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Monday, February 16, 2026

"The Universe as Pool Hall"

"The Universe as Pool Hall"
by Fred Reed

"We will start this magisterial explanation of everything with the time-honored approach of the philosopher, beginning with the things we know beyond doubt and then reasoning from them to suitably astonishing truths. As we know, Descartes began by saying, “Cogito ergo sum,” I think therefore I am.” (Ambrose Bierce, a more profound thinker, said, “Cogito cogito, ergo cogito sum. Cogito.” Butthis way lies madness.) So with what certain knowledge can we begin our quest?

Our only certain knowledge is that we don’t have any. Acceptance of this condition will diminish the world’s output of philosophy, or so we may hope, but this column faces reality with a brave front. We may now list our certainties: We don’t know where we came from, where we are, why, what if anything we should do while we are here, and where if anywhere we go when we die.

On this bedrock we shall construct our philosophy of everything. However, before we begin thinking about these profound matters, we need to take into account one more certainty: Thinking is impossible. I will explain. But what it comes to is that while we know nothing about which to think, it doesn’t matter because we couldn’t think about it if we did know something.

Why? Consider the brain. It is an electrochemical mechanism, blindly obeying the laws of physics and chemistry (chemistry being the physics of the interactions of atoms). For example, consider a nerve impulse propagating along a neural fiber, depolarizing, sodium in, potassium out. Pure chemistry and physics. When the impulse comes to a synapse, a neurotransmitter diffuses across the gap, pure chemistry and physics. It can’t do anything else. Even chemicals with long, imposing names cannot make choices. The neurotransmitter then binds to receptor sites, because it has to. Textbooks of neurophysiology state it thus: “A brain has less free will than a wind-up clock.” Or at least if it were so stated, it would be. This is close enough for philosophy.

Putting it precisely, the state of a physical system is determined entirely by its previous state. This establishes beyond doubt that we have no free will, and that what we think are thoughts were determined at the time of the Big Bang, if any.

Now, no philosophical essay can be held in repute unless it contains words ending “ism.” The reigning creed today is materialism, the philosophy of the wantonly inattentive. Many who believe in materialism are of high intelligence, and so can only be sufficiently inattentive by great effort. Anyway, a materialist believes than nothing exists but space, time, matter, and energy, however hyphenated. That is, physics. As the physicist Joe Friday said, “The physics, ma’am, just the physics, and nothing but the physics.”

This means that the Big Bang, if any, was set up, or I suppose I should say, set itself up, like one of those billiard-table trick shots. You know the kind: The balls seem randomly placed on the table but bounce around a lot before miraculously running into the pockets like birds returning to their nests. In the Bang, if any, all those subatomic whatsamajigggers erupted forth at exactly the right angles and velocities so that, billions of years later, they formed Elvis, San Francisco, and Hillary. (This had to be by chance, since no one in his right mind would form Hillary on purpose. QED.)

Next, consider plane geometry as taught in high school. (You may wonder why we have to consider it. Well, we just do.) Plane geometry deals with planes, lines, points, angles, and nothing else. It is useful and interesting, but it cannot explain a cheeseburger, Formula One race, or political hysteria. Why? Because cheeseburgers exist in three dimensions, which plane geometry doesn’t have. Formula One races involve matter, energy, and motion, which plane geometry also doesn’t have. Hysteria is an emotional state associated with liberal co-eds in pricey northern colleges who, thank God, do not exist in mathematics.

What it comes to is that a logical system is defined by its premises, and all downstream results are mere elaboration. (Of course, as established in the beginning of this luminous essay, we have no premises except the lack of premises, but philosophy readily overlooks such minor hindrances.) Plane geometry is not wrong. It is just incomplete. To state it in mathematical terms, you cannot flatten a cheeseburger enough to fit into a plane.

Physics, the foundation of the current official story of everything, also depends on its premises. Physics is just mathematical materialism. From its equations one may derive all manner of fascinating and useful things, such as planetary motion, npn transistors, smartphones, nerve gas, and hydrogen bombs. (Some of these may be more useful than others.)

But, just as you cannot get strawberry milkshakes from plane geometry, because they are not implicit in it, there are things you cannot derive from the equations of physics: Consciousness, free will, beauty, morality, or curiosity – the whiches there just ain’t in physics. This would not worry a rational thinker. He (or, assuredly, she) would simply state the obvious: Physics is not wrong, but incomplete. It does what it does, and doesn’t do what it can’t. Not too mysterious, that.

However, the true-believing physics-is-all Neo-Darwinian matter-monger cannot admit that anything – anything at all – exists outside of physics. Since some things obviously do, the only-physics enthusiasts have to resort to contorted logic. I think of kite string in a ceiling fan. Or simple denial.

For example, sometimes they say that consciousness is merely an “epiphenomenon.” Oh. And what does that mean? Nothing. (Actually it means, “I don’t know, but if I use a polysyllabic Greek word, maybe nobody will notice.”) Epiphenomenon of what?

Sometimes they will say, “Well, consciousness is just a by-product of complexity.” But if consciousness is a byproduct what is the primary product? A computer is somewhat complex, so is it somewhat conscious? Is a mouse less conscious than a human or just, in some cases, less intelligent? A materialist ignoring consciousness is exactly equivalent to a geometer ignoring cheeseburgers.

