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Friday, January 9, 2026

"In This World..."

"In this world, the thing people fear the most, and what pains people the most - is giving more than they receive. God forbid I cut off more of my fingernail for you than you cut from your fingernail, for me! Heaven forbid I hold my breath in longer while thinking about you, than the amount of time your breath is held in for me! Not a second longer! It is a sad fact of human nature that there you stand as an Infinite Soul and yet your greatest fear is not receiving from another person in proportion to what you give. Your viewpoint is low, your vision is clouded. You have become, in your eyes, a funny little drawing on the paper pad of the universe. Indeed, this race is yet to evolve. And yet, I am surrounded by such fear, to such a great extent that I begin to fear the same!"
- C. JoyBell C.

Chet Raymo, “Time, Person, Year, Way...”

“Time, Person, Year, Way...”
by Chet Raymo

“According to the Concise Oxford English Dictionary, the 25 most used nouns in the English language are: time, person, year, way, day, thing, man, world, life, hand, part, child, eye, woman, place, work, week, case, point, government, company, number, group, problem, fact.

All very prosaic. Very workaday. Time leads the way, with year, day and week bucking up the calendar. Hand takes precedence over eye. Man, child, woman in her place. Case in point: government and company. Problem precedes fact. Work is always with us, of course; play is not to be found. Nothing in the list that reflects science or technology or the lofty ruminations of academics. More surprising, nothing that reflects religion. When it comes right down to it, it's as the poet Rilke wrote in the Ninth Duino Elegy: "Perhaps we are here only to say: house, bridge, fountain, gate."

"Praise this world to the Angel," says Rilke. "Do not tell him the untellable...Show him some simple thing, refashioned by age after age, till it lives in our hands and eyes as a part of ourselves. Tell him things. He'll stand more astonished."

"Big Orly’s Diary: Bulk-Lot Wisdom from Up the Holler"

"Big Orly’s Diary: 
Bulk-Lot Wisdom from Up the Holler"
by Fred Reed

"Saturday morning was sunny and bugs screaming and buzzing, at least in my part of West Virginia, and it was nice and cool. Bugs is pretty much like folk. The boy bugs holler or buzz or I don’t know what all so the girl bugs will love them and they can get laid, and then the boy bugs run off and leave the girl bugs with the eggs. You’d think the girl bugs would learn, but they never do. If you have a choice, it’s better to be a boy bug.

Anyways, I was planning to go see Uncle Hant that makes skull break moonshine back in the woods so he could tell me how to make a living. Hant knows everything. A few years back, he sent the Poverty Office in Wheeling a letter that said he was a one-legged Injun princess named Sighing Cloud with black lung, and they started sending him money in trucks. Then they wrote him a letter saying did he have any children he didn’t know who was the daddy to, so they could send him more money. He told them he had thirteen and he didn’t have no idea where they came from but they all had Down’s Syndrome, whatever that is, and now he’s the richest man in McDowell County. So don’t nobody who says gummint is a bad thing know what he’s talking about.

But Hant don’t get up too early in the morning, so first I went up the holler to see my old school teacher, Mr. Entropy McWilliams that’s got a internet television and lets me look at it sometimes. He was watching what he said was a Sympathy Orchestra and a noise was coming out of it like a blow-out plug on a high-pressure drill rig. It was real awful and I asked Mr. McWilliams what it was and he said somebody was blowing a hobo. I thought that was pretty ripe for a show anybody could watch, even little children, but it turned out it wasn’t so much a hobo as a oboe, which is like a three-foot duck call. I didn’t see much future in it. Neither would our McDowell County ducks, that don’t have much schooling. It might work with city ducks, though.

Anyway, he said it did sound kind of like a cat squalling because of Affirmative Action, which I didn’t know what was. He said it was a newfangled law in Washington, that’s the Yankee capital, that says if you want somebody to do a job, you have to hire someone that can’t do it. I said that made sense, about like taking poison. He said I thought that because I wasn’t in Washington and it was God’s own truth, and it was for Social Justice. The more you couldn’t do a job, the more you had to get it.

That was too many for me. I thought, what if I had cancer in the head and the brain doctor showed up with a claw hammer and a ice pick and didn’t know where to start, so they put a sign on my foot that said Open Other End or something. I’d shoot the sonofabitch before he got in striking distance. Maybe there’s such a thing as too much social justice. At least if it’s my head.

Mr. McWilliams said the Sympathy, that was in New York, used to hire music people by setting them down and listening to them play the fiddle or duck call or banjo and taking the best ones. But then women got into a uproar and started yowling that the Sympathy only got men. They said women could play fiddles and all just fine and it was affirmative action for men and they was madder than wet hornets. So the Congress made a law that the Sympathy had to string up a bed sheet and them as wanted the job had to play behind it and the judges didn’t know who they were and couldn’t let in their sisters and uncles. It made sense, but they did it anyway, and pretty soon the Sympathy was full of ladies blowing and honking and sawing away, and everybody was happy because they did it right.

Well, everybody except American Africans, that said none of them was in the Sympathy. They wanted Social Justice. Best I can tell, Social Justice means getting anything you want or you’ll scream and yell and bite and wet yourself like a two-year-old that needs a whupping and a new diaper. So now they’re going to choose by colors, like they was painting a ‘57 Chevy. I guess that’ll work.

Mr. McWilliams said I just didn’t understand Advanced Thought. Well, I didn’t. I guess it’s because I’m not real smart. I used to be, though. The first time I was in the fourth grade my teacher, it was Miss Purity Perkins, said I was real special and she hoped I’d go far, but I guess she would have settled for the next county over. I told Mr. McWilliams if Affirmative Action meant getting a job because you couldn’t do it, I wanted to be a Space Rocket Driver. At least if I could be one from Lou-Bob’s Billiards and Rib Pit. I was having a lot of fun with my girlfriend Jiffy Lube and I figured I couldn’t drive a Space Rocket at the Rib pit just as good as I couldn’t drive it from Australia or Wheeling or wherever they have Space Rockets.

