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Wednesday, January 14, 2026

"The Forgotten Man" (Excerpt)

"The Forgotten Man"
by Be Water

Excerpt: "For most of America, the headlines trumpeting a “strong economy” and “stocks at record highs” land like a cruel joke. Michael W. Green’s recent series "My Life Is A Lie" attempted to quantify the economic devastation felt by the majority of the country these many years. This carnage has been sanctified by our technocrats - an Aztec priesthood invoking sacred economic statistics as celestial omens to justify the ritual sacrifice of society on the altars of GDP and the S&P 500.

Green, an investment industry insider, gave voice to the Forgotten Man: Predictably, the priesthood declared heresy. Economists, journalists, thought leaders, think tanks, and other fellow travelers circled the wagons, tearing apart Green’s numbers, splitting hairs, and nitpicking his methodology. That is a grave mistake.

Fiddling While Rome Burns: "How can you expect a man who’s warm to understand a man who’s cold?" - "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich," Alexander Solzhenitsyn

This sort of wonkish debate - whether the poverty line is $30k or $140k, whether CPI is 2% or 4% - exemplifies the scientism enabling our national dissolution: the religious belief that the statistical map is more real than the economic territory. Perhaps such effete technocratic sophistry could be tolerated - even indulged - were the body politic unified. But it is a fatal conceit in such a Balkanized powder keg of a nation.

Into this highly combustible environment, Green’s essays landed like an errant spark. If nothing else, Green forced a long-overdue reckoning with a reality that the credentialed class has steadfastly refused to acknowledge: that they themselves have spent decades drowning the American Dream in a flood of ruinous policy, even as they now insist that the water level is perfectly fine and that Americans are simply bad swimmers.

Such an acknowledgment, however, would be tantamount to confessing that their entire worldview - the long Postwar Consensus - rests on a meticulously constructed lie. That the intellectual facade of modern finance and economics, the modern monetary system and central banking, fiscal and monetary policy, financialization, globalism - all of it - has strip-mined the nation and fracked the American bedrock, leaving behind a slag heap of poverty, misery, and rage in place of the prosperity it promised. That their own lives have been a lie."
Full article is here:

"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."

"The Current U.S. Debt And Currency Crisis Are Going Beyond Nuclear"

"The Current U.S. Debt And Currency
 Crisis Are Going Beyond Nuclear"
by Gregory Mannarino

"As of now, January 2026, the United States is functionally and totally dependent on debt expansion just to operate… this is the new baseline of America. The CON-gressional Budget Office (CBO) long-run math shows persistently large and expanding deficits moving forward…. and a debt path that continues to rise over time with compounding interest… and that means new debt obligations that will not only expand, but will also need to be refinanced.

This is no longer just a debt problem. It’s a debt problem and a currency crisis simultaneously… accelerating. Result? An economy trapped, crushed, and a middle-class paying for all of it. Once a system is functionally dependent on debt expansion, it becomes dependent on rate suppression and liquidity support. End result? An economic freefall. (You may want to see this:  Click here.)

Once you accept reality, you understand the next truth. Dollar devaluation is not a side effect. It’s the mechanism. That’s the currency crisis… because the “solution” is a controlled loss of purchasing power. (A slow-motion transfer from savers and wage earners to the debt machine).

Housing/Real-Estate: We’re now watching the operating model play out again in housing/real-estate! (In Real Time: Click here.) As you already know, Trump has ordered the government to buy the Fed’s runoff of MBS. This mechanism creates a government-controlled housing channel positioned to step in as the substitute bid. Result? The government now buying “Fed runoff,” effectively replaces the missing natural buyer with a public-sponsored buyer and it socializes risk.

Let’s break that down in plain language. Fed steps back, Government steps in with cash supplied by the central bank to buy MBS. That’s not just artificial demand…

1. That’s price support, and
2. That’s distorted price discovery.
And 3. It shifts risk where it always gets shifted in this regime… onto the public balance sheet.

Call it what it is... socialized risk/Socialism.

Every time the system proves it cannot function without intervention, it confirms what we have been warning about for over a decade. Markets are being supported… and the currency is being sacrificed.

The Fallout Spreads Out: The system issues more debt to operate. Then it suppresses rates to keep that debt serviceable. Then it supports liquidity when stress hits. Then it shifts risk onto the public. And the currency absorbs the cost through devaluation. Here again is the pattern: Crisis, Debt, Support, Debasement, Repeat.

