands of war;
All pity choked with custom of fell deeds:
And Caesar's spirit, ranging for revenge,
With Ate by his side come hot from hell,
Shall in these confines with a monarch's voice
Cry 'Havoc,' and let slip the dogs of war;
That this foul deed shall smell above the earth
With carrion men, groaning for burial."
- William Shakespeare, "Julius Caesar, Act III, Scene I"

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Adventures With Danno, "Empty Shelves Everywhere...It's Getting Ugly"

Adventures With Danno, 10/19/25
"Empty Shelves Everywhere...It's Getting Ugly"
Comments here:

"Be Ready For Something Major That Is Coming To America"

Full screen recommended
Epic Economist, 10/19/25
"Be Ready For Something Major 
That Is Coming To America"
"Millions are sensing it. The economy is unstable, the job market is collapsing, and regular people are posting warnings everywhere. But warnings mean nothing without action. In this video, I break down REAL preparation strategies - not fear, not panic, just practical steps you can take right now. From the 24-hour emergency window to building offline knowledge libraries, from threat assessment to strategic community building. This isn't about doomsday bunkers. This is about being ready for economic collapse, extended blackouts, or social breakdown. Things that can actually happen. The people in these TikTok videos aren't crazy. They're paying attention. The question is: are you?" 
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Musical Interlude: 2002, "Lady Of The Moon"

Full screen recommended.
2002, "Lady Of The Moon"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“From Sagittarius to Carina, the Milky Way Galaxy shines in this dark night sky above planet Earth’s lush island paradise of Mangaia. Familiar to denizens of the southern hemisphere, the gorgeous skyscape includes the bulging galactic center at the upper left and bright stars Alpha and Beta Centauri just right of center. About 10 kilometers wide, volcanic Mangaia is the southernmost of the Cook Islands. Geologists estimate that at 18 million years old it is the oldest island in the Pacific Ocean.
Of course, the Milky Way is somewhat older, with the galaxy’s oldest stars estimated to be over 13 billion years old. (Editor’s note: This image holds the distinction of being selected as winner in the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, Astronomy Photographer of the Year competition in the Earth and Space category.)“

Theodore Roethke, "In a Dark Time"

"In a Dark Time"

"In a dark time, the eye begins to see,
I meet my shadow in the deepening shade;
I hear my echo in the echoing wood -
A lord of nature weeping to a tree.
I live between the heron and the wren,
Beasts of the hill and serpents of the den.

What’s madness but nobility of soul
At odds with circumstance? The day’s on fire!
I know the purity of pure despair,
My shadow pinned against a sweating wall.
That place among the rocks - is it a cave,
Or winding path? The edge is what I have.

A steady storm of correspondences!
A night flowing with birds, a ragged moon,
And in broad day the midnight come again!
A man goes far to find out what he is -
Death of the self in a long, tearless night,
All natural shapes blazing unnatural light.

Dark, dark my light, and darker my desire.
My soul, like some heat-maddened summer fly,
Keeps buzzing at the sill. Which I is I?
A fallen man, I climb out of my fear.
The mind enters itself, and God the mind,
And one is One, free in the tearing wind."

- Theodore Roethke

"The Point..."

"What is the point? We assume that every time we do anything we know what the consequences will be, i.e., more or less what we intend them to be. This is not only not always correct. It is wildly, crazily, stupidly, cross-eyed-blithering-insectly wrong!"
- Douglas Adams, “The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide”

Scott Ritter, "Israel’s Attack Ignites Iran’s Oreshnik Moment - IDF In Ruins"

Scott Ritter, "Israel’s Attack Ignites 
Iran’s Oreshnik Moment - IDF In Ruins"
Comments here:

The Daily "Near You?"

Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, United Kingdom.
Thanks for stopping by!

The Psyche, "Carl Jung: Life Explained in 21 Minutes"

Full screen recommended.
The Psyche,
 "Carl Jung: Life Explained in 21 Minutes"

"What if the meaning of life isn’t something you find - but something you awaken to within yourself? In this video, we explore Carl Jung’s profound vision of the human soul, uncovering the hidden forces that shape your choices, emotions, and destiny. Through Jung’s timeless wisdom, you’ll learn how to turn suffering into self-awareness, and chaos into purpose.