I said so much Social Justice was giving me a motingator headache and I wanted to go off to Lou-Bob’s that serves bust-head shine under the table if you don’t look like a damn Revenoor.

Then the television started talking about Reparations for Slavery, that I thought they got rid of after World War Two. He said it didn’t matter and it was to pay you for bad stuff that never happened to you, just like Affirmative Action was to give you jobs you couldn’t do, but that was a whole nutheer bucket of crawdads and we could talk about it later. I don’t know. It all sounded like a crooked poker game to let grifters and frauds get paid without going into the mines and getting killed like Christians.

It was still early so I went off to tell Hant about Affirmative Action. He was at his still. Like I said, he makes panther sweat that takes the enamel off your teeth to sell to yuppies from Washington that want a Cultural Experience. He puts it in genuine authentic mountain stone jars he gets from Taiwan. Some folks say he gets a cut from liver doctors in Bluefield, but I don’t know.

Hant’s a tall skinny rascal with arthritis so when he bends over it looks like folding a Buck knife and he’s got a jaw like a front-end loader. Later he said he told the Poverty Office he wanted to be a Orthostatic Ontological Proctologist. I asked him what that was. He said he wasn’t sure but he sure as hell didn’t know how to be one so they had to pay him for it. He said they would never dare say no to a one-legged Injun princess with black lung.

After, I went down the hill to look for Jiffy Lube that I hadn’t seen for weeks. What happened was, Jif is real pretty, and she was in Lou Bob’s, and Lester ‘Callister got smart with her like he didn’t know what parts of her was handles and what parts wasn’t. She laid him out cold with a pool stick and went to hide in the mountains. But after a while the sheriff said he figured the Statue of Limitations was about a month for smacking Lester, and anyway the doctor said he probably be out of a coma in a week, so weren’t no harm done but his teeth might be all cattywumpus. Jif was smiling all happy like. That’s a good sign if you know Jif, and I felt like a man with five aces and a date with somebody else’s wife, so we went off to my doublewide. I figure there’s nothing better on a mountain night than a good girlfriend, a six-pack, and a Bug Zapper."

"How To Recover When The World Breaks You"

"How To Recover When The World Breaks You"
by Ryan Holiday

"There is a line attributed to Ernest Hemingway - that the first draft of everything is sh*t - which, of all the beautiful things Hemingway has written, applies most powerfully to the ending of "A Farewell to Arms." There are no fewer than 47 alternate endings to the book. Each one is a window into how much he struggled to get it right. The pages, which now sit in the Hemingway Collection at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston, show Hemingway writing the same passages over and over. Sometimes the wording was nearly identical, sometimes whole sections were cut out. He would, at one moment of desperation, even send pages to his rival, F. Scott Fitzgerald, for notes.

One passage clearly challenged Hemingway more than the others. It comes at the end of the book when Catherine has died after delivering their stillborn son and Frederic is struggling to make sense of the tragedy that has just befallen him. “The world breaks everyone,” he wrote, “and afterward many are strong at the broken places. But those that will not break it kills.”

In different drafts, he would experiment with shorter and longer versions. In the handwritten draft he worked on with F. Scott Fitzgerald, for instance, Hemingway begins instead with “You learn a few things as you go along…” before beginning with his observation about how the world breaks us. In two typed manuscript pages, Hemingway moved the part about what you learn elsewhere and instead added something that would make the final book - “If people bring so much courage to this world the world has to kill them to break them, so of course it kills them.”

My point in showing this part of Hemingway’s process isn’t just to definitively disprove the myth - partly of Hemingway’s own making - that great writing is something that flows intuitively from the brain of a genius (no, great writing is a slow, painstaking process, even for geniuses). My point is to give some perspective on one of Hemingway’s most profound insights, one that he, considering his tragic suicide some 32 years later, struggled to fully integrate into his life.

The world is a cruel and harsh place. One that, for at least 4.5 billion years, is undefeated. From entire species of apex predators to Hercules to Hemingway himself, it has been home to incredibly strong and powerful creatures. And where are they now? Gone. Dust. As the Bible verse, which Hemingway opens another one of his books with (and which inspired its title) goes: “One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh: but the earth abideth forever…The sun also ariseth, and the sun goeth down, and hasteth to the place where he arose…”

The world is undefeated. So really then, for all of us, life is not a matter of “winning” but of surviving as best we can - of breaking and enduring rather than bending the world to our will the way we sometimes suspect we can when we are young and arrogant.

I write about Stoicism, a philosophy of self-discipline and strength. Stoicism promises to help you build an “inner citadel,” a fortress of power and resilience that prepares you for the difficulties of the world. But many people misread this, and assume that Stoicism is a philosophy designed to make you superhuman - to help you eliminate pesky emotions and attachments, and become invincible.

This is wrong. Yes, Stoicism is partly about making it so you don’t break as easily - so you are not so fragile that the slightest change in fortune wrecks you. At the same time, it’s not about filling you with so much courage and hubris that you think you are unbreakable. Only the proud and the stupid think that is even possible. Instead, the Stoic seeks to develop the skills - the true strength - required to deal with a cruel world.

So much of what happens is out of our control: We lose people we love. We are financially ruined by someone we trusted. We put ourselves out there, put every bit of our effort into something, and are crushed when it fails. We are drafted to fight in wars, to bear huge taxes or familial burdens. We are passed over for the thing we wanted so badly. This can knock us down and hurt us. Yes.

Stoicism is there to help you recover when the world breaks you and, in the recovering, to make you stronger at a much, much deeper level. The Stoic heals themselves by focusing on what they can control: Their response. The repairing. The learning of the lessons. Preparing for the future.

This is not an idea exclusive to the West. There is a form of Japanese art called Kintsugi, which dates back to the 15th century. In it, masters repair broken plates and cups and bowls, but instead of simply fixing them back to their original state, they make them better. The broken pieces are not glued together, but instead fused with a special lacquer mixed with gold or silver. The legend is that the art form was created after a broken tea bowl was sent to China for repairs. But the returned bowl was ugly - the same bowl as before, but cracked. Kintsugi was invented as a way to turn the scars of a break into something beautiful.