 “The Global Angle.” This doesn’t stay contained, and we are already seeing the effect… When the reserve currency starts leaning harder on debasement to keep the machine running, the entire world gets pulled into a competitive devaluation environment. This is the operating model. As a current example… Venezuela. They manufacture necessity, (we have taken over a country) therefore expanding US commitments. This in turn expands debt issuance and further liabilities. This in turn expands into more intervention, (more funding), this in turn accelerates currency devaluation. The dollar has been fully weaponized against you/the American people… all while the propaganda to the contrary expands. (You must see this- click here.)

Dollar devaluation is a weapon of mass destruction as it attacks the foundation of ordinary life… your ability to save, to plan, to prosper. It turns every paycheck into less food, less security, less future. It is a silent tax that never gets voted on, never gets debated honestly, and never stops collecting. And the more this debt-expansion/currency debasement regime depends on further intervention to function… the more it must debase…Result? A nation is left with levitating markets and a hollowed-out zombified economy and a people who never fully understood what happened."

Bill Bonner, "Murphy's Lawlessness"

The Grand Convention of 1787 was the contemporary
name for what we now call the Constitutional Convention.
"Murphy's Lawlessness"
by Bill Bonner
Baltimore, Maryland - "It’s been very hard to know what Mr. Trump really is and what he is up to. So sui generis is he, from an American political perspective, that analysts have had trouble finding a label that suits him or a box that will hold him. Our contribution to the who-is-Trump genre is not so much to figure out what he is, but to eliminate some of the things he is not. That is the rock we will roll up the hill today.

When Donald Trump first appeared on the political scene, few people took him seriously. Even his own sister - a federal judge - reportedly said he was ‘a clown,’ with ‘no principles.’ Comedian Seth Myers commented that he thought the campaign was a ‘joke.’ Many people thought so, perhaps including Trump himself. Always promoting his own brand, he craved the spotlight. Running for president allowed him to mouth off...and the media reported it as ‘news.’

Since then, it has become more and more clear that while his sister may have been right about the ‘no principles,’ the ‘clown’ label doesn’t do him justice. He is much less funny and much more serious than people realized. As we see in the Venezuela example, one thing that Donald Trump is not is a Johnny Appleseed for democracy...or any other form of government. The Wall Street Journal: "US Tries a New Playbook: Regime Management, Not Regime Change."

After costly failures in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Trump administration is betting that managing Venezuela’s autocracy is cheaper than dismantling it Trump is not planting the seeds of republicanism, nor communism, nor Americanism, nor capitalism. Democracy? Theocracy? He doesn’t seem to care.

But there’s nothing new about this. Most empires don’t care either. They don’t insist that the conquered country worship their gods or imitate their political system. That’s the difference between an empire and a common nation. Louis the 14th described the French nation as ‘un roi, une loi et une foi’ (one king, one law, and one faith). Hitler had his version too: ‘Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Fuhrer’ (one people, one government, and one leader).

An empire, however, is a different thing. Like the US, it is made up of many different nations, each with its own religions, languages, and governments. In its heyday, for example, England ruled 56 different sovereign states - from India to South Africa to Canada. But in an empire, unlike the US, subject peoples are not expected to become citizens or salute the same flag. The emperor just wants them to obey...and pay tribute.

Trump doesn’t mind that the people running things on the ground in Venezuela are the same corrupt people who ran it under Chavez and Maduro. He only demands that they take orders from him, rather than from Maduro, and that they send their oil to him rather than to the Chinese. And he has no intention of restoring democracy in Venezuela, either. Even in America itself, he has little regard for democracy. And his affection for ‘vox populi’ - the voice of the people - only lasts as long as they are singing his praises.

But one of the biggest mistakes in the ‘who-is-Trump’ canon came from those who thought he was a ‘conservative.’ He may have been confused about it himself. While he was a registered Democrat for many years - and contributed to Democratic candidates - when he ran for president in 2015 he claimed to be a conservative: “I am a conservative person. I am by nature a conservative person. I never looked at putting a label on myself, I wasn’t in politics. But if you look at my general attitudes in life I would certainly have the more conservative label put on me.”

But there was never anything ‘conservative’ about Donald Trump. From his billionaire lifestyle, to running his own airline, to grabbing women by the crotch and partying with Epstein, nothing about his life was ‘conservative.’

As for his politics, he was all over the place. But in the campaign of 2016, he promised a balanced budget, promoted a ‘live and let live’ attitude towards Russia, dissed NATO and other ‘foreign entanglements,’ despised wokism, DEI, and Rosie O’Donnell, and said he would end the ‘endless wars.’ He even said he would pay off the national debt...though no one took it seriously. All of these things endeared him to ‘conservatives.’

A conservative is someone who wishes to hold onto institutions, customs and ideas - like an old pair of boots - until they no longer give good service. At the heart of it is a respect for laws and traditions. Laws of nature, laws of men, Boyle’s law, the US Constitution, supply and demand...he loves them all. Mr. Trump doesn’t believe in laws at all. He believes in deals...and his power to get what he wants by deal-making. He said that America’s trade deficits, for example, were the result of ‘bad deals’ made by his predecessors.