Discover: Why your unconscious mind secretly directs your life - and how to make it conscious. The real meaning of your dreams, symbols, and “coincidences.” How embracing your shadow can lead to freedom and inner peace. Why Jung believed that the purpose of life is not happiness, but wholeness. The mystery of the Self - the divine spark within every human being. This is not just psychology - it’s a journey into the nature of existence itself. Through Jung’s lens, life reveals itself as a sacred dialogue between the human and the divine, between what you see and what you are still becoming. If you’ve ever felt lost, searching for purpose or deeper understanding, this video will help you reconnect with the wisdom that has always lived inside you."
“Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakes.” 
- Carl Gustav Jung

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"A Long March..."

"The life of Man is a long march through the night, surrounded by invisible foes, tortured by weariness and pain, towards a goal that few can hope to reach, and where none may tarry long. One by one, as they march, our comrades vanish from our sight, seized by the silent orders of omnipotent Death. Very brief is the time in which we can help them, in which their happiness or misery is decided. Be it ours to shed sunshine on their path, to lighten their sorrows by the balm of sympathy, to give them the pure joy of a never-tiring affection, to strengthen failing courage, to instill faith in times of despair."
- Bertrand Russell
This always suggested the March of Mankind through the ages, 
and incredibly, despite ourselves, we march on to our unknown fate...
Vangelis, "Alpha"

“6 Steps to Release Your Fear and Feel Peaceful”

“6 Steps to Release Your Fear and Feel Peaceful”
by Nicolas Perrin

“We are not what we know but what we are willing to learn.”
~ Mary Catherine Bateson

“It was a balmy spring morning and I started my day as per usual, but I soon realized that my mind was entertaining fearful thoughts about my financial insecurity. With many new ventures within the seedling stage, my income flow was erratic and unpredictable, while my financial responsibilities were consistent and guaranteed. At the time I ignored these thoughts as “petty,” like a parent dismissing a crying child after a mild fall on the pavement.

What I didn’t realize was that my mind wanted to entertain these fear-based thoughts like a Hollywood blockbuster, and as you may know, what you focus on expands. Before I knew it, my body was in a state of complete anxiety and fear. I literally felt my cognitive and creative centers shutting down. I felt completely powerless, a hostage to my own mind. My body felt paralyzed, and I felt disconnected from my talents and gifts. I felt separate, isolated, and vulnerable. I became a victim of the fear. In this moment I realized the powerful impact thoughts can have on how we feel, mentally and physically. Here is what unfolded through me, and the lessons I treasured from this experience.

Fear is a closed energy, referred to as inverted faith. Fear exists when we do not trust our connection to the infinite part of who we are and buy into a story about what’s unfolding in our life. The emotions we feel are created from the thoughts that we choose to focus on, consciously or unconsciously. The emotions act as markers to let us know if we are focusing on expansive, empowering thoughts or fearful, limiting thoughts.

If I were to relate this in a story, it may be like a pilot believing he no longer had any guidance or support from the airport control tower in a large storm, and no instruments on board to detect if he was on a collision course with another airplane. If the control tower represents the infinite part of who we are, which always knows what’s best for us, it can be understandable why the pilot with no other guidance except for his own eye sight would be fearful of the situation at hand. An alarm on the plane beeping at the pilot would represent the emotions. The alarm’s purpose is to get the attention of the pilot so he can focus and realize he is off the path. Once our emotions start to take a grip of our physical body, what can we do to move from a state of limitation and fear into an open, tranquil, peaceful state?

1. Come back to the present moment. The first step is to bring your awareness to the present moment. To do this, take three deep breaths through your nose and exhale through your mouth. After the air has filled your lungs and you’ve felt your stomach rise, exhale through your mouth by forcing the air through your teeth, as if you were hissing out loud. This detoxifies your body from the heavy emotions you’re experiencing and brings you back into the present moment. When I do this, I place my awareness into my feet so I am in a feeling space within my body, rather than being in my mind, entertaining the stories that swirl around with vigor, like a dangerous hurricane. Imagine that all your emotions are in a large sludge bucket. This breathing technique will empty the bucket out so you are empty and free.