We will now examine the question, where did we come from? The answer is ready to hand: We don’t have a clue. We make up stories. The physics-only folk say, see, there was the Big Bang and all these electrons and protons and things flew out and just by chance formed Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company in the most motingator a-stonishing pool-table trick shot ever set up. Just by accident. Damn! Who would have thought it?

Of course any sane person, to include materialists when they are thinking of something else, would say that TSMC was designed by hordes of Chinese engineers. But of course designing anything requires mind and intelligence (or a computer designed to simulate these things), But Mind cannot be derived from the equations of physics. Therefore we are all mindless. In general human behavior supports this.

Of course other stories exist. Yahweh created the world, or maybe Shiva, or Allah, and I think some remote tribes believe that it just appeared on the back of a giant turtle. I have no information on the matter, though frankly I incline to the turtle story, but will let the reader know the instant I find out.

The weakness of creation myths from Bang to Turtle is the question of the five-year-old, “But Mommy, where did God come from?” or “Who made God?” Fifteen years later in dorm-room bull sessions he will phrase it differently, “Well, what came before the Big Bang?” Same question.

A sort of second-echelon creation myth now in vogue is Darwinian evolution, also a subset of physics and therefore completely determined. Mutations are chemical events following the laws of chemistry. Thus trilobites had no choice but to form, and so they did. Metabolism is physical from the level of ATP to animals eating each other.

There is of course no such thing as a sex drive, teenagers notwithstanding, since no sort of drive can be derived from physics. (This will no doubt devastate Pornhub.) From this the inevitable conclusion, proven by physics, A that we cannot reproduce. Therefore we either have always existed or do not exist at all.

To give oneself an aura of overwelling wisdom, one may say things like ontology, epistemology, entelechy, and teleology, but these do not detract from mankind’s underlying and perfect ignorance. It’s all a trick shot, I tell you."

The Poet: Wendell Berry, “A Warning To My Readers”

“A Warning To My Readers”

“Do not think me gentle
because I speak in praise
of gentleness, or elegant
because I honor the grace
that keeps this world. I am
a man crude as any,
gross of speech, intolerant,
stubborn, angry, full
of fits and furies. That I
may have spoken well
at times, is not natural.
A wonder is what it is.”

- Wendell Berry

"Remember..."

“Remember, we all stumble, every one of us.
That’s why it’s a comfort to go hand in hand.”
- Emily Kimbrough

The Daily "Near You?"

Concord, North Carolina, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Hell..."

"Many people don't fear a hell after this life and that's because hell is on this earth, in this life. In this life there are many forms of hell that people walk through, sometimes for a day, sometimes for years, sometimes it doesn't end. The kind of hell that doesn't burn your skin; but burns your soul. The kind of hell that people can't see; but the flames lap at your spirit. Heaven is a place on earth, too! It's where you feel freedom, where you're not afraid. No more chains. And you hear your soul laughing."
- C. JoyBell C.

I believe it was Sartre who said, "This is Hell, cleverly disguised just 
enough to keep us from escaping." Look at the world... look around.
I believe he may be right...

"Shocking Money Stats of the Average Person"

Full screen recommended.
Michael Bordenaro, 2/16/26
"Shocking Money Stats of the Average Person"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 2/16/26
"Americans Are Shocked - 
Millions Can’t Afford This"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
A Homestead Journey, 2/16/26
"Millions of Americans Are 
Living in Third World Conditions"
"Millions of Americans are now living in third world conditions - right here in the U.S. Tent cities are popping up across the country, entire communities are facing homelessness, and basic infrastructure is failing. From skyrocketing inflation in 2025 to the cost of living crisis and the vanishing middle class, what we’re seeing is the slow collapse of society happening in real time. This is no longer just about prepping - this is survival prep for what’s already here.

In today’s video, we’re talking about the homelessness crisis, the rise of off-grid living out of necessity, and how the financial crisis in the U.S. is forcing everyday people into third world America. We’ll break down the warning signs of economic collapse, why the system is failing, and how to prepare now for what’s coming. Whether you’re already prepping for hard times or just waking up to the reality, this is something every American needs to hear. Because what’s happening isn’t a warning - it’s already here."
Comments here:

Dan, I Allegedly, "The Harley Davidson Meltdown - 80,000 Bikes Nobody Wants"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 2/16/26
"The Harley Davidson Meltdown - 
80,000 Bikes Nobody Wants"
"Harley-Davidson is facing a massive inventory crisis with an estimated 80,000 motorcycles sitting unsold across U.S. dealerships. Sales have fallen for years, production is being cut, and questions are growing about pricing, strategy, and whether the iconic American brand misread its core customer base. When this many high-ticket items stop moving, it signals something much bigger than a simple slowdown. In this episode of i Allegedly, we break down what’s really happening with Harley-Davidson, how it connects to broader struggles at companies like Tractor Supply, Jaguar, and Bud Light, and what it says about the American consumer in 2026. Is this just a motorcycle problem — or a warning sign for the economy? Subscribe to i Allegedly, your trusted News channel covering business, finance, and economic reality."
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 

"What Do Monica Lewinsky, Maggie Thatcher, Elvis, Cher, Bill Cosby, & The Pope Have In Common?"