Perhaps even more fundamental, a conservative is someone who distrusts government power; he believes government should always be subordinate to the writ of Moses and the Grand Convention of 1787.

This is the opposite of Trump’s pensée. For him, laws can be used to advance his own power, wealth and glory. Or, if they get in the way, they can be ignored. Nevertheless, a substantial part of the voting public, in 2016 and after, came away thinking Trump was, at least in some measure, a ‘conservative.’ But today - after the most unbalanced budgets in history...and attacks on Nigeria, Somalia (more than 100 times!), Iran, Venezuela, and Syria, in 2025 alone - much of his ‘conservative’ make-up has washed off.

What does that leave? Conservatives don’t know either. But they have one other helpful insight. Over-arching the whole structure of laws and traditions, they believe, is Murphy’s Law. It tells us that for all our efforts, there will always be some jackass who comes along and messes everything up. Stay tuned for more of what Trump isn’t."

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

"We're In Very Serious Trouble; The Collapse is Accelerating; Civil War Inevitable"

Jeremiah Babe, 1/13/26
"We're In Very Serious Trouble; 
The Collapse is Accelerating; Civil War Inevitable"
Comments here:

Gerald Celente, "Once Again, We Told You So, Our Top Trend For 2026"

Strong language alert!
Gerald Celente, 1/13/26
"Once Again, We Told You So, 
Our Top Trend For 2026"
"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:

"College Students Are Done - America’s Debt Crisis No One Wants To Talk About"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 1/13/26
"College Students Are Done - 
America’s Debt Crisis No One Wants To Talk About"

"The American Dream is facing a reckoning. College students across America are breaking down as student loan debts pile up, forcing an entire generation to question whether the promise of higher education was ever real. This video dives into the student loan crisis, uncovering why young people are facing unprecedented financial pressure and whether college is still worth the debt.

For decades, society told us a university degree was the golden ticket. Today, for millions of Americans, it feels more like a trap. We follow real stories from students and graduates who are drowning in debt, sharing raw experiences about the connection between financial stress and mental health. From monthly emotional breakdowns to delaying life milestones like buying a home or starting a family, the cost of education is charging interest on futures before careers have even started.

We also examine what these stories reveal about the system itself. When someone borrows $41,000 and owes $118,000, that's not a budgeting failure. That's a structural problem. When someone pays for ten years and hasn't touched the principal, that's not laziness. That's a math equation designed to keep you running in place.

But this video goes deeper than outrage. We break down the patterns emerging across these stories. The use of math as emotional proof. The learned helplessness when every door closes. The shift from personal struggle to seeing the government as an adversary. The grief over a broken social contract. And finally, the quiet resignation of people who have stopped checking their balances because survival matters more than stress.

Are we facing a student debt crisis in 2026 that could destabilize the economy? With tuition inflation outpacing wages and $1.67 trillion in outstanding loans, the numbers are hard to ignore. This video explores the systemic failures leaving young Americans behind and asks whether the game is rigged or just brutally misunderstood.

Whether you're a high school student deciding your future, a parent worried about the cost of college, or a graduate struggling with payments, this video offers a grounded look at where we actually are. Not panic. Not denial. Just reality.

It's time for an honest conversation. Student loans are leaving graduates in enormous debt with shrinking options, and the emotional toll is real. Join the discussion about what higher education actually costs and what happens when an entire generation stops believing in the ladder they were told to climb."
Comments here:

"Douglas Macgregor: U.S. War on Iran Risks Triggering World War"

Glenn Diesen, 1/13/26
"Douglas Macgregor: 
U.S. War on Iran Risks Triggering World War"
Comments here:

"Alert! USA/Iran About To Explode! Oil Tankers Struck!"

Prepper News, 1/13/26
"Alert! USA/Iran About To Explode! 
Oil Tankers Struck!"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Deuter, "Sea and Silence"

Deuter, "Sea and Silence"

"A Look to the Heavens"

Why does this galaxy have such a long tail? In this stunning vista, based on image data from the Hubble Legacy Archive, distant galaxies form a dramatic backdrop for disrupted spiral galaxy Arp 188, the Tadpole Galaxy. The cosmic tadpole is a mere 420 million light-years distant toward the northern constellation of the Dragon (Draco). Its eye-catching tail is about 280 thousand light-years long and features massive, bright blue star clusters. 
One story goes that a more compact intruder galaxy crossed in front of Arp 188 - from right to left in this view - and was slung around behind the Tadpole by their gravitational attraction. During the close encounter, tidal forces drew out the spiral galaxy's stars, gas, and dust forming the spectacular tail. The intruder galaxy itself, estimated to lie about 300 thousand light-years behind the Tadpole, can be seen through foreground spiral arms at the upper right. Following its terrestrial namesake, the Tadpole Galaxy will likely lose its tail as it grows older, the tail's star clusters forming smaller satellites of the large spiral galaxy."

