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Wednesday, November 5, 2025

“10 Things You Should Know About Life’s Most Important Questions”

“10 Things You Should Know 
About Life’s Most Important Questions”
by Marc Chernoff

"It’s a harsh fact that every one of us is ignorant in some way. Although we tend to pretend otherwise, it’s impossible to know it all. Ignorance is our biggest collective secret. And it’s one of the scariest and most damaging realities of life, because those of us who are most ignorant – and thus most likely to spread ignorance – are also the ones who often don’t know it.

Here’s a quick test: If you have never changed your mind about one of your learned beliefs, if you have never questioned the fundamentals of your opinions, and if you have no inclination to do so, then you are likely ignorant about something you think you know.

What’s the quickest solution? Get outside and find someone who, in your opinion, believes, behaves, and handles certain aspects of life very differently from you, and just have a simple, honest conversation with them. I promise, some of life’s most important questions will become clearer by doing so. And it will do both of you lots of good. Once you’ve done that, here are some key things to remember:

1. Many of the biggest misunderstandings in life could be avoided if we would simply take the time to ask, “What else could this mean?”

2. An expert is not a person who gives all the right answers; she’s the one who asks the right questions.

3. Very few of us actively seek new knowledge in this world on a daily basis. We get comfortable with what we know, and we stop questioning things. On the contrary, we try to squeeze from the unknown the answers we have already shaped in our own minds – judgments, justifications, validations, forms of consolation without which we might feel incomplete or off-center. To really ask something new is to open the door to the storm.  And the answer just may blow us away.

4. If someone can get you asking the wrong questions, they don’t have to worry about how they answer you.

5. Monsters do exist in the real world, but they are too few in number to be truly dangerous in the long run. More dangerous are the common people with good intentions who are instantly ready to believe and act without asking questions.

6. At the end of the day, the questions you ask of yourself determine the type of person you will become.

7. Courage doesn’t happen when you have all the answers. It happens when you are ready to face the questions you have been avoiding your whole life. 

8. When it comes to your relationships: Does he/she treat you with respect at all times? That’s the first question. The second question is: If he/she remains the exact same person ten years from now, would you still want to be in a relationship with him/her? And finally, does he/she inspire to be a better human being? When you find someone that you can answer yes to all three questions, you know you’ve found yourself a relationship worth having.

9. Regardless of how much you know, or how many incredible questions you ask, you can never know it all. To believe that you do, is proof of the contrary. The wilderness around us always holds answers to more questions than we have yet learned to ask. And that’s a beautiful thing.

10. Although life will always be filled with unanswered questions, it’s the courage to seek the answers that counts – this journey is what gives life meaning.  Ultimately, you can spend your life wallowing in frustration and misery, wondering why you were the one who was chosen to deal with your problems, or you can be grateful that you are strong enough and smart enough to grow from them. 

Your turn: Be present and have patience with everything that remains unexplained in your heart and mind. Try to love life’s questions. Like locked doors or like good books written in foreign languages, respect their nature. Don’t expect all the answers to come easy. They cannot be given to you right now because your present understanding isn’t ready yet. It’s a question of experiencing everything first. Right now you need to hold on to the questions – explore, learn, and live your life. Perhaps, as you do, you will gradually find yourself experiencing the answers you always wanted.

So with that said, which of the reminders above hit home the most? Why? Leave a comment below and share your thoughts and insights with us."

"The Curse of Interesting Times"

"The Curse of Interesting Times"
Things are the most interesting they've been
 in 80 years, 250 years, and, well, ever.
by Contemplations on the Tree of Woe

"The Chinese curse their enemies with the phrase “may you live in interesting times.” Or, rather, Americans think that Chinese curse their enemies like that; according to Infogalactic, “despite being widely attributed as a Chinese curse, there is no equivalent expression in Chinese.”

Fortunately, there’s an actual Chinese phrase that’s much more interesting. It’s found in a 1627 short story collection by Feng Menglong called "Stories to Awaken the World," and it states "better to be a dog in a peaceful time, than to be a human in a chaotic times.” And to be a dog in 17th China didn’t mean being a beloved fur baby with your own YouTube channel. It meant being a workbeast that got eaten when times were lean. The Chinese still have an annual dog meat festival.

Whichever adage you prefer, our times are both chaotic and interesting. In fact, they are monumentally interesting - they are so interesting as to beggar coherent description, to put to shame historical comparison, so remarkable that every single one of us would be justified in screaming from the rooftops in shock and awe. And yet we don’t. We keep calm and carry on, sturdily gripped by our bias for normalcy, by our human ability to adapt to even the most bizarre circumstances. It’ll be fine, we tell ourselves. This is fine.

But what if we put aside our normalcy bias for a moment and look at how just how “interesting” our times really are? What do we see then?

Once Every 80 Years…Once every 80 years, a country enters a crisis. That is, at least, the assertion of Strauss-Howe Generational Theory. According to Strauss and Howe, human history is organized into repeating patterns marked by four “turnings”: the High, the Awakening, the Unraveling, and the Crisis. Each turning is approximately 20 years long, and an entire cycle of four turnings is therefore about 80 years long. According to Strauss and Howe, American history looks something like this:

○ American Revolutionary Crisis, 1765 - 1785
○ American Civil War Crisis, 1855 - 1875
○ Great Depression and World War II Crisis, 1930 - 1950
○ You Are Here, 2010 - 2030

If we believe Strauss-Howe Generational Theory, we are in the midst of what they call a Fourth Turning - a moment of Crisis. Are we in a Fourth Turning? I certainly believe so. As I documented in "Running on Empty," the United States now stands at a financial precipice. US inflation is at its worst in 40 years because the monetary system we established under Truman and rejuvenated under Nixon is now collapsing. With that crisis have come challenges from a resurgent Russia and burgeoning China that could lead to a Third World War or, at best, a post-American world order. The Thucydides Trap has never been so close to springing. It’s no wonder then that US fears of nuclear war have surged to levels not seen since the Cold War. But unlike the Cold War, no one wants to ‘ask what they can do for their country’ anymore. US Army recruitment is at its worst in 50 years. And why would they want to serve? Our nation is divided into warring camps. US partisan distrust of the opposing party is at its worst in 30 years.