"What Do Monica Lewinsky, Maggie Thatcher, Elvis,
Cher, Bill Cosby, & The Pope Have In Common?"
by Tyler Durden

Excerpt: "In the (alleged) interests of transparency, AG Pam Bondi and Deputy AG Todd Blanche released a statement overnight that included a list of all government officials and politically-exposed persons that appeared in The Epstein Files.

SCOOP: The Department of Justice has sent over a letter to Congress outlining why it made redactions to the Epstein files. The six-page letter also includes a list of all "government officials and politically exposed persons" in the files. pic.twitter.com/aRCmS2p1Bg— Aaron Parnas (@AaronParnas) February 15, 2026

The term "politically exposed persons" was not defined in the Act, but consistent with Section 3 of the Act, Department reviewers were directed to notate "all government officials and politically exposed persons named or referenced" in any document, including videos and images, reviewed during this process.

This list includes (as directed by the Act) all persons where (1) they are or were a government official or politically exposed person and (2) their name appears in the files released under the Act at least once. Names appear in the files released under the Act in a wide variety of contexts. For example, some individuals had extensive direct email contact with Epstein or Maxwell while other individuals are mentioned only in a portion of a document (including press reporting) that on its face is unrelated to the Epstein and Maxwell matters. So, while we have seen 'lists' before, this is the official DoJ list of potential pedophiles, pizza eaters, or island-partiers (allegedly)..."
Full article, including 300 named person list is here:

Bill Bonner, "A President's Day Special"

"A President's Day Special"
Our view, a minority one...and widely viewed as ‘defeatist’...
is that these things take place regardless of what anyone thinks. 
History marches along, thoughts get in step.
by Bill Bonner

Poitou, France - "An open letter to POTUS. Feel free to pass this along to Mr. Trump. ‘Ok Mr. Smarty Pants,’ writes a reader. ‘What would you do?’

We have appeared, to many readers, to be critical of Mr. Trump. But we don’t criticize dogs for barking or clouds for blocking the sun. Mr. Trump is just doing the gods’ work. But these are mischievous gods. Not the loving, beneficent Being of modern American Christianity. Certainly not the God of the Prosperity Gospel. Not the God of Faith, Hope, and Charity. These are the gods of jealousy, war and hate...lust and avarice...and poverty.

Let us remind the reader about how, we think, the political/economic system actually works. In the 1970s, a large group of thinkers - Tullock, Olson, Krueger, Niskanen, and Charlotte Twight - economists and political scientists, showed how and why normal people, pursuing their own self-interests, turn a ‘liberal’ society into an ‘illiberal’ one. Societies do not intend to become ‘fascist,’ for example. Empires do not intend to decline. Nobody really wants to stifle initiative, investment, or innovation. And nobody wants to be poor. As we say here, people come to think what they need to think when they need to think it. They follow immediate incentives and opportunities, without much regard for the long-term or theoretical consequences.

They aim to get ahead. And they use the government – with its near-monopoly on violence - to help. In the language of the ‘70s, they become ‘rent seekers,’ looking to exchange votes and political contributions for special treatment. One simple example - ethanol. Corn farmers - thanks largely to the disproportionate power of the Corn Belt senators - got a ‘rent’...increased demand for their product, decreed by law. In 2005, Congress insisted that energy companies buy corn-based ethanol and add it to gasoline. It would help prevent ‘global warming,’ said the sponsors. Now, it is 21 years later and the current administration believes ‘global warming’ is a hoax. But the ‘rent’ is still there. Farmers depend on it. And big agricultural industries continue to send money to politicians to thank them for their service.

‘Rents’ are by definition unnecessary and inefficient. They are subsidies, bailouts, welfare, giveaways and shake-downs. Tariffs, for example, are essentially ‘rents’ for selected industries, paid for by price hikes on consumers. Rents are put in place to favor a group of beneficiaries. They disfavor everyone else. And then, they are rarely removed. Over time, these ‘rents’ build up...and become a huge drag on the economy and a huge waste of taxpayer money. That’s part of the reason the feds will run a deficit of nearly $2 trillion this year, with no major war and no recession.

Today, nearly everyone gets a ‘rent’ of one form or another. Rich people. Poor people. In-between people. And Donald Trump adds to them rapidly...with tariffs, Tariff Dividends...Warrior Dividends...and Baby Bonds. With so many suckling piglets, the sow grows weak. A once-dynamic empire goes into decline, naturally and normally. Increasing ‘rents,’ helps bring the future forward. Our view, a minority one...and widely viewed as ‘defeatist’...is that these things take place regardless of what anyone thinks. History marches along, thoughts get in step.

The winning quality of Donald Trump is that he is extraordinarily ‘normal,’ pursuing his own interests with a single-mindedness that is rarely matched. Like everyone else, he thinks what he needs to think...and nothing more. And he may be right. A real reformer would probably not be tolerated. People do not give up their rents readily. They think they are entitled to them...that they have a right to them. Anyone who would take them away must be a communist! A terrorist! An anti-American! A threat to God and country! Wisely, Mr. Trump has never asked for our advice. But we give it to him anyway."