Chet Raymo, "The Meaning Of Life"

"The Meaning Of Life"
by Chet Raymo

"There is only one meaning of life, the act of living itself."
– Erich Fromm

"I had heard from a high-school student in the midwest who had read my book 'Skeptics and True Believers,' in which, as you may know, I take to task all forms of faith that lack an empirical basis, including astrology and supernaturalist religion. He writes: "Are we just meaningless beasts roaming a meaningless Earth with the sole purpose of popping out babies so we can raise them to live longer, more meaningless lives?"

A good question, the best question. What we have learned about our place on Earth does indeed suggest that we are beasts, related even in our DNA and molecular chemistry to other animals. And, yes, the driving purpose of all animal life would seem to be "popping out babies." But our uniquely complex human brains allow us to be more than beasts, more than baby-poppers. As far as we know, humans are the most complex thing in the universe, and in our desire to gain reliable knowledge of the universe the universe becomes conscious of itself.

As for myself, I don't need stars or gods to give my life meaning. I work at meaning every day, in the love of family and friends, in caring for my own little pieces of the Earth, in art, in science, and in making myself conscious of the mystery and beauty - and terror - of the cosmos.

"Or is there a possibility that there may be more?" asks my midwestern correspondent. Yes, there is almost certainly more to existence than what we have yet learned. Just think how much more we know than did our pre-scientific ancestors. But that still greater knowledge will have to wait for minds other than my own. My children and grandchildren will know far more than I, and in that growing human storehouse of reliable knowledge I hope they will find some greater measure of meaning.

In the meantime, I attend to the fox that sometimes walks across my windowsill, the morning glory seedlings that reach achingly for the sun, and the moon that hangs like a great milky eye in the sky. Francis Bacon said that what a man would like to be true, he preferentially believes. That's a mistake I try to avoid. I choose instead to believe what my senses tell me to be palpably true."

Viktor Frankl, "Life Changing Quotes" ("Man's Search For Meaning")

Full screen recommended.
Viktor Frankl, "Life Changing Quotes"
 ("Man's Search For Meaning")
"Viktor Emil Frankl was an Austrian neurologist and psychiatrist as well as a Holocaust survivor. Frankl was the founder of the logotherapy method and is most notable for his best-selling book Man's Search for Meaning."
Freely download "Mans Search For Meaning", by Viktor Frankl, here:
o
Highest recommendation:

The Poet: David Whyte, “The Sea”

“The Sea”

“The pull is so strong we will not believe
the drawing tide is meant for us,
I mean the gift, the sea,
the place where all the rivers meet.

Easy to forget,
how the great receiving depth
untamed by what we need
needs only what will flow its way.
Easy to feel so far away
and the body so old
it might not even stand the touch.

But what would that be like
feeling the tide rise
out of the numbness inside
toward the place to which we go
washing over our worries of money,
the illusion of being ahead,
the grief of being behind,
our limbs young
rising from such a depth?

What would that be like
even in this century
driving toward work with the others,
moving down the roads
among the thousands swimming upstream,
as if growing toward arrival,
feeling the currents of the great desire,
carrying time toward tomorrow?

Tomorrow seen today, for itself,
the sea where all the rivers meet, unbound,
unbroken for a thousand miles, the surface
of a great silence, the movement of a moment
left completely to itself, to find ourselves adrift,
safe in our unknowing, our very own,
our great tide, our great receiving, our
wordless, fiery, unspoken,
hardly remembered, gift of true longing.”

~ David Whyte,
“Where Many Rivers Meet”

The Daily "Near You?"

Surrey, British Columbia, Canada. Thanks for stopping by!

"We Don’t Really Know What’s Happening"

"We Don’t Really Know What’s Happening"
by Paul Rosenberg

"And, believe it or not, this is rather good news. I’ll explain. We all like to know what’s happening in the world, and for good reason… understanding our surroundings is essential to survival. We instinctively seek information… we need information. There is, however, a problem that we face: No matter how much “news” you consume, you won’t really know what’s going on in the world.