You can see in this tea bowl, which dates to the Edo period and is now in the Freer Gallery, how the gold seams take an ordinary bowl and add to it what look like roots, or even blood vessels. This plate, also from the Edo period, was clearly a work of art in its original form. Now it has subtle gold filling on the edges where it was clearly chipped and broken by use. This dark tea bowl, now in the Smithsonian, is accented with what look like intensely real lightning bolts of gold. The bowl below it shows that more than just precious metals can improve a broken dish, as the artist clearly inserted shards of an entirely different bowl to replace the original’s missing pieces.

In Zen culture, impermanence is a constant theme. They would have agreed with Hemingway that the world tries to break the rigid and the strong. We are like cups - the second we are made we are simply waiting to be shattered - by accident, by malice, by stupidity or bad luck. The Zen solution to this perilous situation is to embrace it, to be okay with the shattering, perhaps even to seek it out. The idea of wabi-sabi is precisely that. Coming to terms with our imperfections and weaknesses and finding beauty in that.

So both East and West - Stoicism and Buddhism - arrive at similar insights. We’re fragile, they both realize. But out of this fragility, one of the philosophies realizes there is the opportunity for beauty. Hemingway’s prose rediscovers these insights and fuses them into something both tragic and breathtaking, empowering and humbling. The world will break us. It breaks everyone. It always has and always will.

Yet…The author will struggle with the ending of their book and want to quit. The recognition we sought will not come. The insurance settlement we so desperately needed will be rejected. The presentation we practiced for will begin poorly and be beset by technical difficulties. The friend we cherished will betray us. The haunting scene in "A Farewell to Arms" can happen, a child stillborn and a wife lost in labor - and still tragically happens far too often, even in the developed world.

The question is, as always, what will we do with this? How will we respond? Because that’s all there is. The response. his is not to dismiss the immense difficulty of any of these ordeals. It is rather, to first, be prepared for them - humble and aware that they can happen. Next, it is the question: Will we resist breaking? Or will we accept the will of the universe and seek instead to become stronger where we were broken?

Death or Kintsugi? Fragile or, to use that wonderful phrase from Nassim Taleb, 'Antifragile?' Not unbreakable. Not resistant. Because those that cannot break, cannot learn, and cannot be made stronger for what happened. Those that will not break are the ones who the world kills. Not unbreakable. Instead, unruinable."
Freely download "A Farewell To Arms", by Ernest Hemingway, here:

The Daily "Near You?"

Valley Center, Kansas, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Jung’s Warning: Why We Know What We Should Do But Still Don’t Do It"

Full screen recommended.
The Psyche,
"Jung’s Warning: Why We Know 
What We Should Do But Still Don’t Do It"
"We all know what we should do - eat better, work harder, meditate, change, evolve. And yet… we don’t. Why? In this video, we dive deep into one of Carl Jung’s most profound psychological warnings: the battle between the conscious and the unconscious mind. You’ll discover why knowledge alone doesn’t transform us, why we self-sabotage even when we want to grow, and how the hidden parts of our psyche quietly shape our destiny. This isn’t just psychology - it’s a spiritual mirror that reveals the truth about human resistance, shadow work, and inner transformation. By the end, you’ll understand why your greatest struggle isn’t with the world outside you - but with the unseen world within you. This is not a motivational talk - it’s an awakening. Because once you understand what truly stops you from acting, you’ll never see your own mind the same way again."
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The Poet: Charles Bukowski, "Darkness Falls"

"Darkness Falls"

"Darkness falls upon Humanity
and faces become terrible things
that wanted more than there was.

All our days are marked with
unexpected affronts - 
some disastrous, others less so,
but the process is
wearing and continuous.

Attrition rules.
Most give way,
leaving empty spaces
where people should be.
And now,
as we ready to self-destruct,
there is very little left to kill,
which makes the tragedy
less and more,
much, much more."

- Charles Bukowski

"100 Year Record Snow Cyclone Hits Moscow Overnight!"

Meanwhile, elsewhere...
Full screen recommended.
Englishman In Moscow, 1/9/26 
"100 Year Record Snow Cyclone Hits Moscow Overnight!"
 "Historic snowfall in Russia, let's walk through 
Moscow and Red Square together and check it out!"
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 
Yeah...

"California Governor in Panic as Walmart Shuts Down Hundreds of Stores"

Full screen recommended.
Elizabeth Davis, 1/9/26
"California Governor in Panic
 as Walmart Shuts Down Hundreds of Stores"
"Governor Newsom is panicking as hundreds of Walmart stores across California face potential closure - and the regulatory environment forcing them out reveals exactly why businesses are fleeing the state. This video exposes how California's labor costs, environmental regulations, and complex permitting processes have made it too expensive for the world's largest retailer to operate profitably.

Discover how Walmart's potential exit threatens tens of thousands of jobs and hundreds of millions in local tax revenue, why rural communities and low-income neighborhoods will be hit hardest by losing their only source of affordable goods, and how this follows a devastating pattern of major companies relocating to Texas, refineries closing, and truckers being forced out. We'll explore the impossible political standoff between progressive policies and economic reality, the communities that will be left stranded without access to groceries and household essentials, and why California's aggressive regulatory framework is creating a business exodus that experts warn could accelerate dramatically."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Roof Report, 1/9/26
"Denny's CEO Reveals The Real Reason 
It's Closing California Restaurants!"
"Denny's CEO is finally speaking out about the real reasons behind the closure of multiple California restaurants, and the truth is more alarming than you think. In this video, we break down the CEO's shocking revelations about operating costs, labor expenses, regulatory burdens, and the business challenges that are making California unsustainable for restaurant chains. From minimum wage increases and rising rents to declining customer traffic and profitability issues, Denny's closures are a warning sign for California's entire restaurant industry. If you're a California resident, business owner, or concerned about the state's economy, this insider perspective reveals why more closures could be coming."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
The Hidden Menu, 1/9/26
"6 Fast Food Chains That Lost Millions of Americans"
"Once dominant fast food chains are watching millions of Americans walk away and it’s not just about higher prices. Shrinking portions, declining food quality, and nonstop corporate cost-cutting have shattered trust with longtime customers. In this video, we break down 6 fast food chains that lost millions of Americans and why the damage may be permanent."
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Dan, I Allegedly, "Markets Are Booming and Businesses Are Failing"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 1/9/26
"Markets Are Booming and Businesses Are Failing"
"The corporate housing crisis is shaking up the real estate market, and it could mean big changes for all of us. In today's video, I dive into how corporate home ownership is impacting housing, rent prices, and the American Dream. From the President's proposed policies to the ripple effects on homebuilders like D.R. Horton and Lennar, I cover what you need to know about the shifting landscape of real estate and the economy. Plus, I share practical tips for saving money, stacking cash, and navigating these uncertain times."
Comments here:

Bill Bonner, "The Dollar Has Claws"

"The Dollar Has Claws"
by Bill Bonner

Baltimore, Maryland - "It is a world red in tooth and claw, says Miller. Or, as Thucydides put it: the strong do what they can, while the weak suffer what they must. Karl Rove saw this world taking shape during the Iraq War: "We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality - judiciously, as you will - we’ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors...and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do."

But ‘history’s actors’ are just that - actors, not playwrights. The real drama is much deeper and more complex, with civilization, the Ten Commandments, do unto others, the rule of law and due process to restrain knuckleheads like Miller.

But it’s not a story of uninterrupted progress. And when an empire needs to be brought to heel, History unleashes Trump, Miller, Hegseth et al to do the job. They pronounce the words given to them. They read the script faithfully. But these are just poor players, walking shadows who strut and fret for their hour upon the stage. They think they are calling the shots themselves. But they do not develop the plot line on their own. They do as History commands – taking off the seat belts and stepping on the gas.

Trump accused Maduro of being a ‘narco-trafficker.’ He said he was running a major criminal cartel called the Cartel de los Soles. And then he sent in his midnight strike force. It was right out of a novel...or a bad movie. And now, Maduro is being tried as a drug kingpin. But drugs had little to do with his downfall. He was double-crossed by his lieutenants who saw their own opportunity to strut their stuff. AP: "How Delcy Rodríguez courted Donald Trump and rose to power in Venezuela."

There were probably plenty of ‘reasons’ for the US kidnapping of Maduro and his wife. Vanity. Glory. Greed. US elites looked forward to looting Venezuelan riches...such as they are. The Trump team, meanwhile, enjoys the warm light...like the gaslights of a 19th century stage ...of yet another triumph.

It is doubtful if Donald Trump takes much time to think through the ‘reasons’ very carefully. He’s a man of action, not reflection. Butt if he did, he’d see, for example, that the storied ‘oil riches’ probably aren’t as rich as people think. The trouble with Venezuelan oil is that it is more expensive to pump and more expensive to refine than ‘light’ crude from Saudi Arabia. Trump wants lower oil prices, but the lower the price, the less the heavy goo from the Orinoco deposits is worth. The deep thinkers in the Trump circle, if there are any, must have considered these things. Our guess is that they are focused, not on the oil itself, but on the money that buys it.

You’ll recall that in 2000, Saddam Hussein began offering Iraqi oil in exchange for euros. The US trumped up a ‘weapons of mass destruction’ charge soon after; Saddam was executed in 2006. This time, Venezuelan oil exports were sanctioned by the US. Oilprice.com: "Before the first round of economic and financial sanctions hit in 2017, the U.S. took almost 800,000 barrels per day from Venezuela. This figure went all the way down to zero in 2019, with the highest level of restrictions known as “maximum pressure.” This happened again in May of this year [2025], as Chevron, Repsol and others were blocked by the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC)."

This left China as the only customer, openly and flagrantly buying Venezuelan oil...and paying in yuan. And now, the US Deep State appears to be giving the orders, speaking through Donald J. Trump and his Vichy Venezuelan collaborators. Their aim is not to cut China off from oil (that would be impossible)...but to force the oil market to stick with the dollar. ABC News: "Trump demands Venezuela kick out China and Russia, partner only with US on oil."

Back in the 20th century, people were eager to be a part of the great US dollar-based empire. Today, other nations need to be whipped and beaten to force them to stick with the dollar. The ‘exorbitant privilege’ that the US enjoyed since 1945 - in which everyone had to buy and sell oil in dollars - may be coming to an end. Of course, we never know exactly what History has in mind; but we doubt she intends to Make America Great Again by acts of violence and over-spending led by the numbskulls in Washington."

Adventures With Danno, "Jaw-dropping Prices at Meijer"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 1/9/26
"Jaw-dropping Prices at Meijer"
Comments here:

Jim Kunstler, "The Democrats Last Rodeo"

Minnesota ICE war heats up.
"The Democrats Last Rodeo"
by Jim Kunstler

"Chrump, Chrump Chrump... He’s come to occupy the Left’s minds like an infestation of weevils chawing away the ligaments of civilized society. But, of course, the whole wicked, Cluster-B, anomie-driven, insurrectionist extravaganza is a made-for-video production bought and paid for by a tiny coterie of super-wealthy megalomaniacs untouched by consequence - George and Alex Soros (The Open Society Foundations), Shanghai-based American Neville Roy Singham (Codepink and more), Reid Hoffman (funder of Trump prosecutions and more), Lauren Powell Jobs (The Atlantic and the Emerson Collective), Hansjorg Wyss (Berger Action Fund), Bill Gates (of course)...

Their main client in all this mischief is the Democratic Party, and the Democratic Party’s chief motivation, its raison d’être going on at least ten years now, has been to hide its multifarious crimes, its vast racketeering operations now garishly on display in the state of Minnesota, where the grift just went too far and was done right in America’s face.

Who can possibly fail to see how it works? Import a bunch of people from a foreign land... enable them to set up a vast network of social services frauds... organize them for ballot harvesting and election fraud... and kick-back bundles of money to Democratic Party politicians. If anybody notices, yell “racist!” Sound the klaxon to turn out a thousand LARPing protesters on the Soros payroll. Provide them with signs, banners, black-bloc outfits, cartoon costumes, pride flags, umbrellas, snacks, bullhorns, pallets of bricks, and hope that some of them get hurt so you can manufacture the next martyr.