"Dear Mr. President,

The way forward, if you wanted to Make America Great Again, is simple enough. We’ll outline it for you. But we will also warn you; if you actually tried to do it, there would be more than just a kid on a rooftop gunning for you. So, let’s dig in.

Empires come and go. And they most often go in a godawful blur of corruption, bankruptcy, and violence. Their money turns to trash. Their armies are defeated or betray them. Civil war destroys the unity of the people. Then the once-proud citizens are impoverished, killed, enslaved...and dumped on the ash heap of history.

Still, if you wanted to go down in history as the man who tried to save the empire rather than wreck it, you should make it your mission to 1) protect the integrity of the US money system...2) avoid spending more than the feds get in revenue...and 3) avoid any and all wars that are not purely defensive.

The first step is to announce a change of program. Henceforth there will be no more deficits. None. No tariffs. No sanctions. No money printing. And no more inflation. A balanced budget should be made ‘non-negotiable.’ And your dollar should be unassailable. Abolish the Fed immediately. You’re going to have to cut about $2 trillion in spending. That’s an average income for about 30 million people; they’re not going to take too kindly to it.

As Mr. Milei has shown, don’t try a slow, gradual or incremental approach. Pull the bandaid off quickly. Take your case directly to the people. Explain that the country is going broke and must be turned around. Someone has to do it. ‘If not us, who? If not now, when?’ The feds are expected to collect $4.9 trillion in tax revenue this year. That’s your limit. Not a penny more. Explain it to the voters. They’ll understand. That would have been enough to fund the entire federal budget in 2019. Wasn’t that enough?

Outlays are now expected to come to $7.2 trillion; that’s where that $2 trillion figure came from. You take out the meat axe. Let the cabinet deputies figure out the details. One exception. Since the other big risk to the empire comes from the military, you’ve got to use this occasion to get the Military Industrial Spy Complex under control. Either you control it, or it controls you. Off the leash, it will drag you into wars, bust your budget, and maybe destroy your army too.

The last president who tried to bring the spooks to heel was JFK. Someone shot him dead...you don’t want that to happen to you, so you’ve got to move carefully. But forcefully. The real ‘defense’ budget is probably around $500 billion. Experts say that would be enough to defend the country from any plausible attacker. The rest - about $1 trillion - is a ‘rent,’ money that goes to the firepower industry and other special interests. Watch out. Those people are armed and dangerous.

And by the way, you’re clearly fighting the tide of history here...but that’s what you need to do. The empire ‘wants’ to self-destruct in a blaze of sordid glory. You’re trying to stop it. So, don’t dilly dally...don’t tergiversate - go for it. Cut a trillion from the ‘defense’ budget. Go on TV to explain it to the public. You’re not leaving the country defenseless; you’re making it stronger than ever - financially, economically, militarily.

Tell the truth; taxpayers and consumers have been getting ripped off for decades. Not by foreigners; by their own government. Now is the time to stop it...get rid of so many accumulated ‘rents’...and Make America Great Again. Go ahead. Give it a try. And if you survive, you’ll be a real, live hero. Just trying to be helpful,"
Bill Bonner

John Wilder, "The Defeat Of The West?"

"The Defeat Of The West?"
by John Wilder

"I just wrapped up Emmanuel Todd’s latest book, "La Défaite de l’Occident" (that’s “The Defeat of the West” for those of us that hate the metric system), and it lines up perfectly with what I’ve been posting about for years here. In fact, this isn’t the first time I’ve written about Dr. Todd, having written about his Family Structure/Geopolitics Theory. The book isn’t in English yet, but somebody cut and pasted it into Google® to have it translated, and you can find it out there if you look.

The book isn’t in English yet, but somebody cut and pasted it into Google® to have it translated, and you can find it out there if you look. In this book, Todd is using the Ukraine mess as a lens to autopsy what he calls the West’s self-inflicted doom. In Todd’s view, the collective West is collapsing, compared to “stable” powers like Russia and China. The West’s decline isn’t from bad luck or Russian super-spies, nope. It comes from the rotting foundations of the West itself.

I’ve written extensively about the deindustrialization that’s left the economy hollowed out, so that should be familiar. Add to that a slide into nihilism stemming from the death of Protestant Christianity in the United States. Protestants used to stand for something, but the last time I went to a Protestant church it was very much them not wanting to be against anything and the female pastor went on a long “men are bad” speech.

On the other side, Russia, lagging on almost everything by about 50 years, is experiencing a resurgence in families, a religious revival, and an ethnonational cohesion that allowed them to (mostly) take the hit from sanctions and keep going. The Ukraine war? It’s the litmus test exposing our bluff: we’re great at low-intensity or short duration conflicts with things like coups, sanctions, and drone strikes on weaklings (Iran, Venezuela, you name it), but don’t have the industry for real, prolonged industrial slugfests.