We can’t know, because ‘the news’ is half illusion, provided by government-dependent corporations that are paid to keep you watching and to keep you joined to the status quo. Granted, they are quite good at providing pictures from disaster areas, but when it comes to explaining why the disaster happened, they mislead almost every time. Yes, some truth makes its way through the news machine, but most of it is wrapped in layers of manipulation. If, for example, you watch the news feeds all day, you’ll find a good deal of truth, but you’ll find it amongst a pile of half-truths. Do you really have enough time to analyze them all?

One Piece of Truth: The truth about public reporting comes out from time to time, but usually well after the fact. So, here’s one piece of truth that’s worth remembering: For those who don’t recall the 1970s, Daniel Ellsberg was a man who worked as an analyst at the RAND Corp., moved from there to the Pentagon, spent two years in Vietnam working for the State Department, and then went back to RAND. He is the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers in 1971. These were the documents that revealed that three US presidential administrations had been plainly, knowingly, and openly lying to the public.

Here’s what Ellsberg thought the New York Times was good for: "… to see what the rubes and the yokels are thinking about and what they think is going on and what they think the policy is…" Later, in 1998, he said this in an interview: "The public is lied to every day by the president, by his spokespeople, by his officers. If you can’t handle the thought that the president lies to the public for all kinds of reasons, you couldn’t stay in the government at that level…"

And here’s what Michael Deaver, a top aide to President Ronald Reagan, said about the press: The media I’ve had a lot to do with is lazy. We fed them and they ate it every day." That’s the truth about news, my friends. The news channels and newspapers are where the yokels get informed, presidents flatly lie, and legislatures are massively corrupt. And Internet news sites primarily recycle TV and newspaper stories.

Yes, some truth does slide through, but it looks almost the same as the other stuff. The only places we get anything close to refined truth is on a few Internet sites… and many of them have a particular axe to grind. The Internet is being funneled into Google, Facebook, and a few other friends of the state. Social media is being massively censored, and the the independents are being squeezed out anyway.

More Truth: This is what William Colby, former director of the CIA, is quoted as saying in "Derailing Democracy: The America the Media Don’t Want You to See": "The Central Intelligence Agency owns everyone of any significance in the major media."

Now, since people have disputed that quotation, let’s back it up: Please consider Operation Mockingbird: Beginning in 1948, a CIA agent named Frank Wisner started gathering journalists and broadcasters… and started using them to ‘inform’ the public. The operation soon got so elaborate that other agents called it “Wisner’s Wurlitzer.” (Wurlitzer being a popular brand of organ.) In other words, Wisner played the media like a musical instrument.

While the real situation is more complex than this short description, rest assured that every major news organization in every major country is manipulated by intelligence groups. Where do you think they get all those “unnamed sources”? If you were an intel operator, wouldn’t you do precisely that? You’d be considered derelict not to. So, you can rely upon this fact.

And So…I could continue listing facts, but there’s no real point. The crucial thing is to accept the truth: The news is worked over before it reaches us. We do know some facts, of course, and a generation from now we may learn nearly the whole truth about some of these events, but only if we wait and then go out of our way to find it.

The good news in all of this comes when we accept the facts and stop running our brains on bad information. Yes, it would be nice to know what’s really going on, but we don’t, and there isn’t much we can do about it. So, it’s time to stop treating the news seriously.

So long as the guv-megacorp-intel structure remains, it will enforce our ignorance. That’s what such organizations do, by their very nature. To expect differently is like expecting a dog to sprout wings and fly. But once we accept that fact, we stop being spun around by the talking heads and their handlers. And then, you can start building the kind of world you’d like to live in."

Free Download: "Report From Iron Mountain On The Possibility And Desirability Of Peace"

"The Report from Iron Mountain"
by Bill Bonner

"Laugh…and know."
~ Marcus Valerius Martialis

"Every day the war drums beat louder. Asia Times: "US provocatively points new nuke-tipped missile at China." The US has just tested a new type of nuclear-tipped air launch cruise missile, reaffirming the viability of the air-based leg of its nuclear triad against evolving threats from near-peer adversaries China and Russia with profound implications for regional stability and global non-proliferation norms. This month, The Warzone reported that the US Air Force had conducted nine flight tests of its future nuclear-tipped AGM-181A Long Range Stand Off (LRSO) cruise missile prototypes, including one test with a mock nuclear warhead.

When Europeans were just beginning to discover North America, an intrepid explorer spent time with the tribes along the Hudson Bay of Canada. He reported that one day, the young men of the tribe took their weapons and headed north. He thought they were on a hunting party. For weeks they continued…until the trees had disappeared …and it looked like desolate tundra. Finally, they found what they were looking for – an Eskimo village. The Eskimos were different people – different language, different culture… Wasting no time, the Indians attacked and slaughtered everyone in the village – men, women, children.