The crescendo of this long-running seditious treason was the wide open border during the four-year fake presidency of “Joe Biden,” including the colossal coordinated scam of funding who-knows-how-many NGOs with additional US taxpayer money, funneled through the UN, to process, transport, and outfit with social security numbers and debit cards X-millions of alien mutts, professional terrorists, gang-bangers, mental patients, and actual soldiers from faraway lands, and sprinkle them into every cranny of the republic to queer the next election and otherwise cause as much disruption as possible to the everyday life of actual US citizens.

They flooded the country with millions dependent on the Democratic Party’s largess - your tax dollars - and now they are doing everything possible to prevent the removal of this riffraff back to their countries of origin. Starting a civil war over it, in fact, because that’s what it’s come to. The federal agents tasked with the removal operation are apparenty not allowed to defend themselves when the LARPing street cadres attack them. There have been 66 car attacks against ICE officers since January, 2025. State and local officials in Minneapolis have behaved so dishonestly that federal investigators kicked them off what is now a federal case in the matter of “ICE-tracker” Renee Nicole Good, shot dead at the scene in her car. Minnesota will not be permitted to turn ICE agent Jonathan Ross into another Derek Chauvin. That sort of hustle is over.

What you can now discern in the winter darkness through fog of tear gas is that the Democratic Party will choose to destroy the country rather than face the consequences of its long-running crimes. Everybody knows now that the sort of social services grifts uncovered in Minnesota, with the kickbacks to Democratic politicians, have been going on all over America. The president has ordered an “all-of-government” effort to find the fraud and prosecute it, and you can assume the effort will tend to concentrate on the very states and cities where the Democratic Party dominates. Expect election fraud to bubble up in this cauldron. The evidence of a stolen 2020 election is finally emerging and converging with the larger illegal immigrant story.

It’s also clear now, that the NGO racket associated with all that is going to be dismantled - the money-stream from the likes of Soros & friends. They are going to get RICOed, their assets could be seized, and the public will learn a whole lot more about the damage they have done to the country. The Left’s NGOs not only support the on-the-ground street action, they also provide thousands of “executive” jobs and salaries to the Maoist nose-rings and transy-boys churned out of the higher ed diploma mills who are otherwise unemployable in any real economy with their race-and-gender studies diplomas.

The Democratic Party apparently realizes that the latest round of scandals and crimes might be its last rodeo. After a day of hearings this week, featuring several Minnesota politicos who testified about sketchy goings-on in the state, Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FLA) launched criminal referrals against Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and MN Attorney General Keith Ellison. That’s apart from whatever the DOJ has already been working on, and it is probably the beginning of a nation-wide web of prosecutions moving toward the midterm election that will drag in many other big dawgs of the party, including 2028 front-runner Gavin Newsom. The suicide of the Democratic Party has gone live, Donald Trump assisting."

"The Musical Chairs Economy: When You Can’t Find A Job No Matter How Hard You Try, It Can Be Absolutely Soul Crushing"

"The Musical Chairs Economy: When You Can’t Find A Job 
No Matter How Hard You Try, It Can Be Absolutely Soul Crushing"
by Michael Snyder

"After months of submitting resumes and filling out applications, many unemployed Americans have given in to despair. Dozens of large companies all over the nation have been conducting mass layoffs, and the competition for any good jobs that do happen to be available has become extremely intense. But if you have not lost your source of income, things may still seem fairly normal to you and you may be wondering what all of the fuss is about. That is why I am calling this “the musical chairs economy”. If you have been able to hold on to a chair each time the music stops playing, that is a good thing. But you should also realize that there are millions of Americans that have been forced out of the game and are absolutely desperate to get back in.

Earlier today, I came across a social media post from a discouraged job seeker that really tugged at my heart
In recent months I have heard so many stories like this. Very highly qualified individuals feel like they are banging their heads into a wall because they can’t find work no matter how hard they try. One unemployed worker named Tim Rogers that has been out of work for five months feels like the job applications that he is constantly submitting are going straight “into the abyss”…"I got laid off five months ago. Every morning I drink a pot of coffee while I write cover letters, tweak my résumé, and submit job applications into the abyss, knowing they will likely never be seen by human eyes - only crawled by the cold, lifeless algorithms of an artificial intelligence. I feel like General Zod from Superman, floating off into space trapped inside a two-dimensional phantom zone, screaming in silence about my job qualifications and core competencies."

The job market is a mess. The old system is broken and a functioning replacement has yet to fully emerge. We’re stuck in the between years - a dystopian digital doomscape that has job seekers and hirers picking through a landfill of A.I.-generated garbage and longing for the halcyon days of an analog past. Some people are firing off hundreds or even thousands of resumes without hearing anything at all. It can be extremely depressing when you feel like you are trying as hard as you can but you aren’t getting anywhere.

One woman that was laid off by Oracle in November 2023 still hasn’t been able to find work after more than two years…"I started at Oracle in January 2020 as a site reliability engineer. In November 2023, I started hearing that my Oracle coworkers were getting pulled into Zoom meetings and told they had been laid off. I hoped I wouldn’t be next, but I was. My entire team was let go. I didn’t start looking for work right away because I’d received some severance pay, and I’d heard it was difficult to land a tech role during the holiday season. I took some time to reassess what I wanted from my career and began my job search in February 2024. I was optimistic at first because most of my prior job searches hadn’t taken too long. As the months dragged on, it became clear I had the wrong impression of the tech hiring landscape. More than two years after being laid off, I’m still unemployed."

It is January 2026 now. After being unemployed for so long, her value in the marketplace has declined dramatically. In this environment, it is so helpful to have a personal contact that can help you land a position. Because in so many cases, the resumes and applications that job seekers fire off to potential employers are not even looked at by human eyes…You did everything they told you to do. You earned the credentials, spent hours on your resume and revised multiple cover letters. You worked side gigs, volunteered, learned new software and perfected your LinkedIn profile. Yet, you can’t get a callback for an interview.