All right. That all sounds bad. But if Strauss-Howe Generational Theory is true, the Fourth Turning will be over in about 5-10 years and we’ll move into the next Turning, the High. And those are awesome! But what if we won’t be heading into another high?"
Full, fascinating, most highly recommended article is here:
Freely download "Stories to Awaken the World", 
by Feng Menglong, here:

"How It Really Is"

 

"The Last Time Always Happens Now"

"The Last Time Always Happens Now"
by David Cain

"William Irvine, an author and philosophy professor I’m a big fan of, often tries to point people towards a little-discussed fact of human life: "You always know when you’re doing something for the first time, and you almost never know when you’re doing something for the last time."

There was, or will be, a last time for everything you do, from climbing a tree to changing a diaper, and living with a practiced awareness of that fact can make even the most routine day feel like it’s bursting with blessings. Of all the lasting takeaways from my periodic dives into Stoicism, this is the one that has enhanced my life the most. I’ve touched on it before in my Stoicism experiment log and in a Patreon post, and I intend to write about it many more times in the future (but who can say?)

To explain why someone might want to start thinking seriously about last times, Bill Irvine asks us to imagine a rare but relatable event: going to your favorite restaurant one last time, knowing it’s about to close up for good.

Predictably, dining on this last-ever night makes for a much richer experience than almost all the other times you’ve eaten at that restaurant, but it’s not because the food, decor, or service is any different than usual. It’s better because you know it’s the last time, so you’re apt to savor everything you can about it, right down to the worn menus and tacky napkin rings. You’re unlikely to let any mistakes or imperfections bother you, and in fact you might find them endearing.

It becomes clearer than ever, in other words, how great it was while it lasted, and how little the petty stuff mattered. On that last dinner, you can set aside minor issues with ease, and appreciate even the most mundane details. Anything else would seem foolish, because you’re here now, and this is it. It might even occur to you that there’s no reason you couldn’t have enjoyed it this much every time you dined here – except that all the other times, you knew there would be more times, so you didn’t have to be so intentional about appreciating it.

That’s an exceptionally rare situation though. Almost always, we do things for the last time without knowing it’s the last time. There was a last time – on an actual calendar date – when you drew a picture with crayons purely for your own pleasure. A last time you excitedly popped a Blockbuster rental into your VCR. A last time you played fetch with a certain dog. Whenever the last time happened, it was “now” at the time.

You’ve certainly heard the heart-wrenching insight that there’s always a last time a parent picks up their child. By a certain age the child is too big, which means there’s always an ordinary day when the parent picks up and puts down their child as they have a thousand times before, with no awareness that it was the last time they would do it.

Ultimately there will be as many last times as there were first times. There will be last time you do laundry. A last time you eat pie. A last time you visit a favorite neighborhood, city, or country. For every single friend you’ve ever had, there will be a last time you talk, or maybe there already has been.

For ninety-nine percent of these last times, you will have no idea that that’s what it is. It will seem like another of the many middle times, with a lot more to come. If you knew it was the last-ever time you spoke to a certain person or did a certain activity, you’d probably make a point of appreciating it, like a planned last visit to Salvatore’s Pizzeria. You wouldn’t spend it thinking about something else, or let minor annoyances spoil it.

Many last times are still a long way in the future, of course. The trouble is you don’t know which ones. The solution, Irvine suggests, is to frequently imagine that this is the last time, even when it’s probably not. A few times a day, whatever you’re doing, you assume you’re doing that thing for the last time. There will be a last time you sip coffee, like you’re doing now. What if this sip was it? There will be a last time you walk into the office and say hi to Sally. If this was it, you might be a little more genuine, a little more present.

The point isn’t to make life into a series of desperate goodbyes. You can go ahead and do the thing more or less normally. You might find, though, that when you frame it as a potential last time, you pay more attention to it, and you appreciate it for what it is in a way you normally don’t. It turns out that ordinary days are full of experiences you expect will keep happening forever, and of course none of them will.

It doesn’t matter if the activity is something you particularly love doing. Walking into a 7-11 or weeding the garden is just as worthy of last-time practice as hugging a loved one. Even stapling the corner of some pages together can generate a sense of appreciation, if you saw it as your final act of stapling in a life that’s contained a surprising amount of stapling.

Irvine uses mowing the lawn as an example, a task he doesn’t love doing. If you imagine that this is the last time you’ll mow the lawn, rather than consider it a good riddance, you might realize that there will be a time when you’ve mown your last lawn, and that there were a lot of great things about living in your lawn-mowing, bungalow-maintaining heyday. A few seconds later, it dawns on you that you still are.

You can get very specific with the experiences you do this with. The last time you roll cookie dough between your palms. The last time you get rained on. The last time you sidestep down a crowded cinema aisle. The last time your jeans smell like campfire smoke. The last time your daughter says “swannich” instead of “sandwich.” Virtually everything is a worthy candidate for this reflection.