2. Put things in perspective. Now that you are present, acknowledge the experience and ask yourself this question: “What is the worst case scenario that can happen to me?” Once we can accept this and realize we will be okay if that happens, we are free from the fear. When I realized I’d blown things out of proportion with my fears, I was able to detach from the story and put things into perspective. I like to imagine that in every moment I have two wolves I can feed (per the Native American myth): the fear wolf or the love wolf. The one that gets stronger and wins is the one I feed.

3. Become an observer of your thoughts. What has served me well in moments like this is to say, “I’m not these thoughts. I’m not these emotions. I’m not this body. I’m an infinite being having a human experience.” In saying this, we immediately detach from the story and allow ourselves the choice of suffering or to become the observer. Imagine that your life is represented in a book, and the story you are living out comes from the words on the page. We can change the words of the story at any point in time.

4. Change your experience. The fourth step is to place your awareness and your right hand on the heart center, which is located near the sternum. Close your eyes, take three deep breaths, and make the following command: “I am now connected to the infinite part of who I am, which already knows how to be whole and complete. I take full responsibility and accountability for this creation, I recognize how it has served me, and I am now ready to let it go. I command that the fear energy be transmuted into unconditional love now. Thank you. It is now done.” This process is incredibly empowering. We allow ourselves the opportunity to experience being our own inner master and a co-creator of our reality.

5. Prevent your mind from sabotaging you. Visualize a stone being thrown into a pond. Observe the ripples it creates when it enters the water. This is to simply distract your mind and allow the process to unfold without doubt or self-sabotage. It is only our mind that can interfere with our own healing.

6. Be grateful. Express gratitude and appreciation for the integration and healing you have received. The key to happiness is awareness. When we become aware that our mind is wandering, we can gently bring it back to the present moment. It’s only in the present moment that we are empowered and can consciously choose the thoughts we engage with. The thoughts we focus on will determine where our energy flows, and thus what is created in our life. Each thought has a vibration, which is reflected by the feeling we experience in our body. To be able to move from a fear-based experience to an open, peaceful experience we must first take full responsibility and accountability that on some level we created the experience, and nobody else is to blame. The choice is truly ours. Do we choose to experience a fearful, limited life or do we choose a happy joyful life?"
Reduce fear, good. Reduce stress also...
Full screen recommended.
Marconi Union, "Weightless"
"Neuroscience Says Listening to This Song 
Reduces Anxiety by Up to 65 Percent"
Think more clearly...
"Cognition Enhancer For Clearer and Faster Thinking - 
Isochronic Tones"
Full screen recommended.
"This session stimulates Beta, SMR and Alpha to train your 
brain for better cognition, such as clearer and faster thinking."
Information and comments here:

"50 Things I’ve Learned About Being A Person In The World With Other People"

"50 Things I’ve Learned About Being 
A Person In The World With Other People"
by Madeliene Dore

"1. Curiosity drives connection - if you take an interest in a lot of things, you will find a lot of people interesting.

2. Believe in the good intentions of others - they are most likely trying their best (at the very least, this belief improves your own inner-peace).

3. You cannot read minds - you don’t know what other people are thinking, only what you think they think.

4. Model the behavior you wish to receive - if you want an invitation, send them. If you want others to listen, ask questions. If you want to be shown kindness, be kind. You cannot expect something from others that you don’t offer yourself.

5. Don’t delay kindness - give a compliment the moment you think of it.

6. If you long for something, create it - you do not have to wait, you can start the meetup, club or gathering you want in the world.

7. Connection is a tapestry - there are different types and textures, warps and wefts to our relationships. Regularly asking yourself what kind of friendships, interactions or new threads you need right now can help fill the gaps.

8. Be the one to instigate - start the conversation, follow up with people, say hello.

9. If you feel a spark with someone, tell them - starting a friendship can be as simple as saying: let’s get this friendship going.