They were on a crusade. And they targeted people they must have viewed as ‘bad.’ Were they bad because they worshiped other gods? Or because they worshiped no gods at all? Were they bad because they had bad breath…or because the Indians lived on a vast, mostly-empty continent and the Eskimos were the only plausible ‘enemy’ within range?

History tells us that it is easy to gin up a war fever and get millions of people killed for no apparent reason. All you need is an enemy. And right now, America’s foreign policy experts…its glorious think tank generals…and its newspaper heroes turn their eyes east – to China. What have the Chinese done to us? Don’t know? But that was the point of the ‘Report from Iron Mountain.’ An enemy doesn’t have to do something, he just has to be something – a useful foe.

The Health of the State: China is the world’s greatest success story – ever. Since 1979, it brought 800 million people up from the grit and slime of Mao’s communist poverty into the modern world of capitalism, decent salaries, abundant food and technological wonders, such as its high speed rail and Shanghai’s maglev train. The US can’t match it.

But instead of admiring it…trying to learn from it…and hoping to profit from it, all of which would benefit the American people, China is becoming the enemy the empire elite need. Richard Cullen: "Bad-tempered coverage of China continues to flourish across the entire US media. It ranges from fire-breathing to pearl-clutching. Most commentators look daggers at Beijing in a dozen different over-cooked ways – and especially at the Communist Party of China – while reminding readers and viewers of America’s continuing paramount superpower status."

Truth emerges, often, in unexpected places. The “Report from Iron Mountain” may have been a spoof, designed only to elicit a knowing chuckle from the cynical cognoscenti, but it reveals the real cause of war better than any group of federal hacks ever could. The supposed background is that a 15-member group of pipe smokers got together in a Special Study Group to speculate on the consequences of ‘peace.’ They met in a nuclear-secure bunker under Iron Mountain. They came to the conclusion that government is incompatible with ‘peace.’ It can’t exist without war. Nation states only exist so they can make war.

There was nothing new about this insight. “War is the health of the state,” said Randolph Bourne. War is not just useful to government; it is government. The defining difference between the US government and the Catholic Church, Kiwanis Club or Walmart is that the former uses force to get what it wants. The latter do not. Without the use of force – police, jails, wars – the ‘state’ would have no reason to exist. Tune in Monday…for more on why war is inevitable…and why the US will probably lose it.
o
Freely download
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"Remembering the Battle of Teutoburg Forest"

Battle of Teutoberg forest in 9AD, in which German tribes led by
 Arminius of the Cherusci defeated three Roman legions.
"Remembering the Battle of Teutoburg Forest"
by John Leake

"Quintili Vare, legiones redde! "
("Quintilius Varus, give me back my legions!")
- Emperor Augustus, after the Teutoburg Forest disaster.

"The German chieftain Arminius was a prince of the Roman-friendly Cherusci tribe. To make sure that the Cherusci remained friendly, the Romans took him hostage when he was a boy, educated him in Rome, and then sent him back to Germania with the Roman politician and general, Publius Quinctilius Varus, who was tasked with completing the Roman conquest of the country and its tribes.

From his close observation of the Romans, and Varus in particular, Arminius had privately come to the conclusion that - for all of their talk about civilization, law, and citizenship - they were a rapacious, exploitative, and tyrannical bunch. In Arminius’s estimate, Varus was little more than a glorified tax collector.

And so, in the year 9 AD, Arminius set about forming a secret, rebel alliance of German tribes to set a trap for Varus’s 17th, 18th, and 19th Legions. Under normal circumstances, these tribes and their leaders were fractious and uncooperative, but in 9 AD, their uniform resentment of Varus brought them happily together.

Arminius’s plot was extraordinarily effective. Falling for a ruse de guerre, Varus (a lawyer who grossly overestimated his military acumen) and his legions pressed deep into unfamiliar terrain (now in Lower Saxony), where they were ambushed and totally destroyed - all three legions wiped out to a man in the most brutal conceivable way.

Arminius’s plot was extraordinarily effective. Falling for a ruse de guerre, Varus (a lawyer who grossly overestimated his military acumen) and his legions pressed deep into unfamiliar terrain (now in Lower Saxony), where they were ambushed and totally destroyed - all three legions wiped out to a man in the most brutal conceivable way.

When the Emperor Augustus received word of the defeat, he is said to have temporarily lost possession of his senses. All three legions totally destroyed? How was it possible? The “Varian Disaster” was a demoralizing blow, prompting the Romans to abandon their ambition of conquering Germania. Nevertheless, the Romans - with their vastly superior organization - continued to rule much of Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East for centuries to come. The German tribes, on the other hand, went back to their fractious ways. Just twelve years after his great triumph at the Teutoburg Forest, Arminius was murdered by rivals in his own tribe .