It always brings perspective to your life as it is now, and it never gets old. It’s an immensely rewarding exercise, but it not a laborious one. It takes only two or three seconds - allowing yourself “a flickering thought,” as Irvine put it - to notice what you’re doing right now, and consider the possibility that this is indeed the last escalator ride at Fairfield Mall, the last time you put on a Beatles record, the last time you encounter a squirrel, or the last time you parallel park in front of Aunt Rita’s building."
Full screen recommended.
The Rolling Stones, "The Last Time"

"Alert! New York City Is Finished, Escape From New York Now"

Full screen recommended.
Jeremiah Babe, 11/5/25
"Alert! New York City Is Finished,
 Escape From New York Now"
Comments here:

"Crisis Gets Worse, Government Shutdown Is At A Tipping Point"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 11/5/25
"Crisis Gets Worse, 
Government Shutdown Is At A Tipping Point"
Comments here:

"People Have Stopped Spending! Repos Rise to Home Depot Sales Fall"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 11/5/25
"People Have Stopped Spending! 
Repos Rise to Home Depot Sales Fall"
"The car repossession crisis is hitting hard this year, with 10M calls expected! People are struggling to keep up with high-interest auto loans and inconsistent employment, leading to a surge in repo assignments. I break down the shocking numbers, discuss how this impacts the economy, and share the latest trends from the SEMA car show. Plus, hear about the struggles home improvement stores like Home Depot are facing, private equity acquisitions, and real estate insights across Vegas. Don't miss this jam-packed episode!"
Comments here:

John Wilder, "The Big Short Part 2: AI Boogaloo?"

"The Big Short Part 2: AI Boogaloo?"
by John Wilder

“Sometimes, we see bubbles. Sometimes, there is something to do about it. Sometimes, the only winning move is not to play.” – Michael Burry, October 31, 2025

Ah, Michael Burry. I love him for several reasons. First, the man who turned the financial Armageddon of the Great Recession into a personal piggy bank. While the rest of Wall Street was busy high-fiving over adjustable-rate mortgages like they were the next Beanie Babies™, Burry had it right. If life’s a casino, Burry was the guy who spotted the rigged roulette wheel, bet it all against red, and walked away repeatedly tossing the croupier’s pinky ring in the air. But more on that.

Let’s rewind the tape, because Burry’s backstory isn’t just a hedge fund horror story; it’s the stuff of legend. Born in 1971, Burry was that kid dissecting frog guts and getting into high school early, and leaving it earlier than a Chicago inner-city kid, but instead of hitting the streets, Burry hit Vanderbilt med school by age 19. He got an ophthalmology residency at Stanford, because nothing says “future financial legend” like peering into eyeballs.

But Burry’s peepers were always fixed on the fine print of balance sheets, not dilated pupils. In 1997, he launched a value-investing blog that read like Warren Buffett’s fever dream crossed with a pathology report. By 2000, he’d parlayed his blog into Scion Capital™, a $600 million fund where he played the markets like a man solving a Rubik’s Cube® blindfolded.

Then came the subprime saga during the Housing Bubble. It was 2005, and America was drunk on easy credit. Flippers were flipping houses, banks bundling toxic multiple hundred-thousand-dollar home loans made to $14,000 a year illegal alien strawberry pickers. Yes, this happened. They called these triple-A quality financial treasures. Why not jump in? Everyone from soccer moms to strip-mall moguls mortgaging their McMansions to the hilt.

Burry? He saw the rot. He pored over mortgage prospectuses like they were Penthouse centerfolds, spotting the emperor’s new clothes in the form of adjustable-rate mortgages that would reset into huge payments. I was offered a mortgage of over seven times my salary. I asked the banker, “Why are you offering this? I can’t afford to pay that.” “I’m required to tell you that you qualify for it.”

Burry’s investors threatened mutiny as the carrying cost for his bets mounted. Undeterred, Burry plunked down to buy $1 billion in credit default swaps, essentially insurance policies on the housing house of cards He bet that it all would burn. And burn it did.

By 2008, Lehman® imploded, and Bear plowed its Stearns© into oblivion Burry’s investors pocketed $720 million after fees. Burry personally cleared $100 million, enough to buy a lifetime supply of black market Asian kidneys. He could even do the occasional eye exam for fun and pleasure since his medical license remains intact.

The kicker? He shut down Scion in 2008, tired of the thankless grind, and because nothing says “peak contrarian” like cashing out as the casino explodes behind you. His payment was that he was played in a movie about this epic heist, "The Big Short" (recommended), and that he was played by Christian Bale, who actually asked Burry for his actual clothing (cargo shorts and shirts) so he could wear them in the movie. I hope Micheal Chiklis asks to borrow my deodorant when he plays me in a movie.

Bale nailed the eccentric genius vibe: the twitching eye, the Asperger’s-adjacent intensity, the social awkwardness that makes Elon look like a prom king. Bale even learned to drum (Burry’s hobby) for the role. Imagine Chiklis having to learn to get in my daily step count – I’m up to 29.

Now, in a market puffed up like a Kardashian’s hooters, Burry is whispering (okay, Tweeting®) the dad wisdom of all dad wisdoms: sometimes, son, you just sit this hand out. No bluster, just a quiet nod to the sucker’s paradise we’re all pretending isn’t a powder keg from ACME™ while a drunken stripper pole-dances next to it lit cigar.