It’s as if your application vanished into the abyss of a company database, and the “thank you for applying” emails are piling up. So-called entry-level jobs now need years of experience, and junior roles expect postgraduate degrees. You are likely wondering what you’re missing, but it’s not you - it’s the system. Across the United States, Canada and United Kingdom, automation now does the screening before a human ever has a look. Companies say they can’t find talent, yet many have stopped training people.

Unfortunately, it appears that conditions will become even harsher during the months ahead because things are certainly trending in the wrong direction. In November, the number of job postings in the United States was the lowest in 14 months, and it was also the second lowest in nearly five years…"The number of postings in November was the fewest since September 2024. But outside that month, it was the lowest in nearly five years. Open jobs in November fell sharply in shipping and warehousing, restaurants and hotels, and in state and local government."

As the job market continues to dry up, it is going to have enormous implications for the economy. Americans just don’t have as much discretionary income as they once did, and as a result large retailers are closing locations all across the country. And with fewer potential buyers floating around, home prices are starting to fall…"Housing market anxiety is spreading - with 26 of the country’s 50 biggest metro areas now seeing home prices lower than they were a year ago. For the first time in nearly three years, the median US listing price has also slipped below $400,000, a key psychological level that had held firm since the pandemic boom, according to Realtor.com."

It appears that our housing bubble is starting to burst. Sadly, home prices are declining the fastest in some of the markets that were once the hottest…"Worst is Austin, TX, where prices have plunged 7.3 percent over the past year to $462,000, the biggest drop of any major metro. The pain is spreading well beyond Texas. Prices are down 6.7 percent in San Diego, CA slipping to just under $900,000, while nearby San Jose has seen values fall 5.5 percent to $1.19 million."

Needless to say, what we are currently experiencing is just the beginning. Many of the economic trends that made big news in 2025 will continue to accelerate in 2026. So if you are out of work right now, I would grab whatever you can, because competition for jobs is only going to get even fiercer during the months ahead."

"The Idiocy of Using a $200 Billion Navy to Enforce a 140× Cocaine Premium"

"The Idiocy of Using a $200 Billion Navy
 to Enforce a 140× Cocaine Premium"
by David Stockman

"Last year there were 178 million alcohol drinkers in the US, which, unfortunately, resulted in 178,000 alcohol related deaths in the US. That’s a regrettable 0.1% fatality rate among users.  But alcohol isn’t illegal because America hasn’t forgotten the bitter lessons of the Prohibition disaster 100 years ago.

By contrast, the only illegal drug that comes in from Venezuela is cocaine. There is no evidence whatsoever by the Federal government’s own lights that any fentanyl comes into the US from Venezuela. So the "killer" drug they are gumming about is cocaine. Yet even then Venezuela grows zero percent of the annual US supply of about 826,000 pounds, and accounts for only 8% of US bound shipments via transit from Colombia and other sources.

Still, cocaine may well be both illegal and a dubious source of recreational stimulants for most people, but it is actually no more deadly than alcohol. To wit, according to DEA and other government agencies, last year there were about 5 million cocaine users in the USA and about 5,000 deaths from pure cocaine overdoses.

In this regard, the higher figure of 20,000 cocaine deaths per year often cited by drug prohibitionists reflects the widespread spiking of street cocaine with deadly fentanyl. The latter is far, far cheaper at 0.3 cents per dose versus versus $150 per dose for cocaine or more than 1,000X more.

In any event, the fatality rate among cocaine users purely from cocaine is just 0.1% or the same as alcohol. Yet due to Nixon’s long-running misbegotten War on Drugs, we spend billions each year trying to eradicate it—a pointless effort that now includes even the mobilization of the US Navy against fishing boats.

But here’s the thing. Using $40 billion carrier battle groups to blow-up cocaine-transiting speed boats is simply the stupidest, most irrational action ever conceived on the banks of the Potomac, and there is surely plenty of competition for that honor.

The reason is straight forward: Namely, interdiction and destruction of supply only drives up the price and drastically so—thereby making the illicit business of growing, shipping and distributing cocaine all the more profitable. In turn, this also means that the illegal cartels which distribute it are capable of spending whatever it takes to counter-act law enforcement and to compensate for the loss of product due to interdiction.

Stated differently, the idiots behind Prohibition—from alcohol to cocaine and heroin—believe that they can win by defying the law of supply and demand. They most surely cannot. The only thing supply destruction actually accomplishes is to massively increase the revenue of the drug cartels and their ability to maintain ever larger armies of ever more violent operatives to conduct their insanely profitable businesses.

For want of doubt, let’s begin with the basic facts of supply and demand. Currently, Grok 4 indicates that US cocaine consumption is estimated at 514,000 pounds per year. Among an estimated 5.0 million active users, that’s an average annual consumption of 2 ounces per user per year. That is to say, the overwhelming number of recreational users are not about to kill themselves on 2 ounces of snort.

Nevertheless, the actual supply of cocaine coming into the USA in 2024 was about 826,000 pounds, meaning that about 312,000 pounds of seizures by the Coast Guard, other border control operations and law enforcement domestically amount to nearly 61% of actual use. Yes, for a product with the inherent high price inelasticity of a recreational stimulant like cocaine, just have the cops confiscate 61% of end demand. That does make the price go sky-high!

And that gets us to the absurd economics of the so-called War on Drugs. In this case, we are talking about using hundreds of thousands of domestic law enforcement personal led by the DEA, thousands of Coast Guard and other border patrol and now $40 billion Navy carrier battle-groups to hunt down 312,000 pounds of a drug that is no more lethal than alcohol! After all, the US governments at all levels spends an estimated $100 billion per year on the War on Drugs. So even if just 20% of that is directly against the cocaine traffic, that’s nearly $320,000 per pound of cocaine interdicted!

That’s surely stupid enough, but it’s not even the half of it. Spending that much on policing, interdiction and supply destruction drives the price skyward. As shown below, the farm-gate value of cocaine paste grown in Colombia is just $382 per pound, which rises by another $525 per pound for in-country processing and delivery to shipping points, but then the cost of interdiction takes off like a bat out of hell.