One example: Russia can produce three million rounds of artillery a year, with one recent estimate that they produced seven million rounds last year. Even at the lower three million number, that is three times the amount that the United States and other NATO countries, combined can produce. And, yeah, Russia is fighting Ukraine and the United States has lots of amazing tech that nobody but people with top clearance or Chinese spies know about.

That’s why Ukraine keeps facing ammo droughts. The West’s “superior” economies are finance-bloated illusions where we just keep swapping pictures of silver for electronic dollars that we’re too cheap to bother printing anymore.

US manufacturing jobs? These dropped from 20 million in 1980 to 13 million today, with 80% of GDP now in services and Wall Street Pokémon® card swapping.

Russia simply isn’t the basketcase the MSM paints. Yes, their nominal GDP’s around $2T vs. the US’s $27T and EU’s $20T, but in purchasing parity (what their money can really buy them) terms, Russia’s at $6T, edging out Germany as the world’s fourth largest economy.

Why? The sanctions (starting in 2014) forced them to become independent. After nearly a decade, when the United States hit them with sanctions after their 2022 invasion of the Ukraine, well, they were ready to survive without trade from the West. Even though Russia has a much smaller population (roughly half) than the United States, Russia has more engineers aged 20 to 34 than the United States. Russia has 2 million, the United States around 1.3 million.

Contrast that with what Todd calls the West’s “shallow state” since it’s (his view) an oligarchic mess lacking soul or cohesion. Todd mainly blames this on religious evolution: Protestantism (Weber’s ethic of work, literacy, discipline) powered the rise of the West, but we’ve hit the stage where the United States is a secular void. Zombie Protestant churches linger, channeling energy into welfare states.

Now we find that culture in the West is pure nihilism: no morals, just primitive urges for pleasure, cash, and violence. Todd’s view is that the moral low point where we finally jumped the shark was around 2015. “Marriage for all” symbolizing the final shredding of Christian norms and rise of GloboLeftism. In Todd’s words, “If the people and the elite no longer agree to function together, the notion of representative democracy no longer makes sense: we end up with an elite who no longer wants to represent the people and a people who are no longer represented.”

This certainly defines the state of the West now. A huge majority of the people want all illegals gone, and some want legals gone, too. And yet, the illegals are here and we fight to make the line up and to the right in what is now, according to Todd, a “liberal oligarchy”. That leads to a national weakness.

This weakness is structural and has been building for decades as the United States in particular (and the West in general) worked as fast as it could to de-industrialize. This offshoring has consequences, and can’t be changed in a heartbeat. To rebuild, we have to build factories, build supply chains, build up a workforce, and remember how to make stuff. To explain how difficult this may prove to be, in 2024 China reached 10,000 Terawatt hours of electrical production. That’s more than the United States, Europe and India combined.

Back to Todd: “Producing the world’s currency, at minimal or no cost, makes all activities other than monetary creation unprofitable and therefore unattractive.” Why do we spend so much effort on finance in the United States? It’s just so profitable and so much easier than making stuff, which requires real effort.

Todd’s conclusion: Ukraine was a trap for the United States. The United States, flush from the victory over the Soviets was unbound. It could do whatever it wanted. The United States expanded its global reach from the early 90s to 2022. But we ignored Russia’s 2021 ultimatum because we thought sanctions would crush them like they did in 2014.

The opposite happened. Ukraine remains resilient but allowing 60+ year olds into the army isn’t really a sign that you expect when you’re winning. I expect the end of Ukraine’s resistance to be amazingly abrupt and to occur sometime in the next year, with August being a midpoint. Russia will win, and as near as I can see, their economy is stronger and more independent than it was before the start of the war.

Now, my two cents: Todd’s spot-on that West’s weakness is structural, not just spineless leaders. Pain is coming. NATO/EU has ceased to be a bloc; it’s a squabbling conglomerate with clashing interests and seems to have lost its will to live. Todd’s book substantiates the politically incorrect that I’ve been championing forever: nationalism trumps globalism. The West is exhausted, defeated not by conquest but by its own nihilism leading to that most Evil philosophy of all: “Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law.” As for me? I still refuse to learn to speak or read French."

Jim Kunstler, "Epstein-itis"

Hillary and Rep. Sarah McBride (D-DE) at Munich
"Epstein-itis"
by Jim Kunstler

"If you tolerate the intolerable, 
you’re communicating that it’s okay to mistreat you." 
- Aimee Terese on X

"Did you think the American zeitgeist - our collective spirit plus our thinking - could not get crazier? Gird your loins. It’s getting worse by the hour. The Jeffrey Epstein files suggest that people will do anything and that people will believe anything. Pizza, hot dogs, white sharks... boys, girls, babies, teens, Russian whores.... celebrities by the score... billionaires....cannibal orgies... vivisection parlors... adrenochrome... blood... dead bodies... demon worship... a depraved and insane global leadership...lemme outa here!