Generally, Burry’s X® feed is a cryptic cocktail of charts, quips, and quiet alarms. That October 31 post? It’s the mic-drop missive in a string of sidelong swipes at the surreal stock spectacle that AI has wrought. Just days prior, Burry had tweeted innocuous eye charts and “move along” memes, like a oracle playing coy before the deluge.

On Tuesday (November 4, 2025), Burry is making jokes about being short (where you sell stock you don’t own in order to buy it back later after it goes down in price – it’s like selling cars you don’t own). Or maybe about shorts. But peeling back the posts, Burry’s brewing a bearish broth. He’s been wrong before, just like me he’s predicted seven of the last two stock market crashes. In 2023, he warned of a “bubble of all bubbles,” while dumping his positions. He also admitted he was wrong.

Now? His latest dispatches echo that eerie prescience: bubbles abound, but betting against them isn’t always the balm. Sometimes, the house wins by default, by luring you in. It’s irony incarnate: the man who shorted the subprime supernova is now advising abstinence over aggression. Why play when the poker table’s tilted toward the trillion-dollar trusts and AI hype machines? Burry’s not yelling “fire” in a crowded theater; he’s slipping a note under the door: “evacuate quietly, kids.”

And boy, does the timing tickle like a tetanus shot. Today, Bitcoin dropped from $109,500 at dawn to a dippy $99,800 by lunch, rebounding to $101k like a drunk uncle at last call. Is crypto’s crashing alone, or is it the canary in the coal mine, signaling strains in the broader bedlam where Nvidia’s notched north of $5 trillion (more than Germany’s GDP)?

But, I think Burry is trying to tell us something simpler. Shorting the subprime was surgical; shorting everything now? That’s swinging a scalpel at a swarm of bees. Better to bank your bullets, brew your beans, and watch the wasps war from the porch swing. In this everything-extravaganza, where your grandma’s got GameStop™ options and your neighbor’s mining Monero® in the man-cave it pays to at least pay attention to Burry. Play if you must, and maybe, just maybe, those Beanie Babies™ will once surge in value. After all, it’s different this time."

Note: This is not financial advice. I am an Internet humorist who gets paid nothing for writing this. If you take this humor column as financial advice (which I didn’t give anyway) you’re more stoned than Cheech and Chong were in 1977. And if you like Burry’s right, great - just don’t blame me if stocks surge and bite your shorts (borrowed or not). Disclosure: I didn’t mention any stocks because I might buy some. Or sell some. Or do nothing.

Bill Bonner, "Into the Fire"

Guy Fawkes arrested while trying to blow up 
Parliament in London, on this day 420 years ago.
"Into the Fire"
by Bill Bonner

"It’s a cold, cold world we’re livin’ in."
- Nicole Scherzinger

Baltimore, Maryland - "The pieces are jumbling into place. With yesterday’s election, New Yorkers try to escape one toxic fantasy by plunging headfirst into another. They jump from the caldarium - a muscled-up fantasy of sanctions, tariffs and warships. And they sink into the frigidarium of sensitive socialist claptrap, rent control and government-run supermarkets.

Supporting both left and right, however, is the fantasy of ‘growth.’ It will reduce the burden of debt, they say. It will create jobs. It will keep the USA as Number One. Blah…blah…It won’t happen. Since the feds began aggressively ‘stimulating’ the economy with lower interest rates and more (fake) money, for example, real growth rates have gone down. From over 6% in the ‘60s...to around 3% in the ‘90s, the latest reading is only 1.6%, annualized, for the first half of this year.

So, the first question for policymakers might be: Why keep doing it? Why keep flooding the economy with cheap money when it does nothing to help Main Street America? What a naïve question! But we forgive you for asking. You believe our leaders have good intentions. Good for you. But it’s a cold, cold world we’re livin’ in. And the people who control the government - and in particular, the Fed - are interested in the Wall Street economy, not the Main Street economy. The former is where the rich and powerful make their wealth. The latter - hour by hour, week by week, sweat by strain - is where ‘The People’ earn their money and spend it.

Like a bloated corpse, the ‘wealth effects’ doctrine surfaced in the late ‘80s. Lowering interest rates, the Fed could give owners the impression that they were richer. This would induce them to spend more. No evidence was ever produced for this phenomenon. A study of the housing market showed that declining prices didn’t change consumer habits. But there is little doubt that a real increase in wealth will cause people to step up spending...at least to a point. So, like ‘trickle down’ economics and the Phillips Curve, ‘wealth effects’ were good enough for government work.

Our guess for today is that it has had an opposite effect. A poverty effect. As paltry as current GDP growth is, for example, much of it is derived from spending on the AI bubble. David Stockman: "During the first half of 2025, real GDP grew at only a 1.6% per annum rate, but nearly 80% of that gain was due to the massively inflated spending on data centers and chips for the AI frenzy."

Even that probably overstates the REAL GDP gain. Our ace fund manager, Chris Mayer, sends this surprising note: “The US economy has grown by $20 trillion since 2000, to $29 trillion last year. About $7.7 trillion of that - or 36% of all the growth in GDP - is spending related to recovering from or preparing for disasters,” according to Bloomberg Intelligence. In other words, it’s not ‘growth’ at all.

But wait. The dollar is only worth half as much as it was in 1999 - officially. GDP rose from around $10 trillion in 2000 to $30 trillion today. So, our GDP is only worth about $15 trillion in 1999 terms. Measured in gold, the story takes an even darker turn. Instead of being worth 38 billion ounces of gold, today’s economy is worth only 7.5 billion ounces - less than a quarter as much.