The landed value in the US is estimated by Grok 4 at about $11,320 per pound. However, the shipping cost of the 826,000 pounds that makes it way to the US is not remotely the $10,340 per pound uplift from the port of export value. That 10X mark-up is plain and simple the high cost of combating law enforcement and compensating for the 61% of supplies that are lost due to interdiction on the way to end customers.

Beyond that, as also shown by the table, there is another nearly 5X mark-up on the way from illegal entry at the US border to street value at retail. Needless to say, the standard ratio of landed-price to retail for normal legal commerce is 2X, as exemplified by the case of coffee in the second column.
In all, the mark up from the Colombia farm-gate to retail is 142.5X or $54,050 per pound of product distributed at retail. By contrast, coffee beans grown in Colombia and distributed via legal commerce exhibit a mark-up of just 2.86X between farm gate and retail value per pound. The only reason the farm-gate value of cocaine is more than 100X higher than that of coffee beans is that it takes about 500X more land to generate enough cocaine leaf for a pound of paste as it takes to grow enough coffee cherries for a pound of brew.

Accordingly, were cocaine commerce to be legal and were the leaf-based paste produced at the farm level at $382 per pound to be handled by legal shipping lines and domestic drug store distributors, the street retail value would be about $1,100 per pound or 98% less than current levels. Stated differently, the prohibition cost amounts to more than $53,000 per pound. What does that $53,000 per pound cost of law enforcement and prohibition in the retail price of coke really fund? Well, violent criminal syndicates. That’s what!

And yet and yet. The Donald is compounding the insanity by mobilizing $40 billion Naval carrier battle groups to make, well, a lot more totally unnecessary crime on the streets, byways and communities of America. The misuse of power and capital described above is not an aberration. It reflects a governing class that no longer understands economics, incentives, or second-order consequences—and increasingly relies on coercion, monetary distortion, and narrative control when policy failure becomes undeniable."

"Russia Goes Oreshnik Again"

Full screen recommended.
"Russia Goes Oreshnik Again"
by Larry C. Johnson

"I don’t know if this is Russia’s promised retaliation for the failed 91-drone attack on December 28, 2025, but the Oreshnik was unleashed for the first time since its debut in 2024, and with devastating effect. Preliminary reports state that the Oreshnik hit the Bilche-Volitsko-Uhersky underground gas storage facility, which has a storage capacity of 17.05 billion cubic meters, which is more than 50% of the total capacity of all storage facilities in Ukraine. Lvov deputy Igor Zinkevich reported that in the Lvov region, the stoves in the kitchen are barely burning, the boilers have gone out and won’t light up – there’s no gas pressure.

Here is just one video showing the unique lightning bolt strike first seen in 2024 when Russia hit the Pivdenmash/Yuzhmash missile plant (also known historically as Plant 586) in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro in November 2024:
Full screen recommended.
Power substations in Dnipropetrovsk and Zaporizhia also were hit on the night of the 8th. Both cities are now completely disconnected from the power supply. And let’s not forget Kiev: Large-scale missile-drone strikes on the energy infrastructure in Kiev have taken place, resulting in damage to 3 x Power Plants: TPP-4, TPP-5, and TPP-6. Acc to local monitoring channels, up to 12 Ballistic Missiles, 25 x Caliber Cruise Missilies and around 200 x Drones took part in the attacks

After a wave of missile attacks, Kyiv is experiencing serious problems with electricity, water supply, and heating. There are communication outages. Problems on the railway have also begun, but they were already observed yesterday, they have just worsened now.

Back in Moscow, earlier in the day, the Russian Foreign Ministry issued a scorching statement about the US assault on the Russian-flaged ship, Marinera. It is comprehensive and minces no words in decrying what constitutes an act of war against Russia: "The Russian Foreign Ministry expresses serious concern over the illegal military action carried out by the US armed forces against the oil tanker Mariner on January 7.

The ship “Marinera”, which received a temporary permit to sail under the Russian flag in accordance with international law and Russian legislation on December 24, was making a peaceful passage in the international waters of the North Atlantic, heading towards one of the Russian ports. The American authorities have repeatedly received reliable information about the Russian ownership of the ship and its civilian, peaceful status, including at the official level through the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. There could be no doubt about this, and there was no reason to speculate about the tanker’s alleged “flagless” or “false flag” sailing.

International maritime law clearly provides for the exclusive jurisdiction of the flag state over vessels on the high seas. The stoppage and inspection of a vessel on the high seas is only possible under a closed list of grounds, such as piracy or the slave trade, which are clearly not applicable to the Mariner. In all other cases, such actions are only permitted with the consent of the flag state, in this case, Russia.

Meanwhile, Russia not only did not give such consent, but, on the contrary, expressed an official protest to the American authorities regarding the pursuit of the Mariner by the U.S. Coast Guard over the previous few weeks, demanding an immediate end to the pursuit and the withdrawal of the unlawful demands made to the captain of the Russian vessel.

Under these circumstances, the landing of American troops on a civilian ship on the high seas and its actual seizure, as well as the capture of the crew, cannot be interpreted as anything other than a gross violation of the fundamental principles and norms of international maritime law, as well as the freedom of navigation. This constitutes a significant infringement of the shipowner’s legitimate rights and interests. The lives and health of the crew members of the Mariner, who are citizens of several countries, are now at risk. We categorically reject the threats of legal prosecution issued by the American authorities under absurd pretexts. By carrying out an unsafe pursuit and then an armed seizure of an oil tanker in difficult weather conditions, the U.S. military apparently disregarded the risk of causing significant damage to the environmental safety of the North Atlantic.

We consider the American side’s references to its national “sanctions legislation” to be invalid. The unilateral restrictive measures imposed by the United States, as well as by other Western countries, are illegitimate and cannot serve as a justification for attempts to establish jurisdiction or, even more so, to seize ships on the high seas. It is particularly cynical for some U.S. officials to suggest that the seizure of the Mariner is part of a broader strategy to establish Washington’s unrestricted control over Venezuela’s natural resources. We strongly reject such neo-colonial tendencies.