Nevertheless, I believe that a valuable lesson can be learned from the Varian Disaster -namely, a people should never let triumphs like the one that Trump just enjoyed in Venezuela go to their heads.

Given President Trump’s own experience with a Kangaroo Court in New York in 2024, there’s a certain weird irony in Maduro being hauled back to the States to stand before a federal court in New York. I’m sure he’ll get a fair trial!

The story reminds me of the Gallic leader Vercingetorix during Julius Caesar's triumph in 46 BC, who was paraded through Rome in shackles to the exultation of the plebs before being ceremonially executed. Most plebs in the city lived in the Subura slum and subsisted on the grain dole, but the humiliation of the recalcitrant Vercingetorix gave them great satisfaction and pride in being Roman. And boy did it elevate Caesar’s status!

A notably cool head in Rome at the time - Marcus Tullius Cicero - perceived that Caesar’s Gallic Triumph would certainly go to his head. He viewed Caesar as a dangerous figure who was willing to disregard established laws and norms to gain power. I don’t know if Cicero’s perceptions of Caesar are applicable to President Trump, but I’m a bit concerned that they are.

If you get angry when you read this column and reach for your keyboard to fire off a comment, please take a moment to contemplate at least the possibility that cooler heads in the past - though lacking celebratory cheer and humor - have kept this country out of harm’s way.

I am thinking about President Kennedy’s rejection of the advice of Air Force General Curtis LeMay, who advocated immediate military attack of the Russian missile bases in Cuba in October 1962. Kennedy and his brother Robert chose a more cautious approach, and quietly negotiated the withdraw of the Soviet missiles from Cuba in exchange for the U.S. withdrawing its missiles from Turkey.

I hope that President Trump will limit his imperial ambitions to low hanging fruit like Venezuela, and not let his triumph lull him into thinking he can take on Russia. This was the fatal error made by Napoleon in 1812 and Hitler in 1941.

I know, I know, the U.S. isn’t like the great powers of the past. We are utterly unique in our brilliant technological prowess, and no one on earth could ever touch us. We are invincible. As Andy Ogles (R-Tenn.) recently put it in a Fox Business interview about his plan to wrest Greenland from Denmark:

It’s important that we have a stake in Greenland, that they are, quite frankly, a protectorate of the United States. You know, they’ve been in... a relationship with Denmark, that needs to end... When you look at the Monroe Doctrine, you look at the Western hemisphere, we are the dominant predator, quite frankly, force in the Western hemisphere.

Yes, we are the apex predator. All of mankind, including Denmark (!) may now behold the sublime majesty of our might. As Ben Shapiro recently put it, “There is no such thing as international law. It is nonsense.” The law of the jungle now prevails, and the Rampant Lion of the United States will, if resisted, display the awesome firepower of its fully armed and operational military. (Author’s note: I write this in a tone of playful irony).

In all seriousness: Till his dying day, the Emperor Augustus was confounded by the question: “How did the German boy Armenius succeed in totally annihilating three Roman legions? How was it even possible?”

"Socialist Zombies"

"Socialist Zombies"
by Joel Bowman

“We will replace the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism.”
~ Zohran Mamdani, from his Inauguration Speech, January 1, 2026

Buenos Aires, Argentina - "For every silver lining, a clamorous thundercloud. For every sweet-smelling rose, a procession of funeral mourners. And for every measured and thoughtful student of history, a cocksure Zohran Mamdani. Naturally, the mainstream media has been holding the new mayor’s feet to the fire, speaking truth to power, afflicting the comfortable and comforting the afflicted, etc., etc., etc... Just look at these hard-hitting headlines from The New York Times:

Amid Opening Sprint, Mamdani Paused to Socialize With Steven Spielberg (Jan. 8)
Handing Out Free Tickets, Mamdani Says Theater Should Not Be ‘a Luxury’ (Jan. 9)
Mamdani Brings Affordability Push to Arts With Pick to Lead Film Office (Jan. 13)

Down here at the End of the World, meanwhile, we’ve been tracking a curiously underreported political experiment, one rooted in unfashionable sentiments and unpopular concepts... like liberty, self-determination and “rugged individualism.” It’s that rare brand of politics once practiced by cautious men, men who were wary of the state’s reliable, historical tendency to overstep its mark... to engage in mission creep... and to meddle in the private lives of decent, ordinary people.

At its heart, “libertarianism” is a recognition that governments are made up of men – not angels – and that mere men are prone to err, especially when tempted by that most corrupting seductress: power. In other words, it is exactly the kind of laissez-faire politics that keeps the Bernie Sanders, AOCs and Zohran Mamdanis of the world awake at night, fretting that someone, somewhere might be pursuing “life, liberty and happiness” on their own accord.