What that means, we’re not sure. Gold may be over-priced. Or not. But there’s more. Suppose you are planning to buy a new house next year. But along comes the Fed with reduced mortgage rates. You take advantage of the lower rates. The purchase is added to GDP. But you have not really increased GDP...you have simply drawn on next year’s GDP.

Now look at this: "Americans losing grip on debt as delinquencies surge and borrowing costs bite.  Rising delinquencies in auto, credit card, and student Household debt climbed to a record $18.4 trillion in the second quarter of 2025, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, while the nation’s gross federal debt hit $38 trillion for the first time. The figures highlight mounting strain across every layer of the U.S. economy - from Washington’s balance sheet to families’ credit card bills."

Let’s see, in 1999 household debt combined with US government debt was only about $10 trillion. Now, it is $56 trillion. That means that $46 trillion of GDP was bought on credit. Yes, there were houses, cars and vacations - all delivered. But they weren’t paid for. The debt is still outstanding. Which means, when you net out the debt, the value of these purchases is zero. Real GDP happens when money is earned...not when it is spent. What the real GDP number is, we don’t know. But it is surely a lot lower than we think."

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

"Alert! They're Crashing Market Now, Bank Runs Soon! US Secretly Preps For Nuclear War"

Full screen recommended.
Prepper News, 11/4/25
"Alert! They're Crashing Market Now, Bank Runs Soon! 
US Secretly Preps For Nuclear War"
Comments here:

Gerald Celente, "Daylight Saving Time? No, Daylight 'Stupid' Time"

Strong language alert!
Gerald Celente, 11/4/25
"Daylight Saving Time? No, Daylight 'Stupid' Time;
 Politicians Make It Darker As It Gets Darker"
"The Trends Journal is a weekly magazine analyzing global current events forming future trends. Our mission is to present Facts and Truth over fear and propaganda to help subscribers prepare for What’s Next in these increasingly turbulent times."
Comments here:

"Trump Threatens To Withhold SNAP Payments"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 11/4/25
"Trump Threatens To Withhold SNAP Payments"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Leonard Cohen, "Anthem"

Full screen recommended.
Leonard Cohen, "Anthem"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“To some, the outline of the open cluster of stars M6 resembles a butterfly. M6, also known as NGC 6405, spans about 20 light-years and lies about 2,000 light years distant. M6 can best be seen in a dark sky with binoculars towards the constellation of Scorpius, coving about as much of the sky as the full moon.
Like other open clusters, M6 is composed predominantly of young blue stars, although the brightest star is nearly orange. M6 is estimated to be about 100 million years old. Determining the distance to clusters like M6 helps astronomers calibrate the distance scale of the universe.”

"We Must Ask Ourselves..."

''As Americans, we must ask ourselves: Are we really so different? Must we stereotype those who disagree with us? Do we truly believe that ALL red-state residents are ignorant racist fascist knuckle-dragging NASCAR-obsessed cousin-marrying roadkill-eating tobacco juice-dribbling gun-fondling religious fanatic rednecks; or that ALL blue-state residents are godless unpatriotic pierced-nose Volvo-driving France-loving left-wing communist latte-sucking tofu-chomping holistic-wacko neurotic vegan weenie perverts?''
- Dave Barry

"Live for Yourself, Not for Others: How to Stop Being a Slave to Other People’s Opinions"

Full screen recommended.
The Psyche, 11/4/25
"Live for Yourself, Not for Others: 
How to Stop Being a Slave to Other People’s Opinions"
"What if you discovered that most of your life - your choices, your goals, even your identity - was built around other people’s expectations? In this video, we dive deep into the invisible prison of social validation - how society trains us to live for approval, and how to break free from the fear of judgment. Drawing on the timeless wisdom of Lao Tzu, Nietzsche, Carl Jung, and Marcus Aurelius, we’ll explore the path to authentic freedom - where you stop performing for others and start living for yourself. You’ll discover:

• Why we become addicted to validation - and how to end the cycle.
• The psychology behind people-pleasing and self-abandonment.
• How to detach from opinions and reconnect with your authentic self.
•The spiritual truth about ego death and living with inner peace.

This is more than motivation - it’s a psychological awakening. Because the day you stop living for others is the day your real life begins."
Comments here:

"We Deserve Better..."

"We are the world. We are the people and we 
deserve better, not because we're worth it, but because no 
worth can be put on the incalculable, on the infinite, on life."
- Nick Mancuso
“Each of us inevitable; Each of us limitless -
 each of us with his or her right upon the earth; 
Each of us allowed the eternal purports of the earth; 
Each of us here as divinely as any is here.”
- Walt Whitman

The Daily "Near You?"

Irwin, Pennsylvania, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Rule by Thieves: The Police State Becomes a Pay-to-Play Shadow Government"

"Rule by Thieves: The Police State
Becomes a Pay-to-Play Shadow Government"

By John & Nisha Whitehead

Kleptocracy: a society whose leaders make themselves
 rich and powerful by stealing from the rest of the people.” 
- Cambridge Dictionary

"America has been backsliding into kleptocratic territory for years now, but this may finally be it. A kleptocracy is literally “rule by thieves.” It is a form of government in which a network of ruling elites “steal public funds for their own private gain using public institutions.” As analyst Thomas Mayne explains, it’s “a system based on virtually unlimited grand corruption coupled with, in the words of American academic Andrew Wedeman, ‘near-total impunity for those authorized to loot by the thief-in-chief’ - namely the head of state.”