I don’t know what’s real in Epstein and what’s not - but neither do you. What you ought to know is that the colossal inventory of Epstein files is perhaps the greatest instrument of mass mind-f*ckery ever seen in the history of Western Civ. How interesting, too, that the deluge of material coincides exactly with the critical capability emergence of Artificial Intelligence as a tool for the manipulation of documentary evidence. And also consider all the years since 2019 that interested parties have had to mess with, destroy, possibly fabricate, and catalog all this stuff.

pparently, the Woke-Jacobin-Marxist eruption was not enough to destabilize the consensus about reality. The absurdities you were asked to swallow about all-women-are-women-including-men... the police killed George Floyd... mostly peaceful riots... the vaccine is safe and effective... the free-est, fairest elections ever... “Joe Biden” is president... the border is secure... speaking English is white supremacy - did not push America deeply enough into Crazyland. More was required to completely demolish your sense of an ordered world.

Donald Trump was correct, at least, that releasing the Epstein files would bring on more chaos than clarity and impede the effort to get our country back on the rails with an economic engine based on the production of goods instead of financialized hyper-casino voodoo. Well, now we’re in a maelstrom of innuendo, code-talk, gossip, and redaction, and you can hardly begin to sort it out. The Attorney General of the USA, bless her heart, has already botched the management of this monster.

Epstein’s relations with Israel and its Mossad intel blob, along with his connections to global banking interests, have aroused the zestiest breakout of antipathy to Jews since the SS busied itself loading the crematoriums of Europe. Hatred of Jews is a recurring symptom of civilization distress. But it is also possible that Israel has behaved badly - and it is certain that many political intellectuals are reevaluating the way that nation was established after World War Two. To some degree, Israel has become a paranoid state (though even paranoiacs have real enemies).

Where does that go from here? Thoughtful people are pessimistic. For sure, they resent the money and influence seeded by Israel in the US Congress. They might be concerned as well about all the other interests pounding money into American politics. Grift is everywhere, and everyone can see it now. The looming end of the grift orgy is probably behind the Democratic Party’s current psychotic disposition. Having lost its 20th century base of factory workers, the party has had to work the extreme margins of American life to build a coalition of the feckless, the reckless, the brainless, and the shameless. They have become the party’s wards in a reimagined patronage system even more pernicious than the old one under characters like Boss Tweed and Mayor Richard Daley-the-First of Chicago.

The Democratic Party can’t win elections without rigging them and it’s astonishing that they’ve gotten away with building such sturdy armature of ballot fraud in plain sight with next to zero objection from the supposed guardians in officialdom. The features of it are so arrant that a political class with any sense or dignity would have laughed it straight into the criminal courts — and its perps straight into the penitentiary. The fraud became especially acute with the 2020 and 2022 elections. It is about to be revealed in the troves of evidence extracted lately from Fulton County, GA, and presently from Maricopa County, AZ. These birds are cooked. Not a few people will eventually go to jail over these shenanigans. And meanwhile, the SAVE Act pulsates in the Senate like a lump of kryptonite.

Now, you may realize that a political party based entirely on socially marginal persons - many of them mentally ill - will adopt a roster of ideas and policies that are patently marginal, which is to say, crazy. The party elders are now straining to eliminate some of that. Last week, Barack Obama unloaded on California Governor Gavin Newsom’s botched handling of the state’s epic homeless crisis. “We should recognize that the average person doesn’t want to have to navigate around a tent city in the middle of downtown,” the ex-president said in an interview with progressive YouTuber Brian Tyler Cohen.

Hillary Clinton, dropping in on the Munich Security Conference, said, amazingly, “There is a legitimate reason to have a debate about things like migration. It went too far, it’s been disruptive and destabilizing...” before tossing in some Woke word-salad: “...and it needs to be fixed in a humane way with secure borders that don’t torture and kill people and how we’re going to have a strong family structure because it is at the base of civilization.” Say, what... ?

But then, poor Hillary, who can’t help being a Cluster-B psycho, turned up moderating a panel at the same Munich meet-up to take up the issue: “Girls Just Want to Have Fundamental Rights: Fighting the Global Pushback.“ To nail down her point, Hillary brought onstage as the featured speaker, Rep. Sarah McBride (D-DE), known previously as Tim McBride, a man. The insanity is, of course, self-evident. The take-away from all this: they’re not trying hard enough to get their minds right.

And in the meantime, America and the other nations of Western Civ, must contend with the gigantic trip laid on them that is the Epstein files. We know the newspapers and cable news channels are hopeless. Is there anyone or any sense-making institution that can usher us through this nightmare back into the daylight?"
o
A Comment, And A Warning: In 16 years, on 2 blogs, posting 100,043 posts, I have never encountered material that frightened, no, terrified me, like this. This will horrify you and forever change how you view the world... - CP

"Economic Market Snapshot 2/16/26"

"Economic Market Snapshot 2/16/26"

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

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

Sunday, February 15, 2026

"Alert! Iran War Is Now Certain, This Was Final Nail In Coffin"

Prepper News, 2/15/26
"Alert! Iran War Is Now Certain, 
This Was Final Nail In Coffin"
Comments here:
o
“Master, what gnaws at them so hideously 
their lamentation stuns the very air?” 
“They have no hope of death,” he answered me…” 
- Dante Alighieri, “The Inferno”

“Thucydides in the Underworld”
by J. R. Nyquist

“The shade of Thucydides, formerly an Athenian general and historian, languished in Hades for 24 centuries; and having intercourse with other spirits, was perturbed by an influx into the underworld of self-described historians professing to admire his History of the Peloponnesian War. They burdened him with their writings, priding themselves on the imitation of his method, tracing the various patterns of human nature in politics and war. He was, they said, the greatest historian; and his approval of their works held the promise that their purgatory was no prologue to oblivion.