10. Overgiving is not generosity, it’s a bid for control - when we aren’t self-assured in our own worthiness, we try to grasp it from others.

11. Make generous assumptions about people - when someone’s behavior is frustrating, irritating or rude, remind yourself: just like me, this human is simply trying to get comfortable in this world.

12. Sometimes we conceal what we need to give ourselves by giving it to someone else - ensure your own needs are met first.

13. Listen well - allow space before you rush to respond, ask more questions, check if someone wants advice or comfort, meet someone’s curiosity about you with curiosity about them.

14. Go where you’re wanted - have people in your life who are excited to be around you and hear from you.

15. Concern yourself with yourself - trying to control or change other people is futile. Focus on your own side of the street.

16.Trust the people who want to be in your life will be - friendship is something two people keep choosing, not insisting upon.

17. Allow people to be who they are - and then you can decide if that’s for you.

18. Solitude is an art - if loneliness is the state of being alone and feeling sad about it, solitude is the state of being alone and feeling content about it.

19.The fantasy versions of our social lives can get in the way of appreciating what we already have - as can chasing approval, status, and popularity.

20. Compliment people behind their back - gossiping is a shortcut to connection, and often short-lived. Turn the habit around for more enduring bonds.

21. Be wary of living on someone else’s time - don’t contort yourself trying to please somebody.

22. The truth will set you free - but it’s also an investment. People need to be open to hearing it, and sometimes it’s not worth the labor.

23. Sometimes people don’t receive our gifts how we intended them - your candor might be refreshing to one person, and confronting to another. That doesn’t diminish your strengths, it’s just a matter of compatibility.

24. Doing things just for the applause of certain people is rarely gratifying - instead, cultivate self-respect, which first stems from knowing ourselves.

25. It’s rarely about you - people will project, often without knowing they are doing so themselves. We are complicated individuals living in our own interconnected universes.

26. Resentment is the opposite of friendship - don’t obsess about what you’re not getting from people; instead, nurture the things you are.

27. There’s no such thing as a ledger of love - reciprocity is not something that can be perfectly measured. You might say I love you with an elaborate home-cooked meal, and someone else might say it by remembering to ask how that difficult conversation with your boss went last week.

28. Being right isn’t the most important thing - being open to various perspectives, on the other hand, might be.

29. People are allowed to disappoint you - it’s okay for someone to change their mind, politely decline, and say the difficult thing. It’s a reminder you can do the same, too.

30. Make decisions based on now - not what something or someone could be, should be, or might be in the future. Why grovel just to get more of the same?

31. “Some things are best mended by a break” - Edith Wharton.

32. Forgiveness is for you - and sometimes what you really need to do is forgive yourself.

33. Regularly check for blinders - who or what are you neglecting in your busyness, distractions or rumination?

34. Focus on the people who can fulfil you, not the fillers - don’t allow people who demean, deplete or diminish you to fill so much of your time, meaning you don’t have space for the people who can.

35. Our social lives go through seasons - be okay with the ebb and flow, and honor what you need in a given moment, too.

36. If someone is mad at you, it’s up to them to tell you - we spend so much time trying to read minds, avoid disappointing someone, or step around the truth instead of remembering other people have their own agency.

37. Difficult conversations can often deepen or disintegrate relationships - know when you’re playing tennis with yourself.

38. Don’t wait for perfect conditions - simply connect. Reach out even if it’s been a while.

39. Avoid making your social life another to-do - practice the art of sitting around, hanging out, and just do life together.

40. Needing to be needed creates a negative feedback loop - it’s not companionship or care, it’s co-dependency.

41. You can love someone and still have to let them go - one of the hardest, most crucial things is to realize when a dynamic is hurting you both.

42. Don’t place your worth in anything outside you - if you link your worthiness to any activity, person or thing, it can all too easily be diminished.

43. Rejection is redirection - try not to take it personally.

44. Accept people’s limits - people are both wonderful and imperfect, and love is the recognition of all parts.

45. Sometimes the easiest thing to do is to just say what you want - simply and directly.

46. To be alive is to be misunderstood - people might misunderstand you, dislike you, judge you. But the more likely scenario is they won’t even think about you.