One could fairly say that a kleptocracy was always going to be the end result of the oligarchy that was America. The signs were visible long before now: power and wealth have been trading places for decades. Indeed, it has been more than a decade since researchers at Princeton and Northwestern concluded that the U.S. is a functional oligarchy in which “political outcomes overwhelmingly favored very wealthy people, corporations, and business groups,” while the influence of ordinary citizens was at a “non-significant, near-zero level.”

So now we find ourselves in this present moment where billionaires are running the show. The optics are undeniable: while the country suffers through a government shutdown, with welfare programs shuttered and inflation, healthcare and basic cost-of-living expenses skyrocketing, the elite are living it up.

In the White House, President Trump is redecorating, transforming what had been known as “the people’s house” into a palace fit for an American king, complete with marbled bathrooms and a sprawling, gold-fitted ballroom. The rest of the administration, taking its cue from their leader, are jetting around at taxpayer expense for lavish vacations, sporting events - and decadent parties at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s Florida retreat.

The responses to criticisms either deflect to how other administrations wasted money or, in the case of the ballroom, insist the project is privately funded - and therefore beyond reproach because taxpayers aren’t paying for it. But money is never truly “private” once it purchases influence over public office. The moment a government accepts such funding, it becomes indebted to the funders rather than accountable to the people.

Case in point: the list of donors to Trump’s White House ballroom. It reads like a who’s who list of the government’s biggest contractors and those most eager to curry favor. Collectively, the corporations and individuals on the ballroom donor list have received staggering sums in government contracts in recent years, and more than half face or have faced government investigations or enforcement actions “that includes engaging in unfair labor practices, deceiving consumers and harming the environment.” This is how you bring about a kleptocracy - one crooked buy-in at a time.

The constitutional question that follows is unavoidable: if presidents and agencies can do whatever they please simply because someone else foots the bill, what remains of constitutional, representative government? Follow that rationale to its end and you find yourself in dangerous territory. If a president can privately fund a ballroom, could he privately fund a battalion? If a cabinet agency can accept donations to expand its reach, could it sell policy favors to the highest bidder? If every public act can be recast as a private transaction, then the public no longer governs - it merely observes.

That is why the defense of demolishing and reconstructing the White House ballroom - an undertaking never authorized by Congress - on the grounds that no public funds will be used does not pass constitutional muster. The Constitution gives Congress - and only Congress - the power of the purse. This safeguard was designed not as a bureaucratic formality but as the chief restraint on executive abuse - the people’s means of holding the presidency to account.

Once presidents can raise private money to do what the people’s representatives refuse to fund, that weapon is disarmed. What follows is the slow unraveling of constitutional restraint, replaced by the notion that money - not law - sets the limits of power. The same mechanism that once protected the people from tyranny now becomes the means of financing it. What was meant as a safeguard becomes a loophole - a backdoor to unchecked power.

The logic is as seductive as it is corrupting: if private dollars cover the cost, the Constitution doesn’t apply. By that reasoning, a president could wage war, build prisons, or launch surveillance programs - all without Congressional authorization - so long as a billionaire or corporate sponsor signs the check. That’s not democracy. It’s privatized despotism.

This is how republics fall: not only through coups and crises, but through the quiet substitution of private interests for public authority. What begins as a gift ends as a purchase. What begins as a renovation ends as a revolution in how power operates. We have already seen this creeping privatization at every level of government: private contractors running prisons and wars, corporate donors dictating policy priorities, and surveillance and censorship outsourced to tech firms. Now the presidency itself is for sale - brick by brick, ballroom by ballroom.

The Founders feared monarchs; they never imagined CEOs with armies or presidents who could raise war chests independent of Congress. Yet that is exactly where we are headed: toward a government financed by private power and answerable only to it.

When public power can be bought, sold, or sponsored, the Constitution becomes nothing more than a branding tool - and when a nation mistakes private funding for public legitimacy, it ceases to be a republic at all. The power of the purse was meant to be the people’s last line of defense against tyranny. In the architecture of the Constitution, Congress alone was entrusted with the ability to raise and spend money - not because the Founders trusted legislators more than presidents, but because they feared concentrated power. They understood that whoever controls the purse ultimately controls the government itself. “Money,” Alexander Hamilton warned, “is the vital principle of the body politic.”

Without that restraint, the president could accumulate funds, build armies, and buy loyalty at will, consolidating power beyond constitutional limits—what Madison called “the very definition of tyranny.” When presidents or agencies can act outside Congressional appropriations by appealing to private donors, super PACs, or corporate “partners,” they dissolve the constitutional boundary between public office and private gain. Decisions that once required debate and oversight now happen behind closed doors, in boardrooms and donor suites. The result is a shadow government financed by privilege instead of the people.

The privatization of power isn’t theoretical - it is happening in plain sight. As The Intercept recently revealed, the Trump administration has even floated cash bounties for private “bounty hunters” to locate and track immigrants on behalf of ICE. In other words, law enforcement is being farmed out to freelancers motivated not by duty or justice, but by profit.

This is what a pay-to-play police state looks like: private actors deputized to do the government’s bidding, free from constitutional safeguards, answerable only to the wallet that funds them. Once the machinery of enforcement can be financed, directed, or rewarded through private channels, the rule of law gives way to the rule of money. Government ceases to function as a neutral arbiter and becomes a contractor for hire, wielding the badge, the gun, and the gavel on behalf of whoever can afford its services.

These arrangements substitute profit for principle and contract for Constitution, blurring the line between the state and its sponsors: private donors finance political events in public buildings, corporate partners shape executive policy, and billionaires underwrite the very forces - military, law enforcement, surveillance - that keep the rest of the population in check.