As the centuries rolled on, the flow of historians into Hades became a torrent. The later historians were no longer imitators, but most were admirers. It seemed to Thucydides that these were a miserable crowd, unable to discern between the significant and the trivial, being obsessed with tedious doctrines. Unembarrassed by their inward poverty, they ascribed an opposite meaning to things: thinking themselves more “evolved” than the spirits of antiquity. Some even imagined that the universe was creating God. They supposed that the “most evolved” among men would assume God’s office; and further, that they themselves were among the “most evolved.”

Thucydides longed for the peace of his grave, which posthumous fame had deprived him. As with many souls at rest, he took no further interest in history. He had passed through existence and was done. He had seen everything. What was bound to follow, he knew, would be more of the same; but after more than 23 centuries of growing enthusiasm for his work, there occurred a sudden falling off. Of the newly deceased, fewer broke in upon him. Quite clearly, something had happened. He began to realize that the character of man had changed because of the rottenness of modern ideas. Among the worst of these, for Thucydides, was that barbarians and civilized peoples were considered equal; that art could transmit sacrilege; that paper could be money; that sexual and cultural differences were of no account; that meanness was rated noble, and nobility mean.

Awakened from the sleep of death, Thucydides remembered what he had written about his own time. The watchwords then, as now, were “revolution” and “democracy.” There had been upheaval on all sides. “As the result of these revolutions,” he had written, “there was a general deterioration of character throughout the Greek world. The simple way of looking at things, which is so much the mark of a noble nature, was regarded as a ridiculous quality and soon ceased to exist. Society had become divided into two ideologically hostile camps, and each side viewed the other with suspicion.”

Thucydides saw that democracy, once again, imagined itself victorious. Once again traditions were questioned as men became enamored of their own prowess. It was no wonder they were deluded. They landed men on the moon. They had harnessed the power of the atom. It was no wonder that the arrogance of man had grown so monstrous, that expectations of the future were so unrealistic. Deluded by recent successes, they could not see that dangers were multiplying in plain view. Men built new engines of war, capable of wiping out entire cities, but few took this danger seriously. Why were men so determined to build such weapons? The leading country, of course, was willing to put its weapons aside. Other countries pretended to put their weapons aside. Still others said they weren’t building weapons at all, even though they were.

Would the new engines of destruction be used? Would cities and nations be wiped off the face of the earth? Thucydides knew the answer. In his own day, during an interval of unstable peace, the Athenians had exterminated the male population of the island of Melos. Before doing this the Athenian commanders had came to Melos and said, “We on our side will use no fine phrases saying, for example, that we have a right to our empire because we defeated the Persians, or that we have come against you now because of the injuries you have done us – a great mass of words that nobody would believe.” The Athenians demanded the submission of Melos, without regard to right or wrong. As the Athenian representative explained, “the strong do what they have the power to do and the weak accept what they have to accept.” 

The Melians were shocked by this brazen admission. They could not believe that anyone would dare to destroy them without just cause. In the first place, the Melians threatened no one. In the second place, they imagined that the world would be shocked and would avenge any atrocity committed against them. And so the Melians told the Athenians: “in our view it is useful that you should not destroy a principle that is to the general good of all men – namely, that in the case of all who fall into danger there should be such a thing as fair play and just dealing. And this is a principle which affects you as much as anybody, since your own fall would be visited by the most terrible vengeance and would be an example to the world.”

The Athenians were not moved by the argument of Melos; for they knew that the Spartans generally treated defeated foes with magnanimity. “Even assuming that our empire does come to an end,” the Athenians chuckled, “we are not despondent about what would happen next. One is not so much frightened of being conquered by a power like Sparta.” And so the Athenians destroyed Melos, believing themselves safe – which they were. The Melians refused to submit, praying for the protection of gods and men. But these availed them nothing, neither immediate relief nor future vengeance. The Melians were wiped off the earth. They were not the first or the last to die in this manner.

There was one more trend that Thucydides noted. In every free and prosperous country he found a parade of monsters: human beings with oversized egos, with ambitions out of proportion to their ability, whose ideas rather belied their understanding than affirmed it. Whereas, there was one Alcibiades in his own day, there were now hundreds of the like: self-serving, cunning and profane; only they did not possess the skills, or the mental acuity, or beauty of Alcibiades. Instead of being exiled, they pushed men of good sense from the center of affairs. Instead of being right about strategy and tactics, they were always wrong. And they were weak, he thought, because they had learned to be bad by the example of others. There was nothing novel about them, although they believed themselves to be original in all things.