The Warmth of Collectivism: There is nothing new about Mamdani’s promises, of course, except a brand new cohort of mental lemmings willing to fall for his spiel. Here he is on...

State run labor: “As the cost of living explodes in New York City, the City must be a leader in setting a minimum wage that better meets New Yorkers’ needs. I have committed to raising the minimum wage in New York City to $30/hr by 2030.”

State run groceries: “I will create a network of city-owned grocery stores, whose mission is lower prices, not price gouging. These stores will operate without a profit motive... and will pass on those savings to you.”

State run housing: “Whether you call it the abolition of private property or you call it a statewide housing guarantee, it’s preferable to what is going on right now.”

Never mind that these things have all been tried and tried again, always to disastrous results. To take just one example...Last year, the United Socialist State of California (USSC) raised its fast food minimum wage to $20... and (according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics) promptly lost 36,000 jobs as a result. Fast food prices in the Golden State also went up 10% faster than across other states as businesses passed rising costs onto consumers, rubbing greasy salt into the wounds of newly unemployed burger flippers. As one former employee (interviewed for Stossel TV) noted: “Twenty-dollar minimum wage don’t matter much if you ain’t got a job no more.”

A Loss of Blood to the Brain: As for state-run groceries and state-run housing, one only need visit one of the fast-failing socialist utopias of the world – from Cuba to Venezuela, North Korea to Eritrea – to discover the ubiquitous misery of empty shelves and crumbling public housing.

As it happens, Argentina provides a textbook example of how not to intervene in a rental market, by way of 2020’s disastrous “Ley de Alquiler” (2020 Rental Law), which essentially amounted to national rent control. The law reads so badly, in fact, we’d be surprised if a copy of it is not sitting on Mamdani’s photocopier...

The basic Peronist pitch, common to all such “government knows best” conceits, relied on the heart taking a massive advanced loan of blood from the brain, such that feelings – for the poor, for the lame, for “those experiencing unhousedness” – take on lifelike animations… while reason, logic and empirical evidence were left to flail and fold, like an unarmed sock puppet.

The law itself, among the most draconian rent control measures in the world, mandated landowners shackle themselves to strict, three-year leases. Meanwhile, all contracts were required to be denominated in pesos, which the econo-clowns at the nation’s central bank were busy printing into oblivion. It also gave tenants wide discretion to dictate terms of lease termination and weighed heavily against landlords who sought to evict deadbeat tenants, even on grounds of property destruction and failure to keep up with payments. All of which was designed to stop evil capitalists from “ripping off” the poor and downtrodden workers of the world. Can you guess what happened next?

Home Sweet Homeless: Predictably, instead of leasing their apartments to the rental equivalents of “tenants with tenure,” a situation in which they were virtually guaranteed to lose money thanks to the government’s world-beating inflation, many landlords simply kept their places vacant... or sold them for dollars.

Thus, by 2022, some 200,000 apartments were left vacant in the capital of Buenos Aires, up 45% from a year earlier. By 2023, as many as one in seven homes in the entire country sat empty, an historic supply shortage in exactly the thing most needed by precisely the group the state claimed to be helping.

Not until Javier Milei arrived with his trademark chainsaw in 2023 and tore the disastrous Ley de Alquiler to shreds was some semblance of normalcy restored. In fact, the return to free(r) market capitalism was so dramatic, even the mainstream press was obliged to notice. From The Wall Street Journal: "The country’s new president, Javier Milei, has scrapped the rental law, along with most government price controls, in a fiscal experiment that he is conducting to revive South America’s second-biggest economy.

The result: The Argentine capital is undergoing a rental-market boom. Landlords are rushing to put their properties back on the market, with Buenos Aires rental supplies increasing by over 170%. While rents are still up in nominal terms, many renters are getting better deals than ever, with a 40% decline in the real price of rental properties when adjusted for inflation since last October, said Federico González Rouco, an economist at Buenos Aires-based Empiria Consultores."

Milei’s move to undo rent-control regulations has resulted in one of the clearest-cut victories for what he calls “economic shock therapy.” He is methodically taking apart a system of price controls, closing government agencies and lifting trade restrictions built up over eight decades of socialist and military rule in an effort that has upended the lives of many Argentines. Of course, lessons only matter if you’re paying attention... something it’s hard to do when you’re busy fleecing taxpayers, dolling out other people’s money and generally eating the rich."

More on the free market side of the coin in your 
next Notes From the End of the World...

"How It Really Is"

 

"10% Credit Card Interest Cap, This Changes Everything"

Full screen recommended.
ThisisJohnWilliams, 1/13/26
"10% Credit Card Interest Cap, This Changes Everything"
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