A police state funded by private wealth is even more dangerous than one funded by public taxes, because it answers to no electorate, no oversight committee, no constitutional restraint. Its accountability points upward - to financiers - not outward to the people it governs. Under such a system, justice becomes transactional. Enforcement becomes selective. Rights become negotiable.

What began as the privatization of services metastasizes into the privatization of sovereignty: the executive branch no longer merely executes the law—it markets it. The idea of constitutional limits erodes the moment the state claims exemption by calling its actions “privately financed.” And so, when a president boasts that he could raise his own army—through donors, contractors or loyalists - he is not being metaphorical. He is articulating the next logical stage of a government that has already sold itself to the highest bidders.

The Founders warned that liberty would perish when the instruments of power could be bought or sold. We are watching that prophecy unfold in real time. In the pay-to-play police state, money doesn’t just talk - it arrests, surveils, and kills. The fight to restore constitutional government begins where it was first betrayed: not merely with who pays, but with who decides.

If Congress no longer controls the nation’s spending- and if presidents, agencies, and corporations can bypass public consent by courting private benefactors - then the people no longer control their government. That is not democracy; that is debt servitude to power. The Founders knew that taxation and representation rise and fall together - and representation means more than writing a check. It means the power to set priorities, to attach conditions, to withhold funds, and to say no.

A government funded independently of its citizens will inevitably rule independently of them; it will spend without oversight, act without restraint, and enforce without accountability. That is why Madison stressed that “the power over the purse… is the most complete and effectual weapon with which any constitution can arm the people’s representatives against executive encroachments.”

The inverse is also true: once the president depends on private money, the people become dependent on the will of those who pay the president. In other words, an oligarchy - and when that oligarchy turns government itself into a vehicle for enrichment, a kleptocracy.

To reclaim the republic, the people must reclaim ownership of both the purse and the plan - the money that funds the government and the mandates governing how those funds are used. That requires drawing a hard constitutional line between public office and private enrichment; restoring congressional authority over every dollar spent in the name of the American people; and dismantling the system of shadow funding - super PACs, donor networks, corporate partnerships, and “public-private collaborations” - that now serve as pipelines for corruption disguised as efficiency. It also requires the sunlight of disclosure for any outside contribution touching government action, and strict prohibitions on off-budget schemes that treat private cash as a license to ignore the law.

Most of all, it requires remembering that citizenship is a public trust, not a private transaction. We need more than the right to pay for our government - we need the right to say how those payments are used, and the power to refuse when they are misused or abused. The moment we accept the notion that government may do whatever it wants so long as someone else pays for it, we have already sold the republic.

As we make clear in "Battlefield America: The War on the American People" and its fictional counterpart "The Erik Blair Diaries," the restoration of liberty will not come from new donors, new deals, or new rulers - it will come from a renewed insistence that power in America flows only from one source: We the People.

Our forebears fought a revolution to end taxation without representation. We may yet have to fight another - this time, against representation without appropriation, where officials claim the right to govern without the duty to answer to those they are supposed to represent. Remember, they are the servants. We the People are supposed to be the masters."

"Do You Wish To Know?"

"If you saw Atlas, the giant who holds the world on his shoulders, if you saw that he stood, blood running down his chest, his knees buckling, his arms trembling but still trying to hold the world aloft with the last of his strength, and the greater his effort the heavier the world bore down upon his shoulders - what would you tell him to do?"
"I... don't know. What could he do? What would you tell him?"
"To shrug."
- Ayn Rand, “Atlas Shrugged”
o
"Then you will see the rise of the men of the double standard - the men who live by force, yet count on those who live by trade to create the value of their looted money - the men who are the hitchhikers of virtue. In a moral society, these are the criminals, and the statutes are written to protect you against them. But when a society establishes criminals-by-right and looters-by-law - men who use force to seize the wealth of disarmed victims - then money becomes its creators' avenger. Such looters believe it safe to rob defenseless men, once they've passed a law to disarm them. But their loot becomes the magnet for other looters, who get it from them as they got it. Then the race goes, not to the ablest at production, but to those most ruthless at brutality. When force is the standard, the murderer wins over the pickpocket. And then that society vanishes, in a spread of ruins and slaughter.

Do you wish to know whether that day is coming? Watch money. Money is the barometer of a society's virtue. When you see that trading is done, not by consent, but by compulsion - when you see that in order to produce, you need to obtain permission from men who produce nothing - when you see that money is flowing to those who deal, not in goods, but in favors - when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don't protect you against them, but protect them against you - when you see corruption being rewarded and honesty becoming a self-sacrifice - you may know that your society is doomed."
An excerpt from “Atlas Shrugged,” by Ayn Rand.
Full text of “Francisco’s Money Speech” is here:

Freely download "Atlas Shrugged", by Ayn Rand, here:

A Tale of Two Shutdowns (Part I)"

"A Tale of Two Shutdowns (Part I)"
And the trouble with getting what you pay for...
by Joel Bowman

“Be thankful we’re not getting all the government we’re paying for.”
~ Will Rogers (1879-1935)

Buenos Aires, Argentina -  "We awoke, dear reader, as if into a dream...An “Auction” sign on the Congress lawn… A “Foreclosed” notice on the White House gate… and a yard sale out front of the Federal Reserve, where people sifted through shoeboxes of fiat notes, none of them “worth a Continental.” From one End of the Americas to the other, the gears of government are grinding to a halt. Today, we heave a bag of cement into the mix, just for good measure.