Along with the U.S. administration’s disregard for the generally accepted “rules of the game” in the field of international maritime navigation, Washington’s willingness to generate acute international crises, including in relation to the already heavily strained Russian-American relations of recent years, is a cause for concern and regret. The incident involving the Mariner may only lead to further escalation of military and political tensions in the Euro-Atlantic region, as well as a significant decrease in the “threshold for the use of force” against peaceful navigation. Inspired by Washington’s dangerous and irresponsible example, some other countries and organizations may also consider it appropriate to use similar methods. The authorities of the United Kingdom, which has a long history of maritime piracy, are particularly predatory in their intentions. London has already reported its participation in the US military action in the North Atlantic.

We call on Washington to return to compliance with the fundamental norms and principles of international maritime navigation and immediately stop its illegal actions against the Marinera and other vessels carrying out legitimate activities on the high seas. We reiterate our demand that the American side ensure humane and dignified treatment of the Russian citizens on board the tanker, strictly respect their rights and interests, and not impede their return to their homeland as soon as possible."

By the way, the crew of the Marinera consists of two Russians, eight Georgians and 20 Ukrainians. US Attorney General Pam Bondi added fuel to this potential conflagration when she announced on Thursday that the crew members were “under full investigation” for failing to obey U.S. Coast Guard orders and that “criminal charges will be pursued against all culpable actors.”

I don’t know who told Trump that seizing a Russian-flagged ship was a good idea, but the action is not just pointless and stupid… It is dangerous. If you’re sitting in Moscow and reflecting on the actions of the United States since December 28 - i.e., the failed drone attack on Putin’s residence, the illegal abduction of Venezuelan President Maduro, Trump’s threats to attack Colombia and Greenland, and yesterday’s piracy of a Russian ship - you are likely to conclude that Trump is not serious about normalizing relations with Russia and that he is looking for a confrontation. It is foolish to poke a cranky bear because you are only going to further provoke the animal and incite him to eat you."

Gerald Celente, "U.S. Headed for ‘Greatest Depression Yet’; WW3 Will Become Official in 2026"

 Gerald Celente, 1/8/26
 "U.S. Headed for ‘Greatest Depression Yet’; 
WW3 Will Become Official in 2026"
"2026 is here, and President Trump went from declaring he wanted to see “Peace on Earth,” to bombing Venezuela and kidnapping the country’s elected leader. With the Trump Admin pushing for an endless supply of Venezuelan oil, fears are soaring that plans for another U.S./Israeli attack on Iran could be right around the corner. Gerald Celente, founder and director of the Trends Research Institute and publisher of the weekly Trends Journal magazine, discussed his predictions for the trends we’ll see this year, which include: Dot Com Bust 2.0, WWIII Becomes Official, Gold and Silver Spike of a Lifetime, Militarization Madness, and a Gen Z Revolution." 
Follow Gerald Celente on X: - https://x.com/geraldcelente/

"People Breaking Down After The System Failed Them"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 1/8/26
"People Breaking Down After The System Failed Them"

"Burnout is quietly reshaping how Americans live and more people are starting to notice. The cost of living keeps climbing, wages aren't keeping up, and everyday life feels heavier than it used to. Groceries, rent, utilities, healthcare it's all adding up in ways that don't make sense anymore. And while the headlines say one thing, the reality on the ground tells a different story. In this video, we're taking an honest look at what's actually happening. Why so many people are exhausted. Why working harder isn't leading to stability like it used to. Why the old playbook go to school, get a job, buy a house, retire feels more like fiction than a plan for a lot of folks right now.

This isn't about pointing fingers or picking sides. It's about acknowledging what millions of Americans are already feeling. The squeeze is real. The stress is real. And pretending everything is fine isn't helping anyone. If you've been feeling like something is off like no matter what you do, you can't quite get ahead you're not alone. A lot of people are waking up to the same thing. And maybe that's where real conversations have to start.

I'd love to hear from you. What's been the hardest thing for you lately? Is it food costs? Housing? Healthcare? Something else entirely? Share your thoughts down below your experience might help someone else realize they're not the only one going through it. And if you've found ways to make things work deals, tips, changes that have helped please share those too. We're all figuring this out together."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 1/8/26
"Americans Are Drowning In Debt, 
It’s Out Of Control"
Comments here:

Thursday, January 8, 2026

"Alert! IRBM Strike On Ukraine! Oreshnik! Iran In Flames! Total Fking Chaos!"

Full screen recommended.
Prepper News, 1/8/26
"Alert! IRBM Strike On Ukraine! Oreshnik!
 Iran In Flames! Total Fking Chaos!"
Comments here:

Dan, I Allegedly, "Crime Is Crashing Everything, Housing, Jobs & Cities!"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 1/8/26
"Crime Is Crashing Everything,
 Housing, Jobs & Cities!"
'Are we living in Armageddon? Inflation, crime, and chaos are impacting everything - from real estate to daily life. In this video, I explore how crime is devastating cities like Portland and New York, pushing luxury condos and properties into financial ruin. The economy is shifting fast, with inflation hitting hard, businesses closing, and new laws changing the landscape of real estate. From the collapse of high-end developments to shocking new regulations, it’s all connected to the challenges we face today."
Comments here:

Col. Douglas Macgregor, "This Time We're in A Lot of Trouble"

Full screen recommended.
Col. Douglas Macgregor, 1/8/26
"This Time We're in A Lot of Trouble"
Comments here:

Judge Napolitano, "Aaron Maté: When Law Dies, Freedom Follows - Murder in Minneapolis"

Full screen recommended.
Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 1/8/26
"Aaron Maté: When Law Dies, 
Freedom Follows - Murder in Minneapolis"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 1/8/26
"Glenn Greenwald: 
Power Unchecked Destroys Freedom"
Comments here:

"Alert! Civil War U.S.A.! Internet Shutdown! 500% Tariff! $1.5 Trillion For WW3!"

Prepper News, 1/8/26
"Alert! Civil War U.S.A.! Internet Shutdown! 
500% Tariff! $1.5 Trillion For WW3!"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Deuter, "Along The High Ridges"

Full screen recommended.
Deuter, "Along The High Ridges"