47. It’s better to lead with a question than an accusation - remain open.

48. People are gonna people - they change, they stay the same, they disappoint you, they uplift you, they mirror you, they challenge you, they annoy you, they delight you.

49. Friends are like daffodils - they pop up when you least expect.

50. We think we have time - yet we don’t actually know if “later” or “another time” might come, or when it might be the last time. So seize the opportunities you have to be in the world with the people you love most in the world."
o
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"How It Really Is"

Quite intentionally...
"If they can get you asking the wrong questions,
they don't have to worry about answers."
- Thomas Pynchon

"The Plain Truth..."

“The plain truth is we are going to die. Here I am, a teeny spec surrounded by boundless space and time, arguing with the whole of creation, shaking my fist, sputtering, growing even eloquent at times, and then - poof! I am gone. Swept off once and for all. I think that is very, very funny.” 
                                                             - Charles Simic

Joel Bowman, "The End of History"

"The End of History"
A somewhat exaggerated obituary...
by Joel Bowman

“History is a cyclic poem written by time upon the memories of man.”
~ Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)

"Remember when history ended, dear reader? The year was 1992. "Under the Bridge" and "Tears in Heaven" were playing on the FM radio. The Cold War, which had promised such a “Bang!” had ended with barely a whimper. And American philosopher, Francis Fukuyama, had just published a daring book: "The End of History and the Last Man."

In light of the great Soviet collapse, Mr. Fukuyama was of the opinion that The West had not simply triumphed over The Rest, but that the world had finally reached “the end point of mankind’s ideological evolution and the universalization of Western liberal democracy as the final form of human government.”

In other words, whatever was to be done in the fickle and turbulent realm of politics had, by the grand old year 1992, already been done. Here is Mr. Fukuyama, joining a long line of intellectuals (including Marx) to have become ensnared in the labyrinth of Hegel’s dialectical materialism: “Both Hegel and Marx believed that the evolution of human societies was not open-ended, but would end when mankind had achieved a form of society that satisfied its deepest and most fundamental longings. Both thinkers thus posited an "end of history": for Hegel this was the liberal state, while for Marx it was a communist society. This did not mean that the natural cycle of birth, life, and death would end, that important events would no longer happen, or that newspapers reporting them would cease to be published. It meant, rather, that there would be no further progress in the development of underlying principles and institutions, because all of the really big questions had been settled.” ~ Francis Fukuyama

But a curious thing happened on the way to the end of history; namely... history did not end. The political pendulum did not come to a full stop. Stubbornly, insolently, it kept right on a-swingin’...

Time and Again: Indeed, the ‘90s were a time of great political upheaval and experimentation, not all of it leading to the holy grail of western liberal democracy, as imagined by Mr. Fukuyama.

In the power vacuum created by the collapse of the Soviet Empire, Gorbachev’s perestroika (a program of political and economic “restructuring”) delivered the Russian people from the brutality of communism… into the unloving embrace of a corrupted oligarchy…and then to a kind of faux democracy that has seen the same man at the helm for a quarter of a century. (After this year’s “election,” Vladimir Putin became the longest-serving Russian leader since Joseph Stalin, who ruled the Soviet Union from 1929 to 1953.)

As for the Americans, co-belligerents in the aforementioned ideological conflict, they continued their own long march…headlong toward a special brand of political circuses and economic madness. In a country where any boy, girl or two-spirit animal might grow up to be president, the nation that enthusiastically sent its soldiers abroad to “make the world safe for democracy” offered up a Bush, followed by a Clinton (twice), followed by another Bush (twice), then very nearly another Clinton. Two decades of political power, held in the hands of two dynastic families.

Meanwhile, beneath fierce power struggles at the executive level, America’s vast and menacing security state – about which General Eisenhower famously warned in his farewell address in ‘61, at the height of the Cold War – continued its inexorable mission creep into the lives and private affairs of the good citizens of The Republic.

The Scourge of War: Neither the defeated Soviets nor the victorious Americans appeared willing to take the path Fukuyama had so carefully laid out for them. The End of History would have to wait...