Thucydides reflected that human beings are subject to certain behavioral patterns. Again and again they repeat the same actions, unable to stop themselves. Society is slowly built up, then wars come and put all to ruin. Those who promise a solution to this are charlatans, only adding to the destruction, because the only solution to man is the eradication of man. In the final analysis the philanthropist and the misanthrope are two sides of the same coin. While man exists he follows his nature. Thucydides taught this truth, and went to his grave. His history was written, as he said, “for all time.” And it is a kind of law of history that the generations most like his own are bound to ignore the significance of what he wrote; for otherwise they would not re-enact the history of Thucydides. But as they become ignorant of his teaching, they fall into disaster spontaneously and without thinking. Seeing that time was short, and realizing that a massive number of new souls would soon be entering the underworld, the shade of Thucydides fell back to rest.”

Stipendium peccati mors est...

"An Incredible, Heart-touching Musical Interlude: Michael Bennett “After I Pass Away”

Michael Bennett “After I Pass Away”
"Simon Cowell in tears experiencing a truly unforgettable performance by Michael Bennett on America’s Got Talent. In this moving rendition of “After I Pass Away”, Michael pours his heart and soul into every note, leaving the judges, audience, and viewers around the world in tears. From the first note to the final chord, the emotional depth of this song touches every heart. You will witness the raw power of music as it evokes deep emotions, creating a moment where everyone in the room, including the judges and audience members, is completely overwhelmed by the beauty and sorrow of this heartfelt performance. This video captures the intensity of a performance that proves why Michael Bennett is a truly extraordinary talent. Sit back, watch, and feel every emotion in this breathtaking performance."
Oh my God... feel that...

“For Those Who Have Died”

“For Those Who Have Died”
“Eleh Ezkerah” (“These We Remember”)

“Tis a fearful thing
To love
What death can touch.
To love, to hope, to dream,
And oh, to lose.
A thing for fools, this,
Love,
But a holy thing,
To love what death can touch.
For your life has lived in me;
Your laugh once lifted me;
Your word was a gift to me.
To remember this brings painful joy.
Tis a human thing, love,
A holy thing,
To love
What death can touch.”
- Chaim Stern
Graphic: “Into The Silent Land”,
by Henry Pegram, 1905

We will all some day cross the bridge into eternity,
 and there we shall meet again...
Full screen recommended,
Moody Blues, "The Day We Meet Again"

Until then...
Full screen recommended.
Moody Blues, "Candle of Life"

"Carl Jung’s Warning: The Danger of Seeing What Others Can’t"

Full screen recommended.
The Psyche,
"Carl Jung’s Warning:
The Danger of Seeing What Others Can’t"
"What happens when you can see truths others can’t - patterns they ignore, hidden motives behind actions, and deeper currents beneath everyday life? In this video, we explore Carl Jung’s urgent warning about the dangers of deep perception: why it can isolate you, how it can be misunderstood, and how to carry this gift without letting it consume you. By the end, you’ll know how to protect your mind and soul while walking the path of deeper awareness - turning your vision from a burden into a bridge for meaningful transformation. Watch to the end - the final insight may change the way you see yourself and the world forever."
Comments here:

"Why You"

"Why You"
by Maria Popova

"A self is a story of why you are you - a selective retelling of the myriad chance events between the birth of the universe and this moment: atoms bonding one way and not another, parents bonding with one partner and not another, values binding you to one culture and not another. Against this utter choicelessness in the variables we each drew from the cosmic lottery - our pigments, our neurotransmitters, our outpost in space and in time - it becomes downright absurd to grow attached to the story and its byproducts: opinions, identities, absolutisms. It is a salutary thought experiment to go through a single day imagining any one of those variables having fallen one one-thousandth of a degree elsewhere on the plane of possibility - suddenly, the person going through your day is not you.

In her extraordinary manifesto for seeing more clearly, Iris Murdoch observed: "The self, the place where we live, is a place of illusion. Goodness is connected with the attempt to see the unself… to pierce the veil of selfish consciousness and join the world as it really is."

For millennia, the whole of Eastern philosophy and myriad other ancient traditions have made the dissolution of that illusion - painful, perplexing, disorienting dissolution - the great achievement of existence. For those of who chanced by birth into the modern West, where the self roils with its grandiose claims of authorship, to keep questioning the story of who we are - this handful of unchosen stardust on short-term loan from the universe - is an act of countercultural courage requiring exceptional devotion and discipline.

Long before probability theory, before the discovery of gravity and genetics and general relativity, before the overwhelm of two trillion galaxies housing innumerable worlds, the visionary Blaise Pascal, who didn’t live past forty but touched the epochs with his clarity of thought, modeled that courage by cutting through the veil of illusion with uncommon precision:

"When I consider the short duration of my life, swallowed up in the eternity before and after, the little space that I occupy, and even that which I see, engulfed in the infinite immensity of spaces of which I know nothing and which know nothing of me, I am terrified, and am amazed that I am here rather than there, for there is no reason why here rather than there, why now rather than then."

There is no reason for you to be here, to be you. But perhaps what is left in the wake of reason is love - the matter, the substance of us that over and over outweighs the antimatter of chance to make life tremble with aliveness. Like life itself, love is an affirmation of the improbable nested, always nested, in the possible. “What will survive of us is love,” wrote Philip Larkin. No - love is simply how we survive the cosmic helplessness of being born ourselves."