As you’ve no doubt heard, from hyperventilating neckbeards on the mainstream news, government workers are lately going without, as federal programs go unfunded from Washington DC to Buenos Aires. Of course, the “Tale of Two Shutdowns” reveals entirely different motivating forces, and will thus likely yield entirely different results. As such, some see their situation as “the best of times,” while others contend it is “the worst of times.” This week, some unpopular thoughts on them both...

Flying Blind: First, the sitcho up north, as relayed by the state’s apple-polishing newswire of choice...

"WASHINGTON, Nov 4 (Reuters) - The U.S. government shutdown on Tuesday entered its 35th day, matching a record set during President Donald Trump’s first term for the longest in history, as Republicans and Democrats in Congress continue to blame each other for the standoff. The toll increases by the day. Food assistance for the poor was halted for the first time, federal workers from airports to law enforcement and the military are going unpaid and the economy is flying blind with limited government reporting."

And on, and on, blah-blah... Reading the press’s soft, pseudo-lamentations, we are led to believe that, without the tireless work of selfless government employees, the crème de la crème of our otherwise fallen species, mankind would be left wandering naked in the dark, without so much as a club with which to throttle his covetous neighbor. Here’s now Big Government’s arch-apologist, Thomas Hobbes, saw the state of nature (from his own monstrous doorstop, "Leviathan")...

“In such condition there is no place for industry; because the fruit thereof is uncertain: and consequently no culture of the earth; no navigation, nor use of the commodities that may be imported by sea; no commodious building; no instruments of moving, and removing such things as require much force; no knowledge of the face of the earth; no account of time; no arts; no letters; no society; and which is worst of all, continual fear, and danger of violent death; and the life of man, solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.”

False Dilemmas: So that’s it, eh? Government... or violent death. The State... or no building, no moving, no removing, no industry. Centralized authority... or no arts, no letters and no knowledge at all. As a man who never met a horse he did not wish to place behind a cart, it might be said of Hobbes that he was a kind of intellectual precursor to the AOC, Mamdani, Bernie Sanders faction...except that the postcursors lack the intellectual prerequisite.

To be sure, we do not begrudge the poor their daily bread... which is precisely why we don’t want them beholden to the state for piddling handouts in the first place! If ever there was a “utilitarian” argument for favoring the profit incentive, for inducing those “greedy capitalists” to provide the very best goods and services at the most competitive prices, it would surely be to do so to the benefit of those least able to afford them.

And yet... Right now, we live in a world that provides Gold, Diamond and Emerald Status for our highest fliers... but which subjects the poorest among us to the Michelin star equivalent of government-brand imitation gruel. Rather than maintaining the proverbial “safety net” for those struggling to make ends meet, public disservices crowd out much needed private competition where it’s needed most, ensuring ersatz healthcare and subpar miseducation for generations of welfare dependents, who are in turn conditioned to expect no better, and to never bite the hand that force feeds them.

As for the economy “flying blind” without the government’s deft and skillful guidance, have you ever read such poppycock in all your days? Government “reporting” is not so much a reliable navigation system as it is a blizzard wrapped in a blindfold... dipped in chloroform.

Continued Reuters... "No federal funding means limited government data for the U.S. Federal Reserve to pinpoint jobs and economic data as the central bank steers policy. The American Federation of Government Employees, the largest union of federal workers, is pushing for a stopgap funding measure that the Democrats have voted against.

Featherless Bipeds: The US Federal Reserve has been “pinpointing jobs”, “gathering economic data” and “steering policy” for over a century (since 1913). According to Federal Reserve website, the unwieldy beast, spoken of in hushed tones as “The Board,” employs over 400 Ph.D. economists. “The System,” which includes The Board plus a dozen regional reserve banks, has over 1,000 economists on the payroll.

And what, gentle reader, has the public reaped for all this academic mustache twirling and pointy-headed brow furrowing? What masterful guidance have the chosen few delivered to the innumerate, unwashed masses? What sacred oracle was Greenspan consulting, for instance, when he declared, in 2005, while the sublime mortgage crisis was brewing in the cauldron:

“Although a ‘bubble’ in home prices for the nation as a whole does not appear likely, there do appear to be, at a minimum, signs of froth in some local markets where home prices seem to have risen to unsustainable levels.”

What omniscient intelligence was his successor, Benjamin Bernanke, channelling when he said, in 2007, on the eve of the sub-prime collapse and ensuring global financial crisis: “We believe the effect of the troubles in the sub-prime sector … will likely be limited, and we do not expect significant spill-overs from the subprime market to the rest of the economy or to the financial system.”

What dials and knobs was Jefe Jerome Powell fiddling when, in 2021, right before inflation skyrocketed to its highest level in nearly a half century, he told the press gallery plebeians:  “As the economy reopens… we expect that as the economy reopens… we will see inflation move up… but these effects are likely transitory.”

Would that these wise sages were merely running one of Mamdani’s soup kitchens “city-owned grocery stores,” where the fallout from their unbridled arrogance might be contained to a mere mop-up in aisle three... or a few bare shelves in aisle seven.

That these featherless bipeds were given the keys to the system, the ability to control the price of money itself (by setting interest rates and, therefore, determining the cost of borrowing and the reward for saving), is the very reason we have the term “systemic risk.”

Right now, American taxpayers are concerned that they are not getting all the government they (are forced to) pay for. As Will Rogers once said, they ought to be thankful they’re not getting any more. Next time, a tale of another government shutdown at the other End of the World… only, this one’s not a consequence of political ineptitude, but an expression of the will of modern politic’s most overlooked constituency: the people."