Ah, but what about Europe, some venture to ask? Indeed, Mr. Fukuyama himself preferred the transnational euro-model to the comparatively unipolar American offering. Might not the “post-historic” world manifest itself over on the continent, where a common “Esperanto” currency – in the form of the euro – would facilitate free trade and citizens of all backgrounds, creeds and cultures would walk arm in arm from the Seine to the Danube, the Bay of Biscay to the shores of the Black Sea?

“I believe that the European Union more accurately reflects what the world will look like at the end of history than the contemporary United States,” declared Fukuyama at the time, in brave defense of his curious, end-of-days timeline. The EU’s attempt to transcend sovereignty and traditional power politics by establishing a transnational rule of law is much more in line with a ‘post-historical’ world than the Americans’ continuing belief in God, national sovereignty, and their military.”

Alas, not unlike the Ruskies and the Yankees before them, the Europeans would go on to disappoint Mr. Fukuyama, too. After a relatively sanguine start to the new millennium, the Eurozone spent most of the ensuing two decades descending gradually into first economic, then political, and now widespread cultural disaster. Today, protests from one end of the continent to the other – Finland to Greece, the Netherlands to France, Poland to Ireland and plenty more between – underscore real discord between neighbors in the great eurocrat utopia. Not to mention the scourge of war, which threatens to drag the entire continent, if not the whole western world, into yet another great conflagration.

Under the Bridge: And so, almost a quarter of a century after Mr. Fukuyama stopped the clock on History, it plods along regardless. Evidently, something about the political spirit of mankind just doesn’t want to sit still. In the year 2025, the world is faced with a plethora of political challenges, for which many of the seeds were sown in the dimming twilight of the last century.

That is to say, the ideological struggle continues against the backdrop of protests, uprisings, springs, occupations, revolutions and, over the weekend, here in the United States of America, attempted assassinations. (How close the Republic was to having its own Franz Ferdinand moment, we may never know...)

When Mr. Fukuyama stopped the clocks back in 1992, America’s debt clock was just ticking past $3 trillion. As we type these very words, that figure is fast approaching $37 trillion, a rather brassy 785 percent increase. According to the latest estimates by the Congressional Budget Office, it is set to top $60 trillion within the next decade. And the rate of increase is only accelerating…

In its report the CBO revised its estimate of the budget deficit for 2024 from $1.6 trillion to $1.8 trillion - an increase of more than 20 percent.

As a proportion of annual GDP, the debt will rise from almost 100 percent this financial year to 122 percent in 2034, meaning that the debt is growing at a much faster rate than real economic output. Interest rate costs to service the debt, now approaching $1 trillion, will rise to $1.7 trillion by 2034, when it will become the single largest line item on the federal budget.

Which brings us back to the lessons of history…Will the United States have to go “Full Argentina” before the pendulum swings back the other way, to sanity, fiscal responsibility and limited government? Or is the die cast? We wait to see…Of course, Mr. Fukuyama is not alone in wondering how all this ends. Only, if history has taught us anything, it doesn’t. The show, as always, goes on."

Jeremiah Babe, "Living Below My Means In Alabama"

Full screen recommended,
Jeremiah Babe, 10/19/25
"Living Below My Means In Alabama
Cutting My Grass On My Bad Boy Mower""
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Dan, I Allegedly, "Cracks in the System - This Impacts All of Us"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 10/19/25
"Cracks in the System - This Impacts All of Us"
"The economy is showing more cracks every week, and in today’s video, we’re diving into the real issues behind the economic shutdown we're all living through. Are we heading for collapse? From the alarming rise in auto loan delinquencies to subprime lenders like Tricolor and PrimaLend facing bankruptcy, things don’t look good. I also cover the recent wave of trucking company bankruptcies, layoffs at major companies, and how all of this impacts everyday Americans. It’s a chaotic time, and I’m here to break it all down for you. Remember, as things get tighter, repossessions are skyrocketing, and companies are shutting down left and right. From Ford recalling over 625,000 vehicles to layoffs at Skydance Media and Paramount, the signs are clear. What do you think about these economic shifts? Share your thoughts in the comments!"
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